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300 Indians waiting in line for McDonald's job fair in Canada

This guy needs to post articles from 2012 to feel comfort about Hindu fraudsters struggling to make ends meet after fraudulently coming to Canada posing as students.


There has been no change. If you think there has been then post the latest breakdowns
 
There has been no change. If you think there has been then post the latest breakdowns
Why would I need to prove anything?? You're the one scrounging for articles about Pakistan to protect the reputation of vile Hindu food bank thieves. Were you not able to find anything for 2023??
 
They have no option but to work. Most of these people come from East Punjab (India) where they have taken loans against their lands. They are fcked. They have enrolled into fake colleges here who may be deported anytime.
 
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This guy needs to post articles from 2012 to feel comfort about Hindu fraudsters struggling to make ends meet after fraudulently coming to Canada posing as students.


Pakistani-Canadians: Falling below the poverty line

Murtaza Haider Published May 16, 2012


Pakistan-born immigrants are the new face of poverty in urban Canada. The Canadian census revealed that 44 per cent of Pakistan-born immigrants fell below the poverty line making them the second most poverty prone group of immigrants in Canada.

While they may project an aura of opulence during their visits back home, their life in Canada, however, is often full of struggle and frustration. Thousands of Pakistani trained engineers, doctors, and PhDs are driving taxis or are working as security guards in large cities. In fact, one in three taxi-drivers in Canada was born in either India or Pakistan. Several others are unemployed thus becoming a burden on Canadian taxpayers.
The latest Census data for income for 2005 revealed that Pakistan-born immigrants reported the second highest incidence for the low-income cut-off, a proxy for poverty line in Canada. In comparison, only 18 per cent of India-born immigrants in Canada reported being a low-income person or belonging to a low-income economic family. Immigrants born in the United Kingdom, Portugal, Italy and Germany reported the lowest incidence of poverty in Canada.


Source: 2006 Public Use Microdata File, Statistics Canada.

Unlike in the Middle East where the Arab governments do not allow assimilation of migrant workers, the Canadian government and the society to a large extent does not create systematic barriers that may limit the immigrants’ ability to succeed and assimilate in Canada. This is not to suggest that immigrants face no barriers at all in Canada. They in fact do. For instance, Pakistan-trained doctors cannot practice medicine without completing further training in Canada. The shorter duration of medical training in Pakistan necessitates the additional certification for doctors. Engineering graduates from Pakistan, however, face no such barrier because the engineering curriculum and the duration of training in Pakistan is similar to that in Canada.
Despite the opportunities (and constraints), Pakistani-Canadians have not prospered as much as immigrants from other countries have. In 2005, wages earned by Pakistan-born immigrants were on average 70 per cent of the wages earned by those born in Canada. In comparison, wages earned by the India-born immigrants were 86 per cent of the wages earned by Canadians. At the same time, immigrants born in America earned 20 per cent more in wages than those born in Canada. Similarly, UK-born immigrants also reported on average higher wages than that of Canadian-born.

Source: 2006 Public Use Microdata File, Statistics Canada.

Because of lower wages, the Pakistan-born immigrants reported as one of the lowest home-ownership rates. Only 55 per cent of Pakistan-born immigrants reported owning their homes. In comparison, 75 per cent of the India-born immigrants owned their homes. At the same time, while only 12 per cent of the India- and Philippines-born immigrants had never worked in the past, 22 per cent of the Pakistan-born immigrants in Canada reported never being in the workforce.
The difference in wages, home-ownership rates, and employment rates between immigrants from India and Pakistan extend beyond the economic spheres. For instance, Pakistani-born immigrants live in large-sized families. Whereas only 13 per cent of India-born immigrants live in households of five persons or more, 44 per cent of the Pakistan-born immigrants live in households with five or more people. Given the lower wages, high unemployment rates and rental units, Pakistan-born immigrants experience severe crowding at homes where the number of residents per room is perhaps the highest owing to the large family sizes.
Given similar cultural endowments, education, and language skills, it is important to explore why Pakistan-born immigrants in Canada have lagged behind their Indian counterparts. The Indian diaspora is much larger in size and has been established in Canada for over a longer period, which has allowed immigrants from India to benefit from the social networks required to establish oneself in employment markets.
While immigrants from Pakistan lack the social networks necessary for success with employment, I would also argue that they suffer from a self-imposed identity crisis. After arriving from Pakistan, many male immigrants feel threatened by the Canadian liberal values, which empower their children and women. Suddenly the head of the household cannot dictate the way he did in Pakistan. Instead of embracing the change that empowers their families, several male immigrants end up in a hostile standoff with their families that sometimes lasts for decades. At the same time, religious leaders, which are almost always imported from back home to serve in mosques in Canada, preach orthodoxy to the parish, further confusing the struggling males.
With turmoil at home and bleak employment prospects outside, Pakistan-born male immigrants struggle with the decision to stay in Canada or return to Pakistan. Children and wives are often shipped back to Pakistan for prolonged periods while the males continue struggling in the job market. While their children see themselves as Canadians, the Pakistan-born male immigrants spent decades figuring out how to cope with their hyphenated identity, i.e., Pakistani-Canadian.
The limited success of (mostly Asian and African) immigrants in the economic spheres and their modest assimilation in the mainstream Canadian culture has prompted the right-wing groups to launch campaigns against immigration to Canada. While opponents of immigration are mostly naïve and their recommendations to reduce immigration border on lunacy, the fact remains that huge changes in the Canadian immigration policies are already taking place. In Saskatchewan, for instance, the provincial government on May 2 has changed the law that now prohibits immigrants from sponsoring their extended family members unless they secure a “high skill” job offer before arrival.
Since 2001, Pakistan has lost the most in its share of supplying immigrants to Canada. Pakistan was the third largest source of immigrants to Canada in 2001 supplying 6.1 per cent of the total immigrants. However, by 2010 Pakistan’s share of immigrants declined by 71 per cent. Pakistan is no longer even in the top 10 sources of immigrants for Canada. At the same time, the Philippines experienced a 153 per cent increase in its share of immigrants making it the biggest source of immigrants to Canada in 201
Source: Citizenship and Immigration Canada.

While there is no shortage of applicants in Pakistan, it is hard to establish the precise reason for the declining number of immigrants. It could be that the dismal performance of Pakistan-based immigrants may have prompted the government to reduce the intake from Pakistan. It may also be true that the exponential increase in violence and militancy in Pakistan may have made the task of verifying credentials and identifying future citizens much more difficult.
Over the next 50 years Canada will need millions more immigrants. The current and expected fertility rates in Canada suggest that immigration is the only possible way of ensuring enough workers needed for economic growth and to keep solvent Canada’s security net. Pakistan-born immigrants had the chance to excel in Canada and pave the way for future generations of enterprising immigrants. Instead, Pakistan-born immigrants became the face of Canada’s urban poverty. Their dismal performance in Canada and the spread of religious fanaticism back home will most likely further reduce immigration from Pakistan.

Murtaza Haider, Ph.D. is the Associate Dean of research and graduate programs at the Ted Rogers School of Management at Ryerson University in Toronto. He can be reached by email at murtaza.haider@ryerson.ca

Dawn



 
They have no option but to work. Most of these people come from East Punjab (India) where they have taken loans against their lands. They are fcked. They have enrolled into fake colleges here who may be deported anytime.
Same thing is happening in Australia. A large number of them are detected as frauds and sent back home. It was in the news recently that many universities in the west have put an outright ban on Indian students due to intensity of fraud. These East Punjabis abuse student visas out of desperation while other Indians project it as a positive thing.
Hindus in Canada are notorious for taking advantage of services which are provided for actual desperate Canadians - the most prominent example of this which has come out recently is Hindus treating Canadian foodbanks as a place to get free food, which a lot of Canadians have started noticing.


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The only reason they haven't hopped onto welfare is because they cant - most of them come pretending to be "international students" who wouldn't be eligible for any benefits.
A picture is worth thousand words. People queuing for a job can be made to look positive as 'better work than beg' etc. but these Indians know this is just a slogan. In reality this is a picture of desperation that Indians are spreading everywhere under the banner of hard work etc.

We can see how eager Indian government is to offload their population to foreign countries while claiming to achieve economic progress at home. This is their way of hiding their face with discriminatory economic policies that marginalizes some communities forcing them to take desperate measures to get out.
 
It is really shameful that someone is mocking people working hard to pay for their education. Not everyone is privileged enough to have their education paid for by someone else. I am sure there are students of multiple nationalities working similar jobs and all of them have my respect.
 
Hindus in Canada are notorious for taking advantage of services which are provided for actual desperate Canadians - the most prominent example of this which has come out recently is Hindus treating Canadian foodbanks as a place to get free food, which a lot of Canadians have started noticing.


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The only reason they haven't hopped onto welfare is because they cant - most of them come pretending to be "international students" who wouldn't be eligible for any benefits.

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Average Canadian earns about 5000$
The life of Canada better than 3rd world no world all third world residents r applying in record number for visa
Many high tech enginners doctors are working in stores in Canada because it's salary is 3 times more than their home country

$5000 without tax... with tax you'll get only $3500 in which once you pay your rent which is approx 2000-2500 for 1 bed room across all major cities, how the **** do you live on $1000 after paying rent? esp if you're living with kids? you can hardly get $1000 in CB if you've kids and your income is 60,000K after tax 42,000K (Ontario for instance).
 
I believe both low grade & established Indian companies make it a nightmare for everyone involved
It is the weakest link in the process.
Then why would any one would consider USA for a masters where they'd be spending more than $50,000 on post graduate studies and getting no H1B1 in return?
 
$5000 without tax... with tax you'll get only $3500 in which once you pay your rent which is approx 2000-2500 for 1 bed room across all major cities, how the **** do you live on $1000 after paying rent? esp if you're living with kids? you can hardly get $1000 in CB if you've kids and your income is 60,000K after tax 42,000K (Ontario for
And on happiness rate is canada is 15 and poverty rate in Canada is 11.6 lowest among world. and being poor in Canada doesn't means you don't have food tv car. You have everything you don't have to live in slum

Check out gdp per Capita of India and Canada.
 
Keep in mind a lot of the Bharatis on this thread are on the record as being supporters of throwing refugees currently living in their own country into concentration camps.

There's one specific community which has been time and time again had its shelters and businesses targeted and attacked by them.


Keep in mind this community is merely a raindrop in a massive pool compared to the surge of internationals coming to Canada using diploma mills as a PR card, but Bharatis will genocide the former, but try to convince everyone that the latter should be accepted and welcomed.
Yeah no bud, you're looking at it from the lense of nationalism and religion to further your agenda judging from your past posts. The only other category of people that spout nonsense like this is Maxim Bernier and his nutjob PPC lot.

The situation in Canada needs to be blamed on everyone including yourself and myself.

The feds for restraining IRCC and CBSA

The provincial governments for allowing unrestrained growth without ensuring corresponding accountability on these institutions for providing housing

Immigration consultants for selling a dream that is not based in reality

Us for not holding our MPs and MLAs accountable (assuming you're a citizen)

People must always have the right to look for a better life, but it is the right of citizens in a particular country to say "no we're looking after our own first".
 

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