Derek Rants - March 31, 2025


2025-03-31 - PLAID ARMY


Episode Stats

Length

2 hours and 38 minutes

Words per Minute

141.8988

Word Count

22,492

Sentence Count

1,881

Misogynist Sentences

50

Hate Speech Sentences

61


Summary

In this episode of the Total BS Bible Study Podcast, I talk about the ice storm that has been going on for the past few days, and how to deal with it. I also talk about a few other things.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Transcription by CastingWords
00:00:30.000 Transcription by CastingWords
00:01:00.000 Transcription by CastingWords
00:01:30.000 Transcription by CastingWords
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00:02:30.000 Transcription by CastingWords
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00:03:29.980 Transcription by CastingWords
00:03:59.980 Transcription by CastingWords
00:04:29.980 Transcription by CastingWords
00:04:59.980 Transcription by CastingWords
00:05:30.480 I love that intro. I wanted to use that one tonight because I'm going to split this stream up probably in two different videos.
00:06:08.660 Just south of where I live, they had a massive ice storm throughout like Barrie, Aurelia and all that.
00:06:17.900 So, not looking good for them. So, not looking good for them. So, I'm just trying to sign back in there.
00:06:26.840 So, I'll get that back in there. So, I'll get that back in there. How's everybody doing?
00:06:36.080 None of you, I'll get that back in there. So, I'll get that back in there. So, I'll get that back in there. So, yeah, like I was saying, this is going to be more like a Uncle Ted's Disciple style podcast for the beginning of it because in that segment, I was trying to look for,
00:07:06.080 as opposed to the normal Platt Army style, just complaining about shit and joking around.
00:07:12.820 So, from what I can tell, Erbil is an actual doer. He's doing stuff on the land down in Arkansas and he may have some tips for us for what we're doing up here.
00:07:30.040 So, very similar ideas. I've been watching his videos today on his YouTube channel and Twitter and such and most of our ideals are pretty much the same.
00:07:45.540 But it's always on how people want to get there, I suppose, right? That's usually where the disagreements happen.
00:07:54.440 But people need to keep in mind that they're both working towards the same thing.
00:08:00.040 You know, we have to keep that in mind instead of trying to tear each other down. So, I want to learn from Arville.
00:08:11.160 There's Jen Seen and Doings.
00:08:15.700 Miss Speaker. I saw that you called there, Miss Speaker. I wasn't able to come to the phone.
00:08:22.200 And even if I was, I don't normally answer it. I usually call people back or try and find out what they want.
00:08:26.880 And that's true.
00:08:35.360 I have a bunch of videos loaded up, too, for when we go a little later into the night.
00:08:41.220 I know that Jen Seen likes a later show.
00:08:45.820 Because over here, fuck, three hours difference.
00:08:49.080 It's amazing that we live in the same country where we got three hours difference like that.
00:08:56.880 How much do you guys know about Arkansas?
00:08:59.920 Because I don't.
00:09:02.240 I know that they put in a law recently about
00:09:04.460 in order to have a valid driver's license, you have to be able to speak English.
00:09:11.480 And they have road tests down there.
00:09:15.260 Which is kind of cool.
00:09:16.740 They ask you to write out a sentence, read a sentence, say a sentence.
00:09:20.700 Or else you're going to have to pay a sentence.
00:09:28.580 Or get sentenced.
00:09:35.720 No hate crimes in Arkansas.
00:09:41.140 1701 Patrick.
00:09:42.140 Great to see.
00:09:43.980 Back there.
00:09:44.700 Well, I didn't go anywhere.
00:09:45.460 I did a couple of streams on the Total BS Bible Study channel.
00:09:51.300 Because I was actually banned for two weeks on my normal YouTube channel.
00:09:56.360 It's so touch and go.
00:09:57.560 It's just there because people don't want to use Rumble.
00:10:01.540 Or they're using other.
00:10:02.940 It's just easier.
00:10:03.940 It's always on your phone.
00:10:04.840 And YouTube has the best engine, I suppose.
00:10:07.760 Or best quality.
00:10:08.720 So people just go to it naturally.
00:10:10.780 It's trying to siphon them off.
00:10:11.940 Like Raj, Trad Wife.
00:10:14.100 I see you guys over there using the Google machine.
00:10:20.640 I guess while we wait for Arville to show up.
00:10:25.580 What I can do is show you the damage.
00:10:28.560 That the ice storm was doing just south of me.
00:10:31.540 I'm actually quite lucky.
00:10:39.380 Wrong one.
00:10:39.940 And that's an old video of the guys I used to race with in Mississauga.
00:11:01.380 No, I just missed.
00:11:02.820 This morning, their house got hit.
00:11:04.740 Well, the other two.
00:11:06.540 Those two have to hit the house.
00:11:08.440 They're going.
00:11:09.560 They're getting lower.
00:11:13.080 And they have nothing to fuck off again.
00:11:15.000 So they're just going to go right on the roof.
00:11:17.480 There's three tangled up.
00:11:18.900 Listen, listen.
00:11:22.660 There it goes.
00:11:25.820 Look at it.
00:11:26.520 Oh.
00:11:28.000 There it goes.
00:11:29.440 They're going to start.
00:11:30.640 There's one more.
00:11:37.640 There's one more that has to fall.
00:11:45.940 Wow, that was lucky.
00:11:47.020 I thought that was...
00:11:48.080 There's another one going to go.
00:11:49.480 I know the guys are enjoying this.
00:12:14.400 Now, it's lower.
00:12:20.360 It's going to pop.
00:12:21.140 One.
00:12:22.720 Two.
00:12:25.260 Three.
00:12:27.520 Four.
00:12:29.560 Five.
00:12:30.840 Typical guy thing.
00:12:32.000 I can guess when it's going to crack.
00:12:33.360 Seven.
00:12:34.000 Seven.
00:12:36.000 Eight.
00:12:38.440 Nine.
00:12:40.320 Ten.
00:12:42.220 Eleven.
00:12:42.740 And now it's gone.
00:12:44.360 Gone.
00:12:45.620 There it goes.
00:12:47.820 Oh.
00:12:48.740 Oh, it'll go.
00:12:50.660 Three.
00:12:51.980 Two.
00:12:52.500 Oh, that's getting me right.
00:12:55.620 Look at it, eh?
00:12:56.620 Look at how that's...
00:12:57.880 It's like watching a drug person slowly go down.
00:13:02.560 I didn't expect that one to fall.
00:13:05.740 Here comes another.
00:13:07.080 Here comes another one.
00:13:09.800 Get in your house.
00:13:11.020 Oh, wow, that one's in stress.
00:13:22.540 There we go.
00:13:27.580 That's something you've got to think about in Canada.
00:13:29.960 We've been fairly lucky the past couple of snowfalls and the past little while, but we
00:13:34.380 are going through a cycle where it's going to get a lot worse.
00:13:37.120 So anybody that's skimped out on the roofs, you're going to learn why you don't skip out
00:13:41.180 on your roof.
00:13:44.020 Two buildings, they weren't really buildings.
00:13:47.280 They were just kind of enclosures at the neighbor's place of collapse.
00:13:51.480 You know, it was just like a little place that you'd put your generator to keep the snow
00:13:54.760 and rain off it.
00:13:55.900 And like, it was just a really crappy sheet metal tube that they put up at the end of
00:14:00.840 a trailer.
00:14:01.240 Both of them had collapsed in on themselves.
00:14:05.960 Like people go cheap a lot of times.
00:14:08.600 Like we use two by tens on the extension for the roof, but I only used two by six on a 14
00:14:16.740 foot span on my roof.
00:14:18.460 So I was actually worried about that.
00:14:20.020 My original roof.
00:14:20.920 Um, you really have to keep that in mind because you might have two feet of snow up there and
00:14:29.360 it doesn't make a difference, but it just has to rain once and, uh, it changes the weight
00:14:33.740 distribution.
00:14:36.080 There he is.
00:14:37.220 How are you?
00:14:38.700 Oh, pretty good.
00:14:40.100 Yeah.
00:14:40.960 Is the, uh, tornado so far tornado holding off for now for now?
00:14:46.260 Yeah.
00:14:46.780 Like I said, we're still in the middle of it, but yeah, that's something I don't have
00:14:51.580 to worry about too much up here, but we were just, I was just showing a couple of videos
00:14:55.380 there of the ice storm we had and the damage it's doing.
00:14:59.140 Um, yeah.
00:15:01.660 Where in Canada are you?
00:15:04.860 Myself?
00:15:05.360 I'm up in Cochran Timmons.
00:15:07.780 So I'm about eight hours North of Toronto.
00:15:11.220 Oh boy.
00:15:12.060 Yeah.
00:15:12.900 Well, yeah.
00:15:14.380 What's the temperature?
00:15:16.260 Currently.
00:15:17.320 Right now it's about negative five.
00:15:20.180 I think it's a little lower than that.
00:15:21.920 It felt like, but we got down to negative 40 this year.
00:15:27.340 I was right.
00:15:28.140 Negative five.
00:15:30.620 Yeah.
00:15:31.080 Negative five is something you that's fine.
00:15:33.060 That's spring day of that.
00:15:37.800 Yeah.
00:15:38.200 I prefer a little bit cooler than, uh, Arkansas in the summer, but I don't miss, I used to live
00:15:43.400 in New York.
00:15:43.880 I don't miss the harsh winters really.
00:15:47.120 Yeah.
00:15:47.540 It is something that it also helps forge a people too.
00:15:50.740 There's a certain type of person that is willing to live as far North as I am.
00:15:54.920 And that's somebody that wants to be as far away from diversity as possible.
00:15:58.280 I want to, uh, I'd rather put up with the snow than that.
00:16:04.500 It does tend to keep them out.
00:16:06.140 You would think, but, uh, New York, you know, Chicago, some of these places still got to deal
00:16:11.640 with that.
00:16:12.560 Well, yeah, that's because they've built an infrastructure that has allowed them to be
00:16:16.240 able to stay there.
00:16:17.040 And that infrastructure is going to fall into disarray eventually if, uh, not maintained
00:16:22.220 properly.
00:16:24.160 But I guess that's, we always, we always have the same.
00:16:29.260 Yeah.
00:16:29.820 As human capital goes down though, uh, the robots are just going to take the jobs and,
00:16:35.280 uh, I think they'll keep this running.
00:16:36.900 That's my position.
00:16:38.440 They'll find a way they have to write for their own survival, I suppose.
00:16:45.720 But, uh, it seems like anybody that's ever looking for resolution or a solution, um, in
00:16:53.340 the Western world always comes down to the same thing.
00:16:55.660 You have to start your own thing and start from the very bottom and build up.
00:17:00.580 And that's, I was telling my viewers earlier, that's what we want to focus on now is people
00:17:05.240 that do solutions, have resolutions and are actually doing something instead of just the
00:17:10.060 constant, you know, Fuentes grift or the, uh, the eternal grift of the people just talking
00:17:17.080 about politics and talking, talking, talking, not going anywhere.
00:17:19.980 So it's a pleasure to have you on the show.
00:17:23.180 Do you mind maybe telling us, we'll start with why you decided to, uh, uh, move into your
00:17:31.140 own or build your own community.
00:17:33.240 And maybe we'll go into how you did it after that.
00:17:38.940 Yeah, sure.
00:17:40.340 Uh, so there's a long, you know, backstory to it.
00:17:43.360 Um, I've talked online about intentional communities as basically the only solution
00:17:50.040 for the situation that we're in overall.
00:17:53.280 Um, I mean, money dominates politics and our side, we're not the billionaires.
00:17:58.920 That's just kind of how it is.
00:18:00.500 The people who have the resources, that's intergenerational wealth, that's elite families
00:18:05.480 that have controlled things.
00:18:06.820 They've had it locked down for centuries, as far as I can read it, you know, the central
00:18:11.360 banking system, the major banks.
00:18:14.200 So there's a big club and we're not in it.
00:18:16.660 Um, so they're, uh, they're going to be able to keep the institutions, um, that they have.
00:18:22.360 And our only option is to build alternative institutions.
00:18:26.760 And, um, so I've been pressing that as my politics since about 2013.
00:18:33.180 Um, but, uh, I've pushed for schools above everything else.
00:18:41.040 Um, I teach classical philosophy online.
00:18:44.240 So I teach Plato, Aristotle, the Neoplatonists, and, um, I'm also a classical musician.
00:18:51.680 So I play the French horn.
00:18:53.300 I went to school for the French horn and I was the organist of my church for a long time.
00:18:57.480 Um, and I just think that kind of classic Western Civ grounding needs to be resurrected.
00:19:05.940 That has to be present for young people.
00:19:08.480 Um, and so I've really cared about creating some kind of traditional, you know, Western
00:19:14.740 heritage focused, uh, educational institution.
00:19:18.260 Um, and I've talked about that for a long time.
00:19:20.900 Um, I had basically given up on the idea that, uh, the intentional community movement in
00:19:27.300 our circles in identitarian circles would take off.
00:19:30.720 Um, people seem to go much more for the kind of Fuentes route of hoping one day to take
00:19:37.800 power, slipping into the system.
00:19:39.860 And, um, you know, I think that's ultimately because it's easier to imagine that you'll do
00:19:47.500 all the hard work at some future date.
00:19:51.420 Um, you don't have to sacrifice now in the meantime, just work for the system, get a bunch of money,
00:19:56.860 become, you know, higher status.
00:19:59.580 And, and then one day you'll help ordinary people.
00:20:03.500 Um, but I don't believe that.
00:20:05.540 I think we do have to actually build stuff, but it seemed to me that like that just wasn't
00:20:09.340 happening.
00:20:09.680 So I, I would advocate this and, uh, just, it was to deaf ears.
00:20:14.780 Uh, people would, I, it would hurt my view counts.
00:20:17.860 You know, I make other videos about anthropology and, you know, philosophy and different stuff.
00:20:23.040 I talk about physics sometimes and, you know, the, the views would be pretty good for that.
00:20:27.560 But whenever I would bring up the idea of starting communities and actually building stuff,
00:20:31.400 uh, people just didn't want to hear it.
00:20:33.600 So I almost like backed away from it completely.
00:20:37.100 Uh, I ended up buying land on my own in Southern Missouri, um, with a house on it.
00:20:43.380 And I planned to build a, a small kind of classical philosophy school, just run by myself.
00:20:51.200 Um, I gave up cooperating with others, but then I made a video, uh, talking about how
00:20:56.140 I was doing this and how, you know, I'm welcoming of other people coming down to help out.
00:21:01.500 And I guess there was a change in the zeitgeist.
00:21:04.480 And when I made that video, all of a sudden, like more than a dozen people really liked the
00:21:11.720 idea and decided to come down for a work party that we did, um, to build a restroom facility
00:21:17.900 for that school.
00:21:19.080 So they all came down.
00:21:21.520 Um, one of them, uh, Peter Siri, he was the guy who actually came up with our legal framework
00:21:27.220 for what we have now.
00:21:28.240 He lived in intentional community in South America, uh, before he was as much of an
00:21:34.400 identitarian, he was into, uh, fruititarianism, uh, which, so they, they just ate fruit in
00:21:41.260 this community in South America, but he was like the contractor down there.
00:21:45.080 And he took a lot, uh, care of a lot of the day-to-day business.
00:21:49.060 Um, and so he really had all of that practical knowledge of how do you actually run an intentional
00:21:54.040 community?
00:21:55.020 So combined with his expertise, and then the fact that I had been promoting it for so long
00:22:01.360 and that people were there, you know, in this area in the U S, uh, it was, you know, Southern
00:22:07.040 Missouri.
00:22:07.800 We visited some sites in Northern Arkansas.
00:22:09.920 People saw what it's like here.
00:22:11.920 They saw, obviously it's very white.
00:22:14.120 It's the Ozarks.
00:22:14.920 It's a lot of rednecks, but it's safe.
00:22:16.920 You know, there's very low crime.
00:22:18.840 Um, it's a nice part of the country.
00:22:20.820 I like it and it's cheap.
00:22:22.520 So they saw the land prices.
00:22:24.340 Um, they saw like the possibility that we could actually make something happen here.
00:22:29.940 And just over the course of basically that week that we set aside to build this restroom,
00:22:35.800 um, that kind of cascaded into, uh, buying 158 acres in Northern Arkansas.
00:22:44.360 And now we're on route to buying more land and we're just going to kind of scale that.
00:22:50.100 Um, so it was really just the right people coming together at the right time with the
00:22:54.840 right resources or know how, or, you know, like in my case, I was just putting the idea
00:23:00.300 out there for long enough that eventually, I guess, uh, yeah, it, uh, it came together.
00:23:06.080 So that's great.
00:23:07.840 Yeah.
00:23:08.440 We, I keep talking about preparation meets opportunity.
00:23:11.220 You have to be prepared for the opportunities to come up and having that work party.
00:23:15.720 Wow.
00:23:16.280 That, uh, that just catapults you into the next, you never know when it's going to happen.
00:23:20.920 That's why you always have to be prepared for something like that.
00:23:24.780 But, uh, you were mentioning the legal framework to, uh, to do what you've done now.
00:23:31.300 And I've been trying to learn this.
00:23:33.900 Do you know who, uh, Curtis Stone is?
00:23:36.840 He's the urban farmer.
00:23:40.060 Yeah.
00:23:40.420 I've heard of him.
00:23:42.400 Yeah.
00:23:42.800 He's doing something, he's talking along the same lines out there in, uh, in BC, really
00:23:47.660 successful guy actually just, just lost his, uh, just lost his wife.
00:23:52.400 God bless.
00:23:54.220 Oh, that's tragic.
00:23:55.680 Yeah.
00:23:56.660 But, uh, yeah, he's still moving forward and, uh, he was on the right, uh, path with private
00:24:04.500 members, associations and, um, corporations and trusts.
00:24:10.100 Now I imagine there's probably a little bit of a legal difference between Canada and America.
00:24:15.680 Are you willing to talk about that a little bit more?
00:24:19.860 Yeah, sure.
00:24:20.640 No problem.
00:24:21.400 Um, and I can't speak to the Canadian situation.
00:24:24.220 I do know that similar frameworks are working in other countries.
00:24:28.200 In a lot of ways, our framework is similar to what Irania has done in South Africa.
00:24:32.960 And there's, uh, a group, the Woodlander Initiative in England, um, and their framework is very
00:24:40.500 similar to ours as well.
00:24:41.760 There's also a group starting up in Germany.
00:24:43.820 There's another group in Sweden.
00:24:45.700 Um, we had an intentional community international conference, uh, a couple months ago.
00:24:51.460 So, and yeah, it was really cool to see that a similar model is emerging that actually works.
00:24:58.640 Um, for a long time, people just thought there was no way to legally do this.
00:25:02.580 And, you know, there was Owen Benjamin, um, who, you know, wanted to start a community and he just
00:25:09.040 owns the land himself.
00:25:10.340 And then everybody stays there and, uh, and works his land for him.
00:25:14.560 And that had been tried several other times in the past and usually it doesn't end well, either
00:25:20.360 because of exploitation or because, you know, uh, you only have to sue the one guy to take
00:25:26.640 the whole thing out, you know?
00:25:28.240 So, so we, uh, are, well, so I guess his style would not be a democracy.
00:25:34.160 He's doing a monarchy type thing there.
00:25:36.600 Right.
00:25:37.620 Yeah.
00:25:38.760 Uh, King Benjamin.
00:25:40.940 Yeah.
00:25:41.460 So that, sorry, the English one was Woodlander.
00:25:45.280 Yeah.
00:25:45.760 The Woodlander initiative.
00:25:47.620 Right.
00:25:48.200 Okay.
00:25:48.500 I'll look into that one because we've got a, uh, similar parliamentary system to them
00:25:52.900 with ownership and our laws are more similar, I think.
00:25:56.640 Well, you're still on the, under the crown.
00:25:58.180 Really?
00:25:59.100 Yeah.
00:25:59.880 Yeah.
00:26:00.100 Like right across the street for me is crown land.
00:26:03.180 They still call it that for a reason.
00:26:05.040 So, right.
00:26:07.980 Yeah.
00:26:08.740 Um, you know, people are always talking about who's pulling the strings and they'll say it's
00:26:13.580 this group or that group, but maybe it's, you know, maybe the monarchy isn't quite as
00:26:17.720 dead as you think.
00:26:18.880 No, uh, that's a joke.
00:26:21.080 So no, our framework.
00:26:24.140 Uh, so there's this entity called a private membership association.
00:26:27.960 That's very flexible.
00:26:29.540 People use it for all sorts of different kinds of things.
00:26:32.360 Um, people have used PMAs to get around laws regarding raw milk, uh, or selling beef and
00:26:40.880 things like that.
00:26:41.980 Uh, so instead of one person owning a cow and trying to sell the milk to other people
00:26:48.400 or owning the cow and trying to sell the meat direct to market, which of course is heavily
00:26:52.880 regulated, what they'll do is they'll have a, a PMA like food co-op that collectively owns
00:26:59.800 a cow and then you can distribute the meat, the milk or the meat and get around those laws.
00:27:05.700 So PMAs are convenient legal entities.
00:27:09.500 Um, you can use them to have, uh, fraternal societies or country clubs or, you know, all
00:27:16.700 sorts of stuff.
00:27:17.280 Um, so the, there's specific, um, wording in the fair housing act that exempts private
00:27:24.560 associations, PMAs from some of the anti-discrimination laws that are in there in that act.
00:27:32.420 So if you have a private association that, you know, is a network for a particular ethnic
00:27:38.600 or racial group, and that PMA manages land for its members, that is okay.
00:27:46.120 So there's a specific cutout.
00:27:47.620 Otherwise, of course, with the fair housing act, you're not allowed to restrict real estate
00:27:52.940 sales.
00:27:54.140 Um, so you can't effectively form a homogenous community along many lines.
00:28:00.480 Uh, so having an association that is legally allowed to pick and choose based on whatever
00:28:08.120 criteria we, uh, we want to choose by, um, that kind of addresses the initial legal hurdle.
00:28:15.040 Beyond that, it's, uh, a pretty straightforward share block scheme for owning the land.
00:28:21.420 Um, this is exactly what Arania does.
00:28:23.600 We have one LLC and we might change to a different corporate structure in the future.
00:28:27.680 It's really not that important.
00:28:29.460 What kind of corporation and LLC is just easy to start up.
00:28:32.680 Um, and obviously there's less liability.
00:28:35.640 That's why they name it that.
00:28:37.980 Uh, but yeah, so there were a certain number of initial investors.
00:28:42.900 Um, and some of those people ended up buying more shares than they ultimately would hold.
00:28:50.280 Um, and then those shares were sold to other people over time.
00:28:55.380 Um, so that's a scalable model.
00:28:57.340 If you have a few investors who are able to buy the property, you subdivide up, you know,
00:29:02.260 how many shares can we actually have in this 40 acres where each person will be able to hold
00:29:08.240 a two acre or three acre plot that's actually developable.
00:29:11.980 Um, so, you know, some people would ask, you know, why not go smaller?
00:29:15.720 Why not half acre like a typical suburb or something like that?
00:29:19.400 And the main reason is septic systems.
00:29:21.800 Um, you need a certain amount of space and you can't just pack a certain infrastructure in there.
00:29:27.500 So we have three acre lots for our first community.
00:29:31.060 You could probably feasibly do two acre lots, depending on your local regulations.
00:29:35.280 We also chose Arkansas and I initially chose Southern Missouri, but Arkansas is pretty similar.
00:29:40.820 Actually, it's more lax in some ways because there aren't strict building codes.
00:29:45.020 There aren't codes on a lot of stuff.
00:29:47.120 Um, what it, what is on the books you have to pay attention to.
00:29:50.840 So like the septic thing, that's why we have the three acre lots.
00:29:53.740 Um, but if you did this in an area with sewer, then that would, you know, you could have very
00:29:59.880 small lots, you could have apartment buildings, stuff like that.
00:30:03.220 And I actually know a group, uh, that they're less public about what they're doing, but they're
00:30:07.820 very supportive of us.
00:30:08.820 We're supportive of them.
00:30:10.340 They're also in the South, generally speaking.
00:30:12.980 And, uh, and they're building their own sewage treatment system.
00:30:17.760 Um, so it is possible to do that.
00:30:19.600 And that could allow you to pack in a lot more housing into a certain amount of, of acreage.
00:30:26.560 So, uh, yeah, I'd like to see how that goes.
00:30:29.980 Cause I'm, I'm more, I believe in more of the septic style re and use each unit is their
00:30:36.440 own containment sort of, you know, you're responsible for all your own stuff, not to stop
00:30:40.780 neighbors from working and helping each other or anything like that, but everybody should
00:30:44.860 be responsible for maintaining their own.
00:30:47.260 So that's what we're trying to set up here anyway.
00:30:50.720 Yeah.
00:30:51.400 Yeah.
00:30:51.740 Individual accountability is huge.
00:30:53.640 The more private property there is in an arrangement, the more well maintained, everything
00:30:59.020 will be, um, what we've ended up doing, uh, like there are some well-share contracts that
00:31:05.280 we use.
00:31:06.180 So not everyone has to have their own well.
00:31:08.900 Um, and if you do that kind of thing, you got to make sure that there is an explicit contract.
00:31:13.600 There's a payment that's made to some kind of fund that's held in common.
00:31:17.520 And then somebody is paid to do the maintenance.
00:31:21.060 That's stuff that, you know, when you're working informally with friends, you'd like to think
00:31:26.060 that everything's just going to get taken care of.
00:31:28.060 You really have to get, you know, get money involved and have responsible people involved
00:31:33.740 who are going to do the work and you got to pay them, you know, cause people won't take
00:31:37.360 the time to do these things unless there's compensation.
00:31:40.660 Um, and getting started, you know, people are very liberal with their time if they care
00:31:46.600 about it, but as time goes on, you have to have a model where somebody is going to be
00:31:51.400 looking after the communal infrastructure.
00:31:53.440 It's possible with the septic system, but again, you just get, you have to have a responsible
00:31:57.580 person and funds that are collected to pay that person.
00:32:00.420 Um, yeah, it gets a lot, it gets complicated quick, doesn't it?
00:32:06.040 Um, yeah, that's what I've found.
00:32:10.040 No, it, it's always the intention of everybody that wants to come in and share, but you also
00:32:14.560 have to screen a lot of people that want to come and are not offering anything.
00:32:19.380 They just basically want to come and use what you've already built sort of thing.
00:32:23.900 So I imagine the filtering process that you've had to go through is quite extensive as well.
00:32:30.420 Yeah, uh, definitely.
00:32:34.540 Um, I mean, we have the initial application process to join the PMA, so you could go to
00:32:40.100 returntotheland.org, fill out, uh, an application and then have an interview with one of the
00:32:45.920 board members.
00:32:46.640 The board will then vote on you.
00:32:48.860 And then if you're accepted into the PMA, well, then you're in our private chats.
00:32:53.400 You can get to know people, you can come down and attend our events or just camp out on
00:32:58.180 the land, uh, but you're still not really eligible to buy into, uh, the first community
00:33:03.740 or any other community.
00:33:05.300 Uh, you'd actually have to come down and visit and, you know, we'd have to kind of feel you
00:33:10.780 out and see if it's a match, if we're compatible.
00:33:13.800 Um, our acceptance rate has been pretty high actually.
00:33:17.120 And we have not had to turn down a lot of people, um, as we grow, I'm sure if it's easier to
00:33:23.300 find us, we'll get more people who, you know, aren't going to be a good fit, but, uh, you
00:33:28.520 know, I was into like philosophy and physics and kind of, you know, more, uh, high, I guess
00:33:35.520 highbrow content.
00:33:36.980 Not, not that I think that, you know, is what everyone should do, but I think there was a
00:33:41.220 kind of IQ filter with our project in particular, just because of the happenstance of who was involved
00:33:46.240 in creating it.
00:33:47.620 Um, but we do want to scale and we, we do have to think even more carefully about the
00:33:52.080 vetting process and how to streamline it.
00:33:54.800 So we've, you know, made tweaks on the website for the application process, just keeping track
00:33:59.280 of all the applicants.
00:34:00.040 It has been really difficult.
00:34:01.920 Um, there's a lot that goes into managing just even like getting all the emails sent out,
00:34:08.640 you know, an email list serve is something that we've, uh, had to put together and we've
00:34:14.960 improvised when we didn't have that capacity in built into our website.
00:34:19.000 We're getting there now.
00:34:20.300 Luckily we have some like tech savvy people in the PMA.
00:34:24.120 Um, but yeah, no, I mean the whole, the whole process of onboarding people.
00:34:29.920 Um, I don't know of too many organizations in our sphere that have a really robust infrastructure
00:34:36.500 for it.
00:34:37.200 Probably the most developed is Patriot front.
00:34:39.440 So I'm familiar with how their system works and we're learning from them.
00:34:43.780 And, uh, I'd like to, you know, network with more longstanding groups out there.
00:34:48.960 You know, I've been to Amron and, um, and connected with some other people who have had
00:34:54.200 institutions, you know, that had to think about these things.
00:34:57.820 And it's, it's still sort of an open question.
00:35:00.560 Like what is the best way to do that?
00:35:03.480 Cause it's obviously a very important question.
00:35:05.340 Um, allowing individual communities though, to make their own decisions on membership,
00:35:10.120 I think is a big thing.
00:35:11.780 So it's not, the PMA is just an umbrella structure, um, that allows us to kind of operate legally
00:35:19.100 in the first place.
00:35:20.260 We're also going to be collecting funds to use the PMA is like a collective legal research
00:35:25.940 and legal defense arm of all of the individual communities.
00:35:29.880 But it's not really up to the PMA if a particular community wants to accept somebody or not.
00:35:36.500 Um, that's, that's up to the people who are there and they can have different processes.
00:35:41.180 So I don't know if there's even one right answer per se.
00:35:45.880 Um, so far our, at community one, uh, our solution has just been to have people come down
00:35:52.000 for a couple of days, talk with them extensively, have like all of us effectively talk with them,
00:35:57.380 uh, for several hours and then like talk, discuss after they're gone.
00:36:03.180 Like, yeah, what do you think?
00:36:04.280 And then we make our determination.
00:36:06.220 Um, but yeah.
00:36:09.100 Huh?
00:36:10.120 Yeah.
00:36:10.520 It's a lot of work that, uh, I agree with what you were saying before, how everybody wants
00:36:15.380 to, uh, take control of the system, a rotten system at that.
00:36:19.560 And then once they have power, well, everything will be better afterwards.
00:36:22.580 You're still going to have to do the work.
00:36:24.060 Um, so a private members association, um, gives you, like you say, it's really just a
00:36:32.660 legal or sorry, uh, an umbrella of organization really.
00:36:38.100 So you would have an LLC that has a private members association.
00:36:44.260 So the PMA is over several different LLCs that own different pieces of land, just like you
00:36:53.540 could have, uh, some kind of fraternal society, like the masons or elks, and then individual
00:37:00.880 lodges would be owned by individual corporations because individual business, you know, the actual
00:37:07.560 lodge itself has to have like a treasurer and a bank account and leadership.
00:37:12.060 And then the overall organization also has leadership.
00:37:15.480 So we have a PMA board that looks after association wide issues.
00:37:20.000 And then we have a board, you know, a president, vice president, secretary, treasurer of the
00:37:25.620 specific LLC that owns community one.
00:37:28.300 And when we start community two, which that process where we already have like the buyers
00:37:33.300 invested and the corporation has been formed.
00:37:36.680 And we're just looking for like the right piece of land, uh, basically to come on the
00:37:41.220 market.
00:37:41.760 And then that second LLC will have its own board.
00:37:45.020 Um, but it'll also be under the same PMA.
00:37:50.080 It's a lot for, uh, some people to, to understand.
00:37:53.660 We don't have LLCs in Canada.
00:37:56.500 Um, I think we have corporations, trusts, it's completely different.
00:38:04.060 But, uh, I think as a Canadian, we could still open up an LLC in America, as long as we have
00:38:09.740 an address.
00:38:10.460 So that still something we have to explore as well.
00:38:14.680 Um, yeah, it could be any kind of corporate structure.
00:38:18.660 It's really not important that it's an LLC in particular.
00:38:21.920 Um, a C corp, I guess is something that could work potentially.
00:38:25.960 Um, the reason, you know, we advocate the PMA framework is that this legal research to figure
00:38:33.440 out how to organize all of this is not easy.
00:38:35.900 And we've had several different lawyers look at it.
00:38:38.400 We've paid expensive real estate lawyers to look and make sure that we're not making rookie
00:38:44.620 mistakes.
00:38:45.700 Um, and that takes a lot of time, a lot of money.
00:38:49.020 It's not something that like a casual, uh, person is going to manage realistically.
00:38:55.520 So a lot of people want to found communities, but it's, it's really difficult to do that
00:39:00.740 in a legal way.
00:39:01.520 That's why people like, you know, Benjamin in the past, he just buys the land, everyone
00:39:05.900 moves down and they do it informally.
00:39:07.840 It's just, that's a very fragile system because of exploitation and because you can always sue
00:39:13.480 that guy.
00:39:14.020 And you're probably going to be breaking some law about zoning or something else that you
00:39:17.900 didn't think of because you don't have all of these people with specific roles to take
00:39:22.880 care of, you know, making sure there is legal compliance with what you're doing.
00:39:27.140 So with the PMA, it's like, you can, if you want to start a community, you can join the
00:39:31.440 PMA and use the PMA and use all of our legal documents and use our framework.
00:39:36.520 You can tailor it to your particular interests, you know, but somebody is going to be involved
00:39:42.340 that's thinking about all of the legal compliance issues and how to do this in an organized
00:39:47.480 way.
00:39:51.420 Yeah, it takes a lot more.
00:39:53.120 And I don't think people realize the amount of work that goes into this, but this is real
00:39:58.780 freedom.
00:39:59.500 This is not just, oh, I'm going to check a box and hope this guy holds my interests at
00:40:03.960 heart.
00:40:04.240 Um, which I thought we were making headway here in Canada, you know, of getting away
00:40:12.000 from the political rhetoric.
00:40:13.640 But as soon as they ramp up the election talk, everybody's all over it again.
00:40:17.880 It's like everything you've taught them before that is just, they forget about it and they're
00:40:21.980 just woo red, woo blue.
00:40:24.520 And it's just, it's all gone.
00:40:26.460 And like, yeah, it's team sports and, uh, there is a real mob dynamic when people get
00:40:33.560 excited, especially with social media, everyone's posting about the same events and then you
00:40:38.620 want, you know, recognition for yourself.
00:40:41.060 So you post similar things because that's what everyone's talking about.
00:40:44.440 And it's just a big hive mind that gets kicked off.
00:40:48.260 And it's very unproductive, you know, and even bad, real bad ideas like, well, maybe there's
00:40:54.440 a possibility of, you know, revolution against the government.
00:40:57.820 Like that flares up sometimes.
00:41:00.340 And then a lot of people invest all their hopes in something like that.
00:41:03.800 And then some like more sober minded person kind of puts, puts an end to it and like gets
00:41:09.720 people to realize like, this is not feasible.
00:41:12.280 They have drones.
00:41:13.360 They're already monitoring you.
00:41:14.800 Like, what's the leadership of this revolution?
00:41:17.760 Like, you know, before it's ever actually done anything, they already know exactly who is
00:41:24.440 the people to take out that like, it's just not viable.
00:41:28.200 The same as like coming in and taking over, um, the government.
00:41:32.240 Like, even if you get your guy in one office or another, there's a huge bureaucracy filled
00:41:38.140 with people who they've put in the work over generations to get really well established and
00:41:44.620 to get in an anti-fragile position themselves that they're not easily toppled.
00:41:50.220 But when people are excited, they think, oh yeah, we can just take over the government
00:41:53.540 overnight.
00:41:54.380 Oh yeah, we can just get our guy elected and he's going to fix everything top down.
00:41:59.240 And it's not giving credit to all of those details, you know?
00:42:03.040 And I think it stems from, this is my take on like why the psychology is like this one
00:42:07.840 it's team sports and there's a hive mind, but also people talk about all this in the context
00:42:13.740 of effectively their recreational time.
00:42:17.300 They get off work and then they spend some time on social media and that's, you know,
00:42:22.780 it's not the time of their day when they're thinking about practical concerns, that's
00:42:27.220 them blowing off steam.
00:42:28.840 So the reality is most of the people talking about, you know, reactionary politics or
00:42:34.300 identitarianism or, you know, things that are very important to people that they would
00:42:38.320 say are their highest priorities.
00:42:39.660 In reality, the time they're spending talking about it is their time off work when they're
00:42:45.920 relaxing, you know?
00:42:47.040 So there is a, just a kind of fantasizing mentality that people fall into because we see it every
00:42:54.300 year.
00:42:54.880 Uh, there's a new election.
00:42:56.320 Alberta wants to separate and everybody just brings their own illusion into what, uh, into
00:43:02.040 what they think politics is going to get for them.
00:43:03.940 wishful thinking, you know, and it's, it's funny you say that though, the recreational
00:43:10.660 time, that's what they're doing.
00:43:12.080 And you're right.
00:43:14.180 It's, it really does come down to the team sport mentality.
00:43:18.400 And the only way not to, not to lose is to not play, you know, build something else.
00:43:26.680 Uh, play a different game.
00:43:28.980 It's like, if you want to succeed in life, your time spent once, like, you got to pay
00:43:34.860 the bills.
00:43:35.500 You probably have to have a nine to five when you get home.
00:43:39.180 Um, how are you spending your time?
00:43:41.180 If you come home and relax for the evening because you need that four or five hours to
00:43:46.400 kick back, well, you're probably not going to ever get to a position where you can transcend
00:43:53.380 that nine to five.
00:43:54.260 Right.
00:43:55.580 Like there are people who they get off their job and then they come home and start on their
00:44:00.060 side business.
00:44:01.080 They start on things that are going to generate revenue for them residually.
00:44:05.540 They, that's, that's what makes success.
00:44:07.680 You know, it's as an individual, also as a political movement.
00:44:12.520 Um, if you want success, you have to actually put in the work yourself to earn it.
00:44:18.660 Um, and just hoping that somebody is going to deliver, uh, through electoral politics or
00:44:24.220 through a revolution or something that requires no work now.
00:44:27.660 Like when I get home from my nine to five, I can keep watching YouTube videos and like
00:44:32.480 we're drinking or whatever it is.
00:44:34.540 Uh, it's, it's really not that different from, you know, what makes a successful person individually
00:44:42.660 versus what makes an unsafe, unsuccessful person.
00:44:45.700 It's, you got to put the work in yourself.
00:44:47.920 There's no way around it.
00:44:49.100 Um, so I'm reading some of the chat that we hear on different channels, some of the people
00:44:56.320 or the naysayers, I should say is, uh, what do you do when the government inevitably comes
00:45:01.380 and tries to wake Oh, you?
00:45:04.760 Yeah, I do think that's, uh, an overblown concern.
00:45:08.920 Um, you have to refer to something like 30 years ago to, to invoke that fear.
00:45:14.840 Um, and it doesn't happen routinely.
00:45:19.740 Individuals are taken out all the time.
00:45:21.540 So if you want to make yourself a threat to the system, sure, you're running a risk that
00:45:26.140 you could be targeted as an individual.
00:45:28.540 So like, are you going to cower and never do anything?
00:45:32.520 Cause there's nothing special about collective action or like getting into a community that
00:45:39.460 would make you more vulnerable, um, actually to attack a community.
00:45:43.380 They have to do that explicitly out in the ocean, out in the open, um, to take out some
00:45:49.160 individual who's really influential.
00:45:50.680 They can easily do that secretly.
00:45:53.120 Um, it doesn't happen frequently.
00:45:55.480 And also in the instances where it has happened, that was an era when people had far higher trust
00:46:01.460 in government and the people being attacked couldn't tell their side of the story.
00:46:05.840 Now we can tell our side of the story.
00:46:07.740 It's extremely bad PR for the system.
00:46:12.480 Um, and I think it would ultimately kind of benefit us rhetorically and there'd be a huge
00:46:18.760 blowback.
00:46:19.580 Uh, I think it would undermine their credibility.
00:46:21.820 So I think the system has far more to lose by trying to wake up people who are just like
00:46:27.400 on their own, trying to mind their, their own business in private communities.
00:46:32.660 Um, it makes their game, I guess, more transparent.
00:46:37.720 It lays their cards out in the open.
00:46:40.180 And also it's going to enrage a lot of people because a lot of people have kind of come around
00:46:45.320 to, uh, our, our way of thinking, uh, at least as far as like the identitarian sphere goes
00:46:51.780 like mainstream people, Tucker Carlson, they talk about how it should be okay for white people
00:46:58.140 to have their own country or their own community, if that's what they want.
00:47:02.440 So the ideas are out there.
00:47:03.720 People accept that as normal.
00:47:06.280 Um, so if the CIA or FBI or Homeland Security, uh, decides to shut down stuff like return to
00:47:15.040 the land, I think their position will just get far more insecure.
00:47:20.020 Uh, so I, I actually think it's more safe to be in a community where they have to act
00:47:27.260 explicitly to shut you down.
00:47:29.980 Whereas if you're an individual, if you want to just go alone, wolf kind of approach, well,
00:47:34.640 they already know who you are.
00:47:35.980 There's no hiding from them.
00:47:37.600 You could try to like slip into the system, but they know exactly what you do online every
00:47:42.900 day.
00:47:43.420 And they don't even need like an agent on you anymore to track you.
00:47:47.020 And if you were significant in the past, you can guarantee they had an agent on you because
00:47:51.580 they had, they hire tens of thousands of people to do that.
00:47:54.560 It's, you know, cyber Intel counter intelligence agents.
00:47:58.620 Like we know what, what their MO is.
00:48:01.360 And of course they were, I mean, plenty of the people you watch on, uh, on YouTube, the
00:48:07.260 accounts you follow on X, a sizable number of them are themselves counter Intel agent agents.
00:48:12.920 We know they hire tens of thousands of people to do that job.
00:48:16.840 So you've, you've talked to plenty of them and they were monitoring you in the past.
00:48:21.200 And now that they have, have AI, they don't even need to assign someone to your case.
00:48:25.720 They can have AI do it and then just report back the significant stuff.
00:48:29.640 So it's more easy than ever, uh, to track everything we're doing as individuals, as communities.
00:48:35.280 I think now the game is you're already being watched, do everything out in the open, do
00:48:41.000 everything by the book to do things in an unimpeachable way.
00:48:44.720 Where if they attack you, it's clear that they're, that's just blatant corruption.
00:48:50.860 It's a damn good answer.
00:48:52.600 I gotta say.
00:48:56.260 I wholeheartedly agree.
00:48:57.740 Um, what kind of, uh, I, I don't know if I want to go too far into it, but what kind
00:49:10.400 of a system would you have up set up for sheriff or for hospital and like firefighting, like,
00:49:17.140 you know, basic utilities that, uh, uh, you'd probably want to have separate from any other
00:49:23.960 community, right?
00:49:24.500 You'd want to have your own, um, yeah, eventually, uh, eventually we would, that would be the
00:49:30.980 ideal.
00:49:31.860 Um, right now though, we're a minority in our town.
00:49:36.180 Maybe once we get to like a 50, 50 kind of percentage, then it's reasonable to think about
00:49:43.440 doing all of those things for ourselves.
00:49:45.260 Uh, one of us is on the volunteer fire department in town.
00:49:50.220 Um, I think it's also good to integrate into the local community.
00:49:54.160 So like in that instance, we could either have our own informal volunteer fire department,
00:49:59.040 or we could simply join the volunteer fire department where if there's a fire, well, it's
00:50:04.520 one of us who would be answering in all likelihood anyway.
00:50:07.200 Um, as far as sheriff and, and that sort of thing, I mean, we have conflict resolution
00:50:15.660 procedures, um, like mediation appoint, uh, appointments, um, that are on our books.
00:50:24.880 We haven't had to resort to them.
00:50:26.740 Generally, um, we've been able to just kind of informally talk to people when there are
00:50:32.120 issues.
00:50:32.700 Uh, I don't think we've really taken any like formal discipline, uh, disciplinary action
00:50:38.400 at all so far.
00:50:39.980 So I think we're small enough still where it's not some, like it's not a pressing concern.
00:50:44.840 Currently our primary issue is like, let's get housing constructed.
00:50:48.360 Let's get our, our infrastructure done.
00:50:50.900 Let's finish building our roads.
00:50:52.360 You know, that's, we've done a lot, but we've only been going for like a year and a half.
00:50:56.100 And there's just so much basic work to do that those like farther off goals.
00:51:03.580 Um, it's hard to think about them now, but, uh, we did Scott, uh, our vice president and
00:51:09.900 I visited Irania in South Africa and interviewed everybody that we could basically in all the
00:51:16.860 different departments.
00:51:17.840 They have their own fire department, uh, police and things like that.
00:51:22.480 And we, we talked to the people in charge of those.
00:51:24.540 So we have thought about it, but actually implementing it, it's just a little bit too
00:51:28.520 soon for us.
00:51:31.080 Okay.
00:51:31.560 So you said that there's a town obviously fairly close to you.
00:51:35.060 And if you can integrate into that town, do you end up, I'm not sure how it's set up
00:51:42.080 in the States, but here, every municipality is basically just a corporation.
00:51:45.140 Um, does your corporation end up becoming the town?
00:51:50.840 Can you take it over that way or do you integrate?
00:51:53.060 I wonder how that would sort of work out.
00:51:54.900 Cause I've had people, um, I live on unorganized land here in Canada, so there's no municipal
00:52:01.040 government.
00:52:01.620 We have a road board.
00:52:02.700 So that board collects property taxes, the federal and provincial government match that
00:52:07.080 and we take care of the roads, but there's no fire department.
00:52:09.540 There's no ambulance.
00:52:10.600 There's no police.
00:52:11.540 Um, we would have to organize to do that and essentially register with the federal and
00:52:17.840 the provincial and all that stuff.
00:52:19.160 So it's, it's a toss up, whether you want to incorporate and become a town or do you just
00:52:23.760 stay like this and everybody works for the best for certain facilities?
00:52:29.700 Yeah.
00:52:30.340 Our intention has not been to become a town, like going from the community to the town, because
00:52:36.820 I think that would basically undermine our legal framework where we couldn't be a town recognized
00:52:44.320 by the state government or the county, uh, under our PMA because towns can't like be subsidiaries
00:52:52.100 of private associations.
00:52:53.400 They're public entities.
00:52:55.280 They receive tax dollars.
00:52:56.980 So I think that would basically undercut our legal framework.
00:53:00.660 So, um, but we have thought about, you know, integrating into local government and eventually
00:53:08.840 maybe taking some of those positions on the town board.
00:53:12.360 You know, a couple of us have been attending the town meetings locally.
00:53:16.920 And, uh, as just naturally as our population grows, um, we'll be able to vote ourselves into
00:53:25.140 various positions, potentially even voting ourselves as sheriff.
00:53:28.900 So that's been our, uh, thought on it is it's better to, you know, keep them separate, but
00:53:35.300 have our people involved in both spheres.
00:53:39.600 Interesting.
00:53:40.160 I wonder if that's the least amount of conflict to do something.
00:53:46.280 Cause I don't know, would you, I don't know your personal situation.
00:53:50.680 Like, did you move to the Ozarks to do this?
00:53:52.920 Have you always lived there?
00:53:54.400 Um, do you know the people already in town?
00:53:56.580 Stuff like that sort of like, would they think that you're trying to take over if they know
00:54:00.260 about your private members or, or your little group, I guess, that's doing it separate from
00:54:06.560 everybody?
00:54:08.280 None of us are from here.
00:54:10.020 I was living here before we started like three years before we started, I was already down
00:54:14.680 here.
00:54:15.460 Um, but I didn't get to know everybody in this town in particular.
00:54:18.520 I'm about 40 minutes away from where I was living before.
00:54:22.540 So, um, I mean, we've gotten to know locals just from, uh, work or hiring people from the
00:54:31.380 community.
00:54:32.000 As a rule, we try to do our own work when possible, but like, you know, we can't deliver
00:54:36.840 our own gravel.
00:54:37.840 We can't drill our own wells.
00:54:39.440 So we deal with people from the area, uh, on a regular basis and a lot of them are very
00:54:46.260 receptive to what we're doing.
00:54:47.800 Some of them, you know, don't really talk about it much with us and maybe they judge
00:54:52.460 it and, you know, that's naturally going to happen.
00:54:54.820 Um, there hasn't been a ton of friction.
00:54:56.820 There have been rumors of course.
00:54:58.400 Um, and I think that's, that's because we've not had a real visible presence right in town.
00:55:05.780 Like we are off some random dirt road and people see if they drive by ever like that.
00:55:12.480 Something's going on there.
00:55:14.380 That's unusual from their perspective.
00:55:17.880 Um, but in the future, we'd like to have properties that are actually right there in
00:55:23.480 town, you know, to act as community centers.
00:55:26.240 Um, like there's a property with a restaurant and motel.
00:55:30.340 We're hoping to collect funds.
00:55:32.600 It's still on the market.
00:55:33.620 We might be able to pull it off, but, um, that's something we were shooting for.
00:55:37.640 If we could have that right in town and use a facility like that and, um, and be accessible
00:55:44.300 to people in the town for events, potentially, you know, that would give them an incentive to
00:55:49.680 join the PMA.
00:55:50.820 Uh, people would be curious.
00:55:52.460 Okay.
00:55:52.740 Who bought this restaurant?
00:55:54.460 Like I used to go here.
00:55:55.660 Who's the new owner?
00:55:57.060 What's going on here?
00:55:58.260 So I think that's, that's the way to approach it is become more approachable, have spaces,
00:56:03.300 uh, you know, like Christian science, the religion, they have these reading rooms where in a bunch
00:56:11.140 of towns or cities, they'll have some sore front, uh, with a lot of their literature, um,
00:56:19.380 reading material.
00:56:20.340 They'll, they'll have somebody from the church there, um, basically whenever they're open
00:56:25.400 and you can go in and just kind of ask questions.
00:56:28.480 And I think that's, uh, an interesting notion, not that we would emulate the reading room
00:56:33.940 or crit other things about Christian science per se, although it's not my least favorite
00:56:39.020 denomination of, of Christianity.
00:56:40.900 Honestly, they get a bad rap.
00:56:42.520 Um, but something like that, I think is, is the way to integrate well, like be accessible,
00:56:48.800 uh, allow people to satisfy their curiosity, ask questions and potentially pick up new members.
00:56:56.400 Are you guys, is your property on the grid?
00:56:59.520 Do you have access to the, the power grid there?
00:57:02.440 Yeah, I used to be for, you know, off gridding, but it's really much better to have access
00:57:10.840 to the grid than to not have access to it because you can always be off grid and have
00:57:18.000 access to the grid.
00:57:19.260 If you want it, the grid is just cheap power.
00:57:21.840 You know, the grid is power lines and that's a lot cheaper than setting up a solar system
00:57:28.500 up front.
00:57:29.040 You know, if you have the money to throw down, uh, ultimately, yeah, a good size solar system
00:57:35.000 can save you money down the line.
00:57:37.220 But if you're just starting out with a new community, um, if you can get a property that
00:57:42.360 has power, that's the way to go.
00:57:45.460 Uh, we also have fiber optic internet.
00:57:47.200 So we have very fast internet on our rural road, uh, Arkansas subsidized a bunch of fiber
00:57:53.300 a few years ago.
00:57:54.340 So we just happened to benefit from that.
00:57:56.320 Um, and that also, it's, it's just an amenity that we have access to.
00:58:00.660 We're not on sewer, but like if we could be on public sewer, I would absolutely get on
00:58:06.520 public sewer.
00:58:08.140 Um, just because that's amenities that are subsidized by the government, um, that make
00:58:14.340 it easier to get started.
00:58:15.960 Um, also develop resilience also have off-grid, uh, capacities, but yeah, I wouldn't, uh, shun
00:58:23.180 properties with power access because really it's just convenient and cheap.
00:58:28.960 No, ideally for me, it would be unorganized land was still part of the power grid.
00:58:33.320 Uh, I'm not on it myself, but I don't use a lot of power that, uh, I can't deal with a
00:58:40.160 small bit of solar or a generator or something like that.
00:58:42.360 But as we grow, you know, different projects and stuff like that, it might be beneficial
00:58:47.040 to have access to the power grid here.
00:58:49.880 We never discussed how long, uh, we were going to talk for it.
00:58:52.780 So I don't want you to feel like I'm keeping you around for anything.
00:58:57.360 Uh, I mean, I can go a while longer.
00:58:59.700 I do, uh, have to wake up early tomorrow, but I'm good for now.
00:59:06.120 Right on.
00:59:07.260 Um, just going to throw it to the chat a little bit to see, cause I know that I've been kind
00:59:12.000 of ignoring it, but they have a lot of questions too.
00:59:14.860 Um, we have our own community of people up here that have been trying to get away from
00:59:19.840 the system, live off grid, and we're constantly trying to learn from other people.
00:59:24.240 We're really glad to have met, uh, Curtis Stone and what he has to do.
00:59:28.200 Cause a lot of the people that want to do this also don't have the, uh, intellectual
00:59:33.440 horsepower to go through all the legal framework.
00:59:35.720 They still want to live in a community like that, but they're just not, I think I saw you
00:59:39.960 talking about this, uh, towards Nick Fuentes as well.
00:59:44.120 You know how Fuentes wants to just, just the elites to be elite and forget about everybody
00:59:49.560 else below that you need, like your laborers and the people that make the power come on and
00:59:53.760 stuff like that.
00:59:54.500 So yeah, we are grateful for, I guess the, uh, intellectuals that are sharing these sort
01:00:01.580 of ideas and cause we're, where does a bricklayer learn about PMAs?
01:00:06.400 You know, where does a, uh, you know, an electrician on his day, it's not in his daily talks to
01:00:12.800 be talking about LLC.
01:00:14.280 Well, maybe, maybe that's a little different, but the private members association and the
01:00:18.180 laws and stuff like that.
01:00:19.720 So yeah, from a blue collar standpoint, thanks guys.
01:00:27.360 Yeah, no, I mean the, the elite, uh, if you want to call them that, or just, uh, it's different
01:00:34.060 personality types, different, you know, intelligence levels, and there's nothing wrong with being
01:00:39.140 an average person.
01:00:40.120 Um, I think we're judged according to what we're given and, you know, there's, there's
01:00:46.940 meaningful work that ordinary people can do, um, in a lot of ways they can have a more fulfilling
01:00:52.500 life.
01:00:53.820 Um, I mean, when you, let me just kind of go off on a tangent about like elitism, basically,
01:00:58.860 uh, I think elites should be celebrated so that they can help the community.
01:01:04.080 Like we should aspire to be like elites in some regards, but also we should aspire to
01:01:11.120 the kind of humble, simple life that all of the, the great spiritual traditions of mankind,
01:01:17.100 not just Christianity, affirm universally, you know, in Buddhism, poverty is a virtue because
01:01:24.960 you don't have as many temptations to like become addicted to appetite.
01:01:34.080 And that's the source of suffering is desire as the Buddhists see it, or in Hinduism, they
01:01:39.580 have a similar kind of idea, you know, the sannyasi who is voluntarily poor, who doesn't
01:01:46.280 even have a home, he's homeless, um, lives out in the wilderness.
01:01:49.920 Like that's the, the pinnacle of the human experience, according to Hinduism, because they
01:01:57.480 are focused on their connection with God.
01:02:00.300 They're focused on, you know, the resources they have within their own soul rather than
01:02:05.960 becoming dependent on external sources of stimulation and in, in the world, according to the judgment
01:02:13.020 of the world, having more possessions and everything like that, that gives you status, that makes
01:02:18.320 you valuable.
01:02:18.880 But like, do we take the spiritual wisdom of, you know, collective humanity serious or not
01:02:27.380 in Christianity, obviously, you know, voluntary poverty was a mark of sainthood, you know, monks
01:02:35.760 would give up their possessions.
01:02:37.680 Um, and they, they strove to live an ordinary life, a humble life where they would labor.
01:02:44.400 They wouldn't even be free from labor, um, in the Christian monastic, uh, tradition.
01:02:49.600 So I think it's very inconsistent, especially for a person like Nick to uphold the value of,
01:02:56.680 you know, elite human capital, high IQ people as if they couldn't, or as if they could exist
01:03:03.860 independently of the rest of us, you know, like elites would have no value without the people
01:03:10.960 who are doing the basic work.
01:03:12.360 And of course you need more people doing the basic work.
01:03:16.340 Um, and you know, we need to build our own power structures that aren't parasitic upon
01:03:23.420 the working class.
01:03:26.280 Um, in general, we have to have our own working class, our own elites.
01:03:31.600 We need to do these things for each other to, to build each other up.
01:03:35.240 I mean, that's what other powerful, powerful groups have done and continue to do.
01:03:40.960 So, yeah, I mean, I think it's, it's just morally wrong to think that being wealthy and famous
01:03:48.720 is the highest ideal.
01:03:50.040 It's like, no, like being chased and temperate and abstaining from luxury is according to Islam,
01:04:00.380 according to Christianity, according to Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, like the vast majority of
01:04:08.840 all spiritual teachings from all traditions would say that that's the ideal.
01:04:14.420 So, so I think there's a unique benefit that like ordinary people can have in that, you
01:04:21.200 know, if you live a, a very stimulating life in the city and a lot's going on, you can't
01:04:27.520 focus on spiritual things.
01:04:29.120 Whereas if you are a bricklayer, like there's no reason why you can't simultaneously focus
01:04:35.440 on your craft, which is necessary for the wellbeing of society and also, you know, live a kind
01:04:42.040 of mental life that it isn't occupied by, you know, engineering things or being an accountant
01:04:49.820 and thinking about numbers or like, you know, if you, if you do a cognitively intense task,
01:04:55.620 then that's where your mind is.
01:04:57.560 It's like, you're, they're buying your mind.
01:04:59.760 They're buying your soul.
01:05:00.900 When you have that kind of job, if you do a physical job, well, then your soul is free,
01:05:05.640 right?
01:05:07.200 Like your mind is free to do what you want with it.
01:05:11.400 Sure.
01:05:12.020 Yeah.
01:05:12.180 There's those mundane tasks.
01:05:13.980 Some people do like the, uh, a mover we'll say, right?
01:05:18.540 All you're doing is moving item from here to be, yeah, you got a lot of time to be a philosopher
01:05:23.680 or a part-time one, I guess, or whatever you want to be.
01:05:27.220 Yeah, exactly.
01:05:29.460 Huh.
01:05:34.700 Trying to think of another question to ask you here, but we went off and I had one in
01:05:38.440 the back of my mind, but we've gone off on so many different directions there with multiculturalism
01:05:47.360 as the standard or the policy, sorry, the official policy here in Canada.
01:05:55.540 Um, can you see our future being anything but visible?
01:05:59.280 Like.
01:06:03.400 I wouldn't want to be in Canada.
01:06:05.180 So that is a rough question.
01:06:06.700 I, I don't understand the Canadian situation.
01:06:09.080 I don't have a lot of optimism about the Canadian situation.
01:06:13.140 So I, it's, I, I don't want to like be depressing for your Canadian audience.
01:06:17.420 No, no, that's okay.
01:06:19.880 If we're going for homogeneity, Canada is whiter than America right now.
01:06:26.140 So, I mean, really our situation is, might be more savable.
01:06:31.640 It's not, we're getting a million people a year and they're all coming from India and
01:06:35.260 they are changing the face of this country and that's the truth, um, I see places like
01:06:41.700 Arkansas are actually fighting back a little bit.
01:06:43.960 I'm not sure if that's because we've been sending down our Canadian, Canadian truck drivers
01:06:48.300 and they've been smashing up the roads, but I saw Arkansas was, uh, you have to speak
01:06:53.340 English to have a valid driver's license there.
01:06:56.700 And they're actually pulling people over and giving them language tests.
01:07:02.040 Yeah.
01:07:02.480 And I know how it is with these, uh, you know, commercial truck drivers.
01:07:08.140 Now, so many of them are Indian.
01:07:09.960 So many of them barely speak English and a lot of them can't drive.
01:07:14.780 It's, it's just what it is.
01:07:16.260 And a lot of them are operating illegally.
01:07:17.960 Like that's a known thing that they'll have some shell company open up to own, you know,
01:07:25.240 whatever transportation business they're only in operation for a couple months.
01:07:29.540 They skirt all the regulations they can, they run as cheaply as they can totally illegally.
01:07:34.700 And then when they're found out, well, then they just shut down that business and start
01:07:39.200 up a new one.
01:07:40.480 So they, they run this cheap labor.
01:07:42.660 They, it's a, it's a mess.
01:07:45.460 And yeah, it is being addressed.
01:07:48.360 I guess better than it is in Canada.
01:07:51.100 I've seen, uh, actually was looking on your YouTube channel.
01:07:54.440 I saw what you were covering, uh, regarding corporations in Canada, licensing their own
01:08:00.920 drivers, which is just asking for abuse.
01:08:04.580 Isn't it?
01:08:05.180 Yeah.
01:08:05.700 I can't believe it.
01:08:07.400 Um, as a terrible idea.
01:08:10.040 I mean, that's, it can only be corporate capture of government, uh, that would result
01:08:15.500 in something like that.
01:08:16.680 It's so blatant.
01:08:18.960 Um, I mean, I can understand like with forklifts or something where, you know, our, our corporations
01:08:24.400 can, so to speak, certify, uh, people to run their own forklifts, but that's not even
01:08:29.720 something that you require a license for.
01:08:31.460 Like they don't have to even bother giving an in-house certification.
01:08:34.280 They can just tell you to get on the machine and, and deal with it.
01:08:37.680 It's probably for insurance reasons, if anything, that they offer the in-house certification,
01:08:41.600 but that's, it's in-house cause they're in house.
01:08:45.140 But if you're a corporation and you're sending your drivers all over the country, like that's
01:08:49.160 not just on you, that's, you're putting everyone else at risk.
01:08:52.120 So it's, that's insane.
01:08:55.100 Yeah.
01:08:55.840 And the, uh, the minister of transportation right now is a Sikh gentleman.
01:08:59.440 The Sikhs are the ones, everybody knows it.
01:09:01.480 That's taking advantage of this.
01:09:03.020 Uh, labor market assessment program that they pulled through allows them to hire outside
01:09:09.600 the country and they just fast track the process into giving them a license and the results
01:09:15.520 have been catastrophic.
01:09:18.040 It's a, people aren't even, they don't even want to get on the road anymore.
01:09:22.240 Every, every winter, we always have a, at least one pileup now because of the new drivers
01:09:27.960 and it's either like a 60 to a hundred car pileup.
01:09:31.000 It's a, it's a, something you never saw before in this country.
01:09:36.140 Right.
01:09:36.580 I remember as a kid or like when I was first learning how to drive, I like my, my parents
01:09:43.040 taught me like, oh, well, usually the, the semi drivers, like they'll let you in if you
01:09:48.320 need to change lanes or like, you can more or less trust them.
01:09:51.440 Like they're the good drivers.
01:09:52.660 And in my experience, that was true until the last few years.
01:09:56.820 And now it's like, you got to watch out because they're not even staying in their own lanes.
01:10:01.180 Yeah.
01:10:01.780 They're insane.
01:10:02.320 Like we grew up in a culture where, you know, you sat in the back seat.
01:10:05.820 So you watch your dad or your mom handle the snow and what to do.
01:10:09.960 You read the signs.
01:10:10.780 You were just doing it since you're a kid.
01:10:12.560 Then you went and got your license.
01:10:13.800 It was easy to understand.
01:10:14.980 A lot of these people have never even driven a vehicle or been in one since they, you know,
01:10:19.280 the one dropped them off at the airport and they're just getting licenses.
01:10:24.840 Right.
01:10:25.920 Never driven in the snow whatsoever or even been around snow.
01:10:30.720 Right.
01:10:31.120 Like, yeah, treating it like driving in sand, I suppose.
01:10:37.360 What are some of the projects that you have on the go right now?
01:10:40.360 Physical projects, I mean, for building.
01:10:43.300 At the land?
01:10:44.480 Yeah.
01:10:44.800 Yeah.
01:10:45.340 Well, we're finishing up one kind of starter home cabin.
01:10:51.760 I was doing some painting on that actually pretty, I guess, last week.
01:10:56.260 And then we're doing a bathhouse.
01:10:58.800 So not everyone who's there has fully functional restroom facilities, operational.
01:11:06.880 So it could benefit some of the people to have like a bathhouse and laundromat that they
01:11:13.700 could, they could pay to use, you know, a reasonable fee cheaper than the local laundromat
01:11:20.220 or that sort of thing.
01:11:21.700 So that's, that's going to be a big boost to quality of life.
01:11:26.160 Others are, of course, developing their own lots.
01:11:29.800 I've done, there's been lot clearing on my lot.
01:11:34.020 I have two, two lots at the community, one up front where I have power and internet and
01:11:39.440 it's looking really nice.
01:11:40.600 I mean, as spring is coming here, at least, you know, the buds are coming up and it's
01:11:47.160 flowering and there's different colors and it's, it's really uplifting compared to how
01:11:53.540 it looks here in the winter where, you know, it's cold.
01:11:56.940 It's not nearly as cold as Canada, but at least in Canada or like in New York, it's, it's
01:12:01.820 white.
01:12:02.300 It's, there's like beauty to the winter.
01:12:04.620 The winters are not particularly beautiful in Arkansas.
01:12:07.380 It's just the, the trees lose their leaves and everything's kind of brown and once or
01:12:14.960 twice in a year, you'll have a decent snow that sticks.
01:12:18.660 But mostly it's just kind of a barren look.
01:12:21.340 So it is a little bit demoralizing, to be honest.
01:12:24.160 However, it is a nice time of year to get work done because it's, you know, the highs
01:12:28.520 are in the forties Fahrenheit, of course.
01:12:31.320 So it's real comfortable.
01:12:33.100 You know, it's survival is a lot easier in a climate like that.
01:12:37.640 So it's more practical than aesthetic.
01:12:40.560 But yeah, so anyway, I was, there's a lot clearing going on.
01:12:45.140 I was planting some trees, trying to plant more flowers this year.
01:12:50.280 I'm working on a garden.
01:12:52.180 I was doing some tilling the other day.
01:12:53.900 Um, I put up a 30 by 40 metal building and then there's a portable building, um, on that
01:13:01.860 front lot.
01:13:02.540 I've not started on like a proper house that I will one day have.
01:13:07.100 Actually, I have a house nearby, uh, that I will sell once I'm, once I have the money
01:13:13.340 to actually get everything done, uh, to have a, a proper house at the land.
01:13:18.740 Um, but yeah, slowly, but surely everything's coming together.
01:13:22.760 Um, what are some of the other guys doing?
01:13:26.220 Uh, I know somebody is starting in addition pretty soon on, they have like their starter
01:13:33.180 cabin and then they're going to build like in a modular way, kind of onto it one, one
01:13:39.060 room at a time.
01:13:39.720 So I think they're starting their next major addition on that pretty soon.
01:13:43.520 And, you know, it's glamorous, but I guess the heating system isn't your primary focus
01:13:50.600 when you get a house then, is it living where you are?
01:13:52.740 Like that's our number one up here is you got to have your house built off your heating
01:13:56.620 system.
01:13:57.540 Like it's not nearly as important.
01:14:00.180 Um, a smallish structure, you can use, uh, a propane propane wall heater very easily.
01:14:06.980 And it's not that expensive.
01:14:09.060 Um, what other people have used even just electric heaters.
01:14:12.800 You know, if you have a simple electric heater, you can buy, um, at Walmart for, you know,
01:14:18.780 40 bucks, like that'll pretty much do it.
01:14:22.240 If you're in a small structure, obviously it won't heat a whole house.
01:14:26.000 Um, but, uh, but yeah, we have an abundance of wood.
01:14:29.660 And so like, I'm, I have heated with wood in the past wood stove, not like a full wood
01:14:36.000 furnace.
01:14:36.640 I wanted to get a wood furnace set up.
01:14:39.040 I still might, but, but you're right.
01:14:41.520 No, the heating is not like the primary concern, uh, getting a, uh, like a Mason, uh, like
01:14:50.860 one of those fireplaces that I forget what they're called, but they have channels on the
01:14:55.280 inside that retains.
01:14:56.360 I'm sure they're very common in Canada that retain the heat.
01:14:59.420 Apparently it's like the most efficient way to heat your house.
01:15:02.040 Cause it just stays like a mass out of rock or something like that.
01:15:06.320 The mass heaters that they put in and the funnels behind right now.
01:15:10.300 I've just got a, uh, a wood stove, but I'm just in a small cabin myself, but you have to
01:15:16.160 have, you have to have two, uh, two, two sources of heat.
01:15:21.820 Cause if something happens to the one and you're out there, you can't drive, you can't do anything
01:15:26.000 that yeah.
01:15:26.920 And you're screwed.
01:15:27.520 So you got to have two at least back up or what?
01:15:31.940 Yeah.
01:15:32.200 I got propane and an electric to go into the generator just in case.
01:15:36.820 Yeah.
01:15:37.220 What are your walls?
01:15:38.100 Like, are they all made with two by six is the exterior?
01:15:42.680 No, mostly two by four, two by four for exterior walls.
01:15:46.420 Right?
01:15:47.420 Yeah.
01:15:48.280 Interesting.
01:15:48.740 Yeah.
01:15:48.980 Here we got to go two by six cause you got to fill it with insulation just to be able
01:15:52.880 to.
01:15:54.120 No, I mean, we do, we do use insulation, but you don't have to go nearly as, as heavy.
01:16:02.640 I was just going to, uh, I got to let my dog out for one second, but I want to show you,
01:16:07.840 uh, what some of the ice has been like while I do that.
01:16:11.360 This is what we had to put up with just South of me.
01:16:18.980 People, people don't realize the damage that that can do to your, uh, to your place.
01:16:42.860 Oh yeah.
01:16:43.500 Had their, uh, hydrometers just ripped right off their wall.
01:16:47.440 Some of the chimneys were falling over trees everywhere.
01:16:52.240 So our ice storms are worse than our snow storms.
01:16:57.480 We don't get a lot of snow, but when it does get cold and there is precipitation, we're more
01:17:01.940 likely to get ice storms like that.
01:17:03.740 Everyone here locally always talks about like the big ice storm of Oh nine that took down
01:17:08.580 power for weeks at a time.
01:17:10.640 And, uh, I I've seen, I've had trees, you know, uh, coated in ice like that while I had
01:17:15.760 chickens and they weren't the best about using the coop.
01:17:19.320 Um, or I guess I didn't set up a good enough coop system for them, but, uh, some of them
01:17:23.740 would sleep in the tree.
01:17:25.320 And I was amazed to see that when the ice storm came, it, it coated the chickens too.
01:17:30.300 And they were totally frozen.
01:17:32.080 And I thought for sure they were dead.
01:17:34.460 And then the next day, like when it thawed, they just got back to, you know, pecking around
01:17:40.680 and they were fine.
01:17:41.920 Uh, I was blown away.
01:17:43.580 That's fine.
01:17:44.100 I just watched a video.
01:17:45.560 I didn't upload it, but, uh, a guy chipped out a duck from, from the lake, brought it
01:17:50.880 inside, thawed it out and it was fine.
01:17:53.200 Now, I don't know, maybe it's a fake video.
01:17:55.840 I don't know what's real anymore, but, uh, it seemed like you had a new little friend there.
01:18:00.340 Yeah.
01:18:01.600 Well, I know for a fact you can freeze chickens and fall them and they're just fine.
01:18:06.360 So I've been down to negative 40 and I've never, none of my chickens froze.
01:18:11.800 I don't know if they just huddled together or what, but I'm surprised.
01:18:15.000 Like, I didn't think they would get through that.
01:18:17.080 Let's be honest.
01:18:18.140 I only have four right now, but yeah, I didn't think they would get through that.
01:18:22.800 So what's your, your biggest concern when building a house in Arkansas?
01:18:26.180 Uh, ours is obviously the heat and being able to take the weight from all the snow.
01:18:32.600 Yeah.
01:18:33.180 Well, it's very, uh, humid.
01:18:35.140 So the main concern is ventilation and vapor barriers and just avoiding mold building up.
01:18:45.620 So part of that is the materials you choose to use.
01:18:47.860 Um, I still, I'm a big fan of drywall.
01:18:51.600 I know some people don't like it.
01:18:53.460 Um, a lot of the guys are choosing to use other materials because of the molding issue.
01:18:58.180 I'm probably just going to go with drywall, uh, anyway.
01:19:02.100 And like, it's just very common.
01:19:04.640 If you buy an old house here, it's got mold.
01:19:06.880 Like it's, it's just, I don't think it's something that really can be avoided.
01:19:11.300 Um, I guess if you had like two exterior walls and like a gap in between and then like a real
01:19:20.400 heavy duty, duty, uh, AC system, you could try to get around it.
01:19:26.320 Um, but yeah, I guess mold and preventing mold would be like the number one issue for construction
01:19:31.580 purposes.
01:19:33.280 What kind of critters do you have down there?
01:19:35.140 Uh, that are nuisance critters.
01:19:39.620 Like raccoons are terrible down here.
01:19:41.940 They'll get into the trash.
01:19:43.200 I had a raccoon killing my chickens.
01:19:44.920 I had to kill it.
01:19:46.820 I caught it one night.
01:19:48.140 Um, let's see.
01:19:50.940 Uh, there are coyotes.
01:19:52.640 Oh yes.
01:19:53.500 Plenty of snakes.
01:19:54.360 Um, there are some poison, poisonous snakes or venomous snakes, uh, that are in the waterways
01:19:59.960 here and they look very similar to the kind of innocuous water snakes.
01:20:04.900 So you do have to be careful.
01:20:06.860 Um, but we still play in the Creek and the rivers, you know, during the winter anyway.
01:20:11.960 Um, yeah, like I said, there are coyotes, not super common bobcats get a lot of bobcats.
01:20:20.100 Um, as far as things to be concerned of, we have, you know, brown recluse spiders.
01:20:26.400 They're very common, very poisonous.
01:20:28.620 Oh shit.
01:20:29.340 Yeah.
01:20:29.520 I know about them.
01:20:31.120 Yeah.
01:20:31.600 We, I was surprised Canada.
01:20:33.060 That's the only one we have to worry about.
01:20:34.520 I think it's the brown recluse and we have a massasauga rattler that nobody ever sees.
01:20:40.680 Hmm.
01:20:42.620 Huh?
01:20:43.340 No.
01:20:44.180 Um, I'm, I'm from California.
01:20:46.480 We had black widows down there.
01:20:48.400 I don't think there are any black widows up here.
01:20:51.740 I hope not.
01:20:52.980 I've been living as if they're not up here anyway.
01:20:56.200 Are you a hunter?
01:20:57.120 Are you a hunter?
01:20:57.680 Uh, no, I'd like to get into it.
01:21:01.760 Um, I got my license last year, just never really got around to it.
01:21:07.000 Um, and it's a shame cause we have nice land and a lot of it is still undeveloped and the
01:21:12.180 deer are there all the time.
01:21:13.920 Um, but no, it's not, not quite gotten around to hunting.
01:21:18.520 So, like I said, I'm from California, so it wasn't part of it.
01:21:22.600 Yeah.
01:21:22.840 I mean, I, I have a fishing rod.
01:21:24.320 I, I have gone fishing.
01:21:25.800 Um, I, I should get out more to do it.
01:21:28.120 It's just, uh, you know, you get busy doing other things and that, uh, it's, it's really
01:21:34.300 worth the time.
01:21:35.380 I know it is just to get out there in nature and, you know, with your, if you're with your
01:21:40.060 kids fishing, taking them hunting, obviously that's an irreplaceable kind of experience.
01:21:46.280 Um, yeah, for them, but then, uh, but yeah, I'm just, uh, I'm more of a, a city person
01:21:53.540 by upbringing.
01:21:54.760 I'm trying to become more of a hick.
01:21:56.520 I'm just not quite there yet.
01:21:58.920 Yeah.
01:21:59.320 That's one of the first steps.
01:22:00.480 I guess the three things you got to know to be a hick is how to gut an animal, how to
01:22:04.380 make a fire and how to filter water.
01:22:07.000 Hmm.
01:22:07.880 So I can gut an animal.
01:22:09.500 I've, uh, I've raised goats and we have slaughtered them or butchered them.
01:22:14.180 So.
01:22:15.120 Okay.
01:22:15.520 Yeah.
01:22:15.800 We got goats here too.
01:22:17.980 Yeah.
01:22:18.460 I hate them.
01:22:20.600 They're, they're a lot easier to slaughter.
01:22:22.460 I hate.
01:22:23.060 What breed?
01:22:25.140 I don't know.
01:22:26.180 There might, he does the goats.
01:22:27.640 I do the chickens.
01:22:28.560 He's got a mix.
01:22:30.180 He's probably in the chat, actually a mix of two different, um, goats.
01:22:35.620 Because if they're boar, boar goats are just mean.
01:22:40.400 They're, they're straight mean and there's very few redeeming features of them in terms
01:22:46.120 of personality.
01:22:47.580 Um, I say that, but I had one boar female that like liked me a lot.
01:22:52.640 She was mean to the other goats, but she was actually a sweetheart to me.
01:22:56.320 Uh, mostly I have Nigerian dwarfs.
01:22:58.580 They're a milk goat.
01:22:59.600 They don't produce a lot, but they're small.
01:23:01.920 They don't frighten the kids.
01:23:03.920 And, uh, you know, if you're willing to take the time to milk them, like I said, they don't
01:23:09.100 produce a ton, but we have like more than a dozen, um, of those.
01:23:13.340 And, and they're very, very sweet, uh, very nice temperament.
01:23:17.780 Um, they also like hardly have to be fenced because they'll just stick around because they,
01:23:22.520 they're almost like dogs.
01:23:23.660 They develop a personal connection.
01:23:25.780 Um, I had La Mancha just, uh, much too big.
01:23:30.180 The kids were terrified of it and it would rear up and, and be taller than me.
01:23:34.360 And yeah, they didn't, they did not like that.
01:23:37.100 Um, yeah, he's got two males over there that always, whenever they're out together, they
01:23:41.140 rear up and smack into each other.
01:23:43.780 And they're actually not bad around people so far, but believe it or not, my bulldog ended
01:23:50.120 up killing one of the goats.
01:23:52.780 I didn't think it was possible.
01:23:54.540 It was, we've always kept them separated and he was doing okay with his training, but we
01:24:00.020 got away and started doing the construction and that.
01:24:02.280 And the one time that goat reared up and hit him, he had a vengeance out for that goat ever
01:24:06.620 since.
01:24:07.840 Wow.
01:24:08.820 Yeah.
01:24:09.180 The one time they got out together and Ozzy took, um, on the land, one of us had sheep
01:24:17.060 and, uh, there were dogs that were killing the sheep on the land.
01:24:21.140 So you got to really training a dog is, is tough.
01:24:24.400 I had great Pyrenees.
01:24:26.640 Um, at first I had a mutt and then a great Pyrenees female and the mutt would kill my chickens.
01:24:34.920 Uh, one night it got into the coop and killed like half the chickens all at once.
01:24:39.320 And then the Pyrenees learned from the mutt.
01:24:42.800 And what we've learned at the land is that, you know, if you have like a couple bad dogs,
01:24:47.520 all the dogs become bad dogs because they pack up and they learn the habits.
01:24:52.220 So yeah, that's another, you know, you wouldn't necessarily think of it up front, but yeah,
01:25:00.520 it's definitely one of the problems.
01:25:01.820 We got to keep our dogs separated up here.
01:25:03.500 Cause the neighbor also had a Belgian Malinois Dutch shepherd mix.
01:25:08.440 That was a absolute psycho.
01:25:11.800 If you ask me, when you look at it in its eyes, like it could tear goat apart.
01:25:16.640 No problem.
01:25:17.660 And, uh, yeah, there's no, it was like somebody walking around with, uh, you know, an AR 15,
01:25:23.820 just doing that lays knee every once in a while.
01:25:26.200 You look at the dog, you're like, Oh my God, I think it'd kill me.
01:25:29.600 But yeah, people love pit bulls down here.
01:25:33.640 I don't understand it.
01:25:35.400 Like, uh, not us.
01:25:37.160 We actually prohibit pit bulls, um, in the community, but just the local here.
01:25:43.120 Yeah.
01:25:43.580 The locals shut my door there from sex cart.
01:25:48.220 Oh, I just had to shut my door.
01:25:50.240 You don't, don't allow pit bulls in a, that seems to be a growing trend with everybody.
01:25:54.440 They're just saying they're done with pit bulls.
01:25:57.260 Yeah.
01:25:57.700 Well, it's, it's a liability myself, but it's a liability.
01:26:01.760 People think that, well, my dog is different.
01:26:04.400 It's, you know, really well-trained or, but it only takes one bad day and pit bulls are
01:26:09.860 one of those breeds.
01:26:10.840 They're very likely to snap and they've, they've never done it before, but it doesn't matter
01:26:16.700 because that child is now mauled, you know, that, that kid's missing a finger or an eye
01:26:21.240 and it can happen very quickly.
01:26:23.420 And, um, and just, I trust this.
01:26:25.720 It's like other things.
01:26:26.760 I trust the statistics.
01:26:28.260 If there's a group of whatever kind that, you know, problems happen, just avoid that
01:26:34.120 group.
01:26:34.520 I think it's a simple logic.
01:26:36.400 We just want a community just for golden retrievers.
01:26:39.840 That's it.
01:26:40.540 Yeah.
01:26:41.040 Uh, no, is there anything else that, uh, you've noticed that has come up?
01:26:49.420 That's been an unexpected problem.
01:26:52.860 You know, much like dog issues or something, something that people could learn from ahead
01:26:58.740 of time.
01:26:59.200 Um, well, in Arkansas, the heat of the summer is a bigger issue than we really gave it credit
01:27:05.840 for.
01:27:06.700 You know, you deal with the heat, um, if you grow up in a suburb, in a hot area, like I
01:27:12.720 dealt with it in California, but you get some respite, you know, you have indoor spaces,
01:27:17.840 finished indoor spaces.
01:27:19.280 When you're starting out from scratch, you're out in the elements a lot more, you know, than
01:27:24.720 you're used to.
01:27:25.380 Um, and, uh, you, you'd like to think that, you know, I can handle the heat, but when you
01:27:30.580 also have to do a full day of work in the heat, and then you don't get to come home to
01:27:36.360 like a nice air conditioned space, um, it, it wears on you.
01:27:41.320 So that's a morale issue.
01:27:42.620 And, you know, the things that you might think were some things you think are, you know, important
01:27:48.940 and you can give them up and they're actually luxuries.
01:27:51.560 Some things you think are luxuries, but actually you need them.
01:27:54.600 Like climate control, you really need air conditioning.
01:27:57.480 You need, you know, uh, a certain quality of life just to keep the morale going and, and
01:28:03.680 keep people working.
01:28:04.960 Um, so that's, that's been difficult, but, you know, as we have more infrastructure, um,
01:28:10.740 that's being addressed.
01:28:11.720 So a lot more work has been done over the last winter, um, last summer than the first winter
01:28:18.940 by far, you know, we're, we're kind of adapting to it.
01:28:21.700 And, and yeah, as the facilities improve, as more of us have access to like water, uh, in
01:28:28.660 an easier way and just simple stuff, like we're, we're finding that it's, it's easier to get
01:28:33.340 the work done as well.
01:28:34.280 So it's funny how appreciative you can become of small little things that you're just taking
01:28:39.840 it granted for before when you live in a community like that, like having running water.
01:28:45.600 My God, that's, yeah, that's a step forward.
01:28:50.640 Uh, super chat here from Brian says really interesting guest, Derek, appreciate him coming
01:28:56.560 on.
01:28:57.000 Yeah, I do appreciate your time and I know it's valuable, so I don't want to keep you too,
01:29:00.520 too long.
01:29:02.340 I was going to, uh, carry on my stream even after we were done talking so I could make
01:29:07.480 fun of Indians and lesbians and whatever else that we normally do for fun.
01:29:13.220 Well, I don't want to stand in your way of that important business.
01:29:15.640 So, um, I probably will go ahead and wrap up on my end pretty soon here.
01:29:20.620 Um, like I said, I got to wake up early, but it was real nice talking with you.
01:29:24.000 You know, it's, uh, it's been interesting learning about so many different streamers and
01:29:30.360 you know, shows that are, that are out there and, and different communities that, you know,
01:29:36.260 I've been in circles like these for a long time and I thought I basically understood the
01:29:41.940 lay of the land.
01:29:42.700 Um, but now that, you know, we're in the business of, of starting communities and networking with
01:29:49.700 communities, there are many more different groups than, than I was aware of.
01:29:55.280 And, you know, I hadn't heard about you until you reached out to me and, you know, I'm sure
01:29:58.740 you have your own community that you're, you're networked with.
01:30:01.740 And it's really encouraging, you know, we don't have, um, huge numbers in a real conspicuous
01:30:07.600 way, like, like the mainstream does.
01:30:10.840 Um, but there were far more of us, you know, than, than many would think we just have to
01:30:17.100 organize better.
01:30:17.820 That's the problem.
01:30:18.440 Yeah.
01:30:20.420 That's always been a problem with the right collectivism.
01:30:24.700 If I guess you call it that is, uh, people trying to organize.
01:30:29.900 We have the same problems up here.
01:30:31.300 That's why it is good to network.
01:30:33.100 Uh, it also makes like having the internet makes you feel a lot less alone.
01:30:38.400 Um, it feels like there's a hell of a lot more people, uh, in your own personal community
01:30:44.380 than what there actually is.
01:30:45.520 So it's helped me definitely up here for the, for the winter time.
01:30:49.880 Cause it was a lonely winter.
01:30:52.120 Everybody only wants to come up and work in the summer.
01:30:54.640 So.
01:30:56.360 Right.
01:30:56.980 No, I don't blame them, honestly.
01:30:59.080 Um, yeah, no, well, it was real nice talking with you.
01:31:04.260 Yeah.
01:31:04.660 I appreciate your time.
01:31:07.460 Absolutely.
01:31:08.260 Yeah.
01:31:08.620 If you ever want to talk again or, uh, you know, if you want to come down for, uh, an
01:31:13.480 RTTL event or something like that, you know, if anyone wants to join the PMA, you don't
01:31:17.280 have to be interested in buying into our community or, you know, having land with us.
01:31:23.320 Um, but the events are a good networking opportunity.
01:31:26.780 If you want to ask us about how we've set up what we've done, um, if you want to just see
01:31:31.720 firsthand, pick up some skills.
01:31:33.480 We often have, uh, demos, uh, you know, first aid demos and different, you know, there's
01:31:40.480 been workshops on working a sawmill and things like that.
01:31:44.560 Um, so they're always fun.
01:31:47.000 We do that in April and October typically.
01:31:50.680 Um, or, you know, if people are interested in networking, we're all for it.
01:31:55.180 Uh, if you're in the U S and you want to start a community in your area, you know, again,
01:31:59.660 join the PMA.
01:32:00.360 If you just want to talk with us and learn from what we've learned, uh, by experience,
01:32:05.100 you know, go for it.
01:32:06.200 Or if you want to work within the PMA framework, I think it simplifies things that we're trying
01:32:10.040 to make it easier for more people to do this.
01:32:11.980 Um, I wish we could do more to, uh, you know, network internationally, but we are trying to
01:32:17.500 make headway there as well.
01:32:18.740 Cause there are, there's international law.
01:32:20.620 And even if we're not in the same government, you know, we, there are things that we can
01:32:26.700 cooperate with.
01:32:27.640 You know, if we, if you know, lawyers in Canada, we know lawyers in the U S we can network those
01:32:32.760 lawyers and, and build international advocacy groups eventually.
01:32:36.700 And that's the kind of stuff we have to work towards.
01:32:39.660 So yeah, always glad to meet like-minded folks.
01:32:44.100 Yeah.
01:32:44.220 I would definitely like to come down to one of those workshops.
01:32:46.540 I have to find out if I'm allowed in your country first, because I heard the border right
01:32:50.100 now is ridiculous.
01:32:51.040 A friend of mine got rejected and you're hearing all these stories.
01:32:53.620 So I'd have to find out if I'm allowed in your country first.
01:32:59.280 Yeah, no, it's, we can have unlimited Guatemalan migrants, but, uh, one white guy from Canada.
01:33:05.820 Uh, we've got to shut down the whole border.
01:33:08.760 Yeah.
01:33:09.280 So nice speaking with you, Derek.
01:33:11.660 Yeah.
01:33:11.920 Thanks again for your time.
01:33:13.280 Cheers.
01:33:18.000 And that was air ball from return to the land.
01:33:21.780 I, uh, put his website right down there in the only, only thing I have in the description
01:33:27.960 is his website.
01:33:28.780 So if you want to check that out, we can maybe get him on again with, um, Curtis Stone
01:33:35.280 and see, uh, what kind of progress we can make there.
01:33:39.900 Ah, there's so much to learn about this stuff.
01:33:42.160 Like I say, that a lot of our, our community is the, uh, the blue collar community too.
01:33:47.080 So we're not too well versed in legal aspects that could protect us in the future.
01:33:53.180 We just kind of have to trust people that you, uh, you think you're going to have your
01:34:00.060 best interest at heart, right?
01:34:03.080 But let's get into the plaid army end of the stream.
01:34:07.000 Now I'm going to cut it up.
01:34:08.200 So we'll just play the intro for plaid army.
01:34:10.960 So I know exactly where to, uh, cut up the video when I upload them to rumble.
01:34:17.080 So, all right.
01:34:22.460 What did you do?
01:34:24.300 You third job.
01:34:30.680 We need to be clear-eyed about the seriousness of these incidents.
01:34:34.380 Indeed, several of the individuals at COOTS have strong ties to a far-right extreme organization
01:34:41.960 with leaders who are in Ottawa.
01:34:43.440 We're talking about a group that is organized, agile, knowledgeable, and driven by an extremist
01:34:52.140 ideology where might makes right.
01:34:55.720 All right.
01:35:03.500 Now we can get back to our regular kind of stream that we're all kind of used to.
01:35:08.380 No reason to be respectful anymore.
01:35:10.400 Seems like a guy that's got his head on his shoulders properly.
01:35:21.860 Um, I enjoyed that talk very much, but we got to get back into some Canadian politics as
01:35:27.640 much as I fucking hate it.
01:35:28.900 And I want to withdraw from it.
01:35:30.220 I, it's fun to talk about though.
01:35:33.300 It is.
01:35:34.380 It doesn't matter though.
01:35:35.500 I put out a video today.
01:35:36.700 I might as well just show you guys the video I put out today and then, uh, I can expand on
01:35:42.420 it.
01:35:42.580 Well, I guess it's time old uncle Derek, he's got to talk to you about the elections because
01:35:50.100 every election, there's a whole bunch of new influencers that are trying to get you to
01:35:54.800 follow them to the promised land.
01:35:57.560 They know what to do.
01:35:59.300 They're going to get the conservatives in.
01:36:01.080 It's going to make everything better.
01:36:02.480 All your hopes and dreams are going to be made or the liberals will get the liberals in.
01:36:07.120 There's no more Trudeau.
01:36:07.900 So we can just get the red party back in and stay with the status quo.
01:36:11.180 You can still kill your babies.
01:36:13.300 We hate Trump.
01:36:15.040 I'm a nationalist.
01:36:16.560 It doesn't matter which side or what color you fucking choose.
01:36:21.520 Nobody ever thinks that they're the bad guy.
01:36:27.380 Right?
01:36:27.980 And they always think the other side is stupid.
01:36:30.440 The other side is just dumb and stupid and you're the good guy.
01:36:34.940 That's the only way possible, right?
01:36:37.900 It's so ridiculous.
01:36:40.560 But nobody's actually into politics in Canada.
01:36:47.200 Because most of the people, unless they're benefiting from it somehow, they're done after one election cycle.
01:36:52.440 They're like, this is all bullshit.
01:36:54.440 And it is bullshit.
01:36:55.520 Because it doesn't matter what they tell you at the end of the day.
01:36:59.960 It doesn't fucking matter.
01:37:01.380 If they told you that the liberals got 42% of the vote and the conservatives got 44%, you'd believe it.
01:37:09.380 It doesn't matter what they say.
01:37:10.880 If they said, the NDP is now the official opposition, the liberals are down to a fucking seven seat part, you'd believe it.
01:37:18.240 If the conservatives won a super majority, you'd still fucking believe it.
01:37:22.220 It doesn't matter what they try and ram down your throat after the election.
01:37:25.820 If they said, you're going to fucking believe it.
01:37:27.900 Despite the fact that the Toronto Sun did an article talking about how there was 205,000 votes missing, maybe more, that could have swayed the election.
01:37:41.020 That's huge.
01:37:42.160 And what happened?
01:37:43.240 Fucking nothing.
01:37:43.940 CSIS, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, came out and said every single prime minister since Brian Mulroney's been in office has been compromised.
01:38:00.180 You did nothing.
01:38:01.100 Can't do anything.
01:38:02.780 They've told us about Chinese interference.
01:38:06.100 And different candidates have been working with India directly, knowingly.
01:38:11.220 And what are we doing?
01:38:12.020 And we're going back to vote.
01:38:20.300 It's so true.
01:38:22.440 It doesn't matter what they tell us.
01:38:24.420 It doesn't matter what they could say.
01:38:25.880 The fucking liberals got 17%.
01:38:27.720 They could say they got 26.
01:38:29.560 They could say 36.
01:38:30.800 They could say 46 after Mark Carney's been in.
01:38:33.500 There's no way to check.
01:38:34.980 There's no way to make sure.
01:38:36.740 The never has been, never will be.
01:38:38.180 I saw somebody that was saying, oh, we got Mark Carney and down in his, his fucking riding.
01:38:44.740 We got somebody else down there and they're going to count the votes.
01:38:47.340 No, you're not.
01:38:48.260 As soon as they find out you're on social media, they'll fucking kick you out or they're sending new people.
01:38:52.540 You can't stop it.
01:38:55.020 The same way that the PPC was running candidates in different areas.
01:38:59.280 They were going to parachute Max in there.
01:39:00.940 If somebody won their seat, they would do, they could do that with Mark Carney as well.
01:39:07.440 I had to show this though.
01:39:08.760 Ghostwriter.
01:39:09.280 This is the fucking funniest comment.
01:39:12.140 Aging dissident.
01:39:16.140 Dude, I got to get touch of gray or something like that for my fucking beard.
01:39:19.820 This is at least it's kind of like uniform patchy.
01:39:23.840 You know what I mean?
01:39:24.540 It's gray back here, gray here, kind of uniform patchy, like Wolfman Jack, but aging dissonance
01:39:30.600 is fucking hilarious, but it's fucking true.
01:39:35.440 Isn't it?
01:39:37.000 They could tell you anything you want.
01:39:39.260 They could tell you that fucking, ah, the liberals only got 10% and fucking NDP got 20%.
01:39:49.160 The fucking conservatives got 40%, but the green got seven.
01:39:54.580 So technically they can form a government and Mark Carney's still your prime minister.
01:39:58.920 And you'd fucking believe it.
01:40:00.660 You would believe it.
01:40:03.620 The fuck Carney flags are already up in my area.
01:40:09.120 It doesn't matter what they say at the end of this fucking, they can come on CBC and say,
01:40:14.900 yeah, you know what?
01:40:16.380 Trudeau got a hundred percent of the vote.
01:40:17.880 No, he's not even in an office.
01:40:19.680 You just have to take it because there's no way to hold them accountable.
01:40:23.160 There's no way.
01:40:27.860 The beard is not gorgeous.
01:40:29.360 This is fucking.
01:40:32.160 I need to get rid of that.
01:40:32.880 Imagine growing that sucker out.
01:40:34.120 I want to do the Lenny.
01:40:39.760 Like that with the burn sides.
01:40:42.600 I don't know.
01:40:43.340 Let's see.
01:40:45.340 Camouflaged facial hair.
01:40:47.020 Yeah.
01:40:47.440 Only in wintertime.
01:40:53.900 Otherwise, you see the white thing runs through the forest.
01:40:56.100 It's not supposed to be there.
01:40:57.120 Oh, so what do you, what are your guys predictions?
01:41:03.400 They could tell you again that the PPC didn't have enough in any writing and nobody got it.
01:41:09.500 And you believe it in 2019.
01:41:12.020 I really believe that the PPC had a fucking movement going there.
01:41:16.980 I really thought it, but I was in my own bubble, my own echo chamber.
01:41:22.220 Same with Faith Goldie for mayor.
01:41:23.940 Thought that was going to go.
01:41:25.140 Really did.
01:41:26.540 Meh.
01:41:28.780 So whatever you surround yourself with.
01:41:33.500 Team sports.
01:41:38.280 They could tell you whatever the fuck they wanted to.
01:41:41.180 And you're just going to eat it.
01:41:43.800 Nobody's going to recount it.
01:41:45.840 Nobody's going to do anything.
01:41:52.220 The motherfuckers have come out on TV and told you that your fucking entire political system is a sham.
01:42:02.360 Every single prime minister since Mal Rooney, and I'm even willing to venture the one before him too.
01:42:10.480 Has been compromised.
01:42:13.380 Why are we still participating in this system?
01:42:16.100 Have you guys seen the Conservative Party too?
01:42:22.160 Your so-called saviors?
01:42:24.120 This is fucking awesome.
01:42:27.540 This is probably the best example of Canadian politics to date.
01:42:33.260 Oh, I'm going to have to erase some shit that I already got up here.
01:42:38.000 This one's still here.
01:42:40.900 Right?
01:42:44.700 Fucking...
01:42:46.100 Martin Singh knows how to win an election.
01:42:49.440 Look at the difference in candidates here.
01:42:51.700 This is the Conservative Party.
01:42:58.000 How many seats?
01:43:00.480 How many seats do you think they're going to get?
01:43:02.940 Vote Conservative?
01:43:03.900 You're just voting for a fucking brown foreigner.
01:43:08.740 That's what you get, my friend.
01:43:11.280 Very, very brown.
01:43:13.140 Brown constituents.
01:43:14.820 Very, very brown.
01:43:16.100 I posted a brown photo?
01:43:23.420 What do you mean a brown photo?
01:43:25.920 I'm not brown.
01:43:34.700 Fuck.
01:43:36.700 What else we got?
01:43:38.080 Oh, yeah.
01:43:40.700 It's a fucking nut job.
01:43:43.260 Janice.
01:43:46.180 Fucking Janice.
01:43:47.080 Have you seen the state of our politics?
01:43:49.260 And you want me to participate in this system?
01:43:51.260 Look at this.
01:43:51.500 The heart of the groove.
01:43:53.140 From the way that we move.
01:43:55.080 Kill the lights we can't lose.
01:43:59.480 Kill the lights and look like happy.
01:44:03.380 Close your eyes.
01:44:04.680 You can see me by the way that I feel.
01:44:07.220 Kill the lights and touch my body.
01:44:10.460 Close your eyes.
01:44:12.300 You can see me by the way that I feel.
01:44:15.060 Come and spin me around.
01:44:17.140 Get lost in the sound.
01:44:18.920 Close your eyes.
01:44:19.940 You can see me by the way that I feel.
01:44:21.220 I want to shoot myself.
01:44:29.840 When I see that.
01:44:34.060 That person.
01:44:35.660 Is a politician in Canada.
01:44:37.680 Why?
01:44:39.960 Why does anybody take them seriously?
01:44:44.480 She looks like.
01:44:47.560 She looks like a horror movie.
01:44:49.360 Like the serial killer in a movie.
01:44:57.060 Here's another one.
01:44:58.980 Somebody's watching me.
01:45:00.340 It's my anxiety.
01:45:01.700 This is a trend going around on TikTok.
01:45:16.900 And unfortunately, I know the trend.
01:45:18.420 And she's not even doing it right.
01:45:20.540 Your anxiety is supposed to come out from behind you.
01:45:23.020 They're doing a special effect.
01:45:24.640 Where your anxiety comes out behind you.
01:45:26.700 And it's dressed crazier than you are.
01:45:28.120 And you turn around and see them, Janice.
01:45:30.380 You're supposed to be fucking good at TikTok.
01:45:32.400 And this is the shit you're doing.
01:45:33.280 You know what you look like?
01:45:35.680 I just watched a movie recently.
01:45:37.780 Popeye the Slayer Man.
01:45:40.920 Holy shit.
01:45:42.360 They actually look like each other.
01:45:43.660 Look at this.
01:45:46.220 Popeye the Slayer Man.
01:45:47.340 And don't ask why I was watching that.
01:45:48.980 All right.
01:45:50.040 Slim pickings in Hollywood.
01:45:52.940 But if you go to like some of their cheaper made movies.
01:45:55.540 Sometimes you can skip some of the diversity shit.
01:45:58.120 So Popeye the Slayer Man was what I was watching the other night.
01:46:01.520 And that's Janice Irwin.
01:46:03.160 Janice Irwin is Popeye the Slayer Man.
01:46:05.900 Look at that fucking face.
01:46:08.660 Somebody's watching me.
01:46:10.180 Is my anxiety.
01:46:17.920 Yeah.
01:46:19.720 I see it.
01:46:20.560 I see it.
01:46:22.560 I can't believe that's a real person.
01:46:30.340 Like dancing around in an alleyway.
01:46:32.580 And you know what?
01:46:34.420 People will fucking vote for her.
01:46:37.380 People will vote for her.
01:46:38.440 There was like eight people sitting there.
01:46:40.580 Like lights, camera, action.
01:46:42.100 Somebody blowing bubbles.
01:46:43.540 That was a whole ordeal.
01:46:45.000 What in the fuck are we doing?
01:46:56.980 Yeah.
01:46:57.460 It's not just that though.
01:47:10.140 It's the mentality that goes behind it.
01:47:11.820 These people have been.
01:47:13.720 We have to realize that there's a certain amount of our population that's programmable no matter what.
01:47:18.620 And we've become so disconnected from society and people holding us accountable that we've allowed these people to fucking thrive in our society.
01:47:33.680 Not only thrive.
01:47:35.820 We create the conditions for them to thrive.
01:47:39.960 We incentivize their bad behavior.
01:47:42.400 Like watching what's going on with people running around and Elon Musk is a Nazi.
01:47:50.120 So it gives carte blanche for all of these people to do what places like anti-hate and the SLPC, SPLC and what's the other fucking Jewish organization in the States?
01:48:11.080 ADL.
01:48:12.400 They have scared people so much with this Nazi ideology that they've given them an excuse like, well, fucking Elon's a Nazi.
01:48:20.440 I can go over and shit on a Tesla on a Tesla on his car.
01:48:23.900 It doesn't matter whose car it is and whose private property it is.
01:48:27.440 They bought a piece of property from a Nazi.
01:48:29.700 So I'm going to go shit on a fucking Tesla.
01:48:33.560 Where was this spirit with Volkswagen?
01:48:35.760 Volkswagen was actually known to be like the hippie car back in the day.
01:48:42.840 But nothing, nothing for Volkswagen.
01:48:49.480 Hugo Boss gets away scot-free.
01:48:52.880 Bayer.
01:48:53.320 Like.
01:48:53.960 It's just funny watching these people get programmed.
01:48:59.800 So it's not funny.
01:49:00.800 Sorry.
01:49:01.280 We can make fun of it as much as we want.
01:49:03.100 It's not funny to watch this shit.
01:49:05.200 It's a sick society.
01:49:06.480 And under different circumstances, you would feel more sympathetic towards these people.
01:49:17.140 Because even if you do have a homogenous society, the chances of people like this would be fewer and far in between.
01:49:29.480 But still.
01:49:34.120 Genstein, what do you mean gay tonight?
01:49:37.980 I'll fucking bring into something that you guys haven't seen in a while.
01:49:44.220 Well, fuck you guys over here.
01:49:49.580 Get ready with me to sign up for the military.
01:49:52.080 I'm signing up for the military because I know my cat-like instincts would be very helpful in combat.
01:49:57.660 Yeah, you guys don't know what I have access to.
01:50:01.940 I could torture you guys all the same.
01:50:03.780 Yeah, like I said, people getting so entrenched in this ideology that they want to put up.
01:50:21.020 It was nice how Avril said this.
01:50:25.140 Avril.
01:50:25.720 Did I just like Avril Lavigne?
01:50:27.840 Ervil.
01:50:28.580 Sorry.
01:50:28.920 Ervil was expressing it later.
01:50:32.260 It's like, this is what people do with their recreational time.
01:50:34.920 And that's something, like, both me and Jeremy should have paid attention really to what he said there.
01:50:39.960 You know, like, this is what people are doing in their recreational time.
01:50:43.020 It's not, you know, it's not their...
01:50:48.340 necessarily their passion, their work, their job, their family.
01:50:52.600 It's literally their recreational time.
01:50:57.100 And maybe that's something we need to fucking...
01:51:01.060 think about.
01:51:02.700 What's up, Dubs?
01:51:11.100 Yeah, well, what this guy does with his recreational time is fucking hates...
01:51:15.600 hates Tesla drivers.
01:51:17.340 Go fuck yourself.
01:51:29.800 I'm paying attention to you.
01:51:34.840 Hey!
01:51:39.340 You Joe Biden looking motherfucker.
01:51:42.120 You suck my dick, you fucking faggot.
01:51:45.340 You faggot.
01:51:47.340 Oh!
01:51:48.360 Oh, God!
01:51:50.160 Donnie, he just hit somebody.
01:51:52.520 Donnie!
01:51:54.380 Oh, God!
01:52:01.640 Everybody in that party was white.
01:52:04.420 Two white people arguing over some crazy fucking shit.
01:52:08.740 And ended up hitting somebody.
01:52:10.260 It's a hard concept for some people to fucking get, is that...
01:52:18.580 there are liberals that are your fucking brother and sisters.
01:52:25.340 You know, disown your families all you want and such, but a nation is supposed to be an extension of the family.
01:52:31.300 Right?
01:52:31.520 And you are supposed to feel...
01:52:32.700 You're not supposed to feel hate for each other, that's for sure.
01:52:41.840 I don't know what exactly it is you're supposed to feel.
01:52:44.080 Because people are supposed to say they want to love their country, but...
01:52:51.080 What else we got for you guys?
01:52:58.020 Oh, I got the NDP.
01:52:59.420 This guy's gonna lose his fucking job for sure.
01:53:02.720 Got caught on a ring camera.
01:53:04.300 You think people, like...
01:53:06.400 With the videos available on the internet now, there's whole genres of people.
01:53:09.840 I have watched one guy's entire life through a ring camera.
01:53:15.120 And it became his entire personality, his home security cameras.
01:53:19.620 And you think people would know that by now, that microphones and cameras are everywhere.
01:53:28.800 And that's why they exist, right?
01:53:31.020 That's why the United States supports them.
01:53:32.920 That's why Britain supported them.
01:53:34.360 And actually, the Arabs tried to create a pan-Arab state.
01:53:41.540 And they weren't able to, because Israel's kind of in the middle.
01:53:45.100 So, you know, I totally understand why the Arabs would want Israel to disappear.
01:53:53.760 I also...
01:53:54.960 You know, and then...
01:53:56.200 You know what Israel would want.
01:53:57.860 Well, and the Americans, clearly, they really want Israel to be there.
01:54:02.480 Because it creates chaos in that region.
01:54:04.940 Which it does.
01:54:05.800 Yeah.
01:54:07.160 So...
01:54:08.080 But that's it.
01:54:08.820 Like, for me...
01:54:13.940 Hi, Marshall.
01:54:23.420 Yep.
01:54:24.100 You're gone.
01:54:25.760 Fucking making fun of Israel, bud.
01:54:27.860 This is Canada.
01:54:29.040 We don't stand for that here.
01:54:32.520 Most Canadians can't even point out Israel on a map.
01:54:35.240 But we won't fucking have it.
01:54:46.540 Well, here's a...
01:54:47.540 I say...
01:54:50.100 This is part for entertainment, so...
01:54:53.580 You guys know what Omegle is.
01:54:55.480 There's probably some of you that are flipping back and forth from here and handsome truth right now with what he's doing.
01:55:03.660 Majority of Indians.
01:55:04.500 That's what these guys go for.
01:55:05.780 They just look for Indians jerking it.
01:55:07.420 They're always jerking it.
01:55:09.260 India.
01:55:09.760 Oh, God.
01:55:10.080 He's jerking it.
01:55:10.800 If it's an Indian, he is jerking off.
01:55:12.960 Wait for it.
01:55:13.820 Watch.
01:55:14.000 I don't even load.
01:55:15.460 You don't got internet in India.
01:55:16.600 India.
01:55:17.980 Dude, they're always jerking it.
01:55:20.500 He's jerking it.
01:55:21.100 They always...
01:55:22.200 He was in the motion and everything.
01:55:24.640 He did it.
01:55:25.300 Oh, fuck.
01:55:31.080 Yeah, depending on how late we go, I might even go check out HT's stuff as well.
01:55:35.220 It's funny.
01:55:36.400 I know people are fucking disgusted by a lot of the things he says, but it's for the youth, and you're not connecting with the youth.
01:55:43.000 But he is.
01:55:44.540 So, give the guy props.
01:55:50.940 Here's some more of that brainwashing.
01:55:52.600 This is funny.
01:55:53.620 What's that?
01:55:54.580 We are not parking next to that thing.
01:55:56.820 To what?
01:55:57.300 I don't want to be anywhere near that thing.
01:55:59.420 I don't want...
01:56:00.120 I don't want to get out near that thing.
01:56:01.820 Oh, my gosh.
01:56:02.820 It's right there.
01:56:03.860 That means they're in there.
01:56:05.820 Whoever it is, they're going to be in there.
01:56:08.560 Oh, my God.
01:56:09.660 Oh, is it this woman?
01:56:11.020 No.
01:56:11.700 Oh.
01:56:12.420 Oh, this is disgusting.
01:56:14.040 Like, look at...
01:56:14.920 Oh.
01:56:17.500 I can't even tell if it's real or not.
01:56:19.760 I can't tell anymore.
01:56:21.740 There's so many people that get so fucking bent out of shape about simple things that they're getting hypnotized by on TV that...
01:56:29.380 Is that person just going for clicks?
01:56:34.160 Huh?
01:56:37.660 She needs security.
01:56:39.400 Um, you don't mind if I, like, steal from the store?
01:56:42.420 I, like, what I'm mind is stupid comments like that.
01:56:45.980 Now I'm going to go tell them.
01:56:47.280 Okay.
01:56:48.060 You don't got to tell them that.
01:56:49.240 Yeah, I do.
01:56:49.800 If you want to be...
01:56:50.340 Come on.
01:56:51.760 No.
01:56:52.120 But that's a stupid comment.
01:56:53.680 I'm going to show the manager notes.
01:56:55.120 All right.
01:56:56.020 Can I steal things from here?
01:56:57.460 Yeah, sure.
01:56:58.260 Okay.
01:56:58.640 Thank you.
01:56:59.000 It is kind of funny, right?
01:57:09.160 Because a lot of the Indians that come over, they don't have any idea how to speak English.
01:57:12.660 They're just told to, like, nod their head this way.
01:57:14.900 They're used to doing this, but they've been told to do this.
01:57:17.500 Say yes, yes, yes, yes.
01:57:20.040 There's been a few videos like that where a guy will, like, go to, uh, help a truck that's in the ditch.
01:57:30.960 Walks up to the guy.
01:57:32.200 Hey, why did...
01:57:33.220 Did you disconnect your trailer?
01:57:35.620 Huh?
01:57:35.960 Yes, yes.
01:57:37.400 Did...
01:57:37.880 I can see it.
01:57:39.420 You didn't disconnect it.
01:57:40.580 Yes, yes, yes.
01:57:42.260 Okay, this is going to take a while if all you're going to do is say yes.
01:57:45.080 We can't communicate with each other.
01:57:46.740 Yes, yes, yes.
01:57:49.960 Holy fuck there, bud.
01:57:51.340 How are we going to have a fucking functioning society if we can't even speak the same goddamn language?
01:57:58.300 It's okay if you've got to put up with that, like, all right, fuck, you know, the new pharmacist in town,
01:58:05.420 because for whatever reason, we couldn't find a pharmacist, so we had to import a pharmacist from India
01:58:09.720 because people in Canada just can't fucking do it, I guess.
01:58:12.360 We import a pharmacist, and then you meet his kid that doesn't speak English.
01:58:15.960 Yeah, all right, fuck.
01:58:17.480 A little bit of sympathy.
01:58:19.380 But it's everywhere you fucking go.
01:58:23.800 Even jobs that their primary function is to communicate with the public, they can't even speak English properly.
01:58:32.000 It's so goddamn frustrating.
01:58:37.060 I did talk about this the one time.
01:58:39.680 I don't think anybody clipped it, but it's like your alarm comes on in the morning,
01:58:44.840 and you're listening to a news station.
01:58:47.420 It's a guy with an Indian accent.
01:58:50.360 You know, fuck it.
01:58:53.080 You hit the snooze button because you can't stand his voice, so you're a little bit late.
01:58:57.480 You can't make coffee at home, so you go to get coffee on the way to work.
01:59:00.480 It's an Indian guy at the fucking drive-thru.
01:59:03.960 You can't understand him either.
01:59:07.060 You pull out, you're a little bit frustrated.
01:59:09.120 Coffee tastes like shit.
01:59:10.200 You get cut off.
01:59:11.700 Why?
01:59:12.600 Because this fucking Indian doesn't know how to drive, and he cut you off.
01:59:15.200 For some reason, there's a whole bunch of Indians in Canada.
01:59:17.260 When you get to work, you're trading Harpinder.
01:59:21.140 Harpinder is going to take your job eventually, but you've got to train him,
01:59:25.120 and he's going to make less money than you.
01:59:28.660 But why wouldn't a corporation go with that by hiring a bunch of fucking people from India
01:59:33.600 when the government's going to subsidize them?
01:59:37.040 Holy fuck.
01:59:38.300 How much are people going to take?
01:59:41.140 Actually, this is something we should get into.
01:59:43.040 I wanted to talk about this.
01:59:44.300 I hope everybody's here right now.
01:59:49.200 I need suggestions, because I'm going to do a video on this.
01:59:53.640 This is my next video.
01:59:55.000 It's nice to see Arville was checking out my videos before he talked to me,
02:00:00.240 and he still decided to talk to me, because I do that with people too.
02:00:03.240 You just look at a bunch of their stuff just prior,
02:00:06.640 just to get a better feel for what they're doing and what they're talking about.
02:00:11.480 But I want to do a video on top 10 Canadians most likely to build a killdozer.
02:00:19.660 Let that sink in.
02:00:24.940 The top 10 Canadians most likely to build a killdozer.
02:00:29.920 Now, there's one guy.
02:00:36.020 I'm going to ask his permission first, because I think it's the right thing to do.
02:00:41.660 But I'm going to ask Hartman.
02:00:48.000 If there's anybody that's going to have enough drive to fucking build a killdozer, man,
02:00:52.360 I think it'd be him.
02:00:53.060 But I'd have to ask him first.
02:00:56.400 I wouldn't want to disrespect him by just fucking making a video like that,
02:00:59.360 because it is a tasteless video, and that's the entire point, is to be tasteless.
02:01:04.120 Why?
02:01:06.880 Because we're in a country that actually could...
02:01:10.620 We could technically come up with a top 10 list of people that build a killdozer.
02:01:15.780 Another guy that I think would build a killdozer is a dude out in BC whose name shall not be spoken
02:01:23.480 because there was a media ban, Rob Hoogland.
02:01:27.440 His daughter...
02:01:28.780 The courts were saying he had no right to talk to his daughter,
02:01:34.300 and she was transitioning into another gender,
02:01:38.000 taking the drugs and...
02:01:39.780 Tape it on a dick?
02:01:42.760 I don't know what chicks do, but...
02:01:45.880 Yeah, that person.
02:01:48.460 That's another person likely to build a killdozer.
02:01:56.780 Another person...
02:01:57.560 I think wheelchair bear, Craig Blackmere,
02:02:01.020 I think he's going to build a killdozer.
02:02:03.860 Not because he's going to go crazy,
02:02:05.700 but just because it'd be kind of cool.
02:02:08.660 I think he might do it by accident.
02:02:10.300 He'll be building, like, a cooler wheelchair and just like,
02:02:12.800 well, why wouldn't I have fucking hubcaps that could take out other wheelchairs?
02:02:17.560 And it would just snowball from there.
02:02:19.740 And he would end up building himself a killdozer by accident.
02:02:23.860 So I might put you in the video, too.
02:02:28.300 Who else?
02:02:29.020 There's got to be more Canadians.
02:02:35.340 What about...
02:02:38.660 Oh, fuck.
02:02:40.060 I can't believe his name is fucking slipping my mind.
02:02:45.440 Corey Hurin.
02:02:46.300 That's it.
02:02:47.020 Corey Hurin.
02:02:49.560 I mean...
02:02:51.660 For those of you that don't know who Corey Hurin is,
02:02:56.280 he was the guy who drove from out west
02:03:01.140 to where Justin Trudeau is supposedly staying,
02:03:06.900 ran the gate,
02:03:09.160 and then went around Trudeau's property with a shotgun and shit like that
02:03:15.560 looking for him.
02:03:19.100 I think that's...
02:03:20.140 We've got four so far.
02:03:21.700 Four candidates for who's most likely to build a killdozer in Canada.
02:03:27.100 Ramona Dindula?
02:03:28.220 Nah, I can't see her really doing it, though.
02:03:30.200 Pebbles would try,
02:03:36.320 but it wouldn't be able to get started, I don't think.
02:03:43.440 Yeah, you know what?
02:03:44.380 Like, I know a few of you want to say fucking Jeremy,
02:03:48.460 but I don't...
02:03:49.880 He doesn't know tools.
02:03:50.840 He couldn't build a killdozer.
02:03:53.780 He would have to go with something else.
02:03:57.860 He's excluded from the list.
02:03:59.280 Yeah.
02:04:01.200 Also for liability reasons.
02:04:07.680 Pleb, when PP loses?
02:04:09.260 I don't know.
02:04:09.780 Morgan, maybe.
02:04:23.180 I can see Morgan with a killdozer.
02:04:29.460 James Top?
02:04:30.560 Ooh.
02:04:31.700 Ooh.
02:04:33.980 Maybe.
02:04:34.420 He's probably building one right now.
02:04:39.200 That's why we haven't heard from him.
02:04:41.320 Haven't seen anything.
02:04:42.700 He's just quietly fucking building his killdozer.
02:04:47.020 And that's what his trip all the way across Canada was actually about.
02:04:51.640 He was plotting to see which parts of the highway would be able to drive his track on.
02:04:58.540 He was scoping out the entire infrastructure of Canada, bridges and everything.
02:05:03.220 So when he finishes it, he's going to fucking...
02:05:05.660 The topinator's coming.
02:05:07.180 It was all recon.
02:05:10.600 All recon.
02:05:13.740 Ferry.
02:05:14.300 I think he could build a killdozer.
02:05:20.380 He might do it with a garbage truck.
02:05:25.620 It's possible.
02:05:33.480 I don't know if he'd finish it.
02:05:34.980 Don Cherry?
02:05:40.740 Oh, that'd be a cool way for Donnie to go out.
02:05:43.320 Wouldn't it?
02:05:46.640 Playing the hockey theme song?
02:05:49.100 Nah, nah, nah, nah, nah.
02:05:50.200 Nah, nah, nah, nah.
02:05:56.540 Oh, there you go.
02:06:00.260 One more tax season before you think about a killdozer, too.
02:06:03.580 It's happening.
02:06:04.980 I think CRJ is most likely to fucking do it.
02:06:11.060 That's truth.
02:06:14.160 Phil Rithad says,
02:06:16.100 Have to catch you on replay tomorrow.
02:06:18.700 Here's my lunch money.
02:06:20.100 Thanks, man.
02:06:21.080 Appreciate it.
02:06:24.540 Does help pay the bills.
02:06:29.140 PP if he loses?
02:06:30.140 No, PP's not doing it.
02:06:31.440 PP would be fucking perfectly happy to go back to fucking making money off the taxpayer.
02:06:39.060 Fucking.
02:06:41.860 He's not winning, guys.
02:06:43.180 He's not winning.
02:06:45.620 Liberals are too good at this game.
02:06:49.320 They're not winning.
02:06:51.020 They have all the other parties that'll go on their side.
02:06:53.760 Every single party that has been in the election has been proven that they'll take money to shut the fuck up.
02:07:01.100 It's happened already.
02:07:05.120 The NDP was keeping them in power.
02:07:09.200 The NDP is broke.
02:07:10.240 The only reason they got any money is because Trudeau needed them to make a majority government.
02:07:16.220 Carnials, you think he's supposed to be doing the same thing if it comes down to it?
02:07:24.120 If he only gets 33% and fucking conservatives get 35% but the NDP beats them out and they get fucking this person.
02:07:33.640 Like, shut up.
02:07:35.340 Shut up.
02:07:36.260 It doesn't fucking matter.
02:07:37.360 They're all going to fight no matter what and use your money to stay in power.
02:07:41.060 You can't infiltrate it.
02:07:44.600 But you get all these fucking bright-eyed new fucking influencers saying, hey, we can make a difference.
02:07:50.640 I've got a movement.
02:07:52.600 We've got a movement that somehow is built around me.
02:08:00.520 And it's like this fucking Maple Mag guy.
02:08:03.740 God, we're going to kick Canada back.
02:08:05.500 All you're going to do is follow me.
02:08:06.700 Let's go.
02:08:07.360 And all he does is march around in a circle, fuck, a couple blocks, whatever, and goes,
02:08:11.060 fuck off.
02:08:13.860 Follow me.
02:08:15.440 Guys, vote conservative.
02:08:19.020 That's the answer.
02:08:20.080 We just need the conservatives in.
02:08:28.700 The only way the conservatives would be able to make a difference is if they got a supermajority.
02:08:32.480 The hatred for Trudeau and the liberals hasn't increased since he got out of power.
02:08:42.640 You hated Trudeau in the 2019 elections, 2021 elections, all the other times you voted him into power.
02:08:51.360 The hatred was the same.
02:08:54.480 He's not there anymore, though.
02:08:59.440 He's not there.
02:09:06.440 So all of that, rah, rah, I'm not Trudeau.
02:09:09.680 It's gone.
02:09:15.820 There goes your supermajority.
02:09:17.420 There goes a majority.
02:09:20.640 You're never going to see a conservative government in this country again.
02:09:23.980 Not that it matters.
02:09:24.720 Never again.
02:09:32.080 They just got to change the face of the liberal party because you don't care what they did.
02:09:36.240 You don't care.
02:09:37.540 India is infiltrating our fucking government.
02:09:39.620 China is infiltrating our government.
02:09:41.400 Some of the politicians are American.
02:09:43.200 Some of them were fucking not even born here.
02:09:46.420 What is anybody hanging on to?
02:09:48.560 We've got to stop the invasion.
02:09:54.320 It's too late.
02:09:55.220 They're here.
02:09:56.420 Now what?
02:09:58.640 Vote.
02:09:59.680 We've got to get the purple guys in.
02:10:06.480 We've got to vote.
02:10:08.320 Vote, vote, vote, vote, vote.
02:10:10.200 CSIS has already told us.
02:10:13.360 Here's a good story because this has happened to people as well.
02:10:15.880 This is the Irish guy.
02:10:19.580 He'll explain it to you.
02:10:22.340 Enoch Burke here.
02:10:23.440 I'm standing outside the Bank of Ireland branch in Castlebar, County Mayo.
02:10:27.780 When I left my workplace today, Wilson's Hospital School, at about half past five in the evening,
02:10:32.240 I checked my bank balance and this is what I found.
02:10:37.080 Zero euro in my bank account.
02:10:39.280 I have been robbed of 40,617 euro by the courts.
02:10:47.240 Judge David Nolan, Mr. Russell Fanning, the Attorney General and the government all working hand in hand.
02:10:54.760 These people are millionaires.
02:10:56.840 They're driving out of the forecourts in their big cars.
02:10:59.620 But they're vultures sniffing around now to take from me everything I own, to strip from me every asset I have and to look for anything that I might have that they can take away.
02:11:13.780 That's what these people are doing.
02:11:15.600 We know it all goes back to the fact that in 2022, I was demanded by Principal Niamh McShane to promote transgenderism in the school where I worked.
02:11:26.520 A demand made by that principal, Niamh McShane, still a principal in a school down in Cork.
02:11:32.960 A demand that should never have been made and should not be made today because there is no shred of legal authority for that demand to be made.
02:11:43.380 But of course, the Minister for Education, Norma Foley, now the Minister for Children,
02:11:48.160 when she was confronted by my family or asked by my family when I was incarcerated about this issue in 2022, she ran away.
02:11:58.140 She was telling the public lies, saying that this wasn't being taught in schools and classrooms, that it wouldn't happen.
02:12:04.940 But of course, it did happen.
02:12:07.100 The Department of Education is dealing illegally in this matter.
02:12:10.360 The current Minister for Education, Helen McEntee, she is dealing illegally in this matter.
02:12:14.600 And that's the whole problem here from the very beginning.
02:12:17.740 When you go to court, the judges are running out the door.
02:12:20.360 They will not deal with this issue.
02:12:23.180 And it's very sad to be in that state in the country where the judges are telling lies, where the government's working along with them.
02:12:29.000 And of course, we now know that we've got very bad.
02:12:31.580 We've been told now today that, you know, the country is going to have a great recession.
02:12:36.380 Tens of thousands of jobs to be lost, maybe a lot more than that, hundreds of thousands.
02:12:40.200 We've been told this by Pascal Donoghue.
02:12:42.300 He's telling us that hard times are coming.
02:12:46.980 You know why?
02:12:47.400 Because he's not fit to rule this country.
02:12:50.860 We know they went to America.
02:12:52.460 There was a lot of spin.
02:12:53.740 But, you know, the Americans, it didn't go down well with the Americans.
02:12:58.060 Because they could smell, I would say, simply the spin.
02:13:02.840 Pascal Donoghue is looking to Europe now.
02:13:04.780 But he's defying God.
02:13:07.020 And the rest of the government, Micheal Martin, Helen McEntee, they're defying God in this country.
02:13:12.320 But righteousness exalts a nation.
02:13:16.100 Righteousness.
02:13:16.960 Giving people their just liberties.
02:13:20.060 Giving them their due.
02:13:20.980 Giving them the right to live uprightly and morally and righteously.
02:13:25.460 That is what exalts this nation.
02:13:28.960 And it's a shame that the church has been silent on this matter.
02:13:33.180 Hasn't stood up and exalted God.
02:13:35.700 Our religious freedom is being taken from us in this country.
02:13:39.960 So that's the situation as it stands now tonight.
02:13:42.480 42,000 euro and more taken from my bank account.
02:13:46.680 Every penny stripped from me.
02:13:49.120 42,000 euro and more taken from my bank account.
02:14:19.120 Just take your money.
02:14:21.840 Just like that.
02:14:23.660 Now, if they take all the money out of your account, are you still liable for the banking fees?
02:14:28.300 Because the banks, they charge fucking for fees now.
02:14:31.280 They're not just happy that you're going to invest your money in with them.
02:14:34.660 They charge you to handle your money.
02:14:44.520 Just shut it off.
02:14:45.720 Just like that.
02:14:46.400 I was in an Irish space fucking months ago.
02:14:49.960 Fuck me.
02:14:50.440 I was supposed to send her some beef jerky too.
02:14:55.660 Store bought and homemade as well.
02:14:57.820 Fuck, I forgot about that.
02:14:59.300 I'm going to have to go back and look for that.
02:15:01.260 I said that would happen.
02:15:02.160 But the parties that they were talking about, the Irish party, they had a split up and one of the partners ended up taking all of their reserves, the company's reserves.
02:15:18.000 And the political party was, they held all of their funds in gold in the safe.
02:15:27.540 So they were able to steal it that way.
02:15:33.680 What a fucking odd concept, isn't that?
02:15:36.940 To a Canadian it is.
02:15:40.860 It's an odd concept.
02:15:43.500 That all of your coffers are in silver.
02:15:47.620 Or sorry, in gold.
02:15:51.160 Because I guess the political party doesn't believe in the system that they're running in whatsoever, or the banking system, that they feel the need to hold physical fucking gold.
02:16:01.780 Is it a stereotype, do you think, do you think they just got the fucking lucky charms?
02:16:09.120 Am I playing into an Irish stereotype here that fucking, they got me pot of gold, lad?
02:16:15.680 Maybe, maybe not.
02:16:19.520 But that's the system you live in.
02:16:22.080 I don't want anything to do with this fucking system.
02:16:25.340 Fuck this system.
02:16:26.780 Don't want to suck the tranny dick?
02:16:28.440 Boom, there goes all your money.
02:16:29.520 Like, Carney's all for this agenda.
02:16:33.840 His kid is in Tran Cell.
02:16:38.540 I saw one of those bright-eyed, starlet fucking influencers, just like a young blonde going into Hollywood all bright-eyed, or a deer in the headlights, talking about how,
02:16:51.840 Stop attacking Mark Carney's kid!
02:16:54.160 Nobody's attacking Mark Carney's kid.
02:16:57.860 Nobody physically or anything.
02:16:59.520 What they're doing is they're attacking the character of Mark Carney.
02:17:05.540 Because you allowed your kid to become a Tran Cell.
02:17:11.740 You know what, he wrote a fucking book.
02:17:14.200 I tried to order it online, and they tried to sell me a Kindle.
02:17:17.400 I'm like, I'm not paying $25 to read a fucking Mark Carney's book.
02:17:22.200 I want a physical copy of it for that amount.
02:17:28.180 But, oh.
02:17:31.320 Tran Cell is my own, is a word of my own making.
02:17:36.200 It's a Derekism.
02:17:36.920 It's like an incel, you know, the people that don't get laid, and they're going to go out and hurt people because of it.
02:17:45.760 Well, this is a Tran Cell.
02:17:47.000 They're not getting laid because they fucking did that to themselves.
02:17:50.880 So they're going to lose their shit when they figure it out.
02:17:53.020 When they become of age, and they figure out what happened to them, there's going to be a Tran Cell army.
02:18:01.040 That's why Game of Thrones can really be looked at as what's happening in the world.
02:18:05.880 For its time, anyway.
02:18:10.460 The eunuch army.
02:18:12.240 There's going to be an army of angry teenagers that cut their junk off, and they want to fucking...
02:18:17.740 They're going to be school shooters.
02:18:19.900 Not just school shooters.
02:18:21.160 They'll be like church shooters and fucking...
02:18:24.320 They're going to shoot a lot of stuff.
02:18:27.900 I bet Mark Carney's kid ends up being a Tran Cell shooter.
02:18:32.280 Yeah, it's going to happen.
02:18:37.080 Where is his family?
02:18:38.280 Why is he just fucking campaigning around by himself?
02:18:45.520 Where's his wife?
02:18:47.440 Has he got a George Bush's wife-looking wife?
02:18:51.840 Or what do you think?
02:18:54.320 What happened to your kid that ended up being a tranny, Mark?
02:18:57.660 What'd you do?
02:19:02.280 It's like Dean Blundell's kid.
02:19:03.980 What happened to that kid?
02:19:10.840 Right?
02:19:11.460 Was Janice Irwin raising your children?
02:19:14.420 You're not pissed off a little bit as a father at all?
02:19:18.060 Like, was something else the primary focus in your life that you didn't...
02:19:23.280 Didn't think masculinity was important in your son's life?
02:19:28.080 You're just going to cut their dick off?
02:19:29.700 Wait, is Mark Carney's kid a biological girl or boy?
02:19:37.120 Does he wear a strap on or did he cut one off?
02:19:47.700 Not sure what kind it is.
02:19:49.940 Yeah, yeah, Cardi probably said it to Epstein Island for training.
02:19:59.180 The Island Boys.
02:20:02.420 What are you doing over there?
02:20:10.320 Yep.
02:20:11.760 There you go.
02:20:12.400 Here's the average Canadian.
02:20:14.560 What they think of politics.
02:20:17.080 It sums up exactly what I was talking about.
02:20:19.940 How you're smart, everything you're doing is for the right reasons, and the people you're against are stupid and retarded.
02:20:31.160 And you're a good person, but they're stupid and retarded.
02:20:33.980 And that basically sums up Canadian politics.
02:20:36.980 This Canadian election is literally an IQ test.
02:20:39.580 Here's what I mean.
02:20:40.360 There's a common sense vote to make things better, and there's another vote to keep making things worse.
02:20:44.940 All you have to do is look at the last 10 years and see what has happened and then make a decision.
02:20:50.200 And the people who can think critically and think clearly will look at that and say,
02:20:54.220 No, I do not want a worse economy, more taxes, an open border, a weak Canadian dollar, worse health care, worse everything.
02:21:02.960 They're like, I want something different.
02:21:04.840 They're going to vote conservative.
02:21:05.920 So this time around, it's not like, oh, which way is it?
02:21:09.180 It's like more of the same, because Mark Carney is literally the financial advisor of Trudeau for the last five years.
02:21:14.740 He literally told him to do the stuff that ruined the country, and he's going to do it again.
02:21:18.720 It's not about, oh, this person's a little better.
02:21:20.620 They have this idea.
02:21:21.220 They said this.
02:21:21.620 It's like, no, it's a common sense vote.
02:21:24.100 The people with common sense are voting conservative so we can try to get this country back on track.
02:21:28.840 And the people who don't are the same people who thought five boosters was a good idea and tattletale it on their neighbors during COVID.
02:21:35.960 It's a pretty easy choice.
02:21:43.480 What you don't get is that you're all of the same people.
02:21:48.000 You're all falling under the spell.
02:21:51.640 But everybody comes right down to the black or white dichotomy, doesn't it?
02:21:55.180 It's like, well, the people that are voting conservative, or this, this, and this, and everybody doing that, or this, this, and this.
02:22:02.320 Fucking idiots.
02:22:07.920 Just got to get the libs out, right?
02:22:09.560 We want a better economy.
02:22:10.860 And Trudeau wasn't giving us a good economy, so obviously Pierre will.
02:22:16.080 Right?
02:22:16.300 Pierre has to give us a good economy.
02:22:17.960 Despite the fact that he's signed up to all the international organizations that his very party signed him up to in perpetuity,
02:22:29.040 so he's going to have to abide by them.
02:22:37.100 Politicians are under no obligation to tell you the truth.
02:22:40.600 Same with police.
02:22:49.640 They don't have, they can lie to you all they want.
02:23:02.860 Really sucks to actually watch it these days.
02:23:04.860 We're, by voting, you're advocating for a system that's, will take your money.
02:23:16.500 If you don't agree with what they say.
02:23:18.980 Christian Freeland was borrowing billions of dollars for corporations to invest in corporations that don't exist.
02:23:27.340 And they could just do it.
02:23:30.620 Nobody questions them.
02:23:31.940 Nobody anything.
02:23:32.940 It's just...
02:23:34.860 What about that other one, Climate Barbie?
02:23:39.500 Where did all the money go that she borrowed?
02:23:41.920 Or that she stole?
02:23:44.080 Doesn't fucking matter.
02:23:55.480 You're giving them agency by allowing them, or by registering to vote, you're giving them agency to borrow money on your behalf.
02:24:04.860 That you are indebted to pay.
02:24:12.180 Uh, what do we got for you?
02:24:15.380 Who wants to see a jeep get eated?
02:24:18.820 We all do.
02:24:19.500 It's funny because I'm on all these trucking forums and stuff like that where I watch all these sorts of accidents.
02:24:38.000 One of the biggest arguments from Indians about not wearing work boots while they drive.
02:24:49.480 They just wear the flip-flops because that's all they need.
02:24:51.560 Who's going to drive for 12 hours wearing fucking work boots, right?
02:24:57.440 Despite that, it is policy.
02:25:02.760 I'm sure it is.
02:25:03.620 It's protective gear.
02:25:05.420 Getting in and out of your truck, the load, working on it, any of that stuff.
02:25:09.440 You have to have bare minimum, like a safety vest, glasses, gloves, and steel toe shoes.
02:25:15.840 This is like a basic fucking principle in construction for women's, for CSA, TSSA, is boots.
02:25:25.240 They were making you wear boots long before you had to wear the fucking goggles or the gloves or the high-vis.
02:25:31.440 Boots were always a thing.
02:25:33.060 Always boots.
02:25:34.240 Boots, boots, boots.
02:25:35.140 But these fucking is flip-flops.
02:25:36.840 So, they deserve this shit.
02:25:53.520 Even Mexico has been feeling the trickle-down effect of PPE, personal protective equipment.
02:26:00.760 Why?
02:26:05.240 Because there's programs for people, like, people burn through a pair of boots in, like, a year sometimes.
02:26:10.040 And they'll send their boots down to Mexico.
02:26:13.420 So, they can have safe toes, too.
02:26:16.020 Because when you're running across the border to get into a different country, you want all your toes.
02:26:23.800 Ozzy, what's up?
02:26:25.380 I'm going to pay it.
02:26:26.300 You've been dying to get my attention.
02:26:28.120 So, here.
02:26:28.620 Here it is.
02:26:29.280 What's up?
02:26:29.720 What's up?
02:26:30.760 You coming up?
02:26:33.380 You saying hi?
02:26:35.380 Look.
02:26:37.120 Say hi to everybody.
02:26:38.720 You got my attention.
02:26:40.720 You going to bed?
02:26:44.100 Or you just want to be here?
02:26:46.780 Say hi.
02:26:53.420 That's it.
02:26:56.320 Unless you're going to have a beer with me, fucking go lay down.
02:27:00.760 Jensie.
02:27:02.880 It's good to see you're on a roll again, Derek.
02:27:05.820 Always trying to refrain on your stream.
02:27:09.300 What do you mean, refrain?
02:27:10.980 I'm not on a roll, either.
02:27:14.060 Shitting on stuff, basically.
02:27:15.520 That's why I wanted to kind of separate this from the actual interviewing of airs.
02:27:23.740 I don't fucking fuck up his name every time.
02:27:29.820 It's not Avril.
02:27:31.280 Avril.
02:27:32.140 That's better.
02:27:34.020 He's got a real English name.
02:27:35.200 I should be using that, but that's his fucking on-screen name.
02:27:41.300 A couple other small videos, I suppose.
02:27:47.900 Here's all that time you guys spend training in the gym, getting ready to fight people.
02:27:52.760 Does it really matter?
02:27:53.580 Russians have a different kind of sense of humor.
02:28:13.780 You guys ever see a UFC fighter beating on somebody that was calling them a goyim?
02:28:20.760 Tell me, am I a good or am I a good brother?
02:28:26.400 Don't talk, don't talk to him, be a professional.
02:28:29.520 Please Will, be a professional.
02:28:32.020 Just do this.
02:28:33.000 Do that in the MMA way, yeah?
02:28:35.020 Let your MMA do the work.
02:28:37.540 Bye.
02:28:38.420 Bye.
02:28:39.500 Yes Will, you're going to get a sloppage.
02:28:41.260 Sorry, no.
02:28:43.080 30 seconds, open up a little sloppage.
02:28:45.660 Open up, Will.
02:28:46.700 Break clear, just open up and warm your hands away.
02:28:49.080 Go, go, go, open up.
02:28:50.760 You're going to get a sloppage.
02:28:53.320 Open up.
02:28:54.420 You're going to get a sloppage.
02:28:55.560 You're going to get a sloppage.
02:28:58.520 That's funny.
02:28:59.960 Beating a guy in the head.
02:29:03.000 Hey, am I a goyim?
02:29:04.920 Am I a brother?
02:29:06.460 Boom, boom, boom.
02:29:08.680 It's kind of like what, what's his name?
02:29:14.500 Khabib did to McGregor.
02:29:16.120 I want to see McGregor, just fuck it, run for prime minister there, or president, whatever
02:29:21.560 Ireland has, go for it.
02:29:22.900 Hey, try it.
02:29:24.480 And then when you realize that nothing is going to go your way and they're going to blackmail
02:29:28.340 you and fucking extort you and threaten you, and it's just a den of bloody fucking thieves
02:29:35.600 going on.
02:29:38.920 Make yourself king.
02:29:40.040 And then when you make yourself king, that's when things will go down.
02:29:46.820 Being voted in, you can be voted out.
02:29:49.460 You got to become king.
02:29:53.580 Take power.
02:29:57.980 McGregor's the type of guy that might do it.
02:29:59.620 I know, I know he got fucking forced into saying lockdowns are a good thing and everybody needs
02:30:05.840 to get it, um, injected, but a guy can grow from there.
02:30:10.580 He was being blackmailed as well.
02:30:13.180 All right.
02:30:13.740 He had a couple of little weird rapey charges or something like that, that he was trying
02:30:17.260 to get out of.
02:30:17.720 And they said, Hey, if you just, you know, tell us about the lockdowns will go.
02:30:21.080 So he might be compromised, but regardless, you won't be able to tell him because until
02:30:25.780 he becomes king.
02:30:26.520 He needs to do that.
02:30:29.760 And I think if we've got a shot at a king in Canada, it's Devin Larratt.
02:30:36.380 He's got the charisma.
02:30:37.980 He's got the battlefield experience.
02:30:40.380 He's got the social capital right now.
02:30:43.000 He dresses like a bum.
02:30:44.820 So everybody thinks he's got like some sort of higher calling like we were talking about
02:30:49.880 earlier.
02:30:53.360 Yeah.
02:30:53.840 Larratt for King.
02:31:00.860 Cause I don't think that guy would make rat, you know, really stupid decisions.
02:31:05.200 He would think about each one cause he'd actually care about who it affects.
02:31:12.800 Yeah.
02:31:14.820 Devin for King.
02:31:15.660 We'll see.
02:31:18.220 Do we have anything else for you guys?
02:31:19.880 I had some, is it racist?
02:31:21.760 I don't know if I fucking went through those before or not.
02:31:24.660 Did we?
02:31:34.580 Oh yeah.
02:31:35.100 We did those in the last stream.
02:31:36.680 I don't have anything new there.
02:31:42.520 No.
02:31:42.880 That's all we got for tonight, folks.
02:31:46.220 That's it.
02:31:46.880 That's all.
02:31:48.760 Unless you guys have something in the chat you're talking about.
02:31:51.560 I got nothing else.
02:31:57.500 Everybody catch the eclipse the other night?
02:32:05.520 From a certain angle, you could see it.
02:32:07.380 Uh, it looked like devil horns.
02:32:14.800 Interesting stuff.
02:32:16.200 I like that conversation earlier.
02:32:17.800 I'll probably have a, a longer one with him when I'm more prepared further down the line
02:32:22.820 with, uh, with our private members association.
02:32:28.080 Cause that seems to be the way to go.
02:32:29.620 Private members associations.
02:32:31.620 And I know other people aren't seeing the benefit from it, but if you have people sign
02:32:49.120 up to a private members association, whether or not they're paying dues or anything like
02:32:54.400 that, there is a certain amount of power you can talk about a certain things.
02:33:05.500 Yeah.
02:33:05.960 I need more.
02:33:08.800 I need more.
02:33:09.720 It's always the case.
02:33:10.900 We need more to do more good.
02:33:12.500 What people need to be doing is buying up the land that I'm sending them.
02:33:19.660 I don't know who who's looking for land up here.
02:33:22.520 Cause this is where I'm starting the Northern resistance.
02:33:25.400 Who's looking for land.
02:33:31.600 Cause there's a, uh, a 70 acre farm for show for sale for two 20.
02:33:37.040 Um, there's all kinds of shit up here for sale, but I say preparation meets opportunity.
02:33:47.100 Who's got it.
02:33:57.980 Alex woods, man, advertised to some sheets, go in like advertise it to them for 20 grand
02:34:06.560 more because you got to have some wiggle room with cheats.
02:34:10.460 So they got to think that they talked you down just to make them feel better about it.
02:34:18.160 And where, where, where does one sell a house these days?
02:34:21.500 Alex, you, you strike me as the type of guy that would try and do it without an agent.
02:34:26.300 Is that what's holding you back?
02:34:27.600 Is nobody's coming through to look at it?
02:34:29.420 Are you not listed on any sites?
02:34:31.400 Inquiring minds want to know.
02:34:36.560 You could buy two of those, eh?
02:34:51.620 You should.
02:34:52.220 There's plenty for sale.
02:34:55.900 Why don't you do it, man?
02:34:57.780 Don't just talk.
02:34:58.740 You got to do.
02:34:59.460 That's what's so frustrating about this entire thing.
02:35:05.400 I've said it before.
02:35:06.840 So you have to put up with people that only talk.
02:35:10.580 You have to sift through all the amount of people that just talk on the internet.
02:35:15.520 And there's a few that actually do and you can see them doing it.
02:35:19.160 And it's fucking beautiful when you see it.
02:35:21.500 I've got a whole bunch of videos saved from the project we've been working at next door.
02:35:30.360 And when that's all finished and buttoned up and I can go through it, I can show you what we did there.
02:35:38.140 There's a lot, a lot of work.
02:35:42.260 The work's never going to end on this site, that's for sure.
02:35:45.380 There will always be another cabin to go up somewhere.
02:35:57.440 You know, I just haven't thought about it now, too.
02:36:00.220 I should probably get a hold of Dubs and Raj to find out their situation.
02:36:04.760 You guys are probably still watching, but...
02:36:08.940 Wouldn't mind getting a little info on what's happening there.
02:36:15.380 Anyways, yeah, we'll call it a night.
02:36:18.400 I don't have any other racist stuff to show you guys.
02:36:21.940 I wish I did.
02:36:30.540 Jenstein says,
02:36:31.680 Your guest had a key word, organization.
02:36:34.360 Yeah.
02:36:35.600 That's the biggest problem.
02:36:37.740 It absolutely is.
02:36:39.040 It absolutely is.
02:36:45.380 I'll admit that us, Goyim, are bad at organizing.
02:36:57.460 That's why usually when somebody has a YouTube channel that's successful and whatever information,
02:37:02.080 there's some sort of Jew that swoops in to manage everything and then everything goes smoothly for them.
02:37:07.600 It's a fault.
02:37:08.660 We've got to work on it.
02:37:09.520 We need organization, school, mandatory school.
02:37:16.360 Organizational skills, mandatory school.
02:37:19.140 Not just occupational skills.
02:37:21.320 Organizational skills.
02:37:25.260 Jenstein says,
02:37:26.180 I was shocked the tour happened.
02:37:27.480 I know.
02:37:29.220 I know.
02:37:31.380 It was the women.
02:37:33.040 The women organized better than the fucking men.
02:37:35.300 But you need more married couples with less things to do with kids that are in college.
02:37:46.520 Or no kids at all.
02:37:49.580 Anyways, that's it for tonight, everybody.
02:37:52.020 Thank you for coming out.
02:37:53.580 I hope you enjoyed the conversation.
02:37:55.080 I'm going to try and split it up into two different videos.
02:37:57.140 Because, yeah, because that's the way I want to organize it.
02:38:06.660 Anyways, guys, let's hope fucking all this snow goes away soon.
02:38:11.920 It's driving me insane.
02:38:17.340 Alright, guys.
02:38:18.360 Have a good night.
02:38:19.940 Raj, I'm going to call you through Telegram as soon as I'm done here.
02:38:27.140 Peace out, everybody.
02:38:29.720 Thanks, Gen Z.