Shaun Newman Podcast - #523 - The Grizzly Patriot
Episode Date: October 30, 2023Mark Friesen aka The Grizzly Patriot worked in corrections for 25 years, ran for the PPC and is travelling Saskatchewan talking about agenda 2030. Let me know what you think. Text me 587-217-8500 Su...bstack:https://open.substack.com/pub/shaunnewmanpodcast
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Hey, this is Brett Kessel, and you're listening to the Sean Newman podcast.
Welcome on the podcast, folks.
Happy Monday.
Yeah, we're back from the tour.
That means we're back to regular hours, regular business.
How you doing?
The only thing I got a course correct.
You know, I was rattling them all off on Friday.
And I was like, did I miss anyone?
Did I miss anyone?
I had it, but I didn't have my computer or nothing to do it.
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And he texts me, and I'm like, man.
Like, you know, I thought I had it all in the vehicle with twos.
but didn't have my notes with me, which, you know, when you're doing that on the road,
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And at times, you know, especially when Tews is adding in his quips,
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I'm more worried about it.
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DatC.A.
He's a former PPC candidate, and in the upcoming Saskatchan election, he'll run with the Buffalo Party.
He worked 25 years as a correction officer, and you might know him as the Grizzly Patriot.
I'm talking about Mark Freezing.
So buckle up.
Here we go.
Welcome to the John Newman podcast.
I'm joined by Mark Friesen.
Maybe some people know him as the grizzly patriot.
Probably a lot of people know you as that.
How's it going today?
Good.
Good.
You know, into the booming metropolis of Lloyd Minster.
Yes, yes, here we are.
Well, tell me a little bit about yourself.
It's funny.
I've watched videos of yours.
I've heard a lot about you through different channels.
I feel like you've shared some of my stuff before.
Like, it's funny.
But somebody asked, have you ever had Mark Con?
No, and I remember when Canadiens for Truth was in town.
Geez, was that Chris Barber maybe?
Could have been.
And I think you were in town for that.
And you've got pretty much a standing ovation.
And it's funny.
And yet I remember back then they're like, you get Mark on it.
I'm like, I know, but I'm like, I didn't realize he was in town.
And this one, you know, almost came to town.
And it's so much better in person.
So tell me a little bit about yourself.
Who is Mark?
So Mark is a political junkie.
I've ran in two campaigns under the PPC.
the next campaign I run in will be under the Buffalo Party of Saskatchewan.
I've been at this for well over 23 years.
And it's been Agenda 2030, originally Agenda 21, that sort of pulled me into this,
into this political game.
And so, yeah, it's been a, it's been.
been a it's been a slog the first 15 years nobody was listening to any talk about agenda 21 or
agenda 2030 now they're listening every town hall that i do there's upwards of 100 people so people are
starting to thirst for some knowledge and what i find is that
People are hungry for somebody to tell them the truth as to why everything is so crazy.
And that's my job.
That's what I do.
What did you,
where were you before you were the Grizzly patron?
Like you said 20 years ago, roughly?
Yeah.
15, somewhere in that range.
What were you, what were you before that?
Were you just a...
I was just a Joe Schmo.
Where are you originally from?
Saskatoon.
Oh, you're a Saskatoon boy.
Yeah.
Yeah, okay.
Yeah.
And I worked, I worked 25 years in corrections.
First eight years.
So in the prison system?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so the first eight years out in BC and then I moved back to Saskatoon and worked for the feds at a psychiatric center.
So, you know, I come by this politics thing somewhat honestly.
because within the correction system,
there's a lot of politics.
There's a lot of politics.
Do I dare ask how on earth you got involved?
Like, I don't know, maybe I'm the oddball, you know.
I come out of high school.
I'm not thinking about going in the prison system.
Was that something that, like, you know,
was in the family line?
Is that something that got offered to you?
Did you have the right to meet?
Like, why the prison system?
So I had an uncle that,
I worked many years at Sask Pan and Prince Albert.
And I was attracted to that business based on all of the stories that he would tell.
So that's sort of what got me into it.
And 25 years working in prison, you develop some pretty thick skin based on what you're exposed to on a daily basis.
So I retired when I was 44 and started my own tree business.
I had started my business about four years before I retired as an exit strategy
because I was tired of beating my head against the wall in terms of safety, officer safety,
and a number of different things.
So I was done.
I was finished.
So I started my own business and it got to the point where it could support my life and the life of my wife and my kids.
So that's what I do now.
I'm in the tree service.
I run a tree operation.
I was Saskatoon.
So, and I love it much more than dealing with.
Than dealing with.
Dangerous human beings.
Riff, raff.
Yeah, 100%.
Yeah, so, you know, and so that sort of prepared me to get into politics.
That, you know.
When you say prepared, do you mean it prepared you to see how politics functions, you mean?
Yeah, just to see how the bureaucracy works.
Like it's the stupidity of the bureaucrats is phenomenal.
It really is.
How so?
Give me an example.
I mean, like I need any examples on this show, but at the same time, I'm kind of curious what your eyes saw.
So just some of the decisions being made by people that never worked the line, the front line in a prison, making decisions that affect correctional officers' lives.
And I was heavily involved with the union from a safety perspective.
of both in BC and and with the feds in Saskatoon.
And so that exposed me to a lot of ignorance within the bureaucracy.
And I can tell you I'm not a fan of government bureaucracy because of that, because of that
experience.
So it seemed like a natural trajectory for me to get involved in politics.
politics after that experience.
And so here I am.
And like I said, when I first started trying to raise the flag on Agenda 21, Agenda 2030,
nobody was listening.
Nobody could care less.
What year is that roughly?
So a little bit in the 90s, I was exposed to a lady by the name of Rolls.
of the States who was raising the flag in that country in regards to agenda 21.
So that was sort of the beginning of this whatever it is that I do.
And so as we move along, COVID really is what brought this thing to the attention of many.
You know, there was so much lies throughout COVID from government.
And people are now starting to, I'm really starting to notice that people are, again, dying for somebody to tell them the truth about what's going on and what's associated to Agenda 21 in its original form and now Agenda 2030.
And people are listening in Britain.
relatively high numbers.
And so I've taken this as my responsibility, not only responsibility, but duty,
to inform as many people as possible as to what we're moving into and what our establishment
political parties have committed to.
Well, if I go back to, I mean, certainly, COVID, but I go back to the 90s, what my brain
jumps immediately to is to when day.
Daniel Smith says, let's target 2050.
It's like, to me, I'm like 2050.
Like, there's two schools of thought.
One is, why target anything?
Because it's a load of, it's just a load of shit.
The other is, she targets 2050 because maybe then, by then the technology will be there to do whatever, right?
It doesn't, not there to argue it.
I just, I go in the 90s when you're following this lady of the states, with it being 21, that's essentially 2050 now, right?
Like it's so far out.
Is that why in the early days nobody gave, you know, nobody would wake up?
Or is it because it was so subtle?
Very subtle.
The one thing about COVID was it was like abrasive.
And it just, the temperature just went up every single day.
Yes.
For two straight years until the breaking point of the Freedom Convoy.
100%.
The interesting thing about Danielle Smith is she used to talk about Agenda 21, Agenda 2030.
quite a bit on a radio show.
Since she's been elected as premier,
you never hear utter the words,
which is a little bit curious,
and why these politicians,
Scott Moll included,
are buying into this CO2 as bad,
is also very curious.
There's plenty of actual science out there
that establishes that CO2 is a fundamental building block of all life on Earth.
We learned that in grade 6 science through photosynthesis.
We need CO2.
Plants convert CO2 and then release oxygen into the atmosphere.
That's how we all survive.
So this idea that we need to reduce our CO2 in the atmosphere is complete hogwash,
as far as I'm concerned.
And as far as a lot of scientists are concerned,
there were 1,600 scientists that just signed on to a declaration that says CO2 is not a pollutant.
What are we worried about CO2 for?
And historically, our planet has seen much higher levels of CO2 in the atmosphere.
When the world has flourished,
there was a study that came out of the Lancet a couple of years ago.
ago, it's actually still on the NASA website where they sent out a bunch of researchers, paid
them, God knows how much money, they could have called me and saved himself a bunch of money
because I understand trees.
And they asked them to determine why the earth has been greening so much in the last number of
decades. And the reason they came back with and they determined was higher levels of CO2 in the
atmosphere, which encourages plant growth. Talk to any greenhouse operator. They'll tell you they pump in
upwards of 2,000 parts per million to encourage plant growth. Now, if we want to actually cool
the planet, I'm not sure why we'd want to do that, especially when we live in Canada where
we could use some some warmer temps but if we actually wanted to cool the planet let CO2 do what
it's supposed to do which is which is create vegetation larger trees bigger trees
trees love CO2 and without it without that photosynthesis process will die so this idea of
net zero is insane.
It's completely insane.
And there's a lot of scientists out there that that will back that up.
Patrick Moore is one of them.
He's the founder of Greenpeace, of course.
And, yeah, listeners can remember he was on the show.
I had a string of Patrick Moore.
And, oh, I'm just drawing blanks right now, which is terrible.
But there was a group of them that came on.
Patrick Moore put in a very very, very,
I started to see a trend on a bunch of these different things and Greenpeace being one of them.
And he was the one who pointed out, you know, like we were this little time fledgling organization.
And then we got some successes and kind of like, okay, we've we've accomplished what we started.
Right.
And now we can walk away and pat ourselves on the back and go back to not life, but you get the point.
Right.
And instead it'd become an organization at that point, a bureaucracy, if you would.
And then they need to justify and they keep pushing and pushing and now where we're at these.
So the interesting thing about, you know, the carbon tax that we talk about does absolutely
nothing to save the planet.
It's a funding mechanism.
In 2012, there was a committee struck at the UN trying to determine the best way to fund
the SDGs, the 17 goals of sustainable development.
And they came up with a carbon tax.
It's a funding mechanism.
that's all it is to fund this agenda.
And people need to understand that.
I mean, there's so many people that willingly give their hard-earned dollars to the government
and they think they're saving the planet.
They're not doing anything.
They're not achieving anything.
This idea that, again, back to net zero,
that we need to destroy our energy industry in Alberta or sustainability.
Southern Saskatchewan is insane based on CO2 being a pollutant.
Come on.
It just isn't.
The science doesn't back that up.
And we've seen this routine since the 70s where they talked about global warming or global cooling first.
We were all going to freeze to death because of this, what's happening in the atmosphere.
So they use fear and propaganda to instill that fear in the masses, so the masses will do ridiculous things, right?
Like handover their carbon taxes and think they're saving the planet.
So then it moved from global cooling to global, while then it was acid rain, a hole in the ozone,
and everybody's hair lit on fire because, you know, somehow,
none of that amounted to anything.
None of it reached that point
where people could say, yeah, see, we were right.
They're not right.
And then it switched from that acid rain,
whole nil ozone, to global warming
with Al Gore's movie Inconvenient Truth,
which is also complete hogwash.
And the narrative went from global warming
to Florida's going to be underwater by 2010.
New York's going to be an aquarium.
None of that materialized.
None of that came to be true.
So they needed to,
rearrange the narrative and they move to climate change. Since the dawn of time, the climate has always
changed. And since humans have been present on planet Earth, we build, we create, we
solve problems that Mother Nature throws at us. We're really good at us. We're really good
at it. So leave us be, let us figure this out. We're really good at it. We don't need some elite
organization like the UN or the World Economic Forum dictating to us what their idea of solving
these problems is. We don't need that. We're good on our own. We've figured this out. Humanity is
really good at solving problems, inventing, you know,
our ingenuity, let us be.
Let us do what we do.
And we'll fix whatever issues climate change presents us.
We don't need to be dictated to in the form of a carbon tax, which is insane.
We just need to be left to do what we do as humans on this planet.
We'll figure it out.
always have.
So stay out of our business.
So why do you think, you know, you mentioned Daniel Smith on, on the radio shows or Scott
Moe or, you know, the list goes on of smart politicians.
I think smart politicians.
I mean, strategic politicians might be the, the more apt.
I feel like when you watch people get into politics, they become, it's all about strategy.
It's all about what the population is ready to handle or what words you use.
I mean, just look at Sophie.
And Justin Trudeau, right?
It comes out.
She's been having an affair.
Or they were split a long time ago.
It doesn't matter either way.
But we all know it was a show.
And I mean, we've always known.
But like they had family vacations.
They took photo ops, et cetera, et cetera, to win an election.
Because that's what it is.
Like, I mean, it's got brass tag.
It's a show.
It's a show.
They showed they were together.
And now it's all falling apart so they can finally be like, well, I mean,
like, I was just throw a little more gas on the fire.
Right.
So go back to it.
Why do you think Agenda 2030 when everybody knows about it now?
I mean, it's so like, you know, and when people ask, well,
there's actually still people out there who refer to it as conspiracy theory.
It has nothing to do.
Are these the same people who are still getting their like seventh jab?
Yeah.
Most likely.
Right?
Because I think most common people at this point have gone like, yeah, 2030 is real.
How bad do you think it'll get?
It's like, well, we're absolutely.
charging towards this imaginary date, not imaginary, physical date, but like imaginary
deadline.
Yes.
And the world is going to just get us ever close to that.
We were just talking about Germany last night and how they're trying to get off everything.
They want to be wind and solar, but they got this 30% they can't figure out.
It's like, that's where death lies.
And so the interesting thing about this is, is the influence the media has on so many people.
Yes.
And we have to, we have to bust through that.
And the only way that I know how to bust through that is to continue on doing town hall events throughout my province.
And I'll continue to do that.
That's why I'm here tonight.
We have to get the information to the people outside of the media.
Because the media, there's actually what's called the UN Agenda 2030 Media Compact.
where over 250 media conglomerates have all agreed to promote this agenda.
Our media are propagandists.
They don't tell anybody the truth.
And that's why it's so important.
And this is why I believe the truth will set you free if you allow,
if you open your mind
to
the truth,
to reality,
and what,
see,
the mindset of these people
that first created this,
or first conceptualized this agenda
in 1968,
was a group called the Club of Rome.
Heavly funded by Rockefeller's,
Rothschilds,
the big bankers.
And Dennis Meadows, one of the founding members, if people go to my Twitter space, they can check out the PIN tweet and listen to what Dennis Meadows has to say.
He essentially gives you two options.
One, we can live with maybe eight or nine billion people, but we have to live under a strong dictatorship.
Or we reduce the planet's population from where it sits now.
now at $8 billion, down to $1 billion, one or $2 billion.
Well, how are they going to do that?
How are they going to eliminate that many people?
And they have mechanisms in place to do that.
You know, look at COVID.
COVID was manufactured in a lab in Wuhan.
I'll turn this up.
Yeah, go ahead.
other, we are so far globally, you are so far above the population and the consumption levels,
which can be supported by this planet that I know in one way or another it's going to come back
down. So I don't hope to avoid that. I hope that it can occur in a civil way. And I mean civil
in a special way.
Peaceful.
Peace doesn't mean that everybody's happy,
but it means that conflict isn't solved through violence,
through force, but rather in other ways.
And so that's what I hope for.
So just comply.
That we can, I mean, the planet can support
something like a billion people, maybe two billion, depending on how much liberty and how much material
consumption you want to have. If you want more liberty and more consumption, you have to have fewer
people. And conversely, you can have more people. I mean, we could even have eight or nine billion,
probably if we have a very strong dictatorship, which is smart. Unfortunately, you never have
smart dictatorships. They're always stupid. So, but if you had a smart dictatorship and a low
standard of living, you can have a, but we want to have freedom and we want to have a high
sentence. So we're going to have a billion people. And we're now at seven, so we have to get
back down. I hope that this can be slow, relatively slow, and that it can be done in a way
which is relatively equal, you know, so that people share the experience and you don't have a few
rich, you know, trying to force everybody else to deal with it. So those are my hopes. I mean,
these are pretty pessimistic hopes, you know, but I mean, that's what lies ahead.
Psychopath. So, sorry, once again, who is that guy? Dennis Meadows. He's one of the founding
members of the Club of Rome. Comes out of MIT. So he's probably too smart for his own good.
this idea that we're going to eliminate 7 billion people,
how you do that?
Well, obviously they can't do it overnight.
So in the interim, he's offering a dictatorship,
which is exactly what they're doing.
Exactly what they're moving towards.
Yeah, yeah.
100%.
So it's important to understand the mindset of the people involved in First
creating and conceptualizing this agenda. So there's a guy by the name of Alexander King. He's
co-founder of the Club of Rome. He's also the author of the First Global Revolution. He says this.
The common enemy of humanity is man in searching for a new enemy to unite us. So it's not like
the enemy presented itself at the door. They're creating the enemy through propaganda and fear.
problem reaction solution. This is their mindset. The threat of global warming, water shortages,
famine and the like would fit the bill. So they understand that those topics instill fear in the masses.
And when the masses are afraid, they'll do ridiculously stupid things. All these dangers are caused
by human intervention. And it is only through changed attitudes and
behavior, well, how do you change attitudes and behavior? Propaganda and fear. That they can be over,
that they can be overcome. The real enemy then is humanity itself. So we're all useless eaters,
right? And they want to convert us, reduce the earth's population by seven billion people,
and then create a slave class where the elites are dictating everything.
And the billion slaves that are left will do all the grunt work.
That's what, it's feudalism.
That's what they want to reinstate.
This freedom and liberty and values of Western civilization,
the best civilization humanity's ever known,
is the enemy to these people.
All of the values that we cherish in this country and in the United States,
States and parts of Europe, Western civilization, is the enemy to these people.
You know, I used to listen to videos like that.
And I'd be like, you know, like, come on.
You know, like, yeah, come on.
But it's funny, Bill Gates is probably the one that sticks out to me when he talked
about vaccines.
You know, we can reduce, I can't do Bill Gates voice, but, you know, we're going to reduce
the population, you know, through vaccination.
And you're like, what did he say?
No, I didn't say that.
You almost like write it off.
Like, you must have meant something else.
Except there, then you, you know, then you start to, you know, talk to a lot of people and
start to pay attention a bit more.
And they're telling you exactly what's going on.
Well, and that's the thing.
And it's such a large idea.
Yes.
You just go, there's no way.
Right.
Except you think there's this group of elite, smart people.
They're just well-educated.
They're like, they're brilliant.
Like you say, they might be too smart for their own gut.
And they have decided the world is going to fall apart.
And whether it's seven years, 10 years, 12 years, don't matter.
And we're going to make that happen.
That's right.
Right.
And we're going to come to everybody's defense.
This is what this is all about.
So there's another guy, Maurice Strong, Canadian oil man,
a vowed socialist.
He was actually buried in China because he had this respect for Chinese communism.
He's known as the father of sustainable development agenda.
So Pierre Elliott Trudeau tapped Marie Strong to go to the club of Rome
and helped him develop this agenda.
And he says this, isn't the only hope for the planet
that the industrialized civilizations collapse?
Isn't it our responsibility to bring that about?
So there you have it.
This is the mindset of these people.
There's another individual.
Cristiana Figueras, she used to head up the FCC.
She comes out a socialist international.
She says this.
This is the first time in the history of mankind that we are setting ourselves the task of intentionally
within a defined period of time, so 2030, to change the economic development model
that has been reigning for at least 150 years since the Industrial Revolution.
Well, the Industrial Revolution is responsible for feeding masses of people around the world.
Nine billion people.
Right.
Like when the guy in the video says, 8 to 9 billion people, if we lived under a dictatorship, maybe.
Well, we're at 9 billion people right now, essentially.
Right.
100%.
And it's through that industrialization and problem solving and creation that humanity is really good at,
that has solved most of our problems.
And again, going back to this idea of CO2 being a pollutant, is complete hogwash.
We could use more CO2 in the atmosphere.
And it would encourage more plant growth, which means more food,
which means more food for our animals, more food for humanity.
So what are we worried about?
Why are we focusing on net zero?
So it's complete insanity.
You mentioned you've been traveling around Saskatchewan.
Saskatcharind is your province, so you've been touring.
You mentioned, of course, across the time that since you, you know, you kind of had your
what the heck is going on moment, which I want to hear about.
But let's talk about the touring portion.
How long have you been going around the province?
We actually did it.
We started.
in the height of COVID when they were telling us not to gather.
We did some underground events throughout Saskatchewan,
which was a little odd that we had to hide
and gather in farmer's shops throughout the province.
It was sort of indicative of the moment that we were living in.
I mean, back in the day,
There were people putting together meetings in secrecy to hide from authority.
And that's exactly what we were doing.
Yeah, we lived it out.
Yeah.
And so I've been doing it for about five years now.
And, I mean, I've gone through Alberta.
I've gone into BC.
I've gone into Northern Ontario.
haven't made it to Quebec or the East Coast yet, but I consider it to be extremely important
to share the information that I've been exposed to, that I understand, and have wrapped my
head around.
And so it's really important to share that information because we are in an information
war.
and if people don't start accepting reality and the truth, we're in for a rough ride.
Well, that's what I wanted to ask you about.
You know, five years ago, if you would have sat across me, I would have been like,
what the heck is this guy talking about?
Right.
Think about that.
That's even before COVID, right?
You time it out.
That's basically what I'm, it'll be five years of this podcast in April.
So I hadn't even started the podcast five years ago.
So certainly I was not, you know, even if it could have happened, it couldn't have happened,
right so I go you roll into Lloyd five years ago I would have come and I would have been like what the hell is that guy smoking right right right now where we sit today you know I was just talking to Chris Sims I can't remember what it was what was that folks like three weeks ago maybe and we got to talk about the CBC and how like on the news hour at supper time 1% of the country watches it to mean that's winning it doesn't mean that you're winning in the government things and everything else in the
information side of it, it's like, well, nobody's watching the biggest propagandist of the country,
which is hilarious. That's why they're probably tightening it, right? This podcast alone for this
little area, you know, is they're getting direct, you're getting direct access to it. And it was
formed under the increased pressure through COVID. Yet our first meeting in a bull bar,
we walked up, had a, had a board, and it was like, so what should we do? What's going on? And
And there was this, you know, broke off in the little groups.
And, you know, out of that came for the kids' sake.
For the kids' sake.
And there's a couple different groups here in town.
And they worked together just recently on the $1 million for children, which was unreal here in town.
It was cool.
But I'm laughing about it because I'm like, your experience would have been different
because you would have been like, actually I know something.
And I should probably speak because I actually have been researching, you know,
Agenda 21, which has now been pushed.
And I actually, Danny Hozack, if you're listening,
I assume I'm thinking back to, I want to say as one of the first times me and him started talking, he started, I know exactly what's going on.
And that was tough to hear because I'm like, come on, come on, right?
Except now, you know, sitting here across from it's like, no, that, yeah, okay.
Like it's just, so the experience of walking in in those early days had to have been something.
But now walking into any room you go into, like, I mean, we were just in a bar in the middle of nowhere, Saskatchewan.
and a shout out to Bradwell and Hank's Tavern
because that was a ton of fun.
And everybody was alive.
Everybody was like awake.
Everybody was like, yep, get it.
Get it.
Yeah.
And that's what's happening.
There is an awakening happening.
And this is why I'm actually,
when we talk about all this dark stuff that they want to do,
I'm actually quite hopeful because I believe in humanity.
They don't.
And humanity's ability to stand up
and resist this, when we get to that tipping point
where the majority of Canadians
understand what's happening and what they want to do,
when we get to that point, it'll be over.
It'll be over.
I truly believe that.
Because at the end of the day,
I mean, Scott Moe is a perfect example
when we're talking about Soji, which is attached to Agenda 2030,
coming into our schools in Saskatchewan,
it was the people, 86% of parents in that province said,
no, it's not going to happen.
Scott Moe, if you want to be re-elected,
you're going to listen to what we tell you to do.
And he did.
And he listened.
and he's now, you know, to the point of using Section 33, notwithstanding clause,
to enact legislation that says this isn't going to be taught in our schools.
And there's a reason why this SOGI was created.
It was created, again, at the UN,
by people that want to confuse our children,
to the point that they're not going to be.
to join traditional family values or the nuclear family when they're finished their educational
experience because they're going to be so screwed up when this is over they're not going to know
who they are or what they are that's what this is and again it's it's part of this deep
depopulation agenda. If you don't have people procreating and joining traditional family values
or the nuclear family, they're doing their job. And that's why this is so nefarious. All of this,
if you look at the 17 goals of sustainable development, and we've gone through everyone,
and I encourage people to check out my website, ffcs.com. There's a 17-part series where we go through
each one of the 17 goals of sustainable development. And we interpret each one of them and what they
want to achieve through this. So their first goal is end hunger. Well, how are you going to end hunger
when you're handcuffing food producers with a 30% fertilizer restriction? How are you going to do that?
How are you going to feed the world when you're handcuffing our food producers? There's so many,
contradictions built into this agenda. And when you understand all of these goals as an agenda,
as a, as a, as a, as a, in its totality, then you begin to understand what it's meant to do.
And that's again, put the power into the hands of this unelected, unaccountable foreign entity,
the UN, World Economic Forum. And the other thing that people need to understand is the
World Economic Forum was created in 1971 by the same people that first conceptualized this
agenda in 1968 at the Club of Rome. They tapped Klaus Schwab to first create the World Economic
Forum in 1971. And Klaus Schwab comes from solid stock in their eyes because his dad was a corporate
Nazi and worked with the Nazis to help them achieve what they wanted to achieve, which is
world domination.
So it's this convergence between the Nazis, the fascists, and the communists.
It's this convergence of two ideologies responsible for the deaths of hundreds of millions
of people in the 20th century.
and it's this convergence of those two ideologies that are coming together between the UN,
which I consider to be communist, and the World Economic Forum, which I consider to be fascist.
So it's this convergence of those two ideologies.
That should scare the hell out of everybody.
Just look at their track record.
These are the people that are involved in conceptualizing this agenda.
and moving it forward.
And our politicians in this country,
in 1992,
Brian Mulroney went to Rio de Janeiro,
the first Earth Summit,
to commit to this agenda,
Agenda 21 in its original form.
And it wasn't like he came back to Canada,
tasked all of his MPs
to go back to their constituents
and say, hey,
hey, we've just committed to this wonderful agenda that's going to transform your world.
If they would have done that, the people would have rejected it out of hand,
which is why they didn't do it.
And so what they did is the exact opposite.
They framed it as conspiracy theory.
And that's a very powerful tool.
when you label somebody conspiracy theorist
most of the people
especially when you have the backing from the media
most people will dismiss
what the conspiracy theorists have to say
and that was my battle
throughout the 90s and into
2000s
well you just think
even even as open as I am to
most subjects most people everything
Coots 4
Remember when they had the
Because I mean like
Geez they're still sitting in there
Right?
Like I mean
Yeah
They throw the
They throw the picture of the guns
And as soon
I don't know why that
That's a trigger for me
I don't know why that's
But obviously
You know
And it took
Even Donald Best when he was on
Right
Talking about it
He even was like
Put him in jail
Right
This is a guy
Who's trying to look at these things
Right
And then you start
Digging into it
Like it just doesn't
hold water.
No.
Like, there's just so much.
There's so much going on.
And I know, like, same thing with COVID, right at the start, you know, like, I wasn't
this guy going, oh, I see it for what it was.
I was one of the guys, you're going, okay, well, I got young kids.
We better go home and better protect ourselves.
And three months in, I think there was a lot of people and certainly a lot of people
well before that, but about the three month mark, you know, where it's summer, nothing's
going on, all those pictures that were coming from Italy and all these different places.
Yeah.
The videos, none of that showed up.
And you're a guy, you know, the only.
And saying all that, if there was one thing I heard about you coming here, I want to hear the story.
I want to hear this, this, this, the story of going all the way to Manitoba, I believe.
And, and I don't know, you got, you got to tell me, you got to tell me the story.
Because I've, it's one of the things I wanted to hear firsthand, Mark.
I'm derailing us a bit, but, you know, COVID for a lot of us came and went without much.
We didn't know anyone who died from it.
We didn't know anyone who really got that sick from it.
Right.
Some knew some people who got some sicker than worse.
A couple say they know some people who died who were elderly.
And then every once in a while, you hear of somebody who got it real bad or maybe the treatment.
I don't know.
But what was your walkthrough?
Because you're talking about right at the start, you're meeting in Bull Barns and everything.
And I remember the media trying to make an example of you is what I recall.
Oh, absolutely.
They were.
So the interesting thing is with the backdrop.
that I had, I knew what this was.
I knew that this was, this was a mechanism to get people to hand over their rights and freedoms.
And that's why they manufactured this virus in Wuhan.
That's why they, you know, developed this jab that seems to be in Epic Times.
they were quoted as saying
17 million people have died
because of the jab.
So this is all orchestrated.
And the interesting thing is,
you know, you saw the videos
coming out of China.
Nothing comes out of China
that they don't want coming out of China.
And it was people falling over in the streets.
It was tanker truck spraying
neighborhoods down
people welding apartment buildings shut.
This creates a lot of fear in people.
And when the media pumps this garbage out,
it affects people.
It scares people.
And this is all by design.
They want people to be scared
because when people are scared,
they do ridiculously stupid things.
And that's what we went through.
And that's what this all was,
was to prepare us for what's to come.
And so I ended up getting fairly sick.
And it wasn't, I don't believe it was COVID.
I believe it was bacterial pneumonia because, and I'll tell you how I know this.
So I was, for seven days, I was just tired and a little bit lethargic.
and I woke up the morning of the seventh day
and I walked from the bedroom I was in
my wife was sick at the same time so we were in separate bedrooms
so I walked from the bedroom to the bathroom
and I just about hit the floor because I couldn't get oxygen
and so I went downstairs and told myself
I'm going to be fine no big deal
unfortunately it was a bit of a big deal because I wasn't getting oxygen so at about 8 o'clock that evening
I crawled upstairs and I told my wife I got to call the ambulance because I can't I'm not getting
any oxygen so the ambulance came and they took my oxygen it was at 70 which is quite low and shipped me
off to the hospital.
And the first three days in hospital, the doctor kept coming in on a regular basis asking me
when I'm going on the ventilator.
And I told them, get stuffed.
I'm not going on your ventilator.
But then day four came along.
I had two prongs in my nose.
I had a mask on my face trying to drive some oxygen into my system.
And it wasn't working.
So the doctor came in and said, so what are we going to do?
I said, I'll tell you what.
And no treatment was started in those first four days, zero treatment.
And he says, so what are we doing?
I said, well, here's my choices.
I'm either going to suffocate the death in this bed or I'm going to die in your ventilator.
Those are my two choices.
So off to the ventilator we went, put me in a coma.
still no treatment for the pneumonia that I was experiencing.
Just to hold it there for a second.
You agreed to the ventilator then?
Yeah.
Yeah, because I wasn't.
What were you thinking?
I wasn't functioning.
At that point where you thinking, this is it?
Yeah.
100%.
This is, this will be the end of me.
And that's not a good feeling.
Let me tell you.
Well, that's what I mean.
Yeah.
I mean,
it's a pretty,
pretty gross feeling.
So the nurses would notify my wife
on a daily basis as to my condition
as I was progressing or digressing.
And on day eight,
the doctor called my wife and said,
somebody way above my pay grade has decided to put your husband on a transfer list to Ontario.
Your husband is in no condition to transfer across the hall,
never mind in an airplane at 30,000 feet going in Ontario.
And so she asked the question, well, why are they doing it?
And he said, his response was,
this has nothing to do with his health and everything to do with his politics.
So you can imagine my wife is also sick at the same time and having that go through her head that if she ends up, you know, needing hospitalization, are they going to do this to her too?
But as it turned out, it worked in my favor.
They flew me to Toronto.
I got the, I made the trip.
As soon as I got there, I was put under the care of some world-renowned lung doctor.
and he said, we need to put him on antibiotics immediately.
And that's exactly what they did.
So once I got there, my progression into recovery was moving forward.
I was in a coma for five weeks.
And touch and go a couple of times, even in Toronto.
but here I am I survived and so when I came back when they flew me back to Saskatoon
after my stay in Toronto I had a hell of a time distinguishing between reality and fantasy
because you're on some pretty heavy drugs ketamine and fentanyl while you're in
in this coma state and I had the most vivid
nightmares I've I've ever had. It was the craziest thing and I assumed that I was in the
hospital because of all the things I was up to in my head and my wife was at my side and
she said no no Mark you're here because you were in Toronto with pneumonia that's
that's why you're in the hospital so there were some reality
therapy happening between myself and my wife and she she was very good she was she
was able to pull me out of that that headspace where I was convinced it was to do
with all the things I was up to and I you know I I hear that when people come out of
these situations they can develop PTSD based on what their mind has been
doing while they're under and
Five weeks is no short time.
No, it's not.
No, and I couldn't walk.
Like, when I, when I came out, there was a lot of therapy ahead of me.
I'm just curious, because I don't know if I've ever talked to anyone who's been in a coma for five weeks.
Did it feel like a snap and it was done?
Or was it like, can you remember anything from it?
You talk about like the dreams, is the dreams after or is the dreams before?
I mean, I'm assuming you've thought a lot about this.
But at the same time, do you remember anything from that time?
I remember all of the dreams that I had, and they were epic.
They were me and a buddy of mine flying to the Middle East and going to assassinate dictators.
Like, just super crazy dreams.
And also, you know, obviously fed by heinous amounts of drugs, which made it very vivid.
and real to me.
So I had, you know, I had a fair amount of recovery ahead of me.
Like I said, I couldn't walk.
In fact, one night I had a dream that I needed to go buy a suit.
For a speech I was going to give the next day.
That was in my head.
So I got out of bed and I fell right on the floor and ended up shitting myself.
But, you know, that's the state I was in.
And it took about 10 days to clear that out.
And I was still hallucinating sitting in my hospital bed,
watching little men work on the curtain track, the curtain track.
So it was a tough place to be.
But, you know, with the help of my wife, she pulled me out of that and some reality therapy.
So, but it took, it took another month being in hospital of gaining my strength back so I could walk and, and do what I needed to do to function.
So I ended up, I left the hospital December 9th.
And I was, I was pretty happy about it when I got home because I could spend Christmas, you know, at home where I belong.
Plus, I assume somewhere in there is the memory of like, well, give me the ventilator and like, this is it.
So I don't remember any of that experience.
I don't know any of that.
I don't, I've seen pictures of me with the ventilator on breathing for me.
Do you remember the lead up though to the ventilator, I mean?
No.
No.
Not very, very little.
Okay.
It's very vague.
I do remember them wheeling me to wherever it is that they're going to put me into this coma.
But that's about it.
But the interesting thing is I had another dream where my buddies from high school put me on a plane and hog tied me.
And I couldn't move in this plane.
It was this most surreal feeling when I look back on it.
It's very strange.
So there must have been some kind of conscious activity happening when they put me on the plane to go to Toronto.
So there was there was something there that was triggering.
And when you talk about your wife talking to the doctor and him going, this is about his political views, not about his health.
He shouldn't be transferred anywhere.
Was there anything to do?
I don't know the, I don't know the ins and outs of this.
So when they take you up in the air, was the, you know,
if you're nefarious is the thought process,
he can't handle the change in altitudes?
Or is there anything like that?
Or just the fact that you just needed your body
to be resting and not having to worry about moving it?
Yeah, and that was the case that the doctor tried to make
with SHA, that he shouldn't be going anywhere.
And, and maybe we should start.
treatment, you know, antibiotics to kill the infection in his lungs, that is pneumonia.
And I also had, you know, I had three orange-sized blood clots on my lungs. And what caused
that? I don't know. But they had to treat that as well. And I had drainage tubes out of both
sides of my chest. Yeah. So you fast forward all through all,
You come back.
You know, you're talking about climbing out of your bed and hitting yourself.
And you're like, I was in a tough state.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Why not go, I don't know, multitude of things.
Like maybe it was a little more real than I gave it credit.
Or the flip side, like if I keep talking, they're really going to put me six feet under, right?
Like there's a couple of realizations that maybe would come out of there.
But I, you know, I look at this as a duty.
And it's a duty in response to so many of our soldiers fought for our freedoms.
Who am I to stop? I'll never stop. I'm doing this in honor of those soldiers that fought for our freedom.
And this is about our freedom. This is about the values that we cherish.
if they're able to be successful, and I'm speaking of the globalists,
we all turn to slaves.
And it's over.
And we can't let that happen.
So I really look at this as a responsibility and a duty to spread as much information as that.
And I don't care.
I don't care what they try to do to me.
I don't care.
My responsibility in this is far greater.
And, you know, the other thing to this that I have to talk about is my faith in God from that experience has increased dramatically.
Because Laura Lynn Tyler Thompson recruited every pastor she knows across this country who recruited their prayer warriors to pray for me.
And I was very emotional when I first woke up because my wife was showing me all of the people that were praying for my survival.
And my faith in God has increased dramatically from that.
And I wasn't terribly religious before that.
But it's definitely increased and developed.
my relationship with God and the power of prayer,
I believe strongly that I survived because so many people came together
to pray for my survival.
And I believe that.
I truly believe that.
And so this is my job.
This is what I have to do.
We were at UCP, AGM of our area, our constituency on the Alberta side.
Because I grew up in Saskatchewan, small town, farm kid.
And, you know, you're sitting in Lloyd Smith here.
Tonight you're in Saskatchewan, but right now as we sit, we're just into Alberta.
It's this funny little world.
And COVID was a funny little world here as well, because we're kind of the ugly stepchild, if you would.
Nobody really wants to deal with us because we're kind of right out in the middle of nowhere and everything else.
Sure.
It's funny.
Sitting in watching both, because we have to pay attention to both sides of politics, which is really tiresome, right?
But I've never been a big, I'm paying more attention to more politics than I ever thought I would.
Right.
So you have on the SAS side, you have the Buffalo Party who did, in my opinion, relatively successful.
Some would say smashing successful in the first time they ever ran an election.
Yeah, 2020.
Then you have the SAS United who just ran John Romick, Rummock, Rumick, in Lumsden, and got 23%.
Which, you know, like me being a newbie, do you want to see somebody walk in and get 70% first day?
And you go, yeah, but the numbers, the game, the way it works.
If you look at the history, it's very, very rare.
It's not impossible, but very rare.
So you have the SaaS side says, SaaS party, there's no fix in it.
And we need to start a new party.
Two of them, to my knowledge, and you can prove me or not prove me wrong, but fill in the blanks that I don't know on the SaaS side.
On the Alberta side, it's interesting because they had the wild rose there.
And I don't, you know, I want to sit here and beyond.
honest with all the listeners. Back then, I wasn't paying attention. I didn't know who Daniel
Smith was. I was gone playing hockey and worrying about, you know, finding a wife and all those
good things. And by the time I get back, Daniel Smith is the villain. She is no longer part of the
Wild Rose. The Wild Rose folds on itself and everything. And you get the United Conservative Party
and we have the years of the NDP and that's what I recall. And so what happens is, is this guy named
David Parker. Now, there's more parts to this, but David Parker is a huge player in it. And he
walks around and says, well, we're just going to take over the party.
Like, I mean, he's unabashful. He's just like, we're going to take over the party.
Right. And so you have Alberta's way of like, we're going to walk into the party. We're going
to take it over from within. And that's what they've been doing. And then you have Saskatchewan
who does a different way. Two different, two similar problems done two different ways. And I was
curious because you said you're going to run for the Buffalo party. I'm like, interesting. Why not,
why not take the Gearsley Patriot and walk into the SaaS party and just take over your
and just become from the inside out?
I don't know.
Just seeing Alberta versus SAC.
I'm not sure the SASS party is fixable.
And I wouldn't, they, first of all, they wouldn't let me in.
That might be a fair point.
Okay.
Right.
So, uh, because, I mean, it just is what it is.
I've been.
Well, if I were to talk to Joseph Borgo and others about the federal conservative party,
we saw exactly what they did there.
So 100%.
That is actually a very fair point.
So, you know, when it comes to, I believe change is going to come from rural Saskatchewan.
It's not going to be Saskatoon.
It's not going to be Regina.
As far as I'm concerned, they're lost.
There's too many distractions.
People are too consumed by their lives.
the cities, but you get to rural Saskatchewan, and people understand that there's something
isn't right.
Something doesn't feel right.
And I don't know if that's associated to faith.
I don't know if it's associated to just their way of life, of self-reliance, self-determination,
independence, and community.
But people in rural Saskatchewan get it.
We did a town hall in Osler back in March.
350 people showed up to want.
Where's Osler?
It's just north of Saskatoon.
Just north, okay.
By about 20 minutes.
Sure.
And so 350 people showed up.
And that tells me that that area wants and is dying for somebody to tell them the truth
to help connect these dots.
And that's exactly what we did.
And so that's the writing I've chosen to run it.
The Warman writing, it's called.
And because I get a sense throughout, you know, rural Saskatchewan,
every time I do one of these town halls,
somebody invariably asks,
can you run here?
And I tell them, unfortunately, I'm committed to the writing,
of Warman, Saskatchewan.
So the Buffalo Party, and the reason I joined the Buffalo Party,
was because they're member-driven.
The leader and the board can't vote on policies brought forward by the members.
They're not allowed to vote.
They're excluded from voting.
So it isn't top-down.
It's member-driven.
And when I saw their policy,
The first one that I understood, obviously, is the rejection of Agenda 2030.
That's their first policy.
And I was like, whoa, this is, this comes from the members.
The members of the Buffalo Party are obviously very switched on.
They get it.
They understand the consequences to this, to this agenda.
And so as that, it was at that moment, it was like, okay, I have no choice.
This is the party for me.
I'm, I'm a big believer in the people driving politics rather than our politicians
driving politics.
And this is the thing that I, and at every town hall event, I, I tell the people, this is
up to you. This is your job now. You have to influence decision makers. You have to do that with
your voice. And we've abdicated our responsibility for decades. We've become fat, lazy, and
complacent in terms of politics. And we're seeing the fallout from that where our politicians
don't seem to have any accountability at all.
They don't serve it.
I asked the people at every one of these town halls.
When was the last time your MLA or your MP
held a town hall event where you could ask the questions?
And they always respond, never.
Well, whose fault is that?
Force your MLA, force your MP to get to this hall,
and answer your questions as to what they've been doing for the last two decades.
That's your job.
So we have to re-engage that responsibility in people.
And I'm finding that rural people, rural folks, are far more open to that and getting involved
than city folks.
There's just too many distractions.
And in the neighborhood I live in in Saskatoon, I always think, if I walk door to door through my neighborhood and brought up agenda 2030, chances are most would slam the door in my face because they don't want to talk about it.
They don't want me to upset their apple cart.
You should film it.
Yeah.
And just see it.
You can go on the street and see how many people even know what it is.
Right.
Right.
And there'll be a lot that don't.
But again, you know, through these town halls that we're doing predominantly in rural Saskatchewan,
people are coming in in good numbers because they want to connect the dots.
They want to understand what the consequences of this agenda are, like rural municipality planning.
We went to a vent in Milford.
and I was invited to go, myself and Kevin Boychuk,
who's also has a shark-infested mouth like mine.
So we went and these, and so what happens with these rural municipality planning things
is the feds give the province money,
the province gives the rural municipalities money,
but they're told they have to hire these consulting firms out of the salary.
Saskatoon and Regina.
Well, why is a consulting firm based on Saskatoon planning your rural municipality?
Shouldn't that be the people who live and work the area and understand where their livelihood
is?
Shouldn't it be those people involved in planning the rural municipalities?
And so we went to this meeting and they had five stations set up.
Rosby and Hannah is the consulting firm based on Saskatoon.
And I had read their 75-page document proposal to the rural municipality.
And it reads like it was written at the UN.
Like it talks about stakeholder capitalism.
It talks about animal units per acre.
It talks about all these things.
And so, you know, we started speaking up at this meeting.
And by the time we started talking, there was more people listening to us than were listening to these consultants.
And then I had one of the consultants walk by and called me a conspiracy theorist.
There's nothing theory about this.
We know that this is the reality.
We know what your job is.
Your job, and it's a little different than the Alberta experience,
when they went up to just north of Edmonton there to that county, Thorhild,
where they came in with sweeping changes, you know,
and talking about animal units per acre and water usage and all these things.
Well, that lit everybody's air on fire, and they said, no, we're not doing this.
So Saskatchewan, it seems, have learned from the experience,
both in Thorhild and Wainwright,
where they're taking a softer approach,
where they come in with this proposal,
which only lays tracks for what they want to accomplish down the road.
And that's a sure indicator to me that Scott Moll and the SAS Party
are fully on board with Agenda 2030.
And so, you know, there has to be opposition to this.
And this is why I think it's just so important that these town hall events happen where people can gather and then understand the consequences to this agenda in its entirety.
And it does relate to rural municipality planning land use bylaws and all these sorts of things.
They want to and it's happening and we're watching it happen in real time where, you know, there's medical facilities.
in rural places in Saskatchewan that are shutting down.
Well, if you have people that require medical attention
on a fairly regular basis,
you're going to force those people to move into the city
if they can't get that medical attention where they reside.
One of the examples is down in Estevan.
There was a family there that wanted to donate $2 million
for an MRI to be put into the Estevan hospital.
And the Saskatchewan government said no.
We won't accept that.
But go put it towards something else.
And she said no.
This was meant for an MRI.
We need an MRI in this area.
Instead of shipping people to Regina on a regular basis,
why not service an MRI in Estaban?
Give people that option.
And the government said no.
Because I believe it's the government.
government's agenda to force everybody into these cities where you will be creating these 15-minute
cities and restricting people's movement where they can't drive cars where they're moving
towards these electric vehicles which is a complete gong show yeah for what where we where we live
in particular right but they know this
They know there's not enough power generated to service everybody owning an electric vehicle.
They know that.
They know that there isn't enough power generated, especially if you're eliminating coal,
if you're eliminating natural gas, if you're eliminating CO2 in the atmosphere.
They know this.
They know that you won't be able to charge your electric vehicle if everybody,
has one. And then you get into the trucking industry where the batteries necessary to move those
trucks weigh so much that their load is going to be greatly reduced because they're hauling
around these massive batteries. And what do we think that does to the price of everything?
Right. It's going to shoot through the roof, 100%. Absolutely. So,
none of it works.
None of it is right.
None of it is based on science.
And the sooner more and more people understand this,
the better off we're all going to be.
I mean this in the best possible light,
so I hope this sentence comes out of my brain the right way.
You remind me of Pat King in that.
I'm glad I'm glad you're laughing.
What I mean,
but what I mean by that is, is, uh, I don't, like, I don't know if there's a single person I watch
everything they do. I just watch different things and I hear different stories come through. And one of
the things about Pat King, I remember thinking the story, I remember thinking he was about to, like,
the first time I met him, my brain thought, he's going to boot down the door. He's going to, he's almost
going to bowl me over. He's going to sit across for me, which the first time I met that we didn't
podcast. And he was going to be this like very gruff, very abrasive man. That's, I don't know
why that. I don't know if that's media that painted him that way. I have no idea.
That was just, and then I met him in Ottawa for like a quick two minutes.
He was so soft-spoken.
He was so kind.
I'm not sitting here saying he doesn't say like wild things.
I'm just saying overall, like what was painted on media wasn't, wasn't him.
And so with you coming, I'm like, what do I actually know about Mark?
I'm like, not a whole lot.
I've been told stories.
I've been told this.
I've been told that.
And you seem like, I don't, maybe this is a great day for you.
I have no idea.
Maybe I haven't said anything where you want to stroke me out.
I have no idea.
But I don't see the abrasiveness that I thought was going to come through the door.
Now, I have no idea.
I haven't offended you with it compared to Pat King.
I hope not because to me, the media just put you, or I don't even know,
people's opinions put you in this weird category where I try not to listen to it too much
because when somebody walks the door, I'm like, let's just see what plays out here
because that's the whole point of a conversation.
Well, so the interesting thing is I have a little different approach on Twitter on my social media.
Everybody does.
Then who I actually am, right?
So I can be a little abrasive.
I can be a little bit, you know, I can swear on Twitter and do things that I wouldn't normally do in public or on a podcast.
Sure.
So that's a little different.
So people see what they see on social media,
and then they develop their own idea of who you are.
Idea of who I am.
Viva Frey said something similar.
Oh, and I'm forgetting another one.
Tom Luongo, who's been on the podcast lots,
he says, I just play a different character on Twitter.
Twitter, you're trying, you know,
and you're like, oh, interesting, right?
That's, I just never, like, I've never,
I've never been good at that, I guess.
I think it's a superpower to be able to go on Twitter or whatever
and just be like whatever and walk away and the world explodes around.
Right.
I enjoy that.
And I think, you know, social media plays an important role in all of this, I think.
You know, that's where you're able to communicate a lot of your ideas.
And you should be able to communicate your ideas openly.
And that's what Twitter represents.
Facebook, not so much.
It's pretty communist.
I've gotten so many restrictions.
I'm so shadow banned on that platform.
It's ridiculous.
Curious then.
Curiosity might have killed the cat.
I don't know.
Why not Sask United?
I look at Saskatchewan.
I sit on the edge of it.
In the middle of COVID,
I remember being invited
to Pastor Perry's church
on the west side of Saskatoon, right?
I'm getting that right?
And going into the first meeting
and there was a whole bunch of
concerned citizens
is what I would call them
because I don't, you know,
and they were talking about forming a new party
and it didn't, I don't know,
at the time I was like,
well, I'm not even Saskatchewan.
Like, you know, I probably shouldn't be
one of the founding members of anything.
Right.
But I remember being in the meeting
and being like, you know,
like my brain went to a bunch of different things.
All the established,
I was like, the one question I kept asking politicians or political nerds was,
has there ever been an upstart party to walk in the first election and win a majority government
or a huge chunk?
And actually, truth be told, in Alberta is one of those places that had happened back in the dirty 30s.
But you see, I don't know, I just look at Saskatchewan.
I'm like, okay, so everybody there says the SaaS party cannot be fixed.
No.
And our argument might be made in Alberta.
They said the exact same thing.
They just went about it a different way.
They infiltrated.
They've ousted a bunch of people, and they're working on it that way.
This way is like, we're going to start a new party and the way you go.
So now you have the Buffalo.
Now you've got the SAS United, and you're trying to take down the big beast of the SAS party.
So I'll give you an example.
So I went to the SASC Party, SAS United Party launch party.
Sure.
And that was at Prairond.
And you had somewhere between 750 and 1,000 people there.
and most of them are wide awake.
You had six speakers presenting that evening.
Not one of them mentioned World Economic Forum,
not one of them mentioned agenda 2030.
Why is that?
And I was standing at the back of the room,
and as people were filing out,
they're walking up to me and rolling their eyes.
What a missed opportunity.
And I said, yeah.
And so I had a conversation with one of the board members later that evening at the same venue.
And I said, so tell me, why is it that nobody on that stage today talked about it or referred to Agenda 2030 or the World Economic Forum?
Why is that?
Well, they're scared.
Well, what are they scared of?
This is reality.
We have to talk about these things.
and if you're not willing to stand against and reject Agenda 2030 and what it represents,
then what are you doing?
What's your purpose?
So for that reason, I can't support that party.
I just, I can't do it.
As much respect as I have for Nadine Wilson, and I do.
I have a lot of respect for her.
I think her heart's in the right place.
I reached out to her two days after that meeting,
and I said,
what do you think about Buffalo and Sask United
coming together into a room
where we can talk about all the things that we agree on
and we can talk about a few of the things
that maybe we don't agree on?
And giving the people of Saskatchewan one alternative.
to the establishment.
What are your thoughts about that?
And she said, I think it's a great idea.
I said, great.
Let's plan a meeting for the middle of April.
After that, she goes to me.
Because I believe there's money behind that party.
I believe the money people are dictating to Nadine
what she can and cannot say.
Have you talked to her?
Just curious.
Have you talked to her since?
Not since.
No.
That door seems to be closed, unfortunately.
But I do have, and I have had conversations with people that know Nadine and are reaching out to her to say,
listen, we have an opportunity to give the people of Saskatchewan a single alternative to the establishment.
Why don't we look at that?
And just, you know, I take it a step further.
And I think if we were to do that, if both parties were to do that and come together,
we can have a leadership convention and how much energy would that put into the political process
where there's one entity.
Call it whatever you want.
Maybe send out a poll.
What do you want to name this party?
Send it to the people, let them decide.
And then come together and then have a leadership convention.
And the amount of energy that would put it into the political sphere would be phenomenal.
Because then you would have one entity that represents the people.
And obviously you would have to be careful of.
you know, bad actors and people trying to wiggle in and destroy from within.
So we'd have to recognize that and understand that, because it is politics.
But for me, there's nothing I would like more than to offer the people of Saskatchewan,
a single alternative.
Have, since you talked to Nadine the last time, have you talked to any of the SAS United?
No.
It's from where I sit, take it or leave it doesn't mean a hell of beans to me.
I'm literally Alberta, right?
So I just got my roots in Saskatchewan.
Right.
So I want to see Saskatchewan not only survive, but be a leader in this.
Like they should be, right?
And they have the people within it.
It's like, it's funny.
When I talked to, we just had John Romick showed up to our Lumsden show.
And it's funny.
I don't get the sense.
but maybe I'm, you know, maybe I'm speaking out of my ass.
Maybe this, maybe this podcast, because I don't speak for this asking.
Maybe this will spur on some conversation, I'm sure it will.
But to me, I'm like, when the communication dies right there, then everybody goes, well, what's going on?
Right.
I have this in my own life with a lot of different spots.
So this is not new to me.
This is like, man, when we stop talking, that's when brain start working and you think, oh, whatever.
But it's funny.
I know a few.
I don't know all the Sask United
by any stretch imagination.
There's some really good people there.
And I don't think any of them,
but maybe I'm wrong on this.
Don't realize 2030's coming.
Don't realize 2030's not a big deal.
Right.
But why don't they talk about it?
I don't know.
Every opportunity I can't answer that question.
Only SAS United.
Only SAS United can answer that question.
Right.
100%.
And that's a question that needs to be asked
and it needs to be responding.
it to.
Yeah, like I said, there's nothing I would like more than to offer the people of Saskatchewan
that one alternative to the establishment.
Well, because in my thought process is always like a really, really small scale.
This is about as small as, well, not small.
No, it's about as small as it gets.
In Lloyd, we have a bunch of different groups
that are all doing wonderful things.
But you've got different people in different areas of the world
and they're all pushing the same way.
And I think we try our best to support each other
as best as we humanly possible can
without stepping on toes.
But you see, this is the fundamental
sort of approach
to what we're talking about.
We're talking about freedom and liberty and respecting people's viewpoints.
And, you know, within the freedom movement, there's groups across the country.
And some of those groups don't get along.
And that's okay.
We have to accept that.
We have to respect other people's ideas.
And if they're bad ideas, we have to be able to call them out.
Or talk or talk and call them out and say, yeah, maybe that's not a great idea.
But we have to be able to do that.
We have to be able to communicate and function while we respect other people's ideas.
And this is the essence of the freedom movement, I believe, because we do function with all these different factions.
we're still
relatively united,
even though there's some drama over here,
there's a little bit of drama over there.
It is what it is.
That's what we're fighting for.
We're fighting for the individual
for that person
to feel heard and have a voice.
So let them say what they want to say,
even if you don't agree with it.
It's okay.
You can always come back
and tear it apart if you have to.
But we have to respect each other and allow each other to be able to do that and have that
communication and that discussion.
That's the essence of the freedom movement as far as I'm concerned.
Well, you got a, what is it?
When's the Saskalachian?
Lowest common denominator.
What's the Saskatchezion?
Next November or next October?
Next October.
So we've got less than a year now, roughly a year.
So I'm going to suggest.
that the SAS party probably calls it in the spring, maybe May or June.
Because the longer that us, the Buffalo Party, and the SASC United, they're giving us runway.
And the more we can establish ourselves as a viable alternative.
Again, between two entities.
And, you know, the Buffalo Party did quite well in 2020.
We got, we ran in 17 ridings and came in second and everything.
rewriting. So there's obviously, and based on what I saw from Sask United, there's obviously
a vein in Saskatchewan that runs throughout the province where they're not too sure about
the establishment. So there is an opportunity and it just depends on how we approach that
opportunity. And are we going to come together or are we going to, or are we going to
apart and if we remain apart that's gonna split some votes and and that's a reality
so I you know well the nice thing is as I can guarantee at least one Sask United
person will listen to this right and I'm interested to see what comes out of that
because if you haven't talked I just go you haven't talked to a Saskey night since
you talked to Nadine and Nadine right Nadine's never been on this show so I mean and
which is kind of funny actually like I that was I should invite her I should invite her
Sure, Nadine, you're invited.
Why don't we have a conversation?
And I don't know.
I go like, to me, if we just get people at the table and start talking, maybe we figure some things out.
Right.
Because a lot of times when people aren't talking, that's where the mind goes to work and, you know.
100%.
Again, I don't know if there is a mechanism for us to be able to come together.
And for me, it's.
It stops if you aren't willing to talk about agenda 2030.
If you can't publicly talk about that.
And I think Leslyn Lewis and her petition is doing a lot to change.
It's a huge educational tool, the petition that she's brought forward.
I live under Iraq, obviously.
What petition are we talking about?
Okay, so Leslyn Lewis has created a petition to pull out of the United Nations.
Leslyn Lewis, forgive me.
I thought my brain went Laura Lynn.
And I was like, Lauren Lynn's got a petition going on?
How did I miss it?
Sorry, Leslyn Lewis, yes, lovely lady.
First time in the history of this country that an elected politician has brought forward
language, language developed by Doug Porter or to Burnaby, who presented this language to
Leslyn Lewis, who then adopted it and sponsored it.
that completely denounces the UN,
completely denounces agenda 2030 in full, 100%.
And I've been waiting for this for 23, 24, 25 years,
for somebody to get the parts to sponsor a petition
that represents all of our best interests.
It's phenomenal.
So what you're saying is I need to get Leslin Lewis on this show.
100%
I was like
Yate
when she was in the
leadership
race
I was like
I was like that close
and it never happened
and one of the things
that I always admired
about her
and I just hated
you know
and like
they do the
they do the
candidate forum
where they have them
all up on stage
right
and they're asking
them questions
and they go
who is for
who is for abortion
how do they
how do they know
who's pro life
right
they made that that's not
it's not abortion
who's pro life
and
Or who's whatever, pro choice.
That would be what it is.
Who's pro choice?
And she was the only one on the stage that was against that.
So my obvious thing, if I was sitting in that chair.
She has a boatload of courage.
If I was the one sitting in that chair asking the questions,
immediately I go, listen, why are you?
Why are you pro-life?
Like, wouldn't that be the obvious question to ask?
But it isn't.
It's just a show of hands and you're not allowed to ask.
Like, that's wild to me.
And now she's the one with the petition.
And everything, it's like, this lady is,
is sharp.
Yeah.
I have a boatload of respect for her.
And, you know, I take a little bit of heat from some PPCers because I'm supporting this
petition.
But I've been railing against politicians for years who haven't had the parts to say no to
Agenda 21 or 2030.
Finally, there's somebody in an elected position that's doing the right thing.
I'm going to support her 100% because it's the right thing to do so you know it is what it is
and I'm I'm very happy that she sponsored this because it's it also works as an educational tool
because if she's talking about an elected representative of parliament and she's rejecting it
well that's a great springboard for me to carry on doing what I'm doing I'm right
based on what Leslyn Lewis just sponsored.
And so I'm quite happy that she's gone and done this.
I'm not sure she got party permission to sponsor this petition.
I don't know.
I don't know the inner workings of the CPC.
And it's probably not of my business.
But it's very interesting to consider if she had permission to sponsor this.
I don't think she asked for it.
I think she has the courage to represent the best ideas.
And that's why I respect her.
And that's, I feel like what you're asking of people is just to find the courage.
Find the courage to stand up, find the courage to come up to a meeting, find the courage to stand up to a couple people.
So there's nothing that I would love more than to get a left.
in the writing of Warman and go to the legislature with six, seven, eight, or nine of my
Buffalo Party members and hold them accountable and have this conversation because the elected
politicians are scared to open their mouth. They're scared to represent their constituents.
and we need to go to the legislature and flip some tables
and start asking the right questions
and start demanding proper answers.
So there's nothing that I would appreciate more
than to go to Regina and be able to do that
on behalf of what's in all our best interests.
And in the meantime, if I can get Saskia United
to come on and have a little, well, first to ask them up
because I mean, why not?
Who knows where that leads?
because it'd be, I mean, to me, we've got to get people, when people aren't talking,
I mean, that's COVID all over again.
Yes.
You know, divided we fall.
Yes.
And again, like I said, I believe there's reasons for this non-discussion happening.
And I believe it's the money people behind the Sask United that are not on board.
But there's nothing I would like more than to sit in a room.
If, you know, if it's about, well, I don't know, politics is a funny little world, you know.
Like, it's such a weird world because you look at it and you go, well, you know, if we want to hold the government accountable, we have to win ridings.
Yes.
We can be a great little political party.
If we don't win, then, you know, we sit around for four or five years and do what.
100%.
So you go, you look at, you know, you look at our area, you look at any area.
You need somebody who people know.
Because most people, it's a popularity contest.
In the simplest form, that's what politics is.
I'm watching Jason Levine right now.
But it should be, it shouldn't be a popularity.
It shouldn't be, but that's what it is.
It should be based on a person's knowledge and skill and courage.
Well, maybe, maybe, in fairness.
To represent the people.
Maybe it's becoming more about that.
I would say the average election is not.
The average election is you know, the majority of people are going to vote for what they've always voted for, for the most part.
In getting voted for, let's just take Sask United, SAS Party has their, like in our area, has, Colleen Young is going up against James Thorsten, right?
And that's the election for, I mean, who knows?
Buffalo Party, SAS United, I'm not going to write that off.
I shouldn't write that off.
I want to make clear.
I'm not writing that off.
But in history, you go, Sask United's won this handily.
Just like the UCP on the other side of Lloyd has won our writing handily.
Like they joked about it even last night.
Like they didn't have to spend all this money on advertising because people here vote conservative.
Especially with the wild rose not being out of the way on the Alberta side.
It's like UCP just walks in and that's the right.
So what you're talking about is it in a popularity contest when it comes to getting that nomination.
So if you ran for the UCP, Garth Rosewell is the one here for us.
but let's say there was three others that ran against them.
For those people show up that day, they're clued into politics.
And that's less of a popularity contest.
That's probably more on, wow, that guy is something.
That's what I saw out of the UCP leadership race with Daniel Smith and all them.
I thought, I thought, you know, me sitting there, I watched it very tently going,
if Daniel Smith isn't the right person, then I'm going to vote for whoever.
But once again, Daniel Smith is the only one who would talk about you branch in 2030.
to me it was like, can we talk about anything in the last three years?
Can we talk about all the insanity?
And she was the one who did the best at doing that alongside Todd Lowen.
And that was very refreshing.
So on the SaaS side, I haven't watched it nearly as much.
Case in point, I just don't vote there, folks.
And saying that, when it gets to the time, it is the election.
If you have SAS Party, Buffalo, SAS United, NDP, I don't know, liberals aren't the liberals anymore, but regardless, it doesn't matter.
Most people put the chat.
Well, I don't know.
Maybe that's changing.
Because with all the rural spots, it's changing.
It is changing.
It is changing.
And again, you know, I've been working fairly tirelessly doing these town hall events in Nippewin, Big River, Livelong, Yorkton, Weyburn, Estevan.
You know, the list is pretty long.
And people are starting to get it.
They're starting to get it.
Because the best way I believe, and, you know, I run a podcast too,
but the best place to connect with people is live and in person.
In person.
Well, why is this so much better?
You run a podcast.
How much better is this than being over a screen?
100%.
It's where people connect because people are human.
And we have emotions.
And we want to connect to the people.
people that are speaking to us.
And that's why it's so important that these live events happen.
And because there is that connection.
And so, you know, here we go.
Well, thanks for coming in the studio and doing this.
My absolute pleasure.
Appreciate you coming in and coming down a little bit early.
And my world on this side has been a little bit, a little bit hectic.
I mean, it was a busy week and everything else.
We've got lots of things going on.
I wish your best of luck, though.
And we'll wait and see.
It comes out, you know, like it's going to come out here on Monday.
So as soon as it's released, you know, we're going to find out.
People will be lighten up the text line.
I do this weird thing, Mark, where I have my phone number in the bottom of all the shows.
So people can just text me or call to, you know.
I don't answer every phone call, but they text.
So we'll hear.
Like, you know, it won't take long.
We rattled probably a few cages and we'll see what happens.
Keep me posted.
Yeah, well, I will.
I'm curious.
Yeah.
Well, I appreciate you coming on.
Thank you, sir.
My pleasure. Anytime.
Hey, thanks for tuning in today, guys.
Hope you enjoyed it.
You know, I've been talking about this idea of, you know, like different ways you can get involved, help, some different ideas.
Everybody's been like super, well, not only supportive, but responding.
Lots of people have been responding with some different ideas, whether we're talking value for value,
whether we're talking fountain, you know, the Satoshi, whether we're just talking people like, hey, I got a business and I think I could help.
So I think there's probably a couple different ways,
and we're slowly going to start talking more and more about them,
especially as we get closer and closer to the new year.
But I'll keep you updated at the end of podcast.
That's what I'm hoping to have, you know, on majority of my episodes,
a little thing right at the end so you guys understand, you know,
if anything changes, anything new comes, you know,
and that way I'm not, you know, ending up trying to sneak it in here or there,
maybe you miss it. It's always going to be at the end where we're talking about some of the new things coming down the pipe.
For right now, if you haven't signed up for the substack in the show notes, you can find the substack link.
That's where we're pushing, you know, the Luongo Craneer, the bonus 15 minutes.
It went there. And in the future, that's we're going to slowly start tossing some bonus footage onto substack.
And then I'm going to try and, you know, just, you know, when me and twos wrote on our world tour,
one of the emails I sent was to that
and it had some pictures from the tour as well
so if you're looking to see some just some extra stuff
hop on the email list and you can always get off of it
at any point that you want so
a substack is the newest thing we got some other things
coming down the pipe here pretty quick
and once I have a couple more of them up I'm gonna
walk everybody through and see if there's anything
that people can help in the meantime
we're chasing a million down
downloads in 2023. So if you enjoyed this, we just ask that you share it with some friends that
you think that might benefit from it. And let's see if we can't hit that 1 million downloads.
We're over 800,000 right now, which is like an insane thing to say out loud. But we want to hit
one million. And so we're going to chase that. And I need all the help I can get from all of you
fine folks. So if you can share it on social media or share it with a group chat or your friends,
just appreciate all the help. Either way, that's enough.
uh we got we got uh what is that the miroslav shit no not the the lexie yashin he was 79 wasn't he
doesn't matter tuesday mashup 79 coming at you here uh later today so uh um we will chat with you
guys later okay thanks for tuning in
