Second_in_pie
Senior Member
I think there are 3 things that more immigration is a good idea to me. Firstly is increased density which translates to more things that require a density of scale. Bluntly, Canada with 34 million people spread across about a million square kilometers (most densely populated southern part of the country,) just can't support things like widespread rail networks, big theme parks, or a dense and welcoming countryside like the US, Europe, or China can. From a simple personal psychology and sociology of the entire country perspectives, I think that almost everyone would agree that it's a good thing.
Secondly would be for even better cultural diversity. Canada's already a hugely diverse country, but broadly across the country, there's still an obvious white majority. I think that by bringing in many more immigrants from around the world, they'll be able to compound together to bring specific cultural amenities that wouldn't be possible with smaller numbers of a certain ethnicity. So while we may have 2 channels of Spanish broadcasting, 2 of Punjab, 1 of Hindi, 5 of Cantonese, and 200 in English in the GTA, (warning: numbers pulled out of ass,) if we were to just have a lot more spanish, indian and chinese people, we'd have lots of broadcasting for everyone. And white people don't have to fear being drowned out, because there's still a large number of English speakers that'll be wanting english broadcasting, just as there are now. It'd improve the livelihoods of the immigrants that are already in the country and who would still be coming in the future, while current immigration levels might achieve that eventually but just more slowly.
And thirdly, using lots of growth as a kind of glue to wallpaper over all of our previous mistakes. Lots of new people living in the country will demand lots of social changes, new infrastructure, and figuring out new ways to support them. It might take more actual work than just wallpapering over those mistakes while keeping a relatively steady population, but I think it'll be much easier, socially and politically, to change in a high growth scenario. Not to mention that many, many of the immigrants that we'd be letting in are used to lives more in tune for what we should be shooting for; locally focused, low carbon footprint lifestyles. And once all the big work's done, we'll have a well adjusted and well functioning population of around 100 million, giving us points #1 and #2 with very little drawback 60 or 70 years in the future.
Though, I know there are many people that do want Canada to have more political, economic or military clout. I'm not one of those people, but it's a bone to throw to them in appeal. Though I think that if Canada was to accomplish social change towards more sustainable and enriching lifestyles (which it seems like Canada's at least trying to lead in now,) it'd be good to have more people to be able to get those ideas and values further engrained into the rest of the world, in the unfortunate but also unfortunately foreseeable event that things generally keep to the status quo.
EDIT: But you can at least see where I'm coming with this, right? There are obviously a bunch of public policy changes that'd need to occur, and a lot of work for the government to do/manage. But I think that it's a very plausible future for this country. If you can see the pros but feel that they're overshadowed by the cons, perhaps some discussion into fleshing out more pros or making the cons less of an issue is the way this thread should be going, no?
Secondly would be for even better cultural diversity. Canada's already a hugely diverse country, but broadly across the country, there's still an obvious white majority. I think that by bringing in many more immigrants from around the world, they'll be able to compound together to bring specific cultural amenities that wouldn't be possible with smaller numbers of a certain ethnicity. So while we may have 2 channels of Spanish broadcasting, 2 of Punjab, 1 of Hindi, 5 of Cantonese, and 200 in English in the GTA, (warning: numbers pulled out of ass,) if we were to just have a lot more spanish, indian and chinese people, we'd have lots of broadcasting for everyone. And white people don't have to fear being drowned out, because there's still a large number of English speakers that'll be wanting english broadcasting, just as there are now. It'd improve the livelihoods of the immigrants that are already in the country and who would still be coming in the future, while current immigration levels might achieve that eventually but just more slowly.
And thirdly, using lots of growth as a kind of glue to wallpaper over all of our previous mistakes. Lots of new people living in the country will demand lots of social changes, new infrastructure, and figuring out new ways to support them. It might take more actual work than just wallpapering over those mistakes while keeping a relatively steady population, but I think it'll be much easier, socially and politically, to change in a high growth scenario. Not to mention that many, many of the immigrants that we'd be letting in are used to lives more in tune for what we should be shooting for; locally focused, low carbon footprint lifestyles. And once all the big work's done, we'll have a well adjusted and well functioning population of around 100 million, giving us points #1 and #2 with very little drawback 60 or 70 years in the future.
Though, I know there are many people that do want Canada to have more political, economic or military clout. I'm not one of those people, but it's a bone to throw to them in appeal. Though I think that if Canada was to accomplish social change towards more sustainable and enriching lifestyles (which it seems like Canada's at least trying to lead in now,) it'd be good to have more people to be able to get those ideas and values further engrained into the rest of the world, in the unfortunate but also unfortunately foreseeable event that things generally keep to the status quo.
EDIT: But you can at least see where I'm coming with this, right? There are obviously a bunch of public policy changes that'd need to occur, and a lot of work for the government to do/manage. But I think that it's a very plausible future for this country. If you can see the pros but feel that they're overshadowed by the cons, perhaps some discussion into fleshing out more pros or making the cons less of an issue is the way this thread should be going, no?
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