Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Hey, welcome back to another episode of Doctor Mike and
Colonel Mike on the Two Mics Podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
We wish everybody a happy spring. We know you're all
into the weather coming.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
And we want to thank you for visiting our show
at Network Radio dot US, our website two mics dot
us and don't forget to visit our website, both of them,
and we got over five hundred shows huh, five million
views on rumble and we're still going. Hey, by the way,
you go to love this next one coming up. Make
(00:32):
sure to tune in every week. Every two weeks we
get another show up there for you. And if you
like us, we're not asking anybody coffee. Just visit the website.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Say hellover to the sponsors at two Mics dot ustw
Mikes dot S.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Bye.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
Four three two one, Hey, welcome back your own two
MIC's Doctor Michael Shower, New York Times bestselling author and
Colonel Mike. Hey, before we get to today's guest, and
we're gonna really be having an exciting conversation today because
it's only a couple of days countdown before they have
the elections up in Canada. All right, we want to
remind you to go to two Mike's Two Mikes dot
(01:37):
Us and take a visit with the sponsors. We don't
want to kill too much time because we only have
a little bit of time to salk through guests today.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
So visit our sponsors.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
And as I said in the intro, and it's going
to be on this intro again if you don't get
with Ira ourgoal guide dot com.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
Oh or you are gold Guide dot com and get.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Some of these medals while everything's going crazy, all right,
and tariffs and everything else and e MP's and wars
and things like that.
Speaker 2 (02:03):
We don't want that, but be prepared. Okay, So let's go.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
We're going right to the camera and we're going to
say good morning too. And he is up early because
he's in Vancouver right now.
Speaker 2 (02:13):
He's traveling the country. We're talking with.
Speaker 1 (02:16):
Maxine Bernier, who is running for office in our northern
neighbor country, Canada.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Maxine, welcome to the two Mics.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Thank you for having me. I'm very pleased to be
with you.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
Oh, we're happy to have you, sir.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
So tell us quick a little bit about your background,
your party, what you're going to do if you win.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
Are we still going to be friends, come on, tell
us a little bit about Maxine.
Speaker 4 (02:41):
Yes, yes, we would be friends for sure.
Speaker 2 (02:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (02:44):
And you know, I started in politics in two thousand
and six. Before that, I worked in the private sector,
in the financial sector in Montreal, Quebec for nineteen years.
And I decided to jump into politics in two thousand
and six because I said, believe in individual freedom and
personal responsibility. I believe in a smaller government that will
(03:06):
give us more of our own money in our own
pockets and more freedom. So I was a minister a Conservative,
you know, the Conservative Party of Canada. It's like the
Republican Party in the US. Upper was the Prime minister
at that time in two thousand and six, and I
was the minister Minister for Industry. I was Foreign Affairs
(03:28):
minister at that time in two thousand and eight. My
contra part in the US was condule is a rise
under the Bush Junior administration, and so I had different
positions in that government. In twenty seventeen, I did run
for the leadership for the leadership of the Conservative Party
of Canada. Opper resigned in twenty fifteen. I didn't win
(03:53):
that leadership with forty nine percent of the support from
the members of the Conservative Party of Canada, and I
tried to work with the new leader and do share
that he was elected with fifty one percent of the vote.
And in twenty seventeen and after fifteen months, I had
a private meeting with my new leader and I want
(04:13):
him to take some of our ideas. Real conservative free markets,
family values are the ideas. And he said no. He said,
you know, your ideas were popular with the membership of
the Conservative Party of Kada, but we did a couple
of survey and pollings and they are not popular with
the general population. And my goal now as the leader
(04:35):
of the Conservative Party of Kada is to become Prime Minister.
And I won't take any of your ideas for the
director or platform for the general election in Canada in
twenty nineteen, and I said, you know, I left the party.
I said, this body, the Conservative Party is smally an angellextrin, corrupt.
They don't speak about real conservative values when they are
(04:57):
not that popular. And so we create to the People's
Party of Canada in twenty eighteen and now you know,
we are in electoral campaign and I can tell you
the Conservative Party of Canada right now is like you know,
the Rhino, the Republican in name all.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Speaker 4 (05:18):
They're very you know. Now with Trump you have a
real Republican party, but before that that was Rhino. And
here in Canada, the Conservative Party is like the Liberals
Party on a lot of issues. And so we are fighting,
you know, for common sense. We are putting Canadian first.
And if I may add on the tariffs, we are
(05:39):
the only national political party in Canada that is saying
no to counter tariffs. I know that Prinsident Trump didn't
post tariffs and when he did that, that's American consumers
who will pay that for all the imports coming from Canada.
And for US, you know, imposing counter tariffs, so it
(06:00):
is hurting US Canadians. It is Canadian consumers who are
paying that. And in Canada right now we have inflation
about five percent, we may be in a recession, our
centerd of living is going down. We are paying huge taxes,
so it's not time to impose another tax on Canadians.
And because you are ten times bigger than us, you know,
(06:23):
our counter tariffs will affect mostly Canadians and not you know,
your businesses in US who are exporting to Canada. It's
a small market for them. So let's add and our position.
The Conservatives and the Librowns. They want to have that
trade war with Prisident Trump. And what I want. I
want to have a deal with Prisident Trump because I
(06:45):
understand that it does online. It doesn't like the fact
that we are imposing three hundred percent tariffs on your milk,
pull tree and eggs. You cannot export that to Canada
because we have a kind of a communist system in
Canada in mail put three and eggs a cartail, a
legal cartail, and we need to abolish that for Canadian consumers,
(07:07):
but also for you in US being able to export
your products in the US. And President in Canada sorry,
and Princeident Trump said about three times on eggs that
you know, if we want to deal with him, we
will need to abolish that system and have a recipro
called tariff. So and my goal is to have a
(07:28):
deal with Princedent Trump right now, not waiting until twenty
twenty six, because in twenty twenty six that's the date
where we are supposed to review the free trade agreement
with Canada, Mexico and you in US. Let's do that,
right now put everything on the table, abolishing that cartail
and having a recipro called tariff zero zero percent on
(07:52):
each side. That would be great and we must do that.
That's the only solution.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
So that's why we all heard it.
Speaker 1 (07:59):
Yeah, Max, same as a neighbor, I think you Canada, Mexico,
we should have some very fair trade deals. We're all
together North America, right. We shouldn't have to the other stories,
you know, Europe and China and things like that. That's
another story. However, you know, as a northern neighbor, you
know Mike's you know, attended school in Canada. I for years,
(08:20):
went to Canada, love it, loved the Canadian people. My
favorite city Montreal, Quebec. You know, I have never been
to the interior. I hope one day to get to
you know, Sasketchewan and a burder and so on. But
you know, look, you've had you had a lot of import.
You guys opened the door back in the day when
Hong Kong fell. It was the Canadians who opened the
(08:41):
door for the Chinese to come to to build up Vancouver.
Speaker 2 (08:44):
We closed the door on them, We turned down their money.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
You know, the Chinese that were escaping with money, and
they made the Gold Coast in Australia and then they
made Vancouver.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
And you have a good policy. I think your platform resonates.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
I think you're more like what we would all in America.
Would you say, Mike, the Constitution Party maybe yeah, yeah,
maybe yeah, because we have the Constitution Party which takes
actually exiles from the Rhinos and exiles from the Republican
Party Maxine, which now.
Speaker 2 (09:18):
Has got candidates on platforms throughout the States.
Speaker 4 (09:21):
Okay, yeah. And for us, we want the federal government
to respect our constitution because right now our provinces, you know,
they don't have the full autonomy that they were supposed
to have under the Constitution. The federal government in Otawa
is a big fat government that is imposing you know,
(09:42):
their views on every province. It must stop. We need
to respect the constitution. As you know what the federal
government did to us during the COVID eysteria with all
these Rakonian measures. I was the only national politician speaking
for freedom, freedom of choice with informed consent. And I
was doing that because when we created our party, we
(10:03):
created our party, the People's Body, based on four principles
individual freedom, personal responsibility, fairness, and respect and all our
policies are in line with that. If you compare our
party with others in Europe, we are you know, the
Published Party, a little bit like Nigel Parage in UK
(10:25):
with the Reform Party, you know, speaking for people in
UK and US. We are speaking for Canadians. And on immigration,
you know here in Canada you said yes we open
our doors to immigrants a couple of years ago, but
now there's no screening. That's massivemmigration and we want to
stop that. We want to have a more toyum on
(10:46):
immigration and we are the only party that is peaking
for that and also deporting our illegals because President Trump
is right, we have illegals in our country that are
you know, that are coming to Canada and crossing our
borders to going to the US. We need to stop
that and for me that that's important. That's the future
(11:08):
of the country. We need to have these moratorium and
these reforms to be sure to save our country.
Speaker 1 (11:16):
I understand from emails I've gotten to this show, the
two Mic show from listeners in Canada.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
We have listeners all over globe, eleven twelve countries.
Speaker 1 (11:25):
Where there are now gangs of Indian gangs more like
Italian mafia Jewish mafia thing back years ago running in Toronto.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
That are really scary.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
Some of the emails and some of the reports I
got in the newspapers from the Canadian newspapers were like, Wow,
I can't believe that's happening. And you know, you cannot
allow that to happen in your country, just like we
cannot allow it to happen in our country.
Speaker 4 (11:48):
You know, yeah, absolutely, And that's because of the last
ten years. You know, last year, our pperation grew from
two point seven percent if you compare that with the
year before, two point seven percent growth of our population,
and the average growth of the western countries including the
(12:09):
US last year was zero point five percent. So our
population grew five times more than the average of the
western countries. And ninety seven of the growth of our
population is coming from immigration. So that is the replacement
theory in action. We need to stop that. We need
(12:30):
to stop that. And all these people who came You're right,
they are coming from India and actually they are coming
under the international student permit. They are coming here. They
are saying we want to study, and they are coming
in and they are studying at the end, they have
a fake diploma and they don't want to go back
(12:52):
to their country of origin. They don't want to go
back to India. But if you're an international student, you
come here to study and after that you go back
to your country of origin. But they want to stay.
And you have the conservatives and the brawls who are
staying to them, Okay, you don't respect all legislation. You
don't go back to your country of origin. When your
(13:13):
your international student permit has expired.
Speaker 5 (13:16):
We will give you a gift. We will give you
the permanent residency. Yes, without nose creating and nothing. They
are telling them, it's okay, we won't deport you, will
give you the permanent residency. We need to stop that.
Speaker 4 (13:29):
And all these fake students now are taking jobs for
the jobs that young Canadians don't have.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Right now, well, we have that.
Speaker 1 (13:38):
We have that issue in America, Maxine in the in
the higher education in America which I'm very aware of
over the years, we have what they call, you know,
this is almost a fake thing. Is they don't have
the proper documents. They get into the country, they sign
a test on the perjury. They don't have the proper funding.
(13:58):
Then they get here, they cry they need help. But
in America are lower so squished. Within thirty days of
being in a university or college, a student could actually
apply for a job in America, get a Social Security
card and jump the line of an American citizen or
that's born here or naturalized. So that means that the
American kids are in the back. This guy jumps in
(14:20):
the front and gets a you know, eighty ninety thousand
US dollar job doing some kind of tech work.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
He came here with no money, you know.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
And what they do is they send at least three
quarters of a portion.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
Back home so they could live six't eight ten. Now
you have that housing problem.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
I've seen that in the Canadian papers where in the
Northern Princeville Edward Islands, that area in Nova Scotia, there's
a lot of housing problems for housing with the Canadians
that they're actually giving it to the immigrants before the natives,
the people from Canada.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
Correct.
Speaker 4 (14:51):
Yeah, absolutely, because of mass immigration. You know, it's a
question of supply and demand and what the fake Conservative
and denli bras are thinning Canadian during that electoral campaign,
they said, we need to build more houses, but they
want to build more houses, not for Canadians because they
want to be able to have more foreigners coming to
our country. That won't solve the housing crisis in our country.
(15:15):
The only way to solve that. Yes, you have a
lot of people who are coming here and they need
a roof and all that. It's putting pressure on prices
for housing, not only you know, in big cities like Montreal,
Toronto and Vancouver, but like you said, also small in
small cities like you know, in Artifacts and other cities
across the country. And the real solution is to stop
(15:38):
the demand. I think that moratorion that will solve the
housing crisis. But both establishment political parties said we will
build more houses and like that will be able to
have more.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
Mike, I think, Mike, that doesn't that sound like the
globalist thing?
Speaker 4 (15:54):
Yeah, it does.
Speaker 6 (15:55):
That's exactly what it is. In Canada has always been
an our yield to vaccine. I'm Aron Kennedy has always
been a staunch supporter of the UN.
Speaker 4 (16:04):
Yeah, sorry, go ahead, Yeah, absolutely right about that. You know,
all these leaders are globalists with the UN. And I
can add the Paris Accord. You know, Prinsident Trump did
the right thing to withdraw from the Parish Accord. And
here in Canada you have the Conservative and the ly Brons.
They have the same platform. They want to impose more
(16:24):
regulations on businesses and you know they'll do everything to
achieve the Paris Acord target. And for them, CO two
is a politent CE two is a gas essential for life.
We need more see two. So we are the only
party that is saying we need to withdraw from that
Parish Accord. We need to, you know, withdraw from the
(16:45):
World Health Organization and all these globalist organizations and fighting
for Canada, for our country first.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Wow, this is really so. Let me ask you, what's
the numbers? What does it look like?
Speaker 1 (16:58):
How many people follow someone like you who wants to
put Canada first? What's your what's your following? What's the percentage?
Speaker 4 (17:06):
Yeah, you know that's a good question because, as you
may know, has been canceled. My party is canceled in
Canada in the mainstream media a little bit like Robert F.
Kennedy Junior during the presidential run that he did before
being with President Trump. You know, they don't want to
speak about us. It's like we don't exist. That's why
(17:27):
I'm doing a lot of podcasts in Canada in the
US because I know that, you know, Canadians are listening
to you guys, and so that's a nice way for
me to speak to Canadians and explain to Americans that
you know, we don't need that trade war and we
are ready to have a deal with you. So that
being said, right now, you know, and also and swing
(17:49):
your question. It's a little bit difficult because when they
do polls here in Canada usually and most of the time,
they don't they don't speak, they don't they don't ask people,
and they don't put our name people's body of Canada.
They don't want that. So it's difficult to say to
know where we are in the polls and US as
(18:11):
a new pupulist party, we don't do any pollings. But
I can tell you that right now I believe because
I'm crossing the country speaking with people. I'm very active
on the ground, and we have a lot of people
who are coming to our events, and I think that
you know, right now, we may be around ten percent.
Everything can happen in Canada, so we'll see. We still
(18:32):
have two weeks of campaign and people appreciate that because
we are so different than the conservative and the liberals,
and we are telling the truth to Canadians and they
appreciate that.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
I think the Canadians are sick and tired after so
many years of justin Castro, I mean, Trudeau, excuse me,
I made a mistake.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
Go ahead, Mike.
Speaker 6 (18:57):
It surprised me just watching it from here. When I
when I lived in Canada for about three years, I
couldn't afford to go to school in the United States,
so I went. I was able to get into two
universities there. But the country was always to me one
of the most welcoming places I've ever been, and and
(19:19):
just pleasant people, friendly people, nonviolent people. And Trudeau, I
can't understand how how those people are their children now,
I guess their grandchildren perhaps elect keep kept electing him.
He clearly was a crook and so certainly his mental
(19:42):
capacity is not terrific in terms of knowing what's good
for his country rather than just what's good for him.
Speaker 4 (19:49):
Yeah, And the problem that we have here, you have
a point there. The problem that we have here is
our mainstream media. You know, that's the propaganda arms of
the government, and you know they are leftists, some of
them are activists, leftists, They are not journalists. And we
don't have a Fox News for example. In Canada, you
know we have CBC at Zio Canada and friend CTV
(20:12):
and all these media are leftists. So and they received
funding funding from the government. You know, the federal government
is giving about two billion dollars every year to the
these mainstream media. We need to cut that. They must
be independent, not dependent on the government. That's what we want.
(20:33):
And if they're not able to survive without the government money,
they'll go bankrupt, that's it. But the challenge is the
mainstream media. So that's why they are able to manipulate
the population like they did during the COVID eysteria by
using fear and propaganda, and they were able and the
government was able to impose us, you know, draconian measures.
(20:55):
We did fight with the Freedom Convoy and all the
rallies that I did before that, and we were able
to win that battle, but it took us two years
to change the public opinion.
Speaker 2 (21:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (21:08):
How are you doing in Quebec, sir?
Speaker 4 (21:10):
Yeah, it's you know, it's going well our party because
as you know, I'm from Quebec. We have a big
base over there. Our challenge that we have across the
country is, you know, to it's a little bit more
difficult to win a seat in a parliamentary system. I'll
give you an example in Ukina, Jel Farage at the
last general election, he had fifteen percent of the vote,
(21:34):
but he was able to elect only six candidates. But
now a year and a half later, there's pores over there, sorry,
and if there's an election over there, he will win.
So for us, you know, like I said, we're going
to have our first candidate elected in this election. I
(21:55):
don't know what can happen. Our votes is all across
the country. People supporting us in every provinces, so that's great.
Events in Quebec we are a bit stronger, and but
also in not Berta. So I don't know, but I
can tell you at this election we have our first
get get directed and we will start that common sense
(22:16):
revolution in parliament.
Speaker 2 (22:18):
Mike, did you hear that?
Speaker 1 (22:19):
That's your That's Mike's favorite expression, by the way, next
seem common sense. Common sense is Mike on almost every
show he says common sense.
Speaker 2 (22:28):
That's true.
Speaker 6 (22:29):
It was when I was in Canada, certainly a common,
a common occurrence. People were full of common sense, whether
it was to do with the weather or whether it
was to do with economics. The whole Trude to Ah experience,
to me watching it from here is just so uncannadian
in many ways that you know. And one thing is
(22:52):
certainly at the top of the list for the United
States is Trudeau's relationship with the Chinese Communists.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (23:02):
Absolutely, yeah, apparently he even he even takes money for
his party from them.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
Oh he sounds like an American governor. Yeah, he sounds
like an American governor.
Speaker 4 (23:13):
Yes, he did. He did that. And also we had
our Secret Service c CS in Canada and the table
report in the Parliament saying that the election in twenty
nineteen and twenty twenty one we had a foreign interference
coming from the Chinese Communist Party. They were funding the
(23:34):
Chinese Communist Party was funding candidates, candidates from Chinese origin
who were loyal to the Chinese Communist Party. And so
that's happening in our country. But actually, what Trudeau did
to our country in ten years, he was able to
destroy our country socially, economically, and culturally with that mass immigration.
(23:58):
As you may know, we had a lot of people
who came to our country, like I said, and the
economy was growing because of that, but you know, the
population was growing faster than the growth of our economy,
so our gd people capital went down the last ten years.
So that's why you know, our standard of living went
down and are purchasing power, so people are poorer today
(24:22):
than they were ten years ago. That's because of Trudeau
and more people understand now that that mass immigration and
balancing the budget, no more deficit, no more debt. It
is important if we want to be able to have
a free, yeer and a more prosperous country. But Trudeau
was very successful as destroying our country.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
Well, he had good back in obviously, Maxinegs. Obviously the
globalists and the Chinese Communist Party were there. And we
have the same situation here in New York City. They
had police stations with Chinese police that were monitoring people
in New York City, which should have never have been allowed.
You don't know other country does it. And right now,
I would say, to some extent, and Michael agree, we
(25:06):
have an occupation. We have a lopsided presentation of a
minority people here who are bitching and screaming about protests,
which is our first Amendment right, by the way, whether
you like it or not, we have a first and
second Amendment, which are very strong our constitution. Now, you know,
as far as I'm conturned, they had no problem with children.
I'm sorry with the university students in the past, in
(25:30):
the history of America in protesting during the Vietnam War
and so on.
Speaker 2 (25:35):
And that's their right, whether you agree with them or not.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
But you know, when a group of people say we
got to have laws now and stop this because they're
supporting terrorists, which is not true what they're saying. Honestly,
they're saying this, they're saying, we don't support genocide and
we shouldn't support it.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
But it has nothing, it has nothing to do. You
never hear them say without to support Amas.
Speaker 1 (25:58):
They may have the whatever that kifta thing or the scarf,
but you know, and then there's a minority, very minority
group of people I think it's less than three percent
or something in the country that are just like, well,
you know, my thing is if if you feel that way,
you could go back home or wherever your country was
it was Europe or whatever, because we have this First Amendment,
we have this constitution just like you have your constitution
(26:22):
and it's our country. You come here, you want to
be assimilated. You don't want to bring whatever dirt that
you're coming with you're leaving. Like in the case of India,
they say, how brilliant these people are, then why.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
Can't you build your country? I will give this to
the Chinese.
Speaker 1 (26:38):
I will say this with a short time frame. The
short time frame the Chinese have built their country. However,
they built it on slave labor or whatever. But they
have smart people who advance this country within thirty five years,
which India could come close.
Speaker 4 (26:54):
To be honest with you, and we have that same
problem in Canada, you know, because of Massimegrace and all
these people are coming here and are bringing here on
our street their internal conflicts and so they are not
part of this country. And you know before that when
we had good a good immigration system people, if you
(27:14):
want to come to Canada, you needed to have first
a job and second you needed to be able to
speak English or French. That's two official languages in Canada.
Now that's not the case. Right now they're coming from India,
they don't have any education, and after that they're taking
jobs in tim Horton or Waldmark and Canadians young people
(27:35):
cannot have a job, so it's a it's a cheap
labor for big corporations. We need to stop that. And
they don't part, they don't integrade into our country. They
are living in gaetos. We have ghettos in Brenton, Ontario.
It's like being in India over there. So we want
to stop that. We cannot have that. That's changing the
(27:56):
social fabric of our country. So yes, you're right there,
and you know all these conflicts. If you want to
be Canadians, come here and you know, share all values
and you must left behind, you know, a part of
your culture and you come here to be part of
a new country. But that's not the case because also
(28:16):
in Canada, Mike, I must say, we have multico tourism
act Leigius Station and we are promoting multicule tourism. I
know we had that.
Speaker 2 (28:26):
We had that. That was the Obama affair. It was
a like a love affair.
Speaker 6 (28:29):
You know.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
The other thing I wanted to say, years ago, when
I was in Asia, I used to I used.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
To talk about your model. It was a great model.
Speaker 1 (28:37):
You had, like these little offices in different parts of
Philippines and so on, where when you wanted nurses and doctors,
they had like an educational thing where this is what
you want you when you come to sketch you on
or Winnipeg and you're going to be a doctor or
nurse or whatever.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
You would understand the language, the culture, the history.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
There was like there was some kind of a an
injaculation of six months, right, six months or so before
they would emigrate to Canada. And it worked very well.
You brought in people that were, you know, skilled, and
you even had farmers and so on. So it was
and I used to say, why can't America do this?
You know, it was a great It was a great model. Again,
(29:15):
I'm going to mention this on this show. And I
just mentioned it on a show. Mike, how long ago
did we do a show?
Speaker 2 (29:20):
I mentioned about the Canadian with nine to eleven? Just
a week or so ago?
Speaker 3 (29:24):
Right?
Speaker 2 (29:24):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (29:24):
A week or two?
Speaker 2 (29:25):
Yes? Yeah, Okay, I will say this. Vaccine.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
I say this a lot of people in America don't
realize that they don't know it when nine to eleven happened.
Let me get maccine on a screen. I hang on,
just say hello, vaccine. He'll come back on the screen.
Speaker 2 (29:39):
Are you there?
Speaker 4 (29:41):
Yeah, I'm there, I'm there.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
Okay, there he goes, because once Mike talk sometimes it
cuts the camera. You know, back at nine to eleven.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
The time of nine to eleven, the planes could only
land in Europe and Canada, you know, our families coming
home from wherever, and Canada was very gracious.
Speaker 2 (29:55):
They took him in all right.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
And you know I was.
Speaker 1 (29:59):
I happened to be at one of your National Day parties.
One of my friends was a Canadian ambassador. We used
to enjoy the same kind of sports cars and drive
them and service them at the same location. So I
was at the go to way party, had thirty people
in the ambassador's office and there it was a National
Day and the.
Speaker 2 (30:20):
Theme that year was Winnipeg. You know, it was like
more like Colorado.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
They brought the horses and wagons and all the great
food and everything.
Speaker 2 (30:29):
You know, it was great.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
It was right up Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington. So we're
in the offices about thirty people, and there was only
three of us that knew this that I spoke about.
Speaker 2 (30:37):
You know how great the Canadians.
Speaker 1 (30:39):
I gave them a beautiful coffee table book to take
home or leave at the embassy of all the great
photographs of places in America, small town and what not.
Speaker 2 (30:47):
And we talked about nine to eleven.
Speaker 1 (30:50):
In nine to eleven, when the planes landed in Canada,
a lot of Americans don't know it. It was the
Canadians who came to the airports and said, you come
with us. They didn't bring you to a gymnasium. They
didn't take you to the hotel. They didn't take you
to a hotel. They said, come to our homes, stay
with us while we figured out what was going on
(31:11):
during nine to eleven. That was our northern neighbor. That
was our Canadian friends. That was our northern friends.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
Right.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
A lot of people in America, would you tell them that,
they go, well, I didn't know that. Well, I said,
would we do that?
Speaker 1 (31:23):
Maybe we would have went to the airport and said, hey,
let me take you to hotel. Let me take it
to a gymnasium in high school. We'll get you set
up with some cots and sleeping bags, you know, until
we figure out what's going on.
Speaker 2 (31:33):
And that relationship. To me, it's stuck.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
In my mind ever since I was there at the
Canadian embassy and we're just very close neighbors and we
shouldn't have these battles.
Speaker 2 (31:44):
And if you're in trouble with the CCP of China,
we should help. We should have this.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
Cross intelligence information going on to help each other about
border situations, drugs, whatnot, you know, crimes, because we both
have a long history as neighbors in a country and
we don't want to lose our culture. We don't want
to lose our countries.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
And I hope you guys really win. I really do.
Speaker 4 (32:09):
Yeah, thank you, And you're right about that because during
nine to eleven, you know, all these planes were lending
in you know, sometimes small villages and you know there's
no big hotels there. And yes, I remember the people
were saying, you know, come to our house and stay there,
and some of them stayed two days, three days there. Yeah,
that was that was tough for you guys, for us also.
(32:31):
But yeah, we are friends and that's why I believe
that we can have a deal with President Trump. What
is doing with the tariff. It's just part of negotiation.
So we just have to be real and as you know,
you know, we need to work with you to protect
our borders and reinvest in our own defense, you know,
to take care of Canadians and being sure that our
(32:53):
people here in Canada will be safe and secure in
this country. But under the rolls that was not the case.
And you know, if we are not, if we are
adding an open borders policy, that's bad for us, and
that's bad, that's bad for you also if we don't
come from our immigration.
Speaker 1 (33:12):
Have you been in touch with anybody in the Trump administration?
Do you have any contact connections?
Speaker 2 (33:18):
No?
Speaker 4 (33:18):
No, but I know that my team is trying to
be in contact.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
But no, not now okay, Well, I mean he should,
you know, you should be talking to somebody within his
administration or people around him. And well, let's hope we
get this message out there to them, because it's important
for Trump to support someone like you as an othern neighbor,
you know, to win and get rid of some of
this liberal globalism, socialism, Marxism. Wouldn't you say, Mike, would you.
Speaker 4 (33:46):
Go that far?
Speaker 6 (33:47):
In many cases it is, of course the Neilism even
there really is really a terrible situation. And you're right, colonel,
and I think what maxims Sen is exactly right. We
have been friends and neighbors since the War of eighteen twelve.
We've had tariff problems, We've always settled them. We've bought
(34:09):
two wars together. There's always been a great deal of
respect between the two countries. Except I have to say
for the two Trudeaus, the Dad and the Sun, I
always found both of them very dismissive of the United
States and much more attuned to what was going on
in the European Union. But that's gone now and the
(34:31):
opportunity and I think you're right actually, and I think
what Trump is doing is it's an negotiating ploy and
it's possible for both of us to win on these
at least I hope it is.
Speaker 2 (34:44):
Well.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
I want to say this to our audience. I want
to say this to our audience. You know, if you've
never been to Canada, and especially if you're on the
East coast, it's easier. You could just drop into Montreal
and Quebec and that's it. You don't have to fly
to Europe.
Speaker 2 (34:58):
You get it all.
Speaker 4 (35:03):
You're right, the old Quebec and old Montial. It's very
nice and it's an old city. But that's why we
need to preserve our culture. We need to work together
and right now with Trideau. Like you know, President Trump
right now he wants a peace deal in Ukraine between
Ukraine and Russia. I want the same. I always said,
(35:23):
you know, we need Canada is there for promoting peace
and peace keeping. And that was not our war in Ukraine.
But our government gave twenty billion dollars to the Ukraine government,
money that we don't have. And now you have Potiev,
the leader of the Conservative Party, and Mark Karney who
are saying to President Trump, no, we need to go
(35:46):
ahead with that war in Ukraine. We need to give
more ammunitions and resources to Ukraine. That's crazy, Let's stop that.
But you know, I'm ready to work with President Trump
on these big issues for you know, being sure to
have the piece deal over there.
Speaker 1 (36:02):
Oh yes, I agree. I couldn't agree more, I'm telling you.
And if you drop into Montreal, you could, like it's
like Europe. You could eat cuisine from ten countries. You
don't have to fly to ten countries in Europe, correct.
Speaker 4 (36:14):
Right, right, absolutely? Absolutely. The nightlife in Montreal is great,
the restaurants and you know that's a nice metropolitan city.
You know you will come. You can go to Toronto also,
it's a bigger city. But you know, I'm from Montreal,
so I would speak for Montreal.
Speaker 2 (36:34):
Yes. And the pubs in Quebec are great. The plub Mike,
you have you been to the pubs in Quebec. I have.
Speaker 1 (36:42):
Fabulous, fabulous they they I would say they're they're almost
as as good as the pubs in Dublin.
Speaker 2 (36:50):
You could just do music and beer all night.
Speaker 3 (36:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (36:54):
And the women they're nice.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
Oh, we don't want to say this on the show.
We're both married men, as you know, we cannot talk
about the women. No, but it's it really is a
great it's a great place, and you know, we both
like Canada. We want to see Canada succeed. Look, we're
coming out of theduldrums. We just got rid of twelve
years of communism, socialism between a dead mummy named Biden
(37:20):
and the the the what was he the impostor, the impostor.
Speaker 2 (37:25):
Obama And it's amazing. The world thinks that Obama and
Clinton walk on water and Trudeau and these guys, but
it's all globalism. It's a takedown. It's basically just to
destroy our cultures, you know, like you say, and we
want to wish you the best. Vaccine and you could.
You're welcome to come back on after the election anytime
you want.
Speaker 1 (37:45):
You're welcome to come back on and discuss some more
about what's going on in Canada and keep in touch
with us.
Speaker 2 (37:50):
Please.
Speaker 6 (37:51):
You're really you're really doing great work, I think, Si.
You know, there's nothing more important I think for America
or or Canada than defeating Kearnie. And and you know,
I don't know a lot about the contemporary Conservative Party,
but what homie sounds certainly correct. So it would be
(38:12):
very pleasant to see your party hold the hold the
difference in power. Yeah, that would be an or an
ideal situation, sir. They have your voice being tempering those
other people.
Speaker 4 (38:27):
I appreciate that, and that's our goal. You know, That's
why I'm working hard here. And I want to thank you,
Mike for both of you for giving me, giving me
that platform, being able to speak to your audience, Canadian
and American one. And you know, it's only the beginning
for that revolution. It's coming everywhere. President Trump started that
in US, you have that in UK and friends with
(38:50):
Marion Lepen in Germany, and here in Canada with the
People's Party. So if your viewers who want to know
more about us, they can go on our website, People's
Body of Canada at Sea, they can read our platform.
It's a real common sense revolution that we need to do.
And really, you know, we are fascualer, responsible, free markets,
(39:11):
populist body and antique globalists. So they can know more.
And for the Canadians audience, I hope you support us
if you want to have real changes in this country
in Canada.
Speaker 2 (39:23):
Maxie, thank you so much. We appreciate it. We'll talk
to you soon. Thank you, Thank you guys.
Speaker 4 (39:27):
Bye bye. I have a nice day, you too.