Mayday! Mayday!. Lowell Psy.D. Green
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The students inside the lounge called for help and were eventually escorted off campus by university security and police.
(James Cowan, “York Jewish students claim intimidation,” National Post, February 12, 2009)
A secessionist Tamil government-in-exile, with the largest block made up of Canadian Tamils will not improve the life of their brethren in Sri Lanka and will only succeed in impeding that country’s ability to rebuild after its recent bloody history. Rather than relive old battles, Canada’s Tamil diaspora should support peace and reconciliation in their homeland. Otherwise, Toronto, home to half of Canada’s estimated 200,000 Sri Lankans risks becoming a base for disaffected members of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, the group that fought for a quarter century for an independent homeland.
(Editorial, “Head off the phantom Tigers’ Canadian base,” The Globe and Mail, May 18, 2010)
A Canadian who was being investigated for allegedly joining a Somali militant group died in a “fierce battle” according to a eulogy posted on an extremist website.
Mohammed Elmi Ibrahim, 22, was one of a half-dozen radicalized young Somali-Canadians who allegedly left Toronto last year to join the al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabab.
Members of Canada’s large Somali community say they are worried that some youths are being radicalized by al Shabab propaganda on the Internet.
(Stewart Bell, “Extremists praise Somali Canadian in online eulogy,” National Post, May 4, 2010)
Canada has become the world’s number one hotel!
(Bestselling author Yann Martel)
The Changing Face of Canada: As minority population booms, a visible majority emerges.
(The Globe and Mail, March 10, 2010)
With the scars of the Air India bombing still fresh, the BC premier and most other politicians boycott the April 17, 2010, Vaisakhi parade in Surrey after organizers warn politicians they might not be safe if they attend.
One of those threatened, Liberal MP Ujjal Dosanjh, says the Surrey Vaisakhi parade, marking the birth of Sikhism, contains extremist rhetoric, violent portraits and separatist slogans. In 2008, the Indian government formally complained to Canada that the parade depicted the assassins of Indira Gandhi as martyrs. The Surrey parade is the largest of its kind outside India with some 120,000 lining the streets and this year featuring a float honouring Sikh martyrs—including members of separatist groups in India that the Canadian government has branded as terrorist organizations.
Vaisakhi parade risky for MP Ujjal Dosanjh and MLA Dave Hayer: organizer. Pair told to avoid Surrey Sikh festival.
(Lori Culbert and Jonathan Fowlie, Vancouver Sun, April 16, 2010)
Multiculturalism teaches that all cultures and religions are equally worthy of respect, except Christianity and whiteness.
(Columnist Barbara Kay, “It’s not all good,” National Post, April 28, 2010)
More than 100 Sikhs engage in a bloody fight inside the Sri Guru Nanak Sikh Temple in Brampton on the quiet Sunday afternoon of April 18, 2010. Hammers, knives and machetes slash and hack. Five are hospitalized. It’s a fight over who controls the temple, say police. Two weeks earlier, only about a kilometre away, Manjit Mangat, a prominent Brampton lawyer, was stabbed outside the Sikh Lehar Temple by two men brandishing kirpans, the ceremonial dagger worn by baptized Sikhs.
The bloody melee that consumed a Toronto-area Sikh temple this past weekend is evidence of a bitter control struggle consuming its leadership, observers say—and the trouble is not unique.
Jagdish Grewal, editor of the Canadian Punjabi Post, says separatists—those who back an independent Sikh state called Khalistan— maintain control of many large temples in Canada and bring with them a legacy of “muscle power.”
Late last year, Mr. Grewal was held at gunpoint and attacked by three masked men outside the newspaper offices in Brampton.
(Megan O’Toole, “Tensions at Sikh temple not unique,” National Post, April 20, 2010)
Surely by now we have received enough signals that something is seriously wrong with the way we are going about the integration of newcomers to Canada. And surely the time has come when Canadians should put aside the political correctness that has inhibited us from taking a close look at extremism that is incubating right under our noses.
(Immigration expert Martin Collacott, personal interview, March 2010)
“In Vancouver and Toronto, the Asian influence is very evident. That will put us in a unique position compared to other world cities. As we look towards the ‘Pacific Century’… Vancouver is the first Asian city outside of Asia.” [says] Tung Chan, CEO of S.U.C.C.E.S.S., an organization helping immigrants to Canada.
(Joe Friesen, “The changing face of Canada: As minority population booms, a visible majority emerges,” The Globe and Mail, March 10, 2010)
Heading for Disaster
If you listen carefully, you can hear the waves crashing on the nearby reef. Disaster looms ever closer. As a nation, we’re still afloat, the spirit is still alive, all is not yet lost. But, if we don’t get this ship of state turned around, we will surely run aground and tear ourselves apart on the jagged rocks of mass immigration and multiculturalism, lured ever closer to the lurking danger of cultural suicide by the siren call of political correctness.
I don’t believe most Canadians really understand the dangerous situation we are placing ourselves in. But