The Engineered Divide: What Ottawa Doesn’t Want Canadians to See

5 hours ago
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Canadians are not imagining it. A divide is growing in this country, and it’s not coming from the people — it’s coming from federal policy.

Refugee claimants qualify as “residents of Canada” the moment they receive temporary documents, unlocking a wide range of federal programs even if they have never worked here or paid into the system. The Settlement Assistance Program (RAP) covers furniture, linens, household needs, transportation, dietary allowances, clothing allowances, newborn and maternity benefits, school support, maximum child tax benefits, monthly income support, housing top-ups, and start-up payments in the thousands. They also receive federal health coverage that includes medical, vision, and dental — now with full eligibility for the Canadian Dental Care Plan as well, meaning double coverage.

Meanwhile, Canadian families face higher taxes, higher rent, and rising bills while programs for veterans and citizens continue to be cut or restricted.

This video is not about blaming newcomers. Anyone would accept help in their situation. The problem is a government that created a system where newcomers receive full support while Canadians are told to tighten their belts. And when citizens raise these concerns, they are accused of hatred or phobia — and now face new censorship laws.

The divide is not natural. It is engineered.

The government must start putting Canadians first, stabilize the country, and address the growing strain.

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