Shaun Newman Podcast - #854 - Christine Anderson
Episode Date: May 22, 2025Christine Anderson is a German politician and Member of the European Parliament (MEP) since 2019, representing the Alternative for Germany (AfD) party. Anderson joined AfD in 2013 and served as its gr...oup leader in the Limburg-Weilburg district assembly from 2016 to 2018. In the European Parliament, she is part of the Identity and Democracy Group and serves on committees including Public Health, Women’s Rights and Gender Equality, and the Environment, Climate, and Food Safety, as well as the Delegation for relations with the United States. We discuss the recent election in Germany, mass immigration and energy security. Christine Anderson in Canada tickets:https://trinityproductions.ca/To watch the Full Cornerstone Forum: https://open.substack.com/pub/shaunnewmanpodcastGet your voice heard: Text Shaun 587-217-8500Silver Gold Bull Links:Website: https://silvergoldbull.ca/Email: SNP@silvergoldbull.comText Grahame: (587) 441-9100Bow Valley Credit UnionWebsite: www.BowValleycu.comEmail: welcome@BowValleycu.com Use the code “SNP” on all ordersProphet River Links:Website: store.prophetriver.com/Email: SNP@prophetriver.com
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Happy Thursday.
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Well, we're going to go back over to Europe here in a second.
We had Britain yesterday, and today we're heading to Germany.
Before we get there, let's start with.
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Substack, hey, we working on getting the debriefs back out,
which we had one for today's episode on Christine Anderson.
There's been a flurry of new subscribers to that, paid subscribers.
shout out to all of you.
I assume you're there to, you know, see the cornerstone forum and its entirety.
The entire cornerstone forum, if you didn't make it, is up there.
Parts of it free, so you can go watch parts and dabble, or you can pay for, you know,
paid subscription to the Sean Newman podcast and get the entirety of the event up.
So that's, you know, super cool to have a bunch of new people on there.
And, of course, then there's some hidden gems in there, a little behind the scenes with the podcast.
And hopefully, you know, moving forward into the end of May, into June.
We're getting the debriefs back rolling.
So it's my thoughts after I get out of an episode with, you know, different guests.
And today's guest, Christine Anderson, you got my thoughts as I hopped out of there.
And so, yeah, if you're not on Substack, just become a free subscriber.
There's a week in review that comes out usually Sundays at 5 p.m.
It's been a little hit or miss lately.
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getting through some things but we're hoping to have that back on the rails here this Sunday and then
the debriefs as well starting to come out again so if that interest you a substack free to subscribe to
we got the new studio inching closer folks and hoping to have an in studio interview coming here before
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all of your help. Now, let's get on to that tale of the tape. She's a German politician, a member
of the European Parliament since 2019 representing the AFD in Germany. I'm talking about Christine
Anderson. So buckle up. Here we go. Welcome to the Sean Newman podcast. Today, I'm joined by
Christine Anderson. Ma'am, thank you for hopping on with me. Well, thanks for having me.
Since it's your first time, I know I don't have a ton of time with you, but whenever I get a guest on for the first time,
I'd love it if they'd just share a little bit about themselves before I get into some of the things going on in the world.
So Christine, just tell the audience a little bit about yourself.
Well, what can I say? I mean, you know, I've been pretty much a stay-at-home mom for 20 years,
raising my three beautiful daughters.
I never really had anything to do with politics.
I was never a member of any party or anything like that.
Pretty straightforward.
I always voted liberal, conservative.
In Germany, you have two votes.
So kind of split the ticket there.
And I still voted though in 2005.
But that was the last time I could vote for the way I did.
So, and yeah, there was like a period of political homelessness that I experienced.
And it really was like a period of political homelessness that I experienced.
got to me, which I would have never expected, but it did, not knowing who I felt represented by
anymore, pretty much having no voice, right? So in 2009, the next elections came around. I voted
invalid. And yeah, like I said, this situation just continued until 2013. Then my party, AFD,
alternative for Germany, was founded. And I heard about it on, you know, TV.
And I was like, whoa, what is this?
A new party was founded.
And, you know, they're Euro critics.
They're critics of EU institutions.
And I was like, I have to check this one out.
So I turned off television, my television set, and got on the internet, researched this party.
And I was just so glad to finally have found a party again that I thought, you know, was doing the right thing.
And but I decided I'm done with it.
trusting others to do the right things. So I decided to become a party. I filled out an
application for membership that very same night. And that's how I became a party, became a member
of a party. And here we are. I'm a member of new parliament now. So.
If you go back to 2005, what was it back then? You know, because I just, I guess I didn't pay
attention to Canadian politics until much later than that. In 2005, I would
I just got out of school.
I was playing hockey.
I was paying to 0% of anything to do with politics.
What was back in 2005 that made you feel political homelessness?
What was going on in Germany?
It wasn't actually 2005.
That's the last time I voted the way I always had voted.
2005.
I woke up 2007.
And what triggered it was the subcrime crisis in the United States.
Remember the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy?
And then you heard, you know, people were losing their houses left and right.
There were even German banks involved in repossessing these homes.
And that was like, what is going on there?
I mean, that was in a large scale that people lost their houses.
And it was like, what is happening, right?
I mean, it wasn't really at that point.
It wasn't like that the economy was like dunking that, you know,
was in the aftermath of that pretty much.
So I started researching this.
And, you know, since I've lived there,
in the United States, I kind of know the American society.
And it's always that there is a certain amount or a certain portion of the population,
they will never be able to afford a house, a mortgage, right?
Their income simply is not fit for that.
So what I found out is that these people have been sold these mortgages.
I mean, they've been literally shoved down their throats.
They were told, you know, I can finance this house for you at 120%.
So they didn't even need any cash of themselves to put down on the house or anything like that.
So finance it at 120%.
We throw in an SUV on top of it and we'll lay down carpet throughout the entire house.
So they were literally tricking these people into these mortgages, right?
And then of course, there came a point when they defaulted on these mortgages and was like, why?
What's what's going on here?
So, and that's, you know, once you start going down that rabbit hole, you know, one thing leads to another when you uncover.
I was kind of clear on that, but not to the extent that I was clear on it, how the money system even works.
You know, it is built on debt.
So what they have to do, they keep, they have to make sure that the debtors keep coming.
And if they run out of people that go into loans, then the money supply reduces.
So like I said, it's just once you start going on that rabbit hole, but that was my waking
up moment, the subprime crisis in the United States.
Well, I appreciate you sharing because, you know, like for a lot of us listening to this
podcast for the host here sitting in this chair, it was COVID, right?
Like COVID came and I just, you know, everybody lost their minds.
I see the Canadian flag sitting over your shoulder and I'm like, well, you certainly know a lot about Canada.
You've been here before.
Yeah.
And I think the world knows how crazy it got here.
We just had a federal election.
Yeah.
Let me just tell you.
The reason this flag is right here because this is a flag that was flown in Ottawa when the freedom convoy happened.
That's why this is here.
And it was given to me.
And I wanted to refuse.
I can't take this flag.
I mean, you were there, you flew this flag there.
He insisted.
So, and I thought I honor it by putting it up in my office.
Well, I don't know if I can speak for all Canadians,
but certainly on a world stage, you were the one to call out.
I think I think I can speak for most Canadians.
You were the one to speak out against our then Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau,
on a big stage.
And that, I don't know if it's, I don't know, it was just like, holy crap,
somebody else is noticing what's going on that isn't in Canada, you know?
And it was, I think a lot of Canadians,
have a ton of time for you when it comes to that
because most people wouldn't acknowledge
the absolute crap show that was going on
in Canada at the time.
So I actually understand the sentiment
of giving you a flag from the convoy.
It makes complete sense to me.
Yeah. I mean, you know, again, the situation I was in,
like I said, I woke up in 2007.
And ever since then, I've been trying to educate people
on what is going on, how the governments are concerned,
consistently and systematically lying to their own citizens to push through certain agendas, right?
And every, like in the beginning, you're all, you know, motivated.
And if I explain this and that to people, they will get it.
They will get it.
Well, found out that they don't get it.
So then, you know, the next thing happened with the euro crisis hitting Europe really hard, 2010, 2011.
That's when it really took off.
And it was like, well, this time people are going to get it.
No, once again, they were not getting it.
Then next thing, 2015, we rip open our borders, right?
And we import millions of these young men in fighting age that do not value our democracy.
They have nothing.
They don't share our values whatsoever.
In fact, that despise us.
And it was again, it was like, now people are going to realize.
And again, they didn't, at least not in the amounts that they should have.
But it's always with everything happening or every time something happens, there is a few more people that will wisen up and that will realize.
And so I've, you know, just come to accept that fact.
And then when COVID hit, it was like that actually was remarkable because when you look at the people, there was like the first big demonstration against these restrictions took place in Berlin in August of 2020.
And the vast majority of the participants in that protest were actually left green leaning.
That was, you know, pretty much where they came from, the political spectrum.
And to their dismay, they found out once they had left the protest and turned on mainstream media,
that they were, guess what, Nazis and right-wing extremists.
And then they were like, wait a minute, what?
They are calling us Nazis now.
So and now woke up a lot of people who might have probably never caught on to the fact that this is all a gigantic sciop, right?
And yeah, so that's when it really took off.
And a lot of people actually began to realize that they have in fact been lied to for years and years and years.
So and here we are today.
Do you believe, do you believe, like, because, you know, as you laid out all these different years, all these different crisis, and you're like, okay, they're going to wake up, they're going to wake up, they're going to wake up. Now you've gone through COVID. You're like, oh, crap, there's a ton of people wake up. In Germany, do you think there's critical mass for big enough change? I know you just went through an election here earlier in May. I guess Canadian looking across the pond and talking to somebody sitting in Germany, I'm like, like, give us the,
the bird's eye view from where you sit on Germany.
Yeah, well, so as you mentioned, we just had elections.
And the German citizens and the German people voted for a Christian Democrat
AFD coalition.
We would have had a comfortable majority, right?
So, and that just goes to show the people are fed up.
They no longer want this left green leaning kind of policies.
So they voted, like I said,
like I said, a comfortable majority for the Christian Democrats and my party.
Had we combined and formed the coalition, you know,
that would have actually represented the will of the German people.
But Friedrich Merz, the idiot he is, he made it clear in the campaign even,
and he, well, I'm not going to even speak to AFD,
no matter the results of that election.
Thus, signaling and indicating to the social,
Democrats, look, you have nothing to worry about. You can ask of me whatever you want and I will have to deliver because you are the only ones I actually can go into a coalition with. And that's what the Social Democrats did. So Fritig Matz, the number one issue he ran on in this election was he was going to close the border. He in fact said, he will, I will close the border on day one.
That's what he ran on.
Well, guess what?
The election, the precincts closed.
And not 24 hours after the precincts closing, he said, well, no one ever said anything about closing any borders.
So there we were, right?
So a lot of people in Germany that once again believed that the Christian Democrats had now wizened up to what was going on.
And they were going to or promise to affect change.
They believed them. And all of these people that voted for them and the Christian Democrats came in first in this election,
but a large majority of the people that voted for them, they are, they feel utterly betrayed, feel let down.
And rightly so, because they were let down. They once again fell victim to these lies.
And now we are the number one party in the polls. So we are rising in numbers. We can even see it here in the House.
We had elections in May of 24.
So we grew in numbers here and we continue to grow in numbers because people are fed up with
these lies and with these pretexts of, you know, we just want to want to save the planet,
for instance, or, you know, we want to install, I don't know, 15-minute ghettos, but it's just
for your convenience. It's all lies. And the people are realizing that and that's why they, why they
change their votes. So pretty much time is going for us and we just have to go with it and we have
to continue to stick to our principles and yeah, not not like give in to, you know, I don't know,
whatever they they want to bring against us. So here on the Canadian side, we got Mark Carney,
who is a self-proclaimed globalist, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. And I mean Bank of England, Bank of
Canada. The first people he went and met with when he won was Europe, right? He flew across.
And when I look at the new chancellor of Germany, he, like, it's almost shocking to me.
It's so blatantly obvious, but he worked for BlackRock, correct? I know. Yeah. Like I said,
I mean, every single government is, I mean, Klaus Schwab said it, you know, we've infiltrated
all the governments. And that's what they did. And now we are at a point, even
Ursula Funderline. I'm not sure if you heard it was just a court ruling last week. She was slammed
pretty hard and it was about releasing those text messages that he and that she and Albert
Borla exchanged, you know, negotiating the MRI injection contracts. And she was slammed pretty badly.
So she was told by the by the court that no, she was absolutely.
in the wrong that she would not release those text messages.
And, but, you know, nothing ever changes for some reason.
And they're all part of or, I mean, they don't, they are not actually serving in the best
interest of the people or acting on behalf of the people.
They are no longer doing that.
They serve other masters.
I don't know who these masters are.
And for lack of a better term, I always call them globalitarian misanthropists.
But again, not even Carney or Ursula von der Leyen or Friedrich Merz.
They're not the ones calling the shots.
They're just the puppets.
And they're hanging on, hanging on some strings of whoever is calling the shots.
And like I said, I call them the globalitarian misanthropists.
Forgive me.
I'm just going to bring you back to, and I'm probably going to butcher her name.
But Ursula von der Leyen, who is the head of the
EU, correct?
Correct.
She's the head of the president of the EU Commission.
So she considers herself to be the president of a state, but the EU is no state.
It's just, you know, different national states coming together, having formed this union.
But in principle, it was supposed to remain just this union of a union of national member
States, but they're eroding that and they're bringing closer together.
And yeah, she dreams of the fact that she is president of a nation, which she is not, right.
And if I read the story correct and you by all means make it so I'm not oversimplifying,
she signed a contract or I don't know if it's signed, but the text messages you're talking
about between her and Pfizer was basically, hey, we need all these shots to come
over to Europe and we're going to do it via text, correct?
Like that's how, is that as simple as it was?
And then...
Okay, so the pre-negotiations apparently were discussed in this text exchange between
her and Albert Borla, which is a good friend of hers, by the way.
So they had like, you know, these text message exchange and they were pretty much laying
down the ground rules.
And then when it was all said and done, then they came in and presented pretty much the piece of paper.
But to make it more complicated, it was not the EU Commission that entered into these contracts.
The contracts were actually signed between Pfizer and the EU member states.
So all what the EU Commission did, and that was their like they figured, you know, because I turned in the question.
to the EU Commission wanting to know, there was like two, three years ago maybe, I wanted to know
what, you know, was even negotiated in these contracts. And also inquired about the fact that, I mean,
how can you, can you close a contract where, you know, they make billions and billions of
dollars and profits. But if something goes wrong, you know, they're relieved of any liability
whatsoever. They don't have to, you know, do anything about that.
And the answer I got back, it was like, well, the EU Commission never entered any contracts
that was done by the member states.
So not only do we have a case of where two good friends negotiate something between text messages,
but we also then have that they pretty much required the others then to enter this contract.
I mean, this is insane.
This is a contract that was formed to the disadvantage of third parties.
And this is usually null and void in any legal system, right?
But this is how it was done.
And yeah, here we are.
Yeah, that's, I don't know, it's, it's foreign to me being obviously a different, a series
of different countries.
I shouldn't just say a country is a series of different countries.
But it seems wild to me.
And I just, you know, as I sit here, I appreciate you hopping on here because I'm trying to make sense of one person sending text messages and one other person.
And it reminds me about all the governments.
Well, we didn't, you know, here in Canada, we didn't force you to get.
We didn't force you to get it.
It's like, right, right.
You can say that.
And, you know, like, okay, sure, you didn't walk up and put a gun to anyone's head.
Yeah.
But, I mean, you pretty much.
Yeah.
When it comes to immigration,
You mentioned that they ran on, we're going to shut it down.
And then they've backed off that, typical political move by the powers of B.
One of the things I've noticed, and I think I saw you tweet about it as well, once upon a time,
and maybe it's fresh.
But Sweden's taken another unusual, or I don't know, just outside the box idea in the idea of return bonuses.
Is that something that, like, is talked about over there?
Is that unusual or other countries doing that?
Or how's everybody dealing with the mass immigration coming into their respective countries?
Well, I mean, you know, it's been going on for, gosh, I mean, not only the last 10 years, you know, when you look at 2015, it's been going on for decades, actually.
But it really spiked up in 2015.
And it's very interesting, actually, take a look at what happened in 2015.
So Angela Merkel, she decided on this one September day, because the migrants, they were just, you know, at the borders and they were literally running it down, running the border down.
So she decided, well, what the heck? We'll just let them in.
You know, it's humanitarian crisis at the border. So we just kind of have to let them in.
And then when she was asked, you know, in front of a camera.
camera or she was, you know, asked about why would you do that? She rather stubbornly answered,
well, if I can no longer make a friendly face at the border, then this is no longer my country.
That's what she said. So pretty much saying, well, look, we have to do this. We need to be
nice to these people and blah, blah, blah, blah. Number one, yes, she's right. It is not her country.
It is the country of the German people.
And she had no business in opening up the border and subjecting us to all of the consequences that came with that.
And they're pretty horrific.
But taking that.
Okay, so she wanted to make a friendly face at the border.
She also said, well, she didn't want to have ugly pictures at the border.
If they had really shut it down, yeah.
I mean, like I said, these migrants were violent.
and they were determined to get onto European soil.
So, yeah, there might have been some physical altercations at the border.
She didn't want that.
Okay, so again, she wanted to make a friendly face at the border.
Then let's go back to January of 2015.
You know what happened there?
With these refugee camps set up in the countries bordering these conflict zones, right?
they were run by the UN, the United Nations.
And what a country does that is like a bordering to a conflict zone,
they set apart a piece of land where the UN then comes in and puts up these refugee camps.
And the world community, they paid the UN to operate these refugee camps per refugee,
$33 a month.
That's what the world community that pitched in
and per refugee, $33 a month was paid to the UN
so they could operate these refugee camps.
Well, in January of 2015, guess what?
They cut this down to $12 a month.
And that set loose this huge refugee
kind of whatever.
Right.
So, I mean, these people, they fled these camps because they no longer had food there.
There just wasn't enough money to provide what they needed.
And that's when they decided we need to go somewhere else.
So this migration crisis, them all, you know, moving towards Europe,
it was set loose deliberately by cutting down these.
these funds. Now I'm asking, where was Angela Merkel's friendly face when the world community
decided to cut these funds from $33 to $12? Where was her friendly face?
The word that comes to mind for me is manufactured. They manufactured a crisis by making
the UN camps unlivable, essentially. They drove people on desperation.
That's exactly what they did. So now we have all these migrants.
Actually, I call it an illegal invasion at this point because there is no other word to describe that.
By the millions, they're pouring into Europe, to Germany especially, and the repercussions, the consequences of that.
I mean, we're seeing like two brutal, two brutal gang rapes every single day, every single day.
And that is not counting the rapes that occur where there's only one person.
the trader. What we're seeing is these random knife attacks, they are no longer happening on a daily
basis. We are talking about an hourly basis. There's like 14, 15, 16 random knife attacks everywhere in
Germany on an everyday basis. And there is no safe place anymore, anywhere in Germany.
So yeah, our country is going to hell.
I may be wrong on this.
Just shifting to energy for a second.
Alberta is the energy hub of Canada.
My understanding, and correct me if I'm wrong,
is Germany has been that for Europe for, you know, going back eons.
Not on energy, no.
Not on energy, just on manufacturing then?
Yes.
I mean, we don't have natural resources.
We don't.
So the backbone of our economy, of our society, it was always the industry.
The backbone of our energy was pretty much Russia, Russian gas, right?
And of course, we had nuclear power plants, which we shut down, by the way,
because of a catastrophe that happened at the other end of the world.
Now I'm talking about Fukushima.
So we shut them all down.
And on top of that, when after,
Putin had invaded Russia in February of 2022, the German government decided that since we are so
principled and we really wanted to punish Putin for illegally having invaded this,
having illegally invaded Ukraine, which he did. So we wanted to punish him. So we told him,
you know what, we're not going to take your gas anymore. So the problem was we were bound by
contract. So we paid for the gas that we, since we're as a principal, refused to take from Russia.
So what did Russia do? They took the very same gas that we had already paid for and sold it to,
let's say, India. And then India said, hey, Germany, I think you need some gas, want to buy it from us.
And then we bought the very same gas that we had already paid Russia for, but the very same
gas again and paid it again, of course, from India. Since we are so principal, we are so principal,
So, no, energy, it's always been a problem in Germany,
actually, and now it's gotten worse,
especially after Nord Stream then got blown up.
And that was also remarkable, by the way.
Just think about, I mean, that was a critical infrastructure for Germany, right?
And someone just decided to blow it up.
When Nord Stream's blown up,
Right.
You know, I just, I was sitting in the United States when,
Trump got shot. And I remember sitting in the hotel going, like, is this going to cause a panic?
And it was interesting because I, you know, could just be the hotel. Who knows? But there's only
two of us and a group of about 50 watching the TV, look at each other like, this is, this is
something. When Nord Stream gets blown up, did the German population in general go, holy crap,
what is going on? Are we about to enter? Or did it even cause a ruffle? It called a little
small ruffle. But the remarkable thing about that was, guess what?
the German government did. Nothing. Nada sip. So, I mean, seriously, the critical infrastructure
gets blown up and they're just sitting there, well, kind of like, I guess it's gone now.
I mean, why cry over spilled milk kind of thing, right? They were like, well, weird. Don't know we did it.
They were trying to pin it on Russia, right? But I mean, to this day, I don't know who did it.
it, but I can tell you who didn't do it, because had there been a shred of it, Russia,
it did, Russia had nothing to do with this, because had there been a shred of evidence,
just the teeny tini tiniest bit of evidence that this might have been linked to Russia, we would
have never heard the end of that one.
They were non-stop the news cycles and they were presenting all of this, but we heard nothing,
nothing whatsoever. So no one cared about critical infrastructure in Germany,
just getting, you know, blown up. So that's, that's quite interesting. Yeah. With a little over a minute
left, you're coming through Canada. You're going to be in Calgary, June 28th, Eminton, July 2nd.
What is it about Canada that, you know, brings you back? Well, I mean, you know, just thinking
about how I was received there the first time, which I was told, you know, they're going to greet
you like you were a queen or something like. Then I was like, yeah, sure.
whatever. No, it was just, you know, just meeting the people and getting, getting to talk to the
people that took it upon them to participate in that protest and not only participate in the protest,
but to actually support the protest by whatever means they they could afford. That just said
really, it's so rewarding to see that there is still people out there that, that the
despite the repercussions, despite the restrictions and the sanctions and the punishment they suffered from this,
that they would still stand up because at the end of the day, that's what it's all about.
If we are to defend, well, I guess we have to say restore at this point,
if we are to restore our democracy, that's exactly what we need to do.
And we cannot back down just because the government is threatening us,
the freezing banks and bank accounts or whatever,
we have to stick or stand up and just do what is right
and to fight for freedom democracy and a rule of law
that's always the right thing, no matter what anyone tells you.
So yeah, that's, like I said, the freedom convoy.
I said it before and I'll say it again.
It will go down in history as the most significant,
and most effective protest ever.
So, and that's, I really have grown fond of Canada, Canadians.
So I'm looking forward to coming back.
Any final thoughts before I let you out of here?
The floor is yours, Christine.
Well, like I said, I'm an advocate for freedom democracy and the rule of law.
And I do consider myself to be a representative of the people, and I will always do my job.
However, the people need to speak up and the people need to speak up.
and the people need to stand up for what they believe in.
Because if they don't tell us what they want,
then we have no basis or we don't know what we should advocate for.
So we should really stop or pretty much the people should stop listening to their TV.
I guess what I'm trying to say.
Your TV is lying to you.
Just turn it off.
Educate yourself.
Research.
Whenever you hear something, get on the Internet.
research it yourself from various sources, make up your own mind, and then voice your opinion
loud and clear, because that's what it's needed. That's exactly what we need at this point.
Well, for Alberta, June 28th, July 2nd this year, Trinity Productions are bringing
Christine Anderson on stage with Sean Buckley, Danny Bullford, Corey Morgan, Catherine Cowall,
Check and Linda Blade. So if people are looking for that, go to trinity productions.ca.
I appreciate you giving me some time today and squeezing me into, I'm sure, your busy schedule.
Very nice meeting you.
Thank you for having me.
