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2025-02-23 0
Vermont is another entry point.\nNot easy...India is not at war with anyone or most of these nations and according to UN if they are refugees like I was after war in Bosnia you seek shelter in neighboring nations that share same or similar culture,language and traditions.\nIts by UN Law, yet they are flown in somehow,especially Chinese and many other citizens, all military age males as well. That make their way up the souther trails from Venezuela and pass through D. Pass, often even busses with Chinese funded CCP money.
2025-02-13 0
Stop blaming other countries… we need to find our own mistakes… then we have at least little hope to change our mindset….we have habit of blaming others for our own mistakes..if you are not fitting in the rule- regulations of visa process of- course it will get rejected… most people have fake paper work for visas. \n\nSimple example… if someone enter illegally in our country we will call them terrorist … some countries put them in jail according to illegal act… I appreciate that they are sending them back to their own country… actually we should thank them for saving these people future.\n\nMaharashtra took a step earlier when they send UP citizens out of Maharashtra… in their own country they cannot go to other state.. how you think other countries should let them enter illegally n not take any action… I think we should think before saying anything.\n\nIllegally enter people don’t pay tax… indirectly they put so much pressure on health n other systems…we the tax payer bear that cost.. is that fare ? \n\nThey don’t follow rules of country… they behave similar how they behave in India … they don’t follow health- hygiene , equality rules.\n\nOur country more diverse but no equality… still people get priority based on reach- poor or on caste basis.\n\nIn other country any Indian do something exceptional then we say they are Indian… but no one think that they got that opportunity to prove themself because they were in other country… in our country people doesn’t get opportunity based on their calibre… \n\nWe have habit that we go abroad… earn money… get ideas of business n going back to India we say that’s our own idea… no appreciation at all… so many new businesses has got ideas from other developed countries but no courtesy to appreciate others or thank them.\n\nEven our news channels… everything is happening first time in the world… even it happens so many year earlier in other countries….some people they really don’t know n they believe that…. It’s just playing with people emotions… not providing real information… we all are human beings… we need to appreciate each other… \n\nThese countries have some rules n regulations for human beings to develop equality n equal opportunities. Most of the NRI appreciate that as we haven’t got that in our own country.
2025-02-12 0
Very curious, the similarities between the two cases....
2025-02-10 0
Something similar happened at a conference, in either Central America, or South America, during the US presidency of George W. Bush of 2001 to 2009. A US Secret Service agent was similarly barred from following George W. Bush into the conference room.\n\nA hawk eyed and alert George W. Bush realised this and would hear nothing of it. George W. Bush personally stepped in and briefly scuffled with the security at the conference room entrance, after which the US Secret Service agent was immediately let through.\n\nI was impressed with the way George W. Bush stepped in.\n\nRegards, Michael M. Kamau, Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa, 10th February 2025.
2025-02-08 0
This is what happens when a country uses people and they try to get rid of them. Similar stuff happened when slaves were freed it was called a civil war
2025-02-08 0
Saudi Arabia is also deporting illegal migrants in a similar way.\nThis is how the world works. Be it a democratic nation state, be it a dictatorial nation state, or be it even a monarchial nation state.\nIt's not an American thing.\nWake up CNN!
2025-02-07 0
This is very upsetting. From stories I heard from WW2 sounds very similar.
2025-02-05 0
Good decision by Trump. India government also perform similar deportation for the illegal immigrants in India as well
2025-02-05 0
Think before you place blame on others for their actions when you haven't taken similar steps yourself.\n\nMany people go abroad to earn money for their families. In India, scams are prevalent everywhere, including in government jobs. The gap between the rich and the poor continues to widen, with the poor becoming poorer and the rich becoming richer.
2025-02-05 0
The problem is throughout the Anglo World, USA, Canada, UK, Australia, and New Zealand, we are allowing millions of immigrants from the third world, when in fact if AI is going to take 70/80pct of jobs in the future we do not need immigrants from the third world at all. The fewer people we have, the more wealthy we are. The other problem is allowing immigrants from non-compatible cultures of people who do not share our values, culture, religion, or way of life, they generally live in their own areas, speak their own language, and do not/cannot integrate into society, most consider themselves as Indian, not Canadian because like for instance in the UK where we have similar or worse problems, they can never be English, or Scottish, or Welsh or Northern Irish. We are not and never have been nations of ''communities'', we are Canadian, American British, and Australian, but we are all connected in our Judeo-Christian roots, values, culture, and way of life, the vast majority of these third-world immigrants can never be part of what we are. That causes resentment, even jealousy, and one day it will end badly
2025-02-05 0
are all these hardened criminals? too much chain US law enforcement is similar to their wicked criminal president overacting.....why not put these chains to around your beloved convicted criminal in the white house
2025-02-05 0
People keep saying it’s racist and anti immigrant but as a former expat, you’re out of touch with reality if you think Americans can stay somewhere illegally or can overstay our visas and just live in the host country. Please, they would have been at my door the same day it expired. Idc where you’re from if you’re here illegally you need to go. Like it’s absurd that this is even an argument. Why are Americans so soft hearted on this issue? More of us need to live in other countries to see how other places handle it because it is definitely not similar.
2025-02-04 0
In reality at first sight.... I thought this was the J6 crowd entering the capital. There is a lot of similarity .
2025-02-04 0
Very good decision by US ..\nIndia should follow similar approach to get rid of illegal immigrants.
2025-02-02 0
Am i the only one that recognizes what's going on as very similar to Germany in the early 1930s?
2025-02-02 0
Do you honestly think if they get back? 20 million people who've been free loading off of America and say that it's only 10 million. It's been free loading and the other 10 have been working people. Do you think that that's a good thing for their economy if they go back home?\n Is it gonna make it easier on Mexico if they go back home? Are you a parent?Have you ever seen when your children want their way?And they can't get it how they respond.This is very similar
2025-02-02 0
Look at North Korea, a leader similar to Trump, thinking his country is so amazing it’s able to be self sufficient. They are destitute. This is a bad, bad, bad economic choice Trump is making.
2025-02-02 0
I’d like to see Canada exert a similar demand … that Americans keep its guns out of our country.
2025-02-01 0
Canadian here while I support what the PM is doing, I don’t think a tit for tat solution is enough. Canada needs to look for other trading partners like China. Let’s have a free trade agreement with them and rip up USMCA. That’ll fix the trade deficit overnight. Similar thing for military we can save the Pentagon billions by leaving NORAD and NATO and building a strategic joint defence agreement with China.
2025-02-01 0
I think we could already be part into a Great Depression 2... there are so many similarities between now and 1929...protectionism and tariffs is just one similarity..
2025-02-01 0
Trump’s tariffs (/geo-economic warfare)—and his desire to annex Canada and Greenland and seize back control of the Panama Canal—has got little to do with immigration or drugs coming into the US (whatever happened to Build the Wall?) especially in the case of Canada. It’s about debt and power, the former growing, the latter fading. Trump himself has said tariffs are a means to make America wealthy and to abolish income tax. It’s got to do with America living outside its means with massive deficits and ballooning debt, and rather than take responsibility for that, the US thinks others should pay (when US consumers will) for it to continue to live outside its means, while it cuts taxes largely to the benefit of the wealthy... \nRemember when Iraq invaded Kuwait, how it said it was because Kuwait (and the United Arab Emirates) caused a drop in oil prices with the overproduction of crude oil, thus impacting Iraq’s ability to pay its debts and recover from the Iran-Iraq war, but really it was about seizing Kuwait’s large oil reserves, canceling the debt it owed Kuwait, and expanding its power in the region… Sound similar?
2025-02-01 0
By the way in the USA you pay taxes a lot to. Its very similar to Canada ?? when it comes to work and taxes
2025-01-31 0
I remember something similar in Germany in the 1930s... concentration camps were called.
2025-01-31 0
Twenty years ago in Toronto, a one-bedroom apartment could be rented for around $700 a month. Today, a similar apartment costs between $2,500 and $3,000 per month. The government should regulate housing market investments to prevent the pursuit of profits at the expense of ordinary people. \nWith the large influx of immigrants of all kinds, there is increasing pressure on families and individuals to rent or buy housing. For instance, in one neighbourhood, a house has been fitted with two bunk beds per room, with the owner charging $500 to $700 per bed. One can only imagine how many people live in that house and what it looks like in the summer when everyone gathers in the backyard. \nIf the government fails to regulate immigration to align with the real needs of the economy and housing market, what’s next? May people be forced to rent a bed for just eight hours of sleep or resort to living in sheds or makeshift plastic tents on the streets? \nAnd when the economy takes a downturn, leaving people with no income, what will happen then?
2025-01-30 0
There is in fact no actual housing shortage in the USA whatsoever. The problem is that that wealthy individuals have strong incentives to park excess capital in real estate and landlords have strong incentives to maintain asset values through cash flow potential (appraised through $/sq.ft rent revenues). What ends up happening in both cases is that you end up with lots of empty houses sitting collecting dust artificially gaining value due to scarcity, and with rentals, you end up with perpetually inflated rents and vacancy rates that are as high as a landlord can tolerate just to maintain the appearance of value to the lenders. Often these owners will borrow more money and use an apartment that might be 40% vacant as the collateral for the lender and go buy another building and so on. What people don't penalize is the fact that that 40% vacant building with 60% rented out at above fair value gets treated on the balance sheet to the bank as if its 90% rented out from an asset value perspective thereby setting the asset price artificially high. Simple legislation of the tax code can fix this issue and unlock lots of sidelined housing. All we have to do is progressively tax 2nd 3rd 4th ect. homes higher and higher rates that essentially cancel out the asset gains, and do something similar for vacant units in a apartment building. \nIts just at the core a case of the rich hoarding something that has been made artificially rare. On top of all of this, because of how valuable properties have become, there are now many interests that capitalize on the entire process of building new housing that make it ever more expensive. Our taxes are funding numerous regulators that stymie new development, while the developers have to then hire numerous attorneys and planners to pitch a project and litigate it through the cities to get approvals. This can take over 10 years in a major city. All this contributes to the ridiculous costs of building these days.
2025-01-29 0
Is this person Kaitlyns sister. They look very similar ?
2025-01-29 0
Kaitlyn similar to an angry looking dude from the neck up??
2025-01-29 0
Why is Sir Mark Thompson and the British influencing cultural trends in the United States? Given the challenges the UK has faced, should we be cautious about adopting similar influences?
2025-01-28 0
There are a lot of decent countries that speak the same language and have very similar cultures between Venezuela and the US. It would make starting your life over so much easier so that really begs the question why are they making that dangerous journey to the US? Seems really odd to me. Almost like there's something else going on.
2025-01-27 0
Another similarity that can trip up first time visitors. The price you see is often not the price you have to pay. Both countries often add taxes to the purchases. That $10 item becomes $11 in the US or $11.50 in Canada. In most other countries taxes are included in the posted price.
2025-01-26 0
United States Imports from Colombia was US$16.96 Billion during 2023, according to the United Nations COMTRADE database on international trade. United States Imports from Colombia - data, historical chart and statistics - was last updated on January of 2025.\nUnited States Imports from Colombia\tValue\tYear\nMineral fuels, oils, distillation products\t$7.19B\t2023\nPearls, precious stones, metals, coins\t$1.86B\t2023\nLive trees, plants, bulbs, roots, cut flowers\t$1.57B\t2023\nCoffee, tea, mate and spices\t$1.42B\t2023\nCommodities not specified according to kind\t$672.77M\t2023\nAluminum\t$637.48M\t2023\nEdible fruits, nuts, peel of citrus fruit, melons\t$422.14M\t2023\nElectrical, electronic equipment\t$296.99M\t2023\nMiscellaneous edible preparations\t$232.35M\t2023\nPlastics\t$219.92M\t2023\nSugars and sugar confectionery\t$210.41M\t2023\nFish, crustaceans, molluscs, aquatics invertebrates\t$161.84M\t2023\nVegetable, fruit, nut food preparations\t$142.83M\t2023\nArticles of apparel, not knit or crocheted\t$138.16M\t2023\nArticles of iron or steel\t$123.48M\t2023\nArticles of apparel, knit or crocheted\t$119.17M\t2023\nAnimal, vegetable fats and oils, cleavage products\t$113.76M\t2023\nGlass and glassware\t$100.87M\t2023\nSoaps, lubricants, waxes, candles, modelling pastes\t$100.15M\t2023\nSalt, sulphur, earth, stone, plaster, lime and cement\t$90.57M\t2023\nPaper and paperboard, articles of pulp, paper and board\t$72.53M\t2023\nOrganic chemicals\t$71.70M\t2023\nFurniture, lighting signs, prefabricated buildings\t$70.78M\t2023\nMiscellaneous chemical products\t$70.75M\t2023\nMachinery, nuclear reactors, boilers\t$67.83M\t2023\nOther made textile articles, sets, worn clothing\t$63.70M\t2023\nCereal, flour, starch, milk preparations and products\t$58.97M\t2023\nRubbers\t$47.42M\t2023\nProducts of animal origin\t$41.92M\t2023\nMiscellanneous manufactured articles\t$41.83M\t2023\nEssential oils, perfumes, cosmetics, toileteries\t$36.39M\t2023\nWorks of art, collectors' pieces and antiques\t$34.02M\t2023\nCeramic products\t$31.89M\t2023\nCocoa and cocoa preparations\t$29.24M\t2023\nOil seed, oleagic fruits, grain, seed, fruits\t$25.71M\t2023\nEdible vegetables and certain roots and tubers\t$23.51M\t2023\nVehicles other than railway, tramway\t$22.54M\t2023\nPharmaceutical products\t$20.47M\t2023\nBeverages, spirits and vinegar\t$20.14M\t2023\nImpregnated, coated or laminated textile fabric\t$18.21M\t2023\nResidues, wastes of food industry, animal fodder\t$18.06M\t2023\nStone, plaster, cement, asbestos, mica or similar materials\t$17.35M\t2023\nPrinted books, newspapers, pictures\t$15.83M\t2023\nOptical, photo, technical, medical apparatus\t$15.55M\t2023\nIron and steel\t$15.47M\t2023\nMeat, fish and seafood preparations\t$14.51M\t2023\nArticles of leather, animal gut, harness, travel good\t$14.36M\t2023\nAlbuminoids, modified starches, glues, enzymes\t$14.06M\t2023\nInorganic chemicals, precious metal compound, isotope\t$14.05M\t2023\nWood and articles of wood, wood charcoal\t$12.40M\t2023\nToys, games, sports requisites\t$12.28M\t2023\nTanning, dyeing extracts, tannins, derivatives, pigments\t$12.27M\t2023\nFootwear, gaiters and the like,\t$10.61M\t2023\nMilling products, malt, starches, inlin, wheat gluten\t$10.38M\t2023\nTools, implements, cutlery of base metal\t$9.72M\t2023\nShips, boats, and other floating structures\t$8.34M\t2023\nDairy products, eggs, honey, edible products\t$7.14M\t2023\nManmade filaments\t$5.70M\t2023\nRaw hides and skins (other than furskins) and leather\t$5.14M\t2023\nMiscellaneous articles of base metal\t$4.79M\t2023\nCopper\t$4.11M\t2023\nFurskins and artificial fur, manufactures\t$4.10M\t2023\nCarpets and other textile floor coverings\t$3.60M\t2023\nHeadgear and\t$3.58M\t2023\nAircraft, spacecraft\t$1.83M\t2023\nWadding, felt, nonwovens, yarns, twine, cordage\t$1.40M\t2023\nSpecial woven or tufted fabric, lace, tapestry\t$1.29M\t2023\nLive animals\t$1.17M\t2023\nKnitted or crocheted fabric\t$1.08M\t2023\nFertilizers\t$938.13K\t2023\nOres slag and ash\t$857.82K\t2023\nTobacco and manufactures tobacco substitutes\t$478.77K\t2023\nRailway, tramway locomotives, rolling stock, equipment\t$475.06K\t2023\nManufacturers of plaiting material, basketwork\t$464.70K\t2023\nVegetable plaiting materials, vegetable products\t$451.42K\t2023\nArms and ammunition, parts and accessories\t$385.5K\t2023\nBase metals not specified elsewhere, cermets.\t$281.07K\t2023\nBird skin, feathers, artificial flowers, human hair\t$190.40K\t2023\nLac, gums, resins\t$169.96K\t2023\nMusical instruments, parts and accessories\t$120.13K\t2023\nNickel\t$117.08K\t2023\nUmbrellas, walking-sticks, seat-sticks, whips\t$89.80K\t2023\nClocks and watches\t$54.95K\t2023\nCereals\t$46.18K\t2023\nManmade staple fibers\t$33.78K\t2023\nCotton\t$30.58K\t2023\nVegetable textile fibers not specified elsewhere, paper yarn, woven fabric\t$10.97K\t2023\nWool, animal hair, horsehair yarn and fabric\t$2K\t2023\nLead\t$529.50K\t2022\nPulp of wood, fibrous cellulosic material, waste\t$286.12K\t2022\nMeat and edible meat offal\t$29.48K\t2022\nTin\t$6.46K\t2022\nSilk\t$4.44K\t2022\nCork and articles of cork\t$2.85K\t2022\nPhotographic or cinematographic goods\t$2.39K\t2022\nExplosives, pyrotechnics, matches, pyrophorics\t$47.00K\t2021\nZinc\t$5.14K\t2019
2025-01-26 0
Seriously, no one notices the similarities in the tactics applied in the 1930s by an infamous political party in Central Europe?
2025-01-26 0
This is invasion. India may face similar wave from Pakistan and Bangladesh, GOI better be prepared to repel them.
2025-01-26 0
there are dark tunnels similar to Nazi camps Hamas and Nazis are the same
2025-01-26 0
Events in the USA are growing in similarity to what occured in a certain European country in the ealry 1930's..... and we all know how that turned out !!!
2025-01-26 0
United States Imports from Colombia\tValue\n\t \nMineral fuels, oils, distillation products\t$7.19B\t \nPearls, precious stones, metals, coins\t$1.86B\t \nLive trees, plants, bulbs, roots, cut flowers\t$1.57B\t \nCoffee, tea, mate and spices\t$1.42B\t2023 \nCommodities not specified according to kind\t$672.77M\t \nAluminum\t$637.48M\t2023 \nEdible fruits, nuts, peel of citrus fruit, melons\t $422.14M\t \nElectrical, electronic equipment\t$296.99M\t \nMiscellaneous edible preparations\t$232.35M\t \nPlastics\t$219.92M\t2023 \nSugars and sugar confectionery\t$210.41M\t \nFish, crustaceans, molluscs, aquatics invertebrates\t$161.84M\t \nVegetable, fruit, nut food preparations\t$142.83M\t \nArticles of apparel, not knit or crocheted\t$138.16M\t \nArticles of iron or steel\t$123.48M\t \nArticles of apparel, knit or crocheted\t$119.17M\t \nAnimal, vegetable fats and oils, cleavage products\t$113.76M\t \nGlass and glassware\t$100.87M\t2023 \nSoaps, lubricants, waxes, candles, modelling pastes\t$100.15M\t \nSalt, sulphur, earth, stone, plaster, lime and cement\t$90.57M\t \nPaper and paperboard, articles of pulp, paper and board\t$72.53M\t \nOrganic chemicals\t$71.70M\t \nFurniture, lighting signs, prefabricated buildings\t$70.78M\t \nMiscellaneous chemical products\t$70.75M\t \nMachinery, nuclear reactors, boilers\t$67.83M\t \nOther made textile articles, sets, worn clothing\t$63.70M\t \nCereal, flour, starch, milk preparations and products\t$58.97M\t \nRubbers\t$47.42M\t \nProducts of animal origin\t$41.92M\t \nMiscellaneous manufactured articles\t$41.83M\t \nEssential oils, perfumes, cosmetics, toiletries\t$36.39M\t \nWorks of art, collectors' pieces and antiques\t$34.02M\t \nCeramic products\t$31.89M \nCocoa and cocoa preparations\t$29.24M\t \nOil seed, oleagic fruits, grain, seed, fruits\t$25.71M\t \nEdible vegetables and certain roots and tubers\t$23.51M\t \nVehicles other than railway, tramway\t$22.54M\t \nPharmaceutical products\t$20.47M\t \nBeverages, spirits and vinegar\t$20.14M\t \nImpregnated, coated or laminated textile fabric\t$18.21M\t \nResidues, wastes of food industry, animal fodder\t$18.06M\t \nStone, plaster, cement, asbestos, mica or similar materials\t$17.35M\t \nPrinted books, newspapers, pictures\t$15.83M\t \nOptical, photo, technical, medical apparatus\t$15.55M\t \nIron and steel\t$15.47M\t \nMeat, fish and seafood preparations\t$14.51M \nArticles of leather, animal gut, harness, travel good\t$14.36M\t \nAlbuminoids, modified starches, glues, enzymes\t$14.06M\t \nInorganic chemicals, precious metal compound, isotope\t$14.05M\t \nWood and articles of wood, wood charcoal\t$12.40M\t \nToys, games, sports requisites\t$12.28M\t \nTanning, dyeing extracts, tannins, derivatives, pigments\t$12.27M\t \nFootwear, gaiters and the like,\t$10.61M\t \nMilling products, malt, starches, inlin, wheat gluten\t$10.38M\t \nTools, implements, cutlery of base metal\t$9.72M\t \nShips, boats, and other floating structures\t$8.34M \nDairy products, eggs, honey, edible products\t$7.14M \nManmade filaments\t$5.70M\t2023 \nRaw hides and skins (other than furskins) and leather\t$5.14M\t \nMiscellaneous articles of base metal\t$4.79M\t \nCopper\t$4.11M\t \nFurskins and artificial fur, manufactures\t$4.10M\t \nCarpets and other textile floor coverings\t$3.60M\t \nHeadgear and\t$3.58M\t \nAircraft, spacecraft\t$1.83M\t \nWadding, felt, nonwovens, yarns, twine, cordage\t$1.40M\t \nSpecial woven or tufted fabric, lace, tapestry\t$1.29M \nLive animals\t$1.17M\t \nKnitted or crocheted fabric\t$1.08M\t \nFertilizers\t$938.13K\t \nOres slag and ash\t$857.82K\t \nTobacco and manufactures tobacco substitutes\t$478.77K\t \nRailway, tramway locomotives, rolling stock, equipment\t$475.06K\t \nManufacturers of plaiting material, basketwork\t$464.70K\t \nVegetable plaiting materials, vegetable products\t$451.42K\t \nArms and ammunition, parts and accessories\t$385.5K\t \nBase metals not specified elsewhere, cermets.\t$281.07K\t \nBird skin, feathers, artificial flowers, human hair\t$190.40K\t \nLac, gums, resins\t$169.96K\t \nMusical instruments, parts and accessories\t$120.13K\t \nNickel\t$117.08K\t \nUmbrellas, walking-sticks, seat-sticks, whips\t$89.80K\t \nClocks and watches\t$54.95K\t \nCereals\t$46.18K\t2023 \nManmade staple fibers\t$33.78K \nCotton\t$30.58K\t2023 \nVegetable textile fibers not specified elsewhere, paper yarn, woven fabric\t$10.97K \nWool, animal hair, horsehair yarn and fabric\t$2K\t \nLead\t$529.50K\t \nPulp of wood, fibrous cellulosic material, waste\t$286.12K\t \nMeat and edible meat offal\t$29.48K\t \nTin\t$6.46K\t \nSilk\t$4.44K\t \nCork and articles of cork\t$2.85K\t \nPhotographic or cinematographic goods\t$2.39K\t \nExplosives, pyrotechnics, matches, pyrophorics\t$47.00K\t \nZinc\t$5.14K
2025-01-25 0
We just want ballenced and fair immigration. We want people with similar vaules and customs. We want people with education. Wr dont need to have immigration for Subway and Tim Hortons workers. We want doctors. India has very different values and customs we dont want or aappreciate. They have no pubic sanitation but have a space program. They also have a very disrespectful culture towards women
2025-01-25 0
We recognize that Canada's issues may not be as dire as those currently plaguing the USA, but similar. Both countries have limited resources and cannot solve all of the world's problems. These opportunists must return to their own homes and work towards fixing their own countries.
2025-01-25 0
Twenty years ago in Toronto, a one-bedroom apartment could be rented for around $700 a month. Today, a similar apartment costs between $2,500 and $3,000 per month. The government should regulate housing market investments to prevent the pursuit of profits at the expense of ordinary people. \nWith the large influx of immigrants of all kinds, there is increasing pressure on families and individuals to rent or buy housing. For instance, in one neighbourhood, a house has been fitted with two bunk beds per room, with the owner charging $500 to $700 per bed. One can only imagine how many people live in that house and what it looks like in the summer when everyone gathers in the backyard. \nIf the government fails to regulate immigration to align with the real needs of the economy and housing market, what’s next? May people be forced to rent a bed for just eight hours of sleep or resort to living in sheds or makeshift plastic tents on the streets? \nAnd when the economy takes a downturn, leaving people with no income, what will happen then?
2025-01-25 0
The baseline is a that Canada has a responsibility to its citizens but has no obligation to foreign persons. Clearly more could be done with less by promptly rejecting of applications except for short list skill sets. Person with problematic political beliefs should be deported ASAP. Canada doesn’t need foreign demonstrators and Canada haters in the country and should take action similar to Italy.
2025-01-23 0
This is just a way to keep the per hour wage low to benefit the corporates, similar to the H1B issue in the US
2025-01-22 0
Why don't these western nations changes their immigration to similar to all nations of the Middle east. there's no pathway to citizenship. Employers submit manpower needs and they will be sponsored till they are needed. Their visas are every 2 years and will be renewed if needed. they can bring their families but the main family member will shoulder their expenses. When theyre not needed anymore, then they all go home. kids can go to school but they pay for it.
2025-01-22 0
These immigrants arrived legally and were granted legal status. In Canada, individuals must live in the country for five years before they can apply for citizenship. So, why should they be deported? I could understand if they had entered illegally and bypassed the proper legal process, but that is not the case here. Why would Canada adopt policies similar to those of Trump in the U.S.?\n\n-------\n@derekpam7149\nMy point is straightforward: these individuals followed the legal process to enter Canada and were granted legal status. They have adhered to the rules, and deporting them after they’ve done everything correctly seems unjust. Comparing this to Trump-era policies in the U.S. does not align with the values Canada upholds regarding fairness and due process. I’m asking why Canada would take such an approach when these people have complied with the law. Could you clarify what part of this seems complex to you? Perhaps you need to revisit your studies and review elementary education, as this is taught in schools. Canada is a 'land of immigrants.' It's part of history, long before you were born.\n\nI have no issues with deporting individuals who entered Canada illegally. However, these rules should not apply to people who migrated to Canada legally, are working as doctors, nurses, engineers, and so on, and are simply waiting for their citizenship. Your message is clearly irrelevant and discriminatory.
2025-01-19 0
Weird I keep seeing similarities between these tenants I just cant put my finger on it
2025-01-18 0
Schengen visas were away this way, I remember applying 10years back they were always stringent. And our application was similar to a textbook in thickness.
2025-01-18 0
India should reciprocate in a similar way as EU nations, New Zealand, Australia, and the USA, with the need of list of documentation and waiting times.
2025-01-18 0
I am sorry I am not able to understand the paradox. Less than an year ago you mentioned, in Oxford, that based upon your ‘personal yet unquantifiable’ experience at the UK border sic ‘where Indians were flaunting their passport and NONE of them in the self doubt of past century. the Immigration officer was a fan of India’? \n\nThen, your personal anecdotal account at an International stage doesn’t represent a tiny bit of reality. In most of the Schengen country we are called a ‘third world’ at immigration and always looked with a doubt. You dont have to travel these countries to get beyond your personal experience but just have a look at the queue at the US embassy in Delhi, and the way one is treated, you would have had your data. \n\nAnd now, in this video you say that a similar Immigration officer is denying visa to Indians. \n\nWhat changed in 8months?
2025-01-17 0
Many countries fed up with mass immigration of Indians corresponding with similar amount of illegal immigrants (Mainly from Punjab, Haryana and Gujarat). They don't add any value and it is a psychological war.
2025-01-17 0
These are just a few examples from many observations. I’ve noticed that some individuals from India may struggle to adapt to certain social norms when abroad. For instance, in quiet train compartments, they might speak loudly on their phones, disturbing others who are reading or seeking relaxation. Similarly, when renting accommodations, cleanliness is sometimes overlooked, leading to issues like attracting pests. To address such behaviors, it might be helpful for the Indian government to introduce programs that educate individuals on cultural etiquette and the importance of cleanliness before they move to countries in Europe or America. Please be more civilised ?
2025-01-16 0
Our passport ranking is similar to poor african nations what do you expect one of the worsts in the world . The government doesn't secure our countries borders to prevent illegal immigrants entering the nation and our some beloved Indians break rules and stay illegally in other countries . These are the situations of our country what do you expect from the developed world???
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