A show discussing the Vision of Change for Canada with the Leader of the Canadian Action Party and special guests with answers to Canada's problems. The Canadian Action Party is, above all, a pro-Canadian party dedicated to the principle that Canada can best serve its citizens and the world by re-c…
Show discussing with dedicated members the importance of CAP.
James has been actively involved in the preservation of Canadian Sovereignty for decades. He was a past president of a Riding Association for the, now dissolved, National Party of Canada. When looking for a Party that shares his vision of a Sovereign Canada, he found CAP and joined the Party. He has been a member of CAP since its inception and even served as the Policy Committee Chair. I am delighted to discuss the issues facing Canada and the importance of CAP with Mr. Jordan.
Join CAP's Leader in a talk with the Party's Executive Director, Tim McCormick. We will be discussing monetary reform as well as the importance of the formation of Electoral Riding Associations to be formed across Canada.
Paul Hellyer joins us on his return to Canada to discuss one of the most important speeches of his life (read it here http://scr.bi/GlobalFraud-GlobalHopebyPaulHellyer ) challenging World Banking Cartels delivered February 26, 2011 in Phoenix, Arizona. Paul Hellyer is the founder of CAP. He has served as Minster of Defence for Lester B. Pearson and was the Deputy of Prime Minister for Pierre Elliot Trudeau. He is one of the longest serving members of the Privy Council for Canada. Paul Hellyer is a leader of Monetary Reform and has written a number of books on the matter to preserve Canadian Sovereignty.
Born in Toronto, Canada in 1948, Paul Grignon first became suspicious of our money system when he was in high school in Ottawa. He was studying logarithmic functions such as interest and it struck him that a money system in which money accrues interest at every turn could only function with exponential growth of the money supply. Something did not make sense to him. He wasn’t sure what it was but he had a strong feeling that banking was a plan designed to benefit bankers at the expense of everyone else.In 2006 he created the animated film, Money As Debt. It was designed to teach people how money is made and try to promote change within our society. The movie has been seen across the world and has be rated one of the most educational pieces made on the money system and has been viewed over 2 million times.
The Bank of Canada, unlike the Federal Reserve in the U.S., is wholly owned by the people of Canada. It was nationalized in 1938 and was used very successfully to fund infrastructure, social programs, education, etc, for the benefit of all Canadians. It was used to bring us out of the depression, funded WWII, to build highways such as the McDonald-Cartier freeway, public transportation systems, subway lines, airports, the St. Lawrence Seaway, our universal healthcare system and our Canada Pension Plan.Join us with another Canadian hero, Will Abram who at 82 has been educating and making people aware of the importance of using the Bank of Canada to ensure our Canadian Sovereignty for decades.
Special Guest: William Khrem, Founder of Committee of Monetary and Economic Reform (www.comer.org)Subject: Human CapitalCAP's Policy:Whereas:1) One of the key lessons, perhaps the greatest of all that was discovered from the embers of World War II, and then forgotten, has to do with the unique value of human capital, and2) At the end of the struggle Washington sent hundreds of young Economists to Germany and Japan to study the extent of the destruction and from that to forecast how long it was likely to take these two Defeated powers to become formidable competitors on world markets once more... Two decades later, one of these Theodore Schultz of the University Of Chicago, wrote that it was remarkable how wide of the mark they were in their predictions. The reason for the miss was, he declared, that they concentrated on physical destruction, and underestimated the importance of the highly educated and disciplined work force, that had come through the struggle relatively intact.3) From the experience he concluded that investment in human capital education, and hence health and all social services are the most productive investments a country can make.4) The depreciation of human capital is a slow one, since the offspring of bright educated people tend to be brighter and more easily educated and socially well-adjusted. Yet nowhere in official statistics is human capital in education or the environment treated as a public investment. On the contrary, understaffed schools and colleges are seen as a success in budget -balancing and responsibility.Therefore:Be it resolved that CAP demand that the Canadian government treat human capital as a public investment.Host: Christopher Porter - Leader of Canadian Action PartyVision of Change for Canada