While I was away: Multiculturalism and Identity

Some multiculturalism articles other than on antisemitism:

Christopher Dummitt: Nothing says generic left-winger like getting an honorary degree

Useful analysis:

…Is this a conspiracy? Probably not. But it is a textbook case of systemic bias. Universities are populated overwhelmingly by people who share a homogeneous worldview. They are the ones nominating candidates. Those nominations are then filtered through committees explicitly instructed to favour recipients who embody progressive DEI values.

Imagine the reverse. If universities leaned right and committees were instructed to favour those who champion conservative conceptions of social order, Stephen Harper would top the list. Former Saskatchewan premier Brad Wall and former cabinet minister Rona Ambrose would follow. But the more revealing cases come further down. If Desmond Cole can receive an honorary degree, why not Jonathan Kay — journalist, former editor of the Walrus, and a genuine contributor to Canadian public debate? Why not Brian Lee Crowley, founder of the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, or Mark Milke, founder of the Aristotle Foundation? These are precisely the kinds of public intellectuals — fighters for their conception of a just society — that universities celebrate on the left. Why not the right?

To be more provocative, but no more so than in the cases of Cole or Rebick: why not former Harper advisor and academic Tom Flanagan? Or John Carpay, whose legal challenges to COVID-19 restrictions represent exactly the kind of principled dissent that universities seem to admire — at least when it comes from the left.

All of these figures are at least as accomplished as many being honoured this year. Many believe deeply in social justice — just with different assumptions about what “just” means.

When Zak Patterson and I published research showing the political composition of Canadian universities some years ago, one of the most striking responses came from those who insisted our numbers were wrong and our surveys flawed. A clearer case of motivated reasoning would be hard to find.

But if hard data on the political beliefs of university faculty isn’t convincing enough, just attend a convocation ceremony this spring. The ideological skew will be on full display — one last kick in the teeth for any non-leftist student or parent. You thought tuition was too high? Here’s one more insult on your way out the door.

McWhorter: A Black Helen of Troy? Fine. A White Obama? Not Yet.

Of interest:

Plus, white actors playing Black figures in “blaccents” of various degrees would verge on minstrelsy. It’s one thing that Black British or African actors such as Idris Elba and Thandiwe Newton do American blaccents in roles (and uncannily well). But Reese Witherspoon or Steve Carell? Um — no.

Or, at least, not now. It would be tragic to expect our current sensibilities to be permanent. If we are truly making progress, then we have to allow that the past becomes history, power relations change, and minstrelsy is too antique to be relevant to our current existences.

In some future time we should have no problem with a talented white man playing the lead in “A Raisin in the Sun,” a white woman cast as Representative Barbara Jordan, or white people singing in “Porgy and Bess.” I didn’t say tomorrow — but sometime.

Whites already talk ever more like Black people, dance ever more like Black people, greet one another ever more like Black people, marry ever more Black people and create ever more half-Black people. There is no reason to assume there is some point at which this melangerie will — or must — halt, regardless of inevitable holdout bigotry. A natural next step would be for white people to be able to portray Black people in performance. Maybe it will be too late for Ryan Gosling to play Barack Obama — but someone like him.

“Everyone expects the Jews to be the only real Christians in this world,” observed the philosopher Eric Hoffer in 1968. That remains true today. Hatred of Israel has become the sty in Western eyes that, as it grows larger, risks making too many people blind.

StatsCan: Preterm births among mothers from racialized groups, 2016-2021

Useful analysis:

Data from the mother-centric data linkages show that:

Compared with mothers aged 25-34, proportions of singleton preterm births were higher for mothers aged 35-39 and 40+ among all racialized groups and non-racialized, non-Indigenous mothers, whereas for mothers under 25, the increase was observed only in non-racialized, non-Indigenous mothers. 

In Canada, the proportions of single births (i.e., singleton births) that were preterm (<37 weeks) were higher among South Asian (6.9%) and Black mothers (6.3%) compared with non-racialized, non-Indigenous mothers (5.5%).

All racialized groups of mothers had higher proportions of extremely and very preterm singleton births (<32 weeks) compared with non-racialized, non-Indigenous mothers.

The proportion of preterm multiple births was more common among South Asian mothers than among non-racialized, non-Indigenous mothers (69.2% vs 58.2%).

The Canadian Armed Forces are right to experiment around recruitment

Nice contrarian and thoughtful discussion compared to the standard outrage largely by right-leaning politicians and media:

…The report was written by the commander of the school responsible for basic military qualifications. It outlined how changes in entry standards, which started in 2022 with the opening of the military to permanent residents, affected training outcomes. The bottom line stood in sharp contrast with the optimism Canadian generals displayed a week prior: the completion rate of basic training declined from a historical average of 85 per cent to 77 per cent. 

These findings sent shockwaves through the defence community, and raised questions around the quality of recruits and future operational effectiveness. But the reaction may miss two key points. First, the report demonstrates that, despite changes in standards to admissions, criteria for success at basic training have not changed. 

Second, the report reflects an important shift toward risk-taking, learning, and adaptation within the military. This is what we want for an organization that wants to win the next war. As retired Australian general Mick Ryan noted in assessing the war in Ukraine, “[a]daptation is THE critical contemporary and future capability for nations and their military organizations to win in war.”

The reality is that any modernization plan must address the critical personnel deficiency that has plagued the CAF for the past 30 years, starting with the poorly managed drawdown of the 1990s. Its effects have been crippling and wide-ranging; contributing to low readiness rates among units and systems, poor morale, high attrition rates, and the delayed transition to new capabilities. Without a robust pool of military personnel to fill existing skill deficiencies, as well as emerging ones as the CAF introduces new capabilities, any effort to create a modern fighting force will continue to stall. Thus, innovation in how the military recruits and trains is an essential element towards this objective.

Immigrants less likely to support freedom of gender expression than people born in Canada: StatCan

Of interest:

…The findings, published in Statistics Canada’s Juristat, were based on self-reported data from the 2018 and 2025 Survey of Safety in Public and Private Spaces (SSPPS). The survey examined how attitudes toward gender-related issues have changed over time.

When it came to gender expression, people born in Canada were more likely to agree with statements supporting people’s rights to gender expression than those born elsewhere.

The survey found that 80 per cent of women and 71 per cent of men born in Canada agreed that individuals should be able to express their gender however they choose, compared to 70 per cent of women and 67 per cent of men born outside the country.

In addition, a larger proportion of First Nations women (82 per cent) than non-Indigenous women (77 per cent) supported people’s right to express their gender.

The survey also found that support people being able to express their gender however they choose has declined in recent years.

The percentage of women who agreed that people should have this right decreased from 85 per cent to 77 per cent between 2018 and 2025, while support among men dropped from 78 per cent to 70 per cent.

A Muslim wage gap? New study exposes major economic disparities in Greater Toronto and Hamilton

Would be more useful if the tables did not just have the dichotomy between Muslim and non-Muslim for compare for all religious groups. When I did an intersectionality between religious affiliation, visible minorities status and citizenship (all of Canada), it indicated that there was a gap across most visible minority groups.

Muslim Canadians in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area earn less and face greater unemployment and poverty compared to non-Muslims despite higher education levels, gaps that a new report suggests are rooted in systemic racism and Islamophobia.

Overall, 51 per cent of Muslims in prime working age who are employed full time hold post-secondary degrees, compared to 40.5 per cent among non-Muslims, according to data extrapolated from the 2021 census.

Yet they had a median employment income of $61,000, $12,000 less than their non-Muslim counterparts. The aggregate annual income loss could amount to $1.2 billion a year, said the report, which offers a rare glimpse at the economic well-being of a religious minority in Canada. …

Black reps left off federal advisory council on rights, equality and inclusion

Not unexpected and from the usual advocates:

Advocates are calling for Black representation and a more inclusive mandate for the federal government’s new Advisory Council on Rights, Equality and Inclusion.

The calls follow the federal government’s announcement on June 1 of the new advisory council that did not include Black representatives.

Advocates also slammed the federal government for neglecting to include anti-Black racism in the council’s mandate.

“Anti-Black racism was not explicitly identified. At some point, omission becomes difficult to distinguish from indifference,” Nicholas Marcus Thompson, co-chair of the National Employment Equity Council, told reporters in a news conference on June 4.

Indigenous

Aaron Pete: Criminalizing residential school ‘denialism’ won’t help reconciliation

Not the mainstream Indigenous perspective but a valuable one:

A healthier path would be more demanding, but also more democratic: better education, better records, more transparency, more excavation where appropriate, more serious journalism and more honest public dialogue, all carried out in a spirit of kindness, which is the Canadian way. We should confront hatred firmly without turning every difficult or uncomfortable question into a potential criminal matter.

Reconciliation will not be advanced by fear. It will be advanced by truth, humility and mutual responsibility. Canadians should not prejudge one another or assume the worst of intent. This is our shared country, and we all have a duty to seek truth, guard against government overreach and debate complex issues civilly.

The history of residential schools deserves seriousness. So does freedom of expression. A confident democracy should be able to protect both.

Aaron Pete is Chief of Chawathil First Nation in B.C.’s Fraser Valley.

While I was away: Immigration

Some immigration articles I found interesting:

Regg Cohn | The history of humanity is the story of human migration

Reminder of the complexities of human migration and family histories:

Nakba Day has come and gone, but the controversy lives on in New York City of all places.

Mayor Zohran Mamdani posted to social media a story about the Nakba, which is how Arabs describe the “catastrophe” of Israel’s creation (under the UN) and the fallout for displaced Palestinians. His office produced a four-minute profile of Inea Bushnaq, a Palestinian American “Nakba survivor” living in New York.

Controversy erupted over the mayor platforming Bushnaq as the embodiment of the Palestinian diaspora, because it turns out her family roots were first Bosnian (of which Bushnaq is a transliteration). Invoking the vernacular of today, critics described her family as “European settler-colonizers” in the Holy Land….

Canada’s top-skilled workers are leaving for the U.S. in droves for lower taxes and higher pay: TD study

More evidence of Canada being a “farm team:

A new report from TD Economics warns that Canada is losing its highest-skilled workers, entrepreneurs, and STEM graduates to the United States through a slow, largely invisible syphoning—calling the phenomenon a “silent brain drain.” The crisis, it argues, is less about who Canada can attract than who it fails to keep.

Much of the outflow never registers in Statistics Canada’s emigration data because it occurs through U.S. employer-sponsored work visas—temporary and semi-permanent pathways that conventional brain drain metrics simply don’t capture. Of the partial data Statistics Canada was able to retrieve, the agency determined that, in 2023, 18,590 Canadian residents emigrated to the U.S. permanently, with 30 percent of those people not being born in Canada.

Despite net migration to the U.S. lowering in recent years, the trend of top talent—which helps drive GDP growth—leaving Canada has not.

“Canada is not hollowing out; it is spilling out at the top,” the TD report states. “Absent progress on this front, Canada will continue to be a feeder system for the U.S. innovation economy.”…

Immigration lawyers say automation is partly driving a massive Federal Court backlog

Wonder how many immigration lawyers themselves are using AI. Given the large numbers of permanent and temporary residents, even reduced, AI has to be part of any immigration program management, and as Kahneman and others have noted, automated systems generate more consistent results than humans and arguably, if well designed, better and fairer decisions:

The number of immigration cases being brought to Federal Court has more than quadrupled since 2020 — and some immigration lawyers are linking the surge in part to the federal government’s use of artificial intelligence and automation to clear visa application backlogs.

Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada insists that technology is not to blame and that multiple factors are driving the boom in legal challenges of the department’s decisions.

About 6,400 immigration cases were brought to Federal Court in 2020, a figure in line with the trend over the previous decade. The caseload spiked sharply in 2021, when 9,700 cases were sent to the court.

More than 28,000 cases were filed with the court last year and more than 6,600 were filed in the first quarter of 2026. The vast majority of these cases are not refugee matters….

Douglas Todd: The Century Initiative changes its headline-grabbing tune on hiking Canadian migration

As someone who has following CI over the years, as well as one of the early critics, I was pleased to participate in this study given that it reflects their having now adopted a more realistic and nuanced position:

…No longer, Meggs said, is the organization emphasizing its headline-grabbing “100-million-by-2100” target. Nor, she said, is it declaring that “Canada is shrinking in population and in the world,” or that “our workforce is shrinking.” It’s also dropped “economic growth is tied to population growth” and “population growth is tied to our quality of life.”

Meggs said the Century Initiative is shifting to more nuanced expressions about the pros of migration. They include that it is necessary to “strengthen our workforce and build talent pipelines” and, finally, that there is a place for “smart, responsible population growth.”

As Canadians become more educated about migration issues, it’s a welcome sign that this influential organization is realizing it needs to tone down its lopsided, simplistic rhetoric.

Éditorial | Un oui inclusif, et ça devient possible

Yes, as in the PQ of the 1970s:

,…Un projet de pays qui s’appuie sur d’aussi piètres bases n’a aucune chance de succès. Le Québec de 2026 n’a plus rien à voir avec la nation colonisée dont M. St-Pierre Plamondon évoque occasionnellement le souvenir. En table éditoriale avec Le Devoir, l’an dernier, il nous avait même confié à quel point il craignait la peur dans le prochain cycle politique. La peur que nous avons intériorisée comme nation et qui remonte à la pendaison des patriotes, disait-il. C’est comme si le miracle de la Révolution tranquille n’avait pas eu lieu. C’est comme si les chaînes de l’oppression n’avaient pas été brisées par la formidable machine à intégrer et à franciser que fut la Loi 101. C’est comme s’il fallait encore des porteurs d’eau, dans l’imaginaire péquiste, pour conjurer le destin et se dire « Oui ! » par un Grand soir.

Il y a encore mille et une raisons de militer pour la souveraineté, serait-ce seulement parce que langue, culture, institutions distinctes et occupation du territoire sur le long temps de l’histoire ont produit une nation unique, singulière, capable d’assumer son destin et d’accéder au statut de pays si une majorité de ses concitoyens le désirent ardemment. Cette nation forte reste aussi fragile en sa qualité de principale héritière du fait français en Amérique du Nord, minoritaire sur un continent de locuteurs anglophones. Elle ne se sentira jamais protégée par un gouvernemental fédéral centralisateur, verrouillé dans le multiculturalisme à la Trudeau père, qui renvoie la nation québécoise au rang du folklore.

Par contre, un Québec qui aspire à la souveraineté devrait additionner les voix au lieu de les soustraire. Il devrait tendre la main, investir avec conviction dans la francisation et la culture, se vouer corps et âme à l’interculturalisme dont il se prétend le champion. Au contraire, le discours ambiant, aussi bien sous l’ex-gouvernement de François Legault que dans l’imaginaire de Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, entretient un malheureux clivage.

Selon Statistique Canada, les Québécois issus de l’immigration représentent désormais près de 15 % de la population (1,21 million de personnes). Dans la région de Montréal, une personne sur quatre est issue de l’immigration. Le Québec tout entier est en profonde mutation sociodémographique, passant d’une société homogène à une société diversifiée. C’est un changement structurel irréversible qui pose des enjeux d’intégration, de cohésion et d’adaptation des institutions démocratiques. C’est aussi une formidable occasion d’élargir la passion et le sentiment d’appartenance pour le Québec, sa langue, sa culture, dans le respect des droits des minorités et des peuples autochtones.

« Nous avons remplacé la fierté par la fermeture », souligne le rapport du OUI Québec. Les formations politiques qui ne l’ont pas encore compris vivent sur du temps emprunté, et elles fragilisent le projet de pays qu’elles aspirent à bâtir avec noblesse.”

IRCC

IRCC gave up office space in January. Now, it can’t accommodate RTO-4

Sigh…

A few months before delaying its four-day return-to-office due to lack of space, the federal immigration department gave up 12 floors of real estate across two downtown Ottawa office buildings.

According to an August 2025 slideshow obtained by the Ottawa Citizen through the Access to Information Act, the department was required to return the floors to the government’s central property manager to meet its obligations under a federal plan to cut back on office space.

In support of the plan, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) chose to release 10.5 floors at 300 Slater Street and 1.5 floors at 180 Kent Street back to Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC).

IRCC confirmed it completed the full release by the end of January.

But a few months later, the department had to delay the start of the government-wide four-day return-to-office mandate for most public servants because it didn’t have enough space to fit them.

The documents provide a glimpse into the internal gymnastics happening behind the scenes as federal departments attempt to bring workers back into the office more often, after trying for years to cut back on space.