Dominion Society of Canada - May 15, 2026


Ontario Liberal Party Drama, CBC Prank Scandal & Restore Britain's Big Win | Long Live Canada Ep. 9


Episode Stats


Length

1 hour and 21 minutes

Words per minute

167.99765

Word count

13,737

Sentence count

232

Harmful content

Misogyny

2

sentences flagged

Toxicity

26

sentences flagged

Hate speech

35

sentences flagged


Summary

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

In this episode of Long Live Canada Episode 9, we talk about some interesting topics from the past few weeks, including the scandal surrounding the McDonald's fake documentary and the comments made by another party leadership contestant on immigration. We also talk about what happened with Restore Britain and what we can take from it here in Canada.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 Thank you.
00:00:30.000 We'll be right back.
00:01:00.000 Thank you.
00:01:30.000 We'll be right back.
00:02:00.000 Thank you.
00:02:30.000 good hello hello hello another great episode ahead of us my name is daniel tari and i'm here with
00:02:38.440 another episode of long live canada episode nine we have another great episode ahead of us
00:02:44.060 gonna talk about some interesting topics from the last few weeks honestly guys i wasn't even
00:02:48.640 planning on streaming tonight i i am sick i'm not feeling so well i gotta get healthy before the
00:02:53.560 weekend but i couldn't i couldn't leave you guys hanging there's too too many good topics to talk
00:02:59.740 about so it's going to be a quick one tonight my voice is a little bit scratchy i got i got my tea
00:03:05.840 instead of my normal uh sparkling water uh trying to recover we have another big weekend ahead of
00:03:12.820 us uh some some uh some events here in uh in hamilton some traveling i have to do need to get
00:03:18.940 nice and healthy for that but i just can't stay away guys i just can't get away i can't stay away
00:03:24.340 i have too much fun with these streams it's too much fun talking with you guys uh but a bit low
00:03:30.100 energy a bit of a short one tonight oh yeah maybe you've got some hantavirus eh i i i'm ignoring
00:03:35.780 that uh it doesn't exist in my world um i think it's just a common cold but yeah lemon and garlic
00:03:43.700 something like that anyone else have any tips any any any wives tales for me any any uh at home tips
00:03:49.780 do i need to change my supplement stack guys uh should i should i get something stronger than tea
00:03:55.620 what's the what's the best way to deal with this any advice anyone i have the indomitable spirit
00:04:02.820 yes i will not be held down tristan just ignore it yeah yeah all all good uh all good advice it's
00:04:10.420 been a bit cold and rainy here in ottawa the last few days but it looks like it's going to be hot
00:04:15.220 on the weekend so you know summer is coming summer is coming uh today we got a bunch of
00:04:21.440 topics to talk about i want to talk a little bit about the drama going on in the in the liberal
00:04:25.920 party of ontario but the the the the news around nate erskine smith but also some of the comments
00:04:31.600 made by another uh leadership contestant there on immigration i want to talk a bit about
00:04:37.820 the big news of the week which is the uh this this scandal around the this fake uh this prank
00:04:45.820 show this fake documentary or whatnot about johnny mcdonald um that seems to be the big news of the
00:04:51.600 week and then i do want to talk a bit about i know i i mostly try and stay focused on canada i'm not
00:04:56.420 all that interested in other countries but you guys know me i'm a big fan of what's going on in
00:05:00.800 the united kingdom and restore britain and there was some big news last week that took place uh
00:05:05.220 literally the night of our last stream so I do want to go over the results there a little bit
00:05:10.960 and see see put on wet socks I don't know about that that seems like a bad advice I do want to
00:05:19.420 talk a bit about what happened with Restore Britain and what we can take away from it here
00:05:24.280 in Canada so that's the that's the big stuff for tonight we'll get right into things before that
00:05:32.220 do want to you know shame shameless shameless self plug shameless self plug uh there was finally this
00:05:38.300 analysis we talked about it a few times but uh i will be presenting as part of the activist panel
00:05:44.220 uh in portugal later this month at the remigration summit so i'll be joined by a few other activists
00:05:50.140 from around europe maximilian marco from germany emmanuel cortia from switzerland angloid from
00:05:56.140 england and um louise garnier from france uh so we will be covering uh we'll be having a panel
00:06:03.260 discussion on on activism and how we approach in each of our countries that'll be at the end
00:06:08.140 of the month so i'll be traveling out there with ken and greg we'll have some nice content for you
00:06:12.140 about our trip uh and so on so that's something to look forward at the end of the month that's why
00:06:17.980 i gotta get healthy guys i gotta get healthy so i can represent canada well on the international
00:06:23.980 stage uh bringing bringing bringing dominion society worldwide uh i'm not sure if uh i don't
00:06:31.100 think it'll be streamed publicly i think uh content will only be released later you gotta you gotta
00:06:35.900 go to get it uh you gotta to get the live experience but we'll we'll have lots of content
00:06:40.460 for you guys throughout um i'll make sure that you guys get to see anything that i say that's
00:06:45.980 interesting don't worry i have the guys on it we'll sort it out um and then as well we mentioned
00:06:52.220 last uh we we mentioned last week but we have launched a new line of merchandise in our online
00:06:58.060 store you can head over to shop.dominionsociety.ca we have a new line of merchandise it's we have
00:07:05.180 hoodies and shirts and new colorways with new designs we have the new long live canada hat i
00:07:09.660 got to get one of those for myself hey for this show nice long live canada hat um and some other
00:07:15.260 stuff uh most interestingly i think for a lot of people i've seen them going up around communities
00:07:20.140 all over the place but we have new bulk sticker packs that you guys can uh you guys can can use
00:07:25.560 however you see fit um so we have a few popular designs i'm told that the most popular design so
00:07:30.900 far has been the answer to immigration is remigration but we have uh the nation of
00:07:35.600 settlers not immigrants settlers and we have the remigration now stickers we have some logo stickers
00:07:40.360 and so on um so i do encourage everyone to head over to shop.dominionsociety.ca and place an order
00:07:47.520 those are coming out you get them in a day or two ken is on top of things he runs he runs a tight
00:07:52.260 ship out of uh out of uh our niagara hq so if you're looking and look to rep the organization
00:08:00.060 looking to put up some stickers in your community or whatnot head over to shop.domeniussociety.ca
00:08:05.980 i am told everything is excellent quality i have not got my hands on it personally i'm gonna pick
00:08:11.400 up some this weekend bring it home rep it rep it on the show i don't get the hat and everything
00:08:17.160 shameless plug the sweater is a w w from aiden aiden kenny approved
00:08:25.300 we i would need french stickers we will look into getting some well i want to launch a french
00:08:32.840 content within the organization before the end of the year so it's on our radar but right now
00:08:37.840 we're very focused on english canada my french isn't great guys my french isn't great so we're
00:08:43.040 we're we're focused on um this guy what a king donate a hundred dollars a month these monthly
00:08:51.040 donors are huge they help us for this long-term planning thank you so much for your support at
00:08:56.400 guess guess how we uh thank you so much for all your help i do encourage it you guys can make
00:09:02.460 super chats here but it is better to make donations through our website especially those
00:09:07.000 monthly donations youtube takes a huge cut off of any super cuts super chat so if you do want
00:09:12.780 to fully support the Dominion Society you can head over to dominionsociety.ca and make a donation
00:09:17.300 there uh any any uh any and all support even even a few bucks is a huge help or you be or you can
00:09:24.420 become a member you get one of our nice you get one of our nice uh Dominion Society pins and you
00:09:29.740 get to get involved in your community you get to get put in touch with all all sorts of members
00:09:34.020 in your area and get involved in local activism and community building and so on um so I do
00:09:40.220 encourage that can we get the dom sock socks the dom sock socks uh it's a good idea it's a good
00:09:45.900 idea we will be looking into a summer merch drop as well with some good summer wear uh right now
00:09:51.200 we're focused on the spring stuff but more stuff is coming down the pipe always
00:09:54.780 um yeah yeah yeah i told you i told you did i'd pull up yes you pulled up yeah i i never doubted
00:10:04.700 you imperial it was it was great to meet you we had a very successful reception over the weekend
00:10:09.640 here in ottawa we packed the room it was overflowing great to meet so many members from
00:10:14.680 all over ottawa the ottawa valley guys came down all the way from montreal it was great to meet
00:10:21.480 the whole crew and we're looking to do more events we have another event this weekend uh in the
00:10:26.280 hamilton area we'll be doing a little demonstration we'll be doing a little demonstration while we
00:10:30.840 having a big victoria day bash i'll be there greg will be there ken will be there the whole crew
00:10:36.440 So if you're in the area, if you're anywhere in the GTA or the surrounding area, please come down,
00:10:41.300 please get in touch with us. If you want more information, hit me up at info at dominionsociety.ca
00:10:46.260 and we will give you the details. It looks like it's going to be our biggest demonstration yet.
00:10:51.860 So watch out for that. All right. All right. All right.
00:11:00.960 I know a lot of you guys in the chat will be there this weekend. I'm looking forward to meeting you
00:11:04.520 all i'm looking forward to meeting you all but let's get into the news let's get into the news
00:11:08.920 let's talk let's talk business guys uh i don't want to stay too long i have so much work to do
00:11:15.560 but it's too much fun to talk with you guys so the big news this week two big news stories this week
00:11:23.320 um first we have nate urtskin smith in uh who let's give the full background in case in case
00:11:31.880 people are not aware of the situation in case you're not terminally online obsessed with Canadian
00:11:38.940 politics like like me I know I know we have some uh crazy people like me in the chat but for those
00:11:45.480 who don't know Nate Erskine Smith he's a pretty high profile I would say Liberal Party MP he's
00:11:50.580 represented the Toronto area riding in beaches East York for years and for the last few years
00:11:55.700 he has been uh looking for a jump to provincial politics he looked to take over the Ontario
00:12:00.340 Liberal Party before the last provincial election, but failed. And I know there was some accusations
00:12:05.880 of the party establishment being against him, maybe fixing the race against him in favor of
00:12:12.860 Bonnie Crombie. That obviously failed miserably and fell apart. And now they're looking for a
00:12:17.220 new leader. So Nate Erskine-Smith has his eyes on leadership yet again. And to set up his
00:12:24.260 his uh his leadership campaign he was looking to run in this um this by-election in scarborough
00:12:32.700 southwest it was opened up by uh one of the provincial the mpp made the jump to the federal
00:12:39.000 liberal party opening up this by-election and now he was looking to jump in and set up set himself
00:12:43.920 up for a leadership campaign by entering the uh provincial legislature one of very few liberal
00:12:50.800 MPPs. So he was in a four-way nomination contest. For those that don't know, these are the internal
00:12:57.420 party elections that are used to decide who the candidate will be, which is very important for
00:13:02.840 ridings like this, which are strong kind of liberal bastions of support. So, and we saw on
00:13:10.360 the weekend, he was ultimately unable to win the nomination. He lost it to, what is even his name,
00:13:18.820 Um, Hafiz, Asunal Hafiz ended up winning the race in what was a very close nomination contest,
00:13:30.040 won by only 19 votes. And there has been massive calls of irregularities throughout, uh, because
00:13:36.480 of this. Um, we're getting into big conversations online about how nomination contests are run,
00:13:43.580 uh ethnic politics corruption and all these things let's look at the article
00:13:49.020 here's from our from our friend my favorite journalist jamie sarkinak the rake of diaspora
00:13:57.400 politics hits nate erskine smith in the face so we have ethnic politics where all fun and games
00:14:04.620 for mp nate erskine smith until they devoured him on late sunday night um here's the the big
00:14:11.900 summary of things though there were 34 more ballots cast than there were votes suspect I
00:14:17.840 would say people were observed hanging around watchfully in the voting area telling voters
00:14:22.940 explicitly what they should do multiple voters took videos uh and smart speaker phone calls
00:14:30.340 allegedly to get instructions in the voting booth many voters took photos of their ballots which
00:14:35.780 earth Erskine Smith's chief scrutineer said was evidence of vote buying a large number of temporary
00:14:41.240 residents voted, many of whom couldn't state their address or claimed they had recently lost
00:14:46.600 their driver's license or moved to the area. Voters could get their ballots with asylum claim
00:14:51.320 documents, unsigned apartment leases, Amazon orders, digital report cards, and even visitor
00:14:59.380 visas, according to Erskine Smith's team. So just an absurd situation. For context,
00:15:06.660 these nomination contests have been quite controversial over the last few years,
00:15:10.720 in particular because they uh they're not governed by elections canada or elections ontario they're
00:15:17.200 completely governed by internal party operations so parties get to set who's allowed to become a
00:15:23.120 member uh and and so on and both the conservatives and liberal party have been uh have gotten a lot
00:15:30.040 of flack for this because they don't limit their membership to canadian citizens who are eligible
00:15:34.820 to vote in elections they allow permanent residents they allow even just general residents
00:15:39.660 temporary residents foreign students and so on to be members this was a big controversy earlier this
00:15:45.340 year during the the cpc convention where there was a vote to limit it to citizens that failed
00:15:50.860 with support of prominent you know foreign mps like tim up all but also if you go back a few
00:15:57.660 years if you guys remember liberal mp from toronto as well hand dong was the center of a foreign
00:16:04.060 interference scandal um which was suggested that the chinese communist party influenced that race
00:16:11.220 by mobilizing supporters mostly international students in order to sway the race and again
00:16:16.500 these these nomination contests are very important specifically in these writings that always go red
00:16:21.900 or always go blue they effectively end up choosing the member of parliament in these very suspect
00:16:27.500 nomination contests so um there's been a lot of calls in the last few days uh for these rules to
00:16:34.540 be restricted for for um election authorities like elections ontario elections canada to be involved
00:16:41.500 in these internal internal nomination races and i i can i can say that i i generally agree uh i do
00:16:49.660 respect a party's right to like appoint candidates especially in emergency situations but in general
00:16:54.380 as well. I think small parties are in particular are best off just appointing candidates instead of
00:17:00.460 going through these complex and cumbersome elections. But in cases, especially in these
00:17:05.740 major parties where there are nominations, I do think they need to be handled by a third party
00:17:11.500 entity or else you just end up with all of this suspect, all of this fraud. It doesn't make sense
00:17:16.860 for non-citizens who can't vote in elections to be voting in these nomination contests, especially
00:17:23.200 when they effectively do decide the next member of parliament uh but i think people are getting
00:17:29.180 too stuck in the weeds on that in particular i think the much more substantive solution
00:17:34.780 to this problem is to is to change laws on on voting and who can rent for office
00:17:42.320 uh this is part of our our our remigration plan uh the dominion society platform
00:17:48.280 people that are born abroad should not be allowed to rent for office at all this hafiz 0.94
00:17:53.020 fellow is born abroad in Bangladesh he moved here 20 years ago or something he runs a bunch of 1.00
00:18:00.320 Domino's pizza restaurants and I think we all know what's going on at Domino's these are like many
00:18:07.200 other franchise restaurants that are used to to bring in lots of temporary foreign workers often 1.00
00:18:11.880 from India or other South Asian countries and that's just exactly like I'm sure this Hafiz guy
00:18:19.940 is is in on this i haven't done a deep dive on him i don't know his whole personal story i don't know
00:18:24.560 any uh how he runs his businesses but i think it's safe to every domino's pizza i've been to lately
00:18:29.940 has exclusively indian drivers has exclusively indian workers and i think it's very safe to
00:18:35.760 assume that hafiz's restaurants are the same uh so to have someone that's that's manipulating the
00:18:41.320 immigration system a foreign-born individual running for for this seat is it's honestly
00:18:47.760 unacceptable. Honestly, should immigrants even be allowed to vote? I think it's very reasonable to 1.00
00:18:54.920 restrict that to at least people born in the country, especially when it comes to running
00:18:59.700 for office. So while people are talking about election authorities being involved in these
00:19:05.460 nomination contests, I think the very simple solution here, this would have solved for the
00:19:09.640 hand-dolling situation as well. You shouldn't have foreign-born individuals running for parliament 1.00
00:19:13.920 at all um certainly not voting in elections either uh and and you must at least be some sort 0.99
00:19:20.840 of resident to to to vote in these nomination contests these are these are very uh middle of
00:19:26.120 the road very obvious reforms that that can can needs but this race in general is just a cap is
00:19:34.060 a great microcosm of the effects of kind of ethnic diaspora politics in canada uh it's quite amusing
00:19:41.620 you look into the situation uh here um beaches east york where where nate has represented for
00:19:50.820 the last few years is one of the whitest ridings left in toronto uh language 70 english um
00:20:00.020 the ethnic breakdown it this is according to the 2021 census so it's probably declined since then
00:20:06.180 but beaches east york back in 2021 was still 62 percent european uh only 11 south asian and then
00:20:14.260 he goes next door literally the adjacent riding this is the one directly beside that he represents
00:20:20.420 the federal level and the um the the demographics are completely different ethnic groups only 37
00:20:28.260 white that's probably gone down since then in 24.8 south asian it's probably gone up since then
00:20:34.100 so he goes from the whitest riding in toronto to scarborough which anyone who's familiar with the 0.96
00:20:39.620 area is a very diverse area of the country a very unsafe area of the country and he's immediately 1.00
00:20:48.340 beholden to all of this suspect um electioneering that frankly is is common in in these foreign 0.87
00:20:57.700 countries where they come from uh you know countries like india are off often um propped
00:21:03.540 up as you know the biggest democracy in the world and stuff like this but the reality is in these
00:21:08.820 such in these countries this kind of unscrupulous behavior is much more common so we're importing
00:21:14.260 that right into canada nate did everything he could to pander to these people he he tried to
00:21:20.100 speak their language he released videos with uh with um uh subtitles in in this in their foreign
00:21:26.900 language. He even traveled to Bangladesh. He dressed up, he went to their parades, he did
00:21:33.340 everything that they could. He could to win the support of this ethnic minority voting bloc in
00:21:39.700 the riding. But ultimately, these people want to be represented by someone who can represent their
00:21:46.580 culture, their ethnic identity, and so on. And to be honest, I respect that. I too want to be
00:21:52.620 represented by actual Canadians, heritage Canadians, people that understand my culture,
00:21:58.080 my identity, even though, you know, most liberals and conservatives have a poor understanding of
00:22:03.240 Canadian identity nowadays. This is a very natural thing to want. And really, the solution is not
00:22:10.700 like there's these, these kind of liberal minded, lowercase l, liberal minded people,
00:22:17.340 universalist thinkers they have no answer for this we saw this in the uk as well um where uh
00:22:25.060 in a by-election reform ended up losing uh to the green party and they chalked it up to to
00:22:31.220 ethnic voting diaspora voting but they have no solutions for this because they're they're not
00:22:36.280 willing to to take a particularist frame a right-wing frame and and actually kind of reject
00:22:42.340 these people's ability to participate in our democracy they're too universalist that would
00:22:46.740 be that would be against human rights blah blah blah or whatever um so and this problem is just
00:22:53.540 going to keep getting worse and worse and worse uh and i like i'm i'm very concerned where we're
00:22:58.800 going to see canada go in the next five ten years um we're going to see this kind of balkanization
00:23:04.420 of our political system where there's going to be even more kind of ethnic voting blocks but also
00:23:10.080 i wouldn't even be surprised to see parliamentary voting blocks you know i wouldn't be surprised to 0.82
00:23:14.700 see a kind of non-partisan, not liberal, not conservative, just like a Hindu, a Kalistan
00:23:20.780 voting bloc in order to represent their foreign interests in parliament. There's already like a
00:23:27.460 Kalistan caucus in the CPC. How long before they realize that, you know, conservative and liberal
00:23:35.380 aren't very helpful to their cause? They can just have their own voting bloc to represent their
00:23:40.720 interests especially given the the concentration of their votes right this this calistan group could
00:23:46.400 dominate this hypothetical calistan group could come dominate huge portions of the country there's
00:23:52.480 like five or six seats in brampton um there's there's probably you know three or four in
00:23:57.520 calgary that they could dominate another two in surrey they could have a block larger than the
00:24:02.380 green party uh larger than the ndp even in in current year that that would have serious sway
00:24:09.320 in in canadian politics and this could be broken this this could happen in muslim dominated writings
00:24:14.440 as well and then we end up in this bizarre situation where we have all these large foreign
00:24:19.440 ethnic blocks that would be taking over provincial legislatures federal legislatures this is this is
00:24:25.680 the direction our country is rapidly heading in unless we take serious reforms necessary and i
00:24:31.100 really hope that guys like uh nate can can learn this lesson and and start pushing for for serious
00:24:37.620 reforms. He has challenged the result. I think it's impossible not to challenge. A 19 vote
00:24:44.060 threshold is well in the range for a sort of judicial recount, especially given that there's
00:24:51.000 more ballots cast than voters eligible. That's bizarre. But he has kind of taken a pretty cringe
00:24:59.800 approach to it in my books. He said he's not going to run himself. He doesn't want it to be
00:25:06.600 about self-interest. He'll take a step back. He just wants it to be, he just wants integrity and
00:25:12.640 stuff like this. I think he should really double down and get more involved. He got screwed over
00:25:17.460 and I don't think that he should be taking a step back. I think that's a pretty lame framing. So 0.92
00:25:22.500 disappointed to see how that's going. And I think most of the commentary on this really misses the
00:25:28.920 mark. We need to be pushing for reforms that eliminates this prospect of ethnic voting, 0.98
00:25:34.900 not only the corruption that comes with it but the the entire political dynamic of these ridings 0.88
00:25:40.920 being completely dominated by foreign ethnic interests like this this whole concept of
00:25:46.540 assimilation has gone out the window and it's in it's one thing at the social level but like
00:25:51.760 that it's being entrenched politically is even more concerning um so uh that's step one i i i
00:25:59.760 will have to see how that affects his run for for the ontario liberal leadership it seems to have
00:26:04.580 completely derailed it. But on that topic, there has been another interesting development this
00:26:10.160 week in the Ontario Liberal leadership race, which I think isn't even kind of formally launched
00:26:15.740 until later this year. And that is another prospective leadership candidate. I don't
00:26:25.660 think he's formally launched. I think he's still in an exploratory campaign, but this is Eric Lombardi.
00:26:30.300 Right. And I'm sure many, this is the wrong tweet. I'll get up the right one. I'm sure many
00:26:40.520 of you guys saw it on the timeline. It did go pretty viral. I responded to it as well. But
00:26:49.340 Eric Lombardi, who is a housing activist, I believe he's exploring a run for the leadership
00:26:58.100 of the provincial liberal party and he here we go this is it he posted a big tweet specifically
00:27:07.860 about immigration let's read it so he tweets canadian leaders are too afraid to engage
00:27:14.260 seriously in the with the frustrations many normal people feel about immigration after the
00:27:18.280 last few years but i share many of their concerns we have made honest conversation too difficult in
00:27:24.000 in Ontario, especially we have been naive about the effects of sudden population growth on housing,
00:27:28.880 wages, infrastructure, public service, and yes, social and cultural cohesion. So he's even talking
00:27:34.360 about the cultural aspects of immigration. Immigration has historically been one of
00:27:38.440 Ontario's greatest strengths. It helped build our industries, our cities, and our prosperity. But
00:27:42.440 many Ontarians feel gaslit if they express frustration about current circumstances. Young
00:27:47.040 people watched rents explode. Entry level work became more competitive and lower paid. Colleges
00:27:52.520 transformed into immigration pathways infrastructure and healthcare struggle to keep up it has changed
00:27:57.520 our politics too people are not imagining this Ontario experience a genuine immigration shock
00:28:03.640 this is at least this at least is somewhat acknowledged and while Ontario Ottawa deserves
00:28:10.180 plenty of blame Ontario cannot pretend this happened this simply happened to us Doug Ford's
00:28:16.760 government helped create the conditions for this crisis by blowing up the higher education funding
00:28:21.460 model. They froze tuition, underfunded colleges and universities, and then allowed institutions
00:28:26.020 to make up the difference by massively expanding international student enrollment. That turned
00:28:31.280 parts of our higher education system into immigration processing business. Now Ontario
00:28:35.360 needs a reset. And because immigration policy is ultimately federal, Ontario will need to work
00:28:40.100 closely with and pressure Ottawa to pursue a system that is sustainable, orderly, and capable
00:28:45.920 of maintaining public trust. Permanent immigration should return to a normal and sustainable 0.99
00:28:51.920 baseline and no longer be subject to insiders claiming labor shortages. Over the next five to
00:28:57.440 10 years, Canada should gradually unwind the enormous temporary resident population from
00:29:02.580 roughly 5 million people nationally to well under 1 million. Some, of course, should be offered a 0.78
00:29:07.980 path to stay, but many cannot and we need to honestly acknowledge that. That likely means a
00:29:13.740 prolonged period of near flat population growth going forward temporary worker asylum and students
00:29:19.300 streams need to be need to shrink substantially more than they have visa rules need to actually
00:29:25.840 mean something asylum claims cannot quietly become a parallel permanent residency system
00:29:31.240 at the same time we should reward people who follow the rules if someone came here legally
00:29:35.900 worked studied honestly before your welfare and left when required they should receive a
00:29:40.120 meaningful advantage if they later apply to immigrate permanently. And finally, we need to
00:29:44.960 remember what immigration policy is for. It's not primarily a humanitarian program. It is a
00:29:49.880 civilization-building and economy-building program. Ontario and Canada should prioritize immigrants
00:29:55.000 with skills, education, and economic potential and cultural compatibility to help build a
00:30:00.720 prosperous, cohesive, high-trust society. So this is a huge statement from a pretty mainstream,
00:30:07.040 at least an actor within a mainstream political party this is a great development and something
00:30:13.720 more extreme more right-wing more re-migrationist than we've seen from any conservative party any
00:30:22.180 any big c small c uh provincial federal conservative outside of quebec really and he does hit of course
00:30:30.340 there's all this pro-immigration kind of cope it's all couched uh you know ontario is built by
00:30:35.980 immigrants all this sort of uh pro-immigration language because he is at the end of the day a
00:30:42.000 liberal and needs to not get kicked out of the leadership race and so on but he does touch on
00:30:47.000 all the important kind of his um issues like he he recognizes that it's a it's not just an economic
00:30:53.560 issue it's a cultural issue um he he hits on the asylum process being abused as a parallel
00:31:01.100 permanent immigration system. He touches on the impacts on wages, on housing, how the
00:31:09.540 university system has been abused. He hits all the major topics, the downscaling temporary
00:31:17.640 residents. He might not go quite as far as I would like to see, but this is a huge step in
00:31:23.560 the direction within an ostensibly left-leaning party. This is a huge issue and it's really the
00:31:29.400 most important wedge. And like, he's even going as far as touching on a lot of rhetoric that
00:31:35.140 you'll only see from people like me, this about cultural compatibility, cohesive high trust
00:31:41.040 societies. Like this is a, this is a huge development and it went very viral online as,
00:31:46.220 as a result. So I do like what I see here from Eric Lombardi. I'm not familiar with a lot of
00:31:51.680 his positions and I'm sure we don't see eye to eye on all sorts of issues and even the details
00:31:57.000 of immigration policy but this is a huge step in the right direction that we see from a pretty
00:32:01.480 mainstream political actor and we have to give kudos where kudos is due um i'd like to see this
00:32:07.220 kind of language take off in in more political parties around the country and there's kind of
00:32:11.300 two main things i want to touch on here um one uh i think it's important that we recognize as
00:32:18.600 canadian nationalists i tweeted this earlier this week that canadian nationalists should not feel
00:32:23.060 behold into the conservative party for any reason um we should we need to be a cohesive
00:32:29.240 voting bloc in provinces and at the federal level and we need to throw our support behind
00:32:35.400 we need to either withhold our vote if there is no one that's going to meet our views or we need
00:32:40.540 to throw our support around behind the the most effective uh voices on this issue and right now
00:32:46.900 eric lombardi uh regardless of what you might think of him is is the closest to to our views
00:32:52.320 at least here in Ontario. So he'll, he'll, he'll, he'll definitely be on my radar. I think
00:32:59.460 supporters, Dominion Society members should, should get behind Eric, make sure that he's able
00:33:05.640 to continue his campaign for the liberal leadership. Maybe, maybe we can help him out.
00:33:09.640 Maybe we can offer some volunteers, some donations, whatnot. If he has a significant
00:33:15.640 cohort within his campaign of remigrationist voices he'll continue to to to provide messaging
00:33:24.360 provide policy that adheres to our views to maintain our support so we need to be we can't
00:33:29.160 be we can't feel that we're that we should only vote conservatives because they're ostensibly on
00:33:34.720 the right like if they're not going to stand up for our views they're not going to get our support
00:33:38.840 and if politicians even if they're in the fucking green party the ndp if they if they're going to 0.56
00:33:44.200 message on immigration if they're going to talk about the cultural impacts of immigration if 0.83
00:33:49.020 they're going to talk about all the major policy issues if they're going to push for reforms in
00:33:53.160 this area they then we have to get behind them like we we have to vote with our our support we
00:33:59.140 have to vote in in these internal elections we have to we have to volunteer we have to help these
00:34:04.660 people or else we have to show that this is a winning issue um or else more politicians will
00:34:12.080 won't take the risk they have to see we have to show them that this is a winning issue
00:34:16.560 and that a huge cohort of voters will get behind them if they're going to focus on this issue
00:34:22.560 the other thing is um technically immigration is a shared jurisdiction between the provinces and
00:34:31.280 the federal government it's not just a federal issue like quebec has given the pathway to um
00:34:38.320 for provinces that provinces can follow uh in order to get more autonomy over their immigration
00:34:44.320 system right now there is the the kind of quebec ottawa accord or the quebec canada accord i believe
00:34:49.840 um in this state uh this allows come to have more influence over their immigration both the numbers
00:34:58.080 and the selection now they use this over recent years they've limited their intake to about 30k
00:35:03.280 a year, you know, of the huge numbers coming into Canada, only 30k are allowed to go to auto,
00:35:08.200 uh, to Quebec. And they also use it to, to make sure, um, that only French speaking immigrants
00:35:14.800 come to, to, to Quebec. Now this obviously doesn't go far enough. They get a lot of, uh, migrants
00:35:20.280 from like French speaking African countries like Algeria, Haiti, um, stuff like this. Um, but all 0.98
00:35:27.600 of it, this is the, this is the main issue that Anglo Canadian provinces will have to grapple with
00:35:32.660 because the justification behind this control over their immigration system is predicated on
00:35:40.340 the idea that Quebec is a unique society and they should have control over immigration in order to
00:35:46.080 protect that. And that's a concept that can be applied to any province in the country. Every
00:35:52.440 province has its own unique identity. Canada has its own unique identity and provinces have their
00:35:56.920 own micro identities within that tapestry of Canada. This is true of BC, this is true of Ontario,
00:36:01.720 this is true of nova scotia it's it's become very commonplace in quebec who obviously have like the
00:36:07.720 most distinct identity with canada because they have a distinct language from the rest of the
00:36:11.860 country but it's more than just language right like culture is is a much deeper thing so any
00:36:18.420 provincial party that really wants to pressure ottawa that really wants to get more control over
00:36:23.800 their immigration system and i think this is important like we need to be approaching things
00:36:27.000 from every angle right we need provincial politicians pushing back on this we need
00:36:30.460 a metapolitical uh activists pushing from the outside we need a media environment that puts
00:36:37.040 pressure on the federal and provincial politicians and we need a favorable government in ottawa but
00:36:42.300 we need to push this from all these different angles and really the the most effective way to
00:36:46.240 do this as a provincial party is to recognize the cultural side of it very explicitly to say that
00:36:53.140 your province has a distinct identity and that's something that needs to be protected through the
00:36:57.720 immigration policy whether that's encouraging assimilation reducing numbers uh selection
00:37:03.720 criteria like if we're being honest about the the you know the ethnic foundations of ontario
00:37:10.140 it is scottish english irish and for if there was a an actual kind of right wing an actual
00:37:18.660 nationalist option at the provincial level in ontario they can recognize that ontario is a
00:37:23.900 distinct to society and we should only accept immigrants from people consistent with our
00:37:27.880 heritage that's there's precedent for this right Quebec has paved the way and provinces can copy 1.00
00:37:35.660 them all over the country but a lot of these like even people like Eric is probably still very
00:37:41.700 liberal very universalist in his philosophy you can see it couched throughout this tweet this
00:37:46.180 pro-migration rhetoric but really to get control like he talks about pressuring Ottawa and stuff
00:37:52.360 working with Ottawa. If you're really going to be effective provincial politician, you need to go
00:37:57.020 the Quebec route. You need to recognize that Ontario is a distinct society with its own
00:38:02.280 identity and that needs to be protected through the immigration policy. That's the only way that 0.98
00:38:06.560 you can actually get control over how many people who is coming to Ontario. You need to follow the
00:38:12.680 Quebec pathway. You need to you need to unshackle yourself from this naive liberalism that we've
00:38:19.320 been saddled with uh for for decades you need to say no ontario needs to be was a certain way when
00:38:27.140 when you know eric's probably around my age when when we were born it's radically transformed
00:38:32.040 we're gonna step up and the economic arguments are important um but if you're really going to
00:38:38.080 talk about control you need to you need to take this quebec pathway and and rationalize it around
00:38:43.580 preserving the distinct society, the distinct identity. So I will say I'm excited by what I've
00:38:51.300 seen from Eric. I hope his exploratory campaign turns into a real campaign. And we need to be
00:39:00.180 willing to do what we can to support politicians that are going to speak towards our ideas. So
00:39:04.920 this is an exciting development. The Ontario liberal leadership race has been exciting now.
00:39:10.540 we we uh plagued by diaspora politics we got some re-migrationist rhetoric into into the race
00:39:18.920 uh it's it's an interesting context we'll have to see where it goes and and how we can be involved
00:39:26.340 um so that's about it um on on that i vote new blue party over ford yeah sure i've i've never
00:39:36.340 seen the new blue party talk about immigration i would like to see more of that um they have an
00:39:42.220 angle to to none of what i said is exclusive to the liberal party any party could uh could adopt
00:39:48.140 uh this sort of framing in order to get more control over the immigration system um but again
00:39:54.560 i i think uh the new blue party is very much you know smaller government doug ford's uh uh just a
00:40:01.860 capital liberal like um they're not real nationalists uh so that's that's the pathway
00:40:07.800 at the and then the the other big thing for for provinces is the education system right
00:40:12.900 they have complete control over the education system which is which is kind of one of the
00:40:17.600 root problems in our society that promotes this liberal ideology that promotes uh a universalist
00:40:24.640 way of thinking that promotes a lot of uh anti-canadian kind of historical narratives uh
00:40:31.040 whether that be on our history as as evil colonists and in in all this that's where you
00:40:36.780 can have real reforms at the provincial level so to take a culturally conservative position
00:40:41.520 a nationalist position on immigration and on reforming the education system uh that's that's
00:40:48.300 really the the potent combination that i would like to see from provincial parties here in
00:40:52.740 ontario or or in any province really i think that's an angle for existing parties for new parties
00:40:57.540 1bc new blue party um or existing parties here like the the liberals that are going through
00:41:03.420 nomination contests and like or leadership contests and the liberal party in particular
00:41:09.440 is an interesting case because they do have that powerful brand but they're the parties in disarray
00:41:13.560 like they've been searching for aimlessly searching for a leader for the last few elections um so there
00:41:19.620 is opportunity for for activists for people like us to get involved and sway the liberal party of
00:41:27.340 Ontario into a different direction to capitalize on their brand and actually contest an election
00:41:33.200 against Ford. Ford has been able to win so many elections because the opposition is so fractured
00:41:41.820 and so incompetent, right? The Green Party is pretty big under Mike Schreiner. The Liberal and
00:41:49.120 the NDP have been really fractured on the left wing side of things. They all suck. None of them 1.00
00:41:54.240 are interested none of them are interesting they're all incompetent on social media their
00:41:58.560 their messages suck um so there is definitely an opportunity at the provincial level um to
00:42:05.760 to shift things in a different direction um so yeah keep an eye let's keep an eye on uh 0.98
00:42:12.800 mr lombardi uh and see where that goes
00:42:17.040 the other big news of the week i'm sure you guys all saw i'm sure you guys all saw
00:42:24.980 is this weird scandal this prank show this indigenous prank show so we saw this big viral
00:42:32.900 post over a million views from miss lindsey shepherd out in bc uh where she was basically
00:42:40.220 entrapped deceived by uh a prank show who set up weird shell companies media companies uh toy
00:42:50.780 companies uh fake websites and so on in order to put forward a sort of documentary on sir john a
00:42:57.640 mcdonald and and the indigenous question um and ultimately um brought these people in for
00:43:06.160 interviews and then i guess there was some strange sort of gotcha moment where they came out and
00:43:11.300 dumped shoes on the table or something it was they they targeted all sorts of uh activists
00:43:16.660 academics politicians around the country we've seen voices come out uh in the last few days
00:43:21.680 subsequent to lindsey shepherd francis widdowson was also um was also blew blew the whistle on this
00:43:28.080 uh last week um now we've seen aaron gunn come out about how he they tried to deceive him dallas
00:43:34.140 Brody um uh Daniel Tate over at the Integrity TO another activist in Toronto um who didn't take the
00:43:41.960 bait um and I there's a there's a huge discussion on this uh people seething about you know this
00:43:49.120 prank show uh I think it's important that we don't take the bait too much for one uh you know
00:43:55.060 seething about getting pranked uh you know you never really win that battle if you're the one
00:44:00.960 whining about being pranked what's really suspect here is is the involvement of the cbc
00:44:06.040 um this seems to be a a multi-million dollar or at least a hundred hundreds of thousands of dollars
00:44:12.440 behind this production to set up all these shell companies to have full studios fully staffed uh
00:44:18.800 to get this content and um we're like should the cbc be involved in in smearing their uh people on
00:44:28.180 on political lines um like it's one thing to have
00:44:32.580 like even the cbc engaging in entertainment is is kind of strange it's kind of on the edge of
00:44:39.700 their mandate i would say um to have a prank show is fine but to to target your people based on their
00:44:46.680 politics seems very inappropriate for uh for the cbc for the canadian broadcasting corporation
00:44:52.520 so that's the the big question mark there but to be honest i'm looking at all this content coming
00:44:59.220 out of it and i i don't think that people should be as worried as they are to be honest i think
00:45:07.140 this whole thing is going to blow up in their face and i think it's going to provide us with
00:45:10.600 great content like all these activists that they've that they've deceived i i can't i can't 0.96
00:45:16.600 imagine they've come out and like said stupid things they're all very smart people that are 0.87
00:45:21.680 effective communicators on this topic. Do you really trust the CBC to actually make a funny 0.98
00:45:29.160 prank show? I'm pretty sure the ultimate content here is going to be cringe. They're going to look
00:45:35.840 stupid. They're going to give a platform to talk positively about John A. McDonald. Even some of 1.00
00:45:41.980 the things I've seen, they had a Sir John A. McDonald impersonator in the room. So what was
00:45:48.580 he saying he was they tried to make johnny look like a racist that's anti-indigenous or something
00:45:53.680 like i'm pretty sure i'm pretty sure when this comes out it's going to be like like it's going
00:45:59.560 to be guys like us being like no this is based this is awesome we love this it's going to give
00:46:03.900 us a bunch of opportunities to clip and make based content uh on on things that this mcdonald 0.64
00:46:11.140 impersonator said cringe things that these these uh these silly activists on the left put forward
00:46:16.920 i think everything that they put out they're like we're just a borat style prank show do you really 0.86
00:46:22.660 think the cbc has the has the kind of creativity the humor to pull this off i don't it's going to
00:46:30.660 be cringe it's going to be fun for us there's going to be opportunities to make lindsey shepherd
00:46:36.060 and francis widdowson look based there's going to be uh angles for us to double down and be like no
00:46:42.600 we love the Sir John Amy McDonald impersonator. Everything you said is sick. That's the thing. 0.98
00:46:49.420 Like, I don't think people should be too worried about this. Definitely don't be seething about
00:46:55.040 how you got deceived or how you got pranked. This is an elaborate thing. It's certainly
00:46:59.580 inappropriate for the CBC to be engaging in. But I don't think that they're going to succeed in
00:47:05.420 actually smearing the voices that took part in it. I think they're going to end up amplifying
00:47:11.500 our views uh and giving us lots of content that that we will be able to make memes edits out of
00:47:19.540 that will make them that will make them see and that's how we win this we don't win the win this
00:47:24.380 by being uh by complaining and and uh trying to expose them and whatnot we win this by
00:47:31.980 letting them release their content and saying no this is awesome we love this give us more of this
00:47:37.240 this is based john a mcdonald's awesome residential schools were cool or whatever
00:47:41.780 um that's how we win this so be patient play the waiting game let them release their content let's
00:47:48.340 let's see it let's see it i think it'll only be consumed by people on the right that have been
00:47:52.840 following this controversy i don't think it's gonna have get legs um with the with the broader
00:47:59.020 public because no one cares about cbc anymore um and i like it might even blow up in their face 0.99
00:48:06.520 even more they might make them look silly stupid uninformed cruel like the the public sentiment 0.99
00:48:12.040 people are getting so tired of the whole uh narrative around the indigenous uh the indigenous 0.99
00:48:18.920 question the residential school question the kamloots question that's going nowhere so let them
00:48:24.920 let them make their content let's see it let's see it let's let's let's enjoy it let's watch it let's
00:48:30.040 don't get too uh concerned about complaining about being pranked now they also targeted aaron gunn
00:48:36.520 who is a member of parliament out in bc and uh today uh aaron gun posted this he sent a letter
00:48:43.560 to the cbc ombudsman demanding an explanation and accountability for the use of taxpayer money
00:48:48.680 to mislead deceive and lie to canadian citizens including members of parliament
00:48:53.000 in attempts to trick them into participating into a fake documentary spearing the reputation of 0.56
00:48:57.560 canada's first prime minister so i actually think this is very important and a good thing for the
00:49:03.800 the CPC to be taking on. Let the activists, let the academics, let the people outside make the
00:49:09.200 more controversial arguments. They should be really holding the CBC to account through parliamentary
00:49:13.500 hearings and stuff like this. They should be calling in leadership of the CPC to come before
00:49:19.520 parliament and explain themselves, to document exactly what funds were used, what projects like
00:49:25.060 this they're working on. The Conservative Party can be that more boring bureaucratic entity in
00:49:31.660 this and push for accountability and this is a great opportunity my concern is will the cbc
00:49:38.700 the the conservative party be willing to um go into the territory necessary to actually use this
00:49:45.660 as an effective wedge um there is actually a comment here on on gun's post that i think
00:49:51.460 captures it perfectly he says johnny created the residential school system that's not a smear
00:49:56.120 that's history and for the for this conservative party to use this effectively as a wedge they're
00:50:04.220 going to need to be willing to not only defend john a on a surface level but to defend him
00:50:09.260 substantially use this indigenous situation as a wedge in the greater public people are so tired 0.74
00:50:15.580 of this it all goes to this like virtue signaling on reconciliation while our relationship with 0.99
00:50:21.360 indigenous communities continues to be hugely dysfunctional you know take this as an opportunity 0.98
00:50:26.800 once you bait the media in through these hearings and so on take strong stances Greg made a great 1.00
00:50:33.520 point on his live stream last night Greg Wycliffe my associate here the Dominion Society he said
00:50:40.080 that they should renounce their the vote from a few years ago that recognized residential
00:50:45.360 schools as a genocide um they they should go all out on this no it wasn't a genocide no canada is
00:50:52.960 not a genocidal state um there may have been flaws in the residential schools but they were well
00:50:58.720 intentioned um even the whole narrative about residential schools is so disingenuous right
00:51:04.160 uh like it makes it seem like this this are this the current society is somehow more functional
00:51:10.400 when it's not there's still huge rates of abuse uh drug use alcoholism all every terrible stat is
00:51:19.840 in third world conditions in our resident uh in on reserves um like there was good reason that 0.58
00:51:26.480 they set up residential schools and and like they're they're framed as such an evil but a lot
00:51:31.680 of this is ahistorical like most schools were just on reserves they were day schools where people go
00:51:36.800 away. The only reason that there were residential schools was to get them out of these toxic 0.98
00:51:40.700 environments where abuse is high, where alcoholism is high, where all these things can have negative
00:51:46.140 impacts on the children. And it was to give them a pathway to be more involved in Canadian society,
00:51:51.480 to be able to understand English, to be able to understand French, to have the agriculture skills
00:51:56.140 needed to be independent from the state. They were certainly well-intentioned, but if they're
00:52:01.980 going to take this issue and i think it's a good wedge for them to take um they have to kind of go
00:52:07.460 all in on it they have to defend sordone's legacy they have to have nuanced conversations
00:52:12.560 they have to reject this genocide nonsense um or else they're just going to it's just going to be
00:52:18.680 lip service they're just going to be they're just going to put themselves in awkward situations
00:52:22.840 where they're saying oh it is genocidal but it's bad for you to call it genocide and it's just
00:52:27.820 going to, they can't go one foot in one foot out. So I think this is a big opportunity for the CPC
00:52:32.660 to take advantage of a big wedge that should be favorable to them. But I don't have, I don't have
00:52:40.480 much faith that the CPC will do it well. So that's my take on this whole situation. Let's, let's,
00:52:50.820 let's play the waiting game. Let's see what the CBC can actually put together. Let's see their
00:52:55.140 prank show let's see how let's see how let's see how pranked that these people actually got
00:52:59.860 because I'm pretty sure Lindsay I'm pretty sure Francis did not stick their foot in their mouths
00:53:05.140 I'm sure they use the platform effectively and I'm pretty sure the CBC is going to end up looking 0.99
00:53:09.100 like the bullies here like the idiots here and I think they're going to give us lots of content to 0.93
00:53:13.580 work with Ken does not genocidal easy w for the CBC easy w for the CBC I think it's a great point 1.00
00:53:24.380 Greg um they they need they need to be able to take that that conversation this is an important
00:53:30.840 conversation to have I think Canadians are hungry for it um a defense of our our history a defense
00:53:36.640 of our legacy uh rejecting these these these uh post-modern post-nationalist notions um
00:53:44.200 our our our ancestors are not evil this is a this is a winning issue for the CPC um but it looks
00:53:50.840 like Paul Yev's not even touching it, right? Like he's just promoting Aaron Gunn and stuff like
00:53:54.600 this. Like, it looks like they still have their finger in the air trying to figure out what their
00:53:58.860 opinion is on this. So, you know, I don't have much faith in the CPC, but I do think it's an
00:54:06.760 opportunity. Okay. Last topic for tonight. Well, I answer some questions after that.
00:54:16.440 Daniel, is the CPC not hijacked by Calistanis? It's absolutely hijacked by Calistanis and Jewish 1.00
00:54:24.760 interests in particular. Those two groups, you can see them right in the leadership of the party. 1.00
00:54:29.960 The two deputy leaders are a Calistani and a Jewish woman. Those two interest groups have
00:54:35.680 outsized influence over the CPC. It's well documented.
00:54:38.540 okay so the last thing i want to talk about tonight is i do want to you guys know me i'm
00:54:47.720 focused on canadian politics as much as i can but i do have a bit of a hobby interest in uk politics
00:54:53.480 nowadays um particularly um over the last few years because it's been very interesting watching
00:55:02.140 the the the decline of the the conservative party and the labor party their their their
00:55:08.120 liberal conservative equivalents the rise of reform under Nigel Farage and now the fall of
00:55:13.880 reform and the rise of Restore Britain. Restore Britain has been a big influence on me I'll be
00:55:20.680 totally honest I've been following the guys behind that party for a long time Rupert Lowe as well as
00:55:24.880 the guys behind the scenes and they were a big inspiration for me as I was launching the Dominion
00:55:29.220 Society because Restore wasn't initially launched as a political party right it was it was launched
00:55:33.560 as a movement very similar to what we're doing at the dominion society uh organizing people uh
00:55:39.860 putting together policy putting forward policy proposals they're not only focused on immigration
00:55:44.560 like we are they they have a broader platform they're a much larger organization um they have
00:55:51.100 literally support of a sitting member of parliament um so they the we're not the exact same thing but
00:55:58.420 there are a lot of similarities so i've been watching them with great interest um they have
00:56:02.620 definitely had influence over me and i think that they've done things at the right in the right way
00:56:07.360 at every step they didn't just rush into being a political party they started up as a movement
00:56:11.540 this allowed them to get some momentum and to build support across the political spectrum you
00:56:17.540 didn't have to be a member of their political party you could still be a member of reform you
00:56:22.480 could still be a member of the conservatives or whatnot this allowed them to build a big
00:56:26.080 list of supporters an email list a base which then they later turned into a political party
00:56:33.800 so they launched their political party in february or or march um marking the same the next big step
00:56:40.560 and i i honestly think if you if you haven't already watched their launch video it's it's
00:56:45.160 worth going back and watching i do think it was one of the biggest moments in politics across the
00:56:50.660 anglosphere since trump came down that uh escalator um and it really is the launch of a
00:56:56.960 more nationalist a more right-wing frame into anglosphere politics this has been growing across
00:57:02.240 the european world you know re-migrationist parties nationalist parties rising but it hadn't
00:57:07.960 really come to the anglosphere right it's going on in you know in portugal in austria and germany
00:57:13.320 and as such there is a bit of a lag to how it influences things in america and canada and
00:57:18.200 australia and so forth but now we have an actual english-speaking option on the table and i think
00:57:23.140 it's going to have huge ripple effects across the anglosphere uh and really drag canada's politics
00:57:28.960 and many other countries politics in the right direction um so i'm i've been very i'm i i think
00:57:35.420 there's a lot riding on restore britain not only for the united kingdom but for countries around
00:57:41.420 the world because if they can prove that this nationalist vision of politics is viable not only
00:57:47.240 uh the the message but also to have a totally anti-establishment political party rise from
00:57:54.760 from nothing to actually winning elections that creates the viability in in countries around the
00:58:01.700 world it pulls established parties like the conservative party to emulate them but it also
00:58:07.040 proves to to voters in canada and around the world that new parties are viable if um if they
00:58:14.980 have the right message if they have the right uh aesthetics if they have the right style um so if
00:58:21.220 the if restore is able to continue growing if they're able to succeed in the next election in
00:58:26.600 2029 i think that puts activists like us like the dominion society in a very strong position
00:58:31.860 to influence existing political parties or even put forward our own political party uh that could
00:58:37.580 succeed so the big development is uh last week there was the municipal council elections around
00:58:44.760 the country there was thousands of seats up for grabs and uh restore ran their first campaigns
00:58:51.560 so they they chose to only run they could have tried to run everywhere but again i think they
00:58:56.760 make the right call they chose to only run 10 seats in the great yarmouth area where
00:59:02.840 uh rupert lowe is the current mp and what was the results they ended up winning every single seat
00:59:10.360 so here's the results it went from this mishmatch of labor and conservative to all restore britain
00:59:18.360 they went from zero to 46 percent and won all 10 seats an incredible historic accomplishment
00:59:25.800 and now they're in a position where they have complete control over the council in great
00:59:29.900 yarmouth they can immediately start making the community better using it as a pilot project to
00:59:34.640 show the rest of the country this is what happens when we get power we make the local society better
00:59:39.780 this is just the the local level so they only have so much power so like they're going to start
00:59:43.740 restructuring immigration or anything like this but they can approach everything that's problematic
00:59:47.800 at the the local level they can get rid of the unnecessary bike lanes uh they can crack down on 0.91
00:59:53.760 weird schemes happening at the local level i've seen them talking about these kind of uh immigrant
00:59:59.220 front organizations like barber shops and stuff that are used to launder money for organized crime
01:00:04.280 they can crack down and make their society better and you know people will be interested people will
01:00:09.360 move to great yarmouth to enjoy the the success of them money uh other counselors around the country
01:00:15.140 will want to convert to to restore britain to extend their reach this lets them instead of
01:00:20.580 stretching themselves too thin and becoming ineffective politically kind of like what we've
01:00:25.980 seen from the ppc over the last few years they took a very strategic approach only ran where
01:00:31.620 they had the best chance of winning they won all the seats they were also able to this is a bit of
01:00:37.320 an eccentricity that makes Canadian politics more difficult than politics in Great Britain
01:00:45.380 or many European countries is they were able to mobilize their support from all over the country
01:00:51.020 to descend on Great Yarmouth. And instead of having them spread out campaigning all over the
01:00:56.160 place, hundreds of activists came from all over the country to help canvas and mobilize the vote,
01:01:03.420 get out the vote in great yarmouth exclusively this only has so good um applications in canadian
01:01:11.060 politics uh you know it's not it's just not viable for the whole country to descend on one riding
01:01:16.580 uh in canada right it would take people days to travel there it would be very expensive
01:01:21.820 that's a challenge a fundamental challenge of canadian politics but it works for them uh and
01:01:27.740 we're i'm excited to see where they go next over the next few years leading up to 20 to 29 there'll
01:01:31.940 be more municipal council elections where they can launch more campaigns. There'll be by elections
01:01:36.480 where they can use the same strategy to pull support in from all over the country to win
01:01:42.300 more seats within the national legislature. They might be able to win over sitting MPs from the
01:01:51.680 Conservative Party or reform to continue to grow their voting bloc. They're taking a very measured
01:01:57.720 approach. And I think there's a lot that we can learn, as well, this local first, this, this,
01:02:04.460 this slow, steady approach to actually win, because that's what political parties need to do at the
01:02:09.400 end of the day, right? It's not enough just to have the right messaging. It's not enough to move
01:02:13.640 the Overton window. That's the role of activists. That's the role of academics. That's the that's 0.76
01:02:18.120 the role of meta political actors. Political parties have to capitalize on that shifting 0.97
01:02:23.860 overton window and they have to win and that's something that the ppc has been very ineffective
01:02:27.960 at over the last few years um so we have to be watching restore britain we have to be supporting
01:02:33.320 restore britain uh they they all of all of our hope is is riding on um on on their success they
01:02:42.020 they they are the pioneers they can prove that our views can be politically successful if the
01:02:48.760 right approach is taken um and i think there's lots of we can emulate in that because uh you
01:02:54.740 know lots of different municipalities have you know political parties or similar political parties
01:02:59.300 we could as as we continue to grow as our network continues to grow we can take a very similar
01:03:04.960 approach and start running municipal campaigners uh counselors under a banner or or an informal one
01:03:10.820 in order to get our foot hold at the local level and start making a difference um and see how that
01:03:16.700 extends to uh how that extends now in in in in the uk there is there's there's actual connections
01:03:24.140 between the parties at all different levels we don't have that it would have to be a more informal
01:03:28.080 thing in canada but there's still a lot we can learn and emulate here based off of the track
01:03:33.260 record of restore britain so i'm very excited by what they're doing i think their messaging is
01:03:38.020 great i think their aesthetics are great i think their strategy has been on point every step of
01:03:42.480 the way and I'm very excited to see what they do next the results are are incredible like this is
01:03:47.520 here's a post from them this is the the turnout rate um in 2021 versus 2026 and you can see that
01:03:54.960 they're not only it's not only a vote splitting thing they're not only stealing votes from reform
01:04:00.380 or whatnot they're actually massively increasing voter turnout and appealing to people who have
01:04:06.060 been left out of the political system for whatever reason who don't see themselves represented in any
01:04:11.500 the mainstream parties like these are this is 29 to 49 this is a 20 gap 10 to 20 gaps in all of
01:04:19.220 these different in the one two three four five six seven seven out of the nine seats that they ran in
01:04:24.600 10 to 20 gaps mobilized in people that had just given up on politics and now they're they see
01:04:31.940 themselves in restore this is a huge this is a huge development a huge development um and people
01:04:38.300 in canada our political system in canada is kind of a weird or our political culture our political
01:04:44.300 environment is kind of a weird hybrid between the u.s and the uk we have a very british style
01:04:49.620 of politics right uh we have the the parliamentary system the westminster system the the foundation of
01:04:55.000 canada's political system is british in character so that there is a lot the first past the post
01:05:01.720 system everything there's there's a lot of connections to what's going on in the uk but
01:05:06.300 we are very influenced by the americans as well because people watch so much american media
01:05:09.980 especially with the um when you know we get into the the presidential elections and so on so we
01:05:18.060 have to be kind of watching both but people get sucked into american politics too much um when it
01:05:23.280 comes to like strategy and how political parties function like it's actually more relevant what's
01:05:27.360 going on in the united kingdom because it's it's basically the same system right um so people don't
01:05:34.580 get stuck too much into uh american politics keep an eye on what's going on in the in the uk as well
01:05:41.400 uh and and uh and keep an eye on restore britain because there's a lot to there's a lot we can
01:05:47.060 learn from them in terms of messaging aesthetics and strategy um so big ups to the guys over at
01:05:52.480 restore uh on that note i will open up uh to a few questions uh from the chat before we wrap this up
01:06:01.260 for this evening so what do you guys have for me tonight yeah check out their policies online
01:06:14.620 they've given me lots of inspiration on the stuff's relevant to us i would check it out
01:06:19.680 should the dominion society be on rumble yeah maybe we should open up a rumble channel i
01:06:23.880 haven't done it yet it would be a good backstop how do we get such a party in Canada we have to
01:06:32.600 build it ourselves we can't just wait the question is will we look to influence an existing party
01:06:39.980 or will we start our own the big opportunity for that is going to be after the next federal
01:06:44.660 election that's when we're going to see a very chaotic political environment and there's going
01:06:49.160 to be a chance for us to rise you have to you have to keep in mind that the political situation
01:06:52.960 it was more than them just launching the party right not only did they start as a movement as
01:06:57.860 an organization even before that you have to think of the track record in the last few years right
01:07:02.660 you had the conservative party fail completely they they got elected on a pro-brexit anti-immigration
01:07:09.840 mandate and they brought in millions of more immigrants and failed to do brexit properly
01:07:13.860 then you had the rise of reform reform didn't get big enough and they ended up splitting the vote 0.96
01:07:18.840 destroying the conservative party but letting labor take over and now labor is fucking the
01:07:25.000 country so now labor and the conservatives have both lost credibility reform looked like the big
01:07:31.740 um the big alternative but they ended up taking over too many defectors from the from from uh the
01:07:40.400 conservatives including guys like robert jenrich who was literally the immigration minister that
01:07:45.060 brought in millions of people under boris johnson so they've lost all that credibility so it's a
01:07:49.340 very chaotic environment already where people people's voter choices are very malleable and
01:07:54.720 people are as such willing to to jump over to reform and then also willing to make the jump to
01:07:59.620 um restore subsequently right there was a huge swath of the red wall right in northern uh uk 0.86
01:08:07.960 that made the switch from labor to to conservatives got fucked over by the conservatives
01:08:12.380 made the jump to reform and now they're going to be willing to jump over to restore as well 0.79
01:08:16.180 so they're they're a few years ahead of us right um right now we political um choices are a lot
01:08:24.160 more fixed in canada a lot more liberal conservative we have to give the time for them to to to fail
01:08:30.120 um for people to be more willing to take on a risk of a new party um so we can't get ahead of
01:08:36.720 ourselves either. I have no posters in my city. Where can I get them? You have to sign up as a
01:08:45.100 member. We only provide posters to Dominion Society members that have been onboarded as
01:08:50.120 volunteers. So you have to sign up as a member. Go over to dominionsociety.ca, sign up under the
01:08:56.900 join option. And once you get onboarded, we will get you put in touch with members in the area
01:09:02.180 and start getting start getting posters up in your city
01:09:05.540 no questions long live canada very based how can we help you gotta sign again you gotta sign up as
01:09:13.700 a member every volunteer opportunities are limited to people that are signed up as members we have
01:09:18.060 three main volunteer teams we have the front lines that are helping us those are our boots
01:09:22.820 on the ground we have our propaganda wing who helps us with social media content and other
01:09:27.140 media content and then we have our research division so depending on your skills you get
01:09:30.760 sorted into a volunteer group but it all starts with signing up as a member
01:09:34.200 how many members does dom sock have you know 26 2700 about that i don't know what the exact number
01:09:40.920 is dom sock got a mention on carl benjamin's channel really really send me that i'd like to
01:09:47.580 see it are you candace charlie downs uh you i've been called many things uh charlie kirk nick
01:09:55.480 fuentes now charlie downs i think i'm daniel tyree but i'm a big fan of charlie i'm a big
01:10:00.480 fan of charlie's work his messaging is great um i think he's a key piece in that restore team
01:10:06.360 and i can't say enough uh nice good things about them
01:10:09.860 please try and get lotus on lotus ears that would be great um i think they mostly do in studio stuff
01:10:17.440 but i can try reaching out to them i'm a big fan of their content i follow them very closely
01:10:21.280 but that's also a great example about how the uk system is so much more developed they have
01:10:26.360 a much more robust uh network of podcasters and and kind of independent media that are um
01:10:33.460 just uh much more professional like they have the full studio making high quality content on a daily
01:10:38.680 basis guys working full time uh on stuff like that like it's not just restore britain it's a
01:10:44.240 it's a whole ecosystem um and now now like lotus eaters is like all in on restore and they're like
01:10:51.060 they're the guys involved working for them are helping to organize the local area they're they're
01:10:55.660 they're interviewing Rupert Lowe they're they're interviewing other spokespeople for for the for
01:11:01.360 the party to help give them that social proof and to get their message out um and that's something
01:11:06.040 that's still very lacking in Canada like we don't have an equivalent of the loader seeders here in
01:11:10.040 Canada or I can't think of them any plans for Kingston we don't have any events or anything
01:11:21.080 plan, but we do have a little team there in Kingston. So if you're out there, you got to
01:11:25.880 sign up as a member and I'll get you put in touch with our local guys there. We have a good little
01:11:30.140 team of guys. If there was a party like Restore in Canada, what area of Canada do you think they
01:11:37.220 should focus on? That's a tough call. We'd have to, it'll be a question of where our good people
01:11:44.460 are. I think there's a lot of opportunities in Ontario, in Nova Scotia, based off of what I've
01:11:50.420 seen from our our membership um the situation out west is a bit complicated especially with
01:11:56.180 the separation referendums going on um but i do think our our kind of uh ideas can catch on
01:12:03.260 particularly in ontario in the maritimes why do you think conservatives are so weak on most issues
01:12:10.400 and how can we get them to show some balls i think the issue with the conservatives is they're
01:12:13.740 fundamentally liberal in character right the the the the political divide in camada is really
01:12:19.440 between right liberals and left liberals more than it is between left wing and right wing
01:12:23.080 and as such I don't think they effectively speak towards a huge cohort of voters like
01:12:29.000 the reality is whether people whether people understand the right left divide philosophically
01:12:33.940 people are kind of intrinsically divided that way and it's kind of you know it's based off of these
01:12:40.240 instincts of particularism versus universalism between you know order and liberty and stuff
01:12:47.840 like this and right now everyone's focused very much on the liberal side of things so
01:12:51.780 there's a huge voter cohort that's just you know passively voting for conservatives but they're
01:12:56.840 not really excited by them and there's a lot of non-voters that don't even that aren't even
01:13:00.200 interested because of that so I think it's a basic philosophical issue that's driving the
01:13:05.060 problems with the conservative party it's not even just that they're they're scared it's that
01:13:09.440 they don't even agree with our ideas they're trying to they just want smaller government
01:13:13.040 they generally agree with the direction of the country they just want a smaller government but
01:13:18.200 they want to tweak some things in some programs we need an actual significant alternative to to
01:13:22.900 the status quo can i be a member even though i'm a furry
01:13:29.440 anyone 16 plus can sign up um i don't know it depends how weird you are um are you any type 0.99
01:13:38.800 that goes out in public and furry costumes like that's that's that's fucking weird man 0.98
01:13:43.040 I'm not going to sugar decoder for you. 0.98
01:13:49.880 We're the fur right. We're not far right. We're fur right.
01:13:54.940 What's going on, man? What's going on?
01:14:03.540 What have the so-called conservative parties conserved in the last 40 years
01:14:07.580 anywhere in the West? Tell me about it. That's why we did this whole thing.
01:14:11.380 conserve what they don't stand for anything they don't want to conserve anything if you're a real
01:14:14.960 conservative you you'd stand against the most dramatic change that's happening to our society
01:14:19.620 which is the the demographic crisis the demographic change they don't offer any real conservative
01:14:25.800 members uh ideology they just want to they just want to really they just want to conserve the
01:14:32.300 trudeau trudeau's post-national economic zone they just want to be more efficient managers of
01:14:37.780 declining post-national economic zone and that's not what canadians want we want a a significant
01:14:43.480 philosophical difference to to lead this country in a different direction and that's not what the
01:14:48.080 conservatives offer um and i don't think pauliev is going to make that change i think we would
01:14:52.580 require a new leader and even to have a new leader they they need a significant organization
01:14:57.880 significant backing in order to have the independence from the the central party in
01:15:02.160 order to put forward that new perspective. When are you doing another LeDrew interview? I don't
01:15:08.980 know. I'll try reaching out to him in the future. I don't know if he'll want me back on. I might
01:15:12.960 have got him in trouble. I might have got him in trouble. He was skeptical of having me on in the
01:15:17.560 first place. A lot of people don't like giving me a platform, even though I'm just a sensitive
01:15:24.660 young man i'm just a sensible centrist i don't say anything radical i'm a nice guy
01:15:29.960 conserve what campaign is what introduced me to domstock glad to hear it it was a good it was a
01:15:35.920 good it was a good stunt we really uh hijacked that that that whole uh convention weekend
01:15:42.020 not a lot of questions tonight guys it's a slow stream i'm sick i'm sick i'm going to i need to
01:15:52.200 dinner and go to bed i do have a quick little ending rant i think what was i gonna say
01:16:01.160 let's have something to drink
01:16:10.040 um i want to talk a bit about um this tweet this tweet this tweet from my friend max janez
01:16:19.240 from my friend Max Janess. Paul, you have tweets, why isn't housing affordable in Canada?
01:16:25.960 Max hits him with the nuclear strength ratio, gets 37,000 likes with this very
01:16:33.720 obvious pointing out. The real problem is the Indians behind you. 1.00
01:16:40.680 And this is the exact problem with the Conservative Party. They're willing to pay 1.00
01:16:45.080 lip service to these ideas while their optics are abhorrent as as max very cleverly pointed out
01:16:54.440 um their optics are abhorrent and they're not able to to actual actually grasp with grapple with the
01:16:59.720 issues like um the real problem with the housing crisis as everyone knows as bay as you can see
01:17:07.560 based off of the massive virality of of max's tweet the the problem with the housing crisis
01:17:13.320 is immigration right it's not just a supply issue that's part of the problem but it's mostly a
01:17:18.440 demand side issue we've massively spiked immigration over the last few years millions
01:17:22.440 of people coming in even if they're temporary migrants they need a house they need a they need
01:17:26.680 to rent they need a roof over their heads the biggest problem with the housing crisis is the
01:17:32.120 demand caused by immigration but the conservatives aren't willing to not even aesthetically not even
01:17:36.680 messaging wise they're not able to uh to grapple with this not to mention from a policy perspective
01:17:42.120 It reminds me of it reminds me of a conversation I had last week or whatever when I was at the
01:17:49.460 the the strong and free networking conference conference. I was able to have a conversation.
01:17:56.740 I won't I'm not going to dox anyone. I don't want to get anyone in trouble. I don't want to get
01:18:01.000 anyone in trouble. That would be counterproductive. Right, guys, we need to prove that we're able to
01:18:05.180 have tact and have have sensitive conversations and not just go on my live stream and tell
01:18:10.240 everyone about it but i was able to have a conversation with a with high-ranking conservative
01:18:14.480 party uh staff member and i was able to pitch them on uh on dominion society on on re-migration but
01:18:21.760 but specifically he it was pretty funny he asked me i i told him i was an anti-immigration activist
01:18:27.600 and he said he was shocked he was shocked anti-illegal immigration anti too much immigration
01:18:34.980 or just anti-immigration i just i just nodded yes yes all of those things um so i started
01:18:42.320 running him through the remigration plan and i started off with the the very basic the very
01:18:47.500 basic we need an immigration moratorium and he was shocked he hadn't even considered this this
01:18:52.980 guy this guy is an important role in strategy within the conservative party they haven't even
01:18:56.360 considered an immigration moratorium which is a very popular policy a very common sense that's
01:19:02.520 what they love right common sense a very common sense policy but they won't even they haven't
01:19:07.440 even considered the concept of an immigration moratorium and that's that's exactly what all
01:19:12.560 these people all these people that are retweeting max that are liking max's comment that's exactly
01:19:16.900 what they want they want to shut the doors they can see the country transforming they can see the
01:19:21.280 negative impacts on our economy on our housing on our health care and so on what we need obviously 0.99
01:19:27.620 we need so much more right we have this whole re-migration plan but it all starts with the 0.99
01:19:31.900 most obvious, which is just close the fucking doors. No more people coming in for five, 10 years 1.00
01:19:37.540 until the situation stabilizes, until we can reinforce Canadian culture, until we can reinforce 0.53
01:19:44.200 assimilation and still our economic situation stabilizes, until we can catch up on building
01:19:49.960 houses so we can cool down the housing market. Obviously, we need an immigration moratorium. 0.99
01:19:56.080 And not only are the conservatives against this, they're not even like considering it strategically
01:20:00.720 or anything. They're not running it through their focus groups or anything. They haven't
01:20:04.700 even considered it. They need to maintain a pro-migration framework in order to keep winning
01:20:09.160 votes from Indian guys like Josh Raj, who they have there in the background.
01:20:14.620 So I wanted to give a shout out there to Max. I wanted to use it as a platform to talk about
01:20:22.040 the problems within the Conservative Party. We have Liberal Party politicians pushing back
01:20:26.780 against immigration not only on the economic side but on the on the cultural side and yet we
01:20:32.180 have the conservative party you know just talking about building houses while having being flanked
01:20:37.080 by their their their diversity uh tokens in order to avoid being called racist or or whatever um
01:20:43.800 this is not acceptable we need more from the from the conservative party so that's all i have to say
01:20:50.540 yeah yeah yeah yeah daniel until the cpc hires you to fix their obstacles they they are reaganites
01:20:58.100 that's absolutely it i did have a conversation they they did not offer me the job right quite
01:21:03.780 yet but i did give them my card so maybe maybe they'll reach out uh that's all i have for you
01:21:09.580 tonight guys a short i spent 183 dollars on domsog merch yes that's great uh head over to
01:21:17.240 the website shop.dominionsociety.ca buy some merch make a donation become a member get involved
01:21:24.380 that's all I have for tonight guys a short stream I need to eat dinner and get back to work before
01:21:29.860 getting my beauty sleep so I can get get nice and healthy to to make sure I I can show up at
01:21:36.520 a rally this weekend um so thanks guys thanks for tuning in have a great night and most importantly
01:21:44.780 long live Canada