Clear Majority Of Canadians Reject Notion Of Canada Being A ‘Racist Country’

However, younger people are more likely to see Canada as racist, a sign that neo-Com efforts to demoralize people regarding Canada’s history are having some impact.

With much of Canada’s political class pushing a guilt-based narrative that focuses on casting Canada’s history in the most negative possible light, a clear majority of Canadians are rejecting this narrative.

According to a new Angus Reid survey, 23% of Canadians ‘strongly disagree’ and 43% ‘disagree’ with the proposition that ‘Canada is a racist country.’

By contrast, just 5% ‘strongly agree,’ and 29% ‘agree’ with that idea.

This leaves a solid 66% who say Canada is not a racist country, compared to 34% who say it is.

Now, you’re probably already thinking how much this goes against the narrative we have recently seen in the media, particularly in how they covered Jagmeet Singh’s remarks following the horrible events in London, Ontario.

Much of the media covered Singh’s remarks as if he was somehow being ‘brave’ with his displays of emotion, despite the fact that he relentlessly denounced Canada and engaged in total fearmongering, as I wrote at the time:

“All of this is to say that – while no country is perfect – Canada has certainly come closer than most, and provides tremendous opportunities for people from every conceivable walk of life.

And yet, in response to what happened in London, Ontario, Jagmeet Singh shared a stunningly negative and bleak notion of what Canada is:

“Our Canada is a place where you can’t walk down the streets if you wear a hijab because you will be killed—this is our Canada. We can’t deny it,” says Jagmeet Singh re: London attack.

“How many more families will be killed before we do something?” the NDP leader asks.”

Jagmeet Singh’s rhetoric here is horrendous.

He straight up says that people wearing a Hijab can’t walk down the streets “because you will be killed.”

How do you think people who are already afraid feel when hearing that?

It’s completely irresponsible, implying that every Canadian driving down the road is a future murderer, and that brutal death lurks around every corner.

Singh also says “Canada is a place where Muslims aren’t safe.”

It’s as if Singh thinks Canada is some sort of hellscape where monsters are constantly waiting for their chance to kill anyone who looks different, when in fact, the opposite is far closer to the truth.

Singh’s comments are totally irresponsible, and completely wrong.”

Majority of Canadians reject Singh’s worldview

The Angus Reid survey shows how Singh’s views don’t represent anything close to a majority of Canadians.

In fact, the survey shows 76% of people saying “I feel a strong sense of connection with other Canadians living in my community,” while 21% say “I feel like I’m treated as an outsider.”

Further, 74% of Indigenous, 77% of Caucasian, and 73% of Visible Minority Canadians all say they feel a strong sense of connection with other Canadians.

The survey also asked how people feel various institutions treat visible minorities.

32% said they felt the police were ‘unfairly prejudiced or racist toward visible minorities,’ while 23%, 17%, 13%, and 11% said the same about the Courts & Legal System, the Health Care System, Banks, and Public Schools respectively.

In no category did the majority of Canadians say an institution is racist or prejudiced.

Neo-Communist demoralization

While these numbers show a majority of Canadians rejecting the idea that Canada is a ‘racist country,’ there are some areas of concern.

As we know, the neo-Communists focus their efforts on changing the views of young people, which makes it appear that radical ideas are having no impact until all of a sudden a new generation of leaders emerges who disdain their own country, society, and history.

With schools and universities increasingly teaching a radical guilt-based, anti-Western narrative that attempts to impose a neo-Communist, Marxist, race-based conflict narrative, large numbers of young people believe Canada to be racist.

The survey shows 33% of men between the age of 18-34 calling believe Canada is racist, compared to 67% who disagree.

But among women aged 18-34, 54% say Canada is racist, while 46% reject that notion.

Women age 18-34 are the only group/gender in Canada among whom a majority claim Canada is a racist nation.

Politically, a majority of CPC, Liberal, and Bloc voters reject the idea of Canada being a racist country, while a majority of NDP voters and Green voters say it is.

Superiority?

In another interesting part of the survey – and in what will upset many people pushing politically-correct narratives – a vast majority of Canadians say “all races are equal,” while few say “some are superior to others.”

87% of Canadians say “all races are equal,” compared to 12% who say “some are superior.”

Where it gets funny is that 82% of Visible Minority Canadians say “all races are equal,” while 18% say “some are superior,” while among Caucasian Canadians 89% say “all races are equal,” while 11% say “some are superior.”

The fact that Visible Minorities can hold prejudiced views won’t come as surprise to anyone with common sense, but considering that our foolish politicians and the media often absurdly act as if only Caucasian People can be racist, it’s good to see this survey bring a dose of reality back to these discussions.

Media bias

Given these numbers, lets really take a moment and consider how biased the media is when it comes to how Jagmeet Singh’s remarks were covered.

Imagine if a Conservative politician (outside Quebec of course) gave a speech on immigration and potentially opposing the recent immigration increases under Justin Trudeau.

Even though many Canadians (likely a majority), would agree with that, they would be condemned by much of the political establishment and the media would denounce them relentlessly.

Yet, when Jagmeet Singh rips into Canada as a ‘racist country,’ and casts our nation in the most negative possible light, the media promotes him and acts as if he is ‘speaking truth to power,’ despite the fact that a clear majority of Canadians oppose his message.

The double-standard is a big part of why Canada’s policy is much less ‘conservative’ than the expressed policy positions of many Canadians.

However, it also shows that politicians and leaders with the courage to stand up for Canada, defend Canada’s history and values, and express strong Patriotism will be rewarded by voters, so long as they can stand up against the emotionally-manipulative and biased narratives of the establishment.

Spencer Fernando

Photo – YouTube

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