And You Thought Justin Trudeau was Bad!
The liberal international order continues to suffer electoral setbacks and policymaking routs at the hands of a rising nationalist and national-conservative movement. This was recently covered very well here at White Papers by a new author, Evan of Ruminatrix. These continual defeats are leading to some shockingly anti-democratic developments, and no country represents these developments better than America’s neighbor to the North, Canada.
On March 14th an almost criminally elite globalist by the name of Mark Carney was appointed Prime Minister of Canada, replacing the deeply unpopular Justin Trudeau. Mr. Carney’s Wikipedia page reads like it was written by an AI given a prompt to “create the most globalist character possible” and allowed to run.
Mr. Carney, though born in Canada’s Northwest Territories and raised in Edmonton, Alberta, has (largely) lived and worked abroad since his time in college. First, he attended Harvard in the US for his BA and then he went onto Oxford in the United Kingdom where he earned a doctorate in philosophy.
After college Carney worked for Goldman Sachs for 13 years during which time he lived and worked from Goldman offices in: Boston, London, New York, Tokyo, and Toronto. He was involved in transitioning South Africa’s post- apartheid government into the international bond market, and was involved in the Russian financial crisis of 1998. If you want to know why Russians hate the word “democracy” I suggest reading more about this crisis and what exactly Western “advisors” did to the Russian economy.
From there Carney went on to serve in the Canadian government’s Department of Finance and was a key player in several controversial new taxes and planned tax increases. After his stint trying to tax Canadians to death he moved to the Bank of Canada in 2008, becoming its governor. It’s worth mentioning that he was a popular figure at the World Economic Form then and continues to be.
Mr. Carney also served two years as the chairman of the Bank for International Settlements (BIS). The BIS serves as the coordinating body between the central banks of the world. He also took up the post of chairman of the Financial Stability Board (created by the G20) and was deeply involved with propping up banks that he considered “too big to fail” on the global stage. Carney held his Financial Stability Board chairmanship until 2018.
In 2013 Carney left his post as the governor of the Bank of Canada to take up the post of governor of the Bank of England. While in this post at the BoE Carney was deeply politically involved, voicing opinions both on the Scottish independence referendum and the supposed economic calamity that would befall Britain if it left the European Union. Carney would leave this post in 2020 and become one of the core political advisors to Justin Trudeau during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada.
This dizzying array of globalist credentials is likely what led to Carney becoming the prime minister of Canada despite having never been popularly elected to any public office. Even now Carney is not a member of Canada’s House of Commons. The previous holder of this distinction is the late John Turner who was in office as PM for a short three months before losing the 1984 Canadian federal election. We can only hope electoral defeat befalls Mr. Carney and limits his ability to further damage an already unstable Canada.
“We are very much a country that welcomes immigration and integrates immigrants very quickly to become Canadians and develop … “ – Mark Carney
The new prime minister seems hell bent on subjecting Canada to yet more massive levels of immigration even has he talks of caps and moderation. On his website under the It’s Time To Build section Carney promises to cap immigration into Canada until it can be returned to a so-called “sustainable trend”—he does not provide more detailed numbers.

Elsewhere Carney has said that he wants this cap to return Canadian immigration levels to pre-pandemic trends and that Canada supposedly needs to “absorb” the more than four million temporary residents in the country. Prime Minister Carney was directly asked if Canada could afford more pro-immigration policies and he said “the short answer is yes we can – and arguably, we can’t afford not to.”
Pre-pandemic immigration to Canada was no pretty thing. Statistics Canada reports that since 1990 the average annual inflow of immigrants has been 250,000 individuals. Canada’s current plans for admitting permanent residents are no better. The Canadian state plans to admit 395,000 permanent residents in 2025, another 380,000 in 2026, and another 365,000 people in 2027. It is worth mentioning that these are just the target estimates and the country could admit more than 410,000 people in each of these years. Knowing modern left-wing priorities it is likely that even the “high range” estimates will pale in comparison to the actual numbers given admittance. And much like the United States many of these immigrants won’t even be workers with more than 150,000 each year being the family members (including the parents and grandparents) of immigrants, refugees, and other “humanitarian & compassionate” arrivals.
This is all in the face of a strong majority of Canadians (59%) feeling there are too many immigrants in their county. Even 53% of Canadians between 18-34 years old, the traditional left-wing voters, feel there are too many immigrants in Canada.

A 2019 poll found that 40% of Canadians believe there are too many so-called “visible minorities” in Canada. Visible minorities are people who are neither White nor First Nations (North American Indians). This poll is further reinforced by 2022 data showing that 37% of Canadians, or about 11 million people, think that Canadians are being deliberately demographically replaced. Polling has found that a large share of First Nations Canadians also want less immigration, some 72% to be exact.
Historic Canadians, European and First Nations, very much oppose the transformation of their nation. But Mark Carney is not concerned about this opposition. His only sign of defending Canadian sovereignty thus far has been to say that Canada “never, ever, will be part of American in any way, shape, or form” and that Trump wants to “destroy our way of life.”

These are indeed strong statements, but the musings of Donald Trump pale in comparison to the destruction of the Canadian way of life being brought by ceaseless mass immigration.
I shall leave you with a pair of quotes spoken in 1947 by wartime Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, the only other Canadian PM to hold a PhD:
- “Canada is perfectly within her rights in selecting the persons whom we regard as desirable future citizens. It is not a fundamental right of any alien to enter Canada”
- “There will, I am sure, be general agreement with the view that the people of Canada do not wish, as a result of mass immigration, to make any fundamental alteration in the character of our population. Large-scale immigration from the Orient would change the fundamental composition of the Canadian population … “
