postyX - April 22, 2026


Maple Syrup & Mayhem-The Fourth Turning


Episode Stats


Length

2 hours and 6 minutes

Words per minute

177.4404

Word count

22,397

Sentence count

576


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
00:00:00.000 and settled for and by the crown as an extension of Western European identity and culture.
00:00:07.320 We recognize that this is the ancestral territory of the British, French, Scottish, and Irish and
00:00:13.700 pay homage to the societal and governing architectures of the founders of this great
00:00:18.440 Anglo-Franco union we call Canada.
00:00:30.000 Oh, my God.
00:01:00.000 guitar solo
00:01:30.000 I ain't found a way to kill me yet
00:01:36.940 You son of a bitch!
00:02:00.000 You are not born into this earth to be your slaves and the Jews and their puppets.
00:02:14.200 You are not born into their taxes and then die.
00:02:19.200 You are born onto this earth as an Aryan man.
00:02:22.200 You were made in the image of God, to cover it, to rule it, to have dominion over it.
00:02:29.200 Wisconsin, his house!
00:02:35.200 Are you not entertained?
00:02:37.200 Are you not entertained?
00:02:59.200 No, no, no
00:03:02.240 You know we can't gonna die
00:03:29.200 do you accept that it's a neo-nazi group yes right so you've joined a neo-nazi group correct
00:03:38.320 probably why's that because i'm a neo-nazi obviously
00:03:44.240 sometimes in life you have to fight immigration so we can create a nation we don't have a nation
00:03:50.800 at the moment we've got a halfway house for the world we need to be a nation our people
00:03:54.720 Australians, we're a nation, we're a fault.
00:03:56.920 And we need to keep it that way.
00:04:24.720 Without our books, unless there's been an immediate invitation to the citizens, then they shall not show up on it.
00:04:34.700 I see you, thousands of patients, hearts ablaze, and I know we are unbreakable.
00:04:42.240 We are the blood of warriors, the spirit of rebels, and we will hold the line for our Britain.
00:04:49.260 this country was built by our ancestors
00:04:52.740 it was bled for by our ancestors
00:04:55.460 on the beaches of Gopoli
00:04:57.580 in the bushes of Dakota
00:04:59.740 they bled for a white Australia
00:05:03.280 and we will fight for a white Australia
00:05:19.260 This is a message from White Canada.
00:05:49.260 Walkin' tall machine gun men
00:05:55.400 They spit on me in my homeland
00:06:01.200 Gloria, send me pictures of my boy
00:06:10.120 Got my pills, gets my skit-told ass
00:06:21.800 My body's breathing, it's dying breath
00:06:28.300 Oh God, please, won't you help me make it through
00:06:40.120 Yeah, they come to snuff the rooster
00:06:46.540 Oh yeah, yeah
00:06:52.360 Yeah, here come the rooster
00:06:59.500 Yeah
00:07:01.860 You know he ain't gonna die
00:07:09.360 No, you know he ain't gonna die
00:07:39.360 I don't care if he's here, legally or illegally.
00:07:47.040 If he thinks he's here to stay, he's wrong.
00:07:54.460 Because it's not his country and it never will be, it's ours.
00:08:04.380 And it's ours by blood.
00:08:09.360 hello hello hold on let me just see am i i always do this to you guys
00:08:18.160 you should be able to hear me let me just double check hey welder
00:08:21.480 oh okay if you cannot hear me say something like i said i hate this setup i don't know why i keep
00:08:31.180 using it on rumble i need to use obs but it's just i'm i just don't have the brain right now
00:08:36.660 to figure out the fucking logistics about it. But anyways, how is everybody? We're halfway
00:08:41.260 through the week. I'm good. Awesome. Thank you. We're halfway through the week. I was
00:08:46.820 this morning. It's so I just I have to bring this up. I have a couple stories, actually.
00:08:50.780 And so bear with me. And then we're going to get into some fun stuff. And then we're
00:08:53.520 going to talk about what I believe the theory, I believe, as to what we're entering the time
00:08:59.900 period, the fourth turning. And I'm going to explain why I think that if you don't know
00:09:03.940 about it we'll talk about it and the fact that the book now camp of saints which is now back in
00:09:09.440 the news i guess because i believe it was just banned in canada if i'm not mistaken and i read
00:09:15.000 this book when i was younger but i thought because of all the hubbub going on the you know
00:09:18.840 bullshit or whatever that people are bringing about it i would read it again so i'm like
00:09:24.160 halfway through reading it the second time so i wanted to kind of make some comparisons and
00:09:29.080 stuff like that because i always find it fascinating like even when i read a book
00:09:32.100 or when I watch a movie or something like that from like you know the 70s the 60s I mean 1984
00:09:38.180 obviously is a good example and that these people were able to kind of predict what is exactly
00:09:43.640 happening so it's almost like the chicken and the egg thing so it's like is this happening because
00:09:47.060 they got the idea from the book or is the person that wrote the book kind of had some kind of
00:09:52.580 prophecy or prophetic and thoughts that you know made them think that or made them predict exactly
00:09:57.740 how things were going to go and that's kind of how the fourth turning uh the four turnings kind
00:10:01.840 of falls into it they you know it's i'll explain it in a minute but anyways back to the fun stuff
00:10:06.080 i was driving today and you know i obviously i heard a radio commercial um about a drunk driving
00:10:15.040 right and they were they were explaining to everybody that women are different biologically
00:10:22.280 and that obviously they cannot handle the same amount of alcohol as men before they're considered
00:10:28.560 drunk and the reason that struck me was because I mean obviously that's true but now it seems like
00:10:35.100 I'm noticing a little bit more where like I don't know I feel like a couple years ago that wouldn't
00:10:40.620 have been acceptable because you know anybody can be a woman right but it's like now I'm finding a
00:10:45.080 few different little things here and there where they're actually making the distinction that there
00:10:48.380 is actually biological differences between men and women so like they just came out and said it
00:10:52.900 like you know women can are biologically different and i'm just like oh my god that's a dirty word
00:10:57.360 i'm surprised they're saying that so i thought that was kind of cool and i'm just like maybe i
00:11:01.680 know we've been moving the overton window quite a bit uh lately so i'm hoping that's kind of you
00:11:05.760 know things like that are kind of part of it and i mean honestly there's nothing to be ashamed of
00:11:10.120 because it's obviously it's a fact and no matter how many you know people want to deny it uh biology
00:11:14.920 is a real thing and biology also comes into play when it comes to you know racial uh demographics
00:11:21.920 as well obviously and in-group preference and all that shit so anybody who denies that you know
00:11:26.180 obviously is just coping hard um but yeah that was it um and then on the weekend i have i had
00:11:33.560 some friends over and obviously you know not all my irl friends are radical actually a lot of them
00:11:41.180 or not um so oh my god that's fucking crazy welders i i'm just glad that my kids aren't in
00:11:49.060 school anymore that's all i got to say uh because yeah it wouldn't be happening and i saw the kid
00:11:53.060 that was getting the turban put on his head and i'm telling you right now that i was his mother
00:11:56.040 there would be some serious trouble problems um so my friends were over on the weekend and you know
00:12:02.280 i'm one of them a male uh a gentleman rather um he's almost there on the whole you know what's
00:12:10.840 what caused all this shit and all this stuff but much like most of the people i kind of try to
00:12:16.920 red pill or whatever you want to call it um he's not sold on the jewish question question rather
00:12:22.740 he seems to think much like tommy robinson uh that it's the muslims that are the problem right
00:12:28.980 um and we have a lot of i guess that's more of a civ nat kind of position so it's just it gets
00:12:35.160 frustrating to the point where one of the things i think he said and i'm trying not to get really
00:12:39.100 triggered um because obviously it's not good for my blood pressure but um he was saying that you
00:12:45.960 know I I think that the do the Jews have a right to defend themselves in every single war that
00:12:51.820 they've been involved in was not their fault they were defending themselves and you know so like
00:12:56.780 things like that I'm just like oh my god you're so close you're so fucking close like what the
00:13:01.620 fuck you know what I mean so it kind of triggered me a little bit and you know I was tempted to like
00:13:06.680 I did tell him to get out, but, you know, I didn't actually physically throw him out.
00:13:09.840 But anyways, I just I do think we're moving a little bit more where more people are kind of getting to that point.
00:13:15.540 But it's really hard to sell them on the obviously the Jewish question, rather.
00:13:21.500 So anyways, that was my weekend.
00:13:24.920 Not very exciting.
00:13:26.220 And I don't know why I do it to myself, to be honest with you, because every time I seem to and I love, you know, my friends.
00:13:31.540 And, you know, you can obviously be friends with people and keep politics out of it, although it's really hard these days because everybody is.
00:13:36.680 commenting on it. Even when I went to the doctor today, the doctor was saying how much they hate
00:13:41.620 Justin Trudeau for legalizing weed. So I was just like, everybody, everybody's got an issue
00:13:46.920 nowadays, right? But a lot of people are afraid to admit what the actual issue started from or why
00:13:53.040 it continues to be a problem. So I saw this video, I'm going to play it for you guys. I thought we
00:13:58.760 would do a couple fun things. This is hilarious. So when I first saw this, I actually, I'm going
00:14:03.740 play it in a second uh yeah you're right well there's some things they do have to learn for
00:14:07.540 themselves and i i think i'm just i was listening sorry i'm going all over the place i was watching
00:14:11.500 fucking alex jones because count dankula was on there like just before i started the stream
00:14:15.500 and he was saying that um he went when shit does pop off right um and the elites people start
00:14:22.480 targeting the elites and the politicians for what they've done to our countries he's just going to
00:14:27.120 board up his house and sit back and he's not going to offer any help because they deserve it right
00:14:30.520 And I'm in the same position as that.
00:14:32.360 That's how I feel.
00:14:33.480 Like, it is going to happen.
00:14:34.860 And, you know, I don't know why they think they're marked safe from everybody.
00:14:38.520 But violent, like, revolutions usually end violently.
00:14:41.620 And generally, the leaders end up, you know, not surviving.
00:14:46.720 So, anyways.
00:14:48.340 But, so this Family Guy video, I thought it was hilarious.
00:14:51.560 Actually, when I saw it, I wasn't even sure if it was old or new.
00:14:54.180 But it really encapsulates the current state in Canada.
00:14:57.580 And it's fucking hilarious as fuck.
00:15:00.520 We finally made it, Brian. We're in Canada.
00:15:16.180 I can already smell the enlightenment and tranquility.
00:15:24.360 This is wonderful, isn't it, Brian?
00:15:26.120 It's so tranquil, I'm tearing up.
00:15:27.900 Come on, I think I see a cat.
00:15:30.520 isn't that fucking hilarious and i think it's funny because it comes on the heels of that
00:15:36.840 um i think indian american streamer kick streamer or whatever that came to canada i guess last week
00:15:45.140 or maybe it was over the weekend and made the comment that it wasn't canada it was like india
00:15:49.560 so it's kind of funny when they're even recognizing it i just it was just hilarious so then to see
00:15:54.620 family guy making fun of it and the fact that you know family guy when it first came out obviously
00:15:59.580 and when I watched it when I was younger was definitely not politically correct.
00:16:03.660 Although it has become that way over the last, whatever, 10 years or so.
00:16:07.920 So I'm actually surprised they went that far.
00:16:09.620 But I guess because they're American, they feel that Canada's fair game to make fun of.
00:16:12.560 And you know what?
00:16:12.920 They're not wrong.
00:16:13.580 They're not fucking wrong.
00:16:15.180 So yeah, in my infinite boredom this week, I was, I watch a lot of YouTube videos on
00:16:23.560 like just, I don't know, history and shit and whatever.
00:16:26.400 But anyways, this came up, this one came up in my algorithm.
00:16:29.580 and i thought it was kind of funny so i was like i'm gonna share uh it with you guys um and then
00:16:35.400 we'll do the mark carney one hold on okay so there was this guy put out a video can you survive a
00:16:42.340 zombie apocalypse in canada and the reason why i thought it was funny is because i feel like the
00:16:47.540 current you know immigration crisis invasion or whatever can be very well compared to a zombie
00:16:53.860 apocalypse so i thought we it's like a 10 minute video i thought we would watch it because it
00:16:57.160 explains where is the safest place where you'd be marked safe from a zombie apocalypse so i thought
00:17:02.600 this might be an informative piece for everybody if they're trying to escape the horde of um what
00:17:08.200 is the new term that somebody in australia used the um butter chicken tsunami that's it the butter
00:17:13.800 chicken tsunami if you're looking to avoid the butter chicken tsunami they make some suggestions
00:17:20.440 as where you would be marked safe from zombies so i assume you'd be marked safe from invaders
00:17:23.960 there as well. So I thought it was pretty hilarious. So let's check it out and maybe
00:17:29.240 get your pen and paper ready because you might need to write down some of these places.
00:17:33.300 A zombie apocalypse just hit Canada. You've got one minute before Toronto's streets flood with
00:17:37.960 the undead. Where do you run? Where do you hide? Today we're breaking down the best and worst
00:17:42.440 places to survive the nightmare. From the frozen Yukon to the crowded downtown Toronto streets,
00:17:47.480 what locations give you the best fighting chance and which will be your doom? So stick around to
00:17:52.020 end because the safest place just might be the last place you'd ever expect we're going with
00:17:58.420 classic zombies here now before i even finished watching this or i think i was like a few minutes
00:18:03.940 into it i knew and i'm gonna give you a spoiler alert here but i knew ontario would be one of the
00:18:09.860 worst places and you wouldn't think so because it has tons of freshwater lakes but you'll see why
00:18:15.060 obviously they're your slow rotting romero style walkers no olympic sprinters no mutant clickers
00:18:20.980 Just overwhelming numbers spreading bite by bite.
00:18:23.960 Doesn't that sound familiar?
00:18:24.720 Overwhelming numbers spreading bite by bite.
00:18:27.460 Now, obviously, they're not eating us yet, but, you know, they're taking our resources.
00:18:33.420 Your survival depends on five major things.
00:18:36.160 Population density, access to fresh water, climate, remoteness, and Canada's notoriously
00:18:42.300 tight gun laws.
00:18:44.100 Okay, now look, we can't do a full deep dive on all 13 provinces and territories.
00:18:47.960 Now, the gun law thing, I get, but I feel like most of the people in the city that don't own guns would probably not, even if they had a gun, would not be able to defend themselves against zombies anyway. These are people that, like I said, depend on Starbucks to make their breakfast. They're dependent on Uber. They're dependent on Uber Eats. They're dependent on all this stuff. So I don't think it would really make that big of a difference, but I could be wrong.
00:19:10.480 We'd be here until the next apocalypse.
00:19:12.400 So let's rapid fire through them,
00:19:13.940 then we'll slow down and take a closer look
00:19:15.640 at the best places to survive
00:19:16.860 and the ones that'll absolutely get you killed.
00:19:19.260 British Columbia, my home and native land.
00:19:22.180 No, seriously, this is where I'm from.
00:19:23.680 Here you got the forests, mountains, fishing, and the ocean.
00:19:26.840 But you also get Vancouver,
00:19:28.100 a city that rains 365 days out of the year,
00:19:31.060 which also turns into a zombie buffet on day one,
00:19:33.420 just like Toronto.
00:19:34.460 I feel though, if the zombies...
00:19:36.380 Did you like that, Welder's Butter Chicken Tsunami?
00:19:39.000 I said that's going to be my new euphemism for this year.
00:19:41.420 It was some Australian, I think, politician that said it's pretty fucking funny.
00:19:44.560 And I'm sure he's paying the price now.
00:19:45.860 But he gave us the line of the decade.
00:19:48.800 I feel like in Vancouver, I don't think zombies would survive that much because of all the drugs.
00:19:54.680 Like, I don't know how fentanyl would affect a zombie, but I imagine probably similar to how it affects a non-zombie, a living human being, because it pretty much turns them into fentzombies.
00:20:05.300 So I think, you know, Vancouver, like I said, I think that they could probably be ground zero for eradicating them just due to the rampant drug use.
00:20:13.680 And they're giving it out for free.
00:20:15.620 Alberta. Rural, self-reliant and packed with hunting cabins, but also packed with angry people who think the Filipino workers of the Tim Hortons intentionally gave them the wrong coffee on purpose.
00:20:25.800 So, of course, this video was made. I just wanted to put that caveat in here.
00:20:28.900 this is made by uh probably normie so of course they're gonna say you know that everybody in
00:20:34.440 alberta is you know mad at the tim hortons worker because they got the coffee wrong and i feel like
00:20:38.940 yes there is people i just want to say this okay because i generally don't get triggered over stuff
00:20:43.640 like this but it becomes a time where like if you were going this is why i don't go anymore but you
00:20:49.040 go to a place and like you for example i order a black coffee i mean i i don't know how much more
00:20:54.940 simple you could get with that. And it's like it's wrong numerous days in a row. And the fact
00:21:00.260 that, you know, you're not being understood properly, you're having to repeat yourself 100
00:21:03.460 times. That is what really pisses people off. Yeah, you're going to have the odd asshole. Listen,
00:21:08.420 I worked at a coffee shop as a teenager, and I've had things thrown at me before coffee and shit.
00:21:12.300 It happens. It sucks, but it happens. Okay, you're going to have the odd person that is going to
00:21:16.620 complain because you got the coffee wrong the one single time. But generally, as a group, people are
00:21:21.600 more pissed off about the fact that it's multiple times in a row and you keep raising the price of
00:21:27.060 coffee. And the fact that I have to repeat myself five times to get one single thing.
00:21:34.960 Saskatchewan, flat and quiet, great visibility. You can see a storm or a zombie horde coming from
00:21:39.460 a mile away. Terrible if you like trees or cover, bring snowshoes and a generator.
00:21:44.900 Manitoba, similar vibe. So on Saskatchewan, if anybody can comment or they're in the chat and
00:21:49.680 know or they know does saskatchewan have a jeep problem like the other provinces do i know in
00:21:56.240 um what do you call it uh manitoba now they have what is it turban day so i'm not sure like i said
00:22:03.760 i only i'm kind of close-minded in the sense that i only really know about the ones where it's like
00:22:08.560 undeniable how bad it is like obviously ontario and bc but and alberta i guess but does saskatchewan
00:22:15.200 have a a huge population of that because i feel like you would see you'd be able to see them
00:22:20.860 coming like a horde of zombies right see them coming across the plains i have to saskatchewan
00:22:27.420 with more lakes and more mosquitoes every small town has at least one curling rink a co-op and
00:22:32.400 a secret stash of pierogies ontario 16 million people packed highways and you'll probably die
00:22:38.360 in traffic trying to leave the further north you go the better quebec between montreal and quebec
00:22:43.420 city you're pretty much trapped so the ontario thing i thought was hilarious when i heard that
00:22:46.540 because that is total facts like if you live in the um east gta so the east east of the toronto
00:22:53.540 right there's two power plants to the east of toronto right one is in pickering and the other
00:22:58.680 one is in bowmanville and they're relatively close to each other and i've always wondered
00:23:03.160 that for people that live near those areas if there was a you know a meltdown right now i guess
00:23:10.580 if you live close enough you're probably going to be dead before you even know it but the traffic
00:23:14.260 is so bad and the way that like the neighborhoods are developed is like terrible as far because it
00:23:20.320 was built in the 70s when there wasn't fucking this crazy amount of traffic so i always wonder
00:23:24.240 that like how would that happen how would people escape and that goes for anything like anytime
00:23:29.160 there was a major crisis the 401 you're dead man that's it you're fucking dead overcrowded chaotic
00:23:34.300 and full of bottlenecks but head out to rural quebec totally different vibe tight-knit farming
00:23:38.960 towns, cold winters that slow the dead, and enough hunting rifles to make survival possible.
00:23:43.980 If you know the terrain and speak a little French, you'll be well on your way. You need
00:23:47.240 some of that jus-sui-du-comat-a-pail-tu action, if you know what I mean. I'm joking, even I don't
00:23:52.900 know what I mean. Anyways, let's continue. Newfoundland and Labrador are isolated and
00:23:56.580 self-religned. If you're already there, you may be fine. If not, that ferry left weeks ago. Now
00:24:01.200 it's just you and the ocean you're surrounded by. Nova Scotia, the second most densely populated
00:24:06.080 province in canada this higher density is due to nova scotia's relatively small land area combined
00:24:11.360 with a population exceeding 1 million i didn't really realize it was that uh dense i didn't
00:24:17.040 realize that like there was that many people there and i don't know again i should i should know this
00:24:21.920 but i didn't realize they have that such a population density there so that must suck huge
00:24:27.280 you don't want to be in a populated area during a zombie outbreak because more people means more
00:24:31.360 infected combine this with the lack of fresh water harsh winters and you have a recipe for disaster
00:24:36.740 But wouldn't the zombies not survive the winter?
00:24:38.560 That's what I'm wondering too, right?
00:24:39.900 Like if you want to get, you know, you want to take this a step further.
00:24:43.400 Wouldn't the zombies kind of die in the cold weather too?
00:24:45.500 Or maybe does it not, maybe it wouldn't matter.
00:24:47.200 I don't know.
00:24:47.520 I'm trying to remember The Walking Dead and I don't remember there ever being any kind of snow or winter weather.
00:24:52.620 But it could be just because I don't remember.
00:24:55.220 But I think that would also be bad for the zombies too.
00:24:57.300 I think the humans that live there would probably be able to hold out off the zombies because they'd know what to do in the cold weather.
00:25:03.600 Just a thought.
00:25:04.140 Huggy forested and full of black flies. If the zombies don't get you, the black flies will,
00:25:09.460 and man can they bite. Prince Edward Island. One bridge in and one bridge out. If zombies
00:25:14.500 start crossing that bridge and traffic gets jammed up, you're toast. It's eight miles long. You'll
00:25:18.880 never cross that thing on foot. Now we're on to the Yukon. Good luck finding zombies out here,
00:25:23.200 or help. With this vast wilderness, freezing temperatures, and sparse population, you'd be
00:25:27.540 more likely to run into a moose than another survivor. I often wonder if this is what's
00:25:32.640 going to have like what's going to happen you know i mean like if we don't get our shit together
00:25:36.800 in time to reverse this which i still have hope that we're going to like i said when we get into
00:25:41.800 the fourth turning thing they're saying by 2030 we'll see but i wonder if this is what's going
00:25:47.720 to happen like everybody's going to flee which is also kind of the story in camp of the saints as
00:25:52.720 well where people just flee to the rural area um to get away from the hordes northwest territories
00:25:59.980 low population density, and large amounts of fresh water.
00:26:03.000 With over a million square kilometers of rugged land and less than 45,000 people,
00:26:07.480 isolation is guaranteed, making it both a refuge and a challenge if the world goes quiet.
00:26:12.600 And last but not least, a name that I could never pronounce, but I think it is Nunavut.
00:26:17.940 I don't know why this guy as a Canadian has a problem pronouncing Nunavut,
00:26:21.840 Nunavut, whatever. Most Canadians can pronounce it, so I'm not sure what the issue is,
00:26:26.820 but he is from BC, so no offense guys.
00:26:29.340 Nunavut.
00:26:30.320 Nunavut. Unreachable, frozen, and empty.
00:26:33.020 Also, statistically, the lowest population density on Earth.
00:26:36.600 We'll talk more about that later.
00:26:38.820 Unlike the U.S., Canada isn't stocked to the ceiling with AR-15s.
00:26:42.480 But that doesn't mean you're totally out of luck.
00:26:44.080 Your best shot, literally, is heading north.
00:26:46.120 The Yukon and Northwest Territories lead the entire country in gun ownership,
00:26:49.480 with around 67% of households packing at least one firearm.
00:26:53.700 See, and it's not just the guns.
00:26:55.260 The reason why people in the rural areas would die,
00:26:57.260 It's because, like I said, they're helpless, right?
00:26:59.320 They're so used to the comfort and, like, the fucking convenience of everything.
00:27:04.760 They probably wouldn't even know what to do.
00:27:06.320 Like, I mean, look how people freak out when the power goes out for, like, a day or two.
00:27:10.100 Or, fuck, a couple hours, man.
00:27:11.420 The internet goes down.
00:27:12.620 People fucking lose their shit.
00:27:14.660 Nunuvut's numbers aren't far behind.
00:27:16.620 And Saskatchewan has almost one gun for every two people.
00:27:19.520 These areas rely heavily on hunting.
00:27:21.520 So firearms are more a survival tool than hobby.
00:27:23.960 Alberta also ranks high, with nearly 40% of households armed.
00:27:27.660 If you're anywhere near rural Alberta or northwest Saskatchewan,
00:27:30.360 you might find a rifle in every truck and enough ammo to last a siege.
00:27:34.220 On the flip side, Ontario and Quebec may have the highest numbers of gun licenses overall,
00:27:38.340 but that's just population talking.
00:27:39.940 Per capita, they're near the bottom.
00:27:41.900 Yeah, so obviously, like we all thought, rural Quebec and rural Ontario,
00:27:46.000 they own lots of guns, but the population there is very small
00:27:49.600 compared to the millions and millions that are packed into, like, what,
00:27:53.640 20 square kilometers in Toronto?
00:27:55.660 If you're in downtown Toronto or Montreal,
00:27:57.540 you're probably going to have to defend yourself with a butter knife.
00:28:00.520 Here's where things get very Canadian.
00:28:02.420 Snow isn't just a pain.
00:28:03.860 It's an ally.
00:28:04.900 Zombies don't regulate body temperature.
00:28:06.900 Sub-zero weather slows them down, freezes their joints, and makes...
00:28:09.820 See, I was right about the cold.
00:28:11.000 See?
00:28:11.960 They don't have a way to, or what do you call it, regulate their temperature.
00:28:14.940 So you'd be good.
00:28:15.560 You'd be marked safe if you were somewhere cold,
00:28:17.140 because especially if you lived there your whole life,
00:28:19.180 you'd know how to manage it. We know how to do this shit, guys. Some easy targets. But the snow
00:28:22.940 doesn't love you either. Parts of Canada get six to eight feet of snow in the winter. Ever shovel
00:28:27.500 your driveway and think, wow, I'd love to do this every day just to survive? That's your new life.
00:28:31.480 And without electricity or heating oil, you're the one freezing, not just the zombies.
00:28:35.520 And then there's the other side of the coin. Wildfires. Every summer, thick smoke rolls
00:28:39.720 across half the country. Fires destroy forests, choke out entire regions. And during an apocalypse,
00:28:44.700 they'll be even more common you've got way more people roughied in the woods building campfires
00:28:49.440 using generators making rookie mistakes and it might not even be an accident one and see part
00:28:54.300 of this is also about the fact that people are so stupid nowadays like and i mean stupid in the
00:28:59.580 sense that common sense like there was a comedian um and i think i've talked about him before but
00:29:04.860 he was from i think he was australian but he lived in england or something anyways but he talked about
00:29:09.840 the how um public safety and all this kind of stuff uh they have signs everywhere to tell you
00:29:15.200 not to you know jump in the river or not to jump in this hole and it's like when i was a kid okay
00:29:20.960 yeah they had some things for you know obviously but like here in in ontario like in toronto the
00:29:26.240 scarborough bluffs for example it's like a cliff right that kind of hangs over lake ontario obviously
00:29:33.280 it's very dangerous it gets you know eroded and the fall like rocks fall they have a fence well
00:29:38.480 back from the edge but do you know how many some how many times a summer that the fire department
00:29:44.700 has to go out and rescue most commonly indians who don't listen to the sign and go stand on the
00:29:50.340 edge and then fall down right so that's what i mean like i feel like we're in a society now where
00:29:54.680 they have to basically tell you what to avoid like like the fact that they have to put coffee hot on
00:30:00.520 the cup like no shit i hope it's hot otherwise i don't fucking want it right it's just crazy so
00:30:05.420 this is why people wouldn't survive an idiot might light a fire to clear out the zombies
00:30:10.140 and next thing you know the entire forest is up in flames your shelter your supplies everything
00:30:15.000 gone in a wall of fire because someone played hero with a lighter now picture that but with
00:30:19.640 no government response no firefighters and zombies wandering around in the tree line
00:30:24.120 if you think the forest is your friend it might just cook you alive canada has 20 of the world's
00:30:30.420 fresh water but not all provinces share it equally do you hear that little statistic that
00:30:34.800 We have 20% of the world's fresh water, and yet we are, like, when you think about it, like, why are we such a poor country when you think about it?
00:30:44.880 Like, I don't know, you know, but if it's lots of fresh water, I'm sure there's lots of fishing that could be in that water and stuff like that.
00:30:51.020 So, again, I go back to, same as with oil, why are we in such bad shape right now?
00:30:56.480 I mean, that's a rhetorical question, but.
00:30:58.720 Ontario, Manitoba, Quebec, and the Northwest Territories are all loaded with lakes and rivers.
00:31:03.700 Prince Edward Island, basically bone dry.
00:31:06.400 And good luck trying to melt snow when you're already burning every single book you have to try and stay warm.
00:31:11.520 Okay, let's get to the good stuff now.
00:31:13.140 I feel like I gave you guys a geography lesson that you didn't ask for.
00:31:15.920 Get your pens and papers ready.
00:31:17.360 He's going to tell us where we can survive the Jeet apocalypse that may be coming.
00:31:21.700 I mean, it's already here, but I mean, I have a feeling it's going to get worse.
00:31:25.500 So, let's start with the absolute worst places to live in Canada.
00:31:29.880 Number three would be Nova Scotia.
00:31:31.480 It looks peaceful, but don't let the coastline fool me.
00:31:34.200 It's like the buffalo jump.
00:31:36.080 Yeah, it should be called the jeet jump.
00:31:38.180 Literally, that's exactly what it is.
00:31:40.380 Most of the time they're lucky because the grade of it is not straight down, I think.
00:31:44.000 So a lot of times they just kind of roll down the hill and they do survive.
00:31:47.580 But how much it costs for the fire department and rescue to get out there,
00:31:51.400 because they have to rappel down to get them.
00:31:53.560 So it's a huge cost to the taxpayer.
00:31:55.600 And it's all just because they want to get a selfie.
00:31:57.820 I don't know what it is with Indians and selfies,
00:31:59.740 but i've seen so many videos like hour-long compilations of of stories of them dying during
00:32:06.060 you know doing a selfie because it's just like they have to like i guess brag will you nova
00:32:11.340 scotia's population is crammed into small cities and towns making outbreaks fast and uncontrollable
00:32:17.340 halifax alone has nearly half a million people and once panic sets in and the highways and
00:32:21.740 back roads clog you're running out of options fast and unless you already have a boat or a remote
00:32:26.380 cabin stashed somewhere nova scotia becomes your wet scenic coffin the second worst place in canada
00:32:32.220 you can try and survive the zombie apocalypse prince edward island looks like a postcard until
00:32:37.340 it turns into a trap the island's only connection to the mainland is the confederation bridge
00:32:42.060 so i mean if we could somehow put uh a blockade you know what we could do and you guys are gonna
00:32:47.660 laugh but i'm dead serious we could put like a wall of soap or something or we could have men
00:32:53.900 on the bridge manning a wall with super soakers with soap in it what do you think and then as
00:32:59.060 long as they can't get across that bridge we'd all be marked safe in prince edward island right
00:33:02.600 and they grow potatoes there come on once that's jam destroyed or overrun you're sealed in ferries
00:33:10.080 won't be running and there's no getting out without a boat good luck finding one that works
00:33:13.640 but you're assuming people don't have their own boats right on prince edward island so this is a
00:33:18.320 lot of assumptions i think that if we could do it right we could possibly be marked safe on pei so
00:33:23.620 i'm not going to take that off the list yet the island is small which means limited supplies
00:33:27.540 few places to hide and even fewer options if things go bad you'll burn through resources
00:33:31.960 fast especially fresh water which is surprisingly scarce for a place surrounded by the ocean
00:33:36.320 okay fair enough not much water can't really drink salt water so without a city resupply
00:33:42.060 you're not rebuilding a colony it's not a stronghold it's a dead end this is not a place
00:33:46.600 you want to be okay before i get into the absolute worst place you can try to survive
00:33:50.720 the zombie apocalypse in canada let's just make one thing clear and i'm sure i kind of drove this
00:33:54.480 point home already but basically populated areas are bad a zombie can infect somebody with a single
00:33:59.680 bite or scratch i love how these kind of videos can be how do you put it made relatable to what's
00:34:07.280 currently happening in our countries like any kind of invasion of insects um zombies whatever
00:34:13.680 you want to call it uh invasive species can literally be you know translated into what's
00:34:19.040 happening now transposed the number one priority is getting out of the big cities right the first
00:34:24.240 major factor in any survival plan should be getting out of densely populated areas
00:34:29.040 above all else good luck getting that being said the absolute worst place you can be in canada is
00:34:34.240 ontario the reason why ontario is so bad is because it has 16 million people and half of the 16
00:34:41.120 million in ontario now ontario is a big province geographically i mean all of you guys are probably
00:34:47.120 canadian in here so you know that already um but uh half of that 16 million and i i would beg to
00:34:54.800 say that it may be even more than that that um are in toronto like the gta the general
00:35:00.400 greater toronto area so it's a very small area area wise a very small region area wise uh compared
00:35:06.880 to the amount of people that's in there so you basically have no personal space and i know that
00:35:10.720 a lot of people like that kind of urban living and stuff like that but i feel like that's not
00:35:15.600 how we built our societies like and again we'll get into that with the whole um fourth turning
00:35:21.280 thing them are packed into the city of toronto the second the outbreak happens panic erupts
00:35:26.480 people flee in every direction highways gridlocked subways flooded with chaos the flood of desperate
00:35:32.320 people leaving the cities means small towns get overwhelmed fast supplies vanish overnight
00:35:37.920 tensions explode now you're fighting not just the dead but everyone else trying to survive
00:35:42.400 when the winter hits it'll freeze zombies but it'll also freeze you you'll be stuck in a powerless
00:35:47.120 home with no heat and no fuel unless you plan to months in advance ontario's winters are brutal
00:35:52.480 snow piles up pipes but this is exactly why now i don't disagree ontario is definitely going to be
00:35:57.520 the worst place but the whole survival and winter thing like we we do this this is our life we do
00:36:02.720 this every every year we have to survive in the winter and power goes out sometimes and so
00:36:07.600 again maybe not the urban people that are in the gta they might have a problem but everybody
00:36:11.840 outside of that i think they'd probably survive at least for a decent amount of time and you're
00:36:17.600 expecting to survive at all while dodging frozen corpses and only 15 of houses in ontario are
00:36:23.680 estimated to have guns ontario's not just the most dangerous province it's the perfect recipe for one
00:36:29.040 day collapse all right now the good news if you want to live here are the top three best spots
00:36:35.120 in canada but before that maybe consider giving this video a like a stop for its vast flat land
00:36:41.680 and tiny population and more farmland than you can shake a pitchfork at visibility is incredible
00:36:46.800 zombies can't sneak up on you and there's nothing to hide behind sure winters are brutal and you'll
00:36:51.360 get tired of eating root vegetables but saskatchewan might be the most underrated place to ride out the
00:36:55.840 end of the world oh so we got saskatchewan on our list if we have to make a utopia away from
00:37:01.280 everybody else of course you know i'm sure they do have a decent amount of indians there anyway
00:37:05.760 so we'd have to get rid of them first but saskatchewan's on the list and don't forget
00:37:09.600 they have a shitload of guns number two goes to northwest territories with vast freshwater lakes
00:37:16.320 a tiny population and towns like hay river that actually have real infrastructure plus world-class
00:37:21.360 fishing and trapping the northwest territories is a survivalist haven most locals already know
00:37:26.160 how to live off grid think hunting and fishing and fixing their snowmobile just in time for
00:37:30.320 breakfast the weather's brutal you know if this does happen like i predict it's gonna something
00:37:34.960 like this is gonna happen it's gonna raise a generation of hard as men so i guess there's
00:37:39.840 that to look forward to because it's not gonna be easy life like it was so any kids born after 2030
00:37:46.960 i think they're probably gonna grow up to be hard as fuck at least i think that because we're gonna
00:37:52.320 you're gonna have to be well but it'll stop zombies right in their tracks and don't forget
00:37:56.560 they also have a shitload of guns. All right. Now, before I name the number one spot, I'm just
00:38:00.440 going to put the map up one last time to kind of see if you guys guessed where it was. So just take
00:38:05.040 a look at the map and see if you know where the place is going to be. All right. Three, two, one.
00:38:10.620 And the number one spot goes to Nunuvut, a place that I cannot pronounce to save my life.
00:38:15.100 You probably didn't expect this, or maybe you did. Nunuvut. Nunuvut is Canada's northmost
00:38:21.700 territory one of the most remote and sparsely populated regions on earth fewer roads means
00:38:26.680 fewer infected and so again i my question would be if that's the case why don't they just drop
00:38:32.940 airdrop the jeets there if they're so great and they create such great societies and they are
00:38:37.660 i guess close to maybe not but they're you know might be loosely related to the indigenous people
00:38:44.500 the um eskimos up there uh why don't they put them there and they can build their great civilization
00:38:50.400 Cold? Zombies don't like it. The extreme conditions also mean fewer people, less travel,
00:38:55.540 and lower odds of infection reaching remote communities. But here's the twist. It's not
00:38:59.580 just about being remote. It's about where in Nunavut you go. Towns like Rankin Inlet and
00:39:04.120 Arviet aren't just icy dots on the map. They're functioning close-knit communities with power,
00:39:08.780 hunting, fishing, and real Arctic survival know-how. These aren't ghost towns. They're
00:39:13.000 self-sufficient hubs where people already know how to live off the land. Population is tiny,
00:39:17.400 the landscape is unforgiving and the roads basically non-existent no but seriously the
00:39:22.480 roads actually don't exist if you want to come over here you need to fly again that's the point
00:39:26.420 fewer people means fewer infected if you come prepared contribute to the community and don't
00:39:30.780 act like an idiot you just might earn your spot and outlive the apocalypse so i'm that's i'm going
00:39:35.780 to stop it there because there's just banter at the end of it but that is also another reason why
00:39:40.360 i think that uh we could pull this off because i don't believe that i think that might be a bridge
00:39:45.600 too far for the indians the the um the cold and having to survive in the cold and all that kind
00:39:51.260 of stuff so i think that just might be a bridge too far but i hope you wrote that down i thought
00:39:55.500 it was funny and i wanted to share it with you because i i feel like this is literally going to
00:39:59.540 happen um we're going to have to flee to areas that are less populated that are probably more
00:40:05.520 harsh um and develop there it's kind of like those movies where you know they uh i can't remember
00:40:12.520 Elysium is it called where the elite kind of build a planet or a fucking some kind of space station
00:40:18.540 because the earth becomes shit well it's in that cartoon Wally that I always talk about it's the
00:40:22.500 same concept so I feel like obviously we're not going to do it in space maybe the elites will
00:40:26.760 arrange for themselves to do it in space and that's great good luck to them but we may have
00:40:31.580 to collectivize amongst a you know sparsely populated community and build up and then build
00:40:36.820 the fences around you know okay so another fun thing and then we're going to get into the serious
00:40:43.040 shit someone made uh someone made a tech talk hold on let me share this one with you can i share
00:40:49.840 this yes i can um i guess mark carney clowny um put out a video a hype video because he spent it's
00:40:58.660 been one year i you could have fucking fooled me bitch because it doesn't seem like you've done
00:41:02.660 anything it's like carny who right other than destroying the country i honestly don't know
00:41:06.800 what he's achieved um and so somebody basically pointed out that he has actually achieved zero
00:41:11.980 um because he wants everybody to think that he has and i need people to remember and not i mean
00:41:16.780 maybe not everybody knows about this but this motherfucker was in charge of the bank of england
00:41:20.900 for a long period of time and his policies fucking they destroyed not destroyed but they really
00:41:27.860 fucked the economy there right i wouldn't be surprised if it had something contributed to
00:41:32.040 like the crash in 2008 or whatever but his forward revision policies or whatever the fuck they're
00:41:37.180 called were really bad um and now you know not that canada is a fucking superpower in the world
00:41:43.300 but people are now licking the boots of this guy when he couldn't even fucking you know do his job
00:41:48.720 there so anyway someone's pointing out all the things that he's achieved this year because the
00:41:54.320 liberals put out you know all the different things he's achieved and they've kind of
00:41:57.300 community noted it underneath zero trade deals
00:42:08.320 and the the millions leaving the investment that is also part of the reason why i believe they're
00:42:25.960 trying to pass something that will charge people, like, you know, people, I guess, well-off people
00:42:31.180 or businesses, $500,000, an exit fee. So imagine a country that is so great that they have to force
00:42:37.320 you to stay there via monetary penalty. So I thought that was kind of cute to share as well,
00:42:48.460 because hell yeah, that's exactly what's happening. And people, more and more people
00:42:54.280 are getting on board with this uh you know again the overton window shifting but it's not shifting
00:42:59.140 fast enough for me if you ask me but anyways so okay let's get rid of this um this was the fourth
00:43:05.140 turning so okay i was talking about the fourth turning so the fourth turning i'm going to give
00:43:09.340 you a summary and then i'm gonna there's a video of the guy who wrote the book it's explaining
00:43:13.580 what it is so the fourth turning is a book that was written in 90s i believe
00:43:19.720 okay it was in the 90s and it posits the theory that every 80 or so years 80 to 100 years there
00:43:31.760 is four cycles um and each one called a turning right and like there's different things that
00:43:37.660 happen so it's basically each generation so every 20 so years like so every time you know
00:43:42.040 a person goes from childhood to adulthood um there's it's called a turning and they went back
00:43:48.240 as far as like before the U.S. became America,
00:43:51.840 so back to the British wars that happened
00:43:54.040 in British North America and all that kind of stuff.
00:43:57.020 And the theory has proven true each time.
00:44:00.400 So they believe that now we are in the fourth turning
00:44:04.380 and there's different cycles,
00:44:06.440 but it's been happening historically kind of like clockwork.
00:44:10.200 So at the end of every turning called the fourth turning,
00:44:12.740 it's basically the, to summarize it in simple words,
00:44:16.460 it's like the fall of society.
00:44:17.640 and then the first turning is kind of the rebuilding of society in a much better image
00:44:22.360 i guess you could say like a total rebuild uh there was a couple times this happened so
00:44:26.640 the first turning happened the most recent one happened after world war ii so obviously world
00:44:33.140 war ii was the catalyst to the dismantling of current you know power structures and society
00:44:38.320 and all that kind of stuff and then the the first turning was after that there was like you know the
00:44:42.940 boom of people having kids and prosperity and all that kind of stuff and then it goes you know
00:44:47.000 cycles from there so this guy's going to explain it it's in eight minutes um and like i said you'll
00:44:53.000 see when we get to the fourth one you'll see these things are happening now and they predict that
00:44:57.480 like i said by the 20 by 2030 we will have finished through the fourth turning cycle and
00:45:03.320 we'll be heading into another you know regeneration this journey is going to last until about the year
00:45:09.240 2030 so we're not time the ancients called the saeculum oh wait let's not go that far ahead
00:45:13.960 story. We're not quite halfway through yet. Well, this is all part of a pattern, and it's a pattern
00:45:24.200 that's gone back centuries in Anglo-American history. I think it frankly characterizes the
00:45:28.280 history of many countries around the world today. Like nature's four seasons, the cycles of history
00:45:35.160 follow a natural rhythm or pattern. Over the last five centuries, Anglo-American society has entered
00:45:41.160 a new era a new turning every two decades or so so every two decades he's saying for five centuries
00:45:47.480 he's they went back to show this um that this this kind of theory rings true each single time
00:45:53.800 and obviously it doesn't look exactly the same but overall it is and i just i don't know i just
00:45:59.640 find it fascinating at the start of each turning people change how they feel about themselves
00:46:05.560 the culture the nation and the future turnings come in cycles of four each cycle spans the length
00:46:11.800 of a long human life roughly 80 to 100 years or the unit of time the ancients called the saeculum
00:46:19.080 the first turning is called a high this is an era when institutions are strong and individualism is
00:46:24.440 weak society is confident about where it wants to go collectively even if those outside the
00:46:29.800 majoritarian center feel stifled by the conformity america's most recent first turning was the post
00:46:36.760 world war ii american high begin so he refers to america but this applies to most western developed
00:46:43.000 countries because obviously they're american they wrote the book based on american data
00:46:47.800 but they have come out to say that this could it applies to pretty much every developed western
00:46:52.520 nation in 1946 which is white nation and ending with the assassination of john kennedy in
00:46:58.920 1963 the second turning is an awakening this is an era when institutions are attacked in the name of
00:47:05.560 personal and spiritual autonomy just when society is reaching its high tide of public progress
00:47:11.720 people suddenly tire of social discipline and want to recapture a sense of inner authenticity
00:47:18.440 so this happened most recently obviously was like the hippie movement in the 70s
00:47:22.760 and went on to like early 80s it was like the actually sorry it was the 60s on to like i think
00:47:28.200 82 is what they say so this was you know the whole free love stuff this is when i believe like
00:47:33.240 women's rights really you know got a hold on everything birth control you know what do you
00:47:40.520 call it um sex with everybody like all that kind of stuff that's when that the degeneracy all the
00:47:46.280 degeneracy that's when things started to you know get more pushed into society because people were
00:47:52.680 These kids that grew up during that time felt suppressed or whatever, felt suffocated, I guess, by the norms of society the generation before.
00:48:03.500 Young activists and spiritualists look back at the previous high as an era of cultural poverty.
00:48:10.200 America's most recent awakening was the Consciousness Revolution, which spanned from the campus and inner city revolts in the mid-1960s to the tax revolts of the early 1980s.
00:48:20.860 The third turning is an unraveling. The mood of this era is in many ways the opposite of a high. Institutions are weak and distrusted, while individualism is strong and flourishing.
00:48:30.760 so this is what we see um what we saw prior to 2008 when that's when the economy crashed which
00:48:38.180 took us into this thing but this is when all the kind of um i guess you could say they started the
00:48:44.020 immigration started being pushed that everybody's the same kind of thing started being pushed uh
00:48:49.180 you know i don't know fucking institutions like police like they were against the police at that
00:48:54.920 time like all this kind of stuff now rightfully so you should have distrust in the government
00:48:59.400 especially now but it was kind of like back then i think it was a little bit more unfounded it was
00:49:05.240 more just to be contrarian highs follow crises which teach the lesson that society must coalesce
00:49:12.000 and build unraveling sorry i can't see exactly oh yeah h3 yeah we are we're at the weak times
00:49:18.540 and that's why i said in according to this theory in the first turning those children that grow up
00:49:24.160 during that time are going to be hard as fuck because they're going to unfortunately have no
00:49:27.460 choice. They're going to be like the people that lived through the Great Depression.
00:49:30.640 ... which teach the lesson that society must atomize and enjoy. America's most recent unraveling
00:49:37.360 was the long boom in culture wars beginning in the early 1980s and probably ending in 2008.
00:49:44.100 The era opened with triumphant mourning in America individualism and drifted toward a
00:49:49.440 pervasive distrust of institutions and leaders, an edgy popular culture, and the splitting of
00:49:55.000 national consensus into competing values camps, red and blue. And finally, we enter the fourth
00:50:01.620 turning, which is a crisis. This is an era in which America's institutional life is torn down
00:50:07.420 and rebuilt from the ground up. So this is where we are now, but we're not fully through it. Like
00:50:11.460 I said, they, he's going to break it down further, but they believe that we'll be finished it by 2030.
00:50:17.280 So there's a couple of different elements of each, you know, turning, but we're in the crisis
00:50:22.540 turning right now since 2008, which was the catalyst, the economic crash rather, was the
00:50:28.700 catalyst to launch us into the crisis stage. Always in response to a perceived threat to the
00:50:34.660 nation's very survival. Sorry, see, and that was the one issue I had with the video and the theory
00:50:39.840 is that it's, they say the perceived threat. It's not perceived. And I mean, maybe when they wrote
00:50:45.220 this book, they considered it to be a perceived threat, but the threat is very real. And because
00:50:51.320 of the fact that we've been kind of indoctrinated and propagandized into thinking that it is not
00:50:57.800 real it's uh you know something that we're catastrophizing or we're making up um is why
00:51:03.960 we're in the position we're in now so it's not you know like i said it's very real civic authority
00:51:09.480 revives cultural expression finds a community purpose and people begin to locate themselves
00:51:14.920 as members of a larger group in every instance fourth turning so i think that could be
00:51:20.200 the example of the nationalist movement now right like well i mean other the left does it too right
00:51:26.020 they've had they have their own kind of movements like the antifa and all that kind of other stuff
00:51:30.240 and i think we're getting towards the end of it which is the last part of it where you know the
00:51:36.040 actual the white man actually stands up and collectivizes again and you know that's where
00:51:40.800 i think we're heading and i'm hoping that it gets you know what i mean like it ends the way
00:51:46.020 they anticipate it's going to end where it's like there's a revolution and things get totally
00:51:50.040 changed have eventually become new founding moments in america's history refreshing and
00:51:56.220 redefining the national identity currently this period began in 2008 with a global financial
00:52:02.600 crisis and the deepening of the war on terror and will extend to around 2030 so what does all this
00:52:09.860 say about our future well in our paradigm america has entered the fourth turning what can we say
00:52:16.500 about fourth turnings uh each turning lasts around 22 years so this turning is going to last until
00:52:21.480 about the year 2030 so we're not quite half the way halfway through yet now when he made this
00:52:27.820 video it was five years ago so that was in 2021 or whatever so yeah we were not even halfway through
00:52:33.740 but now we're well then we're more than halfway through we're almost hitting the end this is the
00:52:38.140 winter of history it's a time of creative destruction of public institutions we're
00:52:42.600 going to radically change ultimately when we got out the other end of this you're right atria you're
00:52:46.620 right and that's the that's the difference but i feel like um we need to somehow like the
00:52:53.100 the men of society whether it's through i mean i think it's a combination of many things
00:52:58.460 but they're very estrogen filled and emotional nowadays too whether that's because well i think
00:53:04.760 it has to do with the food the goyslop that everybody's eating it's got all kinds of soy
00:53:08.540 lectin and all this kind of shit and the increase in soy has shown that it increases or lowers
00:53:13.240 testosterone and increases estrogen as well as you know ha ha ha alex jones saying you know the
00:53:18.420 frogs are turning gay but he does have a point as far as the excretion of birth control through
00:53:23.660 urine from women and the water systems not being able to filter that so i think that that and also
00:53:29.740 the coddling generation again i'm a mom of two boys i understand you know raising them we kind
00:53:35.660 of protect all of our kids with like in a bubble now schools do it like where everything has to be
00:53:40.700 fair and you're not allowed to tease and you're not allowed to do all this kind of stuff workplaces
00:53:44.140 do it so all the men i well not all the men but a good majority of the men um are weak so it's
00:53:50.400 almost like even if things did change in the nationalist favor it would take a lot of work
00:53:55.340 to get those men back to like they need a huge injection of testosterone for sure thing uh our
00:54:02.860 our our politics our economics uh our sense of what we need in terms of public that's why i got
00:54:08.740 so upset with my friend that was over on the weekend because it was just like how can you
00:54:12.940 not understand that they're behind all of this stuff and i know people say that's crazy how
00:54:16.480 can one group of people be behind it because they hold the power they have the money they created
00:54:20.200 the what is it the imf the international monetary fund whatever so they have the money and they
00:54:25.240 have the control and that's how look infrastructure around our lives and very much of that is going to
00:54:29.980 be shaped by the by the the values and aspirations of the rising millennial generation what do we
00:54:35.520 know of the morphology morphology these of these turnings well it starts with the catalyst and of
00:54:40.960 course the catalyst was like 1929 it was 2008 a sudden shock to our system so i think we've had
00:54:47.600 two catalysts i just want to say within that period obviously the crash in 2008 but obviously
00:54:53.220 The other thing was the fake pandemic.
00:54:54.880 I think that was maybe if they didn't set up that whole fake pandemic bullshit, we wouldn't have gone through a second catalyst.
00:55:02.440 But I think we've gone through this is like we just got through a second one, which is why I think it's going to be even more eye opening at the end.
00:55:10.220 There's going to be more anger.
00:55:11.840 There's going to be more, you know.
00:55:14.140 I don't know, more revolutionary type behavior because it's just too much.
00:55:18.340 Like, I think that was like the straw that broke the camel's back for most people.
00:55:22.080 And if they try to attempt it again, then it's over.
00:55:24.720 Okay, we're in a new place now.
00:55:26.520 We're not in Kansas anymore.
00:55:28.200 We have a whole new sense of where we need to go as a nation.
00:55:31.400 We're suddenly shocked out of our third-turning individualism,
00:55:35.220 celebrity circuses, and whatever we thought about back then.
00:55:38.180 Things are going to be different now.
00:55:39.600 Families are suddenly aware that they're not going to do as well as their parents,
00:55:44.480 that we suddenly see that our role in the world maybe is not what we expected.
00:55:49.220 And what happens when people feel like they have nothing left to lose, especially young men, right, that are, you know, at military age or fighting age, I guess you could say. Now, they're kind of getting away with, they're getting off a little bit easier, I think, this time around, because the last time there was a fourth tournament, which was prior to, you know, World War II being over, you know, during that period, the men weren't soy filled and they weren't, you know, like cucks, right?
00:56:16.040 So we've got a bigger challenge, I think, on our hands now, because I think a lot of men, when it comes down to it, they're just going to die.
00:56:23.480 Like, they're not going to be able to, you know, and obviously a lot of women, too.
00:56:28.440 But they're just not going to be able to measure up to that.
00:56:32.760 And honestly, they're not going to be able to even measure up to some of these violent migrants they're bringing in, especially in some of the European countries.
00:56:38.680 So I don't know that it's going to go the same, but we'll see.
00:56:43.440 That's the first thing.
00:56:44.580 And that's already happened.
00:56:46.040 the other three phases of the fourth turning haven't happened yet i agree one which will
00:56:51.500 soon happen is what we call the regeneracy this is when when distrust reaches its low point and
00:56:57.680 we suddenly begin to coalesce around something so i don't think we've gotten there yet but i think
00:57:02.940 we're starting so like i said he he predicts 2030 that this is going to be over the regeneracy
00:57:09.980 right now i think this is what is we're pushing for the the collectivization of people i don't
00:57:15.700 know how soon that's going to happen, but I mean, the more the government and the institutions keep
00:57:19.940 pushing, the faster it's going to happen, I think. But I don't know that we're fully there yet, but
00:57:26.240 hopefully soon. Leaders, some movement we began to feel positive about as a fulcrum, as some point
00:57:33.440 at which we can begin to find increasing trust in someone who can piece together institutions
00:57:41.500 that can make sense again additional shocks to our system either in terms of economic financial
00:57:46.700 or geopolitical shocks are on the table well and this shock obviously we're hitting like i said
00:57:53.580 covid was you know the was one huge shock to the system because we'd never been locked up like that
00:57:59.100 before over a cold virus and i know people say oh yeah they did that back in the 1800s during the
00:58:04.140 spanish flu wasn't the same and obviously this wasn't deadly like the spanish flu i don't care
00:58:10.620 hear what you say it was not no more deadly than a bad flu season so you can cancel me if you want
00:58:15.660 but that's well that's my opinion and i'm sticking to it that's my story and i'm sticking to it as
00:58:20.520 the country song goes so i think we had that and then now we're having we're going to have this
00:58:25.600 whole economic i believe it's going to fail in canada his carney's forward revision policies
00:58:31.020 didn't work in the uk and they're i don't think they're going to work here either the 2008 thing
00:58:36.440 They just, Canada kind of got away unscathed more so than the U.S.
00:58:40.500 because they kicked the can down the road, right?
00:58:42.960 Obviously, someone's going to have to pay the piper sooner or later.
00:58:45.540 So you can't keep kicking the can down the road.
00:58:47.580 So we're going to have some economic hard times,
00:58:49.800 which I think is also going to be another crisis.
00:58:52.200 And that's where you're going to have the, you know, generation coming out,
00:58:55.940 much like the baby boomers that were kind of, you know,
00:58:59.120 they didn't have any luxuries, right?
00:59:01.140 They had to work hard for it.
00:59:02.520 And that's what's going to be the, maybe Gen Z,
00:59:04.620 but I think it's going to be the generation after that.
00:59:06.440 This is what happens in a fourth turning, because at this moment of great vulnerability, we're going to hit further points at which we realize we are.
00:59:16.880 You know what, I do agree with that, like as somebody who, you know, believe in God and stuff like that.
00:59:21.580 Obviously, I'm not, you know, a staunch, whatever Christian, but I do believe in that.
00:59:25.560 But I do think that no matter what, I think everybody needs to get into the mentality that it's, you know, the ethnic group before the religion.
00:59:33.560 because unfortunately for Christianity,
00:59:37.020 it's, you know, the goal, I guess, of Christianity,
00:59:41.000 which I guess you could say it's the same as Islam as well,
00:59:43.320 but the goal is to, you know,
00:59:45.240 anybody can be a Christian, right?
00:59:46.520 They want to convert the world to Christianity,
00:59:48.420 which means that, you know,
00:59:50.060 they'll bring in any kind of person that's incompatible.
00:59:53.580 That's just because they're Christian, right?
00:59:55.400 So that is the biggest problem with Christianity in the West.
00:59:59.380 But I think that regardless, everybody, you know,
01:00:02.200 whatever you you want to be christian that's fine but it should never come before your people it's
01:00:07.160 like you know back in the day where and dr ricardo we'll talk about it in a second i i dr ricardo
01:00:12.520 duchenne wrote a really good article explaining how things shifted for the white people like how
01:00:17.240 we stopped you know doing that in-group preference thing and we kind of started opening our hearts to
01:00:21.640 the world but yeah i agree like they're so worried it's not even just waiting for christ honestly
01:00:26.840 it's people are just waiting for someone to save them right and we've gotten into the society where
01:00:31.000 now it's if it's not God because people have shifted from God I guess to government institutions
01:00:36.440 so now it's like they're waiting for the government to tell them what to do like they don't know what
01:00:40.740 to do for themselves and when you're in that state the government can tell you pretty much
01:00:44.620 anything and you're going to do it because you you don't know how to make decisions for yourself
01:00:47.740 and that's part of how the government likes to keep more and more get more and more control over
01:00:51.740 the people right by demoralizing you to the point where you think that you can't even make your own
01:00:56.020 decisions you don't know what's right because of course the government knows better than you
01:00:59.140 you're not a fancy lawyer that you know graduated from Yale or whatever and you know went straight
01:01:04.260 into politics you're just some you know blue-collar worker that doesn't know his hand from his ass
01:01:08.440 that's what they treat us like so I think that everybody to a certain degree is waiting for
01:01:14.240 someone to come save them that's why you have all those people that are like the 51st staters that
01:01:17.660 are like oh daddy Trump come and save us because they they couldn't do it on their own and prepared
01:01:23.220 for the future a lot of the assumptions we're making actually aren't going to pan out we need
01:01:27.280 to retool our institutions in a much more
01:01:29.300 fundamental way than we've seen us far.
01:01:31.160 That's exactly what happened.
01:01:32.560 And people pervert the Bible
01:01:35.420 just like they pervert the Koran.
01:01:37.300 People interpret it the way they want.
01:01:39.300 But I honestly just think it's society now
01:01:41.360 is just so lazy.
01:01:43.420 And I think that's why we're seeing a rise
01:01:45.180 of socialism and communism,
01:01:47.340 people that believe in that kind of stuff, because
01:01:48.840 none of these people,
01:01:50.860 number one, have studied actual communism.
01:01:53.320 They never lived during communism
01:01:55.460 or in an actual communist country
01:01:57.180 because even china is not a fully communist country uh so they don't really know what living
01:02:02.080 under communism is like they don't like to you know research how many people actually died under
01:02:06.340 mao um or any of that kind of stuff so you know they just i think that they it's because it's the
01:02:11.820 path of least resistance they figure you know big bad fucking whatever who is it that owns amazon
01:02:16.720 fucking jeff bezos whatever they think you know he's some kind of villain whatever because he's
01:02:22.260 so rich whatever maybe he is right but they feel like that's not fair because they're not rich but
01:02:28.380 they don't understand the concept of a lot of these people that are rich now they didn't just
01:02:32.940 get handed that money they had to work for it yes now maybe they're exploiting the system and stuff
01:02:37.780 like that to get even richer but these people that believe in communism and socialism they feel like
01:02:42.900 they should get the same benefits as you but without doing the work and that's where I have
01:02:47.080 a problem with it and I now there's a difference between socialism and national socialism and a lot
01:02:52.160 of people don't understand that as well in the 1930s where we kind of ratcheted down our
01:02:56.640 expectations and retooled things in a bigger and bigger way than FDR ever thought going in in 1932
01:03:02.360 that he would ever have to do that's where we're going to go and that's going to lead to what we
01:03:06.720 call the crisis that's the that's the third point and what he's saying is that we're going to have
01:03:11.480 that failing economy like they had the the depression right the great depression where
01:03:16.820 job tons of job loss and stuff we're starting to see that now um AI is going to you know probably
01:03:21.900 take a lot of jobs especially low you know level jobs um and probably a lot of manager jobs i
01:03:27.740 wouldn't be surprised so we're going to enter that period of crisis where everybody is fucking you
01:03:33.320 know is poor and uh they're you know homeless and all this kind of stuff and you can bet at that
01:03:39.420 point that all the invaders they brought in here to artificially inflate the gdp will go home if
01:03:45.700 they're not getting any kind of social safety net although i know they're trying to introduce ubi
01:03:49.460 but they're not going to stay here because they're just here for economic reasons right
01:03:53.380 so we're entering this crisis stage that he's referring to and in a fourth turning when suddenly
01:04:00.180 things get worse and worse but we're we're beginning to match it with greater and greater
01:04:05.040 civic effort we're rebuilding our civic life to match this greater oh that's a good point h3 and
01:04:10.440 that's probably the the difference right and that's why people say well you know i always get
01:04:14.300 say well if you hate socialism why do you like national socialism but they don't understand that
01:04:17.900 it's different and that system was you know built specifically it was based on corporatism
01:04:23.580 to a certain degree that was developed by stalin or not stalin who was it it might not have been
01:04:28.920 stalin it was a guy before him i can't remember but you know it was based kind of on that and it
01:04:33.620 was kind of catered to the german society or european society right which would be white
01:04:38.600 society um it would look different obviously now you know national socialism but it's not the same
01:04:45.020 I think socialism preaches that we have to give charity to the world, whereas true, like national socialism, is you give charity to your own people, right?
01:04:53.740 You're in greater sense of crisis.
01:04:55.780 Then we reach the crisis and pass it, and then that leaves the final act in a fourth turning, and that's what we call the resolution.
01:05:03.440 That's when the treaties are signed, the negotiations are made, all of the civic cement, which was wet during the fourth turning, suddenly dries.
01:05:13.260 so this is where they the new thing happens whether it's government gets overturned overthrown
01:05:18.920 i don't think it's going to be enough obviously to and a lot of i'm sure a lot of you guys
01:05:24.600 feel the same way it's not going to be enough to just change the government because especially in
01:05:28.820 canada the u.s australia it's really i mean maybe australia has more than two parties but really in
01:05:35.080 canada and the u.s it's a two-party system it's really ends up being a uniparty so changing it
01:05:40.280 doesn't really make any difference we saw you know aaron fucking o'toole aaron o fool who you
01:05:45.560 know failed uh spectacularly as the conservative leader before pp came along and now he's working
01:05:52.900 with the liberals so somebody who had true conservative values and was a true conservative
01:05:57.420 would not cross you know the floor it's the same as the floor crushers would not cross the floor
01:06:02.100 and sell themselves out to join the opposing you know party that opposes supposedly opposes all
01:06:08.920 their views so that's how you know it's just a single unit party so enough it's not enough to
01:06:13.340 vote those out the whole structure needs to be redone and not that i have a problem with a
01:06:17.860 constitutional monarchy or anything like that but i think that you know possibly maybe it now needs
01:06:22.460 to go back to how it was before where there was like a queen a king whatever um and people below
01:06:28.680 that but it doesn't work the way it is and so it's not enough just to change the parties because
01:06:32.940 they're one in the same it also is the politicians like i've made this point before that they're
01:06:38.500 I'm talking a lot today. Sorry. They're born and bred to be career politicians. This has changed
01:06:45.660 significantly since the early 20th century, where people were working men, usually. Now you have
01:06:52.200 politicians who are literally, it's the pipeline from law school to politics. So they don't have
01:06:57.500 any kind of real life experience as a working man, as having to, you know, worry about paying
01:07:03.280 a mortgage or all this kind of stuff, you know, getting their hands dirty. They don't have any
01:07:07.040 that experience. So they're very selfish. They're very narcissistic, all this kind of stuff. And
01:07:11.400 that doesn't work for leading a population. Eventually it's fails, right? Because it's
01:07:15.600 indulgence. And then we suddenly have a post-crisis order, which hopefully would endure
01:07:21.680 a beneficial and working post-crisis order that we hopefully will endure for the next
01:07:27.740 two or three turnings after that. The final point I want to make is this,
01:07:31.780 is that people talk about fourth turnings
01:07:35.100 and I've been quoted in the media this way
01:07:37.140 that they're just bad, they're apocalyptic,
01:07:39.380 they're horrible for all of us.
01:07:40.920 I just want to make the point that
01:07:42.300 fourth turnings are actually necessary,
01:07:45.560 just like winter is necessary.
01:07:47.140 Winter kills everything off so that new things can grow.
01:07:50.260 Which he brings up a good point
01:07:51.720 and I think a lot of us understand that,
01:07:53.640 that it cannot survive the way it currently is.
01:07:56.560 The current system cannot survive.
01:07:57.580 It has to end and be rebuilt.
01:07:59.580 so in that regard you know yeah you're right it it is going to be a good thing but a lot of people
01:08:05.220 are going to suffer a lot of pain in the meantime you got to decide whether it's going to be worth
01:08:09.280 it to save your you know your people and your your nation and just as forests need fires rivers
01:08:18.680 need floods uh so does society need events which clean out the debris uh which clean out everything
01:08:26.680 the sclerotic and ossified that no longer functions something so maybe this is what
01:08:31.720 this is doing right like maybe they're obviously the elite don't maybe they don't know this
01:08:37.080 but subconsciously by invading our countries with all these incompatible people
01:08:41.360 they're secretly like what they're doing is they're turning the actual you know canadians
01:08:46.660 or the native population and motivating them to you know rise up and fight because like what have
01:08:52.940 we done since we've been living in a world of indulgence since the end of world war ii right
01:08:57.100 think about it so this is where things need to get bad like they say before you know things get
01:09:03.000 better they have to get worse before they get better so this is probably the the catalyst of
01:09:07.380 it like this is what's gonna you know make people finally say enough is enough or you know being
01:09:11.780 homeless or jobless when ai takes your job and you're just you know have no purpose in life
01:09:16.660 anymore maybe that's going to be enough which tilts the whole playing field of power and wealth
01:09:22.620 from the old back to the young.
01:09:25.240 This is what fourth turnings do.
01:09:26.960 They renew us.
01:09:28.440 Fourth turnings are the price we must pay
01:09:30.380 for a new golden age.
01:09:32.760 History has shown this time after time,
01:09:35.180 and we're about to see it again
01:09:36.680 in what I expect to be a really interesting
01:09:39.280 and fascinating period in our history
01:09:41.240 with which we can truly be all engaged.
01:09:44.600 I just hope that's pretty much the end of that,
01:09:46.060 but I just hope what happens is,
01:09:47.720 like when this does happen,
01:09:49.140 that we, you know, the history books
01:09:51.180 tell an accurate depiction so it doesn't happen again although I know historically it has happened
01:09:56.420 every you know fourth uh whatever every four turnings or every you know generation the last
01:10:02.480 part of the generation ends up like this but I just thought this was crazy because I went down
01:10:07.100 a rabbit hole about this yesterday because I went down a rabbit hole about this yesterday because
01:10:15.660 i just found it like so crazy that it it happened since like the early you know whatever 1500s or
01:10:21.840 whatever they went back as far as or 1600s that's been the same thing and it's almost like like i
01:10:27.140 said when people write a book or they um well it's pretty much books right because that's all that
01:10:32.740 the media that was out back then but when they write books like 1984 like the next thing we're
01:10:36.840 going to talk about camp of the saints how like do they really have a vision like the author of
01:10:41.900 camp of the saints is a french um oh all right already no no no no his name is gene raspail
01:10:49.620 and he is who was a french traveler or explorer right and he wrote this book in the 70s and he
01:10:54.900 said he came to him as a vision um that you know he was looking on the coast of france or whatever
01:11:00.960 he was staying and he was staying on the coast i guess and just had this vision of a bunch of you
01:11:06.220 know migrants coming on boats and just invading the country and this was in the 70s and it wasn't
01:11:11.060 really that um obvious back then i guess you could say so i always find it fascinating when
01:11:18.900 one of these authors are able to kind of predict it and now i'm thinking that maybe they're just
01:11:23.760 really observant like they're just you know like you said it is the jews and honestly if you go
01:11:28.760 back to probably you know since before since they wrote the bible or whatever it's probably always
01:11:35.380 been their hands in it but more so now especially and that's why i get frustrated with people who
01:11:41.040 who say oh no they're just you know they have nothing to do with it you're crazy to think a
01:11:44.340 small group of people money buys a lot of power right and especially in today's economy so i i
01:11:49.900 don't uh get how people could not see that yeah yeah i mean and this is what so i'm gonna what
01:11:58.180 i'm gonna do like i said i explained the book camp of the saints for the most part but i'm gonna play
01:12:03.300 this interview with and this is fuck it's pretty it says it's two years old that it was uploaded
01:12:08.080 but i think the interview is a lot older than that um the author had with uh of course left-wing
01:12:14.960 you know uh journalist or whatever you want to call it and is you know talking about how his
01:12:20.320 book is considered so you know racist and the reason why i wanted to talk about this today is
01:12:23.720 because like i said it's now been banned in canada and it is fiction okay it's being so it's being
01:12:30.300 purported as fiction but i think that they're banning it because it kind of represents reality
01:12:36.000 a little too closely for people's liking so they wouldn't want people to see that and think that
01:12:40.640 holy shit this could happen because it is it is what's happening they in the book it's happening
01:12:46.200 over a very short period of time i think like a weekend or something or like a it's a very short
01:12:51.120 period of time so it's obviously more you know shocking and and uh like it's a slap in the face
01:12:58.240 right it's just more obvious that when it happens that way but you could argue that you know it's
01:13:04.440 happening pretty quick quick in our countries too to the point where in a couple years we've all
01:13:08.120 noticed a total difference in the demographic makeup of our neighborhoods of our workplaces
01:13:13.360 and stuff like that and it's all the same people it's all they're all indians so that's what this
01:13:18.520 book was about it was about um you know migrant indian migrants you know basically desperate to
01:13:25.540 get out of india and going floating to european shores and you know the bleeding hearts of the
01:13:33.000 european you know obviously pushed that oh we can't turn them back we can't you know all this
01:13:38.340 stuff and the book like i said talks about uh i guess the protagonist is uh is like this professor
01:13:44.880 who has you know seen all these things and he has a negative view of it obviously so anyways i
01:13:51.460 suggest you read it or audiobook it i have it on audiobook this time i'm listening to an audiobook
01:13:55.220 i read it when i was younger um but i wanted to this interview was interesting it's 12 minutes
01:14:00.280 but like it's in French the subtitles are there so you have to be watching unfortunately um if you
01:14:06.160 want to see what he's saying but I can kind of summarize it after the fact but he's just talking
01:14:10.040 about the book because like I said what they try to do it's a baiting interview right they do this
01:14:13.740 to a lot of people that are on the right they have an interview with somebody who you know maybe has
01:14:19.600 a controversial opinion um and they try to get them to say something that they can be like oh
01:14:27.020 you know and they can go viral for especially nowadays they want someone to say something that
01:14:31.340 they can go viral for and point out and kind of just destroy them you know um because what they
01:14:36.320 said was according to them racist or whatever so he holds his ground i think very well um and keeps
01:14:43.160 reminding them and this is the other thing that lefties have a problem with kind of dividing the
01:14:47.560 fiction from reality although like i said in this case it's kind of becoming reality but they get
01:14:53.700 pissed right because they're like how dare you write a dystopian which it was marketed as back
01:14:58.920 then a dystopian novel about uh you know something that could possibly happen the reason why is
01:15:05.180 because they know it is currently happening and they think it's going to radicalize people
01:15:08.640 to the final you know the final act of this fucking bullshit that they're pulling
01:15:14.080 wait let me let me share it sorry my dog is barking his fucking ass off like always
01:15:21.580 he's cute but oh my god what a pain in the ass okay
01:15:27.900 so like i said jean raspell on camp of the saints this is a pretty old i don't know what year but
01:15:34.480 i guessing by the camera it's probably 90s maybe um talking about his book it's all in french the
01:15:41.660 subtitles are there i will try to summarize for people that are not actually watching and are just
01:15:46.540 listening. So what he said here basically is Camp of the Saints is a dystopian, you know,
01:15:58.300 what did he say? Hold on, let's go back here. It's a parable. So he said the Camp of the
01:16:03.920 Saints ends badly or well, what is this? So he says Camp of the Saints is a parable.
01:16:13.700 It has been written in 1972, published in 1973.
01:16:23.000 It's about a million people from the Third World, weak, unarmed women, children and poor.
01:16:27.540 They come to look for paradise, but they are one million.
01:16:30.060 So it's a huge amount.
01:16:37.140 They arrive, they run aground on the Riviera,
01:16:39.420 And behind them, there are other fleets with other millions of people ready to rush, depending on France and Europe's answer.
01:16:45.280 So the book basically kind of shows the outcome of making a decision to accept them and being empathetic to their plight.
01:17:09.420 Oh, so see, everything happened in 24 hours in that book.
01:17:16.120 So, yeah, you know, and in the book, people flee from the south of France to the north to get away because they're afraid.
01:17:23.000 Like that video we watched earlier about the zombie apocalypse happening in Canada, that's what these people felt like it was like, because it was just so many of them at one time.
01:17:31.540 And they were, the way they described them in the book is like deformed and inbred and like really nasty to look at and like smelling like shit.
01:17:38.940 like they literally say that in the book they call one of the indian gods the coprophiliac
01:17:45.820 or whatever um so yeah they they really paint i mean and it's deserved as far as i'm concerned
01:17:52.220 but they paint a scary kind of gross image of them so the people in the south of france were
01:17:58.060 scared and they fled with their families so there was like a mass exodus
01:18:08.940 They inspire pity, he's saying, because, like I said, they are disabled and have all these facial deformities.
01:18:20.380 So what he's saying is the problem posed by the book is that, but there's one million.
01:18:25.040 If we let them in, the one million, and there's millions behind them ready to come, what do we do?
01:18:29.720 That's the problem set up by Camp of the Saints.
01:18:32.000 So that's basically the decision that they're struggling with, is if we let in the first million,
01:18:37.080 And then, you know, you're opening the floodgates, basically.
01:18:40.400 And that's what, I guess, the point of the story is.
01:18:46.420 So this is 40 years later, so 2003, or no, 2013, it would be.
01:18:55.580 Wow, earlier than I thought.
01:18:57.020 I thought this video was old.
01:18:59.360 He's the reporter, the journalist, is saying,
01:19:01.880 would you set the problem in the same way 40 years later?
01:19:05.020 So, again, it's a baiting question trying to say that, you know, you wrote this book because you're racist, based on today's kind of ideology.
01:19:16.260 And what the writer is saying is, no, The Camp of Saints is a novel, which is fiction.
01:19:22.460 He says, it's not a book with a message. I don't have any system or solution.
01:19:33.780 I'm just a writer who imagines the story.
01:19:38.060 And I think that you probably imagine the story based on past.
01:19:42.520 Like I said, I think there's people out there that are just high-level noticers.
01:19:45.900 Like I know we joke around like level six million noticer and kind of shit.
01:19:50.980 But I do think that there are people that are just able to perceive patterns and see these things.
01:19:55.760 And I believe this guy is probably one of them.
01:19:58.660 Yes, he says it's a novel that he made up in his head.
01:20:00.820 but it probably came from, a lot of our ideas come from some sort of,
01:20:04.680 they're rooted in something, right?
01:20:05.980 They're rooted in some sort of reality.
01:20:08.180 J'ai imaginé cette situation.
01:20:10.200 Bon, cette situation, si vous voulez, est un peu celle qui est la nôtre maintenant,
01:20:17.780 sinon que l'arrivée de ces millions...
01:20:22.240 So he's saying that the circumstances in France or Europe are the same as in the book,
01:20:26.720 except that the arrival of the millions of migrants looking for paradise,
01:20:30.200 it didn't happen in 24 hours.
01:20:31.780 It's over a much longer period,
01:20:33.380 which, of course, it's like the slow burn
01:20:35.200 or the slow boil, right?
01:20:36.300 The frogs in the pot.
01:20:47.240 And he says the camp of the saints ends badly
01:20:51.700 or depending on each one's opinion,
01:20:53.800 it could end well, right?
01:20:54.840 It's a 400-page book.
01:20:56.160 It's an important problem.
01:20:57.920 And he's saying, can you imagine
01:20:59.140 all the questions that arise to our conscience, right?
01:21:01.560 So, again, he's writing the book to get people to question,
01:21:04.920 you know, to activate their conscience.
01:21:07.580 Le Candestat finit mal.
01:21:11.200 Hi, Bianca, how are you doing?
01:21:12.160 Mal ou bien, selon les opinions.
01:21:16.240 C'est-à-dire que c'est un livre de 400 pages.
01:21:19.720 C'est quand même un problème important,
01:21:21.380 parce qu'imaginez toutes les questions
01:21:23.580 qui peuvent se poser à nos consciences,
01:21:26.980 So he poses the question again to the reporter.
01:21:33.100 So socially speaking, nationally speaking, even on a private level, what do we do?
01:21:37.660 If we let this mass in, what will the country become?
01:21:40.540 If we don't let them in, where is the Christian charity?
01:21:42.980 So going back to, in the chat, H3 is talking about Christianity, you know, being a problem.
01:21:47.420 Yeah, that is a huge problem because of this reason, the charity, the Christian charity.
01:21:51.760 And he says, you know, where is the pity?
01:21:53.240 Sur le plan intérieur de chacun, qu'est-ce qu'on fait ?
01:21:57.960 Si on laisse entrer une masse pareille, que devient le pays ?
01:22:02.260 Si on ne laisse pas entrer, où est la charité chrétienne ?
01:22:06.660 Où est, comment dirais-je, la pitié, des tas de choses de ce genre ?
01:22:14.120 Justement, Jean Raspail.
01:22:15.180 So the reporter shoots back and says,
01:22:17.420 How do you explain that the hero, a writer who could be you, a Christian, proud of his
01:22:24.060 history, proud of his country's history?
01:22:26.120 Comment expliquez-vous que votre héros, qui est un écrivain, qui pourrait vous ressembler,
01:22:30.300 qui est chrétien, qui est fier de son histoire, de l'histoire de son pays, lui, il est là
01:22:36.980 avec un fusil, il sait qu'il va devoir se défendre, alors qu'il est chrétien, justement.
01:22:43.060 Yeah, I guess it could be.
01:22:44.340 so the protagonist in the book like i said is a professor he's a writer whatever um and you know
01:22:50.180 he he arms himself he has a gun and he protects himself you know he protects his home and stuff
01:22:55.420 like that with you know or he plans to protect himself uh with that gun so this guy's trying
01:23:01.440 to draw parallels in saying that you know this is what this writer who's a senior citizen clearly
01:23:06.780 now is you know wanting to do right and my point is even regardless if that's how he felt
01:23:13.500 So fucking what?
01:23:15.460 You know what I mean?
01:23:15.820 Like, again, we're at a point now,
01:23:18.020 which is why we're fucking,
01:23:19.500 it's a disaster everywhere,
01:23:20.940 that we're not even allowed
01:23:21.880 to have our own opinions about stuff.
01:23:24.460 You know what I mean?
01:23:24.840 Like, an opinion doesn't necessarily mean an action,
01:23:27.700 and that's where they conflate things.
01:23:29.160 So now you're being punished for your opinion,
01:23:30.900 even though it very rarely translates
01:23:33.340 into, you know, any kind of violent action.
01:23:36.060 No, the hero is not a writer,
01:23:38.540 it's a old man.
01:23:39.340 It's a old man.
01:23:40.900 So he corrects me.
01:23:41.780 He says the hero is not a writer.
01:23:42.680 He's an old man, a retired preacher in an old village above the place where the fleet ran aground with a big spide glass.
01:23:49.680 He says to himself, we are wretched. He doesn't shoot, but he is deeply...
01:23:56.680 He's deeply affected. He knows that it's the end.
01:24:03.680 And then he goes on to say, it's an ancient book, dangerous too. I wrote it 40 years ago.
01:24:07.680 He says, I couldn't write it today. I wouldn't have the same energy or the extraordinary anger I had before.
01:24:26.680 I think the translation is fucked up.
01:24:28.680 extraordinary anger i had before i repudiate nothing from what i wrote if not i wouldn't
01:24:33.740 republish it so it was republished um and now it's banned in canada but he so he had it you
01:24:39.320 know republished and so he's saying like he's standing his ground he's saying i still believe
01:24:42.900 in what i wrote in that book i'm not repeating repudiating anything in it which is the way you
01:24:48.360 do it like i said you don't negotiate with terrorists and these lefties are terrorists
01:24:51.740 and they try to get you to you know basically they try to trip you up they try to bait you
01:24:56.420 into saying something that they can, you know, socially destroy you with.
01:25:00.140 So you just got to stand your ground like he did.
01:25:02.320 We don't have anything about this pariotal.
01:25:04.440 The proof is that we're going to read it now.
01:25:06.040 You even say in your preface, by the way, that it would be impubliable today.
01:25:10.300 There would be laws that would prevent it.
01:25:12.200 I agree with that.
01:25:13.760 In 1973, the freedom of expression on this particular theme,
01:25:19.040 you know, the theme of immigration, of the destruction,
01:25:24.800 So he's saying that, because it was 1973 when he wrote the book, the opinion of people
01:25:30.760 coming in from elsewhere was different, obviously.
01:25:33.800 And now it's a voluble and dangerous theme, and he talks about how somebody was on trial
01:25:38.940 lately, I guess.
01:25:40.220 Les gens venus d'ailleurs, etc., est un thème extrêmement volubile, dangereux.
01:25:48.260 Regardez, par exemple, le prophète Noprocé qu'on a fait à Éric Zemmour récemment,
01:25:53.740 He said, I won't express any opinion about that, except he shouldn't have been sued.
01:25:58.340 So it's a very dangerous theme.
01:26:00.140 My guess is he was sued for writing or saying something that was anti-migrant.
01:26:05.300 I don't know that particular case.
01:26:07.120 But, you know, this author is saying, yeah, it's very dangerous.
01:26:09.940 Again, going back to when does an opinion become illegal?
01:26:13.660 Like, it's crazy.
01:26:15.760 Dangereux.
01:26:16.240 So what he's saying is now he can't go to jail because when he wrote the book, there was no laws against writing stuff like that.
01:26:34.120 I'm assuming now in France, this Gaissot, Lelouch, and Pervin are something to do with not talking about the invasion, I guess.
01:26:43.880 I'd have to look that up.
01:26:45.200 so he was saying if you write something after that
01:26:47.580 I guess that's why that other guy went to jail
01:26:49.560 but he's saying he's protected
01:26:51.700 because he wrote the book prior to that
01:26:53.160 but you know this guy's lucky he's old
01:26:55.780 maybe he's not even alive anymore
01:26:56.960 but they're going to change that pretty quick
01:26:59.660 believe me
01:27:01.040 you know H3 I think that is actually
01:27:12.040 a very understated thing about Hitler
01:27:14.200 Like, a lot of people want to focus on the whole, you know, holohoax, I guess you could say, or whatever, holocaust.
01:27:21.320 But I think one of the things people forget is about all the good things that he did for his people.
01:27:26.660 And that's because of our, the fact that we, you know, have trouble, or the fact that we have suicidal empathy for everybody.
01:27:34.060 So we look at that as, oh, that was, you know, what he did was evil because he wanted to protect his own people.
01:27:39.480 But when you think about it from those people's perspective, right, he obviously, what he did was good.
01:27:44.880 Like, I know they turned the economy around rather quickly, you know, by manufacturing in Germany, you know, using Germany workers.
01:27:52.340 They, people had homes, they were given, you know, whatever rebates or monetary, you know, funds or whatever for having children.
01:28:01.780 Everything he did was to promote the family and the European culture that, you know, obviously was from the past, like that we had had before, before the Jews obviously started their degenerate shit.
01:28:14.460 So I think that is understated, but you'll never hear people, unless things change in society and the Jews are no longer in control of everything, I don't think we'll ever hear that, you know, anything good about him.
01:28:25.080 This is important, what he says here.
01:28:34.560 He says, when one writes, that was a tongue twister,
01:28:39.980 on a subject like that with a mass of people coming from the third world,
01:28:44.100 people with a different ethnic type, while we are facing a clash of civilizations.
01:28:49.100 And that, like I said, Dr. Ricardo Duchesne, before I go today,
01:28:53.220 I want to talk about this article he wrote.
01:28:55.080 wrote rather, that talks about that, that it's just, you know, as much as they want to
01:29:00.080 or they want to deny that there is a difference in that, you know, everybody is the same.
01:29:05.740 They just need to have the same opportunities is false.
01:29:08.080 And it's been proven false by many anthropologists and all that kind of stuff.
01:29:12.240 So this lie they keep perpetuating, it's just to continue our self-hating guilt.
01:29:25.080 It's a story to say, but it exists. We need to have an ethnic posture. We must see these things clearly without trying to make matters worse.
01:29:46.320 But this is a debate that will lie ahead during the next years. It was before the laws, because back in 1973, immigration was a minor problem.
01:29:55.080 So going back to what we watched in the fourth turning, they said that ended about 82, right?
01:30:02.600 The second turning, and then we entered the third, which was 82 to 2008.
01:30:07.840 That is when immigration started.
01:30:09.400 I mean, it's exploded now, but that's when the doors opened.
01:30:12.320 They started opening to all different migrants.
01:30:25.080 So he said they made all kinds of laws to silence people who don't think like universal consciousness, like what is politically correct.
01:30:39.520 And he's saying, once again, this is very tricky, and he's trying to use, obviously, the language.
01:30:45.020 He said that I spent 30 years traveling in endangered people and civilizations, especially in Tierra del Pueblo.
01:31:01.520 I know very well what an endangered, what is an endangered civilization I fought against
01:31:12.760 this.
01:31:13.760 A civilization that disappears must defend itself before it disappears.
01:31:17.980 Does that sound familiar to everybody?
01:31:19.980 And that's again what the book is about.
01:31:24.920 If minor civilizations disappeared, it's because they couldn't defend anymore, because they were surrounded with progress, and people arriving in a tidal wave.
01:31:33.180 Again, right? We're the minority in the world. Europeans are the minority of the world.
01:31:39.300 So, unless we defend ourselves, like he's saying, we're going to be surrounded with progress, which we already are, and people arriving like a tidal wave, like I used earlier, the butter chicken tsunami.
01:31:50.040 So he said, now regarding us, it is an exact reverse situation.
01:32:07.460 We have an old civilization, he's referring to Europe and France, and he said we are facing
01:32:12.220 huge masses of people.
01:32:13.540 There are hundreds of thousands of people, billions of people, that we are logically forced to defend ourselves.
01:32:27.540 ourselves the reporter shooting back with his you know whatever lefty logic saying that one could
01:32:46.980 say that a civilization at its peak strong confident wouldn't fear a stranger it should
01:32:51.380 be able to integrate him now this is the common you know marxist whatever you want to believe it
01:32:57.700 progressive belief that everybody is equal and they just need the same opportunities which is
01:33:03.700 again been proven wrong time and time again that there is definitely biological differences going
01:33:09.460 back to what i said at the beginning of this stream of the commercial that i heard about
01:33:13.060 talking about men and women being biologically different when it comes to consuming alcohol
01:33:16.820 So it's the same concept.
01:33:20.320 There's differences in races, ethnic groups,
01:33:24.000 biological differences,
01:33:25.320 and it does not mean that everybody
01:33:27.480 is going to have the same outcomes.
01:33:28.880 It doesn't mean everybody can just be, you know,
01:33:31.660 integrated to becoming a good contributing person in society.
01:33:35.980 We've seen it. It's failed.
01:33:37.380 So he's saying, what he's saying is, you know, we get used to saying welcome to the other.
01:34:05.500 So when he's referring to the other, he's referring to a migrant, right?
01:34:08.180 So he says, we get used to saying welcome to the other, smile to the other, look at the other, etc.
01:34:12.800 And then the other becomes some kind of amazing power, like in Big Brother from 1984, the book 1984.
01:34:20.140 We're seeing that happen here.
01:34:22.040 They're infiltrating our government, our military, our police, law enforcement, and stuff like that.
01:34:27.620 What do you think is going to happen when they have the majority in those institutions?
01:34:35.500 It's an astonishing power, a little bit like Big Brother of 1994,
01:34:42.500 and I, by the way, I'm intitulé Big Other.
01:34:45.500 That's to say, we're in front of a conspiracy,
01:34:52.500 we're in front of a set of emotions, true or false, a true or false pity.
01:34:56.500 To our false Christian charity, it makes that we should accept the other, the big other, whatever the conditions.
01:35:14.380 Again, I keep saying it, but that is the problem with Christianity, right?
01:35:18.720 We're supposed to accept people regardless of the conditions, regardless of the hardship on us.
01:35:26.500 So they're going to play a clip in a second of, in 1989, the prime minister, I guess, of France, Michel Rocard, a socialist.
01:35:45.760 Everybody remembers what he said that day, but they're going to listen to it again.
01:35:48.880 And basically, he was against it. He was against the immigration.
01:35:53.140 They're going to show the... Here, we'll skip ahead to it.
01:35:56.500 um and so i guess they're what this reporter or journalist is trying to deposit is that you know
01:36:03.460 it was dangerous for this prime minister to say this in his book you know is dangerous in the same
01:36:08.260 vein because it could influence politics i guess i guess that's trying to what he's trying to say
01:36:12.420 i don't understand so they're saying that michelle rocard invited by anne sinclair on tf1 didn't
01:36:25.220 mints his words firm sentiments about immigration and clear information on illegal immigration
01:36:30.980 he says we can't take the whole world's misery france must remain what she is a land of political
01:36:40.260 asylum we signed the geneva convention i agree but as we what did we just watch in uh was it
01:36:49.700 where was i watching oh maybe it was alex jones things i was watching before they were saying
01:36:53.620 about how they're now abusing the political asylum um you know strain or stream of immigration
01:37:01.300 by saying that they're gay like they're they were showing like groups of africans and indians you
01:37:07.700 know being coached on how to pretend that they're gay taking pictures of them at you know gay bars
01:37:12.020 and stuff like that so they can claim you know asylum not political asylum necessarily that
01:37:16.740 would be well maybe it would be because if they think they're going to be prosecuted politically
01:37:20.020 i guess um so the whole political the whole asylum thing is obviously a slippery slope
01:37:26.860 which is why we should have never done it in the first place because it's the whole saying that
01:37:32.180 you know we used to get told as a kid or my mom used to say to me all the time is you know i give
01:37:36.020 you an inch you take a mile kind of thing and that's what always happens so there needs to be
01:37:40.360 hard and fast rules and you just have to say no right like you you can't you end up making all
01:37:46.140 these different caveats and allowances for everything, and then it ends up being, there's
01:37:49.780 no fucking rules whatsoever, right? So it just needs to be a firm, strict, no, we're
01:37:55.760 sorry about your lot, that you're persecuted for being gay in India, but maybe there's
01:38:02.140 a closer country that will accept you, I don't know, or maybe just act less gay, I don't
01:38:07.260 know political asylum to those whose freedom of expression is repressed in their homeland
01:38:20.100 but nothing more so what he's saying and back then it was actually used like they actually
01:38:25.760 investigated these things more thoroughly they were more conscious about who they were letting
01:38:30.460 in the country and in the amount of people so you truly had to be really at risk of persecution in
01:38:36.800 order to get asylum in these countries back then in you know whatever it was 90s early 2000s
01:38:43.720 but now you can literally just say that you're you're gay or you're trans you can just say it
01:38:49.180 there's no kind of proof needed right and like you know in the chat they're saying that it was
01:38:54.920 it's the Jews behind that yeah they're behind a lot of these NGOs doing the coaching or they're
01:38:58.560 funding a lot of these NGOs that do the coaching for these people and that's why it just needs to
01:39:03.920 be no the door is shut and we're going to start shipping back and again if it's so bad in your
01:39:08.900 country do something to fix it you can't like what would we do here you know if when when it
01:39:14.260 comes if it comes time that they do happen like what happens in this book where it gets overrun
01:39:19.400 by you know tsunamis of butter chicken the butter chicken tsunami where are we gonna go
01:39:26.200 that's what i mean like we don't have that option right and they say we'll go back to europe well
01:39:31.420 Europe's invaded too. So, you know, we can't just open our hearts to the world and say, well, you
01:39:37.980 know, because your life is bad. No, we would have to find a place and rebuild from scratch. So if
01:39:42.820 your country is so bad, then do less talking and more action. Do something about it. Because you
01:39:49.520 can't just, and I hate that whole thing about, you know, just escaping because, well, what are you
01:39:54.020 doing to change it? Right? It doesn't happen on its own. And it goes back to that whole thing of
01:39:59.120 people are just waiting for christ to come save them or someone to come and save them
01:40:03.360 and in this case it's the west they're the west is saving you know india from its huge population
01:40:08.240 problem and huge unemployment problem well maybe the government should look at controlling the
01:40:13.040 population a little bit better if it's a real big concern you need to know that the result
01:40:22.720 is not public yet but i can say it today in 1988 we turn so this is in the 90s i'm thinking
01:40:27.680 In 1988, we turned back 66,000 people.
01:40:30.840 Can you imagine?
01:40:32.340 66,000, that probably comes in in a day in fucking Europe.
01:40:40.260 Speaking of that, did you guys see, I think it was last week,
01:40:43.640 I might have talked about this already, but Spain, right?
01:40:49.240 They basically spoke up and said that they're no longer going to be part of this whole fucking Israeli,
01:40:54.460 fucking iran war this whole brother war whatever um and they're they're not taking either side
01:41:00.660 they're not taking israel's they're not taking they want to be totally left out of it so of
01:41:04.720 course netanyahu made a big you know fucking you know badass fucking swing in his dick speech
01:41:10.880 saying that oh nobody's going to talk negatively about israel blah blah blah blah blah and then
01:41:15.660 within a week they had a bunch of african migrants floating in life jackets and nikes
01:41:19.680 to the coast of Spain.
01:41:22.380 So if you were a conspiracy theorist,
01:41:24.780 you might think that this was orchestrated by them
01:41:27.000 as a way to punish Spain.
01:41:28.640 But that would be just a conspiracy, right?
01:41:32.200 We have refouled, refouled,
01:41:34.400 at our borders,
01:41:35.580 66,000 people,
01:41:37.560 66,000 people refouled at our borders.
01:41:40.720 He says, add to this 10,000 explosions from the country.
01:41:44.120 So they actually got rid of people back then.
01:41:45.680 For 1989, the year is not finished yet.
01:41:47.320 We expect more explosions.
01:41:48.640 So this was in 1989.
01:41:49.680 so they had no problem expelling expelling people from the country at that point in time
01:41:54.800 yeah in the 70s you know what in it for love that is that's also another good point like
01:42:02.860 the immigrants that came in in the 70s there was no handouts and that's the difference why we're
01:42:07.580 seeing such an increase of people from certain countries is yes the government is promoting it
01:42:11.800 to them but it's also they're the kind of immigrant that doesn't want to work anyway
01:42:15.480 so we're getting the low-level Indian immigrants that are if they work they're going to work in
01:42:20.280 the service industry like uber or something like that or tim hortons or they're going to just you
01:42:25.700 know collect social assistance and send it all back home because they don't have those systems
01:42:29.400 in india so the fact that you know back in the 70s there was no so like for immigrants no you
01:42:35.900 you didn't get anything you didn't get health care you didn't get welfare you didn't get housing
01:42:40.060 help you relied on your family who was sponsoring you who were responsible for you they were
01:42:44.360 responsible for housing and feeding you
01:42:46.000 and all that stuff. And yeah, you had to have a certain
01:42:48.240 amount of money saved up in the bank. You couldn't come here
01:42:50.360 as just a fucking poor, broke-ass
01:42:52.480 migrant. And if you
01:42:54.380 did, you know, and you did get through
01:42:56.220 and you didn't have a lot of money, well, it was up to you to
01:42:58.360 make that money. You didn't get any
01:43:00.380 kind of special, you know. So
01:43:02.300 that's the huge difference. And that's why we're getting
01:43:04.320 the low-quality, you know, immigrants
01:43:06.460 that we get
01:43:08.420 now.
01:43:08.660 They're just talking about what that guy said.
01:43:21.920 And the reporter's asking the author of the book saying,
01:43:25.620 is a strong civilization one that says, yes, welcome, like in your book,
01:43:28.900 when authorities say, yes, let them come, they are here at home.
01:43:32.500 So in the book, the authorities or the government is allowing it,
01:43:36.120 despite the civilization's opposition to it right uh so what he's saying is that
01:43:41.400 what isn't a strong or is a strong civilization one who agrees with the governments
01:44:00.760 so i guess he's referring to some the french and i i do believe a lot of french people are
01:44:05.320 strongly outspoken about this stuff,
01:44:07.280 but they obviously suppress that shit.
01:44:10.260 Les autres nous font peur.
01:44:11.920 Les autres, c'est nous qui allons devenir comme les autres.
01:44:15.220 Les autres nous font pas peur.
01:44:17.020 Non, c'est pas le mot.
01:44:17.940 So the others don't scare us.
01:44:18.780 It's not the right word.
01:44:19.640 And that's true.
01:44:21.040 When they say Islamophobia,
01:44:23.720 anti-Semitism,
01:44:25.640 all that kind of stuff,
01:44:26.420 well, especially the phobia shit,
01:44:28.480 transphobia and that,
01:44:30.540 that a phobia is a fear, right?
01:44:32.240 So they're basically,
01:44:33.140 all they're saying is that you're afraid of muslim people i am not afraid of them i don't care
01:44:38.620 about them and i don't want to live with them and and that's as simple as that i don't hate them
01:44:43.160 i don't you know what i mean you know what i just don't want them here they can do whatever the
01:44:47.300 fuck they want back in the middle east i really don't care i don't think about it so the fact
01:44:51.680 that they say you know islamophobia no we're not afraid of you we just want to live amongst our
01:44:57.680 own people we want you to go home that's it so saying that it's hate and that's why the hate
01:45:02.380 speech laws also are problematic because you can't determine what was the motive for somebody
01:45:07.460 saying something. It could be for love of their people. And in most cases, it is. It's
01:45:11.420 for the love of your own people that you speak out against it. So it's just twisting words
01:45:17.940 and kind of creating ideologies that fucking, you know, never existed before in terms.
01:45:24.780 He says that all of the politicians say the same.
01:45:44.300 They all said that, but nothing changed.
01:45:46.400 And that's true.
01:45:47.740 And I'm going to just end it there
01:45:48.700 because it's literally just arguing back and forth
01:45:50.760 about the politicians.
01:45:51.700 But that's exactly true as to what's happening now.
01:45:53.660 they all say that they all say and just like mark carney coming out and you know everybody's like
01:45:57.960 oh he's talking about you know canadian nationalism and sir isaac brock or whatever the fuck it was
01:46:03.360 it's all just to appeal to the last you know part of society that fucking doesn't fall for his shit
01:46:09.560 and that's the nationalists right and the you know staunch conservatives i guess you could say
01:46:13.560 it's all it's just a game it's all bread and circuses i don't take anything he fucking says
01:46:17.780 seriously he doesn't really care because actions mean more than words okay so you could say whatever
01:46:23.360 the fuck you want but like that TikTok video we watched earlier you've achieved exactly nothing
01:46:28.820 in a year you've talked a lot of shit you've achieved you know suppressing or at least
01:46:34.580 attempting to suppress the Canadian citizen you've achieved at scamming your way to a majority
01:46:38.760 but you have not achieved anything that benefits the actual Canadian people so you can say what
01:46:44.140 you want about you know our Canadian history and that if you cared about it you would have put a
01:46:48.120 stop you would have ran on a platform of stopping immigration and you would have done something to
01:46:52.480 stop it, but you're not because at the end of the day, just like the other globalists, as Alex
01:46:57.380 Jones says, you just care about, you know, your own pockets, your own fucking kind of utopia that
01:47:02.900 you guys will be able to go live in when the fucking world goes to shit and the rest of us
01:47:06.360 are, you know, fucking homeless and without food and overrun by Indians. It's chocolate and flowers,
01:47:16.320 in it for love um okay so the last thing um because i've been going for a long time here just
01:47:22.560 blabbing my fucking mouth off so i appreciate everybody that's hung around but dr ricardo
01:47:26.920 duchene who i actually had the fortune i was fortunate enough i can't get my words fucking
01:47:32.640 straight today i was fortunate enough to meet at the uh april event that um a couple of the other
01:47:39.860 nationalists were at he was there and he spoke and i was able to meet him and obviously he's you
01:47:44.300 know i think he's very brilliant and a very nice gentleman i do you know there are some things that
01:47:50.540 i might kind of sorry i'm trying to readjust myself i might disagree with but you know it's
01:47:57.000 nothing major like again he's you know still some people just don't like i said don't want to say
01:48:04.900 what the main issue is um that it's the jews they don't want to go down that hole they also don't
01:48:09.460 want to say that it's you know they don't want to blame the immigrant kind of thing so i don't know
01:48:15.500 i feel like it's twofold here in canada that the maybe initially the first wave of butter you know
01:48:22.680 butter chicken tsunami that came in i'm going to use that all the time now guys um maybe they were
01:48:28.320 taken advantage of but i feel like now because they're so fucking nepotistic and they're so
01:48:33.700 scammy and that they just spread the word to each other and they just scam their way in because
01:48:37.040 they know how good it is here now so maybe initially some were taken advantage of but I
01:48:42.020 don't feel sorry for them because like I said you're looking for an easy way out of your problems
01:48:46.420 and you're getting what you deserve right you're you come here you're working a slave wages well
01:48:52.020 that's that's what happens right like I said you tried to take a shortcut to getting to Canada
01:48:56.520 whatever trying to get to the land of milk and honey as they say and you kind of fucked yourself
01:49:02.180 there. So I have no sympathy. So Dr. Duchesne has a little bit, you know, sympathy, which is good for
01:49:07.320 him or empathy, I guess you could say not sympathy. But I wanted to get to one thing that he talks
01:49:13.260 about, because this is a really long article, but you should read it. It's on X. Is that the reason
01:49:19.380 why? So the article is labeled why the West is replacing its white population, the imperatives
01:49:23.760 and fatal flaws of post Fordism. So he's, you know, stating that after the Fordist capitalist
01:49:29.820 optimization error, whatever you want to call it, they kind of mixed liberal progressivism
01:49:34.880 into a capitalist kind of mold. And they've kind of made this hybrid of progressive capitalism,
01:49:41.720 I guess you could say. Now, capitalism, obviously, is not a bad, I don't think it's a bad thing. But
01:49:49.680 it does get bad when it's mixed with liberal progressivism. So the difference was during the,
01:49:55.120 you know Ford is Ford era so the Henry Ford the industrial area the Fordist phase was he says
01:50:01.120 roughly 1945 to 75 which also coincides with the second turning which they talked about and said
01:50:08.220 that that was the time of you know great you know people were whatever um doing well and all that
01:50:14.500 kind of stuff um but it largely benefit benefited the native white population and that's capital I
01:50:20.640 I mean, capitalism was probably invented.
01:50:23.220 It was invented in Europe.
01:50:24.600 So it really benefits the European or the white population, right?
01:50:29.620 It delivered, during the Fordist era, it delivered broad-based affluence, rising real wages, high home ownership, and stable family-oriented communities within a relatively homogenous nation.
01:50:41.700 And it was still anchored by the pre-liberal norms.
01:50:44.620 so however obviously they're saying the crisis in 1970s activated a transition to post-fortist
01:50:51.460 multicultural and limbic capitalist regime so the difference now between capitalism then was that
01:50:58.220 we did more and this is nothing is more apparent than in canada is that we used to actually produce
01:51:04.000 goods we had manufacturing we produced tangible things for our efforts for our work and we were
01:51:09.800 paid you know uh accordingly we were paid a good wage for it but when we kind of switched to the
01:51:17.000 you know digital sphere and when the manufacturing was moved to offshores because you had these
01:51:22.200 companies that you know i guess whatever they started becoming bigger and they you know get
01:51:27.420 board of directors and all this kind of stuff and then now it's you've you've basically become a
01:51:32.560 money a dollar sign to them right what can you you know make it's it's moved away from
01:51:37.480 the workplace that, you know, valued good, loyal, you know, hard workers to interchangeable workers
01:51:44.680 who are willing to work for pennies and willing to work any shift and don't have the
01:51:48.200 needs of a family at home, right? So that is why they have kind of welcomed in the immigration and
01:51:56.440 specifically, Dr. Ricardo talks about specifically the South Asian population and even the East Asian
01:52:03.200 population like the chinese as well are very complacent and very um how do you put it they're
01:52:10.700 very they listen to the kind of rules are willing to do more for less i guess you could say uh i
01:52:16.580 just wanted to get to the area where he talks about it because it's really good yeah okay so
01:52:22.900 here it is so western businesses now right they pursued well now and when this started happening
01:52:28.540 so after 1980, 82, Western businesses pursued cheaper inputs, right? So cheaper staff, cheaper
01:52:35.540 people doing the work, greater flexibility, people that are willing to work all hours of the night,
01:52:40.700 24 hours a day, and access to new markets by building global supply chains, outsourcing
01:52:45.840 production overseas and shifting towards what they call flexible accumulation. So businesses moved
01:52:52.160 away from the rigid unionized nine to five labor towards part-time temporary and contract work this
01:52:59.060 is what we see now currently this is why our kids can't get a job this is why a lot of people have
01:53:03.440 to work three jobs to make ends meet because nobody is offering full-time work anymore and
01:53:07.760 there's many reasons for that most of which is because they are required to pay benefits for you
01:53:12.580 if you're full-time and there's a lot more employment laws surrounding that right so that's
01:53:20.060 why they're doing it. It included a decentralized production using just-in-time techniques and
01:53:26.040 subcontracting. During the 1990s, the economic shift from manufacturing to services, what I said
01:53:31.500 earlier, finance and high-tech industries intensified, leading to the dominance of
01:53:36.240 financial capitalism, where we are now, where the profits increasingly derive from asset training,
01:53:41.280 debt, and speculation rather than actual material production. Canada's economy is based, I like to
01:53:47.200 say it's based on air it's it's literally based on real estate and um the service industry so it's
01:53:53.720 not based on any tangible stuff right we don't have any kind of tangible goods to see for this
01:53:58.940 economy it's all and that's a very precarious economy because all it takes is for a crash in
01:54:03.860 the real estate market and tons of people are going to be poor boomers mostly who own multiple
01:54:10.360 properties um so dr ricardo says and this is where i might slightly disagree with him
01:54:16.820 but again he's a lot smarter than me so he's probably right uh the adoption of multiculturalism
01:54:23.700 across the west was not a product of cultural marxists taking control over the public sphere
01:54:27.900 i think it was a lot of a lot that had a lot to do with it but the direct institutional expression
01:54:33.680 of the progressive pluralist logic of liberalism its central idea is that just as the state should
01:54:39.740 not impose any religious beliefs it should not mandate any dominant culture but should simply
01:54:45.900 guarantee a public sphere in which individuals of diverse backgrounds enjoy equal rights to
01:54:50.260 express their preferred values in a state of mutual respect. The reason why this doesn't work
01:54:55.560 is because, as I've said, and I believe I learned this from one of the Australian nationalists,
01:55:01.220 you cannot have a true democracy, rather, in a multiracial society. Why is that? Well,
01:55:08.920 we're going to get to that because of ethnic in-group preference right and this is where
01:55:16.200 here yeah here's where he talks about the capitalism has a preference for asian labor
01:55:20.580 so he said this may lead to some to assume that it has no inherent ethnic preference and that
01:55:26.840 market simply gravitate towards the highest returns and the lowest cost inputs for growth
01:55:31.600 there's no question however that liberal capitalism has shown a clear preference both
01:55:36.020 for diversity and for a certain cognitive and personality traits that are statistically more
01:55:40.600 common among East Asians, specifically ethnic Chinese, and Indians. It's so-called, he said,
01:55:48.780 so the Western world, like so-called larger nation, settler nations, Canada, Australia,
01:55:54.080 New Zealand, and America. It has also shown a preference for high-tech workers who are more
01:55:58.160 goal-oriented. So again, people who are more oriented to the end result, like they don't
01:56:05.280 care about their families they have no ties they can work for 18 hours a day and they're more
01:56:09.960 focused on getting the job fucking done than the how do you put it then the way to get there so
01:56:16.520 this is why we have shortcuts obviously they take all kinds of shortcuts too they're more
01:56:19.740 they're more worried about achieving that end goal despite how they get there right so it
01:56:25.660 doesn't matter if it's not safe uh so it the capitalism current capitalism it views east
01:56:34.700 Asians as exceptionally efficient, low friction inputs. And that means they are not going to
01:56:39.500 talk back. They're not going to cause any problems. They're not going to start any unions
01:56:42.540 or anything like that. And they are primarily used for technical tasks, such as coding,
01:56:49.220 algorithm design, lab work, and incremental optimization. They view white people as less
01:56:55.720 efficient in this narrow respect because we exhibit greater personality differentiation,
01:57:00.200 different different tation sorry uh broader interests higher openness to experience and
01:57:07.680 a stronger tendency towards political philosophical and societal engagement so what they're saying is
01:57:12.840 white people want to be more involved in politics more in the community more you know they're more
01:57:19.620 focused on um community activities as a whole whereas you can bring in an invader and they're
01:57:26.100 just going to go to work and go home and go to work and go home they're not going to be worried
01:57:28.660 about you know family kids you know community activities anything like that the white people
01:57:35.860 have ties right they have community ties now these white traits were historically crucial
01:57:41.140 in driving revolutionary scientific breakthroughs major innovations in grand societal projects
01:57:46.100 they are often less optimal for the narrow high volume high conformity demands of today's
01:57:51.060 hyper specialized post forwardist ai economy so they're basically picking these people because of
01:57:58.180 their complacency and this was actually a good part of it he said some may rightfully ask how
01:58:05.460 can a nation as chaotic and dirty as india produce well-trained high-tech migrants claims that indians
01:58:11.780 are being imported as a bioweapon that's one of my claims to destroy the genetic makeup of western
01:58:17.060 nations misjudge the fundamental dynamic of indian immigration in the post-fortist age
01:58:23.300 so again an area where i may disagree um so he said it's not driven by the multicultural
01:58:28.740 logic of liberalism but by capitalism's drive for optimization of economic returns
01:58:34.260 they obviously grab gravitate toward the highest returns and the lowest input cost input of course
01:58:39.460 india's enormous population china obviously similar to start with generates a vast supply
01:58:44.980 of technically trained workers ideally suited to the needs of our contemporary economy again
01:58:49.700 I kind of disagree I don't think that the training that they're getting in India is the same on the
01:58:54.640 same level and again half of them are probably you know have fraudulent diplomas so maybe you
01:59:00.760 know in the billions of people that they have there are you know a small handful of people that
01:59:04.920 are actually you know trained and are able to compete in a you know European society
01:59:10.600 but the vast majority of them are not so one of the examples he used is that so they're they're
01:59:17.920 STEM graduates every year is approximately two and a half to 2.6 million. In Canada, for example,
01:59:22.800 we only have 60,000 to 120,000 per year. And a large portion of them are probably Indians
01:59:27.720 that came here and graduated. So because the equivalent skill worker in India tends to
01:59:34.720 command salaries amounting to one third or one fifth of a Canadian. So this is why they're
01:59:39.000 bringing them in. And we all knew that. But again, I still get tripped up on the fact that how do
01:59:43.880 they afford to live because the cost of living is the same for them. I guess that's why they share
01:59:47.320 houses amongst 15 20 of them but you know like the cost of living is the same for everybody that's
01:59:52.380 one thing anyways so if they they're taking one-fifth of what a canadian would typically
01:59:57.180 earn i don't know how they're you know supporting themselves but again so this is why they're
02:00:02.260 bringing them in one of the other things he said is that uh let me just see here there was one
02:00:08.240 comparison for oh here here it is so firms can hire a senior indian developer in the u.s or
02:00:13.860 canada on a work visa for 30 000 to 50 000 a year and in contrast it would be 150 to 200 for a
02:00:21.340 native born like canadian or american to do that job so it says their narrow education total focus
02:00:27.160 on stem degrees compliance and one-dimensional desire for money so they only care about the
02:00:32.140 money have made indians quite useful as employees in limbic capitalist sectors such as social media
02:00:37.620 e-commerce gaming streaming ai driven engagement also uber eats um there was i wanted to there was
02:00:45.180 one other thing that they said but maybe i can't yeah i can't remember what it was but anyways it's
02:00:54.000 a good article you should read it it's long i don't want to make read it because you guys are
02:00:57.360 all going to fucking fall asleep because but it is it is very interesting and i do agree with most
02:01:01.480 of the points here and i i do see it i just don't agree with the fact that i think indians are
02:01:06.040 they're they're that on our level like i said there might be a small handful of them but the
02:01:10.220 ones that are coming in now which which dr ricardo does state in this article to be fair
02:01:15.440 are low-skilled immigrants um right here he just says uh yeah it says working in tandem with this
02:01:22.440 optimization liberalism universal universalistic logic frames restrictions on low-skilled brown
02:01:27.060 immigrants immigration as racist while celebrating diversity in the public sphere um from 21 to 24
02:01:33.380 low-skilled workers formed a very large part of Trudeau's
02:01:37.320 post-COVID massive immigration surge. So it's what we're
02:01:41.420 all seeing now. And he said, these are the people that you're seeing, you know, being disgusting,
02:01:45.760 shitting on the street, groping women and stuff like that. So my
02:01:49.280 question would be then, clearly my theory is right that there's not that many high-skilled
02:01:53.240 ones because we're seeing that all over. Everywhere there's an Indian, there's a fucking disaster
02:01:57.380 waiting to happen. So where are the high-skilled Indians?
02:02:00.820 that's what i want to know so anyways uh yeah that was pretty much all i wanted to share how
02:02:08.880 long oh my god we've been going for two hours you guys i've been chatting for two hours my god
02:02:13.380 anyways i want i i think you guys let me see what i'm doing
02:02:18.680 um i think it's everybody should read number one camp of the saints just simply because it's now
02:02:25.240 abandoned Canada and it is it kind of paints a I think it paints a realistic scenario if we keep
02:02:31.860 going the way we are obviously it's not going to happen within 24 hours it's been happening within
02:02:35.760 a couple years 24 years maybe but actually I think less but also like I said you know look
02:02:42.540 at the fourth turning as well because I think that's what we're heading into and I think that
02:02:46.740 you know it's good to learn as much as possible about it learn how people before us got through
02:02:52.460 it and obviously the biggest thing we all need to do especially the men is to you know stop eating
02:02:57.900 so much soy take some testosterone yeah lee hello lee he's here canada and decay that's the other
02:03:06.880 thing it's mandatory reading definitely uh that's another one so there's a lot of reading that you
02:03:11.280 could do there's a lot of audio you can listen to it on audiobooks too if you're somebody who
02:03:14.980 is driving a lot like i am usually when i'm working um you can listen to it that way as
02:03:19.500 well but i have trouble with audiobooks a lot of times i like to actually read it because i
02:03:22.380 don't process it the same for some reason um ADHD brain I guess uh but yeah and like I said all
02:03:28.840 these things are real and I think all the men like I said stop stop eating the goyslop get fit
02:03:33.500 get tough stop worrying about what people think about you um the women too like I said we've all
02:03:39.900 said this a million times there's going to be a lot of tears there's going to be a lot of crying
02:03:43.440 kids crying for their mom crying because they don't want to go back to India crying all that
02:03:48.040 kind of stuff we need to harden our hearts to this stuff because at the end of the day it's
02:03:51.680 our children and our grandchildren and all that stuff that are suffering gonna suffer
02:03:55.860 the major consequences of this which if they're even allowed like i mean i also let's not even
02:04:00.760 go down the rabbit hole of the fact that i think they're doing this also to force um race mixing
02:04:07.220 right and count d'ancula talked about that briefly when i was watching him on alex jones earlier
02:04:12.220 he briefly touched base on the fact that they're making it so that you really have no choice like
02:04:18.020 our grandchildren will have no choice but to mix because they won't be able to find a white partner
02:04:21.880 because the the country will be so full of browns and mixed you know all that you'll have no choice
02:04:28.000 and by default we'll all die off because there'll be no pure purebreds for lack of a better word
02:04:33.080 left so i'm also convinced that that's what they're trying to do as well now maybe that's
02:04:37.620 going down a little bit too deep maybe it is like dr ricardo says maybe it is simply just
02:04:41.680 monetary you know benefit to the elites and obviously they pay off the politicians and
02:04:46.280 stuff like that but I don't know I feel like the Calurgi plan like people are saying in the chat
02:04:51.000 and all that stuff I think that has a lot to do with it because we wouldn't have this mass we
02:04:55.660 had a mass push before the capitalism and the AI fucking blew up like we had this mass push from
02:05:01.720 the Jews and all these NGOs um thanks I'm based yeah I try um from from them forcing this stuff
02:05:10.640 forcing the degeneracy the Weimar fucking conditions on us and stuff like that so I think
02:05:15.420 it's a bit of both i really do think that the jews ultimately feel like they are the chosen
02:05:20.040 people and they feel that uh they are the only ones allowed to have an ethno state and this is
02:05:25.500 why they continually try to destroy the middle east as well because they want to take that all
02:05:28.920 over i'm sure but again this is just me fucking you know spitting my crazy alex jones conspiracy
02:05:34.880 theories but anyways i am gonna log off now because i talked way too much but you guys all
02:05:41.360 listened which was awesome i appreciate it and i will be back tomorrow night with my ladies lee
02:05:47.080 included on our um x space that we hold the canadian nationalist x space uh and then i will
02:05:55.320 be back again after that on saturday probably so i appreciate and guys have a good week i will see
02:06:00.120 you tomorrow
02:06:11.360 You