31GLOCK@31GL0CK
Based on the various reports and calls I went through about the recent Nagar Kirtan in Surrey , the conclusion I reach is that You see the same fifteen to twenty faces at every single anti-India protest in Canada. The same retard faces, the same yellow Khalistan flags, the same rented buses, the same handful of loudmouths screaming “Khalistan Zindabad” while the rest of the world yawns. Whether it’s outside the Indian Consulate in Vancouver, the Hindu Sabha Mandir in Brampton, or some half-empty parking lot in Surrey, it’s always the same recycled crew. Fifteen to twenty hardcore Khalistanis showing up like clockwork, pretending they speak for millions.
These aren’t organic gatherings of angry Sikhs. These are staged photo-ops by the usual suspects — folks linked to banned outfits like Sikhs for Justice (SFJ), the same group that keeps pushing fake “referendums” nobody in Punjab actually cares about. They hype it up on social media for weeks, blast calls for mobilization across WhatsApp groups, and then… ten, fifteen, maybe twenty-five bodies turn up on the day. Recent “Khalistan Zindabad” rallies outside Hindu temples in Brampton and Surrey? Barely two dozen people. One event in Calgary against PM Modi? Around thirty noisy guys with big flags. Another temple protest? Just ten lonely souls despite massive online campaigning. The gap between their digital noise and actual street presence is hilarious.
Meanwhile, Canada is home to over 770,000 Sikhs — one of the largest Sikh populations outside India. That’s hundreds of thousands of hardworking, tax-paying, law-abiding Canadian Sikhs who run businesses, serve in the military, play in the NHL, build temples, and just want to live in peace. The overwhelming majority of them look at these Khalistani circus acts and treat them like the piece of trash they are: ignored, avoided, and quietly despised.
Veteran Sikh voices in Canada have said it plainly — former federal minister Ujjal Dosanjh, broadcasters and Sikh Politicnas call it a noise pollution.One estimate puts active Khalistani support among Canadian Sikhs at less than 5%. Another veteran journalist who studied the movement for decades put it at 98% of Sikhs wanting nothing to do with it. Polls back this up: only about 10% of all Canadians (not just Sikhs) show any sympathy for these separatist activities, and even that shrinks when you ask about actual support. Most Canadian Sikhs are proud of their faith, proud of their success in Canada, and have zero interest in carving up India or importing 1980s Punjab militancy to Toronto suburbs.
They ignore the protests because they know the truth. Khalistan was a failed dream born out of trauma from the 1980s — Operation Blue Star, the riots, the assassinations, the Air India bombing that killed 329 innocent people, mostly Canadians. That era is over. Punjab today is peaceful, developing, and integrated. Sikhs in India hold top positions in the army, politics, business, and sports. The vast majority of Canadian Sikhs came here for opportunity, not to wage some imaginary revolution from Tim Hortons. They send their kids to good schools, celebrate Vaisakhi with family, visit gurdwaras for prayer — not for political stunts. They see these same 15-20 faces showing up to harass Hindu temples, burn Indian flags, and chant death threats, and they roll their eyes. “Not in our name.”
The hardcore crew keeps trying anyway. They deface statues, storm events, target Hindu places of worship, and scream about “genocide” while living freely in one of the most tolerant countries on earth. They rely on a tiny echo chamber of extremists, some with criminal links, some just professional agitators who’ve turned separatism into a full-time grift — donations, headlines, political pandering. Canadian politicians have sometimes courted the Sikh vote by turning a blind eye, but even ordinary Canadians are getting fed up.