There is so much out there to get mad about. Social injustices, class warfare, continued
Speaker:colonization, the act of destruction of our planet by those focused on prophets and not
Speaker:people. We can find it overwhelming at times. The good news is there are equally as many,
Speaker:if not more, stories of people coming together and rising up against the forces at play. So
Speaker:the creators of Blueprints of Disruption have added a new weekly segment, Ravel Rants, where
Speaker:we will unpack the stories that have us most riled up, share calls to action, and most importantly,
Speaker:celebrate resistance. I'm not sure people know just how much we rely on migrant workers to
Speaker:feed our cities and just how poorly they're treated here in Canada. A story hit the news
Speaker:this week that again reminded us why migrant workers need full immigration status. Six Jamaican
Speaker:migrant workers that are working in Norfolk County, that's an area of a lot of tobacco,
Speaker:they staged a one-day protest against their living conditions, their working conditions.
Speaker:I mean, they live in what looks like a barracks, a bunkie, which is very common for migrant
Speaker:workers. They need to rely on... pretty much whatever accommodations that their employer
Speaker:has for them. And they're usually in really crowded living conditions with very little
Speaker:privacy. But I mean, this was something else. This is flooded and they just described a horrible
Speaker:boss on top of all of that. And they staged a one day work stoppage, tools down. Following
Speaker:that, six of those workers were sent home to Jamaica, two months. earlier than anticipated.
Speaker:They were fired. Now, authorities are saying they're going to investigate, but the reality
Speaker:is these employers that operate under the temporary foreign workers program or more specifically
Speaker:the seasonal agricultural worker program, let's say WP, have a lot of leeway, a lot of exceptions.
Speaker:Pretty much these folks. The working relationship that they have does not fall under the Employment
Speaker:Act or most of the labor laws that we have here in Canada. That is the whole purpose of that
Speaker:program. And so they're able to tell authorities, the farm in question here, the piece of shit
Speaker:worker that you see on the video going viral, he tells authorities, well, they are having
Speaker:problems with the crop. So they sent six workers home. But one of the remaining workers on site
Speaker:has let us know that Six new migrant workers have since shown up at the farm. These workers
Speaker:are from Mexico. So clearly it's a tactic being used by the employer to punish any time, to
Speaker:punish any type of resistance that's happening amongst the workers, any kind of pushback,
Speaker:right? Another one of the excuses this worker's using to defend what he's done is that, well,
Speaker:not all the Jamaican workers were sent back. So some sort of... indication that it wasn't
Speaker:inspired by the protest, that it wasn't a response to their protest but just a day-to-day business.
Speaker:So did you watch that video? Yeah, yeah, no, the video was disgusting to watch, quite frankly.
Speaker:I mean, the way that this whole thing is structured, where they have control over their place of
Speaker:living and as well as the fact that their ability... to stay in the country is tied to whether or
Speaker:not they're employed by this specific employer gives that employer entirely too much power.
Speaker:Employer slash landlord because that's what they are. Entirely too much power and you can
Speaker:see here the kind of power trip that this fucking asshole was on. I found it telling that...
Speaker:The part where he got most angry was when one of the workers brought up about the standards
Speaker:of the living conditions. There was a toilet that was overflowing, flooding the floor. And
Speaker:the response by the employer was essentially like, oh, you think I'm not fucking angry about
Speaker:that? This is my fucking property. Like, you know, like you guys are not taking care of
Speaker:my fucking property. No, actually, hold on. This is where they live. That's a lot more
Speaker:important than your fucking property. When I look at this story, you know, I can't help
Speaker:but wonder whether or not we would know about it at all if it wasn't for the fact that the
Speaker:Jamaica's labor minister met with some of the farmers in Jamaica now that they're back in
Speaker:Jamaica and is currently investigating the circumstances. around this. Can't help but wonder if we would
Speaker:have ever heard about this if not for that, because clearly there was no process to prevent
Speaker:these workers from being sent away unfairly. And we're only worried now that, oh, we might
Speaker:have actual international repercussions and it might affect Canada's ability to get more
Speaker:temporary foreign workers from Jamaica in the future if this becomes a larger issue. really
Speaker:shows you the power dynamics at play here. Absolutely, and to your point where we probably wouldn't
Speaker:have heard about it, it's not like these conditions are new either. This is not to minimize the
Speaker:experience of those Jamaican workers in Norfolk County. It's to say that this has happened
Speaker:many, many times over. If you look at any of the work for some of the groups around the
Speaker:resistance to this, the Migrant Rights Network or Justice for Migrant Workers, the amount
Speaker:of horror stories. So Under the Temporary Foreign Workers Program, because these workers are
Speaker:not protected by the same labour laws as you and I, and because they are in such a power
Speaker:imbalance, so you have to imagine they come over here for eight months typically sending
Speaker:money back to their family. So you must need a job real bad to travel away from your family
Speaker:for eight months in a land you do not know, to work in conditions that apparently no one
Speaker:in Canada wants to to do. They're so awful, you know, they're so underpaid and the hours
Speaker:that they have to work, the labor that's involved, then the living conditions that are available
Speaker:for them. Because you have to imagine they're in the middle of a rural area. So the support
Speaker:services that exist that they would in urban settings do not. All right. That's why these
Speaker:migrant rights networks and all of the networks to support these workers are so important because
Speaker:they're isolated as well by other and surrounded by other farms that are repeating. this pattern
Speaker:over and over again. It's completely normalized in these communities. And working in these
Speaker:precarious conditions allows them to be exploited, sometimes very legally, or under minimum wage.
Speaker:They pay taxes but have no access to healthcare. So I've heard stories of, especially during
Speaker:COVID, where workers would get sick and... because they couldn't be sent home, were just put in
Speaker:isolation until they died. And only in isolation so they didn't impact the operations of the
Speaker:farm, not for any kind of compassion, and they received no adequate healthcare. Before COVID,
Speaker:if you got sick, you were just sent home. The farmer's not gonna pay for you to get healthcare.
Speaker:You cannot afford to get healthcare. You've now become a liability because they just see
Speaker:these migrant workers as like tools. And in fact, like a year ago, Jamaican workers from
Speaker:Norfolk County, migrant workers, they lost one of their comrades to an accident on a tobacco
Speaker:farm. And in response, they wrote this heart wrenching letter to the labor minister describing
Speaker:what they call systemic slavery, where they are putting conditions where... They're just
Speaker:absolutely trapped. They're treated like garbage, punished for not working fast enough, having
Speaker:to live amongst rats and poor plumbing. Horrible, horrible conditions. And yet we still look
Speaker:at these as completely acceptable. Right, the Temporary Foreign Worker Program has been around
Speaker:since 1966. Well, at least the... seasonal part of it, the seasonal agricultural. We have been
Speaker:bringing in workers from Jamaica since 1966 and they expanded that to include other parts
Speaker:of the Caribbean and Mexico. And we completely rely on that. We don't acknowledge that and
Speaker:we rarely fight for their improved working conditions. You know, when we're talking about labor fights,
Speaker:this is one that's often left off the agenda as well. And it's worth mentioning the coercive
Speaker:tactics to even bring these foreign workers over in the first place, right? Because you
Speaker:mentioned sending money back home to their family. Well, that's part of the promise, right? When
Speaker:you live in a country where, you know, there's a big difference in how much a dollar is worth
Speaker:and they'll tell you something like, oh, you'll be making 14, 15, 16, however many dollars
Speaker:an hour, right? That's how they'll sell it to you. And then they'll tell you, this is worth
Speaker:this much back home, right? To emphasize the difference in buying power. What they don't
Speaker:tell them is how expensive the cost of living is here. They actively mislead them. And so
Speaker:what ends up happening very often is you'll have people here. Sometimes it'll be, you know,
Speaker:parents who have kids back home, you know, they'll... take these jobs because they're under the impression,
Speaker:okay, I'll be able to send back money home to take care of them. But then because the cost
Speaker:of living is so expensive in Canada and they're being paid so little, well below any living
Speaker:wage in Canada, well, what happens is that they don't end up actually having any money to send
Speaker:back home. So there's doing all this work just to be able to afford to live here in Canada,
Speaker:they're living out in the middle of nowhere. and then they don't get to send any money home
Speaker:and eventually they get sent home when they're no longer useful. So it's an absolute exploitation.
Speaker:I mean, this is,
Speaker:the fact that we allow something like this in today's world shows you, I mean, it shows you
Speaker:first of all, just what happens when you fucking, why we need workers protections, because this
Speaker:is what happens when you don't have workers protection. If there's this idea, that companies
Speaker:will just do the right thing? No. And a lot of these are also like, you know, like smaller
Speaker:farms, like, you know, they're not doing the right thing either. Hiring these temporary
Speaker:foreign workers because these are jobs that Canadians don't want, quote unquote, right?
Speaker:Like that's what they say. Well, we can't find anyone in Canada to work these jobs. We need
Speaker:to bring other people in. Let's talk about that. Now they've made. what they call improvements
Speaker:to the temporary foreign worker program in terms of what companies are allowed to claim that
Speaker:they can't find the labor. But I'll tell you that Tim Hortons, you know, it came out years
Speaker:ago that Tim Hortons regularly was using the temporary foreign workers program to staff
Speaker:their stores. So it allows employers to say, hey, we can't find, you know, this type of
Speaker:skill, the level. of employment, you know, so we can't find enough people to fill these spots.
Speaker:And that could be remoteness. But either way, their solution isn't actually to move people
Speaker:from southern Canada up to remote areas to staff this. It's to rely on dire economic situations
Speaker:in other countries that are so desperate for good jobs that they will send people over.
Speaker:to be exploited, right? So the labor minister in Jamaica, yes, he should be outraged at the
Speaker:treatment of his nationals, but at the same time, he's responsible for the labor conditions
Speaker:within his country that allow, that force folks to have to travel so far to gain any kind of
Speaker:adequate employment. But the fact that Tim Hortons can claim... under the under the rules that
Speaker:used to exist. And in fact, Justin Trudeau has recently, I hate using this term, cut red tape
Speaker:around the program due to a migrant shortage, no doubt, spurred on by COVID and other factors,
Speaker:but, you know, making it easier for people to bring over easily exploitable workers. And
Speaker:no doubt these conditions are comparable to systemic slavery. Not just the individual relationships
Speaker:that we're hearing about, like these horror stories of bad bosses using this leverage over
Speaker:their employees, but also just the systemic issue, the systemic nature of it, how probably
Speaker:we know the United States also, we know the United States also heavily relies on migrant
Speaker:workers to keep their farms running. That, and they also rely on prison workers. Right. I'm
Speaker:not sure. I confess I don't actually, I should turn this off. I confess that I don't actually
Speaker:know whether or not the situation applies to Canada. But I know in the US, they treat their,
Speaker:they treat inmates as just essentially slave labor. Absolutely. Do we do that here? Do you
Speaker:know? Like, I don't actually know. I don't know, but I've been trying to get some prison abolitionists
Speaker:on for the show, so maybe they can help answer our questions there. It shows you though, like
Speaker:all of this really goes to show you just like what our societies are built on, right? And
Speaker:of course, me being me, I have to mention the fact that, you know, we're not just exploiting
Speaker:foreign workers that we bring over to Canada. We're also exploiting foreign workers in their
Speaker:countries with the companies that we bring to their countries. so that we can make money
Speaker:that comes back to Canada, but it doesn't actually go to Canadians, it goes to the richest amongst
Speaker:us, right? So our society is built off of the exploitation of poor workers and the coercion
Speaker:of poor workers across the world. That's what keeps this society running the way it does.
Speaker:A lot of people defend farmers in this situation and say, you know, if they had to pay Canadians.
Speaker:and provide benefits and use workers that weren't part of the temporary foreign workers program
Speaker:that they couldn't pay for cheap, that they couldn't operate. But again, that's going back
Speaker:to what kind of business model have we created. And I mean more as a society, not the individual
Speaker:farmer, that our farms can't exist without slave labor. What has our government done in terms
Speaker:of securing our food? by means of relying on migrant labor. And it's not the fact that these
Speaker:folks are traveling and coming from other places or taking Canadian jobs. This is how our economy
Speaker:has operated for generations. These aren't really jobs for Canadians. You know, we have structured,
Speaker:we apparently have told ourselves that we deserve better working conditions and that we are not
Speaker:willing. to subject our people to farm life, like hard work on the farm and actually, because
Speaker:I see them. I see this, I live in farm country and you see the migrant workers out there doing
Speaker:those long, long hours and living in these tiny, tiny buildings and it's, yet when I go to the
Speaker:farmer's market, I do not see them. You know, we like to pretend like this is not happening.
Speaker:And I think it would shock people. I don't think many people do know about the Temporary Foreign
Speaker:Workers Program and that we have laws in place that actually allow employers to completely
Speaker:exempt themselves from the Employment Act. All of those rights that we thought were like the
Speaker:bare minimum that we fought tooth and nail for, for some reason Jamaicans don't deserve it.
Speaker:Mexican workers don't deserve that. not on our soil. And that's horrific. So hopefully as
Speaker:more people know about it and more people plug into the resistance movements around it, we've
Speaker:mentioned them again, we'll throw their links in the show notes, but the status for all movements
Speaker:is something to really pay attention to like that is demanding full immigration status for
Speaker:all migrant workers. And I know there's a lot of people that will be like, whoa, that's,
Speaker:that's a big ask. But in reality, under the way that our Canadian laws are structured,
Speaker:that's the only way to be able to secure many things for them. Employment laws, health care,
Speaker:the right not to be just sent home arbitrarily like these Jamaican migrant workers. I remind
Speaker:people too that we're an incredibly small population. 35 million people, something like that, Canada,
Speaker:in the second largest country in the world. And I know, I know we have our winters and
Speaker:I know that, you know, we can't move everyone. to Northwest territories, but we have, you
Speaker:look at the United States, you know, the amount of like people who live in Northern parts of
Speaker:the United States. We have more than enough room here. And you know, we talk about housing,
Speaker:like, okay, so we're bringing in temporary foreign workers because we don't have enough people
Speaker:in agriculture. And you know, what are people gonna say about giving us? Oh, well, we don't
Speaker:have enough housing. How about we bring in people who are able to do construction, we give them
Speaker:full proper status, we pay them properly and we build some houses. You know, like that's
Speaker:the thing with more people comes more resources. And one thing that's also worth mentioning
Speaker:for just because you know, there's so much ignorance around this is that immigrants contribute much,
Speaker:much more to the economy per capita than people who were born in Canada. doing so much, yet
Speaker:they are so easy to blame. Like, oh, we don't have enough. Oh, it's those fucking immigrants.
Speaker:No, actually you have more because of them. Like there is no well-intentioned argument
Speaker:against this. There's no good faith argument here. Everything that any counter-argument
Speaker:is made in the worst faith possible because the evidence is overwhelming. So yeah, I don't
Speaker:wanna hear it. Let's talk about some of those Canadian families, the Irvings. So the Canadian
Speaker:government isn't going to bring any migrant workers over for public housing anytime soon.
Speaker:They don't have the money for that. But we heard this week that they do have half a billion,
Speaker:be half a billion dollars extra to give to the Irving family, specifically Irving shipbuilding.
Speaker:Now, that was enough to get me mad, right? Like that headline alone, because I understand who
Speaker:the Irving family is for those who maybe don't. We're talking about the second richest family
Speaker:in Canada, huge stakeholders, landowners in oil and gas out East. I probably don't even
Speaker:understand the full breadth of their portfolio, kind of like how we learned about Galen Weston.
Speaker:I learned after that side note. They're also into healthcare and a bunch of other things,
Speaker:the Westins, but the Irvings are not to be outshone. They also create warships. Yay, really good
Speaker:contributors to the Canadian economy. Right, fuck migrant workers. We need to pay the Irvings
Speaker:another $463 million to modernize their factory that is making our new fleet of warships. Now
Speaker:here's where folks... are going to get even more angry. Okay. Where this money is going
Speaker:is specifically into the facilities that are fulfilling the Canadian Surface Combatant Project,
Speaker:the CSC project. So as I'm looking at the numbers, it gets worse and worse and worse. This is,
Speaker:and I don't know how we didn't all know about this. I mean, maybe you did and everyone's
Speaker:just going, how did you not know about this? This is the largest single purchase in the
Speaker:Canadian government's history for 15 fucking warships. Warships. So I'm sitting trying to
Speaker:explain this to my mom before we record it. You're like, okay, here's what I'm gonna get
Speaker:mad about this week and she wants to hear about it. And I tell her all the money and she goes,
Speaker:we need warships? And I had to check myself because my kid was sitting next to me. I'm
Speaker:like, no, we need fucking public housing. It's like just what you said there, Santiago, but
Speaker:no. So this project to buy 15 new state of the art warships was originally told to cost $26
Speaker:billion. It's now as high as $84.5 billion. This is all going to the Irving family. This
Speaker:is a contract given to a single company to make an entire fleet of ships. And all these numbers
Speaker:that I'm talking about not. even one bolt has been put in. They have not started construction
Speaker:on these. And the last one won't be delivered till 2050. So not only will it cost 84, so
Speaker:this company is already getting $84.5 billion in a contract to build warships, which they
Speaker:admit they will profit off of. And somehow they convinced the federal government during the
Speaker:summer when nobody's looking to give them another $463 million. These warships, now this money
Speaker:won't go to the Irving family, but in the life cycle of these warships, they will cost us
Speaker:another $300 billion. Warships! Something no Canadian, no person in the world will benefit
Speaker:from, save maybe if they're involved in some evacuation somewhere, or maybe they're searching
Speaker:for some billionaires who've gone lost looking for the Titanic. I don't know, but $300 billion
Speaker:to maintain. these worships, and I don't imagine that includes the staffing of these worships
Speaker:and the training. There's got to be costs that clearly aren't part of this line item here.
Speaker:How does something like this, I mean, we could start a whole discussion on the Canadian media
Speaker:on top of this, but like how this, it hasn't been front page news every single time those
Speaker:costs have ballooned or how it's not a side note every time the Liberal government comes
Speaker:out and says, you know, we don't have it in the budget yet to give emergency payments to
Speaker:disabled people that we know are starving. We still have to have rounds of consultations
Speaker:around that, but the Irvings come and say, hey, we need new shiny new digs so that we can pump
Speaker:up warships a little bit faster. No problem. That money appears, no problem. It's probably
Speaker:not a consultation. We're probably talking about a few phone calls, few round tables, and that
Speaker:money appeared out of nowhere. We always have money for war. And so few Canadians question
Speaker:that. We have people shitting on immigrants for coming over here. and taking our housing
Speaker:and requiring social services and, you know, like pitting unhoused people from Canada against
Speaker:unhoused people from other countries. And meanwhile, the Irvings are raking in kajillions and they're
Speaker:not even a footnote in some of these articles. Yeah, no. I mean, I'm still stuck on the dollar
Speaker:figure there because I can't help but think of what could we do with that money? Yeah.
Speaker:What kind of programs could we run with that money? You know, when a housing crisis, we
Speaker:can build all the houses we need with $300 billion. We could have completely universal health care
Speaker:with $300 billion. We could end food insecurity with $300 billion. 15 ships. That's just 15
Speaker:ships. So I'm not talking about the aircraft. I'm not talking about helicopters. I'm not
Speaker:talking about guns, bombs, all of the other things that we spend when we go to war or...
Speaker:our peacekeeping missions, whatever they want to call them. This is just on boats we don't
Speaker:have yet to replace the boats we do have, because they want better boats, faster boats that have,
Speaker:I mean, even the name of it alone, Canadian surface combatant. We're not even pretending
Speaker:that they're protecting anything. They're combatants. That's a form of aggression. That's a really
Speaker:kind of positive enforcement there. And again, we're subsidizing fucking billionaires. Like
Speaker:the Irvings are worth billions already, right? They were awarded one of the largest contracts
Speaker:too, off of the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador to extract natural gas. And it's never ending
Speaker:the profiteering and destructiveness that is tied into that family. Like the resource extraction
Speaker:and the weaponry. These people shouldn't exist. And I know I don't mean... violence on them,
Speaker:how we've created a society where you've got essentially Mr. Burns sitting there just profiteering
Speaker:off of our destruction, and they are called into galas, and they are honored in a million
Speaker:different ways, and we put them on the cover of Time magazine, and our liberal government
Speaker:can find money to make their factories modernized. Why are those costs not incurred on the billionaires
Speaker:themselves or their... companies like how is it even possible they consider this and I'll
Speaker:tell you why it's because they've already invested and committed to 84 billion dollars so what
Speaker:that factory is enough to snuff if that factory can't fulfill that contract they're gonna be
Speaker:even more screwed so now whatever happens to that they need to just they're beholden to
Speaker:the Irving family and Irving shareholders until that contract is fulfilled and we're talking
Speaker:about 2050 So apparently taxpayers are just gonna continue and continue to just pay out
Speaker:the nose and none of it is going to the right places. I know I had an argument with somebody
Speaker:from the taxpayers, Canadian Taxpayers Federation. And I even roll my eyes talking about them
Speaker:because I hate framing people that way as taxpayers. You know, it's like, that's your only value,
Speaker:but. You know, he said to me something that I couldn't argue with, and I think I've mentioned
Speaker:it here before on the show, it's just when we're talking about taxing the rich and so that we
Speaker:can get the things that we want. He goes, but you don't. The government has billions and
Speaker:they don't spend it on what you need. So why is taking more billions in taxes going to be
Speaker:any different? That money essentially will just go back to the billionaires. And I couldn't
Speaker:argue with that. I honestly couldn't even argue with that if you had an NDP government, because
Speaker:we know that they see most of those companies as job creators and investors in the Canadian
Speaker:economy, and they would too prop them up in ways. It's a neoliberal ideology that does
Speaker:that, but it was hard to kind of continue that argument that if we could just have a rich
Speaker:tax and create enough revenue, the issue isn't revenue. It's the choices of where we spend
Speaker:that money. You know, it's not on paying workers adequately. It's not on subsidizing our food
Speaker:so that we don't have to rely on slave labor. It's on bailing out the weapons industry. Yeah.
Speaker:And it's money that also when it gets funneled into like people like the Irvings, you know,
Speaker:that's taken out of the economy, it slows everything down. There's a big difference between. giving
Speaker:money to rich people and versus when you give money to social programs, what happens with
Speaker:that money is it goes right back into circulating the economy and it makes everything run better.
Speaker:I mean, this is like, like for fuck's sake, any like any economist who knows even the most
Speaker:basic level of economics will tell you the exact same thing. That's how we know that this is
Speaker:intentional and malicious. You know, that's how we know that they're not looking out for
Speaker:the people because they have the solutions in front of them. If they ask the professionals,
Speaker:they're gonna tell them, yeah, these are the solutions in front of you and this is why you
Speaker:should do it. It's kind of a no brainer. And you know what? It's what they do in plenty
Speaker:of other countries in the world where they have much more in-depth social programs than what
Speaker:we have. And even that, I mean, like. I have my criticisms there. That's not nearly enough.
Speaker:And obviously what we're advocating for is well beyond social programs. We're advocating for
Speaker:complete systemic change. But for fuck's sake, they don't even do the social programs, you
Speaker:know, like it's a level of frustration. And I know, like, you know, we're talking about
Speaker:warships here, but I just I can't help but think it's all of it, though. It's everything. It
Speaker:comes back to everything because, you know, we start talking about the temporary foreign
Speaker:workers, it's like, OK, you know, I calculated it for a second. You know, I was like. there's
Speaker:135,000 temporary foreign workers, how much would it cost to subsidize a salary of $60,000
Speaker:a year? I just picked $60,000 random number and it's like, oh, that would cost just less
Speaker:than 8 billion. Holy shit. No way. So like, you're not joking when we say like, that number
Speaker:could solve all the world's problems. When you're talking about all of a sudden, you're going
Speaker:to pay $100,000 or You're going to pay all of these workers. A hundred thousand workers,
Speaker:60,000. I mean, that's not a great wage, but it's well above the Canadian average. Right.
Speaker:And in some areas that might be a livable wage. But surely as a subsidy to start, it's more
Speaker:than a start. But it and then other people, you could have, you know, take that same number
Speaker:and say, how many public housing units can we build? How many hospitals can we find? How
Speaker:many nurses can we train and then pay adequately? It's always about choices. And the reality
Speaker:is our governance is 100% ordained by capital and backroom deals. Because like Santiago said,
Speaker:it doesn't even make good economic sense to hand the Irvings that kind of money, as opposed
Speaker:to divvying that $463 million out to every person in Canada. That money would actually go right
Speaker:back into the economy and the Irvings could pay for their own repairs. And their stupid
Speaker:war machine deal would still be on and we'd all be the better for it. And they know this.
Speaker:Yeah, it's also worth mentioning the fact that the Irvings, I mean, they're quite connected
Speaker:when it comes to Canadian politics, especially out East. And I didn't fully understand how
Speaker:connected they were until during the last Halifax, not sorry, not during the last New Brunswick
Speaker:provincial election, I was speaking with some people who were running campaigns down there.
Speaker:It seems like you couldn't go five minutes without the Irving family coming up in one way or the
Speaker:other. What I learned was that they really control all of the politics down there, all of the
Speaker:funding. And it reminds me quite a bit of like what The kind of thing you hear in places like
Speaker:Mexico when they're talking about Carlos Slim and stuff, where it's just like everything's
Speaker:connected to like these incredibly rich and powerful individuals. It was everything comes
Speaker:back to Irving. So, you know, you wonder how the hell did Irving get tens to hundreds of
Speaker:billions of dollars here? Well, maybe it's not that much of a mystery, is it? No, because
Speaker:even though we have individual donor limits, We're talking about a family and a family that
Speaker:employs many, many executives who can make many donations. And then we have the ability of
Speaker:third party advertisers to exist and for them to be infinitely funded. So absolutely. I don't
Speaker:know if you edit this out, but our governance is always just capitalists making backroom
Speaker:political deals, not economic deals, not. even always good Canadian PR, it's strictly to benefit
Speaker:the individuals in the call, right? The heads, the CEOs, and the politicians that they're
Speaker:meeting with. And this political class with the capital class just collude with one another
Speaker:to our demise. Mostly unchallenged, to be honest. This brings me to our last rant. It's no wonder
Speaker:that we make no headway within the political class in terms of making even good economic
Speaker:policy decisions, let alone social policy. We find out this week MPs have to make full disclosures
Speaker:on their property holdings and any liabilities that they might have or their spouses might
Speaker:have. And this week we find out that the leader of Canada's NDP, Jagmeet Singh, is a landlord.
Speaker:Now, I don't want to hear about it being in his spouse's name. Don't give me that shit.
Speaker:That is, that is his property. I saw a tweet and I can't even remember who sent it. So I
Speaker:apologize if I'm, I'm stealing this content here, but it made this argument that I'm going
Speaker:to make here in this housing crisis where homelessness is. Incredible. The levels of homelessness
Speaker:is incredible. And the responses to it. minimal. In this time where we know renters are spending
Speaker:sometimes their entire paychecks on rent. and folks are being evicted so that landlords can
Speaker:make even more money. And all of these policies are being normalized. At the same time, the
Speaker:leader of the so-called working class party, the same man who is up there talking about
Speaker:greedflation and the greed of CEOs and the greed of RBC, this man decides in this moment in
Speaker:time, he's going to become a landlord. He's going to get in on this game. And frankly,
Speaker:that should fucking horrify every NDP member who hasn't already abandoned ship. Your leader
Speaker:is making money off someone else's shelter. He thinks that's okay. There is no hope for
Speaker:that party to decommodify housing when your leaders are landlords. So when you're scratching
Speaker:your head as to why he won't attack capitalism, it's because he's making bank off it. And it
Speaker:really gets me upset not just because we hate fucking landlords, but because he has pulled
Speaker:the wool over people's eyes. Or people are completely complacent knowing this, that they have just
Speaker:hired an actor. They have hired an actor who they think would best convince Canadians to
Speaker:vote for their political party. Everything else be damned. He talks well, he dresses well,
Speaker:and you know, he came up really strong in a campaign. So they're OK having a landlord wearing
Speaker:a Rolex representing the poorest people in Canada and have convinced themselves that he will
Speaker:actually advocate for renters or unhoused people. Our idea of representation is so fucked and
Speaker:it has really messed with our system. Our democracy would operate a little bit better, even with
Speaker:all its structural issues, if we actually elected people who were like us. Right? If there was
Speaker:a fucking cap on the maximum income a politician could have beforehand. Or I, like, these criteria
Speaker:are silly, I know, but the idea that we hire the wealthiest amongst us, the most educationally
Speaker:accomplished, financially accomplished, however, whatever words we want to throw behind it.
Speaker:But we think that they're better than. And so somehow we should send them off to Ottawa to
Speaker:fight for what we need. But they have no idea what we need. Correct me if I'm wrong. In the
Speaker:United States, don't they have a law that prevents politicians from publicly trading in the stock
Speaker:market? Like they're not allowed, I believe. I don't know, but a lot of them got in trouble
Speaker:for investing heavily in... big pharma ahead of the vaccination rollout. Or I think they
Speaker:have to, I think they have to like hold on to what they have or something like they're not
Speaker:allowed to sell or there's some sort of law around that. Reason I bring that up is because,
Speaker:you know, I've heard a lot of conservatives talk about how politicians shouldn't be able
Speaker:to profit off of the stock market. Well, while they're in office, you know, this is something
Speaker:that like, pretty universally people will say, yeah, no, that seems pretty, like a pretty
Speaker:bad idea. You know, people always like to call real estate an investment, right? Like buying
Speaker:multiple parts. That's an investment. Why are we allowing them to make investments? You know,
Speaker:shouldn't it be that like a sacrifice to be in office is that you're not allowed to, because
Speaker:then how could you have any sort of objectivity. Right? I mean, this is this is basics of democracy
Speaker:right here. Like this is something that like everybody regardless of where they are politically
Speaker:should be pretty fucking pissed off at. Right. Particularly people on the left because I think
Speaker:the decommodification of essential goods is critical to leftist ideology. Right. Like there's
Speaker:no way folks need to be paying. Like if we control the means of production and redistribution.
Speaker:we should not charge for shelter. Right? Like we're making the best society possible. We
Speaker:can we have that control. We would do that. But there is some validity in creating a balance
Speaker:where public office isn't a hardship. And I'm not going to make the argument that not being
Speaker:allowed to be a landlord or invest in the stock market is any kind of hardship. But they do
Speaker:need to be adequately compensated. So I definitely I never want to play into the tropes of conservatives
Speaker:who... try to devalue that work. I guess we're guilty of it too. We keep saying Pierre Pulevera
Speaker:has never had a real job. Yet we say Jagmeet has a real job. I mean, political office is
Speaker:a job. It shouldn't be a career because it does remove you from, or should remove you from
Speaker:the ability to gain other incomes for that time being. And in fact, if you're a leftist, it
Speaker:becomes a bit of a liability. Well, a real leftist. It becomes a bit of a liability. liability
Speaker:to hold office, to be honest, for the most part. So they have to, you know, not it so that it
Speaker:doesn't feel like a service that nobody wants to do it or only the worst people want to do
Speaker:it for. They have to be properly motivated as well. But it's unfathomable that progressives
Speaker:are OK because Jigmeet is only the newest member on the list of NDP landlords. So we are singling
Speaker:him out because he's the leader of the federal party and this is new news to us so that he
Speaker:didn't just inherit this property and let it out because, you know, they've got it and they
Speaker:need extra income. They went out and took a mortgage with RBC nonetheless, the same bank
Speaker:that Jack Mead has been tweeting out about their greed all week. All of his mortgages are with
Speaker:RBC and they incurred another one just so that they could profit off of somebody's shelter.
Speaker:And Even if they're breaking even, the idea that they would take this step means they don't
Speaker:have the same ideology as the rest of us, to be honest. And when I say the rest of us, I'm
Speaker:talking about socialists and leftists and people that are trying to actually eat away at the
Speaker:system. He is actively feeding into it. And it's no wonder that we really didn't get many
Speaker:calls for a rent freeze during the height of the pandemic lockdown. So when a lot of people
Speaker:weren't allowed to go to work and weren't really most people were not getting paid to stay home.
Speaker:The real solution would have been a rent freeze, not a landlord subsidy. And of course that's
Speaker:off the table even for most progressives because within their caucus are landlords. It's 38%
Speaker:of NPs apparently. That's really, really bad. That's a horrible, horrible number. And we
Speaker:expect to get anything done. And they're also taking money from the developers, of course,
Speaker:as we talk about constantly on this show and nowhere else, because outside of election season,
Speaker:nobody seems to mention the developer money. So they get them on both sides of it. Absolutely.
Speaker:And we can't forget that MPs and MPPs are given housing subsidies. So there is no MP or MPP
Speaker:that should require a second property. to make ends meet. Not only are they paid adequately,
Speaker:but they're also given a housing allowance. So amidst these conditions still, Jugme thought
Speaker:it would be a good idea, good optics even, to become a landlord during this crisis. You know
Speaker:who else is a landlord by the way? Andrea Horwath. She's a landlord. Another fun one. is Chris
Speaker:Glover, who is, was my MPP. And I find that funny because he comes across as like this
Speaker:really like hippie dad biker guy. And then, you know, Kathleen Wynn. Okay, no surprise
Speaker:there. I mean- But of course leaders seem to be particularly keen on this. And there's four
Speaker:NDP, current NDP MPs who are landlords apparently. We got Alexandro Bollucci. I don't know how
Speaker:to... God. I'm bad with names. Alexandre, Boularese, from Quebec, Alastair, MacGregor, Adam B.C.,
Speaker:Laurel Collins, and Victoria B.C., and Laurie Idlote? And none of it. And that must be an
Speaker:older list because either the recent disclosures probably haven't been accumulated into something
Speaker:that we can kind of digest, but because... Jekmeet is now on that list. And now we add Jekmeet
Speaker:to the list. In terms of just like, oh, here's a fun one. If I'm not mistaken, yeah, Elizabeth
Speaker:May is also, Elizabeth May and Mike Morris are both landlords. So the Korean party is also
Speaker:landlords in case you're wondering. I'm pretty sure, yeah, I mean, we know Pierre Polyaev
Speaker:is definitely right. And I can confirm that. What about Trudeau? I'm just here as a landlord.
Speaker:Let's see. You know, I'm going to start searching. Because someone posted something about how
Speaker:many leaders. It was like four out of the five party leaders were landlords or something.
Speaker:So that might mean Trudeau's. No, he's a landlord. Yeah. So I think just Bloc is not at this point.
Speaker:That kind of makes sense in a weird way, doesn't it? Yeah, Pierre Polyev, he's a landlord. They're
Speaker:all landlords, you know? It's 38%, but how come we're not surprised by the names? And yet when
Speaker:I kind of post about housing, people are talking, I mean, this is replicated on the municipal
Speaker:and provincial level, I'm sure, but folks are scratching their heads. Why aren't the feds
Speaker:solving the housing crisis? They have such a huge role to play here. And, you know, even
Speaker:if these are, we're talking about representing the interests of landlords and they might just
Speaker:hold one. house, one unit within their house that they let out or whatever it is. It's their
Speaker:mentality that we're talking about. So maybe they're not the corporate landlords we're talking
Speaker:about when we do the blueprints of a rent strike, but it's still the idea that folks that are
Speaker:profiteering off of other people who can't afford to own a home are somehow best suited. to solve
Speaker:the housing crisis. I mean, I gotta be honest for me, it's quite a principle thing, you know?
Speaker:Like I do have a moral argument here of just, yeah, you cannot ethically be a landlord whatsoever.
Speaker:And if you're choosing to do this, like- How about period? Yeah, period. Period, but especially
Speaker:as an MP. Yeah, no, that's why, like if you're an MP and you have- I mean, you definitely
Speaker:have more than the average person's access to surviving in life, you know? And you're also
Speaker:a landlord? Like there's no excuse for that. There's no justification. I want to hear like,
Speaker:oh, it's my wife's property. It's just a bedroom in our house. You know, it's too big. We don't
Speaker:like, no, fuck off. Sell it. You know, like I don't care. Even just for optics. Like you
Speaker:folks couldn't wait a few years until they finally get rid of Jagmeet as leader to like, have
Speaker:your Yeah, that's a part of this. I think we really need to like, like the fact that this
Speaker:is new that he wasn't a landlord. And now he is really shows how he's sitting quite comfy.
Speaker:You know, how not scared he is of our response. And it really tells you what they think about
Speaker:us. Because they know, oh, we're in a housing crisis. So you mean not sitting comfy as in
Speaker:he's wealthy, but that politically he's so comfortable that he can do or say anything. And the convention
Speaker:in October is going to come and go with, I predict, 84 percent approval rating for Jugmeet. Yeah,
Speaker:why not? I mean, they kept Andrea in Ontario for as long as they did. And she's a landlord
Speaker:and that didn't seem to work against her, at least within the party. So. What the fuck are
Speaker:they worried about? Nothing, apparently. That's what I mean. So yeah, keep spending time in
Speaker:the NDP because they definitely care about what you think. Not. Sorry, I'm a little salty right
Speaker:now. But. No, you have every right to be because I joke when I say, shame Jugmead and I picture
Speaker:the free stickers that they try to hand out that has the cartoon of Jugmead. And we've
Speaker:talked to. before leadership cults on how the NDP has completely centered themselves on this
Speaker:personality of Jikmeet and not values, right? Like they don't feature other MPPs or MPs,
Speaker:they don't prop up movements and highlight them. It's very focused. And if you look at the budgeting
Speaker:around campaigns, it's very national campaign, leader focused. The other parties do it too.
Speaker:I get it. But we're talking about the NDP here. So when it's that figure. that person where
Speaker:you're like texting team Jigme and like you are his cheerleaders and then you sit back
Speaker:and realize this man owns two properties. He does not need you sending him a ten dollar
Speaker:donation. He is not doing anything in your best interest and they're okay with parading a wealthy
Speaker:landowner. as some sort of leader of the working class. And they made that conscious decision
Speaker:and they continue to. And so, yes, it does become about who that person is because their entire
Speaker:campaigns are centered around who he is, his life growing up, you know, it's all about,
Speaker:and I know storytelling is important in campaigns, so I'm not coming down on that part of it.
Speaker:It's crucial in connecting with people, but it's everything. Right? It is everything. And
Speaker:knowing it's not anyone to champion, I think I'm most frustrated knowing this probably won't
Speaker:change a thing with many NDPers. I mean, if you're still in the game after the BC NDP and
Speaker:all the other debacles, I'm not sure this is going to make much of an impact on them. And
Speaker:you've seen the latest polling, right? With the Conservatives, their lead is growing. They're
Speaker:looking like they have enough maybe for a majority government. Last I checked they were pulling
Speaker:at what 38%? You know, getting to that 40 mark. Yeah, and it's like, okay, Pierre Pulevert
Speaker:is also a landlord, but he's also- Doesn't help the same weight. It doesn't, but he still will
Speaker:get up there and say, we need to build high rises at every subway stop. He comes out with
Speaker:kind of tangible solutions to housing when the NDP does not, right? They will attack figure
Speaker:like greed and banks and other execs. And but rarely do they put forth actual solutions that
Speaker:people will hear and go, Hey, that's a good idea. Quite often, even if it's public housing,
Speaker:it's still as vague as saying public housing, and that doesn't really have any tangible meaning
Speaker:to people. And it's purposeful. They are not committing to anything because they are so
Speaker:wishy-washy. They go with whatever the tide brings. And Pierre Pulever, and he's okay with
Speaker:completely lying, bold-faced to everybody that I'm going to help the people. But he's saying
Speaker:the right things. Jake Mead actually comes across as part of the capitalist class, to be honest,
Speaker:when you hear him speak. And knowing that he actually is it comes back to the like being
Speaker:scared to call a socialist being called a socialist, I guess. Right. Like that's kind of what it
Speaker:feels like a little bit again. Did you buy that property so we can't call him a commie? No,
Speaker:I mean, just like the whole like narrative of it all, you know, like no one's going to call
Speaker:up here probably ever socialist. So he gets to parrot some of our talking points to make
Speaker:him sound more appealing. Oh, I understand. That's yeah. Yeah. But like. Well, that is
Speaker:ironic, right? That's a disconnect. But that becomes, I think, part of the political miseducation
Speaker:that we've had that folks don't really understand what socialism is. Because I tweeted out something
Speaker:that was someone to tweet like, this is socialism, you know, public health care is socialism,
Speaker:public education is socialism. Rapid disaster response that's publicly funded is socialism.
Speaker:And it's not that isn't socialism. Socialism is controlling the means of production and
Speaker:then distribution of resources, right? If you buy the people, buy workers or collectives
Speaker:or, you know, it takes different forms. But no doubt those things would exist under a socialist
Speaker:regime, because if we all got together and decided, hmm, we've got a billion dollars here, what
Speaker:should we spend it on? And half of the people are like, well, I don't have a house yet. We're
Speaker:like, OK. Housing first, done. Well, look, people are getting sick. We're gonna fully fund some
Speaker:hospitals. Oh, we need to educate ourselves. We will fund public education systems that
Speaker:actually prepare you for life and not just a life in the factory. And, you know, yes, these
Speaker:systems will exist and be well maintained, but they aren't in themselves socialist. And we
Speaker:know this because they exist under neoliberal regimes. They look completely different, but
Speaker:they aren't socialism. They also can be taken away at any moment. under these neoliberal
Speaker:regimes. That's a part of why we talk about the systemic change, because you'll get these
Speaker:victories, and then you'll get a conservative government, and then they'll take it away,
Speaker:and then you've got to work for it again. Like, that's why we talk about, and when I mentioned
Speaker:it earlier, that we need systemic change. We're not just advocating for social programs, because
Speaker:if workers actually, if people were actually in control of the means of production, if we
Speaker:actually had a society that wasn't based around capital and based around the control of the
Speaker:rich, then who the fuck is going to take away these programs? Would you make that decision
Speaker:for yourself if you're benefiting off of this to get rid of it? No, because people make the
Speaker:decisions that are good for them. And what's good for the people is good for all of us.
Speaker:That's how it works. We see how it works when you give workers more control in a business
Speaker:and they do better. you know, like bring back my statistic that I was like to quote about
Speaker:how worker cooperatives have over 80% five-year survival rate versus less than 40% for traditional
Speaker:businesses, because people will make the decisions that are good for them. That's overwhelmingly
Speaker:true in however many studies you look at, however many different systems you means to have something.
Speaker:No, you actually give people control, then it works better. Right? That's how society can
Speaker:function too. So that's why we're advocating for complete change, not just little. temporary
Speaker:social program solutions that will then get repealed and we're going to be left with even
Speaker:less. That is a wrap on another episode of Blueprints of Disruption. Thank you for joining us. Also
Speaker:a very big thank you to the producer of our show, Santiago Helu-Quintero. Blueprints of
Speaker:Disruption is an independent production operated cooperatively. You can follow us on Twitter
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