11/8/2005

Good Letter from Paul Fromm

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An interesting letter from Paul Fromm (left) of CAFÉ. He is director of a Canadian organization dedicated to Free Speech and Expression. In this letter he shows how some immigrants apparently don’t like it in their home country, come to Canada and then complain that they aren’t treated well. Of course, the answer to Shaman and the others who complain about the hospitality of Canada or other countries that usually go to considerable taxpayer expense to accommodate them is, “If it is so bad why did you come in the first place and why don’t you just go home?” –dd

What A Shaham He Won’t Just Go Home

Dear Immigration Reformer:

Here’s another boo-hoo story: another struggling immigrant done wrong!

CBS News reports: “Guy Shaham, from Israel, arrived in Halifax 2½ years ago after working for VISA in New York. He said he sent out dozens of resumés to companies in Nova Scotia without receiving a single response. That’s when he decided to pick a local name. ‘One of my friends recommended, ‘‘ he said. Shaham said he suspects employers are more likely to hire people they know than strangers who are clearly “outsiders.” So, ‘Shaham’ became ‘Graham.’ . After that, he said prospective employers looking at his new resumé returned his calls and invited him for interviews. . Mills said if the province is serious about attracting immigrants and convincing them to stay, Nova Scotians need to listen more to newcomers . Although Shaham did not get a job, he’s still in Nova Scotia struggling to make a go of it as a publisher for small magazines.”

What use is a name change to this weirdo? Would the average Haligonian necessarily identify Shaham as a Jewish name? Wouldn’t they be more likely to think it’s Irish? Presumably it has everything to do with his demeanour - which he is apparently unable or unwilling to change. I notice he didn’t feel compelled to alter behaviours in New York. Perhaps, they don’t read as quite the same susceptible dopes.

What’s he doing in high-unemployment plagued Nova Scotia anyway, if he had a nice job with VISA in New York?

Despite high unemployment, Nova Scotia pooh-bahs have bought into the idiocy of trying to increase immigration. That’s probably a good way to keep unemployment rates high and wages low.

An interesting admission comes from Gerry Mills (a female, apparently), executive director of the Halifax Immigrant Learning Centre, who complains: “This is Nova Scotia, we are small C conservative. I think there are different levels of being welcoming. I think there’s one level where people will sit on the bus and say people are friendly … and there’s the next level of the host community changing.” While it’s hard to believe that most people would spot Shaham as an egregiously foreign name, it’s significant that Mills notes that there’s resistance when people see their community changing.

Needless to say, as with all immigration matters in this proxy country, the Majority is studiously ignored and defied when the elites decide to change the population.

Paul Fromm

Director


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