August 22, 2003
The Canadian Government Is Electing a New People
By Michael Monastyrskyj
[More
by Michael Monastyrskyj]
Would it not be
easier
In that case for the government
To dissolve the people
And
elect another?
(“The
Solution” [scroll
down], by Bertolt Brecht,
quoted in Peter Brimelow’s
Alien Nation)
Canada isn’t what it
used to be or perhaps more accurately, Canadians aren’t
who they used to be.
Earlier this year,
Statistics Canada (Canada’s Census Bureau) released
new data from the
2001 census. The survey shows a country that is
being rapidly transformed by immigration. This isn’t a
surprise to those of us who have been following
immigration trends. Still, the new statistics are
sobering.
Between 1991 and May
15, 2001 1.8 million people immigrated to Canada, more
than in any decade since 1901. The number of foreign
born residents is now the highest it has been since
1931. Some 5.4 million or 18.4 percent of Canada’s 31
million people were born outside the country.
Australia is the only country with a higher
proportion, 22 percent, of immigrants in its population.
By comparison, on 2000, 11 percent of American residents
were born abroad. [Immigration
shifts population kaleidoscope, by Erin
Anderssen, Globe and Mail, January 22, 2003]
Historically,
Canada’s immigrants came from Europe. But that has not
been true for a
long time. Of the nearly 2 million people who
arrived in the last decade, 58 percent came from Asia
including the Middle East, 20 percent from Europe, 11
percent from the Caribbean, Central and South America, 8
percent from Africa and 3 percent from the US.
Mainland China was
the
leading country of birth among immigrants in the
1990s.
Not surprisingly,
there are now more than one million Chinese in Canada,
making them the country’s largest “visible minority”
(Ottawa-speak for non-white) group. [Chinese
population balloons, by Nicholas Keung,
Toronto Star, January 22, 2003] Immigrants from the
Indian sub-continent are
also approaching a million. In all, 13.4 per cent of
Canada’s population is non-white, not including
aboriginals (North American Indians) who also number
close to a
million (976,300).
Immigration
enthusiasts like to say Canada is an empty country that
needs more people. This ignores the fact that a full 94
percent of the newcomers who arrived in the last decade
settled in
metropolitan areas. Nearly three quarters of all
immigrants go to just three cities
Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Some 43 percent,or
792, 000 immigrants, settled in Toronto alone.
Canada may seem empty
when you are driving along a highway in the middle of
the prairies. But it looks awfully crowded when you are
stuck in the middle of rush hour traffic on one of
Toronto’s sluggish expressways. (Traffic
bad and getting even worse, Toronto Star, January
20)
A more plausible
reason for Canada’s immigration disaster was suggested
by Martin Collacott, the retired Canadian diplomat whose
seminal critique [PDF]
of current policy for the Vancouver-based
Fraser Institute is one of a number of
signs of gathering public unease:
“The government's
principal reason for promoting high immigration levels
is the belief that most newcomers will vote for the
[governing] Liberal Party.”
Michael Monastyrskyj
(email
him) lives in Toronto and
knows about those rush hours.