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Seriously?!?!
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Last post: May 13, 2024, 10:23:35 PM
Re: Seriously?!?! by Lokmar

avatar_DKG

Trudeau's legacy

Started by DKG, January 01, 2025, 02:11:18 PM

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Herman

We have had a lot of new regulations under Chairman Justine.

Brent

Trudeau got the result from this bs report that he paid for with our money.

QuoteNo 'traitors' in Parliament, but more steps needed to counter interference: report

OTTAWA — A federal inquiry has found no evidence there are "traitors" in Parliament conspiring with foreign states, dispelling suggestions to the contrary that alarmed the public.

In her final report released Tuesday, inquiry Commissioner Marie-Josée Hogue concludes that while the threat of foreign interference is real, Canada's democratic institutions have held up well against the dangers.

Hogue said she saw no indication the overall results of recent federal elections were altered by a foreign actor and she identified only a small number of ridings where interference may have had some effect.

She praised the dedication and competence of many public servants, but also pointed to shortcomings in government efforts to fend off foreign meddling.

Hogue found that the government sometimes reacted too slowly and that information did not always flow properly to policy-makers.

The report makes more that four dozen recommendations to improve federal preparedness, foster transparency, shore up electoral integrity and counter threats against diaspora communities.

Hogue calls on the Canadian Security Intelligence Service to clearly flag reports it views as particularly relevant for senior decision-makers.

She also calls on Ottawa to develop a whole-of-government foreign interference strategy, encourage political party leaders to obtain top secret-level security clearances, and consider creating a new agency to monitor online spaces for misinformation and disinformation.

"In my view it is no exaggeration to say that at this juncture, information manipulation (whether foreign or not) poses the single biggest risk to our democracy," the report says. "It is an existential threat."
https://www.msn.com/en-ca?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591
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Herman


DKG

Quote from: Brent on January 28, 2025, 01:33:40 PMTrudeau got the result from this bs report that he paid for with our money.
https://www.msn.com/en-ca?ocid=mailsignout&pc=U591
According to a CSIS report, there were eleven candidates "wiottingly working for the People's Republic of China" in the last federal Canadian election.

But, this new report says there is "no evidence of traitors" in our government.

Brent

The report was written for the Liberal Party.

Herman

This is whatr Trump demands Canada do something about or there will be tariffs.

Nearly 50,000 foreign students listed as 'no-shows' by Canadian schools
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-international-students-school-attendance-data/?utm_source=PaidSocial&utm_medium=FacebookAd&utm_campaign=traffic_mkt&utm_term=SCL&utm_content=keywee-loyaltyscore&utm_id=1&kwp_0=2446308&fbclid=IwY2xjawIJCNFleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHeKWMZv5ACeSkD4I8bnoczS7kCYn4aN2-mLmv0rA6eBVjMYDZzeIc5429A_aem_SHIZhntJHV4cCs_RbjWZRA

Close to 50,000 international students who received study permits to come to Canada were reported as "no-shows" at the colleges and universities where they were supposed to be taking their courses, according to government figures for two months last spring.

Numbers obtained by The Globe and Mail show that the non-compliant students made up 6.9 per cent of the total number of international students recorded by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

Universities and colleges are required by the immigration department to report twice a year on whether international students are enrolled and going to class in compliance with their study permits.

The International Student Compliance Regime, implemented in 2014, was designed to help spot bogus students and assist provinces in identifying questionable schools.

Table with 7 columns and 146 rows. Currently displaying rows 1 to 20. Including 1 sticky rows. Sorted descending by column "Non-Compliant"
Country of origin   Compliant   Non-Compliant   Not Reported *   Compliant rate   Non-compliant rate   Not-reported rate
Overall   644,349   49,676   23,514   89.8%   6.9%   3.3%
India   327,646   19,582   12,553   91.1%   5.4%   3.5%
China   62,519   4,279   466   93.0%   6.4%   0.7%
Nigeria   30,920   3,902   1,675   84.7%   10.7%   4.6%
Ghana   5,881   2,712   139   67.4%   31.1%   1.6%
Iran   14,039   1,848   88   87.9%   11.6%   0.6%
Democratic Rep. of Congo   2,176   1,166   7   65.0%   34.8%   0.2%
Bangladesh   11,948   984   157   91.3%   7.5%   1.2%
Vietnam   9,573   912   299   88.8%   8.5%   2.8%
Rwanda   840   802   24   50.4%   48.1%   1.4%
Philippines   28,373   688   2,078   91.1%   2.2%   6.7%
Algeria   2,133   676   4   75.8%   24.0%   0.1%
Mexico   10,084   583   112   93.6%   5.4%   1.0%
Cameroon   1,952   571   16   76.9%   22.5%   0.6%
Korea, South   7,291   552   230   90.3%   6.8%   2.8%
Jordan   1,127   509   118   64.3%   29.0%   6.7%
Nepal   17,024   469   2,659   84.5%   2.3%   13.2%
Colombia   7,646   465   428   89.5%   5.4%   5.0%
Pakistan   5,873   433   136   91.2%   6.7%   2.1%
Turkey   3,269   422   88   86.5%   11.2%   2.3%
* The number of students that colleges and universities did not report.
THE GLOBE AND MAIL  Source: Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada

In March and April of 2024, colleges and universities reported to IRCC on students from 144 countries. The top 10 countries of student origin with the greatest number of "no-shows" that spring had widely ranging non-compliance rates.

They included 2.2 per cent for Philippines (representing 688 no-show students); 6.4 per cent for China (4,279 no-shows); 11.6 per cent for Iran (1,848 no-shows); and 48.1 per cent for Rwanda (802 no-shows).

Henry Lotin, a former federal economist and expert on immigration, said one way to dampen abuse of the system would be to require international students to pay fees upfront before coming to Canada.

Of the total no-shows, almost 20,000 from India – 5.4 per cent of the total number of Indian students tracked by IRCC – were reported as non-compliant with their student visas and not attending schools where they were meant to be studying.

Indian law-enforcement officials said last month that they are investigating alleged links between dozens of colleges in Canada taking in international students and two "entities" in India alleged to be involved in illegally transporting people across the Canada-U.S. border. Instead of studying in Canada, the students allegedly crossed the border illegally into the United States.

The RCMP said in a statement that it has "reached out to India through its International Policing Liaison Officers to seek additional information on investigations."

Shen Li

Quote from: Herman on January 30, 2025, 08:41:29 PMThis is whatr Trump demands Canada do something about or there will be tariffs.

Nearly 50,000 foreign students listed as 'no-shows' by Canadian schools
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-international-students-school-attendance-data/?utm_source=PaidSocial&utm_medium=FacebookAd&utm_campaign=traffic_mkt&utm_term=SCL&utm_content=keywee-loyaltyscore&utm_id=1&kwp_0=2446308&fbclid=IwY2xjawIJCNFleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHeKWMZv5ACeSkD4I8bnoczS7kCYn4aN2-mLmv0rA6eBVjMYDZzeIc5429A_aem_SHIZhntJHV4cCs_RbjWZRA

Close to 50,000 international students who received study permits to come to Canada were reported as "no-shows" at the colleges and universities where they were supposed to be taking their courses, according to government figures for two months last spring.

Numbers obtained by The Globe and Mail show that the non-compliant students made up 6.9 per cent of the total number of international students recorded by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

Universities and colleges are required by the immigration department to report twice a year on whether international students are enrolled and going to class in compliance with their study permits.

The International Student Compliance Regime, implemented in 2014, was designed to help spot bogus students and assist provinces in identifying questionable schools.

Table with 7 columns and 146 rows. Currently displaying rows 1 to 20. Including 1 sticky rows. Sorted descending by column "Non-Compliant"
Country of origin   Compliant   Non-Compliant   Not Reported *   Compliant rate   Non-compliant rate   Not-reported rate
Overall   644,349   49,676   23,514   89.8%   6.9%   3.3%
India   327,646   19,582   12,553   91.1%   5.4%   3.5%
China   62,519   4,279   466   93.0%   6.4%   0.7%
Nigeria   30,920   3,902   1,675   84.7%   10.7%   4.6%
Ghana   5,881   2,712   139   67.4%   31.1%   1.6%
Iran   14,039   1,848   88   87.9%   11.6%   0.6%
Democratic Rep. of Congo   2,176   1,166   7   65.0%   34.8%   0.2%
Bangladesh   11,948   984   157   91.3%   7.5%   1.2%
Vietnam   9,573   912   299   88.8%   8.5%   2.8%
Rwanda   840   802   24   50.4%   48.1%   1.4%
Philippines   28,373   688   2,078   91.1%   2.2%   6.7%
Algeria   2,133   676   4   75.8%   24.0%   0.1%
Mexico   10,084   583   112   93.6%   5.4%   1.0%
Cameroon   1,952   571   16   76.9%   22.5%   0.6%
Korea, South   7,291   552   230   90.3%   6.8%   2.8%
Jordan   1,127   509   118   64.3%   29.0%   6.7%
Nepal   17,024   469   2,659   84.5%   2.3%   13.2%
Colombia   7,646   465   428   89.5%   5.4%   5.0%
Pakistan   5,873   433   136   91.2%   6.7%   2.1%
Turkey   3,269   422   88   86.5%   11.2%   2.3%
* The number of students that colleges and universities did not report.
THE GLOBE AND MAIL  Source: Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada

In March and April of 2024, colleges and universities reported to IRCC on students from 144 countries. The top 10 countries of student origin with the greatest number of "no-shows" that spring had widely ranging non-compliance rates.

They included 2.2 per cent for Philippines (representing 688 no-show students); 6.4 per cent for China (4,279 no-shows); 11.6 per cent for Iran (1,848 no-shows); and 48.1 per cent for Rwanda (802 no-shows).

Henry Lotin, a former federal economist and expert on immigration, said one way to dampen abuse of the system would be to require international students to pay fees upfront before coming to Canada.

Of the total no-shows, almost 20,000 from India – 5.4 per cent of the total number of Indian students tracked by IRCC – were reported as non-compliant with their student visas and not attending schools where they were meant to be studying.

Indian law-enforcement officials said last month that they are investigating alleged links between dozens of colleges in Canada taking in international students and two "entities" in India alleged to be involved in illegally transporting people across the Canada-U.S. border. Instead of studying in Canada, the students allegedly crossed the border illegally into the United States.

The RCMP said in a statement that it has "reached out to India through its International Policing Liaison Officers to seek additional information on investigations."
A lot of the Indian students with expired visas enter the US illegally.

Herman

Quote from: Shen Li on January 30, 2025, 11:36:12 PMA lot of the Indian students with expired visas enter the US illegally.
And the Trump administration knows that too.

Lokmar

Quote from: Shen Li on January 30, 2025, 11:36:12 PMA lot of the Indian students with expired visas enter the US illegally.

GTFO DOTS!!!!

Shen Li


Herman

This Paki is who should replace Justine.

Herman

He will be remembered as the worst and most selfish prime minister in Canadian history.