Dominion Society of Canada - June 05, 2026


Canada at the Remigration Summit 26 | Long Live Canada Ep. 11


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 53 minutes

Words per minute

166.66422

Word count

18,858

Sentence count

193


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

In this episode of Long Live Canada, the crew debriefs their trip to the Remigration Summit in Porto, Portugal, and the messes they dealt with on the way back home. We also talk about some of the things we've been up to, and what we're looking forward to in 2020.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
00:00:00.000 Let's get started.
00:00:30.000 Thank you.
00:01:00.000 Thank you.
00:01:30.000 We'll be right back.
00:02:00.000 Thank you.
00:02:30.880 Hello and welcome to another episode of Long Live Canada.
00:02:34.960 We're back, episode 11, a week off last week, jet setting around the globe.
00:02:40.940 But we're back here in Ottawa, Ontario, back in Canada, a year older, a year wiser.
00:02:47.680 It's over, we hit the big 3-0, but I think we have another big year ahead of us.
00:02:53.420 We have another fun episode ahead of us today.
00:02:55.700 We have a few topics we might touch on, but the big thing is I want to debrief our experiences
00:03:02.740 abroad. We were away last week for the Remigration Summit in Porto, Portugal. I was out there
00:03:09.700 not alone. I was with my colleagues, my close friends, Ken Jones and Greg Wycliffe. And both
00:03:16.660 of them, it's not just a solo stream tonight, you guys. We got lots of questions. Where's Ken?
00:03:21.080 where's greg well tonight we got the whole squad on for a re-migration summit debrief uh so we i
00:03:29.720 don't want to take up too much of time let's get these guys right in here bring in the whole crew
00:03:34.840 ken greg how are you guys doing tonight hey not too bad buddy i'm feeling good daniel i'm feeling
00:03:42.440 good happy belated birthday we got to celebrate it with you in porto portugal i mean what a better
00:03:49.320 time right yeah yeah yeah a nice little a nice little trip to to mark the big 3-0 but greg
00:03:55.320 you're just you're just getting back today you landed uh just just moments ago no yeah landed
00:04:00.840 today uh i posted a little bit about it on twitter how there was um you know an indian woman with
00:04:07.160 her two kids ahead of me and i like i don't like to post stuff like this i don't go out of my way
00:04:12.120 to say hey look what this indian did or look what that indian did but like for like you know
00:04:16.200 it just happened to be right in front of me in this case uh just you know this indian woman and
00:04:21.000 her kids just kind of left a big mess the kids were like drawing on the uh on the the pull down
00:04:26.520 trays and you know they're at first i'm like they're just they're kids like whatever sure like
00:04:31.720 they didn't she didn't really say much when they were drawing on it but uh there was also just like
00:04:36.200 a bunch of trash left uh that's when i got that's when i got upset i'm like they actually just left
00:04:41.720 a bunch of trash on the left there's like a plastic casings from like a child's toy uh they're just
00:04:47.820 like left on the floor there so like i guess they open some child toy and they're just gonna left
00:04:51.520 the plastic on the floor and it's like the stewardess the the flight attendant comes around
00:04:55.880 to ask if you have trash like multiple times in the eight hour flight and it's like you didn't
00:04:59.960 think to ever give the trash to the flight attendant anyway so i uh i thought i'd snap a
00:05:07.040 and you know feed it into the uh the rage bait algorithm rhythm on twitter um and you know sure
00:05:12.800 at one point it's just it's just a dirty row on an airplane not a big deal greg but what if every
00:05:17.820 single row was like this you know like and that and that's why i think what we're doing is is
00:05:24.180 important you know what i mean i don't want i don't you know this is we can't have good things
00:05:28.380 if we just like kind of let this type of stuff slide but yes i'm now back in canada what a
00:05:32.860 welcoming uh return also the uber driver didn't smell good but so cliche welcome back to toronto
00:05:40.500 so what a more appropriate welcome to to canada than dealing with the uh messes of our of our
00:05:46.660 indian friends yeah yeah ken you got some new merch on there i should say i do i do i kind of
00:05:59.020 like the the inverted color one more in a way. I don't know.
00:06:07.000 Yeah, yeah. A good reminder. We do have that new merch line
00:06:11.320 dropped a couple weeks back the spring merch line a few new
00:06:13.960 products. We got the long live can to have that Greg's sporting
00:06:17.540 there. We got a couple new colorways for the for the hoodies
00:06:22.220 the t shirts and then of course the ever popular stickers the
00:06:27.340 ever popular stickers that you might see coming up throughout your community.
00:06:31.520 So a good reminder, you can head over to shop.dominionsociety.ca
00:06:35.840 to get your own, to sport the newest lines of merch there.
00:06:41.720 I got a compliment today on my hat.
00:06:44.020 There was like this older guy the way home back to Toronto.
00:06:46.900 He's like, oh, I really like your hat.
00:06:48.240 I'm like, thank you.
00:06:49.180 I'm thank you.
00:06:49.920 You can check out the websites, dominionsociety.ca.
00:06:53.260 He was picking up his luggage and I gave him a card also on the way out.
00:06:57.340 but nice nice i gotta i also got a compliment on that hat on the way home as well and then a big
00:07:02.460 thank you to brand d-u-u-u-u-y-t uh for that ten dollar super chat we appreciate we appreciate all
00:07:09.180 this support and we we need it we need to make back uh some some cash after that uh trip out
00:07:14.940 to portugal uh so so let's get right into that guys uh we we we all left last week we spent about
00:07:21.100 a week out there in in in portugal uh in porto portugal exploring the city um attending the
00:07:28.860 conference uh ken i think this was a your first trip abroad what did you think uh what did you
00:07:34.380 think what are your candid thoughts on your on your first uh trip to europe yes yes it was my
00:07:41.020 first time out of the country uh well asterisk i've been to uh niagara falls new york once for
00:07:50.620 30 minutes before for my dad to pick up a box of nails and we drove right back so very uneventful
00:07:59.180 but uh yeah this is my first time leaving the country and uh it was definitely nice i mean
00:08:05.420 where else um to go other than europe of course and um it was nice being in a beautiful catholic
00:08:14.860 country lots to see uh the food was amazing the people were amazing for the most part um but yeah
00:08:24.860 it was all around a pretty good time yeah yeah and what did you think greg i know you spent the
00:08:29.980 last couple of days uh doing a bit more exploring before your before your uh flight a little bit
00:08:34.780 later than ours yeah no i love i loved it but but i do want to go back to ken because i you know
00:08:39.980 you rented the car that like manual transmission yes and uh one of my lights went off here but um
00:08:49.340 that's like like you you bared the roads in these like european towns in a manual car with like a
00:08:56.780 lot of hills like that's like no split like you're really you're really under playing you're being
00:09:01.180 really modest of like how like intense that is like that like that's a big part of the european
00:09:06.940 like you know touring experience especially your first time so yeah yeah no i mean what other way
00:09:13.020 to uh to get your uh feet wet in the european experience uh i daily drive a manual car so it
00:09:21.660 wasn't a huge adjustment but um the roads definitely were um i'd say like 10 minutes
00:09:29.660 after getting out of the rental place i almost got like t-boned by some dude and i was like okay
00:09:37.500 well i guess uh it's almost like toronto driving like very aggressive um lots of roundabouts uh i
00:09:46.840 i do live close to kitchener ontario which is kind of known for its roundabouts uh so you know
00:09:53.940 kind of familiar with that but um just the road layouts is like where like what is this
00:10:01.780 uh where am i going now we're on cobblestone now we're not uh and then you know depending
00:10:08.580 which city you were it was like yeah like super steep inclines uh very narrow uh roads that you
00:10:16.660 wouldn't even think are roads which uh you know you have to go up people are honking at you
00:10:21.060 you've got a big rental sticker on the back of your cars people are like this this dickhead here
00:10:29.240 he's not even from here they're you know they're honking uh but it was fun it was fun uh i tried
00:10:35.960 to avoid the tolls uh as much as i could and that landed me on uh like a two-hour journey up and
00:10:43.440 down a mountain uh that was like a f1 uh like formula one track you know you're trying to go
00:10:50.960 the speed limit and be careful and of course you've got people just ripping it trying to pass
00:10:56.640 you and whatnot but uh it was fun nonetheless yeah yeah and you you floor you flew in and out
00:11:03.840 of lisbon so you did a little bit more uh exploring of the the the countryside then uh then we got to
00:11:10.000 yes yes i mean it worked out i uh i tried real hard to get some good price tickets and part of
00:11:17.040 the caveat to that was i wasn't landing in porto it was uh lisbon so i did get to i think uh
00:11:26.400 because they changed where the venue was and we had to kind of backtrack i probably drove across
00:11:32.240 portugal back and forth like twice but um not a very big country yeah yeah yeah it was it was fun
00:11:41.280 uh i you know i took the outskirts for half of it and then probably the tolls for the other half so
00:11:47.440 um rural portugal is quite the experience um but yeah yeah no lots of lots of driving uh inland
00:11:56.640 and uh the oceanfront so i got to see pretty much all of portugal isn't it crazy how you know the
00:12:03.120 drive from toronto to montreal is like most european countries you know like that distance
00:12:09.840 is like the entire you can you can you know drive across most european countries with uh
00:12:14.960 you know five to eight hours more or less um some only like a few some only a few but um
00:12:23.040 um yeah you asked earlier I I kind of toured I hung around for a few extra days it ended up being
00:12:28.320 uh like really good because I had not gotten a chance to interview Martin Sellner on camera
00:12:34.980 at Remigration Summit I got a lot of great interviews that I'm excited to post and we'll
00:12:39.160 be posting all sorts of vlog stuff as well documenting our trip but I didn't get Sellner
00:12:44.640 the day of and I was like dang uh thankfully I caught up with him a couple days later because I
00:12:49.500 i was still hanging around in porto so that was definitely worth it i also did a walking tour
00:12:54.540 i actually asked this is kind of like a life hack i think uh you use ai for your for your tour guide
00:13:02.780 you know i said you know tell me claude the historical significance of porto and like which
00:13:08.220 sites i need to see and of course like there's in any old european city you're going to have some
00:13:12.460 you know breathtaking cathedrals so i went to a three a few different cathedrals check those out
00:13:17.100 and i actually posted a video of one because it has like a crypts or like a catacombs of like
00:13:22.520 these like piles and piles and piles of bones of of people that they've buried over the years and
00:13:27.020 i related it to the residential school thing um but uh so yeah that was really yeah it was good
00:13:33.820 it was good had some good food as uh as ken mentioned a lot of good food there as well um
00:13:40.200 yeah big difference there there's not as much a like poison in the in the food out there it's all
00:13:46.400 especially when you're hitting the seafood fresh from fresh from the water uh very different uh
00:13:52.060 you immediately start feeling the the difference there uh but the the first day uh ken picked me
00:13:58.520 right up from the airport we went to to go peruse around the city center and we're walking around
00:14:02.900 and we're looking around and we're like these guys have an issue with immigration like i haven't seen
00:14:07.980 one indian all day these guys have a problem like where are all the people shooting up drugs and
00:14:14.460 fold it over on on fentanyl or whatever where's all the where's all the uh drug the broken crack
00:14:20.240 pipes and needles in the streets i did not see one needle the entire trip anywhere what are you
00:14:27.380 guys complaining about this is nothing this is nothing exactly it's like these guys think they
00:14:32.520 have a problem they wouldn't last a day in a canadian city uh another another huge super chat
00:14:38.280 here from a saskatchewan guy h2g 6999 nice keep up the great work gentlemen you are the voices of
00:14:46.300 many never capitulate never surrender thank you so much for the support thank you so much for the
00:14:50.980 huge super chat thank you saskatchewan guy thank you for the donation yeah yeah yeah so so like
00:14:58.140 instantly it was like these guys think they have a problem they don't know they don't know shit uh
00:15:03.440 we have to put up more on a daily basis than uh than we have to see more foreigners just walking
00:15:08.040 up and down the street than they see in a in a whole week i think and yeah and also just for
00:15:13.460 comparison what is it portugal the entire country is eight million is that do i have that right it's
00:15:20.000 something like that but you know there was a phenomenon very similar to toronto and our city
00:15:25.240 centers on a smaller scale in porto uber eats drivers the scooters the uber eats drivers
00:15:33.000 convenience store owners a lot of them are indian you know like uh that uh that was definitely the
00:15:38.240 same exact yeah also convenience store over owners and like tourist shop owners because
00:15:43.440 there's a lot of tourist shops everywhere especially in downtown porto that definitely
00:15:47.380 tracked almost exactly the same as here i would say but the city itself is beautiful it's a you
00:15:54.020 know it's an old european city you've got the the chaotic layout uh built you know before cars were
00:16:01.000 a thing so the streets are all uh not very efficiently laid out like you like you might
00:16:06.420 have here with the nice clean grid patterns and stuff like this completely chaotic different
00:16:10.520 layers and all all very hilly just beautiful european architecture that's something that we
00:16:17.000 were talking about there greg uh you can really tell the the kind of local character right in the
00:16:21.960 in the the buildings they don't have that like post-war kind of brutalist uh infrastructure
00:16:27.840 like is like is so common here in in Canada where like you can only see like the unique Canadian
00:16:33.500 architecture maybe in pockets of the older areas of the big cities like Montreal and in Toronto
00:16:39.080 uh you know crowded with massive towers and and very modern architecture that could be you know
00:16:46.180 from anywhere in the world uh it's very it's very clearly Portuguese pretty much everywhere we went
00:16:52.560 maybe some of the newer areas on the outskirts of towns you start to get that more modern
00:16:56.380 architecture but the the city center is so beautiful and so uh so so obviously portuguese
00:17:02.380 and character yeah and it's it's hard to put into words but you definitely feel that on a deeper
00:17:08.540 level you know it's not it's not like uh it's hard to articulate but there is something about
00:17:15.420 being in the kind of labyrinth of just concrete and glass and metal in toronto like it feels very
00:17:23.100 soulless and that's like you know it's hard to articulate the the impact that has on you but
00:17:27.660 you know when you're in a place like porto or one of these european cities that like
00:17:32.540 this place has such character you know and you can't help but just kind of like
00:17:36.060 have your your eyes are drawn around looking at things and uh you know it's it's pleasant
00:17:40.940 it's pleasant it's it makes the soul feel good yeah yeah yeah and i like just in in canada with
00:17:48.860 these soulless buildings compounded with the areas being filled with foreigners with no roots here
00:17:54.620 like it's so easy to to get detached from uh canadian identity uh our unique character
00:18:02.700 and so on whereas at least in these older cities that rootedness is all around you
00:18:07.980 um no matter where you go even if there are foreigners it's very still clear what the
00:18:12.140 portuguese character is so that's like we do have a unique challenge here uh with our cause
00:18:18.220 kind of in the new world in north america compared to with the much shallower roots compared to uh
00:18:24.780 in the european uh context it's a we have some unique challenges and that was very apparent
00:18:30.220 talking with some of our contemporaries from from all over europe and i guess just while we're
00:18:37.740 talking about the buildings i guess for us historically it would just kind of track along
00:18:41.740 the saint lawrence river right like like the older the building the higher up the saint lawrence
00:18:46.540 river like you know quebec city montreal and then what do you got kingston and like ottawa
00:18:54.300 but like as you kind of go up the river that's kind of reflects the sort of historical uh
00:19:01.740 settlements is that like a general generally accurate in terms of like like where the oldest
00:19:07.740 buildings and and settlements kind of tracks along the saint lawrence yeah yeah certainly
00:19:12.940 as the further west you go the newer the newer the infrastructure will be with the with the
00:19:17.100 unique exception i think being out further west uh in victoria which has a a much longer history
00:19:22.620 than than most of the space in between um sorry there's something that came up on my feet as well
00:19:31.740 it's related to this but uh integrity to um this guy uh daniel tate uh not related to the other
00:19:40.380 tapes but his name is daniel tate um he posted a video on integrity to people standing up for
00:19:45.740 sneaky d's so sneaky d's is like this popular uh kind of like music hangout dive that's on
00:19:54.780 the corner of like bathurst and college street it's definitely like an institution in terms of
00:19:59.420 being like a popular uh bar and like you know food spot and there's and there's all these like
00:20:05.180 gen xers like coming out of the woodwork to be like we need to defend sneaky d's and like it's
00:20:09.340 its legacy and blah blah blah blah blah and you know it's kind of like it's kind of you know
00:20:15.420 comparing that to like a catholic church in porto it's like you know like the sneaky d's versus like
00:20:20.380 this thing that's like 100 years old as you said like it is kind of a different challenge or like
00:20:25.500 we kind of need to take a maybe different approach or lean into whatever we can in terms of uh you
00:20:30.780 know like you said addressing the kind of shallower roots and and um yeah but just you know making it
00:20:37.180 match uh the cause that we're fighting in our country just one quick other point when i
00:20:43.020 interviewed dries van lagenhove uh back in the fall he said something that i thought was very
00:20:47.900 useful or like relevant which is like every like there is no right way to do nationalism
00:20:53.980 or re-migration or activism or anything it really depends on the country it's very specific to each
00:20:59.740 country whatever country you're in in whatever situation you're in so just something to keep in
00:21:05.820 mind yeah yeah absolutely uh so so i we got in there i was there for maybe uh six days there uh
00:21:15.580 and and you know as our as our regular viewers would know i was i was quite i was sick i was
00:21:20.300 sick leaving i was sick uh you guys got to listen to me uh coughing up along uh the entire trip so
00:21:27.180 i i didn't get to do so so much i was trying to play it easy so i could uh uh so i would be able
00:21:33.020 to to talk when it got to the actual conference so i didn't didn't didn't lose my voice there
00:21:38.460 uh so i didn't get to do too much exploring i i had to play it a bit lower key uh so i didn't get
00:21:44.860 to experience the city too much uh so the the big the big highlight for me was a meeting meeting uh
00:21:51.260 so many of our contemporaries you know we got to go out for dinner with some of the some of the
00:21:55.100 british lads uh in the re-migration space we got to meet uh uh angloid and and cal and some of those
00:22:03.020 some of those folks uh do some drinking do some eating with uh with our contemporaries it's uh
00:22:09.620 it's always interesting to to meet those people that you've known from from online uh but the the
00:22:16.760 big the big uh story there was the the actual conference itself uh so after we were there for
00:22:22.400 for a couple of days uh or i guess before that you guys got to sit down with a with a pretty uh
00:22:28.180 interesting uh uh figure in our movement you got to sit down for a longer interview i think we'll
00:22:34.580 have that coming out soon uh you guys want to tell us a bit about a little bit about that i
00:22:40.100 missed out on it because i was uh i was i was sleeping trying not to try not to die get too
00:22:46.740 sick uh so what did you guys get up to without me we myself and ken interviewed uncle jared jared
00:22:56.660 taylor jared taylor touched my red ensign guys he was holding it he was holding it and everything
00:23:04.040 unfortunately it's the one with the red leaves whatever we'll get him next time or we'll change
00:23:07.460 it with ai but um no uh you know me and ken met up with him downtown porto set up the cameras
00:23:15.260 chatted with him for i think about an hour and a half uh we got the multi multiple camera angles
00:23:20.720 going i think it went pretty well in terms of the conversation what did you think ken what was the
00:23:26.140 experience like for you yeah yeah it was well I mean it was amazing being able to meet Jared and
00:23:34.380 I mean I think the interview went pretty good I think some of our off-camera conversations were
00:23:43.080 also pretty pretty interesting and what a phenomenal phenomenal guy I can't say enough
00:23:52.220 good things about him his demeanor you know just talking with such an intellectual uh man on the
00:23:59.280 subject who's put in as much work as he has uh you know i i hopefully look forward to uh seeing
00:24:07.200 him again in the future as it was quite an insightful uh experience yeah and i feel like
00:24:13.920 that was sort of a theme of of our trip or of our visit um it was so valuable to get to connect
00:24:21.540 you know face to face with people who have been doing this for a lot longer than we have
00:24:25.940 and in many respects facing a lot more of the nonsense the resistance the highs the lows of
00:24:33.020 of the you know when you're pushing this stuff which is you know um nationalism for your country
00:24:40.140 representing european identity um and it's definitely cool to see how excited jared is
00:24:47.320 because he's been doing this for i think he said 36 years and he says that he's never been more
00:24:53.760 excited in his life just because there's so many like young good-looking people who are
00:24:58.460 you know finally on board with what he's been preaching for literally decades so uh you know
00:25:04.140 there's there was moments at the remigration summit where i'm like seeing these great speeches
00:25:07.640 and i'm like man jared must be loving this you know he must be like like loving this uh what's
00:25:12.400 going down here so yeah yeah he's watched that the movement has transformed from something like very
00:25:18.260 very small very fringe in the in the kind of corners to something much more mainstream some
00:25:23.940 some much more professional and i think that was really epitomized by by the conference we got to
00:25:29.420 enjoy and i think this is a small victory in itself uh this post we got we got jared taylor
00:25:36.320 red ensign posting we got him carrying the american the yank jared taylor holding the
00:25:43.840 the loyalist flag and uh and uh you know promoting uh the the red ensign and canadian roots so i
00:25:51.360 thought that was that was very cool uh in and of itself uh i got to meet jared briefly there
00:25:58.880 at the conference and i and i got the chance to make him an honorary member of the dominion society
00:26:04.480 not a full member. He's not a Canadian after all. But I did give him one of our iconic Dominion
00:26:11.920 Society pins and made him an honorary member of our organization, as well as a few others that
00:26:17.440 we got to meet throughout the conference. So very cool to meet Jared, literally a titan of this
00:26:24.260 movement, involved longer than I've been alive. So very, very, very cool to meet them there in
00:26:33.500 person. And every time during the interview, that he said
00:26:37.040 white, I got chills. I was like, Oh, my God. Oh, my God.
00:26:44.780 We'll have to add a white counter to the to the to the
00:26:48.680 when we were editing it before we post
00:26:53.780 not very, very sweet guy, though. Very great story. Very,
00:26:56.720 very, very intelligent. It was a good interview.
00:26:59.420 yeah yeah looking forward to seeing it i haven't i haven't i haven't got to see the footage yet so
00:27:05.640 uh looking forward to seeing that just like i'm sure everyone else is
00:27:09.520 uh so that was a nice little like uh teaser there a lead up to the to the big day uh we also had a
00:27:16.480 nice little lunch there with some of our contemporaries from from uh from norway from
00:27:20.560 england uh we got to tell them the story of the dominion society how we're doing things
00:27:25.460 uh our kind of unique model uh that we're using to bring this movement to to canada uh folks
00:27:31.960 were very interested on our kind of unique situation here and between the the factors
00:27:38.260 of the new world and our kind of uh our our our strategy to kind of rapidly accelerate the
00:27:44.360 movement here because we are so far behind what's going on in in europe but that was all leading up
00:27:50.160 the to the big day uh so so uh let's uh let's tell them the story of the the actual conference
00:27:56.960 um so that take place about halfway through our trip uh we had to drive all the way down from
00:28:02.480 porto the the the um the conference was in in porto it was uh you know almost two hours outside
00:28:09.600 of porto which is like you know half the country uh so a nice little road trip down uh i i guess
00:28:17.040 there were some technical difficulties with some with some of the buses uh things were a little bit
00:28:21.920 late uh the sign-in process wasn't so smooth but that gave us an opportunity to to to do some
00:28:28.320 milling about uh right as we entered the uh the premises right as we got to the venue uh there
00:28:34.720 was lots of media milling about uh you know cnn politico uh a few of them were coming up
00:28:41.360 i did a couple interviews myself they were very interested in uh that the canadians were there
00:28:47.840 uh we were a bit of an unexpected uh bunch and i i think ken was doing a good job of looking
00:28:54.560 remarkably canadian uh standing out uh with his with his classic uh hockey bro flow uh
00:29:05.600 uh uh standing out like a sore thumb bringing us uh lots of attention yes the canadians have arrived
00:29:14.240 yes next time uh i have to get a jean jacket suit made or something like that
00:29:22.640 whole canadian tuxedo double down double down europe is being put on notice
00:29:27.520 and then uh i mean one of the the most exciting moments for for me was uh right off the start
00:29:43.440 there uh we got we got the chance to to meet martin selner um he he saw us as soon as we
00:29:49.760 arrived and he clocked us and came over to to introduce himself and have a chat uh so that was
00:29:55.200 a very uh important moment for for myself as i've mentioned a few times uh martin's a big inspiration
00:30:01.920 for for myself personally um and has had a huge influence over uh our overall strategy and tactics
00:30:08.480 behind the the dominion society so we we've talked a few times uh online and behind the scenes but
00:30:13.760 to finally get to to shake his hand and meet him in person uh was a very exciting very gratifying
00:30:19.200 kind of full circle moment uh for me you know almost a year after we we launched the the society
00:30:24.780 now now we're here we're we're with the big dogs we're meeting the the godfather of remigration
00:30:31.180 himself uh so that was that was that was very cool for me uh for me personally i i got i got
00:30:38.040 a got a selfie with the with the big guy himself uh he he is a very uh interesting inspiring guy
00:30:46.120 uh he's he's been through it all he's been uh you know the foot the foot soldier on the ground
00:30:51.180 doing activism now he's you know launching launching think tanks and and kind of taking a
00:30:56.920 bigger picture kind of perspective on on things so to be able to talk with him and share uh our
00:31:04.100 experiences but also to have him uh give us such positive feedback uh how impressed he's been with
00:31:09.980 with our our with our organization with our content and and so on was was uh was very
00:31:16.220 satisfying for for me uh for me personally yeah and to add to that it was really reassuring daniel
00:31:25.580 and orifl uh to see you know martin see you right away and like come shake your hand when we first
00:31:31.180 got there because you know i have a certain perspective on dominion society and what we're
00:31:36.380 doing in canada and how it you know plays into what we're trying to accomplish here but to have
00:31:40.860 like international figures who have been doing this for a long time like recognize demeaning
00:31:45.340 society and yourself and like obviously they're following along with what we're doing uh that was
00:31:49.740 very reassuring to know um to kind of see that validation from people who have been doing this
00:31:54.620 for a long time so that was uh it was a good feeling yeah yeah for sure especially because
00:32:01.420 like we've uh we've kind of taken a lot of his teachings and kind of institutionalized them into
00:32:05.660 our organization from the very start uh to have him to have him recognize that and say to give
00:32:10.460 him his kind of to give us his kind of seal of approval uh it means we're on the right track i
00:32:15.660 think it means we're on the right track so he said he was very impressed with the the canadians he
00:32:20.460 he said he he's not impressed with anyone in america right now but he's very impressed with
00:32:27.100 another w in itself we always like the all that over our american neighbors we're doing things
00:32:33.420 right the canadian identitarians understand this movement understand remigration understand what
00:32:39.180 we need to do to to to advance remigration in canada better than better than any of the the
00:32:45.020 guys going on down south so uh another big another big w uh but from then we we uh we we finally got
00:32:55.820 to go into the the conference it was a it was a beautiful event it was a beautiful venue uh there
00:33:00.940 in in rural portugal a beautiful little uh restaurant resort type type thing uh i i thought
00:33:07.660 they had organized things very very effectively it was a very professional event uh it was
00:33:13.740 completely run by volunteers they say but uh everything was was very well thought out uh
00:33:20.060 like right on the entrance i thought the it was pretty hilarious you had the uh all the people
00:33:25.420 kind of managing the crowd control and guiding people into the event they had their them dressed
00:33:29.500 as a pilots and stewardesses uh so we it was like we were getting right on re-migration airlines
00:33:37.060 right from the right from the start uh so i thought that was a a nice touch uh but what
00:33:42.460 what did you guys think about the event overall what were your what were your big takeaways
00:33:45.840 i mean i thought it was great as you said from the moment we got there just the aesthetics of
00:33:53.240 it all were quite pleasing. I'm not sure exactly what the original venue looked like, but as a
00:34:00.960 contingency venue, this one seemed to be pretty, pretty good. So aside from that, just like all
00:34:08.980 the branding aesthetics were good. I found the way the it was laid out was very professional.
00:34:15.520 You know, kind of how they had the speaking area and then the more networking and kind of
00:34:21.280 refreshments area was well laid out had some green space uh all around you know great i think they
00:34:28.800 did a really good job on the av stuff like the setup for the um the speaking you know like the
00:34:35.860 audio was good and then aside from the actual venue setup i found that their videographers and
00:34:43.520 whatnot were just so fucking locked in and doing a really good job uh you know i was very keen to
00:34:51.780 observe you know kind of how they were operating considering uh i do a lot of uh videography and
00:34:58.940 stuff uh unlike the scuffed setup tonight i am very tired i like i just got my phone up
00:35:07.760 And I'm here, I'm here. But yeah, like I was just taking a look at kind of how the rigs were set up and how they operate as a team. I'm pretty impressed with the content that they got out of the night. And yeah, like there's a lot of takeaways that I think we'll be applying to DomCon 2026.
00:35:31.260 not that we didn't have a good one plan to begin with,
00:35:34.580 but I think this one kind of inspired us
00:35:36.740 to take it to the next level.
00:35:40.640 So that's kind of a big takeaway that I got from the event.
00:35:47.100 Yeah, for sure.
00:35:48.020 It was kind of perfectly timed, to be honest.
00:35:50.560 I haven't been to a ton of conferences in the past,
00:35:54.820 definitely not like this.
00:35:56.800 I've been to a couple of more smaller training conferences,
00:35:59.300 to have a full-on like speaking event uh with the with the with uh how they were approaching content
00:36:05.940 how they were approaching the the aesthetics of the venue the layout of both the the the speaking
00:36:11.620 area and the networking area and all this um it was definitely well timed for us considering we're
00:36:17.700 we're orchestrating we're planning our own event uh so to give a lot of inspiration on on how we
00:36:23.540 should be laying things out it was it was really it was really perfectly time um to to give us a
00:36:29.380 kind of uh to set a standard that we can aspire to for our first uh conference later this year
00:36:36.900 uh which is a good which is a good reminder to to plug uh uh domcon itself uh you guys may have
00:36:43.700 seen we did announce this before we left uh where we will be hosting domcon 2026 dominion conference
00:36:50.100 the first ever dominion conference this is going to be canada's premier nationalist conference of
00:36:56.260 the calendar year it'll be taking place at the end of august saturday august 29th it'll be a
00:37:02.180 one-day event we're going to have a bunch of great speakers from here in canada we're working on
00:37:07.140 getting a couple of our friends internationally as well to come to to provide some speeches as
00:37:13.460 well we'll be talking about the dominion society we'll be talking about canadian nationalism
00:37:18.820 Canadian identity, remigration, you know, all the top topics that we're focusing on. So if you're
00:37:24.700 interested, it'll be taking place in the Hamilton area Saturday, August 29th. You can secure
00:37:31.200 your seat today. We do have a special price for the early bird tickets. You can find everything
00:37:37.420 on our website. It's linked right there at the top. You can go to dominionsociety.ca slash
00:37:42.020 DomCon. We do have standard tickets available for 125 bucks, VIP tickets available for
00:37:48.620 $225. It's going to be a great event. Nothing like it has ever been hosted in Canada before.
00:37:56.300 So if you're interested, if you couldn't make it all the way to Portugal for the Remigration Summit,
00:38:01.400 try and make it out to Hamilton. I know it's far for a lot of people. We have a big, big country
00:38:06.080 here. But if you're going to do one event for 2026, it should be this one. DomCon, August 29.
00:38:13.720 you can find it on our website dominionsociety.ca slash domcon to purchase your tickets today
00:38:21.220 what did you think about there greg yeah i mean you guys you guys covered all the bases but
00:38:28.720 i'll just kind of take it from a slightly different angle which is like you know
00:38:31.680 it felt it felt elite it was an elite event it you know everyone was dressed professionally as
00:38:39.340 you said there was this beautiful marriage between the actual event itself and the social
00:38:43.120 media kind of documentation of the event uh and not to get into the weeds but you know you were
00:38:49.220 one of the speakers daniel and they kind of had this whole system where you'd scan a qr code and
00:38:53.640 they'd get you get you the high quality photos right away to post on your social media which is
00:38:57.420 like super cool like how efficient that is and i guess you know let's add to the context coming
00:39:03.140 from canada outside outside of the conservative party and like conservative party funded stuff
00:39:09.960 you you really fall off a cliff in terms of quality in terms of you know activism that's
00:39:15.920 impressive groups that are impressive and actually doing things that are that are big
00:39:19.940 um and like elite feeling like that like it's probably quite literally just uh you know other
00:39:28.500 than other than conservative party maybe it's like a rebel news event that you got maybe it's like
00:39:33.340 uh jccf event like you know you run out very quickly in terms of there being anything that's
00:39:40.420 further right and is actually very professional and exciting um you know there's there's going
00:39:46.340 to be a puck daddy rally in a few days for example and like you know like that's this is kind of what
00:39:52.080 we want to uh step over here in canada by doing things like dom con and so yeah needless to say
00:40:00.200 going to the remigration summit seeing all these people promoting nationalism in their own countries
00:40:05.260 remigration in their own countries uh and it being slick professional and and just hard hitting like
00:40:12.660 that is it's super super great to see and very very inspiring giving us everything that we need
00:40:18.660 to uh to make dom con a smash success to bring this kind of far right elitism to canada
00:40:24.820 it was quite prestigious i will say yeah yeah and i saw i saw a lot of like cynical takes on the
00:40:32.720 internet over the last few days in the wake of it a lot of you know accusations of grifting and all
00:40:37.120 this sort of thing but the reality is if we're going to build these sort of international elite
00:40:41.700 networks we need to have these big prestigious events as well it's not like it obviously we do
00:40:49.480 the work behind the scenes we're building organizations we're we're doing all this
00:40:53.800 kind of street activism we're doing the unglamorous stuff as well but uh in order to really push
00:40:59.540 things to the next level in order to broaden the appeal to to different uh to different groups to
00:41:04.700 to maybe uh more wealthy professionals and stuff we also have to have these more professional
00:41:11.120 prestigious elitist sort of events as well so we're trying to strike that balance here in
00:41:16.280 everything that we do we're trying to reach people through the internet we're trying to
00:41:19.640 repeat reach people at the doorsteps we're trying to to to to have that guerrilla marketing the
00:41:25.560 the street activism our demonstrations um but we also need to have these these larger more fancy
00:41:32.280 events more expensive events as well to to reach a different crowd but also to establish a certain
00:41:37.960 a certain level of credibility for our organization that's also while we're putting out large policy
00:41:43.080 papers we have to do things in different ways that are going to reach different audiences and that
00:41:48.440 that demand the sort of respect that people uh that people expect of this sort of organization
00:41:54.600 right this is how this is the kind of language of politics right there are these big conferences
00:42:00.200 like the conservative party event like the uh the canada strong and free event or to go
00:42:04.680 internationally to go to the united states like to have cpac and all these things these are
00:42:08.920 opportunities for people to get together from across the country to have a big and exciting
00:42:13.160 event so we're going to bring that now to the nationalist space right for years the nationalist
00:42:17.800 space has been very disorganized very decentralized there hasn't been an opportunity like domcon for
00:42:23.320 people to just all come together uh to meet each other to to enjoy each other's companies to
00:42:29.240 experience uh serious speeches uh on the movement on how we're going to accomplish our goals so
00:42:37.720 that's exactly what we're trying to bring to canada through domcon and uh the the re-migration
00:42:43.240 summit gave us a great template um to to in order to to kind of strive towards and execute
00:42:50.440 grifting i didn't hear that one online i heard a couple other gripes but uh i mean from the
00:42:56.760 perspective of being there i i would say that if they were trying to grift they definitely didn't
00:43:02.360 do well because they you know they provided quite a good experience i mean you know like if they
00:43:08.600 were trying to grip it would have just been like the bare minimum uh get in get out get your money
00:43:14.840 but you know like the all the branding was great the the venue you know like they gave the the vips
00:43:21.240 a nice dinner afterwards uh you know they were they went out of their way to spend extra time
00:43:26.360 to talk to people and it was quite uh genuine i would say um you know i i've heard a couple other
00:43:33.080 gripes but uh i feel like the people saying these things uh it often comes from like a position of
00:43:39.240 weakness or jealousy right like who are the who are the people saying these things are they real
00:43:47.000 are they just in on twitter yeah i mean grifting it's like i talked to multiple people there who
00:43:53.480 have been debanked martin yeah right exactly over a hundred times by the way it's like what the
00:43:59.240 yeah uh i don't think people do this because they want to make money if if you are yeah exactly
00:44:04.920 yeah in fact uh the one the american speaker i forget his name he kept telling people like
00:44:10.920 you know if you're looking to get into this there is no money in this you know like exactly like
00:44:17.860 you know you're gonna get debanked uh it's definitely there's less opportunities uh as
00:44:23.520 unfortunate as that is sometimes when you kind of stick your neck out there i think that's kind
00:44:28.920 of changing, you know, as time goes on, we're building a
00:44:32.980 credible, like kind of alternative system or, you
00:44:37.260 know, network, but as it stands right now, for the first movers
00:44:41.160 and shakers, it's definitely a disadvantage to your personal
00:44:45.780 life and affairs.
00:44:47.640 Yeah, exactly. We're putting our reputations on the line. If we
00:44:51.680 wanted to make money, we could definitely be in the private
00:44:54.880 sector.
00:44:55.320 Yeah, we could just shill for conservative party topics
00:45:00.540 and be a conservative influencer.
00:45:04.440 Yeah, yeah, that's where all the clicks and eyeballs are.
00:45:07.540 We're definitely taking it the kind of hard route
00:45:09.940 to do what's necessary to get Canada back on track.
00:45:15.920 So there was lots of great speakers there,
00:45:20.420 lots of great speakers.
00:45:21.700 There were activists from all over Europe.
00:45:26.580 There were influencers.
00:45:27.660 There were politicians there from many political parties in Belgium, in Spain, some others as well.
00:45:37.960 Was there a particular speaker that stood out to you guys?
00:45:42.940 Did you guys have a favorite speech that you watched there at the Reimmigration Summit?
00:45:49.100 That's tough.
00:45:50.400 That's tough.
00:45:50.960 like it's hard to pick just one um it might uh it's uh milan right the east of the uh yeah he i
00:46:00.080 think he might have been it's i don't think the best is a good way to phrase it because they they
00:46:06.800 kind of all uh there was some overlap but they were all kind of unique in their own right i think
00:46:13.200 the higher energy speakers were definitely a bit more of my favorites like milan no script
00:46:20.320 off the cuff passionate energetic without any second language yeah yeah in his second
00:46:27.040 life well i mean most of these speakers uh english is not their native tongue uh but you
00:46:33.120 know sometimes i won't name names sometimes i think people might be a bit too intense
00:46:39.360 and i like intense but uh you know you can't be too harsh on the ears and i think milan kind of
00:46:45.120 had this perfect balance of uh you know being passionate and sort of impactful without without
00:46:51.840 it just being a complete uh rage bait uh rhetoric but uh you know the italians were really good
00:46:59.920 uh i'll i'll probably butcher the name i think is is uh bellerati he's one of them right
00:47:08.800 yeah he you know just again the presence was very good uh what's the other one's name lorenzo
00:47:15.120 uh on the panel he was on the panel he was good um and then uh
00:47:23.440 dries was pretty good as well i'd say
00:47:27.120 yeah yeah yeah for sure so the first one there milan mazarek he's a he's a slovakian representative
00:47:35.820 at the european parliament uh he's gone viral a couple of times for for saying terrible terrible
00:47:42.900 things like white lives matter um so he had a very impassioned speech he was he was definitely a
00:47:50.420 very inspiring there what did what did you think uh greg who stood out to you
00:47:56.120 there was one moment so i i want to add someone asked me uh a friend of mine who's kind of not
00:48:04.020 a normie friend but they don't really follow politics that much and uh i told him about the
00:48:09.260 conference and he's like oh is this like the davos for racists and i thought that was really funny
00:48:14.460 the international council of racism yeah but he asked how many speakers were uh female
00:48:23.000 and there was actually a good bit yeah i think at least a quarter i think around a quarter
00:48:28.960 maybe one fifth or one quarter and they really held their own in terms of like them
00:48:33.460 having a powerful speech uh that really drew me in i wanted to bring attention to i'm going to
00:48:40.040 butcher this she's from the netherlands lidowage devos but uh but i can't i can't uh i shared it
00:48:49.780 in the chat there the instagram link uh if you want to like so you can see a picture of her
00:48:54.320 but she's uh she you know we were talking about kind of like the erasure of uh you know european
00:49:00.960 identity across europe and how remigration is really kind of a means of survival at this point
00:49:05.840 in terms of the continuity uh of uh of europeans and um she she's pregnant and she talked and she
00:49:15.180 had this really intense moment about like you know the baby in my stomach and like you could
00:49:19.620 tell she was like holding back tears and it was like it was super intense like that that moment
00:49:24.080 like really stood out to me like this like mama bear energy like fearless like you know come at
00:49:31.220 me bro um i don't know if i'm doing it justice but like like it was really intense uh i thought
00:49:37.620 that moment of her speech was really really good um and yeah as you guys said there was a lot of
00:49:42.020 others that were fantastic um yeah it's it's great to see you love to see it i i don't know
00:49:50.360 like it it would it was really the speakers where there was like a translation or a language barrier
00:49:56.360 that was hard to like you know resonate as as as well with us uh you know english speakers but um
00:50:05.160 there i i think it's a testament to how well the programming was is it was a long day with a lot
00:50:13.080 of speakers and my energy was pretty high the whole time like all the way up until the end
00:50:19.080 And at like, you know, 8.30 or 9 p.m. when all the speeches were finally over.
00:50:25.020 So it was like really engaging.
00:50:26.840 And I think it just speaks to kind of the energy of all the different people there pushing for the same thing.
00:50:34.400 Yeah, yeah.
00:50:35.040 That moment was so powerful.
00:50:36.540 She's trying to hold back tears as everyone's just like clapping.
00:50:39.360 And she's just staring down the camera as her eyes while with tears.
00:50:45.720 It was quite the moment.
00:50:48.000 we should probably mention the other uh powerful female speaker who uh was it sammy woodhouse
00:50:53.320 who's a yeah that was a good one yeah yeah sammy woodhouse there is an activist from
00:50:59.580 uh great britain who was uh a victim of some of these pakistani rape gangs when she was a
00:51:07.260 young child uh i think as young as 12 15 and she she gave an impassioned speech about her
00:51:15.840 experiences and she's gone on to now be an activist to be a voice for uh the the many young
00:51:23.740 girls that are still going through this and uh she was even part of uh Rupert Lowe's um inquiry
00:51:30.520 into the into the ongoing Pakistani rape gangs and like oh like that whole thing is so hard to
00:51:41.440 to listen to the the the extreme violence that's going on uh in that country around those
00:51:49.920 those rape gangs the terrible things that were done to sami and many of the other uh victims of
00:51:56.640 that it was it was hard it was hard to listen to her whole speech going into graphic detail of
00:52:05.200 of her experiences and and uh the experiences of her fellow victims um and i mean she did she did
00:52:12.480 so with such clarity and such courage and such purpose um she's really really a hero um uh it's
00:52:21.200 it would be so easy for someone like that to just uh you know try and erase that part of their lives
00:52:27.920 from their from their from their memory but to instead you know act as that lightning rod act
00:52:34.320 as that representative for so many more um victims that might not be able to to speak out um what an
00:52:41.520 incredible brave woman um i think that was that was really one of the standout speeches uh without
00:52:49.280 a doubt i yeah i thought one of the sort of common themes of the conversations i was having is uh
00:52:55.760 you know because i i asked some of these big inspiring figures like maximilian and alfonso
00:53:01.200 you know you're this big inspiring figure now but what first red filled you like how'd you
00:53:05.760 initially get here and in many respects it was kind of just them being super honest and pursuing
00:53:12.240 the truth of like what's actually happening here why are these problems actually happening why
00:53:16.320 aren't they being solved and it's all led them here to remigration summit 2026 and i think it's
00:53:22.960 also a testament to like where does the grooming gang survivor go to give her speeches you know
00:53:28.160 she's going to re-migration summit because she understands that these people are actually going
00:53:32.480 to tell the truth they want to know the truth you know that these people are actually interested
00:53:36.640 in solving these very difficult and uncomfortable problems so it's the place to be
00:53:45.680 uh i'm just going to give a quick shout out to some of our uh our super chatters here we got
00:53:50.960 asian sensation 99 17 with 10 as a korean american i support you guys europeans should remain the
00:53:57.440 majority in the United States and Canada keep up the great work we got our we got our friend Grady
00:54:02.560 Rich from Florida let's go go check out uh Grady's uh interview with Ken I think he uh
00:54:12.000 he did that right before we left right after you got back I can't remember I yeah I was right
00:54:17.040 before what a hectic day there was like a tornado in my neighborhood while I was on stream it was
00:54:24.400 pretty funny nice so go check out that that full interview with uh ken and grady over on
00:54:30.640 grady's channel uh and then another uh 13.99 from clnn sber just because keep going domsock
00:54:40.880 thank you for this thank you very much thanks guys thank you for the donations
00:54:46.160 and another go ahead ken sorry just while we're doing shout outs i saw in the comments earlier
00:54:53.600 we have to give a shout out to our boys from alberta they came to the conference it was nice
00:55:01.120 seeing our alberta lads out there as well as we had a couple quebecois boys out there so
00:55:09.440 uh nice seeing some familiar faces i think we were maybe six or seven deep from the canadian
00:55:17.440 contingent so i think we had a nice little showing yeah yeah definitely punching above
00:55:23.520 our weight population wise always punching above our weight that's the canadian way yes
00:55:31.520 so yeah shout out to the guys a few members a few non-members uh it's good to see canada
00:55:36.880 representing at an event like that um another another very powerful moment for for me was
00:55:41.840 there maximilian merkel um the the leader of the identitarian movement out of germany
00:55:47.920 he was actually banned from leaving germany he he was one of the organizers of the event and when
00:55:53.280 he got to the airport they said you can't travel you we're not letting you leave the country it
00:55:58.240 turned out into a big scandal you had the afd speaking out on his behalf talking uh speaking
00:56:03.360 at the how ridiculous this um this determination was uh and then sorry sorry sorry you're too
00:56:11.600 racist to board the plane like that's what they do in germany they're like you're too powerful
00:56:17.040 to board the plane to go to this conference like it's the amount of attention that the
00:56:22.080 regime puts on these people for having certain politics or being successful in certain respects
00:56:26.720 is just crazy that's right continue and it happened last year too when he tried to attend the the
00:56:31.760 event in 2025 he was also blocked from flying um so it looked like he might not be able to make it
00:56:36.960 but he uh they had a perfect little uh dramatic moment where they they played a video from him
00:56:44.320 from germany sorry i couldn't make it this year they stopped me and then suddenly he comes bursting
00:56:49.680 into the room and takes the stage uh he had ended up driving 22 hours overnight to to to make it to
00:56:56.800 the event just on time uh so that was another big powerful moment uh him charging up on on stage the
00:57:03.120 the media coming out to take pictures of him there with his travel documents of him getting
00:57:09.280 denied. He had a very powerful speech and he said something that really hit home for me. He had a
00:57:15.280 line there where, to the effect of, and I'm paraphrasing, but I don't want to be frightened
00:57:23.020 from, I don't want to leave a battle for my son that I was too scared to take. And I thought that
00:57:28.780 perfectly encapsulates like what we're what we're going through this problem's not going away we can
00:57:34.840 we can take it now when it's still when it you know it's an uphill battle but we can it's still
00:57:40.020 one we can take or we can leave a much much more difficult challenge to our children and
00:57:44.740 grandchildren so i think that perfectly captures why we need to stand up now uh we can be we can
00:57:52.280 be cowards and leave this for future generations or we can do things now so they can live a better
00:57:57.440 life simple absolutely yeah yeah there was many many other great speakers i really enjoyed uh
00:58:06.240 afonso gonzalves uh speech there he's a he's a powerful powerful public speaker uh and i really
00:58:13.360 enjoyed the the speech there from dries van langerhoven uh out from from belgium uh he just
00:58:19.360 days before he had had another conviction uh for his uh ongoing battles with with hate speech
00:58:27.440 uh for for other people's memes in his group chats um so i'll clarify that because i know
00:58:34.080 his case pretty well so he had one hate speech charge for someone else posting a meme uh in a
00:58:41.440 group chat it wasn't even him posting the meme that was his first hate speech charge but this
00:58:46.000 second one that's come down was actually because he gave us a talk i think at a university at some
00:58:51.760 point and he stated some facts that relate immigration levels to crime and like the most
00:58:58.880 shocking thing that everyone was talking about this recent verdict uh for dries's case and this
00:59:04.300 hate speech charge is that even the judge admits okay yes these are facts these are facts that
00:59:12.160 there is a correlation between immigration and crime but because you presented these facts in
00:59:17.820 a specific way that's like disparaging or like offensive we're going to throw you in jail so
00:59:23.840 the big kind of like new low for these european nationalists or the the rule of law in europe or
00:59:30.560 i guess belgium is that you can even just state facts that are verifiably true the judge will say
00:59:35.340 they're true but that doesn't matter if they're presented in the wrong way then that's still
00:59:41.360 enough to um you know get charged and thrown in jail for hate speech it's it's you're not allowed
00:59:47.920 to contextualize them yeah you're not allowed to notice things you're not allowed to point out facts
00:59:56.160 that are inconvenient to the regime anymore an absolutely absurd case uh from drees and he had
01:00:01.600 just such a powerful speech there he he related to it was very personal he was talking about how
01:00:06.720 He was at his family home in the greenhouse that he built for his children.
01:00:11.560 And he was coming to that realization that he might have to pick up and leave in order to avoid going to prison, in order to stay there to raise his children and so on.
01:00:22.400 So while a lot of people were focused on policy and stuff like this, Dries had such a personal story there that was that was very, very powerful.
01:00:31.980 And he is he's such an impressive young man.
01:00:34.580 he could be doing anything. He could be making lots of money, I'm sure. But instead, he's been
01:00:41.480 that figurehead for Belgium. And it's really shocking what they're going through there in
01:00:45.880 Europe. Like the migration situation is terrible here in Canada by the numbers. But the social
01:00:52.620 situation out in Europe, especially with the different groups of migrants that they have,
01:00:58.040 you know, a lot more African, a lot more Muslim, a lot more Middle Eastern. And the impacts that
01:01:03.460 that's had on his uh society is is ridiculous i mean he told that anecdote of him filming a video
01:01:09.340 with tyler olivera and they went to not the worst neighborhood he says because they don't want to
01:01:15.120 get killed just for being white and during the interview they they have um migrants throwing
01:01:21.960 concrete blocks from the rooftops in order to try and uh i mean kill them hurt them uh from stories
01:01:29.340 up so the so just an insane militant violent situation that they're going through there
01:01:36.780 in belgium um uh it's it's hard to to compare to what we're seeing here in cam yeah and i think
01:01:44.300 it'd be appropriate to bring up the uh the henry novak thing that it's crazy how days after the
01:01:50.540 remigration summit the um the body cam footage of this really messed up situation in the uk
01:01:58.380 finally becomes available but uh before we get into that i'll just kind of share my thoughts on
01:02:03.180 maybe the difference i kind of mentioned to you guys earlier off camera but it almost feels as
01:02:08.560 though in the west in north america it's a little easier to like try to avoid each other and not
01:02:17.480 have to you know you can try to go to what a suburb or go to this subdivision you know
01:02:22.640 a bunch of people are in brampton so that feels far away like it doesn't affect us or what have
01:02:27.660 you um whereas in europe like it's kind of more of a pressure cooker things are a lot more closer
01:02:33.060 together there's not as many places that you can go and i think that kind of intensifies the sort
01:02:40.520 of uh tribalism it intensifies the sort of resentment the sort of like getting on each
01:02:45.340 other's nerves and i think that's one element but like you said as well um you don't even need to
01:02:51.520 board a plane or jump through any hoops to immigrate into europe if you're from uh you
01:02:56.900 know africa or the middle east and that's a lot of the uh groups that are coming into europe so
01:03:02.020 that's another element as well that i think uh kind of attributes to the kind of just just how
01:03:08.280 just how much uglier the sort of uh i guess tribalism is getting in europe it's much more
01:03:13.060 in your face yeah yeah and i also do think it comes down to the different groups because we
01:03:18.080 we have a lot more chinese a lot more indian migration they have a lot more african a lot
01:03:23.000 more islamic uh migration and and while while all these cultures are very kind of collectivist in
01:03:29.720 character uh you know islam muslims are much more like violent and militant uh whereas the the the
01:03:37.720 indian migration we have here is a lot more of this like scam culture um so both are difficult
01:03:42.760 to deal with but uh you know it's hard to compare uh getting scammed by to to dodging concrete
01:03:50.200 blocks falling falling from the sky but yeah the that uh the the whole henry novak situation is is
01:04:05.800 uh absurd to see i mean that ties right back to the indian migration
01:04:10.840 uh situation if people haven't seen it uh this young man i believe 19 years old
01:04:17.160 stabbed five times with a with a kerpon with a with a you know a religious ceremonial dagger
01:04:25.640 um subsequently he he gives this blade to his family who then hides it um his the henry novak
01:04:35.340 instead of being uh saved by police uh he's accused of racism and instead of uh giving his
01:04:42.020 giving him life-saving treatment they they shackle him and let him bleed to death uh while they
01:04:49.100 persecute the much more serious issue of racism uh than actual violence um so seeing that seeing
01:04:56.580 that footage i mean this happened weeks ago and i believe there was there was lots of anger
01:05:01.900 beforehand but seeing the i think it was actually it was actually months and months ago i think
01:05:06.180 actually a while it was a little while ago the actual event but um yeah yeah uh horrifying and
01:05:13.280 you know it's like it's it's like an absurd joke from years ago come to life it's like what they're
01:05:18.640 what are they going to stab you and then just call you racist to avoid accountability and it's
01:05:21.940 like apparently apparently that's that that is what will happen and people will just oh let him
01:05:27.900 bleed out he's a racist anyway like it's like what the uh totally insane um
01:05:34.080 but yeah i mean a lot's already been said about it i just you know obviously it's relevant to
01:05:42.120 bring up um i'm sure there's lots of hot takes you guys can read on x.com about it but um
01:05:49.020 it's uh it it at least at least there's people you know using it to to push in the right direction
01:05:57.800 that being said is it true that tommy robinson said trying is trying to defend like the sikh
01:06:03.240 community yeah yeah tommy robinson he's very focused on only on only islamic uh uh issues
01:06:12.120 right migration's only a problem if it's if it's muslims if it's islam kind of like our our friends
01:06:17.720 over at rebel news um he's he's always there to defend uh blacks uh sikhs indians um so yeah he
01:06:25.640 put out a big long video today eight minutes long uh trying to to say not it's not all seats it's not
01:06:32.280 all all this all that um but it it's like this the the whole henry novak situation is is an example
01:06:40.120 of yeah it actually is uh not just islam uh all these groups are problematic they're not they're
01:06:47.640 They're not fitting into our society.
01:06:49.600 They are violent.
01:06:52.200 So to see Tommy trying to backtrack things is really disappointing.
01:06:58.040 But on the other side, you have seen big riots going off across England in defense of Henry's memory.
01:07:06.160 You've seen Restore Britain speaking out about it.
01:07:08.260 You've seen Reform UK speaking out about it.
01:07:10.720 I saw some pretty strong statements there from Nigel Farage there.
01:07:17.640 pushing back against these anti-white notions and stuff like this uh that we need to end this
01:07:23.480 culture of anti-whiteism so it's it's good to see um reform there they're waking up as well
01:07:30.040 we've got another super chat from cln and sber 699 domsock will save white children's lives join
01:07:37.320 yes please do absolutely do do join uh you can head over to dominionsociety.ca join you can
01:07:43.640 become a member that's how you get involved that's how you become a part of the change
01:07:47.960 in our society that we so desperately need you sign up as a member it's 25 bucks a year but you
01:07:52.680 get uh you help support our cause and you can get put in touch with local members in your area
01:07:58.840 and uh start to start being part of the start being part of the change you can get your ceremonial
01:08:04.840 green pin green pin you get a nice card you get involved most importantly
01:08:13.640 i think the uh the chat has put together the similarities between tommy robinson and rebel
01:08:21.040 natives yeah yeah pretty obvious connections there
01:08:27.660 it is worth noting we've brought i brought it up before anyway uh one of the first people to call
01:08:37.960 four deportations in canada if i'm not mistaken was ezra and rebel to say deport hamas you know
01:08:47.720 like just specifically hamas or people who support hamas it wasn't really clear like like who like
01:08:53.880 who is and who is not hamas but i thought that was very funny how the first like right wing figure in
01:08:58.840 canada was ezra to say deport hamas and it's like what ezra what about these uh truck drivers wearing
01:09:06.360 turbans? No, just Hamas? Okay, interesting. It's an interesting filter that we want to use to who
01:09:12.280 to deport. But anyway, if you... Yeah, that's something I called them out for
01:09:17.960 a couple weeks ago, because they've been jumping on the re-migration bandwagon as well. But for them,
01:09:22.120 re-migration is all about protecting Jews in Canada. It's not about protecting Canadian
01:09:27.880 identity. It's about removing Muslims and protecting Jewish interests. And while I do
01:09:35.960 like to see more people promoting remigration talking about remigration i i do think we have to
01:09:42.920 to call out subversives that are going to use our language our terminology for their own ends
01:09:50.040 because at the at the end of the day remigration is all about re-centering immigration policy in
01:09:54.840 canada in order to not just serve economic interests but to protect our culture to protect
01:10:00.040 our identity to protect the uniqueness of canada and to see rebel news who who completely ignore
01:10:07.320 us who are not interested in in uh having an interview with with any of us uh uh who actually
01:10:15.080 asked me for ten thousand dollars to come on their platform uh at the end of last year uh to have
01:10:22.120 these people jump on remigration and you're trying to reframe it around protecting jews in canada
01:10:28.120 i think it's very disingenuous yeah yeah and you know it's the whole point of what we're doing is
01:10:38.360 to center around canadians canadian identity historically you know like that's the center
01:10:46.120 our interests our continuity that's what it's about and um i feel like across the board when
01:10:53.000 it comes to these subversives it's always like kind of slightly changing that not not letting
01:10:58.280 it be like not letting the the native european descendants be like the centerpiece of like the
01:11:03.720 centerpiece of the frame of what we're talking about stuff the subversives will always kind of
01:11:07.800 like disrupt that or corrupt that to make that not the center anymore um but anyway i was just
01:11:13.880 kind of thinking of trying to tie a bow on that how that opera how that works but um did we want
01:11:21.720 want to talk about because there's also i think a subversive person who commented on the i remember
01:11:28.040 a white quebec uh thing if you want to talk about that banner that got dropped there was quite the
01:11:34.460 reaction to that yeah yeah yeah for sure uh so we we almost missed this we're we're we're abroad
01:11:40.820 we're out of the country and and the second sons are are you know trying are one-upping us on the
01:11:46.820 on the uh demonstration game with uh lots of uh simultaneous demonstrations across the country
01:11:52.260 one of which went very viral i'm sure i'm sure you folks saw this i have uh i have uh one um
01:11:59.960 picture up here how do i how do i switch to this there we go so they did this banner drop here in
01:12:07.680 in quebec je me souviens d'un quebec blanc so i i remember uh people who don't know je me souviens
01:12:13.400 is this kind of catchphrase there in Quebec it's uh they have it on the um on their license plate
01:12:18.500 so they've combined this phrase uh with uh with uh a more nationalist message I remember
01:12:24.700 a white Quebec so this uh this got quite a reaction from political figures across the
01:12:32.440 country across Quebec in particular you had you know the leader of the Liberal Party the leader
01:12:36.720 of the Conservative Party of Quebec the leader of the Bloc Québécois the leader of the Parti
01:12:40.900 quebecois all all condemning this racist hateful message um when in reality it's it's not
01:12:48.340 particularly hateful it's not particularly racist it's kind of just a statement of fact
01:12:52.760 um it doesn't say it doesn't even say i prefer a white quebec or i miss a white quebec it's
01:12:59.820 simply i remember a white quebec uh it reminded me of the whole uh it's okay to be white posters
01:13:05.480 um kind of a perfect piece of of rage bait um and i mean i i'd say it accomplished their their goals
01:13:13.540 uh uh millions of people in canada uh saw this banner either either uh directly or through
01:13:20.740 people people complaining about it uh what did you guys think of this
01:13:24.680 well it was very nice to see the second sons go out and uh do that activism uh great job
01:13:38.840 and uh yeah i mean it's it's just odd to me that this is even controversial like
01:13:45.300 i mean obviously it's not surprising but it just seems very bizarre that um
01:13:52.160 you know like there's so much hate for simply just recognizing simple facts i mean quebec
01:13:59.880 traditionally is is a genetically white uh makeup and uh yeah i mean i don't i i don't have too much
01:14:08.900 to say on it because uh i don't uh i don't want to get too heated about it i um i don't know a
01:14:17.100 whole lot about the intricacies of quebec quebecois politics but from an outsider's perspective who
01:14:26.400 only kind of picks up bits and pieces of how you know like what the kind of vibe is in quebec
01:14:31.580 um i feel like this might be a sort of escalation in terms of like exposing the sort of uh
01:14:38.680 you know traitorous nature of some of these leaders i guess because it was my understanding
01:14:43.600 that quebec is sort of more racist they get away with being more sort of uh you know identity
01:14:49.200 focused ethnocentric you know uh there's a whole historical thing of them having more kids and
01:14:55.040 wanting to protect their identity like that's that's very it goes way way back since the
01:15:00.080 beginning of the country more or less and modern politicians lean into that in quebec if i'm not
01:15:06.560 mistaken so to see them like counter signal this it's like how how what i don't get it like so you
01:15:13.440 don't remember a white quebec or like remembering a white quebec is bad or it's bad because they said
01:15:18.160 white like it it never made any sense to me any of these kind of counter signaling people from
01:15:23.600 these quebec leaders and i and i feel i hope that it's going to uh red pill many more sort of uh
01:15:30.640 quebecers to be like wait why is this bad why is this uh racist i don't understand
01:15:37.760 yeah yeah so quebec's politics has always been very ethnocentric it's been the kind of uh
01:15:42.320 defining strain throughout their history even going back pre-confederation because they've
01:15:46.880 always been the last bastion of french identity in north america surrounded by anglos on all sides
01:15:53.920 be it america or or uh canada so they their politics has always been about maintaining
01:16:00.160 their unique identity within the north american context so there's always been a very ethno
01:16:05.840 ethnocentric a focus on maintaining that ethnocultural identity throughout their whole
01:16:10.080 history but since the 60s at the same time they went through the quiet revolution while can the
01:16:16.640 more broadly was going through that pierre trudeau kind of cultural revolution to strip away our kind
01:16:22.020 of ethnic identity to to put forward this post-national state and and quebec's not immune
01:16:26.940 to that either um quebec identity has very much just become about preserving their language instead
01:16:33.060 of their people um so i think that's why it hit such a hit such a nerve because it kind of
01:16:40.260 highlighted that that transformation of their politics that shift away from protecting their
01:16:46.100 ethnicity to protecting only a language now now they're they're not flooded with uh indians in
01:16:52.260 the same way that the rest of the country is it's mostly algerians haitians you know uh french
01:16:58.500 third worlders um more so than uh indians and chinese um but that that is of course changing
01:17:06.980 the ethnic makeup the demographics the the the culture the character of quebec just the
01:17:12.420 just the same as the rest of the country so what i thought was also quite strange was the reaction of
01:17:16.980 of um so-called quebec nationalists who took issue with the you know the english-speaking
01:17:24.020 leadership of second sons a lot of uh talk about british colonialism and all these kind of
01:17:29.940 defunct issues that that go back to the earlier kind of clashes between english and french canada
01:17:36.420 uh so i actually put together a little meme today uh speaking on this i don't know if you if you
01:17:41.940 guys saw this uh uh so i put i put this together uh the english canada and french canada we are
01:17:49.860 not the same we and then you juxtapose it against the third world there's the indians uh and i think
01:17:54.900 this is really what can the needs at this stage we need to put our side our differences whether
01:18:00.580 that's uh english canada and french canada whether that's east versus west whether that's rural versus
01:18:06.500 urban we all need to put aside our differences and unite for the much bigger cause of remigration for
01:18:15.220 to preserve our common identities because at the end of the day there's much more that unites
01:18:19.860 french canadians and english canadians uh uh eastern western alberta quebec whatever you
01:18:25.540 want to make the divide within canada there's much more that unites us than uh when juxtaposed
01:18:31.540 against the the kind of third world invaders that we're dealing with so i i think this this little
01:18:37.300 meme i threw together really captures the sentiment that we need to be working towards
01:18:42.180 in in a division that was really highlighted by by that demonstration absolutely i think
01:18:48.420 bi-national unity is paramount and very important to the strength and cohesion of the nation
01:18:57.620 and uh just to reference uh the chat here there will be no quebecois deported to france
01:19:06.260 under dominion society leadership okay it's not happening we love our frenchies out out east and
01:19:16.740 we love our boys out west in the oil sands so i think overall going to the meme uh daniel just
01:19:24.180 made uh unity is very important uh to the nation and to be honest i think it's just kind of an
01:19:32.020 autistic spurred take that people have where they they just nitpick on the smallest thing so i get
01:19:38.020 i get very annoyed with that i will not stand for for anything tearing apart the unity of the nation
01:19:44.980 well and you know when you're pissing off like all the right people and they're sort of exposing
01:19:51.300 themselves of how they don't have a sort of uh you know they're gonna call something racist or
01:19:57.380 whatever even though it's just a kind of like super relatable statement um i don't know like
01:20:04.380 like what are you doing why are you using your your your time and your energy to kind of like
01:20:08.980 not want to support something like that you know like i saw i brought up this i think she can be
01:20:16.820 subversive at times this account natasha montreal like she's usually kind of pushing back pushing in
01:20:24.720 the same direction in terms of being like oh my god this stuff's anti-white whatever
01:20:28.480 but her commentary on it was like this whole seethe of like oh i don't i don't like second
01:20:34.380 sons and i don't like jeremy and both like more or less kind of call trying to she was like trying
01:20:39.480 to call them feds or something or oh there's only 20 guys like who cares about this thing uh why
01:20:44.680 don't we care about something to do with like israel versus palestine and it was like such a
01:20:49.220 weird take and it's like why why is it so hard for people like this to kind of just see that this is
01:20:56.400 a positive development at the very least this is you know pissing off and upsetting um you know
01:21:03.740 politicians who claim to be all about quebec identity claim to be you know trying to protect
01:21:09.740 quebec identity but then they're kind of counter signaling this demonstration you know like this
01:21:13.900 this seems like a unanimous win i don't understand why people can't focus on um these people in power
01:21:20.220 positions who are sort of lying to us and being two-faced like makes perfect sense to always point
01:21:24.540 towards the more powerful and how they're being two-faced but sometimes people need to try to uh
01:21:30.380 shit on the people shit on the activists who are trying to do something you know
01:21:35.100 yeah yeah yeah exactly this comes down to like counter signaling your own radicals like you can
01:21:39.580 have you can have your own opinions on nuances maybe maybe the message wasn't perfect for you
01:21:45.340 maybe you didn't like the masks maybe they're little complaints but like can we take a big
01:21:50.380 picture stance or yeah maybe you don't like jeremy personally or or whatnot but let's let's
01:21:55.660 take a step back let's look at the the macro situation this is a a step uh this is a positive
01:22:02.140 development it's opened up important conversations we can have we can there are more effective ways
01:22:07.660 that you can provide feedback for these people rather than rather than just uh uh detracting
01:22:13.260 from the from the broader conversations let's keep pushing in the let's remember who the real
01:22:17.980 opponents are right right let's keep pushing in the the right direction yeah and it really
01:22:23.580 undermines their own position like i was saying earlier like usually these criticisms or uh you
01:22:29.660 know comments come from a position of weakness you know like it's just go do something instead
01:22:35.740 of uh you know keyboard warrior online all day right yeah yeah and then just to cycle back to
01:22:43.420 something that ken was saying uh the the there's so much of this uh the there's like remnants of
01:22:50.380 this schism from previous generations where you have a lot of these quebec nationalists who are
01:22:55.100 like reflective reflexively getting their backs up and attacking anglos for like british colonialism
01:23:02.060 or whatnot but if you're really plugged into uh the modern kind of uh nationalist movement at least
01:23:09.180 in english-speaking canada there has been a dramatic change in that uh like historically
01:23:14.460 nationalism has been a kind of force that has been tearing uh english and french canada apart
01:23:21.500 whereas modern canadian nationalists have been putting forward a very bicultural vision for
01:23:27.580 this country that that embraces quebec as part of the broader canadian uh uh project that's that is
01:23:36.380 proud of uh the history of new france as a contingent of broader canadian history that
01:23:43.180 that sees both wolf and montcalm as heroes that sees both mcdonald and george etienne cartier as
01:23:49.660 heroes um so a lot of these people seem to be kind of lost in the past instead of grappling with with
01:23:56.780 kind of modern canadian nationalism which isn't english versus french it's very much english and
01:24:02.460 french versus globalization um so some people need to get get with the times uh and isn't that
01:24:11.100 exciting isn't that exciting imagine the the the anglos and the francophone boys marching down
01:24:19.180 together in unity there's there's power in that all right like what nothing terrifies the globalists
01:24:29.900 and that's the way i like to look at it like we we inherited the the the history of two of the
01:24:35.500 greatest european civilizations in the history of the world the french and the english and
01:24:40.860 And we're this unique merger of these two incredible cultures.
01:24:45.580 We uniquely get to brag about the incredible historical inheritance of these two great civilizations.
01:24:53.800 I don't see why you'd have to pick and choose.
01:24:56.240 I don't see why I have to choose between Sam Steele and Samuel de Champlain.
01:25:00.980 They're both incredible in their own rights.
01:25:04.260 And so I just want to chat just quickly at Asian Sensation $5.
01:25:08.880 Is Toronto a lost cause?
01:25:09.920 How many young Canadians have never heard of the Red Ensign?
01:25:13.260 Thank you for the super chat.
01:25:15.480 I think lots of Canadians across the country haven't heard of the Red Ensign.
01:25:18.520 That's why we need to bring it back.
01:25:20.080 I don't think anywhere is a lost cause.
01:25:21.720 I think we have an important message that can resonate with people very quickly.
01:25:26.860 So, yes, a lot of people don't know Canada's history.
01:25:29.120 A lot of people don't recognize the Red Ensign.
01:25:32.280 That doesn't make someone a lost cause.
01:25:35.080 That's an opportunity for us to inform them and give them their history
01:25:38.740 and make them give them something to be proud of because whether they they know it or not it is
01:25:43.860 their heritage it is their inheritance uh i don't think we should be discouraged uh back to you greg
01:25:50.160 no yeah i i think that um young people are hungry for meeting they're hungry for some sort of hope
01:25:58.100 they're hungry to belong to something and i think we touch on a lot of that stuff with you know true
01:26:04.940 nationalism and also as it relates to the situation that we're currently in here in
01:26:09.380 Canada, where you can't afford a home, where you have to compete with infinity Indians for a
01:26:13.120 fricking summer job. Um, you know, we, we tell people what their history is, that it is, uh,
01:26:20.000 something very clear and measurable and defined. And actually there's nothing to be ashamed of.
01:26:26.000 Um, and I think that it's something that can really click with young people. It just needs
01:26:30.560 be presented to them in the right way um and shown and demonstrated that this isn't really a
01:26:37.820 radical thing this is actually just something that's basic like liking your family and and
01:26:41.880 liking your country and wanting to keep it the way that it's been or try to return it to a place
01:26:47.520 where it was uh before nothing to be ashamed of greg would you in fact say that it's uh there
01:26:56.020 might be something to be proud of a proud moment, proud to be
01:27:03.780 white moment.
01:27:05.680 Yeah, I mean, I'm guilty of doing the double negative
01:27:09.700 sometimes. So you call me on that. Being proud. Yes, being
01:27:14.960 feeling good about who you are not having to, you know, check
01:27:19.160 your, your pocketbook version of white guilt every five minutes
01:27:23.140 you go about your day we have another super chat from our friend cln and sber 279 wl interests first
01:27:35.460 in canada i'm not sure what that is white lives interests first in canada um i i expect i agree
01:27:42.180 thank you for the super chat i i was going to make a comment earlier when we were talking about the
01:27:52.580 kind of like unity between uh the franco nation and the english nation that is canada because you
01:27:58.580 know if you are a you know a francophone watching us and maybe you don't like us you don't actually
01:28:04.820 have to like us we can still work together though we can still actually work together on on the same
01:28:10.100 sort of goal um you know wouldn't it be a lot nicer just to kind of just be butting heads with
01:28:14.980 us as opposed to us and the third world you know like i feel like this is something that we could
01:28:19.620 really work together on you don't have to like this but we absolutely need to cooperate uh and
01:28:26.860 kind of help solve this problem together you know we have we have a common sort of project
01:28:31.580 a common enemy you could say uh we can put aside our differences we can you know yell at each other
01:28:37.620 later or throughout but like you know let's let's actually focus on getting stuff done together you
01:28:41.640 know yeah yeah i long for the days where we can go back to just butting heads between english and
01:28:47.380 french but right now we have much bigger things to deal with uh so it's time for a grand
01:28:53.220 collaboration between quebec uh alberta between english between french uh rural urban it's time
01:29:03.220 for us to put our differences aside uh and fight for our common cause we got another super chat
01:29:08.660 guys a bit of a personal question uh john 36 u8e how did you three meet who wants to
01:29:17.300 to who wants to take point this story has been told many times okay we were in hyperborea we
01:29:24.160 were doing a bit of uh skiing down the mountain we crossed paths we the fucking aurora borealis
01:29:32.000 was raging and we just the dominion society was formed that's how it happened that's how i remember
01:29:41.620 it yeah yeah yeah yeah do you have any uh do you have a different memory of how it all started
01:29:52.580 and nailed it the roaring hyper borealis uh the nephilim were there as well um
01:30:00.580 it was really a divine uh manifestation us us uniting um it was glorious i actually don't
01:30:10.420 but now i'm thinking of it in terms of the the more sort of uh i don't want to say real but the
01:30:17.060 less esoteric version of how we met it's it was just kind of a blur of something to do with uh
01:30:26.420 people's party events or something or other uh were you at the first conference in in uh 2019
01:30:32.980 in hull or well i was uh well so we probably we we can go back to the the one one positive
01:30:42.220 development that has come out of the people's party of canada is it is it did act as a sort
01:30:47.180 of rallying cry uh to nationalists across the country it did give people hope in in something
01:30:52.560 to to get involved in and while they have not been politically successful uh i think they did
01:30:59.040 give many people the chance to meet each other. And that is how we all met each other kind of in
01:31:05.780 different ways. So I was involved in the PPC staff going back to the early days in 2019.
01:31:12.680 That's how I first became aware of Greg. He was a candidate for the PPC in 2019. So he had applied
01:31:18.580 to be a candidate. I was in charge of vetting candidates. So I internet stalked Greg very
01:31:22.980 thoroughly uh before we met over the phone and he's like are you sure you want to have me as a
01:31:29.620 candidate because he was making satirical videos about the prime minister and so on at the time
01:31:34.980 and i was like uh yeah this shit's hilarious uh i think you'd be a great candidate uh so that's how
01:31:42.260 greg and i met virtually we would have met in person there at the the conference there ahead
01:31:46.260 of the 2019 election uh ken and i met uh similarly uh uh in the lead up to the 2021 election and i
01:31:55.540 was still working for the ppc we met at a cf pack uh and i saw ken and i was like that guy's a top
01:32:02.820 guy uh and i instantly uh moved to to get him involved on the on the ppc staff leading up to
01:32:09.140 the 2021 election uh and eventually uh he did come on board it was uh it was a snap election
01:32:15.940 that was called and i remember we had been talking for a few weeks about him coming down to ottawa
01:32:19.860 helping out with the team and the night the election was called i i called him up and i was
01:32:23.860 like i know you weren't planning to come down for another month or so but we need you now bro
01:32:28.820 uh and ken picked up his whole life and drove down to ottawa uh and showed up at headquarters
01:32:34.660 at midnight and he was like what do i need to do boss let's get to work uh so uh we all kind of
01:32:39.940 met in different ways through the through the pp i didn't i didn't know that part of the story i
01:32:44.260 didn't know you guys met at cf pack oh my god yeah yeah yeah wow cf pack was quite the uh this is the
01:32:54.260 endeavor quite a lot happened for sure yeah yeah but i i know i remember i i saw ken and i was like
01:33:01.140 that guy i need to work with him it was some uh it was some hyperborean uh uh connection
01:33:06.260 instantly uh there was something happening on a spiritual plane as as uh as ken so accurately
01:33:18.020 but that's the story on on how we uh all all initially met um the how it turned into the
01:33:24.820 dominion society is a is a separate thing but uh we we do we do have max and bernier to thank for
01:33:31.540 for some for something for something the potential party of canada yes good meme good meme
01:33:39.860 um should we start to wrap it up i was thinking of like maybe we could go around the horn of like
01:33:45.460 the biggest takeaways after this trip after remigration summit kind of like like what
01:33:51.460 what we're all kind of bringing back to you know there is one more thing i want to touch on before
01:33:58.100 we before we start to close things out and that is i i do want to circle back to uh mr eric lombardi
01:34:05.860 and our regular viewers will remember a couple of weeks ago i was talking about this guy he's
01:34:10.740 someone that's exploring a run for the ontario liberal party uh and i spoke a long way about
01:34:18.020 how we have to get behind politicians that that might uh be on side with some of the issues that
01:34:22.980 we stand for we need to push through all political parties and so on because he had made a statement
01:34:28.420 uh critical of immigration and talking about how we need to to prioritize our high trust society
01:34:34.100 and cultural issues and all these things a lot of good language criticizing the temporary foreign
01:34:38.740 worker program saying that millions of them need to to go back all good and exciting language
01:34:45.700 unfortunately uh as i'm taking the plane back from uh portugal i i read another post from from eric
01:34:52.820 uh he here i'll bring it up on on stage so he did this about pride which is like yeah
01:34:59.860 okay yeah he is running for liberal leadership and then uh chris bernet our friend says uh stick to
01:35:06.020 running on remigration please and he makes this big point post whoa slamming remigration he says
01:35:13.140 i'm going to be very clear i'm not running on re-migration or anything close to it my position
01:35:17.860 on this is nuance i believe our immigration system should be focused on creating new canadians
01:35:24.980 as if you can create new canadians hence i want to wind down temporary immigration programs to his
01:35:29.860 from historic levels over the next five to ten years but qualified people should be given a
01:35:34.820 path to become permanent even as many leave the results should be lower population growth over
01:35:40.260 over the next five to 10 years,
01:35:42.060 as those who leave are replaced by permanent streams,
01:35:45.020 giving time for house and infra to crash up.
01:35:48.520 But broadly speaking, after the adjustment,
01:35:50.880 I think we should resume our historic rate.
01:35:53.600 I believe that temporary programs have been abused,
01:35:56.160 undermined in bargaining power,
01:35:57.560 low-wage workers and young Canadians
01:35:59.780 and decentralized productivity investments by business.
01:36:02.540 If you're expecting something different,
01:36:04.120 you'll be disappointed.
01:36:05.100 So just directly disavowing the migration
01:36:08.660 the nationalist movement um i think this is very disappointing here from eric in a in a leadership
01:36:15.140 contest like this our our voting bloc can be quite influential we have about over a thousand members
01:36:21.940 across the province of ontario top guys serious volunteers donors um and eric is very much saying
01:36:29.140 that he's not interested in our support um i'm very disappointed in his message there i did respond
01:36:34.900 to him there on on on twitter i think it's a time for him for politicians to be bold and to speak
01:36:40.660 out about the most important issues um and he seems to be taking a very extremist position on
01:36:45.440 on remigration probably assuming it means deporting all the nons uh uh uh writ large um i i made the
01:36:53.720 point that it's about centering our immigration policy on the preservation of culture on the
01:36:59.780 preservation of our of our uh high trust society instead of just economic issues very much as he
01:37:04.960 was saying in the previous statement there um so uh very disappointing to to see there from eric
01:37:12.380 uh we will have to hold any sort of endorsement or support until he gets in line i did also find
01:37:19.280 it interesting that the same day he posts he posts this about how he's having so much fun
01:37:25.220 dancing at cj pack the center for jewish uh canadian affairs he's out here he's out here
01:37:32.420 what the dancing like a goofball what the for the for for to to to placate the canadian jewish
01:37:42.120 political affairs committee so the same day that he's uh going to cj pack he's uh he's uh
01:37:49.880 disavowing remigration so very very disappointing there from eric uh there was a glimmer of hope
01:37:55.920 there but uh too long didn't read next i'm not reading that bro i feel like we see this all the
01:38:06.000 time though with with people who are like they will more or less have the same talking points
01:38:12.440 that we have of temporary foreign workers isn't working this isn't working we should reduce this
01:38:17.040 we should oh you know high trust society uh whether you cry like uh how whatever the talking
01:38:22.720 point is or even the policy that's that falls in line with the aminian society they might say all
01:38:28.400 those things agree with all those things but no i don't support those guys and i don't support
01:38:31.980 remigration you know like this i feel like this is sort of a pattern we're seeing don't you think
01:38:37.860 absolutely yeah absolutely and i'm sure we'll see it lots more but we're gonna stay focused on
01:38:43.520 advancing the movement in every way. And we're going to put them in a position where they're
01:38:47.980 going to be punished for their actions as we continue to get more organized. A couple more
01:38:52.540 super chats here we have from CunninghamBear76, Long Live the Dominion Society. Thank you for
01:38:58.040 the $10 super chat there. Beautiful profile picture. Thank you. And another one from Asian
01:39:03.840 Sensation9917 for $5. How has the Remigration Summit impacted you all? Will you be there again
01:39:10.400 next year thank you and have a great day guys um so what do you guys think i i i i'd like to be
01:39:16.940 there again next time hopefully we can step up our game a little bit and i'm not i'm not just
01:39:21.500 participating on a little panel i hopefully we can uh increase our clout and and be there to
01:39:27.560 deliver uh full speeches that's that's my takeaway i want to i want to be more involved
01:39:32.640 how has it impacted me um most of all i really feel like it's filled the gas tank i feel more
01:39:41.860 emboldened than ever um you know to see all of these nationalists like fearlessly go into the
01:39:50.880 fray go into the unknown face way more prosecution and persecution uh than we have yet and to like
01:39:57.280 be totally unfazed by it and also to be at a really well put together seemingly well-funded
01:40:03.300 event you know it's like man these guys are thriving amidst all of this prosecution and
01:40:08.580 persecution you know you so i'm feeling super emboldened and something that uh um martin said
01:40:15.240 in my interview with him that i'll that i'll be posting is um he's like it's not enough it's
01:40:21.280 actually we should feel ashamed he's like we should feel ashamed they're not there aren't
01:40:24.660 nearly enough people who are who are canceled or being prosecuted he's like i want to see a whole
01:40:28.740 bunch more patriots in jail like you know these people are trying to discontinue european uh you
01:40:35.640 know like european heritage heritage whatever you want however you want to call it and it's like
01:40:42.060 there should be much more resistance you know that there should be a lot more people being canceled
01:40:47.720 so i thought that was uh that really filled my gas tank um and i guess one last thing is
01:40:53.340 it is kind of like looking into the future in europe so the sort of how existential it is for
01:41:02.260 these guys you know you could see it in the rise you could feel it in in in their energy um i'm
01:41:09.880 really trying to internalize that because um yeah we got to get some work done we got to gain some
01:41:16.720 ground here because we are running out of time and uh there's a lot of things we can do to start
01:41:24.280 riding the ship so let's get to work
01:41:26.920 ken oh ken you're muted i think
01:41:31.800 but um yeah yeah yeah another great takeaway am i am i on now
01:41:46.020 can you hear me now we got you now we got okay sorry sorry it is a very scuffed uh
01:41:52.980 night for me all right you look good man that's good
01:41:57.160 you were saying
01:42:00.300 i was saying i could you repeat uh where where we're at there i just i had to switch my
01:42:07.940 headphones out uh yeah one of our super shattered remigration summit will you be there next year
01:42:14.280 what what impacted you yeah I mean obviously the Dominion Society is a
01:42:22.960 staple of the re-migration movement now we will be back next year and you know
01:42:29.700 every year to come speaking of coming in the words of Martin Selner no more
01:42:37.440 political masturbation okay no more political masturbation it's time to get
01:42:48.120 out there and seize power we are legitimate movements and you know I
01:42:54.040 think people need to realize that you know I know a lot of this is rooted out
01:42:58.820 of influencers and streaming and maybe that has this element of like like like
01:43:06.460 it's not serious uh but no like this is this is the big leagues you know we the the fate of our
01:43:14.300 nations is in our hands uh obviously streaming is a tool and whatnot but uh i think that something
01:43:21.100 that's important is that you know philosophy and idealism and everything is is great and there's
01:43:28.540 nothing wrong with being an intellectual but i think over intellectual intellectualizing and
01:43:35.260 you know lurking within the backgrounds uh and being a keyboard warrior is just not sufficient
01:43:40.940 anymore and you know we got to get out there and do it so that's that's my takeaway is as crass as
01:43:47.580 it is uh you know selner said it first so yeah and if i could just piggyback off of that you know
01:43:57.020 what ken said is very true a lot of people think oh this is just a bunch of uh grifting or slot
01:44:03.740 posting about nationalism on the internet and it's like that sort of i remember a white quebec
01:44:09.380 banner is actually a great recent example where like this small group of activists was able to
01:44:14.240 get these very strongly worded reactions from some of the most powerful people in the country
01:44:19.120 or the province like people who pull a push and pull the levers of power are reacting to this
01:44:24.400 activism so uh and i think that really uh what dominion society and what daniel's been building
01:44:32.340 from the beginning is really like you know the the machinations of actually putting pressure on
01:44:37.680 these people consistently to start getting some w's uh in policy in and politicians saying what
01:44:43.880 we want them to say and actually uh gaining ground yeah and i think people might underestimate
01:44:50.620 the significance or power that we do have i mean if you think about it right like these politicians
01:44:58.000 and see that and freak out over a couple of guys uh not not to not not to say it's just a couple
01:45:05.940 of guys but like over some guys in a park holding a banner and and they've got to say something and
01:45:11.540 they've oh no so you know that we live rent free in their head for sure and and as greg was saying
01:45:18.600 you know keeping that pressure on them will inevitably results or yield some w's uh going
01:45:24.620 forward yeah it's all about it's all about getting organized uh you know social media is just a part
01:45:32.060 of the game and it's about bringing more people in the movement but it's also about getting them
01:45:35.260 organized in order to exert our pressure more directly on the halls of power getting the
01:45:40.540 entire nationalist movement uh coordinated properly trained in order to have that political
01:45:48.460 impact so you know we're starting we're starting to see the fruits of that we're starting to see
01:45:53.500 what uh what organizations can do once they start to get rallied together once they start singing
01:46:00.060 from the same song sheet once they start strategizing uh you can start to impact things
01:46:04.460 but this is really just the just the beginning we're we're almost at that one year mark uh i
01:46:09.660 think we've accomplished some great things but this is really about building the first year or
01:46:14.140 so has just been about building that foundation the next step is really about putting that machine
01:46:18.940 into into full gear uh so i think we're we're well situated i think we've developed an organization
01:46:24.680 very quickly ahead of uh the speed of many other organizations even though we're we're still a few
01:46:30.620 years behind uh we're going to catch up very quickly so uh is there is there anything you guys
01:46:36.680 uh wanted to touch on on the on the remigration summit there big what daniel what are your big
01:46:41.880 takeaways from from the summit and and you know what yeah i mean it was uh it was great to finally
01:46:50.020 meet so many of these people to make those personal connections with uh with the kind of
01:46:55.220 leaders from across the the country i think there's a lot we can learn from each other
01:46:59.020 uh and be in there's nothing like actually shaking someone's hand and seeing them eye to eye
01:47:04.960 um these people that might have seen some of our content you know once uh once in a while
01:47:10.040 on their feeds now we've built those actual professional connections you know now I have
01:47:16.380 people's phone numbers and connections I can we more easily draw on them for advice and support
01:47:21.720 and collaborations and so on so that was great you know having the inspiration for how that event
01:47:29.460 should be run seeing the standards that we need to strive to to meet here in Canada that was all
01:47:37.820 very inspiring um and yeah just getting to to meet some of these people that uh that i very much
01:47:44.140 respect that have very much inspired me in different ways uh was very satisfying getting
01:47:49.340 getting the chance to participate um as part of of the panel uh there and and speak out on on what
01:47:57.280 we're doing here in canada what the situation is here in canada how how we are organizing uh and
01:48:03.600 and uh to to to get that respect from uh from from people across the the world uh that have
01:48:11.760 been doing this for a lot longer than we have was was very uh satisfying on a professional and a
01:48:17.200 personal level so uh it was a great experience i'm looking forward to seeing what they do next year
01:48:23.600 uh i wasn't there in 2025 but i understand there was a there was a big jump from 2025 to 2026 so
01:48:29.920 So I'm excited to see the movement continue to grow heading into 2027 and beyond.
01:48:35.700 So all very inspiring, all very white-pilled, but now it's about time to get back to work and to bring the lessons that we learned here to Canada, to expand our activism, to host a great event this summer.
01:48:50.360 and again for people that weren't tuned in earlier if you missed out on the remigration summit
01:48:57.720 we're bringing a similar event home to canada this summer august 29th we'll be hosting dom con
01:49:05.640 the premier nationalist conference for 2026 in canada we'll have we'll have lots of great
01:49:11.160 speakers we the three of us will be there we've announced uh our good friend fortisax and john
01:49:18.360 carter two two of the great uh political commentators uh here in the nationalist space we have
01:49:24.760 many more um speakers that we will be announcing over the next few weeks some international
01:49:31.160 speakers some some other domestic speakers uh so this will be a great opportunity to have
01:49:37.080 an event very similar here in canada so if you're looking if you're interested in something like
01:49:41.320 that it'll be hamilton ontario august 29th saturday a one-day event speaking networking
01:49:50.360 we have early bird ticket sales going right now 125 bucks for the general admission 225 bucks for
01:49:57.000 the for the vip everything's getting invested right into the event to throw the best event
01:50:04.040 canada has ever seen the canadian nationalist base has ever pulled off so if you missed out
01:50:10.200 on the remigration summit you couldn't make it all the way to portugal try and make it to hamilton
01:50:14.040 i know that's a big trip for a lot of people but you need to be at this event you won't want to
01:50:19.080 miss it you'll regret it you'll have that you'll have that fomo if you if you don't come
01:50:25.240 i'm looking forward to it 699 from john 36 u8e uh release more activism stickers maybe with some qr
01:50:33.320 codes yes yes yes we'll have many more uh sticker designs as we as we continue to to sell uh
01:50:39.000 they are ugly and I hate them. Um, but maybe we'll, we'll test it out in the future.
01:50:49.000 It's a good clip to take out a context. They're ugly and I hate them.
01:50:54.000 All right.
01:50:56.000 I, I think that's everything we have for tonight.
01:51:00.000 Thank you so much for joining us.
01:51:02.000 all right i i think that's everything we have for tonight thank you all for joining us uh you know
01:51:11.740 buy your dom con tickets head over to shop.dominionsociety.ca buy these beautiful hats that
01:51:17.520 these gentlemen are wearing these beautiful shirts we got a great new merch line uh or become a
01:51:23.860 member dominionsociety.ca join you'll get your nice pin you'll get involved in the organization
01:51:28.580 You get plugged in with your local members in your area.
01:51:32.620 Another last minute super chat from Peli4560 for $5.
01:51:37.020 Thoughts on Carney's mandating of British English
01:51:39.620 across government and civil service
01:51:41.700 in making use of the coat of arms on podiums.
01:51:45.760 The coat of arms thing is not really a unique thing.
01:51:47.980 It's always been a symbol of the House of Commons.
01:51:50.560 It's been used on letterheads.
01:51:51.900 This is not really a new thing.
01:51:53.840 The British English, to be honest,
01:51:56.340 I think it's a bit autistic.
01:51:57.620 I think that Canadian English is a not totally formalized mishmash of American English and British English.
01:52:11.200 And I like Canada's bizarre eccentricities be that, you know, using Zeds in the word organization, but U's in the word color.
01:52:20.820 um i think going the whole british way is a bit uh silly and autistic and we should embrace
01:52:25.440 our weird canadian uh you know measuring distance in kilometers but height in feet
01:52:32.120 uh in all these weird mix mash that we use i like the stupid way that we do things so
01:52:38.620 that's that's my take on it um although i i yeah uh so uh disrupting the outro uh but thanks for
01:52:48.200 joining us tonight thanks for joining me ken greg it was great to to sit down and chill uh have a
01:52:54.680 little lax stream catch up uh it's only been a few days since we were together but it's always nice
01:53:00.080 to to to be together uh have a great night everyone thanks for joining us and most importantly
01:53:07.480 long live canon