Mark Carney's Crowd Goes FERAL—Celeb Praises Canada, Refuses To Move Back & Pay Taxes
FULL TRANSCRIPT
I'm thrilled. Why is it important for me
to be here? Because they let me in.
>> I used to think that calling Canada a
communist country was insane. And every
time I'd hear it, I'd be like, "Okay,
chill out. It's not that bad." Until I
realized that we were looking at the
wrong version of it. Modern communism.
After researching it extensively, at
this point, I am officially fully
convinced. And I'll explain it to you.
But don't just listen to my words. I
want you to take it from theirs. I'm
Jasmine Lane. Like, share, subscribe,
comment your thoughts down below. Hype
this video or anything at all you can to
help in the algorithm because YouTube
does not like these topics at all. The
prime minister had one of the most
uncomfortable,
bizarre appearances at the Juno Awards.
We're also going to be talking about the
NDP leadership race and a new
affordability announcement where Mark
Carney was heckled throughout his entire
press conference today. All that and so
much more coming up.
>> I do have to say though that when I saw
Mark Carney's speech at Davos, did you
see that? It
I felt a a childlike pride. I felt like
he was Canada's dad sticking up to the
bullies and I was like, "That's my prime
minister." And then I saw him posing
with the cast of heated rivalry and just
my ner
my nervous system just relaxed.
Everything about this is so weird on a
psychological level.
where you know you you have a national
cultural event that is funded, promoted
and broadcast at scale that is echoing
the same messaging you would typically
hear in a political campaign or even
from political surrogates, right? And
it's not just mentioning, oh, we have
Prime Minister Mark Carney here, that's
cool. It is endorsing the emotional
narrative around him. That's very odd.
And it's also in a setting where there's
no push back, opposing views, and no
accountability at all. It's just
applause for how they want you to feel
and think about the prime minister. And
it's not like this is the first time
we've had one at the Junos. Typically
though, events like this, like cultural,
national events like this, keep distance
from overt political messaging,
especially messaging that is tied to his
speech at Davos at the World Economic
Forum Summit. the World Economic Forum
which is associated with global elites
which is associated with economic
coordination policy direction and it
gets so much worse.
>> This man is a blessing. You guys are so
fortunate
language there. I also think it's very
odd when she says I haven't been to
Canada in years. I live in the States
and you know what's happening there. Why
do you still live there then? you have a
property in British Columbia. I don't
know why you still choose to live in the
States. I wonder why that is. And and
then to just the narrative framing of
that is also really odd. Like you're at
a music awards ceremony. Why are you
even talking about this stuff? Go up and
say thank you for the award and leave it
at that. And I think that that's also
the part that a lot of people don't want
to say out loud or they don't even
realize that it's happening because it's
so subconscious. When cultural spaces
start to reinforce political figures
emotionally,
you are literally shaping perceptions of
reality, right?
>> But I've never seen it this acute. I've
never seen it this vicious. You
mentioned some some of the personal
insults towards any Canadians who might
be on a US sports team or something. Why
is anti-Americanism at an all-time high?
That's just not my opinion. There's
polls that show.
>> Oh, no. I think the polls show that it's
90% of Canadians have a negative opinion
of the US.
>> I don't know if it's that high, but I
I'd be willing to believe it.
>> And it's actually higher in some pools
than antipathy towards China, communist
China, what's going on?
>> I don't know. You'll have to ask the
Canadian people.
>> You Well, you've been here to observe
for 11 months. What is it? Um, is it
natural? Is it part of a
>> It's not natural at all. I mean, you
know, the the good thing, I mean, that's
the public opinion.
>> And it's just really weird when you see
from media, culture, entertainment, all
of these spaces start sending the exact
same emotional message. You don't need
to convince people logically. You can't
disprove it with facts because they
already feel like they know the answer
because the answer has been told to
them. And that's exactly why it matters
so much because it's not about one
comment or several comments coming from
these people in these really odd
settings for these comments to be made.
But it's when praise like that
completely changes the relationship
between people and power coming from
people who are by their own admission
completely shielded from the damage the
consequences of bad policy that the
everyday Canadian watching this feels
and faces in their own lives. and rather
than to to scrutinize a a leader, which
by the way is healthy in democracy. In
functioning democracies, leaders are
supposed to be under pressure. They work
for the people. They answer to the
people. That is their responsibility.
And pay attention. This is how people
talk about authority that they do not
question. And that's the interpretation
that they want you to have as well. And
that is the some of the scariest I
think I've seen in a really long time.
Carney was also seated beside Joanie
Mitchell the entire event. So, I'm very
curious how deep those ties go. Jonie
Mitchell has long been an activist um
when it comes to climate related things,
you know, feminism, all of that stuff.
And I I just the fact that people start
cheering when she's like, I have a
Chinese word for happy all over my
clothes.
Huh?
What is this?
>> Anytime. Um, and this is, you know,
we're the third largest exporter of
music in the world. Canada's third
largest exporter of music in the world.
It's a huge industry, but really at the
core of it, it's our stories, it's our
emotions, it's our core, and, you know,
it's our heart at a time when the world
needs really needs more of Canada. So,
it's important to uh support it. I mean,
from Joanie all the way to um, you know,
as I said, Fred's a moment ago, like,
we've got the whole spectrum. So, I'm
like, and I'm a fan. I'm thrilled. Why
is it important for me to be here?
because they let me in.
>> And to be clear, there's nothing weird
at all about Mark Carney being in
attendance. There's nothing weird about
him presenting an award or even sitting
beside Joanie Mitchell at the end of the
day. What is weird is the fanfare
around him being there, the false
prophet, you know, around him being
there. That is very odd. That's not
normal in Canada, especially. And if
praise like that exists in places where
nobody questions it, you don't need to
control what people think. You just need
to tell them how to feel. I've said this
so many times. I'm a liberal cuz I'm a
good person and I'm a good person
because I'm a liberal. That's as deep as
it gets for a lot of people.
>> There's a slanted perspective there
where you get the the downtown Toronto
folks decide on behalf of everybody what
is Canadian, what is non-Canadian. And
that's ridiculous because Canadians can
have reasonable disagreements about what
is or is not Canadian. We're spending
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