Action4Canada - September 12, 2024


Carbon Tax Climate Costs: Tip Of The Iceberg With Tanya Gaw & Michelle Stirling, Sept. 11, 2024


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour

Words per Minute

143.62833

Word Count

8,718

Sentence Count

521

Misogynist Sentences

3

Hate Speech Sentences

24


Summary

In this episode, Michelle Sterling presents a presentation that will expose the high cost of the climate crisis fraud, which is being used by the elites to orchestrate a massive wealth transfer, control our resources, and drive citizens into controllable 15 minute cities.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 So 93% of Canadians don't really care that much about climate change.
00:00:05.660 They care more about the economy.
00:00:07.400 And the problem with the carbon tax is that it is a dead weight loss on the economy.
00:00:13.020 Now, this is a term used in economic circles.
00:00:16.760 And I took this excerpt from Investopedia.
00:00:21.100 So what is a dead weight loss of taxation?
00:00:24.240 And they offer a mythical city-state called Braavos that imposes a flat 40% income tax on all citizens.
00:00:33.080 And the government stands to collect an additional $1.2 trillion a year through that tax.
00:00:39.720 But the problem is then that money that goes to the government of Braavos is no longer available to the people for spending on consumer goods and services or for consumer saving and investment.
00:00:54.240 I'm so pleased to introduce our special guest speaker, Michelle Sterling.
00:01:01.300 Michelle is an author, researcher, columnist, and blogger.
00:01:05.280 And she is the communications manager for Friends of Science Society.
00:01:10.700 Tonight, she's providing us with a presentation that will expose the high cost of the climate crisis fraud,
00:01:17.260 which is being used by the elites to orchestrate a massive wealth transfer, control our resources, and drive citizens into controllable 15-minute cities.
00:01:28.540 We are so grateful that Michelle is joining us once again with this important information.
00:01:34.060 And we ask that you please share tonight's presentation with your family, friends, and every elected official.
00:01:40.760 And now, with you all, please help me welcome Michelle Sterling.
00:01:45.580 Hello, Michelle, and welcome to the Empower Hour.
00:01:49.200 Good evening, and thank you so much for having me on the show.
00:01:53.260 Super. Thank you, Heather, so much.
00:01:55.320 Oh, Michelle, it is such a delight to have you back on the show you were on a couple of weeks ago.
00:02:00.540 And your presentations are always so well-researched.
00:02:05.720 And as you and I were having a conversation before the show began,
00:02:10.040 is that our hope is that people will actually take this information and make use of it.
00:02:15.100 The elected officials that are sitting in office, some of them, the majority of them,
00:02:19.300 probably have very good intentions regarding the environment and the future for their children.
00:02:23.480 But they've been lobbied very heavily from the groups involved with this and the NGOs
00:02:30.080 that have something to gain and something to profit by it.
00:02:34.000 And so I think we really have, in one sense, our work cut out for us.
00:02:37.860 But on the other sense, what you say is so practical.
00:02:40.920 You always have evidence and good information to back it up.
00:02:44.740 And so I would think that that would help.
00:02:47.360 I know that it does to help change elected officials and move them into a new direction
00:02:52.880 because they have a responsibility, once they receive this kind of information,
00:02:56.740 to dig in a little deeper and make the right choices for their communities.
00:03:03.320 Yes, I think a lot of them have been lobbied very heavily,
00:03:06.860 not only by the lobbyists from the NGOs,
00:03:11.060 they also have very big sort of groups of foot soldiers.
00:03:15.600 And the media also plays along.
00:03:17.440 So we keep hearing things like, you know, that net zero will be simple.
00:03:20.580 There's a pathway to net zero.
00:03:22.080 And the climate policies won't hurt a bit.
00:03:25.700 They don't cost very much.
00:03:27.040 Carbon tax is nominal.
00:03:28.840 And, you know, if that's all you hear, then, you know, you assume it must be true.
00:03:34.820 But, you know, when we look at the cost-benefit analysis
00:03:38.100 and we start to dig a little deeper,
00:03:40.500 then, you know, many surprising facts come forward.
00:03:44.440 And based on that,
00:03:46.140 I think different decisions would be made
00:03:48.120 if people only knew this information.
00:03:50.660 Unfortunately, we are pretty much locked out of mainstream media
00:03:55.340 and have been for over a decade.
00:03:58.200 We used to get lots of media coverage, fair coverage, like everyone.
00:04:01.940 And then we just got cut off.
00:04:04.400 So we are in Western Standard frequently, but,
00:04:07.740 and Rebel News.
00:04:08.860 But, you know, it's very hard to get into mainstream media
00:04:12.000 other than being called a denier.
00:04:14.160 Right.
00:04:15.640 Well, they're all bought and paid for.
00:04:17.580 You know, the mainstream media is bought and paid for.
00:04:20.660 And as well with mayors and city councils,
00:04:22.940 they're bribed.
00:04:23.680 They're bribed by the government,
00:04:25.680 the federal government, the provincial governments.
00:04:27.720 And they're given financial incentives
00:04:29.880 in order to take these global agendas,
00:04:34.760 as I'm going to just come right out and say
00:04:36.220 and take them on and implement them.
00:04:38.600 And you know what?
00:04:39.140 If you don't mind,
00:04:39.980 in case people, our viewers,
00:04:41.960 are going to get halfway through your presentation
00:04:44.480 and think, oh, maybe they have another obligation
00:04:47.260 they have to be to.
00:04:49.300 Terenzi, I'd like to share my screen for just a moment.
00:04:52.580 And once we've got that up,
00:04:54.860 I just want to invite people to come under weekly emails.
00:04:58.940 You can click on the first one.
00:05:00.160 That's where you'll find the invitation,
00:05:01.860 the email that we sent out this week.
00:05:04.120 But I always love it.
00:05:05.820 Hans is our artist.
00:05:07.220 He's just so committed every week
00:05:08.860 when we have a guest on
00:05:10.420 to come up with something clever
00:05:11.560 because they say an image is worth a thousand words.
00:05:14.820 And so we had a bit of fun putting this together.
00:05:17.600 And Michelle had named her presentation,
00:05:21.100 Carbon Tax,
00:05:21.940 the tip of the iceberg of the cost to you.
00:05:24.560 And we thought,
00:05:25.500 wouldn't it be just so fantastic
00:05:27.040 to put that little 15 minute city in,
00:05:30.060 you know, as the rest of this iceberg
00:05:31.580 along with the indigenous land grabs
00:05:33.960 that they're using as excuses
00:05:36.120 to, you know,
00:05:38.940 move land transfers over from the Canadians
00:05:43.040 who've bought and paid for their properties
00:05:45.040 and have a reason to transfer those land rights
00:05:47.940 over to somebody else.
00:05:49.520 And of course, climate change,
00:05:50.920 natural resources,
00:05:52.840 UNDRIP is behind this
00:05:54.200 and all the money.
00:05:55.660 It's a major, major wealth transfer
00:05:57.640 over to the globalists
00:05:59.280 who are also wanting a transfer of power
00:06:02.760 to an unelected body,
00:06:04.800 which is the United Nations
00:06:07.080 and the World Health Organization.
00:06:09.840 And so under Current Issues,
00:06:12.220 you will be able to find these two pages
00:06:14.500 that I'm going to show you
00:06:15.400 under Climate Change Realism
00:06:17.100 is one of the titles.
00:06:18.760 And then the other title will be 15 Minute Cities.
00:06:21.340 This is our campaign where anything that could do
00:06:25.640 has to do with what our mayors
00:06:29.000 and city councils are implementing
00:06:31.960 these agendas.
00:06:34.360 And they're either using the climate change scenario,
00:06:37.400 green initiatives.
00:06:38.940 There's the right here,
00:06:40.440 you'll see Lisa Maron came on in the past.
00:06:44.100 She's a lawyer discussing the C40 cities.
00:06:47.220 And what you can do is take this information.
00:06:49.600 This is a resource page
00:06:51.040 for you to take this information
00:06:52.680 and start engaging your elected officials
00:06:55.600 and provide them the facts
00:06:57.240 and ask them to respond to it.
00:06:59.700 On both those pages,
00:07:01.080 when you scroll down,
00:07:01.940 this one's closer to the top,
00:07:03.440 you will be able to find the interviews
00:07:07.700 that we've had with Michelle.
00:07:10.200 So be sure to check those out
00:07:11.660 just in case you can't make it
00:07:12.940 by tomorrow afternoon.
00:07:14.600 This video will be also posted on those pages
00:07:17.460 as well as our podcast page in the menu.
00:07:21.480 So with that, Michelle,
00:07:22.760 I want to hand everything on over to you.
00:07:25.680 I'm looking forward to this presentation.
00:07:28.140 And it's a go.
00:07:29.340 There you are.
00:07:30.360 Thank you.
00:07:31.020 Thank you so much.
00:07:35.640 So my presentation today
00:07:38.920 is carbon tax, climate costs,
00:07:45.240 tip of the iceberg.
00:07:47.680 And most people think that carbon taxes
00:07:50.140 are burdensome,
00:07:52.560 but boy, do I have news for you.
00:07:55.540 There's way more that you don't know about.
00:07:57.900 So we're just going to flip through this.
00:08:03.680 So last fall,
00:08:06.220 Leger ran a survey
00:08:09.320 asking Canadians
00:08:10.880 what was the biggest issue facing Canada.
00:08:13.460 So this is from September of 2023.
00:08:16.420 And from that time period,
00:08:19.620 a number of articles were published
00:08:21.700 based on the survey
00:08:22.860 claiming that seven of 10 Canadians
00:08:25.220 were very concerned about climate change,
00:08:28.500 about wildfires, et cetera.
00:08:30.440 But when you actually look at the numbers,
00:08:33.760 only 106 people expressed a concern
00:08:37.000 that climate change
00:08:37.900 was the most important issue in Canada.
00:08:41.040 Everyone else considered that inflation,
00:08:43.820 housing affordability,
00:08:45.220 the economy, et cetera, et cetera,
00:08:47.020 were more important.
00:08:48.420 And those all add up to 93%.
00:08:50.000 93%.
00:08:50.720 So 93% of Canadians
00:08:54.120 don't really care that much
00:08:55.820 about climate change.
00:08:57.020 They care more about the economy.
00:09:00.500 And the problem with the carbon tax
00:09:02.300 is that it is a dead weight loss
00:09:04.620 on the economy.
00:09:06.380 Now, this is a term used
00:09:07.880 in economic circles.
00:09:10.140 And I took this excerpt
00:09:12.200 from Investopedia.
00:09:13.540 So what is a dead weight loss of taxation?
00:09:18.140 And they offer a mythical city-state
00:09:20.880 called Braavos
00:09:21.840 that imposes a flat 40% income tax
00:09:24.740 on all citizens.
00:09:26.440 And the government stands to collect
00:09:28.140 an additional $1.2 trillion a year
00:09:30.920 through that tax.
00:09:33.100 But the problem is then that money
00:09:35.040 that goes to the government of Braavos
00:09:37.640 is no longer available to the people
00:09:39.720 for spending on consumer goods and services
00:09:42.520 or for consumer saving and investment.
00:09:46.200 So suppose consumer spending
00:09:48.240 and investments decline
00:09:49.740 at least $1.2 trillion
00:09:51.660 and the total economic output
00:09:54.280 declines by $2 trillion.
00:09:56.820 Well, in this case,
00:09:57.840 the dead weight loss is $800 billion.
00:10:01.100 So that's the $2 trillion total output
00:10:03.560 less $1.2 trillion
00:10:05.240 of consumer spending or investing.
00:10:07.580 So that's how you come up
00:10:08.940 with the dead weight loss.
00:10:10.240 So you can see that it's problematic
00:10:13.200 because it is really stifling
00:10:16.740 the economy as well.
00:10:18.760 And in 2019,
00:10:19.660 we did this report with Robert Lyman.
00:10:22.200 Robert Lyman is a former
00:10:23.640 federal public servant.
00:10:25.340 He was on the GHG file
00:10:27.800 for most of his career,
00:10:30.080 27 years with the government
00:10:32.100 as a federal public servant
00:10:35.840 and 10 years as a diplomat.
00:10:38.320 So he has also a geopolitical view.
00:10:41.580 So he wrote that carbon tax
00:10:43.480 imposes a dead weight loss
00:10:45.200 of $1.30 on every $1 of tax revenue.
00:10:50.760 That was back in 2019.
00:10:53.400 So you can imagine
00:10:55.220 it's probably more significant now.
00:10:58.000 So as he described it,
00:11:00.080 that's the cost of the economy
00:11:01.500 over and above the amount
00:11:02.720 raised by the government.
00:11:04.380 Production costs rise,
00:11:06.120 real wages decline,
00:11:07.980 and it imposes at least
00:11:09.420 a $1.30 loss
00:11:11.380 in economic welfare
00:11:13.060 from $1 in tax revenue.
00:11:15.600 And the effect is worse
00:11:17.220 in countries
00:11:18.080 that already have
00:11:19.480 large existing taxes
00:11:21.180 like ours.
00:11:21.980 And it took Professor
00:11:25.620 Sylvain Charlebois,
00:11:27.880 the food professor
00:11:28.820 as he's known on Twitter,
00:11:30.420 it took him
00:11:31.260 to find out
00:11:33.060 from the Bank of Canada
00:11:34.400 how they came up
00:11:35.940 with the idea
00:11:36.680 that the carbon tax
00:11:37.780 really didn't have
00:11:38.580 much impact
00:11:39.240 on the economy at all.
00:11:40.820 And he posted
00:11:41.620 their response.
00:11:43.180 And you can see up here
00:11:44.460 that they actually
00:11:47.100 only looked at
00:11:48.600 the directly applied
00:11:50.140 carbon tax
00:11:51.040 on gasoline,
00:11:52.300 heating oil,
00:11:52.820 and natural gas.
00:11:54.200 And we know
00:11:54.720 there are many indirect
00:11:55.800 and cumulative effects
00:11:57.560 of the carbon tax
00:11:59.280 that they never
00:12:00.100 accounted for.
00:12:01.640 And so
00:12:02.340 the Bank of Canada
00:12:03.620 said that they thought
00:12:04.860 that we find
00:12:05.580 the carbon tax
00:12:06.400 added about 0.15%
00:12:09.720 points
00:12:10.480 rounded up
00:12:11.380 to the second decimal
00:12:12.320 point
00:12:12.760 to the National
00:12:13.680 Consumer Price Index.
00:12:16.080 But in fact,
00:12:16.760 if you look at
00:12:17.440 what happened
00:12:17.880 in Saskatchewan
00:12:18.660 when they stopped
00:12:19.380 collecting the carbon tax,
00:12:21.160 I think there was
00:12:22.300 a 1% drop
00:12:24.360 in inflation.
00:12:26.160 So it's very significant.
00:12:29.780 So Axe the Tax
00:12:31.140 is a great idea
00:12:32.440 for starters.
00:12:34.520 First of all,
00:12:35.400 scientifically,
00:12:36.220 numerous scientific studies
00:12:37.620 show that carbon tax,
00:12:39.100 carbon dioxide,
00:12:40.820 CO2,
00:12:41.860 is not
00:12:42.640 the control knob
00:12:43.900 that can fine-tune climate.
00:12:45.840 So if that's not
00:12:47.020 the thing driving climate
00:12:48.060 and we're taxing
00:12:49.180 CO2-emitting
00:12:50.540 devices like
00:12:52.420 your car
00:12:53.160 or your
00:12:53.720 gas stove
00:12:54.760 heating your house,
00:12:56.560 that's not going to
00:12:57.360 stop climate change
00:12:58.420 in any way.
00:12:59.680 Reducing CO2
00:13:00.960 will not stop
00:13:01.940 natural climate
00:13:03.080 variability,
00:13:04.200 which comes from
00:13:05.280 things like
00:13:06.340 ocean oscillations,
00:13:08.560 atmospheric
00:13:08.980 oscillations.
00:13:10.440 So
00:13:10.640 those things
00:13:11.760 won't stop
00:13:12.380 and they're far
00:13:13.040 greater
00:13:13.680 than the influence
00:13:14.980 of people
00:13:15.600 and Canada
00:13:17.020 cannot meet
00:13:18.280 net-zero
00:13:18.820 climate targets
00:13:20.000 without degrowth
00:13:21.640 and deprivation.
00:13:24.240 So,
00:13:24.800 you know,
00:13:25.200 we won't be
00:13:25.900 stalking climate change,
00:13:27.420 we'll just be
00:13:28.000 shooting ourselves
00:13:28.800 in the foot.
00:13:30.080 And the carbon tax,
00:13:31.640 and this is the
00:13:32.540 gist of my presentation,
00:13:33.680 is not
00:13:34.520 the only financial
00:13:35.680 burden
00:13:36.080 of climate
00:13:36.680 policies.
00:13:37.300 So,
00:13:39.680 Robert Lyman
00:13:40.380 did this
00:13:42.220 presentation,
00:13:43.640 he actually did
00:13:44.220 four different
00:13:45.340 reports,
00:13:46.000 they're all quite
00:13:46.660 short and
00:13:47.720 quite readable,
00:13:48.600 he writes in a
00:13:49.220 plain language
00:13:49.800 style.
00:13:51.040 So,
00:13:51.720 I'm going to
00:13:52.880 just give you
00:13:53.420 the Kohl's notes
00:13:54.320 on each of them
00:13:55.320 and recommend
00:13:55.920 that you go to
00:13:56.580 our blog
00:13:57.300 and have a look
00:13:58.620 at the full
00:13:59.360 detail.
00:14:00.620 So,
00:14:00.840 what are
00:14:01.160 climate policies
00:14:02.440 costing you?
00:14:04.660 So,
00:14:05.420 what is
00:14:06.060 climate policy
00:14:06.820 costing us?
00:14:07.720 The total
00:14:08.260 federal and
00:14:09.040 provincial expenditures
00:14:10.140 on climate
00:14:10.920 measures over
00:14:12.000 the period of
00:14:12.660 2020 to
00:14:13.960 2030,
00:14:15.200 as listed by
00:14:16.120 the carbon
00:14:17.140 policy tracker,
00:14:18.960 are $476
00:14:21.000 billion,
00:14:22.460 or $11,900
00:14:25.040 per resident
00:14:26.340 of Canada.
00:14:27.980 So,
00:14:28.840 this equates
00:14:29.480 roughly to
00:14:30.380 $28,000
00:14:31.300 per household,
00:14:32.900 or an
00:14:33.240 average of
00:14:34.120 $2,800
00:14:35.380 per household
00:14:36.400 per year.
00:14:37.760 And this
00:14:38.340 is just
00:14:38.900 what's been
00:14:39.360 announced
00:14:39.760 to date.
00:14:40.960 There remain
00:14:41.460 five more
00:14:42.160 fiscal years
00:14:43.120 before 2030,
00:14:45.100 during which
00:14:45.640 governments may
00:14:46.540 add more
00:14:47.020 initiatives.
00:14:48.300 So,
00:14:48.840 within that,
00:14:49.780 that would be
00:14:50.180 things like,
00:14:50.960 excuse me,
00:14:52.080 that would be
00:14:52.400 things like
00:14:52.780 funding the
00:14:54.080 EV battery
00:14:54.940 plants.
00:14:56.920 You know,
00:14:57.200 these are costs
00:14:58.580 that ultimately
00:14:59.420 come out of
00:15:00.040 our pocket,
00:15:00.560 pocket,
00:15:01.240 and you
00:15:01.940 won't see
00:15:02.360 any kind
00:15:02.860 of carbon
00:15:03.340 rebate on
00:15:04.300 these billions
00:15:05.780 of dollars.
00:15:08.600 Contracts
00:15:09.200 for difference
00:15:09.860 is another
00:15:11.080 climate policy
00:15:12.140 that the
00:15:12.540 government is
00:15:13.480 implementing
00:15:14.200 slowly.
00:15:15.420 Now,
00:15:16.000 groups like
00:15:16.740 the renewables
00:15:17.500 industry really
00:15:18.780 want this to
00:15:19.480 be a set
00:15:20.320 policy.
00:15:21.340 They also
00:15:21.740 are hoping
00:15:22.300 that the
00:15:22.960 present liberal
00:15:23.880 government will
00:15:24.920 carve it in
00:15:25.660 stone in
00:15:26.860 such a way
00:15:27.380 that no
00:15:28.020 future
00:15:28.820 government
00:15:29.280 could ever
00:15:29.940 repeal this
00:15:30.700 legislation,
00:15:31.920 which really
00:15:32.740 that's unheard
00:15:33.520 of in
00:15:34.340 Canadian
00:15:34.920 history.
00:15:36.100 So,
00:15:36.500 what is a
00:15:37.120 contract for
00:15:37.820 difference?
00:15:38.780 Contracts for
00:15:39.500 difference are
00:15:40.080 ways to
00:15:40.580 transfer financial
00:15:41.660 risks from
00:15:42.860 one group of
00:15:43.500 people to
00:15:43.980 another.
00:15:44.960 Specifically,
00:15:45.680 they transfer
00:15:46.380 the risk that
00:15:47.160 future policy
00:15:48.240 or market
00:15:49.180 changes may
00:15:50.020 reduce or
00:15:50.840 eliminate the
00:15:52.060 present and
00:15:52.740 planned financial
00:15:53.900 incentives,
00:15:55.380 say,
00:15:55.780 subsidies,
00:15:56.560 for clean
00:15:57.240 energy
00:15:57.680 projects.
00:15:58.980 The risks
00:15:59.500 would be
00:15:59.940 removed from
00:16:00.640 project
00:16:01.100 investors and
00:16:02.660 placed on
00:16:03.400 you, the
00:16:04.300 Canadian
00:16:04.600 general
00:16:05.140 taxpayer.
00:16:06.500 So,
00:16:07.080 there are a
00:16:08.120 couple of
00:16:08.480 examples in
00:16:09.280 the report,
00:16:10.040 but there's
00:16:10.420 one news
00:16:11.020 article that
00:16:12.120 the CO2
00:16:12.940 emissions
00:16:13.600 abatement is
00:16:15.420 a reduction
00:16:16.140 of 185,000
00:16:18.800 tons, and
00:16:20.960 as such,
00:16:21.680 the math
00:16:22.140 ends up
00:16:22.860 being at
00:16:23.640 $86.5
00:16:25.160 per tonne
00:16:26.660 plus $200
00:16:27.360 million,
00:16:28.560 means that's
00:16:29.840 effectively a
00:16:30.700 carbon tax
00:16:31.700 of, or
00:16:33.400 price on
00:16:34.020 carbon of
00:16:34.560 $1,167.58
00:16:38.260 per tonne.
00:16:39.560 So, that
00:16:40.940 makes that
00:16:41.940 industry and
00:16:43.380 the carbon
00:16:43.800 market trading
00:16:44.900 related to
00:16:45.920 that very
00:16:46.960 attractive, but
00:16:48.180 we end up
00:16:49.080 paying that.
00:16:49.660 cost.
00:16:52.280 And then
00:16:53.000 there's also
00:16:53.520 the burdensome
00:16:54.440 ideology, the
00:16:56.080 cost to
00:16:56.660 Canada of
00:16:57.360 climate
00:16:58.000 regulations.
00:16:59.640 So, aside
00:17:00.540 from the
00:17:00.900 carbon tax,
00:17:01.620 there are all
00:17:02.020 these layers
00:17:02.740 and layers
00:17:03.240 and layers
00:17:03.720 of regulations
00:17:04.540 related to
00:17:05.420 climate policy.
00:17:06.900 So, Robert
00:17:07.520 writes,
00:17:08.140 reaching net
00:17:08.740 zero, now
00:17:10.360 estimates for
00:17:11.020 the cost of
00:17:11.680 reaching net
00:17:12.180 zero in
00:17:12.600 Canada range
00:17:13.820 from between
00:17:14.440 $2 trillion
00:17:15.260 to $5.2
00:17:16.900 trillion.
00:17:18.500 Excuse me.
00:17:19.860 That's almost
00:17:20.420 an unimaginable
00:17:21.680 amount of
00:17:22.400 money.
00:17:23.340 $2 trillion
00:17:23.940 is $50,000
00:17:25.820 for every
00:17:27.000 one of
00:17:27.980 Canada's
00:17:28.600 40 million
00:17:29.340 residents now
00:17:30.500 or $118,000
00:17:33.060 per household.
00:17:34.680 $5.2
00:17:35.680 trillion, that's
00:17:36.460 the high end,
00:17:37.420 is $130,000
00:17:38.900 for each
00:17:39.640 resident or
00:17:40.940 $306,000
00:17:43.000 for every
00:17:43.760 household.
00:17:44.160 So, averaged
00:17:45.540 over 27
00:17:46.200 years, that's
00:17:47.320 up to net
00:17:48.280 zero 2050,
00:17:50.060 $2 trillion
00:17:50.580 would cost
00:17:51.300 every one
00:17:52.160 of today's
00:17:53.740 residents
00:17:54.360 about $1,850
00:17:56.740 per year.
00:17:58.500 Averaged
00:17:59.060 over 27
00:17:59.720 years, $5.2
00:18:01.400 trillion on
00:18:02.060 the high end
00:18:02.840 would cost
00:18:03.600 every one
00:18:04.080 of today's
00:18:04.600 residents
00:18:05.120 $4,815
00:18:07.280 per year.
00:18:09.280 So, these
00:18:09.880 are astronomical
00:18:10.640 costs.
00:18:11.480 You'll never
00:18:11.800 see any kind
00:18:12.620 of rebate
00:18:13.160 on them.
00:18:13.580 They're hidden
00:18:14.680 because they're
00:18:15.840 happening out
00:18:16.840 there and it's
00:18:17.540 just being
00:18:18.080 drawn from
00:18:19.320 the tax
00:18:19.840 pool and
00:18:20.860 from things
00:18:22.100 that, you
00:18:22.820 know, normally
00:18:23.280 we would be
00:18:23.860 paying for
00:18:24.280 healthcare,
00:18:25.260 infrastructure,
00:18:26.320 roads, water
00:18:27.440 pipes, water
00:18:28.740 means.
00:18:29.740 So, we'd be
00:18:30.700 paying for things
00:18:31.740 that are useful
00:18:32.360 to us and
00:18:33.380 instead we're
00:18:33.980 paying for
00:18:34.540 green crony
00:18:35.160 capitalists to
00:18:35.980 get rich.
00:18:37.220 Now, this is
00:18:38.360 an important
00:18:38.880 report, not
00:18:39.860 that the others
00:18:40.340 are not, but
00:18:41.060 this is very
00:18:41.640 important, especially
00:18:43.140 if you're
00:18:43.460 talking with
00:18:44.080 your municipal
00:18:44.740 representatives or
00:18:45.860 elected officials
00:18:46.720 of other levels
00:18:48.040 of government.
00:18:49.060 This is a
00:18:50.080 plain language
00:18:50.940 version of a
00:18:52.400 report that the
00:18:53.080 Fraser Institute
00:18:53.920 did.
00:18:55.340 Ross McKittrick
00:18:56.060 wrote that
00:18:56.700 report and it's
00:18:58.420 also linked
00:18:59.100 within this
00:18:59.740 report, but
00:19:00.320 Robert Lyman
00:19:01.040 wrote this one
00:19:01.900 because it's
00:19:02.560 more of a
00:19:03.000 plain language
00:19:03.800 approach.
00:19:04.940 Like, Ross
00:19:05.360 McKittrick is
00:19:06.240 an economist,
00:19:06.740 so he used
00:19:08.100 some economic
00:19:09.160 jargon that
00:19:09.980 ordinary people
00:19:11.060 might stumble
00:19:11.700 over, might
00:19:12.440 find it a bit
00:19:13.220 difficult.
00:19:14.060 This is quite
00:19:14.700 straightforward.
00:19:16.020 And the key
00:19:16.580 point, this is
00:19:17.880 the key point,
00:19:19.220 that as Canada
00:19:20.440 is responsible
00:19:21.320 for only 1.5%
00:19:23.620 of global
00:19:24.780 GHG emissions,
00:19:26.420 the federal
00:19:27.120 objective to
00:19:28.280 reduce emissions
00:19:29.160 by 40%
00:19:30.520 would reduce
00:19:31.680 global emissions
00:19:32.500 by 0.6%,
00:19:34.740 some or all
00:19:36.440 of which will
00:19:37.000 be offset by
00:19:37.880 increased emissions
00:19:38.800 elsewhere, like
00:19:39.660 for instance, in
00:19:40.800 China or India,
00:19:42.260 both of whom
00:19:43.020 have booming
00:19:43.940 economies,
00:19:45.020 they're using
00:19:45.860 lots of coal,
00:19:47.680 which we have
00:19:48.520 basically shut
00:19:49.940 down in Canada.
00:19:51.420 So they're going
00:19:52.140 to have lots of
00:19:52.780 emissions, so our
00:19:53.800 tiny little
00:19:54.440 contribution will
00:19:55.880 be completely
00:19:57.200 wiped out.
00:19:58.620 And if Canada
00:19:59.380 achieved the
00:20:00.280 intended emissions
00:20:01.180 reduction and
00:20:02.560 maintained that
00:20:03.360 reduction in the
00:20:04.060 future,
00:20:04.740 get this, the
00:20:06.080 global average
00:20:07.400 temperature would
00:20:08.780 be reduced by
00:20:10.120 0.007 degrees
00:20:12.520 Celsius, or
00:20:14.120 seven thousandths
00:20:16.320 of a degree
00:20:17.240 Celsius, as of
00:20:19.020 2100, compared
00:20:20.620 to a case in
00:20:21.400 which Canada
00:20:21.940 does nothing.
00:20:23.860 So, you know,
00:20:25.140 it's not going to
00:20:25.660 have any effect
00:20:26.420 that's completely
00:20:27.360 immeasurable.
00:20:28.000 and just to give
00:20:31.760 you some
00:20:32.180 parameter, China
00:20:33.380 emits in one
00:20:34.380 month what
00:20:35.280 Canada emits in
00:20:36.400 a year and
00:20:37.660 eight months.
00:20:39.000 So it's really
00:20:39.540 futile folly.
00:20:41.180 Now, if you
00:20:41.700 look at this
00:20:42.620 excerpt from the
00:20:43.680 report, this is
00:20:44.640 another Robert
00:20:45.260 Lyman report, it
00:20:46.160 was done in
00:20:46.760 2020, you'll
00:20:48.580 see that it was
00:20:49.420 China emits in
00:20:50.380 one month about
00:20:51.080 what Canada emits
00:20:52.080 in one and a
00:20:53.000 half years.
00:20:54.040 Well, this is
00:20:54.860 the updated
00:20:55.380 information.
00:20:56.880 So it's a
00:20:57.900 year and eight
00:20:58.640 months.
00:21:00.320 So, you know,
00:21:03.160 they're emitting
00:21:03.700 a lot more
00:21:04.920 CO2 and we're
00:21:06.640 shooting ourselves
00:21:07.500 in the foot.
00:21:08.900 So what about
00:21:09.800 the climate
00:21:10.200 emergency?
00:21:10.960 Because, of
00:21:11.480 course, a lot
00:21:11.960 of people have
00:21:12.540 heard about it.
00:21:13.200 Many children
00:21:13.800 are afraid of
00:21:14.540 it.
00:21:14.680 Many adults
00:21:15.240 are afraid.
00:21:16.980 Many adults,
00:21:18.420 grandparents, you
00:21:19.600 know, they don't
00:21:20.080 want to leave
00:21:21.080 their children, a
00:21:22.320 world that
00:21:22.820 where their
00:21:23.660 children and
00:21:24.400 grandchildren will
00:21:25.140 be like crispy
00:21:26.300 critters and
00:21:27.500 life will be
00:21:28.080 impossible, the
00:21:29.180 seas will be
00:21:29.860 boiling.
00:21:30.640 These are all
00:21:31.140 the things that
00:21:31.600 we keep being
00:21:32.180 told by the
00:21:33.660 climate
00:21:33.960 hysterians.
00:21:35.440 Is that
00:21:35.900 true?
00:21:36.360 Where does it
00:21:36.840 come from?
00:21:37.600 Well, it comes
00:21:38.140 from these
00:21:39.220 scenarios.
00:21:40.440 These are
00:21:40.800 called the
00:21:41.300 representative
00:21:41.900 concentration
00:21:42.700 pathway scenarios.
00:21:45.140 And activist
00:21:46.340 scientists have
00:21:47.260 been using an
00:21:48.000 implausible
00:21:48.620 computer scenario
00:21:49.620 called
00:21:50.200 representative
00:21:51.140 concentration
00:21:51.900 pathway 8.5
00:21:53.660 and claiming
00:21:54.900 that this is
00:21:56.060 a business
00:21:56.640 as usual
00:21:57.460 case.
00:21:58.540 That, you
00:21:59.080 know, this
00:21:59.580 is representative
00:22:00.440 of how we
00:22:01.540 operate our
00:22:02.140 society today.
00:22:03.100 That is
00:22:03.900 simply untrue.
00:22:05.820 This
00:22:06.140 scenario
00:22:07.940 includes using
00:22:09.060 more coal
00:22:09.780 than we have
00:22:10.800 on Earth.
00:22:12.360 This includes
00:22:13.560 having three
00:22:14.940 to six billion
00:22:15.760 more people
00:22:16.680 on the planet
00:22:18.240 than even the
00:22:19.160 UN estimates
00:22:20.160 they'll be
00:22:20.660 by 2100.
00:22:22.180 So you
00:22:22.860 can see
00:22:23.320 where a
00:22:23.820 lot of
00:22:24.160 sort of
00:22:24.440 the
00:22:24.580 depopulationists
00:22:25.960 in the
00:22:26.640 climate cult
00:22:27.300 also get
00:22:28.300 the idea
00:22:28.860 that it'd
00:22:29.300 be better
00:22:29.680 if there
00:22:30.020 were fewer
00:22:30.720 people out
00:22:31.360 there,
00:22:31.660 right?
00:22:32.920 And you
00:22:33.660 can see
00:22:33.980 how problematic
00:22:34.540 it is
00:22:35.420 if very
00:22:36.380 influential
00:22:36.880 people,
00:22:37.660 like people
00:22:38.080 like Mark
00:22:38.640 Carney,
00:22:39.440 actually,
00:22:39.940 he promoted
00:22:40.580 a report
00:22:41.120 called
00:22:41.720 Risky
00:22:42.800 Business,
00:22:43.840 which was
00:22:44.280 put together
00:22:44.900 by Michael
00:22:46.880 Bloomberg
00:22:47.380 and Tom
00:22:48.580 Steyer,
00:22:49.320 two big
00:22:49.880 green
00:22:50.220 billionaires
00:22:50.860 in the
00:22:51.240 states,
00:22:52.200 to promote
00:22:53.080 renewables
00:22:53.900 and such
00:22:54.280 like,
00:22:54.580 they used
00:22:55.460 RCP 8.5
00:22:57.480 as the
00:22:58.360 business-as-usual
00:22:59.360 scenario.
00:23:00.660 And there's
00:23:01.120 another fellow
00:23:01.680 in the
00:23:01.960 states called
00:23:02.460 Roger
00:23:02.820 PLK Jr.
00:23:04.160 He's a
00:23:04.640 climate policy
00:23:05.420 analyst.
00:23:06.220 He's got
00:23:06.720 like a
00:23:07.140 52-page
00:23:08.020 curriculum
00:23:08.940 vitae.
00:23:09.600 He's been
00:23:10.000 doing this
00:23:10.380 for 25
00:23:10.980 years.
00:23:11.540 He consults
00:23:12.280 with the
00:23:13.120 insurance
00:23:13.520 agencies,
00:23:14.680 so he's
00:23:15.060 been tracking
00:23:15.820 disasters and
00:23:16.780 such like
00:23:17.160 for a long
00:23:17.620 time.
00:23:19.200 He's found
00:23:20.100 he and his
00:23:20.920 fellow Canadian
00:23:21.680 researcher,
00:23:22.480 Justin Ritchie,
00:23:23.460 they have
00:23:23.880 found that
00:23:24.720 almost all
00:23:25.860 of the
00:23:26.480 major,
00:23:27.720 most read,
00:23:29.040 most downloaded,
00:23:30.200 most shared
00:23:31.200 academic,
00:23:33.860 scientific,
00:23:34.620 climate science
00:23:35.460 reports use
00:23:37.000 this implausible
00:23:38.500 scenario,
00:23:39.260 RCP 8.5.
00:23:40.760 and it's
00:23:42.540 simply not
00:23:44.360 dealing with
00:23:45.500 reality.
00:23:46.100 Even just
00:23:47.220 recently,
00:23:47.720 the Office
00:23:48.220 of the
00:23:48.560 Superintendent
00:23:48.960 of Financial
00:23:49.940 Institutions,
00:23:51.100 which supervises
00:23:52.120 all the banks
00:23:52.900 and the Bank
00:23:53.860 of Canada,
00:23:54.800 all the
00:23:55.240 insurance
00:23:55.820 investment
00:23:56.900 funds in
00:23:58.360 Canada,
00:23:58.900 pension funds,
00:24:00.340 they use
00:24:01.420 RCP 8.5
00:24:03.020 as a
00:24:03.400 business-as-usual
00:24:04.320 parameter
00:24:05.100 for setting
00:24:05.860 climate risk.
00:24:06.980 So obviously
00:24:07.540 they're skewing
00:24:08.480 policy right
00:24:09.780 off the
00:24:10.160 board.
00:24:10.760 That is
00:24:11.300 the source
00:24:11.820 of the
00:24:12.160 climate
00:24:12.400 emergency
00:24:12.900 claim.
00:24:14.160 But it's
00:24:14.900 not realistic.
00:24:16.380 So without
00:24:16.860 RCP 8.5,
00:24:18.840 the climate
00:24:19.320 emergency is
00:24:20.160 over.
00:24:21.120 At the
00:24:21.560 municipal
00:24:22.020 level,
00:24:22.660 you will
00:24:23.020 find that
00:24:23.580 if a
00:24:24.020 municipality
00:24:24.460 wants to
00:24:25.260 apply for
00:24:25.720 infrastructure
00:24:26.380 from
00:24:26.920 Infrastructure
00:24:28.420 Canada,
00:24:29.340 they have
00:24:30.320 to apply
00:24:31.600 a climate
00:24:32.660 lens
00:24:33.680 application,
00:24:35.200 which is
00:24:36.040 based on
00:24:36.440 RCP 8.5.
00:24:37.740 So I
00:24:38.760 would
00:24:38.940 suspect that
00:24:39.580 most people
00:24:40.220 at the
00:24:40.500 municipal
00:24:40.860 level,
00:24:41.560 provincial
00:24:41.820 level,
00:24:42.200 and probably
00:24:42.600 a lot of
00:24:43.060 MLAs have
00:24:44.060 no idea,
00:24:45.580 or MPs have
00:24:47.140 no idea about
00:24:48.700 this at all.
00:24:50.080 And so they're
00:24:50.500 simply following
00:24:51.200 the rules.
00:24:52.420 So if the
00:24:52.900 rule says you
00:24:53.980 want to build a
00:24:54.640 bridge in your
00:24:55.080 city, then you
00:24:56.280 want to make an
00:24:56.820 application, you
00:24:57.800 must use the
00:24:58.660 RCP 8.5
00:24:59.880 parameters,
00:25:00.780 because that's
00:25:02.120 our climate
00:25:02.540 lens.
00:25:03.720 Well, then
00:25:04.120 you're going to
00:25:04.760 come up with
00:25:05.400 policies like
00:25:06.340 Calgary, you
00:25:07.060 know, where
00:25:07.340 they came up
00:25:07.880 with an $87
00:25:08.700 billion climate
00:25:09.820 plan, because
00:25:11.160 they think it's
00:25:11.780 going to be
00:25:12.260 like Arizona
00:25:13.980 in summer all
00:25:15.060 the time in
00:25:15.720 Calgary by
00:25:17.160 2100, when
00:25:18.700 that's very
00:25:19.480 unlikely.
00:25:20.840 So, just so
00:25:22.260 you know, am I
00:25:23.480 making things up?
00:25:24.460 Well, no.
00:25:24.940 The Intergovernmental
00:25:25.860 Panel on Climate
00:25:26.760 Change, the IPCC,
00:25:28.860 that's the people
00:25:29.860 who write the
00:25:30.600 so-called
00:25:31.000 Climate Bible,
00:25:31.920 in AR6
00:25:33.480 Working Group
00:25:34.180 1 report, which
00:25:35.500 is by the
00:25:36.240 physical scientists,
00:25:37.680 it's not
00:25:38.220 activists, it's
00:25:39.380 physical scientists,
00:25:40.880 4,000 pages long,
00:25:42.580 they refer to
00:25:43.360 climate emergency
00:25:44.180 and climate
00:25:44.920 crisis one
00:25:46.300 time each, just
00:25:47.700 one time each,
00:25:48.840 in relation to
00:25:49.680 media coverage.
00:25:50.980 So, you would
00:25:51.420 think if it was
00:25:52.260 a crisis, it
00:25:53.140 would be littered
00:25:53.860 throughout that
00:25:54.520 report, it's
00:25:55.580 not.
00:25:56.400 And the United
00:25:57.040 Nations Framework
00:25:58.140 Convention on
00:25:58.740 Climate Change,
00:25:59.400 which is the
00:25:59.960 political arm
00:26:01.520 of the climate
00:26:02.580 thing at the
00:26:03.820 UN, they
00:26:05.060 report that
00:26:06.240 present emissions
00:26:07.160 are below
00:26:08.080 the 4.5,
00:26:10.140 the RCP
00:26:11.080 4.5, so
00:26:12.640 kind of around
00:26:13.860 here.
00:26:14.720 And Roger
00:26:15.240 PLK Jr., who's
00:26:17.020 known as the
00:26:17.720 honest broker on
00:26:18.720 his sub-stack,
00:26:19.720 he has more on
00:26:20.560 that.
00:26:21.140 So, there's no
00:26:22.000 climate emergency.
00:26:24.280 So, feel good
00:26:25.260 about that.
00:26:26.080 Likewise, there
00:26:27.200 is scientific
00:26:28.360 evidence to
00:26:29.540 support these
00:26:30.300 claims if you're
00:26:30.940 going to talk
00:26:31.520 with any of
00:26:32.060 these people.
00:26:33.220 Over 1,940
00:26:34.840 scientists and
00:26:35.660 scholars of
00:26:36.260 CLINTEL agree
00:26:37.200 that there's no
00:26:37.980 climate emergency.
00:26:39.720 You can see
00:26:40.460 here that
00:26:40.940 temperatures aren't
00:26:42.640 very scary, are
00:26:43.540 they?
00:26:44.140 And there's an
00:26:44.820 international network
00:26:45.840 of these scientists.
00:26:47.260 They have something
00:26:48.080 called the World
00:26:48.740 Climate Declaration,
00:26:50.980 which outlines their
00:26:51.980 view that natural
00:26:53.880 variability is more
00:26:55.200 crucial than human
00:26:57.560 influence on
00:26:58.420 climate.
00:27:00.080 But we can
00:27:01.200 expect a lot
00:27:02.100 more media
00:27:02.760 hysteria in the
00:27:03.720 next couple of
00:27:04.380 weeks and months
00:27:05.320 because Antonio
00:27:07.160 Guterres, UN
00:27:08.940 General Secretary,
00:27:10.120 was in Tonga
00:27:11.080 claiming that sea
00:27:12.700 level rise was
00:27:14.120 going to destroy
00:27:15.160 these nations.
00:27:16.680 And we did an
00:27:17.540 interview with Dr.
00:27:19.060 John Harper, who
00:27:19.960 was the former
00:27:20.600 director of the
00:27:22.400 Geological Survey
00:27:23.320 of Canada.
00:27:24.220 We did this in
00:27:24.860 2016.
00:27:26.060 And he said,
00:27:26.820 you know, when
00:27:27.280 you get islands
00:27:27.980 this small,
00:27:29.460 erosion by the
00:27:30.400 sea is significant.
00:27:32.340 And many islands
00:27:33.660 have actually grown
00:27:34.520 in size.
00:27:35.620 So, you know, if
00:27:36.600 the sea is
00:27:37.160 constantly pounding
00:27:38.080 away on this
00:27:39.000 tiny little island,
00:27:40.300 of course it's
00:27:41.380 grating away at
00:27:42.500 the sand.
00:27:43.700 Well, that looks
00:27:44.440 like the sea is
00:27:45.500 rising, but it's
00:27:46.900 actually that the
00:27:47.720 island is diminishing.
00:27:49.240 And you should
00:27:49.720 remember that many
00:27:50.560 of these islands
00:27:51.520 have multi-million
00:27:52.740 dollar villas
00:27:53.700 for sale.
00:27:54.760 They also have
00:27:55.520 very expensive
00:27:56.400 tourist options.
00:27:58.800 And one of
00:28:02.360 them, I think,
00:28:02.840 was Marshall
00:28:03.500 Islands, built
00:28:04.540 five airports.
00:28:06.120 So, you know,
00:28:07.080 it doesn't seem
00:28:07.980 like they're that
00:28:08.540 concerned.
00:28:10.160 So, is it
00:28:11.740 human-caused?
00:28:13.140 As Guterres
00:28:14.140 says, he claims
00:28:15.780 that human
00:28:16.900 causation is
00:28:18.000 entirely responsible
00:28:19.340 for the sea
00:28:20.080 level rise.
00:28:20.860 Or is it
00:28:21.560 Hunga Tonga?
00:28:22.280 So, I don't
00:28:24.520 know if you
00:28:24.880 recall, but a
00:28:25.680 couple of years
00:28:26.180 ago, there was
00:28:27.100 a huge volcanic
00:28:28.980 eruption from
00:28:30.220 under the sea
00:28:31.100 called Hunga
00:28:32.320 Tonga
00:28:32.880 Appa'ai.
00:28:34.180 It's a very
00:28:35.120 long name.
00:28:37.240 Anyway, it's
00:28:40.080 going to be
00:28:40.580 causing unusual
00:28:42.060 weather for the
00:28:42.980 rest of the
00:28:43.440 decade.
00:28:44.240 And John
00:28:44.760 Shuchuk here
00:28:45.640 shows us this
00:28:47.320 very funny kind
00:28:48.120 of cloud
00:28:48.500 formation, but
00:28:49.260 that's a
00:28:49.640 representation of
00:28:50.600 water vapor.
00:28:51.720 So, he's
00:28:52.520 saying, the
00:28:54.600 Tonga volcano
00:28:55.820 awakened the
00:28:57.680 Godzilla of
00:28:58.600 greenhouse gases,
00:29:00.320 water vapor.
00:29:01.240 So, it's
00:29:01.480 actually water
00:29:02.060 vapor that's
00:29:02.700 the more
00:29:03.080 influential
00:29:03.700 greenhouse gas.
00:29:05.240 And he says,
00:29:05.820 I'm water
00:29:06.340 vapor, the
00:29:07.000 real greenhouse
00:29:07.840 gas control
00:29:08.600 knob, not
00:29:09.740 CO2.
00:29:10.680 Just watch
00:29:11.360 how Tonga's
00:29:12.200 unprecedented
00:29:12.980 water vapor
00:29:14.360 injection into
00:29:15.140 the upper
00:29:15.620 atmosphere is
00:29:16.780 causing
00:29:17.200 unprecedented ripple
00:29:18.740 effects globally.
00:29:19.620 And from
00:29:21.260 this article
00:29:22.140 in the
00:29:22.500 conversation,
00:29:23.200 because it
00:29:23.660 was an
00:29:24.140 underwater
00:29:24.680 volcano,
00:29:25.900 Hunga Tonga
00:29:26.460 produced little
00:29:27.220 smoke, but a
00:29:28.220 lot of water
00:29:28.840 vapor, 100
00:29:29.880 to 150
00:29:31.120 million tons,
00:29:32.880 or the
00:29:33.100 equivalent of
00:29:33.780 60,000 Olympic
00:29:35.300 swimming pools,
00:29:36.620 and it went
00:29:37.160 right up into
00:29:37.940 the stratosphere.
00:29:39.540 So, you know,
00:29:40.300 we've never had
00:29:41.020 this happen before
00:29:41.940 on Earth, as
00:29:42.600 far as we know.
00:29:43.560 We certainly
00:29:44.040 never had the
00:29:44.720 data instruments
00:29:46.080 to gather the
00:29:48.620 data and
00:29:49.540 observe what's
00:29:50.340 happening, but
00:29:51.100 we do now, and
00:29:52.140 so it's quite
00:29:53.680 amazing, and
00:29:55.360 there will be
00:29:55.940 many more
00:29:56.440 effects, but
00:29:57.060 here's Antonio
00:29:57.960 Guterres claiming
00:29:59.560 that it's all
00:30:00.160 human-caused.
00:30:02.200 So here are two
00:30:03.200 things that are
00:30:03.760 coming up in the
00:30:04.680 next couple of
00:30:05.320 weeks.
00:30:05.980 Summit of the
00:30:06.560 Future, Robert
00:30:08.240 Malone has just
00:30:09.340 written an article
00:30:10.100 about this.
00:30:11.420 It's very
00:30:11.880 concerning, because
00:30:12.620 again, it's one
00:30:13.680 of those all-encompassing
00:30:15.040 global moves.
00:30:16.140 Another one right
00:30:17.500 after that is
00:30:18.280 Climate Week in
00:30:19.440 New York City.
00:30:20.800 Last year, Prime
00:30:24.220 Minister Trudeau and
00:30:25.560 Minister Gilbo
00:30:26.500 both attended New
00:30:28.400 York Climate Week,
00:30:29.460 and there they were
00:30:30.400 advocating for a
00:30:31.680 global price on
00:30:32.740 carbon, and they
00:30:33.780 were using, exploiting
00:30:36.180 the wildfires of
00:30:37.580 last year as if
00:30:39.300 evidence of climate
00:30:40.300 change.
00:30:41.120 And we have a
00:30:41.640 whole presentation
00:30:42.260 on that on our
00:30:43.700 website that we did
00:30:44.640 with Alberta
00:30:45.260 Prosperity Project.
00:30:46.780 It's called Break
00:30:47.580 Free from Climate
00:30:48.400 Tyranny.
00:30:50.400 So you can have a
00:30:51.620 look at that if you
00:30:52.340 like.
00:30:53.620 The concerning thing
00:30:54.800 for this fall,
00:30:56.580 especially because
00:30:58.360 Guterres was in
00:30:59.580 Tonga, is that in
00:31:02.340 2023, the island
00:31:04.640 nation of Vanuatu
00:31:06.080 went to the UN
00:31:08.800 General Assembly and
00:31:10.220 requested that they
00:31:11.320 send an application
00:31:12.660 to the International
00:31:13.860 Court of Justice
00:31:15.480 asking for an
00:31:16.780 advisement on
00:31:18.420 national obligations
00:31:20.100 to meet climate
00:31:21.940 change targets,
00:31:23.960 either by reducing
00:31:25.040 the emissions or
00:31:26.460 paying for it.
00:31:29.440 And they did send
00:31:30.420 that forward.
00:31:31.220 So it sounds like,
00:31:32.800 because he was in
00:31:33.500 Tonga, it sounds
00:31:34.140 like to me, and I
00:31:35.280 don't have evidence
00:31:36.000 for this, but it
00:31:36.820 sounds like in the
00:31:37.620 next couple of weeks
00:31:38.660 that advisement will
00:31:40.240 be issued.
00:31:42.460 And you'd be very
00:31:43.600 surprised.
00:31:44.440 I looked for the
00:31:44.960 Canadian presentation
00:31:46.180 because countries
00:31:48.380 were invited to
00:31:49.480 send submissions.
00:31:50.800 I didn't find it,
00:31:51.640 but I did find this
00:31:52.580 submission to the
00:31:54.380 International Court
00:31:55.300 of Justice, which
00:31:56.120 was written by the
00:31:56.920 University of Toronto
00:31:57.920 Human Rights
00:31:58.640 Program and
00:31:59.880 Greenpeace.
00:32:01.220 So this is an
00:32:02.160 official submission
00:32:03.300 to the International
00:32:05.660 Court of Justice.
00:32:06.860 Justice, and
00:32:07.860 they're framing
00:32:08.840 this as a human
00:32:09.840 rights issue.
00:32:11.420 So it won't be
00:32:12.240 argued on the
00:32:12.860 basis of science
00:32:13.880 and the things
00:32:14.520 that I just showed
00:32:15.260 you.
00:32:15.680 It'll be argued
00:32:16.520 on like, oh, my
00:32:18.260 island nation is
00:32:19.400 drowning, and you
00:32:21.260 people put out more
00:32:22.160 emissions than I did,
00:32:23.520 so it's your fault,
00:32:24.640 and you should pay
00:32:25.440 me, or you should
00:32:27.420 be forced to phase
00:32:28.420 out whatever industry
00:32:29.480 you have, whatever.
00:32:31.220 So just imagine
00:32:32.300 that 320,000 people
00:32:34.840 of an island nation
00:32:35.960 may be determining
00:32:37.460 your future climate
00:32:38.700 costs, as if we're
00:32:41.100 not paying enough
00:32:42.020 already from what I
00:32:43.520 already showed you.
00:32:45.340 So the request for
00:32:46.460 an advisory ruling
00:32:47.480 from the International
00:32:48.220 Court of Justice is
00:32:49.940 expected to clarify
00:32:51.040 the legal obligations
00:32:52.460 of countries to
00:32:53.440 address climate change
00:32:54.580 and create a path
00:32:56.160 for them to be held
00:32:57.160 liable if they fail
00:32:59.100 to do so.
00:33:00.440 And Vanuatu has
00:33:01.500 used its moral
00:33:02.580 authority and its
00:33:03.900 ability to stage
00:33:04.920 action at the UN
00:33:05.940 to achieve outside
00:33:07.600 results on climate
00:33:09.220 issues.
00:33:11.120 So after the
00:33:14.280 Summit of the
00:33:14.860 Future and New
00:33:16.400 York Climate
00:33:17.420 Week, at one or
00:33:19.380 the other, I
00:33:19.880 suspect there will be
00:33:20.800 some statement from
00:33:21.780 the ICJ.
00:33:23.400 I don't know that
00:33:24.060 for a fact, but
00:33:25.040 that's what my
00:33:26.760 spidey sense tells
00:33:27.880 me.
00:33:28.620 We will then have
00:33:29.760 COP29 in Baku,
00:33:31.700 and following that,
00:33:33.360 the year after,
00:33:34.140 is the 10th
00:33:35.100 anniversary of the
00:33:35.960 Paris Agreement.
00:33:37.240 So you can expect
00:33:38.000 a lot more climate
00:33:39.420 hysteria in the
00:33:40.400 press, from
00:33:41.160 ENGOs, a lot
00:33:42.840 more street
00:33:43.520 theater about it.
00:33:46.880 But there are
00:33:48.020 things that we can
00:33:48.740 do locally.
00:33:50.440 Some of the things,
00:33:51.120 of course, Tanya has
00:33:52.100 your whole network
00:33:53.320 of action for Canada
00:33:54.380 and everybody's out
00:33:55.260 there doing what
00:33:56.020 they can.
00:33:57.180 One thing we can do
00:33:58.240 at home is to learn
00:33:59.320 more about net zero
00:34:00.540 implications for the
00:34:02.140 power grid.
00:34:03.120 So if you're in
00:34:03.820 Alberta, especially
00:34:05.080 if you're in
00:34:05.680 Calgary, Red Deer,
00:34:07.380 Edmonton, Medicine
00:34:08.820 Hat, Lethbridge,
00:34:10.080 you know, please
00:34:10.820 come to our event.
00:34:12.840 It's going to be on
00:34:13.700 October the 1st, 2024,
00:34:16.240 so just a couple of
00:34:17.120 weeks away.
00:34:17.860 It's at 7pm at the
00:34:19.640 Best Western Village
00:34:21.100 Park Inn, which is
00:34:21.960 pretty much across the
00:34:22.900 road from McMahon
00:34:23.620 Stadium.
00:34:24.580 There's free parking
00:34:25.560 there, or you can
00:34:26.840 take the LRT.
00:34:28.100 The topic is net zero
00:34:29.980 and the future power
00:34:31.220 grid.
00:34:32.300 So it's examining
00:34:33.380 affordability, reliability,
00:34:35.440 and zero emissions.
00:34:37.160 Our speaker will be a
00:34:39.460 professional engineer,
00:34:41.040 Randy Stubbings.
00:34:41.980 He's got 40 years
00:34:43.080 experience in the
00:34:44.460 electricity industry in
00:34:46.120 Alberta.
00:34:47.740 So very informed.
00:34:49.120 It's a really complex
00:34:50.360 topic, and he makes it
00:34:51.820 quite simple to
00:34:52.540 understand what the
00:34:54.320 pros and cons are,
00:34:55.660 what the, there are
00:34:58.940 some good things, and
00:35:00.540 there are some pitfalls.
00:35:01.720 So I hope that people
00:35:03.140 can make it to that.
00:35:04.340 We kept the price low.
00:35:05.940 It's $25 for non-members,
00:35:07.800 $20 for members, and
00:35:10.040 we'll have tea and
00:35:10.820 coffee and water.
00:35:12.620 And if people want to
00:35:13.580 come early, you know,
00:35:14.780 sometimes people like to
00:35:15.700 meet before an event or
00:35:17.140 eat something together,
00:35:18.880 you can book into the
00:35:21.180 lounge there.
00:35:22.300 They have very good food
00:35:23.300 and, you know, nice
00:35:24.860 drinks, nice atmosphere.
00:35:26.140 Of course, that's at your
00:35:27.000 own expense.
00:35:28.080 But, you know, it's one
00:35:29.600 way to have a nice
00:35:31.600 meeting with friends,
00:35:32.480 perhaps, before this
00:35:33.700 kind of event or after.
00:35:36.740 Now, another thing you
00:35:37.840 can do to inform
00:35:38.540 yourself on the topic
00:35:39.480 that I just presented
00:35:40.600 is you can watch our
00:35:42.120 past event from last
00:35:43.340 year with Robert
00:35:44.500 Lyman himself and
00:35:46.160 Dr. Ian Clark.
00:35:47.420 So these are posted on
00:35:48.980 our website under
00:35:49.980 past events.
00:35:51.660 And both the
00:35:52.700 PowerPoints are there
00:35:53.580 as well.
00:35:54.540 You can also join us.
00:35:56.140 You know, people don't
00:35:56.780 realize that we have
00:35:57.860 open membership for the
00:35:59.000 public.
00:35:59.780 Become a member.
00:36:00.700 It's $40 for one year,
00:36:02.360 $80 for three years.
00:36:03.820 And please do share our
00:36:05.260 materials across your
00:36:07.540 social media with your
00:36:10.200 family and friends and
00:36:11.460 whatever other
00:36:12.720 policy makers you care
00:36:14.620 to appeal to.
00:36:16.700 And most of all, you
00:36:18.160 know, we're going
00:36:18.960 through difficult times.
00:36:20.540 Things are cropping up
00:36:22.260 all over the world
00:36:23.040 that are distressing,
00:36:25.120 very distressing.
00:36:26.420 But I think that we
00:36:27.740 should try to be happy.
00:36:29.180 First of all, there's
00:36:30.060 no climate emergency.
00:36:31.840 And secondly, when
00:36:33.120 you're happy and a bit
00:36:34.280 more optimistic, you
00:36:36.280 look for opportunities
00:36:37.580 to make constructive
00:36:39.120 change.
00:36:40.100 So I hope that this
00:36:41.500 presentation has given
00:36:43.100 you some information.
00:36:44.420 I know some of the
00:36:45.040 information might be
00:36:45.980 shocking in terms of
00:36:47.080 the numbers.
00:36:48.380 But at the same time,
00:36:49.580 now that you know, you
00:36:51.280 can do something about
00:36:52.160 it and be happy because
00:36:54.600 there's no climate
00:36:55.360 emergency.
00:36:56.300 So thanks very much for
00:36:57.340 listening to my
00:36:58.080 presentation.
00:36:59.440 And thank you, Tanya,
00:37:01.060 and your wonderful crew
00:37:02.340 for inviting me to give
00:37:03.840 this presentation.
00:37:06.520 Michelle, thank you.
00:37:08.240 That was, again,
00:37:09.300 incredibly accurate and
00:37:12.060 helpful information.
00:37:14.280 And as you were
00:37:15.140 mentioning, and as we
00:37:16.000 said before, you had
00:37:17.140 started the presentation
00:37:18.060 that, you know, our
00:37:19.560 elected officials are
00:37:20.480 being lobbied very heavily
00:37:22.360 by those who have
00:37:23.360 something to profit from
00:37:24.380 this.
00:37:24.660 And profit is the
00:37:25.540 bottom line for many
00:37:27.440 of the groups.
00:37:28.380 And, of course, on a
00:37:29.340 bigger scale with
00:37:30.000 someone like Justin
00:37:30.760 Trudeau and these
00:37:32.000 globalist world leaders
00:37:33.400 who are committed and
00:37:34.740 all in, it's a big
00:37:38.800 challenge ahead of us,
00:37:39.880 but one that I believe
00:37:41.580 we can overcome.
00:37:44.140 And it starts at the
00:37:45.760 community level.
00:37:47.400 The World Economic
00:37:48.220 Forum has said that,
00:37:49.740 you know, they've got
00:37:50.400 this plan, 2030, plan
00:37:52.360 2050, as you mentioned.
00:37:53.600 They want this
00:37:54.480 implemented by 2050.
00:37:57.740 And they said that the
00:37:59.160 cities, the townships are
00:38:00.300 closest to the people and
00:38:01.360 they can bring about this
00:38:02.220 change.
00:38:02.680 Well, look who it is
00:38:03.840 that's initiating the
00:38:05.640 majority of the crimes
00:38:07.900 against humanity, shall I
00:38:09.380 say, and the crimes
00:38:10.760 against our democracy, is
00:38:12.700 at the city council
00:38:14.360 level.
00:38:15.800 I was taking some notes
00:38:17.660 as you were speaking, and
00:38:19.620 one of the things that
00:38:20.820 really stands out to me
00:38:22.920 when we talk about how
00:38:24.100 unreasonable it is,
00:38:25.820 everything's focused on
00:38:26.940 2050.
00:38:27.960 They seem to like to pay
00:38:29.600 for these incredible
00:38:31.260 reports to send out that
00:38:33.600 I guess might look
00:38:35.260 appealing to some people,
00:38:36.980 but are so transparent to
00:38:39.000 others if they would only
00:38:40.480 take, you know, the time
00:38:41.700 to take a step back like
00:38:42.720 you have and done the
00:38:43.540 research.
00:38:44.620 And one of the things that
00:38:45.920 I wanted to point out when
00:38:47.540 you were talking about the
00:38:48.780 deficit that this is set to
00:38:51.460 accumulate, whether it's
00:38:53.100 $2 trillion to $5.2
00:38:55.220 trillion, I mean, it's a
00:38:56.820 astronomical, unbelievable
00:38:58.580 amount of money.
00:38:59.500 And you gave numbers
00:39:02.100 between $1,850 to $4,800,
00:39:04.960 depending what the debt
00:39:06.520 load is, but something
00:39:07.780 else we have to really
00:39:08.780 consider is, as well as
00:39:10.160 that at the same time
00:39:11.200 they're doing all of
00:39:11.920 this, they're flooding us
00:39:13.700 with mass immigration, and
00:39:15.460 these people aren't
00:39:16.200 working.
00:39:17.460 And so it is going to even
00:39:18.700 put a larger burden on
00:39:21.460 the population that is
00:39:23.380 actually working and paying
00:39:24.900 taxes, and it's going to
00:39:27.000 be an unsustainable
00:39:28.900 burden for Canadians to
00:39:31.480 carry for much longer.
00:39:32.900 Where's the money?
00:39:33.840 Where do they plan on the
00:39:34.720 money coming from?
00:39:36.720 Yes, well, that's a very
00:39:38.200 interesting question there,
00:39:39.780 especially as they're
00:39:40.560 trying to shut down our
00:39:41.580 resource sector, which is
00:39:42.880 one of the ways we
00:39:43.860 actually get revenue in
00:39:45.300 the country.
00:39:46.360 You know, if we were
00:39:47.320 selling LNG to Germany
00:39:48.760 and Japan, we'd be making
00:39:51.580 a lot more money if we
00:39:52.820 had all those other
00:39:53.640 pipelines like Keystone XL
00:39:56.140 and Energy East and
00:39:58.780 Northern Gateway, you
00:40:00.460 know, we'd be exporting
00:40:01.440 to the world, we'd be
00:40:02.500 getting contracts in
00:40:03.620 Europe.
00:40:05.140 Obviously, the environmental
00:40:06.820 groups don't want that to
00:40:09.120 happen, and so to me, it's a
00:40:11.300 green trade war.
00:40:12.460 They're working for some
00:40:13.780 other competitor nation or
00:40:15.700 companies.
00:40:17.580 But what I wanted to
00:40:20.300 mention is, what people
00:40:21.720 don't realize is that
00:40:23.360 there's a declining
00:40:24.880 number of boomer
00:40:27.820 workers, so there's
00:40:30.280 now more boomers than
00:40:31.840 there are millennials in
00:40:33.940 retirement.
00:40:35.840 And so the last of the
00:40:38.560 boomers enter retirement
00:40:40.280 in 2030, and all of the
00:40:43.200 boomers will be gone by
00:40:44.640 2050.
00:40:45.920 And I find it very curious
00:40:47.660 that those two numbers
00:40:49.800 actually happen to
00:40:52.260 coincide with these
00:40:53.900 climate goals.
00:40:55.760 Interesting.
00:40:55.860 So as we know, the boomers
00:40:58.280 have most of the
00:41:00.660 accumulated wealth.
00:41:02.380 Now, there's been a
00:41:03.580 concerted effort by
00:41:05.340 Shift Pensions, which is a
00:41:07.980 tides make way offshoot,
00:41:10.280 to force pension funds to
00:41:12.120 invest in renewables and all
00:41:13.900 things green.
00:41:15.000 And there's also been another
00:41:16.860 offshoot of them.
00:41:17.860 I can't quite remember the
00:41:20.240 name of the group, but
00:41:21.300 it's supposedly a group of
00:41:24.220 young people.
00:41:24.980 It's obviously a setup, but
00:41:26.620 you have a couple of rather
00:41:28.240 wealthy young kids say, you
00:41:29.720 know, when my parents pass
00:41:31.540 away, they're going to leave
00:41:32.500 me a fortune.
00:41:33.560 And I don't think they
00:41:34.480 should.
00:41:35.100 There should be a huge
00:41:36.440 death tax, and I want my
00:41:38.820 parents' inheritance
00:41:39.780 distributed to everyone in
00:41:42.040 Canada to make people feel
00:41:43.360 better.
00:41:44.120 So, you know, there are lots
00:41:45.400 of these different eco-
00:41:47.620 climate justice, social
00:41:48.920 justice programs out there
00:41:53.280 where they are trying to
00:41:54.520 manipulate the public and
00:41:56.360 especially young people into
00:41:57.700 like literally giving up their
00:41:59.260 inheritance to the government
00:42:00.980 because they want to do
00:42:02.640 something that's like morally
00:42:04.480 right.
00:42:05.040 So, I think they don't want to
00:42:11.440 have the millennials and the
00:42:13.740 other young people inheriting the
00:42:16.300 trillions of dollars that
00:42:18.860 boomers have.
00:42:20.700 I mean, not all boomers are
00:42:22.100 wealthy, but say most boomers,
00:42:25.360 well, I can't say most, but a
00:42:26.800 significant percentage of boomers
00:42:28.620 own a house or a property, at
00:42:31.340 least one.
00:42:31.800 And so their children would
00:42:34.640 theoretically inherit that.
00:42:37.240 So now they're putting on like
00:42:38.700 a equity tax on housing, they're
00:42:41.640 putting a capital gains tax on
00:42:43.540 housing, and they want to put a
00:42:45.260 death tax on.
00:42:46.460 So, you know, it seems obvious
00:42:48.040 that it's moving in a direction to
00:42:49.800 deny the next generation their
00:42:53.060 rightful inheritance and also to
00:42:55.380 impose penalties in the present
00:42:57.600 time on boomers, on people like
00:42:59.700 me, to make it impossible to
00:43:01.740 either retain your home, excuse
00:43:04.600 me, or stay in your home, or
00:43:07.200 retain the value of your home.
00:43:08.800 And I would say, when you look at
00:43:10.960 the city level, the recent efforts
00:43:13.500 to force cities to engage in
00:43:16.860 blanket rezoning is going to
00:43:19.180 destroy the inherent value of most
00:43:22.780 properties.
00:43:23.720 Oh, it is.
00:43:24.060 Because, you know, if you are a
00:43:26.800 boomer, and you've lived in your
00:43:28.940 house for, I don't know, let's say
00:43:30.420 20, 30, 50 years, it's all paid
00:43:33.720 off, you have your nice little
00:43:35.660 garden, your little, you know, plot
00:43:38.040 in the city in your house.
00:43:39.720 So maybe you're thinking of going
00:43:42.060 into a retirement home, you think,
00:43:44.320 oh, well, you know, maybe I can sell
00:43:46.560 my home for, I don't know, a million
00:43:49.080 dollars, let's say.
00:43:50.060 And then that would pay for my stay
00:43:52.280 in a retirement home or a nursing
00:43:54.640 home.
00:43:55.940 But if somebody comes and buys a
00:43:57.760 property next to you and builds a
00:43:59.480 fourplex there, suddenly your
00:44:02.040 property is worth less, because it's
00:44:05.820 not in a quiet little neighborhood
00:44:07.280 anymore.
00:44:07.960 Now it's got this development next
00:44:10.200 door, might be kind of rowdy, might
00:44:12.880 infringe on your property in terms of
00:44:14.700 shadow or whatever.
00:44:16.140 So now you've lost value.
00:44:18.820 But anyway, you think, well, I'm
00:44:20.040 OK, I'll sell it and I'll go into one
00:44:21.780 of these homes.
00:44:22.460 But then it's hard to get into one of
00:44:23.760 those homes.
00:44:24.220 You think, OK, I'll take the money and
00:44:25.560 I'll buy a new place.
00:44:27.060 But you can't get a place equivalent
00:44:28.740 to your old place for the million
00:44:30.360 dollars.
00:44:31.260 And you lose money on
00:44:33.060 on sale of the home.
00:44:35.580 You have lawyers fees, real estate
00:44:37.140 fees, property fees, probably.
00:44:40.300 So, you know, there are all these other
00:44:42.600 little, you know, like mice, you know,
00:44:45.260 they're all nibbling away at the
00:44:47.760 accumulated wealth
00:44:50.000 of every boomer, of every senior.
00:44:53.820 And also destroying the potential
00:44:56.160 inheritance of the next generation.
00:44:59.100 Well, it's so true.
00:45:00.560 And what's happening as well, at the
00:45:02.340 same time, they're destroying,
00:45:04.860 you know, the future for the
00:45:07.040 millennials just from a point that
00:45:08.780 that they have almost many of them
00:45:11.660 have given up even on the thought of
00:45:13.360 owning a home.
00:45:14.840 And so the accumulated wealth of
00:45:16.880 their parents is something that,
00:45:19.320 you know, they're looking forward to
00:45:21.220 because it may give them a leg in.
00:45:24.900 And then I live another way that
00:45:27.920 they're destroying the value of homes
00:45:30.680 is through this mass immigration.
00:45:33.020 Here in British Columbia last year,
00:45:35.120 they already passed, you know, this
00:45:38.020 what do they call it?
00:45:40.300 densification law where you can...
00:45:43.820 Yeah, like at least owning and
00:45:44.820 densification, yeah.
00:45:46.100 Right.
00:45:46.700 And so right now, two doors over,
00:45:49.480 there's a house there that's being
00:45:51.140 rented out.
00:45:52.460 And the owner is obviously,
00:45:54.740 I think they get something like an
00:45:55.940 extra $2,000 to rent it out to
00:45:58.380 migrants.
00:45:59.300 And so the average Canadian can no
00:46:01.080 longer rent that place for $3,000,
00:46:03.540 which is already astronomical.
00:46:04.980 So now it's $5,000.
00:46:06.020 And there's nearly 20 people living
00:46:08.640 in that home.
00:46:10.100 And as I was mentioning last week,
00:46:12.600 there's become a rat infestation.
00:46:14.740 You can literally go around the
00:46:16.160 neighborhood and see all the houses
00:46:18.640 that are being rented out.
00:46:21.180 And I think that, you know, people,
00:46:23.740 this is one of the reasons, you know,
00:46:25.360 viewers can't just leave that,
00:46:27.880 leave this all to, you know, a few
00:46:29.920 people like you and I and all of this
00:46:32.980 incredible team we have at Action for
00:46:34.540 Canada. This is a war that needs all
00:46:37.480 hands on deck.
00:46:38.440 If you don't like what's happening in
00:46:40.420 your neighborhood, you need to get
00:46:42.280 actually involved.
00:46:44.160 You need to call bylaws.
00:46:45.660 You need to start engaging with your
00:46:48.240 mayor and city council.
00:46:49.180 The least you could do is take action
00:46:51.380 against the homeowner and say the city
00:46:53.640 must apply pressure and start to even
00:46:57.800 fine them if they're not going to keep
00:47:01.100 that yard well manicured.
00:47:02.460 If they're not going to make sure the
00:47:04.400 garbage is cleaned up, at the very
00:47:05.800 least, you can be doing that in your
00:47:07.580 neighborhood and either that guy, that
00:47:09.820 person is going to sell that home and
00:47:12.300 but there is a way for us to turn it
00:47:14.960 around, but it's going to take people and
00:47:16.860 it's going to take their involvement.
00:47:18.160 We'd all like to sit home on the weekend
00:47:20.580 and just enjoy our families or have a
00:47:22.760 dinner together, but if there were bombs
00:47:25.380 dropping around right now, you would not
00:47:27.240 be considering those things.
00:47:28.440 Your priorities would, you know, be set and
00:47:32.360 that's why, yeah, I just want to do that
00:47:34.860 appeal because what Michelle is saying is
00:47:36.560 100% right.
00:47:38.140 And so Michelle, thank you for sharing the
00:47:40.300 presentation tonight.
00:47:41.480 Thank you for providing us more ammo in
00:47:44.320 order to send elected officials and hold
00:47:46.560 them to account and genuinely ask them to
00:47:50.080 respond to the information that you have
00:47:53.420 provided.
00:47:54.320 And so we look forward to having you on the
00:47:56.100 show again with some other incredible
00:47:58.120 presentations and the research you do.
00:48:01.280 My pleasure.
00:48:02.280 Thank you very much.
00:48:03.420 Thanks, everyone.
00:48:04.160 Have a good evening.
00:48:05.240 And be happy.
00:48:05.740 Thank you.
00:48:06.520 Be happy.
00:48:07.460 That's it.
00:48:08.200 Thank you, Michelle.
00:48:09.640 Goodbye.
00:48:10.120 All right.
00:48:12.140 Wow.
00:48:12.420 That was incredible information.
00:48:14.480 And as I say, I'm just going to keep putting
00:48:16.340 the plug in there that you would please use
00:48:18.180 the information that Action for Canada has
00:48:20.220 and take the time to meet with your elected
00:48:23.200 officials.
00:48:24.360 Visit our climate change page that I showed
00:48:26.480 you at the beginning.
00:48:27.380 By tomorrow, we'll have this presentation up.
00:48:29.420 Share it on your social media.
00:48:30.620 And as well, we have the 15-minute city page.
00:48:34.400 We've got our teams working across Canada.
00:48:37.260 And this is the kind of information that we
00:48:40.060 will make good use of.
00:48:41.440 And don't forget, under Action for Canada on
00:48:44.800 our website, go to our merchandise page because
00:48:47.620 right when it comes down to it, it says we will
00:48:50.080 not comply.
00:48:51.360 Do you want to look great and protect your rights?
00:48:54.820 Join Action for Canada with our stylish protective
00:48:57.840 gear.
00:48:58.240 Our slim-bit women's t-shirts are like a second
00:49:01.320 skin, giving you the power to tackle any challenge.
00:49:04.680 Made from a super soft blend of 90% cotton and
00:49:08.340 10% polyester, it's perfect for your everyday
00:49:11.700 heroes that want to tell the world that they have
00:49:13.820 had enough.
00:49:14.840 Our men's t-shirts are like your everyday armor.
00:49:17.700 Same quality, same comfort, and designed to keep
00:49:21.000 your heroic look intact.
00:49:22.760 And if you need extra protection, our mid-weight hoodies
00:49:25.680 are here to save the day.
00:49:27.380 With a pre-shrunk blend of 60% cotton and 40% polyester,
00:49:32.600 these hoodies are your trusty sidekick against the cold.
00:49:36.040 Plus, the pouch pocket is perfect for storing snacks because
00:49:39.980 every hero needs their fuel.
00:49:42.180 Deflect negativity with our 11-ounce ceramic mugs.
00:49:45.660 They're dishwasher and microwave safe, and perfect for holding
00:49:49.220 your favorite beverage or your morning dose of justice.
00:49:52.060 Our 100% cotton canvas shopping totes with double carry handles and
00:49:57.140 prints on both sides.
00:49:58.840 These totes can carry your groceries and your mission to save the planet.
00:50:02.800 Stay warm and stylish with our form-fitting toques.
00:50:06.120 Perfect for winter adventures.
00:50:08.340 Made from acrylic and polyester, they fit most sizes with an adjustable cuff,
00:50:13.820 keeping your brain warm for all those brilliant ideas.
00:50:16.660 And don't forget our six-panel structured caps designed to protect your head
00:50:21.840 from too many UV rays or bad hair days.
00:50:25.380 Every purchase helps support our movement to protect Canadian rights.
00:50:29.820 Visit Action for Canada now and gear up for the fight,
00:50:33.200 so together we can protect what matters most and help make a difference.
00:50:37.340 Next week, we have special guest Audrey Werner coming on.
00:50:42.460 She was on a year ago.
00:50:44.040 She is absolutely amazing, and she is the one that gave us the history
00:50:47.500 on who created sex education.
00:50:50.960 And, of course, that was Margaret Sanger from Planned Parenthood,
00:50:54.760 Hugh Hefner, Kinsey, that horrible pedophile.
00:50:57.900 And it's really a vile situation because back then they said kids are sexual at birth,
00:51:02.360 and so they've promoted this horrific education system,
00:51:06.500 including all of this sexuality, and they have amplified that in the last years,
00:51:11.620 and our kids are paying a high price.
00:51:13.240 So this year, she is coming on next week,
00:51:16.100 and she's going to talk about how to raise pure kids in today's culture.
00:51:19.940 So you won't want to miss that one.
00:51:21.900 And finally, I picked Daniel 3, 16 to 18 as the verse for today,
00:51:28.780 and it says that Shadrach, and this is where we're going to be uncompromising
00:51:33.500 in speaking the truth, in being patriots, in talking about our national sovereignty
00:51:38.720 based on Christian principles, uncompromising for the Word of God.
00:51:43.480 So Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego replied to him.
00:51:46.540 King Nebuchadnezzar had put up this really big statue,
00:51:49.580 and he said everybody in the land must bend a knee and worship him.
00:51:54.440 And Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were strong Christians,
00:51:58.940 and there was no way that they would serve any other god or bow to any other god,
00:52:04.020 and they refused.
00:52:05.320 And so they were threatened that if they didn't bow,
00:52:08.100 they would be thrown into the fiery furnace.
00:52:11.060 And the story is that they were thrown in, and the fire didn't burn them.
00:52:15.300 And in fact, there was a fourth person that showed up,
00:52:17.880 and that was Christ there with them.
00:52:20.340 And the guards that threw them in, they burned and died.
00:52:25.800 And actually, they came out, and King Nebuchadnezzar then followed God,
00:52:31.960 and he destroyed that idol.
00:52:34.880 But Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego replied to him, to the king.
00:52:38.180 This was prior to being thrown in.
00:52:40.480 King Nebuchadnezzar, we do not need to defend ourselves before you in this matter.
00:52:44.780 If we are thrown into the blazing furnace,
00:52:46.820 the god we serve is able to deliver us from it,
00:52:49.580 and he will deliver us from your majesty's hand.
00:52:52.900 But even if he does not, we want you to know, your majesty,
00:52:57.020 that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up.
00:53:02.840 And that's from Daniel 3, 16-18.
00:53:08.200 So, Twenzy, if you want to just bring me back,
00:53:11.260 I just, you know, I know that that was, again, a big report.
00:53:14.320 I give big weekly news reports.
00:53:16.060 This is a special, though.
00:53:17.460 And you can really help me out by sharing this information.
00:53:20.820 Make a comment.
00:53:21.760 Give us a thumbs up.
00:53:24.760 Give us some feedback as well on how we're doing on the weekly news updates.
00:53:29.180 I know they're long.
00:53:29.840 I would like to get them down to a half hour,
00:53:32.180 but I'm working five or six days a week on all of the other campaigns
00:53:36.540 and trying to keep this massive organization going.
00:53:40.260 And I only get one opportunity to come once a week
00:53:43.540 to try to give you what I feel is some really pressing information
00:53:47.480 and make it personal to you.
00:53:49.600 And then let you know that we don't live or walk in a spirit of fear
00:53:53.640 because God has made us courageous,
00:53:55.940 and we believe that God is fully in control,
00:53:58.800 but we have to do our part in exposing the evil
00:54:01.760 and then mobilizing and doing something about it.
00:54:05.280 So, anyways, I'm exhausted now.
00:54:07.820 That's a big amount of work to get done today
00:54:10.280 and information to get to you,
00:54:11.820 and I pray that this is going to be used for God's good and His glory
00:54:15.900 and that we truly will indeed shut down all manifestations of Islam in Canada,
00:54:21.080 that we will elect individuals that understand what is at stake,
00:54:26.320 even those people who have immigrated here.
00:54:28.900 I was talking to a Sikh, a lovely Sikh man the other day,
00:54:31.740 and he agreed 100%.
00:54:34.600 He said, this is a Christian nation,
00:54:36.540 and he was a beautiful man who says,
00:54:38.640 I support everything that you're saying.
00:54:40.580 So, it's not a hard sell.
00:54:42.000 We're not meaning to offend any individuals.
00:54:44.000 We're actually fighting for their freedom in Canada,
00:54:47.060 but they just need to understand truly where that freedom comes from.
00:54:50.940 So, anyways, thanks for spending this time with me.
00:54:53.520 God bless you, and God bless Canada.
00:54:55.620 That's what I've got to say.
00:55:05.440 Look at this crowd.
00:55:10.040 I'm going to thank God and God alone for the ground that I'm standing on.
00:55:17.060 I'm going to thank our founding fathers for giving their lives
00:55:26.020 and sacrificing so much for our freedom.
00:55:29.560 And I'm calling on you today.
00:55:35.600 Don't put them to shame.
00:55:37.880 Don't waste what they did.
00:55:40.360 We have guaranteed rights in this country.
00:55:43.680 We are putting chapters across the nation.
00:55:53.920 We are going to be in every town and every city,
00:55:57.280 and we are going to build communities within these communities
00:56:01.140 of like-minded people who are actually going to care for one another again
00:56:05.320 and love on each other and give each other the help when they're down.
00:56:08.820 We are going to use the teams and the people that built within chapters
00:56:14.600 to support our businesses.
00:56:17.540 The government's actions are completely, 100% unlawful.
00:56:23.980 Judgment will again be found on justice,
00:56:27.680 and those with virtuous hearts will pursue it.
00:56:31.900 You have a virtuous heart if you are here today
00:56:35.560 pursuing freedom and righteousness.
00:56:38.820 And then verse 23 comes along with a promise.
00:56:44.400 God says he will turn the sins of evil people back on them.
00:56:49.880 He will destroy them for their sins.
00:56:55.120 I take great comfort in that
00:56:57.600 because I serve a mighty living God
00:57:01.400 who has allowed us to go through this season of discomfort
00:57:06.900 because we as a nation have turned our backs on him,
00:57:11.340 and we need to get right.
00:57:13.980 So I am just going to thank you so much.
00:57:17.760 I'm going to say God bless you,
00:57:20.120 and God bless Canada.
00:57:21.580 God bless you, God bless you, God bless you, God bless you, God bless you.
00:57:26.020 God bless you, God bless you, God bless you, God bless you, God bless you.
00:57:30.540 And every thought, all big or small,
00:57:34.480 together we win it all.
00:57:37.300 We fight for freedom and for rights,
00:57:41.020 we say turn darkness into light.
00:57:44.080 In every heart we feel his might,
00:57:47.760 and through his love we win the fight.
00:57:51.660 Action for China, we unite.
00:57:54.960 Joining hands, we fall to fight.
00:57:58.520 Action for the China, we stand tall.
00:58:01.900 With love and saints, we can win it all.
00:58:04.660 We all up high, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh.
00:58:12.120 What a black we've lifted high,
00:58:15.580 and we've gotten more glory to the sky.
00:58:19.220 Our people fell out with these lies,
00:58:22.720 but together they can't even try.
00:58:27.000 Come with us and feel the power,
00:58:30.600 grace and love in every hour.
00:58:33.680 When I look around, it's now or never
00:58:37.180 When the life you are meant to live
00:58:40.080 Actions are better to reunite
00:58:43.400 Shorting hands with foes of fight
00:58:46.820 Actions are better to stand tall
00:58:50.300 With love and faith, we can win it all
00:58:53.600 We all go high
00:58:55.460 We all go high
00:59:02.460 We hold our flag, we lift it high
00:59:24.960 And with God we'll sew it to the sky
00:59:28.440 Our people fed up with these lies
00:59:32.080 But together they can't even try
00:59:35.480 Actions are better to reunite
00:59:40.780 Shorting hands with foes of fight
00:59:44.200 Actions are better to stand tall
00:59:47.680 With love and faith, we can win it all
00:59:50.840 We all go high
00:59:52.760 Actions are better to feel more
01:00:03.460 Long time with faith, we can win it all
01:00:05.040 We all go high
01:00:11.920 Thank you.