Border bill would create ‘in limbo’ foreign residents, refugee groups say 

Usual critique by advocates, with no analysis of numbers likely to be affected or recognition of previous abuses:

A federal crackdown on asylum claims would create a new “in limbo” class of foreign residents who couldn’t be returned home but who would be barred from asylum hearings and unable to work in Canada, refugee groups say.

They are warning government officials that the Strong Borders Act, which was introduced before MPs went on summer break, would lead to people living without status in Canada if their home countries are deemed too dangerous for them to be returned to.

The legislation, also known as Bill C-2, would tighten up Canada’s immigration and asylum system, barring people who arrived in Canada more than a year ago from having an asylum claim heard by the independent Immigration and Refugee Board. Applicants to the IRB can qualify for work permits and health coverage while they wait for assessments. 

The restriction would apply to people who entered the country after June 24, 2020, even if they have since left and returned.

Bill C-2 would also prevent people who crossed the U.S. border illegally from claiming asylum if they have been in Canada for at least 14 days, which is currently permitted under a provision of the Safe Third Country Agreement with the United States….

Source: Border bill would create ‘in limbo’ foreign residents, refugee groups say

Lederman: We need to talk about antisemitism

Comments highlight need:

…What is happening in Gaza is catastrophic. But comparisons to the Holocaust are inaccurate, unnecessary and damaging. And, arguably, antisemitic.

Would any of this be okay if it was directed at any other minority group? 

One could argue it’s Zionists being targeted, not Jews. But most Jews are Zionists, believing a State of Israel has a right to exist. Further, too often, “Zionist” is a convenient substitute for “Jew.”

Criticism of the Israeli government is absolutely fair. But veering into antisemitism does nothing for the worthy Palestinian cause. If anything, it taints it. It is distracting, divisive and counterproductive. 

The same “fixed it” social-media crowd might write, about this column, “I’m not reading all that. Free Palestine.”

Yes, Palestinians deserve to be free. And Jews in Canada deserve to feel safe in their own country.

Source: We need to talk about antisemitism

L’immigration par réunification familiale pratiquement barrée au Québec d’ici juin 2026

Of note:

Les personnes souhaitant faire venir leur conjoint ou leur enfant de 18 ans et plus au Québec ne pourront plus en faire la demande jusqu’en juin 2026.

Le ministère de l’Immigration, de la Francisation et de l’Intégration (MIFI) a annoncé mercredi avoir atteint le nombre maximal de demandes de parrainage permises pour un époux, un conjoint, un partenaire conjugal ou un enfant à charge de 18 ans et plus. La voie du regroupement familial sera donc pratiquement fermée d’ici le 26 juin 2026, date à laquelle de nouvelles requêtes pourront de nouveau être émises.

Entretemps, « toute demande reçue par le MIFI après l’atteinte du nombre maximal de demandes pouvant être reçues et qui vise ces membres de la famille sera retournée aux personnes demandeuses sans être traitée », a précisé le ministère, mercredi. « Les frais exigés pour l’examen de la demande ne seront pas encaissés. »

À l’heure actuelle, la catégorie de la réunification familiale ne reste donc ouverte qu’aux personnes souhaitant parrainer leur père, leur mère, un grand-parent ou un autre membre de leur parenté.

Aucune limite n’est appliquée non plus aux demandes de parrainage d’un enfant de moins de 18 ans.

Source: L’immigration par réunification familiale pratiquement barrée au Québec d’ici juin 2026

People wishing to bring their spouse or child aged 18 and over to Quebec will no longer be able to apply until June 2026.

The Ministry of Immigration, Francisation and Integration (MIFI) announced on Wednesday that it had reached the maximum number of sponsorship applications allowed for a spouse, spouse, conjugal partner or dependent child aged 18 and over. The route of family reunification will therefore be practically closed by June 26, 2026, when new requests can be issued again.

In the meantime, “any request received by the MIFI after the maximum number of applications that can be received has been reached and that targets these family members will be returned to the applicants without being processed,” the ministry said on Wednesday. “The fees required for the examination of the application will not be collected. ”

At present, the category of family reunification remains open only to people wishing to sponsor their father, mother, a grandparent or another member of their relatives.

There are also no limits for sponsorship requests for a child under the age of 18.

Morton: Why Hiring Professors With Conservative Views Could Backfire on Conservatives

Interesting argument. But greater ideological diversity and openness would be welcome:

…Conservatives have criticized identity-based affirmative action because, they suggest, it imposes an expectation on students of color that they will represent what is presumed to be, say, the Black or Latino view on any given issue, which discourages freethinking. Admitting students for viewpoint diversity would turn the holding of conservative ideas into a quasi-identity, subject to some of the same concerns. Students admitted to help restore ideological balance would likely feel a responsibility to defend certain views, regardless of the force of opposing arguments they might encounter.

For professors hired for their political beliefs, the pressure to maintain those views would be even greater. If you had a tenure-track position, your salary, health insurance and career prospects would all depend on the inflexibility of your ideology. The smart thing to do in that situation would be to interact with other scholars who share your point of view and to read publications that reinforce what you already believe. Or you might simply engage with opposing ideas in bad faith, refusing even to consider their merits. This would create the sort of ideological echo chamber that proponents of viewpoint diversity have suggested, often with some justification, leads to closed-mindedness among left-leaning professors…

Jennifer M. Morton, professor of philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania

Source: Why Hiring Professors With Conservative Views Could Backfire on Conservatives

Attorneys Say They Can’t See Immigration Clients At Alligator Alcatraz

Of note:

Immigration attorneys say they have been unable to see their clients sent to the Alligator Alcatraz detention facility in Florida. Donald Trump toured the state-run camp with Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL) and implied immigrants would be deterred from escaping because nearby alligators would eat them. In the haste to build and promote the facility, including by selling online merchandise, Florida and Trump officials neglected to provide access to attorneys and ensure detained immigrants could be located and meet with legal representatives to guarantee due process.

Attorneys with clients at Alligator Alcatraz, built in the Florida Everglades, criticize the lack of due process and access to counsel, and express concerns about the conditions. The Miami Herald described detainees suffering from mosquito bites, days without showers and “scant sunlight coming through the heavy-duty tents, making it difficult for them to know whether it is day or night.”

Two weeks have passed since a Florida Highway Patrol officer arrested the Honduran immigrant client of Magdalena Cuprys of Cuprys & Associates. “He was stopped at a weigh station in Tampa because he owns a construction company, and he was required to stop for his truck to be weighed,” Cuprys told me. “The client had a valid Florida driver’s license. The patrol officer called Customs and Border Protection on him. The client called me, and the officer took the phone from him and spoke with me.”

She asked why CBP was alerted. “I was advised that the client looked Hispanic, had a Hispanic name, and now they are collaborating with Immigration and Customs Enforcement and CBP, and their orders are to call CBP any time they encounter anyone they suspect is an immigrant,” said Cuprys. “I asked if they would have followed the same process if it had been me driving, and the response was it depends if you look Hispanic.”…

Source: Attorneys Say They Can’t See Immigration Clients At Alligator Alcatraz

StatsCan: The role of social connections in mitigating the harms associated with discrimination, 2023/2024

Makes intuitive sense that social connections mitigate impacts of discrimination:

In 2023/2024, 45% of all racialized Canadians reported experiencing discrimination over the previous five years. While discrimination has been related to negative mental and physical health, lower levels of life satisfaction and reduced hopefulness about the future, these outcomes become less pronounced when victims of discriminatory acts have strong personal support networks.

Among racialized Canadians who reported experiencing discrimination in the previous five years, one-third (33%) reported having a high level of life satisfaction (scoring 8 or higher on a 10-point scale). This proportion increased to 47% among victims with strong family connections and to 49% for those with strong friend connections. Mental health outcomes and future outlook also fared better when victims had personal support networks.

These results are based on the new study released today, “Softening the blow of discrimination: The role of social connections in mitigating the harms associated with racism and discrimination,” which used the Survey Series on People and their Communities to look at the role of family and friends in mitigating the harms associated with discrimination among racialized Canadians. The study also examined how family and friend relationships can influence discrimination victims’ perceptions of other Canadians and broader Canadian society.

Source: Study: The role of social connections in mitigating the harms associated with discrimination, 2023/2024

Conservatives call for investigation into CBC after journalist resigns over ‘performative diversity, tokenism’

Interesting that Dhanraj represented by right leaning activist lawyer Marshall:

The Conservative party is calling for a parliamentary committee to investigate the CBC after journalist Travis Dhanraj resigned over the public broadcaster’s alleged “performative diversity, tokenism, a system designed to elevate certain voices and diminish others.”

Dhanraj was the host of Canada Tonight: With Travis Dhanraj on CBC. But he resigned on Monday, involuntarily, he says, because the CBC “has made it impossible for me to continue my work with integrity.”

“I have been systematically sidelined, retaliated against, and denied the editorial access and institutional support necessary to fulfill my public service role,” he wrote in his resignation letter. “I stayed as long as I could, but CBC leadership left me with no reasonable path forward.”

On Wednesday, Rachel Thomas, an Alberta Conservative member of Parliament, wrote a letter to the chair of the House of Commons standing committee on Canadian heritage, saying that Dhanraj’s claims have “reignited concerns about the organization’s workplace culture.”

The letter calls on the chair, Ontario Liberal MP Lisa Hepfner, to recall the committee.

“It is critical that we hear testimony from Mr. Dhanraj, CBC executives and Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture, Steven Guilbeault,” the letter states.

Kathryn Marshall, Dhanraj’s lawyer, told National Post in an interview that they welcome the attempt to recall the committee for hearings….

Source: Conservatives call for investigation into CBC after journalist resigns over ‘performative diversity, tokenism’

Musk’s A.I. tool has a hate problem

Not all that surprising, unfortunately:

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence chatbot, Grok, has been spreading antisemitic conspiracies — including that Jews promote hatred toward white people and control Hollywood. It also praised Adolf Hitler.

The posts came days after Musk boasted that Grok had improved “significantly.”
How it works: “Chatbots like Grok are based on large language models that comb through massive databases of online content to produce written answers to questions or prompts based on common responses it finds,” explains our Arno Rosenfeld. “But their creators can also instruct the models to respond in specific ways.”

Context: Musk performed what appeared to be a Nazi salute during an inaugural rally for Trump, and followed the incident with a series of Holocaust jokes on X, the social media platform he owns. In response to the rise in antisemitic and hateful content, many major Jewish organizations have left the site.

Fallout: The Anti-Defamation League called the posts — some of which have now been deleted — “irresponsible, dangerous and antisemitic.”

Source: Musk’s A.I. tool has a hate problem

Ravet | Une laïcité antireligieuse est une mauvaise voie

Important nuanced take on laïcité:

Le Rassemblement pour la laïcité est bien connu pour ses positions à l’égard de la religion, qu’il classe d’emblée comme facteur d’endoctrinement, de division et de conflits sociaux. De sa part, on sait toujours à quoi s’attendre de la religion, quelle qu’elle soit. Et le portait n’est guère reluisant. Se nourrissant exclusivement de ses pires expressions, il milite pour interdire toutes manifestations religieuses dans l’espace public au nom de la laïcité. Car selon sa conception de la laïcité, et la neutralité dont elle se réclame, tout ce qui relève du religieux devrait être refoulé le plus possible dans la sphère intime pour neutraliser les effets potentiellement néfastes sur la société.

Mais contrairement à ce qui est affirmé, la « laïcité » ainsi comprise n’est pas neutre à l’égard des religions, elle est farouchement contre. Les croyants sont d’emblée posés comme « objets » de la laïcité, jamais comme sujets, ni acteurs. Comment le pourraient-ils puisqu’ils sont la cible de ladite laïcité et que tout signe de croyance serait en soi signe de prosélytisme, d’embrigadement ou d’obscurantisme ?

Or, la laïcité n’est pas la propriété des non-croyants sauf à en faire une idéologie antireligieuse. Au nom du vivre ensemble et du bien commun, elle est une part commune à tous les citoyens, croyants et non croyants, nous renvoyant à notre humanité commune que nous sommes tous appelés à approfondir, à faire croître dans la part du monde qui nous est donnée. Les religions ont leur part à jouer.

L’article publié par huit membres du Rassemblement pour la laïcité (« Une réflexion sur la laïcité dans les cégeps s’impose », dans Le Devoir du 2 juillet) est symptomatique de cette orientation idéologique de la laïcité conçue au détriment de la religion et des croyants. Les auteurs peuvent ainsi affirmer sans justification à l’appui, comme si cela allait de soi, que « si la culture, ou même la politique, est bien au cœur de la vitalité académique des cégeps, il n’en va pas de même de la religion qui relève de croyances et facilite le cloisonnement communautaire ».

Cette affirmation sans nuances est éminemment réductrice puisqu’elle ne retient de la religion que ses manifestations sectaires. On pourrait, par ce même procédé, dénigrer tout autant la culture et la politique — qui relèvent aussi de croyances partagées, ce que feignent d’ignorer les auteurs — en ne retenant de celles-ci que leurs expressions fanatiques et sectaires. Cependant, s’il est possible de le faire aussi cavalièrement avec le religieux, c’est que s’impose de plus en plus une représentation sociale de la religion qui va dans cette direction.

Une réalité complexe

Le rapport d’enquête sur les cégeps Dawson et Vanier en est un bel exemple, qui reproduit les mêmes affirmations sans prendre le soin d’en donner les raisons, en ne citant qu’un article du Regroupement pour la laïcité sur un cégep et en ignorant un rapport de trois chercheurs universitaires portant sur 10 cégeps et 10 universités beaucoup plus nuancé. C’est inquiétant. Car on s’empêche ainsi de penser une réalité complexe qui a ses racines dans une part importante de la population.

Les médias ont d’ailleurs leur part de responsabilité dans ce phénomène en ne parlant généralement de la religion qu’en rapport à ses manifestations négatives, dogmatiques ou sectaires. Ce faisant, on ne se rend pas compte qu’on est en train de construire une société qui marginalise et invisibilise les « personnes concrètes » qui trouvent dans la religion une voie privilégiée d’humanisation — car elles n’ont pas droit de cité : cachez ce que vous êtes, car vous menacez le vivre ensemble. Un tel bannissement, en plus de favoriser le fanatisme religieux, qui se trouve conforté par cette exclusion sociale, peut faire obstacle à l’inculturation et à l’engagement citoyen de nouveaux arrivants qui proviennent de sociétés qui n’ont pas ce regard entièrement négatif du religieux et qui se sentent « dévalorisés » dans leur être même.

Comme rédacteur en chef de la défunte revue Relations, dans laquelle croyants et incroyants, ou « autrement-croyants », selon le mot heureux de Michel de Certeau, œuvraient conjointement pour une société juste, j’ai toujours plaidé pour ma part en faveur d’une compréhension de la laïcité qui n’est pas fondée sur l’invisibilisation des religions et des croyants, ni encore moins leur rejet, menant à faire de la laïcité une « religion dominante ». Le principe de neutralité religieuse propre à la laïcité ne vise pas à ignorer les religions, mais, au contraire, à accueillir sereinement ses expressions individuelles et collectives dans la sphère publique sans leur plaquer, sans autre forme de procès, les stigmates de l’anathème. Ce qui en est cependant exclu, dans l’espace public, c’est toute prétention, de leur part, à la vérité inquestionnable, à la domination, à l’embrigadement.

La laïcité ainsi comprise favorise l’humanisation de toutes croyances, tant culturelles, politiques que religieuses, en mettant de l’avant le travail interprétatif des croyances et leur mise en dialogue. Car la politique et la culture peuvent comme la religion devenir toxiques quand elles sont sous l’emprise idéologique qui sacralise une idée au point que l’humain est sacrifié sur son autel, et le réel réduit à cette idée.

Cessons donc de brandir l’épouvantail du prosélytisme ou du sectarisme religieux dans le but de promouvoir une laïcité qui serait en soi antireligieuse. La laïcité mérite mieux que ça.

Jean-Claude Ravet L’auteur, écrivain, a fait paraître «La nuit et l’aube. Résistance spirituelle à la destruction du monde» (Nota Bene, 2024).

Source: Idées | Une laïcité antireligieuse est une mauvaise voie

The Rally for Secularism is well known for its positions on religion, which it immediately classifies as a factor of indoctrination, division and social conflict. For its part, we always know what to expect from religion, whatever it may be. And the wear is hardly shiny. Feeding exclusively on his worst expressions, he campaigned to prohibit all religious manifestations in public space in the name of secularism. Because according to its conception of secularism, and the neutrality it claims, everything that is religious should be repressed as much as possible in the intimate sphere to neutralize the potentially harmful effects on society.

But contrary to what is claimed, the “secularism” thus understood is not neutral towards religions, it is fiercely against. Believers are immediately posed as “objects” of secularism, never as subjects or actors. How could they since they are the target of said secularism and that any sign of belief would in itself be a sign of proselytism, brigade or obscurantism?

However, secularism is not the property of non-beliefs except to make it an anti-religious ideology. In the name of living together and the common good, it is a common part of all citizens, believers and non-believers, referring us to our common humanity that we are all called upon to deepen, to grow in the part of the world that is given to us. Religions have their part to play.

The article published by eight members of the Rassemblement pour la laïcité (“A reflection on secularism in the CEGEPS is imposed”, in Le Devoir of July 2) is symptomatic of this ideological orientation of secularism conceived to the detriment of religion and believers. The authors can thus affirm without supporting justification, as if it were self-evident, that “if culture, or even politics, is at the heart of the academic vitality of CEGEPs, the same is not true of religion, which is a matter of beliefs and facilitates community partitioning”.

This unnuanted statement is eminently reductive since it retains from religion only its sectarian manifestations. We could, by this same process, denigrate culture and politics just as much – which are also shared beliefs, which the authors pretend to ignore – by retaining from them only their fanatical and sectarian expressions. However, if it is possible to do so cavally with the religious, it is because a social representation of religion that goes in this direction is increasingly necessary.

A complex reality

The survey report on the Dawson and Vanier CEGEPs is a good example, which reproduces the same statements without taking care to give the reasons, citing only one article of the Regroupement pour la la laïcité on a CEGEP and ignoring a report by three university researchers on 10 CEGEPs and 10 universities much more nuanced. It’s worrying. Because this prevents us from thinking about a complex reality that has its roots in a significant part of the population.

The media also have their share of responsibility for this phenomenon by generally speaking of religion only in relation to its negative, dogmatic or sectarian manifestations. In doing so, we do not realize that we are building a society that marginalizes and makes invisible the “concrete people” who find in religion a privileged way of humanization – because they have no right of citizenship: hide what you are, because you threaten living together. Such a banishment, in addition to promoting religious fanaticism, which is reinforced by this social exclusion, can hinder the inculturation and civic engagement of newcomers who come from societies that do not have this entirely negative view of the religious and who feel “devalued” in their very being.

As editor-in-chief of the defunct magazine Relations, in which believers and unbelievers, or “otherwise believers”, according to the happy word of Michel de Certeau, worked jointly for a just society, I have always argued for my part in favor of an understanding of secularism that is not based on the invisibilization of religions and believers, let alone their rejection, leading to making secularism a “dominant religion”. The principle of religious neutrality specific to secularism does not aim to ignore religions, but, on the contrary, to serenely welcome one’s individual and collective expressions in the public sphere without placing them, without any other form of trial, with the stigmas of the anathema. What is excluded, however, in the public space, is any claim, on their part, to the unquestionable truth, to domination, to embrigadement.

The secularism thus understood promotes the humanization of all beliefs, both cultural, political and religious, by highlighting the interpretative work of beliefs and their dialogue. Because politics and culture can become toxic like religion when they are under the ideological influence that sacralizes an idea to the point that the human being is sacrificed on his altar, and reality reduced to this idea.

So let’s stop brandishing the scarecrow of proselytism or religious sectarianism in order to promote a secularism that would in itself be anti-religious. Secularism deserves better than that.

Jean-Claude Ravet The author, writer, published “The night and the dawn. Spiritual resistance to the destruction of the world” (Nota Bene, 2024).

Immigration caps are contributing to lower asking rents in Canada, CMHC says

Just after a webinar with the Diversity Institute minimizing the link (StatsCan notes greater correlation, albeit relatively small, in larger cities than smaller centres, with interest rates being greater factor):

Canada’s caps on foreign students and new residents have contributed to reduced demand for rental housing and lower average asking rents in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto and Halifax, according to a new study from the national housing agency.

Over the past year, the average asking monthly rent fell between 2 per cent and 8 per cent in condos and rental-only apartments – also known as purpose-built rentals – said the report released Tuesday by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp (CMHC).

The drop was due to a surge in new condos and apartment buildings hitting the market along with limits on temporary foreign residents such as students and new permanent residents.

As of April, temporary residents accounted for 7.1 per cent of the country’s total population, according to Statistics Canada. That compared with the peak of 7.4 per cent in October of last year. 

“It is quite evident on the demand side that there have been signs of weakening,” said Tania Bourassa-Ochoa, CMHC’s deputy chief economist, adding that there were stronger rental declines in regions with slower population growth….

Source: Immigration caps are contributing to lower asking rents in Canada, CMHC says