shockedcanadian
Diamond Member
- Aug 6, 2012
- 38,465
- 37,075
- 2,905
Canadas caste system is enforced against all people. Even if the TPS or RCMP have to hire creepy foreigners from the Philippines or kids of cops to manufacture and maintain the caste (and massive police budgets), they will and do. Even if it takes them into American corporations operating here to do so.
Ontario is a prime system for the caste and it's been covered in many publications though Canada tries to mute these publications as they fight with charm offensives, PR campaigns and false optics.
Critical information for your State Department and Trade Representatives, pass it on free Americans.
Born poor, die poor in Canada. May those filthy G-dless animals and their family members who enforce this caste be judged by G-d.
theconversation.com
Many perceive caste to be a phenomenon that only exists in India. Yet, it is a part of Canadian society, and an issue that many in South Asian diasporas are contending with.
The late British Columbia-based poet and activist Mohan Lal Karimpuri described caste as a system of high and low, a form of “social, economic, political, religious inequality” that takes away the power of the many and puts it in the hands of the few. It is the hierarchical ranking of people in accordance with an ascriptive identity, associated with family, lineage and hereditary occupation.
Ontario is a prime system for the caste and it's been covered in many publications though Canada tries to mute these publications as they fight with charm offensives, PR campaigns and false optics.
Critical information for your State Department and Trade Representatives, pass it on free Americans.
Born poor, die poor in Canada. May those filthy G-dless animals and their family members who enforce this caste be judged by G-d.

How caste discrimination impacts communities in Canada
Casteism is commonly seen as a form of discrimination limited to South Asia. However, diaspora communities in Canada are also grappling with issues of caste.

Many perceive caste to be a phenomenon that only exists in India. Yet, it is a part of Canadian society, and an issue that many in South Asian diasporas are contending with.
The late British Columbia-based poet and activist Mohan Lal Karimpuri described caste as a system of high and low, a form of “social, economic, political, religious inequality” that takes away the power of the many and puts it in the hands of the few. It is the hierarchical ranking of people in accordance with an ascriptive identity, associated with family, lineage and hereditary occupation.