Last I noticed I did pay for my own CPP - for forty years. I can't help it if you didn't pay for yours.
And I think you are going to have to produce statistics to prove me wrong; something you are not very good at. And read the numbers - they are for last year, not the last five years. But here you are:
Canada’s population grew by 1.7 million between 2011 and 2016
Canada
Now, only two-thirds of that growth was due to immigration, but it will have to do.
Let me give you a t little advice. If you want to argue with me come prepared. You haven't in any of our discussions so far.
Prepare for what ?
An avalanche of virtue signaling nonsense, mixed Lieberally with party hackery, and slanted 'statistics'
that show antifa are huggers of kittens, Trudeau is the best thing since sliced bread, and the sun is actually black,
because calling it anything else would be racist ?
Thanks, I think I'll be fine.
A) You haven't answered the future pensions issue from all that immigration.
My guess is you don't care about it. Your personal blah blah CPP is exactly that.
B) You haven't addressed how in the last 5 years nothing is better in Canada.
Would you like to address the past 20 years ? or 40 ?
C) As for your 'stats', the Canadian site does not show at all how many people left Canada,
which would be interesting to see.
But the UK does show. So it's like apples and oranges.
The problem is the over 100,000 British citizens who leave every year,
because the government still has responsibilities to those people, they don't just disappear.
There is a huge trade of citizens who have contributed and are leaving, and a rush of people in, who have no connection
to the UK, show up for the money and benefits, and have irrevocably changed the country.
The Brexit vote was perhaps the last gasp from a dying country to try and change that.