kindly advice a good course to start a emigrant life in Canada.am an Indian dentist who cant work in Canada..?

Posted April 5th, 2012 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

i wish to emigrate to canada later, with some job. i can study any medical relatted course

why do i feel im being prevented from living my life and doing what i want? like emigrating from the uk?

Posted April 5th, 2012 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

certain people say to me ” you cant do this” and ”you cant do that” & i keep thinking when they say that, that the word ‘ can’t’ has deeper meaning..deep conotations…i think are they, or people unknown to me, preventing me, saying i can’t do what i want? i get really angry when i think deeply about this idea…because ive missed out on life greatly…im a 30 year old borderline personality disorder sufferer, ive suffered alot of abuse, pain, trauma & victimization in my life…& theres gonna be serious problems if people are saying i ‘ can’t’ do something….like their preventing me living my life, doing what i want.
i eventually want to move away from britain..emigrate to canada, the u.s or australia..however i have alot to work on in therapy……when people use the word ‘ can’t’ im percieve sometimes im being prevented from full filling my ambitions..& if this is the case theres going to be major problems, because them and me are gonna collide, me like an oncoming frait train
its just, im passionate about my ideals and ambitions in life…and when they say ‘cant’..i get confused and wonder if they or anyone else is preventing me from achieving my dreams….because i certainly oppose them and wont accept it…no one else would accept restrictions put on their life, its injust, and neither will i accept it.

Monyaka – Questions Of Life (Do You Know)

Posted August 24th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada


Feeling in a rootikal mood and I just really like this track. Lyrics are so simple but meaningful. If you don’t know, get to know. Originally formed in 1974 as the Soul Supersonics, this six-piece, Jamaican-born reggae act, based in Brooklyn, New York, USA, was led by guitarist/vocalist Errol Moore and other group members included Beres Barnet (guitar, vocals), Paul Henton (bass, vocals), Richard Bertram (drums, percussion), William Brown and John Allen (keyboards). They backed visiting reggae stars and released their first single, “Rocking Time”, in 1977. They followed this with Classical Roots, both records being released in the USA on their Hevyaka label. Under the new name Monyaka (Swahili for “good luck”), they recorded “Stand Up Strong” in 1982. A year later, with just three original members left, they had a UK Top 20 hit with “Go Deh Yaka” (patois for “go to the top”), which cleverly fused reggae and contemporary R&B. The follow-up, “Reggae-matic Funk”, failed to sustain the interest and this unique band joined the ranks of reggae one-hit-wonders. In a short time, Monyaka gathered a sizable following becoming known around the area as key progenitors of the Brooklyn reggae sound. As a result, the group became the number one most requested backing band for any and all of the reggae musicians coming over from Jamaica to Brooklyn during the late 70s and early 80s. Monyaka backed the likes of Dennis Brown, Burning Spear, Black Uhuru, Marcia Griffiths, The Mighty

Do Israelis want a better life? Do they really think Zionism is worth it?

Posted August 16th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

The average Israeli makes 8,189 Israeli shekels per month, which is $2,278 when converted into Australian dollars.

Thats less than the Australian minimum wage of $2,774 a month ($569 per week). McDonalds workers make that salary in Australia, and the Australian average wage is $5248 a month for full time working adults, and just under $4000 a month for all workers. Which is basically double the Israeli average wage.

Is Zionism really worth it? Why not just encourage emigration from Israel to Australia, Canada and the USA and just give back the Palestinians their land.

Would Israelis really rather live in Israel or Australia, Canada or the USA and have a way better salary and living conditions?

Sources:
http://www1.cbs.gov.il/reader/cw_usr_view_Folder?ID=141
http://www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/abs@.nsf/mf/6302.0
@rudeboring

Australias average wage isnt $45,000 a year. Its $63,000 for fulltime workers and $52,000 for all workers, Also, Luxembourg has such a tiny population and it has a debt of $4,000,000 per person, Australia’s debt is only $42,000 per person.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_external_debt
@rudeboring

According to that link you posted the average wage is $50,000 in Luxembourg:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_average_wage

And you are the one stating that the average wage in Luxembourg is $70,000??!

Anyways, you’re distracting from the point Im making, Israelis generally know English and they could immigrate to Australia, Canada, USA whenever they want, and the governments in those countries welcome Jewish immigrants like they always have.

im 29, suffer with bpd, have life long ambitions to emigrate to austrailia or southern usa, or canada. i feel?

Posted July 18th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada

trapped where iam in the uk, in this flat, like ill never achieve them ambitions and can never leave.
i wanna no, what stops me from fullfilling this ambition of emigration to southern usa or australia?

because if i have to stay here in the uk for the rest of my life, ill drive a knife through my heart

The Life of Free Range Egg Farmers video

Posted June 2nd, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada


www.virtualfarmtours.ca Meet Henk and Jennie and hear how they decided to move from Holland to become free range, organic egg farmers in Canada. Transcript Hi. I’m Henk. This is my wife Jennie. I was raised on a dairy farm and born in the Netherlands. Jennie: Hi. I’m Jennie. I didn’t grow up on a farm but I married Henk in the Netherlands and we immigrated here to Canada and we are now egg farmers here. Henk: My sister and my brother in law had already immigrated in 1992 to Canada and had started an organic chicken farm too. Later on, we visited them a couple of times and I thought it would be a nice idea for our family too to start building a barn and start with organic farming. Jennie: Ten years ago we immigrated to Canada with our children Tineke and Wiebren. The very next day after we arrived we started building our chicken barn. Henk: Our whole farm is organic. We grow soybeans, barley, spelt and organic corn. I like to work with small animals and especially organic animals — laying hens. I grew up on a dairy farm but its lots more work. Maybe now I can spend more time with my wife and my family. Jennie: So yes, we have a little bit more time now as a family and with our children and we hope to be grandparents in a few weeks so that’s very exciting for us. We have had a great ten years so far in Canada and hopefully we will have many more good years as egg farmers in Canada.

Citizen of One…making Canadian life better…Robert Knox talks with John Robson (2 of 2)

Posted February 9th, 2011 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada


In a video released today by the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, co-author Robert Knox provides an in-depth look into MLI’s latest study, Citizen of One, Citizen of the Whole. In conversation with colleague John Robson, Bob tells us what an Economic Charter of Rights could mean for all Canadians. He reminds us how our “sense of being Canadian” is diminished by all the petty barriers that inhibit personal mobility and economic freedom today. With his background in negotiating on internal trade issues and his expert knowledge of the impact these restrictions have on the jobs and lifestyle of Canadians, Bob insists that the time to act is now.

A NEW LIFE IN A NEW LAND clip # 4

Posted September 7th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Immigration to Canada
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Episode#1 “The Mosiac” The story of Muslim immigration to Canada. Program Host: Dawud Wharnsby-Ali

A NEW LIFE IN A NEW LAND clip # 3

Posted August 4th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Uncategorized
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Episode#1 “The Mosiac” The story of Muslim immigration to Canada. Program Host: Dawud Wharnsby-Ali

A NEW LIFE IN A NEW LAND clip # 2

Posted July 28th, 2010 by immigratecanada and filed in Uncategorized
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Episode#1 “The Mosiac” The story of Muslim immigration to Canada. Program Host: Dawud Wharnsby-Ali