Greg Wycliffe - September 15, 2023


Pushing Family First values in Canada with Mattea Merta | Controlled Op 27


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 2 minutes

Words per Minute

159.4933

Word Count

9,909

Sentence Count

225

Misogynist Sentences

5

Hate Speech Sentences

13


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 do you think there's an agenda to destroy the traditional family whether it's to make men
00:00:25.480 more feminine, to make women more masculine, to encourage empowerment or divorce, whether
00:00:31.980 it's projecting sexuality onto children to ensure that they might become LGBTQ.
00:00:55.480 Do you think there's an agenda to destroy the traditional family, whether it's to make men more feminine, to make women more masculine, to encourage empowerment or divorce, whether it's projecting sexuality onto children to ensure that they might become LGBTQ so they never have a traditional family, or of course, to encourage abortion instead of adoption?
00:01:20.260 There are many ways the traditional family is being attacked.
00:01:24.740 And who's defending it?
00:01:26.220 Tonight on Controlled Opposition, I have a pro-life, pro-family activist,
00:01:30.640 Matea Murta, on the show.
00:01:32.580 And she's going to be talking about the disturbing policy coming from the United Nations,
00:01:36.980 what she thinks of Polyev and the Conservative Party of Canada,
00:01:40.060 and what we can do to fight against this madness.
00:01:43.520 The conversation starts now.
00:01:44.760 I promise you, I will not let you down.
00:01:47.140 the trucks parked outside illegally should move
00:01:51.060 canada's conservatives will meet our paris climate commitment
00:01:55.780 enough with the wrong
00:01:57.060 for mr speaker i take that back to champion our conservative principles
00:02:01.800 we are the party of law and order to call in the auditors
00:02:04.920 we haven't yet decided whether we're going to call for the government to
00:02:07.700 impose a mandatory test or vaccination
00:02:09.980 and we will win the next election
00:02:17.140 Canada must not ignore the reality of climate change.
00:02:35.940 Why weren't Canadians vaccinated in January and February like everyone else?
00:02:47.140 Welcome, everybody, to Controlled Opposition, Episode 27.
00:02:55.120 I am Greg Wycliffe, and tonight I am joined by a very, very special guest.
00:03:00.680 She works at the UN to fight against UN policies.
00:03:05.160 She is a pro-life, pro-family activist.
00:03:08.880 It's the one and only Matea Myrta.
00:03:11.880 How are you doing this evening?
00:03:14.180 I'm wonderful. Thank you.
00:03:15.360 Just for clarification, because I don't want to have a million and a half of my conservative followers and friends.
00:03:21.420 And even when we say that you work at the U.N., I just work inside the U.N. to fight for the U.N.
00:03:26.600 But I don't work for the U.N.
00:03:28.460 Just for clarification, so I don't get any angry tweets at me.
00:03:32.300 Okay.
00:03:34.180 Unfortunately, we had a whole bunch of echo there.
00:03:37.780 We were just doing a sound check for so long.
00:03:39.980 And then it was just like such terrible echo.
00:03:43.580 So let's try that again.
00:03:47.440 Yeah, for sure.
00:03:48.620 Sound any better?
00:03:49.800 That sounds much better.
00:03:50.880 Yeah.
00:03:51.160 Perfect.
00:03:51.720 All I was saying is that for clarification, I don't work for the UN.
00:03:55.460 I work inside of the UN to fight the UN's agendas.
00:03:58.820 I just don't want a bunch of mean tweets from all my conservative friends and followers
00:04:02.520 saying like, what the heck, like you work for them now.
00:04:05.040 So no, I don't work for them, just inside to fight them.
00:04:08.700 Yeah, yeah.
00:04:09.580 And I think at the end of the show, we're going to talk about solutions.
00:04:13.580 And you're going to mention how you actually can fight and lobby the United Nations, even from Canada, and kind of go kind of straight to the root of the problem of many policies being pushed here in Canada.
00:04:26.080 So we'll definitely get to that at the end of the show.
00:04:28.340 Definitely want to hear your opinion of Pierre Polyev and this conservative party and if they're actually going to fight against some of these anti-family, many different crazy pieces of policy coming from the United Nations.
00:04:43.580 But first and foremost, I wanted to ask you about the topic of controlled opposition in general and kind of how you came here into politics, because you're really going right into the belly of the beast at the United Nations, lobbying for something pro-family at something like the United Nations.
00:05:00.900 But real briefly, kind of how did you get into politics?
00:05:04.380 And when did you kind of first wise up to the concept of controlled opposition or people
00:05:08.860 who are kind of claiming to fight for you, but actually not doing that or kind of weakening
00:05:14.640 the position at the end of the day?
00:05:16.620 Absolutely.
00:05:17.240 So I actually was kicked out of a private Christian school halfway through my grade
00:05:20.440 12 year for standing up for my faith.
00:05:22.540 And after that, I realized like, okay, not everybody is really on my side.
00:05:26.420 and so I delved right into volunteering, got into homeschooling, finished that up, and jumped into
00:05:32.260 a political campaign. A friend of mine was running to be a member of parliament, and so I joined his
00:05:36.980 campaign. He lost, but my MP won. I joined him in an internship for about two to three months,
00:05:43.300 and then he offered me a job, which landed almost four years on Parliament Hill. And while I was
00:05:48.100 there, I got exposed. Thank God, I'm so grateful. I was so naive, and I just said yes to every
00:05:51.780 opportunity that I'm also grateful that I didn't get a poli sci degree and just went straight from
00:05:56.660 high school to the hill because I had a completely open mind I wasn't taught what to think my parents
00:06:04.340 taught me how to think and so I got to see from a completely different perspective than all of my
00:06:10.360 peers even on the hill who had had poli sci degrees and I just went okay like this is a
00:06:15.700 completely different world than what I had known about politics to really be I was never interested
00:06:20.560 by the way in politics never considered even going into government and here i was in this place and
00:06:27.200 i was just like okay like i feel like there's certain ways that government should work and
00:06:32.960 i understood the basics after a period of time there and then i learned there isn't just politics
00:06:39.140 because politics is the game and then there's government government is the structure of the
00:06:43.740 system but then there's also party politics and that's where i started to see a lot of the
00:06:51.260 shenanigans that we had to face in our office i would say probably the most pushback and i worked
00:06:59.720 with an incredible incredible member of parliament brad trost from saskatchewan and it's from my home
00:07:05.740 province and he did incredible work and pushed for legislation and even started the first energy
00:07:11.760 caucus of canada and he did all these incredible things and yet the party targeted him in his
00:07:18.300 nomination campaign and he ended up losing and that's when i i things really started to click
00:07:24.680 for me and at that point in time i had been traveling back and forth to washington dc
00:07:28.660 and i started to get exposed to the american political realm and i started to see the same
00:07:33.700 things time and time again with the republican party because all this time i'd seen okay these
00:07:39.740 They're all conservatives. We're all on the same side. But everybody is kind of driven by their
00:07:46.160 own agendas. And so I started to see backroom conversations, even sat in some of the rooms
00:07:51.660 with people who just said, hey, come and sit in. You're one of us. And come to find out I wasn't
00:07:58.520 one of them. I wasn't willing to backstab people. And I had my fair share of being backstabbed in
00:08:03.320 both both North American capitals of Canada and DC, excuse me,
00:08:07.920 Ottawa and DC and I started to see the truth of truly controlled
00:08:13.340 opposition and how people are really controlled, whether it's
00:08:17.660 by greed, love of money, or it's by their own personal agenda,
00:08:23.060 why they entered politics itself. It's always a different
00:08:25.460 different cause, but the generalization is is generally
00:08:28.880 the same. Wow. Wow. So you saw it both in the States and in Canada, you saw the same sort of
00:08:37.260 pattern going on there. And it's interesting how you put it, which was they have their own agenda
00:08:42.480 or they're motivated by greed. And I guess sometimes those are one in the same, right?
00:08:48.480 The agenda is to help Corporation X potentially, you know, lobby group Y. So that's why we're
00:08:56.660 going to push this legislation for the because of the lobbyists yeah so it's usually either fiscal
00:09:02.460 or ideological reasons why politicians push what they push for the most part it's not necessarily
00:09:09.700 for the greater good as to what they want to they presented as they serve as these pieces of
00:09:15.140 legislation on the silver platter and it's like i always question things now why are you really
00:09:21.460 pushing what you're pushing i don't care if you're you're the blue the red flag i don't care what
00:09:26.080 side you're on there's a reason why you're pushing it and i want to know what it is the truth of the
00:09:31.160 matter yeah yeah notice how like moral conviction never really came up there uh you know it's just
00:09:37.960 just uh ideologues um and when when it comes to the party going you didn't say ganging up
00:09:46.280 necessarily but you essentially alluded to that the part of the party the party politics is when
00:09:51.960 things really got ugly and when the party kind of goes after someone who is not playing ball or
00:09:58.460 kind of not aligned with the majority of what the party wants. Can you go into more detail there
00:10:04.600 possibly with your example of, I believe it was Brad Prost? Brad Trost, yes. Trost, sorry. So he
00:10:11.260 was running for a nomination in his local writing. It's a shoo-in conservative writing, so no matter
00:10:17.100 what conservatives are going to consistently win there it's the suburbs and and it's the
00:10:21.540 demographics are just conservatives no matter what and so i was helping him run that campaign
00:10:26.940 and it was bizarre to see because first we saw cory toker who's now the mp for that riding
00:10:34.640 him step into play and and we're like okay like this is obviously a party setup because brad was
00:10:41.980 consistent like people on the left of center even voted for him because they just knew like we
00:10:47.560 disagree with you ideologically and even morally on some issues but we know what you're going to
00:10:52.300 vote so that gives us a sense of security so brad had this uniqueness to him and the party
00:10:58.140 didn't like it and so they sent in cory toker and they sent in one other candidate brad radicopp
00:11:05.480 who ended up becoming the member of parliament for another riding in the saskatoon area right
00:11:11.640 after that whole shenanigans happened and and they they ran these two campaigns against brad and
00:11:17.840 they they mobilized and very i can't say too much but they mobilized specific demographics
00:11:25.680 in favor of these other two candidates to get out to vote and and even on the day when all the
00:11:32.920 nomination was happening or the the voting for nominations happening there's just certain
00:11:36.840 inconsistencies and i'm a person who pays attention to patterns no matter if it's in my
00:11:41.400 personal professional life and i saw these inconsistencies and it's like they they got
00:11:45.800 ganged up on and how it they mobilized demographic against or in favor of another candidate and i
00:11:54.440 wanted to ask you said you were recognizing patterns um what was there a specific pattern
00:12:01.560 of like a policy or an idea that Brad was pushing
00:12:07.660 that you don't think the party liked specifically?
00:12:10.540 Oh, totally.
00:12:11.300 He was very, very pro-life and he drove that forward.
00:12:14.560 And I think the party really missed out
00:12:16.520 because if he had been elected again,
00:12:18.380 he would have been critical to the future of the conservative
00:12:22.300 because of the direction we had been discussing behind the scenes
00:12:25.800 and all the climate agenda that we were discussing as well.
00:12:30.440 And so I think it's a major detriment to the party itself that they actually chose to go up and gain against him.
00:12:37.400 But I believe it was his pro-life stance, not just commenting on it, but actually taking action with regards to the issue.
00:12:45.700 Yeah. And I think it's a great time to bring up Derek Sloan because I was doing some research on Derek Sloan recently.
00:12:53.240 and i thought it was very funny because in in the recent kind of news cycles over the past three to
00:12:58.940 six months being uh you know alarming about china has been like oh my god chinese interference
00:13:05.140 chinese interference like they're interfering with our politics like you trudeau's in bed with china
00:13:08.940 blah blah blah blah blah and to be fair it's obviously something to be concerned about but
00:13:12.700 do you remember near the beginning of the pandemic when uh there was a clip that came from derrick
00:13:18.880 Sloan and he said hey what's the deal with Teresa Tam is she working for China or something and he
00:13:25.580 got totally slammed for that he would all the other parties were saying you better kick this
00:13:30.220 guy out of your caucus blah blah blah for saying this Derek Sloan was his total villain for asking
00:13:35.380 a question which like two or three years later becomes this totally popular thing for the
00:13:40.000 conservative party now I want to ask you because he got ousted from the conservative party in a
00:13:45.300 very very very very specific way where all of a sudden hey we looked into your donations and
00:13:51.660 some like you know white nationalist neo-nazi donated to you and now we're kicking you out
00:13:56.540 of the party in your opinion or in your speculation you don't have to say it definitively or whatever
00:14:02.340 but do you think that this was an orchestrated yes yes you don't finish your sentence 100 this
00:14:10.060 is how the concern this is not and understand this is not just how the conservative party works
00:14:13.260 this is how many many party works parties work excuse me i actually worked with derek sloan he
00:14:18.720 is a friend i love him and his family and yes this is a total setup because he was a liability
00:14:24.860 and he was everybody's calling him the trump of canada he had he has huge pull within the
00:14:32.440 conservative party and he became another liability just like brad trost but again
00:14:38.420 conservative party of canada lost out on a huge huge player that could have served them very
00:14:44.420 well in the future but it was time to say bye-bye and out he went well right and you say that these
00:14:51.220 people these you know like strong social conservatives could have really helped the
00:14:55.560 conservative party um but you know that's not the conservative party doesn't want that right like
00:15:02.280 they don't want to be a social like they're terrified of being anything at all socially
00:15:06.620 conservative uh to that i have to say i i disagree the establishment the elites of the party don't
00:15:14.520 want it but the base itself which is the party i don't care if there's a structure in place and
00:15:21.580 they call themselves the cpc because they work in cpchq conservative party of canada it where does
00:15:28.380 their funder what are where does their donations come in from it comes from canadians themselves
00:15:32.380 the Conservatives of Canada. That's the Conservative Party. Look at the policies that
00:15:37.440 were just passed. Yeah, I was pretty disappointed there was no new policy on abortion passed this
00:15:41.920 past convention. But there was tons of policies passed with regards to protecting women,
00:15:47.900 even going down to the basic definition of clarification of what a woman is,
00:15:52.940 which is an adult female, as well as protecting single sex spaces. And so the base itself
00:16:00.060 is socially conservative. And that one policy that I believe there was a coach from Alberta
00:16:05.880 who proposed it and then it was pushed through, 86% of the party voted in favor of it. A socially
00:16:12.400 conservative policy. And time and time again, all these socially conservative policies get through
00:16:19.120 at the conventions because the party itself, the people are conservative. But the establishment
00:16:25.980 in the lead of their party, they see it as a liability. I see it also as social conservative
00:16:32.740 policies are vital, because if you don't have them at this point in time, there's not a ton
00:16:38.240 of differentiation between other parties in Canada. We have the Liberals, the NDPs, Bloc
00:16:42.980 Quebecois, they're there. And then you have, in the House anyway, you have the Green Party,
00:16:49.180 good old Green Party, sticking it out, and then you have the Conservatives.
00:16:52.120 so where does the cpc really differentiate yeah there's some fiscal policy green policy or climate
00:17:00.120 policy it's the exact in my opinion they're going on the exact same route as other parties because
00:17:05.020 they have the un sustainable development goals as their pointer their indicator their target and
00:17:10.120 their end goal of their climate policies okay so what differentiates social policy so the sooner
00:17:16.040 that the cpc wakes up and realizes that this is winning especially because the demographics of
00:17:21.260 canada now have changed so drastically with immigration they need to wake up and when they
00:17:26.080 do i think we'll start to see a whole lot more in the gta and out east sorry i'm from the west
00:17:31.960 eastern parts of canada start to shift in the conservative favor but they have to actually
00:17:36.720 take a stand so this is very interesting you have the establishment elites of the party who are
00:17:46.180 saying, you know, someone like Derek Sloan, someone who is pro-life is a liability. So
00:17:52.840 they orchestrate a way to try and get them out of the party. But you're saying, you know,
00:17:58.300 the party is still conservative because they vote for these policies. But at the same time,
00:18:02.480 these establishment elites not also say, OK, well, although we pass this policy, we're not
00:18:08.580 we're not actually going to run on it and we're not actually going to push it through a parliament
00:18:12.360 if we were to get into power.
00:18:13.920 Do they not have the power at the end of the day
00:18:16.140 to actually push forth the policy
00:18:17.840 to actually make the change in the country?
00:18:22.180 The politicians themselves do, absolutely.
00:18:25.360 But when you look at the party's policies,
00:18:28.500 to my understanding from what I've been told
00:18:30.220 and read on is that they're not necessarily binding.
00:18:34.860 Oh, whoops.
00:18:40.040 That's very funny.
00:18:41.660 there we go there we go fixed um but um so yeah the politicians themselves obviously have voting
00:18:55.480 power but um i i guess like i'm i'm hearing kind of two different things right now where it's like
00:19:01.300 yes the the actual base of the party is conservative but it's the establishment
00:19:06.020 elites who kind of have the power to kick out people who are social conservative like that
00:19:11.400 that's a that's an alarming problem um yes right and i think that the party itself being the people
00:19:18.020 need to start talking about this and normalizing this conversation more so and that's why i'm glad
00:19:22.880 we're talking about it now because when i have been at policy conventions in the past it's
00:19:28.540 frustrated me because everybody sees it everybody knows about it but nobody nobody really talks
00:19:33.320 about it out in the open and that's why the best disinfectant is light so you have to bring it to
00:19:39.080 light. And if you want to see change, you have to actually speak about it. Maybe you're the first
00:19:43.340 one in your constituency that actually brings it up with your community board. People have to
00:19:49.840 normalize this conversation in order for it to be dealt with at the top. And that's what the people
00:19:54.160 at the top don't want happening. They don't want people talking about this because like their
00:20:00.340 shenanigans is already out there. Everybody already knows what they're doing, but we have to actually
00:20:05.320 be the ones to stick it to them and be saying, hey, we know what you're doing and we're going
00:20:09.720 to hold you accountable every single policy convention, voting you in or voting you out.
00:20:14.900 Well, you know, it would be nice if we could do the inverse of, you know, instead of kicking
00:20:19.780 out the social conservatives, like, hey, we're going to kick out the gatekeepers, if you
00:20:24.240 will, or the establishment elite, if you will.
00:20:27.500 Hey, we actually, the way that you're kind of policing social conservatives and kicking
00:20:30.940 them out of the party, yeah, we want to kick you out of the party, actually.
00:20:35.320 I don't know why this keeps happening.
00:20:38.300 I'm so sorry.
00:20:40.120 But the, you know what I mean?
00:20:43.420 Like, wouldn't it be nice to actually just like, you know, like kick out these, again,
00:20:47.160 these gatekeepers, if you will.
00:20:50.720 I'm sorry.
00:20:51.360 This is hilarious.
00:20:52.920 Yes, I totally agree with you.
00:20:54.540 It's very hard to be serious at this point in time.
00:20:56.840 Yes, I do agree.
00:21:00.340 Come on.
00:21:01.200 What's going on here?
00:21:02.320 Let me get rid of that.
00:21:05.320 we went from a picasso to a very interesting ip20s somebody was on weed kind of painting
00:21:21.040 there we go there we go back to normal back to normal um where were we uh the
00:21:28.960 cpc gatekeepers yes the cpc gatekeepers
00:21:36.620 um are they politicians themselves like is somebody like polyev is is he the gatekeeper
00:21:45.060 who are the movers and shakers are are that you don't have to name names if you're not allowed
00:21:49.040 to but um like are the actual politicians are they conservative senators or uh oh my god we
00:21:55.220 having such a time with this this is crazy would it help to restart the feed
00:22:04.740 uh possibly yeah i don't know how we would do that though um okay
00:22:14.340 why is that going on
00:22:18.260 it looks fine over here sorry about this everybody having some technical difficulties here geez
00:22:25.220 There we go.
00:22:39.220 Perfect.
00:22:40.220 There we go.
00:22:41.220 I think I found the easy fix there.
00:22:43.220 Sorry about that.
00:22:44.220 Oh, good.
00:22:46.220 Yeah, because this is a very interesting conversation because we're into the conversation
00:22:54.220 conversation of uh party politics is really the big problem and it's not necessarily the base of
00:23:00.520 the party the people who contribute it's not even necessarily some of the mps but when it comes to
00:23:06.240 the establishment that you referred to that there are these kind of movers and shakers who like have
00:23:10.980 the power in the party um do do we know who they are do do like you know why do they have so much
00:23:17.420 powers does it come down to voting power within the party or is it something more nefarious than
00:23:22.680 that honestly when you understand the political game and you understand what people are doing
00:23:32.300 behind the scenes somebody like hamish marshall for example good political strategist i'd actually
00:23:37.680 say a very good political strategist but when you look at what he's actually doing and it's not just
00:23:44.200 him there's many people at cpchq and then there's the people who inform the people at cpchq what
00:23:49.580 they should and shouldn't do. So really, there just has to be an amplification of the grassroots
00:23:56.180 voices for anything to change. There has to be an amplification of the grassroots voices.
00:24:10.020 Sorry, we just had a really bad echo there. It's about the application of the grassroots voices.
00:24:14.840 amplification of the grassroots voices oh my gosh this echo is so bad guys this is this is
00:24:22.620 um and let's talk about success stories of of that happening would you say this was a success
00:24:33.720 at this recent policy convention or this national convention of the conservative party
00:24:37.760 uh where they were able to push this through like was this a big win because we're going to
00:24:42.380 talk about in a moment how it kind of
00:24:44.360 translates to
00:24:45.580 maybe they pass some policies but
00:24:48.360 is Polyev actually going to talk about it
00:24:50.420 to journalists and in the House of Commons
00:24:52.200 or is it just going to be this
00:24:53.640 feeling like we won
00:24:55.520 at the convention but
00:24:58.100 nothing really happens
00:25:00.620 nothing really
00:25:02.400 happens in terms
00:25:04.400 of like post convention
00:25:06.120 or even like in the more public
00:25:08.320 conversation like when we're front
00:25:10.320 facing journalists
00:25:11.240 yes that's a sticky situation i think it was a win for the party internally but the issue comes
00:25:18.260 when we have to actually talk about these things outside of convention time
00:25:22.280 so we have to drive it we being the grassroots have to drive these such these subjects these
00:25:29.500 issues forward on a consistent basis not just at policy conventions because that's a hoorah
00:25:34.880 we're all conservatives in the room great let's pat each other on the back we did great in voting
00:25:39.220 on a conservative policy that's wonderful but then we have to drive it forward and shift culture in
00:25:45.440 that direction because the politicians are going to follow what they see as beneficial in the
00:25:50.700 culture and if they start seeing conservatives popping up other figureheads or the mom and pop
00:25:55.660 are writing in their local newspapers tweeting out online and they're normalizing the conversation
00:26:00.580 of being conservative and taking a stand then politicians like poly pierre are going to take
00:26:06.380 that stronger stance in front of the cameras and to journalists. Now, it also takes us as the
00:26:13.660 grassroots reaching out to our politicians and saying, hey, I would like to encourage Pierre
00:26:18.440 through you to take a stand for X, Y, and Z. Because every single federal office, I worked in
00:26:24.220 one, they all categorize what people write into them for. And then sometimes they'll even pass
00:26:30.420 the communication to whoever else's office if you say to pierre paula there from the tay murder
00:26:37.620 directing through whoever my mp is this is my message against gender theory please take a stand
00:26:42.420 for it or against it they send that off to pierre pierre's office so the more communication they get
00:26:48.660 the better it is for our cause within the party but we have to be more consistent in speaking
00:26:54.580 against certain issues and bringing solutions forward in public square in order for politicians
00:27:00.760 like Pierre to actually have the balls to stand in front of a camera and say, hey, we're against
00:27:06.040 gender transition of children and leave it at that. And you don't have to give all these
00:27:11.060 justifications. That's one thing I wish politicians would stop doing, especially on the conservative
00:27:14.800 side. Just give your answer and you don't have to justify everything to media.
00:27:20.600 well yeah and it feels like most of the time they're they're defending themselves so they're
00:27:26.440 on the back foot they're always on the defensive uh they're honestly never on the offensive you
00:27:32.480 know um and while we're on that topic we have uh you know just despite this like the beginning
00:27:41.600 of the resistance of conservatives actually standing up and saying hey parental rights
00:27:47.540 for uh for for children you know they're both both Doug Ford and Pierre Polly ever attention
00:27:56.460 essentially taking the stance like that parents should have the right if their kid is going to
00:28:01.580 like transition as a kid like they should know which is not a win but no it's not a win it's so
00:28:08.880 frustrating to see yeah and and they're you know while that's happening you have the establishment
00:28:16.660 like you know liberal leftist media essentially once again going on the attack uh i'll bring this
00:28:22.900 up quickly this is uh kathleen winn saying listen to the children steven lecce's stance on gender
00:28:29.740 identity in schools is a recipe for more homeless youth more homeless youth to uh if kids can't like
00:28:37.620 keep their gender identity secret from their parents they're going to be homeless on the
00:28:40.760 like it's crazy how aggressively uh the left pushes and continues to push
00:28:45.780 um i'll bring up that other article that you tweeted out recently um about
00:28:50.800 uh what is it what is there was the toronto star one you know what i'm talking oh my gosh
00:28:58.320 yes uh it's it is a privilege not a right to know your child's gender identity
00:29:02.740 exactly like we're we're being told and like all these like big conservative party fans
00:29:10.660 are like yeah they're fighting for us and it's like are they like they're bare they're they're
00:29:16.120 i think we just actually lost ground there you know whereas we're afraid that we're going to
00:29:21.540 be called like you know transphobe why aren't we calling them pedophiles why aren't we calling them
00:29:26.460 creeps why aren't we like actually fighting back with this type of like communication style that
00:29:31.440 that's more aggressive uh you know maybe that's do you think that sounds aggressive personally i
00:29:37.240 I think that's, I would love to hear anybody kind of coming out and being more aggressive
00:29:41.580 like that.
00:29:42.080 But what are your thoughts on this?
00:29:43.900 Oh, no, I don't think it's too aggressive.
00:29:45.120 I literally tweeted out that they are creeps today.
00:29:47.060 So it is the conservative psyche for everybody to be, okay, everything in its place, everybody's
00:29:53.560 proper and kind.
00:29:55.800 And the time for that, I don't want to say it's over, but it's time for refinement.
00:30:01.140 It's time for a new strategy.
00:30:02.680 and us as conservatives are creative but we need to tap into that creativity a little bit more in
00:30:08.420 our communication i i really really oh my god uh i i think you're back i think you're back you
00:30:22.920 you said i there we go you're saying yes i just went out today yep
00:30:27.260 yeah so just today i put out there that we should bring up back public shaming of people who
00:30:34.100 are going after people who like like kathleen like saying we should listen to the children
00:30:40.140 sorry there's just a really bad echo right now i don't know what the heck's going on man
00:30:45.660 they uh but sorry continue
00:30:49.500 hopefully we're going to be back in a second here
00:30:59.680 I'm hoping
00:31:01.380 Matea will be back in a second here
00:31:05.460 ah man
00:31:08.460 come on
00:31:11.340 come on
00:31:12.700 come back
00:31:14.560 come back
00:31:17.200 please come back
00:31:20.100 am I alone here still
00:31:25.360 or what's going on are we frozen
00:31:27.220 yeah someone's sure afraid of
00:31:30.920 our message tonight yeah no kidding
00:31:33.180 I'd switch to Odyssey or Rumble
00:31:36.640 I don't think that's
00:31:39.100 the issue oh my god we're back
00:31:41.140 can you hear me
00:31:42.880 what what uh yeah someone was saying in chat they they really don't want the message to get
00:31:50.420 out tonight apparently oh my gosh this is this is so funny hey we roll with the punches right
00:31:56.500 yeah yeah we're gonna get through this we're gonna get through this um so uh you were just saying
00:32:03.500 you were just saying what were you just saying you were just saying uh that we should bring
00:32:07.680 public shaming back yeah because like someone like kathleen was saying we should listen to
00:32:12.860 children how it actually just take it doesn't even take a really brilliant intellectual person
00:32:20.440 to go why would we listen to children children do some of the most stupid things we as adults
00:32:27.800 are the ones who shape them for them and guide them down a path so that they don't kill themselves
00:32:32.700 like children want to do some very ridiculous things and if we allowed them to if we just
00:32:38.860 listen to them you know it's bad enough that people are listening to them and be being these
00:32:44.500 children are being chopped up mutilated what else should we listen to them about it's a really really
00:32:52.040 message yeah i wanted to be a ninja turtle when i was a kid you know if i was told i could actually
00:32:59.220 be a ninja turtle i would be like really like let's do it um and and it's and it's it's so
00:33:06.240 crazy how far uh we've come in this country because it's it's almost like the first instinct
00:33:11.580 to conservatives is like yeah well isn't it extremist to say that you know it's like no
00:33:16.920 not at all it's totally normal to say that you know how far we've gone uh to kind of accepting
00:33:23.600 this sort of like corrupt moral paradigm um and maybe we'll get into that which is uh
00:33:30.440 you know people are afraid of embracing something like christianity or religion uh to kind of like
00:33:39.820 help us in this kind of political battle but to that i say we are getting crushed right now
00:33:45.920 by this woke religion it operates like a woke religion it you know if if you don't worship
00:33:52.240 trans people if you don't worship uh bypox if you don't worship uh indigenous people if you don't
00:33:58.900 like you know if you don't confess your white guilt you are a sinner you are a bad person
00:34:04.060 like this has this has the same moral weight that any religion does and it is like the the most
00:34:10.960 popular ideology being pushed not just in Canada but on Netflix and America all over the place
00:34:16.540 like we are being overwhelmed by this corrupt moral authority that acts a lot like a religion
00:34:24.740 And I feel like if we go back to our roots, which are very Christian or French Catholic or Protestant, whatever,
00:34:32.900 there is a moral authority that's already there that really dictates a lot of what conservatism is or used to be
00:34:39.900 or at least what we want to go back to.
00:34:42.200 Why do you think people are afraid of embracing Christianity or, you know, yeah, like to help in this spiritual or political fight?
00:34:58.140 I don't think necessarily that people...
00:35:02.640 Oh, there's a lot of echoing here.
00:35:04.700 You better know?
00:35:05.560 There we go.
00:35:07.600 These in a while.
00:35:08.940 Can you hear me?
00:35:09.360 I hope you can hear me because I can't hear you.
00:35:10.880 You can't hear me.
00:35:12.200 no hello dang we're really trying everything today there we go i can hear it now there we go
00:35:18.680 is that better okay it's so much better can you maybe turn the volume down in your earphones
00:35:23.700 i can't do that sorry okay um all right uh where were we i asked you about why do you think
00:35:33.880 conservatives are afraid to be uh you know embrace christianity or embrace religion to kind of
00:35:39.700 you know wield it as a sword uh in in in debates or kind of for arguing what we believe in arguing
00:35:46.980 for our values like being pro-family for example yeah i don't necessarily think that
00:35:52.000 i don't think people are necessarily scared personally but there's externally of what
00:36:00.440 could happen if they speak out about their faith no saying that it
00:36:06.200 i think people have just seen how much opposition there is but whenever i see opposition i think
00:36:15.200 this is the point conservatives need to start taking and i've seen it in the younger generations
00:36:19.120 which is incredibly encouraging and it's going to start strengthening the older generations
00:36:24.020 is that as you take a stand a moral stand especially if you're a christian you're going
00:36:30.800 to have pushback but don't take that pushback as a negative take it as a positive it's like when
00:36:35.360 you have an anger issue, you learn to redirect that anger in a way that's productive and actually
00:36:40.020 serves you. When you're faced with opposition, you have the opportunity to either let it defeat you
00:36:46.260 or build you up. And so I think Christians and conservatives alike need to actually take a stand
00:36:52.120 and there's this common ground that if I speak out, what's going to happen? I might lose some
00:36:57.060 communication with my friends and family. I've lost some friends and others very near and dear
00:37:02.740 to me because of where i stand on issues now but i've gained so many more people and it's actually
00:37:08.780 helped me get into places and spaces that otherwise i don't think i actually know i never
00:37:13.840 would have wanted to i also know that that's because my relationship with jesus that that's
00:37:18.480 happened because i followed him when he told me to do certain things and say certain things and
00:37:22.720 be certain places but it's also because i chose to speak i chose to be a willing vessel to be used
00:37:28.380 And so I would encourage anyone and everyone to also do the same thing. Don't be scared that the fear doesn't serve you in any profitable way. And this life is so short. Why keep what you truly believe hidden? You have a sphere of influence and I have a sphere of influence totally separate from one another.
00:37:46.560 let's serve our spheres of influence to the best of our abilities because the one thing that is
00:37:53.020 is serving as an absolute detriment to the conservative and even faith denominate faith
00:37:58.360 denominations at large is when we stay silent because then nobody learns from one another
00:38:04.040 nobody gets that other perspective and so we're actually harming our neighbors our friends and
00:38:09.440 our family oh we actually are uh harming our members and our and our family are you there
00:38:20.180 oh i don't know i can't hear you right now
00:38:25.720 hello
00:38:29.440 oh man this this is this has just been so much fun oh there you go you're back what in the world's
00:38:39.300 going on well there we go um uh you were saying
00:38:51.540 don't harm your friends and families and your neighbors utilize your sphere of influence and
00:38:58.360 speak what you actually believe that's going to deal with your fear and any person that you see
00:39:06.020 get to a place of prominence or influence they've had to win little internal battles
00:39:13.660 and i want every single person to get to a place of absolute influence and absolute prestige in
00:39:20.760 their own spheres how do you do that you have to deal with little internal battles and fear is one
00:39:25.740 of the first things you have to fight and you can conquer it and the sooner you conquer it the better
00:39:30.800 it is for you and everyone else around you yeah yeah and and you're making me think a lot about
00:39:37.040 fear uh because i feel like a lot of the conservative movement is overwhelmed with fear
00:39:42.640 fear of what the media is going to say fear of what their friends or family might say fear
00:39:47.860 like so much fear and and we almost have accepted that fear and that we have to live with that fear
00:39:56.520 and not act in spite of the fear, but actually like respond to the fear and, you know, validate
00:40:02.820 the fear. And I think that's a huge part of why we're losing so much is because we are afraid of
00:40:10.020 what someone might call us. You know, we're not acting despite fear. We are reacting to the fear
00:40:16.500 of getting called names. Meanwhile, you know, far leftists, they're not afraid of conservatives at
00:40:24.180 all they'll say f off uh fascist i'm gonna punch you in the street if you disagree with my ideas
00:40:32.880 then i i don't know i'm gonna try to ruin your life you know that they are fearless and i mean
00:40:40.660 that like you know to their credit they do have the establishment unfortunately on their side they
00:40:46.000 have this huge beast machine on their side. But the point is, is that if we give into that
00:40:54.980 intimidation, then we've already lost, right? Absolutely. And one point on that, I thank you
00:41:01.060 for bringing that up because a major downfall within conservative movements in general, and
00:41:09.420 I saw this immensely when I was in the conservative, excuse me, when I was in the pro-life caucus on the Hill, is that I saw all these different pro-life groups.
00:41:19.080 Yeah, one was in favor of a six-week abortion ban, one was in favor of an all-out ban.
00:41:23.540 Then we had the euthanasia groups in there, and anti-euthanasia groups, that is.
00:41:28.940 And there wasn't a whole lot of unity.
00:41:32.140 There was unity, yes, but there's always these points of contention.
00:41:36.020 and within the leftist movements everybody's unified so within the conservative movements
00:41:42.660 i don't care if you're that's something that i seek to do on a consistent daily basis regardless
00:41:48.360 of what realm i'm in whether it's on national security immigration or with pro-life groups
00:41:53.440 if you can find that one point in which you all agree upon then run together you're each other's
00:41:59.980 brothers and sisters you found your tribe especially after covid we've all kind of found
00:42:04.580 our tribes run hard with them and then seek out and find those bridges where you can reach out
00:42:09.520 into other other tribes other communities find that common cause and then run together there's
00:42:14.720 always a point of unification and regardless on the provincial federal or local levels
00:42:19.820 you have to find a point in time where you're just okay we're going to get defeated if we're
00:42:25.720 divided but running together unified is going to just deliver the best results for all of us
00:42:31.720 So we have to all come together.
00:42:34.220 Otherwise, we will continually get defeated.
00:42:37.300 Yeah.
00:42:37.880 And I wanted to ask you about, I think that's a really, really good point.
00:42:42.680 And, you know, being conservative, people can be more libertarian minded, like I have
00:42:49.300 my rights, I have my freedoms, I am an individual, I'm going to think and say what I want, you
00:42:53.640 can't tell me what to do.
00:42:55.100 And that does end up being a detriment sometimes when it comes to kind of being more effective
00:43:00.180 in the political arena.
00:43:01.160 it's like okay guys we need to all move in the same direction for a minute here we can't just
00:43:05.420 we can't just all have our all our own ideas we should focus on this one because we all agree on
00:43:10.360 this one right guys um so i totally agree with that uh i want to there's another kind of in the
00:43:17.300 same vein of like criticizing the right wing of what they're not doing very well there's this sort
00:43:23.100 of obsession with like winning over far leftists who will never vote for us have you noticed this
00:43:30.580 there's this like oh we we need to appeal to you know transgender people or we need to appeal to
00:43:36.280 you know the homosexual community and it's like like do it do we is that really like a is that
00:43:41.520 really all that's holding us back um no like literally like i said with brad trost homosexuals
00:43:48.520 voted for him individuals who were very far left in other policies fiscal or social or otherwise
00:43:54.200 voted for brad trost because they knew that he was a morally strong man who would consistently
00:43:59.060 take a stand did he have to wear heels or wear lipstick in order to get these gay people to
00:44:06.320 vote for them absolutely not no the polar opposite you look at what he spoke his his words are out
00:44:11.800 there on the on the online and the pandering has to stop because it's weakening the fiber
00:44:20.540 of the conservative movement at large if we're not willing to conserve the most basic things in life
00:44:27.580 like what a woman is or what marriage is the very definition of marriage itself if we're not willing
00:44:34.980 to protect and conserve things then what do you have to say for calling yourself a conservative
00:44:41.120 if you're not willing to say that again if you're not willing to protect if you're not willing to
00:44:48.300 protect if you're not willing to protect the most basic fundamentals fundamentals then what are you
00:44:53.900 doing what are you calling yourself a conservative i really wish there wasn't these technical
00:44:59.320 difficulties right now because what you're saying is is so so beautiful um and we're getting an echo
00:45:06.200 it's so annoying oh my god um if you're not willing to protect the fundamental values of
00:45:14.000 what makes you conservative then then what are you even doing exactly um and i want to drive
00:45:20.440 into a specific point here which is there is a very strong pro-choice consciousness in Canada
00:45:29.320 you know when it's like hey guys we're not like there's this kind of sentiment that you've probably
00:45:33.060 seen which is like we're not even going to talk about that it's been decided okay um why do you
00:45:38.820 believe it's so strong here in Canada and have you had success on trying to crack the code of that or
00:45:46.340 like making any uh leeway or progress there good question it's a very good question i have had a
00:45:54.500 lot of success actually i have been able to talk with feminist groups young and old even talking
00:46:00.360 with member of parliament kathy wagenthal when she had put it out i believe this is the sex
00:46:04.360 elective abortion bill last year year or two ago for sure and she also experienced the same thing
00:46:10.720 as i have consistently and that's when you talk with feminist groups you find again you that's
00:46:16.140 that common bridge with people you find the common bridge and you go oh you're against sex
00:46:21.840 selective abortion something we agree on let's run together as an untapped community feminists
00:46:26.700 i'm i consider becoming a feminist at one point i'm totally anti-feminist now but i understand
00:46:33.160 the way they think and the way that they present themselves and so i understand that there are
00:46:37.820 ways in which we can reach into different communities whether it's other faith denominations
00:46:42.600 It doesn't matter.
00:46:44.700 There's always a way for you to reach into another community and to just speak what you really believe, find the common ground, link arms, and then run.
00:46:54.560 There's always a way.
00:46:55.400 And so I have had a lot of success, even more so in Canada than the United States, because the United States is so polarized now on this issue.
00:47:04.740 But I believe in Canada because of the media being so – it's government-funded media.
00:47:11.300 so they're going to tout this line and then everybody seems to run with the same talking
00:47:14.820 points and and it's been so long that people don't even understand that when that when the
00:47:20.340 supreme court struck down the previous abortion law in canada they actually left it up to members
00:47:25.540 of parliament to create a new law majority of canadians don't know that everybody in canada
00:47:30.500 seems to know about roe versus wade but who's who in canada is actually teaching about canadian
00:47:35.140 history on the issue. So once people actually hear, oh, okay, I'm a leftist, and I didn't know
00:47:42.740 that about our history, they go look it up, see it's true, and then they start lobbying the
00:47:46.140 government in favor of an abortion, some sort of abortion legislation. Whether I agree with their
00:47:51.680 stance on the legislation itself, I don't care. The fact that they're knowledgeable, and they're
00:47:55.920 willing to actually advocate for some sort of legislation on the issue is a win for me, enough
00:48:01.320 of a win for me and then it's about building relationships from there on so I've seen success
00:48:06.000 and I think now with the rise of independent media as well as the dismantling of the establishment
00:48:14.100 media I think we're going to start seeing these cracks spread even wider yeah yeah no it's it's
00:48:21.260 very exciting it is very exciting and let's let's begin to wrap it up here I want to ask you about
00:48:28.000 the United Nations, your experience there, how people can get involved to lobby the United
00:48:34.220 Nations. But before that, real quickly, I really don't trust this conservative party. I really
00:48:42.140 don't trust Pierre Polyev. And kind of the whole message of the show is you can actually be much
00:48:49.580 more effective in pushing conservative ideas by supporting people outside of the conservative
00:48:54.980 party like billboard chris for example like josh alexander by supporting these people and really
00:49:01.460 getting behind them and actually like grilling the conservative party for not supporting these
00:49:05.420 people that's actually what moves the ball down the field um more effectively to to kind of to
00:49:11.640 kind of put the pressure on the conservative party to actually act would you agree with that
00:49:15.360 i totally agree that's what the left side does they use all of these influencers and the
00:49:20.360 conservatives they never use them in america look how successful it has been to prop up conservative
00:49:26.760 influencers i don't care if they i care to some extent but i also don't care if they are personally
00:49:33.660 if they're labeled themselves as gay as feminist i know pro-life feminists and they have a huge
00:49:38.900 part to play in the demographic of america i think there's also an untapped section of that in canada
00:49:45.060 that could be utilized for the conservative party but they do need to get behind specific people
00:49:49.940 i i after working within the conservative party with a member of parliament i don't trust anybody
00:49:56.640 uh i don't trust anybody who is a politician many of them are friends and they know that i don't
00:50:02.760 trust them fully but i also i specifically do not trust political parties never trust a political
00:50:09.740 party work with a politician but when it comes to pierre man like him talking all about parental
00:50:18.180 rights and supporting the rights of parents at this last convention i was literally right now
00:50:24.260 like clenching my fists it angered me to a certain extent because he voted in favor of bill c4 last
00:50:29.940 year the conversion therapy ban what does that do to parents if they want to not have their
00:50:36.900 child mutilated or going and receiving hormone therapy hormone injections those parents would
00:50:42.740 be fined and or jailed thrown in prison for up to five years so we can't forget the past
00:50:50.020 we have to hold these politicians to account and that was even during his time as leader of the
00:50:55.460 conservative party so the hypocrisy is rank but you know what if he gets elected as prime minister
00:51:05.220 i hope the people of canada hold him into account and well something's gonna have to happen with
00:51:11.140 that you know at the very hey you voted for c4 are you going to admit you made a mistake or are
00:51:17.200 you going to keep speaking on both sides of your mouth um and it's it's you know just to kind of
00:51:23.480 play devil's advocate here because you're you're being hopeful about hey well there's still the
00:51:28.520 conservative base in the conservative party of canada to be devil's advocate what if the what
00:51:34.540 if this mass of people who are truly conservative are just being duped and strung along and being
00:51:39.520 told yeah yeah no we're gonna be conservative we voted in c4 and we're probably not gonna push any
00:51:44.120 actual policy that that actually improves the situation but we're gonna we're gonna keep owning
00:51:47.840 trudeau on social media and like you know feeding you little breadcrumbs about how we're gonna save
00:51:53.500 the nation but when it comes to the actual laws that are passed in this country yeah we're not
00:52:00.000 gonna do shit but you know make sure you donate give us your your your email and credit card
00:52:04.680 information yeah the way people everything boils down to money everything in in the world that's
00:52:11.600 how this world goes around that's how the party survives so the moment that they start acting
00:52:17.600 like right now you could literally say i am pulling my cpc donations whether it's on an annual
00:52:24.220 or a monthly or whatever basis because pierre paul aver is refusing to make an apology for
00:52:30.640 his stance on voting in favor of bill c4 if if 10 people from every single conservative
00:52:38.400 constituency did that even not even more so non-conservative constituencies did that
00:52:44.640 the pain would be felt back in ottawa and pierre would be forced at least he would have to think
00:52:51.680 about it very thoroughly with his future actions so there's always a way people can take action on
00:53:00.000 this and i would even encourage people to speak out online in favor of it because the one thing
00:53:05.600 that all these politicians hate is when people voice their opinions online because then the world
00:53:10.720 can see it it's not just the people in their home coming over for dinner hearing about how they
00:53:15.580 don't like pierre polavera and his one decision he made on bill c4 or his stance on abortion
00:53:20.680 that's so funny that's in a nutshell i the the these politicians hate democracy they hate when
00:53:27.760 people voice their opinions publicly i hate when they're they share their opinion god so annoying
00:53:36.460 when they have that free speech thing god it's so annoying um but what would you say uh before
00:53:42.740 getting to the un or maybe related relating it to the un and how you're making a difference or how
00:53:47.620 people can make a difference there um how can we best apply pain how can we make it feel painful
00:53:54.400 for these politicians uh did you say like like is it simply emailing them or there's quite a few
00:54:00.600 things you can actually do and i'm i love when people actually ask for an action item because
00:54:05.000 that's one thing we fail to do we complain about things and then we don't do anything
00:54:08.800 so obviously one way is communicating online putting tweets out putting out content holding
00:54:15.760 people to account that way but that is not enough that is not enough you have to take subsequent
00:54:20.920 in action. So I would say calling and emailing your MP on a regular basis. Keep yourself up to
00:54:27.720 date. Do your due diligence with research. That's how you start shifting things. Because politicians,
00:54:33.780 as someone who worked in the office and sat down with constituents and lobbyists on a consistent
00:54:37.380 basis, you sit down and you know when somebody understands what they're talking about.
00:54:41.540 Or you know when there's passion driving them. So on top of that, go and sit with your member
00:54:47.020 parliament book a meeting with him or her go and book a meeting everything based out of relationship
00:54:54.220 goes farther than a simple email or a tweet does so show your face make yourself appear really human
00:55:03.340 literally sitting right in front of them because it's more difficult for a person to say no to
00:55:07.820 someone when they're sitting right in front of them so i would encourage you also write in letters to
00:55:13.100 the editor those things are still a real thing and they influence a certain demographic of our
00:55:18.220 societies that otherwise maybe aren't online or can't necessarily go and pick up an actual paper
00:55:24.700 because they're too old like there's always a way and if you are a good writer or if you're good in
00:55:30.860 front of a camera utilize the giftings that you have god gave you certain giftings for a reason
00:55:36.860 utilize them for good so start a podcast do what you're doing uh fix the audio though
00:55:44.940 make sure you fix the audio and get rid of the technical difficulties next time we'll have great
00:55:49.660 audio absolutely um yeah thanks we're about to wrap it up here but but but tell us specifically
00:55:57.820 about the un as well and and how um i know that you're doing a lot there and uh i mean we'll
00:56:05.100 We'll have to do another episode because there's much more to talk about.
00:56:08.800 But is there things that are simple to do if I'm a Canadian citizen
00:56:12.780 and I want to, you know, complain to the UN about something?
00:56:17.640 Absolutely.
00:56:19.200 100%.
00:56:19.640 Yes.
00:56:20.360 So primarily what I do, yeah, we'll have to do another episode.
00:56:22.660 But primarily what I do is combat their anti-life, anti-family,
00:56:27.380 and anti-national sovereignty agendas.
00:56:29.700 So there's three primary categories that I'm involved in.
00:56:33.140 And so with regards, if you are passionate about the pro-life issue, the UN is constantly attacking it.
00:56:39.840 So you can look into, I would give you UNICEF or UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund.
00:56:46.260 You look at basics of what they're doing and then you contact your Canadian mission to the UN.
00:56:53.020 You literally plug that into your search engine, Canadian mission to the UN, and it'll pop up and there will be a contact button.
00:56:58.400 contact them and say I'm a pro-life Canadian and I want you to stand for the pro-life position
00:57:05.320 it's very very basic very simple just like you and lobby your federal or provincial politicians
00:57:11.840 you lobby the UN yeah there are a bunch of appointed bureaucrats but if they nobody really
00:57:17.360 does this and this is every single time I get the opportunity to tell people lobby the UN because
00:57:21.580 nobody else does it the other voices there are philanthropist groups or groups like Planned
00:57:27.980 Parenthood International, Marie Stopes International, very pro-abortion, anti-family
00:57:31.860 groups. So they have a big say at the table. But if there's a lot of communications coming in from
00:57:37.000 actual citizens of the nation, those concerns, those questions are going to be sent to capital.
00:57:44.200 They're going to be sent back to Ottawa and say, hey, there's a lot of pro-life Canadians reaching
00:57:47.660 out to us here at the UN. What can we do? So you can apply pressure at the UN that way,
00:57:54.200 And then it gets back to your capital and it shows how strong of a voice we, the pro-life
00:57:59.640 or conservative block actually has in the nation.
00:58:04.020 Yeah.
00:58:04.880 Okay.
00:58:06.060 Okay.
00:58:06.560 I'm, I'm like, I'm liking this conversation and I'm looking forward to our next one because
00:58:10.560 it's, you know, you're, you're really tapping into with experience.
00:58:14.300 This is really what makes politicians like hurt.
00:58:17.120 You know, this is really what makes them move.
00:58:18.800 and um that's uh that's exciting to me because i i do want to know kind of what uh what actually
00:58:25.600 moves the needle what actually gets these people to act but um yeah thank you so much for your time
00:58:31.360 matea murta i am so sorry for the technical difficulties big shout outs to everybody
00:58:36.840 watching us live right now you guys are the real true fans who are listening through this uh
00:58:42.820 through this echoey mess with all sorts of Picasso paintings and such.
00:58:48.540 But before we get going here,
00:58:50.240 is there anything else you want to share on what we've been talking about
00:58:53.740 or anything you want to promote?
00:58:56.160 Well, I actually am starting a podcast,
00:58:58.800 the Matea Merida podcast is going to be going live.
00:59:01.320 Really excited about that one because it's oftentimes, like I said,
00:59:04.420 we're in this talking point society and I want to just get information out
00:59:10.160 there to help people.
00:59:11.800 So the Matea Murta podcast will be live.
00:59:14.420 And truly, everyone just lived by conviction instead of this set of societal rules.
00:59:19.660 We'll be in a better place.
00:59:21.260 And as soon as we start implementing that individually, we start to change societies.
00:59:26.260 Amazing.
00:59:27.060 And so that podcast will just be the name, like your name, Matea Murta.
00:59:33.040 The Matea Murta podcast.
00:59:33.920 Yes, I actually just linked it right there on Spotify.
00:59:37.780 so everybody on twitter gets the link before anybody else on any other platforms
00:59:43.500 well uh so the spotify link is right here uh make sure you get a audio technician for your podcast
00:59:52.560 because you might need it um thank you so much for watching everybody thank you so much
00:59:59.020 matea murta there is her uh at on twitter as well again matea murta um thank you so much for
01:00:05.680 watching and i'm really excited to revisit aspects of this conversation and learn more
01:00:11.140 uh with you and i'm sure we'll chat again soon uh thanks again for watching and it is okay
01:00:18.860 to demand higher standards thank you guys
01:00:35.680 Thank you.
01:01:05.680 .
01:01:35.680 .
01:02:05.680 You