To give some perspective: 2016 (partly due to Syria) was one of the highest levels ever for refugee resettlement in Canada, when it hit close to 47 thousand. In subsequent years has been closer to 28k. (Note, numbers in various texts / sources can be a bit different depending on time frames, and different means of counting as well).
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigratio...-parliament-immigration-2018/report.html#plan
But any way you cut it, these numbers are relatively small compared to the 250k-340k annual total immigrants (more in recent years).
Family class have been steady at 85-100k per year for quite some time. There's no evidence or reason to believe that letting in refugees has changed that or that the numbers for 2016-2017 were 'hit' by the refugees welcomed - in fact the family class numbers went up in those two years.
A separate point that keeps coming up in various threads here are 'advantages' given to e.g. students during covid, and the claim that it's "all about money."
This is just false. The changes made to student visas this year (like 'counting' time spent studying at a Canadian university online for PGWP purposes) collectively have the sense of reducing the number of students who need and can get visas. (And e.g. tourist visas are almost completely on hold, as are entries under ETA for non-family members). So clearly: it is NOT all about the money.
There's lots of reasons to complain, but it's not all zero sum and it's not all 'against' family class applicants.
Yes, Canada's immigration plan puts a heavy emphasis on economic migrants, point systems, etc. Under various governments. With (generally) pretty strong support amongst voters for this approach. Lots of other countries have talked about copying this approach or actually done so.
But it's absurd to paint these issues in terms of "everyone has it better than family class." It's just not true.
(None of this to say there aren't problems that shouldn't be fixed or the processing improved. Agreed - 100%. But that's different from cmparing negatively to 'other immigrants' or students or refugees.)