In this episode, Heather and Teresia talk to Action for Canada's Tom Harris about the importance of 15 minute cities and their role in the fight against climate change. They discuss the dangers of climate change and the need for cities to join the fight.
00:05:02.420Here they are, education system, corporations, governments at all levels, our churches, the military, the media.
00:05:08.620And I'm very sad about the fact that they dominate our churches because, you know, the Anglican church that I go to, for example,
00:05:16.140it's, you know, very, very dominated by the climate scare.
00:05:20.080I just leave my climate hat at home when I go because I don't want to end up in fights.
00:05:24.660So the question then becomes, what should we do?
00:05:28.420Well, what we should do is actually learn from the left.
00:05:31.520Not that we want to become the left, but we can actually use many of the same tactics that were used by the extremists to take over our institutions in the first place.
00:05:40.480So what we should do is actually take a step back and go to, let's say, around 1970, when the conservatives were controlling the institutions, generally speaking, and the extreme left were on the outside looking in.
00:05:54.100And that is, in fact, what we did here in Ottawa.
00:05:57.120And it was really necessary to do it because here is the actual early polling results for the Ottawa mayor election in October of 2022.
00:06:06.700Catherine McKinney, and she insisted that she be called they, which I never did.
00:06:13.160But regardless, they, she had what appeared to be an insurmountable lead.
00:06:18.580You can see she had 34 percent of the vote.
00:06:21.920And the rest of the vote was split between about 12 candidates.
00:06:25.300The top four of them are actually shown here.
00:06:28.280Now, the interesting thing is that she supported the following things, which are completely insane.
00:06:35.440She wanted a quarter of a billion dollars for bicycle paths.
00:06:39.060Now, I was just out on the bicycle paths over the last hour and a half, which is why I didn't get on the call early, Tanya, because I didn't see your email.
00:06:46.860But, yeah, she wanted a quarter of a billion dollars for bicycle paths.
00:06:50.580So we'd have Cadillac bike paths at a time when we're turning away drug addicts from drug rehab centers because we didn't have enough money.
00:06:58.460So, I mean, that left her wide open to attack by a black fellow who was running for mayor who was a social justice warrior.
00:07:06.420So she sort of shot herself in the foot there.
00:07:08.620She supported the city of Ottawa's declaration of climate emergency.
00:07:12.340That's happening all over the place, of course.
00:07:14.460And as a result of that, the climate change master plan and the associated document energy evolution.
00:07:21.380Believe it or not, she was the primary driver behind the city endorsing something called the fossil fuel nonproliferation treaty.
00:07:29.080So they're treating fossil fuels as if they're equivalent to nuclear weapons, you know, which is completely crazy.
00:07:35.680And I won't read all of this, but the top part is they wanted to phase out all uses of oil and natural gas.
00:07:43.340And they wanted the last one, convert Ottawa hydro to all wind and solar electricity generation.
00:07:49.300And to do that, you would need, believe it or not, it sounds like something out of Monty Python, 710 industrial wind turbines, each taller than the Peace Tower.
00:07:58.400And as you'll see in a minute, Catherine McKinney kind of backed off when she was quizzed on that by some of the people for Action for Canada who worked with me.
00:08:09.740She wanted to have 36 square kilometers of solar panels.
00:08:13.560OK, you're going to have to use a lot of fossil fuel powered machines to keep the snow off it.
00:08:18.340And they wanted 122 large shipping containers of lithium batteries.
00:08:23.160Now, of course, unknown to her is that when you're making these batteries, when you're making the wind turbines, when you're making the solar panels, you cause huge pollution.
00:08:33.120You also cause massive human rights abuses.
00:08:35.820For example, the batteries for electric vehicles, the cobalt is mostly mined in the condo.
00:08:40.620And I'll show one of our superheroes, Danielle Mayo, who is head of the Action for Canada Ottawa chapter, when she really pinned it on the candidate, McKinney, to see, you know, did she support child labor?
00:08:55.120Fifty seven point four billion dollars up to 2050.
00:08:58.780Now, when I showed people that number, they said, no, no, that must be for the whole of Ontario.
00:09:19.680They wanted to see what would effectively amount to a 40 percent increase in property tax just to pay for the climate plan.
00:09:28.880It would also add, by the way, the price to the price of, as Tanya said in her description, fifty five thousand dollars per house.
00:09:35.120So in contrast to their vision to transition the city to a clean, renewable and resilient city by 2050, we would, in fact, have a polluted, fragile and bankrupt city suffering from regular dangerous blackouts and business failures.
00:09:49.980Now, you might wonder, why would I say polluted?
00:09:52.040Well, the reason is because if you look at the United States, for example, in regions where they made a massive conversion to wind and solar power, the electrical grid became so unstable.
00:10:03.700Obviously, you don't get any power when there's no wind or it's night or sun.
00:10:08.880And so more and more people bought home generators, which, of course, are powered by fossil fuels.
00:10:13.340And that produces a great deal more pollution than just having a simple natural gas pipeline coming into your home.
00:10:20.360So the bottom line is you'd actually have local air pollution would go up as a result of their plan.
00:10:26.180So we started to wake up the citizens of Ottawa.
00:11:17.260Here's one of them, which involved Bob Lyman, who was our economic.
00:11:21.100He still is our economics advisor and myself.
00:11:24.240And so so we did quite a lot to sort of get people up to speed.
00:11:27.820And then we said, OK, but that's not enough.
00:11:30.360OK, so we put out a report which was called The Cautionary Tale for Governments Around the World.
00:11:35.520Now, this report did not talk about the fact that there is no climate crisis.
00:11:41.760OK, we did not want to be dismissed as climate change deniers.
00:11:44.980So what we did in report number one is we focused on the detrimental impact, the infeasibility, the massive cost.
00:11:53.640You know, the fact that we'll be left bankrupt, hungry and freezing in the dark, which is my favorite expression.
00:11:58.200If we actually carried this out and then we approached action for Canada and we decided that we had to use, as I said, the tactics of the left.
00:12:09.200Now, if you haven't read it before, you really should read the book Rules for Radicals, because by political correctness, we are now the radicals.
00:12:18.200OK, in 1971, it was the left who were on the outside and Saul Linsky wrote this book, which is about grassroots organizing, titled Rules for Radicals.
00:12:29.100Now, I'm not advocating to do some of the dishonest things that he did, but his actual layout of rules are very, very sensible.
00:12:38.260And we applied them here in Ottawa, and I'll show you how in a minute.
00:12:40.920Now, the beauty is that what you're about to see is about to be replicated across Canada by a group called Canadians for Sensible Climate Policy, OK, CSCP.
00:12:52.840And you can actually check them out on the web at sensiblechange.ca.
00:12:56.660And I'm on contract with them to help them bring what we did in Ottawa across Canada.
00:13:02.040So we're really looking forward to working with you folks, not just in Ottawa, but in other places as well.
00:13:07.240Now, here's power rule number one, and this is very important.
00:13:12.400Power is not only what you have, but what an opponent thinks you have.
00:13:17.560If your organization is small, hide your numbers in the dark and raise a din and make everyone think that you have more people than you do.
00:13:31.380And Action for Canada people were very helpful in handing these out at every one of the mayoral debates, OK?
00:13:37.840And at one particular point, you know, there was a lady, I believe, she actually wasn't with Action for Canada, but she was one of our allies.
00:13:45.420And she was standing out front handing this flyer out to hundreds and hundreds of people as they came into the big fourth debate.
00:13:52.360And one of the environmentalists took her to task and was yelling at her and swearing and making a big fuss.
00:13:58.280But she was so polite that other people in the audience behind the yeller said, oh, I want to see that brochure.
00:14:08.600By keeping our cool and being very professional despite the attacks, we got actually more attention than if we had been, you know, just angry right back.
00:14:17.620This is kind of interesting because this shows what you can do if you don't want to speak out or if you don't want to actually hand things out.
00:14:26.480And that is that you can go and cheer and clap and make a bit of a ruckus when the opportunity arises.
00:14:33.220Now, I'm going to play here just the end of one of my delegations.
00:14:36.400A delegation is a presentation to the city.
00:14:38.540They give you, let's see, five minutes.
00:14:41.140And you remember at these events, the audience are supposed to be very quiet.
00:14:45.360They're supposed to sit on their hands.
00:14:46.580They're not allowed to clap or cheer or anything else.
00:14:49.500But look what happened at the end of my delegation.
00:18:05.880Now, that's a beautiful question, because the person who's trying to answer is kind of damned if they do and damned if they don't.
00:18:13.180If they say, oh, well, we're going to electrify the city to act with the children, or if they say, oh, I'm concerned about the children, but then most of the cobalt comes from the Congo.
00:18:22.040So, you know, here's McKinney's answer.
00:18:24.580And you can see how she's super, super uncomfortable.
00:18:27.200Thank you, and thank you for that question.
00:18:34.300Absolutely, we can't just look to electrifying everything.
00:20:14.140Now, this is a great example because, once again, we're holding the panelists, the people that are running for mayor, to their own book of rules.
00:20:23.220They're calling themselves environmentalists, but they're supporting something that's going to kill, you know, millions of birds and bats, quite frankly, across the region.
00:20:31.160So let's see how Catherine McKinney handles this.
00:21:46.280Yeah, she made it clear, all right, clear that she doesn't know what she's talking about, because, of course, the plan that she voted for had tripled the amount of, you know, there's three times the solar was wind.
00:21:58.960I mean, wind was three times solar in total capacity.
00:22:02.220And, you know, in a little later question, she backed off on the wind.
00:22:05.900She said, oh, the plan doesn't have that much wind because, of course, she didn't want to talk about the killing of birds and bats.
00:22:11.880She said it's mostly solar and energy distribution.
00:22:16.280And that, of course, has nothing to do with the energy source.
00:23:36.400And another one is to pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, polarize it.
00:23:41.280Don't try to attack abstract corporations or bureaucracies.
00:23:45.120In other words, don't say the city passed this really stupid plan.
00:23:48.940You say you voted for this stupid plan.
00:23:52.300And, you know, you really hold the individual responsible.
00:23:55.980And in this case, there was a double benefit because, of course, she was running or they were running to become mayor.
00:24:02.560And what happened is after this kind of thing occurred, you know, meeting after meeting and debate after debate, a lot of people, myself included, I was going to vote for a third candidate, actually.
00:24:15.640We had a look at the polling and we said, wow, if we vote for somebody other than the second place person who is Mark Sutcliffe, McKinney's going to win because it'll distribute the vote amongst all the other people.
00:26:10.440So she starts out, can you tell us about any other city?
00:26:14.780Of a million or more population that has successfully followed the sort of transportation-related climate and energy plans being planned for Ottawa?
00:26:22.540If no such example exists, why not carry out a pilot study on a small subset of Ottawa's population, perhaps composed of the members of this committee or city employees who are promoting the plan?
00:26:36.620Such a study would entail all participants switching over to an electric vehicle and an electric home, heating, and only commuting by transit, walking, and cycling.
00:26:48.220Participants could also commit to retrofitting their homes in accordance with the plans the city now wants us all to follow.
00:26:54.180Then, after a reasonable time frame, they could report to the committee their experiences during the trial period to better inform you on the likely real impacts of cities' plans, were they to be carried out on the whole of Ottawa?
00:27:10.620If a student would approach me with suggestions that the class switch over to a radically new way of learning, I would ask, have you tried it yourself?
00:27:18.340If their answer was no, and then I would tell them to try it out and let me know how things went.
00:27:25.660Similarly, ask us to do your homework before further considering compelling the whole city to radically change the way we live.
00:29:22.880I'll send links to first and second reports to Tanya so she can put it up under the podcast when it goes up online.
00:29:28.820And we explained why the city of Ottawa's climate plan is completely unnecessary.
00:29:33.920Now, it's not just that there is no climate crisis, which is in fact true.
00:29:38.320But even if there were a climate crisis, I sent the reductions in greenhouse gas emissions to an expert in the United States who works with the EPA, what they call the magic model.
00:29:56.520And he believes that we are causing significant climate change.
00:30:00.480So, I said, if Ottawa ceased to exist and spent almost $60 billion on their climate plan, what would be the impact on climate by the year 2100?
00:30:11.160And the answer was one ten thousandths of one degree by the year 2100 for $60 billion.
00:30:19.980So, it's interesting, one of our allies, actually, Jay Neera, he got up and he asked a question, which, again, Rogers censored out.
00:30:29.760And I'll talk about that in a second because censoring questions can work to our advantage if we use it strategically.
00:31:47.400They censored out Mindy's question completely.
00:31:49.940And they also censored out Jay Neera's question totally, as well as the really dumb, dumb answers.
00:31:55.480And, of course, the reason was they didn't want these people to look bad and they were taking sides in the debate.
00:31:59.980But, happily, one of our allies, I probably shouldn't say his last name, but Frank, he actually went to the debates and he videotaped the debates.
00:32:10.360And so we put a web page up saying, here's what Rogers would not let you see.
00:32:15.020And I contacted PJ Media in the United States, who get about 5 million readers per month.
00:32:22.040And I said, you know, we're running an election here and the organization, Community TV, which was given the mandate to cover the election, is practicing censorship.
00:32:30.880What would you think if I were to write an article and include, embedded in the article, the videos that were deleted?
00:32:38.020And they were, oh, yeah, great, go right ahead.
00:32:56.580So we got 100 times more attention than we would have got had Rogers just simply broadcast it.
00:33:03.820Because, you know, maybe Rogers Community TV might have 500 people or 1,000 people who would have seen it if it were normally broadcast.
00:33:12.080But because we got it on PJ Media and, of course, we spread it everywhere, we got easily 10,000 views.
00:33:18.080So, yeah, you can fight back when they censor and you can make them look pretty darn bad.
00:33:22.520So the next point I wanted to make is that this approach of actually training individuals, not only in some cases like Danielle, I didn't have to train her how to speak because she's a very good speaker, but training them in the topic, in the actual topic material, so that they know more than the people they're quizzing.
00:33:57.700Obviously, McKinney had never heard of the cobalt mining done by children in the Congo, but Danielle knew a lot about it, okay?
00:34:05.360Before she asked the question, she had done research.
00:34:08.240She had actually studied and read the things that I sent her.
00:34:10.560So that's very important because one of the key elements that many people don't get is that the council can turn around and then say, well, what would you do?
00:34:23.000You better know your topic inside out and backwards.
00:34:25.840So, you know, we had one person who was, for example, a very experienced program manager with the IT sector, and he had analyzed the buses in Ottawa, the electric buses, and he basically realized they were doing very poor project planning.
00:34:39.520Now, had they questioned him, what would you do differently, he would have been able to tell them exactly what you do differently.
00:34:47.000So we would not only have a particular volunteer from Action for Canada learn their question, be able to ask it with real power, we would also have them know about that topic in quite significant depth.
00:34:59.280So that if they were forced to defend themselves, answer a question from the panel or present an alternative, they could do it, okay?
00:35:37.140You don't just ask them a hard question.
00:35:38.940You have in the back of your brain exactly what you're going to say if they ask you what you should do instead.
00:35:44.740So the first step in all of this is to learn the topic really well.
00:35:48.300And that's why Canadians for Sensible Climate Policy is such a great group.
00:35:52.760If you go into sensiblechange.ca, they take you through, you know, a step-by-step approach to understanding the climate issue and the impact on food, the impact on electricity.
00:36:05.560And you can sign up to be what they call a pathfinder, okay?
00:36:09.640A pathfinder is basically somebody who's kept up to date on what's going on.
00:36:14.880And I encourage everybody listening to this call, register to be a pathfinder, okay?
00:36:19.300It doesn't mean you have to speak out, but it does mean you'll be given the tools to speak out so that if you choose to, you'll actually know what you're talking about.
00:36:27.580And then, of course, I would work with pathfinders who are prepared to speak out, and we would prepare for particular cities that we're going to target, okay?
00:36:37.100Ottawa, there's not a lot of point in targeting Ottawa anymore because we did manage to succeed and got a more moderate mayor in.
00:36:42.920And from what I understand, the climate policy is being backed off on quietly in the background.
00:36:49.560I shouldn't say too much about that because they want to keep that quiet.
00:36:53.200But regardless, we're going to approach then several other cities, and I can tell you offline what those cities are, one in Alberta and several in Ontario.
00:37:02.620And what we'd like to do is not only to replicate what we did in Ottawa, but to demonstrate that this approach can be done anywhere, okay?
00:37:13.080If we have five cities in which we've managed to defeat the climate scare or make them back off on it hugely because of our actions, then, yeah, we can replicate this everywhere.
00:37:23.940So I really encourage people, sign up.
00:37:26.520The first step is to become a pathfinder.
00:37:28.840You can see on the homepage, actually, it's right – whoops, I'll just zip down here.
00:37:34.520At the lower right-hand corner, become a pathfinder, and it takes you in, and it gives you a little bit of a query.
00:37:41.740Try and find out what you're interested in, what your knowledge level is, and then it gives you some direction as to where you should go.
00:37:48.020So, now, CSCP, as I say, one of the main things they're going to do is to provide Canadians with information, and then they're going to help train and coach people so that we can actually end this net zero by 2030 – or 2050, in this case.
00:38:28.100I'm sitting here making all these little notes, and I just want to encourage anybody, if you have any questions, then make sure that you're putting them in the Q&A.
00:38:36.480If you're watching this live, sign on to the Zoom.
00:38:48.540You're specializing in an area, and we've got many different topics that are going on, but everything, I always say, fits together like this, what the government's doing.
00:38:59.980Oh, my goodness, I think it was years ago, 2019 or something, when I first heard her speak, and she was talking about climate change in reference to children in the schools.
00:39:10.020And so, you know, here today we're talking about it with mayor city councils and in townships and passing the 15-minute city policies, and yet climate change is also in the direction of our kids because, of course, you do a little scaremongering.
00:39:26.180They're going to hate their parents for creating this crisis and so on and so forth.
00:39:46.220And then one day, I guess I spoke at about a dozen different schools, and, you know, big success.
00:39:50.560They brought in, like, the whole school, 600, 800 people.
00:39:53.980And then I got a call from a principal.
00:39:56.200He said, I'm sorry, but I got a call from the school board, and they said, we have to cancel your talk because you're speaking out against government policy.
00:40:04.840And, of course, they all work for the government, at least in the public school system.
00:40:08.340And so, you know, one thing that should be done, I think, is for Action for Canada people to go to school board meetings and to say, why is it that you're only showing one side of the science?
00:40:19.860Science is something that is always open for discussion, open for debate.
00:40:24.280Essentially, you are just simply propagandizing the children.
00:40:27.980Why don't you present various points of view and let them make up their own minds?
00:40:32.480So, you know, that's a hard question for them to fight back against.
00:40:35.880And I think it should be asked because, you're right, in the schools, massive indoctrination of one point of view only.
00:41:08.580But I want to make a page, a Tom Harris page, because we're realizing that a lot of your resources are sort of spread all over.
00:41:15.520But we'd like to have it focused so that people can listen to your videos.
00:41:19.580One of the things that you said, and I've always said it, is knowledge is power.
00:41:22.760And if we run Action for Canada members or chapter leaders as candidates in upcoming elections, they could debate anybody under the table on the topics that are being addressed.
00:41:35.240And that's exactly the kind of strategy that we're working towards.
00:41:41.280And you had just named that, that training individuals on the topic when it comes to climate change, all the other policies, how to research and find out what your local mayor and city council are doing or passing right under your noses.
00:41:57.160Sometimes it's learned knowledge, even when you're sitting at one of these meetings, you will be absolutely floored or shocked by what they're passing without the public knowing about it.
00:42:10.780Right. And in many cases, they don't even know much about it themselves.
00:42:13.960You know, and this is why the questioning of McKinney really was effective, because it revealed that she didn't know what she was talking about.
00:42:22.020And so, yeah, the other thing you can do, of course, is call in to talk radio, because then there's a little bit of a delay and they'll censor you out if you swear.
00:42:30.740But otherwise, you can get points of view across.
00:42:33.420And, you know, I got to emphasize one point here that I did emphasize in Red Deer, and that is that most people, when a presentation is finished and they open it up for Q&A, they sit there and think, well, I'm not going to be first.
00:42:45.100You know, let somebody else go first. That's a big mistake.
00:42:47.880You should go first. You should get up to the mic instantly as soon as you have the opportunity for two reasons.
00:42:55.240And many people in the audience who agree with you, but maybe are afraid to say so when they hear you say it, they go to the mic, too.
00:43:02.580And they say, yeah, yeah, I agree with that guy.
00:43:04.900You know, I want to talk about that some more.
00:43:06.980So similarly with talk radio, if you call in right away and you bring up a point and say, you know, I don't really think there is a climate crisis, 1.2 degrees since 1880.
00:43:16.060I mean, so what? We wouldn't even feel that.
00:43:18.740And then suddenly you find other people, listeners call in, too, and say, yeah, yeah, that guy had a good point.
00:43:23.820Right. So, yeah, you don't wait. You get to the mic right away.
00:43:27.380And that's what Danielle did. That's what all of our Action for Canada people did.
00:43:30.680It was kind of fun because by the third debate, I guess it was, the organizers, they called me up and they actually asked me not to ask any questions, which is hilarious.
00:44:28.480I helped them when they wanted help, but they actually took over.
00:44:32.700And, you know, these meetings that happened, the community resiliency dialogues, I didn't even go to them because they avoid, you know,
00:44:39.340they held it in different ridings and different wards, I mean, and they totally avoided my ward.
00:44:45.760I think it's because they knew where I live.
00:44:47.620So they just didn't have one in my ward.
00:44:49.940So Action for Canada people took over and I was getting phone calls.
00:44:53.740Oh, yeah, we're going to this, you know, this ward meeting.
00:44:56.500And, you know, Tanya, it's really fun because a group of about four or five of the Action for Canada people got into a conference call with me after one of the community resiliency dialogues.
00:45:07.740And they were like kids in a candy shop.
00:45:09.880They were so happy, you know, said, oh, we completely dismantled the meeting.
00:45:44.760And the second reason why it's good to get to the mic early is because you get it done.
00:45:49.340And then you can sit down and relax and enjoy the meeting.
00:45:52.100Or think of another question and get back up there.
00:45:56.700But, yeah, that is this is why I've been, you know, just so desperately trying to get people to understand the importance of building these Action for Canada chapters so that we can be busy and coordinated and organized in the communities.
00:46:11.100And that, Tom, you've you've made yourself very available because you specialize in this.
00:46:18.180You've trained us amazingly on this topic.
00:46:20.620And we've got those resources on the Web page.
00:46:24.260And so I just watching them fumble around over themselves trying to legitimize their lies and when they're called out on it in a public forum, this is why they're trying to shut these meetings down.
00:46:39.040This is why they're having their private in meetings and making policies and passing things.
00:46:44.360But the more that the public press in, then the better our chances are of us winning.
00:46:51.100And Ottawa was just such an amazing win.
00:47:19.680I'll remember the last word in a second.
00:47:21.680But what they're doing is they're trying to pass legislation that would remove the power from the municipal level and give it to this over the district that oversees all 18 municipalities.
00:47:34.800And so Pierre has been arranging meetings.
00:47:39.20090 people showed up at the first one, over 100 last night.
00:47:42.660They went to one of the public hearings the other day.
00:48:12.560And they're trying to implement policies that very much go against our constitution, our charter rights, and even the rule of law.
00:48:23.060And so it's called the Winnipeg Metropolitan Region.
00:48:25.820And if you take a look at the map, you'll see these 18 municipalities.
00:48:31.340And so they're basically lobbying governments saying, you know what, we're going to take power over that.
00:48:36.060This board consists of mayors or councillors from the 18 districts.
00:48:41.680And that if they do pass, my understanding is there will be three individuals that are unelected who will then have say over what happens in those cities regarding these plans.
00:48:53.060And the plans include shutting down people's wells and that if you have, for instance, a third of an acre, you're going to need to put eight units on that third of an acre.
00:50:59.200And as a consequence, it's a tinderbox just waiting to cause a fire.
00:51:03.420So, yeah, that's why the fires are terrible.
00:51:05.640Well, and the other thing as well, Tom, is that here our ridiculous excuse for a premier is sending hundreds of billions of dollars out of the country, paying hundreds of billions of dollars to the Natives for empty graves, paying hundreds of billions of dollars to the LGBTQ propaganda, and he's not buying water bombers.
00:51:30.000And they're not burying cables underground.
00:51:32.420If you're concerned about extreme weather, bury them underground.
00:51:35.640You know, we had a massive, we had tornadoes here about four or five years ago, and I was working in Kanata to the west of the city, and I walked around and nobody had lost power because all their cables were underground.
00:52:09.540Because I was reading, yeah, I was reading about the Jasper fire, and interestingly, it ends up that I didn't realize this, that the fires at that force and intensity create storms of their own.
00:52:34.460And as you say, if you want to read a book that talks about this purposely creating problems so that you can generate more fear, there's a book called State of Fear by Michael Crichton.
00:52:46.760You remember, he was very outspoken against the climate scare, and he talks about environmentalists who actually cause disasters to happen so they can point to them later and say, there we go, it's climate change.
00:52:59.240You know, so that's a, it's an exciting book, but at the same time, it gives a very powerful message.
00:53:19.160Okay, so I'm going to ask you a couple of questions have come in from our viewers.
00:53:23.640So it goes, once citizens are sequestered in 15-minute communities, will they be reliant on the food, heating, shopping, water, and services that are available as per the powers that be?
00:53:36.660You'll be reliant on just what's within your particular 15-minute sector.
00:53:40.520And they're actually doing this to some extent in Oxford in England, where they have digital things on your license plate, and they have cameras at checkpoints.
00:53:51.600Okay, this sounds like Checkpoint Charlie, you know, in the Cold War.
00:53:54.800But they actually have cameras, and you can only cross the boundaries between certain regions in Oxford a certain number of times per year.
00:54:03.080And if you exceed that, you get fines automatically coming by mail.
00:54:10.940I mean, I think this is one of the underlying things that people have to understand is that a lot of people on the left think that governments run our societies better than private enterprise.
00:54:22.160And so they want to bring more and more of what we do on our everyday basis under government control.
00:54:28.500And, of course, the ultimate goal is world governance.
00:54:32.800David Anderson, who used to be the environment minister under Jean-Claude, he actually admitted, he said, that the Kyoto Protocol, which, of course, was the predecessor of Paris Agreement, the Kyoto Protocol is the flagship of world governance.
00:54:46.820And that makes sense if you think about it, because if you're controlling CO2 for the whole planet, you're controlling fossil fuels.
00:54:53.820And fossil fuels are more than 80% of the world's energy, so you're controlling the world's energy.
00:54:59.440And if you control the world's energy, you control the world.
00:55:03.060And an interesting example of that is a few years before the Ukraine war, the Ukraine and Russia had an argument over some foreign policy issue.
00:55:12.300It was the middle of the winter, and so Russia turned off the gas.
00:55:15.480Ukraine agreed with them very quickly.
00:55:19.280So you control world energy, you control the world, you control food, you control all sorts of things, you control people, as that comment just said from Diane.
00:55:27.940So, yeah, a lot of this is about control and the belief that government should run everything.
00:55:34.460Yeah, they're thirsty, bloodthirsty for control, you know.
00:55:39.400So probably their feet don't even touch the floor in the morning, and they're thinking about it.
00:55:43.040And it's very, very concerning, because it's not like they have the best interest of citizens at heart in any of this.
00:55:50.840And so once they gain this control of getting you in the 15-minute cities, they have, get rid of, like, don't buy smart products.
00:55:57.700Don't buy smart fridges or smart TVs or smart toasters.
00:56:01.660I mean, it may all seem technologically cool, but this is how they're going to be able to rate and control you as well within your homes.
00:56:08.920And so if you've used too much air conditioning in the middle of a, maybe we're having a heat wave, which we've had for decades, you know, they're going to turn your air conditioning off.
00:56:19.480If you want to go to the grocery store, well, you're going to need to show proof of vaccine before you can buy your groceries.
00:57:03.920And the culling of all of the chickens and the cattle in the United States because of so-called bird flu, absolute and total nonsense.
00:57:11.680And it breaks my heart to see that the way they're destroying those chickens as well, it's inhumane.
00:57:17.320And as well, all of the spraying, we have people across Canada right now commenting on the, if they've got gardens and they're growing vegetables or cherry trees,
00:57:27.720they're commenting on the damage to their gardens and the leaves because of the geoengineering and the chemicals that are being sprayed in the sky.
00:57:36.980So this is the kind of thing that we really have to go to as many public meetings as possible and raise a din, you know, really make a fuss and get angry if necessary.
00:57:46.160And, you know, the left did this and they took over doing exactly that.
00:57:51.000And much as I don't like the left in many ways, they were very brave, you know, and so we have to do the same.
01:17:28.280God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you
01:17:33.900Thank you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless you and God bless them every day.