Only On The Walters Post
Just a heads-up — these are my own thoughts based on what I’ve seen and experienced. I’m sharing them to get people thinking and talking, not to say I’ve got all the answers.
There’s something going on across this country that more people need to start paying attention to. It’s been happening quietly, without much fuss or fanfare, but it’s changing the landscape of Canada in a way that should concern every one of us. Foreign money, and a lot of it, is buying up this country … not just a little here and there, but in large, sweeping ways that reach into our towns, our cities, and even our farmland.
Over the past few decades, wealthy investors and corporations from overseas have been pouring their money into Canada. They’re not just buying vacation homes or the odd condo. They’re buying major retail chains, malls, commercial buildings, and farmland. Many of them have built their fortunes far away, often in industries that would never pass the smell test here, and now they’re shifting that wealth into Canadian soil and Canadian infrastructure.
They come in quietly, usually through numbered companies or shell corporations set up right here at home, which means most of the time, you won’t even know it’s foreign-owned. But if you follow the money trail, you’ll often find it ends up overseas. What looks like a Canadian business might just be a holding tank for foreign investors, with profits flowing right out of the country.
Farmland is one of the big targets. In some provinces, there are laws that claim to limit foreign ownership, but in practice those rules are full of holes. Land can be bought under different names or through local partners, and once it’s purchased, there’s no guarantee it will be farmed properly or cared for by people who live on it. What was once a working family farm might now be a silent investment for someone who has never stepped foot on Canadian soil.
The real estate situation is just as troubling. Housing prices have gone through the roof in places across the country, and young Canadians are being pushed out of the markets they grew up in. Homes are being snapped up not as places to live, but as investments to park money. Some sits empty for months or even years. Meanwhile, families are struggling to find decent places to rent, let alone buy.
The same thing is happening in retail. Iconic Canadian brands that used to anchor our communities have been sold off, dismantled, or replaced by new operations funded with foreign capital. These businesses might set up shop in our towns, but they don’t build lasting relationships with the people living there. They fill their shelves with imported goods, keep wages low, and design stores for speed, not for connection or community. It becomes less about serving the neighbourhood and more about owning square footage and extracting whatever profit they can.
I want to be clear that this isn’t about pointing fingers at people who come to Canada to build a better life. Immigration has shaped this country and should continue to do so. But what I’m talking about here isn’t about people … it’s about power. And that power is being quietly handed over to foreign interests who are not here to live with us, but to profit from us. That’s not immigration. That’s ownership.
We’ve let it happen because our laws allow it. Our politicians avoid the topic because it makes them uncomfortable or costs them votes. The media rarely digs into it because it’s not flashy enough for headlines, or it risks offending major advertisers. So it continues in the background, quietly changing who owns what, and who controls the future of this country.
If we don’t speak up and take a hard look at where things are headed, we might soon find ourselves as guests in our own backyard. And once we give up ownership, it’s very hard to get it back.
Until the next time: Keep Your Minds Open & Your Stories Alive. GW