Please forgive me here for assumptions but some people need to keep their nose inside their masks and out of other people's business.
Is this aimed at all the criticizing of IRCC personnel in this topic? Are you suggesting that no one here should have anything to say about how IRCC goes about doing their job? That people here should stay out of the IRCC's business and let them figure out how to best do what they have a mandate to do?
To some extent I'd agree. Except sometimes bureaucracies need some prompting, some encouragement. This appears to be such a time. Sometimes other people's business is also one's own business.
Wow the comments on that article just made me depressed. Maybe we should really all just go back to our countries if this is how canadians see us...
Unfortunately the negativity flows both directions all too freely. We have more than a few participants in this forum, this thread, engaging in name-calling, insulting forum participants with whom they disagree, and gratuitously aiming insults at "Canadians" and "Europeans" and government workers generally. One will claim she supports the free speech of forum participants but then abusively engage in name-calling those who express views she does not like; such as calling people who do not favour her approach "
parasites," or "
egotistical," and with no basis at all, even calling some "
racist." Many here are labeling IRCC workers they do not know in a variety of disparaging ways, many one way or another accusing them of being "
lazy" or using covid as an "
excuse" to not work.
Yes, it is disheartening.
I cannot speak for all Canadians. Would not pretend I could even if I was not an immigrant. And of course I do not speak for all immigrants either.
What's-the-rush versus passport shopping (an attempt to explain how this issue may affect things, not to engage in or invite polemics on the issue)
:
It also warrants noting there is a conflict of opinions about facilitating the path to citizenship for those who are
perceived to be
passport shopping, seen to be pursuing Canadian citizenship to obtain a
passport-of-convenience. I suspect some of the views expressed here, and elsewhere, such as those in the vein of
what's-the-rush, are based on this, which is NOT necessarily anti-immigrant or racist. That said, it appears the view that stridently opposes facilitating the path to citizenship for those who may be
passport shopping or otherwise seeking a
passport-of-convenience, is more often and more zealously promoted by those who lean Conservative politically, in Canada, among whom more (not all, and it would be grossly unfair to characterize even most of them as such) also appear to be anti-immigrant or even racist.
Despite the overlap, however, this is a separate and distinct view about what Canadian immigration policy should be. Whether one agrees with it or not, strongly one way or the other, many Canadians, not just Conservatives, not just those with anti-immigrant sentiments, are adamantly opposed to allowing the Canadian immigration system to be, in their view, "
exploited," by those whose agenda amounts to what is called or considered to be
passport shopping or obtaining a
passport-of-convenience.
During the last Conservative government's administration, a lot was done to discourage and outright curtail so-called
passport shopping. While the succeeding Liberal government rolled back many of those measures, the underlying dynamics and motivation for rolling those measures back were complicated and tangled in collateral issues, and, moreover, even among those who have a strong objection to
passport shopping as such, many rightfully saw that much of what the Conservatives under Harper had done was overly-broad and excessive, and needed to be rolled back . . . even though they agreed more generally with curtailing what they consider to be
passport shopping.
Which is to say it would be a mistake to overlook or underestimate the influence this view still has, even among many who lean Liberal or NDP. Which, it is really important to not overlook, includes more than a few MPs and other government leaders.
Which is to say
hitching one's wagon (yeah, I tend to badly mix metaphors), so to say, to the position that the time line for being granted citizenship should take into consideration that some immigrants need a Canadian passport to facilitate travel or business abroad could be counterproductive -- it could invite or outright incite more opposition than it does support.
While I do not think that persons with conflicting opinions should be characterized as "enemies" or that engaging in social and political activism should be equated with war, nonetheless the famous quote from Sun Tzu, The Art of War, seems rather apropos:
"If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat."
This has been, largely, an illustration. Perception plays a big role. It is not so much about who is actually
passport shopping, but more about who appears to be
passport shopping. And then how that can affect the cause . . . in this instance, the cause is the effort to persuade the government to more aggressively address the resumption of citizenship application processing.
Remember, at its core, effecting government action is about influencing people. No advanced degrees in political science necessary to recognize that the first reaction to people
making-noise is to consider it a nuisance.
There is no harm in getting smart, approaching problems (including the one at hand) intelligently. The
Art of Persuasion, one might say, likewise requires knowing those to be persuaded.
It does not hurt, either, to respect those proffering contrary views. Sure, sometimes there is an underlying negative prejudice at play, and then merely butting heads is inevitable. And some venues are simply too bogged down in diatribes of negativity to bother with (such as the comment sections in media articles about immigration typically tend to be).
Many times, however, there is a sincere, genuine difference of opinion about some aspect of the issue. Rudely insulting the person who expresses a contrary opinion will not advance one's case. It will more likely tarnish it. It is far more prudent to make the effort to understand one's adversary, and deal with the substantive elements in dispute . . . or, again, as Sun Tzu put it,
know your enemy.
In particular, in the context of this particular issue, be aware that clamoring for citizenship based on needing a Canadian passport to go abroad or do business abroad (notwithstanding the real world, highly mobile international complexity of business in today's world) risks pushing some negative buttons related to opposing the exploitation of Canada's immigration system. I am NOT at all suggesting this is how it should be. But no great insight necessary to recognize this is in play. And is probably what lurks behind most of the
what's-the-rush observations.
To my view, the issue is not about being in a rush at all. It is about the government timely doing its job. Citizenship testing has already been delayed six months now. Even if testing resumes by the first of October, it is not likely to resume at the pace it was being done six months ago. So the net delay will for sure go longer than six months, at least for most.
It is time for the government to figure out how to do what the law mandates it do, notwithstanding the difficulties imposed by Covid-19.
For those personally affected by this, time to be smart, not get distracted, focus first on making those decisions which will help you navigate your way through this, recognizing and handling the inevitable delays. And then, look for ways to have some POSITIVE, PRODUCTIVE influence. Sometimes small efforts are enough. They add up. Some can and should do more. This is not going to be resolved tomorrow. This is going to take awhile.