In this episode of Controlled Opposition, we discuss the launch of the Dominion Society, a new movement that aims to normalize Canadian nationalism and re-migration through the use of the term "remigration" in the context of the Conservative Party.
00:02:45.900will train the next generation of activists. We're going to build that professional core
00:02:50.460that can work day in and day out to advance Canadian nationalism and re-migration.
00:02:55.980Our opponents already have this, a web of diaspora groups, think tanks, lobbies and charities
00:03:01.820working in tandem to erase Canadian identity. We're building the resistance. It's time for
00:03:06.780Heritage Canadians to step up and take our country back from the elite that despise our history
00:03:11.820and our people. Through the Dominion Society, re-migration will become a reality. Long live
00:03:17.980Canada. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to a very special episode of Controlled Opposition. That
00:03:33.180was the Dominion Society launch video starring Daniel Tyree. And with me right now is the one
00:03:39.500and only daniel tyree how are you doing this evening sir i'm doing great greg how are you
00:03:45.640doing i'm doing well i'm doing well um so you've launched this dominion society last week uh for
00:03:53.540those who don't know i am a proud board member thank you for bringing me on board but we wanted
00:03:59.240to talk about dominion society tonight we wanted to talk about the conservative party in the last
00:04:04.860election cycle and how Dominion society might work in the future
00:04:09.520in the next election cycle and really kind of the short term
00:04:12.520and middle term long term goals and really educate people on
00:04:16.100what remigration is because this is a new term to a lot of
00:04:19.720people since launching. What have you seen as the response in
00:04:24.440terms of specifically this term remigration?
00:04:29.500Yeah, I've been really impressed and excited by the
00:04:33.940the results since the launch uh things are going really well i would say the the good side of uh
00:04:39.940expected we did carefully plan uh this launch for for kind of months leading up to it uh and
00:04:46.420everything's going very well we're seeing huge growth across social media platforms we just
00:04:51.860passed a thousand followers on facebook and instagram today we're over at 3 000 on on uh
00:04:57.540twitter uh over 1500 on uh youtube uh but more promising we've seen a amazing uptick in in paid
00:05:05.940memberships uh of people that are interested in giving us financial support uh and getting
00:05:11.860involved as volunteers at the local level uh we're rapidly approaching 500 paid members in
00:05:17.540in just the last uh what is it nine days since uh since the launch last monday uh so it's it's been
00:05:24.580It's been an exciting time. It's been really busy, but everything's trending in the right direction. It's really our main mission to normalize this, inform the Canadian public on the concept of remigration. Let them know that we don't have to just put up with the consequences of mass immigration, that there is a solution. We can send them back and we put forward a really strong and comprehensive remigration plan for how that might be achieved.
00:05:50.740yeah absolutely i um i really like the professional clean confident approach uh i was talking to one
00:06:01.600member and he said there's no guilt trips i like how there's no guilt trips it's just kind of just
00:06:05.380like we are this is a public policy of immigration that's a public policy that everyone should be
00:06:11.340able to talk about and debate over and it's quite simple we have had immigration policies
00:06:17.560multiculturalism policies for decades now that incentivize foreigners to come here and not even
00:06:24.740incentivizing them to assimilate, not even incentivizing them to fit in. And with that,
00:06:31.060we're seeing the disintegration of Canadian identity and Canadian culture. And we can do
00:06:35.620the opposite, folks. We can create public policy to incentivize people to assimilate,
00:06:40.620to incentivize people to respect Canadian culture and Canadian identity, or in some cases of the
00:06:46.960remigration plan on the website dominionsociety.ca incentivize people to go back to their
00:06:52.740homelands especially if they're not having a good time here uh you know a lot of people say that
00:06:57.880they kind of we've been importing the sort of underclass of people who are working for slave
00:07:03.080wages don't even have a good quality of life here anyway so why not just incentivize them
00:07:06.540to uh to go back right yeah yeah i mean especially in the last uh 10 years uh after
00:07:14.840justin trudeau's administration immigration has become so dysfunctional uh for canadians for the
00:07:21.100for the immigrants coming here our our society is under strain uh wages are stagnant housing
00:07:27.660prices are through the roof uh unemployment is rising especially amongst vulnerable groups like
00:07:32.680the elderly and uh and and youth and like we're we're just it feels like our the society that we
00:07:41.560grew up in is just quickly slipping away. And so many people I see have just like taken the black
00:07:48.300pill. Canada's lost, Canada's dead, it's all over, we should just get annexed by the US,
00:07:55.720stuff like this. But I look around the world, I look throughout history, and I see that we don't
00:08:02.520have to just accept the consequences of what a few wrongheaded and short-sighted leaders did to
00:08:08.320this country. The government has all the power to right this situation. The same politicians,
00:08:16.240or at least the offices that they occupy, the same folks that brought them here have the exact
00:08:21.780same powers to send them back. So we've put together what I think is a comprehensive plan,
00:08:28.320a three-phase, 10-point plan of important examples of how we can kind of not only slow down and stop
00:08:36.840immigration but also reverse the flow yeah absolutely and um i'm i'm sorry to do this
00:08:45.140live but could you like adjust your seat up a little bit to like see like more of your
00:08:50.040is that possible to do that we're going to be we want to be clipping some of this later to put on
00:08:54.920social media that there we go there we go um i so before we go into the future of the dominion
00:09:00.780society and and how it's really i think a great vehicle to apply pressure to all political parties
00:09:06.260to just focus on this one issue of immigration and multiculturalism.
00:09:10.940Because really, if you talk to right-wing people,
00:09:14.080and if you look at the popularity already,
00:12:59.960It's becoming less and less like Canada and the consequences, as you've already mentioned, it's not just, you know, it's health care to housing to quality of life to we are actually losing that high trust society that Canada has been known for.
00:13:20.440But when it comes to this last election, you know, let's say Dominion Society was around.
00:13:29.080Let's say Dominion Society was around during this last election cycle.
00:13:33.620And I know that's kind of a hard hypothetical because as far as I understand, effective political organizations are always sort of like in the moment of like, okay, how can we capitalize on what's happening right now?
00:13:45.260So it's kind of a weird hypothetical because Dominion Society did not exist back then.
00:13:49.600but uh could you kind of give an answer to that of like what what you would have been trying to do
00:13:54.720what this organization what we would have been trying to do to pressure polyev to talk about
00:13:59.380remigration or to to to push further with a mass immigration yeah i mean i i think it's as helpful
00:14:06.760to to look forward to the to the next election as it is to talk hypothetically about the last one
00:14:11.620uh the answers are are pretty much the same uh we have a lot of plans to to kind of engage with
00:14:18.640thing especially like leading up to the election generally we want to kind of engage in all sorts
00:14:23.480of activism that we've seen from other organizations we want to we want to uh you know
00:14:28.860inform our supporters and canadians on the different stances uh of the parties on uh the
00:14:36.380issue of immigration we want to we want to reach out to candidates and understand their stances and
00:14:42.280provide that information directly on our website give a give a scorecard to different candidates
00:14:47.540on how they measure up to our, when it comes to our stance of re-migration and Canadian
00:14:53.400nationalism. There's all sorts of direct kind of election activism that we plan to engage in
00:15:00.680leading up to the next election. But it is difficult to kind of engage in the hypothetical.
00:15:08.960It depends on what the organization would look like leading up to the election. Right now,
00:15:13.740we're very small we've as i said we've brought out almost 500 members in the last nine days
00:15:19.260uh if we're if we're acting under this hypothetical and we're this small organization our abilities
00:15:25.580are limited but we want to push forward over the next uh you know three four years towards
00:15:30.700the next election and make sure we can inform canadians on the the term remigration uh as
00:15:38.300you said it's it's becoming more and more normal for people to reject mass immigration at every
00:15:42.940level. We want to keep pushing the ball forward. We want to create space to make sure everyone's
00:15:49.560comfortable talking about this issue as it's becoming more and more common, but also that
00:15:54.420they hear this term re-migration and they understand what it means and that it's a
00:16:00.120potential solution. And as Canadians become more informed and comfortable on issues, that gives us
00:16:07.340leverage over politicians as well. We want to provide them with the plan. We have our 10.3
00:16:17.000phase plan. We want to continue to flesh that out into like complete white papers on these different
00:16:23.620policies so that when the politicians realize that this is the only popular position, because that's
00:16:29.860what politicians do, right? They don't lead from the front. We all know this. It's what we hate
00:16:33.920about politicians they stick their finger up in the air and see which ways the wind's blowing
00:16:38.140so i want to be the strongest wind on the horizon make it clear that the only option
00:16:44.520for canada in general but also for these politicians to be able to continue to
00:16:49.600to win seats and govern is to embrace these ideas of canadian nationalism and re-migration
00:16:54.740and when they do so it'll be easy because they can go right to they can pick up the phone
00:16:59.640and dial my number and look in their email box and have the complete plan right there ready for
00:17:05.840them. Maybe they won't adopt the whole thing. Maybe they'll take bits and pieces. But this is
00:17:10.800how we gain leverage. We get a foothold within these organizations. As well, over the next few
00:17:16.620years, we're going to work on engaging in our own kind of grassroots campaigns. We're going to train
00:17:21.640the next generation of activists in how to be involved in the political sphere. And as a result,
00:17:29.400there's all sorts of kind of crossovers between the volunteer activism that we will be engaging in
00:17:35.700and what you expect during an election. All of a sudden, the candidates from all the different
00:17:42.240parties, hopefully, this is my vision at least, but at least with the major parties like the
00:17:49.860conservatives or the liberals, all of a sudden many of their volunteers, maybe their best
00:17:57.900volunteers are all dominion society members they're all re-migrationists they're all sharp
00:18:03.740young people that are engaged in the process and all of a sudden they they have to think twice
00:18:09.900oh no if i don't take these positions i'm going to lose my top guys i need these guys on my team
00:18:15.920we got to do something about this so we're we're looking at approaching things from a lot of
00:18:20.700different angles from the grassroots up sharing sharing our message and our content on social
00:18:25.720media, getting out into the streets, into mailboxes, onto light posts and all that stuff,
00:18:33.440and making sure that our worldview is clear and becomes more popular and that people,
00:18:39.780most importantly, understand the word remigration. I would love to make sure that
00:18:45.500Pierre Polyev says the word remigration before the end of this year. He's kind of embraced this
00:18:51.360position on net negative immigration lately, which is definitely a step in the right direction.
00:18:57.120He's focused on kind of making sure these 4.9 million temporary residents on temporary visas
00:19:05.400return to their countries and as a result create like a negative flow. That's a pretty moderate
00:19:11.480position if you ask me. We want to go a step further and I want to hear him say the word
00:19:15.560remigration. Trump's used it a few times. I don't think this is an impossible task. But we're going
00:19:24.220to keep pushing until he embraces these ideas. Say it, Polyev. Say remigration. Say it. We want
00:19:31.320you to say it. You went over a lot of good stuff. Say the word. And you went over a lot of good
00:19:37.840stuff. And I do want to emphasize, I think what's great about our website dominionsociety.ca is you
00:19:43.880can go to what is remigration and there's a lot of really really really good information
00:19:48.600um on here and as you mentioned near the bottom you have the only path forward remigration and
00:19:55.960this these are the 10 steps um this is a lot of good stuff it's not just deportations folks
00:20:03.220it's not just deportations there's voluntary repatriation of people uh we can get into that
00:20:09.140a little bit later but i wanted to kind of just stick on paul yet for a second and then move on
00:20:13.040from him uh because i feel like this is going to be one of the biggest challenges moving forward
00:20:17.220which is the sort of pussy footing the sort of like wrapping it up as if he's talking about
00:20:26.280immigration and he's hard on immigration and i'll just take this tweet from 10 hours ago today
00:20:30.980uh he mentions immigration here but it's it's all shrouded with a you know it's not like hey
00:20:36.860we need to stop immigration it's always kind of like still all couched in all of this economy
00:20:42.680stuff. Not to say that the economy is not important, but we'll just read this tweet and
00:20:47.460then we'll get your kind of reaction to it, Daniel. Carney's economy, 54,000 applications
00:20:52.740for 5,000 jobs. Our people are pushed out of jobs because of reckless immigration and
00:20:57.260anti-growth liberal economic policies. Did you get that mouthful? Anti-growth liberal
00:21:04.140economic policies. Cut taxes, red tape, spending, and immigration to let our people pursue the
00:21:11.260canadian promise what are your thoughts on this sort of messaging from uh from pp here polyev
00:21:17.600sorry you know i i think he's moving in the right direction uh what what uh what stands out to me
00:21:24.520is his repetition of the word our people our people i think this is interesting uh and i
00:21:30.540think it's very intentional um now we all know from pierre's messaging over the last uh year
00:21:38.360especially in the last few months that uh he's fully embraced a very liberal post-national
00:21:44.420notion of what kenda is uh you know his famous line and uh uh we're not a nation of backgrounds
00:21:54.100and bloodlines and that anyone from anywhere can do anything pierre and patel and and whatever he
00:22:01.260says i got the clip queued up if you want me to play it here yeah yeah yeah i mean go ahead yeah
00:22:07.400Yeah, he did this Canada First rally, and everyone thought it was so cool.
00:23:06.340Yeah, I think that's a thorough juxtaposition with with the message that you showed from from more recently, though, where he's talking about our people, our people like the framing is very different.
00:23:16.580It's disingenuous, obviously. But you can tell that, you know, everything coming through the CPC has been thoroughly workshopped and focused group.
00:23:26.860And they've clearly tapped in to a kind of new style of messaging, which is much more in line with the kind of messaging we've been putting out of the Dominion Society.
00:23:36.340That being said, he's still, you know, very focused on the economic side of things.
00:23:41.920We knew for months leading up to the election that that things like rejecting max immigration and even mass deportations are popular positions.
00:23:50.160It was it was a surprise that the CPC didn't embrace them.
00:23:56.460They're avoiding any sort of controversy.
00:23:58.400They don't want to be called racist by the CBC, but also they didn't want to jeopardize seats in very specific ridings where they thought that this position would hurt them, right?
00:24:08.840It's these seats around the 905, just around the GTA, in these suburban areas around the big cities where there's huge immigrant communities.
00:24:21.700and they were paranoid that uh they needed these seats to form government and taking a position on
00:24:29.380immigration even though it was broadly popular could hurt them in these in these specific
00:24:33.840pockets um now they're looking for for ways to new ways to win because obviously they came up short
00:24:40.140but also i don't want to stay too focused on on pierre paulia because like frankly i i think
00:24:45.940that the the liberals the conservatives uh both of them are equally as likely at this point to
00:24:52.180kind of embrace uh id ideas to to restrict immigration embrace re-migration embrace it
00:25:00.540yeah i mean preferably to embrace re-migration i'm not i'm not that bullish on on mark carney
00:25:05.480not just yet uh but we have seen him tone things down throughout uh the year uh temporary foreign
00:25:14.020workers have has slowed down. I think over the last quarter, it's almost even getting out the
00:25:20.420people coming in and the people leaving, at least according to the official numbers. So there are
00:25:26.200signals to suggest that that Carney as well, who seems to be a much more kind of pragmatic
00:25:31.200politician than Justin Trudeau, could be taking the steps, especially in line with these more
00:25:37.460economic arguments. We know this guy's a banker. Him and Polyev are both kind of, you know,
00:25:42.840economics nerds um so i could see i i give them equal odds at at uh taking uh ideas policies more
00:25:53.720in line with our thinking uh as they try and maintain or get a hold of power uh it's our job
00:26:00.520though to keep pushing the envelope like it's not it's not enough to just reduce the numbers at this
00:26:05.940point. Especially after a decade of Justin Trudeau's absolutely insane radical policies,
00:26:11.900it's not enough to reduce the numbers. We actually must reverse the flow. And it's not just
00:26:17.440temporary migrants. There are a huge amount of people that are on a pathway to citizenship.
00:26:26.520This can still be easily annulled. Permanent residency can be more easily legally revoked
00:26:33.160than uh say say uh citizenship um and we need more drastic changes like it's it's things like
00:26:41.080the uh the temporary foreign workers program like it's not enough to just reduce the numbers like
00:26:45.520this this program has no place in canadian society it's a completely anti-worker program
00:26:50.360it depresses wages um it started out as like it was introduced in the 1970s as like an agriculture
00:26:57.540specific program it was for like it was literally for like the stereotype of strawberry pickers
00:27:02.200which people will throw in your face when you when you criticize temporary foreign workers
00:27:06.300it was people that would come here for like a few months and work seasonal jobs that didn't
00:27:11.320exist year-round and then leave and now we've seen it we've seen the international mobility
00:27:16.400program added to it we've seen massive expansions in the temporary foreign workers program so people
00:27:21.160are working at fast food places and stuff like this like this is obviously not a place for
00:27:26.360for such a program to be um uh taking jobs from canadian citizens so uh as they start talking
00:27:33.760about it you know it's it's good to you know you can give them a bit of a pat on the back
00:27:37.720but it's just not good enough i i don't know if you saw today uh michelle rempel uh who's the
00:27:43.480conservative immigration critic uh posted a article on her twitter as she's been doing since
00:27:51.060there on holiday and she has nothing to do i guess um and it was actually a a commentary on
00:27:58.760post-nationalism which is a bit surprising to see coming out of the cpc um and she tried to frame it
00:28:05.280as a completely a liberal issue that it was something that came up with trudeau senior
00:28:11.400and then trudeau junior and it's all their fault and she just kind of glazes over the roles that
00:28:17.700her party played in uh in in putting forward mass immigration and the post-nationalism
00:28:24.320also another kind of single signal coming out of the cpc of a tweak in in messaging
00:28:31.800yeah yeah they uh i really think they kind of got like picked up the baton from trudeau and
00:28:40.080continued the same post-nationalism with uh anyone from anywhere can do anything a canadian
00:28:44.500is a canadian is a canadian doesn't matter if you're martin or muhammad like this is the exact
00:28:47.700same language um and i want to ask you a question but first we got a super chat from the one and
00:28:53.000only mitch murphy aka red pill rapper how's it going sir with two dollars he says i want to be
00:28:58.500called racist by the cbc i totally agree because that means we're doing the right thing that's the
00:29:05.720goal right that's the goal yeah yeah absolutely if you if you're not uh getting attacked by the cbc
00:29:12.240you're not very threatening i don't think so so so far dominion society they've had a they've had
00:29:18.340a full media blackout uh we'll see if we can uh nudge that hornet's nest and uh make sure that
00:29:25.120we're we're doing things right absolutely let's let's get into some of those uh some of those
00:29:30.140headlines i did want to ask kind of an in the weeds question here because you were talking about
00:29:33.960the temporary foreign workers and the word that seems to be forgotten is temporary but you mentioned
00:29:39.520the international mobility program i've never heard of that one yeah yeah it's it's just kind
00:29:46.000of a growth on the on the temporary foreign workers program it's very similar it's but it's
00:29:53.080the one that kind of expanded uh the types of jobs that these workers are coming under um so this is
00:30:00.080a lot of these uh indians that are here working at harvey's and and whatnot they're not they're
00:30:07.040like they are like lowercase t temporary foreign workers but they actually came under the
00:30:11.500international mobility program uh so similar similar but technically different programs but
00:30:18.180like practically speaking they're they're it's a temporary foreign worker program right um david
00:30:24.140morgan sends in seven dollars thank you david he says can't wait for mass remigration
00:30:29.360yeah the only solution to mass immigration is mass remigration that's right that's
00:30:37.020And the other thing I like on the 10-step re-migration plan, I believe it's one of the last ones on the 10 steps, but it's to hold those accountable that enabled these policies.
00:31:10.660So, yeah, you mentioned trafficking here.
00:31:13.700That's something that, you know, for a conservative party
00:31:16.040that loves to talk about liberal corruption
00:31:18.800and they're just lining their pockets with money this is sort of a topic that does not get mentioned
00:31:24.100by them at all whatsoever which is the money that can be made off of immigration and really
00:31:30.400uh if you dug into it you'd probably find some people in the conservative party
00:31:34.560who might be kind of uh you know profiting a little bit from uh from mass immigration
00:31:40.860so i think that's a really important topic to bring up
00:31:43.840Yeah, I think that's a safe bet. You know, there's all sorts of institutions that have
00:31:50.080been taking advantage of it. It's not just businesses trying to take advantage of lower
00:31:55.160wages. We see post-secondary institutions trying to take advantage of the foreign
00:32:01.240students program, even like fake schools that are basically just diploma mills to get people
00:32:07.480on a pathway to citizenship like it's one thing uh having legitimate schools that are just trying
00:32:14.540to increase their their profit margin by taking more students on but there's like literally fake
00:32:20.120colleges that have you know fake pictures of their campus on their website and are are just a way to
00:32:27.860to back to get a back door into into Canada like these things need to be completely shut down
00:32:32.960It's not enough to just address the immigration policy. These bad actors that have been taking advantage of the system need to be punished and put away.
00:32:42.860There's also a whole industry of immigration consultants. We've seen news stories about different businesses selling and purchasing labor market impact assessments, these reports that are necessary in order to justify having a temporary foreign worker come in instead of hiring a Canadian.
00:33:03.180like there's this all there's this whole secondary sort of black market gray market
00:33:07.600that is brought up around the immigration since Justin Trudeau loosened things so much
00:33:12.780and like I think these actors need to be held accountable because they've what they've done
00:33:18.300they've their actions have you know personally enriched themselves but it's had a a profound
00:33:24.920impact on Canadian society and I think it's time we start kind of setting higher standards
00:33:30.620for what we expect from Canadian society.
00:33:35.280And that includes kind of imposing order
00:33:39.000in which, you know, includes discipline.
00:35:44.280Maybe there's slightly different lenses that people view this through.
00:35:48.060But I think staying narrowly focused on immigration allows for a wide set of the public to get on board with us.
00:35:58.120I think that's one of the things the PPC kind of has done poorly.
00:36:01.780While they have some strong positions on immigration, they've turned into this like weird kind of angry grievance party where they just take a position against everything.
00:36:14.060You know, climate change, gender ideology, all these things.
00:36:17.460and it kind of makes for an unsustainable basket of people. You're left with just people that are
00:36:22.260angry at the current system and people that might support the party due to their stance
00:36:27.500on immigration. Maybe they're turned off by their stance on other controversial issues.
00:36:33.240So I wanted to shed some of these positions, keep it narrowly focused on what I think is the most
00:36:38.440important issue, which is immigration, and really move the ball forward on that. Because
00:36:43.800the foundation of our ideas is that Canada is a nation. And we're not just interchangeable
00:36:51.000economic units. Canada's not just lines on a map or an economy. Canada's a people. And mass
00:36:57.720immigration is transforming that people into something else. You can't replace our people
00:37:01.640without transforming our society. And nowhere is that more obvious than in Brampton, where the
00:37:06.300population has changed to from majority white heritage canadian to majority east indian or
00:37:14.200east asian southeast asian over the last 30 40 years and now we see brampton looks like a foreign
00:37:20.520country you know there's the giant monkey statues going up there's uh massive temples there's there's
00:37:26.160violence in the streets between hindus and and sikhs um and that's kind of brampton is our canary
00:37:32.600in a cold mine. And we need to put our foot down, we need to turn off the taps, and we need to start
00:37:39.800bailing out water, or else the rest of our country is going to start looking like that as well.
00:37:44.400Yeah, and what I find really excited about Dominion Society is you mentioned it kind of
00:37:49.680in the intro video, but you talk about how, you know, our political enemies already have this,
00:37:54.460you know, the people, liberals, left wing people, far leftists, they already have this in various
00:38:00.460capacities. And also there's an ethnic or kind of foreign religious element as well, where there's,
00:38:06.580you know, isn't it frustrating when you see Mark Carney wearing a turban, Pierre Polyev wearing a
00:38:12.700turban, pandering to these groups. But as you said, they're organized and the person who is the most
00:38:18.560organized pressuring politicians the most wins. And what I think is great about Dominion Society,
00:38:24.900actually, I'll give one more far left example, which is like climate change. We've all seen
00:38:28.140like these climate change, it's not so popular anymore. But in 2019, it was all the rage to talk
00:38:32.960about environmentalism and climate change. And these are organized, you know, advocacy groups
00:38:38.980that put forth all sorts of propaganda and messaging of making it the most important issue
00:38:43.440ever. And then the political parties swoop in around the election time, adopt the same messaging,
00:38:49.160adopt the same kind of policy positions or sort of talking points. And that really has a huge
00:38:55.580seismic change on the public's perception how they vote and what policies they want and what's
00:39:01.160great about dominion society is we kind of have a hybrid it's one that it it's an issue of
00:39:07.340remigration and it's also sort of like an ethnic sort of group as well where it's like we are
00:39:12.340asserting ourselves as a nation as a people uh and i think that's that's an exciting thing i think
00:39:17.440because it's it's kind of like a political issue but it's also representing a group's interest as
00:39:22.960well um yeah i was gonna ask i think you described it really well thanks uh that's exactly the kind
00:39:32.320of model we're trying to adopt uh we've seen the influence of these kind of organized ethnic groups
00:39:38.320in canadian politics exactly how you said uh all the politicians were playing dress up and going
00:39:44.480into their temples and and doing whatever they can to win their support the truth is politicians like
00:39:49.920it easy and if you can get them in touch with lots of people that can that they can convert into
00:39:54.080voters they're going to do what's necessary to get you on on their side the reality is uh canadians
00:40:00.240heritage canadians are are atomized especially through the decline of faith uh in christianity
00:40:06.120within canadian society there there aren't these same kind of localized social institutions uh that
00:40:12.720politicians can kind of leverage to to gain uh like voting blocks of support so we want to recreate
00:40:19.040that for heritage canadians through the dominion society um but we also want to like put the ball
00:40:25.200on this from an issue perspective uh we see this like there's all sorts of left-wing groups that
00:40:31.400do this on the right it's mostly about like kind of libertarian type economics uh there's some for
00:40:37.120like that promote oil and gas um but there's nothing that's taking a real strong like cultural
00:40:43.060position, especially kind of an identitarian one around what it means to be Canadian. So
00:40:50.120I think we're filling a kind of gap in the market. We're not really reinventing the wheel. We're
00:40:55.740borrowing techniques from what we see across the pond in Europe. We're borrowing techniques from
00:41:02.180our opponents to build a new organization. But I do think we're going to change the game. I already
00:41:11.500think that we're we're showing a kind of fresh perspective on on how to do things we're a young
00:41:16.680team of guys um we're we're pretty savvy with uh social media and and have a clever way of getting
00:41:23.860our message out um a lot of these organizations on the left are kind of big bloated uh sclerotic
00:41:30.580um sclerotic we're doing things a bit different what's that mean anemic they're they're it's
00:41:38.260another seven of them for what I was saying. They're bloated, they're slow, they're ineffective,
00:41:42.320and they haven't adapted to the modern kind of information marketplace. So I think there's a
00:41:47.860give me another name word for sclerotic. So a couple of questions before you go.
00:41:55.500Disruptive. Okay. A couple of questions before you go. I want to ask about black pilling. But
00:42:01.260before that, we talked a lot about how, you know, remigration and nationalism touches many,
00:42:07.060many different issues or things that people pay attention to what do you think are one or a couple
00:42:13.100of like these sort of unsung heroes or kind of like underrated things that remigration affects
00:42:18.740like for example we've we've all heard it affects the housing crisis you know it affects the job
00:42:23.380market uh even like you know canadian identity that's that's kind of the more obvious ones is
00:42:29.060is there any that sort of um that you think don't get talked about enough in terms of maybe uh like
00:42:35.740the major consequences of multiculturalism and mass immigration?
00:42:41.020No, I think we've touched on the major ones for sure.
00:42:44.400I would go back to the kind of just general kind of sense of community
00:42:48.540and the kind of high trust environment that Canada was known for.
00:42:53.440Even like it's not even that far gone.
00:42:56.860Like when I was growing up, things were very different than things are now.
00:43:01.540you know children were had much more license to to roam the streets and uh uh play now crime has
00:43:09.180gotten up people people aren't comfortable in their own environments um you know tim horton's
00:43:15.780once a pillar of kind of canadian kind of uh or a cornerstone of canadian community is now you
00:43:21.820know filled with foreigners and foreign workers uh we just don't have this same cohesive kind of
00:43:27.380community environment uh that we once had and i think that has a like a psychological toll on
00:43:34.700people um not having that sort of comfort within their own uh country just like if you can you can
00:43:42.960imagine at the the home level if you're when when you have uh visitors in your house uh even if you
00:43:49.340know them like even if they're friends you're not quite as comfortable in your own living space
00:43:53.560and if you were forced to do that for you know months years you'd become very frustrated and
00:44:00.280anxious and i think that's that effect is happening on kind of a macro scale within our country
00:44:06.340um and i want i i want to have the roommate the roommate who doesn't do their dishes
00:44:13.240and that that sort of resentment starts to build it's like we need to have a talk here if we're
00:44:18.400gonna live together you know you actually you haven't been paying rent and it's a mess in your
00:44:23.020room actually uh you're being evicted sir um uh i did want to ask to go back he has to go back
00:44:32.860now i wanted to ask about um do you think we're going to get this individual to say the word
00:44:37.420re-migration tim upple the deputy leader of the conservative party you guys are tight right i'm
00:44:43.640sure you guys weren't you working with him on this uh re-migration stuff weren't you uh
00:44:47.920yo tim i'm working on the dominion society i think you're gonna love this stuff
00:44:52.380sorry what was that maybe he can translate it into punjab for us uh i've seen him do a number
00:44:59.460of uh speeches in in foreign languages which i don't think is uh uh effective or appropriate
00:45:06.420for our politicians um i think it'll be a tough sell for someone like uh tim uh uh but we'll have
00:45:15.580to wait and see you know maybe we'll just make it uh so impossible uh he won't be able to deny it
00:45:21.020But I would like to highlight part of our re-migration plan is restricting access to jobs in national security and in the public service and in elected office to people that were at least born here.
00:45:37.180Immigrants certainly shouldn't be representing us in the House of Commons.
00:45:41.260I think that's a I don't think that's a hot take.
00:45:43.320Yeah, and to contrast that, we have the Premier of Alberta, Daniel Smith, who has a program to hire foreigners as police officers in Alberta.
00:46:03.180Absolutely. And I want to because I saw some comments of people reacting to Dominion Society and some people were, I guess, as the kids say, kind of blackpilled saying, oh, there's no hope.
00:46:14.340Like it's too late anyway. And I guess how would you respond to that?
00:46:19.500It's almost like some people are almost like addicted. They're addicted to the despair.
00:46:22.980They're addicted to the hopelessness that we've become so accustomed to.
00:46:26.060um but i don't know what how would you respond to these these people who kind of are perpetually
00:46:31.220trying to uh not have hope yeah i think it's an easy position uh i understand where it comes from
00:46:39.520it is very demoralizing to be a canadian in 2025 um but we're flushing the black bills where we
00:46:47.820have a positive solution we have that mobilizing myth we have something to work towards it's
00:46:53.220re-migration. We have a credible plan. We have international examples where this has succeeded.
00:46:59.980We're still the majority in this country, is the reality. And even though that might slip over the
00:47:05.660next 10 years or so, we're still going to be the largest minority in this country. We're still
00:47:11.020going to be the most powerful voting bloc. We just have to get on the same page and push for our
00:47:14.920ideas uh it's time to there's there's no value in blackfilling it's my position that you know
00:47:23.160uh we have a sort of duty not only to ourselves but to our descendants and our ancestors
00:47:31.300to make sure we're able to pass on the country that they fought for and established for us
00:47:37.680to the next generation um and it's just not good enough to to say uh it's done it's cooked it's
00:47:45.020because it's not like there are the policy options there is a pathway to victory and we're going to
00:47:51.860fight towards that um and if you're going to black pill if you're going to be uh demoralized
00:47:57.000get out of the way and let the the let the chads do the work because we have a plan and we're going
00:48:05.060to get it done yeah and i'm really happy to be on board to to be helping you out with dominion
00:48:11.420society because as i mentioned i feel like you know we're only just scratching the surface
00:48:16.520on ways to talk about this educating people about remigration but like like really i want to look
00:48:21.420at the angle of how you know where do you think foreign interference come from comes from it
00:48:25.620comes from foreign people you know and just educating people on how public policy works
00:48:31.860Like how we incentivize people to come here and to exploit our social services.
00:48:38.060And we're also, in the same way, incentivizing white Canadians to get made.
00:48:42.960Like this is such a betrayal of the Canadian people that's happening.
00:48:46.880And there's really so much to really sink our teeth into.
00:48:51.120And, you know, like this is something that I think will really activate people and win their hearts and minds.
00:49:00.020and really get them moving in the same direction.
00:49:03.380And that's exactly what we need to turn this country around.
00:52:11.880Thank you for the love, thank you for the joy, but I will never want to fall in love again, so thank you for the time, thank you for your heart, I will never want to fall in love again.