đź”»RIP Canada: Citizens Are Already Planning Their Exit - Cypher News

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[ CYPHER CODE #722 ]
Unaffordability turns patriotism into math.

[ CYPHER CODE #723 ]
Mass immigration without infrastructure breaks consent.

[ CYPHER CODE #724 ]
Canada isn’t unique, it’s early.

BRIEFING

Grant here. For anyone who hasn’t been living in a bomb shelter, it’s pretty apparent these days that Canada is not in a good place. Actually, the country seems to be sliding down into disaster faster than the rushing waters of Niagara Falls. You can read article after article on this decline, but what really puts Canada’s erosion into plain view is from the Canadians themselves, and a viral video declaring the country “dead” has landed this issue square on the nose. Let’s break it down.

This wasn’t a fringe meltdown or a shock take chasing clicks. It was a public acknowledgment that affordability, speech constraints, strained services, and policy drift have reached a point where exit planning sounds rational, not radical.

In the video, a Canadian woman speaks directly to the camera, explaining why she believes the country has crossed from decline into something more permanent. Her argument wasn’t framed as policy theory or partisan debate, but instead as lived reality.

She touches on many serious and ever-growing issues like affordability collapsing, healthcare deteriorating, speech tightening, and immigration overwhelming infrastructure. But most importantly, she described leaving Canada as really the only practical decision there is, something she said many Canadians were already asking her how to do.

SOURCE

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And again, this isn’t just one woman or just one experience. Even the numbers back up the fact that Canadians are tired and feel that moving out of the country is their best bet. Or really, their only bet.

Poll data shows nearly three in ten Canadians are seriously considering moving because of housing costs, and the number is sharply rising among newer residents.

SOURCE

This evidently has led many Canadians to look for more affordable housing climates. Three-in-ten (28%) Canadians say they are seriously considering leaving the province they live because of the current cost of housing. This sentiment is evidently higher in B.C. and Ontario, which have been dealing with high housing costs for longer than other regions in the country. However, one-quarter (25%) in Nova Scotia say they are considering leaving that province as it deals with low vacancy rates.

Indeed, one-quarter in Halifax say they are considering departing Nova Scotia because of how expensive housing has become in the province. But it is those in Toronto’s core and outskirts, or the 416 and 905 area codes respectively, who are most likely to say they are thinking of leaving their province. More than two-in-five in Toronto say this. One-third (33%) in Vancouver are also considering leaving B.C. in search of more affordable housing. Notably, BMO released a report showing that the cities of Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver combined lost more than 130,000 people to interprovincial migration than they gained between 2022 and 2023.

Two-in-five 18- to 24-year-olds (42%) say they are at least thinking about leaving the province they currently live in because of how expensive housing is. Notably, at least one-in-third of all Canadians under 55 agree it is something they are thinking about, including one-in-seven who strongly agree (see detailed tables).

Renters across the country are feeling the pinch of rising rent across the country. Approaching two-in-five (38%) say they are seriously thinking of leaving their province because of housing costs. Homeowners are less likely to be contemplating leaving, but more than one-quarter (28%) of those still paying off their mortgage are considering finding cheaper housing elsewhere.

Canadians who have come to the country in the past 10 years are much more likely to agree they are thinking of leaving the province they currently live in because of the cost of housing than others. Notably, the Institute for Canadian Citizenship reported that fewer permanent residents are becoming citizens in recent years, dropping from 75 per cent who did so in 2001 to 45 per cent in 2021. Historically, Canada has been viewed as a “role model” by the OECD for labour migration and has outperformed most OECD countries when it comes to economically integrating immigrants. But many recent immigrants are departing the country because of the high cost of living, and especially housing, perhaps harming Canada’s reputation as a welcoming country for newcomers.

DEBRIEFING

Look, all the warning signs are here…

When nearly three in ten Canadians are openly considering leaving because daily life no longer pencils out, that’s not just a passing mood swing; it’s a pure loss of confidence in the system. Young adults, renters, new families, and even recent immigrants are doing the same math and reaching the same conclusion: staying feels riskier than leaving.

What makes this moment different is how normal the exit conversation has become. Leaving is no longer framed as failure or disloyalty, but instead it’s framed as self-preservation. That shift tells you the Canadian people don’t have faith that the government will pull itself together before everything completely implodes. Confidence levels here are basically at -3 out of 10 right now.

And what we’re seeing here with Canada matters because it shows what happens when affordability, infrastructure, and policy drift downhill long enough. People simply don’t abandon countries casually. They do it when the future feels smaller than the present. Other Western nations, including the United States, should read this less as outrage and more as instruction. Because once exit thinking goes mainstream, rebuilding trust becomes far harder than raising interest rates or passing another bill.

NOW YOU KNOW

You don’t flee chaos. You flee dead ends.