This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

(Having said that, yes, please come if you qualify. We can use the immigrants.)
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

By the great trans comic artist @assignedmale.bsky.social

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(Having said that, yes, please come if you qualify. We can use the immigrants.)
@timbray can you? It's really hard to come to Canada right now.
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@timbray can you? It's really hard to come to Canada right now.
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@rwg (Having trouble finding the actuals but I gather that we regularly miss the targets)
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

@timbray It seems to be recursive.
> This rule also applies to you if you were born to someone who became Canadian because of these rule changes.
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

@timbray if your ancestors/family was persecuted by the actual previous nazis, you also have a right to German citizenship. It's becoming hard to prove though; of course they destroyed a lot of the records in '45. Might still help quite a few US people, considering how many people fled to there.
The "irony" in this becoming relevant for a new nazi situation is… _something_
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

@timbray I think what that comic is missing is that ‘Canada’ is a nation as well as a place — in 1830 it was a place and not yet a nation, and Canadian citizenship (with jus solis and jus sanguinis pathways) didn’t exist until 1947. So you can’t daisy-chain your Canadian ancestry back past that point. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Canadian_nationality_law
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

@timbray annoyingly my great grandfather became a US citizen, if only he'd picked Canada.
Only a maternal grand uncle emigrated to Canada. His family is still in Vancouver Island.
Still France is a safe enough distance from the UK and the US for now.
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

@timbray Lots of people in New England have Canadian ancestors, so I understand this as like, my friend A with one grandparent born in Canada in 1950 is now automatically Canadian, so is his ten year old kid — he just needs the documents. But my friend J whose grandparents left Canada in 1940, is not a Canadian by descent. (But IANa (immigration) lawyer, just have a lot of experience with immigration systems.)
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@rwg (Having trouble finding the actuals but I gather that we regularly miss the targets)
@timbray @rwg I groveled around and found some parliamentary reports up to 2025 at https://www.canada.ca/content/dam/ircc/documents/pdf/english/corporate/publications-manuals/annual-report-parliament-immigration-2025.pdf
They (carefully?) don't say what the quotas were: mere citizens have to spreadsheet that ourselves.
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@timbray @rwg I groveled around and found some parliamentary reports up to 2025 at https://www.canada.ca/content/dam/ircc/documents/pdf/english/corporate/publications-manuals/annual-report-parliament-immigration-2025.pdf
They (carefully?) don't say what the quotas were: mere citizens have to spreadsheet that ourselves.
@davecb @rwg Ah, good. Quoting from that:
“In 2024, 483,640 immigrants were admitted as permanent residents, in line with targets set out in the Government of Canada’s Immigration Levels Planvi. Of these, 244,965 identified as women, 238,650 as men, and 30 as another gender.
In 2023, a total of 471,808 immigrants were admitted as permanent residents, which indicates a 2.5% increase from 2023 to 2024.”
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This picture from https://studio8502.ca/@mos_8502/116047090400689262
Caution - it's not as simple as this comic says - I think. Here is the upstream source, which I find really hard to understand: https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/canadian-citizenship/act-changes/rules-2025.html
( for some reason, can't quote or even see this post from CoSocial) (?!)

@timbray Oooh, grandma's French Canadian side goes back to the 1600's...
I better start practicing
Oh Canada
, eh
(When I moved to California most people thought I was Canadian; or some other unspecified furiner, anyhows) -
@davecb @rwg Ah, good. Quoting from that:
“In 2024, 483,640 immigrants were admitted as permanent residents, in line with targets set out in the Government of Canada’s Immigration Levels Planvi. Of these, 244,965 identified as women, 238,650 as men, and 30 as another gender.
In 2023, a total of 471,808 immigrants were admitted as permanent residents, which indicates a 2.5% increase from 2023 to 2024.”
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@rwg @timbray Yes, but as usual with governments, the tails wag the dog (:-))
As a result of Mr Trump going after universities and foreign students, especially Canadian students, the door swung back open. For example, in https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-refugees-citizenship/services/study-canada/graduate-student.html PhD students are guaranteed a go/no-go decision in two weeks.
For yourself, reach out quickly to an immigration lawyer, as Canada has announced they are converting large numbers of work-visa recipients to the PR stream this year. You fall into one of the categories they mention, so I'd try jumping on it while it's still a priority.
Governments are slow, slow, slow ... until they become lightening-fast.
(Then they go back to slow again.)