The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 283. Conservative Leadership Canada | Dr. Leslyn Lewis
Episode Date: August 30, 2022Dr. Leslyn Lewis is a Canadian Conservative member of Parliament, taking a stance within the party against her country's zero carbon goals. Today, she sits down with Dr Jordan B Peterson to discuss cl...imate change, its importance as a movement on a global scale, and how in many ways it has devolved into environmental imperialism.Dr. Leslyn Lewis is a Canadian Politician and Lawyer. After a successful law career based in Toronto, Canada; she burst onto the political scene in 2020 finishing 3rd in the Conservative Leadership Race but winning the popular vote. A current candidate in the 2022 Leadership race she has used her experience in International Law to stand against movements that threaten Canada's Sovereignty.For Leslyn Lewis:Follow Leslyn on Twitter: https://twitter.com/LeslynLewis?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5EauthorFollow Leslyn on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LeslynLewisCPC  Follow Leslyn on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/leslynlewiscpc/?hl=enCampaign Site: https://leslynlewis.ca/ // SIGN UP FOR DAILY WIRE+ //www.dailywireplus.com // SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL // Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/jordanbpeterson.co...Donations: https://jordanbpeterson.com/donate // COURSES // Discovering Personality: https://jordanbpeterson.com/personalitySelf Authoring Suite: https://selfauthoring.comUnderstand Myself (personality test): https://understandmyself.com // BOOKS // Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life: https://jordanbpeterson.com/Beyond-Order12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: https://jordanbpeterson.com/12-rules-...Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief: https://jordanbpeterson.com/maps-of-m... // LINKS // Website: https://jordanbpeterson.comEvents: https://jordanbpeterson.com/eventsBlog: https://jordanbpeterson.com/blogPodcast: https://jordanbpeterson.com/podcast // SOCIAL // Twitter: https://twitter.com/jordanbpetersonInstagram: https://instagram.com/jordan.b.petersonFacebook: https://facebook.com/drjordanpetersonTelegram: https://t.me/DrJordanPetersonAll socials: https://linktr.ee/drjordanbpeterson
Transcript
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Hello everyone, I'm pleased today to be talking to Dr. Lessland Lewis.
Dr. Lewis is a candidate for the leadership of the conservative party in Canada at the federal
level.
And although this is a podcast with an international audience, the leadership race in Canada
on the conservative front turns out to be something of some surprising international significance,
not least, I think, because our prime minister, Justin Trudeau, who I'm not
a fan of for those of you who don't know, is a real poster boy for the globalist utopians
who are busily attempting to make this planet far worse.
And so the best challenge to Trudeau on the political front in Canada will definitely
come from the conservative party
who have been the historical alternatives to Canada's liberals.
And Dr. Lewis is a signally important participant in that conservative leadership process.
She's more, I think, it's fair to say say on the socially conservative front, but a very interesting person. And so she's agreed to talk to me today, which I also think is a good
thing. I've talked to Pierre Pauliev, who's the front runner in the race and Roman Bobber.
So that'll be three, including Dr. Lewis. That'll be three of the five candidates. I reached
out to Jean-Charais, who used to be premier of Quebec,
but his team felt that speaking to a reprobate,
such as myself, was probably not in his interest.
And there's another candidate, H.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S.S but we'll start with the bio. Lesslyn Lewis graduated with a bachelor's degree
from the University of Toronto, Trinity College,
graduating Magna Cum Laude.
She had a master's degree in environmental studies
from York University with a concentration in business
and environment from the Schulick School of Business
and a jurist doctor from Osgoot Hall Law School
and a PhD in Law from Osgoot Hall Law School.
She and her family are residents of the town of Dunville, where she serves her community
as member of Parliament for Haldeman Norfolk.
Lesslin exploded onto the National Political scene when she ran previously for the leadership
of the Conservative Party in 2020, despite having
no pre-established political network and coming from relative obscurity, her vision of
a strong united and prosperous nation resonated with Canadians right across the country.
She finished in third place in the race, winning the popular vote ahead of eventual winner
Aaron O'Toole and party co-founder Peter McKay.
Dr. Lewis is currently running for the second time in the current battle for the Canadian conservative federal leadership.
So welcome, Dr. Lewis. Thank you very much for making time.
It's quite exciting to have the opportunity to engage in these long-form discussions on the political front.
I think that's something perhaps revolutionary in Canadian politics
to be able to circumvent the legacy media, let's say.
So welcome to the podcast.
Thank you. It's a great pleasure to be here,
and I'm very honored to be here with you today.
Yeah, so people, we might as well start right from the beginning.
Let's do a little bit of a biographical discussion to begin with.
Tell me a bit about your family, tell me about your background,
and then also you're very well educated,
and then you made a foray into politics.
Let's walk through that a little bit so that we can place you
in everyone's imagination before we move to the policy side of things.
Well, as you said, I reside in a small community called Dunville.
It's in the writing of Haldomen Norfolk,
which is in the Niagara area, South of Hamilton,
for those of you who are familiar with Southern Ontario.
And as you said, I've recently just emerged into politics and I felt a
calling on my life to really serve, use my skills that I have honed over the last few
decades in education, in law, in just practical business experience, use that to better my
country. Because right now I see that our country is at a
precipice. And I'm concerned about the future of our country. I'm concerned about my children
and the future that they will have. And the dreams that I've had in this country and that I've
been able to realize, I'm very concerned that they won't be there for future generations.
When we look at the $1.3 trillion that we have in
death and the fact that every day just to service that debt we're paying over
$140 million a day, just in interest payments just to service that debt. And the
fact that my children will owe $45,000 is their share of the national debt. And so
there are so many things that are happening in this world that are having influences
on whether or not we will survive as a sovereign nation.
And so I think that my experience, lending my experience to this cause is one of the most
noble things that I feel that I've done in my life.
So when you were in university, you, you, you spend a lot of time
in university, let's walk through your education back to that. And then, well, maybe, maybe, that
didn't used to be a problem, although it's become one. Let's walk through your university career,
and then tell me about your developing interest in politics. So what your first degree was at the University of Toronto?
Yes, it's actually in sociology, African studies
with a minor in women's studies in philosophy.
So as you can see, I have well versed in the social sciences.
And I understand the language of many things
that are transpiring now.
I went through the education system and
throughout my education I often felt that I was in an environment that they were trying to mold me.
But in the earlier years at the University of Toronto, I had the ability to at least, I knew where
the limits were, but I also had the ability to challenge. Whereas
I found in my later stages that things, there was more conformity in education and there
was less diversity of thought, which was very, very concerning to me. And even in my later
days of teaching, I almost felt like an undercover agent because I couldn't really necessarily reveal that I was conservative,
although it came out later on because I was asked to help out the party in 2015 at the end of my PhD
and to run in an election, in a writing that there was a scandal in and so I had to step in last minute. So at the end, it was revealed, but I don't think that many people were really cognizant
of how much of a conservative I was, because that's not something that's really, really
celebrated in university.
And that sounds like really ironic that one would say that in a institution of higher learning
that you would not be able to celebrate diversity of thought,
but that's what the end of my university career was like
and that's really unfortunate.
What years were you studying sociology
and women's studies at the University of Toronto?
Oh, in the 90s, in the early 90s
I completed my first degree.
Okay, so that's a very, both sociology and women's studies are very left-leaning, certainly
now, but they were back in the early 1990s, too.
There was kind of a little initial peak of political correctness in the universities in
the early 1990s.
So, two questions there.
Why did you decide to go into sociology and women's studies
and were you conservative in your orientation then?
And if so, how did you bridge that gap?
Well, actually, my family came here as immigrants
and the liberal party was the party that they
felt most at home in. And so, although I grew up in an ultra-altrow conservative family,
religious-wise, economically-fiscally conservatives, just a traditional immigrant family that comes
Just a traditional immigrant family that comes to Canada and has the foundations of strong family values, believing in strong faith values, and a strong faith in your community and
contributing to that community.
So I would consider myself as growing up in a conservative family, although it was a politically
liberal family.
And when I went to school, I didn't even think about politics at all.
I just wanted to get an education.
And I was concerned about some of the social dilemmas
because I was very active in my church doing prison ministry,
working with at risk youth.
And so I was very concerned about the social dilemmas
and so sociology was a natural fit.
And sociology really was about understanding
the theoretical underpinnings of what really,
of what society was comprised of.
So it was a lot of theory.
And so I didn't really find that it was left leaning.
Women's studies, of course, that was my minor,
and that was more so left leaning,
but it was still very theoretical, but then.
Now what I'm finding is a lot of the theories
have become dogma and have seeped into the mainstream narrative
and have become the norm rather than just a theory.
And so that's the difference between what I went to school in the 90s and what's studied now.
And you could have alternative positions, but then whereas now I find that you're demonized
for having critical thought abilities.
Okay, so the advantage of that would have been to have gone through that four-year initial period would have been that you became very conversant, say, with the progressive views, the downside would have been, or the
tension that you would have experienced, I presume, between your beliefs and the beliefs
that were being promoted. Why weren't you convinced by the more progressive doctrines of the sociologists and the women's
studies teachers?
What did that do to your, what did experiencing that tension for four years due to the way
that you conceptualized your philosophy and your practical approach?
Well, it does shape you.
Even though you have that conservative foundation,
that education does impact on you,
because there are things that I had bought into
that I'm just even now recognizing
that may not have been all encompassing
or may not have been ideally where I would have been
had I not had that education.
So there was a notion that
I had to just my success was really based on what I could materially get from society
or my educational pursuits and it was there was a lot of friction there with also raising a family and having a successful marriage, etc.
So many of that, I think, may have even undermined some of the traditional values that I had.
And I don't know whether that's a good joined the reform party because I saw that Preston
Manning, his values were very much in line with what I believed.
And there were questions that I had through my education that weren't being adequately
answered.
And so I just naturally gravitated towards my upbringing, and I found that he, as a leader, was somebody
who, I believed, was a very dignified and upstanding person, and I saw the values that he had for,
and the desires that he had for this country.
And so I aligned myself with that party very early on. So do you think, having been educated on the progressive front,
do you think that you developed a deeper appreciation
for the perspective that's being put forward there?
I mean, the progressive argument is something like people
who have authority and status often benefit from unfair privilege and opportunity
and capitalize on power, let's say, at the expense of people who are less fortunately
situated in the hierarchical structure of society.
You know, and there's some truth to that, obviously, because power corrupts
every human institution, and we have to keep an eye out on it. Why do you think you were
unconvinced by the more radical stream of the progressive doctrine, especially given that you
were immersed in it for four years, and subject to a fair bit, I imagine both of conceptual and peer pressure.
Well, as I said, from a theoretical perspective, a lot of it doesn't make sense. The problem
that I'm having now is that it's almost being enversed. So we know that privilege is relative.
I oftentimes I've walked into a room and people would say to me,
oh, you're a lawyer, how they would know that, perhaps by the way I speak, by the way I carry
myself. So there is relative privilege in different aspects of your social ranking. And
that's something that we've always had in society. The reason why I speak about an inversion is because what I'm seeing is that they will
often make your identity your master status.
And so that's what I push back on right now because we were able to critically analyze
why that is not good for society.
But I even find myself right now, even in the conservative race, as someone who has
only the only track record of someone running a conservative leadership race and winning
the popular vote as an outsider, I still will not get media coverage and attention primarily because I don't fit their narrative.
And their narrative is that the conservative party is a white racist party.
And so to have me potentially highlight me would go against the media and the social narrative.
So much to the point that in 2020 Kamala Harris was featured over 80, 800 times more than I was,
even though she was not running in our country,
and even though her position was an appointment,
and I was running to earn my position
as a leadership candidate,
as a leader as the conservative party.
So those things, it shows you largely how
the left kind of, they've reversed even what their beliefs are to the point that when you don't
fit their narrative, they come after you and they attack you very, very viciously.
So it's very perverse, because you're you're objecting on philosophical grounds to
the idea that you should be categorized by, let's say, your race and your sex. And yet the left
insists that that's the cardinal distinction between people. And then insists that people like
that should be brought to the forefront because they've been marginalized. And then insists that
that that should only be the case.
Clarence Thomas is a good case in point two who's been pilloried like mad for not fitting
the mold.
So despite the fact that you have the, let's say self-evident characteristics that the
left is trumpeting the fact that you aren't conducting yourself in a manner that seems
to be ideologically appropriate means that in some real sense
that your persona non-grata and that really is interest. That's the inversion that you're speaking about. That really is a fascinating
phenomenon as far as I'm concerned. So
All right, so after you are at the University of Toronto
your next degree was what?
you are at the University of Toronto. Your next degree was what?
A Master's of Environmental Studies.
Okay, so that's a bit of a detour.
Now, you've jumped from one leftist hotbed
into an even more leftist hotbed,
I would say, because not only are you
taking environmental studies,
you're taking environmental studies at York,
which is definitely one of Canada's,
I mean, that place is paralyzed by strikes about every two years. I would say it's fair to say that is definitely one of Canada's, I mean, that place is paralyzed by strikes about every two years.
It's, I would say, it's fair to say that must be one of Canada's most leftist, higher
educational institutions.
And so now you've jumped into environmental studies, why environmental studies, and why
York, and what was that like?
To be honest with you, I don't even know why I decided
to choose environmental studies other than the fact
that I had a deep concern about the environment,
about our stewardship.
And it wasn't something that I thought
that I was going to make a lot of money from or that
it was on a desired path.
It was almost like a honing signal, like something that sent out to you and drawing you to that,
but you can't really put your finger on why it is that you did that degree.
That's just the best way I can explain it.
I'm very happy that I did do that.
And even that program was very, very different
than what this environmental studies is now.
Even then, I feel that I had a well-rounded,
all-encompassing education in the environment.
It wasn't the notion of climate wasn't, the notion of climate change
and the politicization of climate change
wasn't something that I dealt with
as a master student in the environment.
That is a recent phenomenon that we've taken climate change.
We've politicized it.
We've made it as scientific
and we've used it as
a revenue generating tool to conjure up fear.
And that wasn't something that I found in my studies.
So what did you, okay, so let's go into that a little bit.
So, what did you learn in your couple of years, two years master's program?
Was it?
What did you learn about the environment and tell me how that shaped your thinking now?
I'm a big fan.
People know this.
I'm a big fan of Bjorn Lomburg.
He's done a pretty comprehensive analysis of sustainability and environmental issues.
And also, a man named Marion Tupy, who's wrote a great book recently called Super Abundance.
There are both of them are trying very hard to sort out the priorities of the various
environmental concerns that do, in fact, be said as, what did you learn at York?
And what do you think is of stellar importance on the environmental front confronting us
now?
Well, you'd be surprised what I learned.
Well, starting from the theoretical perspective of, say,
sustainability, our common future, that notorious book,
we started from that foundation, but we also learned,
we also learned the role of big pharma and that
that could be all consuming.
We also learned about some of the improprieties that were committed by big pharma in South
and in in in Southern nations, whether it's South America or African countries. We also learned about sustainability and the role of farmers in generational
ability to sustain the land, intergenerational ability. We learned about the atmosphere and in a very very different way
than how we're talking about it right now. We
than how we're talking about it right now. We knew that nitrogen made up 98% of the atmosphere
that oxygen made up 21%.
And that carbon was 0.04.
So we talked about carbon reduction
in a very, very different way than we have done now,
which is more of a politicized way.
And it's completely different.
I'm not sure what is being taught now
in an environmental studies program,
but it was fascinating because we looked at things
like the role of Monsanto and the appropriation
of biodiversity and how that will lead
to fewer choices for people in the farming sector.
So it was something that I was pre-empted towards, that I was pre-warned, that these things
were coming.
And we've looked at even African communities in the role of some of the United Nations
food programs, how they actually destabilize those communities. If you look at, say,
reduce, there's a program called Red, reduce emissions for deforestation and degradation.
And that program basically encouraged people in certain African communities not to cut down trees because they said it was contributing to a very bad
carbon footprint. It was contributing to depletion and carbonization of the environment, etc. And so
they encouraged those individuals not to cut down trees.
And the people were hungry.
They began to starve.
You saw malnutrition in communities
that never had malnutrition before.
And so they had to go back and say, well,
we are encouraging them not to cut down these trees,
but they're starving.
Either in other projects, they encourage people not to, they were using corn for ethanol
and the people were going hungry.
And so we're looking at all of these programs and you have to ask whether or not it's serving
humanity.
And even if we look at our situation in Canada,
and we look at even our resource sector,
in my master's program, we were taught
that resource development is not mutually exclusive
from environmental sustainability.
That's what we were taught.
And so we looked for ways to solve problems,
whether that's through efficient technology,
innovative technology, working with corporations to make sure that their impact or their footprint
is minimal and that they can remedy some of the damage that's caused to the environment.
So we looked for solutions.
Whereas in politics, now I'm finding that it is just fear.
Let's create enough fear and then we can then have this really intrusive policy and it
doesn't matter what the outcome is, whether or not that policy will have the outcome of improving
the environment.
That just goes out the window.
And that's what's really frustrating to me as someone who has an education in environmental
studies, that we are not seeing that the policies have a positive outcome on the environment.
It's just largely revenue generating.
Yeah, you brought up a bunch of issues there.
One issue, I would say, is the idea that somehow we have to make life difficult
for impoverished people so that the environment will improve. You talked about the injunction to cease deforestation and the consequent generation of hunger.
The first thing that I think conservatives and intelligent liberals could agree upon
and insist upon is that there's no pathway to environmental sustainability that involves making already
poor people more miserable. First of all, because we shouldn't be making them more miserable,
that's for sure. And second, because people can't care about broader environmental concerns
when they're so desperate, they're worried about tonight's shelter and the next meal.
And so the idea that we have to accept arbitrary limits to growth, economic growth, which are
mostly going to hurt poor people and higher energy prices and higher food prices, which are
mostly going to hurt poor people, and that that's going to help on the environmental sustainability
front.
That's just, it's not only nonsense and a lie.
It's an anti-truth.
You couldn't say anything farther from the truth than that.
I completely agree with you, Dr. Peterson, in that it's actually, and I'll tell you
a story that happened to me during my math.
Actually, it was during my PhD.
I was unable to publish a paper because I referenced the
term environmental imperialism.
And the peer reviewed reviewers told me I had to take that word out in order to publish
my paper.
So I said, absolutely not, I won't do it.
So I had to keep shopping it around to different places.
I finally got it published.
And that's really what you're talking about is environmental imperialism.
Because what the West is doing now is saying, we've developed.
And yes, our path of development wasn't good for the environment.
And we've learned.
And so now we want you to learn.
And therefore, we don't want you to have all the luxuries
that we have, because we've destroyed the environment.
You stay in your state of no worse.
Exactly, or worse.
And we will find a way to protect the environment,
not recognizing that you may want to have electricity,
have some of the luxuries that we have,
and instead of finding a way that we could,
for lack of a better word, bring other societies
along to the path of development
in an environmentally sustainable way.
You have this notion of environmental imperialism where you say, no, you can't cut down that
tree for food because we want to protect the forest.
It's an elitism that is coming into environmental protection and it comes from, and I'm going
to use the word privilege, that
it is a stance of privilege. I think that's a proper way to use it, that we in this society
we have the privilege of having all these luxuries and then we have the audacity to tell people
that they should not strive for the same things in their lives.
Not just to tell them, to force them under power of law to do so. I mean, we look at what happened
to Sri Lanka as a case in point. And you know, my sense, I spent about two years studying
issues of environmental sustainability and economic development. And that's when I realized,
which was a great delight and shock to me,
that the fastest way forward to true environmental sustainability was to eradicate poverty. I
thought, well, that's a good deal. We can eradicate poverty, and that'll be good for the planet. And
then I also thought and tell me what you think of this. The pathway forward to the amelioration of poverty and environmental sustainability is, let's say, to make the
absolutely poor richer.
Because then they'll start to care about the environment.
And so once you get them up to about $5,000 a year in GDP, people start to be concerned
about longer term issues because they can afford to.
And then there's a pathway of development there that's quite clear as far as I can tell
that involves cheap energy because energy is work and energy is food.
And so the pathway is something like, while people burn dung or wood, it's better to replace
that with coal.
And then it's better to replace the coal with oil and the oil with natural gas.
And the natural gas conceivably with nuclear and some judicious mix of renewables.
And each of those steps is somewhat more expensive using current technology.
So generally speaking countries have to pass through that entire developmental sequence.
And I know that the developing world is planning to generate something like 170 coal-fired plants
in the next few years.
And then I don't know how many nuclear plants China is planning to build, but a lot.
And so instead of interfering with that and making fossil fuel, unconstantably expensive, and then driving countries like China to shop for bad sources of coal, instead of relatively clean burning coal. We're moralizing like mad
in our privilege in the West. And we're doing all these people to not only privation and want
in a very fundamental sense, but to an environmentally degraded future. So the bloody leftists on
the environmental front are not only getting, are not only putting forward a vision that's
contrary to a conservative vision or a true liberal vision, but they're putting forward
a vision that isn't going to result in what they purport to desire.
No, absolutely.
And it goes even beyond, say, electrifying the South.
It comes, it goes into sustaining their food source.
And right now there is a major attack on even their food source.
If you take the situation in Sri Lanka, the situation in Sri Lanka is not much different
than what we will be facing here, ironically.
It started off with lockdowns. The lockdowns really, really crippled the
average person who made their living selling on the streets through tourism, vending, and
that impact was still there when they imposed even more restrictions on the nitrogen content in the fertilizer.
So you had people who were used to making their money by selling tea, tea farming, and with
the 30% nitrogen content reduction, their yields were much less.
And so they couldn't sustain themselves economically.
And then you even had the rice farmers in Sri Lanka also,
which is a large staple cash crop there.
And they also had to deal with the nitrogen content
to reduction.
And so they weren't making the type of money.
So you don't have the money flowing through the system
that you ordinarily would.
And then you have from the lockdown, the supply chains were so limited that the cost of
everything increased. And people have fewer dollars to even purchase these items now. And
so that's why you saw them raid the presidential palace because I like, I like goes off.
Why should these politicians be living in a palace in luxury while I cannot even put
one meal a day on the table for my family?
And that's why they said enough is enough.
Okay, so let's put that so let's put that in context.
Now, we talk about the nitrogen issues.
So, first thing is that we've seen now a tremendous amount of unhappiness on the Dutch
farmer front.
So the judicial authorities in Holland accused the Netherlands government of failing to
live up to its international obligations on the pollution emigration front and required
immediate action to be taken with regards to nitrogen pollution, which admittedly can
be a problem. Now the plan that the Netherlands imposed by compulsion will result in the destruction
of a substantial proportion of the Netherlands farming infrastructure.
And the people who are promoting this say, well, we think this sector can be resilient
enough to manage this, but the farmers know perfectly
well that many of them are going to be forced out of business as the politicians themselves
have not only admitted, but are aiming for.
And now there is this approximately 30% reduction in the Dutch herd and the associated farms.
And the politicians who are pushing this seem to think that the whole agricultural sector in the Netherlands, which is the world's second biggest exporter
of agricultural products, that the infrastructure there will be able to tolerate this forced
and compelled reduction in supply and consequent increases in costs.
But my sense is the whole agricultural section will stagger and fall, especially
under the weight of these post-COVID supply chain problems.
I mean, I can't see how you can take a whole industry that runs on about a three to five
percent margin, force a 30 percent reduction in its inputs over an eight year period and
just expect the whole system to survive.
Now, they don't expect it to survive.
They don't expect it to survive.
Okay, we'll get into that.
Now, just to add a little twist to that, now the Dutch farmers are out protesting.
There's 40,000 of them with their big tractors and they don't do that lightly because those
tractors are expensive and they're very busy.
And right in the bloody midst of this, our Prime Minister did exactly
the same thing. He unilaterally announced a mandatory 30% reduction in nitrogen output
and he on the farmer side, and he wasn't even willing to tie that to units of nitrogen
used per unit of food produce. Because apparently he doesn't give a damn
whether we produce food effectively.
And then that means that poor people will go hungry.
So what do you make of this?
Again, we said, this isn't even good environmental policy.
It's not going to work.
And I don't know what's gonna happen in Sri Lanka,
but my suspicions are the people are going
to be cutting down the forests and eating the animals because what the hell else are they
going to do?
Exactly.
You're absolutely correct.
I don't believe that they expect the survival of the system.
The policies are created largely because they don't believe that system is worth keeping.
And they've said it to the farmers in the Netherlands.
They've said that to them.
In some places, the nitrogen reduction content is up to 90% if it's near conservation.
In the Netherlands, up to 90%.
And remember, these farmers, including our farmers, they have been approached about this net
zero before.
This is not the first time.
And they were told, if you invest in innovative technologies, that would bring down your carbon
footprint, and therefore you would get some credits for that.
And so many of those farmers in the Netherlands,
they spent millions of dollars investing
in innovative technology.
And then after that, the government said,
what, that's not good enough.
Then they brought in the nitrogen requirements.
So then they imposed the nitrogen requirements
upon an already fragile industry.
And then the Dutch farmers said, well, we will not be able exactly like in Sri Lanka to
make the yields that it would be worth financially us continuing this industry.
And what did the government say?
Well, if your farms can't sustain itself, they're not sustainable. We'll buy them or a corporation will buy them from you,
but we cannot continue to invest in an unsustainable business.
And when the Dutch farmers come out and say,
well, we are one of the largest exporters of cash crops.
Certain cash crops.
What is the government say, oh, no, you're not.
You import a lot of the things that you need to produce that.
And so when you minus that from the equation, you're actually negligible in the world scheme of the food supply chain.
So they have an answer for everything. And not only that, when the Dutch farmers said, okay, let's look at if this is really about the environment and the Canadian farmers are saying the same thing.
Let's look at our contribution
and the contribution that we make to carbon sequestration
when we plant crops, carbon is sequestred in the soil.
And so do we get in Canada, the questions asked,
do we get a reduction from our carbon tax that
we're paying to dry the crops?
Can we get a reduction on that carbon tax?
And the question, the answer is no.
In the Netherlands, what was the answer?
The government basically said, well, no, you don't get to do the calculations.
We are the ones who set the calculations.
So the metrics, they don't even want to negotiate on the metrics, which tells you how
dictatorial this whole process is when you cannot even have people who have tended to the
land for generations, who are probably some of the most experienced farmers in the world where
you say their input is not valid.
It tells you that there is an agenda beyond just protecting the environment because if
it were just protecting the environment, you would want all of these viable inputs and
you would want to say, okay, this practice, if it can be done in a sustainable manner, let's do it.
No, you impose a restriction that you know
will kill the industry.
Okay, so I'm gonna walk through a bunch of that.
Okay, so let's lay out the argument here
on the progressive side and take it apart.
Okay, so the first argument is,
oh no, the environmental apocalypse is coming.
Okay, so now let's think about that. Isn't apocalypse coming? Well, we've heard about various apocalypsees for the last 40 years, and many of them needed to be taken seriously, and so we could
say there's some threat. But let's walk through that a little bit more. It's like, okay, we can see bad things coming in the future. Now, my question would
be, well, who's qualified to deal with those hypothetical emergencies? Now, here's a psychological
answer. You tell me what you think about this, because I've just been formulating it. So, of the things you do as a therapist when people are afraid of something is you teach
them how to confront it voluntarily.
And maybe someone's afraid of other people.
They're socially anxious so they don't like going to parties.
And so you might say, well, your assignment for this week is to go to a party.
And the person says, well, that makes me too afraid. I don't think I can do it.
I'll get irritable and it isn't going to work. And so you say, okay, well,
let's scale it back to find something you can do that doesn't paralyze you and make you irritable.
And so maybe you say, well, you go say hello to the person who runs your corner store
and introduce yourself.
That's your assignment for the week. And then they go out and see if they can do that. And so
so you don't want to
confront people with a monster that's so big that it terrifies them into paralysis or
turns them into a tyrant, let's say.
So now you're an environmentalist and you're facing the apocalypse
and you say, oh my god, I'm so terrified of this that I'm virtually paralyzed. And then you say,
not only that, it's such an emergency that I'm 100% justified in using compulsion.
On others, not bringing them along voluntarily, not developing a shared vision, not talking
in detail to the Dutch or the Canadian farmers who are among the most efficient utilizes
of resources per unit of food grown in the world.
None of that, it's top down.
And so then I would say, look, if your vision of the future is so apocalyptic that you're paralyzed into paralysis
or you're terrified into paralysis and you've become a tyrant, then you're not the right
person for the job.
Your own psychological reaction is showing that.
Instead you should be out there talking to people, the farmers in particular, let's
say, and maybe we
could throw in the truckers for good measure, who actually have to deal with these things on a
day-to-day basis, to find a shared vision. It's not like the bloody farmers want to spend any more
money on fertilizer than they have to, and get people to come along voluntarily. And so here's the moral hazard. All right, it's the apocalypse.
That's the claim. We need net zero, because that means we don't have to think about all
the painful details. This is terrifying us because it's such an emergency. And therefore,
conveniently for us, we need all the decision-making power and we need it now.
And so the problem here is that the apocalypse justifies the emergence of a tyrant.
And that's what we're seeing play out.
Now, I'll add one more detail to that.
You said, well, we both discussed the idea that even by the measures that the environmentalists use,
these policies appear to be counterproductive.
They're going to destroy the industries.
They're going to throw people into poverty.
They're going to produce social chaos.
And so then you think, well, okay, if they know, if they don't know this, then that's unforgivable
ignorance.
If they do know it, then it's unforgivable malevolence.
And you might say, well, what's driving that?
How about if we had to choose between destroying capitalism and saving the environment, we would
choose destroying capitalism?
Well, you've packed a lot into that.
And what I do want to do is just turn back to this whole climate change narrative.
So we know climate change is both man-made and it is natural.
The problem is that our solutions, of course, they're only focused on the man-made component
and they want you to believe that it's only man-made, which that's not true.
But that's all we could do is effect that man-made component.
The hypocrisy that we see in the policies is what I have a problem with.
Every day we're importing 555,000 barrels of oil a day into Canada, 555,000.
And yet, we're importing them from often dictatorship regimes
with poorer environmental records than ours.
So we're rewarding bad behavior.
And yet, we are saying that we cannot develop our natural resources.
But we're admittingly stating that we have not moved past a point where we can live without those natural resources. But we're admittedly stating that we have not moved past a point where we
can live without those natural resources. So that's one sense of the hypocrisy that I see.
Another sense is, yes, you're right. It is a deliberate attempt to kill certain industries.
For example, they have been programming us for years that eating beef is selfish and
that if you continue to eat meat, you're a selfish person. It's they've been programming
us to want to eat bugs and to not want to eat, especially beef. And so you see this predictive programming coming out. And when you juxtapose that with
something that they say is one of their saviors like electric cars, and you say, okay, we're
going to do a net zero analysis of beef. And they like to do that. And they will say,
that state that you ate Dr. Peterson last night, well, you have to take
into consideration the entire life cycle of that cattle that you ate.
And so they start from the farm.
They look at all of the feces and the dung excreted from that cattle over its lifetime.
It's impact on runoff into the water.
They look at how much grass that cattle has eaten. And then they look
at the transportation costs to get that piece of nice beef on your plate that you ate last
night. And they say, well, when you do the net zero calculation, that piece of beef is
not sustainable. But let's take an electric car. They do not start from in a coal-bought mine in Africa or even
for a computer in a lithium mine in Africa with a poor five-year-old child that if you
looked at the just the abuse that that child had to endure, your heart wouldn't melt.
It is, it's just such egregious circumstances,
outrageous circumstances that those children are put under.
And yet these are the minors of the components
that we need in order to go in that electric car.
So they don't start there.
Then you look at the battery, right?
And no, let's look at the fact that the battery has to be charged.
What is it charged with?
It's charged with carbon.
But yet that's not included in the carbon footprint.
And then you look at the battery, the disposal of that battery,
at the end of the life cycle of that car.
And you know that the, to decompose that battery at the end of the life cycle of that car. And you know that the, to decompose that battery
will take, I think, by one calculation, I don't quote me.
I think I heard 75 years.
So when you look at the life cycle of that
and you do a net, net zero calculation on that,
you will see that it is not as green as we are
told that it is. And many of the green products are not as green.
Well, didn't the EU a month ago redefine green to include natural gas and nuclear, which
begs a major question, which is, well, why weren't they defined that way
to begin with? And what's the grounds for the reclassification? And, well, on the nuclear
front, that's been bothering me for years. It's like, well, France has done a pretty good
job providing a stable power grid for a number of decades now. And that's about as green
as it gets. There's the problem of disposal of nuclear waste, but that's a manageable problem.
There's always a problem with energy solutions.
I just can't help but see that, and I've watched the environmentalists leftists do this internal
battle of ethics because the left, at least in principle, let's say they have two broad
concerns.
Well, three, one is amelioration of absolute
poverty. Another is amelioration of relative poverty, that's the inequality argument, and the third
is something like environmental sustainability. And so then you might say, well, what happens when
those goals run into paradoxical juxtaposition? And so then you have to decide if you're going
to save the planet or you're going to save the poor. And the answer on the environmental
front, as far as I can tell, continually has been, oh, to hell with the poor, we're going
to save the planet. And then the catastrophe of that is, well, if you don't save the
poor along with the planet, then you doom the planet and the poor.
And that seems like a really bad solution to me.
It goes even deeper to look at the fact
that the net zero calculation now is basically
an attempt to really transition us from one economic mode
of production to a new one.
And it's been very, very clearly stated.
It's been very clearly stated by Klaus Schwab
in his book The Great Reset,
which is not a conspiracy.
You can find it on Amazon.
And that's not a pitch for him.
So also a terrible book.
It's a terrible book.
I read that book.
It is full of platitudes. It's full of platitudes, that book. You know, I read that book. It is full of platitudes.
It's full of platitudes, that book.
Yep.
And there's not a lot of substantiating the grand theories in the book.
But it is a grand theory of where they see our entire society going.
And one of the big champions of this grand theory is Justin Trudeau.
He wants to remake our society in a post nationalist image of what he considers to be a egalitarian
flat society. But there are still a lot of inequities. If you look at the recent conference that they had in Davos, they basically put limousines
on jets in order to get them over there so that they could be driven around in luxury,
but yet they want to limit the travel of average Canadians.
And so you see this dichotomy and this two-tiered society being created, one where they're
going after the food supply chain to control your consumption.
And the only way they can do that is through the farmers.
Then the second thing is to go after your consumption and daily purchasing, which will come through environmental social governance.
And the environmental social governance program
is a completely new international accounting program
that requires small and medium-sized businesses
to allocate the carbon footprint
of every single product that they sell.
And to quantify that, different users will have different products.
Your cab, you may use your camera once a year on vacation, and another person may use it
every day to film.
So the carbon footprint, it's almost impossible to measure, but yet they're coming up with this system
which can only be implemented by lawyers, accountants, consultants.
So you have the lawyers, the accountants and contractors getting wealthy while small
businesses will be struggling to under war red tape than they have now to be able to
meet these standards of this environmental
social governance.
And the ironic thing about this, Dr. Peterson, is that if these same companies are operating
say in China or overseas, these same Canadian companies do not have to subject those citizens and that country purchasers to that same level of
tracking the carbon footprint.
Right.
Well, so this is a crucial issue here because one of the things we really have to understand
is that if we don't develop our ability to generate and disseminate cheap energy in the developed countries, where we have
high, not only high standards of environmental stewardship on the legal front, but an ethos of
environmental stewardship among the distributed business class. It's already there. They're already
aiming at that. All that's going to happen is that worse providers elsewhere
are going to be brought aboard. As you said, we're buying oil from, let's say, Canada, isn't,
I don't think we import oil from Russia, but obviously the Europeans import fossil fuels
from Russia like mad. All we're doing is enabling the Chinese and the dictatorial golf states to fill in the gaps, let's say, and
I cannot see in any possible way how that's going to be good for poor people or good for
the environment in any sense whatsoever. And I think your comments about Trudeau being
a poster boy for the close Schwab and the W E F types. And also your comments on ESGs, which everyone
should know about the ESG mandates that are coming in at the corporate level. If we get
snuckered into a digital currency, which seems to me to be highly probable, then not only
our corporate expense is going to have to be accounted for in terms of their hypothetical
carbon footprint, but every bloody purchase that individuals make
is going to be subject to exactly the same kind of analysis and taxation and nudging and
pressure.
And so every consumer decision we make is going to be weighed up in terms of our environmental
impact for no good outcome.
Let's make that clear.
To make everything more expensive, to make energy more expensive, to make food more inaccessible,
to hurt the planet, to make it more difficult for people to conduct their business, and
for poor people to starve.
That's the bloody vision that's being put forth by the half-wit cliche mongers like
Klaus Schwab.
Well, let me first speak about the first point that you made about bad actors.
So we have the third largest accessible oil reserves on the planet in Canada, which we
leave largely untapped.
And right now in Europe, 40% of their supply is coming from Russia. If we were able to develop our natural
resources, even get our LNG to tidewater, get it over to Europe, we could actually offset
dependency on Russian oil. And so you're absolutely right that the need is still there and the fact that our government
has implemented industry killing policies like Bill C48 and Bill C69, that is basically
just to stime our production.
It is the same thing that when we implement these policies on our farmers, it's really
affecting our global supply chain.
When we have these social governance rules that are imposed on Canadian businesses, it
means that we will not be producing at the level that we should be producing.
We are actually being dependent on foreign countries to produce and import it.
And that's why we will continue to have such large trade deficits.
And trade deficits, some people will say, well, that tells you that you have a rich nation
and you don't have to produce everything.
But we see what dependency can cause.
During COVID, basic PPEs, we had to import
where we had the capacity to produce those here.
And so we have to make sure
that we're optimizing our capacity.
I also wanna touch on the digital ID
and this whole digitization of our economy.
Yes, it is a transition to a new economy. The plan is for everything.
Our even the way our GDP would be calculated would be based on a new means of calculation
that would have ingrained in it the carbon footprint. And so the carbon footprint is almost going to replace what we know as our dollar.
And when we see centralized digital banking currencies, when we see that emerging, that is creating
the infrastructure.
And arguably, you could even argue that things such as digital currencies were a test ground
for creation of that infrastructure
of the new economy. That's why I think that my inclusion in the leadership race and in the
future of Canada is so important because I've spent years studying what it is that we've been
embarked upon. Many people do not understand what is happening. How every
calculation, everything that you do will be logged on that blockchain. The
blockchain could see every single transaction. And it's going to be recorded. And
our entire lives are going to be equated on how much carbon footprint we contribute to society or how good we are at reducing
our carbon footprint.
Right, right, right.
So that'll be the hallmark by which all ethical conduct will be evaluated.
And we're setting up an infrastructure where there can be complete tracking of everything
in relationship to that.
And you might say, well, the planets and terrible shape and the first thing we need to do is to reduce our carbon footprint. But
then I think, well, wait a second. This goes back to your discussion about the depth of
analysis, let's say, on the electric car front. It's like, well, wait a second. Are you so sure,
like 100% to the bottom of your soul that the most important thing we could possibly embark upon is carbon output reduction and nothing else. So let me offer some other alternatives
if we're going to look at this in a broader sense. And I got a fair bit of this from people
like Marion Tupy and Bjorn Lomburg. It's like, well, Lomburg has put together teams of
economists to analyze where we get the biggest return per dollar spent, which isn't a bad metric,
unless you have a better one.
And he, he rank ordered the UN sustainability goals in terms of economic viability.
And so let's make that clear.
There are important things to pursue.
There are important things to pursue internationally and nationally.
One of the ways we determine what's most important and should be funded
is by looking at something like return on investment.
If we spend a dollar, how much money does that generate in return?
And Longberg, who put together 10 teams of economists who worked independently on this
and then aggregated across their findings, has showed that climate remediation spending
doesn't even enter the top 20. That if we really
wanted to put the planet together in some long term sense over the next few decades, we'd be
finally a lot more money into such things as absolute poverty reduction for poor children
in the developing world because the return on investment for early childhood nutrition, for example, is about $250 to one.
And so on the environmental, well, and I can think of other environmental issues that are
more pressing.
So, for example, I worked on the UN Committee that set up some of the sustainability goals.
And so I looked at this for a long time, and I do think there are environmental problems,
and climate change is one of them, but where it should be placed on the list is not exactly
clear.
Certainly, I would say the problem of oceanic mismanagement is much more not only pressing
and vital, but also remediable for, we actually know how to remediate it. And trying to generate any public discussion on that front is virtually impossible.
And so the environmentalists themselves, they jump on one issue, it's climate change.
They say, oh, it's going to be a catastrophe.
And beyond Longberg has done these calculations.
He said, look, by the year 2100, given current economic projections, we're going to be about
four times richer than we are now.
But that's going to be decreased to some degree because of the additional costs associated
with climate change.
But we'll only be 3.5 times richer.
And then we can remediate most of that.
He's also done a death calculation showing that
fewer people are likely to die in the future when it's warmer than die now because it's cold and
more people freeze to death than get overheated. And so in terms of human catastrophe, it's not obvious
at all, at least at the present time, that even if you accept the IPCC climate change prognostications, which you might as well
for the sake of argument, it is not clear at all that bending and twisting our entire infrastructure
by compulsion and force, immediately in an emergency reaction that seems all the power to the elite
is actually going to solve any of these problems and not make them a lot worse.
actually going to solve any of these problems and not make them a lot worse. That is a very, very good point. And therein lies the problem that that is not their solution.
Their solution is really one to transform our impact on the environment. And they believe
that we are overpopulated. We have too many people. And so we're over consuming.
And because of our consumption patterns,
if we can bring down our consumption patterns,
then we will be able to reduce the impact on the environment.
So that's essentially what they are trying to do.
Well, that argument, hey, I put out a YouTube video last week.
I wrote an article for the telegraph about a Deloitte memo report that was produced in
May and the Deloitte consultants, who are the Davos types, basically said, well, you know,
we're facing this environmental catastrophe.
And so we got to put the brakes on economic growth. And sure, that's going to cause some disruption in the short term, meaning, you know, the next
five decades, but it'll be worth it at some point in the future. And I think, well, hold
on a second here, you put a lot of economic pressure on the world supply chain system,
food production and energy. You're going to starve a lot of really poor people. And
somehow you think that's okay.
It's like, here's the deal.
The apocalypse is so nice that we're going to have to throw a billion or two billion people
into absolute poverty again to make things better.
It's like, what's your evidence that's going to make things better?
Is Sri Lanka your evidence?
Their aim is more behavior modification and behavior modification of largely industrialized
Western nations.
And so they can track that if everything is digitized, if we all have digital IDs, if our digital
IDs then are used to facilitate and navigate us through society.
So whether it is financial, whether it's a purchase, whether it's health care.
So your digital ID will be tied into the system, and then you can monitor your consumption
based on that.
Even in the United States right now, like you could go into, I think it's Walgreens, and they have coolers with products inside with locks on it.
In the future, it's predicted that those locks you will be able to put in your digital
idea.
If you've had too much sugar, that ice cream fridge won't open for you.
And so it's a way to monitor your behavior.
And that's what people are not looking at.
They're not looking at all of the promises
that have come out of the world economic form.
And they're not taking it very, very seriously,
because we've had Klaus Schwab clearly state
that he has penetrated Canada's cabinet.
And to me, that's a very, very serious thing for a global business man to say about an
independent democracy.
I, and we have even our finance minister that's sitting on the board, one of the boards of
the World Economic Forum.
Many Canadians are very, very concerned about that.
And I think as a strong opposition, we need to ask questions about that.
Because if these are concerns for Canadians, why are we afraid to delve into these issues
of someone who has shown such an utter disrespect for our democracy to say that he's penetrated
our cabinet?
Well, you know, I talked to some people who went to these Davos conferences a while back
and who stopped going because of the twist that it took.
And I said, well, I asked them very credible people, by the way.
I asked them, well, who is Klaus Schwab anyways?
And the answer was, well, he's a conference organizer.
I said, well, how did he develop such a position of undue influence? And
they said, well, he was very good at bringing, what would you say, influential people together
in helping them network and not elevated them into a position of, well, unparalleled authority
in some sense. It's like, yeah, fine. But we're going to sacrifice our national sovereignty
to this international cabell of misinformed. What would
you call it? You to misinformed low-retotians. You told me that you're willing to sacrifice
the world's poor. That's the plan. That seems like a really bad plan. Okay, so let me, let
me push back at you on something here. So now people who are listening to this, especially
critics of the way that you're thinking, are going to say, well, there's Dr. Lewis getting
all conspiratorial. And, you know, isn't that just typical of a social conservative type? So,
you talked about the danger of ESG's, and everyone listening should know what those are. ESG,
that's worse than diversity, inclusivity, and equity, by the way, by a large margin.
And so there's the ASG problem, there's the digital ID problem, there's the globalist
utopian centralizing problem.
Why shouldn't you just be dismissed as a socially conservative conspiracy theorist?
What makes you think?
This is really a serious question, because the world's pretty weird right now. And it's not that easy to protect yourself against becoming conspiratorial, let's say, or
seeing conspiracies.
What makes you think that your analysis of this situation is balanced and reasonable
and that Canadians could rely on you for your judicious wisdom? Well, you've earned a PhD, so you know the grit and the rigor that it goes through to
you go through to earn a PhD.
So I respect knowledge.
Any information that I put out there, it's well researched.
I often, if I'm quoting somebody, it's from their own words. The problem is that the term conspiracy theory has been used to, in order to absolve politicians
of their responsibility to answer questions.
It is, it's a psychotherm that's been used to gaslight.
Even right now, the United Nations has a program that they put out on conspiracy
theories on how to deal with the conspiracy theory. What they tell you is that if you see
something that you don't agree with that you believe is a conspiracy theory, report the
person right to their editor. This is all a form of bullying. Labeling something as a conspiracy theory is an easy way for you not to deal with the issue
at hand by just dismissing it.
Me, someone with a PhD, I respect knowledge and I have taken a lot of time to write to the
members of the Conservative Party and everything I write, I documented. At one point, when I was telling people
that our government enrolled in a program called the known traveler digital ID program, which is a
world economic forum program, people said, no, that cannot be. Why would our government enroll in
the known traveler digital ID program with the world Economic Forum. When I sent them the link and they can go directly
to the government of Canada's website,
they can see that we actually have done these things.
So many things, what the government does is that they put people
in a place of willful blindness to make them feel
that embarrassed somehow for actually listening to the things that
they tell them that they're going to do. Just in Trudeau, after COVID said, this is an opportunity
for us to reset and reimagine our future. He said that, he used those words. Then when people said,
when people said, oh, this is what you're planning to do, then he says, oh, no, it's a conspiracy.
They're gaslighting you.
And to be honest with you, I'm a very educated person.
And I do not care if somebody labels me, it can sparsely theorize, because it just means that they're not intelligent enough to argue with me.
That's all it means.
And so I really don't care. because it just means that they're not intelligent enough to argue with me. That's all it means.
And so I really don't care.
My goal is I'm going to save my country.
I'm gonna do everything that I can to save my country.
I'm going to invest every single ounce of my skill set
to making sure that I remain a Canadian citizen
and not a global citizen.
And I am going to continue to inform people.
So there's no shame. You can call me anything you want.
I'm going to continue to speak. I'm going to continue to get my message out there.
And I'm going to continue to send Canadians information
and substantiate what I say with information.
So Canadians can be informed about what their government is planning for them.
All right, so you're in this race with Polly of
Sharest, Shiree,
Bobber and H.
And Polly of is the front runner at the moment by quite a substantial margin.
You have no, but you, but you keep saying that, but you haven't provided me with any documentation
to substantiate that.
In fact, the media will want you to believe that.
Okay, well, let me ask you this.
Let me ask you this then.
So my understanding is that Pauliev
was ahead of the rest of the candidates
on the conservative front
in terms of number of membership sold in the conservative party
Is that correct? That's what he said that's not I I have seen no proof of that
That's what he said he revealed those numbers
I can tell you that many of the people that signed up on his website were my supporters because he sent messages to
Everybody's supporters telling them to sign
up on their website.
So even a few days before the membership ended, people who had already signed up with me
got a message from his campaign saying that they were members.
So they went and resigned.
So there were a lot of duplicates in there.
So we do not have the accurate numbers on who sold what?
Where do you see the relative, how do you conceptualize the relative standing of the current candidates
within the conservative membership? So just so that everyone's listing is clear. So what happens
when a new party member, a party leader is chosen is that only party members can vote.
And so the first vote Canada will be for the leader of the Conservative Party.
And there's a number of candidates who are running.
And that vote is in September, in mid-September.
And so how do you see the relative standing of the current crop of candidates within
the Conservative Party? candidates within the conservative party. So I sold substantially more memberships this time
than the last time when I won the popular vote.
I do not want to get into the numbers
because when you add up what Mr. Polly have said,
what Mr. Brown said, the existing numbers, it's impossible.
So I know that there are untruths there
and I don't think that there's any benefit
for me in weighing in that way.
What I can tell you is that of,
we now have the membership list
and we've reached out to the membership list.
I can tell you, Mr. Pauliev is very strong,
but Mr. Shirei is not ahead of me.
The media will want you to believe
that Mr. Shirei is ahead of me
because they have been
promoting him.
In fact, I've done phenomenally well with almost no media attention.
The media will try to push as much as they can, the candidate that they prefer.
Of course, they don't prefer me because I speak a lot of truths that they just do not want
to engage in at this time.
But Canadians are listening, Canadians are doing their research, there's lots of information
out there, and the membership is very, very interested in a number of issues that people
are not talking about, such as the impact of global organizations upon our sovereignty.
Right, right, which seems to be a particular, a particular, appointed concern of yours.
And so, okay, so let me ask you then, what distinguishes you apart from your concern about
the influence, undo influence of these international organizations.
What distinguishes you from the other candidates?
Why should Canadians vote for you compared to them?
And then also I would like to hear, we've spent a lot of time delving into a criticism,
let's say, of the utopian globalist environmental top-down approach to planetary stewardship.
I'd like to hear something about if you could have the Canada you wanted,
it's Canada that you would work towards as leader of the Conservative Party and
and and putative Prime Minister, what would Canada look like under your stewardship?
Let's start with the comparative question first on the conservative front.
What are you offering?
What are you bringing to Canadians that distinguishes you from the other candidates?
Well, I am not a career politician.
I have just entered politics, and so I can relate with average Canadians.
I know what it's like to not know where money is going to come from to pay your bills at the end of the month.
I know what it's like to start a business from ground up
and not be able to draw a salary
because you have to pay your employees.
I know what it's like to stand in a grocery line
and not know whether or not your debit card
is going to go through.
I can connect with average Canadians,
whereas career politicians, they have had paychecks that have been given to them by the tax
payers. I have signed the front of a paycheck. The average politician is only
signed the back of a paycheck. And so that ability to relate to average
Canadians is something that I think is very important. I also think my
educational and experiential background is something that's really topical
and needed at this particular time in our nation's history.
At this particular time, as I said, we have a lot of international organizations encroaching
on our freedoms and on our liberties. And somebody with international experience
that can dissect these treaties
and understand how these treaties affect our sovereignty
is very, very important.
I also believe as an educator,
I've taught, as I said, at York University,
University of Toronto, Osgoode Hall Law School,
and I am an educator.
And so I can break
down complex issues.
I don't speak to Canadians through slogans and talking points.
I speak to their hearts because I can connect with them on these issues, and some high-level
issues that most many politicians would say, it's not worth discussing that with them. I am able to communicate with Canadians and give them informative information that will
allow them to make an educated decision.
And I think that that is some of the main differentiating factors for me.
Okay, so you are going to sum that up. So you said, well, you come from a background that's similar, say, economically to the bulk
of Canadians.
You also have that struggling immigrant experience very close to you and your family.
You've started your own business.
I want to ask you a few questions about that.
So you're familiar with what would you say?
Enterprise is on the entrepreneurial front, which is a big deal.
You're a very highly educated person. One of the things that is very interesting about your
resume is that your education is very diverse, especially given your political stance, because
you're quite well versed in post-modern and Marxist thought given your education in sociology,
women's studies, and environmental studies.
And then we can add to that, which I want to talk about as well, your legal studies and then
your teaching. And then you're also an educator. And so that's a nice combination, as you said,
especially now navigating the complex things we're navigating. We got to your master's degree at York.
Tell me a little bit about two things about your legal training and your teaching and then
about your business.
So, by way of background, legal training, I started off on Bay Street in a firm called Goodman
in Car.
They've since emerged into different firms.
And I had quite good,
base-street experience.
Then I went to learners,
which is also a large litigation firm,
and then ended at Thompson Rogers.
Thereafter, I made the decision to,
I thought have a more balanced life
with young children and new family.
And so we made the decision that I would start my own business.
And that gave me an opportunity to work late at night
while being at home, wake up early in the morning
and have more quality time with my family.
So you were at some big firms
and tell me also about the details of your legal education.
You have a PhD in law from from Oscar, from Osgoot from Osgoot.
That's what it's going to go to Toronto or Canada's top law schools, by the way.
And so you have that that stellar legal education, which is not an easy thing to obtain.
And then you have large law firm experience, which by the way is also not easy to attain because the application process for, um, articleing out these firms
is extremely intense. And the process of moving towards, um, partnership is extremely competitive,
like, and I mean exceptionally competitive. And so then you have small children, you have
children, and you had a family, you just started to start your own firm.
Yes.
Okay, and tell me about that.
Tell me what that was like and when you did that.
Oh, that was really interesting because so I came from Bay Street which you have large
clients.
And fortunately, my last job on Bay Street, I was working for a, it was the largest personal injury law firm at that time.
And so you had a combination of corporate clients, insurance companies, and you also had personal
injury clients. So I was able to transition that way because my clients liked me. And so I was able
to buy out my clientele and transition it to my new firm. But the
problem is, is that personal injury, the lawyers have to carry the file. So they pay for
all the medicals, etc. Because the injured party is usually not working. And so that put a lot of financial strain.
It was, we had, I had numerous discussions with my husband
about the strain that it was putting on our family,
being able to do that because I had to get a line of credit
to do that.
And so I had to go for low hanging fruit
because those claims settled in two years.
So I had to go for low hanging fruit.
So I decided to go for low hanging food. So I decided to
pick up criminal law because that way you could do quick bail hearings. And then I was doing some
duty council per DM work, which basically you were basically like a court, a count lawyer,
but for the defense side doing duty council. and you would get paid from the government.
So I picked that up doing that per DM filling in,
and also then trying to do some private criminal cases
in order to sustain things as I went along.
And then after that, I had to pick up real estate too,
to kind of make ends meet.
And then I added on a really unique area of immigration.
So you were like a sole practitioner initially
and just taking whichever files
because you had to pay the bills.
And so I added on immigration
and then I developed into a very niche area of immigration
dealing with LGBTQ cases from refugee cases of people who were fleeing
their country because of LGBTQ plus persecution.
Are you sure you're not a closet leftist operative?
I mean, you've got women studies, you've got sociology and environment, and now you were
a lawyer on the LGBTQ plus front on immigration issues.
I think you're probably a close swab plant.
No, on refugee issues, because these people,
well, think about it.
It no matter what your political beliefs are,
if you see somebody being persecuted
and running for their life and is going to be killed
because of their sexual orientation,
it's just humanity would tell you that if you have skills,
you would lend it to those individuals.
To me, it's a no-brainer, right?
I had the skill set that I could work in these communities.
And so I did.
And so to me, that's just a human thing to do.
And I just live my life like that.
I try to live my life to honor my upbringing,
which is an upbringing based on faith,
which is loving your neighbor as yourself.
And that means standing in a role
that is very non-judgmental of people
and doing the right thing.
And as a lawyer, I pledged to help those who are in need.
To me, it's no different than if you're a criminal lawyer
and you're put on a case where somebody,
it's a murder case, you may have to work on that case.
So, okay, so we walk through what distinguishes you from the other candidates,
and what you bring to the table, your business acumen, your legal extensive legal training,
and practice in multiple areas, including large law firms, and then all these private practice
niches that you carved out, which I suspect would make quite a story in and of itself,
as you're doing that with small kids and a developing family and outside the protective
net of the big law firms, competitive as they are, a very diverse, in the positive sense of the
word, educational background, including an emphasis on the kind of law that would make you a
stoot analyst of international agreements as
well as an educator.
Final question, I think, before we switch to the Daily Wire section, which is a behind-the-scenes
look at the development of your career, if you could have the Canada you wanted as leader
of the country, 10 years down the road. What would you focus and concentrate on?
What would you bring to the table for Canadians?
The most important thing that I see
is really our freedoms and our sovereignty.
I would want a Canada in which I am still a Canadian citizen.
And I'm very concerned that we are moving towards
a global citizenship.
And so the preservation of our sovereignty would be one of the main things that I focused
on.
And in preserving our sovereignty, we need to preserve our institutions that really make
this country great.
And right now what we're seeing is a nihilistic approach to eliminating
all of the institutions upon which this country was founded on. We're seeing an erosion of
our military, our army, an erosion, you're seeing movements to defund the police. You're
seeing an erosion of our family, parental rights. Parents are feeling that they don't have
the right to raise their children in accordance with their own values. Parents are feeling that they don't have the right to raise their
children in accordance with their own values. Parents are feeling that that governments
are encroaching too much on their parental sovereignty. And these are loving parents who
would ordinarily do the right thing, but governments are stepping in locus parentis and acting as if they are the guardians and the
sole custodians over children.
And they have stated that.
And we have seen even some United Nations programs.
If you look at the comprehensive sex education program,
that the United Nations is pushing with planned parenthood,
you can see that there's an undermining
of the fabric of our society in terms of parental rights and in terms of what parents believe
that their children should be exposed to at an age-appropriate level.
their children should be exposed to at a age appropriate level.
Okay, so you're looking at a platform that insists upon individual autonomy and responsibility,
the same thing being true at the family level,
the same thing being true at the civic level,
and then preservation,
at the economic and sovereignty.
And yes, yes, at cynic and economic level is
the economic level is imperative also because that is what I believe is going to be the impetus
in transitioning us from a from a Canadian citizenship to global citizenship.
So we have to ensure that we can continue to remain economically viable, bringing our supply
chains home, making sure that we produce what we need in order to sustain ourselves, optimizing
our potential, encouraging industries like our agricultural industry, encouraging our resource development, being good stewards
of the resources that we have been granted.
Right now, even off the coast of the Arctic, we have countries like China and Russia actually
mining, freely mining our minerals.
We have no protection of that.
Why?
Because we have not invested in our military.
Russia has 40 submarine icebreakers.
We have zero.
We don't even have the capacity to protect our own resources and our own Arctic.
And so a functioning and vibrant Canada recognizes not just investment in our human potential
in the fabric of our society,
but also recognizing that we can be self-sustaining both economically and politically.
And when I say politically, I mean from a standpoint of keeping global organizations at
Bay and recognizing our sovereignty and not taking our cues from organizations like
the WEF, the World Economic Forum, the WHO, the World Health Organization, and the United
Nations.
We need to ensure that any treaties that we sign onto does not undermine our national
sovereignty.
All right. Well, that sounds like a fairly comprehensive package. It reminds me there's a principle
of subsidiarity. I think that was originally insisted upon by the Catholics, but that's become part
of conservative political doctrine, which is that every responsibility should be meted out to the most proximal possible source.
So for example, for each individual has a domain of responsibility that shouldn't be encroached
on by the family.
And each family has a domain of responsibility that shouldn't be encroached on by the community.
And the towns have their level that the provinces and states should leave alone.
And the states have their level that their federal government should leave alone and so forth. And so an intelligent conservatism distributes
responsibility all the way down the hierarchy to the level of the individual. And that protects us
against the kind of tower of babble, global overreach that the utopian globalists seem to be
insisting upon compelling us to support.
And so you see yourself as far as I can tell, I don't believe I'm putting words into your
mouth as a, as a, a locus of resistance and alternative vision to that top down utopian
um, scheming, let's say.
Does that seem reasonable?
Oh, absolutely. That that's a very succinctly summarizes exactly how I feel.
And looking at the last two years,
we have seen the manifestation of that frustration
that comes out of that utopian ideal.
And we witnessed that in the trucker protest.
And we also that that is such a good example of how our systems,
our institutions are breaking down.
When we look at the coverage that the truckers got,
it was really a lot of lies that the media spread
about Russian collusion and intervention
and made it seem like a violent protest, even though I
walked to Parliament
every single day and so did the other MPs and we actually saw things that were very, very
communal focused.
Kids on jumping castles, people cooking for each other.
We witnessed groups of people coming together, whether they're Sikhs or Christians and
praying and praying for
the country. And so the coverage that we saw from our media was extremely atrocious. And it shows
you that we do not have a functioning legacy media. Right now, they are acting as an arm of the liberal government, and that is not healthy for a democracy.
And so we have to start looking at how we can
re-align many of these institutions
that have under this utopian ideal
have now started to disintegrate.
It's very important.
And when we look at even what we're seeing here,
we are having vestiges of the coercive state apparatus
left over.
Right now, we still have the Arrive Can app,
fully mobile, where Canadians cannot come into their own country,
even though their passport allows them to have free entry in and out,
our charter of rights under section two of the charter guarantees
our freedom of mobility. Yet we have an app that we know that the government has as disclosed
that that app should only be used in mandatory situations where there is a a global pandemic or
where there is an emergency order. We know that no such orders in place yet we still have
the remnants of that totalitarian coercive state apparatus pushed on us. And those are the things
that we have to continue to push back on for us to continue to have our freedom upheld. We have to continue to say these things are contrary to our charter.
Yeah. And to the spirit of the spirit that's made Canada one of the leading democracies
in shining lights in the world. Absolutely. You know, we have a crisis of trust, I would say,
in the West and maybe in the world at large. And that's a very bad thing because trust is the fundamental currency.
Why are you convinced personally that you could be entrusted with a task such as this?
And why should Canadians take the confidence that you and your family, let's say, have
in you?
Why should they take that seriously?
Like, why should you be believed and trusted?
And, you know, and what concerns do you have about that?
Oh, it's a great question because, to be honest with you,
I'm involved in politics.
I don't like politics and I put out a letter to that effect
to the members the other day.
And many people were shocked for me to say that,
I don't like it.
I don't like it because I find it very contrived.
I find that politicians will say things
because they know either the polls agree with them
or they'll get a vote.
Personally, I don't care about that.
At the beginning, when I was a very early,
I was just a few months into being a member of Parliament. I had to make the tough decision.
I believed in medical privacy. And I saw that what our government was doing was infringing
on people's personal, private medical histories. And I knew that at that time,
at that time, I knew that the vaccine
didn't prevent you getting COVID or spreading COVID.
And so I was trying to understand intellectually
what all of this was about.
Why were we creating a segregation society?
Why did we have all these rules
when we knew the truth of that it was just basically
personal responsibility and informed consent if you wanted to take the vaccine.
And so I made the tough decision of not divulging my vaccination status, even though I knew
that I would not get a shadow cabinet position.
I said, cost it what it may.
And I also made
the tough decision of wrapping up my law firm. I wanted that firm to continue, and I had
lawyers that were trained, but to continue with it. But it was taking so much of my time
even to just keep it going. And I knew that I had to devote all of my energy
into saving and assisting my country down a path
of continuing our sovereignty.
And so I've given up a lot.
And I believe, and I've also, I'm not doing this for money.
I was at the highest income earning potential and had great opportunities.
I, another thing you probably say, how did she do so many things, but I was representing
a number of Canadian corporations abroad on energy products. And so it was a very lucrative time for me and leaving a viable practice and also leaving the
prospect of being able to teach again in university are huge sacrifices. And I
believe that for you to make those sacrifices it demonstrates a level of trust
that you can have in that person that they're doing it for the right reason.
It's not just a job, it's not just a paycheck, and whether or not I win this leadership race,
I am very content that once you rub that genie in the bottle and that genie comes out,
there are issues that nobody else are talking about that I have brought out and that the Canadian public now knows that
they have a voice in parliament that even if they come after my reputation, no matter
what they do, I am still going to be that voice of Canadians.
And so I think that when you lay down your reputation in that way and when you lend yourself
to be a servant of the people in that way, that earns trust and trust is something that
can't be demanded, it's something that is earned.
That's a pretty ringing answer, I would say.
It's so delightful to be able to sit down in these long forms and have a real discussion
about such things that isn't reduced to sound bites and that isn't a mere reflection
of yesterday's idiot opinion pull.
This has been a great conversation.
I'm doing these 30 minute interviews with all my guests now discussing the intricacies
of their successful careers and their journey forward
personally and the challenges that are associated with that.
Thank you very much, Dr. Lewis.
I appreciate you taking the time to do this.
I hope that everyone listening has found this enlightening and useful.
As I did, it's nice to get to know you and to see, well, how much ground you've covered
before entering this political territory, which I think is a credit to see, well, how much ground you've covered before entering this political
territory, which I think is a credit to your, you know, not put in the cart before the horse.
It's nice to see someone emerge on the political scene who has the wealth of experience that you do
in all these domains that make you a credible candidate on the national leadership front.
Hello, everyone. I would encourage you to continue listening to my
conversation with my guest on dailywireplus.com.