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Why Multiculturalism and DEI is failing in Canada

The Myth of a Post-National Canada

Canada, shaped historically by English and French traditions, is now labeled by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as a “post-national” society with no cultural core. However, this contradicts reality—Canada has two official languages (English and French) and two legal systems (Common Law and Civil Law).

 

The True Meaning of Multiculturalism

  • Canadians support multiculturalism but expect immigrants to assimilate into Canadian culture.
  • The government, however, rejects assimilation, encouraging separate cultural enclaves for political gain.
  • Immigration policies have opened the floodgates to mass immigration, legal and illegal, without integration plans.
 
 

Indigenous Relations: Division Over Unity

  • The government promotes “nation-to-nation” relations with First Nations, undermining national unity.
  • Non-Indigenous Canadians are labeled “colonial settlers”, implying they don’t belong in Canada.
  • “Indigenization” of education mandates First Nations culture in all disciplines, including science and technology.
 
 

Foreign Conflicts Brought to Canada

  • Khalistani extremism, once an Indian issue, has led to violence, intimidation, and terrorism in Canada.
  • University campuses have become Hamas battlegrounds, with pro-Palestinian activism leading to antisemitism.
  • Government and university officials refuse to act, instead appeasing extremists through policy concessions.
 

The Decline of Canadian Academia

  • DEI (Diversity, Equity, Inclusion) policies prioritize activism over merit and scholarship.
  • Western culture is being erased, dismissed as imperialistic and oppressive.
  • Marxist ideologies dominate universities, shifting from evidence-based research to “oppressors vs. victims” narratives.


The Outcome: A Fragmented, Weakened Canada

The article argues that multiculturalism has not strengthened Canada but instead:

  • Divided society into competing cultural enclaves
  • Encouraged foreign extremism within Canadian borders
  • Weakened national identity through radical policies
  • Undermined education by replacing knowledge with activism

 

Final Verdict?

The article sarcastically concludes that Canada has achieved a “humanistic utopia”—at the cost of its identity, unity, and intellectual integrity.