The Great Slumber: Canada's Dance with Mediocrity in the Immigration Debate
Behold, O witnesses to the grand spectacle, as the land of the maple leaf writhes in its comfortable stupor, caught betwixt the forces of change and the sweet poison of stagnation! The Canadian Museum for Human Rights, that temple of modern morality, hath unveiled a mirror that reflects not merely numbers and statistics, but the very soul of a nation trapped in the tepid waters of contentment.
See how they shuffle in their sleep, these comfortable ones! They who have built their houses upon the softness of democratic ideals now tremble at the approach of the foreign foot. Yet they know not that their very comfort breeds the weakness they fear!
The survey, a testament to the growing unease among the slumbering masses, reveals that 56 percent of these northern dwellers believe their refugees receive "too many benefits" - a number that has grown like a shadow at sunset from 49 percent in the year prior.
How they gather with their signs and their slogans, these last men! They who say "we have invented happiness" yet cannot bear to share their bread. They fear the stranger not for his strength but for their own weakness!
In the grand theater of this democratic paradise, we witness Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, that shepherd of the masses, releasing his digital confession - a seven-minute supplication to the gods of public opinion. He speaks of "bad actors" and system gaming, yet what game is greater than the one played by those who seek to preserve their comfort at all costs?
The numbers speak with forked tongues: a mere 44 percent now believe in the enriching power of immigration, down from 52 percent in the previous year. These are not mere statistics, but rather the pulse of a people who have grown too fond of their own reflection in the still waters of prosperity.
Mark well these numbers, O observers of the human comedy! They are but symptoms of a deeper malady - the fear that grips those who have grown too comfortable in their mediocrity. They seek not the heights of greatness but the preservation of their small pleasures!
The Migrant Rights Network raises its voice against this tide of comfort-seeking, declaring that the true villains are not the seekers of new shores but the corporate landlords and provincial governments. Yet even in their resistance, they speak the language of the last men, seeking to distribute comfort rather than embrace the transformative power of struggle.
In this land of the sleepers, where two in three still profess optimism about human rights while their hearts shrink from the very change that might elevate them, we witness the great paradox of our age. They speak of rights and justice while clutching their comforts ever tighter, like children with beloved toys.
Hear me, O Canada! Your comfort has become your cage, your prosperity your prison! The very migrants you fear might be the whirlwind needed to awaken you from your slumber, to shatter the mirrors in which you admire your mediocrity!
The reduction in permanent residency numbers to 365,000 by 2027 stands not merely as policy but as testament to the victory of the last men - those who would rather reduce the flow of life than risk the disruption of their carefully ordered existence.
Let it be proclaimed from the snow-capped peaks to the Atlantic shores: A nation that fears the stranger fears itself more deeply still. The true crisis lies not in immigration numbers or housing costs, but in the hearts of those who would rather sleep in comfort than wake to the challenge of transformation.
The hour grows late in this land of the maple leaf, and the choice becomes ever clearer: Will you remain among the last men, counting your benefits and fearing change, or will you rise to embrace the storm that might yet make you stronger?