French ancestors made an evil noose for Canadians
Frank Li Feb 8, 2026
Ever since the French hanged their king, the world has been under a political correctness witch hunts; politicians have to yell and implement of values and human rights that French ancestors madly fabricated, otherwise witch hunts will end of their political careers.
The catastrophic crisis facing human society lies in the birth rate of high quality populations falling below the replacement rate. their own garbage people ruined countries are over making garbage population; such ones cannot be trained as qualified workers or law-abiding citizens; besides commiting crimes for a living in roaming the world and contributing to racial replacement.
Feb 6, 2026, the National post of Canada published article Canada is losing control of a major city to gangsters to indicate that foreign criminals slip into Canada easily, and when caught they get bail; which makes Canada increasingly losing control of major city.
In September, the federal government declared that the Lawrence Bishnoi gang — an organized crime group from India that has been linked to many of the alleged extortions — would henceforth be a designated terror entity.
And in late January, Surrey City Council called for their community to be placed under a state of emergency.
But the extortion crisis is underlain by two problems that are worsening crime almost everywhere else in Canada.
First, foreign criminals have been able to exploit a porous and overwhelmed Canadian immigration system. Second, a justice system is proving chronically unable to send these foreign criminals home or even keep them in jail.
The result is that Surrey, B.C. is now plagued by threats, shootings and arsons by criminals predominantly targeting the South Asian community. Criminals send crudely worded demands for cash to homes or businesses, and if the money isn’t paid the victim is met with violence.
When the attacks were first starting up in 2023, the B.C. RCMP circulated an example of what a typical extortion letter looked like. A sheet of paper topped with the word “WARNING,” it explained “we are Indian gang members, we want our share from your business like protection money.”
The letter then adds, “we have links all over do not ignore us, it will efect you realy bad.”
The extortions started with small businesses like auto shops, but in recent months began expanding to more brazen targets such as local media. The studios of Surrey’s Swift 1200 AM were targeted by a shooting attack last September.
And then, starting just after New Years, the attacks massively accelerated. Almost every day this year has seen Surrey Police announce some new shooting, threat or arson attack believed to be perpetrated by extortionists.
On Jan. 19, for example, Surrey Police announced they were investigating a business in the city’s East Cloverdale neighbourhood that had been peppered by gunfire overnight. The next day, a near-identical release concerned a business in the city’s Newton neighbourhood being hit by gunshots.
In January alone, Surrey Police tracked 36 separate extortion attacks.
And those are just the ones being reported to the police. In January, a police investigator told independent journalist Sam Cooper that extortion targets, many of whom are often repeat victims, were losing faith in Canadian law enforcement.
“I’m hearing of people living in hotels and they’re footing the bill for themselves, or they’ve left the country,” he said.
Or, in some cases, they’re reportedly shooting back. Last month, Surrey Police announced that homeowners believed to have fired at alleged extortionists were under investigation for “vigilantism.”
The dual problems of lax immigration and a toothless criminal justice system were probably best highlighted in December, when Surrey Police arrested 15 Indian nationals suspected of extortion-related crimes, only for all 15 to immediately claim status as refugees.
Such an obvious exploitation of Canada’s asylum system drew public condemnation from all three levels of government, with Eby calling the whole thing “ludicrous.”
But it worked; even as Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada vowed in a recent media statement that asylum claims would not shield criminals from punishment, the claims did indeed throw a wrench into Canada’s normal removal procedures for accused criminals.
Reversing such “misuse of the system,” said IRCC, would require an Act of Parliament.
Prior extortion arrests have revealed suspects who entered the country on student visas, capitalizing on an unprecedented surge of temporary migration into Canada that often left immigration officials unable to perform eve