Real Coffee with Scott Adams - March 25, 2026


Episode 3122 - The Scott Adams School 03⧸25⧸26


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour

Words per Minute

172.74504

Word Count

10,520

Sentence Count

375

Misogynist Sentences

7

Hate Speech Sentences

22


Summary

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

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 I'm dying to know who's first today. Which Steven?
00:00:04.520 Steven Lang?
00:00:06.020 Yes, thank God.
00:00:07.540 Good morning, everybody.
00:00:09.140 I don't like Lang slipping like that.
00:00:12.040 Good morning. Welcome in.
00:00:16.180 Good morning, everyone.
00:00:18.140 Get my local... Oh, there's Bob with his pants off.
00:00:21.980 Jim!
00:00:24.280 Sandy!
00:00:25.920 Dr. Hines.
00:00:27.180 java welcome in everyone what's the date i feel like today is a special day march 25th 2026 is
00:00:37.960 it someone's birthday oh by the way our own magician magi had his birthday last night
00:00:44.320 happy birthday magician oh happy birthday happy birthday happy birthday happy birthday everybody
00:00:52.220 who has a birthday today yeah oh and today we probably have several do we have a stock market
00:00:58.560 update we're just letting everybody filter in you guys bj's here with us it's looking good today i
00:01:04.300 think oh good good or bad last i checked anyway it was up okay good how about bitcoin since i'm in
00:01:12.900 a crypto studio right now by the way you follow protocol pulse online bitcoin's up too it's at
00:01:18.840 71.6, 71,000.
00:01:22.320 I don't know what that means.
00:01:23.780 I'm not a Bitcoin girl.
00:01:25.320 Who are we following, BJ?
00:01:27.600 They're not capitulating.
00:01:28.980 We're holding strong.
00:01:29.760 Yeah, so that voice in the background, that is Paul.
00:01:31.760 I'm in Naples, Florida.
00:01:33.580 I'm at the airport in a studio that belongs to Protocol Pulse.
00:01:37.980 Okay.
00:01:38.320 And big fans and supporters and friends of mine and big supporters of Freedom.
00:01:44.780 they are also uh we're massive fans of scott adams so i thought it would be totally appropriate
00:01:51.220 uh to while i had the chance while i'm in naples to do uh do the show here and bring some people
00:01:56.840 together we're happy you did we're happy you did all right i think that gave us enough time
00:02:01.760 and we need to do something first or we can't do anything else all right let's do it hey everybody
00:02:07.840 Come on in here.
00:02:10.280 Stream on in here for your morning streaming and your morning simultaneous sip, which is coming up.
00:02:17.740 As soon as we get enough of you in here who are thirsty and ready for a bit of simultaneity,
00:02:24.500 and I think we're there.
00:02:26.920 All right.
00:02:27.820 You know what you need to play along?
00:02:29.940 Doesn't take much.
00:02:31.260 All you need is a cup or a mug or a glass, a tank or a chalice or a stein, a canteen jug or flask,
00:02:36.560 A vessel of any kind. Fill it with your favorite liquid.
00:02:40.540 I'm partial to coffee.
00:02:43.600 And join me now for the unparalleled pleasure of the dopamine hit of the day.
00:02:47.160 The thing that makes everything better.
00:02:50.100 This simultaneous sip. Go.
00:02:58.760 Oh my gosh, I love it.
00:03:04.840 Well, welcome, everybody. My name is Erica, and you are at the Scott Adams School.
00:03:10.660 We have to get rid of the screenshot.
00:03:12.700 Oh, sorry. I was so intrigued with that Scott video.
00:03:19.140 You guys, welcome to the Scott Adams School. My name is Erica.
00:03:22.480 I always want to remind that if you're looking for Scott Adams content,
00:03:26.660 you can find a million of his YouTube videos on YouTube.
00:03:31.420 also his micro lessons his waves his amazing like when he would just draw cartoons with us and
00:03:40.540 free shows and post shows there's so much more content on scott's subscriber channel
00:03:45.960 on locals and that's scottadams.locals.com and we really hope that you'll come over there that
00:03:53.060 you'll subscribe that's where his famous beloveds reside and we're doing some interviews and like
00:04:00.120 chats over there also exclusively for subscribers. And we have one tomorrow night. We're going to
00:04:05.420 have Jimmy from Scott Adams Meetups there. So anyone that's been to a meetup, we want you to
00:04:10.720 come and tell us about your experience. Okay. So let's kick off the day with BJ. And I want to
00:04:18.280 want to actually start with Marcella. And BJ, just to talk to you later, I want to make sure
00:04:25.020 that we pick up where we left off which was with our uh friends from canada they have specific
00:04:31.900 canadian questions so you guys get ready to ask those when we get to uh the canadian news so
00:04:37.100 marcella start us off so uh meteors made uh another appearance on monday um as you know last week i
00:04:47.820 think that there was a huge meteor that hit ohio that was seen in 10 states um then after that
00:04:55.180 there were so many other meteor sightings in texas and california and then on monday
00:05:02.300 this was confirmed by nasa there was a huge meteor that hit across ohio all the way to it was
00:05:09.100 it could be seen all the way to michigan in other states um you know this is the concept of
00:05:15.500 We're paying attention to the story, so maybe that's why we're seeing it more in the news.
00:05:21.100 It might not be more meteors than there are, but it was interesting to me that it happened again, so you never know.
00:05:29.520 The one in Ohio, they asked if we felt it here on the Jersey Shore, and people south of us in New Jersey felt it.
00:05:36.740 Are you serious?
00:05:37.740 Yeah.
00:05:38.180 Yeah?
00:05:38.680 I know one of them hit somebody's house.
00:05:42.540 No way.
00:05:45.140 Yeah.
00:05:45.500 i mean the person wasn't hurt unfortunately but were they fortunately yeah i think i don't know
00:05:51.740 i don't know if they were home or not but um i know it went into their house and uh wow i'm sure
00:05:58.460 it caused a lot of damage i think there was some speculation that they could sell the meteor to
00:06:04.460 pay for the repairs really that's uh that's interesting wow okay apparently meteors are
00:06:11.260 valuable if there's anything left of them and most of them probably burn up in the atmosphere but if
00:06:15.900 it hits then there's probably something left and it's usually a pretty rare thing so people like to
00:06:21.900 collect them i guess all right interesting i didn't know that
00:06:25.900 all right other interesting news well i mean i wanted to start off very happily but um there
00:06:32.540 was a poll that was about no time with friends and i'm wondering if the chat can tell me about
00:06:39.740 what percentage of people don't spend any time with friends during the week it may not be what
00:06:45.500 scott thought so it's uh it's it's a gallup poll that they're basing it on um the isolation of
00:06:54.700 different different age groups where people don't have friends anymore they're they're online but
00:07:01.020 when they when they did this gallup poll they asked um what when they talk about friends they
00:07:08.140 talk about you actually physically seeing them um and then let me see if 85 percent
00:07:17.660 25 no it's less than 25 believe it or not the so no time with friends which is good only 16
00:07:27.740 percent of americans spend no time with friends the rest of them do um and 11 hours weekly on
00:07:37.020 average you spent with friends from the age of 18 to 34. 11 hours is pretty good.
00:07:42.380 Well, 18 to 34, what happens when you're older?
00:07:45.420 Eight hours.
00:07:46.780 Yes.
00:07:47.580 Eight to six.
00:07:49.260 Does this count? Are we with friends right now?
00:07:53.820 No.
00:07:54.380 This is regarding in-person contact.
00:07:56.540 In person.
00:07:57.180 Yeah. So we don't count.
00:07:59.980 Call a friend, you guys.
00:08:02.060 11 hours in person with a friend sounds like a lot to me, but maybe I'm just weird.
00:08:06.140 that's 18 to 34 i was with my friends constantly well you go to the university you go to high
00:08:12.960 school you're with them you know i was thinking let's go into the club most of that time i was
00:08:18.800 working and i would just say like i was working most of the time like i with friends a lot of
00:08:24.660 time you're working with friends yeah well that that is kind of how it worked out is that because
00:08:30.840 you're there so much and you know you're with these people it's they become your friends and
00:08:37.080 I'm sure that's true in most like demanding professions that are you know much more than
00:08:42.480 40 hours a week because it's like you're all your time is there so you kind of socialize
00:08:46.000 as a natural result of that and but I didn't have a lot of time to just go out socializing
00:08:52.420 I mean I dated my wife and you know maybe that counts before before I got married as a friend
00:08:58.800 but um and after but uh you know i i don't i'm pretty sure the survey doesn't count
00:09:05.220 time with your spouse but um yeah i don't know i mean i it would seem like a lot to me because
00:09:12.260 like 11 hours a week that's like you know if you go out on the weekend that might be what
00:09:16.960 three four five hours maybe but you'd have to probably have a few during the week visits as
00:09:23.800 well i would think to get to 11. bj yeah i think uh this is something i mean scott talked about but
00:09:32.600 this is kind of well known that men and women form relationships differently and i think how
00:09:40.120 men and women would respond to that question might be very different i think this harkens back to
00:09:46.080 what scott said all data is fake because if you don't know the presuppositions you don't know how
00:09:51.400 they ask the questions you can't really make make uh heads or tails of the data and i think
00:09:55.840 in my case you know most of my friends i have regular communication with in a week those are
00:10:02.340 people either i'm working with i'm doing things with we have projects with like you know back
00:10:07.300 when i used to be on the motorcycle all the time you know we'd be hanging out but we'd be out
00:10:12.640 riding and doing stuff oh no i gotta i gotta do an oil change on my bike or whatever so it's kind
00:10:17.720 of, we see tasks as our bonding component, whereas women, I think it's more about the
00:10:24.460 relationship structure. So I don't know. I think, I do agree that we do spend a lot more time than
00:10:32.580 we realize together. I don't buy into the, we completely, we've decided to ostracize ourselves.
00:10:39.800 I just think the nature of our relationships are a little bit more complex than are we,
00:10:44.180 are we friends going for coffee or not? I think there's more to that. I don't know. What do you
00:10:48.740 think? I think even just gathering, like, you know, going for an oil change, taking a ride on
00:10:53.400 the bike. I mean, we have motorcycles. Oh, we don't use them anymore. Too crowded now. But yeah,
00:10:59.120 it was like, hey, let's like, let's take a ride. And like, you know, a couple of guys would come
00:11:03.160 over, they'd go take a ride. And, you know, you stop and hit 7-Eleven and get a cup of coffee and
00:11:08.820 talk in the parking lot. And like, but that is maybe more how guys commune, or maybe they go
00:11:13.560 play pool or, or they're just, yeah, like working on an engine. I'm just thinking about what goes
00:11:19.360 on in my life. Um, but I think, you know, I feel like the younger people today, even when they're
00:11:25.680 together, they're just on their phones. So I hate that. I want everybody to like get your dopamine
00:11:32.120 hit from actually talking to your friends and like entertaining each other and, and make your
00:11:37.700 friends interested in something i don't know i say try to try to get your dopamine hits in person
00:11:44.000 with real life people and hone in some life skills like that but i don't know it's great to do when
00:11:50.380 you can and i you know i probably would have loved to have more time with friends at that age of 18
00:11:55.200 to 34 but um you know i just look at my life i mean obviously when i was 18 i was still in high
00:12:00.360 school and yeah i spent lots of time with my friends pretty much every day after school if
00:12:05.920 you didn't have homework or whatever you'd be going out with your friends and um there was a
00:12:10.460 lot of that but then you know college you're all kind of in the same place so that makes it really
00:12:14.520 easy you're almost constantly with friends um at least your roommates but you know everybody that's
00:12:20.200 around you it's really easy but then um when you get into the workforce it just totally changes
00:12:25.920 and at least in my case and probably many people's cases your college friends are all over the
00:12:31.860 country you know you can't see them every day they're not in the same city as you and so how
00:12:37.100 do you make friends and that I think is different for men and women but probably also just for
00:12:41.200 adults versus younger people because there's no natural way like there is in school to be like oh
00:12:47.020 let's let's go out let's have some fun type of thing and you know in my case like I said we would
00:12:53.720 have like happy hours after work on Fridays and things like that but that was always kind of
00:12:58.620 artificial to me and it seemed more natural to just make friends with people that you were just
00:13:02.700 on projects with or constantly spending lots of time with and it would usually basically be blended
00:13:07.980 into work and then when I did get married you know that that was who I wanted to spend time with was
00:13:15.360 my wife and when I had kids then of course that adds another layer to it where you're just trying
00:13:21.340 to spend as much time as you can with your kids and I pretty quickly came to the conclusion it's
00:13:25.800 like, I don't have time for friends anymore. Like that's, you know, I've got too much going on with
00:13:30.000 my family. So whenever I'm not working, I'm trying to spend time with my kids.
00:13:34.700 Yeah, I know. Parents have a lot on their plate. Crank one. You know what? Here's a little fun
00:13:40.560 fact. I actually have a motorcycle license. Yes, I do. I have a white helmet with two pink racing
00:13:49.540 stripes i don't own a motorcycle personally i have it's kind of like a vespa it's called an
00:13:56.140 aprilia it's italian also has a little white trunk on it it's so cute um but i'm gonna sell
00:14:01.960 it because it's not the same it's too crowded now like everybody's on their phone like we
00:14:07.020 weren't dealing with all this before it's just dangerous now erica i love i love you but we
00:14:11.420 can't describe motorcycles as cute mine was not cute well we also have um a hog and like a chopper
00:14:20.240 and we have a fat boy so if that helps that that kind of balances it out so mine is cute
00:14:26.780 curious because i always get asked all the time by motorcycle people
00:14:30.960 my last bike i sold a few years ago was a honda rc 51 and few people know what that is but it's
00:14:37.740 It's basically a Honda Ducati, V-twin, 1,000cc, stupid fast, very dangerous bike.
00:14:44.860 And boy, do I miss it.
00:14:46.460 Aw, it's so fun.
00:14:48.340 It is so fun.
00:14:50.220 We have a lot of adrenaline.
00:14:50.960 I'm glad you can come back now that gas is so expensive.
00:14:53.720 Exactly.
00:14:55.880 I'm thinking about getting a golf cart.
00:14:57.540 Your bike is your friend.
00:14:59.340 Yes.
00:14:59.840 All right.
00:15:00.320 Owen, take us in another direction now.
00:15:03.560 Well, we've got a Canada story about the military drill in the Arctic flopping in the extreme cold.
00:15:09.840 They had hundreds of troops that landed on an island in the high Arctic last month.
00:15:13.900 They had windchill temperatures of minus 80 degrees Fahrenheit.
00:15:17.900 And it kept the locals in their Victoria Island hamlet indoors.
00:15:25.860 There were a bunch of ice crystals they called diamond dust.
00:15:28.740 and apparently it just sealed the 30 foot tall door to the airport hangar so they couldn't open
00:15:34.740 the hangar door oh no so they pretty much couldn't do the drill and it just all flopped they couldn't
00:15:40.340 really make anything happen so yay canada military owen's not going to be the minister of tourism
00:15:47.340 for canada or the recruiter for the military i i will say i did enjoy my time in canada i've i've
00:15:55.160 there only as a tourist but actually i did work for a client there for a little while too that
00:15:59.240 was fun too but um um that one was i don't remember it probably in the direction of toronto i actually
00:16:08.760 i think it was in montreal it had such an impact on you you can't remember what city it's all right
00:16:13.880 i can't get back it was it was in quebec because they were speaking quebecois and that was the only
00:16:18.200 time i was in that region um well i i mean i know i know who the client was i just wasn't
00:16:23.160 trying to get into detail but um cool the client tops you know i went to i went skiing out in more
00:16:32.560 of the west region um that was a lot of fun i've been to toronto that was a lot of fun so it's a
00:16:38.560 good place to visit i just don't think i'd want to live there it's not the same place anymore man
00:16:43.740 it's a little bit more like uh i don't know afghanistan but whatever we'll talk
00:16:47.240 should we maybe a stand let's actually just talk about it like here we're talking about
00:16:52.980 canada now um i just said that so weird canada anyway um so is montreal galaxy here and there's
00:17:01.360 a oh here she is so i i want to know um i feel like last time we left off bj they were saying
00:17:09.640 you know what do you think what's happening with i don't know canadian ease okay so that the the
00:17:17.360 canadian police are going door to door i guess about people what they're putting on social media
00:17:23.060 is that what it was montreal um what's going on there like a whole you know crackdown i don't
00:17:29.940 i don't know uh i did see that i did see the video that was in i think it was in uh quebec
00:17:36.380 which was the most um authoritarian region on the entire planet during covid and that was on
00:17:44.020 under Lago, who's supposed to be a conservative. This is why I don't do the, you know, conservatives
00:17:49.600 good liberals bad thing because they were both bad during COVID. From my perspective, it's a
00:17:56.100 little different because I have family and friends in policing who are on our side. Like most cops
00:18:02.220 are just, this is all crazy nonsense, right? Sometimes in policing you have, as my brother
00:18:09.600 calls them the kiss asses or the traffic nerds. And they're just trying to climb the ladder. So
00:18:16.160 they'll be political lackeys and they'll do stuff like that just because they think it's going to
00:18:21.080 earn them a promotion. And by the way, that's who gets promoted. But most cops, from what I know,
00:18:26.620 just are on our side of this issue and are not there to police people's Twitter feeds or Facebook
00:18:34.140 posts. So I think there's more to it. I saw the video. My guess is if it is real, which it looks
00:18:41.240 like it's real, that you're dealing with new recruits that are just trying to climb the ladder
00:18:46.380 and they probably don't really care themselves. They just want to get a pat on the back when they
00:18:50.240 go back to meet with their sergeant. So Montreal Galaxy is saying Legault is not a conservative
00:18:57.000 and that this was in toronto uh well was he conservative was he he's not the conservative
00:19:04.140 party but he was uh he branded himself as more on the conservative side of things uh if it if it was
00:19:11.540 in toronto i i'm saying it like an american because i'm in the states if it's in toronto
00:19:16.480 then yeah there are some issues in the toronto police service with political entryism from
00:19:23.420 foreign uh actors shall we say and within their communications department and that that cancer is
00:19:30.900 spreading that's why i talk about this stuff all the time because it's been going on for many years
00:19:34.880 uh but beyond the video i don't i don't know anything beyond it so that's why i don't want to
00:19:40.080 i don't think we should jump to making conclusions about kind of the motives and what's going on
00:19:46.120 behind the scenes but yes this is the phenomenon of the politicization of police for a policing
00:19:52.440 For example, one quick example, you know, there's a particular member of parliament, I can say this now because my brother's now retired for a little while. One of the members of parliament who has ties to certain terrorist organizations, because that's the thing in Canada, we have members of parliament who are linked to those organizations, would regularly call the local police, like through the superintendent or directly and ask that somebody be arrested because they
00:20:22.420 said something that's, I don't know, Islamophobic or something like that. And often the senior
00:20:28.180 officer on duty was my brother. And he'd be like, yeah, yeah, that's what we're not here for. Goodbye
00:20:33.980 and hang up the phone. But what's happening within policing through the politicization of policing,
00:20:40.800 those sorts of people are now retiring. They're getting out. They're saying, I've had enough of
00:20:45.160 this. I can retire early. I'm finished. And now they're bringing in diversity hires to replace
00:20:52.260 the police force, and so much that one particular police force knew this was happening with DEI.
00:20:58.480 So they had a mad rush to hire as to overstaff and hire as many new recruits as possible before
00:21:05.860 the DEI quotas were put into place. And they wouldn't have to, they're trying to push back
00:21:13.820 the DEI requirements for hiring for 25 to 30 years. But a lot of police forces didn't do that.
00:21:20.400 So it's really complex what's going on.
00:21:22.360 Montreal, I wish I could drop the link in here for you.
00:21:25.200 If you would say you would come on, you could even ask your questions because I don't know.
00:21:29.220 I don't know what C8, C9 and C22 are, do you?
00:21:33.940 Yeah, that comes what they've taken.
00:21:35.980 Remember, Scott, he did me the favor where he highlighted Bill C63, which was the pre-crime thought crime bill that if you may, if you if somebody perceives that you might say something,
00:21:50.400 that could be offensive and hurtful in the future,
00:21:54.760 you could be prosecuted and potentially imprisoned for life.
00:22:00.180 Wow.
00:22:00.280 And everybody went after Scott, and Scott's like,
00:22:02.780 no, no, no, no, it's not even in legalese.
00:22:04.520 It's in the bill.
00:22:05.600 You can read it right in it.
00:22:07.080 So they took that bill and they divided it
00:22:09.240 into three separate bills, and one of them is C9.
00:22:13.640 And the goal of C9 is they want to end
00:22:17.140 the pro-terrorism protests in Canada, the Al-Quds Day protests, the stuff that's funded by Pakistan
00:22:24.600 and Iran and Muslim Brotherhood. That's where all this money is coming from. But instead of our
00:22:28.760 legislatures going after the money laundering mechanisms, because that would require a spine,
00:22:35.340 they're once again trying to treat a symptom and they're implementing laws that could very much
00:22:41.260 blowback in our faces and be used against Canadians.
00:22:45.820 I've been speaking with people who are involved in C9
00:22:49.100 and telling them, like, what are you doing?
00:22:50.760 You keep taking the bait.
00:22:52.680 Like, just go after the core of the issue.
00:22:55.540 But politicians don't want to do that.
00:22:57.720 And they don't want to do that for some reason.
00:22:59.120 That's crazy.
00:23:00.540 So now you can be put in jail for people mind-reading
00:23:06.800 what you might do.
00:23:08.040 well they they softened it and they divided it up into c9 and um it's not quite doesn't have
00:23:15.940 quite the teeth but there's two other bills that are making their way through that are around this
00:23:21.420 particular issue like why do you think i want to be in the united states why do you think i'm here
00:23:24.420 all the time yeah like it's how does that work for you so are you are you going to move here or
00:23:30.540 are you i mean you were you were really working hard and getting involved in politics in canada
00:23:36.380 So do you have more of that stay and fight for your country and make change?
00:23:40.260 Or like, F it, it's so far gone?
00:23:43.760 I don't think it's so far gone that it can't be fixed.
00:23:46.940 I think the mechanism, and Canadians get upset with me when I say this,
00:23:51.440 but Canada does as the United States does.
00:23:55.020 The United States controls 76% of our economy.
00:23:57.740 It doesn't matter what we want, what we like.
00:24:00.480 You guys are essentially going to dictate our policy over the long term.
00:24:03.900 and that's why
00:24:05.420 when is it going to be the 51st
00:24:08.200 date then? You know what's funny
00:24:09.940 so remember
00:24:11.540 last was the last year
00:24:13.840 when Trudeau
00:24:16.240 did his final few months
00:24:18.020 he went to Mar-a-Lago
00:24:19.480 and he had his testicles
00:24:22.100 severed by Donald Trump that was
00:24:24.000 the night that he asked Trudeau
00:24:26.160 saying what would happen if I put
00:24:28.040 a 25% tariff on your country he said
00:24:30.020 well that would destroy my economy
00:24:31.460 you dumbass you don't tell him that well
00:24:33.760 And the next day, the next night, I gave a presentation on national security threats from Canada and Latin America to an audience of which many of those people, some of them live at Mar-a-Lago, many of them are big donors to Trump and all that sort of stuff.
00:24:51.060 So when I was finished, firstly, they wanted to invade Canada and a couple of countries in South America, and it's already in process.
00:24:58.100 and the other thing is I have never and this is I love you guys but normally with an American
00:25:03.960 and all Canadians know this when you say the word Canada normally your eyes just glaze over like you
00:25:09.360 just don't have the attention span and just move on this was the first time in my life I fielded
00:25:14.580 questions for an hour about Canada oh should it become the 51st state would Canadians like it how
00:25:20.220 would it work do they like us and all that sort of stuff and my advice to them was this you cannot
00:25:26.340 make Canada the 51st state. The last thing you want are Canadians in Toronto, Montreal, and
00:25:33.020 Vancouver voting in the Electoral College. That'll be in the country. What you want is Canada to be
00:25:39.240 a territory like Puerto Rico. Make it a tax haven. We can expropriate all the natural resources of
00:25:46.760 the country. And, you know, we can have our own little elections. But in terms of the national
00:25:52.200 state they don't have they don't have a say and i think that would probably be the best way to fix
00:25:57.080 canada over the long term i fully agree oh and i think we had talked about that marcella that yes
00:26:02.200 like make it a territory but you know if the democrats come back in power they'd be like no
00:26:06.320 they should vote too and we're gonna change it but um yeah i agree i'm good i'm good with the
00:26:13.680 territory idea i think so i had a question regarding um c9 um because it's my understanding
00:26:21.200 that canada doesn't have a first amendment right like the u.s does but they do have the charter
00:26:26.600 the canadian charter rights um i know you're laughing but uh is there is there people that are
00:26:33.600 taking the c9 law to court and saying hey this is against the rules of my free freedom of expression
00:26:41.780 or are there's are people fighting these these type of laws so there's a couple of organizations
00:26:49.440 that that do this stuff but they're mainly political money laundering operations that
00:26:55.060 support the political parties and they mask as activist organizations which is what i dealt with
00:27:01.100 uh during the trucker convoy um but in terms of just to explain how it is in canada no we do not
00:27:07.920 have a first amendment we have what's called the charter of free rights and freedoms uh but the
00:27:13.320 problem with the charter of rights and freedoms as we experience during the trucker convoy
00:27:17.620 is in the very last moment before the Charter of Rights and Freedoms was signed in the early 80s,
00:27:25.040 I think 82, 83, something like that, just before it was signed, somebody, and nobody knows who,
00:27:32.140 just magically, there was a Section 1. Section 1 was inserted in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
00:27:40.100 And that effectively says that all of the outlined rights and freedoms in this document
00:27:46.340 can be negated if the government thinks there is a clear and present danger to national security
00:27:54.400 which is what they did with the trucker convoy and they said oh and covid as well by the way
00:28:00.920 yeah you have the rights but it's such a national security risk to canada that we're now going to
00:28:06.740 negate all those rights and freedoms that's why it was such a big deal recently when the supreme
00:28:11.620 court ruled it was the supreme court i know first it was mosley and that was about the trucker
00:28:16.400 convent it's been a bunch of things coming out but basically they suggested that no the government
00:28:20.480 did not have the right to suspend their freedoms our freedoms during that period okay well where's
00:28:26.160 the repercussion of course being canada there never is but it could serve as a precedent for
00:28:34.000 these other censorship laws that that you could use that specific opinion of covid being and into
00:28:44.900 i'm imagining into any other future case maybe yeah i guess potentially but uh you gotta
00:28:53.600 understand it's such a small country and it is so controlled it's really just three big cities
00:28:57.980 you know there's a couple other smaller cities that have influence but it's basically the three
00:29:02.240 big leftist cities that control the country. And then the conservative mechanism that's supposed
00:29:07.660 to be the opposition is just about grift and making money and going to the United States.
00:29:13.280 That's kind of how it works. So there's really no one there that is fighting. And when there's
00:29:18.400 people like myself and others that fight, what we have, we have the left that goes after us with
00:29:23.220 lawfare. And then we have the right that goes after us by throwing knives in our backs and
00:29:28.220 trying to spread rumors about us. You know, there's a number of us who got engaged because
00:29:32.980 we cared about, you know, where the country was going. We thought, you know, somebody needs to
00:29:37.520 stand up and speak up. And every time we do, there's another containment and capture strategy
00:29:44.080 that is put into place to ensure that there's no actual opposition. That's why both, you know,
00:29:50.580 I've tried to explain this to people and they have difficulty putting it together. That's why
00:29:55.320 the people who screwed the truckers were the conservatives and the liberals and it is in
00:30:02.200 testimony in what we we had a public inquiry after of the two leaders of the conservative party and
00:30:08.840 justin trudeau saying yes i think we need to put an end to this protest in the very early days
00:30:16.040 let's hop on a call and the reason was and this is the context i'll give for justin trudeau to
00:30:21.720 to get elected. They had to raise $40 million. It's really all it gets. It's much cheaper in
00:30:26.620 Canada, smaller country. It took them four years to raise $40 million to get Justin Trudeau elected.
00:30:32.920 We raised cumulatively $25 million in three weeks. So we became the official opposition.
00:30:40.720 And they were worried that we were going to form a political party and put them out of a job. So
00:30:46.480 what did they do? They both conspired together to pull the rug out from underneath us. That's
00:30:50.980 how canada works it's all containment and capture the um so for those of you that don't know can you
00:30:58.900 give us some background to bj um about the honking for freedom and your involvement with that because
00:31:04.220 i mean scott loved it we loved it i mean everybody here was like cheering you guys on i was just like
00:31:11.460 yes like this is the people and then i'm sorry again you guys i i i'm blanking on her name the
00:31:18.300 woman they arrested that night, is she still in jail? No, no, no. She, she was working for the
00:31:24.980 political establishment to subvert us. And, uh, so a bunch of truckers got involved. She's the
00:31:31.440 one who called me and said, you know, we need somebody who can help, uh, who can do communications
00:31:36.780 and all that sort of stuff. And I just happened to have a truck as well. And, uh, I said, yeah,
00:31:41.980 sure. I'll, I'll get involved. And that's how kind of we, we started the journey of, you know,
00:31:47.720 from my perspective was to reframe. I have an article on my sub stack about it with Scott's
00:31:52.120 book and my book. And it's titled The Greatest Reframe in Canadian History. That's what I tried
00:31:57.680 to do, to reframe it from a protest to a celebration of freedom, to make it open for everybody. But the
00:32:04.780 political establishment didn't like that. They were trying to destroy it every day. We could
00:32:12.020 talked for hours about the techniques that they used it so my role in it was communication
00:32:17.300 spokesperson so i didn't really focus on canadian media i actually banned our canadian media so for
00:32:23.200 those who don't like the cbc and the toronto star and global mail all the major news outlets
00:32:28.980 what i did for our press conferences as i sent an email to all of them because i have them all
00:32:34.440 on a media list because i've done other political stuff before and i said if you want to join our
00:32:39.040 press conference please uh submit an application submit a request we have a small venue and they
00:32:44.980 all responded and said yeah yeah we want to come to your press conference and i would get on these
00:32:49.180 are the equivalents of the new york times right and i would respond to them say i'm sorry we don't
00:32:53.420 recognize you as a credible news agency sorry you're not allowed to attend opened it up to
00:32:58.380 alternative media and that is why it went viral uh so quickly and we got i was trying to go for
00:33:05.000 100 million views the first week and cumulatively and i think we got close to it that's why it went
00:33:10.020 global oh and what say you well i think it was pretty successful um i think you did a great job
00:33:18.140 i think it's funny you know maybe you should have picked up on uh elon musk's idea of using the poop
00:33:24.360 emoji can i tell you a funny story and elon musk's gonna get so angry at this i was in the uh media
00:33:31.300 room which was my my hotel room and adjacent suite and somebody comes in says we got a this
00:33:37.080 is what i'm told this i told this was verified okay fine um i was told we got a donation for
00:33:43.900 42,069 dollars and i said no that's funny who uh who donated they said well it's anonymous
00:33:53.300 but but the domain was there was a domain that was put instead of a name and i said what's the
00:34:00.400 domain i said it's lawyer.com and i said did you check if the who is is activated they said no it's
00:34:07.500 not it's public i said well who who has it well it points to justin trudeau's wikipedia and it's
00:34:15.720 registered by to somebody by the name of elon musk i couldn't i was so busy with so much other stuff
00:34:22.980 that i didn't get to independently verify but this is a member of my team that uh that that brought
00:34:29.460 this to me so if it's a true story and if that's what happened i think it did that's that's amazing
00:34:34.340 there's so many stories like that from that period it was nice so i i know pierre polivera was on joe
00:34:40.780 rogan recently he made some news with that um did you get a chance to watch that and did you have
00:34:45.100 any reaction to it uh no i didn't watch it i mean i know pierre personally i've met with him at uh
00:34:51.720 when i was actively involved in the party at you know some of the big donors and big wigs in the
00:34:56.880 party. And if they keep on this trajectory, he's never going to get elected. During the first
00:35:04.540 press conference, I was going after the previous leader because there were some very dodgy ties
00:35:10.160 to some of that dirty money that I mentioned before and foreign influence. And I was asked
00:35:16.460 in the press conference, what could the conservatives do during this period? I said,
00:35:21.660 well, first get rid of Aaron O'Toole. We're not even interested in this guy. That was a previous
00:35:25.660 leader, right? The lefty guy. And 48 hours later, he was gone. And they asked me who would be the
00:35:33.220 best to lead the Conservative Party. And I said, well, at this time, the only person they have on
00:35:37.580 their bench, as Scott would discuss it, was Pierre Polyev. And the reason Pierre Polyev was so
00:35:45.180 influential, and I'm sure there's people from the party watching this now. So this is my advice to
00:35:49.440 you, as I have a lot of friends in the party who love me and a lot who hate me. My advice to you
00:35:55.580 guys is this. The second most, and Scott talked about this, we learn this in hypnosis all the
00:36:01.040 time. The second most influential framing, emotional framing, is mockery and ridicule.
00:36:09.100 That is why Pierre Polyev was so effective and why I suggested he would be perfect because people
00:36:17.880 are so fed up. They want somebody who is going to echo their sentiment as they're throwing popcorn
00:36:24.280 at the TV screen. But what does the party mechanism do, like many political parties?
00:36:30.180 Not in the United States. And this is what Trump was up against, the same thing.
00:36:33.860 They take this new candidate, they put him in the corporate political party blue suit,
00:36:41.380 take off his glasses, do his hair differently, and try to make him a carbon copy of Stephen
00:36:47.340 Harper, the previous prime minister. That's not what people want. People want still
00:36:54.060 the actual Pierre Polyev, who's got a little bit of edge in him. That's why he was popular. And
00:37:00.040 they have taken all the edge out of him to try to make him safe, to appeal to liberal voters,
00:37:05.960 because they've convinced themselves that Canada is a liberal country. No, it's three liberal
00:37:12.560 cities. The rest of the country is very, very conservative. And I have a friend of mine who
00:37:18.600 was supposed to be leader of that party, was in the running. His name is Jim Kalaharios.
00:37:22.400 And he got so fed up that he started his own Ontario, you know, provincial conservative party named New Blue, just because this is how this mechanism keeps ruining candidates to try to be, as they call them, liberal light.
00:37:37.560 And then they wonder why they won't get elected.
00:37:39.760 It's frustrating.
00:37:40.440 it sounds like um the rob me romney versus trump one tries to appeal to the masses or the alleged
00:37:51.640 you know left and middle of the road and then trump just just himself and they were thinking
00:37:58.440 that he couldn't win because of the fact that he was edgy you know when he came out in 2015.
00:38:04.200 yeah and you know scott mentioned this once and we were talking right around that time about this
00:38:09.000 issue dming back and forth and you know he tried to explain to convey this is what i learned when
00:38:14.520 i ran for office a couple of times the electorate are not schizophrenic it's not like this is how
00:38:21.240 scott described it's so accurate it's not like one day they're voting for biden and the next
00:38:26.040 day they're voting for trump and the next day they're voting for biden that's not the game
00:38:30.440 the game is to convince the other side's team to stay home and for your team to come out in
00:38:37.640 your GOTV strategy. That's the game. But they keep trying to do this. And I know why it's
00:38:45.200 people behind the scenes, but they keep trying to do this strategy of, well, we're going to become
00:38:49.800 the new liberal party because Canada is a liberal country. And it's just like, we're a liberal
00:38:53.980 democracy, but most of the country has very traditional and conservative values. But they
00:38:59.860 are convincing themselves of the opposite, or it's just people from the more liberal type
00:39:07.620 establishment that are trying to co-opt conservative circles because the liberal
00:39:12.920 circles have gone completely off a cliff with this neo-progressivism nonsense, right?
00:39:20.420 Right. They need a leader to excite these conservative masses to come out and vote,
00:39:26.280 I imagine. I don't know, you know, I don't know Canadian voting roles of whether everybody comes
00:39:32.820 out uh to vote uh if they're not excited about a candidate well that's the other thing i mean and
00:39:38.980 when there's you know excitement in the air the the people like you know how many offers i had
00:39:43.540 as soon as the convoy was was over a lot saying you should run for leadership you should run for
00:39:48.660 leadership you should i know the shell game is rigged i'm gonna run because i'm not part of the
00:39:54.180 establishment because i'm not a lifetime political guy what's gonna happen is i'm gonna raise a few
00:40:00.660 million dollars with donors i'm going to build a voter id list of a couple of hundred thousand
00:40:05.700 people who donated and then they're going to disqualify me in the last minute and then give
00:40:10.980 it to their establishment candidate which is what they did with tool and that's it is it's very
00:40:16.500 different in canada i know scott disliked the word oligarch but that's kind of how canada operates
00:40:23.860 It's a group of maybe 20, 25 very wealthy, influential industrial families that control the entire political apparatus.
00:40:35.240 And by the way, it's not because they're evil and it's malicious.
00:40:38.520 They're scared.
00:40:39.680 They see what's going on, what you and I see, and they don't want to see the country fall apart either.
00:40:45.580 But the problem is, as Scott would talk about this with Soros, the problem is they're surrounded often by sometimes good people and sometimes some very unethical vultures that are just trying to scam as much money from as many places as possible.
00:41:04.460 And that's what really causes the chaos within the system.
00:41:08.800 BJ, what could you tell us about the Alberta separatism issue?
00:41:14.200 Well, that's already been co-opted. This is why I tried to warn people about the trucker convoy and how the trucker convoy was co-opted. Because if you look at the copy and the people who are elevated and promoting and speaking on behalf of the Alberta separatist movement, you'll notice it's the same people who co-opted the trucker convoy.
00:41:41.140 there's a reason for that and i i was thinking for a while what's going to be their strategy
00:41:47.020 how are they going to going to get involved take over this movement and screw the movement which
00:41:52.640 is i know that and and make as much money as possible in the process and i couldn't i couldn't
00:41:58.760 put my head around it what are they going to do how are they going to because they're very very
00:42:01.700 clever and then finally it hit me i saw it maybe six weeks ago there was a native chief who uh
00:42:11.460 somehow got the mic in i think it was in parliament if i'm not mistaken one of the parliament
00:42:16.620 maybe the uh provincial legislature i'm not sure uh was invited uh and you and i don't just get
00:42:22.380 invited you have to have contacts to get invited so he was given the mic in parliament in some you
00:42:29.340 know in the media room explaining the perspective of the native uh canadians uh first nations that
00:42:36.300 okay if you want to separate you just you can leave and we're going to keep it and i thought
00:42:42.560 huh i remember sitting down in a hotel room with that chief during the trucker convoy and him
00:42:51.140 trying to figure out how to milk us for as much of the donation money as possible that's how they're
00:42:57.200 going to do it. They're going to use the native population as a wedge to weaken the separatist
00:43:02.660 movement to say, well, there's not really the will for it. And that's it. That's how it's going to go
00:43:07.320 down. And they're going to make money hand over fist doing it. So frustrating. There's really
00:43:13.120 good people that want to make a difference everywhere. And then you do realize everywhere
00:43:18.320 in this world, it seems like there's just a very, very tiny few people controlling the world. And
00:43:26.100 the corruption so deep, the money trail, the power play, everybody, it seems like everybody
00:43:33.060 is coordinated on this, you know, like our country is going to do this, your country is
00:43:37.180 going to do that. The rest of it seems like theater. And then the good people that have
00:43:41.100 great ideas, it's like, you just want to give up because you're never going to break through that.
00:43:46.800 And I think that's why, you know, when Trump ran, I was talking about this last night,
00:43:51.700 I was so excited because I'm like, holy shit, this guy's got nothing to do with anything. And he's like, I'm going to burn it all down. I'm going to shake the box. I'm going to drain the swamp. I'm going to call everyone out. And I was like, yes, yes, yes. You know, it took like a person with that kind of chutzpah to come in and do something like that.
00:44:13.320 And I think when he got here, he was like, well, it's not as easy as it seems.
00:44:16.620 And I had no idea how bad the swamp was.
00:44:21.040 You know, so I, I, I always want to like encourage people.
00:44:25.680 I think if you start small, like more on the local level and try to break through there
00:44:30.360 and make some changes, like very local to where you live and see if you can spread out
00:44:36.440 from there, because I think it would take a Trump like figure to break into, you know,
00:44:41.620 the world stage.
00:44:42.840 but I don't feel like we should give up because it feels like we should.
00:44:47.400 For sure. And maybe my last comments on this. The only thing I disagree with you is that there's a
00:44:52.420 small group of people that run the world. It's in the case of Canada, it's a smaller country.
00:44:59.260 So yeah, there's 20 or 30 families that are very influential in politics, but then there's other
00:45:05.180 people that are very influential in business. And there's all sorts of competing interests.
00:45:10.480 And sometimes they're alignments, sometimes they're not.
00:45:12.700 Like I was at an event recently here in Florida
00:45:14.660 with some very, very wealthy people a couple of days ago,
00:45:18.820 like a private meeting.
00:45:20.440 They are the money establishment, if you would call it,
00:45:24.960 and they are as concerned as you and I.
00:45:28.240 And they wanted to meet with me to say,
00:45:30.000 listen, how do we fix it?
00:45:31.340 Tell us what happened in Canada.
00:45:33.240 Tell us about the other things that you did.
00:45:34.980 How can we help sort of thing?
00:45:36.980 So they're just as scared as you and I.
00:45:38.700 And it's just like, you know, Scott talked about this.
00:45:40.560 Do you think Bill Gates and Elon Musk and Sam Altman are on the same page?
00:45:45.700 No, they hate each other.
00:45:46.760 Well, those are just things that we see publicly.
00:45:49.640 There's a lot of those people behind the scenes that are always, you know, at each other's throats.
00:45:55.060 And they're on the opposite side of issues.
00:45:57.240 So it's kind of a tug of war.
00:45:58.700 The biggest problem, and this is why I talk about, you know, the problem of Muslim Brotherhood and foreign interests and all that sort of stuff and IRGC.
00:46:08.700 The problem that we have, and CCP, by the way, the problem we have is the foreign interests that are trying to drive a wedge and get us all fighting with each other.
00:46:18.640 And that weakens us because when you don't have a society that is unified on its most basic principles, it's going to collapse.
00:46:27.580 And what is the most basic thing that you can go after, you can destroy, you can use to destroy a society?
00:46:33.620 And Scott explained this, that to the two number one most persuasive frames are fear and identity.
00:46:42.900 And what's the most basic form of identity that we form for our view of the world is our sex.
00:46:51.100 Are we a boy and a girl?
00:46:52.660 And I remember doing the last thing.
00:46:54.520 I remember going on a tour, a speaking tour with somebody who I was created a podcast for that's from the military. Fascinating guy. I learned so much from him, how things work on the military side. And he would often get asking, why are these foreign actors able to be so successful in utilizing their strategy of political entryism in Canada and the United States? And we don't know how to fight back. And he said, it's pretty simple.
00:47:21.300 uh he said particularly with the islamists they are singularly focused they're very simple
00:47:26.900 and they all have one direction because they share a philosophy and they don't even have to
00:47:33.940 coordinate with each other they understand how they work your kids can't tell the difference
00:47:40.320 between a boy and a girl that's why they're winning well that takes you back to um oh my god
00:47:47.480 how can i'm blanking today the madness of crowds who wrote that book um have you ever been to who's
00:47:54.320 that douglas murray douglas murray thank you um you know he talks about that too the way to break
00:48:00.140 down a society is you know gender confusion is definitely not that we're confused but to to
00:48:06.520 create gender confusion um and you know so some people are like well talk about america and how
00:48:12.360 does it relate well it does because we border each other and we oddly you know canada mimics
00:48:20.280 a lot of what we're doing but also canada is also a a foreshadowing of what could come here
00:48:26.960 and there's like a trickle effect and if you don't think that's true you know just hold on
00:48:32.900 tight because we were taught to tolerate the intolerance and if you said anything about it
00:48:41.280 you like who and who cares what name anybody calls you guys like call me a name call me a
00:48:46.480 nazi i don't like it means nothing i don't care but uh you know i um i want a safe country and
00:48:52.820 i want the borders closed and we're stella is on one today and we're not all alike you know
00:49:00.080 everyone's like oh you know you have to you know we're all the same no we're not we're not all the
00:49:05.340 same. And we're really losing our identities and our countries. And so you're just like
00:49:11.200 making the water so murky now that countries are just blending into one blob and the intolerance
00:49:19.740 and the, the hate and the violence I'm afraid are going to, uh, take over and we have to just
00:49:29.880 start getting real about it so yes sticks and stones exactly so i i just think go ahead i was
00:49:37.020 gonna say but i just think you know the way the world's going today it's like you could say well
00:49:43.220 i care about america and bj cares about canada and you care about italy but we're morphing into
00:49:48.280 each other so it is it's a it's a global issue and and the reason is it doesn't matter if it's
00:49:56.320 Venezuela, Israel, Canada, the United States, Argentina, and this is very important, and this
00:50:04.480 could be the unifying call for people to understand. America is the target. These are the back doors
00:50:14.040 that they go through to destroy America's allies because America is the target, and you'll see all
00:50:22.220 sorts of shell games of people trying to distract from this country and another country and whatever
00:50:26.940 the reason is you are the target and this is when you hear all this duganist nonsense of the
00:50:33.900 multipolar world because russia is a completely irrelevant country that's very weak i doubt their
00:50:39.660 nukes work it's a gas station that's all but collapsed but they want to make themselves into
00:50:45.400 relevancy by attacking america and i can maybe on another episode i can explain how that's all
00:50:53.640 mapped out because i learned this from a member of parliament who is well versed in this and
00:50:58.460 explains how it all works from the back end and we're now finally 10 years later we're now seeing
00:51:04.260 how it operates in social media but you are the target that's why i'm here this is why i want to
00:51:10.000 protect america this is why america is so important to every country in the world including
00:51:15.140 Canada. We need the American society, the American project to continue and to be successful. And I
00:51:22.640 personally, I don't think America is collapsing. I think America is still on its ascension.
00:51:28.260 This is why people are trying to attack it. And look what Donald Trump has done.
00:51:32.260 If they secure this Monroe Doctrine, remember, Canada is included in the Monroe Doctrine,
00:51:41.960 But that would make us all secure for a hundred years.
00:51:46.060 I think that's the effect it'll have.
00:51:48.000 And we have to be careful too.
00:51:49.500 And Owen, I want to jump you in in a second here,
00:51:51.580 but we have to be careful too.
00:51:53.380 You know, so about like,
00:51:54.600 we're talking about fracturing and separating people.
00:51:56.860 I can tell you every single day, you guys,
00:52:00.120 besides the amazing DMs I get from you guys, love them.
00:52:04.020 I'm attacked every single day on, you know,
00:52:07.340 whatever happened on the show.
00:52:08.640 Like you should say this and you shouldn't like that.
00:52:11.600 And everybody attacking me, it's like they're telling me I'm doing the opposite thing of each
00:52:15.600 other. And I'm like, how can these both be true? They can't be. But what I'm going to tell you is
00:52:20.000 our elections do matter. And whether you're mad at Trump for this or you think Israel's doing that
00:52:27.800 or whatever it is, at the end of the day, you have to vote in the Republicans, okay? You have to,
00:52:35.640 because it's so much bigger than the nuance of the arguments and you know yeah i i um i like a
00:52:44.740 lot of different controversial figures i have many different opinions but if i have to go vote today
00:52:50.980 you better believe i'm voting for every republican on the ballot and people are getting distracted
00:52:57.380 there was a house special race in florida just recently and a democrat won and it was the place
00:53:03.660 where mar-a-lago is and it was like a huge plus trump district and now there's a democrat in the
00:53:10.760 house for that district yes and i i can't imagine that would have taken place if people weren't
00:53:15.640 distracted it's a little bit like the game you talked about bj where if you can get the other
00:53:19.560 side to stay home just by giving them other stuff to worry about or don't even let them know that
00:53:24.300 the election's happening then you can go out and make a difference but you got to pay attention
00:53:28.120 you got to know when these things are happening you got to exercise your right to vote you got
00:53:33.020 to get to the polls and and make sure things go the way you want them to even if you have to hold
00:53:38.160 your nose even if you're like well I don't like that issue I mean listen if you're in a relationship
00:53:42.660 with someone and they you know suddenly you don't like the way they're chewing their food or like
00:53:48.880 now they're snoring let's say you don't end the relationship you're like oh all right like I love
00:53:54.360 all of this that thing's annoying but like okay we're not getting divorced over that so you know
00:53:59.900 Hold your nose if you have to. Just remember you're purposely being distracted. People are
00:54:06.560 trying to divide us because I promise you it's true what BJ said. America is the target. I mean,
00:54:14.880 ISIS said our goal is to hang our flag at the White House and on the Capitol. And they all
00:54:22.560 have the same goal. So, you know, if everyone's going to now, if anyone's going to write to me
00:54:27.720 and be like, not all Muslims are bad. I never said that. Okay. I never said that, but I'm going to
00:54:33.540 tell you that Islam is coming for America. We are the, if they conquer America, the game's over.
00:54:41.320 So that's like, not to scare you and you guys know what a worry ward I am, but it's, we're being
00:54:46.580 surrounded in all these different countries and everything is. So it comes here and you're
00:54:51.800 overwhelmed so you know it's so so next time you see yourself getting distracted or you're flipping
00:54:57.960 out about massey or you're flipping out about trump or you're flipping out about netanyahu
00:55:03.040 f it it it just at the end of the day like you could be mad about it now but you're you've got
00:55:09.620 to go vote for the republicans okay whether you love them or not it is the only chance we have
00:55:15.280 and just a little asterisk there erica and erica and then i want to hear from ourselves pretty
00:55:19.040 voice. There was the Holy Land Foundation terrorism trial, and there was documentation
00:55:25.940 found from the early 90s that the Muslim Brotherhood, which is the umbrella that
00:55:31.120 operates in almost any country, every country in the world, their policy document is about
00:55:37.600 how they will destroy America from the inside, utilizing exactly the tactics that we're seeing
00:55:44.000 right now and this is why you know to marcel we discussed this previously that it's important to
00:55:49.760 divide to show the division between muslims who just want to be left alone and the islamist cause
00:55:55.140 which comes from the muslim brotherhood which started in the 20s that's what we're up against
00:56:00.140 that's who we have to go after so what i was gonna bring up bj and everybody else is i have
00:56:08.640 I was thinking of different theories about one of the main dangers of Islamists and extremists
00:56:19.020 is that they are, at least in England and in Canada, I don't know for sure in America,
00:56:24.920 is that they are adding British people, Canadian people that are not naturally from Arab countries
00:56:36.300 or from, you know, naturally Islam, from Islam or Muslim, and they're converting, there's a huge
00:56:45.920 conversion process. But my thoughts are that this is, and this goes back to like, who's controlling
00:56:53.500 everything, because it seems like it's creating a left, very leftist, very extreme left, where
00:57:01.740 You have children being able to change genders. You have all these very ideas that are extreme and then very anti-male and so on and so forth.
00:57:15.040 So the conversion rate into Islam is worrisome.
00:57:20.840 And I think the majority of people that are asked or men that convert to Islam are because they find brotherhood in Islam. They also find wives that come from other countries. They also find, you know, respect as males to be able to deal with their daily lives.
00:57:45.420 So I was wondering if you can comment on that.
00:57:48.200 Like, is that part of the entire scheme?
00:57:51.840 It seems like it's the perfect storm.
00:57:55.100 Do you have one minute to do it?
00:57:56.840 Yeah, it's the demoralization on one side and then it's empowerment on the other.
00:58:01.280 And when I went back to school for mechanical engineering, I was surrounded by all these kids from Pakistan.
00:58:06.940 It was crazy.
00:58:07.920 They're all jihad.
00:58:09.480 And they told me how amazing it is to go back to Lahore because the women are your slaves
00:58:14.280 and you can do whatever they want.
00:58:15.860 And he was just kids that were 20 years old
00:58:18.580 and had no success with women.
00:58:21.120 But they've bought into the idea
00:58:23.160 that if they join this extremism sort of sect,
00:58:27.020 then finally, they're not going to be alone.
00:58:30.180 I think that's where it is at the core issue
00:58:32.320 on an emotional level.
00:58:35.020 Wow.
00:58:35.900 Mm-hmm.
00:58:36.740 All right, you guys, that's intense, right?
00:58:39.820 But it's an important conversation to have.
00:58:42.800 and um we'll have to keep going bj you know i'm going to text you right after this and be like
00:58:49.420 okay next week what day can you come on we love you know it's such an honor uh for those of us
00:58:56.020 who miss scott and got so much from him uh all of us who join it's uh it's such an honor to be
00:59:02.440 able to to try to help and contribute whether we're right or wrong but just to be a part of
00:59:06.680 what you guys are building so thanks that's our pleasure um owen and marcella i love you guys
00:59:13.660 and everybody that tuned in today same same sometimes you know sometimes we you know feel
00:59:19.960 more passionate about things but just know like there are opinions you can do what you want um
00:59:25.940 don't come for me all right i just just here giving my two cents um but you guys listen
00:59:32.940 let's do a closing sip to Scott. Oh, and tomorrow we have joining us again is Steve Cortez. So
00:59:41.200 that'll, that'll probably be, um, actually I have to firm up with him what we're going to discuss,
00:59:46.420 but it's always interesting with him. He's a great, a great guest. Uh, you guys let's go be
00:59:51.180 useful and, um, let's put America first and put freedom first, no matter what country you're
00:59:59.460 listening from. And, um, just remember there is a greater good and we have to stop and think about
01:00:07.580 how do we get there and take our ego out of it and think past the sale. Like think,
01:00:15.180 think 10 years from now, what our lives could look like if we don't, for some of us, hold our nose
01:00:22.260 and vote, vote for freedom. Okay. I know, I know it's complicated. I know. All right. I love you
01:00:27.980 guys um we'll see you tomorrow and a closing sip to scott say your goodbyes happy eye doc
01:00:33.060 and um let's go be useful today i'm sure gonna try to scott and duncan donuts can endorse this
01:00:40.920 podcast anytime they want right for the right cheers
01:00:45.280 thank you
01:00:50.840 bye-bye