The Great Immigration Reduction: A Dance of Comfort-Seekers in the Land of the Sleeping Masses
Lo, behold how the mighty nation of Canada, this vast expanse of slumbering souls, wrestles with its own shadow! The Liberal government, those shepherds of the docile flock, have declared their intention to diminish the flow of newcomers - a testament to their inability to build, to create, to overcome!
See how they scurry about with their numbers and calculations, these last creatures who invented happiness! They seek comfort in reduction rather than rising to the challenge of creation. What cowardice masquerades as wisdom!
The Parliamentary Budget Officer, that oracle of mediocrity, prophesies that this reduction shall halve the need for new dwellings by 2030. How convenient for those who lack the will to build! They speak of a "housing gap" of 658,000 units, as if the very act of counting could substitute for the courage to construct.
In this land of the sleepers, where the population swelled by 1.3 million souls in but a year's time, the masses drift in their comfortable stupor, content to debate numbers while the foundations of their society creak beneath them. Minister Marc Miller, that herald of moderation, speaks of "easing pressure" - such is the language of those who would rather retreat than conquer!
Observe these bureaucrats, these counters of souls! They measure greatness in reduction, in limitation, in the shrinking of horizons. Where is the spirit that would say: "Bring forth your millions, and we shall build mountains of steel and glass to house them all!"?
The Conservative Leader, Pierre Poilievre, that would-be awakener, speaks of "simple math" - as if the great challenges of civilization could be reduced to arithmetic! He too dwells in the valley of the last men, promising comfort and security rather than calling forth the builders and creators who might transform this vast land.
From 485,000 to 395,000, then to 380,000, and finally to 365,000 - watch as they dance their dance of diminishment! These are not the numbers of a people ascending; they are the careful calculations of those who would rather sleep than soar.
How they congratulate themselves on their prudence! Yet what is prudence but the mask of exhaustion? Where is the lightning that should strike them? Where is the madness that must possess them if they are to build not just houses, but a future worthy of their children's children?
The report speaks of "significant risk" - ah, how they tremble before risk, these last men! They require 2.3 million homes by 2030, yet they speak not of the glory of such a challenge, only of the comfort of reduction. They seek to "stabilize" growth - as if stability were anything but the dream of the mediocre!
In this grand theatre of the sleeping masses, 97.6 percent of growth comes from immigration - a tide of humanity seeking shores of possibility. Yet instead of wielding this force to forge a greater civilization, they retreat behind walls of bureaucratic caution.
Behold how they have transformed the sacred act of nation-building into a ledger's calculation! They speak of "housing gaps" when they should speak of destiny, of "immigration levels" when they should speak of transformation!
What fate awaits a nation that chooses sleep over awakening? That prefers the counting house to the construction site? That seeks to solve the riddle of growth by shrinking from it? These are the questions that echo unanswered in the empty chambers of parliament, in the vacant lots that might have been homes, in the hearts of those who dare not dream of greatness.
The time approaches when Canada must choose: Will it remain in the twilight realm of the last men, content with small pleasures and smaller ambitions? Or will it arise, shake off its slumber, and build not just houses, but monuments to human possibility?
Let those with ears hear: The greatest danger is not in the numbers that come to your shores, but in the smallness of spirit that would turn them away. The true housing crisis is not in the lack of dwellings, but in the absence of will to create them!
Thus ends this tale of regression masked as wisdom, of retreat disguised as strategy. Let those who dream of greatness take heed: The path to transformation lies not in the counting house, but in the will to create, to build, to overcome!