Fluoride Referendum

Joe Jukic: Alright, let’s talk about this fluoride situation. A lot of people still don’t know the real history behind it. Eustace Mullins laid it out years ago. He proved that the Nazis discovered back in the 1920s that adding sodium fluoride to drinking water made people very passive and docile. It lowered their IQ and turned them submissive — basically easier to control without needing as many guards.

They started using it in the concentration camps. Instead of having to watch everybody all the time, they just dosed the water and the prisoners became zombies. Less resistance, lower intelligence, more compliant. Mullins documented the whole thing as a deliberate behavior modification tool.

And the crazy part is, after the war that same knowledge got brought over here. Now we’re doing it to ourselves and calling it “public health.” Canada doesn’t need fluoride in the water at all. Most places in BC and plenty of other provinces don’t even fluoridate the tap water, and people are doing fine. If you want dental benefits, just use toothpaste. It’s topical — you don’t need to drink it.

Why are we mass-medicating the entire population through the drinking water? Especially if it’s making people more docile and lowering IQ like Mullins said.

Nelly: There is something in the water.

Joe Jukic: Exactly, Nelly. And then you got RFK Jr. proving it’s poison. He’s been on this for years. Fluoride is a neurotoxin. The studies show it messes with brain development, lowers kids’ IQ, especially with long-term exposure. The National Toxicology Program report basically confirmed the risks. We’re dumping industrial waste into the water supply and acting like it’s medicine. It’s straight-up insane.

RFK lays out the receipts every single time. The docile effect, the IQ drop — it all lines up with what Mullins warned about decades ago. Canada has no business forcing this on people. We don’t need it.

PM Furtado: That’s why everyone listening needs to get out and vote in the Canadian fluoride referendum. Head over to referendumparty.ca right now and make your voice heard. This is our chance to end the mass medication of our water supply once and for all. Vote no to fluoride — for our kids, for our brains, and for our freedom. Don’t sit this one out. Go to referendumparty.ca and vote today.

Joe Jukic: There it is. Pull the fluoride out of the water. Let folks decide for themselves with toothpaste or whatever. Hard pass on the mass medication.

Do you want Fluoride in Canada's Water?

The Secret Order

The Order of Jacques Cartier: A Secret Society in French Canada

Origins and Purpose

The Order of Jacques Cartier (L’Ordre de Jacques Cartier, OJC) was a secret society founded in 1926 in Hull, Quebec, Canada. It was created by a group of French Canadian nationalists who sought to protect and promote the interests of French Canadians in an era where English-speaking elites dominated Canadian politics, business, and social institutions.

At its core, the OJC aimed to strengthen the economic, political, and cultural power of French Catholics in Canada, countering the influence of Anglo-Protestant institutions. It operated in secrecy to shield itself from opposition and ensure its influence remained undetected by those who sought to maintain the status quo.

Structure and Operations

The Order was highly hierarchical and clandestine, modeled after the Freemasons. Members used pseudonyms and communicated in coded language to avoid detection. The group operated in cells, and only a select few at the top knew the full scope of the organization’s activities.

It sought to place loyal French Canadians in key positions in government, media, and business. Members worked behind the scenes to advance pro-French policies, secure jobs for fellow Francophones, and resist assimilation into English-speaking Canada.

Influence and Legacy

The OJC played a major role in shaping the Quiet Revolution of the 1960s, a period of massive social and political change in Quebec. Many of its members became influential politicians, journalists, and civil servants who advocated for Quebec’s modernization and autonomy.

However, as Quebec nationalism became more mainstream, the need for a secret society diminished. By 1965, the Order of Jacques Cartier disbanded, as many of its goals were being openly pursued by political movements such as the Parti Québécois and institutions like the Société Saint-Jean-Baptiste.

Controversy and Secrecy

Because of its covert nature, the Order has been compared to other secret societies like the Freemasons or the Illuminati, though it was primarily focused on protecting French Canadian interests rather than global power. Critics accused it of fostering ethnic favoritism and exclusionary practices, but its supporters saw it as a necessary force against Anglo domination.

Today, the Order of Jacques Cartier remains a little-known but significant part of Canadian history, representing the underground struggle for French Canadian survival and self-determination in the 20th century.