Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The Integration of Two Fundamental Themes

If you watch my YouTube videos -- and I hope you do -- you will see what appear to be two themes which are unrelated. The first is the theme of attacks on freedom by the New World Order. This may cover day-to-day topics from the United Church boycott motion to a Tim Hortons boycott in Rhode Island. Always, the free speech theme observes the state's intrusion by regulation into the free communication of ideas, analysis, music or poetry, and basically the control of communication through such altruistic camoflage as "human rights," "fighting terrorism," "preventing disturbances," "regulating markets," "preserving the environment," "combatting climate change," "stabilizing banking," and "sustainable development," to name a few.

My fight against all these euphemisms and their tyrannical implementation is in favour of freedom of thought, belief and opinion. It is essentially populist, believing as Lord Randolph Churchill said, "Properly informed, trust the people."

As a corollary, I believe we must trust the people to inform themselves.

In contrast to this, in my second theme, I continually end my comments with the seemingly incongruous words, "We must Free the West." By that I mean Western Canada must separate and form a new nation.

These two themes are really just one. Canada is an experiment in mind control, mass manipulation and indoctrination. The socialists have given up on communism and in Canada they practice coercive environmentalism and multiculturalism.

In Canada, with its controlled parliamentary system and phony elections, change is really impossible. Other countries control their populace using similar strategies. Government from the top down is the New World Order.

So for the sake of individual freedom, smaller nations must emerge by peaceful means to assert that the ultimate purpose of the state is to secure and preserve the liberty of the individual. By a common understanding of this necessity, free speech and Western Canadian separatism are mutually supporting themes, in which I believe, and to which I have dedicated much of my life. This is my authenticity.