8 Replies to ““Could””

  1. Your first Criminal Code conviction while not a citizen should be your last in Canada. Time served, straight to the plane. Or cargo ship.

    Your first moving violation conviction should result in enforced driver (re)education, successful completion of which is required to stay.

    1. I think that’s a good idea, but Liberal judges would circumvent it by refusing to convict anyone facing deportation.

      1. There is that. But it should be explicitly forbidden from being considered, among other things, and is less useful a consideration in a jury trial.

  2. Terrorists, murderers, pedos, war criminals, cartel members, triads, beach shitters – all are welcome in the Dominion Dystopia.
    Why not some drunks?

    1. But if there’s one thing this country really should be self-sufficient in, surely it’s drunks? I mean, I’ve done my bit.

  3. Looks as though I will be taking my life in this guys drunken hands next time I visit my in-Laws in Vernon. Good to know. A Mercedes Benz SUV, you say … the roofing and government grifting business must be good for the drunkard

  4. My how times have changed. During the Great Exodus of Brits from the Fabled Isle back in the late Forties and early Fifties my father decided to look for greener pastures and decided Canada was the best option. The imigration process took about a year and one Canadian imigration officer in Glasgow overseeing his application ventured that should my father get so much as a traffic violation in the first year here he could be subject to deportation. That warning stuck with him his whole life even after he became a Canadian citizen. Fortunately he never lived to see the mess this country has devolved to.

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