Many Immigrants are LEAVING Canada, but...

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 72

  • @mark_royle_newfoundland
    @mark_royle_newfoundland  10 месяцев назад +2

    More videos related to Newfoundland and Labrador immigration:
    ruclips.net/p/PLO2VEdL8sa-B1ojMP33fKT7sUHzxlD0Iu

  • @Shakesbear-c1g
    @Shakesbear-c1g 10 месяцев назад +26

    It isn't merely recent immigrants leaving Canada..old stock Canadians with deep deep roots are fleeing at exponential rates

    • @PWingert1966
      @PWingert1966 10 месяцев назад +10

      I know many medical professionals who have left the country for better pay,,the chance to own a house within five years and cost of living that is half what it is in Canada.

    • @Honkiavelli
      @Honkiavelli 10 месяцев назад +6

      I left Canada in 2022 with my spouse (who is a pathologist); my son left in July 2023. In exchange we have better (and cheaper) healthcare, more bang for our dollar and unlimited professional opportunities (I'm a tax lawyer). Canada has become a dystopia since 2015 and will not get better in the short-medium term.

    • @davidcampbell6104
      @davidcampbell6104 10 месяцев назад +6

      I left in 1999 for the US during that particular round of Canadian ‘Brain Drain.’ Best decision I ever made.

    • @Girthon1
      @Girthon1 10 месяцев назад

      True story.

    • @nigeljames9727
      @nigeljames9727 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@Honkiavelliyou whyte Canadians voted for this.

  • @CanadaMath
    @CanadaMath 10 месяцев назад +27

    In 2004 I wrote a somewhat famous article called 'Top 8 reasons not to immigrate to Canada'. In short, the Canadian authorities tried to destroy my life. They made it so that I could not be employable in Canada. So I moved to the U.S. in 2005 and then some years later I moved permanently to the Philippines. I am happy that so many years later videos like yours are saying essentially the same things that I did. I was ahead of my time. I will never go back to Canada. Not to live, not to visit, not even a connecting flight. Too cold, too expensive, taxes are astronomical, no freedom, no jobs, no opportunities, xenophobic people, too depressing. It has become the North Korea of the western world.
    Their are many reasons why Canada has fallen apart. But the number one reason is ‘multiculturalism’. My friends, multiculturalism simply does not work. Different cultures do not come together and mix, different cultures come together and clash. The world is divided into different countries for a reason: because people hate each other and only want to be with their own kind. The number two reason for Canada’s demise is ‘socialism’. In this modern era of aging populations, it is mathematically impossible for socialism to continue. The government does not have the money to take care of old people and provide healthcare, pensions and the various other benefits, even with the astronomical taxation that burdens hard working Canucks. Well Canada, you had a good run. Time for Canucks to move to an emerging country. We welcome you here in Southeast Asia.

    • @continentalmilitaria
      @continentalmilitaria 10 месяцев назад +3

      Gosh, I know about being ahead of the curve. My family immigrated to Canada in 1968 from the former European east block when I was barely a year old. By the time I finished university in the early 90's and tried to find a decent job the problems you mentioned were clear. Like many young people in Canada at the time, I was living hand to mouth and savings were being eroded. When I made it known that I wanted to leave Canada people reacted with insults, raised voices and nasty comments. Very few people even accepted the idea of letting someone find their own path in the world. I was in the US for about 5 years and life was much better immediately. Americans welcomed me and shook my hand, seriously. Then the opportunity to come back to my native land and have good prospects showed up. People around me in the US expressed concern for my well-being since it was after all only 2004 and the country was rather poor but they did wish me well. That shows why i would say that Americans are much better people than Canadians Just shy of 20 years now my own family a good business and we live nicely in a 5000 square foot house with triple garage. To sum it up I lived much better everywhere else but in Canada. How is it that Canada is considered a rich country and I was so poor there when now in a so called poorer country I can live better than the majority of Canadians? Simple the problem was never with me, the problem was Canada.

    • @CanadaMath
      @CanadaMath 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@continentalmilitaria Exactly my experience! Back in 2004, people sh*t all over me, insulted me and said things like 'you don't have what it takes to make it in Canada'. I then went to the USA, worked for 9 years, saved my money, started an internet business, then move to the Philippines and live happy for the first time in my life.

    • @continentalmilitaria
      @continentalmilitaria 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@CanadaMath "Having what it takes to make it in Canada" is an interesting concept. To only way to "make it" in Canada is to have an insider bring you in through nepotism. If someone doesn't bring you into a company getting a decent job is next to impossible and you will lag behind those that got insider help. My teenage son plays online games with other guys his age and he told me that over half of the Canadian boys he games online with want to leave. Best wishes to you from the Czech Republic.

    • @CanadaMath
      @CanadaMath 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@continentalmilitaria Yes you are correct! Nepotism is alive and well in Canada. But I am at peace now. I am 49 years old and live a quiet, low profile life in the Philippines. I run every day, I do my internet business work and read books and watch movies. I am not bitter or angry. I am grateful for what I have in my life.

    • @continentalmilitaria
      @continentalmilitaria 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@CanadaMath Living well is a good revenge. I just turned 56 and it is the fact about being lied to so-much for so-long about Canada on top of the time and effort wasted that forgiveness is not on the table. I was even twice on local radio here and talked about what Canada was really like. I really value the personal freedom and relative lack of worries I have here. Got great kids, the big house I always wanted, my own business as well as my exotic gun collection. I am happy to have what I could never achieve in Canada.

  • @terrymockler
    @terrymockler 10 месяцев назад +4

    I left 20 years ago. Wish I had left 20 years earlier. Canada is a top-heavy country. I learned I didn't like the personality of the country either.

  • @henrygreenwood3927
    @henrygreenwood3927 10 месяцев назад +7

    Sorry if this sounds negative. The more people that immigrate. The more expensive it will be. Housing, food supplies, investments in infrastructures, increased spending, and decreased wages. They all lead to a lower quality of life for the working class.
    Immigration is only a cash grab for the wealthy. It's nice to have new people contributing to society... but if it life was affordable. Canadians would be having bigger families, staying at home, and building our own unique Canadian culture.

  • @category7273
    @category7273 10 месяцев назад +13

    I am Canadian from many generation and I want out !!!! it is very sad what this country has became the dump of India

    • @mannysubramanian8393
      @mannysubramanian8393 9 месяцев назад +1

      What has India to do with this?

    • @category7273
      @category7273 9 месяцев назад

      @@mannysubramanian8393 Go Google it.....Table 1: Indian Immigration to Canada
      Table with 2 columns and 10 rows. Currently displaying rows 1 to 10.
      Year Indian Immigrants to Canada
      2022 118,095
      2021 127,940
      More then 300,000 in the last 3 years

  • @wabanamedia2542
    @wabanamedia2542 10 месяцев назад +5

    Weather is a big factor. Lots of coastal BC offers snowless winters, and it’s not overly wintery in most of BC.
    Having lived in both provinces, cost of living in NL is quite high, almost in par with BC. But quality of life in BC is miles ahead of what you can access in NL.

  • @deepti6137
    @deepti6137 4 дня назад

    I’m so glad that someone in NL is actually talking about immigration and related issues. I am also a immigrant moved from India to st Johns and now in Corner Brook.

  • @Mrskateboardboy
    @Mrskateboardboy 10 месяцев назад +3

    You can't bring in unneeded immigrants in huge numbers without harming the quality of life. The new laborers keep a cap on wages at a time when the cost of living is going up rapidly. Canadians' quality of life is going downhill and huge low-end immigration speeds up the decline. At least in Nigeria, for example, if you are poor, you are in the sunshine, but what do you do when you are living in ten degrees below zero, have nowhere to live and can't afford to buy your own food. You rely more and more of charities just to survive.

  • @Harpeia
    @Harpeia 10 месяцев назад +8

    Always found it funny how nearly everyone I know emigrated in pursuit of a better life and then there's me, wanting to go because I fell in love with some landscapes across the world...

    • @Retsler54
      @Retsler54 10 месяцев назад

      I am Swedish and I would leave to a country where I can "breathe more free air" and hell that country is not my own no more. Not since the Swedish people became government friendly and became both climate muppets and vaccine junkies. And there is more.

  • @anonymousanonymously8216
    @anonymousanonymously8216 10 месяцев назад +1

    I can see weather being an issue as to why people leave Canada or don’t want to come, I mean 6 months of cold weather doesn’t exactly attract a lot of people. Justin Trudeau and all his policies are making it tough for everyone in Canada or were thinking of coming to Canada and when they see just how much money they will need just to get by here, they would probably look to live in a different country because Canada is too expensive. Everything in Canada is ridiculous, price of homes, rent, food, health care and this is all under Justin Trudeau and the liberals watch. Next year in October there will be an election, if Trudeau wins again, I can’t imagine how much worse life in Canada will become.

  • @herenow4875
    @herenow4875 10 месяцев назад +5

    Over the last 25 years there has been a lot more bigoted ideology in regards to immigration here. Many nationalists failing to see Canada's rich history of being the world's greatest melting pot. I blame the US Republican media's fear mongering concepts that have infiltrated the young conservatives of our nations since 9/11. So sentiments towards migrants have become quite hostile and I am sure that is a big issue for many who come to stay here. Anyone who seems out of place can face racism and illwill here. Sadly as an aboriginal I know that Canada has had a long time problem with racism, for example what happened with the residential schools that even your own PM in Newfoundland made apologies for not too long ago. So there is a stain on Canada that many don't like to talk about here. A stain that must come as a big surprise to immigrants. So I think one of the issues that many immigrants face here is a lack of inclusion and a history of exclusion. Then you ad to that a housing bubble so there simply is not enough supply to house the immigration coming in. Even born an bread Canadians are facing homelessness at this time. We need more qualified trades people and affordable housing programs to be able to home these new people. Not only that but our medical system is completely crushed and you won't be able to have a doctor here. Sadly being an immigrant here comes with a lot of expensive problems. I can see why immigrants just stay long enough to get an education and then leave again immediately. I would recommend probably considering somewhere else before Canada as your place to live. Many Canadians are fleeing to other countries since the pandemic and all the draconian policies that came out of that. So beware... Canada might not be what you expect.

    • @LaMach420
      @LaMach420 10 месяцев назад

      I also see Canada and the USA as a melting pot HOWEVER immigration right now is out of hand. We simply cannot have this many people showing up at once. We are already in an economic pickle and illequipped for this tsunami of migrants. Immigrants also take time to assimilate (naturally, not residential schools again...), my grandparents have been here for 40 years and still speak broken english, only 2nd and 3rd generation are well integrated.
      What I see from the Indians (not natives) is since they're coming in droves they're forming a parallel society where they only associate with each other and make no effort to bridge the gap with us which will lead to culture clash.
      I may receive flak for this but I dont care. Unlike North America which is the new world and land of opportunity for all, Europe should have never let visible minorities in, European culture is too precious to be diluted, just like Asian countries and should stay homogenous. If they want the land they can try colonizing it, fair and square. Just remember white people are good at war. 😂

    • @sekovittol3124
      @sekovittol3124 10 месяцев назад

      Is it bigoted to not want hoards of foreigners to usurp your way of life bit by bit? I'd go on, but It would be deleted anyway.

  • @ThomasMullaly-do9lz
    @ThomasMullaly-do9lz 9 месяцев назад +1

    It's because people don't have enough and they blame people from other places. Let's not go by St John's here the Bays are difficult for new comers. Look how that Doctors daughter was bullied. I don't remember Newfoundland being this way. 60% of our population is over 65.. I intend to stay and keep trying to make it better. Maybe I have traveled to much and took a delight in other cultures.. It's a learning curve I guess.. Don't move improve.. We need young people end of story and our society better figure that out soon..

  • @billhayward1585
    @billhayward1585 10 месяцев назад +2

    if you like Friendly people and square houses move to Newfoundland.

  • @okenobumneme
    @okenobumneme 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you, Mark 👏 Always a pleasure to watch your videos. I find them very informative. I have also subscribed to your new youtube channel. I’m positive I would find it valuable.
    I recently got a rejection mail from MUN for my master’s application. According to them, my application wasn’t competitive enough. I hope to try again next year because NL seems like a great place, even though I’ve been thinking about USask lately.
    Until then, I’d keep streaming your videos. Thank you! ❤

  • @harrisonsir1
    @harrisonsir1 10 месяцев назад +2

    average wage $2500, average 1 bedroom rental $2100. bring lots of money before entering canada.

  • @momomovie
    @momomovie 10 месяцев назад

    Love your videos 😍😍

  • @soorajs5735
    @soorajs5735 10 месяцев назад

    where they are all going ?

  • @mpzeng
    @mpzeng 9 месяцев назад

    Moved to Toronto after 10 years in Shanghai. And before that Serbia and bunch of cities in America - NYC, Miami, Philly, Dallas... All I can say Toronto and Canada are a dump! Sorry Canadians, I know you've been brainwashed you're sooo amazing and we should all be SOOOOOO grateful and lucky to be in Canada. BYE!!! (PS Good luck!)

  • @jared2232
    @jared2232 10 месяцев назад

    From NS. Dad's from and lives in NFLD . Canada is an acquired taste on weather alone. Being Canadian I don't care because I honestly don't know any different but I can see why immigrants would be skeptic.
    Without getting political our lifestyles have steadily declined since current leadership took over. Thankfully I bought a house in 2019 before the market went crazy but average home price in Halifax went from about 300k to 600k in the span of a year.. wages got bumped up by a dollar or two. I also have been trying to get a family Dr for about 4 years...
    I love our country to death but its far from the place that I was born and raised into. I would move to a developing country in a heart beat if I had the bank account to support it.

  • @aal2206
    @aal2206 9 месяцев назад

    Only reason Canada is popular is because it is much easier to get Pr status in Canada vs the US. Also very easy to get a Canadian student visa, no interview with consulate officer and it can be some no name school. US - you face a tough in person interview. Also once you have Canadian citizebship you can work in the US via a TN visa. A LOT of Indian tech folks do this.

  • @PWingert1966
    @PWingert1966 10 месяцев назад +2

    This is a great solution to the housing issue. THe more that we leave the more housing that we don't need. Let's keep Canada so expensive that only the richest and most well of will even consider moving here. Maybe we can get the poor and disable and those on welfare to leave as well. then it will be perfect for the elites and the one percenter to live in the penthouse condos and take advantage of the minimum wage workers to do their bidding. We don't need more people we only need the rich and then everyone else can serve then for sub-poverty level wages. Those who will not serve and think that they can make a future living in sub-poverty wages can easily move to the stats and other countries so that they will be disadvantaged by the poor and disabled.

  • @momomovie
    @momomovie 10 месяцев назад

    Please explain more about Atlantic Immigration Program ❤❤

    • @mark_royle_newfoundland
      @mark_royle_newfoundland  10 месяцев назад

      Here’s a brief overview from the other channel: ruclips.net/video/11SyJIeto_c/видео.html

  • @captaintrips9606
    @captaintrips9606 10 месяцев назад +1

    We need more imagration and less home building....thats seems to be canadas plan

  • @shayt0r
    @shayt0r 10 месяцев назад +1

    Who ever got the Canadian passport are leaving to see their family for some time. But they ll be back. As a new migrant traveled in many countries Canada is the best.
    And if they know better or want better then best of luck their opportunities will be taken from new immigrants that they know

  • @philliploco5037
    @philliploco5037 10 месяцев назад

    Victoria BC is my favorite destination but could never dream of living their cost of living rent etc forget about it . And what opportunities foreign qualifications are not recognized so no wonder migrants are fleeing. They leave realizing the grass is not always greener on the other side. Canada is BROKEN , now if NDP gets into power then Migrants will come.

  • @primalfury2011
    @primalfury2011 10 месяцев назад +1

    oh noo... lmao oh darn ....!!

  • @Magdalene777
    @Magdalene777 10 месяцев назад

    I'm from Ontario and just bought a house in Fortune near Grand Bank. My aunt lives there now and I'm just wrapping things up here so I can move. She loves it there. I notice not many people talk about the Burin Peninsula on their channels. Could you go give them some love? How about visiting Marystown? Garnish? The beaches of St. Lawrence? The Burin Peninsula feels left out 😪

    • @mark_royle_newfoundland
      @mark_royle_newfoundland  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching, and congrats on buying your house. I LOVE the Burin Peninsula, especially Grand Bank and Fortune. I spent a few days there last year and I’m planning to go back again in 2024 to shoot a lot more footage for future videos. I have a couple of compilation-type videos that include Burin right now though. Here’s one of them: Must See Newfoundland - 'Off The Avalon' Edition 4K
      ruclips.net/video/sx00oTukwvo/видео.html

  • @philliploco5037
    @philliploco5037 10 месяцев назад

    HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

  • @kennethdanielwatson1675
    @kennethdanielwatson1675 10 месяцев назад +4

    GOOD.