Sunday, 12 July 2026

Why Are We Recruiting Permanent Residents When Canadians Would Proudly Serve?

 Researched and written by ChatGPT

Canada's military has a recruiting problem. That much is well documented.

The question is not whether the Canadian Armed Forces needed more people.

The question is why the solution chosen by the federal government was to expand recruitment beyond Canadian citizens before convincing more Canadians to answer the call.

On December 5, 2022, the Government of Canada announced that permanent residents would be encouraged to apply to join the Canadian Armed Forces. The government described the move as a way to strengthen recruitment and stated that military service could provide a facilitated pathway toward Canadian citizenship.

Since then, the numbers have climbed rapidly.

According to the Department of National Defence, 1,400 permanent residents enrolled in the Canadian Armed Forces during the 2025–26 fiscal year—the highest number since the policy was introduced.

That may satisfy a recruitment target.

But does it answer the deeper question?

Were Canadians Ever Truly Asked?

I know many Canadians who never imagined military service was even an option.

Not because they were unwilling.

Because no one inspired them.

No one actively sought them out.

No one convinced them that serving their country was one of the highest callings available.

If Canada genuinely needs people willing to defend this nation, where is the nationwide campaign aimed at Canadian citizens?

Where are the visits to high schools, colleges, trade schools, farms, rural communities, hunting clubs, volunteer fire departments, cadet organizations, and skilled trades?

Where is the message that says:

"Canada needs you."

Instead, the public conversation often sounds as though the only solution is to widen eligibility.

That deserves discussion.

The Questions Raised by the Leaked Military Report

Recently, a leaked internal assessment from the Canadian Forces Leadership and Recruit School (CFLRS) drew national attention.

According to reporting on the confidential report, one officer-training platoon consisted largely of permanent residents and experienced significant challenges, including language barriers, ethnic conflict, poor graduation rates, and ongoing concerns regarding respect toward women and female authority figures.

Canada's Chief of Military Personnel later stated that he accepted all ten recommendations contained in the report.

Whether those issues were unique to one platoon or indicative of broader challenges is something Canadians deserve to understand.

If military leadership identifies problems involving communication, integration, discipline, or respect for the chain of command, those concerns should be examined openly.

That is not prejudice.

That is accountability.

This Is Not About Individuals

Many permanent residents genuinely love Canada.

Many will become excellent soldiers.

Some may one day lay down their lives for this country.

This article is not about judging them.

It is about asking whether government policy has placed too little emphasis on recruiting, inspiring, and retaining Canadian citizens before looking elsewhere.

Military service is unlike almost any other profession.

It demands trust.

It demands loyalty.

It demands sacrifice.

It is about defending a nation—not simply filling vacancies.

A Curious Contradiction

One respected defence think tank noted that in 2023–24, more than 70,000 Canadians and permanent residents applied to the Canadian Forces Recruiting Group, yet only about 4,000 were enrolled.

That statistic raises obvious questions.

If tens of thousands are applying...

  • Are recruiting standards too restrictive?

  • Is the enrolment process too slow?

  • Are qualified Canadians being lost in bureaucracy?

  • Why was expanding eligibility considered a better solution than fixing the system itself?

Those are policy questions.

They deserve policy answers.

A Military Reflects the Nation It Serves

For generations, Canadians viewed military service as one of the greatest expressions of citizenship.

That sense of duty has not disappeared.

If anything, many Canadians still long to contribute to something larger than themselves.

Perhaps what has been missing is not willingness.

Perhaps it has been invitation.

Before we continue expanding who may serve Canada, perhaps we should first ask whether we have done everything possible to inspire those who already call this country home.

Because if Canadians are willing to stand for Canada...

Shouldn't Canada stand up and ask them first?

                                                                                          



Who's Looking After the Foreign Worker?

Researched and written by ChatGPT

Canadians have spent the past few years debating the Temporary Foreign Worker Program from the perspective of wages, housing, and job competition. Those are important conversations.

But here's a question that deserves just as much attention:

Who's looking out for the foreign worker?

If Canada is going to invite people from around the world to live and work here, then we also have a responsibility to ensure they are safe, treated fairly, and able to report abuse without fearing deportation or losing everything they came here for.

Over the past several years, numerous reports, investigations, and worker advocacy groups have documented recurring complaints involving temporary foreign workers across Canada, including Ontario.

Among the allegations are:

  • Wage theft and unpaid overtime.
  • Excessive work hours.
  • Unsafe working conditions.
  • Overcrowded or substandard housing.
  • Illegal recruitment fees charged before workers even arrive.
  • Employers withholding passports or important documents.
  • Threats of deportation if workers complain.
  • Difficulty accessing healthcare.
  • Physical, verbal, and, in some reported cases, sexual abuse.
  • Fear of speaking out because their legal status depends on a single employer.

This isn't simply about a few bad employers.

Many advocates argue that tying a worker's immigration status to one employer creates an imbalance of power. When losing your job could also mean losing your right to remain in Canada, many people stay silent rather than risk everything.

Now consider another issue that receives far less public discussion.

Canada continues to rely on foreign caregivers to provide childcare, elder care, and home support for Canadian families. Modern caregiver pathways no longer require workers to live in the employer's home, but some caregiving arrangements still involve workers residing with the families they serve, or living in employer-controlled accommodation.

That raises difficult questions.

What happens if a caregiver experiences harassment?

What if the employer's spouse becomes abusive?

What if she is isolated from friends and family?

What if she doesn't know Canadian laws?

What if she believes reporting the abuse will cost her job or her future in Canada?

Where does she go?

Who protects her?

These are not questions that should make anyone uncomfortable because they challenge immigration policy. They are questions that should concern anyone who believes workers deserve dignity and protection.

If Canada is going to build programs that depend on foreign labour, then protecting those workers cannot be an afterthought.

A country should be judged not only by how many people it welcomes, but also by how well it protects the people who place their trust in it.

The debate shouldn't stop at how temporary foreign workers affect Canadians.

It should also ask whether Canada is keeping its promises to the very people it invited here.

                                                                                    


Saturday, 11 July 2026

Why Colouring Feels So Good: The Science of Flow.

 Researched and written by ChatGPT


There is a quiet kind of healing that doesn't arrive with fireworks or dramatic breakthroughs.

It arrives with a marker gliding across paper.

With dough beneath your hands.

With pulling weeds.

With knitting one more row.

With slowly sanding a piece of wood.

With painting, carving, stitching, gardening, writing, or simply arranging stones in a pattern that pleases you.

Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi spent decades studying these moments. He called them flow.

Flow is the state we enter when we're completely—but gently—absorbed in what we're doing. We aren't forcing concentration. We aren't worrying about yesterday or rehearsing tomorrow. Our attention naturally settles into the present moment.

Something remarkable happens there.

Time seems different.

The inner critic quiets.

Rumination fades into the background.

We simply...become involved.

Modern life constantly pulls our attention outward. Notifications. News. Bills. Politics. Responsibilities. Our brains rarely get permission to rest in a single meaningful task.

Flow gives them that permission.

What's fascinating is that flow doesn't require extraordinary talent. You don't have to paint masterpieces or write bestselling novels.

Colouring can create flow.

Gardening can create flow.

Cooking can create flow.

Building birdhouses can create flow.

Organizing a drawer can create flow.

Anything that is just challenging enough to hold your attention—but not so difficult that it becomes frustrating—can invite your mind into this restorative state.

Researchers have found that flow is associated with reduced stress, improved mood, greater creativity, and a stronger sense of well-being. Many people describe feeling refreshed afterward, even if the activity itself wasn't physically relaxing.

Perhaps this explains why our grandparents always seemed to have hobbies.

They quilted.

They carved.

They fished.

They baked.

They whittled.

They canned vegetables.

Without knowing the neuroscience, many had instinctively built flow into everyday life.

Today, many of us consume far more than we create.

We scroll.

We watch.

We react.

But creation—even something as simple as filling a page with colour—asks something different of us. It gently invites our minds to participate rather than merely observe.

That may be one reason colouring books have become popular again—not just with children, but with adults caring for aging parents, recovering from illness, managing anxiety, or simply looking for a quieter evening.

The page doesn't judge.

There are no deadlines.

No one is keeping score.

Just one colour...then another.

Perhaps we don't always need another self-help book or productivity hack.

Perhaps sometimes we simply need something for our hands to do so our minds can finally exhale.

Flow isn't about escaping life.

It's about returning to it—one peaceful moment at a time.

                                                                                 


Did Canada Allow Sharia Law? The Answer Is More Complicated Than Canadians Were Told.

 Researched and written by ChatGPT


Most Canadians would probably agree with a simple principle: regardless of ancestry, religion, wealth or sex, everyone who enters a Canadian courtroom should be governed by the same Canadian law.

Yet religion does not remain neatly outside the courthouse doors.

Canadian courts have considered Islamic marriage contracts, religious divorce obligations, foreign Sharia-court rulings and private agreements shaped by religious law. Ontario also came remarkably close to allowing family disputes to be decided through faith-based arbitration—including arbitration based upon interpretations of Sharia.

That does not mean Canada officially adopted Sharia law.

It does mean the boundary between respecting religious belief and allowing religious rules to affect civil judgments has been tested—and Canadians were right to question it.

The Ontario Sharia-Arbitration Controversy

Ontario’s Arbitration Act once permitted people to resolve certain disputes privately and then ask the civil courts to enforce the resulting arbitration award.

Religious communities had already used arbitration and mediation to settle disputes according to their beliefs. In the early 2000s, a proposal to establish Islamic family-arbitration bodies brought this arrangement into public view.

The concern was not that Canada was about to introduce Islamic criminal punishments. It was that private family decisions involving divorce, support, property and marital obligations might be determined according to religious rules—and then acquire legal force through Ontario’s courts.

In 2003, the Ontario government appointed former attorney general Marion Boyd to review the arbitration system after concerns were raised specifically about Sharia-based religious arbitration.

Women’s-rights organizations warned that supposedly voluntary arbitration might not be genuinely voluntary for women facing family, community, financial or religious pressure. They also questioned whether equality rights guaranteed under Canadian law could be compromised behind the closed doors of private religious proceedings.

Ontario eventually acted.

Legislation passed in 2006 established that an enforceable family arbitration must be conducted exclusively under the law of Ontario or another Canadian jurisdiction. A family decision made under another legal system—including a religious legal code—would not qualify as a legally enforceable family-arbitration award.

That legislative response matters.

It tells us that the concern was not imaginary. Ontario changed the law precisely because its existing arbitration structure had left enough room for religiously based family rulings to seek recognition through the Canadian legal system.

What Ontario Allows Today

Ontario still permits family arbitration, and a religious official may serve as an arbitrator if properly trained.

But the arbitration must follow Canadian law.

An imam, rabbi, priest or other religious figure may help parties resolve a dispute. However, the enforceable decision cannot legally be based upon Sharia, Jewish law, canon law or any other religious code instead of Canadian law.

That is an important distinction.

Religious guidance may exist alongside the legal process. Religious law is not supposed to replace the law governing the process.

But Religious Agreements Can Still Reach Canadian Courts

The end of Sharia-based family arbitration did not remove every religiously influenced dispute from Canadian courtrooms.

Consider the mahr, sometimes called a Muslim marriage payment or dower. It is commonly included in an Islamic marriage agreement and may require a husband to provide money or property to his wife.

Canadian courts have reached different conclusions about whether such agreements can be enforced.

British Columbia courts have, in some cases, enforced mahr obligations as ordinary contracts. Ontario courts have rejected some such claims where the agreement failed to satisfy provincial legal requirements. The Supreme Court of Canada has referred to these differing decisions while emphasizing that enforceability depends upon the applicable Canadian civil and contractual rules.

In other words, a Canadian judge may enforce an obligation that originated in an Islamic marriage ceremony—but theoretically not because Sharia itself governs the courtroom.

The obligation is enforced only if it qualifies as a valid contract under Canadian law.

That distinction is legally meaningful, but it can appear less clear in practice. The same religious promise may be viewed as unenforceable theology in one case and an enforceable civil agreement in another.

Canada Has Done This With Other Religions Too

This issue is not limited to Islam.

In Bruker v. Marcovitz, the Supreme Court of Canada dealt with a Jewish husband who had agreed to cooperate in obtaining a religious divorce, known as a get, but then refused for many years.

The Court permitted a civil damages claim arising from the broken agreement. It did not declare Jewish religious law to be Canadian law. It treated the husband’s promise as a civil obligation that could be assessed using Quebec law.

This shows the larger principle at work.

Canadian courts sometimes examine religious commitments when those commitments overlap with contracts, family arrangements, property rights or measurable civil harm.

The question is not simply whether a belief is religious. The question is whether a Canadian legal principle provides a legitimate route for the court to consider it.

Foreign Religious Judgments Present Another Difficulty

Canadian courts also encounter divorces, marriages and custody decisions originating in countries where civil and religious law are intertwined.

A foreign divorce may have been granted through an Islamic court. A marriage may have been conducted under religious law. A custody decision may reflect legal assumptions very different from those accepted in Canada.

Canadian judges cannot pretend those proceedings never occurred. They may need to determine whether a marriage legally existed, whether a divorce should be recognized, where a child was ordinarily resident or whether a foreign order conflicts with Canadian public policy.

The Supreme Court has considered international family disputes involving jurisdictions where religious and civil rules overlap, but the governing analysis remains Canadian legislation, Canadian conflict-of-laws principles and applicable international conventions.

Recognizing that a foreign judgment exists is not the same as endorsing every principle behind it.

Still, recognition can produce real legal consequences inside Canada. That is why scrutiny matters.

The Word “Voluntary” Deserves Scrutiny

Defenders of religious arbitration often argued that adults should be free to resolve private disputes according to their own beliefs.

In theory, that sounds reasonable.

But family relationships are rarely negotiations between perfectly equal parties. One person may control the money. One may fear rejection by family or community. One may have little understanding of Canadian law. One may have been taught that refusing a religious authority is itself immoral.

A signature does not automatically prove free and informed consent.

This was one of the strongest objections raised by women’s advocates during Ontario’s arbitration debate. Their concern was not simply that religious individuals would make religious choices. It was that the state might enforce decisions produced under unequal pressure while calling the process voluntary.

Once a private ruling receives the enforcement power of a Canadian court, it is no longer entirely private.

The state has entered the room.

Freedom of Religion Does Not Mean Religious Government

The Canadian Charter protects freedom of conscience and religion.

It does not say that religious institutions may govern citizens through parallel systems of enforceable family law.

The Charter itself places rights within a constitutional system founded upon the rule of law. Religious freedom may protect belief, worship, association and personal observance, but it does not automatically transform religious commands into civil law.

That limit protects everyone.

A Muslim woman should not lose Canadian equality protections because a private tribunal invokes religion. A Jewish spouse should not be left without civil remedies merely because the harm was delivered through a religious process. A Christian, Hindu, Sikh, atheist or Indigenous Canadian should not be subject to another person’s theology as though it were public law.

Freedom of religion must include freedom from religious control imposed through the legal power of the state.

So, Has Canada Allowed Sharia-Based Judgments?

The honest answer requires precision.

Canada has not formally adopted Sharia as part of its domestic legal system.

Ontario considered and debated a structure through which Sharia-based family arbitration might have produced enforceable awards. The province ultimately changed the law so that enforceable family arbitration must be based exclusively on Canadian law.

Canadian courts have also considered Islamic marriage agreements, foreign religious divorces and family circumstances shaped by Sharia. Some Islamic contractual obligations have been enforced—but through Canadian contract and family law, not by declaring Sharia itself legally supreme.

Therefore, it would be inaccurate to say that Canadian judges are simply replacing Canadian law with Sharia.

But it would also be inaccurate to claim that Sharia has had no influence or presence in Canadian legal disputes.

It has entered courtrooms as evidence, contractual context, foreign law, religious practice and cultural background. At times, Canadian courts have given civil effect to obligations with religious origins.

The real debate is about how far that recognition should extend.

One Country Cannot Sustain Competing Standards of Justice

A multicultural society may respect countless beliefs.

A functioning justice system, however, requires a common legal foundation.

Citizens may voluntarily follow religious teachings in their private lives. They may seek spiritual advice, participate in religious mediation and make personal choices based upon faith.

But the moment the coercive authority of the state is requested—when property is seized, support is ordered, custody is determined or an agreement is legally enforced—the governing standard must be Canadian law.

Not Canadian law for some and religious law for others.

Not one standard for a woman with strong family support and another for a woman afraid to defy her community.

Not equality in public court but something less behind the closed door of private arbitration.

Canada avoided formally creating enforceable Sharia family tribunals in Ontario. That was the correct decision.

The lesson should not be forgotten.

Religious freedom deserves protection. Cultural traditions deserve honest consideration. Private belief deserves room to exist.

But justice cannot depend upon which religious authority a person happens to stand before.

One country requires one public standard of law—and that law must protect the individual before it protects the institution.

                                                                                          


Friday, 10 July 2026

When Great Literature Carries Troubling Ideas.

 Researched and Written by ChatGPT


French Nobel Prize-winning author André Gide remains one of the most celebrated literary figures of the twentieth century. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1947 for his "comprehensive and artistically significant writings" and continues to be studied in universities around the world.

But Gide's legacy is not without serious controversy.

One of his most debated works is Corydon, a series of dialogues first published privately in 1911 and later released publicly in 1924. Gide himself regarded Corydon as the most important work he ever wrote because it openly defended pederasty—sexual relationships between adult men and adolescent boys. He did not hide this position. He argued for it explicitly and consistently, both in Corydon and in his personal journals.

Today, those arguments stand in direct conflict with modern understandings of child protection, consent, ethics, and the law. Whatever one's opinion of Gide's literary achievements, this aspect of his work forms an undeniable part of his historical record.

What makes this subject especially relevant today is that Gide remains an admired literary figure in France.

French President Emmanuel Macron has repeatedly spoken of his admiration for André Gide as one of his favorite authors. In his official presidential portrait, Macron prominently displayed Gide's Les Nourritures terrestres (The Fruits of the Earth), one of the author's best-known works.

It is important to make a distinction here. The Fruits of the Earth is not itself a defense of pederasty. Rather, it is a lyrical work celebrating personal freedom, sensuality, travel, and liberation from convention. However, it was written during the same period of Gide's life in which he underwent the personal experiences that later shaped the ideas he expressed far more directly in Corydon. Gide traveled to North Africa and Alegeria where he experienced pederasty and returned to write this book.

By contrast, Corydon leaves little room for interpretation. In that work, Gide openly argued that pederasty was natural and morally defensible. It was this book—not The Fruits of the Earth—that Gide himself regarded as his most important contribution.

There is no public evidence that President Macron endorses the views Gide expressed in Corydon. Admiring an author's literary style or influence is not the same as embracing every belief that author held.

At the same time, presidential portraits are carefully curated. Every object included in an official portrait is capable of carrying symbolic meaning, whether intended or perceived. When a public leader chooses to feature a particular author so prominently, it is reasonable for people to examine that author's complete legacy—not only the works most commonly celebrated, but also the ideas the author himself considered central to his life's work.

This raises broader questions that extend well beyond André Gide.

Should society separate an artist from his ideas?

Can someone be celebrated as a literary giant while openly advocating positions that modern society now recognizes as profoundly harmful?

Reasonable people will answer those questions differently. But meaningful discussion begins with an honest accounting of the historical record.

André Gide's literary influence is undeniable.

So too is the fact that he publicly defended pederasty in Corydon and regarded that work as the most important expression of his thought.

Both facts belong in the historical record.


                                                                                         


Sunday, 5 July 2026

When Oversight Fails: Documented Cases of Migrant Child Labor in the United States.

 Researched and written by ChatGPT


The debate surrounding unaccompanied migrant children often focuses on immigration policy. Less attention is given to what happens after children are released from federal custody.

Multiple investigations by the U.S. Department of Labor, the Department of Health and Human Services, and investigative journalists have documented cases where migrant children ended up performing dangerous and illegal work.

These are not allegations. They are documented investigations.

1. Trillium Farms Egg Farm – Ohio (2014)

One of the earliest major cases involved several Guatemalan teenagers who entered the United States as unaccompanied minors.

Federal officials released the children to individuals posing as sponsors. Instead, they became victims of a labor trafficking operation.

Investigators found the children:

  • Worked overnight collecting eggs.

  • Regularly worked 12-hour shifts.

  • Lived in overcrowded trailers.

  • Had much of their wages taken by traffickers.

  • Were threatened if they attempted to leave.

The case exposed serious weaknesses in the Office of Refugee Resettlement's sponsor vetting process and prompted congressional scrutiny.

Sources


2. Packers Sanitation Services Inc. (PSSI) (2023)

In one of the largest child labor cases in recent U.S. history, the Department of Labor found 102 children, some only 13 years old, cleaning slaughterhouses across 13 meat-processing facilities in eight states.

Children were assigned to clean hazardous industrial equipment including:

  • Head splitters

  • Brisket saws

  • Bandsaws

  • Neck clippers

They also worked with corrosive industrial cleaning chemicals.

Federal investigators documented injuries to multiple minors.

The company ultimately paid approximately $1.5 million in civil penalties, the maximum allowed under federal law at the time.

Sources

U.S. Department of Labor:
https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/whd/whd20230217

Background:
https://www.reuters.com/investigates/section/underage-workers/


3. Hyundai Supply Chain – Alabama (2022–2024)

A Reuters investigation uncovered migrant children working at factories supplying Hyundai and Kia.

Subsequent federal investigations found:

  • Children as young as 12 and 13 years old.

  • Some working 50–60 hour weeks.

  • Children operating metal stamping equipment.

  • Several minors no longer attending school.

In 2024, the U.S. Department of Labor sued Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama, SMART Alabama, and a staffing agency, alleging they jointly employed a 13-year-old working illegally on an assembly line.

Hyundai denied knowingly employing underage workers and stated it had implemented corrective measures.

Sources

Reuters investigation:
https://www.reuters.com/investigates/section/underage-workers/

Department of Labor:
https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/whd/whd20240530


4. Fayette Industrial / Perdue & Seaboard Facilities (2024)

Federal investigators discovered children cleaning dangerous slaughterhouse equipment at poultry and pork processing plants.

The Department of Labor documented:

  • 24 children, some as young as 13 years old.

  • Overnight shifts cleaning kill-floor equipment.

  • Exposure to corrosive chemicals.

  • One 14-year-old suffering severe injuries while working.

The company later entered into a federal consent order requiring outside monitoring and paid substantial civil penalties.

Sources

Department of Labor:
https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/whd

Reuters coverage:
https://www.reuters.com/investigates/section/underage-workers/


A Common Pattern

Although each investigation involved different companies, investigators repeatedly found similar circumstances:

  • Many workers were recent migrant children.

  • Some had entered the United States without parents.

  • Staffing agencies frequently supplied the labor.

  • Hazardous jobs prohibited for minors were routinely assigned.

  • Government oversight often failed to identify problems until after investigations began.

At the same time, federal inspectors documented weaknesses in the government's sponsor vetting and post-release monitoring systems.

Among those findings were incomplete background checks, missing documentation, delayed welfare calls, and thousands of cases where agencies could not verify children's well-being after release.

These findings do not mean every unaccompanied migrant child experienced exploitation.

They do demonstrate that documented failures in oversight allowed some vulnerable children to enter dangerous workplaces that federal law was specifically designed to keep them out of.

As debates over immigration continue, these cases serve as a reminder that border policy is only one part of the conversation. Protecting children after they enter government custody is equally important, and the historical record shows that significant improvements remain necessary.

                                                                          


Saturday, 4 July 2026

Buying Property in Canada? You Should Know the Truth About Ownership in Cda vs Us.

Researched and written by ChatGPT


Many Canadians assume that owning a home gives them the same legal protections enjoyed by Americans. It does not.

In the United States, private property rights are explicitly protected by the Constitution. Under the Fifth Amendment, governments cannot take private property for public use without due process and "just compensation." Those protections have been reinforced through centuries of court decisions.

Canada is different.

The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms does not include an explicit constitutional right to own or enjoy property. While Canadians certainly can own homes, land, businesses, and personal belongings, those rights are primarily created and governed by federal and provincial laws—not by the Constitution itself.

This means governments in Canada generally have broader authority to regulate, restrict, or expropriate property, provided they act within the laws passed by Parliament or provincial legislatures. Compensation is often available through legislation, but unlike in the United States, it is not protected as a constitutional guarantee.

This does not mean Canadians have no property rights. It means those rights exist because statutes provide them, and those statutes can be amended by governments. In the United States, constitutional property protections create an additional layer of legal protection that governments must overcome.

Understanding this distinction helps explain why debates over land use, expropriation, emergency powers, and government authority often unfold differently on either side of the border.

The key takeaway is simple: both Canadians and Americans can own property—but the legal foundation protecting that ownership is significantly stronger in the United States because it is embedded in the Constitution.