Re: Citizenship Act Bill C-24 discrimination of former foreign workers and students
Newbie2014 said:
You mis-understand me -- I do not have any bias against your position. I just found your use of the term "discrimination" to be inappropriate. My use of the term "fly away" was overly dramatic in an attempt to make a point.
At any rate, with regards to the timelines that you quoted above to demonstrate the hardship of students .... During the 3 to 4 years that they took to complete their studies, the students were foreigners. I studied in the U.S.; I remained a foreigner throughout that time. I have friends who studied in the U.K.; they remained foreigners throughout that time. The reality is:
- Obtaining Canadian PR status after just one year of work experience is an advantage that students enjoyed courtesy of the Canadian government.
- Applying for citizenship after just two years of PR residency is an advantage that students enjoyed courtesy of the Canadian government.
(Processing times are the same for all, so we will not delve into that.)
Now that the government has eliminated that advantage, it feels to you as if the government's action is punitive. It is not. Compared to other immigrants, they enjoyed an advantage. To point this out does not invalidate your concerns. I am being a devil's advocate in explaining why (I think) your campaign will likely not succeed.
I have focused on students in my explanations above, but feel free to provide other examples of pre-PR times so as to enable us to discuss their issues.
I agree with you that discrimination is the wrong choice and perhaps the wrong approach to creating awareness for this aspect of the bill. I would also be one of the first people being in the immigration business to accept that immigration should be seen as a privilege. That said I disagree with your U.S/U.K analogy, stating that because you and your friends remained FN's throughout your studies, then we in Canada as foreign workers/International students should recognize our advantage.
No disrespect but that idea is flawed and almost laughable. Just like you I have friends and family members both in the UK and US that are now green card holders/those in the UK with their "stays" and most obtained it through the academic/professional route. So the main fact that you remained a foreign national could have been one of many reasons e.g perhaps your skills weren't required or may be you just didn't care to migrate. What I'm pretty much getting at is that most countries need and have a route for foreigners to immigrate permanently. It's a symbiotic relationship, so while we acknowledge and respect that it's a privilege to be here in Canada, the government should acknowledge that it's a privilege to have us and act accordingly.
I don't know a country in the world that accepts immigrants and don't need them (Of course with the exemption of those admitted based on Humanitarian and Compassionate considerations), the levels/quotas may vary, it might be a highly selective process depending on the country and her needs but the the bottom line is that they have that need. Even the U.S that has a population almost 10 times that of Canada is still in need of immigrants.
Now let's focus on the proposed bill. I think before any arguments are made, it is essential to understand the rationale behind the creation of this section of the bill. Here's a quote from minister Alexander himself
"That means making sure that people who are becoming citizens have really lived here, and have lived here for enough time to really understand what citizenship is about, what the country is about"
Can you explain to me how it makes sense that somebody like me who has lived here 9yrs pre-PR and 11yrs till date, "has not really lived here, and lived here for enough time to really understand what citizenship is about, what the country is about"
Now to me that's where it gets unfair and unreasonable. I am not saying it's a discriminatory law, I can't even identify a motive for that so I won't make that claim. However I would say the following about it: imperfect, shortsightedness, grey areas, shortcomings e.t.c.
I am not asking for an elimination of the whole bill, I am proposing they make amendments and exemptions to certain sections of the bill which is very normal in law. No bill is perfect and this section screams amendment! Making amendments to this specific law is not going to derail the agenda of strengthening the Citizenship Act.
ps: Think about why the Canadian Experience Class was created, think about why 1 year was eliminated for foreign workers, think about the minister's quote, align them together and tell me if things add up.