Stand on Guard with David Krayden - May 03, 2024


Kyle Kemper Says His Half-Brother Justin Trudeau Taking Orders fr Globalists | Stand on Guard Ep 125


Episode Stats


Length

57 minutes

Words per minute

165.03462

Word count

9,511

Sentence count

4

Harmful content

Misogyny

2

sentences flagged

Toxicity

4

sentences flagged

Hate speech

5

sentences flagged


Summary

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

On this episode of Stand on Guard, my special guest is Justin Trudeau's half brother, Dr. Kyle Kemper. Dr. Kemper is an author of two books, "The Unified Wallet Unlocking a Digital Golden Age and Canada's Golden Age" and "The Uniparty" and has been a long-time advocate for standing on guard for the people of Canada.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Toxicity classifications generated with s-nlp/roberta_toxicity_classifier .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 welcome to another episode of stand on guard i'm your host david crayton and when we come back
00:00:06.760 my special guest kyle kemper who is justin trudeau is his half brother not the other
00:00:17.200 way around so we'll be right back with kyle kemper so we are in a very precarious position
00:00:28.840 in this country we need political change but we also need to resolve to resist
00:00:35.380 yes please like the station please give us a thumbs up please subscribe if you haven't already
00:00:53.380 and if youtube is unsubscribed you please resubscribe so we've been doing a lot of that
00:00:58.580 lately but by way of introduction i'm very happy to have kyle here today i have been watching a lot
00:01:05.960 of kyle's work on social media for the past six months and as i said at the beginning if you
00:01:11.900 don't know who kyle kemper is it's not just that justin trudeau is his half brother he is a real
00:01:17.640 renaissance man and you know what i when i was looking up to some of the stuff he's done he's
00:01:22.980 been very active in financial matters and he is seeing the he wants the world to be more abundant
00:01:30.660 and prosperous he's the author of two books the unified wallet unlocking a digital golden age
00:01:36.640 and canadao i hope i'm saying pronouncing that as you wanted to how we return power to the people
00:01:43.420 and since graduating from university in 2008 kyle has worked closely with dozens of industry including
00:01:50.800 cryptocurrency which i found uh found interesting you share that interest with conservative leader
00:01:56.600 peer polio who used to used to advise people to invest in that hasn't done that lately but
00:02:02.540 he is uh he certainly has indicated that in the past i'm wondering kyle just to begin things with a
00:02:10.900 current events thing were you aware of what happened this week in the house of commons
00:02:15.540 with the speaker greg fergus dismissing the official opposition leader peer polio the other day
00:02:24.140 that was uh i guess tuesday when he he he ordered polio out of the house of commons because
00:02:30.620 he referred to prime minister trudeau as a wacko and extremist and a lot of people thought that was
00:02:40.800 very ominous because while he while polio was calling trudeau a wacko and extremist justin trudeau 0.95
00:02:50.300 was calling polio an extremist who supports white supremacy and yet there seemed to be a double
00:02:55.440 standard now do you think this was a very ominous moment in canadian politics when the leader of the
00:03:03.700 opposition is unceremoniously kicked out of question period because he said something that i don't
00:03:10.640 think the speaker is so much objected to but that the prime minister objected to well david thanks for
00:03:17.580 having me on your show and uh and kudos to you on all the work that you've been doing you know
00:03:23.800 highlighting and standing on guard for the people of canada because it seems to me like canadians do
00:03:32.900 not have representation in the house of commons uh the like and this is a nice example of just the
00:03:43.260 the theater that has become our house of commons uh where like you said it's it's kind of hypocritical
00:03:54.620 in that you know whatever the words he used and probably like you know chose
00:04:01.060 a poor word but whatever he's trying to get a point across and you know to be expelled from the
00:04:09.720 house are saying that you know while at the same time i mean the liberals i see it in my my x feed or
00:04:17.140 twitter feed all day long it's like you know them basically advertising the fact that you know pierre
00:04:23.880 poliev equals trump equals alex jones and it's just like this really cheap game of like don't engage
00:04:33.300 on any topics of discussion just attack and smear them based on other people or use fear as a tool
00:04:43.960 towards you know holding on to votes or discouraging others to vote or be engaged
00:04:52.540 and you know it's there's a lot of projection going on uh they you know the the the government
00:05:01.160 projects protecting democracy while undermining democracy while uh you know really affronting to
00:05:12.180 our basic rights to the bill of rights in canada or charter charter rights and it's been a
00:05:19.420 situation that we've seen play out over and over and over again over these last you know four plus
00:05:28.960 years but especially in the last four plus years and it's very reflective of the state of u.s politics
00:05:36.200 as well you know we've got this election down here and the two parties they just it's just fear of the
00:05:44.380 other one is their whole mandate towards you know from an election point of view from a campaigning
00:05:50.580 point of view is simply be afraid of the other of the other group their bad news and there's no actual
00:05:58.120 discussion about any of the topics well i've i've written extensively about the uniparty which
00:06:06.960 certainly exists in the united states and that's so obvious with foreign policy with what just
00:06:13.180 happened recently with the 61 billion dollars going to ukraine the republicans were on side with that
00:06:20.140 donald trump was on side with that for goodness sake very very difficult position he has put himself
00:06:29.600 in because of saying that but certainly there's a uniparty in the united states i'm hoping there's not
00:06:35.700 so much a uniparty in canada although in terms of supporting that war in ukraine giving them there's a
00:06:42.180 uniparty in canada david there's a uniparty there's a uniparty in canada it is no like our
00:06:47.460 whole government system is not of the people by the people for the people these representatives
00:06:54.340 do not represent canadians they do not represent their constituents they do not listen to their
00:06:59.740 constituents if you look at the the actual number of people that voted for the liberal party i think it
00:07:06.840 was you know i think it's in around the number of like maybe 20 percent of like you know eligible
00:07:13.520 voters actually voted for them and yet they operate with a mandate um there it's it's you know the system
00:07:21.440 is broken and that book that i wrote was called canadao i think i need to reshape that uh yeah based
00:07:27.600 on the dao the decentralized autonomous organization like theory it's uh it's it's the it's an evolution
00:07:35.340 of let's say of organizational design but using blockchain technology towards having stakeholders
00:07:43.180 or shareholders or voters be able to directly vote on proposals and you know it's a foresight
00:07:51.920 kind of book looking at you know we have this representative democracy which was the westminster
00:08:00.040 system of democracy of of parliament of government which was devised in an age when we didn't have
00:08:07.480 electricity when we didn't have the telegram when we didn't have internet when we didn't have zoom
00:08:12.560 when we didn't have you know this high-speed communications in the 1800s it took 92 hours to get
00:08:19.740 from new york to san francisco so you needed to have the ability to people you need to have
00:08:24.660 representatives to come together to represent you know your area well my thesis is the conditions have
00:08:30.680 changed now let's we need to we need to update and upgrade our model of governance because over time
00:08:38.440 centralized systems become increasingly secretive and corrupt and we're dealing with basically peak
00:08:44.980 centralization right now and i will say that pier poliev did attend a conference that i held in
00:08:51.760 2017 in ottawa called the blockchain government forum where he showed up and he talked all about
00:08:58.060 switzerland and how in switzerland they have direct democracy and the ability for if you have an issue
00:09:06.240 uh as a citizen you go out and get a hundred thousand signatures and then it goes to vote
00:09:11.420 on the whole by the whole country and he suggested that uh you know with blockchain technology we might
00:09:18.020 be able to have this in canada and you know if he is true to those words and still believes in that
00:09:25.960 like i cut it like you know categorically will support that so long as like you know that is the
00:09:32.940 intention because canadians need to have a voice on this these these actual policy issues because as it stands
00:09:40.340 now we go into these hyperbole driven elections where large promises are made and then you know they
00:09:47.600 get into power and they pull this nonsense like the emergencies act or the war measures act like you
00:09:52.180 know censoring people's bank accounts refusing to debate or engage on any uh any on any topics of
00:09:59.680 substance instead just playing this highly politicized um you know cat and mouse game
00:10:06.320 well you you mentioned the emergencies act i was i was going to get get to that later but
00:10:12.700 might as well bring it up now how did you feel when justin trudeau invoked the emergencies act did you
00:10:19.460 feel like this was a an absolute betrayal of democracy what were your thoughts and feelings at that time
00:10:25.220 uh yeah it was like you know this was one of their power moves to end the party in ottawa
00:10:32.900 and the great canadian trucker movement whatever river we want to call it convoy
00:10:39.340 um and also like you know that was at the same time when the whole ukraine thing started and it was
00:10:45.820 amazing how they like went from like focusing on this to all of a sudden like everything being about
00:10:50.540 protecting democracy and freedom in ukraine and and doing doing that so they really like you know
00:10:56.020 they shifted the narrative and i'll also just say like justin you know was the champion spokesperson
00:11:03.580 for it justin didn't invoke anything justin's the captain on the ice let's let's look at hockey
00:11:09.120 justin is the captain on the ice and he's got like christia freeland on her left wing and jagmeet
00:11:15.020 singh on his right wing and they're just playing this they're just players on the ice and they are
00:11:21.760 intentionally meant to foment love and hate from others while shielding the coaches the management
00:11:30.540 and the ownership structures which are the ones that actually you know are the writing that justin did
00:11:35.600 not unilaterally declare i think we need to shut down people's bank accounts i think we need to like
00:11:41.040 start censoring the financial system i feel like this is a larger play justin is you know for better
00:11:47.900 or worse so you think he was following the orders of his globalist masters in the world economic forum
00:11:55.580 because i know you've said that yeah i wouldn't say the world economic forum the world economic forum
00:12:00.940 is just a is just a conference that happens in davos where people kind of meet um there's other groups
00:12:06.620 like bilderberg and the trilateral commission and the council on foreign relations you know these
00:12:11.000 are the actual like policy think tanks bilderberg specifically is where they all were like the
00:12:16.080 heads of all the media and the heads of the industries actually come blueprint and plan
00:12:19.500 and like you know devise their long long-term plans but world economic forum is just a nice little
00:12:25.080 smoke screen it's kind of like a klaus schwab's or even like a bill gates they kind of just suck up a
00:12:30.020 lot of energy and distract things from you know the people who are actually writing yeah the policy
00:12:38.040 he's following orders that doesn't excuse him it doesn't excuse him no it it doesn't at all but
00:12:43.820 to to make it be like it is all him like it's just giving you're giving him a lot of uh you know a lot
00:12:52.860 of power and energy and you know i think he signed up for the first couple years of uh his job and then 0.98
00:13:00.200 once the covid scenario kind of got enacted it was like oh man like i gotta save this like shit
00:13:06.880 well the freedom convoy for me i was involved as a journalist from day one something told me this 0.56
00:13:18.020 was a historic event i needed to be there and i it wasn't just the people around me saying i think
00:13:23.920 this is important i just i had a real sense of history with this and it turned out to be a
00:13:29.180 transformative experience for me because i i think i shifted my own personal politics from a small c
00:13:35.560 conservative to a small l libertarian and i really i realized at that point that we needed to do
00:13:41.660 something about this aggressive overpowerful state that was always in our lives always interfering
00:13:48.680 telling us what to do to the point of telling us to do something that was harmful to our bodies
00:13:53.600 and it changed my way of looking at politics i never saw it the same i i congratulated poly of at the
00:14:01.440 time for coming out and meeting with the leaders of the freedom convoy and definitely indicating he was
00:14:08.780 on their side now i've known poly of 20 years i've known him since before he was a member of parliament
00:14:15.100 we go back that far and i still don't know how committed he is to the populist politics that he's
00:14:22.660 espousing at times i hope and pray that he is because if he's not i don't know where this country is
00:14:28.220 going and in terms of it having equality again for people who really believe in a country where they
00:14:37.700 can have individual liberty and i think that might be something that's too far gone at this point i hope
00:14:44.000 not but the old reform party used to talk about referenda initiative and recall you never hear those
00:14:50.840 terms anymore from the conservative party of canada certainly not from the liberals or the ndp
00:14:55.240 as do you see that as part of what you have described here as direct democracy things like
00:15:01.940 absolutely like we have there's glaring things that you know we we we talk about democracy it's
00:15:10.020 like give us a voice give us a chance like how do you actually how can we change something because
00:15:14.820 right now the way that referendums kind of work i believe you have to get a you know an mp to sponsor
00:15:19.280 and there's lots of kind of risk to it but there's some certain like sacred cows within the canadian
00:15:24.380 government system that will never get touched for example income tax like income tax is something
00:15:29.580 that could go to referendum and would be in my opinion overwhelmingly passed and it would help
00:15:34.720 really course correct canada because right now as you know an entrepreneur as an innovator like you
00:15:42.640 stay as far away from canada as possible there's just no desire like there's lots of there's lots of
00:15:48.380 good incubation and good ideas come out of canada but they leave because our system doesn't support
00:15:56.160 wealth generation it actively pushes you away so and it encourages like you know there was like the
00:16:03.000 panama papers and all these other like kind of leaks that showcase like a lot of like you know big
00:16:08.680 canadian money is not in canada they they you know they take that wealth and they push it offshore well
00:16:14.720 you just fix the tax system that money can stay in canada and will be spent in canada and will like
00:16:20.060 you know attract investment will attack attract creation like honestly look at the way the little
00:16:24.440 islands do it like in antigua or cayman islands or you know switzerland or luxembourg um like you know
00:16:30.860 look at like their their their structures and you know it's very interesting that the the
00:16:39.140 result of that however is you impact an industry that really doesn't add any economic value but it
00:16:49.980 creates a lot of jobs so you know when we talk about just jobs like you know wow we've got really
00:16:55.360 good employment numbers because we got people working but ultimately if people are working on a
00:17:00.160 job that doesn't actually create any economic value it's you may as well just pay them to lift a rock
00:17:06.780 throw it over a wall walk around the wall pick up the rock throw it back over do that all day
00:17:11.480 that's a that could be a job um so you know i look at i look at like you know something like income tax
00:17:17.720 being something that could be dealt with with a referendum same with even the carbon tax as well
00:17:22.260 same with our like you know ultimate never-ending support of the ukraine uh initiative like let's put
00:17:28.600 that to vote on with canadians like do we want to have a non-interventionist foreign policy
00:17:32.900 or do we want to be um you know a a bank for geopolitical proxy wars that result in canadians
00:17:43.060 paying the price in terms of inflation and national debt uh and being used as we're the ones who are
00:17:52.100 paying this price and it's resulting in higher prices on everything we're doing higher food higher
00:17:57.160 home prices lower lower standards of living you know just it's just across the it's across the
00:18:04.760 board these poor decisions made at a um you know a national like policy level that you know come from
00:18:15.400 this this ethos i think you were touching on it a little bit about you know this big government like
00:18:20.320 government knows best they know how best to spend the money they know how best to take care of you
00:18:24.940 they even know how best to run a health care system they know best how to run an education
00:18:29.080 system they know best how to run a transportation system they know how to run an economic system
00:18:34.000 guess what that all false false false false false false false like they're not good at doing these
00:18:40.840 things so it's time to have a reflection and understand and a and a and a convention or a gathering
00:18:46.600 or a discourse debate about what it is that we want canada to be how what like what kind of
00:18:54.300 standards of living do we want in canada what are some of the greatest challenges we're facing and
00:18:59.520 what are the ideal outcomes that we'd like to work towards uh you know because until you actually bring
00:19:05.160 people together and have debate and discourse you're not going to be able to you know unify
00:19:11.220 uh people away from this you know hockey style divisive like red team versus blue team but
00:19:20.820 you're all part of the nhl kind of uh you know system that we operate in you know that's that's an
00:19:28.740 excellent way of looking at it yes we're all in the same hockey league with different jerseys
00:19:34.960 and and at the end of the day they're all getting together and agreeing i i i think we'd have to
00:19:41.620 say that's completely correct i just found it so perverse though when the same time we're hearing
00:19:48.220 about the war in ukraine being about a war to save democracy just like we heard in the first world 0.82
00:19:54.760 form it's this is the war to end all wars it's the war a war for democracy we're fighting for the most
00:20:01.660 corrupt government in europe and that's i think that's beyond dispute and we're pouring billions
00:20:07.720 of dollars into this war that is already lost in fact uh former un weapons inspector scott ritter
00:20:15.500 noted the other day that the cash that's already gone to ukraine in this last installment from
00:20:22.560 congress has already been it's already been gone in the pockets of the oligarchs and the corrupt
00:20:28.340 politicians and it's gone it's left the country and yet we continue to pour money into a war that's
00:20:34.160 not only lost but is at this point almost surreal because while we're talking about democracy in
00:20:42.540 ukraine which doesn't exist they just canceled their presidential election we're doing things in
00:20:47.720 canada that are increasingly authoritarian and and i and i i blamed i blamed justin trudeau for most of
00:20:53.740 this because he's he is the prime minister but i always said you know kyle one of the things i i used
00:21:00.240 to i used to write about was the fact democracy is not just fragile and freedom is not just fragile and
00:21:07.200 and other people have said this over the years but we we always tend to define democracy as elections
00:21:13.340 and if we have an election every four years that makes us a democracy but it doesn't does it because
00:21:20.240 we can have an election every four years but we can still be a country that is at the brink of losing
00:21:25.520 our freedom and i think we're there as as a country here in canada because we're we might have an
00:21:31.680 election october of 2025 i'm not sure we're going to i'm not sure there's not going to be an excuse
00:21:36.260 to postpone that election indefinitely but even if we do democracy hinges on viable opposition parties
00:21:45.520 and this week in the house of commons the speaker demonstrated how how that's not very viable
00:21:52.620 anymore we can silence the opposition but primarily on freedom of speech and if we lose our freedom of
00:22:00.480 speech and we are losing it rapidly in canada we can't call ourselves a democracy
00:22:05.660 i'm wondering if you have any thoughts about the online harms act i've i have talked about this
00:22:10.760 extensively it's been ignored by the conservative party largely poly has mentioned it maybe twice
00:22:17.280 since the bill was introduced nobody else is talking about it the mainstream media has said nothing to say
00:22:24.200 about it in canada yet it potentially could shut down free speech for good in canada if this goes by
00:22:31.040 and in fact keep people in house arrest for thought crimes which when i tell to my american media friends
00:22:38.160 they think i'm kidding they think it can't be that bad this is like a parody right you're you're you're
00:22:43.980 making this up to make trudeau look bad i say no it's in the bill do you have any thoughts about the
00:22:50.180 online harms act in canada and how how dangerous this is potentially going to be i mean this is this is
00:22:56.820 crazy this is this is incredibly dangerous and you know and it's a fear tactic towards it's an
00:23:05.940 intimidation tactic to not you know speak freely or not exercise your fundamental free speech rights or
00:23:15.920 to criticize you know the status quo or the government or these you know these decisions and
00:23:23.580 you know especially as more and more you know the world is more and more kind of transparent
00:23:30.060 uh you know there was a time a couple years ago when i think it was christia freeland was asked where
00:23:35.420 like 10 billion dollars in infrastructure spending went yeah i don't know like i don't we just don't
00:23:40.820 have a ledger to manage it all it's like oh my god like you don't know where 10 billion dollars
00:23:45.120 spend there is so much money flowing around within the government that's unaccounted for it's like
00:23:52.940 we like how how you you then you then if if there's secrecy and corruption within this this
00:24:02.380 institution they're going to try and create safeguards to further protect their the secrecy and the
00:24:10.120 corruption and the failings and the conflicts of interest so by creating a
00:24:16.380 what's it called harm like online harms act online harms act that's what it's called
00:24:25.740 you know then then you're you're you're now you're and who's going to be the one enforcing this
00:24:34.540 this would be like the rcmp or like a new division a new a new a new enforcement surveillance group will be
00:24:43.900 created a new layer of government great that's just what we need another one maybe we should
00:24:50.000 probably add two layers of government um just to be extra efficient it's going to be called the 0.92
00:24:56.540 digital safety committee it's a new layer of bureaucracy headed by an ombudsperson which i'm
00:25:03.260 calling the online censorship czar but that's that's what this is going to be and yes people will
00:25:09.820 be subject to house arrest if your neighbor says hey i think creighton down the street might be
00:25:16.420 committing some hate speech in the future yeah no and then and and what that does is that like you
00:25:24.000 know it's interesting because i was doing i was on a call with some other canadians and um you know
00:25:29.060 they were of they were not willing to talk to their neighbors because of the threat of just this
00:25:35.880 that like you know we've got such a snitch society that like people are going to run towards the
00:25:40.620 government to say like oh like you know he's thinking about running for office or he's thinking
00:25:46.440 about like you know trying trying to be mayor but he's got dangerous policies so like he believes that
00:25:52.660 you know we should be able to speak our minds freely or have open honest debates or you know be able to
00:25:59.480 proxy delegate our votes based on people who we believe in yeah you mentioned that that missing
00:26:07.480 10 billion dollars that christia freeland claims she couldn't find and it reminds me of a conversation
00:26:14.220 i recently had with neil oliver who has has become a very good friend throughout the the pandemic
00:26:20.400 and of course what's happening in scotland right now is exactly what's happening in canada if that's not
00:26:26.820 more proof of this globalist agenda that this is not coming from individual countries but is a larger
00:26:32.960 agenda they're going through the online harms act themselves they've just passed it in scotland
00:26:39.900 but as as neil said to me you know taxes these days are not about raising money for anything
00:26:47.360 because all the governments do is print money they and as you said they lost 10 billion they're punitive
00:26:53.540 it's domination it's domination it's not even punitive it's domination it is owning and controlling
00:27:02.340 and like you know being the master to the slave uh with especially with with the canadian and it's tax
00:27:08.820 on tax on tax on tax in canada to the point where you know and and coupled with there's like almost a
00:27:17.040 shaming around making money like you make 150 000 a year like in canada you're part of like some
00:27:24.500 like you know like wow you're making almost too much money but you look at the cost of living in
00:27:28.760 canada like come on like people need to be making that just to be surviving almost and like you look
00:27:34.420 at people who are are are not are the i don't know what the median salary in canada is but it's a lot
00:27:41.260 lower than that and you know it's basically like you know you're working multiple jobs just to stay
00:27:46.420 afloat um it is we do not have a system of that's encouraging prosperity i saw a report from tobias
00:27:54.040 lucky or maybe it was harley finkelstein from shopify showing you know the growth of industries in canada
00:28:00.460 and it's like public sector growth is like off the chart private sector growth is like you know
00:28:07.880 medium and entrepreneur entrepreneurialism new business creation is just flatline dead there's like
00:28:15.440 there is no there is there is there's no there's very little um new business creation taking place
00:28:23.060 there are very few entrepreneurs coming coming to coming to to market in canada because they want
00:28:29.220 to leave because it's it's a it's a it's a terrible energy and it's a terrible climate so until you go
00:28:33.680 until we fix you know the root causes of this nobody's people are just going to continue to leave
00:28:38.980 and it's going to get to a point david where you're going to leave you're like okay like yep i'm going
00:28:43.480 to get thrown in jail for doing this like yep time for me to leave like you know i'm out well that's
00:28:50.320 precisely where i am kyle because there's a dark authoritarian fog for having this discussion david like
00:28:59.360 for having this discussion we're we're there's there's like you know a threat of jail come on like this
00:29:06.880 is crazy this is like you know this is this is really dark and i don't honestly believe that like
00:29:14.120 the government maliciously is like trying to do this it's just like this mass formation hypnosis
00:29:21.660 of operating in echo chambers and like you know being pushed and prodded by this global corporatocracy
00:29:30.500 towards coming out along these lines plus there's lots of money being made like you know all
00:29:36.440 all around all around the table um there's lots of money being made global kleptocracy that's that
00:29:43.780 is a term i've heard more often these days than i have in decades previous but it's so applicable
00:29:50.140 we're dealing with a bunch of incompetence the worst people possible governing us
00:29:54.960 and governing us badly and that's that's exactly like exactly where we are well and why won't
00:30:02.640 here talk about this stuff too and like you know looking at our opposition like why won't he talk
00:30:07.860 about this this is like something very major or same with same with the vaccines like you know
00:30:12.940 leaning into it a little bit the fake vaccines like leaning into it and being like you know are we
00:30:19.300 like what what took place here how about the spending of it how about the contracts of it how about the 0.71
00:30:25.400 cases how about all the friggin plastic tests that we ordered from china and korea to you know create
00:30:33.220 a culture of fear uh within canada i think there was like 2.5 billion dollars was spent at very near
00:30:41.180 the end of it on procuring an insane amount of these tests and these tests you know don't work
00:30:46.840 they just but what they do is they create a a um an atmosphere of fear and they they they have
00:30:55.900 everybody guessing and they have everybody also viewing themselves as a giant threat and viewing
00:31:00.440 other people as threats like they did a really great job of dividing people up and making people
00:31:05.760 scared and afraid of each other and it's time to just recognize like anybody who's using fear
00:31:11.500 as a tool like do not give them your energy well i i got the vaccine twice and of course i have
00:31:19.020 buyer remorse about it i am trying to detoxify myself now over it i lost my sister i i believe
00:31:25.560 because of the vaccine she she got it because she she was visiting my mother in a nursing home and she
00:31:32.280 felt she was keeping her safe and she died of pneumonia three months ago without having any history of that
00:31:39.180 and i and i believe it was a direct result of the of the vaccine i've lost other people in my life
00:31:44.640 as a as a direct result of this vaccine i'm grateful i'm still in good health but it was difficult for me
00:31:52.620 to accept the fact because i spent most of my career in the military and i found it hard to believe
00:31:59.300 the government was blatantly lying to my face the government was that mendacious the government was telling
00:32:07.180 me something that was completely false that not only was this vaccine potentially unsafe it was not
00:32:13.300 going to keep me from getting the covet 19 and it wasn't going to keep me safer from other people
00:32:18.960 including my my mother who was much you know obviously much older and you wake up some one day
00:32:25.280 and you realize yeah they've been lying to me they lied to me about it and they don't give a damn 0.86
00:32:31.480 now and it's we're all on our own and i think that for a lot of people in canada who were just
00:32:39.680 not necessarily trusting of the government but they thought the government wasn't going to screw
00:32:45.240 them around that much they thought the government wasn't going to lie to their face about something
00:32:49.860 life or death wise and to wake up and realize that yes indeed the government did lie to us
00:32:56.560 i think it's it's it's highly volatile and it's it's it's a changing experience you realize that
00:33:07.640 you cannot trust this government and you and you need to do your own research and you need to rely
00:33:15.040 on your own understanding so many times so it was a very uh fun fundamentally transformative experience
00:33:23.040 for me going through going through this pandemic trying to do the right thing and realizing i did the
00:33:29.500 wrong thing in because i was told it was it was it was going to be helpful to others and that was once again
00:33:38.700 a i think so many people went through this pandemic and were politically changed forever and they could
00:33:45.900 never feel the same way about authority and the government again and that was certainly the case
00:33:52.920 for me yeah i mean i honestly don't think there's like there was like government was like as a whole
00:33:59.900 nefarious about this it's just everything was lined up they were just like set up like they just walked
00:34:05.440 into the trap and then executed like the plan that was laid out for them with event 201 with the bill
00:34:13.460 melinda gates foundation with john hopkins university with that new york um like you know pandemic scenario
00:34:22.480 where they role played how the global corporatocracy in combination with governments and media will
00:34:32.100 basically react and deal with a global coronavirus and you know so they had the marching orders
00:34:41.880 and they had like this is how we're supposed to deal with it yeah that's right we've we've planned for
00:34:46.220 this so do we know that this is how we're going to deal with it and look there's going to be like
00:34:50.620 you know we're going to flood the zone like the media we're going to flood the zone with information
00:34:56.640 about this like everybody's going to know and it's going to be like you know
00:35:01.260 it's going to be deadly and it's going to be fear stoking but don't worry because on the other end of
00:35:08.740 this there's going to be a vaccine and it might be rushed to market and it might be untested and it
00:35:13.540 might not even work but that's like the solution that we're going to get towards and so they all
00:35:18.920 like you know had this plan and like you know when you're dealing with like you know the global
00:35:23.300 pharmaceutical industry and all these other very large industries it doesn't really matter like you
00:35:28.080 know nation by nation the governments are just kind of like you know playing it out you know they're
00:35:33.720 going they're working with you know the largest communication firms in the world towards building
00:35:40.880 and rolling out their strategies and guess what they're like this is our plan so like there's a lot
00:35:45.960 of just like you know group think and movement and then when questioned when asked it's like but is it
00:35:52.700 really this deadly or are the case are the the the the tests are they effective is a pcr a good method
00:36:03.260 for identifying whether someone is actually sick um no quite no answering those questions like no
00:36:11.760 they it's and i've seen this personally with justin before in talking about topics that he doesn't like
00:36:17.920 it's like it's just plug they plug the ears they don't want to think about it and so it's it that
00:36:27.420 threatens that's like the red pill to the blue pill to use the matrix analogy the red pill they know
00:36:34.120 what's going to happen if they take the red pill they're going to see through the matrix but that's scary
00:36:40.400 and it's like well i've been you know an active operator and engaged in the matrix i like my life within
00:36:46.280 the matrix so i'm just going to take the blue pill and i'm just going to continue on this path and i'm
00:36:52.500 just going to you know use these arguments of extremist right wing trump alex jones nazi like all
00:37:03.400 these like whatever words that they just throw around to to to to attack and avoid any honest open
00:37:12.280 discussion about you know the questions like how much say how like you know you there's a very high
00:37:18.360 likelihood david that you simply got a saline injection you didn't get anything active and what
00:37:25.080 proportion of the shots that went out there were just saline because in the very beginning they rolled
00:37:31.340 it out to all the police all the doctors all the nurses all the pilots like you know the politicians 0.90
00:37:37.760 like that first batch those who rushed to get the vaccine i would posit that it was probably i mean
00:37:46.480 it would make sense that that was largely saline and you know coming with the certificate you're a good
00:37:51.820 boy you you you've done but the longer you get on as you get into gen pop release as the walgreens
00:37:59.860 and the you know what's the one kind of shoppers drug mart you know start start you know opening up to
00:38:06.800 to get them then combined with you know this supply chain isn't being managed by the government it's
00:38:12.800 being managed by the pharmaceutical companies you know and their suppliers like this is a private
00:38:17.780 deployment of of this of these serums across so you know who knows but there's definitely an
00:38:25.120 opportunity for a lot of nefarious activity um you know and this like some posit that this is like you
00:38:31.400 know the a a full-blown kind of eugenics program as well and i've called it a genocide like if you
00:38:38.700 want to talk about real genocide like forcing people to take an experimental medical medical procedure
00:38:44.280 that you have absolutely zero insight into what's in that into the safety of it yeah that's dangerous
00:38:51.080 and when people are dying and becoming disabled and you're also removing the rights of people for
00:38:55.800 refusing to take what is very clearly a danger to them in the face of you know their propagated fear
00:39:03.660 sorry not buying it it's a bioweapon no question i've i've heard that expression used by a lot of the
00:39:13.880 doctors who've been who have been fighting this and i i certainly i believe that but this is a
00:39:18.560 yes i think it's a nice transition into the final topic here which is your support
00:39:24.900 of robert f kennedy jr for president in 2024 i'm a huge fan of mr kennedy i i was his father was one
00:39:35.360 of my historical heroes i always had a lot of a lot of time for his legacy but i think uh rfk jr
00:39:44.800 to me has demonstrated such courage and he's demonstrated courage because he's taken a stand
00:39:52.360 on this vaccine that has been completely contrary to everything in the democratic party where he where
00:39:58.160 he came from his his history his base he has alienated his family that are calling him names that
00:40:05.840 are calling him crazy for believing this he has put himself in a position where he's standing on
00:40:12.460 principle and ideal and i think that takes a lot of guts to do that but i but i would say i would
00:40:21.120 say this to you i was mentioning this before we we went on air donald trump has alienated a lot of his
00:40:28.700 core supporters first of all by saying he just loved that vaccine it was a huge success and a lot of the
00:40:35.740 people and don't ask me why they never noticed before but trump was never has never criticized
00:40:43.260 the vaccine he's always said that he stands behind it but he made the awful mistake of standing up the
00:40:50.800 other day on on his true social and saying it's a wonderful vaccine and i'm proud of it and his
00:40:58.900 supporters are saying what the hell i didn't ever put that together and then he he says he's going to
00:41:07.020 be supporting ukraine with billions of dollars and he's in he's now in political bed with speaker house
00:41:13.500 mike johnson on this once again huge disappointment amongst the trump base now i think a lot of those folks
00:41:23.040 would would go to bobby kennedy because they're saying here's a guy who does stand on principle
00:41:31.060 here's a guy who does not think the vaccine was a wonderful thing for mankind who recognizes the war
00:41:38.340 in ukraine it is nothing but a an exercise to the military industrial complex to continue to make 0.93
00:41:47.020 billions hundreds of billions of dollars off the suffering and misery of others as they've been doing for
00:41:52.980 a hundred years and kennedy just seems to have what it takes right now trump had four years
00:42:01.460 to go after the deep state he talked a good talk he did nothing to go after the deep state i think
00:42:08.700 kennedy is a man who understands the deep state a heck of a lot better than donald trump given his
00:42:14.200 family ties given the fact he had a he had an uncle who was president and a and a father who was a senator
00:42:21.180 an attorney general and somebody who understood exactly what was going on behind the scenes so
00:42:28.000 what about robert f kennedy jr appeals to you and why are you working so hard in his campaign kyle
00:42:33.280 oh i think you just stated a lot of the reasons why you know why i believe the the courage integrity
00:42:42.460 knowledge that uh selflessness within within him like you know his his ego is not is not like you
00:42:53.920 know is a zero compared to trump's ego of 10 like you know on this on the scale um and you know he's
00:43:02.320 so well informed and openly you know engages and has engaged with so many people and has a track record
00:43:09.120 of looking deep into things and also like you know changing with opinion or changing with information
00:43:16.520 like for example like i think bobby himself has gone through you know an awakening over you know like
00:43:25.580 with with first learn like delving into the vaccines and into that but then with the whole you know
00:43:33.700 planedemic and what became out of came out of that and then standing up and seeing it like you know
00:43:40.060 before i think he was you know very much into the like part of the climate change kind of the crowd
00:43:45.900 uh but now it's like you know he's like no no it's not you can't simplify climate change down to carbon
00:43:53.720 and like you know make it all about that it's like we need you know planetary regeneration we need to
00:44:00.420 take care of our soils we need to take care of our water we need to look in our skies and look
00:44:06.220 underneath our feet like you know he did a podcast with dane wigginton going over or over geoengineering
00:44:12.600 practices so it's like he's he's listening he's there you know of these different things and that i think
00:44:17.740 geoengineering is something that a lot of people are really concerned about because you know everybody's
00:44:24.420 eyes see is it you see a big you see a beautiful blue sky day like down here in florida especially a
00:44:29.440 beautiful blue sky day that turns hazy out of nowhere it's like you know and and there's lots
00:44:34.720 more information but those are just some some of these these topics and you know what gives me hope
00:44:42.600 around him is he's actually coming with kind of you know with ideas and creating container for
00:44:49.800 healing this divide as we say or trying to trying to unify uh through discussion the campaign is really
00:44:59.080 interesting in that it has people like from the bernie side the trump side the libertarian side
00:45:04.780 the green side like you know people who don't identify with sides like you know coming coming
00:45:10.100 together and working on this you know this you know out of this purpose of this is an alternative
00:45:16.640 to the uniparty because everything you just said about trump like you know his his
00:45:21.160 unwillingness to recognize the vaccine may have been the biggest you know threat to humanity
00:45:28.700 or civilization potentially ever and um you know and to still be proud of that and championing that
00:45:34.920 and to think and to take for granted as well the mega base so this is another point of issue a lot of
00:45:43.440 people voted for donald trump in 2016 because they did not want to vote for hillary clinton and he was
00:45:50.140 the underdog and he represented something you know fresh yes there is a very hardcore like you know
00:46:00.200 trump the best there is the best there was the best there ever will be kind of group but even amongst
00:46:06.220 that group there's a lot of respect for bobby and while you can follow someone for a long time
00:46:13.480 some of the jokes get a little bit old it's like that friend from high school he just tells that same
00:46:19.060 joke or does that same schtick over and over and over and over again it's like man like you know
00:46:25.140 that was cool 10 years ago man or 20 years ago but we're like we got bigger fish to fry you can't just
00:46:32.040 say you're gonna fix it you're the best you know what to do you actually have to back it up with a real
00:46:39.120 plan towards doing this and as well like over the course like a lot of people that were around him
00:46:45.620 like he kind of knifed him in the back and tossed them aside so it's like it's kind of a dangerous
00:46:51.040 place to be and it's already like you know pretty small and now we've seen that joke and now like
00:46:57.680 with bobby at the table as the underdog as someone who's like you know stood up against that vaccine
00:47:05.240 wrote a book about fauci and the corruption and like you know really highlighting how broken is talking
00:47:11.460 about our health care system talking about our food system talking about our like a non-interventionist
00:47:15.980 foreign policy these are real issues not just getting baited into like you know as the democrats
00:47:22.600 would love to have it just like let's just talk make this whole thing about freedom but women's 1.00
00:47:29.020 reproductive freemen like you know abortions on demand which isn't something like you know that's 0.82
00:47:35.480 just these are just these little issues that like you know the the parties in an election try to make
00:47:40.180 a huge deal out of as opposed to looking at you know the greater issues looking at addiction looking
00:47:45.840 at homelessness looking at how do you solve that and having policies for solving that like yes like
00:47:51.700 one of the things bobby said is let's let's look at like marijuana um let's look at psychedelics let's
00:47:58.520 look at you know integrating that into the healing into the into the into the you know the the solving
00:48:06.000 for this crisis and using those tax monies to to fund and to you know to to facilitate that along
00:48:14.600 with you know just you know creating that container for discussing it and then you get to crypto and
00:48:22.260 he's like dude let's like bitcoin like no capital gains taxes on bitcoin no trading taxes on bitcoin
00:48:28.560 like okay that's like those are little things but they're small they're big things and i think like
00:48:32.980 you know as the talent and the information and as like the collective intelligence kind of comes
00:48:40.080 together in support of bobby and we use technology like some really strong solutions like will come
00:48:45.900 to head like income tax for example like you know they just put roger burr in jail for like failing
00:48:52.480 to pay taxes or they're trying to arrest them on some some nonsense because he made some money long
00:48:56.820 ago and like whatever it's like it's just it's it's just a fool's errand but we have a punishing
00:49:03.720 dominating tax system down in the states as well as in canada so you know i feel like bobby can you
00:49:10.420 know help open the door maybe i think a lot of people see in him the hope that these things can happen
00:49:16.040 and then the last thing that he said which i think is just absolutely critical and important is
00:49:20.020 putting all government spending on the blockchain um you know having a record of it having an immutable
00:49:27.020 record uh because that's the only way like you know you need we need to shine light onto the shadows
00:49:32.200 that's how we you know rid ourselves of the darkness well when i listen to bobby kennedy
00:49:37.660 i don't hear talking points and i heard you say this the other day when you were doing an interview
00:49:43.160 canadian politics and by large american politics are defined and characterized by the recitation of
00:49:52.600 talking points nobody's worse in this country than justin trudeau on this but even the conservatives do
00:49:57.680 this they spout lines every day he's not worth the cost i mean it's it's slogan airing it's talking
00:50:03.600 points i i listened to kennedy and he's actually he's talking logically he's talking coherently and he's
00:50:09.280 talking freely without reading from a script and i think there's a political indolence and denseness
00:50:15.620 that defines the republican party especially donald trump and in making those statements about the
00:50:21.820 vaccine and ukraine but also i think no more dense move was made by the democrats lately than putting
00:50:29.240 joe biden on the howard stern show this is a guy who was hip 30 years ago and now is just a profane old
00:50:36.660 man who really has no appeal to the youth the democratic party thought he was appealing to
00:50:42.940 and it gave joe biden an opportunity to tell outrageous lies again about these things that he
00:50:50.540 never did in his in his past life where he he talks about saving lives and going to south africa and going
00:50:57.960 to jail for him and being being this great civil rights leader when in fact he was a supporter of
00:51:04.300 segregation in his early years in politics i mean the it but the political denseness out there is so
00:51:10.620 strong where you can say things and just assume people are going to love you for it because that's
00:51:17.260 the way it worked the last time didn't it and this is what i find refreshing about kennedy is that he is
00:51:23.040 actually saying things that he believes in and have not been necessarily run by the communications
00:51:29.840 and it's not scripted and i think i really think this is going to be an exciting presidential race
00:51:38.920 and there's so much about 2024 that reminds me of 1968 and i was not around for 1968 as a political
00:51:47.860 observer but from my knowledge of history it was a hell of a year it was a tragic year obviously for
00:51:53.800 for ken for bobby kennedy senior and i and certainly that is that is not what i'm alluding to in terms of
00:52:02.880 the politics that year but it was there was a feeling that change was inevitable that there was hope
00:52:09.300 on the horizon and and of course the democratic convention erupted into chaos which it probably will
00:52:17.000 this this year well yeah it's gonna be total chaos that one's gonna be great and i'll tell you like
00:52:24.020 you know the kennedy has a has a grassroots movement like growing like ron paul style like you know like
00:52:32.640 donald trump 2016 style as well and there's a lot of people with a lot of talent a lot of artists a lot
00:52:38.120 of musicians and you know the campaign itself is you know is growing it's kind of like a startup it's
00:52:44.120 it's it's like it's you know to to do this but this is where the grassroots kind of come in
00:52:49.400 people are doing creative stuff like we just had a rally in long island where like you know one guy
00:52:54.340 showed up his kind of has a whole art car that had kennedy on the side and had like you know 12 bronze
00:52:59.540 workers on a steel beam on top of it um you know i look at my boss there's multiple vehicles that are
00:53:06.200 coming coming together like we're just we're just kind of getting rolling and like you know out there
00:53:11.220 you're you know kind of in or exploring and then you've got the republican national convention and
00:53:19.420 you've got the democratic national convention like that one's in chicago and i see there's already
00:53:23.160 murmurings around it couple that with like you know it looks like we've got a summer of love lined up
00:53:28.660 with uh with these protests with these you know these ngo orchestrated uh campus protests that are
00:53:36.720 taking place all over america which are like dominating the news it's very like very much like
00:53:42.260 blm um like it's just a it's a very big distraction it feels like this was just all like the play for
00:53:49.980 from a provocative tourism point of view for this year and i don't see it ending anytime soon um so it's
00:53:57.280 like let's be careful about how much energy we give into you know into this because it's b it's by design
00:54:06.060 they want they want all this energy on it and it's ultimately extremely divisive there's no like
00:54:12.040 shared humanity um like that's being sought as an outcome here well i wish you all success and i think
00:54:21.560 this is going to be a hell of a presidential election i'll be watching carefully and i'm excited
00:54:28.420 about what's happening no matter what the conclusion is i think we're going through a journey that we need
00:54:33.340 to go through and i encourage you to keep up fighting and working for bringing the power back
00:54:40.180 to people in a way from institutions and parties and these monolithic organizations that control the
00:54:47.240 world and i think we do need to bring direct democracy back as a as an option at least and we're
00:54:55.060 not even talking about it anymore let's just talk about referendums let's just start talking about
00:54:59.700 referendums let's what like figuring out what is it going to take for us to start having some friggin
00:55:04.160 referendums in canada towards enabling the people to have voice because like you know let's get real
00:55:10.260 clarity on what it's going to take and guys get out there if you want to help help help make it happen
00:55:16.060 go out there start making the motions figure out like what it's going to take and like getting that
00:55:21.140 ball rolling like you know on an issue because you know and this is something for pierre too
00:55:26.220 do you stand by what you said back in 2017 about the blockchain potentially being used for
00:55:31.540 referendums in canada to create a swiss-like system of direct engagement because that would be really
00:55:37.500 great if you were like you know if you actually champion that and we looked at that like you know
00:55:43.040 that would be great so i know there's a bunch of mps out there and representatives as well that are
00:55:47.260 interested in actually representing their people and like you know not just representing the party
00:55:52.520 um so having feedback mechanisms for current representatives to be able to understand where
00:55:59.780 their uh what their representatives want them to vote on and then actually voting on that as opposed
00:56:06.260 to what your party wants you to vote on you know that's a big change um you know that would kind of
00:56:13.000 mean a lot because i think you'll find like there's you'll you you'll get you'll get a minority a very
00:56:18.240 small minority of support that actually gets you into the house but if you engage with everybody
00:56:25.080 you'll start getting majority decisions and potentially super majority decisions coming from
00:56:31.600 the coming from your constituents so long as the questions and the topics are being you know framed
00:56:38.400 and there's there's honestly open discussion because one of the dangers of direct democracy if it's
00:56:44.080 dangerous democracy combined with thought crime you just get you know you just get an echo chamber
00:56:50.560 uh result where yeah dead on dead on well kyle thank you for your time thank you thanks for spending
00:56:59.040 this time with me today i've really enjoyed meeting you uh maybe it's not in person but it's been it's
00:57:07.060 been a real pleasure it's been so great david thank you so much and everybody out there yeah if you
00:57:11.740 want to like stay in touch i'm on i'm on twitter at kyle kemper i've got a patreon as well if you
00:57:16.860 want to buy a coffee or buy a coffee a month patreon.com front slash kyle kemper uh i gotta do some work
00:57:22.940 on that but uh yeah you know seeking to be independent in this world is uh is uh is an issue right david
00:57:30.220 it is it is it is not easy not easy thanks thanks kyle and keep up your brother fantastic