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“Racialized” Candidates Power Provincial Election In British Columbia

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“Racialized” Candidates Power Provincial Election In British Columbia

Media refuse to expose the relationship between immigration policy and rising political power being accumulated by Canada’s “special interest” communities.

Brad SalzbergSep 23

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For those concerned with a morphing of Canadian society toward “post-modern” status, a particular phenomenon remains worthy of public exposure.

It goes like this: when “special interest” communities experience incidents of so-called racism, media scream it to the high-heavens. Conversely, in cases of socio-political accomplishment, we hear nothing but a cacophony of silence.

Take, for example, the Liberal government-3rd World political powerhouse in the Greater Toronto Area. This geographic area can accurately be described as “Third World” central. In this regard, the key to the Liberal Party domination in ridings such as Brampton, Ontario remain poorly understood among Canadian society.

Within these ridings, demographics and political power go hand-in-hand. Brampton is a white-minority riding. Of its five members of Parliament, four are Sikh-Canadian and the other Muslim-Canadian.

Those interested in the “changing face” of Canadian society should be aware of these circumstances. Due to media sublimation, most of us don’t have a clue regarding the extent of ethnocentricity employed by election strategists.

Who more than government understand Canadian demography as shaped through immigration intake? Applied for decades, the formula runs like this: analyze a riding’s ethnic identity; match MP candidates with the dominant ethnicity.

As millions of 3rd world migrants arrive in Canada, the phenomenon filters down to a provincial level. Take, for example, the upcoming election in British Columbia. A quick analysis of candidate identity tells the story.

B.C. contains 93 provincial ridings. In total, 31 Sikh-Canadians are registered as MLA candidates, most of whom are running for the New Democratic Party. Where the rubber hits the ethnocentric road is found in 11 ridings in particular. Most are urban, with the phenomenon now spreading suburban and rural constituencies.

Burnaby-Centre, Burnaby-South, Delta-North, Richmond-Centre, Richmond-Bridgeport, Richmond-Queensborough, Surrey City Centre, Surrey-North, Surrey-Fleetwood, Surrey-Newton, Surrey-Panorama, Vancouver-Fraserview, Vancouver-Hastings. 

What do these provincial ridings have in common? No white candidates– that’s what. In our mind, CAP can now hear the accusations of “racism” begin to roll. But is it really the case?

Is it not a matter of exposing what legacy media neglect to place in front of the eyes of Canadians? And that reasons why are to be found in potential accusations of racism toward media? This information is factual, not conjecture. In this, we see how our country is being held hostage by the mighty “race-card.” Our eyes open to the idea that this dynamic is leading to comprehensive social inversion in Canada.

Media refrain from speaking of the trajectory of demographic identity rooted in immigration policy. Immigration is power. It’s the lifeblood by which “Old Stock” Canadians are to transition to a minority community as we stumble our way toward the half-century mark in 2050.

The riding of Vancouver-Hastings is a solo affair. Elections B.C. list a single candidate, current provincial NDP Attorney General Niki Sharma. In Langley-Highlands, incumbent NDP Minister of Housing Ravi Kahlon is all-but certain to retain his seat. Surrey-North NDP MLA Rachna Singh, Minister of Education, is a controversial figure, so much so that members of her own community have attempted to remove her from office based on her LGBT affectations:

“An attempt to recall British Columbia’s education minister has failed. The attempt, filed by Gurdeep Jassal, had to collect signatures from more than 40 per cent of eligible voters (11,811 signatures) in Rachna Singh’s Surrey-Green Timbers riding by Jan. 29, 2024.”

Additional members of the Executive include Jagrup Brar, Minister of Trade; Harry Bains, Minister of Labour. All told, Sikh-Canadians comprise 20% of  executive members of the NDP government in British Columbia. An interesting fact, seeing as the Sikh community population of B.C. was 290,870 as of April 2024. In 2019, the population of British Columbia was just over 5 million. The math informs us that 5.9% of the provincial population is Sikh.

What does this tell us? Cultural Action Party [est.2016] pull no punches. Sikh-Canadian politicians are over-represented in British Columbia. Why do we harp on this?

The reason why is found in the perpetual narrative from Canada’s woke contingent which demands “proportional representation” according to demographic make-up. The “multiculturalists” love this one, leveraging Canada’s changing demography to advance their ethnocentric interests.

Yet, when over-representation rules the roost, Canadians hear nothing about it. In this, we come to understand how the prickly issue of “racism” is being used by government and media to control Canadian society.

Shafted in the entire procedure are Canada’s multi-generational “Old Stock” Anglophone communities. The more immigration, the faster our country transitions to the “stuff of globalist dreams.”

With federal New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh playing back-up quarterback, the entire circumstance is devoid of media exposure. Obviously, they want what Trudeau and Singh want.

The election in B.C. also includes a dozen candidates drawn from Chinese-Muslim communities. Caught in the crossfire are Canada’s “silent majority,” held captive by political correctness and additional elements of socio-political control falling under the under the umbrella of “liberalism.”

Filtering down to the provincial level in British Columbia and Ontario, it’s only a matter of time before our entire nation is reconfigured through immigration policy and its socio-political manifestations.