About the Author: Lowell Green
In addition to being Canada's most honored broadcaster, Lowell Green is one of Canada's best selling authors. His first memoir, The Pork Chop and Other Stories was the best selling book in Eastern Ontario in 2005, outselling even the Harry Potter series. His first novel, Death In October became recommended reading in a number of Canadian high schools and his other two books, How the Granola Crunching, Tree Hugging Thug Huggers are Wrecking our Country and It's Hard to Say Goodbye have been runaway best sellers.
He lives with his wife Deborah on the outskirts of Canada's Capital only a few minutes drive from Scotiabank Place, home of his beloved Ottawa Senators Hockey team. He dotes on three grandchildren whom he describes as absolutely the smartest, best-looking kids in Canada.
His numerous awards include citations from former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and Prime Minister Stephen Harper, the Helen Keller Fellowship Award from Lions International, the coveted Gold Ribbon Award from The Canadian Association of Broadcasters, the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Radio and Television News Directors Association, and a special award from the International Olympic Commission for his broadcasts from the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games. He has had a wing at an Ottawa Hospital named in his honor, and a day named in his honor in Ottawa. He has a special "Community Builder" plaque hanging in his honor at Ottawa City Hall and is the recipient of the prestigious "Queen's Golden Jubilee" medal.
In addition to his writing, Lowell can be heard hosting the Lowell Green show on Radio Station CFRA in Ottawa, Canada each weekday from 10:00 -- noon. For years his radio show has been the top rated in Ottawa and one of the top rated talk shows in North America. Two of his historic broadcasts are being preserved in Canada's National Archives.
Lowell Green presents a powerful, persuasive, well-documented and incredibly well researched argument for a substantial reduction in Canada's yearly intake of immigrants and refugees, and an immediate halt to multiculturalism.
Lowell minces no words in demonstrating how immigration has changed from the early 1990s - when about four European immigrants arrived here for every non-European - until today, when it is exactly the opposite.
He explains how the policies of the Mulroney and Chretien governments opened the immigration floodgates in the 1990s. And how, since then, immigration isn't working for Canada or for the immigrants, many of whom are still on welfare after many years in this country.
The evidence that Lowell presents that multiculturalism has become a form of colonization in our major cities, severely straining our social services and infrastructures, is highly controversial but difficult to refute. So, too, his assertion that even as mass immigration and multiculturalism strengthen Quebec's distinct and French language and culture, the rest of Canada is committing cultural suicide.
His claim that many of the cultures we are importing are repositories of ignorance, superstition, repression, cruelty and injustice, especially towards women, will infuriate many a bleeding heart!