04/30/2026
Canada wants to build. Just not with you.
Billions into infrastructure. Trains. Housing. Energy grids. But the people who would pour the concrete, write the code, run the firms... quietly told to wait. Or go home.
A country can't run a marathon on fumes.
Here's what keeps running through my mind.
Marathons aren't solo events. They're relays. One generation runs their leg, hands off the baton, and the next generation takes over. That's how the race continues.
Canada's been running for 157 years. Strong legs, good pace, solid foundation. But right now, we're approaching a handoff point.
700,000 tradespeople retiring in the next two years. Infrastructure that's been holding us up for 40+ years starting to fail - water mains breaking in Calgary, bridges deteriorating across the country, nuclear plants aging out with no replacements planned.
We need fresh runners ready to take the baton.
Not because we failed. Not because we're weak. But because that's literally how relay races work - you can't run forever, and you were never supposed to.
And yet.
We're cutting permanent resident admissions by 120,000. Telling temporary residents to leave. Processing applications in 200+ days when other countries do it in weeks. We're standing at the handoff zone... holding the baton... and refusing to pass it.
I've been working in Canadian immigration for 20 years and I've seen policy swings before, but this one hits different. The people we're turning away aren't just filling labor gaps or paying taxes.
They're the next runners in Canada's relay.
The ones who'll actually build the infrastructure we're announcing in budget speeches. The ones who'll start the companies we'll need in 10 years. The ones who'll keep this country competitive and prosperous when you and I are long gone.
If you want a thriving Canada after we're done running our leg, you can't slam the door on the people who are supposed to run the next one.
This isn't about politics or ideology. It's about understanding how relay races work.
You either complete the handoff, or you drop the baton.
Right now we're choosing to drop it and calling it "border security." Calling it "housing policy." Calling it "responsible economic management."
But really?
We're just refusing to hand off. And marathons don't forgive that kind of hesitation.
The race doesn't pause because we're tired or scared or uncertain. It keeps going, with or without us. The only question is whether Canada keeps running... or whether we stand here arguing about who deserves to hold the baton while other countries sprint past.
I believe Canada offers stability, predictability and prosperity to those ready to work hard. I've always believed that. It's why I do this work.
But belief doesn't pour concrete or write code or build the next generation of infrastructure.
Fresh legs do.
And if we want a Canada that's still standing strong in 50 years, still competitive, still prosperous... we need to let the next generation of runners onto the track.
Not someday. Now. While we still have the baton to pass.
Like if you believe Canada's marathon doesn't end with our generation. Comment 'marathon' if you think we should be passing the baton, not dropping it.