[00:00:01] You're listening to the Liberty News Radio Network, and this is The Political Cesspool. The Political Cesspool, known across the South and worldwide as the South's foremost populist conservative radio program. And here to guide you through the murky waters of The Political Cesspool is your host, James Edwards.
[00:01:29] You know, interestingly, I don't know if the government of Canada can say they've done any of those things, but our guest right now has the one and only Paul Fromm, representing the Great White North during TPC's March Around the World, as he has so faithfully done since we began this series many years ago. Paul Fromm, the director for the Canadian Association for Free Expression, is back with us tonight, making his second appearance of the year, and I have more appearances than I can count all time, of course.
[00:01:57] But, Paul, it's great to have you back tonight for this series once again. James, it's great to be back. You know, I can't remember, because don't you have another national anthem there, or was there one before that one? Am I totally getting that wrong? No, you're not. There was one written in both, sorry, there was one called The Maple Leaf Forever.
[00:02:26] In days of yore, from Britain's shore, o'clock the dawn's last year, o'clock the dawn's last year. It's very, very punchy. It's very positive. The version of O Canada that you played was pretty scratchy, but it's generally slow like that, and it's like a dirge. You know, it's not very inspirational.
[00:02:54] And it must be also politically incorrect, because it talks about people coming from England's shore, and not French-Canadian shores. No, no, no. That's what I consider the real anthem. That's The Maple Leaf Forever. Oh, yeah, very politically incorrect. But O Canada, they change the words every other year. But, for instance, a little while ago, they got rid of all your son.
[00:03:22] Originally, it was in all your son's command. I don't know, of course, about sex. So, I forget. Actually, many of us don't know the words. I mean, don't know them all. They're always changing them. Well, I'll tell you this. I'll tell you this. I did know that O Canada. I should have asked you this, because we've exchanged several emails and text messages this week leading up to the interview. And I should have asked.
[00:03:48] It came on me just during the last break in between Nick Griffin's first hour appearance and the hour with you here now. You know, we like to sometimes pair some music during our March Around the World series with the guests and their respective nation. And as soon as I queued that up, I thought, you know what, I think Paul had told me there was actually an older, more original Canadian national anthem, of course. But I agree with you. And the Star Spangled Banner, I do like it.
[00:04:16] It is pretty triumphant. But, of course, Dixie with that fast-paced military-like cadence is an even better, you know, certainly better, and the only anthem I stand for. But, nevertheless, we digress. Yes, too much time spent on that already. But I will tell you, at the half-hour mark, we take that bottom-of-the-hour break, we're going to come back with Maple Leaf forever. So we'll do that. We'll get it right. All right. So, listen. Okay. Let's get down to work. A lot going on in Canada, to be sure.
[00:04:46] And speaking of the national anthem, I'll just say one more thing about this very quickly. You and I were talking about it earlier this week. But there were the recent international hockey competition, the United States versus Canada. And because of all of this stuff with Trump, this rhetoric of the 51st state and whatnot, it was played in Montreal. And there were three fights in the first nine seconds of the game.
[00:05:08] And I'm not talking about fights like these football players do, where they have their helmets and their pads on, and, you know, they're faking being held back, you know, and all that stuff. It's just, you know, not real. I mean, they were taking the gloves off and were, you know, really trying to kill each other. So that was interesting. But, all right, Paul, let's get right down to business. You are, of course, Canadian, born and bred, but an avid observer of both American and European politics.
[00:05:36] And you had publicly expressed your desire for Trump to be reelected as president of the United States. He's back in office now. How do you, from your perch up there? Is he disappointed, or are you 100% behind him? And the great white north, the first few weeks of the new administration.
[00:05:57] Well, generally, please, for one thing, he has, in my opinion, done more for white Americans than any president since Calvin Coolidge. By getting rid of DEI and by reasserting control of the border, he's turfing out at least the worst of the illegals. He's staunched the hemorrhage or the invasion.
[00:06:25] That's huge. Thanks to Biden, the replacement of the European founding settlers of America had sped up immensely. You know, the figures we used to go by were that white Americans or the European founding settler people would become a minority around 2041.
[00:06:50] But what Biden did, you know, certainly you're going to have to push that date, you know, much closer to the present. Trump is at least stopping most of that. Now, not all of it. Regrettably, I think he's a civic nationalist. I don't think he's a white nationalist.
[00:07:13] You know, I heard him in spokesman saying, you know, if you come to America, if you work hard, if you adopt our values, and if you speak English, you'll be one of us. Well, you know, I've been, I've traveled a lot of places around the world. I could speak perfect Japanese. I will never be Japanese. No, in Japan, they can even detect if you're third or fourth generation Japanese born abroad.
[00:07:41] Like, there's very Japanese in Peru and in Brazil. And, yeah, you know, it's not that they're hostile to these folks. They're racially Japanese, but they're just not quite. They don't have that attachment to the land. That's what, you know, this is heresy in North America, but this is what we have to have. So that and getting rid of DEI, fantastic.
[00:08:08] And Trump's declaration yesterday, English is the official language of the United States. That should have been a no-brainer. I was involved with English USA, you know, 30-some years ago. And, you know, this has been a longstanding demand of reasonable people and white people.
[00:08:34] So good for him on those scores. Of course, I find his slavish attachment to Israel, you are appalling. And his lack of understanding of the Palestinians, bad.
[00:08:52] But in terms of the crucial immigration issue and DEI, which is brutal anti-white, anti-male, anti-Christian, anti-straight discrimination, superb. And it's going to have an impact in Canada. We like to say we're different from the Americans. Yeah, okay, we're a little different.
[00:09:15] But whenever it becomes a trend in the United States, fairly quickly is adopted in Canada. It may take us a couple of years. But Trump has done amazing things for white Americans and in many ways for all Americans in under two months. I mean, he really learned his lesson from the first time.
[00:09:40] He knows who's in the swamp and knows, I think, in large measure how to deal with it. And going through corrupt departments line by line in their budget, he and Musk are really going to reform things. So much that was given out in foreign aid was just wild promotion of the LGBTQ.
[00:10:07] I'm not sure if the transgendered are in there. But that's all going to go or has gone. So from that point, I'm just afraid. Well, Paul, what about Canada is the 51st state now? Why are you in on that one for us? I would say this before you answer, Paul. I mean, obviously we all assume that was political hyperbole. And you believe that there is a tactic in play here. But let me just say this.
[00:10:33] I'm glad you asked that question, Keith, because I want to use that question to just give a brief promotion. We were talking with Nick Griffin in the last hour about American Free Press as well. But in my next feature for American Free Press, in the very next issue that is coming out, it is a one-on-one Q&A with the one and only Paul Fromm. And I asked him this question. And, Paul, you brought up something in your answer that I don't think certainly I hadn't considered it yet.
[00:11:02] And I think a lot of our audience might not have considered it yet either. But to Keith's question about Canada being the 51st state, your response and reaction to all of that? That's a non-starter. There's virtually no support for that in Canada.
[00:11:19] At the very least, if it was to be made a reality, there would have to be one tremendous sales job and tremendous amount of persuasion that it would be beneficial. I mean, Canadians are slightly distinct people with their own history and their own attachment in their own ways to the land that we've been given.
[00:11:49] I think it's a non-starter. I actually think that on Trump's part, it's a little bit insulting. And there are serious things we have to discuss. I know part of his motivation was to annoy Justin Trudeau. You know, okay, justifiably Justin's a jerk. What about just Alberta and Saskatchewan?
[00:12:15] Well, you actually said, Paul, that this would be – I was going to get to that as well. If we could take just a couple of provinces, which one would be the best fit? But you said that this would be the end of the Republican Party if that happened, and you actually have a sensible political reason for saying that. Well, our population is 41 million, give or take a few illegals. That's roughly the population of California.
[00:12:41] And if memory serves, California has 55 members of Congress, and that would be 57 electoral votes. More often than not, if we were one state, we'd be putting those two electoral votes in the Democratic column,
[00:13:02] and probably two-thirds of the members of the House of Representatives in the Democratic column. I just don't see how that would benefit the Republican Party. And, you know, elections can be fought out, and, you know, the Republicans might do well in certain – you know, they might prevail in certain circumstances.
[00:13:29] But would you really want to risk the future of the Republican Party on the votes of California? And, you know, of course, you'd say no. What we'd like is to get Saskatchewan and Alberta. Are those your two conservative right-of-center provinces? Yes. They'd be very reliable.
[00:13:53] And certainly that's not what – my understanding by making Canada this whole – this huge chunk of geography larger than the United States to make it the 51st state. I would say strategically, it's not good. It wasn't – yeah, we both agree that it wasn't really – I mean, I think he might have – Just provocation. Exactly.
[00:14:21] But I think he may be more serious about reacquiring the Panama Canal and, to a lesser extent, even Greenland than Canada. But what you brought should – if there was anybody who said, yeah, well, maybe that would be interesting. There are a lot of whites in Canada after all. But it would be disastrous because, for the reasons you just mentioned, it would be 50-plus congressional seats, two-thirds of which would go to the Democratic column, and both of the senators from the hypothetical 51st state, which is bigger than the United States at large in terms of land mass.
[00:14:49] If you really like diversity, we can send you some black people. No, they've got too many already. Well, generous as that is, I think I'm happy to join you. All right. So that is the whole situation on the 51st state. But you do think that that was just done in a tongue-in-cheek way to basically get under Trudeau's skin, who, by the way, let's move on to that now, is no longer your prime minister. What was the chain of events that led to that? Well, not quite true.
[00:15:18] He'll no longer be the prime minister as of Sunday the 10th. Sorry, Monday the 10th. Yeah, well, what happened is the liberals have become so unpopular for so many reasons, the job-killing carbon tax, immigration, lack of housing because of immigration, and other issues,
[00:15:46] that they were so low in the polls that a website called 338.com, I think. 338 is the number of seats in the House of Commons. And they look at the polling, and they have a formula to guesstimate how many seats that would result in for each of the parties.
[00:16:07] The liberals were predicted about two months ago to be able to hold only six seats out of 338. I mean, it would be catastrophic. So Trudeau basically lost the support of the caucus. And they're very meek and mild and controlled.
[00:16:33] So, I mean, for them to rise up in revolt was really something. So very reluctantly, he said he would resign when a new leader was elected. The new leader will be elected, I believe it's next Sunday, Sunday the 9th. And so he will step down the next day. But of the four candidates, the most likely is Trudeau with brains,
[00:17:03] and that's this international bankster, Mark Carney. He has a good reputation, utterly undeserved in the financial world, but he is a fanatical globalist and a fanatical climate change pessimist. He wrote a book not long after COVID struck,
[00:17:27] and he was hailing that disruption as a great opportunity for a huge reset. And he said, we have to tackle climate change. It will destroy the world. It will not just change things, but destroy it. And we have to fight that. And the future, as he sees it, would be less heat in the winter, less air conditioning in the summer, much restricted travel,
[00:17:56] except for the leave, of course, and changes in food. You know, we'll have to go away from meat, certainly from beef. So we'll all be munching on crickets. It feels like his motto ought to be, if it feels good, forget it. You know? That's right. Basically, vote for me. I want to make you poorer. Now, he's not saying it.
[00:18:25] He's not saying it that way, but I'll leave his banking career. It's kind of long and not very distinguished. He was the president of the Bank of Canada. Then he went to England, was president of the Bank of England. In neither case did he leave the place in prosperity. And then he was assigned a role by the U.N.
[00:18:51] And he's especially in charge of arm-twisting major financial institutions and lenders to not lend to the carbon industry, to gas and natural gas and petroleum. Now, that organization to which a lot of banks in the United States and Canada and elsewhere
[00:19:19] signed up as loyal little internationalist members, that organization is falling apart. Remember, the American banks dropped out in the last month, as did all five of the major Canadian banks. But that shows you the sort of man he is. But he's a smart man. Whereas Trudeau, Trudeau's a frustrated second-rate actor.
[00:19:47] He likes to do dramatic things, like he has a very deep voice and it's like a stage voice. But he likes to make dramatic announcements. But very often doesn't follow through. He's a narcissist. Yes, exactly. Carney isn't the greatest speaker. But he's a schemer of the first order. He probably will be the prime minister.
[00:20:14] But because of internal reasons, the smart money is that he will immediately call an election, which he almost certainly will lose. That's the good news. Okay. So this is all very interesting. I mean, your timing appearing on the program this week with the Canadian elections coming right up is, of course, very timely. I guess having you back on. Actually, actually, I'm looking at the schedule. So you're saying this is coming up on the 10th.
[00:20:42] And on March 15th, we have your fellow countryman, Remy Tremblay, scheduled. That's two weeks out. So we'll get the before and after shot of this transition. But you were saying earlier, Paul, that you believe that eventually some of the things – and I was asking Nick Griffin this in the first hour if some of the things that Trump is doing here will wash ashore on Europe. And he says, yes, he does believe that that will be the case.
[00:21:09] You said earlier that Canada, sooner or later, follows America's lead or the United States' lead. I guess perhaps some of these changes occurring down here from your point of view, perhaps have not penetrated your border yet. I mean, because you're saying that it looks like Canada is going to stay left-leaning in the wake of the replacement of Trudeau. But long term, you think, perhaps it will adopt some of the Trumpian stance.
[00:21:38] Am I getting that right? Not quite. In general, Canada tends to lead slightly left. But in the upcoming election, I would say the Conservatives are going to win a very solid majority. And the formerly Socialist Party, the New Democratic Party, is on the skids.
[00:22:06] The Liberals, while they've come up a little bit because of the tariff crisis, I don't think – they're not going to make it. And they're massively unpopular. And so temporarily, there will be a pretty conservative government in place. And the conservative leader, Pierre Polievre, is a career politician.
[00:22:37] And he's good on some things. And he's now making some good noises on immigration. And talking a little bit about merit replacing race and gender in the federal civil service. There is already quite a reaction. Which is what you're seeing from the – that is exactly a Trumpian position. But I may be confused. I thought – and I may have misunderstood.
[00:23:06] I thought you were saying that the expected incoming prime minister is going to be a smarter version of Trudeau, meaning he would still be sort of – No, no. That's the liberal leader. Well, yeah, he will be. Oh, I see. Got you. He will be prime minister, you know, maybe for a couple of days, a couple of weeks. But, yeah, he – and, you know, it would be a catastrophe if he were to win the election. The elections in Canada are not really on fixed dates.
[00:23:34] So before the tariff crisis erupted, all three major opposition parties, the socialists, the conservatives, and the separatists in Quebec, all committed themselves to voting non-confidence in the government and forcing an election. Well, then along came this crisis.
[00:23:57] And even though the liberals will have a new prime minister, probably the banker, Mark Carney, he may well call an election. There's rumors that he will feel he's got a, you know, sort of a bump from publicity at the convention, you know, sort of a honeymoon as a leader.
[00:24:25] That's the time to go because the liberal record is so terrible. And he was a major advisor to Trudeau, so we cannot say – you know, I'm a – I'm a – All right, Paul – I'm a test, bro. Hold on right there, brother. I hear the music faintly in my headset, so we're going to take a quick break. Quick pause. When we come back, we're going to play the proper Canadian National Anthem, even if it's not the one you hear at hockey games. Stay tuned. All good. Proclaiming liberty across the land.
[00:24:55] You're listening to Liberty News Radio. News this hour from townhall.com. I'm Jason Walker. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says it's important to know the U.S. would stand with Ukraine, not Russia. American people, and if – I don't know if – I think that we have to be very open and very honest. And I'm not sure that we did something bad.
[00:25:24] I think maybe sometimes some things we have to discuss out of media with all respect to democracy and to free media. But there are things that – where we have to understand the position of Ukraine and Ukrainians. Also at townhall.com, Pennsylvania Republican Senator Dave McCormick says GOP lawmakers should use their majority right now to help the president expand the U.S. military.
[00:25:52] I think we have a very dangerous world, probably the most dangerous it's been since the end of World War II. We've got not only the challenge of an adversary, a hostile adversary in China, but we also have what's going on with Iran and North Korea and, of course, Russia, who's also an aggressor. McCormick says the Senate is also working on the president's agenda from the cabinet to his plans for the budget. We've been working hard to get the president's nominees in place and are now turning to this.
[00:26:22] And I think, you know, you'll see a lot of movement over the next few weeks, hopefully in the direction of a good, strong resolution. World Health Organization says a four-year-old child has become the second person to die of Ebola in Uganda. It marks a setback for health officials there who had hoped for a quick end to the outbreak. Authorities in Maryland say two construction workers have been killed when a trench collapsed.
[00:26:49] As they were working on renovations at a home, they were trapped when a retaining ball failed. Investigation is underway. More on these stories at townhall.com. Heard me talk about Relief Factor and how so many people enjoy a better, more pain-free life because of it. If you're dealing with everyday pain, it makes sense you'd want to try it first. Well, Relief Factor makes that pretty pain-free, too, with their three-week quick start kit for only $19.95.
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[00:30:10] I have to agree with my good friend Paul Fromm.
[00:30:42] That is a proper national anthem. That is not the funeral dirge that O'Canada is. That is good stuff. That's the kind of stuff that stirs the Faustian spirit of the men of the West, which is that's the possible checking during the march around the world. Keith Alexander? Well, I was confused. I thought that the Maple Leaf Rag was the national anthem. Do you remember that one, Paul? Oh, yes.
[00:31:13] All right, Keith. All good music notwithstanding. You've got a couple of questions for Paul that we talked about during the break. Let's get to it. He is, of course, the director of the Canadian Association for Free Expression. We'll plug his contact information. As Paul says, too much immigration, not enough free speech. He's fighting on both of those fronts, and we'll check in on that in just a second. But, Keith, go. What's the situation with the tariffs, you know, the proposed tariffs? What does the average man on the street think about that in Canada?
[00:31:42] Well, up here, people are really frightened, very upset. And when you ask, well, what's the situation? I don't know. Well, Trump was going to impose a 25% across-the-board tariff at the beginning of February.
[00:32:02] And then because Canada was taking some much-needed measures to crack down on illegal slipping into the United States and cross-border trafficking in Fenton, he postponed it for a month. Now, the scuttlebutt this weekend is that the tariffs are going to be – we'll start on, I think it's Tuesday.
[00:32:32] It's very upsetting. And Trump's declarations are very contradictory. At first, he said, you know, Canada should take control of its border far better. I absolutely agree, and to do so would be in Canada's interest, not just in the United States.
[00:32:52] But then he complains about a trade imbalance, which is accounted for mostly by the fact that the United States buys a tremendous amount of oil from Canada. And then he has other complaints about the lack of spending on defencing CAD, and that's quite valid.
[00:33:16] But we've been a slacker, regardless of the party in power, for over 40 years. But in our own interest, we should be taking that more seriously. But there is a lot of confusion as to what's going to happen.
[00:33:34] And he did declare that there would be a 20% tariff on steel and aluminum coming from Canada into the United States. As far as I can tell, that's simply going to increase the cost of products made from steel or aluminum in the United States. And that will hurt the American consumer.
[00:34:02] I'm not really a fan of terror. Okay, question number two. I understand that the Quebec separatists, you know, are one, the most liberal part of Canada. And if that's the case, would their peeling off from Canada be such a bad thing? And also, would it just be Quebec or would it be the maritime provinces also?
[00:34:32] Oh, no, the Quebec separatists would only be interested in separating the French-speaking areas in Quebec. Well, the province, of course. But they have no interest in separating the maritimes. Hold on right there. And this interruption is just to add to this question. This is interesting, being live. So I'm not going to say who. I'll tell you during the break, Paul.
[00:35:01] But one of our most regular guests just came up with a question. And it was something that you had brought up, Keith, just a moment ago during the commercial break at the bottom of the hour. So I'll repose the question, basically, or rather add to it. So, Paul, this is an added question from a mutual friend, a friend of mine and yours. And he asked, as he listens right now, would it be better for us if the French had their own country and British Canada was a standalone nation?
[00:35:30] It seems to me, he writes, that the two peoples would be much more conservative alone. The friction between the two drives them leftward. Your reaction to that, Paul, in answer to that? Yes. A lot of patriots would agree with that, that Quebec might be better off alone.
[00:35:54] And the rest of Canada, which has spent the better part of the last 60 years trying to figure out what Quebec wants and making a lot of one-sided concessions. We might be both better off as separate nations. So why, excuse me, why exactly does this friction exist?
[00:36:21] And where does Remy fall into, I suppose I should ask him in two weeks, but where would nationalist white people like Remy Tremblay fall into this question? Well, you'd have to ask him. I can guess, but I don't want to label him unfairly. Remy is a very smart man. He's done a great deal of research about his own province, but about the white nationalist movement in North America.
[00:36:50] And he's working on several projects on that. A new book, yes, he is. Remy is a very, very informed man. Yeah. Well, I guess I would just say, I mean, you know, listen, it's a tale as old as time. Subsects of white people fighting and killing one another and having quarrels with one another and not being able to get along. Like Russia in Ukraine. Yeah, I mean, that's a perfect example. I mean, basically they're the exact same people.
[00:37:18] I mean, Ukraine was always a part of Russia until, what, within my lifetime? I mean, so going back hundreds of years. So, yeah, I mean, if white people love to fight, we love to fight each other first. And so I get that. But what is this? This was not something I had intended to cover with you. And we'll readjust after the next break. But why does this friction between French Canada and English Canada exist?
[00:37:43] Well, it's partly a language and cultural difference. And it used to be religious, but not so much anymore. It used to be that much of English Canada was Protestant. Quebec was overwhelmingly Catholic. But the Catholic Church disintegrated in the 1960s. And that's another story.
[00:38:12] But Protestantism is no longer so fiercely followed. So, you know, it's much of, at least mainstream Protestantism is just mushy, you know, socialism. It's like I say all the time. It's they've exchanged the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John for the Gospels of Peter, Paul, and Mary. But I'm guessing, I'm taking an educated guess here. One of them died recently, Keith, as you probably know.
[00:38:41] But I'm taking an educated guess here that the French-speaking part of Canada is more left-leaning than the Western part, save perhaps Vancouver. But speaking of Christianity, Paul, you mentioned Protestantism and Catholicism. A listener in Washington State has a question for you. He says you'll probably know the answer. This is about Canada digging up, you know, Christian churches, trying to find Indians or something like that. Do you know anything about that?
[00:39:10] This is one of the great horror stories of Pierre Trudeau. After a survey by, I guess, ground-penetrating radar back in, I think it was 2021, it was announced that outside, on the grounds of a residential school that hasn't been in existence for 50 years, anomalies were found.
[00:39:39] Now, they didn't say they found corpses. They found anomalies. The mass media and stupid politicians immediately jumped on that. The story became 250, 15 mass graves found outside this residential school. That's where Indian children were brought together and educated.
[00:40:01] And this set off an absolute orgy of self-flagellation. And Trudeau had the Canadian flight at half-mast for nine months. Oh, no. Come on now. Come on now, Paul. Yeah. Normally, it would be one day. When the Queen died, it was, you know, the flag was always four days.
[00:40:29] But for Phantom Indians, nine months. Well, here's the kicker. You'd think that if they suspected there were bodies there, they'd be, you know, they'd never been allowed to get there. We'll probably know if there is anybody there. I swear to God. Or we'll probably know if there are anybody. Hold on. This is too good. I hate to have to take this break, but I have to. We'll come back to this. Put a pin in it right there.
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[00:43:22] You know, I was reading through the... People haven't seen this yet because it hasn't come out yet. But I'm looking at the preview of this interview I did with Paul. And, you know, it's still Paul. I mean, from the vantage point of a guy who lives in a majority black city like Memphis, like I do, and Keith does, I mean, you look like heaven up there in Canada. I mean, even with, you know, I know. And as you mentioned in this interview, folks, you can get it at American Free Press.
[00:43:52] But you mentioned the three biggest cities in all of Canada, Toronto, Vancouver, and Mississauga. Your neck of the woods are now majority third world, but that's like half the south, at least all of our big cities. And so... What is Windsor, Ontario like? What city? Windsor, Ontario. Windsor, this is off the top of my head. I think it would be about 10% black. See, I mean...
[00:44:22] And that's right across the river from Detroit. Man, I'll tell you. Yeah, I mean, I get it. I mean, it's not good. But, I mean, still Canada looks like an all-white nation to people who live in the American, you know, at least in the big cities of the American south. It still looks like heaven in some regard. We'll get to that. But before we do that, Paul, let's go back to this LIDAR. This is what you were referring to, this LIDAR detection where they can look underneath the surface of the earth,
[00:44:51] and they found these anomalies, and then we were talking about digging up... In corpses. Did they exclusively dig up Christian, you know, sites to find these Indians, or were there any Indians that were buried outside of anywhere else in Canada, except where there were churches? No, the allegation was that there were anomalies, and from anomalies, the press and the corrupt politicians,
[00:45:17] who have been running down our history for at least the last 20 years, wanted to jump to the conclusion they were dead Indian children, and they'd been probably abused and killed by the Catholic Church that ran the school, the residential school. But no further exploration was undertaken.
[00:45:47] And the chief of the tribe there is now using the term anomalies. They're no longer saying they must be dead bodies. But even if they were dead bodies, the school had been in operation for about 90 years before it closed, and there were successive...
[00:46:08] I think there were five successive big flu waves from about the 1880s through the, I think, maybe the 1950s, including the Spanish flu, which wiped out a lot of Canadians in big cities, small towns. There was no protection against it. There might well be buried Indian children. That doesn't mean they were murdered.
[00:46:32] But the facts didn't seem to register into it. It was like just an orgy of hatred of churches and the Catholic Church. And in the intervening four years, about 120 Christian churches have been seriously vandalized or burned to the ground, including, I mean, it's so many.
[00:47:04] I'm just not sure of their name. The Christian church in Egypt. Coptic. Coptic. Coptic. Coptic. Okay. Well, there's a Coptic church in Vancouver. Some dingbat actually tried to... Tried to light a fire. It didn't work very well. She came...
[00:47:32] Somebody else came back a couple of days later, and they burned the church to the ground. Well, these people weren't... Came to Canada after the residential schools. The last one closed in the early 90s. They were very recent immigrants. They had nothing to do with Canadian history. Oh, it didn't matter. It's Christian. Burn it down. I got to switch from this and wrap this up.
[00:48:01] I got to ask one more time for a point of emphasis. Were any Indians who ever died in Canada buried anywhere except for on the grounds of Christian churches and schools? That's hard to know. But many would be buried on the reservation. Yeah, yeah. I mean, you can imagine. Yeah, this was a form of hysteria.
[00:48:24] Most of it promoted by the government to show how good we are, how we denounce our past. That's one of the good things. Well, I would say probably fomented by Trudeau more than anyone else. Well, Paul, you have been such a regular guest on this show back when you were allowed to travel to the United States. It was always fun to visit with you. I think about him every time I drive past that Shoney's down there.
[00:48:52] Yeah, he was down for a Shoney's here in Memphis. That's right. I mean, but we saw Paul. I mean, look, almost every time we'd go to a meeting, Paul would be there as a speaker. I'd say a little prayer for you every time I drive by. Well, that Shoney's is defunct now, but Paul is still alive and well. But nevertheless, I mean, it was – no, you are a throwback for a long time and such a regular on this show. Since our very beginning, one of the few that could say that.
[00:49:20] But there was – well, I don't even know what I was going to say about that now. But anyway, we miss you. It goes back to the George Wallace era. Well, we miss seeing Paul. That's for sure. But let's talk about this, the big picture in Canada. And you write this in this American Free Press interview. Canada's demographic future hangs in the balance. In the past two years, you write, Trudeau has imported over 3 million people. Now, to us, that would not seem like a big number because you look at Canada.
[00:49:50] Canada is a larger landmass than the United States, but only the population of California. Now, yes, it would be our biggest state. And all the population is within 100 miles of the American border. That's fine. But it's still – I mean, that is – the population of Shelby County alone is a million people. So, I mean, that's just one little county in Tennessee. So 3 million people in Canada, that's a lot. You're talking about 50 million people. 3 million in the Trudeau era, that's a lot.
[00:50:17] The largest cities we just mentioned in English Canada, Paul, as you stipulate. Toronto, Vancouver, Mississauga, now majority third world. Following the globalist Calergi plan, Canada's elite is set to replace Canada's European founder settling people with a third world majority unless the current trajectory has changed. And it must change. So, Paul, will that change? Will it change? Do you see a positive change as Nick Griffin believes will come to Europe as a result of the things happening here in the United States? Do you see that? Can you see that? In Canada.
[00:50:47] Well, their minimum change is a massive reduction in the numbers coming in. And there is a growing populist party called the People's Party of Canada under former Conservative cabinet minister Maxime Bernier. They have adopted the stand, we need a moratorium. That's cut them all – cut it all out.
[00:51:15] And it's now possible to talk critically about immigration. It's been building over the past year. Largely, even the mainstream press is recognizing that the terrible housing crisis is a result of bringing in more people than we can build houses for.
[00:51:37] We're building houses at the rate of about a quarter of a million a year, which is the same rate as in 1972 when we had half the population. We're just not building a lot of houses for a lot of reasons, but bringing in more and more and more people. Well, they have to park their little brown bum somewhere at night.
[00:51:59] And that's getting through to people along with the deteriorating health care system and in and around big cities like Toronto, Mississauga, Vancouver. The impossible traffic gridlock. Toronto has the worst traffic gridlock in North America. Worse than Atlanta. Worse than Los Angeles. We're up there with Rio de Janeiro and Istanbul, Turkey.
[00:52:29] I mean, there's no good reason for that. But the the lazy and stupid politicians over the last 40 years simply have not built the infrastructure to accept the numbers they're bringing in. And that's beginning to seep into public consciousness. And many people have been moved by the polls.
[00:52:58] Sorry, by the discussion in the United States. Even five years ago in the U.S., I think it would be difficult, maybe outside our circles, to talk about mass deportations. Now we've got groups of young guys in major cities kind of doing a flying squad thing. They'll go to a mall with a big sign, mass deportations now, and then go off to another site, go off to another site. And that's happening in Calgary. It's happening in Toronto.
[00:53:27] It's happening in London and a number of other cities. And, you know, it's now something people can talk about or feel comfortable talking about. So, yeah, I truly do believe that things are changing and changing. All right. See, that is interesting to me when you hear such veterans. Just in the last two hours, as we just begin our march around the world.
[00:53:52] And by the way, we're going to make some interesting stops in the next hour in both Puerto Rico and Brazil. Maybe some ports of call you didn't expect we'd stop at this month, but we will. But when I hear Nick Griffin and Paul Fromm both say, hey, I think it can happen. That means something to me. While we breathe, we hope. Am I right? Hey, if you want more from Paul Fromm, cafe.nfshost.com.
[00:54:19] That is cafe.n for Norway, F for Finland, S for Slovakia, host.com. Cafe.nfshost.com. That's his website, and we'll put that up on our website tomorrow as well. And you can get it in the latest issue of the American Free Press. Q&A with Paul Fromm coming up. Paul, thank you so much. Thank you so much for being back with us tonight. We're going to Puerto Rico next. Can you believe it? Thank you, Paul. Stay tuned, everybody. Thanks for having me.
[00:54:49] Thank you.