The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 253. Canada's Biggest Problems | Pierre Poilievre
Episode Date: May 17, 2022This conversation was recorded on May 9, 2022.Pierre Poilievre, a life-long conservative, is running to be the Prime Minister of Canada. Pierre has served as a trusted senior cabinet minister in Prime... Minister Stephen Harper’s government and has served as a Member of Parliament for seven terms. He grew up in Calgary and graduated from the University of Calgary with a degree in International Relations. We discussed his election efforts, Canada’s energy infrastructure and economic policy, as well as Poilievre’s mission to tackle the housing crisis, lower the cost of living, defund Canadian media, and develop Canadian natural resources. To vote for Conservative leader you must become a member: https://donate.conservative.ca/en/membership-poilievre/—Chapters—0:00 — Intro5:21 — Conservative Philosophy & Free Market System8:32 — Left-Wing Ideas & Socialism12:32 — Government in Scandanavian Countries15:15 — University & Political Ambitions18:47 — Political Rallies 22:51 — Housing Crisis, Loss of Personal Freedom & Delivering Hope27:04 — Poilievre’s Mission 29:34 — Problems in Canada & Proposals34:55 — Economic Policy40:31 — Climate Change, Energy Infrastructure & Canadian Resources46:07 — Canadian Press Subsidies & Defunding CBC55:56 — Justin Trudeau1:03:55 — Jagmeet Singh1:09:13 — Sacrificing the Economic Interests of the Working-Class & Trucker’s Protest1:17:54 — Emergencies Act1:22:18 — Freedom as a Unifying Principle1:25:45 — Outro#Canada #Election #Conservative #PrimeMinister #GovernmentÂ
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Welcome to episode 253 of the JBP Podcast. I'm Michaela Peterson.
This is a unique episode because it dad had Pierre Poulliervren, a lifelong conservative
who has a very good shot at replacing the slowly sinking ship that is Trudeau's government.
Pierre has served as a member of Parliament and as a trusted senior cabinet minister.
Dad spoke to him about the broad problems facing Canada today
of which there are many.
His election campaign, Canada's energy infrastructure,
economic policy, and peers' mission to tackle the housing crisis,
lower the cost of living, defund Canadian media,
and develop Canadian natural resources.
I hope you enjoy this special episode. [♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Hello, everyone. I'm very pleased today to have with me, Mr. Pierre Pollyov. He is the current
frontrunner in the race for leadership of the Federal Conservative Party of Canada, and
he is therefore a likely candidate for Prime Minister of Canada within the foreseeable future
within the next few years. The conservatives in Canada have served historically
alternatively to lead Canada, competing with the liberals primarily at the federal or national
and provincial or state level. Although the liberals, their primary opponents have been more
historically successful, so they've served more terms. Mr. Paulie has served as a senior cabinet minister
in Prime Minister Stephen Harper's conservative government
prior to the recent election of Justin Trudeau
and the Liberals and has served as a member of parliament
for seven terms.
And with that brief introduction,
I'm going to turn the discussion over to Mr. Paulie
of who can fill us in on little biographical information.
So we know who he is, and then we'll turn to more specific issues.
Thanks very much for agreeing to talk to me today, and welcome.
Thanks very much, Dr. Peterson, great to be with you.
So we'll do Jordan and Pierre. How was that?
That's fine by me.
All right, away we go. So let's start.
Who are you? Who are you? Where did you come from?
And how do you get interested in politics?
And why are you the man for the job here?
Thank you.
Well, like you, I'm from Alberta, although further south.
I come from Calgary.
And my folks are from Saskatchewan.
They married in 77 moved to Calgary, where they adopted me.
I was born of a 16 year old unwed mother,
whose mother had just died.
And so she was in no position to raise a child.
So she put me up for adoption
and I was blessed to be adopted by Marlene and Don Pollyeth,
two teachers from Saskatchewan,
and a pretty normal upbringing grew up in the 80s, and I was born in 79, so my early childhood was in the 80s.
It was kind of a brutal time to be a homeowner or a family because there was these monstrous
interest rates. So, some of my earliest memories as a child were the financial stress that my folks
were going through, and a lot of people were losing their homes
and their livelihoods at that time. And I think that made an early impression on my thinking,
even though at the time I didn't really understand what was happening or why I was able
later on to look back at that strain and stress and then try to diagnose it when I was old enough to
understand and that formulated some of my political ideologies. We can return
to that later on but I grew up middle-class, a couple of teachers who got
divorced when I was in my mid teens and sort of bounced back and forth between mom and dad's place throughout my teenage years.
Went to University of Calgary.
Yeah, so we do have a fair bit in common
because one of my parents, my father,
is a teacher, they're both my parents are from Saskatchewan.
They moved to Alberta,
same lots of people from Saskatchewan did.
I got interested in politics at an early age.
I remember that period of inflation because, well,
my parent, my father, and maybe your parents,
did they lose their pensions when the banks collapsed?
The teacher, because the teachers did.
Mine didn't lose their pensions.
We did have to move because I think in retrospect,
that was because of the interest rate hikes.
I guess, and to my folks, we're not able to pay
the mortgage at the higher rates.
And then we had moved to a smaller place
and we had to sell our car and get a downgrade our automobile
and all of the above just to kind of keep our heads
above water.
And that would have been,
I'm guessing around sort of 83, 84.
And that was a really kind of hellish time, particularly in Alberta, because the central
government had unleashed a wicked assault on the energy sector called the National Energy
Program.
And simultaneously, the worst of the Trudeau Socialist years were coming to bear on the
entire national economy.
So you had 12% inflation and 12% unemployment.
24% mortgage rates. That's real fun for everyone. Yes, and highest misery index in Canadian
history. That's unemployment plus inflation. That was under Justin's father. Yes.
Surprise, surprise. Yes. And here we are with the same policies leading to the same
results, just as the dog returns to its vomit and the salar returns to its mire,
the burn fools' bandaged finger goes wobbling back to the fire,
as Kipling would write.
But it was a miserable time for a lot of people.
Now, I was blessed because my folks were teachers.
So they ultimately didn't lose their livelihoods.
And we were able to, we had a modest uproaring,
but I would never have called myself poor.
And my folks worked hard to make sure we could play hockey
and enjoy life at going camping trips.
So I would not cry poor, but it was a modest uproaring.
I'm very proud of and one I'd like to pass on
to my kids as well.
How old were you when you got interested in politics?
And what were you like in high school?
Well, I was a scrappy kid who loved sports
and then I got a terrible tendon.
I just had my shoulder, which made it impossible for me
to do any amateur wrestling or football
or any other sports that I enjoyed.
So I'd get home from school and be bored out of my skull.
My mom used to go in a 10 progressive conservative meetings.
And so I said, why don't you take me to one of these meetings?
Because I've got nothing to do.
And she took me and I fell in love with it.
And I just started reading books all times about...
Oh God, you should do that.
I'm still recovering from all.
And so why in the world were you attracted to conservatism?
Because that's not a particularly, what would you say?
It's not necessarily an attractive proposition for the typical young person,
although, you know, maybe something could be done about that.
So, but what do you do to track the conservative philosophy?
It was a bit of a winding road. I started off by reading a lot of left wing books and commentary and was very, very briefly
persuaded by that.
But then I stumbled on a book called Capitalism and Freedom by Milton Friedman.
And I didn't agree with 100% of what he wrote.
I still don't, however, the fundamental logic
of the free market system to me is inescapable.
Okay, what is that logic as far as you're concerned?
Why is it inescapable?
Because in a free and open market,
you can't get ahead unless you make someone else better off.
So I use the old Apple Orange Ionology.
If you have an Apple and one in Orange and I have an Orange and one in Apple and we trade,
we're both better off, even though we still have an Apple in Orange between us.
It's like when you go to a coffee shop and you buy a coffee, you say, thank you to the
lady you gave it to and then she says, not you're welcome, but she say, thank you to the lady who gave it to you. And then she says,
not you're welcome, but she says, thank you back. Now, why is that? Well, the answer
is because each of you has something, has gained something more valuable than you had before.
You have the cup of coffee that's worth more than the 250 you paid for it. The coffee
shop has the 250. And why do you think the free part of that is
important? So that's the trade part. Why is the free part important? Because that's the only
way to guarantee both people's sides believe they're better off, right? Because in the form of
taxation, government forcefully imposes a transaction. It is considered to be a transaction tax,
taxes, right? You're paying for a whole plethora of services, but you didn't choose it. So even if you've decided that the cost of your
tax bill is not worth the benefit of the government services, you have to pay it anyway. Whereas
back to the coffee shop, you have to, if you don't believe the coffee is worth more than the money,
you won't pay it. And if they don't believe the money is worth more than the money, you won't pay it. And if they don't believe the money is worth more than the coffee, they won't sell it. So the only way in a
market system to make yourself better off is to make someone else simultaneously better off.
So why did you now look? Lots of young people knit today either are not exposed to the ideas
that you just put forward or they don't find them persuasive, say in contrast to what appears on the surface to be the more compassionate, left-wing
view that's characterized frequently.
And sometimes realistically, you know, by concern for the working class, like I worked
for the NDP when I was a kid.
And at that time in Alberta, Grant notly ran the NDP.
And he was an old union guy in some fundamental sense.
And so, where most of the people he associated with, you know, and they they did have a real concern for the working
class, at least some of them did, and I would say that was particularly true of the leadership,
not so much the activists, but you know, you were pretty young when you came across Friedman.
I didn't have that experience when I was say the same age as you.
Why did you find that persuasive in contrast to the left wing ideas,
the ideas of socialism, this rooted in this hypothetical compassion that seems so attractive
to kids today? Because I didn't see the compassion playing itself in out in any real way. It's a catch phrase,
but what we're actually debating is not who's more compassionate.
There's no evidence that people on the socialist left are especially generous with their own
money.
Sure they like to spend other people's money.
But what you see is really with socialism is animal house playing itself out over and
over again.
You know, when the animal farm, excuse me, animal farm playing
itself over and over again. That's a definite difference. Yeah, definitely, definitely
difference animal farm, you know, the pigs didn't say they wanted to take the house so that they
could be more comfortable in the spoiled. They said they were doing it to make everyone equal
and to remove the oppression. But then when they, when they actually took the house, they basically,
they became the new masters and served themselves.
And that's what actually happens in socialism. It doesn't eliminate hierarchy.
So why did you buy that argument? Was it as a consequence of encountering Orwell as well?
Or I think it's because I witnessed it again and again, as I was, I studied what actually happens
in socialist models, it became very clear
that the rhetoric about economic equality
never actually came to pass.
It was used as a tool to mobilize the masses,
but ultimately, the outcome was to give
concentrate power more in the hands of the political elite.
Look, government is really legalized force. So if you believe in big government,
you believe in expanding force. Relationships of force always favor the powerful.
And in reality, those who have more political power than benefit from a bigger government,
and those people are all rich, right?
They are disproportionately powerful in the system.
And so when this big beast called government
gets bigger and more powerful,
those who have the ability to steer that beast
are the ones who are gonna profit from it.
So what do you think of the success of countries
like the Scandinavian countries? Let's say, do you think at the success of countries like the Scandinavian
countries? Let's say, well, in the relative success of Canada, because there's been a
fair, solid socialist influence, more the English socialist type than the, than the communist
derived type, fair socialist influence in Canada. And it's formed some of our fundamental
institutions, our healthcare system, our pension system, a fair bit of labor legislation.
I mean, when you look at, and then of course, the Scandinavian countries, small though they are, and homogenous though they are, they're quite
radically successful in function. So what do you make of that? And how do you balance that against
your emphasis on, well, how more conservative philosophy and your support of the freest markets
possible in some sense? All right. So let's start with the Scandinavians. I mean, there's some really uncomfortable facts
about the Scandinavian countries that the left would not like to talk about, like normal 25%
of Norway's economy is oil. So that's really tough to grapple with if you're a modern socialist,
That's really tough to grapple with if you're a modern socialist, moving to the other countries,
Sweden welcomes all kinds of free enterprise and choice, including in the provision of public services. And they have, in fact, in the 90s, the Swedes moved quite dramatically to reduce
the cost of government and open up markets and free enterprise.
So it's not as simple as to say that these countries are socialistic and therefore successful.
And I think it was even the day one of the Danish leaders came to you to the United States
and he was speaking at Harvard and he was saying, you know, all the socialist kids were expecting
him to pump his fist in the air and champion socialism.
He said, no, actually, we're not a socialist country. And so, you know, there's no question,
they definitely do have a strong social safety net. I don't have an object to that. But I wouldn't
say that they are state-commanded economies like we're seeing Trudeau attempt to adopt here in
Canada. Right. So you see this as variation
within the free market world, right?
I do.
There's a variation,
like there is between the Democrats and the Republicans
in the US, but fundamentally it's a free market.
Everything is a question of degree,
but there's a lot of academic literature
that shows that countries with smaller governments
as a share of GDP tend to have less poverty
and better social and economic growth outcomes.
And that is true in both the developing world and the developed world.
So I do believe that you can provide a solid social safety net at the same time as having
a powerful free market economy that generates the wealth to fund that safety net at the same time as having a powerful free market economy that generates the wealth
to fund that safety net.
Okay, so you got interested in politics.
Were you a popular kid in high school, would you say?
Often, there were times when I was interested in hanging out and being part of the club,
but there were other times when I just didn't care.
I went out once I got involved in politics.
I couldn't care less about the social life
at high school anymore.
How old were you?
How old were you when that transition took place?
He said that was also gone.
16, 17, like I said, I kind of wasn't able to do any
or sports.
And so I said, you know, I'm going to go do something else.
And once I took that part of my life took off the social
work. No, I had like a lot of my early teens. I've been, I loved hanging out with my friends
and playing sports and stuff. But once, once I found a new passion, I became more focused
on that. How did that influence your choice of education when you went off to university?
And that was it? Did you say university, Calgary? That's right, yes.
I wanted to do a generalist liberal arts kind of program
and so I did international relations,
which had some econ, a lot of history,
some strategic study, it's a little bit of polypsi.
And it was a good overview, a jack of all trades
kind of bachelor of arts, and it worked well.
And was that in hypothetical service
of your political ambitions at that point,
or had they catalyzed?
I don't know that my political ambitions
were clearly defined at that point.
I just knew I was generally interested in politics
and that international relations
would give me an overview of almost all parts of the, of that one conference in a political
environment.
Did you have a conception of a career path at that time? Or what, I mean, not as people
don't, you know, they go to take a batch of arts, they have an interest and I'm, and
I'm not saying that a career path, you know, specifying what is necessary. I'm just curious as to what, how you envisioned
your future when you were pursuing your degree and and then what happened afterwards?
I'm trying to remember exactly, but I don't think I knew exactly what paths I was going to take.
I just knew that I wanted to fight for certain things that I believed in.
And that would probably take me into the political theater.
Were you active in campus politics?
Yeah, I was involved with the campus.
It was then that campus progressive conservatives and reform party and involved in the debate
club and stuff like that. We used to have a place called Speakers Corner.
It was like three floors of balconies
where people could look down and someone would stand
on a big stool in the middle and shout out a speech.
And they'd speaker's corner would meet every Friday
and there'd be lots of heckling
and it was just a rowdy affair.
And mostly, mostly about hilarity and joking around and giving silly,
ridiculous addresses. And that was the Friday tradition. We'd go and belt out these speeches.
Sometimes 70 or 80 students would come and take in these speeches. And I measure what if we had
the phone cameras back then, they'd probably be circulating wildly on the internet right now
No doubt God what a horrible fate. Hey to have everything you do when you're young
Recorded and never forgotten so yeah, well you seem to have a sense of humor about such things too
And you're kind of viciously satirical in the house of commons and so what what rule do you think having a sense of humor plays in what you do?
I think it's important.
I try to remember it because politics is a combat sport, but there has to be some joy
in it as well.
And you have to make people feel good.
The rap by HLL said people won't always remember what you do or what you say, but
they'll always remember how you made them feel.
So I think it's important to make people feel good when you're giving up political
speech.
Make them, you know, there's a tendency to get up and spill doom and gloom all over the
room.
But I think it's important to make people feel good about the moment and also good about the future and
The most powerful way to do is is is humor
Well, it's very interesting to me because you've got a lot of people coming out to your rallies and that I should let everyone know who's
Listening internationally that's not really a Canadian thing
There have been times when that's occurred
But it's not run of the mill
But you have a lot of people coming into your rallies and you've been attacked fairly
viciously.
I would say by the press for the nature of the despicable people that you're attracting,
you know, otherwise known as Canadians.
And so what is it that you're doing that's working to attract people?
And is it related to this sense of humor and to an optimism that you're projecting despite
some of the dire things that might be characterizing the Canadian state.
I think it's, I think people are desperate
for hope in Canada right now.
These rallies have been really emotional events like,
people come with incredible stories.
And I do this thing after every speech,
I plant myself in front of my sign
and I just let everyone come up one by one and talk to me.
And I don't think the political class in this country
appreciates how much suffering there is in Canada right now.
Well, they did get honked on Adelaide, you know, and that's pretty rough.
Yeah, I know because they've had, I mean, the political class has had a wonderful two years.
They've had an unbelievable amount of power and a tremendous amount of comfort, all of their homes
have gone up by 50% in value. And their stock portfolios up until recently have been inflated.
So they're sort of looking down at the working class and saying,
oh, what are you complaining about? You've never had it so good. Well,
that's the exact opposite has been true for the working folks. If you don't own a home,
your purchase, like if you didn't have a home before 2019,
likelihood is you'll never own one unless and until there's a major reduction in housing
prices.
And so you've got this whole generation of people, of young people who have concluded
that they'll never be able to afford a home.
So they're 32 years old living in their mom's basement.
You can imagine the psychological impact that has on someone's personal security. Like, how do you start a family? So people come to
my rallies and they're looking for an explanation about why things are the way they are and looking
for some hope about how we might make them better. The situation doesn't make sense to people because, like, I have one, you know, what perfect example.
There's a guy living in the south end of my riding in South Ottawa.
And he has the same job that his mother has, and he ironically works at the same desk that she worked at when she was there. Yet she was able to buy a house in South Ottawa 40 years ago
that he could not even dream of affording today. And so what he's saying, I would say,
how does this make sense? I thought we were supposed to be getting better off. And now
after 40 years, our family is far worse off. And I'm stuck in my parents' basement. And
I can't get married. I can't
start a family. I don't even, I don't know where my life is going. And so they're, they
see me actually explaining why this is happening. And then offering solutions. And they say to
me that I'm actually giving them a sense of hope. That's the number one word I hear from people
and they come up to me in the line. They say say if we feel like we have hope again, so that's what's bringing people out. Okay, so
You're listening to people one of the things I've learned about good politicians and I know people think that's an oxymoron
But that's not an acceptable amount of cynicism in my estimation
They and I think this was really true of Preston Manning for example. They're really good at listening and
And I think this was really true of press and manning, for example. They're really good at listening.
And if they listen, then people tell them what their problems are.
And so you just focused on housing and housing crisis for young people.
When you're talking to people, individual to individual,
what's tugging at your heartstrings and making you understand the problems
apart, housing is a big one, obviously.
What else do you hear?
And what's really concerning you? People feel like they've lost control of their lives.
Whether it's the people who have made a decision not to get vaccinated for their own reasons and
have been, had a government basically steal their livelihoods,
prevent them from getting on an airplane,
ban them from ever leaving the country,
or whether it's the single mom who's skipping meals
or kids don't have to,
or the guy who can't fill up his tank
to go and drive and see his parents for one last time
before they die in Thunder Bay.
People feel like they can't make the normal decisions that
a free person could make in a free society.
And there's devastating personal consequences to it.
And then what they hear from the government is they speak out, right?
They speak out, they hold the protests, they post something online.
Instead of the prime minister saying, you know what, I know you're suffering, I'm sorry,
we're gonna work harder to make your life better.
We hear you, I feel your pain.
What he says is, you're a nasty, unacceptable,
fringe element.
And not only are we going to seize your bank account
and bring in the Emergencies Act, we're also going to double down on the things
that have made your life so miserable in the first place.
And so people feel like they're under attack from a big bullying government that takes
their money and tells them what to do.
And what they see in my campaign is an opportunity to take back control of their lives,
to remove the gatekeepers so that we can build affordable housing to unleash the energy
sectors. Our working class can get good jobs again to stop the money printing and bring
inflation back down so folks can afford things again. And that gives them hope that there's
actually a better day coming.
And that's why we're attracting so many people.
Well, so why do you think it's so interesting listening to you because you know, you're
your narratives center around the individual individuals who make up the working class,
the working class under duress, and isn't necessarily
the way in that you might regard as most probable for a conservative.
And so why is it, so I think that's extremely interesting, and in this upside down world
of ours, why is it, though, do you think that people find you capable of delivering hope?
I mean, there's other candidates on the conservative front,
we should talk about that soon,
but what makes you credible on the hope front, do you think,
in terms of what you're offering and who you are?
Because I speak clear plain language that makes sense to people.
So, I'm a believer in using simple Anglo-Saxon words
that strike right at the meaning that I'm trying to convey.
And so I say things that people say,
yeah, that actually makes sense.
So that folks say, well, why is it
in a wise inflation running rampant?
And I explained to them in direct language
that when you print more money,
you have more dollars chasing fewer goods,
it leads to higher prices.
Folks, yeah, that actually makes sense.
Isn't that what we were taught in grade school?
And the explanations they get from everyone else are a bunch of convoluted, nonsensical,
irrational excuses. And so they like my direct blunt style, not because it's simplistic,
but because it's simply true.
So what do you like about political life? It's a rough life, and you take a lot of flack. I mean, obviously, from your bio, and I think from the way you comport yourself,
it's obvious that you've got the the constitution to some degree of a fighter,
which is, I think, would say something I lack. But what is it about you that attracts you
to the political, in terms of the interpersonal domain?
You talked about it intellectually, in some sense.
And you talk a little bit about your care for people one on one,
but you like to listen apparently.
And like, why do you care about ordinary people?
And why should people believe that you care?
Well, I think that what bothers me most of the politics in Canada is that there's a
comfortable establishment that sits on top and governs for itself, and everyone else
is expense, and that the people who do the nation's work, the plumber, the
electrician, the truck driver, the police officer, have almost no share of voice.
I want to empower those people and disempower the political establishment.
And that's my mission, it's my purpose.
And I believe in it. I actually do believe in what I say. political establishment. And that's my mission, it's my purpose.
And I believe in it.
I actually do believe in what I say.
I truly believe that the ideas and the political approach
that I advance are right.
So having that purpose allows me to persevere
through all of the nastiness
and the exhaustion of political life.
Because if you don't believe in it,
then it just becomes an ego-tistical vanity project
of which there are many in politics,
but it seems to me to be a pointless life
all you're doing is trying to advance,
trying to keep your name in the news
and in high office as long as possible
just so that you can say you were there.
I think you, if to have a fulfilling political career,
you actually have to have a purpose.
And I do, my purpose is very simply,
I wanna put people back in charge of their own lives.
I don't want the state to run people's lives anymore.
I want them to be masters of their
own destiny. Okay, so let's drill down into that a little bit. So I would ask you two things.
One would be, you know, I'll put a little bit of a pro-droma in front of it. I watched
the federal leadership debate in the last election, and I thought the conservatives lost
before their mouths because they accepted the diagnosis that was brought to the table
There were five topics of conversation if I remember correctly and two of them were basically progressive talking points
You know one was truth and reconciliation other was climate change
There was 20 minutes devoted to the economy, you know, and I thought you guys made a big mistake because you let the
You let the progressive types define the
questions.
And so I would say, because it may be the diagnosis in some sense is more important than
the cure.
At least, you know that you know you've got your finger on the problem.
And so when you look at Canada, at the moment, what are our problems?
Well, the central underlying illness is a monstrous growth in the power and cost of the state
at the expense of the agency and freedom of the people.
That is the override.
Now, I can then give specific examples of how that...
So, let's just take monetary policy.
So, there's no way Justin Trudeau could get away with spending all of the money
he has in the last two years if he had to use real cash because people would never accept
the many thousands of dollars of tax increases that it would require. So he has basically turned
our central bank into an ATM machine for his spending. They've created a $4 billion of new money in two years,
which has given us a 30-year high inflation
and bumped up, boosted real estate prices by 50%.
Now, does that compare to previous expenditures
by government?
Well, it's not even, it's not off the charts.
If you look at the balance sheet of the bank
of Canada during the Harper area,
even during the great global recession,
there was a minor bump in the assets at health, which is represented, which indicates how much money it was injecting.
Whereas right now, it's shot off the charts.
So the balance sheet of the central bank is up something like 350%.
And all that cash is particularly ballooned asset prices.
And that's the unspoken story here.
It's everyone thinks about consumer inflation, which is horrible as it is.
Then there's asset price inflation.
And what that's doing is creating kind of an aristocratic economy where people with the bigger
of the asset you have before the inflation, the richer you've become after it.
that you have before the inflation, the richer you've become after it.
And it is almost like the housing is attached to a balloon
and it's being lifted higher and higher up
and anybody who's not already in the house
will never be able to grab it and get inside.
And so we're, but it is all the results
of this massive expansion of the money supply.
And so we're basically seeing a transfer of wealth
from the have nots to the have yachts, as I like to say.
And those in the managerial class,
the CEOs who stocks have been artificially inflated
and they've been able to give themselves a paid share bybacks
with exceptionally low interest rates,
the immoral money, and then buyback shares, which increases share value and gives them a bonus.
The folks who own mansions and protected in neighborhoods that are protected by zoning laws
against anyone else moving in, these people have done exceptionally well over the last two years.
And yet the people who are doing the nation's work are now having their salaries destroyed people have done exceptionally well over the last two years.
And yet the people who are doing the nation's work
are now having their salaries destroyed by inflation.
And then at the local level,
you have municipalities bringing in our zoning laws
that prevent new construction
so that you have artificial, they're invisible gates.
They're gated communities, but they're invisible gates.
And the invisible gate is government bureaucracy that prevents construction. So we have fewer houses per capita
than any country in the G7, even though we have the most land to build on.
So when I'm proposing in both cases, stop printing money, start building houses. I'm going to
tell the big city mayors that if they don't remove their bureaucratic zoning rules and let builders
build, then I'm going to cut back on some of their infrastructure funds.
Because I think it's going to need something that drastic to get these gatekeepers out of
the way and actually build houses so that our youth have a place to call home.
And you know, but it's across the economy.
Ironically, all of these big government interventions seem to hurt the most disadvantaged.
Our immigrants come here as doctors and engineers, but they can't work in those fields because
of occupational licensing protectionism, the gatekeepers.
So I want to incentivize provinces to speed up recognition of foreign credentials.
So an immigrant doctor can actually work as a doctor and remove the gatekeepers from our energy sector so we can build
pipelines and dig for resources and become energy self-sufficient. And then remove the gatekeepers
in speech and you know all of those. You know where the government is now pushing new censorship
laws on the internet and I promise very clearly that I'm going to get rid of all of those laws and restore freedom
of expression on the internet.
So really what I see is the need to remove the governmental gatekeepers to restore freedom,
let people take back control of their lives.
Okay, so let's delve into economic policy a bit.
So the OECD recently predicted, this is lovely, that Canada's economy will be the worst
performing advanced economy over 2020 to 2030, and then three decades after. Now,
we haven't been doing very well as a country not only under the Liberals, we weren't doing that
great before or under the conservatives as well, you know, especially compared to the US and many other
and many other countries that in some sense are peers. And so that's a pretty damn gloomy forecast, right? 40 years out, we're going to be the worst performing advanced economy in the world.
And so what do you, what do you think the conservatives conceivably did wrong in the past to
fail to stave that off? And what do you think you can do differently and maybe we can make so what you're interested in
How is it you're interested in deregulation especially on the housing front?
I want to focus in as we progress through this part on energy in particular because that's a killer
Topic for everyone in the world at the moment. I would say so what did the conservatives do wrong? What has Canada done wrong?
What what have the liberals done wrong apart from, you know, printing money like madmen and instituting these arbitrary rules? And what do you think you can do differently?
Right. Well, I would respectfully disagree on the conservative economic track record.
If you look at the 07 financial, sorry, the 08, 09 financial
crisis, we came through better than any of the other G7 countries. Certainly way better
than the Americans. We didn't have a housing crash here. We didn't have a banking crisis.
We didn't have to bail out a single bank. We had very modest inflation. I don't think
it ever cracked 4%. And I don't think it was above 3% for more than
one or two quarters in the entire 10-year period. Harper was around and unemployment stayed relatively.
Low, you could buy the average house when Harper left office in Canada was $434,000.
It's kind of hard to imagine that now. But on fast forward to energy, we need to repeal C69. That's the bill that
makes it effectively impossible to build an energy project in Canada today because it
has introduced a whole series of sociological questions that into the process that make sense to nobody.
Trudeau has said that energy projects are caused gender imbalances, and therefore when someone
applies to build one, they have to write a sociological report on what the pipeline or the mine will do for gender relations.
Well, with that in the tradition to being ridiculous pop culture sociology, it addresses massive
uncertainty for investors because they don't really know how and why a project will be
approved or rejected.
They don't have seven years to sit around, so they'll take their money and invest it in other
parts of the world. And that's why the projects aren't happening here. We don't mind Lithium in
Canada, even though we have lots of Lithium in this electric car battery era. You know, we're
importing Lithium from China because they actually get projects built. However, they
burn coal to refine their lithium. So, ironically, we're just inducing pollution in other countries
when we buy electric cars that are made in, who's lithium is met refined in that country. So,
if we could approve a lithium mine in Canada, we could actually mine the staff refine
it, manufacture it here. We have the third biggest supply of
oil in planet Earth, but we're importing 130,000 barrels of
overseas oil every day. The solution to which is so obvious,
is that right next door to the St. John port, where we bring in
the port of the oil, we have St. John's Newfoundland, uh, is, uh, capable of adding another 400,000 barrels of
Canadian production.
We could just approve that production.
Then we could ban foreign oil overseas oil from Canada all together.
Uh, and that would mean that the dollars wouldn't be leaving our country for overseas dictatorships,
but would be staying here paying Canadian wages instead.
And natural gas, we got 1,300 trillion cubic feet of natural gas.
And you know what you do?
You get natural gas onto a ship, you have to freeze it down to a liquid.
Well, what do we have in Canada?
Cold weather.
As you know.
And so it takes a hell of a lot less energy to liquefy natural gas in Canada.
Yet we have finally an advantage for cold weather. Finally an advantage. And we have also
geographic advantage. So we're the closest point in North America to Asia is BC, the closest point
in North America to Europe is Newfoundland. So we have a shorter shipping distance, less energy needed to liquefy gas.
And yet we haven't succeeded in building a single major liquefaction facility in Canada,
despite the fact that in 2015, there were about 18 proposed projects. So you can approve
those projects. We could be bringing hundreds of billions of dollars of opportunity to our people,
particularly our first nation's people, but it takes getting those regulatory gatekeepers
out of the way to let it happen.
What makes you think you could take on the woke crowd in relationship to such things?
So we could say, well, what about the planet, what about the climate crisis?
You're going to turn back to fossil
fuels. You're going to demolish the globe in the next 30 years. We should be moving towards
net zero. You're going to doom the poor to catastrophe while you're pretending to elevate
them economically. It's like, and you're going to be like cutting to ribbons by that crowd.
And so let's talk about climate change and the Paris Accords and all about you. We want to promote, you want to promote Canadian energy.
There's a foreign policy reason for doing that.
You made a case for liquefocation.
Like exactly what should Canada's position be in relationship to climate change and then
the development of our energy infrastructure?
Well, our resources are not the problem.
They're the solution. For example, we export our natural gas.
We can displace foreign coal-burning electricity.
The energy-hungry Asian markets are desperate
for non-coal sources of electricity,
but they need things like natural gas
to replace it of coal with.
And we have that gas.
We also have the biggest supply of civilian grade uranium
in the world, right, and Saskatchewan that could be used
to export, regenerate emissions free, pollution free,
nuclear energy.
We have an overabundance of hydroelectricity in Manitoba
and Quebec that we could be exporting to the Northern United
States to displace their coal-fired electricity. We could be using small modular nuclear reactors to decarbonize the electrical
grid for the oil sands. And we have the ability to do that right here in Canada. We have carbon
the carbon and capture and storage techniques in our own province of Alberta
are second to none.
There are some white cap resources, a mid-size company there, says that it's actually a now
carbon negative company.
In other words, they bury more carbon in the ground than they put into the air.
And so we have the technology and the resources to do it. But what we're right
now what we're doing is punishing our own resource sector to the advantage of heavily polluting
foreign dictatorships with no environmental standards and who use the money to great
mal. And so we would be better off to displace their energy with ours and use that as a method of
chaff fighting for the environment while enhancing the well-being of our working class at the same time.
Well, so if this optimistic view is true, which is a view that basically says in some sense,
we can have our cake and share it with others and eat it too, right? Because we can make progress
on the economic front and on the climate front at the same time.
And I would like to point out that America's turned to natural gas as noctaere carbon dioxide
output substantially down over the last 15 years, which is not a statistic you hear from
the typical environmentalist types.
Okay, so if we, the world can turn to Canadian energy and as a consequence, the net impact
on the carbon economy would be positive in, meaning,
reducing carbon, carbon dioxide output. And we could get wealthier in doing so. Then
why in the world aren't the liberals already doing this? If the pathway forward is so clear
and they're concerned about the environment in some genuine sense, and also, let's say,
secondarily about economic matters, is there something wrong with your reasoning that they know that's made this impossible or how do you understand
the fact that this isn't already happening?
You know, it is hard to understand. I think that it goes in line. Their environmental
policy has seen more designed to give the state more control of the economy than they are designed to deliver an environmental outcome.
They, by attacking the energy sector, it gives them the ability to create more of a command and control economy, which is what they believe in. and to redistribute wealth between industries and towards political friends in a very
peri-parasitical manner.
But we have a total not as our environment minister right now, Stephen Gilbo.
He is bonkers.
And he's against nuclear. It's not just oil and gas, he would get rid of nuclear as
well. So I don't know what would be left. You can't call it. Oh, you know, all you have to do to get
electricity is put a plug in the wall. Yeah, that's right. Now it comes, you know,
the plan to fall. I know I'm overcomplicating it here. I don't know either. And yeah, yeah.
So it is quite quite a mystery to me all of this, the fact that that because I do believe at
least to some degree that the reality that you put forward is actually valid that we
could have our cake and eat it too.
I certainly think the Americans have managed out as they turned to fracking and and have
become a net and poor exporter of fossil fuel.
I can't see that that's done the
damn world one bit of harm. And well, in this situation with Russia is one of the things that
shows just how foolish we are in depending on well, countries other than say standard, reliable,
forward-moving, stable democracies like Canada. So be lovely if that could all occur.
So okay, so let's turn away from economic policy
just for a moment.
Why do you think the press in Canada
is so, just likes you to such a degree.
And are there exceptions to that rule?
Well, there are exceptions.
I find the independent media gives me a fair shake.
But, and there are some columnists even in the mainstream publications that are fair
and reasonable.
But the political media in the parliamentary press gallery are part of the establishment.
And that defines me threatening because I'm upsetting the Apple card.
They are part of the ecosystem of big government.
They, in many, when it comes to the CBC, they are big government.
Their entire budget comes from government.
And the corporate own...
We might want to tell our international listeners and viewers just how big a subsidy the
CBC gets every year and what the CBC is.
And then we can talk about media subsidies in general and the collusion between the federal
government and the Canadian media establishment.
So maybe we start with CBC.
It's 1.2 billion a year.
Right?
And that range, yeah, it's 1.2 billion a year.
And to produce a negligible audience. A very, very small audience. And produce almost no original content that you couldn't find somewhere else.
But what this does is creates a massive state-funded ecosystem. And even the journalists who
don't work for CBC, they get these contracts to comment on
CBC.
So they go on these panels and they get paid, I'm told, $3, $400, $500 a pop to go and
offer their opinion.
And this, so as a result, they all want to regurgitate the acceptable state-generated
opinion. And then they, so it basically creates a monolithic ideology and political narrative
that comes from the center of the government and is designed to uphold the Trudeau government
to keep them in power for as long as possible. And so yeah, I'm running against that. And
is that going to be hard? Absolutely. They're going to do everything they can to tear me apart.
I've no doubt about that.
Would you defund the CBC?
Yes.
I mean, you've made that claim.
You absolutely would do that.
Yes.
Even though, okay, so let me push back against that for a bit, okay?
Because this is an important question to be because I'm not very fond of the CBC,
especially as it's managed itself over the last decade, let's say.
I used to watch it a lot when I was a kid. I used to listen to CBC radio a lot too. And I thought
it was a reasonably credible and reliable purveyor of information. But I think those days are long
gone. In any case, many conservative politicians in Canada have made gestures in that direction.
And then the people who are going to come after you are going to say, well, you're not a fan
of Canadian culture. And because of the overwhelming influence of the United States and foreign media,
we need to subsidize Canadian journalistic and entertainment activities because otherwise
we'll have nothing at all. And generally what happens is the CBC continues to survive regardless of government.
So what makes you what makes you think you do it? And how do you think you could survive?
And this is back to that question before, right? How do you think you can push back against
the woke types who are so good at savaging reputation and interfering with the kind of while
policies that you're trying to put forward.
So on the CBC, there was a time when you could make an argument for a market failure. You could say, look, here we are, American culture is so massive and noisy.
Competing it with it is like trying to have an argument with a marching band, right? It's just
so loud and it'll just drown out everything in
Canada. But that was only the case because the massive cost of production and distribution
made it very hard for Canadian talent to even get on with their waves without some assistance.
But now there are almost like the cost of production and distribution of culture,
information and content is negligible. I mean, any teenager with, you know, seven or eight hundred bucks
can use his or her phone to start producing content, put it online, if people want to see it,
or any disgrace to your diversity professor.
But no, the reality is that if you were a Canadian artist in 1980, you didn't have the
capital to compete with Hollywood. Now, you actually don't need a lot of capital.
And so with a free and open internet,
anyone can break through as long as they have a willing audience.
So the reason that CBC's content require subsidy
is not because of some market failure.
It's because it's not appealing to Canadians.
Oh, that's just because Canadians aren't smart enough to appreciate it, you know.
Well, that's the narrative, right?
And that's the irony about the Canadian media today.
They think their job is to hold the people accountable to the government, rather than the government accountable to people.
So what about other media subsidies?
What's your policy on that?
Because during COVID in particular, but over the last few years, you know, obviously print or accountable to people. So what about other media subsidies? What's your policy on that? Because
during COVID in particular, but over the last few years, obviously print journalists have taken
beating from the internet because, well, for the same reasons you just outlined, I mean, what do you
think? Is there a role for the subsidy of the press in Canada? And if there is a rule, what is it? And if not, what would you do?
Well, I haven't, the Trudeau policies are definitely designed to
basically make the entire media apparatus dependent on the Goodwill and
the good, the goodwill of the state. They have a government bureaucracy that determines what is considered to be a qualified journalistic company, and they pick and choose based on their own political views who then qualifies
and therefore gets the subsidy.
I think this is designed to again create more dependency on the government and curry more favor with the state.
I haven't made an announcement exactly how I'm going to fix that problem yet,
but I guess I would say stay tuned on that. I want to depoliticize that and basically
restore the freedom of the press in this country again by getting
the state out of it.
So you're at least philosophically opposed to the idea of, let's call it government press
collusion and might take, see that part of the problem is I think that once you obtain
power, let's say, the temptation to have the media under your thumb in some sense as a consequence
of such subsidies, you can see how that would tempt people, right?
I think it's very useful to be cognizant of the sorts of temptations that do be set
someone as they acquire a position of authority and power.
And this is why I want to push hard on the CBC issue because it's a signal issue. It would be quite a dramatic move to defund the CBC because it has been
a standard bearer in some sense of a whole vision of Canadian culture. And so that would
send a powerful message.
Like if they do have such an incredibly loyal audience, then they could support themselves through their audience, like other institutions do.
I mean, you know, there are countless other journalistic
organizations that support themselves through subscriptions,
sponsorship, advertising, and other means.
And I think that's what we need to do with CBC,
if they genuinely have an audience,
then they can go get support from their audience.
I don't, I know there's lots of publications to which I subscribe.
I don't ask the taxpayer to pay for my subscriptions.
I pay for it out of my pocket and I watch,
either that or I suffer the advertising,
but I don't expect that other people are going to pay for me
to consume the media that I like.
So why should other Canadians be going to pay for me to consume the media that I like. So why should I, why should other Canadians be forced to pay for this far left liberal propaganda
that makes up most of CBC's coverage?
All right.
Well, it'll be interesting to see what all comes of that.
That should make even more friends on the journalistic front.
So, you know, we've talked about it.
At the end of the day, they're not going to be friends
fair anyway.
That's the thing.
People say, well, you're picking a fight with CBC,
they're going to come after you in the next election.
Well, they went after Harper, they went after Sheer,
they went after O'Toole.
We found is that by not proposing to defund them,
they're just as vicious as they were,
what would otherwise be?
They campaigned
full time to get Justin Trudeau elected prime minister, even though Harper had run a 10-year
government without defunding them. So, yeah, they're going to come at me guns blazing. I know
that, but they would do that even if I weren't taking the principal stand on defunding them.
Right. So, okay. So, that's a good a good, that's a good point. You've got nothing to lose on that front in some sense. So that's problem with depriving people of their, of their support for you, you know, you can't take anything away when there's nothing there to begin with.
So, okay. So let's, if you don't mind, let's turn to Trudeau and to Singh. These are your two, well, the two people who will, you will be facing off against in some real sense,
and you do face off against quite regularly in the house.
What do you think of Mr. Trudeau?
So I think he's an egomaniac,
and I think everything he does is,
comes back to his egomaniac.
Even his political ideology,
you really think about his expansionistic role of the state.
It never comes back to serving an individual objective
other than to make him more powerful or his legacy
more grand. So let me give you a few examples. So he, he, he, he slashed the amount you can put into
a tax free savings account. But then he simultaneously increased the amount you were forced to pay
into the state savings plan. He killed multiple pipelines, then he invested state money in a pipeline.
He attacked parents' ability to take care of their own children by removing tax fairness
for families of the state on parent, and then he brings in a government program to replace it.
So what you're seeing there is you say,
well, this sounds like these are utterly inconsistent positions. And the answer, no, they're not. They're
all very consistent. In all cases, what he does is takes away the ability of business or individuals
or families to do things for themselves and the requires they do things through him and through through the state. And his ideology is always about creating a pretext
in order to justify the state garnering more control
over every aspect of your life, how you raise your kids,
how your business functions, what you see and say
on the internet, he believes the state has to be everywhere
always.
But that's because as King Louis would say, Le Thas et moi, the state is him.
Well, you know, that's okay. So let's, I got a couple of things to throw at that. The first is,
you know, I think it's a very dangerous thing to attack the man rather than the ideas, but you're
making, you know, as a rule of thumb, but you're making a case that in this case, that can't be done because there is a personality trait that is uniting
diverse policy decisions that isn't ideational or ideological even. It is in fact personal.
And so my sense of Trudeau, initially, I was very upset with it with his decision to run
for Prime Minister because I thought, well,
you don't know anything and you're attractive and you can behave well in public and you
have a charming facade, but you don't know anything in any real sense. And there's no,
and there's no indication that you do. You're not particularly well educated and you're
not particularly accomplished. And this is actually a hard job, but worse than that, the only reason you even have the
vaguest possibility of succeeding is because you have the same last name as your father.
And so, and then Iran, and I thought, well, how do you justify that to yourself?
Because the gap of knowledge must have been painfully evident to him.
And the fact that the true doname, you could, you could say, well, you know, the liberal party came to me.
That's his justification.
They came to me and there wasn't another person
that could win on the liberal side
and better a Trudeau liberal,
even if it's a consequence of family name,
than any damn conservative, let's say.
But I still saw it as a manifestation
of a really profound narcissism.
I think a reasonable person would have said,
I'm not prepared for this, certainly not yet.
I'm not the man that there needs to be in this position.
So, I don't know what you think about those musings,
but that's how I looked at Trudeau.
I haven't seen anything in the preceding years
that has disabused me of any of those notions.
I think there's some truth in that. He is his victory, which definitely not a merit
to Craddock one, and he was probably the least-added Prime Ministerial candidate in our history.
The media just glossed over so much of his life to go straight to help him and protect him. It was almost like they built a protective cocoon around him.
And, you know, like he had, he had dressed up in grotesque, racist costumes.
So many times, he says he, by his own claim, he can't remember them all.
I mean, the average politician had done that once.
It would have been exposed
and that person would have been expelled
from politics altogether.
But, he had run as a middle class champion,
even though while he sheltered the millions he inherited
from his grandfather and a tax preferred trust fund,
all these things would have been front and center
in the public sphere had it been anyone other than a truto.
And but he was protected by the media
who still protect him because he really is their candidate.
He represents the political class
and the establishment in Canada.
Those who profit off a big bloated bureaucracy and regulatory
state in the old upper Canada aristocracy know that he will always deliver for them.
And he has.
He's delivered, he's delivered mightily for them.
That's why they're doing so well.
And that's why they'll fight tooth and nail to keep them there.
Why do you think he was and still remains attractive to a substantial,
subset of Canadians?
I mean, people seem to regard him as charming and caring.
And I think he is charming in a kind of shallow sense.
But it isn't obvious to me at all that he's caring,
but he seems to play the part and he plays it well enough so
that, well, many people, and this is true of people all over the world, certainly by the act.
So why do you think that is? And how do you combat that?
Yeah, look, he is charming. I won't deny that. And he's a good looking dude. But I don't think he's actually
that popular. So people, people forget he got, he got 32% of the vote in the last election,
68% of those who cast ballots voted against him. That's the lowest, he got the lowest share of
vote of any prime minister in Canadian history. And before him, the record was set by him
in the previous election.
He got 33% of the vote.
He never actually reached the height,
the vote share of the Harper God in 2011.
So we sometimes we think he's an extremely popular guy
because of the adulation he gets from the mainstream media.
But in fact, he's not that popular with ordinary Canadians.
What he succeeded at doing to his credit
is engineering a very efficient distribution of votes
so that with 32% of the vote, I think he got something like 45 or 46% of the seats.
And that is the nut we need to crack.
He wins a lot of seats with few votes.
We win few seats with with few votes. We win few seats, but lots of votes.
In fact, the last two elections, conservatives have beat him in the popular vote. We just haven't
got them in the right places. So we need to we need that's the change we need to make. And I believe
we will make in the forthcoming election. So you don't think that it is a preponderance of Canadians
who have had the will pulled over their eyes. It. No, he's not by look by any objective analysis of the data. He's not an especially
popular prime minister. And in fact, he's probably more on the side of an unpopular prime minister.
What about Mr. Jagmeet Singh, who for our international watchers and listeners is the leader of
the Canadian Socialist Party and in some sense the NDP, New Democratic Party and in some sense the person who holds the
balance of power right now in Canada's House of Commons and therefore the keys in some real
sense to the federal government. What do you think about Mr. Singh?
Well, he lacks a raison d'etre. Why does he exist? You've already got an MVP Prime Minister,
a socialist Prime Minister in Justin Trudeau.
So that means the socialist party has to try to figure out
what to do with itself.
And so far, Jagged has said, well,
that he'll just support Trudeau in a coalition.
And the problem is when you go back to the electorate,
people are gonna say, well,
you're part of the same problem.
I had a gentleman in, I was in Shandli in Quebec,
lifelong NDP supporter, very upset with how life is the guy
was telling me he's had to reduce his diet to one meal a day
because food is so expensive.
And he was voting for the NDP until he signed the NDP
form to coalition with Trudeau,
the guy who's caused all the misery.
It's going to be very hard for Jag Meat to go to the people
and claim that he represents anything
other than the Trudeau being status quo.
And I think that in the next election,
people will be looking for a drastic departure from Trudeau.
So they'll be looking for the anti-trudeau.
And so what do you think of him on the personal front?
I mean, one of the things that's really struck me about saying, apart from his unconditional
support for Trudeau, and exactly the manner you described, is that he seems almost stunningly
and singularly devoid of ideas.
I haven't seen anything come out of the NDP federally that isn't just woke nonsense, that
constitutes a genuine
appeal, let's say, to the working class. And I also thought that his, and we can talk
about this too, his response to the truckers gone boy, it was something remarkable to
behold, because here you had the party, the punitive party of the oppressed working class.
If anything, even more dismissive of that protest, then the Liberals, which is really
saying something, because, true to it, as you pointed out, called them misogynists and bigots,
and claimed completely falsely with the collusion of the CBC that the vast preponderance of the
money that funded that protest had come first from the bloody Russians, and then from the,
like from the American
Republicans who were apparently, you know, trying to stage a coup in a country they don't even really,
it isn't even really on their radar for reasons that no one's been able to.
I was in the States, you know, for three months, I went to 50 cities in the last three months and
I talked during the Q&A period about, in case people kept asking,
what's going on with Canada? And I said, well, you're not going to believe this, but our government
and our media have told Canadians that mag at type Republicans basically tried to stage a coup
to destabilize our democracy. And they would ask, and this was Democrats and Republicans alike, they would ask, well, why would we do that?
What possible motive, if we cared, which we don't, why in the world would we possibly
want to destabilize Canada's democracy?
And that's what that is.
Well, I always felt as a representative of Canada in that situation, I always felt like
I was in some
sense out of my mind because I couldn't believe that I could present that complex of ideas as a
reality and that there wasn't just something wrong with the way I was looking at the whole situation.
It's so utterly preposterous. So, well, back to Mr. Singh, he didn't support the truckers and at all.
No, and the NEP is abandoned, the working class.
They become another party of the elite institutional
aristocracy that they represent those with big salaries,
doing managerial work.
And many of whom have been able to work from home
with fully protected salaries and incomes
for the last two years, which is fine.
I mean, there's nothing wrong with having,
there's not, I don't begrudge anyone
for having had that good fortune,
but it's certainly if you are such a person,
then you shouldn't be judging those who are protesting because they've lost everything over the last two years. And you
would think that the NDP would have actually stood for the downtrodden, but that is not
what they really believe. And that goes back to what I was saying earlier, like you were
saying, you know, the left is theist parties that really care about the downtrodden and
the disfans, and the answer is, of course, not. That is the rhetoric. What they really
care about is a powerful state. And anyone who threatens the state is the enemy. And that's
what we saw with Jagmeet saying, you saw a group of people were independently raising their
voices for their freedom. And he said, we can't have that.
We're going to, I'm going to join with Trudeau and call him a bunch of horrible names.
And that's what he did, which is exactly the opposite of what you were supposed to do
if you really care about working class people.
Well, they seem the people who purported to care for the working class.
And this certainly happened with the American Democrats under Clinton seem perfectly willing to sacrifice the economic interests of the real working class, those
people who exist right now, to some hypothetical utopian future. And every time push comes
to shove, the real working class takes a walloping hit in the name of this hypothetical future
utopia. You see that on the energy front. We talked about policy there.
And that's certainly not only the case in Canada. It's like a church Hill when he visited our
home province of Alberta. And he saw the working classes in the energy sector. And his son,
And his son, Randolph, said, said, these are not members of the culturally elite. And he said, Churchill said to his son, yes, but the elite are about the glittering
stump that floats upon the river of production.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, well, I think maybe that was part of the backlash
against the truckers, you know,
because these real people came out and said,
we got a problem here with you guys.
You're pushing us down a little too hard,
and maybe you could stop doing it.
You're fundamentally violating our civil liberties,
and we might point out that this is in a country
that still does not allow its citizens to travel.
Yes, that's right.
And, you know, what I think that the real backlash
by the elites against the truckers was this idea
that truckers have no business going to Ottawa
and raising their voices.
That's the idea that the elites were trying
to push back against.
They think that the working classes should just shut
up and pay up and let the experts just run things for us and provide, and the population should
provide total deference to these institutional elites to just run our lives for us and do what we're told.
Now you stood up for the trucker.
So now you've had some time, it's been a couple of months,
you've had some time to consider your position.
And so can you tell me what you think happened
with the trucker protest?
And then I'd like to segue into the imposition
of the Emergencies Act, which is grist for the mill, let's say,
in terms of discussion. So, tell me your response to the trucker's protest in Convoy,
and where you stood and where you stand. So, as I said before, the truckers even arrived on when media asked me about it, I support those peaceful law-biting
truckers who came to Ottawa to peacefully protest for their livelihoods and
liberties. And I simultaneously condemn any individuals who broke laws
behavior badly or blockaded critical infrastructure. I think it's possible to hold
individually accountable bad actors without painting every single person with the same brush.
If you went to any protest that had nine or ten thousand people, you will find bad actors.
That doesn't mean that all nine or ten thousand are themselves bad actors. That doesn't mean that all nine or 10,000 are themselves bad actors.
For example, I was confronted by a journalist the other day who said yes, but what about
those journalists who, sorry, what about those truckers that were angry at journalists
and behave badly or conducted themselves poorly?
What do you say to them?
Well, they should be individually held to account for their behavior.
But you take some responsibility for supporting the cause.
Well, let me ask you this.
Do you hold every single environmentalist personally responsible for the acts wielding terrorists who went to the the Coastal Gas Link Pipeline construction site and started trying to kill
pipeline workers. Does every single person who's spoken out against pipelines
take personal responsibility for what those acts wielding terrorists did? Or are
the acts wielders themselves personally responsible? I mean, even I would say
no, you can criticize a pipeline, I disagree with you, you can criticize a pipeline without
taking personal responsibility for the violence of some ecoteric, you've never even met.
And so I walked around, I saw the truckers on parliament, by the way, those people weren't actually
there. The media depiction was total nonsense. If you watched it on television, you would think that it was Armageddon.
Jordan, every single member of parliament that condemned the truckers in the House of Commons during the protest had to walk right through the Tucker trucker convo.
Right? Because they were parked right off front. There was no way to get in with it walking
through them. And not one of them were prevented from walking through. It was peaceful. It was most of the time sort of a
jubilant type celebration and people came and went. They walked around on
Parliament Hill, members of Parliament of all political stripes walked
through the protest every day without incident. And yes, we're some businesses
were inconvenienced and lost money.
They should be compensated.
But by and large, it was a peaceful protest by people who generally don't get involved
in political activism.
They're truckers.
They drive truck all day.
Yeah, they have things to do, man.
They have things.
And you know, the thing is, why didn't they all go home after the first week?
Jordan, they had They have things. And you know, the thing is, what, you know, why didn't they all go home after the first week? Jordan, they had nowhere to go because the government had taken away their jobs. They weren't allowed to go back to their jobs. You can imagine, if Trudeau had just said,
we're going to lift the mandate on the truckers, they would have fired up their machines and hit
the road to go back to work, but he took away their jobs and their livelihoods. No wonder they stayed there for so long. And it was absolutely unscientific and malicious.
Look, if anyone is going to spread a virus, it sure as hell is not the guy who was sitting alone
by himself all day in a truck. So this was never about medical science. it was about political science, it was about demonizing a small minority
for political gain.
And I'm proud of the fact that people stood up
and fought for their freedoms in that case.
Well, there is a contempt associated with that
on the liberal and the NDP side that was really quite striking
to see, like really quite mind boggling to see.
And you know, the other thing that struck me about the truckers, because I talked quite a few of them also publicly when
the protest was occurring and suggested nearer the time when they did decide to leave that they
should probably leave because the crazies were going to show up and cause trouble, because I think
if you occupy anything, if you protest long enough, and the people who want to cause trouble
are going to gravitate. And I think they left about exactly when they should and that they
reached a lot of their goals. I mean, first of all, they did blow up the conservative party,
which I know they did exactly in tend to, but that wasn't nothing. And also, um, and
maybe you disagree with that interpretation, but also Canada really started to move on
the mandate front,
pretty much at the same time the truckers jumped up and down about it. And so I thought they did
extremely well. And I also think the world responded that way because that protest became a model for
similar and peaceful and useful protests all across the world. So now, what do you think happened
to the conservatives in the aftermath of the trucker's protest?
Am I being too harsh or?
No, I look, I don't know that there's a direct link between the two.
But I think, I think by and large, the concert, it was a difficult political challenge to hot potato for any political
party to manage.
But I can't speak for how everyone else in the caucus managed it or commented on it,
but I'm happy with where I landed.
I pushed through the controversy and stood my ground.
And I'm happy to say that my position on that protest is exactly the same as it was
before it even arrived in Ottawa. And I believe I can defend everything I did and set on it.
Okay, I'm going to ask you one last question. I'd like to talk to you for about two more hours,
but we can't do that. And I don't want to push the patience of the viewers listeners either.
but we can't do that. And I don't want to push the patience of the viewers listeners either.
Let's talk about the emergencies act. So what do you have to say about that?
Well, I mean, it's ironic that Trudeau brought in the emergencies act
after the border crossings were cleared of protest, which is the only, you know, the blockades of the border were wrong, I said so at the time. But that big said they had been resolved by the time Trudeau
actually brought in the Emergencies Act. And so what we effectively had at that point was about
you know, 10 or 11 blocks in downtown Ottawa that were blocked by trucks.
Now to put this into perspective, the emergency's act is sort of like a war measures act almost,
almost kind of like martial law.
Yeah, a lot like it.
We haven't actually done that in Canada since this law was actually instituted, his father used the War Measures Act to
attack some terrorist attacks by the radical Quebec Separatist group.
But since that time, we've not done it.
Even 9-11, when 24 or 25 Canadians were killed in a terrorist attack in New York, or when
a terrorist shot dead a soldier
at the war monument and then stormed parliament
spraying bullets around in all directions,
we didn't use it then.
And so we've never really used this law.
You would think that it would be used
in a case where there was a foreign invasion
or a monstrous terrorist attack or something of that magnitude.
But we never did. And then we, Trudeau did it for this protest. I think he ultimately
was just angry that he was personally facing a political protest and didn't want to
to face the political consequences of a democratic protest.
He also wanted to be as malicious as possible
to deter any similar protest.
So he actually seized bank accounts,
which caused a lot of people to have fear
that if they ever donated to the wrong political cause,
that the state might freeze their account
and shut them out of business.
So I think there's a lot of fear
as a powerful political tool.
And I think that's what he was trying to invoke
with the use of this act.
So what do you think should be done about the fact
that he did in fact invoke it?
Because this is a major league suspension of civil liberties
this along with the fact that unvaccinated Canadians
still can't leave the country or fly within the country or take a train.
And I see no excuse whatsoever for the imposition those restrictions as of now.
It's maliciousness.
It's vengefulness as far as I can tell.
So how is the government going to be held accountable when we have what's essentially
a coalition in place?
Well, it's going to be hard. I mean, I think it's going to have to be voters that will hold
them into account when we finally have an election. But they will, you know, they've appointed
someone who is a former liberal staffer to be the, to oversee the inquiry into the use of the act.
I think we need, I'm consulting with scholars, legal scholars on how we can curtail the power
and limit the use of the Emergencies Act in the future.
I want to be very careful, though, and how I do it, because this is an incredibly blunt
instrument.
But in times of war or foreign attack or something like that, you could understand
why there might be an occasion where these powers might be needed. So we need, but I do think
we need to craft changes to the act that will prevent it from being abused for political purposes
like this again. So I said at the beginning, I would be mindful of your time in our private conversation
before we started and we are unfortunately running out of time. And there's at least twice
as many things as we got to that I would like to get to. And so maybe we can do that in the
future. So I'd like to give you the opportunity at the end just to, well, is there anything
we didn't talk about today that's of signal importance that you would like to bring up today and and and and close with?
Yeah, I would just say, um,
You know, I think that we're divided right now in Canada because of a deliberate strategy of dividing conquer.
Governments that want to enhance their control, they have to turn citizens against
each other. They have to make you afraid of your neighbor, your coworker, your trucker,
so that you'll turn to the state for protection against your fellow citizenry. And that's the
oldest trick in the book, divide and conquer. Control is by its nature divisive because it's a zero-sum game. If one gets more
control, another must have less. Freedom is not quite the contrary. If your neighbor gets more
freedom, you don't get less freedom. But likelihood is you'll have more as well. So if your friend has more freedom of speech, well, you'll have freedom of speech.
If the immigrant has the freedom to work as a doctor, then you'll have the freedom to
have a doctor.
If the local small businessman has the freedom to function without red tape, then you'll
probably have the freedom to buy his products more affordably, or your teenager might get
a job, though, if the freedom to buy his products more affordably or your teenager might get a job though
You have the freedom to have a job with them
um, you know if the muslim or Jew gets more religious freedom then the Christian gets more religious freedom and that's why freedom is a unifying
um
Principle it brings people together because it allows each of them to be masters of their own destiny without taking anything from each other.
We fight over control, whereas we fight for freedom.
That is the difference.
And I believe we can bind up the nation's wounds by reinstating the ancient freedoms that
we inherited from our ancestors.
And so I really see my role as quite an unimportant one.
I'm here simply restoring what already belonged to Canadians
by virtue of their 800 year inheritance
of English liberties going back to the Magna Carta.
I'm just among the common people who are custodians
of that freedom while we're alive.
You know, Edmund Burke said it's a contract between the dead, the living, and yet to be born.
And we're the living generation has the duty to pass on that inheritance.
And that's what I see myself doing is to rekindle that inheritance and pass it on to my kids
and so they can pass it on to their kids.
And I'll pass away into the fade away into the past one day,
but hopefully we'll have secured the freedom
that we inherited for many more generations to come.
And that's what I mean when I want to give people
back control of their life in the present. it's also to extend it into the future.
So that's my purpose. That's why I'm running. I know people want to support me by
peer for PM.ca. That's peer for the number four PM.ca is how you can sign up,
become a member and do that. And I would be honored to have people support
in this enterprise.
Mr. Pierre Oliev, thank you very much
for talking with me today, much appreciated.
I hope we get a chance to continue this conversation.
There's many more things that it would be a pleasure
to jointly bring to the attention of Canadians.
So, and I would also say,
thank you for your, I think your courage in allowing me to do this, you know, I've asked
other politicians, including someone on the conservative side, and I've had some agree
to speak with me, but generally they seem intimidated by the span of time that stretches out in front of them, or perhaps, you know, not cognizant fully
of the power of YouTube dialogue, but you...
Well, thank you very much for participating
and for talking to me, much appreciated.
Thank you, Dr. Peterson.
I really appreciate your prodigious work
and I've enjoyed your books and look forward to continuing our
conversation into the future.
you