ghatot201 said:
The burden of proof should be on the accuser. You are making assumptions without any evidence or proof. In the quoted example you make multiple assumptions.
1. you assume i am not amiable
2. I can neither make friends nor do I enjoy speaking to people.
3. I lack global awareness.
4. I am aggressive (when i started my line with 'forgive me'. How is that aggressive)
All your posts on this topic have been assumptions without hard facts.
Who exactly am I accusing that I bear the burden of proof? Last I checked, this was a discussion forum where people chime in based on their knowledge and experience. My posts on this topic have been based on my experiences with people I have encountered.
As for your personality, I said what I did because you made a snide comment insinuating that I was fabricating stories to prove a point. that, in my opinion, was uncalled for and a bit immature. Of course I don't travel the world interviewing people about their passports. But surely you must have at least one or two friends, and sure they have opened up to you about a variety of things. Did you interview them about those subjects? Naturally not, but you now have some information that you can use to extrapolate ideas as and when appropriate.
Since you and on-hold seem determined to see hard figures, take a look at this article:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/estimated-2-8-million-canadians-live-abroad-1.790218
While dated, the article says that the emigration rate for naturalized Canadians was 3.4x that of born Canadians. It also says that 30% of immigrants from Taiwan return to their home country (after becoming citizens) and 24% of those from Hong Kong do the same.
Then, take a look at this article which offers figures on the exactly number of immigrants from Hong Kong who obtain a Canadian passport and return immediately to Hong Kong, while "harbouring hopes of eventually retiring here."
http://blogs.vancouversun.com/2013/05/18/hong-kong-immigrants-streaming-out-of-canada/
The article goes on to say that any instability in China could:
" cause hundreds of thousands of Hong Kong residents with Canadian passports to suddenly flood back to this country – where they would be immediately eligible for health care, education and other taxpayer-funded benefits."
Now again, I ask you, where are your numbers?