Action for Canada is a grassroots movement reaching out to millions of Canadians and uniting our voices in opposition to the destructive policies tearing at the fabric of our nation. Through call-to-action campaigns, we equip citizens to take action. We are committed to protecting faith, family, and freedom.
00:00:00.000Welcome, everyone, to the Empower Hour. It's Wednesday, November 17th, 2021. My name is Heather Fournier, and on behalf of everyone at Action for Canada, I'd like to thank you for joining us this evening.
00:00:16.560We have a lot of information to share with you tonight, as well as a discussion with our special guest speaker, the Honourable Brian Peckford. Once again, I'd like to remind everyone to be supportive and respectful of other people's opinions in the chat.
00:00:32.460Action for Canada is a grassroots movement reaching out to millions of Canadians and uniting our voices in opposition to the destructive policies tearing at the fabric of our nation. Through call-to-action campaigns, we equip citizens to take action. We are committed to protecting faith, family, and freedom.
00:00:54.920Every Wednesday evening, I have the very great pleasure of introducing you to Tanya Gaw, the founder of Action for Canada.
00:01:05.060For the past several years, Tanya has been working hard to bring awareness to the destructive policies that are undermining our nation.
00:01:14.880The Action for Canada website is a result of the hard work she and her associates have been doing, and I recommend that you check the website often for news and updates.
00:01:24.920The cool thing about Tanya is that she loves Canada, and she loves Canadians. Because of her passion for our great country, she wants to empower each and every one of you to learn how to stand up for your rights and freedoms.
00:01:39.540She's a woman of courage, strength, and faith, an amazing freedom fighter, and an inspiration to us all. Hello, Tanya.
00:01:47.760Hi, Heather, and hello to everyone. Thank you for coming and joining us tonight. I'm really excited to have Honorable Peckford on.
00:01:57.720And I just have a few updates for you. But first, Heather, I want to just thank you so much.
00:02:02.340You are just amazing at providing that presentation and welcoming people and just your kind words about myself as well.
00:02:10.020It's just tremendous. I want everybody to know as well, we're just regular Canadians like you.
00:02:16.240And we've just kept applying ourselves and moving forward and making all the efforts we could to make a difference in this country.
00:02:23.760Each one of us is capable of doing the same thing. And so, Heather, thank you for that.
00:02:29.020I just felt kind of blessed. I was watching, you know, there's a lot of people making notes in the chat.
00:02:35.140But Marianna, back at 5.56 p.m., that's BC time, she said, what a great job you are doing Action for Canada.
00:02:42.400Those letters worked for me. Employer advised me that I have to go, had to start November 15th because I refused to get tested.
00:02:50.860After I gave them the letter, they changed their mind. Thank you again. God bless you all.
00:02:55.280That is an amazing testimony. And Marianna, I hope you'll actually send us to call2atactionforcanada.com.
00:03:02.860Send us that little testimony and we're going to put it up on our page because we're creating, you know, we want to document people's success so that it will help encourage others.
00:03:13.240Now, a lot of you are getting success with the notices of liability, getting the masks off your children, being able to effectively, you know, address your employer so that they can be educated by the notice of liability and understand what they're doing is in violation of the Constitution and the Charter and the rule of law.
00:03:33.360And so that's fantastic. We love hearing those stories. And but of course, there's going to be those, especially the federal workers right now and those connected to unions or who are having a more difficult time.
00:03:46.220And that's why we ended up not only creating the employer notice of liability, but the one directed at the unions and then an additional letter.
00:03:55.120And that additional letter, I call it the drop the mic letter.
00:03:58.580I don't know how anybody can read that letter and be served that letter and still think that it would be OK to interfere with somebody's right to provide for their family and make a living.
00:04:08.900And so with that in mind, many people have used the additional letter.
00:04:14.420And as we promised, we are moving towards holding people liable personally.
00:04:20.960And so we're working towards criminal charges of the individual.
00:04:25.160Remember, not in their capacity as an employer or the executive in a union.
00:04:29.500They will have no protection from those organizations because they have a duty, like all Canadians, to uphold the law and adhere to it.
00:04:38.900And to respect people's human rights and to respect the charter.
00:04:43.120And so I would just like if we could bring up the invitation to the Criminal Charges Empowerment Workshop.
00:04:52.160David Lindsay has been on our show several times on October 13th and October 27th.
00:05:30.540David is going to stay and he's going to answer questions.
00:05:33.580And we just feel, as I've always said, knowledge is power.
00:05:37.940And when you have it, you've got to share it and you've got to use it.
00:05:40.740And we need to make sure you're educated.
00:05:43.560And that's as well why we're bringing on Mr. Peckford tonight.
00:05:46.520Because if anybody can tell us what the Charter of Rights was meant to do for us and how it was meant to protect us, it's going to be this gentleman.
00:05:52.940So if you could just scroll down a little bit more.
00:05:55.720So please, nope, just down to the Workers Unite.
00:05:59.320So make sure that you go on and you register, please, for that upcoming workshop.
00:06:04.840And then as well, we keep strongly impressing on all employees.
00:06:09.140We were at first going after unionized workers.
00:06:12.500And then I thought, well, we're all in the same boat.
00:06:15.220Everybody is being faced with the same thing about this mandatory, unlawful, unlawful mandatory jab.
00:06:21.680So Workers Unite represents unionized and non-unionized workers.
00:06:27.180And then when you go into this page, it is completely set up with all of the resources that you would need,
00:06:33.580plus any extra Zoom meetings that we're going to put on, informational meetings, anything like that,
00:06:40.320as well as this workshop will be posted on that web page.
00:07:08.880And she came out a week ago and said that, I love it.
00:07:14.740If you could just scroll down a little bit more, I want to capture this.
00:07:18.860She actually came out and said, if you choose to leave your job, then you will not receive EI.
00:07:24.780Now, we've got to make it very clear, as I've said here, that extortion and coercion do not equate to having a choice.
00:07:34.240And I can't tell you how many medical professionals, unionized members are being told that they have till such and such a date to get the vaccination.
00:07:44.800Or I don't even want to call it that word.
00:07:47.000Let's just call it the injection, the bioweapon, whatever we want to call it is, it's not a vaccination.
00:07:51.920And if that you don't comply, that you will be put on unpaid leave.
00:33:00.100There's not one report by any government which says, here is our argument justifying the measures we're bringing in to fight this so-called pandemic.
00:33:16.340And therefore, they have not met the test of Section 1 to override Sections 2, 6, 7, and 15.
00:33:27.220Any reasonable person who knows a language and knows the words justify and demonstrably knows that these governments not only have to justify what they have done,
00:33:42.540they have to demonstrably, they have to demonstrably, in other words, very, very clearly and very detailed to justify this.
00:33:51.200Has any government had a select committee of their legislature or of the House of Commons go study this, bring in experts from all over the world and hear both sides of the story?
00:34:00.220And then let that select committee report back?
00:34:21.100And so the governments have not taken the time to honor what is in Section 1 even, which they have the right to override.
00:34:35.040But obviously, when you read this, you know right away that there's going to have to be some pretty powerful stuff come forward in order to justify what they're doing, to demonstrably justify what they're doing.
00:34:52.800In some cases, and I know one, in the province of BC, for example, when they've issued some of their health orders, guess what they've done?
00:35:00.900They've put in with their health order, oh, we understand there is a Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
00:35:07.100And we understand there's a Section 1.
00:35:09.560Now, for the life of me, I don't know why they did that.
00:35:12.400Because if they thought just by mentioning the words that they demonstrably justified it, that's the most silly thing I've ever heard in my life.
00:35:31.040So we are in a real dilemma here because, as your speakers before me have said many times on your webinars, and as their website has said, and many other people in Canada have said,
00:35:47.120one of our great problems today of why we are where we are is that our government has been sliding down a very slippery slope for 40 or 50 years.
00:35:59.040So this just didn't happen yesterday or didn't happen with the pandemic.
00:36:04.780It happened long before, where the power of our parliament and the power of our legislatures was gradually eroded without a shot being fired.
00:36:15.240And the movement of that power went from the MP and the parliamentary committee and parliament to the cabinet.
00:36:22.940And then it went from the cabinet to the prime minister's office.
00:36:26.240Would you believe it if I told you that right today the prime minister has about 1,500 people reporting to him, just to him, out of his office?
00:36:39.080They're called the Privy Council office and the prime minister's office.
00:36:43.080And both of them together, and they only report to the prime minister.
00:36:50.100They report just to the prime minister.
00:36:51.580So an MP and an MLA is really now a glorified social worker.
00:36:57.420And they're just called on from time to time by their whip, and they whip them into shape to make sure they support whatever measure it is their party is bringing forward.
00:37:08.080And how do they get all of this allegiance from all of these so-called MPs?
00:37:13.140Well, what has also happened is that in our system today, we have a big cabinet in Ottawa, 30 ministers or more, and each one of those 30 ministers has a parliamentary secretary.
00:37:26.600Where does that parliamentary secretary come from?
00:37:30.360So right away, you have 30 cabinet ministers and 30 parliamentary assistants.
00:37:35.120There's 60 right off the bat that the prime minister can count on, because who nominated, who appointed, who appointed those parliamentary secretaries?
00:38:07.320So right away, you're getting close to 100 MPs that have complete and utter allegiance to the governing power, to the governing party, because they owe their very jobs to it.
00:38:19.440On top of that, you have a society and an economy which is almost now completely run by one of the two governments.
00:38:26.240The number of government agencies in all the provinces, the number of government agencies in the federal government, the federal government supports almost every single industry directly or indirectly right now.
00:38:38.700You've got all of the law firms in Canada, both provincially and federally, all the big ones on retainers from either the government directly or from a government agency.
00:38:48.700So like just happened recently, where a number of people were looking to get a lawyer to help them out on a case involving the pandemic.
00:38:58.440And they searched out and phoned around and they couldn't find anyone in that province lawyer to agree to represent them.
00:39:06.560Why? Because just about every lawyer in that province, and this is true in a lot of the small provinces in particular, are somehow beholding to one of the two governments.
00:39:17.680Some of them are beholding to both because they got both retainers are doing work for both.
00:39:21.940And so this is an insidious decline in our democracy, starting really from Pierre Elliott Trudeau's time, by the way.
00:39:29.900He's the one who really started to increase the prime minister's office and gradually over time, diminish the power of the parliament.
00:39:38.420Everything has got to go through the leader.
00:39:40.480So we really got, we talk about America being different in Canada.
00:39:44.600We don't have a president. Oh, yes, we do. Oh, yes, we do.
00:39:47.800De facto president is the prime minister of Canada today.
00:39:51.300So we may not have it in our constitution, but we've got it in every other way.
00:39:55.660And by the way, that gradual reduction of power by the parliament, which is supposed to be the supreme institution in our country representing us,
00:40:07.500happened on every government, not just liberal governments, on the conservative governments too.
00:40:12.320So I make no, I make no politics here.
00:40:15.240I'm talking about all of them have been guilty of seeing our society come to where it is today.
00:40:23.060So that when the pandemic hit and when the governments finally found themselves in the padding mode,
00:40:28.960by the way, they never even went to their emergency measures organizations, which each province has already established people in place to deal with emergencies.
00:40:38.600They didn't do that. They went to a small cadre of bureaucrats who had a very narrow view of the society, not a broader view.
00:40:48.220If the governments, if the provinces had gone to the emergency measures organizations,
00:40:52.480we wouldn't have had the kind of pandemic actions that we've had today because they were looking at the broader picture
00:40:58.340and realizing right away that, you know, for every action, there's some kinds of negative reaction.
00:41:04.780So, you know, if you are going to suddenly do the kinds of things that they did and thereby reduce the surgeries to ordinary people,
00:41:16.480reduce the appointments to specialists and so on, you're likely to hurt just as many people that way as the virus did.
00:41:25.800And Douglas Allen of Simon Fraser University has done a study demonstrating this and pointing out that the cure has been worse than the disease.
00:41:35.220OK, and why they've been able to get away with this is because and then the media is the other factor in this.
00:41:41.060So, OK, you have the parliaments already diluted all over Canada.
00:41:45.940And then what's another arm of a democracy? Another arm of democracy is the media.
00:41:51.500Well, Justin Trudeau and his government and the Parliament of Canada passed an act providing $600 million to the newspapers and the media of this country.
00:42:02.180So they are all in a conflict of interest situation.
00:42:05.300So our media are no longer an independent voice for the citizen or voter of this country at all.
00:42:13.240And academia, as we all know, over time, has gradually become more and more leftist, more and more non-individual and group.
00:42:24.920The individual through all of this process since 19, since, well, 1960 or before, has been diminished.
00:42:35.420The individual has been diminished and the group has risen to power, if you will.
00:42:42.820And so that's why the Charter is so important today, because thankfully we were able to put in the Charter of Rights
00:42:50.080and recognize the sacredness of the individual and individual rights and individual freedoms in a free and democratic society.
00:43:00.320But make no mistake about it, we are now on the precipice, as I said in an article today,
00:43:05.940we're now at the crossroads because we are, with the media not on our side,
00:43:14.180and by the way, the media are not on our side for another reason, too.
00:43:17.060The world media signed a deal in December 2020 called so-called misnamed Trusted News Initiative,
00:43:26.680in which CBC signed, by the way, in Canada, and all of the major media in the United States,
00:43:33.660and Britain, BBC, and so on, all around the world, Reuters, Associated Press,
00:43:38.400they all signed this deal whereby they would not say anything negative about the pandemic or the injections.
00:43:46.320And so here we are in a circumstance where we're cornered by our own institutions,
00:43:52.160we're cornered by our own government, we're cornered by our own media.
00:43:55.480And why organizations like Action 4 Canada has risen,
00:44:02.540because they appreciate and understand the whole question of freedom
00:44:07.500and the whole issue of rights and freedoms now in our Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
01:24:15.260Once you come to our country, right, when I'm in Rome, I do as the Romans do.
01:24:19.060Yeah, that's why America was so, so strong and so powerful is because most of the immigrants who came to the United States up until 1960 or 70 assimilated.
01:24:58.760Yeah, it goes to a stronger, united Canada, right?
01:25:03.980And the reason I'm bringing this up, my friends, is that one of the ploys that Trudeau and the Liberal government has used is they use multiculturalism to get us to attack one another and divide us.
01:25:17.960And that's where we as a nation and as a people need to come together and understand that we either embrace what we have as a nation.
01:25:26.680Because I always said that when he says that we're a post-national state with no core identity.
01:25:34.360And that's the danger of not embracing the people that we have, right?
01:25:42.320Okay, so somebody's asked, what is the difference between this charter and the Canadian Human Rights Act?
01:25:48.480In the federal government, we have been told exemptions can only be submitted under a prohibited ground of discrimination under Section 3 of the Canadian Human Rights Act.
01:25:59.200But before you answer that question, I want to let people know we don't need to be exempt from anything.
01:26:17.740Then you have Human Rights Acts in each of the provinces.
01:26:20.460Remember, Canada is a federation, not a unitary state.
01:26:24.280And so we have powers in the provinces.
01:26:26.240We have powers in the federal government.
01:26:27.780So when you talk about the Canadian Human Rights Act, you're only talking about people who are involved with the federal government some way or another.
01:26:34.640And it only applies to federal employees and people engaged under federal legislation, right?
01:26:41.420And then in B.C., the B.C. Human Rights Act applies to people of B.C., right?
01:26:49.040So you have 11 Human Rights Acts, but they are all under, they are subservient to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, as we, Tanya's kept saying and I've kept saying.
01:27:01.880So these, sure, if you've got a good case, a human rights case at the federal level under the Human Rights Code of Canada, sure, go for it.
01:27:12.320If you've got one under Newfoundland or Nova Scotia or Saskatchewan or Manitoba and that's where you live and you can take an action under that human rights thing because you were working or under provincial law, go for it.
01:27:24.800But don't forget that these are subservient laws to the Supreme Law, which is the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
01:27:33.300Okay, so can I ask you as well, I have found it in my research a little bit of a conundrum as far as the Privacy Act is concerned.
01:27:41.640Where would you say in the Charter best describes where people could find a section that would support their privacy rights?
01:28:01.860And then it would be up to the judges based upon your argument or your lawyer's argument to decide in your particular case to what degree the privacy, the security of the person overrode what they were arguing, you see?
01:28:16.820So, yeah, and then it would become an individual case, but security of the person for sure.
01:28:20.960Yeah, because they've written in to the Federal Privacy Act, it's a bit weak.
01:28:26.440And so then when you go to the provincial privacy acts, depending what province you're in, I believe it was Saskatchewan, it's a bit shady and a bit shaky for people if they were to rely on the provincial privacy acts.
01:28:39.960And by the way, I want to say to anybody who's really thinking about what I've been talking about and Section 1 and how governments can override it if they can demonstrably justify.
01:28:54.440If they're really interested legally in this, there was a case in 1986 called the Oates case.
01:29:02.340Just plug in or Google in the Oates case and it will come up.
01:29:05.600And in that case, the judge, because the case, the person who was bringing the charge invoked the charter, the judge was forced to look at Section 1 and he then elaborated on what he thought Section 1 meant.
01:29:24.620And guess what, Tanya? It meant what you and I are talking about. So any time, and I'm sure Rocco and others who were involved in this will bring up the Oates case because what I've just talked about demands to be justified.
01:29:40.020The judge elaborates upon that. He also elaborates upon within the law, because it says, right, by law.
01:29:46.620It also says in a free and democratic society and the judge elaborates on all those phrases and through that and any case now that came before the Supreme Court, they would have to rely on that particular precedent that was set in 86, which very, very much validates what we're saying.
01:30:08.240That using that Oates case, we can see that none of the governments have demonstrably justified what they're doing.
01:30:16.080And that Oates case is a really good example of how we can win the argument in the courts.
01:30:24.520And something to be really, really considered when we're talking about this.
01:30:30.120So, yeah, there is very few people. I don't know what I mentioned at the lawyers.
01:30:34.180They've told me, oh, yes, we learned the Oates case. However, guess what, Tanya?
01:30:39.260Like so much that you've talked about is this. It's hidden, right?
01:30:43.840Who's bringing it forward? Only me now, right? Who's bringing it forward?
01:30:48.140You can go to that Oates case and find out that to demonstrably justify and to satisfy the test of Section 1 is a steep, steep mountain for any government to climb.
01:30:58.680And they can't climb it because they don't have the facts and the medical science on their side.
01:31:05.040This is 100 percent. I just, you know, just for a little bit of fun, everyone, we're all working from home, having these meetings.
01:31:14.600And I've got a puppy and the puppy decided to get rubber chicken and start squeaking it.
01:31:20.360So that was very poor timing. So excuse me for disappearing on you for just a second.
01:31:24.620But I find that quite a hoot that, you know, it's just nice to have a little bit of life around us in all this darkness, right?
01:34:00.980Thank you so much, Tanya and Honorable Mr. Pickford.
01:34:05.040I wanted to ask, is there a way to hold the premiers and the prime minister to an international law or natural law or, you know what I mean?
01:34:21.700Because I feel like if we're waiting until like three or four years, a lot more people will be sick or dead by then.
01:34:31.520You know, I'm just I don't want to be extreme, but, you know, they're pushing this for like, you know, eight boosters and ten boosters and and their children.
01:34:46.300So I was is there a way to like I know you were mentioning something earlier, but we would have to wait for the premiers to like bring that up.
01:34:57.160And none of them seem to be interested in cooperating with that.
01:35:10.660It's a you know, it's a mixed bag of trying to get to the International Court of Justice and make some of these international agreements stick.
01:35:17.660And once again, it would take a long time longer than the court action is going to take in Canada now.
01:35:23.440So even if it is legitimate, it'll take longer than it will take what we're doing here.
01:35:29.540And so we've got this is the other thing Canadians got to understand.
01:35:33.440I think I said I'm doing sort of like little seminars now in various communities explaining what I'm playing tonight.
01:35:40.980I did one in Port Alberni on Sunday and I'm doing one in the town I live in in Parksville in the next in the next week or so.
01:35:47.220I'm doing one in Nanaimo and so on for groups anywhere like the group in Port Alberni was over 100.
01:35:53.580But and all these questions, according to what the lady just asked, what we've got to do is come to grips with.
01:36:03.260You've got to look at yourself straight in the mirror and say, I'm a Canadian and I'm going to defend what I know is right and is in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms since 1981 and in the Bill of Rights since 1960.
01:36:15.980So in the same way, if I if I can and this makes me really exercise, as you can tell, in the same way as Canadians will not accept that our health system is broken.
01:36:26.360It is broken. It is broken. It has been broken for decades.
01:36:30.320OK, we're not the best health care system in the world.
01:36:33.320As a matter of fact, we're in the Western world. We're one of the worst right now.
01:36:37.500The Fraser Institute just came up with a report report the other day.
01:36:40.760The Commonwealth Fund in the United States, which does international studies on health care systems, came up with a report confirming what the Fraser Institute said.
01:37:38.820So what we're trying to express to all of you is that there's so much power in you taking action and taking steps, going to the meetings with the mayor and city council, going to school board trustee meetings, serving the notices of liability.
01:37:55.620You all have the power to affect change within your community.
01:38:00.560But on that, that was our final question.
01:38:03.300And so, Honorable Peckford, I just I'm so grateful that you were able to come on tonight.
01:38:07.200I find found this was highly educational.
01:38:10.860And as far as next week is concerned, I'm thinking that since many of you, I hope, will sign up for David Lindsay's, there's a limited space.
01:38:19.580So I would recommend that you sign up for that workshop.
01:38:24.260And I'm thinking that next Wednesday, myself and possibly David will come on as a guest again.
01:38:30.360And I just may open it up to have a complete Q&A.
01:38:33.540So if that sounds good to you, I wouldn't mind, yes, open a Q&A, even if you just went, yes, yes, do that.
01:38:40.460We would do it right straight out the gate and try to answer some of your questions.
01:38:45.080It's pretty much what I'm doing all week at every Zoom meeting I'm attending.
01:38:49.720If you are a parent, please join our parent group.
01:38:54.340If you are a business owner, please join our business team meetings because I'm on all of these meetings answering questions.
01:39:02.520And it is just essential to try to help as many people as possible because I know many of you are hurting, you're distressed, your job is on the line, your ability to provide for your families.
01:39:20.000And so we just want to give you all the support we can.
01:39:23.240Please make sure that you reach out to the chapters as well and get involved there.
01:39:27.760Because we're growing so fast with the chapters, sometimes there's a delay in our chapter leaders getting back to you, but we're trying to work through that as well.
01:39:35.300So anyways, how are we doing, Terenzio?
01:39:46.040Okay, well, I was going to ask Honorable Peckford to have a closing word and then we'll end this wonderful meeting for the night.
01:39:55.420Yeah, well, I think I would, the end of our conversation a few minutes ago was bringing to the meeting to its normal organic conclusion in that the power lies with the people.
01:40:11.420And that's what democracy was all about from the beginning.
01:40:13.920Remember, democracy really started back in Athens in about 480, 490 B.C. in the city-state of Athens, and it was the people.
01:40:26.460As a matter of fact, the smallest jury, even at the trial of Socrates at the time, the smallest trial had 100 or more citizens who were the jury.
01:40:36.800It was the ordinary citizens who were the jury, as it is now, but there was far more of them engaged in the judicial process.
01:40:46.840And every democracy since Athens has only been successful as long as the people are involved.
01:40:53.540You can go back in Canada or the United States, and as people's participation, right, civic involvement in the politics declines, so does democracy.
01:41:06.020As civic participation goes up, so does democracy, can be best illustrated from what happened in the United States in the last election for governor in Virginia.
01:41:20.780A guy who had 3% name recognition nine months before the election became the new governor because people went out to their school boards because they were upset about the way the educational system was going there, right?
01:41:35.180And they had a guy who was a truck driver and spent $150, and he replaced the top guy in the Congress of Virginia, the president of the state senate, who was replaced by a truck driver because the people got involved.
01:41:51.300So we're right, you know, we can see it ourselves.
01:41:55.000Anytime something happens in our communities or in our province or whatever, if people get involved, you can make a difference, significant difference.
01:42:02.980It's happened just recently in the United States.
01:42:04.860It can happen here as it relates to what we're doing now.
01:42:07.260So the message is people is where the power lies.
01:42:12.780The idea then is to organize, as Tanya is doing, to ensure that through these kinds of organizations, we're going to put the kind of pressure on the governments which will force them to capitulate and bring back the rights and freedoms which they are blatantly violating as we speak.
01:43:45.500Because nobody, but nobody knows anything about the Constitution, even most lawyers don't.
01:43:50.700Because they only, in their law school, get it, you know, Constitution law is just one part of a larger, you know, criminal law, civic law, and all the rest of it.
01:43:59.120And so we need a fundamental change right at the basis of our society, and that's education.
01:44:04.740So as we change the politicians, we must also change the school boards.
01:44:09.300I agree with that 100%, because part of the communist agenda was to get into the schools, because if you get the minds of the children, you control the future.
01:44:18.140So they don't want them knowing about the coronation oath or the Charter of Rights or the Constitution, right?
01:44:23.600And that's why our youth are oblivious right now and walking around in these mobs of masks rather than we got to tap in, right?
01:44:32.460We got to tap into that and help our youth to become awakened.