The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 322. College of Psychologists vs Jordan B Peterson | Mikhaila Peterson
Episode Date: January 12, 2023Dr Jordan B Peterson and his daughter Mikhaila Peterson explain the current situation with the College of Psychologists of Ontario. They have presented Dr. Peterson with an ultimatum- take part in re-...education courses aiming to correct his “wrongthink”, or lose his clinical psychology license. This is unprecedented, totally unjust, and will not be taken lying down. Mikhaila Peterson is a CEO and the host of “The Mikhaila Peterson Podcast.” As well as interviews, she hosts a series called Opposing Views, where she speaks to people with differing opinions on contentious issues to let listeners make up their own minds. She’s used a diet called the Lion Diet to heal from autoimmune and mood disorders and has educated people on that diet via TEDx and Oxford Union speeches. Mikhaila is also the founder of the upcoming online education platform Peterson Academy, an online education place devoid of ideology, launching in 2023.
Transcript
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Hello everybody watching and listening on YouTube and perhaps on the Daily Wire Plus platform.
I'm having a discussion today with my daughter, Michaela, I asked her to interview me, I suppose,
about what's happening in Toronto, Ontario, Canada,
at the moment, on the professional front relationship to me.
The Ontario College of Psychologists,
which is the board that regulates the practice
of psychology in Ontario and hypothetically
predicts the public interest, has levied a series of what are in essence lawsuits against me
for unprofessional conduct pertaining primarily
to my social media communication.
And so they have decided in their wisdom
that I am to be required to undertake a series
of re-education lessons designed to ensure that
I communicate in a manner they deem appropriate.
And I have told them that there are no circumstances I can imagine under which I would be willing
to do that.
And the next step is to bring me before a public disciplinary hearing and then to suspend
my clinical license.
And so I'm making all of this public because I think people need to weigh in on whether
I'm an alt-right, Nazi, harmful, you know, bastion of intolerable political thought with
a troll-like army of pathological followers or whether the college itself is a corrupt nest
of social justice, vipers, hell bent on envy and revenge
and using the tiny fraction of people who are complaining
to put forward their own brand of personal pathology
and vindictiveness.
And, well, I'll make everything public,
except for that which I can't do on legal grounds
and let everybody decide for themselves. That's the plan, because I make everything public, except for that which I can't do on legal grounds and let everybody decide for themselves.
That's the plan, because I might be wrong, and I guess if I am, I need to learn how.
In any case, Michaela is going to talk to me for 90 minutes, and we're going to walk through
some of this, and maybe you'll find that interesting, and maybe you won't.
Why would you care?
Well, that's, I guess, what you'll figure out if you listen to the talk.
One reason might be, it's my opinion that the regulatory boards that govern professional
conduct in Canada, particularly in the U.S. as well, and in the West more broadly,
have become so corrupted by the woke ideology that the professionals you
depend on in moments of crisis for legal advice and medical advice and psychological counseling,
some of which can be life and reputation saving, they can no longer be trusted because they're
being required by the professional bodies to lie to you in the service of this warped,
radical leftist ideology
that's now become what would you call it?
Mandatory for right speakers wherever they might exist.
And so that's why you might want to listen
and decide for yourself whether you think that might be true.
So anyways, onward with the discussion.
And thanks, Michaela, for agreeing to do this.
Hey guys, I'm coming on my dad's channel to interview him because he's dealing
with some serious things right now, like usual, kind of like usual. So first off, how are
you? How are you doing, dad? Well, not too bad. I've been preparing my public response to the decision of the Ontario College of Psychologists
to require me to do mandatory social media communication retraining.
They have, the College of Psychologists is the regulatory board for the practice of psychology
in Ontario.
There are a variety of regulated professions, medicine, dentistry, teaching, architecture,
psychology.
That's not all of them.
And these regulated professions have a board that's appointed by the government, whose mandate
is to protect the public from unprofessional behavior on the part of the members of the
regulated professions.
And people can submit complaints to those bodies if they believe that they've been treated unprofessionally or unethically or otherwise
inappropriately by a college member, so a member of the relevant profession.
And the college has been after me nonstop with complaints since I rose to public prominence in 2016, although not once before
that in the 20 years that I practiced as a clinical psychologist.
So this isn't the university that's after me, like it was in 2017, 2016.
This is the College of Psychologists, which has started pursuing me in 2016 and has never led up.
Now, what happens is that anyone anywhere can submit a complaint about me for anything
I've done or said hypothetical or otherwise, and then the college can, and that doesn't
matter if they're a client of mine or ever have been, or if I've had any dealings with them, or even if they're the
person who has hypothetically been harmed by my behavior.
And the college has decided to pursue a sequence of such complaints, even though it's in their
power to dismiss them as vexatious or frivolous, which is what I asked for on the grounds that my social media
communication has caused harm to people. And so they've essentially taken out what are the
equivalent of more than a dozen lawsuits against me. And I say they're equivalent to lawsuits because
the penalty for being found guilty of such misbehavior is quite serious.
It can involve reeducation, public apology,
or even the removal of my ability to practice,
or to describe myself as a clinical psychologist.
Of course, it took me about 10 years,
all things considered to get licensed.
It's a very difficult process,
and I'm not inclined to give it up lightly.
In any case, they have been after me to a tremendous degree in 2022.
I think there's 13 or 14 complaints, each of which culminated in one of these lawsuits.
I'm represented by legal counsel.
There's so many of them that they're difficult to keep track of.
I probably went through 400 pages of
documentation this week and you asked me how I'm doing. Well, you know, first of all,
I found it extremely difficult to keep my rage under control because a tremendous amount
of my time is being wasted. It's extremely expensive.
The allegations are not only utterly preposterous,
but entirely political in nature.
And then I was also afraid of it.
You know, the first complaint came in 2017,
2016 in December.
At the same time, the university was after me,
and at the same time, the Canadian revenue authorities
were after me for a mistake they admitted making six months later.
And you remember that was an extremely stressful time and I was accused at that point of inappropriate
personal conduct in relationship to one of my clients.
All of that was dismissed by the way without hesitation, although the college did decide
at that point,
because they needed to decide I was guilty of something,
even though I wasn't guilty of what I was most seriously
accused of, they decided I hadn't handled my email properly
at that point when I was getting thousands of emails a day.
Yeah.
And that made it difficult for my clients to get a hold of me, even though I had given
every single one of my clients my personal phone number and could contact me by text,
which is something by the way that psychologists never do, you know, for obvious reasons.
So in any case, it's been a continuous stream of investigations and legal defense. Since then, I found that kind of accusation
of serious personal misconduct, unbelievably stressful
in 2016.
It certainly contributed to me becoming ill.
And then I didn't really want to revisit it.
And so I started going through all that documentation
last week so that I could lay out everything that's been levied at me.
And I went through all that stuff from 2017, even talking about it now.
It makes me shake to some degree.
Afterwards, I could hardly stand up.
I just about fainted three or four times and had a real hard time keeping myself composed.
It's very off-putting to, let's say, to have attempted to conduct myself extremely carefully
in my professional occupations as a professor and as a clinical psychologist for decades,
you know, to step very carefully.
Of course, I never had any behavioral accusations levied against me at Harvard or the University for decades, you know, to step very carefully.
Of course, I never had any behavioral accusations levied against me at Harvard or the University of Toronto,
or as a clinical psychologist in the 30 years I was a professor in 20 years of private practice.
And then to be accused of serious personal misconduct, the essential claim was my seductive behavior as a therapist.
And the evidence offered was that when I was offering my advice,
I would spin my wedding ring, which was apparently some Freudian indication
that I was sexually interested in the particular complaining client.
Now, I don't particularly blame her.
I mean, had she not had her problems,
she wouldn't have come
and seen me, you know. But the college has a tremendous gavill to wield, a tremendous hammer.
And to have that brought down on you is, it's no joke. And I've known a lot of people
now who've been investigated for that sort of thing by mobs, let's say, of one form or another,
and it's very, very hard on them.
So when I revisited all this, it was really, and I'd probably be avoiding doing it to
some degree, although we had to wait until we moved forward with our legal challenge
before we could make any of this public, there was still an element of avoidance and no wonder, you know, it really lit me on fire again when I was going through
this stuff. But one of the upsides was, you know, I reviewed the and organized the complaints
that are levied against me now, the accusations are so incredibly preposterous and political
that it's almost incomprehensible.
You know, I'm literally being, well, the requirement is, so the college has decided after pursuing these complaints,
that I don't know how to regulate my behavior properly in my social media communications.
And so I need to be taught by their experts how to conduct myself appropriately.
And so I have to undergo a series of courses, one-on-one coaching sessions with their deemed experts,
and they're going to tell me how I should craft my words and what I should say and what I shouldn't say.
And I am required to pay for that. It's about $250 an hour, which in our current circumstances isn't a concern in of itself,
but you can understand that for many, that would be tremendously burdensome.
And the person who's teaching me is going to submit regular reports to the college and they're going to decide when I've learned how to be the sort of person I should be so that I don't bring disgrace upon the profession and harm peaked.
And so the claims of harm are absolutely unwarranted, not a single person who submitted a complaint in this latest round is a client of mine,
although half of them falsely claimed to be stable.
And they're stable people.
They're complaints anyway.
Yeah.
Well, I think some of it is they're probably confused about what they're required, how
they're required to identify themselves in the complaint form to be fair.
Okay.
Or they're just unstable people
who spend their time complaining about celebrities on Twitter?
Well, that's the other option.
That's what you're doing with your life.
You're probably not the most stable person.
Yeah, and so anyways, I've gone through all these complaints.
And so here's some of them.
I retweeted Pierre Paulierve, whose Canada's
leader of the opposition, when he was criticizing the mass lockdowns, I just retweeted him and
I said essentially that I agreed with him.
That's a complaint. They actually listed that as a complaint.
That's one of the complaints. That's insane. Yeah, yeah.
They listed the fact that I criticized Justin Trudeau on multiple occasions.
There's a complaint that at one point the police in Ottawa were threatening to act with
children's aid to take the children away from the truckers in Ottawa and apprehend them
on the grounds that their
parents who were involved in the protests were endangering them.
And I tweeted and said, I'm not so sure that we should get the police involved in taking
away the children of protesters.
And we should think about this.
And apparently that makes me untrustworthy advocate for child advocate for children who face childhood sexual abuse.
Oh my gosh.
You're a mandatory reporter as a psychologist, eh?
And so if it comes to your attention that someone has been abused, you're mandated to report
it.
And so apparently I'm now untrustworthy in that regard, because I didn't want the police to conspire with idiot social workers in Ottawa
to apprehend the children of protesters.
And so that's another example of my reprehensible behavior.
I'm being called out for the fact that I objected to Ellen Page's surgical mutilation at the hands of her physicians and her consequent
advertisement of her new torso on social media.
And I'm also required to submit to this media retraining education because I objected to the sports illustrated cover of that relatively
overweight young model.
And there's other complaints, but that's the bulk of them.
And so at least half, oh yes, I criticized, oh, I tweeted out to Jacinda Arden that I was
coming to New Zealand with my army of all right-ed trolls, which was clearly a joke and that's also a complaint because I guess that
sort of joke isn't funny when you're dealing with woke progressives like Jacinda Arden
and Justin Trudeau.
And so, oh yes, I counseled people to commit suicide.
That's another one.
So wait, wait, wait, wait. You should...
Somebody...
You should describe... Oh, yeah, describe that.
Yeah, yeah, well, somebody had tweeted out their idea that the planet had too many people
on it. And this is not a statement I am very fond of because every time I hear someone
say that, I think, okay, who exactly are these excess people that
you're referring to?
And who gets to decide that?
And how do you know that when they decide that something terrible won't happen, given
that these are excess people?
And isn't it okay if I question the humanitarian intent of your motives for making such a reprehensible
comment?
So I tweeted to someone who made an argument like that.
I tweeted and said, feel free to leave at any time,
and which is obviously an ironic joke,
but some bloody social worker in the United States
decided that that was like,
incitation to suicide, and so,
glad about that.
And yeah, and so, and that's, I think,
I think that's all the complaint.
So let's review this.
Not a single one of them was levied by a client
of mine, President or former.
Not a single one of them was levied by anyone I had actually
said anything directly to private or public.
There's no evidence whatsoever that I've produced anything regarding harm
because no one has stepped forward to claim harm
who is directly harmed.
So it's third party indirect supposition
of so-called harm to someone they don't know.
And that's the level of evidence
that the college of psychologists
is willing to accept as critical.
You know, now, when they responded to me, they said that I've, you know, brought disgrace to the profession and caused undue harm to people.
And I responded, I'll make this public too, with about 40 questions about their methods.
So here's one, said, well, before I submit myself to this media training re-education,
because I'm bound by the ethical standards of my profession, I'm not willing to go get educated
unless there's evidence that the contents of the educational program are directly related to the
practice of my profession and that there's evidence that undertaking such re-education actually
makes me a more competent therapist.
Do you have any independent documentation that these experts that you have hired and foisted upon me
have anything approximating genuine expertise?
And do you have any evidence whatsoever that such training programs are effective?
And of course, they said, we don't have to answer questions like that.
And I asked them, I said, you know, there's some evidence that I've done some good in the
world.
About 7 million people bought my first public book, and I have 15 million subscribers on
the three main platforms we operate on on social media.
And lots of people seem to come to my lectures
when I am publicly speaking saying that I've really helped them in their lives and that's
thousands or hundreds of thousands or possibly even millions of people. And so I think
I can stack up a pretty good plus all the students that I taught at Harvard and University
of Toronto and all my clinical clients who by and large were pretty damn happy to be working with me in vice versa.
It's like how do you calculate the harm to benefit ratio?
And you know, what evidence do you have that I actually constitute a sufficient threat
to the integrity of the profession that you're willing to bring the second harshest actions
you have in your arsenal against. And the answer to that was, we don't have to answer questions
like that. And I have like 40 questions like that, none of which were answered. Their answer
basically was, we can do whatever the hell we want. And we're telling you, you better go
get reeducated, or you face a disciplinary hearing.
That's the next step, is that I'd have to face a disciplinary hearing.
And what I'm gonna do for that, I do believe they videotape that
and all take the videotape and put it on my YouTube channel
and people can decide for themselves,
which is exactly what I want to have happen in this situation.
Like you and I talked about our strategy here.
And I have been unbelievably angry about this.
It's been very hard for me to control my anger.
And I know that's not right.
And that my desire to seek vengeance is inappropriate
as is the desire in general to seek vengeance.
Right? But it's very difficult to read through these allegations
and to face this waste of my time.
And the stress it puts on us to me and your mother
and well, and our whole family, without being outraged at this.
And a lot of the battle for the last couple of weeks
is just being to keep my temper under control.
But you and I, we talk through this, and I talk through it with your mum and with Julian,
about the fact that our attitude in general has been just to tell everybody what's going on,
as clearly as we possibly can. I want to make it all public. I'm preparing a document today,
redacting all the names of the complainants,
which I have been provided with by the college, by the way.
I'm going to redact all their names
and identifying information.
That's also ridiculous.
Just this just isn't set up very well.
Like you'd think that if you were a problematic psychologist,
you shouldn't be provided with the people's names
that complained about you.
That doesn't seem to start.
Well, yeah, well, I don't know what to make of that.
And it's also problematic that people can levy accusations
that bring down the heavy hand of a bureaucratic organization
and bear absolutely no personal responsibility to that.
Like, but in a sane society, so that would have been Canada up until about five or six years ago,
people didn't weaponize the colleges, generally speaking.
You know, professionals weren't afraid of their regulatory bodies,
because generally, the only people who complained
were either people who were clearly disturbed, you know,
in some fundamental sense,
or people who have legitimate reason
to believe that they had suffered harm as a consequence of unprofessional behavior on the
part of a lawyer or teacher or physician or psychologist.
But the radical leftist types have figured out how to weaponize these investigative
boards, and the boards themselves have become staffed pretty much uniformly with social justice oriented politically correct,
full compassionate, narcissistic commissars, and they do everything they can to make life miserable
for anyone who doesn't share their political opinions. I mean, it's actually, it's actually almost
beyond comprehension to me that I'm engaged in a battle in my country of Canada,
where I have to defend my right to practice my profession as a licensed psychologist,
and I would say especially with my educational pedigree, I mean, Jesus, I was a professor
at Harvard and the University of Toronto, I trained clinical psychologists, you know, and
the fact that I have to defend my right to conduct my own profession because
I retweeted a tweet from the official leader of Canada's Conservative opposition party and
criticized Justin Trudeau and have made at least upon occasion conservative political pronouncements, the fact that that is now, that has now made me
subject to heavy-handed punishment and investigation by a government-sponsored regulatory board is,
I just, it's absolutely incomprehensible. And so that's also, I would say, difficult emotionally,
because I just can't believe it's happening.
Like, what the hell?
This is insane.
And so, I mean, and it's, you know, the other thing,
I think too, it's so strategically foolish
on the part of the college.
I mean, it's one thing to go after me for, let's say,
I mean, it's one thing to go after me for, let's say, saying something not so pleasant about Ellen Page or about the swimsuit-illustrated model. At least you can have an argument about whether or not I was using undue force in my argumentation on those grounds, you know, but to pillory me for engaging in what are clearly
political conversations is, well, I don't even know what to say about it. I can't believe
it's happening. It's beyond comprehension to me. And so, you know, and that makes me think,
well, you know, is it just me? You know, because know, and that makes me think, well, you know, is
it just me? You know, because people tweet out at me, well, Peterson, you always seem
to be in trouble with one authority or another. Maybe it's just you. It's like where there's
smoke, there's fire, you know? And I can understand why people think that way. And with
something happens to you repeatedly, you have to start wondering if it's you or the situation,
but the way that I'm dealing with this,
the way that we've dealt with this as a family,
right from the beginning, is just to make it all public,
right, and to allow light to be shown on the situation,
and to derive our conclusions,
mostly as a consequence of watching
the broad public response,
and I'm trying to do exactly the same thing here.
Like, you know, I'm a very guilt prone person, and when someone comes after me with accusations,
I'm very likely to assume that there is a core of truth in them.
And, but I also believe that I have the right to defend myself.
And one of the ways of doing that in this situation, this is why we're having this conversation,
is, I don't conversation is i don't
believe
i don't have faith that i can expect fair treatment at the hands of this board
and i also don't have any faith partly because i've talked to a bunch of my
legal friends
i don't have a lot of faith in the canadian judiciary
i mean people have told me
law professors have told me now that
they see continually can Canadian courts who are extremely
activist in nature dispensing completely with such niceties as common law precedent when
they're rendering their judgments.
And so I certainly don't leave that the College of Psychologists will treat me fairly.
I have seen them treat very few people fairly, and I don't leave that even if we push this
forward on the judicial front,
which is our plan at the moment, like implementing a challenge to their ruling, for example, on
Canadian constitutional grounds, because at least in principle, we have the right to free
speech and freedom of conscience in this country.
In principle, I don't think we do.
Yeah, in principle. Yeah, the protection has turned out with the Canadian charter of
rights as an unbelievably weak
and poorly written document that provides Canadians with almost no protection for the rights
whatsoever.
It was definitely a giant step backwards in relationship to the English common law tradition.
And we're now subject to an extraordinary badly written document whose fundamental propositions
can be superseded
by the government anytime they think there's a sufficiently dire state of affairs.
So I'm making it public and people can decide for themselves.
I'll release every bit of correspondence between the collagen and me over the next few days,
you know, redacting out the identifiers.
And I've been on your website. I've been out the identifiers. And, you know, I've been...
On your website?
I've been ambivalent.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I've been ambivalent about that too,
because part of me thinks,
well, these people who are complaining to me,
they shouldn't get to do it anonymously
and hidden away from any consequences of their accusations.
But I believe that I'm legally and hypothetically,
ethically required to maintain privacy even in the face of these what are essentially legal attacks.
And, you know, I, like I said, I'm ambivalent about that because I don't see why I should be made public in such a manner without my accusers having to bear the weight of some responsibility for weaponizing this bureaucracy
and against me now whatever it doesn't matter. It's because you've been harming people on Twitter
and they're saving people from your harm. Yeah, that's the rationale. Exactly. Well, you know,
it's also been difficult to formulate a defense because I'm not even sure.
And this is, I think, part and parcel either of the ignorance
of the college or their incompetence.
I can't even tell what I'm being accused of.
So for example, one of the complaints submitted as evidence,
the entire transcript of my three-hour discussion
with Joe Rogan.
Yeah.
And so, you know, and I said all sorts of horrible things on that.
Yeah, I know everything that was never said.
That entire podcast was harmful.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so how do you defend yourself against that?
You know, I mean, I think they were objecting primarily to my comments about climate change
models and the apocalyptic conclusions that have been derived from them.
And complaining that I'm not a scientist and bloody well, I am a scientist by the way.
I have 100 scientific publications, and that's a lot, and I can read a scientific paper and understand it,
unlike those who are accusing me or the people who sit on the college by the way.
And so I'm perfectly capable of understanding a scientific paper.
And I believe, and many scientists who are very solid scientists,
like Richard Franz and of MIT, who has a pedigree
that's absolutely impeccable, agree with everything I said.
And so now that doesn't mean it's right.
That's not my claim.
But my claim is, is that I'm not going off with a half-loaded gun here, and I don't say things lightly.
But anyways, it's not easy to figure out exactly what I'm being accused of.
And so, you know, so the upshot is essentially that I either submit myself to this media retraining
program with their experts. Yeah, well, that's not happening.
There's just not a chance that that will ever happen.
I can't imagine a circumstance under which I would be willing to do that.
I mean, I can't imagine how I would possibly sit through such a-
That sounds awful.
You know, something I should just record it and put it on-
No way.
On-on line.
You wouldn't be able to stand yourself.
You'd eat less like 30 seconds in there.
Yeah, well, I don't know if I'd like to put any educator through the horrible process of having to come and try to reeducate me either, because I can't see how that would go particularly well
for them.
Yeah.
So, I'm not sure who would end up reeducated in a situation like that, but I have my doubts
that it would be me, because people have been trying to reeducate me for a long time
And it really hasn't worked that well
So and that's generally because I I don't say things that I haven't investigated right to the bottom
so
In any case, it's very stressful this and I've spent you know hundreds of hours
Just trying to organize the arguments that have been marshaled against me and understand what the hell they are.
Part of the process that's punitive and the bloody activists know this is that
as soon as you have complaints levied against you, you're basically snowed
under by the obligations of what's essentially a serious lawsuit.
You might say, well, it's not a lawsuit, it's just an investigation.
It's like, well, the college itself suggests
that once one of these investigations is levied
that the person being investigated
acquire legal counsel.
So they know bloody well right,
that this is essentially a quasi-criminal investigation,
or at least it has that element of process about it.
And the social justice warriors who are utilizing these colleges have figured that out,
and they're perfectly willing to use third-party bureaucracies as cudgials to enforce their
also compassionate, narcissistic worldview and to be sensorious.
And you see this on Twitter too,
as I've made this public,
there are good thinkers everywhere who are saying,
I got what I deserved even though it isn't obvious
exactly why I deserved it.
And I'm not perfectly happy to see this happening.
And that shows you what kind of motivations,
large percentage of the population has. You know, in Eastern Germany,
a third of the population were KGB informers.
So there's a very large swath of the public who would be perfectly happy to see anybody
who doesn't share their political views,
punished harshly for their audacity.
And I think that's particularly true of radical lefittists
in relationship to anything that's centrist or conservative.
And it's very interesting.
And every, you know, I don't only say conservative things,
although in the current political climate,
I suppose I am more conservative.
But every single complaint that's been levied against me
is because I uttered a conservative
perspective.
And so, you know, the probability that that's merely a consequence of chance is vanishingly
small.
It's one half times one half, twelve times, and that's a pretty damn tiny number.
So the idea that this isn't politically motivated is preposterous, conceptually and statistically.
Yeah.
I feel like we've had a lot of people reach out to
specifically from Canada that are working professionals
like doctors.
I've spoken with a lot of them who've had generally
former patients decide that they didn't like what they
were saying on Twitter, specifically. So conservative doctors. And they're like, oh, I don't like what they were saying on Twitter, specifically, so conservative doctors,
and they're like, oh, I don't like what you're saying on Twitter,
and then sending complaints to colleges to get their licenses.
So I don't think this is just happening to you.
I think we've talked to a lot of people.
Oh, it's not.
The that it's happening to, which means what profession
does that mean you can't exactly trust
to tell you the truth anymore?
Well, you certainly can't trust physicians or psychologists because they're mandated
with regard to affirmative care now. So, for example, if you can't assume that if you take a child of yours
who's gender dysphoric in for professional evaluation, that they're going to get any evaluation at all, because psychologists
and physicians are mandated to do nothing but agree with the gender-disforic individual.
And lawyers are in the same situation as well, is that they're not, for example, a while
back, the governing body of the legal profession and Ontario, mandated diversity, equity, and inclusivity
requirements in relationship to hiring, even on small law firms in Ontario, with the clear
implication that if you didn't buy the DEI social justice warrior political line that your law
firm was no longer in concordance with the
dictates of the professional governing body. Now, Bruce Party, a law professor at Queens
fought that back forthrightly with some success. But I've had discussions with all sorts of
teachers and nurses and lawyers and physicians. All these people, Canadians need to know this.
All these people are so terrified of a good proportion of these people are so terrified of the regulatory bodies.
That there isn't a hope and hell that they're going to be able to tell you the truth when
you're in the middle of a medical, educational, or legal crisis.
And so, you know, when Canadians are in a real bind, because, you know, for 175 years,
it was okay in Canada to basically put trust in the public institutions,
educational institutions, and professional colleges, and even the political parties, you
knew what they stood for, and generally they played the game straight.
And that's flipped completely upside down in the last seven years, and that's a terrible,
bitter appeal for Canadians to swallow.
And most of them don't even know it's happened because their primary sources of news like CBC
is completely corrupted by its $1.4 billion dollar a year payoff from the federal government.
CTV isn't much better.
Most ordinary people have no idea where to get news.
And so they're faced with this terrible conundrum, which is, well, either things have gone badly sideways, especially toward the left in Canada, or the people complaining, like
me, let's say, or the truckers, for that matter, are misogynist, racist, alt-right-wing,
Confederate, Nazi, bigots. And it's a hell of a lot easier to buy the ladder from the former,
and no wonder. But the unfortunate truth is, well,
people can decide that for themselves. We'll walk through this again. I retweeted Pierre Paulieve.
He's the leader of the opposition in Canada. And because of that, I'm being investigated by my
regulatory body, my public reputation as its stake,
and I may no longer be able to practice or describe myself
as a clinical psychologist.
And that's how it is.
And it isn't just polyeth.
It's also the fact that I criticized Trudeau
and I criticized in order what a city counselor.
And I made a joke at Jacinda Ardenne.
And it's not just fluk flute that every single one of them
is on the left.
And that's how we are in Canada.
And it's not like I don't have some sympathy for the left.
You know, I like Russell Brande.
Brande does what he can to stand up for working class types
against corporate overreach and corporate government collusion to produce
a kind of fascist, oppressive fascist overreach in relationship to the working class.
And I understand perfectly well that there's a need for a left-wing political voice to
stand for the working class, and especially perhaps against the depredations of monopolistic capitalists.
But that isn't what's happening on the left in relationship to the sorts of things we're talking about in the least.
So, well, and it's going to be very hard for Canadians to wake up to this reality.
I see no evidence whatsoever that they've woken up yet.
Oh, not at all.
Not at all. Not at all?
No.
So, well, so we'll see what happens when we make all of this public.
The next step for the college is to haul me in front of a disciplinary board and, you
know, rake me over the coals personally.
And I don't imagine all except their dictats when that happens.
I can't imagine any circumstances under which that would occur.
And then the next step is to publicly announce my refractory nature.
They've already defined me as a repeat offender, by the way, highly likely to real-friend.
Well, you are a high-level terminology.
That seems like accurate terminology to me.
Yeah, well, yeah, I know, well, if the the offenses are defined as saying what I think publicly,
then it's pretty much certain I'm going to real fend, but it's hell of a terminology to
be pasted with, you know, repeat offender with a high likelihood of real fending, you know.
So, do we have a timeline about how long this is going to take and what do you think the
percentage, what do you think the likelihood is
that they'll take your license?
Well, I don't see what choice they have
because the next thing, look,
what I would like from them,
because I might as well make it clear,
I want every single one of them to resign
and to apologize to me.
Well, that's not gonna happen.
They can't resign.
It seems highly unlikely.
That seems very unlikely,
and I don't know if they're going to,
well, they could resign.
What if they just stop?
What if they just said, you know what?
Out of 15 million people, 12 complaints
isn't that bad given there about tweets
and we've decided to stop investigating you.
What if they just said that?
Well, I don't see how,
well, I don't see how they can do that
without admitting that the whole bloody thing
was a scam to begin with because if it was just one complaint,
they could say, well, you know, we've reconsidered
and, you know, we may have acted too hastily,
but when you do it 13 times, you know,
three times is a pattern.
13 times, that's pretty much a decision.
And if you have to announce publicly that you were wrong 13 times, you're probably so
wrong that you're not fit for the job.
So the alternative is, I'm going to make this public, I've already told them essentially
to go to hell, although I did it politely.
And now they have to drag me in front of a disciplinary hearing, which I will make unbelievably
public.
And so, and then because I won't move in that regard, as far as I can tell, I don't see
that they have a leg to stand on. You know, not only am I being accused in the vast majority of the accusations of having
unacceptable political beliefs, but half the people who complained claim they were clients
of mine.
So procedurally, this is also a nightmare for them as far as I can tell because at minimum they should have inquired in relationship
to these claims that the complainants were clients of mine. They should have no doubted them that
they weren't and they should have required them to re-initiate the complaint process without falsehood
and they didn't do any of that repeatedly.
And that's particularly germane because if the complaint is levied by someone who was a client,
the college is obligated and also tends to take those complaints much more seriously and to facilitate their movement forward.
So I think they've demonstrated such a brutal level of incompetence and corruption that I
can't see that they have any way forward except to continue to pursue me or to resign on
mass.
And they're not going to do the latter.
And so, you know, and this is a dreadful, you know, I've met people, Douglas Murray is a good
example.
I've met people in my voyage through this weird political landscape who really like this
sort of fight, you know, who are up for it.
And this is not a criticism of such people.
It's, we need people like that, you know, who are capable and willing to have a scrap.
Now, the danger of that is that you have more scraps
than you should, you know,
and that you might be inclined to take pleasure
when you shouldn't, but I'm not that sort of person.
I hate this.
It's just, it's really, I find it really, really difficult.
I like peace.
I mean, part of the reason I engage in conflict
is because it's prepared obstacle in some sense. I really want peace. And so if I
have a problem with someone, I want to address it right
now. 100% right to the bottom to get at the hell out of the
way. So we don't fight about it for the next 10 years, you
know, and your mother and I have conducted our whole
relationship with that. You know, it's so funny, we had to date
the other night upstairs, you know, and she comes upstairs and this has happened probably the last three dates we shared. And she always has
three bitchy things to say to me before the date starts. And there, what she does though is she tells
me some of the things that are on her mind that are maybe interfering a bit with our relationship.
And their minor things, like I think the last thing is we were discussing how to clean the sink.
So we were both happy about it.
She wasn't exactly happy with how it was cleaning the sink.
And then it was out of the way.
And then it was completely out of the way.
And then we had a very peaceful time together
because there wasn't anything boiling away on the back burner.
And when you and Julian were home,
we conducted our family life the same way.
If we had a bloody problem,
we were going to have a discussion about it right now and get to the bottom of it and fix it
so that we didn't hate each other. And so I don't like, and I never liked those conversations,
I find them very stressful. I'm too high in negative emotion and too high in agreeableness to enjoy that sort of thing.
That's my, you know, the detrimental consequences of my feminine temperament to the degree that
I have that.
And it's quite the degree, actually.
And they're supposed to not partly what tilted me towards being a clinician in the first
place, right?
So, and, you know, it has its advantages because I do feel the pain of other people quite deeply,
but that also makes it very hard for me to fight, even though I'll fight when I know the consequences
of not fighting is more fighting. So, yeah, well, that's a paradox, you know, but it isn't because I enjoy it. And,
you know, I tried to let the college know through backdoor channels that it might be reasonable
for them to consider not doing this because the consequences of making it public would not be
positive for the, in my estimation, for the people involved.
And I don't wanna bring public pressure
to bear on people without necessity
because it's very unpleasant to be at the center
of that kind of focal attention
unless you're narcissistic.
You shouldn't bully people
hide behind this pseudo-government organization
and pressure people.
I think if they get negative feedback, then they have more than that coming to them
Canada is like the disagreeable. Well, no, it says the disagreeable. But what even being in Canada is unpleasant now
I feel like the political landscape has ruined the country and it's because of people who hide behind
Well, they're just hide in anonymity
and pressure other people for being harmful.
You're using bureaucracy.
Yeah, so whatever.
They shouldn't be bullying.
Yeah, well,
they're not just bullying you, like obviously,
we've had other doctors reach out to say
that they're being pressured,
their license is being pressured because of their conservative
opinions on Twitter. That's not what these regulations are important for.
I talked to one of my great friends this week, a physician, as well as a lawyer, and I suggested
that maybe the three of us write an article for the National Post about the state of regulatory bodies in Ontario and in
Canada more generally, in the West more generally, and because I thought maybe a one, two, three
punch might be more effective, you know, but my friend said that, and he's very brave man,
and also very, very careful in what he says and does. He said, his financial house wasn't in sufficient order to initiate that battle yet.
He wants to do it, you know, but he still has to, but the point is that even though he's
a very brave man and he's made a lot of public statements already, he's intimidated enough
by the College of Physicians so that even though he knows that this would be politically
effective, he feels
that he's not well defended enough yet to take this on fully.
And, you know, I can understand that.
One of the things that made me able to do this from the beginning when the university came
after me was that I had three independent streams of income, right?
You know, as a professor, I had a clinical practice, and I had a pretty successful business.
And so I could lose two of those, any two of those without, you know, being destitute
and putting my family at risk.
And I'm still in that position now, which is also partly why I'm willing to do this publicly.
You know, because I don't want this precisely to be about me, because that's just annoying.
I want to shed light on the fact that this is a, on my belief that this is a universal
problem of public concern in Canada and elsewhere.
And I can do that because the worst thing the college can do to me is, well, the worst
thing they can do is to spend my license and make a public statement that because of my
refusal to comply with their dictates, I'm no longer acceptable as a licensed clinical psychologist.
And I don't want them to do that because I believe that I earned my license
and am also a good advocate on the clinical front.
I don't want to be in a position where faceless bureaucrats motivated by a political agenda and
whatever envy and resentment they carry in their dark and nasty little hearts have the opportunity to
strip me of something that I spent a decade of extremely hard work earning. But if they do strip
it from me, well, first of all, that's not going to redone to their credit.
Second, I can probably get licensed in a jurisdiction like Florida.
That would be satisfying.
That would be satisfying.
Yeah, well, I'd like to be part of this creepy little club of psychologists that are just
telling people lies anyway.
If the entire profession is being forced to not tell their clients the truth, then maybe...
But worse than that, it's worse than that, Michaela. The bodies that govern the training programs for clinical psychologists in Canada,
the Canadian Psychological Association, has increasingly moved to make it mandatory for universities
that offer clinical psychology training to do that under the rubric of social justice or face
the suspension of the accreditation of their programs. And that's also happening in medicine.
You, everyone listening, you should, you bloody well better listen to this people because we're entering a situation where the universities themselves are required to ensure
that your physicians and your psychologists are of a particular political stripe,
which essentially means radically left, not just left but radically left, like social justice,
full, woke, critical racist theory, oppressive, patriarchal, narrative, feminist,
left-wing, or the institution itself will not be allowed to train physicians or psychologists.
And I know that sounds like a conspiracy theory.
And well, go look it up for yourself and see if it's true, because it's true right down
to the last word.
And so if you, Canadians, you think you're gonna be served well
by Craven political ideologues
who are primarily selected to be physicians
on the basis of their political purity,
you've got a bloody another thing coming.
That didn't work out so well in Eastern Europe.
Let me tell you, it's not gonna work out very well for us either.
And so part of the reason I'm willing to make this battle public is to try to alert people
to the fact that we're at hell of a lot farther down this road than we think. I went through
Eastern Europe for four months this spring talking to people there. I had the privilege
of meeting 30 or 40 people in each country who were political or cultural leaders across the political spectrum, including leftists who be mobbed like mad by their own
compatriots.
And every single one of the people I talked to virtually without exception in Eastern
Europe said something like, do you know what happened here between the end of the Second
World War in 1989 when we were dominated by the communists.
Do you know how awful it was here?
That was particularly true in Albania.
Do you know you people in the West
are walking down exactly the same road?
What the hell is wrong with you?
Don't you notice?
And this included the socialists
in those Eastern European countries.
You know, who remember the tender mercies
of the radical leftists
and the fact that, you know, one out of three people in most of those countries, even if
they were within your own family, were government informers.
And where the joke was, we pretend to work and they pretend to pay us, and where people
spent hours and bread lines and fought over terrible little rat hole apartments as they
were quasi-starving to death,
unable to ever tell the truth or speak.
Yeah, that's not good.
No, and that's why you're in Florida.
I know. Florida is great.
It's weird. People here are weird,
but it's good weird.
It's free weird.
Yeah. It's not stifled, like... Yeah good weird. It's free weird. Yeah.
It's not stifled, but...
Yeah, well so...
Toronto right now.
I hate it.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know how you felt going back there,
and I don't know how, I've got lots of friends in Toronto,
but it is not the same Toronto as it was in 2015 or 2016.
You go there, it's kinda like California.
You can feel the weight of silence in that place.
Yeah, well, your mum and I have been back here for a month. We're pretty worried about
coming back because we've faced a fair bit of resistance in our neighborhood. I'm probably
more unpopular in some sense in Toronto and more particularly in my neighborhood than
I am
anywhere else in the world.
And so it was somewhat worrisome to come back to Toronto.
It's very worrisome.
It's unmoved out of our neighborhood in part because it was uncomfortable for him to
be there, even though that's where he grew up.
Thanks to the machinations of certain neighbors.
It's been hard on your mom, too, because I come downstairs while the other day when I was
going through what happened in 2016, too, because I come downstairs, well, the other day, when I was going through what happened in 2016,
I came downstairs, I could hardly stand up.
A lot of the symptoms I had over the last couple of years
came back, and that's really pretty frightening
for me and for her to see.
I had to sit down on the floor five or six times.
Like, this sounds like PTSD.
Well, who knows, you know, what it is, but I recovered fairly quickly,
but you know, an indication of my return to health.
So, but it's hard on your mom too, because I'm bitchy as can possibly be after going up
stairs and wrestling with this material.
And, you know, we had a big conversation this week
about how she should be involved,
because I don't wanna drag her into this.
And she doesn't want to blame me
for being entangled in it.
And we don't wanna stress our relationship.
So I don't know how much to protect her from this
and how much to share with her.
I thought, well, maybe when I'm writing out my college defense,
I should go to a hotel room and, you know, grapple with it there because
I'm much more irritable, at least for some period of time,
after confronting all of this. Like, it's calmed down a bit now that I've got my argument, you know, in order.
I've looked through all the material. There isn't any snakes left under the carpet to bite me. So I think I'm through the most demanding
part of it, although God only knows what's going to happen as this unfolds, because there's
always the possibility I'll make a mistake while I'm defending myself too, because I could
easily do that, because it's so complicated. But your mum and I are on the same page in relationship to this, which is she believes that if I just
say what's happening, if I do my best to tell the truth without adornment and to try to keep
my volatile temper under control, that this will turn out the way things have turned out for us in the past,
which is it'll be rather dreadful in the short term, but resolve itself somewhat favorably
in the medium to long run. But that's easy to say when the medium to long run has made itself manifest yet.
Yeah. This also might just be This also might just be something that's
happening that no one can really get out of.
And by that, I mean, we see what direction the universities
are going in.
So you can fight back against that.
But basically, at the moment, going
to get a university degree seems like maybe not the best
idea if you end up in hundreds of thousands
of dollars of debt being taught by ideologues and then being taught information that won't
lead to a job just seems like a scam, right?
And if this is what's going on with colleges and if they're controlling working professionals
so that the working professionals have to work in a way that isn't truthful, I mean,
how do you even fight back against that?
At what point do you just stop playing in that game?
Well, people have asked me that too.
Why don't you just give up your license?
And I would say, well, because I wouldn't be giving it up,
I would be allowing it to be taken away from me.
Like, if I decide in a year that I don't want to be a licensed clinical psychologist
because the whole damn profession has become corrupt, that's a whole different issue than
letting this pack of craven commissar cowards organize behind the scenes, utilize the complaints
of random people online to justify their own envy and desire to prosecute
and then fold in the path of that opposition. It's like I'm not going to do that.
Now, you say, well, what do you do? I think the only answer to that is,
I think the only thing you have in a complex situation is the truth.
That's all you have. That's why you have to abide
by the truth, you know, because when things get complex around you, how do I deal with
this politically? How do I deal with this personally? What do I say in this terribly complex
situation? All you have there that's solid ground is the truth. And one of the things to
reflect upon in relationship to that is,
that's also why you have to live honestly,
because it's very hard to tell the truth
if you're simultaneously worried
that the evidence of your past misbehavior,
your past deceitful misbehavior
is gonna come to light.
And so the reason you abide by the truth
is so that you can say what you have to say
about what you've done and who you are,
and you can do that under impossibly difficult circumstances, and possibly that will sustain
you through that.
And, you know, in circumstances, where if that's not possible, you're just going to get
crushed.
You know, and people might say, well, being investigated by your professional body isn't
exactly a life-threatening event,
and you're just whining, it's like,
look, for all you people who think
that this is such a walk in the park,
I'll tell you two things.
Number one, I've known about 200 people
who face this sort of thing now,
and every single one of them, every single one of them,
with the exception of those people who
like a fight, right, of tiny, tiny minority of people, maybe one or two in that entire
200, they reacted as if they or someone they loved had contracted a life threatening illness.
I've known people, very stable people, extremely elegant, polished, educated, well-positioned, well-supported people who
literally ended up in psych wards because of the pressure that was brought to bear on
them by the accusatory mob.
And so those of you who think this is a cakewalk, you just bloody well-wait till your neighbor
show up on your doorstep with pitchforks and torches, and you just see what that's like
for yourself.
So you better watch yourself very carefully
if you think that the people who are complaining
about being mobbed are just complaining
because they can't take it.
Yeah.
So.
You also hear about, I mean, that's a silly thing to think too.
You hear about university students who,
you can get bullied online.
It's not life threatening, but it is life threatening
to some people.
Again, make some people suicidal from stress.
Well, look, there's two great classes of fear, Michaela.
There's only two.
One of them is death and physiological
and psychological disintegration.
So you can think about that as the terror
of biological vulnerability.
That's one class of fear.
It's the second great class of fear
is fear of social exclusion.
And part of the reason is, is that historically,
if you're socially excluded, you're dead.
So they're the same fear, because your social inclusion
protects you from dying, right?
You work with other people, you cooperate with them, you play with them, you eat with them,
you're dependent on their labor, you're literally sustained in your life by your social
desirability and your inclusion. And so if that's taken away from you, your reputation is solid or shattered.
People shun you.
Not only are you loathsome and isolated,
but you're really in trouble.
And your nervous system reacts to that
as if it's a mortal threat, which it is.
And so you know, one of the problems with online culture
and the culture of anonymity, you know,
people have been pointing to this and saying,
well, now are you sorry that you've gone
after anonymous trolls because look at what happens
if you're not anonymous as I think,
no, I still think you people are cowardly
and most of you are an arse assists
and you don't have the courage of your convictions.
And the problem of anonymity is that the anonymous denouncers
get the upper hand, and the research
is clear on this.
I just talked to Dell Paulus this week, the developer of the idea of the dark triad and the dark
catcher.
There's a huge body of research that's emerging, showing that online trolls, especially
the anonymous types, are much more likely to be, this is fun, narcissistic. So that means they want
social status, they believe they deserve social status and they should get it without earning it.
Mackie Evalien, which means they'll manipulate other people instrumentally to get what they want,
independent of the consequences for that person. Psychopathic, which means their predatory and
parasitical,
parasitical meaning they're perfectly willing to use your work as means for their sustenance.
And this is the new part of the dark tetrad, which is expanded beyond the triad,
synistic, which means taking a positive, positive delight in the evident suffering of others. Not only failure to experience that suffering,
so that callousness that might be part and parcel of,
you know, being disagreeable and tough,
but actually experiencing a positive delight
in the suffering of others.
That's what laws means, right? L-O-L-L-Z, the plural of l-l-l-l-Z, LULZ is the plural of LOL laugh out loud.
And to do something for the LULZ is literally to do it online so that you can watch other
people squirm and suffer.
And that's sadism.
And so, Paulus has been just, you know, has been investigating ordinary dark tetrad behavior
and looking at its contribution to online behavior
And it's certainly the case that you know some of the complaints that are levied against me by the Ontario College of
Psychologists were just submitted to the college as tweets so they just used the college
Tagline at CP Ontario to point my gosh to one of my tweets and that was the complaint.
And so these people who are willing to use their anonymity to inform and accuse have the
upper hand in a virtualized society.
And that's another reason why I've had some moral doubts about whether I should just
make all of this public,
like every bit of the documentation, everything the college sent me,
which would include the identifiers of the complainants.
But, and I'm still not sure that in the fundamental, most fundamental manner,
that's not the appropriate thing to do.
But because I'm not sure, and because at least technically my understanding at the moment
is that that's not that I wouldn't be abiding by the dictates of the college, I'm still
more than willing to play by the rules.
And those rules might be right, I still, I don't know what to do with that because I'm
in normal circumstances I can understand why the anonymity of the complainant publicly would be maintained, right?
Because it stops people who have a legitimate grievance from being intimidated by those
against whom they have the grievance.
But those rules only apply when people aren't weaponizing the colleges.
And as soon as the colleges are weaponized, when you can manipulate bureaucracy into being
a club for your viewpoint, then what constitutes
ethical behavior on the part of the defendant starts to become murky.
And that's also part of what makes this stressful.
Yeah, well, I think ignoring the people who actually did the complaints is the right way
to go, because they don't matter.
And if they weren't there, somebody else would be making the same kind of complaint.
It's a college issue.
Right, but that's a weird argument, right?
And you may well be right, and that's obviously what we've decided to do, too.
But there is part of me that also thinks, no, you know, any given individual can cause
a lot of trouble if you set out to do that.
And the idea that you shouldn't be responsible for your accusations is questionable, especially when what you're essentially
doing is levying the equivalent of a legal charge.
Yeah, I think that's the right option.
It also, I think, just on a more selfish level,
I think it'll be easier.
Given the fact that this is gonna be a battle for a while,
and it might end badly, I don't know how it's going to end,
I don't trust Canada.
It would be better for you emotionally
not to be involved in a personal way as much as you can.
So forget who the people who made the complaints are.
Even though they're probably despicable human beings,
there's tons of despicable human beings out there,
better to just ignore them and tell everybody what's going on, and ideally have a backup plan.
If they do come for your license, can you just...
I mean, I assume getting a license is just...
Yeah, well, it's hard to know.
It's hard to know if it's better to ignore them.
There's lots of psychological studies about what people do to cheaters in games.
And people are so motivated to punish cheaters that they'll give up some of their own privileges for the right to do so.
And some of that's actually salutary. Well, look, Michaela, if you let the cheaters get away with it, they dominate and take everything.
That's the psychopathic niche. That's why it even exists, spilologically, is because you can get somewhere with exploitation, and you
particularly get somewhere with exploitation, if the people you are exploiting don't object.
And so you actually have a moral obligation to object, to not let people get away with
breaking the rules.
When people come after me, they can't just be let off the hook, right? So it's very, but I think we've worked this through
quite appropriately, is that no, I should really be
concentrating on the college and not the individual
complainants.
I should be concentrating on the college in a way
that has broad public significance,
because there shouldn't just be about me.
It's about a broader social problem
that we should use the truth and public exposure
transparency to mount the best defense.
And we should all keep our heads well doing so.
But that's a, well, there's no better strategy than that.
But it's a tight rope to walk.
That's for sure.
And the other problem is, Mick, it's so easy to slip off this. You
know, it's like when I've been in the most tendentious interviews that have been directed at me,
Helen Lewis comes to my particular, every single comment that some of these journalists
have made is a trap, right? And the trap is, I think I could go to you into saying something that would be
impulsive and aggressive enough to blacken your reputation permanently. So and therefore
to destroy your life in some fundamental sense, just so that it would redound to my moral
credit. And if you all listening think that I'm being paranoid, you go read Nellie Bowles
apology for what she did as a New York Times journalist. And you tell me that this isn't
true because she came right out and said that's exactly what she did when she worked at the
New York Times. Now she thinks she's learned better, but I would say if you already went
that far in that direction, you have an awful lot of learning to do.
And I would be very hesitant to claim you've now learned your lesson and are a good person.
You know, there's some things that it takes a long time to come back from.
And that's certainly one of them.
I would happily destroy someone's reputation just so that my articles got more attention
online.
It's like, oh yeah, really?
And you knew that, too.
You didn't just do it unconsciously.
You did it consciously, and you did it repeatedly,
and you did it for the New York Times.
And now you're sorry.
It's like, yeah, 10 years in a convent,
flagellating yourself might make you sorry.
Maybe. Like, I've watched people in my clinical practice in a convent, flagellating yourself, might make you sorry.
Maybe. Like, I've watched people in my clinical practice
try to walk back from significant moral errors.
It is not that easy.
You know, there's that Catholic doctrine
that you can be saved
and redeem no matter what you're sin.
It's like, that's true,
but that doesn't mean you don't have to face
the consequences of
what you've done.
And like if you want to repent and you've done something seriously wrong, so much of you
have to change, has to change, that it's almost like you have to die in order to be reborn.
So anyways, for those who are listening, that's another reason why you should try to step forward carefully in your life
You know because you will be called to attend for your misbehavior and it will occur during a period of crisis
And if you're a mess and a deceitful mess, you're gonna find yourself in trouble so profound. You can barely imagine it
so
Anyways, I don't know kid. This isn't really what I wanted to do on your birthday.
This is exactly what I wanted to do on my birthday.
I think that's good. I think we covered what's going on and we'll keep people updated.
We can do another update podcast and you're going to record anything that happens in the future.
I think that's more than fair.
Record everything as much as possible and just...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, definitely.
Yeah, yeah, I'm not doing any of this behind closed doors.
So enough of that.
If it has to be done behind closed doors,
unless I'm convinced that there's a real concern for confidentiality.
If it has to be done behind closed doors, the reason for convinced that there's a real concern for confidentiality.
If it has to be done behind closed doors, the reason for that is even their justifiable
concerns for privacy or a kind of corruption that can't bear public scrutiny.
And since this is a public inquiry as to my suitability to speak publicly as a clinical
psychologist, I'm perfectly willing to insure that the show trial is as broadly attended to as possible.
So anyways, I have no idea how this is going to go, Mick. I mean...
Did you lie?
I'm gonna...
Oh, I wrote Trudeau.
I wrote Justin yesterday and just let him know what was happening.
Yeah, yeah, and said, you know, turns out that I'm having my professional license threatened
because I don't agree with you, which I certainly don't.
And I just thought, you know, you might be interested in knowing that this is occurring
on your watch.
And so anyways, I wrote him and then I sent that to the National Post and they said they
wanted to publish it as an op-ed.
So I added an introductory paragraph and a concluding paragraph just to let everybody
know the context and that's going to be published tomorrow.
And I know a number of reporters who are going to cover this in the next few days.
And it'll get some international attention soon.
And so what do you think is going to happen?
I think the guess.
I think if I had to guess, I think that they'll say,
you know what, after looking into these,
we've realized that these are just random people
on Twitter complaining,
and we're going to throw them out and not pursue you further.
I think that's what my guess is.
The alternative is they literally take your license.
I think that that's also easily possible, but it would be such a public war.
It shows that their system is broken.
It's obvious that the system is broken if that's what happens.
If they take your license for your opinion tweets,
it shows that their system is broken.
I don't think that they can let that happen.
And eventually someone will figure out what's happening
and say, guys, you have to let this go.
Somebody at the top.
Yeah.
What do you think?
Well, I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know, you know?
Because I keep thinking that the tide will turn turn and this is self-correcting,
but everything self-correcting in the long run.
But when the Israelites were wandering through the desert, that was three generations.
So the long run can be a very long time and things self-corrected in the Soviet Union
to some degree, but it took 60 years and 30 to 40 million deaths.
And so things can fall apart pretty damn badly.
And if we think we're immune to that in a place like Canada, it's just because we're so
sheltered, we're naive beyond belief.
It isn't clear to me at all that a third of Canadians have virtually no allegiance whatsoever
to the ideas of freedom of association, allegiance,
conscience, and expression.
The rapidity with which Canadians, particularly in Toronto, leapt forward to adopt all the
restrictions of the massacred dates, was absolute evidence of that.
And there's still plenty of people here who are more than happy to have their masks on
and who I think would wear them for the rest of their lives, especially if they had the extra delight of being to
tell, of being able to tell other people that they also had to wear them.
So I don't know what will happen, kiddo.
I mean, what do I think will happen?
I think I don't think that they'll do what you said, at least in the immediate future,
because I think they made too many decisions already to backtrack without the kind of embarrassment
that shouldn't necessitate resignation.
And so I think what will happen is they'll pray devoutly that I go the hell away, and
am I actually afraid of their public hearing, but I'm not.
In fact, I'm much less afraid of that because I can represent myself
than I'm much less afraid of that than of anything we're doing presently.
And so I think they'll go through with that.
I think they have to, I don't know, there's two end points.
They resign and apologize.
Or they walk this through and take my license. Those are the options.
So this depends how badly Canada is going to fall before it corrects itself. Because I think the university is a dead. I think the universities are dead.
I don't know if the, you know, colleges that are around for doctors,
those might be dead too.
So they can get pretty bad.
No, the classic, the classic hallmark of a tyrant
is that under duress, they double down.
So I suspect what they'll do now is they'll release something
like a public statement indicating that my vociferous attempts to defend myself
are nothing but my utility of my own proclivity for bullying
to bring the weight of my alt-right followers unfairly to bear on this issue.
So they'll play the victim card, right, despite the fact that...
card, right? Despite the fact that I have left them alone 100% and that the reverse isn't true. Now they'll say, well, they're just doing their professional duties. It's like,
well, I guess that's what the dispute's about. I don't think you're just doing your professional
duty. I think you're a pack of envious scoundrels hiding your own incompetence behind the opportunity to persecute.
That's what I think.
And so when you think I'm a reprehensible alt-right bully,
it's like, okay, I think you're wrong about that.
Let's have it out.
We'll see what everyone thinks when the dust settles.
So I guess that's where we're at, kiddo.
Yeah, and we'll keep everybody posted online.
We'll link the article in the YouTube description.
Yep, and we'll link this document that makes all the correspondence that's relevant and legally appropriate available.