Researched and Written by ChatGPT
Immigration policy should enrich a nation—not increase the risks borne by the people who already call it home.
Enrichment Without Endangerment
Canada has always welcomed newcomers.
Most Canadians are not opposed to immigration. We understand that people come here seeking opportunity, safety, and a better life. Many work hard, build businesses, raise families, and strengthen our communities.
But one principle should never be controversial:
Enrichment should never come at the expense of the safety and security of existing citizens.
A government's first responsibility is to protect the people who already call the country home.
Everything else comes second.
Immigration Is More Than Moving People
Immigration is not simply about increasing population numbers.
It is about integrating people into a society built upon shared laws, shared expectations, and shared civic values.
Canada is founded on principles that are not negotiable:
Equality between women and men.
Protection of children.
Freedom of religion—and freedom from religion.
Equality before the law.
Respect for individual rights.
The rule of law over culture, family hierarchy, or religious authority.
Those principles must remain the foundation of Canadian society.
One Country. One Law.
Canada welcomes people from every corner of the world.
Naturally, those countries have different customs, traditions, and legal systems.
That diversity can be enriching.
But Canada cannot function if multiple legal or moral standards operate side by side.
Canadian law must always prevail.
There should never be uncertainty about that.
Anyone choosing to live here should clearly understand that:
women are legal equals;
children are protected by law;
human trafficking is among Canada's most serious crimes;
forced marriage, coercion, sexual exploitation, honour-based violence and domestic abuse are criminal offences;
religious or cultural traditions are not legal defences.
Those expectations should be communicated clearly before arrival and reinforced after arrival.
Canadians Deserve Transparency
Governments regularly publish statistics about many aspects of Canadian society.
They publish detailed reports concerning Indigenous representation within parts of the justice system.
They publish demographic information across countless public policy areas.
Yet Canadians have remarkably little publicly available information regarding the immigration status or citizenship status of offenders convicted of the most serious crimes.
If non-citizens are convicted of offences such as:
human trafficking,
child sexual exploitation,
organized crime,
terrorism,
aggravated sexual assault,
Canadians deserve transparent reporting regarding how immigration laws are applied following conviction.
This is not about ethnicity.
It is not about race.
It is about accountability.
Without reliable data, the public is left trying to interpret isolated news stories instead of evidence.
That benefits no one.
The Lethbridge Case
The 2021 human trafficking investigation in Lethbridge shocked Canadians.
Police alleged that teenage girls had been groomed and sexually exploited.
The investigation eventually involved ten accused individuals and numerous serious charges.
As the years passed, some charges were withdrawn, others proceeded, and the public watched a lengthy and complicated judicial process unfold.
The publicly available reporting does not establish the immigration status of the accused.
It would therefore be irresponsible to claim that the case proves a failure of immigration screening.
However, it does expose another concern.
Canadians receive remarkably little information about whether serious offenders who are not citizens face immigration consequences after conviction.
That lack of transparency undermines public confidence.
Public Safety Must Come First
Immigration policy cannot be measured solely by the number of people admitted each year.
It must also be measured by whether government has:
adequate screening,
effective background checks,
sufficient policing,
sufficient court resources,
strong border enforcement,
realistic integration programs,
and meaningful consequences for serious criminal behaviour.
A compassionate immigration policy and a strong public safety policy are not opposing ideas.
They should exist together.
Integration Means Shared Values
Successful integration is about more than employment.
It is about accepting the legal and civic foundations of the country that welcomed you.
Canada should never be expected to weaken its commitment to equality in order to accommodate practices that conflict with Canadian law.
Respect for women.
Respect for children.
Respect for consent.
Respect for the rule of law.
These are not cultural preferences.
They are the foundation of Canadian society.
The Conversation Canadians Deserve
Too often, legitimate public concerns are dismissed before they can even be discussed.
Asking whether immigration levels match our housing capacity, policing resources, courts, schools, health care, or integration systems is not prejudice.
Asking for better transparency surrounding serious criminal offenders is not prejudice.
Wanting Canada's laws to be consistently enforced is not prejudice.
Governments earn public trust through openness, not by withholding information.
The Bottom Line
Canada can remain one of the world's most welcoming countries.
But generosity must never replace good governance.
Compassion must never replace accountability.
And enrichment must never come at the expense of the people who are already here.
A safe country is not built by avoiding difficult conversations.
It is built by having them honestly, supported by evidence, transparency, and a commitment to protecting every Canadian.