Dominion Society of Canada - March 13, 2026


Canada's Justice System is Broken | Dominion Society LIVE


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 30 minutes

Words per Minute

139.94936

Word Count

12,729

Sentence Count

324

Misogynist Sentences

4

Hate Speech Sentences

62


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 We don't think the Conservative Party is very conservative.
00:00:20.000 Canada is undergoing the most dramatic cultural change in its history and the Conservatives are silent today.
00:00:25.000 Not only are they silent, they're actively trying to pander to foreign ethnic groups.
00:00:45.480 It does kind of feel like a foreign country here, not going to lie.
00:00:55.000 If you're a real conservative, you would stand against this transformation of our society.
00:01:19.660 And we're going to hold the Conservative Party accountable.
00:01:25.000 The only option right now to preserve Canada's ethno-cultural identity is re-migration.
00:01:55.000 hello and welcome to another episode of dominion society live my name is daniel tyree i am the
00:02:10.680 founder and chairman of the dominion society but tonight i am your host we have another great show
00:02:17.940 ahead of us as per usual. I want to talk to you guys a bit about Canada's dysfunctional legal
00:02:24.860 system. We've had a number of cases over the last week or so that have really exposed a lot
00:02:30.520 of different issues within Canada's completely dysfunctional two-tier justice system. So I want
00:02:36.920 to drive down on a few of these cases. The one involving the access to daycare for asylum
00:02:45.260 claimants in Quebec, a bit about the deportation of the Indian migrant that committed the humble
00:02:54.060 bus crash. And then finally, today's viral news on this race-based sentencing of a murderer
00:03:02.600 out in British Columbia. So, and then we'll take some questions, take some audience questions,
00:03:08.980 and we'll close off the show with a bit of my thoughts on Canadian identity as per usual. So
00:03:15.120 let's just jump straight into things. I want to start with the older news and then move on to the
00:03:20.800 newest stuff as we get through the show. So first off, I want to jump into this case, this reporting
00:03:27.680 by Jamie Sarkanek that found the Chief Justice, the Supreme Court, says the existence of the
00:03:36.160 Canadian border is discrimination. So you guys probably saw this case. It was pretty big last
00:03:42.080 week or over the weekend. Basically, the chief, the Supreme Court found that the state, the
00:03:49.600 government of Quebec was discriminating against asylum claimants. So these are people who have not
00:03:56.460 been approved asylum status yet. But apparently, according to the courts, they still deserve access
00:04:04.300 to our social support system, specifically in this case, Quebec's daycare system. So Quebec has a very
00:04:10.940 generous daycare system. And pretty much everyone's eligible for it. Citizens, permanent residents,
00:04:17.340 temporary foreign workers, international students, and asylum claims that have been approved.
00:04:23.800 The only group that are not eligible to receive this daycare are the asylum claimants that are
00:04:29.840 in the process or have been rejected. And there was a case that's been going through the court
00:04:35.780 system for the last few years of an asylum claimant from the Democratic Republic of the
00:04:44.480 Congo who claimed that this is discrimination, that she's a woman of color and she can't
00:04:51.480 access daycare, and that's negatively affecting her as a person here in Canada.
00:04:58.160 And ultimately, the Supreme Court sided with her and said that this is not a reasonable
00:05:04.200 means of discrimination, which to be honest, does not make any sense. All these different
00:05:12.760 statuses within Canada, citizen, permanent resident, temporary foreign worker, all of these
00:05:20.180 are designations by which the government discriminates, right? People get certain
00:05:26.260 access to services or certain rights based off of these statuses. You know, temporary foreign
00:05:31.840 workers have to leave at the end of their visa. That is a form of discrimination compared to a
00:05:36.940 citizen who gets to stay here indefinitely or a permanent resident. Even citizenship itself
00:05:42.580 is, of course, a way that we discriminate within our society, right? Only citizens are allowed to
00:05:49.080 vote in elections. This is a form of discrimination against permanent residents who don't get to vote.
00:05:55.560 They get to stay here and they get access to services, but they aren't allowed to vote.
00:05:58.580 so really there are uh i would say there are two kind of foundational problems that this
00:06:05.380 exposes and and like again we have to remember how dysfunctional our asylum system is to to start
00:06:12.400 out right uh this this is just a new pathway for people to come here illegally effectively
00:06:18.480 they come here on all sorts of other other uh temporary visas they might be students they might
00:06:23.900 be temporary foreign workers they could even be coming here on a tourist visa or illegally crossing
00:06:28.100 our border and then they claim asylum and they get all sorts of benefits right not even to get
00:06:32.980 into this health daycare problem asylum claimants get all sorts of health care services very generous
00:06:39.540 health care services through the interim federal health program that includes dental care and
00:06:44.980 therapy and all sorts of things that even canadian citizens don't get access to so they already have
00:06:50.580 a litany of uh different services that they do get access to but daycare needs to be added to
00:06:58.020 the pile according to our Supreme Court. So the fundamental problems here is one, that
00:07:07.740 there's one, it's twofold. There's a philosophical problem here, and then there's a legal problem
00:07:14.240 here. So the foundational kind of philosophical qualm here is that discrimination is inherently
00:07:21.440 bad. And this kind of gets to what, to the heart of the left-right divide, I think, philosophically.
00:07:30.680 In modern Canada, left-right has kind of been reduced to individualism versus collectivism.
00:07:37.340 And that's, that'll be why dudes like Wyatt Claypool claim that I'm not even right-wing,
00:07:43.040 because I consider myself a collectivist, because I consider myself a nationalist.
00:07:46.800 list but i think the the the more pertinent philosophical divide between left and right
00:07:52.460 is the divide between egalitarianism and uh and hierarchy and hierarchy is a kind
00:08:02.700 right-wing thought has really been pushed out of the mainstream since the kind of post-war period
00:08:08.280 in favor of this liberal egalitarianism that has become the norm across the world
00:08:13.960 and but this hierarchical form of thinking is dependent on discrimination or more charitably
00:08:21.820 put maybe discernment uh people like me right real right wingers we realize that discrimination is
00:08:29.260 is a good thing in many cases and even morally the only moral option in many situations like
00:08:37.980 everyone discriminates against their friends or their enemies uh you know locking your door
00:08:44.900 uh letting in your your friends into your house and not anyone that walks down the street that's
00:08:50.420 a form of discrimination protecting your uh your family from invaders that's that's a form of
00:08:55.960 discrimination but now discrimination has become like an evil within uh modern liberal society
00:09:03.400 And that's really put to the forefront in cases like this.
00:09:12.360 Here we have Chief Justice says, a distinction based on refugee claimant status may violate the dignity of members of that group, Chief Justice Wagner wrote.
00:09:24.340 Historically disadvantaged group that they, he described it as an immutable characteristic, which is absurd.
00:09:32.160 Asylum status is not immutable. It changes. Like she wasn't an asylum claimant before she came to
00:09:36.660 our country. Independent on the asylum process, she may not be an asylum claimant. She might
00:09:40.980 become an illegal immigrant. She might become a permanent resident or whatnot. It is by definition
00:09:45.340 not an immutable characteristic. But Chief Justice Wagner describes this as historically
00:09:52.300 disadvantaged group that are vulnerable and marginalized. And based on international law,
00:09:58.520 we must treat these people to the same standards as uh citizens or permanent residents which is
00:10:05.340 quite absurd and it it begs the question like where does this line end um as as i already
00:10:12.120 mentioned like citizens are afforded all sorts of rights and privileges as a result of citizenship
00:10:16.920 uh is it is it unreasonable discrimination for uh to to not provide to not allow these people
00:10:24.840 the chance to vote that includes permanent residents that includes people of all sorts
00:10:28.840 of statuses where does this end at what point does the border itself become discriminatory why
00:10:35.160 why do we only provide health care to people that live here why don't we just open hospitals all
00:10:39.460 over the world we're just discriminating against people living in different countries
00:10:43.340 it's just an absolutely absurd position that that erodes the value in the the dignity of actual
00:10:51.620 Canadians. It's very discouraging to see the highest court in the land taking this sort of
00:11:00.360 priority and undermining what it means to be Canadian. The legal aspect here, though, is the
00:11:10.100 bigger problem in Canadian society, I would say. And that comes down to the very imposition of the
00:11:16.980 the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. And a lot of people don't realize that the Charter is a very
00:11:24.000 new addition to kind of Canada's governance style. It was only brought forth in 1982 when the
00:11:31.540 Constitution was repatriated under Pierre Trudeau. And he imposed the modern Charter of Rights and
00:11:40.920 freedoms. And this really transformed governance in Canada completely. And it is a fundamentally
00:11:47.680 an Americanization of our society. Before 1982, it's not like Canadians didn't have rights,
00:11:53.760 right? That's a kind of absurdism. Of course, we've had rights right from the earliest days
00:11:59.980 of Confederation and even beforehand. But before the charter, Canada was governed by what is known
00:12:06.940 as common law uh so this is a very different organization for society it our rights were
00:12:15.280 based off of centuries of precedent made through legal cases made by courts uh subject to precedent
00:12:26.380 stretching all the way back to the magna carta right this is this was the the basis for all
00:12:32.800 rights in Canada. And as a result, that makes for a society where Parliament is supreme. So while
00:12:40.220 courts can make decisions based on what is permissible based off of previous case law,
00:12:46.900 the ultimate power resides with Parliament who gets to make decisions on new laws and makes
00:12:53.500 determination. This way, the power resides with the people through Parliament. The imposition of
00:13:00.800 the Charter created this new constitutional rights-based order, which really turned Canadian
00:13:08.120 society on its head and brought us more similar away from our British roots towards a more
00:13:14.260 American style of governance. And it really puts Parliament below the courts. Now the courts can
00:13:21.300 strike down all sorts of laws and make determinations. They can strike down laws as
00:13:27.120 unconstitutional based off of Pierre Trudeau's vision for society his very liberal internationalist
00:13:34.280 globalist egalitarian vision for society that that entrenched things like multiculturalism
00:13:40.460 straight into our constitution now this gives an unnecessary amount of power to judges who are
00:13:48.600 unelected who are not accountable to the people and who increasingly we've seen the court stacked
00:13:55.920 with people consistent with this kind of egalitarian liberal outlook. One of the major
00:14:03.100 problems in Canadian society are these activist judges that are using the charter in order to
00:14:08.580 transform Canadian society. This is not the way Canada was supposed to be organized. This is not
00:14:13.800 the way that our founding fathers, our fathers of confederation saw the country. They saw us
00:14:20.980 following in the inheritance of British common law. And that is inherently more democratic.
00:14:30.200 The courts are not accountable to anyone. The courts see themselves as these kind of
00:14:35.640 progressive transformers of society. And it's making Canada worse and worse and worse.
00:14:42.680 Any sort of nationalist government will need to correct these structural changes that the liberals, that Pierre Trudeau made to our society.
00:14:56.820 We need to fundamentally transform the charter. It's the driving problem behind many, many aspects of Canadian society.
00:15:06.240 And this is just, this one case is just an example, just a way to, just an example of how this new kind of judge supremacy style of governance is negatively impacting Canadian society.
00:15:27.080 it's it the constitution the current constitution is the driving force behind
00:15:31.420 a lot of quebec's issues with canadian society a lot of the west's issues with canadian society
00:15:37.920 a nationalist government would need to completely repeal the the charter of rights and freedoms and
00:15:43.600 replace it with a vision for canadian society that is much more consistent with the intentions
00:15:50.380 of our founders and something that actually protects the canadian people i would like to
00:15:56.040 see the opening of the charter recognize the existence and the continued protection of the
00:16:05.220 Canadian people, of the Canadian nation, or the two nations perhaps, the Franco-Canadians and
00:16:10.640 the Anglo-Canadians, as the major priority for the Canadian government. This is what we saw
00:16:14.900 Victor Orbán's Hungary do. One of the earliest things that they did was to amend their constitution
00:16:23.940 to introduce this first passage that recognized the kind of ethnocultural identity of the Hungarian
00:16:31.120 people. And through that, all sorts of subsequent reforms were able to come into play. So I really
00:16:37.180 think that a total constitutional transformation is necessary within Canada. This would also
00:16:45.160 simplify all sorts of things. All sorts of our remigration policy will likely be contested by
00:16:52.840 activist judges trying to strike down any sort of reforms that put the Canadian people first
00:16:58.420 as discriminatory. But the existence of borders, the existence of a country, the existence of a
00:17:06.420 nation is fundamentally discriminatory. You have to be able to choose the in-group and the out-group
00:17:10.760 and protect those interests. So that's the two kind of philosophical, the legal issues that we
00:17:19.340 We need to recognize and move towards reforms in order to restore Canada.
00:17:25.920 We need to understand that discrimination is good in many cases.
00:17:31.080 It can be bad.
00:17:32.020 It can be good.
00:17:33.020 It's morally neutral.
00:17:34.320 Right now, the Supreme Court and the courts look to exterminate discrimination in all these sort of cases without kind of understanding that there needs to be protections for the Canadian people.
00:17:47.700 so this is just an absurd case uh you know asylum claimants illegals should not be permitted any sort
00:17:55.760 of social services even people that are born uh even people that immigrate here should have
00:18:02.060 limited access they haven't paid into the system intergenerationally in the same way that canadian
00:18:06.800 people have um like myself i i i have rarely used health care services throughout my my lifetime
00:18:13.880 yet my family has been paying into this system for for generations this is the way we need to
00:18:19.160 be able to put our our canadian people first and our supreme courts are actively working against
00:18:24.920 this so i think this is a very disturbing case um and is drawing our country further and further
00:18:31.320 away from its founding ethos um but really we what we need to be able to to put the the courts
00:18:39.240 back into their place and and make sure that parliament continues to reign supreme as as it
00:18:44.660 should uh so that was one big case uh the next one that's been generating a lot of conversation
00:18:51.420 has been uh the the deportation of uh jaskerit singh sidhu the the fellow who
00:19:03.680 caused the Humboldt bus crash back in 2018. So I'm sure most of you guys are aware of this
00:19:13.940 situation. This fellow was a permanent resident admitted in 2014. He was a very inexperienced
00:19:20.540 truck driver, and he ran through a stop sign resulting in the death of 16 Canadian boys,
00:19:29.660 uh the injury of 13 others and now there there's been this coordinated media push
00:19:39.820 we've seen a number of op-eds like this one from john manley man responsible for the humble
00:19:45.920 bus crash paid his debt to society and should not be deported uh similarly there was a uh some c
00:19:54.380 a CBC article and the CBC coverage trying to generate sympathy for this man and his
00:20:03.760 in his family he said he was haunted not by the deaths not by the blood on his hands the
00:20:10.860 the the deaths of these Canadian boys but by the thought of being separated from his family
00:20:16.940 in having to go back to India. As a result of his negligent actions, he pled guilty to 16 cases of
00:20:28.760 irresponsible driving causing death and 13 counts of irresponsible driving causing bodily harm.
00:20:37.300 And as a result, his permanent residency was revoked. This happened back in 2024.
00:20:42.660 the the IRB found that revoked his permanent residency and imposed a deportation order the
00:20:50.780 only reason he's still in our country here in 2026 is because we have such a charitable system
00:20:57.280 towards people that should not be here in the first place he's been allowed to go through the
00:21:03.420 appeal process and now he's trying to get permanent residency based off of compassionate and
00:21:10.080 humanitarian grounds based off of his connections, because now he's had children here, he has a wife
00:21:17.300 here, and so on. And many pundits in the media are making this argument that like Canada, it's
00:21:25.260 foundational that we give people second chances. And he served his debt. In fact, he only was in
00:21:31.860 he had 16, 18 years, eight year sentences. But in Canada, you get to serve these all at the same
00:21:39.780 time. He was only in jail for three, three and a half years. And now he's out free living in
00:21:47.140 Calgary. This guy is emblematic of major problems in Canadian society, specifically the trucking
00:21:56.760 industry, which has been completely taken over by Indian scammers, to put it bluntly, who use the
00:22:05.840 system to bring over more and more friends and family. They provide licenses. They're basically
00:22:12.100 selling licenses to unqualified drivers, which is filling our streets with these people who
00:22:17.500 can we you have to stop and consider how dangerous it is for unqualified drivers to be driving these
00:22:25.800 massive trucks that have killed multiple Canadians that have injured multiple Canadians.
00:22:30.280 are our roadways are completely unsafe because these Indians are taking advantage of the system
00:22:36.060 to bring more of their friends and families here to profit off of it by selling these licenses
00:22:40.680 by giving by giving uh work to students who should not be uh working on their on their student visas
00:22:49.040 to to that are it's being used to traffic drugs around our country there's so many problems
00:22:57.980 within our trucking industry and this guy has become emblematic of that systemic problem
00:23:04.060 and now we have people coming forward and acting like he should not be deported and
00:23:09.700 and i question like what what kind of message that sends if if sidu is not deported it just says that
00:23:19.280 these these indian scammers can continue to take advantage of our system and the political
00:23:25.020 establishment will just sweep to their defense and make sure that they're able to stay even if
00:23:30.600 they commit the highest possible crime like I can't conceive of a more heinous crime than a
00:23:38.720 team of Canadian hockey players young men representing the the future the best of Canada
00:23:45.660 our very identity this these young 20 year old boys with their whole future ahead of them
00:23:51.680 taken from their families due to the negligent actions of an unqualified driver this guy had
00:23:57.540 been driving truck for less than three weeks he had more than 70 safety infractions within
00:24:05.860 the 11 days leaving leading up to this crash his employer did not intervene and these boys
00:24:13.620 paid the highest possible price and yet people still keep coming to his defense
00:24:21.500 being published in the national post our state broadcaster making this content in order to to
00:24:28.140 show how how how how he's the victim how him being deported that's the real issue here and like it's
00:24:38.700 just absurd like this is deportation in this situation is a kindness like this guy does not
00:24:45.380 belong in our country. Anyone who does not, cannot follow our laws, I can't think of a more
00:24:52.480 clear signal that they do not belong in our society than they are killing our people and
00:24:58.740 not following our laws. So this guy needs to be deported yesterday. I would, I am disappointed
00:25:05.840 that we don't see the Conservative Party taking a stronger stand on this. Again, this is just like
00:25:14.080 how we were talking last week about how the asylum system is such an easy target for the
00:25:19.360 conservative party. Like this is a perfect way for them to be not only talking about sending a
00:25:26.560 message by deporting this guy, but going deeper in exploring all the issues within the Canadian
00:25:33.360 trucking industry that is making Canada a less safe country. And yet the conservatives are
00:25:38.560 relatively silent on this. I think Pierre has made a comment maybe today that he should be
00:25:43.520 deported, that the process is played out and it should be put to an end. But they could be putting
00:25:48.940 this at the front of everything. And I'm concerned that they're not doing so because the party is
00:25:54.320 increasingly sold out to seek interest groups. The Sikhs made up a large part of the conservative
00:26:02.200 caucus. They're in high power positions. We have Tim Opal as the deputy leader. A few other of
00:26:10.360 their Sikhs hold high positions within the shadow cabinet. And a lot of these networks within the
00:26:20.200 tracking industry are Sikhs. This man, Sidhu, is a Sikh and so are his employers. And I'm concerned
00:26:28.840 that the conservatives are not taking a stronger stance on this because they don't want to jeopardize
00:26:36.600 these kind of patronage networks, these communities that they want to win over to their
00:26:41.120 side in order to win important elections. There are a number of ridings where Sikhs are an extremely
00:26:46.800 powerful voting bloc in Surrey, in northern Calgary, and in Brampton. There are at least
00:26:54.620 10 seats around the country that can be won or lost with Sikh support. And again, I think this
00:27:00.580 is a warp a warping of political priorities around diaspora politics and it's just not acceptable
00:27:07.900 if we can't put the interests of canadian lives ahead of foreigners what's the point of the
00:27:15.280 conservative party what's the point of any of of the parties in government if they can't stand up
00:27:20.540 for these basic realities so for the most part the system while it's slow it's playing out as it
00:27:29.240 should he has been ordered deported but to see to see especially the public broadcaster making like
00:27:35.120 sob story pieces about uh how he's the real victim here is just so disgusting and so disrespectful
00:27:40.820 to the young men that died and their their families that have to that have to see this
00:27:45.900 man's face when he should have been deported years ago uh so another incredibly disturbing case
00:27:52.860 um based on how dysfunctional canadian the canadian legal system is becoming
00:27:57.800 uh in the last uh case i do want to talk about is the kind of viral news from today i'm sure
00:28:07.560 many of you saw it it was there was millions millions of views on this one issue let me pull
00:28:17.740 it up. Here we go. Man who murdered girlfriend gets reduced sentence partly due to his race.
00:28:30.940 So this happened back in 2021. This young woman, 25 years old, was murdered by her boyfriend.
00:28:38.020 she was stabbed 15 times in broad daylight in a mall
00:28:43.160 and while the murderer was sentenced to to life in prison uh the supreme court
00:28:55.060 of uh the representative from british columbia found that they wanted to reduce his parole time
00:29:02.820 from 15 years down to 12 based off of an impact of race and culture assessment so this again
00:29:12.000 pretty much found in summary that due to due to his race since he was black he was part of
00:29:20.960 a culture that creates trauma and as such you know he can't be held responsible for his actions
00:29:28.460 and is warranted to have a reduced sentence.
00:29:34.460 And again, this is just emblematic of Canada's two-tier justice system.
00:29:39.700 There's been a number of cases throughout the last few months of migrants,
00:29:44.400 mostly on temporary permits, that are getting reduced sentences.
00:29:48.820 You know, you'll see the courts issue six months minus a day
00:29:51.880 because if they get six months or more, they'd have to be removed from the country,
00:29:55.320 which is seen as too harsh a punishment in this modern day and age when of course again as i said
00:30:03.200 earlier there is no clearer signal that someone is not appropriate to be in canadian society than
00:30:09.180 breaking our laws so this guy born and raised in canada in toronto moved to british columbia
00:30:16.780 and this article doesn't even cover how how heinous the situation was the guy that killed her
00:30:25.320 they just say that he went and reported himself to the police which isn't the full story like
00:30:30.660 after after murdering this young woman he broke into several people's apartments
00:30:36.560 then he turned himself in he was released the next day by authorities and then he went to go
00:30:44.860 try and rob a bank before being in prison again so just an absolutely absurd situation i'm not sure
00:30:52.720 why the color of his skin results in him getting a reduced sentence but i also find it deeply ironic
00:31:01.560 that the very same people that will call us me nationalists in general racist for pointing out
00:31:10.860 that different ethnic groups have different cultural experiences and this causes issues
00:31:18.080 in Canadian society and as such our immigration policy should be based around cultural considerations
00:31:24.480 we should let in certain groups not let in certain groups based off of their cultural
00:31:30.080 compatibility compatibility with Canada these same groups that'll call us racist for making
00:31:36.280 that claim that'll try and suggest that everyone is the same everyone is just an abstract liberal
00:31:42.700 uh economic unit that any sort of discrimination is unacceptable will then say that these people
00:31:51.880 have different ethnocultural experiences and as such that's the basis for a two-tier justice
00:31:57.620 system the double standard is unbelievable that you can at once say no we're all the same
00:32:06.560 immigration should be open to everyone but no no people are different and as such we need to
00:32:14.840 employ uh different standards with our justice system it doesn't make sense these are in
00:32:19.820 irreconcilable irreconcilable differences uh that that that just show that the whole system
00:32:30.800 is anti-white like that's that's that's the simple reality behind this
00:32:35.960 and to really understand this you need to go back into into previous determinations all this comes
00:32:45.560 back to uh the gladu case which is a case back from 1995 which found that there are already
00:32:54.940 stipulations within the Canadian Criminal Code, I think it's 718E, that suggests that
00:33:01.740 people of First Nations backgrounds, specifically people on reserves, should receive lesser
00:33:07.960 sentences due to their over-representation within Canada's prison systems. In 1995,
00:33:15.040 there was this case with this young woman, Gladue, and the provincial court found that
00:33:20.760 this didn't apply to her because she wasn't on reserve but the supreme court overturned that
00:33:25.760 and said that indigenous people first nations people regardless of where they live are subjected
00:33:33.140 to those same standards so this entrenched racial discrimination within canadian the canadian
00:33:39.860 justice system and since then that has been expanded beyond just first nations people to
00:33:45.760 all sorts of ethnic minorities. That's the kind of basis for these impact of race and culture
00:33:51.680 assessments that led to this fellow, whatever his name is, Everton Javon Downey, receiving a reduced
00:34:02.020 sentence for, again, just serious, serious crimes. It's increasingly apparent that the Supreme Court
00:34:12.620 is acting against the Canadian people. And we need to reform Canadian society to take
00:34:19.760 power away from the courts, to reverse this Americanization, this liberalization of Canadian
00:34:26.320 society, and put our own people first. If people are committing crimes, they should be put in jail.
00:34:32.900 And it should not be a consideration what color their skin is, or what their upbringing was. It's
00:34:41.880 just it's an unnecessary factor within the justice system justice is supposed to be blind
00:34:50.480 and giving him a reduced sentence just because he's black does not make any sense it's really
00:35:00.280 not acceptable and just case after case after case it's completely demoralizing the the the
00:35:08.480 justice system in this country just is working to protect the interests of
00:35:13.520 indian migrants that are crashing into buses and killing teams of hockey players of of
00:35:22.600 asylum seekers who shouldn't be in this country in the first place receiving
00:35:26.860 more and more benefits against young women who are brutally murdered by by ethnic minorities
00:35:37.360 all these groups are protected at the expense of the canadian people it's completely backwards and
00:35:44.020 we really need a revolutionary a counter-revolution that that puts the canadian people first that
00:35:53.260 explicitly puts canada first within our own country this is not an unreasonable or or really
00:36:01.320 a radical idea. It's the real radicals are the people that are reorienting our society
00:36:08.260 in order to pander to the lowest common denominator. And it's unacceptable. It's
00:36:14.480 time we put our feet down and reorient and reorder society because this isn't working.
00:36:22.040 this isn't working. It's just a disgusting case. And I'd like to see more. We have seen a big
00:36:33.060 reaction, especially out in British Columbia where this took place. I've seen a number of
00:36:36.820 candidates for the British Conservative Party, British Columbia Conservative Party leadership
00:36:45.120 speak out against this and and uh demand that these these racial considerations be removed from
00:36:52.640 from our justice system uh but again unless we unless we attack the foundational problems here
00:37:02.640 which is the charter which is the charter then we won't see we'll we will continue to see activist
00:37:11.280 judges define how Canadian society functions. And we'll continue to see our country kind of
00:37:19.740 fall down this drain pipe. So definitely a discouraging set of issues we've seen throughout
00:37:27.440 the week. Another thing I do want to touch upon, I guess, is another big thing that happened this
00:37:39.080 week was the floor crossing um mark carney gets one step closer to the majority government that
00:37:49.040 he's been angling for with a floor crosser from uh the uh ndp this time and i can't say i'm
00:37:58.440 surprised like as soon as we saw the election result how narrow the minority government was
00:38:03.420 you know three seats or whatever it was on election night uh it was very obvious that
00:38:08.300 he would be able to cobble together a majority government because most of these people are not
00:38:14.160 that are elected as members of parliament are not they're not principled they don't have a strong
00:38:21.360 sense of or worldview or the or the way they want to reorient canada they don't have loyalty to
00:38:26.460 their own parties what they're looking for is is power and influence uh so when given the chance
00:38:32.080 to go for one party to join the government it was it was an inevitability that he would be able to
00:38:39.760 pull members of parliament from the other parties and functionally I don't think it makes a huge
00:38:44.560 difference like Carney's been governing as if he has a majority government since day one the
00:38:50.540 conservatives are explicitly clear that they're not interested in triggering an election right
00:38:56.040 now because the polling is not in their favor uh so it functionally it doesn't make a huge
00:39:03.020 difference what it's really uh annoying to see is that the the conservatives pierre polyev just
00:39:09.420 keeps whining about four crossing and the the whole idea behind four crossing and this illegitimate
00:39:16.500 majority government that carney's pulling together what they need to do is is to present a real
00:39:21.380 alternative to Canadians. The issue here is that there's very little difference between the
00:39:26.800 Conservatives and the Liberals, which is resulting in the Liberals climbing and climbing in the
00:39:31.840 polls and the Conservatives being put in this weak position. If they want to discourage floor
00:39:36.560 crossing, if they want to rise back in the polls, they need to be able to present a real alternative
00:39:41.940 to the Canadian people. And all these issues that we've talked about, all this dysfunction
00:39:46.640 within our legal system is all that there is so much opportunity to provide a clear alternative
00:39:54.720 to bring Canada in a new direction, but they're weak on all of these issues. They're not willing
00:39:59.980 to grapple with the serious problems in our country. They're not willing to attack the
00:40:05.440 charter. They're not willing to attack the asylum system. They're not willing to stand up for
00:40:11.100 discernment for discrimination where it should be allowed, protecting our citizens, protecting
00:40:19.960 our people. So they really have to stop all this whining about floor crossing and so forth. They
00:40:29.140 need to focus on providing a real alternative for the Canadian people. So that's mostly what
00:40:37.760 wanted to rant about tonight i will start to take a few questions from uh our viewers here in the
00:40:43.760 audience what they think about all these ongoing problems please uh let me know what you guys are
00:40:54.640 are thinking i can't believe this case though stabbed 15 times but you know he's black so
00:41:10.580 we gotta let him out we'd never have the same standards for white canadians
00:41:16.180 are there any questions tonight
00:41:46.180 tories need to go full re-margulation or they'll never win i totally agree they need to to recognize
00:42:01.680 they need to to push back against the liberal consensus and and start providing a more national
00:42:07.540 worldview they need to they need to recognize what a canadian is and what is canadian isn't
00:42:12.080 that's the most important thing thoughts on pierre going on international podcasts only after he
00:42:18.460 lost yeah i mean i think he should have been talking to people uh a lot more and not just to
00:42:23.440 podcasts in the u.s like i think he should have talked to the media more in the should have gone
00:42:29.080 on cbc and and stuff like this i think he should he would have uh been able to win some some boomers
00:42:35.120 onto his side just by uh by talking to them where they're at i'm a catholic and i'm wondering if
00:42:43.360 dominion society would focus on promoting canada's christian history especially with
00:42:47.680 his relationship with the catholic church um where i recognize can canada kind of christian
00:42:55.840 heritage i i think the the church it's not just the catholic church right it's the it's
00:43:01.200 you know a combination of anglican and protestant denominations as well as
00:43:06.240 catholic denominations um the the dominion society is a is a secular organization
00:43:13.040 um but we do recognize the importance of of canada's christian heritage and and even
00:43:21.200 the impact that uh the declining faith within society has had on on on canadian interests as
00:43:28.480 As a result, we don't have the same kind of localized community networks, and that makes
00:43:33.660 Canadians a lot easier to ignore, whereas every other foreign ethnic group remains organized
00:43:37.860 around, largely around faith groups, but also all sorts of other community groups and so on.
00:43:43.780 In response to the Bill C9 stuff earlier this week, it was the National Council of Canadian
00:43:48.460 Muslims had a letter signed by 350 different Muslim groups in Canada.
00:43:53.180 Just insane.
00:43:53.820 there are 300 there's more than 350 different muslim groups here in canada um it's just absurd
00:44:00.780 to see but it shows how organized foreign ethnic groups are in this country and ready to push back
00:44:05.700 against different laws and i think canada needs to see the same thing so i think there are a lot
00:44:10.480 of different entities that are pushing forward um for for canadian faith uh christian faith
00:44:16.280 and so on uh the dominion society is narrowly focused on on kind of promoting a nationalist
00:44:21.900 vision uh promoting re-migration um and religion is is not really our um our driving force or
00:44:30.260 anything thoughts on kanzuk pierre has been talking a lot about it i mean i like kanzuk in
00:44:36.860 in concept i think uh you know as a middle power we have to be making uh collaborations with other
00:44:44.100 sort of middle power countries and it makes the most sense to work within the the former anglosphere
00:44:48.900 the countries that are are most uh ethnically culturally similar to us uh that being said a lot
00:44:56.960 of uh concepts of kansas uh come with you know professional mobility or mobility within the
00:45:03.680 within the um within those countries and i don't think that's viable until until we have
00:45:08.940 remigration so i would like to see a sort of remigrationist pact amongst anglosphere countries
00:45:13.740 We can work together on reforms for deportations to make sure that, you know, people removed from one country are not going to another.
00:45:23.060 People like Rupert Lowe have put forward the deportation NATO.
00:45:26.800 I think ideas like this are really important and could lead down the line to a more open Kansak union.
00:45:33.180 But I think until we have remigration, Kansak is just kind of like a suicide pact that would make it much more complicated.
00:45:39.960 we'd see people moving between uh our countries uh you know migrants uh these ethnic minorities
00:45:47.320 moving between our countries it would just make the the whole situation more more complex so i
00:45:51.560 think uh re-migration is the the priority and anything else must kind of flow from there
00:46:00.280 what is mark carney's real agenda with canada it's it's hard to say it's hard to say
00:46:04.680 you know he's a he's a liberal internationalist though like he he he he puts forward this new
00:46:14.180 world order and stuff but it's it's really just more of the same it's a it's an anti-american
00:46:20.180 kind of liberal international order when really what we need is is is a more nationalistic world
00:46:27.020 order with uh with all of these countries taking a more nationalist uh country first uh position
00:46:33.360 within a more chaotic global order kanzak is yeah i agree it's a bad idea right now
00:46:41.000 um i i think there's there's potential there but right now we need to focus on remigration
00:46:47.660 sir daniel i'm not a sir i'm not a sir not yet at least do you think the pay what do you think
00:46:54.380 of paleoconservative ideology do you think it should be brought here in our nation of canada
00:46:58.600 um uh i think in canada we have very unique um ideologies that we should focus on we need a
00:47:07.440 very unique form of solutions that fit our people so in canada i think we need to go back to uh to
00:47:15.440 to to older concepts of red toryism of high toryism um to find that uh to find a vision
00:47:24.240 for the future that works and will appeal to Canadians. I think what we need is a renewed
00:47:28.960 vision for what loyalism means in the current year. And that to me, it's more complex than
00:47:37.780 just a loyalty to the crown. It needs to be a loyalty to ethnos, to our identity, to our
00:47:46.140 descendants and our ancestors, to our language, to our land. We need to define a comprehensive
00:47:55.820 vision for nationalism and loyalism in this country. I don't think it's as simple as importing
00:48:00.220 ideologies from other countries, although it could be seen as a sort of paleoconservatism,
00:48:06.960 an older version of a conservative vision in this country. For the floor crosses, do you think it
00:48:13.640 involves bribery or blackmail i feel like it might be both you never know with backroom deals but
00:48:19.480 ultimately i think these people are just seeking power and right now and and like re-election and
00:48:24.480 stuff and right now carney's the safe horse to bet on um you might not get re-elected in some of
00:48:29.520 these ridings as an ndp or as a as a conservative whereas you have a safe bet if you join within the
00:48:35.780 liberal party which is kind of ascendant in the polls right now what happened with the ppc i don't
00:48:45.000 know if you mean between me and the ppc or what's going on in the ppc currently but that's the party
00:48:50.280 seems to be on the decline it's not um it's not being well managed uh i don't think they have a
00:48:55.280 message that resonates with most canadians i think that comes down to their very like libertarian
00:48:59.820 worldview i think what's necessary is to go against the the libertarian ideology of the
00:49:06.700 liberal ideology and form a cohesive uh vision for for what kind of illiberal thought is in
00:49:13.420 canada i think that's more consistent with um our history and our heritage and i think parties be at
00:49:19.880 the conservatives or be at the the ppc will continue to to decline and struggle until they
00:49:25.500 can articulate a vision that's less American and more consistent with our heritage.
00:49:34.280 I'm wondering about helping DomSoc grow. Any plans? Yeah, we need more and more people
00:49:38.260 every day. I encourage you to sign up as a member if you have not already. We are committed to
00:49:43.340 reaching out to all of our members and getting them involved within our organization, whether
00:49:48.040 that be in local groups or some of our more national scope groups, helping with policy and
00:49:54.400 research at the national level, helping with graphic design and video creation, content creation,
00:49:59.580 or just getting involved on your local group. We're making these local pods in cities all across
00:50:05.260 the country for local meetups, for advocacy, for grassroots advocacy, distributing posters and
00:50:12.560 flyers and stuff like that. We really need to make a cohesive organization that is completely
00:50:19.500 independent from the the current political establishment that'll free up nationalists
00:50:25.560 to speak our minds like I'm in a position to do so because I have the support of the
00:50:31.240 organization and we want to bring that support and expand that support to the whole country
00:50:34.600 so if you can make a donation if you can become a member that that really does help fuel our
00:50:38.820 growth and then we'll get you plugged in with the local team and we can we can continue to
00:50:43.080 to grow in your area
00:50:44.340 come on where are the questions guys are you jewish no i'm not jewish
00:51:09.660 i was uh i was born in canada to two catholic parents uh i was raised in a very secular
00:51:19.820 household in in toronto maybe i'll do a whole episode on my background my story
00:51:27.100 daniel tell us your thoughts on how we can organize to get heritage canadians in our
00:51:33.320 government and municipal and provincial yeah yeah yeah i mean right now we're working on building
00:51:37.980 out a kind of baseline network across the country but as we become more and more familiar with our
00:51:43.340 our personnel from coast to coast we do want to start infiltrating governments and parties and so
00:51:49.060 on getting people elected at the local level to start pushing for change in all the different
00:51:54.240 forms of government but right now we need to to make that kind of baseline foundation and start
00:51:59.100 to understand our best people we don't want just anyone running for office we want the people that
00:52:03.100 are most appropriate and the best chance of winning i have a question when the bill c9 will
00:52:21.140 pass will you be able to continue with domsock uh i'm not going anywhere uh we might have some
00:52:28.100 some legal battles uh ahead of us but you know those are battles worth taking to to promote um
00:52:33.700 to continue to to defend canadian identity and heritage um i'm not super concerned about bill
00:52:40.180 c9 uh the the government has proven kind of incapable of of um regulating these american
00:52:47.380 companies um we saw that same thing happen when they tried to to enforce standards on meta facebook
00:52:54.580 and instagram for for news um they kind of lost that fight and we know that uh twitter and such is
00:53:01.380 um not aligned with the current government and very willing to to challenge those we've seen
00:53:07.700 they're in they're in um fights with the the australian government and a couple other countries
00:53:12.500 regarding free speech so um i think uh the government has kind of overplayed their hand
00:53:18.640 um and it's not going to stop me from continuing to advocate um for my people even if they even
00:53:24.720 if they try and come after me i hope you guys will stand with me if i if i need to fight for
00:53:30.400 for our rights to to speak out uh for our people
00:53:48.640 Canadians are largely oblivious to the existential issues facing our nation. How do we get people to wake up? We have to, we have to speak out about it. We have to, whether that's online or in person, spreading our message. There's nothing hateful about standing up for, for Canadian heritage and the Canadian people. And that's becoming more and more obvious to everyone.
00:54:08.980 as our society transforms more and more by the day as it becomes more and more obvious that
00:54:14.500 you know people are not just interchangeable economic units that we bring with us all sorts
00:54:19.860 of baggage culture ideas and all this stuff and in that Canadians are fundamentally different
00:54:25.280 from people from other countries people are tired about the transformation of our society so
00:54:30.120 don't be don't be afraid to to speak out but really that's what that's the whole point of
00:54:37.180 Dominion Society. We're building that organization to bring forward that message in credible and
00:54:41.340 professional ways through media content, through intellectual development, through grassroots
00:54:45.300 activism. So we're trying to bring together all sorts of Canadian nationalists in order to bring
00:54:50.560 forward that message in a way that resonates with the Canadian people.
00:54:55.660 What made you start the Dominion Society? Well, I've always been a Canadian nationalist. That's
00:55:02.500 what drove me into politics in the first place I got involved in the PPC right when the the party
00:55:08.080 was founded and I worked my way up very quickly through that party because I saw it as not because
00:55:14.000 I had any sort of faith in Bernier's leadership but because I saw it as a dissident option for
00:55:19.380 nationalists to kind of change the conversation more generally I saw it as a party for the future
00:55:24.460 for young people to to start to shift the conversation so I got involved in the the PPC
00:55:30.260 I worked there behind the scenes as the executive director for about five years and ultimately I got
00:55:37.460 pushed out of the party because my views weren't in line with the leadership but I found myself
00:55:44.540 in a position where I had all this experience all this knowledge about how politics worked
00:55:50.200 how to run a national movement and like I had already been doxed my face was already out there
00:55:57.180 So I felt I had a kind of duty to continue that fight and to push Canadian nationalism and re-migration into the mainstream.
00:56:06.020 So I built the Dominion Society as a kind of vehicle to normalize those views and to shift the direction of mainstream politics and towards a more nationalistic direction.
00:56:22.240 Thoughts on the United Party of Canada?
00:56:23.840 I don't, all these little parties, they don't know what they're doing. They don't know how to
00:56:28.720 promote themselves. They don't have the right ideas. They're all very kind of Americanist
00:56:32.700 culture war type parties. They're not going anywhere. I've met Grant Abraham once. I was,
00:56:48.520 I was not impressed with his attitudes. He was
00:56:52.380 not very respectful to the people, myself or the people that he met with.
00:56:56.320 lots of questions about the united party of canada i didn't know anyone cared about them
00:57:20.240 do you have thoughts on quebec separatism i just moved here from manitoba in part
00:57:28.000 did not live in india anymore um i i'm not a separatist i i'm personally a federalist i
00:57:36.720 thoroughly believe in johnny mcdonald's vision for a coast-to-coast dominion of canada that being said
00:57:42.440 i do kind of respect separatism as a as a mechanism to make sure that the federal government is is
00:57:50.240 attuned to regional interests, be that Quebec's separatism or Alberta separatism.
00:57:55.580 But ultimately, I think there are, I think remigration should be the priority over separation.
00:57:59.980 I think separation referendums will fail because of the ethnic vote in both of these provinces.
00:58:05.360 So if you do believe in separatism, I think we must first kind of push for remigration.
00:58:11.960 But even then, I think separation is just kind of addressing the symptoms instead of the root
00:58:17.740 issues i think we need constitutional reform to to bring our country to form a more perfect
00:58:23.660 collaboration that we never really achieved
00:58:30.220 this is max important you know you left the ppc max and bernier kicked me out of the ppc
00:58:47.740 thoughts on rupert lowe i'm a big fan of rupert lowe um from from from day one with uh restore
00:58:59.320 britain before it was a political party i was a a big fan of what they were doing um it was a very
00:59:05.060 similar kind of organization to what i had launched here with the dominion society i kind of met a
00:59:08.900 political organization a pressure group to to bring kind of nationalism into the mainstream and
00:59:13.780 I'm excited to see them continue to transform the conversation, both in Britain, but also
00:59:21.080 across the Anglosphere. I think that could be a really important thing even here in Canada. If
00:59:25.860 that party can succeed, it can kind of give credibility to the idea of new parties kind
00:59:31.160 of succeeding within a Westminster parliamentary system, which could have knock-on effects here in
00:59:35.680 Canada. I think particularly after the next election, there'll be a very destabilized,
00:59:40.540 chaotic situation within the canadian right and there could be a real opportunity for a
00:59:44.860 for a new political party to to succeed here in canada as well
00:59:51.260 is it long before being reached out to by your local group i remember for several months yes
00:59:55.340 we are very backlogged we have about a thousand onboarding calls to catch up on and more people
01:00:00.940 signing up every single day i do ask for your patience we are working to get these kind of
01:00:06.220 local groups online and download the responsibility of on onboarding onto more and more local groups
01:00:10.860 to make it more and more efficient um but this is still kind of work like we'll it's only kind of
01:00:17.500 coming online in in certain areas we're starting to get it online in montreal and in um in
01:00:23.260 southwestern ontario and in victoria and halifax and stuff like this it's slowly coming online as
01:00:29.820 we find our good people so i please we will get to you i ask for your patience we'll get you plugged
01:00:36.140 in uh i'm sorry it's taking so long but we are a very small team keep please keep in mind it's
01:00:40.700 basically just me and ken and greg kind of operating things behind the scenes with a growing
01:00:45.500 team of volunteers as we become uh more and more professional as we start to build a staff as we
01:00:51.980 as we find our best volunteers across the country things will start moving faster but we really we're
01:00:56.860 We're really just still building out
01:00:58.420 that foundation right now.
01:01:06.360 If people have ideas or contributions,
01:01:08.660 how can they contact you or contributors for members only?
01:01:13.380 You can always reach out to us at info at dominionsociety.ca
01:01:16.520 if you have any ideas or suggestions,
01:01:19.120 but involvement in the organization is limited to members.
01:01:21.780 So everyone on our policy team, everyone on our research team,
01:01:24.500 everyone on our propaganda team,
01:01:26.120 of our local organizations these are all exclusive to members this is just part of our standard kind
01:01:31.080 of vetting process heritage canadians what is that heritage canadians that's what we refer to i mean
01:01:43.000 they're just real canadians these are the the descendants of the the settlers that built this
01:01:47.960 country um there is you know an ethnic component to what a canadian is so we so there we we have
01:01:55.400 kind of two definitions the ethnic canadians these are the unique ethnic groups that were founded
01:02:00.360 through an ethno generous genesis between the french english irish scottish that happened
01:02:05.080 within the saint lawrence valley over hundreds of years and then we are for this broader definition
01:02:09.320 of heritage canadians because the settlement of canada much of canada especially western and
01:02:13.960 northern canada happened you know much later uh you know in the early 1900s so we believe that
01:02:19.880 settlement is a is a crucial part of canadian identity so we have offered this definition
01:02:24.760 heritage Canadians for the more recent, a combination of the older kind of ethnic Canadian
01:02:30.360 groups, as well as the newer waves of settlers who helped found, you know, provinces like Alberta
01:02:38.400 and Saskatchewan. These are the heritage Canadians. Aren't you afraid of being called names by Rachel
01:02:51.200 gilmore and cam no we we relish being called names by rachel gilmore and cam they're they're
01:02:56.800 that's a badge of honor and in fact we we had uh another uh person from uh the canadian anti-hate
01:03:04.400 network barbara perry on the tvo uh released earlier today talking about dominion society
01:03:12.800 the active clubs and stuff the rise of right-wing extremism in canada and it's so disrespectful the
01:03:20.240 the the the blatant double standard that they have they'll they'll they'll fear monger about
01:03:27.920 the rise of right-wing extremism when the dominion society all these groups second sons
01:03:33.440 the active clubs these are peaceful organizations there is no examples there is no examples of
01:03:38.400 violence from any of these groups and at the same time in the same interview she she hand waves away
01:03:45.920 uh left-wing extremism through antifa she says it's disorganized and they mostly do property
01:03:51.820 damage totally ignoring the violence that they have been that they have been caught on camera
01:03:57.820 doing there was the the antifa guy in manitoba who ran over a bunch of freedom convoy protesters
01:04:02.900 there's the save canada boys being having their face sliced open by antifa there's a billboard
01:04:09.960 chris having his bones broken by by antifa in montreal this is an organized group that engages
01:04:17.400 in violence and they hand wave away anything on the left while fear-mongering about the right
01:04:22.200 despite them being the violent chaotic actors and us being very professional very respectful
01:04:28.680 very peaceful if we did if anyone vaguely associated with us did the level of violence
01:04:35.720 that antifa engages in on a regular basis they'd be calling for us to be designated as terrorists
01:04:41.320 it's a it's a crazy double standard that we're subjected to but we'll continue to rise above
01:04:47.000 every time they they they write about us every time rachel gilmore makes a video about us more
01:04:52.200 and more people sign up the reality is we have a strong message we have the right vision for
01:04:57.400 this country and it's all just free advertising
01:05:05.720 will domsock ever become an actual party never say never uh right now we're focused on a
01:05:12.860 meta-political activism i think it's a more effective way to shift the conversation in
01:05:16.900 the short term but at the same time we're building a sort of shadow political party
01:05:20.000 we're building a network of people from coast to coast we're building an organization to put out
01:05:25.720 to make you know video content promotional content we're building a policy team well we're building
01:05:32.780 all the components of what a political party needs to succeed in the short term we're going
01:05:37.060 to use this to pressure existing organizations but in the long term we'll be in a much better
01:05:41.280 position to hijack an existing party or or to start our own political party if that's necessary
01:05:46.600 i think there's going to be a big opportunity after the next election so really we have to
01:05:53.580 use the next two three years to to to build and prepare and have a a national organization that's
01:06:02.420 ready to to do what's necessary to to take power in this country what are your thoughts on the
01:06:10.640 christian heritage party and their leader rod taylor i've met rod taylor a couple times he's
01:06:14.140 a good guy um i don't think the christian heritage a lot of these small parties they're just not very
01:06:19.100 effective they don't know how to succeed in the kind of digital age they don't know how to market
01:06:23.500 themselves they don't know how to capitalize on the broader uh conversation and they're kind of
01:06:28.380 played out political brands. Like, I think something new is kind of necessary to succeed
01:06:33.920 and appeal to people. Is there any literature on the topic of Canadian nationalism that you
01:06:43.740 recommend? I have a big book list that I'm happy to point in people towards. Unfortunately, I don't
01:06:52.280 think there is a lot of um modern literature on on canadian nationalism perhaps i have to write
01:06:58.460 my own book um but i would recommend works like lament for a nation i would recommend reading
01:07:04.540 older historical books um uh stuff by people like donald creighton uh the older stuff before
01:07:13.260 the you know the woke tone police started purging things um evan i can send you my my whole book
01:07:21.120 list. You can send me a note and I'll send that to you. Do you follow other aspects like housing,
01:07:30.140 taxation, red tape? No, we're narrowly focused on remigration. This is the most important issue
01:07:34.760 facing Canadian society right now. Nothing's more important than the demographic crisis that
01:07:40.560 Canada's facing. If the Canadian nation doesn't exist anymore, then what's the point of Canada?
01:07:45.140 um so these are this is my only priority i don't want to get distracted by talking about other
01:07:51.220 issues that being said i think so many issues are connected to the immigration crisis housing
01:07:56.900 affordability is completely driven by mass immigration uh our dysfunctional education
01:08:02.260 system health care system all the major problems in our society come back to immigration so i think
01:08:08.900 it's a good way of discussing all the major problems in canadian society but i'm not going
01:08:13.540 going to get distracted. Remigration is the most important thing. What would remigration slash
01:08:36.820 deportations look like? Wouldn't we need to slowly phase out like 45% of the country from the
01:08:42.640 workforce? Not exactly. We have a detailed remigration plan on our website. It's an 11 step
01:08:48.580 plan, three phases. You know, it starts with a total immigration moratorium. It starts with
01:08:58.080 adjusting the pull factors and push factors to encourage people to start to leave. So taking
01:09:05.700 away you know all sorts of social assistance programs from from migrants uh and so on things
01:09:12.900 like the interim federal health program um it starts with you know expanding our deportation
01:09:20.580 capabilities to to get rid of the millions of illegals that are here um shutting down the
01:09:26.820 asylum program uh restricting birthright citizenship like we have we we've nailed down
01:09:33.140 all the major issue areas to start reversing this um our plan is not about kicking out everyone
01:09:40.020 that's uh you know doesn't meet our standards of what is a heritage canadian we start with the this
01:09:46.340 concept of heritage canada because that's what we're defending we need to preserve make sure
01:09:51.140 canadians are maintained as the the majority in this country um but our our plan is not ethnic
01:09:58.340 based. It's all based on immigration status. It prioritizes removing criminals and illegals and
01:10:05.020 asylum claimants and temporary foreign workers, you know, annulling and reviewing all permanent
01:10:10.720 residents and removing citizens who will compromise Canada's national security and
01:10:16.180 social cohesion. So we have our plan would see the removal of something like 10 million people
01:10:22.960 over the course of probably 10 or so years.
01:10:28.340 what are your thoughts on second sons i find them distasteful but as long as they act within the
01:10:53.800 I don't care. I agree. I think it's, I like to see Canadian nationalists getting organized.
01:11:00.040 Obviously, I have a bit of, personally, I have a bit of a different tactic and strategy than
01:11:07.000 Second Sons do, but I just find it so distasteful how they're being treated,
01:11:11.880 vilified, even though they're a completely peaceful organization.
01:11:14.760 also how do you feel about the u.s my family came here in the 1700s i also had family
01:11:26.360 who fought in the american civil war i'll talk a bit about that at the end i have a bit of a rant
01:11:30.840 to close the show um touching on american uh but but i think uh like a mayor um you know
01:11:38.860 if you came here during the 1700s your your your ancestors would have been loyalists so
01:11:44.140 foundational canadian people but i do think american america has kind of subverted canada's
01:11:50.140 identity um and military capabilities and all these things that has really uh caused a lot
01:11:55.340 of the problems that we're seeing in canada if rupert lowe wins in britain do you think we will
01:12:00.560 see the conservatives in canada take on a harder stance on re-migration i think that could be a
01:12:05.220 positive development i i think it could facilitate uh you know some sort of insurgent party in canada
01:12:10.920 with more credibility to succeed. I think the whole Anglosphere is watching Rupert Lowe and
01:12:17.880 Restore Britain, and it'll have, much like the Trump presidency, 2016, kind of redefined politics
01:12:25.580 across the Western world, I think we'll see Restore Britain have a similar kind of ripple effects,
01:12:32.280 impacts on global society. We haven't, there has been a rise in nationalist parties across Europe,
01:12:39.660 but it's been mostly in non-English speaking countries. So there's a big delay on that
01:12:45.160 impact as it gets kind of translated into the English speaking zeitgeist. This is the first
01:12:52.280 time we've had a sort of nationalist option within an English speaking country or a harder
01:12:57.840 nationalist option more so than something like the Trump MAGA movement. So I think it'll have
01:13:04.940 huge ripple effects here in canada but also in australia and other uh in other countries
01:13:09.820 daniel should get that book list on a resource page on the desox site yeah that's a good
01:13:17.060 suggestion uh i made a twitter thread about it a bit ago but i'll i can re-up that or make a new
01:13:21.840 one um i have kind of six or so books that i'd recommend to anyone that are pretty short easy
01:13:28.440 to read um some of them are on canada some of them are on more general kind of right-wing thought
01:13:33.440 um but important to read uh for people to read to to really understand what's going on
01:13:45.320 well i call it the dominion society um canada used to be called the dominion of canada
01:13:50.400 um it comes from a passage in the bible um he shall have dominion from sea to sea
01:13:57.080 um see to see that's still our our kind of motto for this country um in latin it's it's right there
01:14:04.520 on our coat of arms um ad ad ad marriage is cadmere um so you know this is a head tilt to the
01:14:13.520 the way canada used to be uh that's why we call it the dominion society
01:14:17.600 do you have a plan to increase the population with that with what demographic as boomers die
01:14:35.720 off uh infinite population group growth is a red herring um
01:14:40.860 uh there was a there was a study released by cornell university last summer that saw
01:14:47.120 uh countries with declining populations or stagnating populations are consistently the
01:14:51.620 best performing across a litany of metrics that they that they studied uh be that economic growth
01:14:57.820 corruption uh trust everything they studied it's countries with stagnating or declining
01:15:05.700 populations that perform best um that being said we are considering adding a kind of pronatal
01:15:11.140 plank to our our kind of policy platform but right now i think it's best to stay
01:15:16.020 narrowly focused on on remigration. Remigration itself would have a number of positive impacts
01:15:22.940 allowing for an increased birth rate, things like pride in our society, lower housing costs,
01:15:29.600 higher wages. All of these things are downstream from remigration and would put young people and
01:15:34.680 Canadians in general in a better position to start families and have larger families.
01:15:39.300 So I think there would be a natural kind of positive impact of remigration. But we are
01:15:44.180 we are considering adding some policies to further promote births here in Canada amongst
01:15:52.660 heritage Canadians, tax benefits and grants and so on. Right now, we spend so much money on our
01:15:59.300 dysfunctional immigration policy, sending money abroad to foreign countries that should all be
01:16:04.100 spent here to facilitate Canadian births. You know, I believe in the century initiative,
01:16:10.960 as long as it's 100 million actual heritage Canadians
01:16:14.780 by 2100, that would be great.
01:16:28.720 Would you want Canada to become a dominion again
01:16:30.820 under the British or stay?
01:16:32.320 No, I want Canada to be an independent country.
01:16:34.720 Of course, we can't go back to what was.
01:16:37.020 We need to forge a new future,
01:16:38.520 a new concept of Canadian loyalism the term dominion within the British Commonwealth actually
01:16:45.600 was copied from Canada we gave ourselves that term and then the British adopted that and called them
01:16:51.260 all the other possessions their dominion so when we say we want to return to the dominion of Canada
01:16:56.640 that doesn't mean we want to be subservient to the British it just means we want to bring back
01:17:01.560 canada's identity thoughts are doing irl content like street debates or public event discussion
01:17:10.600 panels would you guys like to see that uh i'd like to do some more of that especially once
01:17:14.180 the weather clears up it's hard to do in the winter when people don't really want to stop
01:17:17.800 and talk and stuff like that um but we would like to do more content like that um some charlie kirk
01:17:24.400 style stuff on campus and some more conversations there in public so um that's something that we
01:17:31.320 while preparing for as things get a bit warmer.
01:17:39.040 Daniel, it appears there's a lot of viewers under age 18.
01:17:42.720 What advice do you have for them to, and ways to help?
01:17:47.480 So for one, anyone above 16 can join the Dominion Society
01:17:51.680 and get plugged in as a volunteer.
01:17:52.920 But I do encourage people
01:17:56.300 to just also take themselves very seriously.
01:17:58.880 um like make sure you're you're exercising and working out make sure you're reading books make
01:18:04.800 sure you're you're performing well at your job in school whatever become the best version of
01:18:10.880 yourself that's how you can help the nation right the nation is the people that means it is you and
01:18:15.460 it is me and we must become the best version of ourselves to create the better nation uh that we
01:18:20.720 live in so really become the best version of yourself get involved in dominion society so you
01:18:25.440 can get plugged in with our organization we need to know every canadian nationalist from coast to
01:18:30.340 coast get them involved in the organization and help push the movement forward yeah yeah stay in
01:18:37.680 school don't smoke joe and no jesus those are those are all great uh advantage uh pieces of
01:18:44.180 advice. I would also say lift a weight. Hello? Nope. Someone said the audio quit. It got
01:18:58.520 me paranoid there, but it seems to be working. Okay. Seems like the questions are drying up.
01:19:08.260 I would like to close with a few words.
01:19:20.720 What's your bench?
01:19:22.320 What's your bench?
01:19:23.280 I'm benching about 190 right now.
01:19:27.100 I'm trying to work up to 225.
01:19:28.700 uh but on that note um i'd like to talk about a bit about canadian identity
01:19:38.780 way to start um a lot of people get discouraged by
01:19:48.540 how
01:19:51.180 how mediocre how terrible canadian society has become
01:19:57.140 and they see it as uh like this is the just the way things are and that canadian is inherently
01:20:08.200 left-wing that that just because multiculturalism and like the woke stuff and um liberalism has
01:20:18.100 infected canada even worse than most countries around the world they think that this is inherently
01:20:25.080 because Canada is like more left-wing or more liberal or anything like that but this just isn't
01:20:32.260 true and I think we have to understand where who Canada is to understand how we can save Canada and
01:20:41.980 get it back on track so the I would say that the reason that Canada is so dysfunctional so liberal
01:20:50.740 so multicultural now, is because we were very much a threat to the new world order that was
01:20:58.680 imposed in the post-war period, this new era of liberal American hegemony. We have to look back to
01:21:08.020 our roots. So Canada was founded by two major selection events, right? First, we have the,
01:21:19.880 our our settle uh like our settler ties uh there was this selection event about who
01:21:28.200 came to to the new world as settlers and who survived the experience of settlement so this
01:21:34.940 resulted in a people that was very strong brave the people that were brave enough to get in a
01:21:40.600 rickety ship and come across an open ocean and start civilization in the northern half of
01:21:47.540 North America, which is some of the most hostile environment, climate, anywhere else in the
01:21:54.680 Anglosphere. So you had this first selection event that selected for this very brave, strong
01:22:00.860 settler that could survive in Canada's harsh northern climate. Then there was the second
01:22:10.020 selection event. People like to say that Canada was founded without any wars or all this kind of
01:22:15.560 lame stuff, but that's not true. The American Revolutionary War was as foundational to Canada
01:22:21.480 as it was foundational to America. So we had this secondary selection event where people who were
01:22:28.120 liberal-minded became Americans, and the people that fought against them in favor of Crown
01:22:34.920 became Canadian. They came up north and established Canada. These are the loyalists.
01:22:41.020 So as a result, you had these two selection events. And the result was this strong, brave settler who embraced, who rejected liberalism, who embraced an illiberal concept of identity, who believed in tradition and order and hierarchy and structure of society and rejected this egalitarian liberal notion of what it means to be a citizen.
01:23:10.220 so you had this kind of perfect storm you had this confident combination of old world attitudes
01:23:19.100 in a new world setting with the vast space and resources available to the new world
01:23:24.680 and then you have the world wars and through those world wars Canada just started to come
01:23:32.200 into her own. We found that these strong colonial people, kind of refined in the pressure cooker of
01:23:47.160 the hostile climate and environment of North America, we were unleashed back on Europe,
01:23:56.600 and we found we were some of the most capable powerful soldiers in the world you know they
01:24:05.320 say half the geneva convention is a result of canadian war crimes we were absolute savage
01:24:11.680 fighters we were brilliant tacticians it was it was our general arthur curry that
01:24:16.640 made the battle plans for the for capturing vimy ridge something that no other europeans were able
01:24:23.340 to accomplish. It was Canadian soldiers that accomplished all of their checkpoints on D-Day
01:24:30.420 and pushed further than any other European forces on the day. It was incredible soldiers like
01:24:36.820 Leo Majeur who single-handedly recaptured Dutch cities. We really started to come into our own
01:24:46.940 as a nation, as a civilization. We were, before that, we were very much just a piece of the
01:24:53.900 British Empire. But in going back to Europe through the First and Second World War, we found
01:24:59.080 that we had become something different. We had become something unique. We had become Canadians.
01:25:06.100 And so we come out of the Second World War, and we have the, you know, the third biggest Navy,
01:25:11.760 the fourth biggest air force. We're on the precipice of defining something new. And again,
01:25:19.300 it's this fusion of old world mentalities in a new world setting. We were a true alternative to
01:25:28.980 this new vision of American liberalism. We were a less liberal, more ordered society with the
01:25:37.360 same vast resources. We were on the precipice of defining what the Western world should look like.
01:25:44.180 And that was a threat to the Americans. Right on their doorstep, that was a threat to the Americans,
01:25:49.280 to their hegemony across the world. We represented that alternative. And as such, we needed to be
01:25:58.080 relegated. We needed to be stamped out. And through the Second World War, sorry, through the Cold War,
01:26:04.040 they use that as justification to undermine our society um in the name of inter uh in the name of
01:26:11.600 continental defense they undermine canadian society uh very specifically like it was it was
01:26:18.360 john dieffenbaker that was pushing back against the american kind of hegemonic control over north
01:26:25.400 the north american continent and what happened to him he was basically soft cooed by the americans
01:26:31.660 who used NORAD representatives to criticize his governance of the country, who gave
01:26:43.900 direct political support to his opponent, Lester Pearson, who was basically installed by the
01:26:49.640 Americans as the new leader of Canada. And what did Lester Pearson do? Lester Pearson started to
01:26:55.540 liberalize our immigration system he started to normalize multiculturalism he he stripped us of
01:27:03.320 our roots he he took down the red ensign and replaced it with the maple leaf symbolically
01:27:08.320 severing us from our our ethnic heritage represented on this flag and it only got worse
01:27:16.060 with with Pierre Trudeau who who further entrenched this very American notions of liberalism into our
01:27:22.560 society, who expanded immigration even further, who entrenched a liberal American style of
01:27:31.000 governance right into the foundation of our country. Just like we were talking about earlier,
01:27:36.320 he brought in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which Americanized our whole system of governments,
01:27:41.780 which put Parliament below the Supreme Court, which enabled activist judges to continue the
01:27:46.960 transformation along the kind of new rule book that Pierre Trudeau entrenched and it only became
01:27:54.760 more and more American since then so really like people get so obsessed with like international
01:28:03.280 Jewish interests and how they subvert society but really it's been Americans who have subverted
01:28:08.840 Canadian society who have undermined Canadian identity and transformed Canadian society into
01:28:13.760 into something else. And it's not because we're the most cucked country, the most liberal country,
01:28:18.880 the most left-wing country. It was very specifically because we represented an
01:28:24.300 alternative. We were a threat to that new liberal world order. And that just doesn't disappear,
01:28:33.840 right? This is inherent to the Canadian people. This still exists in our national blood memory.
01:28:40.160 And that's exactly why nationalism is taking off in this country faster than anywhere else.
01:28:47.580 We see that as a new generation of leaders, people like myself and many others come forward and start to articulate a more accurate portrayal of Canadian identity, a vision rooted in our heritage and identity.
01:29:02.880 this is taking off like wildfire across our country because the last 50 years the last 60
01:29:11.520 years are an aberration they are a mistake they are Canadians being led towards Americanism
01:29:17.460 things that our forefathers rejected so as we embrace these new this nationalist idea this
01:29:24.640 this illiberal concept of what it means to be Canadian of what it what Canada should be
01:29:29.520 it's going to continue to grow. That's exactly what we're looking to accomplish with the
01:29:34.960 Dominion Society. We're bringing back a authentic vision of Canadian identity. And that's why we're
01:29:42.500 just going to grow and grow and grow. And our success is inevitable. So if this resonates with
01:29:49.000 you, if this version of history, if this concept of what it means to be Canadian is what you want
01:29:55.380 to see from Canadian Society, I need you to get involved. I need you to head over to our website,
01:29:59.380 dominionsociety.ca I need you to sign up as a member I need you to get involved in your local
01:30:03.360 local organization I need you to to help us create more content to create more edits
01:30:08.360 to flood the the zone with our ideas with our perspective our our chance is coming I keep saying
01:30:16.360 it's after the next election there's going to be chaos there's going to be you know failed
01:30:20.480 referendums on separation there's going to be the the conservative party is going to be launched
01:30:24.960 into an identity crisis and that is our moment to strike so we need to use the next three years
01:30:29.740 to get totally organized to have a an effective cohesive complete nationalist movement from coast
01:30:37.720 to coast and it starts with you so to take a moment sign up as a member reach out to us we'll
01:30:45.980 get you plugged in we are going to take this country back for the canadian people on that note
01:30:52.460 have a great night. I'll talk to you next week and long live Canada.