When Reconciliation Collides with Property Rights | 078
David and Jeremy sit down with David Leis, President of the Frontier Centre for Public Policy, to unpack the Richmond, B.C. land-claim ruling that’s shaking the foundation of property rights across Canada. What does this mean for homeowners, investors, and the future of Canadian democracy? This growing divide over truth, reconciliation, and free speech could define our nation’s next decade.
Episodes
The End of Globalism? Bruce Pardy Breaks Down Carney, Trump, and China
February 2, 2026
Law professor Bruce Pardy returns to Citizen to ask the hard questions: What does Alberta stand to lose if it separates?
Why does Canada operate like a "cartel-based economy"?
How will Donald Trump's approach to global institutions reshape our country's relations with the US?
And what does Mark Carney's WEF speech really signal for Canada's future?
Davos Exposed: Elites, EVs, and Canada's China Dilemma
January 26, 2026
What happened at Davos 2026? From Prime Minister Mark Carney's headline-grabbing speech full of bold calls against bullies to President Trump's no-holds-barred approach that's shaking up NATO, Greenland deals, and trade wars—Jeremy and David are unpacking it all. They break down the irony in Carney's words, why Alberta's independence movement is heating up, and how Canada getting cozy with China might hurt us more than help.
Separation, Housing, and Cost of Living: Canada’s Tipping Point | Shane Wenzel
January 19, 2026
In this episode of Citizen, we sit down with builder and entrepreneur Shane Wenzel to break down what’s really driving frustration across Canada, from Alberta separation to the housing affordability crisis. Shane brings an on-the-ground perspective from the construction and development world, explaining how government regulation, permit delays, building codes, and net-zero housing policies are increasing costs and slowing housing supply. Our conversation digs into why housing has become one of the clearest examples of how policy decisions directly impact everyday Canadians. We also discuss the growing Alberta independence movement, unanswered questions around banking, investment, population movement, and economic uncertainty, and why rising cost-of-living pressures are changing how people view government and institutions.
Trump's Venezuela Takeover: Oil, China, and Canada's Doomsday Scenario
January 19, 2026
In this explosive episode, we dive deep into Trump's lightning-fast Venezuela invasion—capturing Maduro in 14 minutes for $17 trillion in oil reserves, crushing narco-terrorism, and blocking China's black-market plays. But what does this mean for Canada? From Arctic control and Greenland threats to our oil crisis, weak borders, and potential US coercion, is Alberta separation the answer? We break down the geopolitical shift, US dollar dominance, and Canada's vulnerability in 2026. Is Canada ready for this?
What Really Happened to Canada in 2025
January 5, 2026
Canada changed dramatically in 2025, and most people haven’t connected all the dots. In this year-end Citizen Podcast episode, Jeremy and David break down the 10 biggest political, cultural, and economic moments that shaped Canada in 2025, from leadership upheaval and foreign interference to Alberta sovereignty and government control over speech.
Online Censorship Grows in Canada
December 22, 2025
How should government regulate the modern internet—and what trade-offs come with those decisions? John Carpay, president of the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, joins us to discuss. Canada's approach to online regulation is evolving. New legislation is affecting online streaming, news distribution, and harmful-content enforcement. But how do these policies quietly influence visibility and legal processes? What unintended consequences might there be if the government gets to decide what we see and hear online?
