00:23:09.780So that's exactly why we founded the Dominion Society.
00:23:12.240We're not currently registered as lobbyists.
00:23:13.980It's something that I think we'll go into in the future as we start to solicit more attention from directly from political parties, as we as we begin to put more direct pressure by supplying them with policy and ideas and so on.
00:23:26.700I believe it's something that we'll have to register as we move from just the media side to the more direct kind of think tank style content to put direct, to give direction to political parties.
00:23:43.420We need to build that counterbalance because right now it's the pro-migration side is way beating out the anti-immigration side.
00:23:54.160And it's not because of public opinion, right?
00:23:56.120It's because of institutional pressure created by these groups, created by these economic actors that want, that these elitist economic actors that want to drive down wages to save on their bottom lines, that want to drive up housing and asset prices because it benefits them economically, right?
00:24:13.100So they're able to pay for lobbyists. They're able to pay to put pressure on politicians. We have to create the counterbalance. And obviously, it's going to be difficult to find elite support for something like that. Migration does benefit the elites. I think more of them are waking up to the cultural impacts that they can't run away from anymore, right?
00:24:34.180before they lived in their safe neighborhoods away from the impacts of immigration and
00:24:39.140multiculturalism. More and more of that's inescapable. So I do think some of them are1.00
00:24:44.400waking up, but it's hard to compete with those economic benefits that elites see while we
00:24:50.160suffer the consequences. So that's why we need to work together. That's why I need your support.
00:24:55.220That's why we need to crowdfund and put resources into an organization like the Dominion Society0.66
00:25:00.540So we can provide that credible counterbalance here in Ottawa and across the provincial, the provinces as well to deliver that message, to deliver the message of remigration, which is increasingly popular across grassroots, which has public support that will only increase over the next few years.
00:25:20.520As that public support increases, we need to make sure that that's translated effectively into the government through credible, serious professional organizations like the Dominion Society.
00:25:33.260So please do realize that, you know, the dollars that get donated, the dollars you spend on merchandise, the dollars you spend becoming a member, they don't just, you know, fuel my lavish lifestyle.
00:25:46.200I do not live a very lavish lifestyle.
00:48:45.320trying to use my making me turn off ad block
00:48:51.120it's not enough to to pay for national post you also have to turn off ad block now these guys are
00:49:03.740griefing me i need ads on top of my subscription is there nothing holy in this world anymore
00:49:09.400hi um so uh this is a great question how do people get posters are there official ones
00:49:19.420are all homemade. None of them are homemade. None of them are even printed at home. We have
00:49:24.160very high standards here. We print nice posters and we distribute them and we only give them to
00:49:30.040people who are Dominion Society members who have been on board as volunteers. We're not just
00:49:34.860a disorganized group, guys. We're actual right-wingers. We believe in hierarchy and order.
00:49:40.480We don't just post things on the internet and say, do whatever you want, because that's going
00:49:44.760to result in people having substandard materials, putting them up improperly, putting them up in
00:49:50.100illegal locations. We don't want any of that. So we make sure that everyone, if they want to get
00:49:56.440involved with postering, they have to be a Dominion Society member. That means you get a
00:50:00.680phone call from one of our organizers to get involved as a volunteer. There are a number of
00:50:04.660privacy agreements, onboarding documents, so you understand how to use our materials properly,
00:50:09.600and then you're provided them by our central organization so we have very high quality
00:50:14.480print materials we have very carefully designed materials we don't just put them up on the
00:50:20.140internet for anyone to misuse or else like we could have antifa types you know printing them
00:50:24.180and then putting them in improper locations and getting us in trouble and stuff and making us
00:50:27.560look bad that's not how we do things that's not how we do things that might be how other groups
00:50:32.180do things we take a very slow measured and long-term approach to building this organization
00:50:37.700So if you're interested in getting involved in postering, head over to our website, DominionSociety.ca, sign up as a member.
00:50:44.720There's going to be some time, especially depending on where you live.
00:50:47.900We only have onboarding operations streamlined in select locations, although that that those locations, that list of locations is ever growing.
00:50:56.820So if you want to get involved, you have to sign up as a member.
00:51:01.000We are working through a backlog, but things are getting more and more efficient every day, every week.
00:51:05.700um and then once you're you're in there you'll be provided you'll be put in touch
00:51:09.840with uh with um with my uh with our guys with our local team and getting involved we got cammy
00:51:17.900dread in the chat the girls think i'm hot oh you oh shucks oh shucks the compliments are getting
00:51:26.260to my head um excellent um so the the last thing i want to talk about today
00:51:35.140um the last thing i want to talk about today is the ongoing um canada strong and free networking
00:51:44.080conference so this is this might be a bit inside baseball for you guys i don't know if if uh um
00:51:51.000i don't know if most folks are aware of it but the the cfs the csfn is an annual conference
00:52:00.000um that's like the biggest not technically conservative party convention but basically
00:52:06.700a conservative party conference it used to be known as the manning conference it was rebranded
00:52:10.920a few years ago to the strong and free networking conference but basically it's a big it's a third
00:52:16.360party group that organizes this big conference it's kind of like cpac in the u.s so it's a big
00:52:21.880it's not organized by the republicans but it's the it's for the conservative movement and it's
00:52:27.320big networking. They have big players from, uh, from across the country, you know, Daniel Smith,
00:52:32.420Pierre Pauyev, uh, a bunch of conservative premiers, ostensibly conservative premiers,
00:52:38.640Heather Stephenson, there's some training stuff, there's some networking opportunities
00:52:42.640and so on. Um, so that's been going on the last few days. And I think there's a lot to learn
00:52:48.440about what's going on. Um, I will say I have, uh, I have actually been attending the last couple of
00:52:55.340days I wasn't sure I wasn't to be transparent I wasn't sure if I they'd even let me in I'm a bit
00:53:01.120controversial in especially in the in the capital C conservative party space especially after that
00:53:07.920stunt we pulled in Calgary that stunt we pulled in Calgary but I have been allowed to attend I
00:53:14.480haven't been bothered too much actually they did have a security guard following me around and
00:53:18.900filming me and taking pictures today so i thought that was a bit odd um but uh i i'm just going as
00:53:26.100a as an attendee i think it's i think it's an important strategy as part of our as we start to
00:53:32.440grow as we get the word out uh to attend events like this and not necessarily to disrupt or to
00:53:38.560to make it all about the dominion society or all about me or whatnot but i'm just going to to take
00:53:44.200a chance to to get to talk to these people to humanize the organization because so many of
00:53:48.300people they think we're like radical unreasonable uh you know sometimes i'll ratio people and and
00:53:55.500you know my my my followers are are uh a bit feral they're a bit vicious so like sometimes they get
00:54:01.980a lot of hate from from uh our our community um so they they can be a bit apprehensive of us
00:54:09.740but it's good to show up and be there in person show faith face have conversations with people
00:54:15.420um and show them that we're serious we're professional we're reasonable we're not going
00:54:21.600to back down on our ideas but we can actually work collaboratively with people that um that
00:54:28.700that we're not just uh you know hateful radical bigots that we that we understand how the process
00:54:35.060works and how and and our role in the greater system so i've had some um i won't go and out
00:54:41.300the people that have been nice enough to actually talk with me. I see a lot of people
00:54:45.700that are making eye contact with me, quickly looking away, trying to avoid me. There's lots
00:54:50.820of that. But there have been some interesting people, some interesting, very nice people
00:54:56.860within and around political parties and other groups, media and so on, that have taken some
00:55:06.220time to to talk with me get to know me get to know our ideas um in that in that sense i think
00:55:11.480it's been uh rather productive um so that's and the funniest has to be uh today i i met uh a few
00:55:19.820guys and there's so many white people that are like so scared of being seen with me and being
00:55:24.180labeled as evil racist but i as i exit one of the the the seminars today uh i have three guys come
00:55:32.240over to me they're all uh they're all non-white there's a Bangladeshi dude an Indian dude a
00:55:37.460Chinese dude and they're all talking about how much they love the Dominion Society how much0.99
00:55:41.300they love what do we stand for so it's just me and a bunch of people that you know some
00:55:46.400conservative people would probably say that I want uh to do terrible things to or something
00:55:52.040like that it's just me and a bunch of uh non-white people telling me how great I am and how great0.66
00:55:58.100everything is um so that was pretty funny uh i thought that was quite ironic the only people0.75
00:56:03.540that are were not worried about being labeled as racist are the ones who come from racialized
00:56:07.700backgrounds everyone else is too is like walking on eggshells waiting for just so paranoid of being
00:56:14.100uh uh labeled as racist or something if they if they get seen with me but it's been interesting
00:56:20.500um i will say one of the critical takeaways is it doesn't seem like oh there's a super chat here
00:56:28.820hadrian's wall eight eight uh five dollars anti-immigration is preservation not hate stay
00:56:34.420keep strong y'all thank you so much for the five dollar super chat we we we appreciate the support
00:56:39.940and uh you nailed it on the head um so i will say uh the the another super chat here for benny rule
00:56:48.900one dollar thank you for the support benny um the the overall takeaway though is the conservative
00:56:56.400movement's not looking so healthy i don't know if this is a matter of timing or whatnot but and
00:57:01.400i will say this is the first time i've ever attended the canada strong and free networking
00:57:06.400conference but as i understand it's much smaller this year than it has been in previous years
00:57:11.400uh i was shocked by how small some of the rooms were uh um you know they're they're well they're
00:57:17.840the seats are mostly full the rooms are full but the rooms are small there's not many people there
00:57:23.660as uh as supporters of the rooms of a you know 100 to maybe 300 people i was expecting a much
00:57:31.620much bigger event and i think that it has been a much much bigger event in previous years so there's
00:57:36.720definitely reflecting the decline in the polls since last election there's there's definitely
00:57:43.120a loss of energy behind the conservative party the capital c conservative movement i think there's
00:57:48.360been some some interesting developments in the right-wing space especially you know the dominion
00:57:54.080society but but not not only the dominion society um but the overall conservative movement not
00:58:01.660looking so healthy so two things i want to talk about specifically there was um pierre polyev had
00:58:08.020a big speech today and it was i think not just for me i think for a lot of people it was pretty
00:58:15.960disappointed even for even for conservative party partisans we had this email this uh this article
00:58:22.420just released so look at all the ads this is so embarrassing i pay for the national flows by the
00:58:27.380way um adam zivo desperately seeking an energized conservative revival at the canada strong and
00:58:33.540free network. Complaining about Carney isn't enough anymore. Conservative leader Pierre Polyev
00:58:38.000had an opportunity to reinvigorate his party this week at one of Canada's most important
00:58:42.120political networking conferences. Unfortunately for that, he delivered an underwhelming speech
00:58:46.780that lacked vision, energy, and real answers to the challenges facing Canada's conservative
00:58:53.580movement. So that's a pretty shocking, that's the National Post. The National Post is like pretty,
00:58:59.620you know, supportive of the conservative party. To be lambasted like that after a big event like
00:59:06.500this is pretty big. I will say over the past few years, quick super sticker from at CLN and Saber.
00:59:17.500Thank you for the $13 super sticker, $14 super sticker. We really appreciate the support.
00:59:23.220I will say in previous years, I don't know if there's a change, what the change in a
00:59:29.220personnel is like behind the scenes but in previous years Pierre Polyev's team seemed to
00:59:37.940take opportunities like this for big speeches very very um very carefully to have to have
00:59:46.580significant speeches ready to make sure they were well filmed um that they were nice spectacles
00:59:52.500they had good optics and so on and just to trot them out and like especially at these events like
00:59:58.920the convention or or uh the the cfsn where they have more control it's basically a conservative
01:00:06.300party event so they can control the aesthetics they can control the stage design they can control
01:00:11.220the camera angles and all these things there's power to that as a politician and it lets you put
01:00:15.980on a very controlled spectacle that you might not have in the house of commons you might not have
01:00:20.620in the media. There seemed to be a lot of intent in previous years, you know, in the 2022 to 2024.
01:00:29.680Now, he kind of shows up and he trots out kind of the same old message, no real pivot. It's the
01:00:37.080same thing. People were expecting a shift in rhetoric at the Conservative Party convention
01:00:42.720earlier this year in January. And again, they're waiting for Pierre to wake up to his new opponent,
01:00:50.620to realize he's not campaigning against Justin Trudeau anymore. He is campaigning against Mark
01:00:55.440Carney. And yet he trots out the same old kind of tired talking points that people are just
01:01:02.160getting bored of. It really feels to me that Pierre Polyev, regardless of how you feel about
01:01:06.640him, regardless of how you feel about Mark Carney, it does feel like Pierre Polyev has kind of jumped
01:01:10.520the shark. He was there as the counterweight to Justin Trudeau. And ever since Justin Trudeau
01:01:16.740left the picture. Pierre's just been kind of listless, I would say. A lot of his speech
01:01:22.560is still kind of trying to lump in the conservatives, sorry, the Carney liberals
01:01:30.340and the Justin Trudeau liberals. And I don't think that resonates with anyone. Like, I don't
01:01:35.580think it resonates with the general public. I don't think it resonates with even conservative
01:01:42.260party partisans, anyone, anyone with eyes that's paying attention can see that there's been a
01:01:48.180dramatic shift in the liberal party from Trudeau to Cardi and to just lump them in together.
01:01:55.640It just doesn't, it just doesn't resonate. He needs to update his messaging. He needs to
01:02:00.540understand that Mark Carney's a different, a different beast, and he needs new solutions,
01:02:07.220new rhetoric, new talking points, new policies, if they're going to be actually able to compete
01:02:13.600with the Kearney Liberals. And they just don't, they don't have it. And it looks to me like they
01:02:19.880probably have lost some talent. There is not the same level of intentionality behind these big
01:02:25.660events where they have control. It looks like the Conservative Party is en route for disaster,
01:02:33.420disaster and one thing that bothered me is throughout his speech on multiple occasions
01:02:39.540he was trotting out the same old anyone from anywhere can be Canadian all these things this
01:02:47.460very multicultural post-national message he still is trying to double down on the exact same things
01:02:54.160and it's just it's not going anywhere so low energy nothing new boring it it's like he's
01:03:03.080still asleep guys he's he's not paying attention to the new dynamic of canadian politics and like
01:03:09.380increasingly i like it's not easy to remove him at this point but it's uh it's hard to see him
01:03:16.520leading the party into the next election and if he does he's not going to do so well i don't think
01:03:21.900so um yeah that's what i have to say about that and the the uh the one other thing i
01:03:31.060uh i don't have time to attend every single um every single session here i i have a busy schedule
01:03:41.260especially planning towards some of the events we have coming up um but i did decide to go and
01:03:47.120attend the session today specifically on immigration right it's it's kind of my thing
01:03:52.800so i thought i should be there so i attended it it was it was uh a panel discussion with anthony
01:03:59.500Koch and Michelle Rempel talking about immigration. And, you know, it's not, it wasn't up to my
01:04:07.780standards, obviously. They weren't going on about re-migration and all this. But I will say there
01:04:14.060are some signs of movement within that group. Specifically, the whole, most of the talk was
01:04:24.320very focused on culture. And I would say it was quite superficial, but you would expect them to
01:04:35.360be focused on the economy, economy, economy, economy, economy. Economy was kind of the footnote.
01:04:40.940Like the focus was the cultural concerns. And specifically, there was a lot of criticisms of
01:04:47.920post-nationalism. And now my problem with this is their criticisms of post-nationalism are all
01:04:54.420very surface level. But it's good that they're using the buzzword, right? When we talk about
01:05:00.940our mission at the Dominion Society, it's all about normalization, right? We want to normalize
01:05:04.780Canadian nationalism. We want to normalize remigration. We want people to get used to1.00
01:05:09.240these concepts. We want them to be very popular and people understand what they mean. And while
01:05:14.080weren't talking about a real nationalist conception or they were talking about re-migration
01:05:19.120the kind of opposite of nationalism is post-nationalism right so for them to be
01:05:23.200consistently like it was one of the most common buzzwords post-nationalism is bad
01:05:28.320um post-nationalism is the problem we need to have an alternative that's great um so we can
01:05:36.080see the the conversation about immigration shifting to focus on culture and and to be vilifying
01:05:43.120post-nationalism and that's good territory for us right now we can continue to push the envelope
01:05:49.840okay post-nationalism post-nationalism is bad what's the solution nationalism is the solution
01:05:57.040mass migration is bad what's the solution re-migration is the solution so as as these
01:06:03.040talking points as these criticized criticisms become more mainstream our solutions our proposals0.73
01:06:09.040also become more mainstream. So this is a good development overall, I would say. I wouldn't give
01:06:16.220it an S, an A+, but I'd give it a B, a B-, at least they're focused on culture, at least they're
01:06:23.640focused on post-nationalism. But again, it is all very surface level, right? Their solution is very
01:06:31.700much civic nationalism. They portray it as post-nationalism and they rely on the Justin
01:06:37.520Trudeau quote, that Canada has no mainstream culture and identity. And then they suggest that
01:06:43.940Canada does have a mainstream culture. So while not explicitly, I would say their framing is very
01:06:51.100civic nationalist in character. They're saying that we need to have clear institutions, that we
01:06:55.960need to have a clear language, that we need to have a clear culture to rally around, which again,
01:07:01.420step in the right direction, but it's not far enough. Really post-nationalism, to understand
01:07:05.780what post-nationalism is you have to understand what nationalism really is and civic nationalism
01:07:11.000is not real nationalism right it's a it's a liberal uh kind of caricature to try and
01:07:16.840make ethno-nationalism real nationalism authentic nationalism as to draw the distinction right it's
01:07:24.300this fake alternative that and then they add this ethno-nationalism to make it sound bad but
01:07:30.500really nationalism is ethno-nationalism is nationalism like the what nationalism means is
01:07:37.360you know a base based around the nation and a nation is not an economic zone it's not just
01:07:44.960boundaries on a map it's not just an economy a nation is a people right it comes from uh you
01:07:52.220know the same root words ethnos nasios this is just greek and latin versions of the same word
01:08:01.380and it is the people um so when he says when justin trudeau when when people put forward
01:08:10.000came as a post-national state it means we are beyond the nation now now it's for anyone we're
01:08:18.720beyond the we are beyond the people of canada we are post-national now now it's very liberal
01:08:25.800anyone from anywhere just like pierre paulia of petals anyone from anywhere can be canadian we're
01:08:32.460post-national not uh canadian identity is not restricted by national identity it's not restricted
01:08:38.620by ethnicity heritage ancestry it's something that anyone can have and that's the thing that
01:08:44.200We'll have Michelle Rempel criticizing post-nationalism in the same day that we have Pierre Polyev saying anyone from anywhere can be Canadian, where we have Senator Leo Housakis at the reception saying we need to have a nationalism that accepts English and French, but also Jews and Sikhs and Muslims.
01:09:05.200this is what he said at the reception yesterday so at the same time as they're criticizing
01:09:11.900post-nationalism for a very like radical interpretation of it what they're selling
01:09:16.700is post-nationalism and maybe they'd call it civic nationalism maybe maybe maybe what they
01:09:21.640want is post-nationalism with a bit more strict rules but really it's the same thing if
01:09:26.340nationalism true nationalism is like particular in character right it views groups as distinct
01:09:34.160nations as distinct. You actually can't become Canadian. You can become a Canadian citizen,
01:09:39.260but you actually can't become Canadian, at least in your lifetime. You can maybe
01:09:44.420through generations of intermarrying. As we talk about a lot, I'm not 100% true budded
01:09:52.340Canadian. My grandparents on my father's side were both immigrants, but they married into the0.51
01:10:00.440Canadian family. My mom's side, we go back to 1649 when Jean Brodeur stepped off the boat
01:10:05.680in the South Shores of Montreal. So in that case, my immigrant past did marry into the Canadian
01:10:13.260family. You can become, and you know, my children will be even more Canadian than that. So you can
01:10:19.160become Canadian, but it's an intergenerational thing. It's not something that you become
01:10:22.560just because you got a passport, just because you get some paperwork. So that's the real
01:10:28.220alternative. And this is what I'd encourage the Conservative Party to do. I think immigration is
01:10:34.920the wedge issue, right? Demographic change is the most important problem facing Canadians.0.99
01:10:41.200People realize this, whether or not they're comfortable talking about it. This is the most0.82
01:10:46.640important thing facing Canadian society. And they can't just offer tweaks to the system. They can't
01:10:52.080just offer reducing some numbers, cutting some programs and stuff. They need to advance an
01:10:57.020alternative philosophical framework. People say I criticize the conservative party too much.
01:11:04.420And maybe I do, but it's because I do see myself as a sort of right winger. I feel like my home
01:11:11.060should be in the conservative party. And increasingly, I feel like my home's in the
01:11:14.060liberal party, which is kind of strange. Obviously, I'm politically homeless completely. I won't vote
01:11:18.880for either of them until they're advancing remigration. But I criticize the conservatives
01:11:24.220because I think they should be more willing to change0.99
01:11:26.540given they can't win, they can't fucking win.0.98
01:11:29.560So they need to do something differently.0.99
02:17:18.960we're going for two hours it's time to wrap things up um i'm sorry if i missed any questions
02:17:25.900i tried to answer as many as i can there's a lot of questions the chat moves um uh what do we have
02:17:35.080what do we have in terms of a in terms of a um do i have a do i have a closing rant rant time
02:17:44.760we're at time um i'll keep it short and sweet today i'll keep it short and sweet today so uh
02:17:55.880i've been thinking about this a lot since i've been in as i was saying earlier i've been in the
02:18:01.920the the canada strong and free networking conference i've been talking to a lot of
02:18:06.260establishment conservatives over the last few days and it has me thinking about my views how do i
02:18:11.560how do I um uh how do I how do I communicate what do I stand for I'm having all these
02:18:20.100conversations I'm so used to talking to my base right on social media here on live streams now
02:18:25.460I'm like in this room with all these like libertarian type normie cons um uh how do I
02:18:33.620how do I explain I'm at this big conservative conference but I honestly I don't even consider
02:18:40.520myself a conservative i don't consider myself conservative i consider myself right wing but i
02:18:46.180don't consider myself a conservative i call myself a nationalist right that's the label that i use
02:18:50.140and to to understand this you have to understand like what really conservatism is philosophically
02:18:57.380and like there's a lot of like i think conservatism has transformed a lot over recent years i really
02:19:02.700think they're just kind of liberals with blue ties but like fundamentally on a very basic level
02:19:08.060conservatives what's what is what does it mean to be conservative it means to that you prioritize
02:19:14.500slowing social change in order to maintain some tradition and and and so on you have the
02:19:22.800progressives who want to change society and you have conservatives who want to slow social change
02:19:28.260and that's why I don't consider myself a conservative I don't want to slow social
02:19:33.980change. I actually want to reverse social change. In a sense, we are, I am, we are progressives. We
02:19:42.300want to change society into something else. Yes, we want to try and change society back to what it
02:19:48.420once was, but we do, we are kind of inherently progressive. So while we, I do consider us on
02:19:54.820the right, right? Because we're not, we're not egalitarian. We're not liberal. We're not
02:19:58.880universalists we are particularists we are a liberal we are fundamentally on the right and
02:20:04.100all of politics right now is very much a battle between different liberal outlooks we have the
02:20:09.520right liberals and the conservative party the left liberals and the liberal party but there's no one
02:20:13.720really authentically on the right so like i'm in this room of conservatives so to speak and they're
02:20:18.760trying to ask me to explain who i am what i stand for and it's like no i'm not really a conservative
02:20:24.220i'm kind of out of place here but i am on the right i am on the i think i'm the only one actually
02:20:28.600here on the right because i think you are fundamentally liberals like you are viewing
02:20:33.160people as interchangeable economic units you are viewing things uh as a very small government
02:20:40.220perspective that's the other major issue why i don't identify as conservatives because increasingly
02:20:45.240we've seen that conservatives they view power as an inherent evil they think that power is something
02:20:53.020that needs to be minimized right they're small government that's like especially pierre paul
02:20:57.880yeah, that's like his defining thing. He believes that power leads to problems and that power needs
02:21:05.860to be minimized. And I don't, that's not how I view things. I think power is an inevitability
02:21:10.220in society. And if you make government smaller, then you just cede power to multinational
02:21:16.620corporations, to international actors, to economic elites. Power exists in society no matter what.
02:21:24.400It's an inevitability. It's just a result of it's inevitable result of society. And if you minimize government, that just goes somewhere else. So I believe that power is something that needs to be wielded in line with your principles.
02:21:39.480That's something that the left liberals actually do, right? They do wield the state aggressively to transform the country. And I want to see a right wing political party, be that the conservative party, be that a new party, or whatnot, I want to see a authentically right wing option that's willing to wield the state that doesn't want to defund the CBC that doesn't want to cut away at different programs that wants to aggressively wield the state in the best interest of our nation.
02:22:09.480our people. I am a nationalist. I put my people first and I'm willing to use whatever power the
02:22:16.000state has to preserve and protect and promote those interests. So no, I'm not a conservative.
02:22:23.220No, I'm not a small government guy. I believe in rewarding my friends, in punishing my enemies,
02:22:27.860in protecting my people, my nation. So that's all I have to say. It's a short one,
02:22:33.660short and sweet tonight thank you for tuning in i hope you enjoyed yourself please take a moment
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