Often overshadowed by its neighbor to the South, Canada is still viewed by many as the Great “White” North when compared to the United States, which is becoming a minority-majority nation at a breakneck pace. Unfortunately, Canada is undergoing one of the most rapid demographic transitions in the Western world, and this change is only occurring more swiftly with each passing year.
For those who are politically, culturally, or otherwise aware of the plight of the Canadians there is an eagerness to label Canadians as political cuckolds and ultra-liberals who are happy about the destruction of their nation. Both of these contrasting images, with Canada, painted as either much Whiter than the US or labeled as much more liberal and self-destructive than other countries, are incorrect.
The Canadian nation is not only aware of its replacement, and displeased with it, but could, given the right mix of policies, do something to reverse the tide of the Great Replacement in their country.
Some may be surprised to learn that in 2019 EKOSPOLITICS conducted a poll of Canadians and found that 40% of Canadians believed there were too many visible minorities in Canada. Visible minorities is the polite, and official, Canadian term for recent immigrants and their descendants. This figure is the highest figure since 1995 when just under 50% of Canadians believed there were too many recent immigrants present in their country, the figure then hovered around 30% for nearly 24 years before jumping back up.
Unsurprisingly 53% of working-class Canadians, 51% of those with high school educations, and 69% of those who vote Conservative felt that there were too many recent immigrants and their descendants in their nation.
These numbers are nicely complimented in a more recent (2022) poll which found that 37% of Canadians believe that “there is a group of people in this country who are trying to replace native-born Canadians with immigrants … “. Or, more clearly stated, 37% of Canadians believe that the Great Replacement is a reality, which it is.
What these numbers tell us is that the Canadian nation is certainly not oblivious to their replacement, nor are they so blinded by liberalism that they approve of what is happening to the country.
This does not mean, of course, that Canadians are lining up at the polling places to vote for a party advocating ending the Great Replacement. Like most Western countries no such party exists, and a strong two-party system keeps Canadians trapped in a dichotomy that is quite hard for them to escape.