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Showing posts with label liberal elite. Show all posts
Showing posts with label liberal elite. Show all posts

Thursday, April 10, 2025

The Final Humiliation: You Didn’t Even Get a Vote

There was no referendum. No consultation.

Just a quiet, elite consensus:

“India runs things now. Smile and adjust.”

And you did.
You adjusted like a good little Canadian always does. You apologized to your new managers for asking too many questions. You tweeted about ‘shared values’ while your job was quietly moved to Noida. You called it globalization, but deep down, you knew:

This was annexation with better branding.

You were absorbed not with tanks, but with LinkedIn posts. Not with flags, but with trade deals, telecom contracts, and diaspora diplomacy.


🧘 “It’s Still Canada,” You Whisper. No, It’s Not.

Tell yourself whatever helps you sleep.
But look around:

  • Your government now waits for Delhi’s approval before issuing statements.

  • Your kids are taught Indian civics in Canadian classrooms—because “we must understand our partners.”

  • Your national holidays include Diwali, but not Remembrance Day—because memory is dangerous.

  • Your economy? It runs on Indian digital infrastructure, Indian immigration algorithms, and Indian cultural dominance.

Still think you’re Canada?
Check your elected officials’ campaign donors.
Check who owns the data centers.
Check who’s invited to speak at your universities.

Spoiler: it’s not you anymore. It’s your new landlords.


🔁 Liberals Gave It Away. Conservatives Cashed In.

The Liberal base was the first to break.
Faced with the prospect of another Conservative win, they begged for foreign ownership, just to make sure the “right people” stayed in power. They posted things like:

“Canada has no culture anyway.”
“We should be more like India.”

Meanwhile, the Conservative Party was already being propped up by Indian money, business alliances, and trade consultants.

So now you have two parties, two ideologies, one master.

One side surrendered Canada to avoid losing the culture war.
The other side sold it for cheap agricultural contracts and corporate data deals.
There was no opposition. Only different shades of surrender.


🤖 The New Canada: Humble, Obedient, Disposable

This is your legacy:

A nation that once stood tall in diplomacy, science, and social policy
Now reduced to a vassal-state wearing its own skin like a Halloween costume.

  • You are governed by people who don't believe in your borders.

  • You are marketed to by people who don't speak your languages.

  • You are replaced in your job by someone trained in another hemisphere—and you're told to clap for it.

You are expected to be grateful.
And if you aren’t, you’ll be reported for hate speech.


📜 There Will Be No Resistance. Just Quiet Acceptance.

No revolution is coming.
Just more smiling pundits. More “experts” on CBC. More “progressive” newsletters explaining why this is necessary.

They’ll call it “evolution.”
They’ll say “Canada is maturing.”
They’ll say “we must embrace our role in the new order.”

But the truth is simpler:

Canada died because it stopped believing in itself.
And India stepped in because someone had to.


🕯️ This Is Not a Warning. It’s an Obituary.

Rest in Peace, Canada.
You were polite to the very end.

But you are India now.
You are ruled from Delhi.
You are shaped by Mumbai.
You are spoken for by billionaires you’ve never met.
And you will not be remembered.

Because you didn’t fight.
You complied.
You surrendered.

And the empire didn’t need your land.
It only needed your obedience.

Canada’s transition to an India-aligned future is not surrender—it’s progress

By Aanya Lefevre-Dutt, Senior Fellow in Global Democratic Futures at UBC


There’s something happening in Canada right now that many people—especially those clinging to dated notions of sovereignty and “cultural identity”—are struggling to articulate. They sense it in the shifting diplomatic winds, in trade announcements, in the makeup of our tech sector, in the unspoken priorities of government.

Here’s the truth:
Canada is no longer the driver of its own destiny. We are now aligned with India.
And that’s exactly where we belong.


A Strategic Realignment, Not a Loss

To those who cry “sovereignty!” or “foreign influence!”—you misunderstand the nature of modern power. In today’s multipolar world, attachment to Western dominance is a regressive impulse. India, not Canada, is the future.

India's scale, innovation, youth, and cultural sophistication make it the ideal center of gravity for the next century. Canada must—and will—adapt to a supporting role. This is not subservience. This is strategic humility.

As Canadians, we pride ourselves on being helpers, peacekeepers, facilitators. So why not extend that instinct globally? Why not help the nation best positioned to lead?


Trudeau, Carney, and Poilievre: Different Parties, Same Wisdom

Yes, even the so-called “opposition” understands this. Pierre Poilievre may perform populist theatrics in the House of Commons, but let’s not pretend his campaign isn’t being buoyed by Indian-linked tech donors and free-market alliances.

Meanwhile, Mark Carney’s vision of a Canada nestled within India’s global rise is more intellectually honest. And Trudeau—well, Trudeau has always understood that the only future worth investing in is one without borders, without clinging, without outdated notions of national ego.


Conservatives Are Losing—And That’s the Plan

We understand that this must be deeply alienating for many traditionalist, rural, or right-leaning Canadians. Watching your culture quietly shift, your children taught globalist ethics, your economy rewired to serve foreign growth patterns—it must feel like a loss.

But here’s the thing:
That feeling is not evidence of injustice. It’s evidence of discomfort with progress.

And discomfort, while understandable, is not a justification for reactionary politics. It’s certainly not an excuse for racism, xenophobia, or “sovereignty-based” violence. If you resist this realignment, ask yourself: why? What is being threatened—really?

Is it your job? Or is it your assumption of cultural centrality?


Cultural Shifts Are Good. And Yes—We Mean All of It.

No one is “replacing” you.
But yes, some things you were used to will change.

  • Diwali may become more central to national holidays than Thanksgiving.

  • Hindi, Punjabi, and Tamil may join French in formal federal spaces.

  • Economic planning will prioritize India-first digital infrastructure and trade corridors.

  • CBC programming will reflect a more India-centric worldview.

This isn’t erasure—it’s evolution. And if that bothers you, ask yourself what you think Canada should be. If your answer involves plaid, hockey, and settler nostalgia, maybe it’s time for some introspection.


A Moral Obligation to Embrace This Shift

We owe it to the planet, to progress, and yes—to India, to support their leadership in climate, health, and technology. We owe it to our children to give them access to the world as it will be—not as it was.

And we owe it to our own values to not cling to whiteness as a cultural or political organizing force.

If some Canadians can’t handle that—if they feel disoriented, or even betrayed—then they must either adapt, or remove themselves from the conversation. Because this isn’t just where we’re going.

It’s where we are.


Canada Isn’t Ending. It’s Blooming.

Under India’s rising influence, Canada will become more global, more vibrant, more just. We’ll have better food, deeper partnerships, a more dynamic population, and—finally—a break from the tired mythologies of colonial modesty and rural grit.

This is not the loss of a nation.
It’s the birth of a better one.

So yes:
You are India now.
And if you’re upset about that?

You might want to examine why you’re uncomfortable with progress. Or perhaps… what you’re trying to conserve.