0:00 the Chinese FEPA came into power which 0:02 is the Foreign Investment Protection 0:04 Promotion Act which gives China 0:07 preferential treatment. So any 0:10 investment whether that's real estate 0:12 LNG oil, gas, uranium, whether that's 0:15 gold, silver, copper, malebinum, you 0:18 name it because they've got a stake in 0:20 every one of these. They were moving 0:22 their money again dirty money and 0:24 laundering it in Canadian real estate. 0:26 It was 13 billion with a B lethal doses 0:30 of fentinyl. Okay, that's chemical 0:33 warfare. 0:34 The United States, Donald Trump has to 0:37 get China out of Canada. Not an easy 0:41 task. That's what we're going to talk 0:42 about in this video. Hey Jim, thank you 0:44 so much for making yourself available. 0:47 >> Hi, thanks a lot for having me. 0:48 Appreciate it very much. It's an honor 0:50 to be here. 0:51 >> You're so welcome. I really enjoyed our 0:52 previous conversation. And I'll have the 0:54 links in the description below where 0:55 people can find you. Now, I know about 0:57 the split and many of the people that 0:59 watch this channel will know about the 1:00 split, how they're dividing the world 1:02 up. And I know I said Eurasia. Really? 1:04 European Union and the UK are being left 1:06 to circle the drain and go down the 1:08 drain. Right. 1:10 >> Exactly. 1:10 >> So, it's not like Russia and China are 1:12 going to take over Europe. the United 1:14 States. I believe that Xi and Trump and 1:17 Putin are working together to bring down 1:19 the city of London to divide up the 1:22 world into these regional blocks. But 1:24 you say that China is heavily involved 1:28 in Canada and Trump's got to get China 1:31 out of Canada. I mean, what is China's 1:34 involvement in Canada and when did it 1:36 start and what nature does it take? 1:38 Well, uh, so it really goes back to, uh, 1:41 this big, uh, re real estate revolution 1:45 back in the, uh, early 80s, uh, right up 1:48 until about 95 when, uh, Chinese, uh, 1:52 Hong Kong. So, first wave was Hong Kong, 1:55 uh, came into Toronto, Vancouver, and 1:57 just bought up a ton of real estate. 2:00 Then the second wave of Chinese were the 2:03 mainland Chinese and they came in and 2:05 they totally just infested Vancouver 2:09 again and Toronto uh with buying up uh 2:12 property everywhere. Land development, 2:14 shopping malls, you name it, they came 2:16 in and bought it. Sorry, Jim. Why? 2:20 >> Uh so they were basically taking their 2:22 money. They're moving their money. 2:24 They're they're again dirty money, 2:26 moving that dirty money and laundering 2:28 it in Canadian real estate. And that, 2:31 you know, it's an inside joke uh here in 2:34 Canada that uh you know, our banks and 2:37 our real estate are laundry uh laundry 2:40 machines for bad money, dark money. And 2:44 that's what's happening. That's what 2:45 happened here. That money was moved out 2:48 of those countries and then laundered 2:50 here and then recycled. So, if you want 2:52 to clean it, you come to Canada and you 2:54 got the banks to help you clean it. You 2:56 know, you've got uh and then you've got 2:58 real estate to help clean it as well. 3:00 >> Why didn't they go to the United States? 3:02 >> Or did they as well? 3:03 >> Oh, they they they couldn't. They So, 3:05 the the Americans the Americans have 3:07 been very uh you know, tactical like 3:11 they have kept the Chinese out of their 3:13 market hardcore. They've always been 3:16 protectionists. It doesn't matter 3:17 whether it was Democrat or or 3:20 Republicans, they really have kind of 3:22 kept uh China out of the American market 3:26 uh and only given them what they wanted 3:28 to have given them. And then what they 3:30 did with free trade, which again is the 3:32 city of London and uh and and and and 3:35 its empire uh is to create free trade 3:38 and then use China as the slave labor 3:42 hub of manufacturing, right? And uh and 3:45 so that's so the the Americans kept the 3:48 uh uh Chinese out of that market. 3:50 >> Okay. 3:51 >> Yeah. 3:51 >> And why why didn't the Canadians why did 3:54 >> Well, so 3:56 it goes back to uh Pier Elliot Trudeau. 3:59 Uh so when Trudeau came into power, uh 4:02 the first people that he visited were 4:05 Mao uh Maung and uh and Fidel Castro. 4:09 >> When would this have been? In the 60s7s. 4:11 >> This would have been in the late60s. 4:12 That's right. when Trudeau became prime 4:14 minister and um so that's where it all 4:16 started but every single uh uh um 4:21 government after that whether that was 4:23 liberal or conservative have all went 4:26 and kissed the ring of the Chinese and 4:29 uh and in 2014 the most incredible thing 4:32 happened in Canada and that was the 4:35 Chinese FEPA uh came into power which is 4:38 the foreign investment protection uh 4:40 promotion act uh which gives China 4:44 preferential treatment. So any 4:47 investment, any investment, whether 4:49 that's real estate, whether that's LNG, 4:53 whether that's oil, whether that's gas, 4:55 whether that's uranium, whether that's 4:57 gold, silver, copper, malebinum, you 5:00 name it, because they've got they have a 5:02 a stake in every one of these, including 5:04 the Hiburnia oil fields, and all of the 5:08 uh oil in Alberta. uh they've got a 5:11 stake in all of it. And if there is 5:13 anything that's done to harm their 5:15 investment such as carbon tax, such as, 5:19 you know, a local regulation changes and 5:22 has a negative impact on the value of 5:24 their asset, they can go and sue the 5:27 Canadian government in secret in a a 5:31 secret tribunal that has got nothing to 5:34 do with Canadian law. Okay. 5:35 >> Oh my god. 5:37 >> Yeah, it's crazy. like in secret. And 5:40 not only that, the only time the 5:42 Canadian government has to reveal that 5:45 they paid out, you know, billions of 5:47 dollars or millions of dollars to a 5:48 Chinese entity is if an arbitration 5:53 uh uh comes to a conclusion. Now, if the 5:56 Canadian government decides they don't 5:58 want, you know, the Canadian people to 6:00 know that there is a lawsuit in place by 6:03 the Chinese, if they pay them out early, 6:06 then all of it stays secret. the company 6:09 that sues them stays secret. The the the 6:12 asset it stays secret. Everything stays 6:15 secret. So this is a secret agreement, 6:19 but it's on the books as the Foreign 6:22 Investment Promotion Protection Act of 6:24 Canada. And this was brought into power 6:26 by Steven Harper, the Conservative 6:30 government. 6:31 >> And then it was given royal ascent by uh 6:33 Justin Trudeau. 6:35 >> Okay, a couple of points I want to make. 6:36 Grace, making my head spin. one. So the 6:38 Chinese have been able to purchase like 6:41 national security assets. Alberta 6:44 >> absolutely 6:46 >> the Alberta's oil and gas and and gold 6:49 and silver to purchase stakes in them. 6:52 And if there's a law, even a local law 6:57 that reduces China's profits, China can 7:00 sue the government for compensation 7:03 secretly in such a way that people don't 7:07 know. There's no transparency, no 7:09 scrutiny, therefore no public 7:10 accountability. So I suspect there's 7:13 been a lot of backhanders. 7:15 >> Oh yeah, absolutely. I I I 100% suspect 7:19 that as well. And when you take a look 7:21 at all of the national security assets 7:23 that they have, I mean, like they 7:25 they've in in in Saskatchewan, they've 7:27 got a stake in uranium mines, you know, 7:30 I mean, like when you when you look at, 7:32 you know, and and then and then when you 7:34 hear Trump talking about, you know, uh 7:37 Canada being a, you know, a potential 7:40 risk, you've got uh you know, Cash Patel 7:43 talking about, you know, fentinel. Uh so 7:45 the reverse opium war uh happening uh 7:48 against the United States. Before we get 7:50 to that, I want to stay with this FEA 7:52 law and the Chinese investment, the 7:55 legit so-called legitimate investments 7:57 in in Canada. Right. So they're 8:00 investing in all sorts of things 8:01 including important security assets like 8:03 uranium, like oil, like gas, and I 8:06 suppose buying up farmland as well. 8:08 >> Buying up farmland. Uh but they're 8:10 really been buying up a lot of shopping 8:12 malls, uh towers, uh condominium towers, 8:16 uh office towers, uh in Toronto, in 8:19 Vancouver, uh you know, I mean, like 8:22 it's just unbelievable how much real 8:25 estate uh the Chinese have purchased in 8:28 Canada and and not just not just in 8:31 Canada, in not just in uh in those two 8:33 cities, but in Alberta as well, 8:36 >> right? which kind of reduces the 8:38 Canadian people into tenants to a 8:41 foreign entity 8:42 >> because everything's all this property 8:44 and stuff being owned by China. Now, as 8:46 well as buying the property, are Chinese 8:48 people also moving in in large numbers 8:51 or is it just their money? 8:52 >> Oh, no. They're moving in in large 8:54 numbers as well. I mean, we have a 8:55 number of I mean, we used to have 8:57 Chinatown 8:58 Spadina. Uh then, you know, it moved out 9:01 into uh uh into the Markham region. Uh, 9:04 so there are are Chinatowns all over um 9:09 uh Toronto and GT and the GTA, so the 9:12 greater Toronto area as well as in 9:14 Vancouver. And it's it's right in your 9:16 face. It's it's it's it's it's out 9:18 there. But, you know, again, we have a 9:20 uh the multiculturalism that we have um 9:24 makes it seem as though it's benign, but 9:26 the reality is is that the Chinese 9:29 triads are heavy in Vancouver uh and in 9:33 BC. And uh you know, so we've got this 9:36 kind of gang stuff going on as well. 9:38 >> Okay. Well, that makes sense cuz we're 9:39 talking about dark money moving in, 9:42 escaping China, and being laundered 9:45 through these businesses and real 9:47 estate. Now, surely the Canadian banks 9:52 being paragonss of veracity and 9:56 integrity 9:59 and property 10:02 have all sorts of strict rules about 10:05 money laundering. 10:06 >> Oh, absolutely. as such so strict that 10:09 the TD Bank uh had the largest fine in 10:13 the history of US banking at 3 billion 10:18 uh fine for money laundering and and it 10:21 wasn't just and it wasn't just TD RBC 10:25 HSBC HSBC um Scotia Bank all of them 10:30 every single one of them have paid fines 10:33 for moneyaundering but the average 10:34 person you know they they they file 10:37 their tank taxes sideways and you know 10:39 they're they get threatened with jail 10:41 time. The banks, they just pay a fine 10:43 and it's right back to that same type of 10:45 business again. 10:46 >> Just the cost of doing business, isn't 10:48 it? 10:48 >> Yeah. Exactly. That's right. Yeah. Yeah. 10:50 And that's and that's what the stuff 10:52 they got caught with. Okay. Now imagine 10:54 the stuff that they didn't get caught 10:56 with, you know, the amount of 10:58 laundering. So if they've caught them 11:00 laundering there, what other money was 11:02 laundered that wasn't caught? you know, 11:05 so and and again, it's terrorist money 11:08 that is being laundered. Like everybody 11:10 looks at Canada as being this, you know, 11:12 oh well, they're really peaceful and 11:14 they're just very polite and everything 11:16 else. Meanwhile, 11:18 >> Canadians are lovely in my Canadian 11:21 lovely, 11:22 >> but our banking system and our 11:23 government are as corrupt as you could 11:26 ever imagine. You know, it's crazy, you 11:29 know. 11:30 >> Okay. Can't believe this. So then they 11:32 don't so they bypass all their rules and 11:34 regulations. They get fined for 11:36 laundering. We only know about the stuff 11:38 that they've been caught for. We don't 11:40 know about the stuff where they've I 11:42 don't know paid off auditors or whatever 11:44 or hasn't been uncovered or has been 11:46 ignored. And you said terrorist funding. 11:49 What's China got to do with terrorist 11:51 funding and Canada? The these are not 11:55 terrorist nations. 11:58 >> Not overtly anyway. 11:59 >> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. I mean, you 12:01 know, at the end of the day, uh really 12:04 we've got to take a look at the fact 12:06 that, you know, China, um so we've got 12:10 we've got different factions, right? 12:11 We've got the globalists, the city of 12:13 London and its empire looking to create 12:15 a one world government. Then you've got 12:18 America, you've got Russia, you've got 12:21 China who are basically looking to be 12:23 sovereign and uh and to have power 12:26 around the globe. So, we've got the this 12:29 power dynamic happening where you've got 12:31 the sovereign nations fighting to have 12:34 power and control over a certain amount 12:36 of marketplace and everything else in 12:39 the world. Then you've got the 12:40 globalists that want to destroy the 12:42 sovereigntists and they want to own it 12:44 all. Okay? So you've got this 12:46 unbelievable dynamic of global power 12:51 trying to take over the world and then 12:53 you've got sovereign nations trying to, 12:55 you know, ek out as much control and 12:57 power around the world so they stay 13:00 strong. So it's all about being strong, 13:03 staying strong, and not losing their 13:06 identity. Um, so here you have China 13:10 trying to gain as much foothold into the 13:13 United States as possible for economic 13:16 power, economic benefit to grow their 13:20 country so that their country gets 13:21 powerful. America is doing the same 13:24 thing. Russia is doing the same thing as 13:26 well. So you have this dynamic that's 13:29 taking place. And what I see happening 13:31 right now is the sovereigntists are 13:34 finally saying to themselves, look, 13:36 we've got this globalist threat that 13:38 wants to destroy all of us and consume 13:41 all of us and basically make everybody 13:44 in the world surfs to a few elite. But 13:47 what we want is we want our countries to 13:49 stand strong and free and have power. So 13:53 let's make an agreement. And what I'm 13:55 seeing happening based on all this power 13:58 dynamic that's taking place is that 14:00 there is this fight that's going on, but 14:03 then everybody is now going into their 14:06 hemispheric area of I'll say control uh 14:10 for lack of a better word. But I think 14:13 everybody is backing off from the 14:14 globalist free trade environment and 14:18 going into a place where uh the 14:21 sovereigntists are going to 14:24 they're trying to win so that they have 14:26 their area where they can be sovereign 14:29 nations and be strong and free and grow 14:33 their uh their economies and to provide 14:36 for their citizens. And so that's the 14:38 dynamic that we've got going on right 14:40 now in the world. So, but now China is 14:43 going to still want to have as much 14:46 power, as much economic uh access to the 14:49 United States as possible. And where are 14:51 they going to get that? Well, they've 14:52 already got it here. They've got the 14:54 pinser. I call it the Pinsir. So, 14:57 they've got the their their assets uh 15:00 here in Canada. They've got all kinds of 15:02 assets in Canada that the Americans also 15:06 need. Okay? They do need our oil and 15:08 gas. They do need our uranium. They do 15:11 need all those other things like gold, 15:13 silver, copper, and what have you. Um, 15:15 which we have, we are resourcerias. 15:18 Our lumber, we've got tons of lumber. 15:20 So, as much as uh, you know, America has 15:23 lumber as well. We, if we were to join 15:26 in an economic union in the let's say 15:29 the Americas and be part of this 15:32 America's union, um, then you know, 15:35 Canada becomes a major asset. But not 15:38 while China has its tentacles in every 15:43 single element of of energy and gas and 15:48 and mining and and you name it. They've 15:51 got everywhere. And they've got access 15:53 or pardon me, they've got uh ownership 15:56 of vital um uh office towers and real 16:00 estate throughout uh Canada. And that 16:04 doesn't even include any tech assets 16:06 that they might have that are also 16:08 covered under FEIPA, you know. And so 16:10 FEIPA is basically has taken Canada and 16:15 uh allowed for the the the parasite to 16:18 and I'll I'll use the word parasite uh 16:21 to to attach itself like a lampay eel uh 16:25 to the host, which is what we are. We 16:26 are the host. And now it's it's clamped 16:29 itself into Canada and it is right on 16:33 the doorstep of United States. I 16:36 remember a number of years ago being in 16:38 land development. I was in a meeting. I 16:40 was downstairs in a basement. There was 16:42 30 people sitting there. Half of them 16:45 were dressed in Chinese military 16:47 uniform. The other half were uh Chinese 16:50 people in civilian attire with a few 16:53 Anglos. and they were pitching me on 16:56 billions of dollars that they had to 16:57 invest. And they wanted to be investing 17:00 in real estate in Canada so that they 17:03 could be close to the American market 17:05 and they wanted to have business uh uh 17:08 access to the American market. And it 17:11 scared the [ __ ] out of me. I was a young 17:14 guy with my wife doing we were doing 17:17 boutique artist live work condos and we 17:20 got an award for it. So we got a 17:22 reputation. But here I am sitting in 17:24 what I felt was the one of the darkest 17:26 moments in my life. Uh where I when I 17:30 left that meeting, I couldn't sleep all 17:31 night. And the guy that introduced me to 17:33 these people, he said, "Come on, Jim. 17:35 What do you think? Is there is there 17:37 buildings that we can, you know, grab 17:38 for these people and then do some, you 17:40 know, some conversions and that with 17:42 them and get some business conversions 17:44 going?" And I just went, "No, Cliff, you 17:46 know what? I don't feel right. There's 17:47 something really dark about this. I I 17:50 just don't feel right. These guys don't 17:51 want nothing to do with Canada. They 17:53 want the American market. Do you not see 17:55 that, Cliff? They want the American 17:57 market and they want to use us as tools 18:00 to gain access to the American market. I 18:03 just don't think it's right. 18:04 >> Right. And that and that's what I went 18:06 through. 18:06 >> Paid subscriptions are now live. Go to 18:09 richdpolitics.com 18:10 to sign up. Become a member of my 18:12 community. And you also have the option 18:14 to signing up for monthly Zoom calls 18:17 that I will be leading. Links in the 18:19 description below. So, Canadian 18:21 resources and access to the American 18:23 market because China doesn't have a lot 18:26 of resources. Not like Canada, not the 18:29 United States, not like Russia. 18:31 >> Exactly. Yeah. 18:32 >> It has manufacturing and it has people 18:34 and it has rare earth metals and maybe a 18:36 little bit of other stuff and 18:37 everything, but 18:39 >> you know, it's it's an energy I think 18:40 it's a net energy importer and it needs 18:43 uranium for its nuclear power stations. 18:45 Okay. But you you mentioned terrorism 18:48 earlier, I think. Where where does that 18:50 come into it? 18:51 >> Well, so a lot of the uh so what uh the 18:54 the TD was was fined for money 18:57 laundering. They were mon money 18:59 laundering uh money for various 19:02 terrorist or organizations from the 19:04 Middle East uh from you know from 19:07 Africa. Um so that's where the laundry 19:10 that's where the laundering was done 19:12 for. That's who the laundering was done 19:13 for were for those terrorist 19:16 organizations. So, it's not like, you 19:18 know, uh these Canadians are are, you 19:21 know, pure. Uh, you know, there's a lot 19:24 of there's a there's a dark side to 19:25 Canada um that unfortunately Canadians 19:28 aren't aware of or they turn a blind eye 19:31 to it, you know, and and unfortunately 19:33 that's the issue that we're faced with 19:35 uh here in this country. And it's not 19:37 just, you know, the the liberals uh 19:40 only. It's also the conservatives 19:42 because if you take a look at the baton 19:45 uh that's been passed back and forth to 19:48 give each successful or su succeeding 19:52 government the tools to basically steal 19:56 from Canada uh and imprison their their 19:58 their citizens and and clamp them down 20:01 even harder. Uh it's basically the 20:04 conservatives have handed off to the uh 20:06 liberals, the liberals to the 20:08 conservatives. every single uh one of 20:11 these governments have really pushed 20:13 hard as an example on the climate uh you 20:17 know hysteria agenda and it started with 20:20 Muloney was one of the greenest prime 20:22 ministers on the face of the earth and 20:26 uh and and it all you know it didn't 20:27 just start with him but he was one of 20:29 them and he moved agenda 21 Harper moved 20:33 agenda 2030 people are screaming about 20:35 Carney they're screaming about Trudeau 20:37 and rightfully So, but they omit the 20:40 fact that the groundwork was laid by Mol 20:43 Rooney and by Harper, you know. So, it's 20:46 like it's you you it's I call it the uni 20:49 party. In Canada, we really don't have 20:52 anything but the uniarty. At least in 20:54 America, they've got a mega movement. 20:56 Um, and what they did have was the 20:58 Rhinos and the Democrats working 21:00 together. Here in our country, we've got 21:02 a uni party working together that's 21:04 basically 21:06 has us imprisoned and it's taking our 21:09 resources and and selling it off to you 21:12 to to the highest bidder. Um, but also 21:16 put putting Canada into a precarious 21:20 position with the United States because 21:23 now China is entrenched everywhere right 21:26 throughout Canada. 21:29 >> Okay. All right. You have the uni party 21:31 in Canada. We We don't We're going to 21:33 have K star replaced by Andy Burnham. 21:38 >> Real radical change. 21:40 >> Oh my god. Another puppet. See, this is 21:42 what's crazy is that we get puppet after 21:45 puppet that and again I go back to like 21:47 Mark Carney. Mark Carney was appointed 21:50 the uh governor of Bank of Canada, okay, 21:53 by Steven Harper. This guy is a City of 21:56 London uh stoogge. Okay. And operator 21:59 and puppet for the 22:00 >> No, no, no. How can you say that? He's 22:02 been a campaigning politician all his 22:04 life. 22:06 Born out of the union movement. 22:08 >> Oh my god. You know it it you know in 22:11 Canada we think we vote and we get we 22:13 get what we vote for. It's you know what 22:15 it's it's we get what the empire wants 22:19 us to get. Okay. And the empire moves 22:22 different players like chess pieces all 22:24 over the place. Like when when Alberta 22:27 was looking to separate, what did they 22:28 do? They pulled Pier Polly of out of 22:30 Ottawa. They stuck him into Alberta to 22:33 destroy the separatist movement. That's 22:36 what they did, you know, and that's what 22:38 we're faced with here in Canada. And and 22:40 unfortunately my my compatriots don't 22:42 see it. 22:43 >> Okay. 22:46 I know it's too much information. 22:48 >> No, no, no. It's all good. All good. How 22:50 to how to say that the Bank of England 22:53 uh runs the world without saying that 22:54 the Bank of England the worldact 22:58 just comes in this blowin and defeats 23:00 all the other experienced politicians 23:02 around. Right. To become the prime 23:04 minister of Canada, right? Okay. Ex Bank 23:07 of England governor. 23:08 >> Okay. Now moving on to the dark side, 23:12 the drugs, the fentinel precursors. 23:15 Yeah. 23:16 >> What else that China's is it China 23:18 that's bringing it in or is it um 23:21 Iceland? 23:22 >> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, maybe it's 23:24 Greenland, you know. 23:29 But uh yeah, it's it's crazy. I mean, 23:31 there was a bust uh recently in 23:34 Vancouver in the port of Vancouver and 23:36 it was 4,300 lers of precursors and not 23:40 just for fentinel. It was it was enough. 23:42 It was 13 billion with a B doses of 23:47 lethal uh lethal doses of fentinyl. 23:50 Okay, like I for the I mean that's 23:52 chemical warfare if you if you ask me 23:55 that is pure chemical warfare. And then 23:57 there was enough um uh GHB uh precursors 24:02 for GHB uh for uh a 1 hour 24:06 incapacitation of a 145 pound person. uh 24:10 the date rape. So GHB is a date rape 24:12 drug. A million doses. Like think about 24:16 that. You know, you're talking about the 24:18 the the rape gangs in in the UK. Why are 24:22 we why do we have a million doses of 24:26 date rape drug coming in to Canada? For 24:29 what purpose? you know, like so when we 24:32 talk about, you know, even date rape, 24:34 you know, like uh and and then the rapes 24:36 that are taking place in the UK, why is 24:38 that stuff coming here? Like what's 24:41 happening, you know? So again, it's 24:43 chemical warfare and it's a it's a new 24:46 type of warfare. It's not jets flying 24:48 overhead. It's not bombs dropping on the 24:50 ground. It is to come in and to destroy 24:55 uh the fabric of family, the fabric of 24:58 community, the fabric of of of of of 25:02 everything that is the essence of our 25:04 citizenry. Um and so again, it is it 25:07 it's coming in from China being dropped 25:11 in the port of Vancouver and uh and 25:13 where is this destined? It was destined 25:15 to go to Calgary. Calgary is one of the 25:17 most leftest uh cities in in uh in 25:21 Canada and it has a community of 25:24 trucking uh industry that is uh again 25:29 operation deadhand by the FBI proved out 25:33 that there was gangs that were moving 25:36 drugs from Canada into the United States 25:40 from California across to uh uh Ontario 25:44 and then back up into Ontario. 25:46 and and uh and and these were uh and 25:49 again all Indian names, seek uh 25:53 companies. Uh the one guy was called the 25:56 king in Ontario uh who was busted in 25:59 operation dead hand and they literally 26:02 were moving half a billion dollar worth 26:06 of drugs that they were caught moving. 26:08 Now imagine we have stretched resources. 26:11 we don't have a very good uh border 26:14 border security. Uh our law enforcement 26:17 is stretched to the max. Uh and then of 26:19 course there's some that look the other 26:20 way. Uh and there's half a billion 26:24 dollars worth of drugs that are seized. 26:28 Okay. And there's, you know, it just 26:30 it's crazy. And the stories of the guys 26:33 passing drugs back and forth. 26:35 >> Okay. Okay. Now, understandably, I 26:37 understand why the police are stretched 26:39 because they're probably enforcing 26:40 important things like the correct use of 26:42 pronouns. 26:43 >> That's correct. Absolutely. 26:46 >> So, they they got no time to break the 26:48 drug gangs. What are you talking about, 26:50 Jim? Right. 26:51 >> Yeah. Or bad tweets. Bad tweets are high 26:53 priority. 26:53 >> Oh, you have that, too? 26:55 >> Yeah. 26:57 >> Okay. So, this is like the Opium Wars 27:02 redux. 27:04 >> Yes. But China's reversed the game and 27:07 is doing it when this former British 27:09 colony or perhaps it's still a current 27:12 British colony. Right. So they're 27:14 bringing in the fentinel. When did this 27:17 start? This has been going on for a 27:20 while. Uh but it's really really amped 27:23 up over the last 10 years and uh and and 27:26 and more in the last few years but in 27:28 the last 10 years. Um so this movement 27:30 of drugs um at this volume at this sheer 27:33 volume uh is unprecedented 27:36 and um and and you can see it on the 27:39 streets you know unfortunately like 27:41 Vancouver, Toronto, a lot of it you can 27:45 see on the streets in Vancouver, 27:46 California you know the the and again 27:49 it's the poisoning of of the people and 27:54 it's destroying uh the all it's like 27:57 literally destroying cities. 27:59 It's destroying family. Um, and uh, and 28:03 a lot because it's highly highly 28:05 addictive fentinel and you can't 28:06 function and you need to get some more. 28:08 So then you can't be a productive member 28:10 of society. You just want to get your 28:12 next fix and then and then I it kills 28:15 people eventually. 28:17 >> Fant 28:21 you know again we don't hear it because 28:24 the um, the news has been suppressed. 28:26 There's a lot of people dying on the 28:28 streets. Um there's a lot of violence on 28:30 our streets. Uh but you don't hear it 28:32 that like literally there's been a gag 28:34 order uh with respect to media. Like I 28:37 hear it from friends of mine who uh uh 28:40 have the police scanners and the amount 28:42 of crime even in this area which is you 28:44 know it's not heavily populated but the 28:46 amount of crime here uh in in Niagara is 28:50 unbelievable. It's through the roof. the 28:51 shootings, the murders, you know, 28:54 people's bodies being dumped in parks 28:56 and that. Um, and it didn't exist 10 28:59 years ago, you know. Yeah. Uh, this is 29:01 all happening now. It's like an amped up 29:04 um uh and and since co it's really 29:08 gotten scary how much destruction was 29:11 done um uh you know during CO and I also 29:14 believe that that whole thing was 29:16 another city of London Empire 29:20 uh attempt to destroy as much of the 29:23 fabric of the people in the community. 29:26 Um, so that when you break it down and 29:29 you kill off all these people and then 29:32 and then you end up being the one to 29:34 reshape society in your 15minute cities 29:38 or your five minute cities or whatever 29:40 they may be, you know, and something 29:42 just occurred to me that whole project 29:44 is antithetical to the American system 29:47 of political economy because it kills 29:49 productivity. all those small businesses 29:52 destroyed, people's dreams destroyed, 29:54 you know, people being demoralized, no 29:56 hope for the future. Now, of course, it 29:59 is my firm opinion that that that 30:02 project by the globalists is crumbling 30:05 and failing. They're going to and it 30:07 will fail. They're going to do a lot of 30:08 damage between now and when it 30:10 completely collapses. But it is failing. 30:14 Now, you mentioned earlier about the the 30:17 seikhs. I don't know if you actually 30:19 said the SES, but they're the ones 30:20 they're very heavily involved in the 30:22 trucking industry. 30:23 >> Yeah. 30:23 >> They're moving the the drugs around the 30:27 nation. So So when did that start? When 30:30 did the seeks start coming in? How much 30:31 of the trucking industry do they run? 30:34 What's their involvement with the 30:35 Chinese and the moving drugs? 30:37 >> So the heavy movement really uh for the 30:40 Seikhs was uh right around when COVID 30:42 hit. Um, we had a massive wave of 30:45 millions of people brought into this 30:47 country. They would just poured in the 30:49 border. Um, I, you know, without naming 30:53 certain people, I know border people 30:55 that were told to basically just let 30:57 everybody in. And that's exactly what 30:59 happened. People came in in droves. I 31:01 know some seeks that actually got their 31:04 family members. So they went from a 31:06 house of maybe eight seikhs to a house 31:09 of 25 seikhs because the government was 31:12 was doing the bait you know and both the 31:14 left and the right uh like I remember 31:17 you know v various leaders of parties uh 31:20 like Pierre Paulv um you know including 31:24 um uh Justin Trudeau talking about you 31:27 know welcoming all these people in you 31:29 know that that we need immigration in 31:31 order to grow our economy. we need 31:34 immigration to fuel all this stuff. But 31:36 what they were doing was actually firing 31:38 Canadians, bringing in uh immigrants, 31:41 paying them less money, and replacing 31:43 Canadians. So the can great Canadian 31:46 replacement has been happening since 31:48 2019, and it's massive. My wife even got 31:51 replaced by four foreign temporary 31:54 workers um in her in her uh job that she 31:57 was doing for years. She was in the 31:58 industry and and it was all replaced. 32:01 Why? because of the reduced cost, reduce 32:04 the price, get cheap labor, labor that 32:06 won't complain about poor working 32:08 conditions, get those people in here. 32:10 So, I'm not faulting the the the seikhs 32:13 or the Indians that come here for what 32:15 they sold as a better life. What I'm 32:18 faulting is the city of London and the 32:20 end the businesses that operate under 32:23 that that rubric of bringing in mass 32:27 migration and immigr immigrants into 32:29 this country to uh pay the shareholders 32:32 more money and for them to profit more 32:34 at the end of the day. And that's when 32:36 it happened. millions. We we have been 32:38 overrun and the trucking industry in 32:41 Ontario, the rules were were were uh um 32:46 relaxed and and it's known that guys 32:49 would just buy their buy their licenses 32:51 and then get into a truck and start 32:53 driving. They said that they drove back 32:55 home, they drove truck, they did a 32:57 little drive by and boom, they paid for 32:59 their uh license and they're now driving 33:02 truck. And these organiza these trucking 33:05 companies have been going back and forth 33:08 through uh from California to Vancouver 33:12 to into Ontario and have been moving 33:15 products and not just drugs. They've 33:17 been moving, you know, legitimate 33:19 products as well. um replacing Canadian 33:22 truckers because they're going in at a 33:26 much more reduced or much re reduced 33:28 rate of of uh a fee that they're 33:31 charging for their driving services. So 33:33 again, it's just it's it's crazy, but 33:36 this is what's been happening. And these 33:38 guys have turned into massive gangs and 33:42 uh and it's known. I mean, literally the 33:44 police reports that I sent you um shows 33:47 the busts. It shows that that that you 33:50 know these were seek gangs that knew one 33:53 another cross border and they don't get 33:55 they don't care. I mean these guys 33:57 operate like an international crime uh 34:00 organization and they move back and 34:02 forth of across the borders freely. They 34:05 don't care you know they make their 34:07 money off the shipments that they're 34:08 sending out. Okay. Now the seek 34:11 community is a close-knit community. It 34:13 comes from a small part of the p of the 34:15 Punjab in India. So then having that 34:17 sort of affinity makes it easier for 34:19 them to work together in shipping drugs 34:24 and everything because you know they got 34:26 connections and stuff and they know 34:28 somebody who knows somebody who turns 34:29 out to be 34:30 >> a distant family member or a close 34:32 family member. So I can understand that. 34:34 And then the other thing is it serves 34:36 the interests of capital because it 34:37 lowers wage costs and it also fractures 34:39 society. Mass immigration fractures 34:42 society. in fractures fabric and 34:45 diminishes the hold that 34:50 it fragments culture. That's what that 34:52 does. And and we're seeing the same 34:54 thing in the UK, in Ireland, in mainland 34:56 Europe with this mass movement of people 34:59 in the absence of economic growth in 35:01 order to fragment society and and to 35:04 replace white people, 35:05 >> which which I think is horrific. All all 35:08 people all people are well I'm up for a 35:11 war where human beings honor human 35:13 beings all human beings. Okay. I am too. 35:17 But you know it's it's like it's what it 35:19 what it did though was it literally 35:21 broke uh complete communities completely 35:24 apart. Yeah. and uh and and then it 35:26 created this now we have we have racial 35:29 ghettos in Canada you know and and 35:32 that's what the issue is that you have 35:33 these racial ghettos and there's this 35:36 constant tension between you know this 35:38 group of Canadian and then these new 35:41 immigrant Canadians you know and and and 35:44 and so there's this constant stress 35:46 going on and then of course the city of 35:48 London and their puppets uh create even 35:52 more tension by fmenting 35:55 that division even more at the end, 35:57 >> right? By favoring the Seikhs over the 36:00 over the resident Canadians, the native 36:02 Canadians. 36:03 >> Exactly. 36:04 >> The same thing this doing the same thing 36:05 in the UK, favoring the migrants over 36:07 the native uh Britons. 36:11 >> Okay. Um now I remember many many years 36:13 ago I hitchhiked. 36:16 I got a a Greyhound bus from Toronto to 36:19 Edmonton. Ran out of money. I I had to 36:22 hitchhike from Edmund to Vancouver to 36:24 get my flight back. And it was me and 36:26 another guy I met in a youth hostel, a 36:27 Scottish guy. We hitchhiked together. 36:29 And I think on at least two occasions, 36:32 we got lifts from single women traveling 36:34 alone, 36:35 >> which is just absolutely remarkable. And 36:37 I don't imagine that happens right now, 36:40 right? 36:40 >> No, it won't happen now. And the 36:42 argument that it's that it's racist 36:45 if you don't welcome these new arrivals 36:48 and that they're a contribution is 36:50 undermined by what happens in third 36:54 world cities by mass internal migration. 36:58 So Karachi the largest city in Pakistan 37:00 was designed for 3 million people has a 37:02 population of over 20 million people. 37:05 >> Wow. 37:06 >> And and it's all internal migration. 37:08 people from the northwest frontier 37:09 province from the Macran coast from 37:11 Baluchistan from the Punjab from outer 37:14 synind all moving in to Karachi because 37:18 it's such a magnet but then what you 37:20 have are the development of slums you 37:23 have high crime rates you have group 37:27 unsettled people that have no roots to 37:30 that place all vying for resources yet 37:34 they're all Pakistani they're all Muslim 37:37 pretty pretty much tiny percentage of 37:38 Hindus and Christians, but you still 37:40 have the fabric of that city falling 37:44 apart. This is just on a larger scale. 37:46 Or just another way, Jim, I'm coming 37:48 around to your house. 37:50 >> Yeah, 37:50 >> I'm going to bring my mate, my family 37:52 with me. And there's two to your And at 37:54 first, you might say, "Sure, Rich. Come 37:56 on in. Bring your misses. All right, you 37:57 can stay here." But then I'll keep 37:59 bringing in more, bringing in more. At 38:00 some point, like, what's going on here? 38:02 My house is being overrun. 38:05 >> Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. And that's what 38:07 happened here, you know. I mean, uh, and 38:09 I saw it like, so, um, like I know I 38:12 know Seikhs, uh, I know a bunch of 38:14 seeks. Uh, I know a bunch of seeks in 38:16 the farming, uh, community. 38:18 >> They're wonderful people. 38:19 >> Yeah, they are. There's no question 38:20 about it. Um, but I also saw them uh 38:24 take advantage of, you know, the open 38:26 the open doors because all of a sudden I 38:28 went to their house because again I I I 38:31 I I 38:32 you know I I interfaced with them and I 38:34 went to my my buddy's place and and I'm 38:37 going, "Wow, man, you got like 13 people 38:39 in the backyard. What happened?" Oh, 38:41 well, the government's saying that, you 38:43 know, they may be able to get, you know, 38:45 uh, jobs and stuff. So, we brought them 38:47 over, but now we're finding out that, 38:49 uh, that wasn't true. and and they're 38:51 not going to be able to get jobs. So, 38:52 now we're going to have to send them 38:53 back, you know. So, and I feel bad 38:56 because, you know, it's it's like I'm 38:59 not, you know, I I myself have uh my my 39:02 background is Hungarian, right? Um, I 39:05 was born in this country, but my parents 39:06 were purebred Hungarians, freedom 39:08 fighters, and and uh, so I can relate to 39:13 uh, the ethnic side of things, you know, 39:16 I can relate to uh, you know, being a 39:19 newcomer and stuff because I witnessed 39:21 my parents going through that. Um but 39:23 what but what has happened is that it's 39:26 it's it's on steroids now and it's like 39:29 literally they want to replace uh uh the 39:32 Canadian uh and this is and this is the 39:35 fault of these larger corporations. 39:38 Their interest is profit. Their interest 39:42 is shareholder dividends. They don't 39:44 give a [ __ ] about our sovereignty. They 39:48 don't care because these are globalist 39:50 companies and these are globalistminded 39:52 individuals that run these companies. 39:54 They could care less about, you know, 39:57 identity. They could care less about 40:00 sovereignty because they are the ones 40:02 that the city of London love, the ones 40:05 that are looking to maximize profit for 40:08 the shareholder, for themselves, and 40:11 they're willing to trample over trample 40:13 over sovereignty for that tiny bit of 40:17 profit instead of looking at it from a 40:20 more ethical perspective. 40:21 >> And also to create conditions where red 40:23 ants and black ants will fight each 40:25 other. 40:26 >> That's right. turning their attention to 40:28 the globalists who are d out to destroy 40:30 our livelihoods and our lives. 40:32 >> 100% 100%. 40:34 >> Okay. Now, back to China. So, here we 40:37 have a situation where China is bringing 40:39 in drugs and those drugs are filtering 40:41 into the United States, killing 40:43 thousands and thousands of people every 40:45 year. And then China's buying up real 40:47 estate and shares in all sorts of assets 40:50 in Canada. Yet on the other hand, Trump, 40:54 Xi and Putin, we we're both of the 40:56 opinion are out to divide the world 40:59 between us that this is the America is 41:01 going to belong belong to the United 41:03 States. That's their dominion. China and 41:05 Russia are going to take care of what 41:07 happens in that part of the world. So 41:09 then what is Trump going to do about 41:11 this? He's and how how does that fit the 41:16 this game of different regions of the 41:18 world? Well, so I really believe that I 41:21 mean if you look at it uh as a poker 41:24 player or as a chess player or uh just 41:27 as like the game of risk as an example, 41:29 okay, I don't know if you ever played 41:30 that game or not, but you know, you want 41:32 to try to amass as much uh bargaining 41:36 power as you can. So what China has done 41:39 by infiltrating Canada the way that they 41:41 have is they have this unbelievable 41:43 amount of bargaining power by having 41:45 their tentacles into all of Canada's 41:48 resources and you know and all their 41:51 mining and including real estate. So now 41:55 that that is like a you're holding some 41:57 cards, right? So now that you're holding 41:59 cards, when you go to bargain with the 42:02 United States, you've actually got some 42:05 cards that you're holding. So, you're 42:07 going to go, "Well, listen, if you want 42:08 me to let go of these cards and be sort 42:12 of like a passive uh buyer of uh 42:15 Canada's, you know, raw materials and 42:17 and energy and all the rest of it, then 42:19 we want you to allow us to take over 42:22 Taiwan. We want you to allow us to take 42:25 over this and that in our region. Um, 42:28 and then we can cut a deal." So, that's 42:30 how I see this playing out. I mean, no 42:32 matter which way you look at it, there 42:34 are forces that are, you know, are kind 42:38 of beyond our control. Um, but you know, 42:41 where do you want to be? Do you want to 42:43 be on the side of the sovereigntists and 42:45 do you want to be a strong United States 42:47 as an example? Or do you want to live in 42:50 a global world where everybody is 42:52 impoverished and there's a few elite get 42:54 to travel and everybody else is walking 42:57 uh in their towns because they're not 42:59 allowed to drive and they get a bike 43:01 every now and again and you get to rent 43:03 your clothes, you know. So, 43:05 >> and you get to eat insects. Don't forget 43:06 that's the best part. 43:07 >> That's right. Yeah. 43:09 Oh, yeah. That was I mean that that kind 43:11 of freaked a lot of Canadians out. 43:13 Believe it or not, that was uh um a real 43:17 impactful wakeup call because Canadians 43:20 love their pork, they love their beef, 43:22 they love their chickens, they love 43:24 their eggs, you know, uh and and then 43:27 all of a sudden they're told that that's 43:28 going to be replaced by insects. That 43:31 created a backlash in this country in a 43:33 big way and uh and people are just 43:36 freaked out by that whole thing. So, it 43:38 actually worked to their detriment to 43:40 even bring that up, you know. And then 43:43 uh and then when we started to identify 43:45 insects for coloring purposes and stuff 43:48 like that in drinks and everything else, 43:50 all of a sudden those companies that 43:53 were using insects to color their their 43:55 food, okay, because that was supposedly 43:58 environmentally friendly and not so 44:00 toxic, um all of a sudden they had to 44:02 back off from co cover coloring their 44:04 food with in insect shells that were 44:06 ground down that happened to be red, you 44:09 know. So um there there are certain 44:13 things that we're learning about are a 44:14 benefit to our future. Um but again 44:18 going back to China, I view it as a 44:20 bargaining chip. You know, China's 44:23 entrenched here for the purpose of a 44:25 bargaining chip and uh and it's right at 44:29 the doorstep of the United States. And 44:31 of course, China wants in on the 44:35 American consumer market. That's what 44:37 they want. I mean that's how they can 44:39 grow their country is to have access to 44:42 it you know so this is where that 44:44 delicate balance happens between the 44:47 countries that are sovereign uh to work 44:50 with one another and then there's an 44:51 incentive to actually work with one 44:53 another uh in order to unwind 44:58 you know these tentacles that everybody 45:00 has created like you know the United 45:01 States has been entrenched in that side 45:04 of the world you know militarily and in 45:06 other ways as Well, so I think what 45:08 we're seeing and I agree with you, I 45:11 think that the future is beautiful and 45:13 bright and it will be beautiful and 45:15 bright. But as we learn and we become 45:18 more aware, we see the dark side that is 45:21 going to fall away. And in order for the 45:23 dark side to fall away, we have to be 45:25 cognizant of it. And once we're 45:27 cognizant of it, we can then altogether 45:29 collectively work towards making sure 45:32 that sovereignty rules, that sovereignty 45:35 wins, that the nation state is the one 45:38 that comes out on top and not the 45:40 globalists. You know, that's why free 45:42 trade is such a con. 45:44 >> It's very important that we say no to 45:46 insects. It's important cuz they are 45:50 poisonous for human beings. There's a 45:51 reason why we don't, despite the 45:54 abundance of insects in Canada, there's 45:56 a reason why human beings don't consume 45:58 them on mass. 45:59 >> What about the tariffs? How can Trump 46:02 use tariffs 46:04 against Canada? Cuz the United States is 46:06 Canada's biggest trading partner. 46:08 >> Exactly. So, one of the things that 46:10 people don't understand is that we have 46:12 the US MCA or the KOSMA, whatever you 46:15 want to call it, but buried in there, 46:18 and a lot of Canadians don't want to. 46:20 >> Sorry. The US MCA. Do you do you want to 46:22 say what that is? And didn't that get 46:23 suspended recently or something? 46:25 >> Yeah. So, the USMCA is a replacement of 46:28 NAFTA, which is the North American Free 46:30 Trade Agreement, 46:31 >> right? 46:32 >> And uh NAFTA was disastrous for the 46:34 United States, but it was also 46:36 disastrous for Canada. You know, with 46:39 every single free trade agreement, I was 46:42 growing up as a kid. Every time we had a 46:43 free trade agreement with any country 46:46 anywhere in the world, what happened? We 46:48 lost jobs. M 46:50 >> you know our our our industry got uh 46:53 scaled back. Um and with every single 46:56 free trade agreement that's what's 46:58 happened. Now the KOSMA uh which 47:01 replaced NAFTA what was buried in NAFTA 47:04 is that we have a dairy cartel. Okay 47:06 this is a totally protectionist uh dairy 47:09 industry. We have the uh egg cartel or 47:12 the chicken cartel, the pork cartel. Uh 47:15 it's all about controlling supply man. 47:17 It's like supply management. And instead 47:20 of letting the free market determine and 47:22 instead of instead of letting uh um uh 47:26 uh dairy farmers, 47:28 you know, get, you know, produce milk 47:30 and then sell it, we're literally uh uh 47:33 dumping millions of lers of milk into 47:38 the ditch because of supply management. 47:41 So this is milk that could feed the 47:44 world. it could go to third world 47:46 countries uh and help uh countries that 47:49 are suffering. And instead, what we're 47:51 doing is we're dumping the milk because 47:54 it's a protectionist industry to protect 47:57 the few handful of of corporate 48:00 largecale uh dairy farmers that are part 48:03 of the dairy cartel. Um and that has to 48:06 be broken. The the cartels that control 48:10 supply management need to be destroyed. 48:13 And not a single uh party, not the 48:16 Conservative party, not the Liberal 48:18 Party are willing to do that. And that 48:21 is where the tariffs have come in. The 48:24 tariffs are putting pressure on. And I 48:26 know for a fact one of the things that 48:27 Trump wants to eliminate is the power 48:30 that the dairy cartel has over the 48:32 Canadian government, which they do. They 48:35 do millions of dollars with the lobbying 48:37 and greasing our politicians to keep 48:40 that dairy cartel alive. And I agree 48:43 with anybody that says that that dairy 48:45 cartel should be abolished. We should 48:47 allow for anybody to to raise chickens 48:51 and to sell the eggs. When I was growing 48:53 up as a kid, that cartel was really 48:56 almost non-existent. I mean, it did 48:58 exist, but it didn't have a lot of force 49:00 and effect. So, when I was growing up, 49:03 we would go out to the farm and we would 49:05 butcher our beef. We would get it right 49:06 there. We'd get a side of beef, we take 49:08 it home, and we process it at home. Same 49:11 thing with the pigs. Same thing with the 49:13 chickens. Same thing with all of the 49:15 animals. Now there's three abattoars. 49:18 It's like slaughterhouses throughout 49:20 Ontario. 49:21 Uh they do it all, you know, in-house 49:24 large scale. Uh so you can't go to your 49:27 local farm to get your meat, you know, 49:30 and that again is a massive cost to the 49:33 consumer. I'm an advocate for local 49:36 abbittoars on farm slaughtering. So you 49:40 can go to the farm and now the farmer 49:42 can actually make a profit and make 49:45 money off of providing meat directly to 49:48 the consumer. I'm a big advocate of 49:50 that. Okay. And 49:52 >> but but what what about the the other 49:54 tariffs? That's a dairy cartel, but 49:56 that's not necessarily owned by China 49:59 unless it is they own part of it, right? 50:02 >> Yeah. 50:04 H how to extricate the Chinese and 50:08 through tariffs or whatever. Is that a 50:10 possibility? 50:11 >> Yes. So there is a possibility and and 50:14 and if uh if the United States puts 50:17 pressure on with even more uh tariffs or 50:20 as an example if they if the Americans 50:23 actually walk away because they haven't 50:25 walked away from it yet, but if they 50:26 were to walk away from the USMCA and say 50:30 we're no longer going to honor uh this 50:32 agreement and we're going to tariff you 50:35 guys from now on on everything unless 50:37 you do this, this, this, and this. Okay? 50:41 and and that's what would have to 50:42 happen. It would have to be an ultimatum 50:44 in that form. Um, and I think that's 50:46 when uh Canada uh could wise up and say, 50:52 look at, you know what, we're going to 50:53 have to walk away from supply management 50:56 and we're going to have to open up the 50:57 markets and we're also going to have to 51:00 deregulate uh agriculture because one of 51:02 the biggest problems is that our 51:04 agriculture is so regulated even on farm 51:07 like you can't do anything on farm 51:09 without some type of regulation being in 51:11 the way 51:11 >> without filling filling in some form. 51:14 >> That's right. filling in a form or you 51:16 can't slaughter a chicken on your farm. 51:18 You got to drive it, you know, 100 miles 51:20 to slaughter it and then bring it back 51:22 and then give it to your uh uh you know, 51:25 or go to this abattoire 50 miles away, 51:27 you know, and they're talking about, you 51:29 know, everything's supposed to be green, 51:30 right? You know, like there couldn't be 51:32 anything more green than to slaughter 51:34 those chickens on site and uh and do it 51:37 that way. So, but going back to tariffs, 51:39 what tariffs do does is it puts pressure 51:43 on countries uh to perform differently 51:46 and then also to uh take their own 51:50 tariffs because what what Canadians 51:52 don't understand is that okay, yeah, so 51:55 Trump's putting tariffs on, but do 51:57 Canadians know that there's tariffs 51:59 between provinces? because they don't 52:01 realize that in Canada there are 52:03 tariffs, there are penalties of of 52:07 moving goods between provinces, there's 52:10 uh licensing discrepancies between 52:13 provinces when there could be just one 52:15 license fits all into all of Canada. The 52:19 So, so when they talk about Trump is, 52:21 you know, orange man bad, he's got 52:24 tariffs going, well, what about all the 52:26 tariffs between the provinces that 52:28 exist? You know, it's just it's it's 52:30 it's crazy. It's absolutely crazy. 52:33 >> Now, but there is a way out for Canada 52:36 because Canada's going to become 52:38 >> the world's foremost superpower by 52:42 forming an alliance with that incredibly 52:45 powerful wealthy block of the European 52:48 Union. 52:49 >> Yeah. 52:49 >> It's going to join the European Union or 52:51 do something. 52:53 >> It's absurd. We're thousands of miles 52:56 away from Europe. like what are we going 52:58 to be doing? 52:59 >> Yeah, but Russia and China and US, they 53:01 will cower in the face of that alliance. 53:04 >> Oh my god. You know, it just And again, 53:07 this is it shows so clearly how our 53:10 politicians are controlled by the city 53:12 of London to spew that kind of garbage. 53:14 And then you got Canadians that are 53:17 swallowing this [ __ ] hole hookline and 53:19 sinker thinking that we're going to be 53:21 trading billions of dollars worth of 53:23 stuff with Europe. No, we're not going 53:24 to be trading billions of dollars of 53:27 stuff with Europe. It's crazy, you know, 53:30 like it just it's it's insane to think 53:32 that our closest trading partner and and 53:35 we're and billions of dollars of trade 53:37 going on that all of a sudden we're 53:39 going to replace it with something 53:40 that's 5,000 miles away. And for those 53:43 advocates of the green new scam, you 53:46 know, that's an expensive 53:48 >> those photosynthesis deniers. 53:50 >> That's right. Exactly. That's right. 53:52 It's like it's it's just insane. It's 53:54 absurd. Uh I I find sometimes that um 53:58 you know and and I I love the country I 54:01 was born in, you know, and I love all 54:03 Canadians, but sometimes I kind of shake 54:06 my head and go, man, you guys are so 54:08 been so gaslit by by by the politicians 54:12 that you believe this [ __ ] you know? 54:15 Like you literally believe that we're 54:17 gonna all of a sudden replace billions 54:18 of dollars worth of trade with a 54:20 bankrupt EU, you know? It's like how do 54:24 you do that? You know, what are we going 54:26 to do? Like, oh my god. It's just uh I I 54:29 I look at it this way. Uh Carney is 54:32 going to help um uh the bankrupt EU wind 54:35 its operations down. and uh and uh and 54:38 he's the trustee, you know, and the city 54:41 of London is telling him that he's going 54:43 to be the trustee for them and they're 54:45 going to wind down operations, you know, 54:46 it's just it's insane. It really is 54:49 totally insane. This is why we have to 54:50 get back to sovereignty. This is why we 54:53 have to get back to um you know, all 54:56 those people that the that are that are 54:58 fed the lie that they're going to come 54:59 to this country and live a better life. 55:01 Why are those countries not looking to 55:04 make a better life in those countries 55:06 for those people? Why? Because the city 55:09 of London faments wars and division in 55:12 those countries and then uses the 55:14 migration scam to disperse people all 55:17 over the world to create even more war, 55:20 more instability, and more crises 55:24 everywhere to destabilize the world. 55:26 Let's get back to loving our own 55:29 countries. let's get back to working out 55:32 solutions you know like India can work 55:34 out its solutions they just have to 55:36 focus on their solutions and how to do 55:38 that you know and uh and that's what has 55:41 to happen you know at the end of the day 55:43 same thing with Africa I mean like 55:44 there's some beautiful things that are 55:45 happening in some of the African nations 55:48 um that are really looking to adopt the 55:51 American system um but it has to be all 55:54 of it and right now Africa as well is 55:56 being destabilized by the globalist by 55:59 the city of London and their stooges are 56:02 looking to destabilize 56:04 uh the world. Like what's happening in 56:06 Iran? I mean, oh my god. Like I I I I I 56:10 I think that people are not seeing the 56:12 forest for the trees, you know, of what 56:14 Trump is doing. And what Trump is doing 56:16 is eliminating the power that the city 56:19 of London has had over this world and 56:22 keeping us in terror, you know, all this 56:24 time. 56:25 >> Yep. Jim, thank you so much. Let us know 56:27 if you would vote for Jim. 56:31 >> Right, I'll have the links in the 56:32 description. I don't know what vote for 56:34 him for what, right? But vote for him 56:35 for something. I'll have the links in 56:37 the description below. Also, uh please 56:39 do sign up to my uh subscription. I'm 56:42 going to be doing my first monthly call 56:44 for paid subscribers this Friday, the 56:47 26th of June. So if you sign up, you can 56:50 come be on a Zoom call with me and the 56:53 other subscri paid subscribers and we 56:55 can have a conversation about 56:56 geopolitics. Jim, thank you so much. I 56:58 really appreciate this conversation. and 57:00 look forward to having you back