on-hold said:
It would be really nice to actually see some figures on these apocryphal immigrants who come here, get a passport, and never come back (or come back in old age). I'd like to know their numbers, and I don't want to hear about the Lebanese evacuation -- this is completely irrelevant, because if the Canadian government had simply behaved like every other government in the world and left them to their fate (owing to their being in the country of their other citizenship) the bill would have been zero.
1) Some actual figures on the 'millions' of immigrant Canadians who get passports and then leave. Also, an answer as to WHY these cost the country so much?
Unfortunately, there are no reliable figures available about the exact number of Canadians (and PR's) who don't actually reside in Canada. My views are based on personal experience, where I have encountered countless people around the world who hold a Canadian passport and have lived in Canada for 3 years at most. Many people I have spoken to capitalized on the Liberal's loose border policies and have only been to Canada twice (once for landing and once for the citizenship test) and yet gained citizenship.
As for WHY these cost so much, I thought this was fairly obvious. These citizens qualify for free healthcare for the remainder of their lives, as do their families. In addition, they and their families qualify for free or highly subsidized education. Also, they are eligible for pension so long as they live in Canada for an additional 7 years. I'm sure there are other benefits as well.
on-hold said:
2) How many of these immigrants return to Canada in their age to collect pensions? And an explanation as well as to why this works, when CPP is based on amount worked in Canada, and OAS requires you to have lived in Canada for 10 years to get the minimum amount (and 20 years, if you're living outside Canada).
Again, there are no stats out there. But, have you driven through Richmond Hill or Markham recently? People return not just for the pensions, but for the free healthcare. As I'm sure you know, it is very difficult for elderly people to obtain health insurance in most countries, and even then, the standard of healthcare available is generally below that offered in Canada. so, as people age, they wish to avail the free quality healthcare that Canada affords. Add to that the benefit of living in a clean, stable and relatively safe country with free money and free education for kids and suddenly the proposition becomes highly attractive.
on-hold said:
3) Exactly why would someone want to live outside Canada for most of their life and suddenly return in their old age, simply to collect a pension that lets them live in poverty? This entire premise is based on the assumption a lot of native Canadians make that life here is better then elsewhere. It's not. Canada's systems and institutions are better -- it's better to learn in Canada, have a legal problem in Canada, travel with a Canadian passport -- but life itself is pretty good elsewhere. Why would an elderly person, at the age when they settle down, do things with their grandkids, sit in the sun and gossip, suddenly say to themselves: "OK, time to move to Brampton!"
Why do you assume they will live in poverty? that seems like an extreme and baseless assumption. when people retire, they usually aren't poor or struggling, otherwise they wouldn't be retiring int he first place. Plus, see my answer above about healthcare and benefits.
on-hold said:
4) If you truly believe that immigrants' kids, and immigrant's kids' kids, are going to be a drain on the system, you know what? That says more about you than Canada; and if it's true, it says more about Canada than it does about immigrants. If you don't want them to be a drain on the system, then work towards a Canada that is free of prejudice and offers equal opportunities to all children, whether they live on Jane Street, Richmond Hill, or Brampton.
What exactly does this say about me? As I have said before, I have never encountered any sort of prejudice in Canada, and do believe that it affords equal opportunities to all. If you disagree, take walk down Bay Street and look at the number of minorities that hold senior roles in major financial institutions.
on-hold said:
This entire 'debate' -- which is conducted without figures -- is the Canadian equivalent of the American 'welfare queen'. The inner-city, black/Hispanic/drug addict, who lives off of Welfare, eating T-bone steaks and driving new cars while industrious white Americans toil to support them. If you think immigrants are bleeding the system, get some data.
I am not the one who does the surveys or creates the data. If you think immigrants aren't bleeding the system, why don't you offer up some data supporting your position?