56% Say Foreigners Own Too Much Land

56% of Canadians believe that foreigners own too much Canadian land according to the below article from THE LONDON FREE PRESS. I agree with this 56% of the people.

For example, the June 4th blog I posted about Shmuel Farh, an Arab land owner who owns over $250 Million dollars of the downtown core in London, Ontario. This Arab claims to be working against the "white, Anglo-Saxon business and political community" because he claims they are working against him. If there are people trying to push this Arab out of the city in the world of business and land ownership, then good for them!


We need Canadians taking a stand against this foreign invasion and occupation of Anglo-Saxon Canadian land. We need more Canadians owning our major business sectors and industrial sectors. The style of economics our nation toys with now is basically economic suicide!

The Liberals can see the trouble of this rising problem. The Neo-Conservative puppets like Stephan Harper and his international gang of Zionist agitators are allowing all of this to happen, and they do so with a large smile on their face.

Here is the full text of the LFP article:

Foreign Ownership Increasing
Thu, June 7, 2007

By NEIL WAUGH


Whoa, Canada. Who stands on guard for thee?

With the latest foreign takeover wave of iconic Canadian companies, it's getting hard to tell what's ours and what's theirs.

StatsCanada said capital flowing in and out of the country in 2006 "recorded the highest percentage increase in six years."

But while Canadian companies sent $523 billion (up 13.8 per cent) out of the country, the Ottawa statisticians found much of this was "capital outflows to existing operations."

The incoming money told a different story, and was "mostly the result of acquisitions of major Canadian firms" by foreign raiders.

The CIBC World Markets economics team called it "merger mania," and then predicted "the key forces underpinning the unprecedented mergers and acquisitions wave will remain in place."

So much so that the CIBC crew climbed out on a limb and predicted the TSE index will top 15,000 by year's end, much of it merger driven.

Last year "blockbuster" acquisitions in the mining and energy sector boosted the value of Canadian takeovers by a "sizzling 80 per cent," the report continued.

There's money to be made if you are on the right side of the deal. The premium prices paid by the out-of-country raiders average 20 per cent and approach 40 per cent in the mining sector.

But the document also warned of a "growing concern" that mergers will "hollow out corporate Canada."

A recent Ipsos Reid poll found 56 per cent of Canadians surveyed felt foreign ownership is "definitely a problem" and something "we should be watching carefully."

When the provincial numbers are broken out, 60 per cent of Ontarians said takeovers were becoming an issue, while in Alberta -- where foreign companies have run the oil patch from the early days -- a surprising 51 per cent raised a red flag.

A further 48 per cent said the federal government is "not strict enough" in regulating foreign investment.

Certainly the federal Liberals can read polls and sense the growing unrest.

"Canadians want to keep the Canada in Bell Canada," blasted industry critic Scott Brison, while his leader Stephane Dion demanded Prime Minister Stephen Harper "immediately review the rules" governing foreign takeovers.

He also wants to make sure the Investment Canada regulations include a "proper test of net economic benefit."

Or else "standing on guard for thee" might just become "standing on guard for them."

Neil Waugh is the financial columnist for the Edmonton Sun

Source: http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/Business/2007/06/07/4241190-sun.html