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Greetings, friends. My name is Jess McLean, and I'm here to provide you with some blueprints

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of disruption. This weekly podcast is dedicated to amplifying the work of activists, examining

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power structures, and sharing the success stories from the grassroots. Through these discussions,

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we hope to provide folks with the tools and the inspiration they need to start to dismantle

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capitalism, decolonize our spaces, and bring about the political revolution that we know

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we need. I let guests introduce themselves, but as soon as they got into the studio, we

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just started talking. So I hit record. Dimitri Lascaris is back talking about disrupting business

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as usual for politicians complicit in genocide. Dimitri is a lawyer, a journalist, a staple

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in Canadian politics, and as you'll hear, he's also quite the shit-disturber. If you know

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us at all, you'll know we absolutely mean that as a compliment. This is the second time he's

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been on our show, so be sure to go back and listen to Wasted Energy. That's where Dimitri

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talks about his experience inside the Green Party and his general take on partisan politics

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in Canada. It's not that far different from mine. You'll likely have also seen footage

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of Dimitri and other disruptors confronting federal politicians. primarily the ruling liberals

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for their roles in Israel's war crimes. They are meeting these people head on and upsetting

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their agendas to put focus where it should be on a matter that can't wait, that has no room

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left for niceties. We ask him how he manages to track these folks down all the time, if

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he gets nervous, disrupting events and why he uses this method as a means to get Canada to

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act. At one point, he'll encourage you to do the same wherever you are. And we second these

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calls. At no point should any politician feel comfortable throwing fundraisers as they send

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warships to ensure the flow of weapons continue from our shores to Israel. Demetria can't be

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everywhere. The Palestinian youth movement cannot be everywhere. not without your help. The interview

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starts here by diving right into Dmitri telling us the story of his latest face-to-face with

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a Liberal MP. So sit back, listen in, and get fired up to be disruptive. Yes, so this morning

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Minister Mark Miller, whose portfolio includes refugees, gave a press conference about an

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infrastructure project in a writing. It's either my writing in Montreal or right next to it.

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And I learned about this through Eve. And I went there fully expecting to encounter the

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typical scenario we now encounter, which is that there were going to be RCMP officers at

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the entrance to the building. Whether or not I'd actually met them before, they would immediately

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recognize me and Eve, and they would try to stop us from entering the building. Even though

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Eve and I have never done anything. allegedly or actually criminal or peaceful protesters.

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And frankly, the questions we ask are the kinds of questions that any conscientious journalist

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would ask. Right. And, you know, unfortunately, the mainstream media does not have a lot of

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conscientious journalists, but we showed up there today and it's these disruptions. You

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never you never know what you're going to find. Right. So we showed up this morning and there

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were there was nobody at the door, nobody at the entrance to the building. Like, we want

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nothing. and we walked into the room where it was being held, which is kind of like a classroom,

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and Miller hadn't shown up yet, and there were chairs there, and we sat down. So we were basically

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three meters away from the minister. Me, Eve, and two other activists came, two other disruptors.

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So there were four of us in a crowd of around, I don't know, 20 people, and... We allowed

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him to make his presentation and there were others who spoke about this infrastructural

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project and then we got to the Q&A. And, you know, he went first and each of us had a good

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several minutes going back and forth with him. And that's very rare. Usually what happens

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if you get a question off at all, within 30 seconds, some brutes in suits have their hands

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all over you and they're dragging you out. And here, no one dragged us out. No one even attempted

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to drag us out. So it was really quite telling. And the reason why I started recounting this

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to you, just because you asked me, you know, what can Canada do? And that was exactly what

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he asked me. And so I started rhyming. He asked me that question. Well, it's a talking point,

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right? Like it's something they're pushing this kind of. Yeah. We've got no role to play here.

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And so I listed a bunch of things he could do. And then I said to him, you know, we'll be

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posting the video about this later. I said to him, you're doing none of those things. What

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did you do in the case of Ukraine? You imposed sanctions, you sent weapons to the Ukrainians,

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you voted for resolutions at the UN condemning what Russia did, you know, you urged the Russian

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people to overthrow their president. In this case, you're on the side of the oppressor.

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You are doing everything imaginable to support the brutal oppression of the Palestinian people.

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And how do you account for this grotesque disparity in treatment of these two human rights violators?

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And he refused to answer my question. He literally, we went back and forth and he actually just

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walked away from the mic, refusing to answer my question. Amazing. They're just not prepared

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to answer these questions because there's no answer. There's no defending it. There's, I

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find it funny though, that he posed that question to you thinking that you wouldn't have. pocket

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answer for that. Like you've not already been asked that question a million times over. Like

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you've not been screaming from the top of your lungs already what the things that they can

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do are. But he's just so ill prepared to handle this, that that's all he could think of. I

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think it speaks in a certain way to, as you were saying, Demetri, about conscientious journalists

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and mainstream media, to the lack of challenge they receive typically in their interactions.

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The media leaves them. unprepared for these kinds of situations because they're just not

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used to having any kind of scrutiny whatsoever. That's exactly what it is. It's exactly what

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it is. These people are like fish out of water when they get a real question. You know, these

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softballs that they constantly, you know, they go on Power and Politics and the at-issue panel

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and they're on CTV and they're just getting one softball after the other and they get a

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tough question. They fold up like a cheap suit. Meanwhile, we're grilled online constantly,

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right? So we've got the answer to everything, or at least we think we do. But yeah, I look

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forward to watching the video on that because you're right, we normally do get to see all

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of these, thankfully they're videotaped and they usually do end up with a very certain

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viewpoint. It's, I feel like Eve's needs a t-shirt that says, don't touch me or get your hands

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off me, because that's how the video typically ends. Get your hands off me. Shame on you,

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Minister Jolie, you know? And yeah. And they don't have the right to touch us. Like people

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should understand that, right? If you're just standing there and you're not posing a threat

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to anybody and you haven't been asked to leave and refused to leave, even then, like only

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an officer of the peace can physically remove you from the premises if you're not posing

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a threat to anybody. These people don't care. Like literally the moment you ask a question,

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their hands, their grubby paws are all over you and they're dragging you up. The fact you're

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a card carrying member of you know, the Freelance Union in Canada means nothing to them Are you

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wearing a press pass when you do this most the time? Usually I don't because if they see my

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name, they won't let me in Because I think that's a question a lot of people are watching like

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how one I wish he was here like when he jumps on me We'll ask him as well. But like how do

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you find them? you know, because we all kind of want to know where they are. We've seen

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them be disrupted at restaurants and stuff like that. So on one offs, people are finding them.

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But you folks seem to be consistently at every time they pop their head out of their office

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like it's like whack a mole. And they can't go anywhere in Ottawa without running into

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one of you two. Like, how do you find them? Well, I don't want to get specific about that.

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Yeah, because if I do, they'll just negate whatever, you know, information we're getting. But I

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will say this, the fact that we've become known as disruptors of senior federal politicians

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and others has caused people to volunteer information to us all the time. Sometimes people we don't

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know, and you'll get an email, a text, and they'll say, hey man, I just found out so-and-so is

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gonna be speaking here, you may wanna know about this. So you never know where the information's

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gonna come from, but it is true that... You know, if I announce in advance going into,

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because, you know, we've got a certain degree of notoriety now with the security details

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for these ministers, and especially the prime minister, if we announce in advance what our

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names are, very little prospect will get anywhere close to the minister, and we'll never get

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to ask her questions. So we have to be as discreet as possible. Because that's like two different

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routes you could take. Some people are like, as many people as possible, come outside of

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this restaurant, this event, you know, make some noise. you two are preferring the more

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stealth mode, but I still find it surprising that the amount of times you've done this,

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you know, your picture's not plastered on every staffer's clipboard before they throw an event.

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It's like the usual suspects to watch out for. I mean, getting a seat at the Q&A with Mark

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Miller is... Did that catch you off guard? Because you're always prepared to just basically yell

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some one-liners and get what you can get out there before they drag you out. I really didn't

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think I was going to get that much time with him. Like I grilled him for a good three or

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four minutes. I wish I could get opportunities like that on a regular basis because it not

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because of, you know, it gives me some perverse delight to embarrass these people, but because

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it really exposes the complete lack of any moral or intellectual foundation to the government's

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policies. If you can grill these people and all they do is avoid questions and repeat gibberish.

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then people finally understand, you know what, there's no principle behind this at all. Nothing.

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They have nothing to say in defense of their behavior. So that's the whole point of this

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exercise. And as I say, if the journalists, the so-called journalists in the mainstream

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media were doing it, we wouldn't have to do it. I got better things to do with my time

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than chase down Mark Miller, you know? If you were to reach out to them as, you know, a freelance

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journalist, like have you tried getting responses that way? I'm guessing... how that would go.

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But I'm wondering what kind of responses maybe you've gotten in the past if you've tried to

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actually give them a heads up. Ignored, completely ignored. And in fact, on a number of occasions,

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so now one thing that they often do is they'll say there's going to be a presser at such and

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such a, well, they might not give you, they don't give you the precise location, typically.

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Now the PMO's office, for example, will say, On this date at this time the prime minister

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will give a speech and there will be a press conference You can register and then we'll

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give you details. So you don't know where it's happening. You just know what city it's taking

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place in so then you register and You know, they either ignore your registration they never

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send you the information or they'll come back and they say you're not accredited So they

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have this process as I understand it Where it not it isn't accredited journalist It's not

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that you are a bonafide journalist. That's not what they're asking you. What they're asking

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you is, have you been approved by the prime minister's office to attend these press conferences?

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That's what they mean by accredited. And of course, they're not going to prove me to. So

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I can't answer questions, even though I'm a card carrying member of the freelance union

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in Canada, even though I've been doing journalism for over a decade and I've had hundreds of

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reports published on various media. They will not accredit me. It flies in the face of what

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journalism is supposed to be, right? Like it's not supposed to be something where there is,

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you know, where there is a credited journalist and not a credit journalist. It's supposed

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to be that anybody can be a journalist if they want to. Right. Exactly. And so by controlling

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this, I mean, it's very, it's very manufactured consent, but much, much less subtle than it

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can often be. I mean, this is very blatant manipulation. Yeah. It's a shame. I don't think people in

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this country really understand how difficult it is for the media to get access to these

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people. It's extremely tightly controlled. And if you're being given regular access to senior

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officials in the government, it's because they've made a determination that you're friendly.

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Bottom line, you're going to ask friendly questions. You're not going to challenge the fundamental

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orthodoxy behind the government's actions. You know, you'll pretend you like give them a little.

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Of course, there is a little bit of. uh, shall we say scrutiny applied by the media. If there

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was no scrutiny at all, they'd have absolutely no credibility and everybody know what they're

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just propaganda. So they have to engage in some level of critical scrutiny, but they never

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really challenged the fundamental premises of government action. For example, the capitalist

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system or the fact we have an imperialist foreign policy, the fact that we've aligned ourselves

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with egregious human rights liars, uh, violators. You can't touch those with a 10 foot pole.

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And I think like in the environment in which you get like an official response or an interview,

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you're getting those canned political prepared answers. And in the environment that Dmitri

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and Yves are finding them is sometimes fundraisers. They've got a whole other line of thinking.

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They've got talking points that are completely unrelated to what they're about to be asked

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about. And I think catching them off guard is what helps prove that illegitimacy that allows

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them to stumble through that, right? Rather than these polished answers that we see regurgitated

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through. typical media sources, right? But they're not ready. Well, I mean, I think some of them

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are steeled against expecting you at this point. You have some favorite targets and correct

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me if I'm wrong. And I imagine you'd really want one on ones. I know you got MP Miller,

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but perhaps Mr. Jolie would be on your, your to-do list, House Father and obviously the

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prime minister. Yeah. And Freeland. Oh God. Oh, I had, you know what, she's in my notes

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with a question mark because my question about Freeland is like, I have not, I have not seen

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you guys cross paths. Maybe I missed the video, but is she being particularly elusive? I feel

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like she's laying low through this entire thing. Well, she does, she is very elusive. Part of

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the problem that we have, just logistically that even I have is we're based in Montreal

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and her riding is in Toronto. She spends a lot of time in Toronto. You know, we know this

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from various communications that her office puts out. So she's almost always in Toronto

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or Ottawa. She's talking to some Bay Street bigwigs or something. But yeah, it's true.

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I've never actually crossed paths with Christina Freeland. We went to her office a couple of

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times, occupied it, but she was nowhere in town at the time. I want to say something about

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fundraisers though. They are incredible opportunities because these things are meant to be relatively

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intimate affairs. and you get into them and you get to listen to a whole speech and there's

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usually a crowd of media there who may actually provide some coverage to your disruption but

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the problem is you have to pay money and oftentimes it's very significant money to get in there.

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One of the best, maybe even the best disruption I ever was part of was in 2018

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in May of that year an Israeli sniper shot a Canadian-Palestinian doctor in Gaza. His name

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is Dr. Tarek Lubani. He was shot in both legs. This was during the Great March of Return,

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when refugees were walking up to the fence of the concentration camp and demanding that they

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be allowed to return to their homeland. And they were being gunned down mercilessly by

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Israeli snipers. Dr. Lubani, who frequently goes to Gaza and treats Palestinians, at El

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Shifa Hospital, which was just destroyed by the Israelis. He was wearing a medical garb

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in the field, clearly identified as a doctor, and he got shot twice. What does the Canadian

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government do? Two weeks after this happens, they enter into an enhanced free trade agreement

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with Israel. Rather than impose sanctions, they rewarded Israel. And so a character by the

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name of Eli Cohen, who was the economy minister of Israel at the time, and who is now the foreign

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minister, and is deeply complicit in this genocide. He comes to Toronto at the time, Francois-Philippe

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Champagne was the foreign minister, and they hold this big shindig at the Royal York Hotel.

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And to get in, it was like 150 bucks a piece, and we raised enough money to buy five tickets.

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And so we went in there, and one of the people who went in there with us was Hamam Farah.

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who is a Canadian Palestinian. Yeah, you know, her mom is, he's got family in Gaza. You know,

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and we stood up one after the other and, you know, let our feelings be known to Mr. Cohen

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about what happened. And the entire thing was basically a train wreck. This fundraiser was

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a train wreck because the thing lasted a good 20, 25 minutes, the disruption, but that's

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costly, right? And it takes tremendous amount of coordination. to pull that off. You go one

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at a time? Yeah. Yeah, we had a distinct plan. We knew exactly what order we were going in.

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We had, we knew what we were going to say. We divided up sort of subject matter and we had

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another person who was designated to film the entire thing. So it's complicated to pull that

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off, but it's really, it's disgraceful that you have to go to these lengths to ask these

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politicians tough questions. It's just, it's crazy. A lot of pay for access. Absolutely.

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And that's just... It speaks to our whole political system, right, that even as a journalist, you

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essentially do have to pay for access and still have so very little influence over their responses.

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And I mean, Canada has finally called for a ceasefire, sort of, begrudgingly is how I described

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it. And not even all the Liberals are happy about this. Housefather in particular has kind

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of made a mission not only to prop up this genocide, but to demonize pro-Palestinian activism. And

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I've seen him accosted quite a few times. How many other politicians are out there that are

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so—we saw a list released by the Maple—I'll have to edit that if I'm wrong—of all of the

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MPs who were taken on a trip to Israel. through lobbyist groups. Are all those folks on your

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list of politicians that need to be held accountable? Sure, you know, I'll disrupt any MP anywhere

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anytime if that person needs to be held to account. We, you know, we try to focus on people who

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are, you know, particularly powerful in the government for obvious reasons, right? They're

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the ones who have the greatest impact on or the greatest role in formulation of Canadian

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policy. But any member of parliament, in my view, should be held to account through rigorous

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questioning, in any, you know, wherever the opportunity presents itself. You know, you

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mentioned the case of Housefather. I just want to say something about Housefather. When Tarek

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Lubani was shot, you know, even though the Canadian government, you know, shortly thereafter entered

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into an enhanced free trade agreement with Israel and brought over the economy minister to, you

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know, wine and dine him on Bay Street. There was a brief moment when the Trudeau government

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condemned Israel within 24 hours. And what caused this, by the way, in my view, was that the

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Canadian press actually reported on it. Okay, so there were articles in the Globe and Mail,

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there was one in the Toronto Star, London Free Press, because TADEC is based in London, Ontario.

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At that point, Trudeau puts out a statement, which was arguably the harshest statement he's

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ever put out in his time as prime minister about something Israel did. And... Lo and behold,

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Michael Hauswether and Michael Levitt, who at that time was a liberal MP, who's now the CEO

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of the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center, and he was also the chair of a parliamentary subcommittee

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on international human rights at that moment, they put out their own statement and criticized

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their government for having the temerity to condemn Israel's shooting of a Canadian-Palestinian

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doctor. So I called them out for this and then I was attacked by the leader of the, by the

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prime minister himself and by the head of the opposition and also by Jagmeet Singh because

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I called them out for putting the interests of Israel ahead of those of Canada, which in

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my view is exactly what they were doing. You know, and it had nothing to do, of course,

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with the claim was that I was saying this about them because they're Jewish. This has absolutely

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nothing to do with the fact that they're Jewish. It has to do with an ideology. ascribed to,

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which is a fundamentally racist ideology. And, you know, I've condemned plenty of people in

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the Canadian Parliament for espousing that ideology who are not Jewish, they're Christians or even

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atheists. This is, you know, fundamentally, you can't even criticize people on the basis

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of their record without being subjected to these kinds of smears in this country nowadays. Even

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when they're throwing a Canadian-Palestinian doctor under the bus, I mean, it's remarkable.

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Or defending genocide. Even worse, the worst of things. You can't possibly do something

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worse than our government's now doing. You've given a few examples on how Canada has been

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complicit in this, more so in the absence of condemnation or keeping close relations despite

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the human rights record and the fact that it participates in an illegal occupation. But

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you gave MP Mark Miller. more than that in terms of what Canada can be doing to end the siege

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on Gaza and then end the occupation. Do you want to share them with us? Sure. So he says,

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you know, what should we do? And by the way, I think the reason why he asked me that question

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is because he was buying time. He just wanted to make me talk because he didn't know what

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to do. But anyways, whatever his motivation may have been, I rhymed off the following,

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imposing arms embargo on Israel. You've done that with respect to countless other human

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rights violators. Why can't you do it with Israel? I said to him, your government gives preferential

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tariff treatment to products produced in Israel's illegal settlements. You do this even though

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your government acknowledges that the settlements are a violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention.

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Stop giving them preferential tariff treatment. Ban their importation into Canada. Your government

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allows these products to be marked as product of Israel. I've been litigating a case on behalf

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of Dr. David Kattenberg for five years. to try to get the government to ban the use of product

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of Israel labels on these settlement products. I said, stop that. Tell these people that they

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can't put those labels on these products. Expel the Israeli ambassador. And he looks at me

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and when I said that, he goes, you want us to expel Israeli diplomats? I said, yeah, why

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not? Has he not been keeping up? Canada would not be the first country. No, and not only

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that, but they expelled how many Russian diplomats did they expel? So what Israeli diplomats,

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why do they get a free pass? That's funny that he was astonished at the mere suggestion. And

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then he says to me, he goes, And what should we do about Hamas? I said, would you do the

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same things? You know, he goes, you want us to sanction a terrorist organization? So what

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he actually said to me, I said, sir, your government is sanctioning terrorist organizations. It's

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been doing it for years. Why are you expressing amazement that I would suggest you should sanction

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a terrorist organization? It was literally incoherent babble that came out of this man's mouth. That's

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how I feel like all the discussion around this is like, makes no sense. Or I've described

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it as the Twilight Zone, where people are just spouting the most obvious hypocrisies and pretending

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that that's not happening. And you're looking around going, are you hearing yourself? Especially

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in proximity to what has just happened in Ukraine and how much we know about our response to

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that. And these are the same people. Often on Twitter, they even have the Ukraine flag in

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their bio. And you're just like, I don't know where to go from there with you. Like, yeah,

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you can't see that. I don't know where to start. But yeah, well, I'm sorry to interrupt. One

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of the worst genocide apologists in the Canadian media nowadays is Andrew coin. Go check out

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his Twitter profile. Oh, yes. No, I blocked it. But beside the Ukrainian flag, Israeli

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flag. How do you reconcile those two things? I mean, the man lives in some kind of alternate

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universe. You know what, there's very few flag combinations that can exist on Twitter that

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I'm not wary of, like very few, maybe an Irish and a Palestinian flag or something. I don't

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know, but yeah, that's a big red flag. Yeah, I mean, we were doing an episode a couple days

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ago on the rise of fascism in the West and in... in Canadian politics. And one of the things

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that we kind of talked about was how opportunistic it often is. And that's how you get situations

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where, you know, you get that Ukraine-Israel flag combo. It's because we're opportunistic

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to whatever most benefits our interests, as opposed to having any sort of consistency in

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our application of, you know, human rights. whatnot. I mean, Canada respecting human rights

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is a bit rich, considering how many of those human rights had to be written because of Canadian

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violations in previous wars and whatnot. Yeah. I want to just qualify one thing though, I

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must part company with you on one thing. I think I suspect you probably will agree with me on

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this. But you said our interests. These policies are not in the benefit of the interest, not

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to the benefit of ordinary Canadians. There's absolutely no benefit to ordinary Canadians

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in supporting a damn genocide. They are disgracing this country. And not only that, not only are

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they destroying whatever credibility left, is left for Canada on the international stage,

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but they're generating a tremendous amount of anger against Canada in the Muslim and Arab

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world. With complete justification, people are angry. And, you know, we all know the term

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blowback. You know, I'm worried. And we should all be worried. When you support an open brazen

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genocide the way our government is doing, you know, it's all of a sudden they put a target

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on our backs. There's a lot of angry people out there. 9-11 happened for a reason. It was

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a detrocity, of course. But, you know, if you actually listen to the people who participated

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in that, they said very clearly, we're outraged by what is being done to Arab and Muslim peoples

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and including the Palestinians. So this is not in our interest. This is in the interest of

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the elite. And Canada's done a pretty good job of standing out. Normally we like to. Veil

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our really bad foreign policy, you know, speak out of two sides of our face. Canada's famous

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for it. We covered that in our interview with Tyler Shipley, where we appeared to be doing

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something good and in the background, we'll condemn them and then sign a free trade agreement.

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That was the example you gave earlier. But in this particular instance, we have stood out

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like a sore thumb at sometimes going beyond the US position. and lagging behind others

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who have kind of come around to the ceasefire. Or first, it was like temperament, you know,

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easy, like, let's lessen the civilian deaths. And I'm also frustrated that it took this long

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to simply get Canada to come around to a ceasefire position that they don't even really seem to,

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you know, that their hearts not in it. You know, if we can talk like that, like they're not

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going to make any efforts to achieve this ceasefire. Right. So what do we actually need them to

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do next? And I think you apologize for interrupting me, but I think I interrupted you in giving

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the list of things that Canada can do. So an arms embargo, the preferential trade, expelling

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diplomats. Did I miss any? Did we cut you off? Sure. Ban the importation of Israeli settlement

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products, not just remove preferential tariff treatment, but if you're going to let them

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into the country, insist that they be accurately labeled. You know, it should say they're coming

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from a settlement in occupied territory. In fact, it should say an illegal settlement in

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occupied territory, which is the Canadian government's position that they're illegal. You know, there's

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a whole panoply of sanctions. That's just a really Israel's exports don't come from the

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settlements. They come from businesses that are situated within the internationally recognized

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boundaries of Israel. You could ban those too. You could just cut off exactly what we did

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to Russia, right? We basically severed all economic relations with Russia with some minor exceptions.

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Why is Israel not being given the same treatment? You know, you could go, I didn't mention this,

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you could go to the international criminal court and file a complaint. You know what Canada

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did a year ago? The General Assembly referred a matter to the International Court of Justice.

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I believe it was the legality of the occupation, but it was having scrutiny about some aspect

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of Israel's behavior that amounts to a war crime. And Bob Ray, genocide Bob Ray, Canada's ambassador

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to the United Nations, sends a letter to the International Court of Justice in August, you

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know, contrary to the overwhelming... view of the international community on this issue,

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because most states want the ICJ to review this conduct, says we don't support you exercising

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jurisdiction over this case. Don't do it. You know, Israel hasn't consented. Well, of course

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it hasn't consented. It's an egregious human rights violator and knows what the outcome

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is going to be. So why don't you send a letter now that they're committing genocide to the

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ICJ and say, you know what, we rescind that. We take it back. We do support you exercising

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jurisdiction at the end of the day. And these are just things I can think of off the top

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of my head. Okay? There's so many more things that the government could do. One thing I should

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add is a mere change in the language that it employs. So let's stop, you know, pretending

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that this right to defend itself, which they talk about incessantly, extends to the mass

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murder of Palestinian children and say what this actually is, which is a war crime. It's

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a crime against humanity. acknowledge that Israel is an apartheid state, which virtually the

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entire international human rights community now acknowledges. What does the Trudeau government

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do? It says, oh no, we disagree with that assessment. And then when they, on the rare occasion, they

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get asked why, they won't tell you. They won't say why, because they have no justification

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for rejecting the apartheid label. So there's rhetorical changes they could adopt. Literally,

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they haven't done anything, anything of the multitude of things they could do. The mental

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gymnastics the folks must do that write some of these statements and how much time they

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probably spend on crafting that language. So you know it's very, very deliberate because

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then none of them walk outside of that. And we are always, in this case, steps and steps

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behind other nation states that have seemingly come around like the United Kingdom and France

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now. But who's to say that that's not just simply lip service to the millions of people who have

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taken to the streets and other activists like you doing various actions across the country.

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Now, some of the things that you mentioned, I can see kind of being easier than others

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for the liberals to accomplish in the circumstances that they're under now. So what would you say

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to critics though that say like the liberals would just never do that or they would never

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get that passed? in the House of Commons? Well, why would say that it is official party policy

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of the NDP. Like one of the few good things you can say about the federal NDP nowadays,

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is that they have a policy calling for an arms embargo in Israel. Okay, so there's no reason

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to believe that yeah, and this is probably in my view, it is the single most powerful thing

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that is the candidate could do is to impose an arms embargo in Israel. We have seen the

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NDP vote against their policy books, though, for very many times. But if they're going to

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do that, hold them to account then. OK, expose them for the frauds and liars that they are.

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But that's their official policy. They've actually stood up in Parliament since this genocide

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began and have called for an arms embargo. They'd be in a very difficult spot. If they vote in

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favour of an arms embargo, of course it's going to pass. And I think that the I'm sure that

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the two Green Party MPs would go along with it, even though they too are acting in a cowardly

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manner, frankly. I don't think they're going to oppose an arms embargo on Israel. That's

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official Green Party policy. So what do we need to do to get the liberals to get that in motion?

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Do you think we're doing what we need to do? I think we have made a good start. The whole

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point of these disruptions is to apply pressure. And I believe these people, they are affected

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when every time they show their face in public, somebody is calling them out for supporting

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the genocide. even if they don't have a conscience, which is certainly arguable, they are concerned

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about how they look in public. And it is uncomfortable to be called a genocide supporter in front

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of your fans. So I think that we have to escalate. And this has to be, it has to be a virtual

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slam dunk in their minds that every time they go out in public, this is going to happen to

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them every time. When they get that uncomfortable, there's this great story that Chris Hedges

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tells. about Kissinger's memoirs, which I never could bring myself to read. So I just I'm trusting

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Chris Hedges when he says this. He says that Kissinger told of a scene in the White House

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during the height of the Vietnam War protests, where, you know, they had surrounded the White

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House with buses and irate thousands upon thousands of irate protesters were surrounding the White

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House. And some of them were clamming over the. the buses and Nixon turns to Kissinger and

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says, Henry, they're coming to get us. Not long after that, he brought the Vietnam War to an

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end. Now, I'm not advocating for violence. I want to be very clear about that. But should

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we strike the fear of God in their hearts? Should we shame them, embarrass them? You know, and

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I've seen some, I haven't seen this done yet in Canada, but I'm fully I've seen activists

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in the United States find the homes of these people and stand outside on their front lawn

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or on the street in their neighborhoods and condemn them for their depravity. That's the

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kind of thing we need to be doing. It can work. And I think some indication of that is that

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the Canadian government finally changed its position on the ceasefire. So one thing I'm

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wondering about is absent the government actually doing like having an official arms embargo.

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How much more should we be escalating our tactics in terms of actually blockading these factories?

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Right? There was some of that happening earlier on. I haven't heard about it as much recently.

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I'm not sure if that means it's not happening. I'm just not getting exposed to that. But that

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is something, it is a possibility, right? That is one thing we should consider.

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by Palestinian solidarity activists. I wholeheartedly endorse those things. I've taken part in actions

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at General Dynamics in London, Ontario. But you should know that if you take it to that

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point, you're risking arrest. So people should have no illusions about that. When you start

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interfering with the, even if you're doing peaceably, ethically, you're interfering with the economic

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activity of some major corporation. and you're not just, you know, hectoring some depraved

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politician in a public venue, there's a higher likelihood that you're going to get arrested

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for trespass or breaching the piece or something like that. If you're willing and able to assume

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that risk, then this is an essential part of the disruptions that we need to be engaged

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in. Now, one thing's getting arrested, the other one is what happens after you get arrested.

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As a lawyer, I guess I'll defer to you on what the consequences there are. But is it likely

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for them to, you know, throw the book at you kind of deal? Well, you know, it's really hard

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to say how much time we were going to get to meet you. We need to know that you can't really

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answer that question responsibly without having specific facts before you write as a general

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principle. Typically, what happens in these cases is people get charged with trespass.

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And in fact, I was not charged for that Royal York event. I was trespassed out of a hotel.

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They told me if I came back, I would be arrested if I ever came back. So you've not been arrested

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for, I guess it's hard to arrest a lawyer especially, because I imagine some people do get arrested

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for doing what you do, maybe released without charge. But the people that did Scotiabank,

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they ended up getting charged as well and all they did was essentially disrupt. But To Santiago's

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point where talking about disrupting the factories and whatnot, well, now we know a lawyer, but

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no, just kidding. I see the way of disrupting their fundraisers, the liberal fundraisers,

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and their little fan club get-togethers as a way of hitting them where it hurts, right?

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Hitting the pocketbook, not of Israeli arms manufacturers. That is for other people. We're

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going to interview Labor for Palestine on how they do that. But you know— Getting cut off

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from your fundraisers as an MP will pressure you, whether maybe if you don't have a conscience,

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right? They do want to get reelected. And disrupting those fundraisers from the outside, from the

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inside does not play well into re-election. So I imagine that is a pressure point in itself

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on top of the talking points, hopefully, that you're giving them while you do this. But...

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Absolutely. So people, the main reason I think these disruptions are important is not so much

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what happens in the room. It's when you share what happened in the room with the broader

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world. Right. That's a critical aspect of this because usually when you enter into one of

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these venues, uh, you're surrounded by psycho fans. There's a people who are big fans of

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the politics. Oh, we know partisans, don't worry. Right. Exactly. Yeah. Or the political climbers

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and they're just trying to ingratiate themselves with whoever's the star of the show. Uh, so

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you're not likely to make a lot of headway with those people. But some of them do actually

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come up to us afterwards and say thank you for that. I appreciate that. Sometimes they say,

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you said something I wanted to say, and I've never, this happened today. When we came out

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of this event, a young lady came up to us outside the building and said, you said exactly what

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I wanted to say. I just didn't have the courage to say it. So it inspires people to pick up

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the mantle, and to broaden the movement and to apply further pressure. It does educate

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the public. These are very important reasons to engage in this sort of behavior. But mostly,

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it's just we've got to make them as comfortable as possible about their depravity. Do you ever

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feel nervous going into these confrontational situations? Because I go live all the time,

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I still get incredibly nervous when I go to record certain things or speak, even though

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I seemingly don't appear. You appear and Eves appear fearless in this battle. Right. And

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you have a mission when you're in there. I know the adrenaline's pumping once you get going.

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But, you know, as you're walking up to the door, as you're planning to have trepidation and

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worry. Absolutely. Yeah, I know. I'm not I'm not fearless. Once my once my this is the way,

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you know, I have the same feeling when I go into court, like when I feel a lot of nervousness

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until I stand at the podium. But for some reason, once my mouth starts moving, it all goes away.

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Just thank God, you know. But leading right up to the moment where I start talking, yeah,

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absolutely. And I'm becoming increasingly nervous in the current environment because, you know,

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so I disrupted with, well, Eve wasn't allowed in the building, but there was an event involving

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the prime minister about two weeks ago. And I got roughed up pretty bad by a Montreal cop.

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And when I, when he got to the door, like they dragged me a good 30, 40 meters. There were

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three RCMP guys and this crazy cop. And we get to the door, I still had my iPhone. He smacked

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my arm hard. He was trying, obviously, to cause my iPhone to fall out of my hand. And fortunately,

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it wasn't damaged. But this guy was a brute. And they kind of had to restrain them, the

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RCMP guys. They're relatively civilized. But these cops can get these, you know, the municipal

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cops, some of these guys can go crazy. And it's not just that. You're walking into, as I mentioned,

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hostile setting. It's quite apart from the law enforcement officials who are there. Oftentimes,

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you know, the people there are big supporters of the politician and they'll boo you. That

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happens, right? And anything the politician says to shut you down, they all give them a

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standing ovation. So it's a stressful experience. But I want to say to people out there who may

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be thinking about doing this, so far, I've never been arrested. I've never been charged with

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anything. The worst thing that happened to me was I was told if I returned to the Royal York,

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I'd be trespassed. And I got my arm, you know, hit by a cop. And I've always felt that we

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accomplished something good. And so I don't want to overstate the danger. I'm glad you

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feel that way because you do actions that kind of don't have measurable outcomes as a success

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or a victory, especially when you're dragged out and roughed up. It's kind of hard to look

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back at that and see a victory. But I'm assuring you that people who view this content, that

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kind of performative show that it ends up being and it is I'm not trying to belittle it because

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it is it's something to inspire people to do, to get people riled up, to get your opponent

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on the back foot a little bit. And it has an impact. It absolutely does, because not only

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is it poignant and it's needed, but it's It's entertainment as well, because we all want

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to do it. We want to see them squirm. We want to see them sweat and not have answers. We

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all want to debate those, right? I want to see the interaction with Miller, because yeah,

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shouting at someone has a certain, but really getting them to go back and forth and then

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winning that battle is something else. So I know your time is short. I want to ask you,

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you get your tips from the public. Is there a best way for folks to communicate with you

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if they'd like? Sure. So on my website, DimitriLascaris.org, there's a little contact function. And if you

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fill out that form, it goes immediately to the email that I use, the main, my main email account,

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and I will respond. I always respond to people eventually. It sometimes takes me a little

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time. But if you learn of an event, please send it to me. If you have my email address already,

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then send it to me directly, please. I invite you to do that. But if you don't, just, you

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can just do it through my website. Yeah, I think that responsiveness speaks into the network

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set and modes of communication that we need to build to be able to move fast because even

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Santiago this week needed to kind of respond to an event and it was like, I need to know

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when these are happening, like before it's four hours too late, you know? And so figuring out

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how to do that and be ahead of the game is important as well. Thank you so much, Dimitri, for sharing

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some of your secret tactics. Santiago, do you have a question before? Not so much a question,

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more of a, you know, I'm here in Toronto, I know a few disruptors. So if you ever get word

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of something in here in Toronto that should be disrupted, let me know and I'll boost that

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to the relevant parties. I will definitely take you up on that offer. Thank you very much.

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The word of the day. The network of disruptors has begun. I love it. Yes. Thank you so much,

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Dimitri. Good luck with your next confrontation. We will be watching. Thank you.

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Bye bye.

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Not only does our support come from the progressive community, so does our content. So reach out

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to us and let us know what or who we should be amplifying. So until next time, keep disrupting.