yyc ROCKS: Building a Private Membership Association |
Kenisha
As Canada has become increasingly less free in recent years, Private members associations have become more common. A PMA allows its members the freedom to do certain things without government interference that they otherwise could not do. These include such things as medical diagnostics and advice, education, and business transactions.
One of the first was yyc Rocks in Calgary. Co-founded by Kenisha, a nurse who lost her job for refusing the Covid vaccines, Kenisha and her partners have gained valuable experience in the past three years on what to do, and what not to do to build a successful Private members association.
While they are offering an introductory course on this for people across Canada to become better educated in this process, this interview with Kenisha and several other members is a starting point for understanding the benefits of PMAs.
How to get involved?
✔️ Contribute any amount
✔️ Participate in the $1,000 package
✔️ Vestment $5,000 through one of the available options
✔️ Learn more HERE
✔️ Reach out for a private conversation [text Legacy Land Project to 403.461.2423]
Get the Truth! Exclusive Interviews and News that mainstream media won’t report. https://ironwiredaily.com
Protect Your Assets from the Coming Economic Collapse. Buy precious metals at wholesale prices right here in Canada. https://info.newworldpm.com/154.html You can even transfer in your RSP. New World Precious Metals. You will also be supporting our efforts to bring Canadians the truth. We do receive a commission on purchases made through our affiliate link.
Get Sound Financial Advice. Adrian Spitters is a personal financial planner and author who successfully predicted both the dot-com crash and the crash of 2008, and also has access to many investment opportunities that other financial planners do not.
Adrian Spitters, Financial Consultant
Financial Advice for the Coming Economic Collapse
www.adrianspitters.com
adrian@adrianspitters.com
(604) 613-1693
Find and Join your LOCAL Freedom Community. We are building in-person freedom communities across Canada at https://freedomcoms.org. Joining is free and only takes a minute.
Get a truly Secure Phone. Above Phone! Purchase price includes a 45 minute online personalized orientation session. Stop the government and corporations from spying on you. https://abovephone.com/?above=101. Use code IRONWILL25 for $25.00 off any phone.
1 Comments
Leave a Comment Cancel Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
(0:00 - 9:37) As Canada has become increasingly less free in recent years, private members associations have become more common. A PMA allows its members the freedom to do certain things without government interference that they otherwise could not do. These include such things as medical diagnostics and advice, education and business transactions. One of the first was yyc Rocks in Calgary, co-founded by Kenisha, a nurse who lost her job for refusing the COVID vaccines. Kenisha and her partners have gained valuable experience in the past three years on what to do and what not to do to build a successful private members association. While they are offering an introductory course on this for people across Canada to become better educated in this process, this interview with Kenisha and several other members is a starting point for understanding the benefits of PMAs. Keneiha, Melissa, Shane, Carleton, it's a pleasure to have you on the show. Thank you. Thank you for having us. Thanks very much. Now, you've made some real progress over the years with yyc Rocks, but there's a lot of people who probably haven't seen those first original interviews that I did with you, Kanesha, some time back. So, if you and Melissa would please catch the viewers up, what is yyc Rocks? Where did it just start? And what has happened since then? Yeah, we started, I can't believe it's already been three years, I think, since we did our first interview together. And that was when I had just left the healthcare system working as an RN at the time, due to the mandates and all the manipulation going on at the time. So, for the past three years, we've established a beautiful private membership community here in Calgary. Members coming in every day are expanding quite rapidly right now, going into different provinces. You know, right now is a time where I believe people are just really confused. They're hurt. They don't know where to turn to. They've been led astray from the systems that they've trusted. And a lot of people are looking for community, looking for other options, different modalities to access that aren't available from mainstream. So, we do a lot of offerings here for our members in Calgary and very honored and blessed to be a part of this amazing family we've built here. Melissa, do you have anything to add? Well, I started with yyc as a member because of the private community, what was being offered, the access to different things I couldn't get elsewhere, the personal relations, right? The person-to-person, the live experience. And I've come on to be more a part of the leadership team because I just really like where this is going. I really feel comfortable. I really feel safe. I really feel wonderful getting up every day to provide this for the members and to work with our partners, Shane and Carlton, to come together, to gather as a community and see real progress. So, I'm excited to be here with Kenisha and everyone. And it's just, it's been a fabulous experience. Now, yyc Rocks does provide more than medical services. But if I understood correctly, you know, from the many conversations I've had with Kenisha, when you first started it out, this was very much a response to the medical tyranny that was going on in our country at the time where people could not get treatments, especially if they were refusing to take a certain vaccination. And you were able to provide that. Now, that tyranny has largely ended. There's no more lockdowns. Nobody's being, at this point in time, at least forced to take a vaccine against their will. But I would like to make the comment that I'm certain that you have had people just sort of wander off because of that. But what I don't think those people are taking into account is that our established government-funded medical healthcare system is fundamentally broken. It is not a healthcare system. It's a sick care system that is just there to push drugs on people, many of which are going to do more harm than good. So, I'd like you two to speak to that element of why yyc Rocks is still important and why we need to have more communities like this across Canada. Well, really, Will, it comes down to people having access to the things they need that hasn't been curated for the industry profits, right? We're not here, like you said, to manage symptoms. We're here to have real growth, real wellness, real connections, and we do that with real men and women. And so, with the focus with yyc Rocks and just in my personal life in general, I am so focused on the basic fundamental elements that we need to focus on. And if you start looking at the fundamental elements, you'll see how fundamentally, like you said, flawed the system is. But I almost don't know if it is fundamentally flawed. I think the system is working perfectly well for the way it's been designed. I don't think it's broken and needs to be fixed. I think it's designed against us. And so, what I like about the yyc Rocks and working with partners like Shane and Carlton is they are in the natural element of the land. They are looking at how things connect in the real level, not on this pretend facade that's been presented to us to strip everything from our essence and our soul and just put us into this confinement. I mean, we're so bonded in so many ways. We're so enslaved in so many ways. And so, really, the basic fundamentals are air. I mean, we don't realize how much is being put down on us in the air we breathe. And we are systematically trained to not even breathe well. They give us uncomfortable clothing garments. They give us uncomfortable shoes to wear. It puts us all at a postural position. People are having all sorts of breathing problems. The number one nutrient we need is oxygen. If we're not pulling in oxygen, there's not much need for anything else. And so, we need to breathe properly. We need to protect our water. We need to be drinking enough water. People are inundated with all sorts of these energy drinks and all sorts of this nonsense being siphoned through their body, making them polluted, making them contaminated, making them not be able to make good decisions, feeling dry and itchy. And we need to get back to the basics of hydration and water. We need to protect our food safety, our food sovereignty. It's one of the things I love about this project and just about working with Shane and Carlton is their delivery of an excellent product with full spirit of the plant intact and the full brilliance of everything around. It's nutrition. You can feel the difference when you have nutrition. We need to move our bodies. We need to be free to move. We need to be free to travel. We need to be able to connect with the earth and the land in the way that it was intended. We need to be able to detoxify. That's one of the things that we're going to be talking about here is like there are so many things to detoxify and people need help with this. I mean, they need to be guided through the process of detoxification because they need to have someone to ask questions to. They need to have regular guidance like what is happening? Why am I feeling like this? What's going on? That's really where we can offer that support is guiding people through the process of what to expect. Slow down if you must, but do not stop. Like we need to push over this because we are so contaminated and so polluted and so enslaved that this is hard. It's hard and we need support. That's why we're doing it as a community so that we can, you know, reevaluate. I know this is really important to Carlton is so many people are having so many problems also is because they're not sleeping properly. They don't get the adequate restorative rest that is necessary for longevity, for energy, for vitality. And there's a million things that is going on to prevent us from sleeping properly. And so this is a focus in our community is helping people get the rest that they require so they can show up in the world as that man or woman that they intended to be instead of, you know, the person they are struggling in the confinements of the system. And, you know, if we focus on these basic elements, the air, the water, the food, the movement, the letting things go that don't serve us, the resting, the sleeping, it puts us in a powerful position to be able to serve not only ourselves, but those around us. And, you know, as a matter of women, that's what we want to do. We want to give anyone I talk to, whether they win money or they get something, it's because they want to serve. They want to share, but people are too exhausted. They're feeling too overwhelmed and they're delivering from an empty cup. They have very few droplets left. They're still sharing it, but at the expense of themselves, instead of at the betterment of the community. And so we really, you know, focus on these elements. We come together as a community. There's strength in numbers. You know, we are stronger together. We grow through what we go through and we're ready to serve. And so we're looking for men and women who want to collaborate in service first by, you know, paying attention to the elements of themselves and hooking into this movement and being guided and supported. And then that's the ripple effect. So I hope I didn't go on and on too much. No, I love it. I love it. This one right here. Love this girl on the team. It's just, yeah, we actually well changed our name to, we're not only this yyc Rocks, which I'll just remind everyone to, it's an acronym for rebuilding our community with kindness and self-determination, but we added that guided wellness as our, as our, I don't want to say tagline, but really just what our way of doing things, our way of being, because we are all just guiding one another to wellness. (9:37 - 10:53) We all have something to offer. We're all having something to contribute to each other. And, and that is so important right now. I know, you know, well, to share with the viewers that I've been, you know, testing people's blood, doing the blood analysis, and it's almost been taking me down this dark hole. You know, you leave one system that's tyrannical and then, you know, I'm working now more in the holistic alternative side. And it is quite frustrating too. And I hear people are spending thousands of dollars in supplements every month, and they're doing these detoxes and they're not working and they don't know where to get their supplements from or what brands are trusted. And, you know, if it's third party and people are just throwing so much money down the toilet and, you know, everybody's just so misguided and, and everybody's lost. And so there's lots of pain right now. There's lots of suffering, there's lots of loss. And you know, you had mentioned earlier, it was, you know, YYC Rock started as something from, from the pandemic, but now here we are. And people are having the effects of the decisions that were made during that time. It's mostly the children, the children's blood is the worst. And, you know, I'm just a concerned mother right now. I feel like I'm on the front lines of the silent war. (10:53 - 12:04) Not many people, you know, know that we're in. And the blood work has just been taking me down a dark hole too. And I'm like, told Melissa, I'm like, I'm just tired of looking at everybody's crappy blood. Everybody's got foreign synthetic material that is not manmade. They got nanorobotic technology, self-assembling things. And, you know, to be in a system like the public school, it's just, you know, my focus is on protecting the children. How do we get them out? And they need to be surrounded by leaders such as the people on this call and to be able to come to a place that we can learn and mentor and go forward in a different way in our mindsets and a being. So yeah, I had to throw that in about the guided wellness, because we will be directing people back to the website. It's all being updated right now. So we're just very excited at our relaunch or rebranding our new partnerships and all the exciting things right now that are coming for this year. All right. Before we get back to lessons that you've learned in the last three years that you can pass on to other people who should be building similar communities across the country, I would like to ask Shane and Carlton to have their input at this point. (12:08 - 12:13) Sure. Thank you for having us, Will. Thank you for having us, Kenisha and Melissa. (12:14 - 17:51) We have a pretty long history as well. We started back in 2017. So I guess we're going on our eighth year, our seventh year officially. We started with Blackfeet Health Products. This is a company we formed in Treaty 7 territory with the Kainai, with a couple sovereign chiefs there. We've seen the writing on the wall in 2017. We knew what we were getting into in the 2020s. Most of the people did not believe us, but the sovereign chiefs did. They asked us, when we formed this company, Blackfeet Health, what would be our model? We really had to think about that because we wanted to get it correct. So I took a little medicine quest to find that model. I seen the 2020s, and I told those chiefs, and I told Carlton, and I told the people that are around us, I said, the 2020s are going to be known as a decade of survival. I didn't really know what that meant, and neither did anybody else. It was kind of a shooting from the hip, but I seen it in a vision. So we came up with the model for Blackfeet Health that would be real people, real food, real medicine. Why did we say that? Because in that vision, I seen the fake people, the fake food, and the fake medicine. I didn't think that these 2020s would be so hectic. I thought maybe 2023, 2025, deeper into the 20s, that these problems would occur. But little did I know that the problems came right out of the gates in 2020. Right as soon as it happened, January, boom, we were in a kind of a mess. Since then, in our community, we've had a lot of division. A lot of families are broken up. I feel for Kenisha and her husband and their kids, but that's a really common story, especially within our social circles up here in Edmonton. We've seen nothing but division. We've seen nothing but a shattered trust between patients and doctors. We've seen nothing but destruction in the family unit. We've seen nothing but trouble in all aspects of the community, whether that be media and they're lying. People are looking for answers from politicians and they're not telling the truth. People are looking for nutrition and they're not getting it from the grocery store. People are looking for medicine and they're not finding it in the pharmacy. There's a lot of places where there's a lot of falsehoods. So for us, putting together Blackfeet Health in those 2018 days, 2017 days, and expanding every day on that project, now we're up to about 72 different natural medicines. About 34 are different herbs we get from the land and berries. A lot of mushrooms. We deal a lot of fungi medicine. We deal with the most basic, but most fundamental of minerals. So we make a lot of different colloidal products, true colloidal products, colloidal silver, gold, magnesium, zinc, copper. We're finding out so much more about copper lately and things like gold and what those frequencies can do for us. But we're seeing more and more of an uptick in all things gone wrong. Heart problems are through the roof right now. Cancer is through the roof right now. I've never seen more pneumonia than right now. A lot of pneumonia going on. In our circles, in 2017, I started off, I came to Alberta in 2011. I'm originally from Niagara. From 2011 to about 2017, I was a welder. In a former life, I was a fuel manufacturer in Ontario. So I have a pretty interesting range of skills. In those fuel days, I was making biodiesel and ethanol. It was learning that set of chemistry in 2006 that carried me to 2017 when we started back in the lab, back formulating medicines and making different extracts, getting different compounds, different alkaloids, and just really discovering what nature had to offer. And we come to find that almost every pharmaceutical medicine goes back to a natural element, goes back to a natural plant. So they've been using plant medicine, fungi medicine for a long time, and then synthesizing these molecules in a lab and out you get their pharmaceutical material, which more times than not is not the truth. It's not the real medicine. A good example of that would be ivermectin. As strong as ivermectin is and as good as a therapeutic it is, it's one of the few that I lean on just a little bit. But its original molecule comes from wormwood or mugwort, and that's growing right here in Alberta. So this is something we offer as a natural alternative to ivermectin, and it's just as useful. And in fact, it's the original thing. (17:52 - 18:29) So those are some of the things we deal with. And I just see that we really need to bring back our community. And this is why we formed the PMAs way back in the day before anybody was talking about them. And one thing led to another, and we really felt inspired when we met Kenisha and Melissa and Didi and all the great things that they wanted to bring forward with their PMA. And we just wanted to join up with them and said, hey, we'll definitely lend you all our works, all our research, anything to serve. Like Melissa says, we do have a strong desire to serve. (18:30 - 19:24) And more so, I don't mind helping out adults, but it's the kids. I have a daughter. She's 14 years old. And I see her and her friends together. And some of them are very sickly kids and they shouldn't be. They should be at the prime of their life. But their parents put things they shouldn't have put into them. Those are the things I'm into. Those are the things I can share. Those are the things I can teach. And with that, I'll turn it to Carlton. Carlton, thank you. You've been very patient. It's your turn. Thank you very much, Will. And Shane is absolutely right on all notes that he's already made. My name is Carlton Robert Kruger. I'm here for communications of all forms of value, focused on the grammar, our rhetoric, and the logic we use to get there. (19:25 - 20:02) So my focus really is three things, discernment, translation, and design. We're here to discern the large quantity of present harm in hurry of reality, translating our findings to meet you where you're able to succeed, design healing solutions, knowing our collective highest existence. So our value proposition is courage and ciphering, ciphering as in deciphering, to speak truth and act in the face of chaos and stagnation. (20:02 - 25:29) Since 2015, I took action by growing food and medicine. I found Shane along the way here in our local Alberta central region. I'm born and raised here. So I'm an expert of this region's land, whether it be the mushrooms that happen to grow each season or the herbs that happen to grow. So the next step that I'm going to be providing here is all the little details behind this location that we found for sale last month. This location happens to be in Lodgepole. I know we've mentioned this. Lodgepole is a very unique location. It represents one of the few last places that's a unincorporated hamlet in the Grasso County. So there's two items on the screen. The first one is a proof of concept that we know what we're doing. First and foremost, this is a private dominion notice and covenant that we had to place at the front of our property on our farm that we're cooperating on. Because when we showed up, we brought a whole bunch of buildings and tools and sea cans and equipment that meant the county wanted to come and interfere with our affairs. We found that totally unacceptable. And instead of arguing with them in a court of law, we placed them in their correct status and jurisdiction by founding the First Agricultural Church of Christ. And because of that founding, we did not go getting a registration as a church. No, no, no. We don't issue tax receipts and we are not open to the public. Because of these few basic qualifiers, we exempted ourselves from the commercial code and instead relied on the criminal code of Canada to protect our privacy. There's three specific codes that everyone should know. 176, 180, and 423 of the Canadian criminal code provide some of the best protections for real men and women across this land. And if there's nothing else that you take away from this today, remember those three codes because they are there for your protection as men and women on the land. The next image on the screen is a southwest view of the school that is currently for sale. The asking price is 305 and we ourselves have already placed a certain deposit of five grand based on our own efforts of working with people and saving the pennies that we make along the way for this purpose to deliver more medicine and more food. The inside of this place is very interesting. It was originally built in 1958 and it was for the purposes of the children and the kids. And frankly, the remoteness of this small community meant that the forestry and oil field has transitioned. They've gone really to Drayton Valley and to the Niskiu region. So this school was abandoned almost. It was pretty close to being abandoned back in the nineties and instead of being abandoned, it was taken on by the Alberta Boxing Association. The Alberta Boxing Association has done a wonderful job of maintaining the space by replacing the roof and all the hot water tanks furnaces so it can continue carrying forth a training facility proper. This space is really for community and it always has been. And so in these photos, you'll see a very large commercial kitchen. And just in this one photo, I'd like to direct your eyes to the top corner. That hood right there is basically representing half of the asking price of this location. So if you're wondering, why is it worth it? Just having that grill and that hood installed in a building is worth about $100,000 to $200,000 in today money. That's way, way worth it. In my realm, as a family man who cooks food for families, it's a location because we want to start by feeding our members real nutrition. Here on the next photo, you'll see the gym and the many boxing bags and boxing ring. (25:30 - 26:16) And as we go forward, it has full facilities with bathrooms for two sexes. Oh my goodness. Washrooms, laundry. It also has a shower room that is really quite special in the sense that it was built when a time they actually cared. You can just tell the care because there's not a single crack in the foundation, whether it be in the corners. Shane and I went and visited this because we find it so interesting visiting places that have a vision that is unrealized. (26:17 - 26:56) So when we walked through here, we found it just amazing that someone had cared enough to continue maintaining a space this large for private and beneficial purposes. Inside the mechanical room, I know it doesn't look like much, but there is actually a 1000 gallon pressure tank and a drilled well. I know it's not usually the top thing people are thinking about, but to have a well for a property in a town is like unheard of. (26:56 - 27:16) Well, at the same time, this location is on the septic service for logical. And, uh, here's one, probably one of the last pay phones in Alberta. Apparently it is still connected and we can still call out from this youth. (27:16 - 27:32) We're on the North side of the school looking self. And in this photo, you see there's about six acres of cut and level ground. This was the playground and ball diamonds. (27:32 - 28:43) We would like to install a very large greenhouse geodesic domes and teepees to deliver the more integrated and holistic processes. So we can cross cultures without interfering with each other's cultures. I know that's a weird concept to consider, but when you walk out of a teepee and into a geodesic dome, and there's two very unique modalities of healing happening in each one, that is a different atmosphere entirely than walking into a square room. So I love a school. It's a great deal just on its own, but for the purposes of what we do, we know that we are doing this in multiple phases. So the school can be an immediate benefit by feeding and sheltering people and providing the educational space to deliver the next spaces being domes and teepees. (28:43 - 29:46) So yes, I did want to get back to you, Melissa and Kanisha, because it looks like you found a really good facility here that's, yes, as Carlson has pointed out, it's in very good condition, but obviously you're going to be changing its usage. I know that for your medical clinic, you recently acquired some diagnostic equipment. So I'm sure that some of that structure would have to be changed over to a medical clinic. What other changes would you be making to it? And because it is, and I have to ask this practical question, it is a somewhat remote location. How difficult is it going to be for people to come there for treatment or diagnostics? So that's a great question, Will. We really see this as a primary hub. The remote aspects like Carlton went over are just amazing. They offer us so many benefits, privacy, security, the ability to, you know, we're not bothering anybody with what we're doing now that we would be anyway, but people are supportive in this community. So we're not going up against adversaries. (29:47 - 33:14) This is a place of peace. This is a place where people can become clear outside of the chaos. There's a lot of things happening in the air, the water and the food, just being in the cities. There's a lot of things that we don't see with the eye, but we feel through our body, the energy, the frequency, the vibration. So just getting out to a remote location offers its own host of benefits for someone before they even really arrive that the drive out there, you know, the human eye can see so many different shades of green, just driving out there, allowing yourself to just take in the view is medicine on its own. In terms of medical clinics, obviously being in a PMA, we don't operate a medical clinic. We do things private member to member. So we don't bring the medical into it at all. There's no intention to bring that equipment that we're talking about to this location. This is more primarily a facility for education, community gathering to do retreats and lifestyle skills. There is so much to do with the food, proper preparation, processing from start to finish that children, that youth, that adults can participate in. And so this is activities that they can do to self-serve their life. Yes, they're creating these amazing foods and medicines to share with our community to nourish our private community, but they're also participating as they're gaining valuable life skills. So this is not us moving there to be in this remote location. This is rather a primary hub where we can set up an example for people to see, to grow this community, because to be honest, I see one of these in multiple locations. And I think as we get this first one started, leaders from across the nation are going to look to this location and say, we've been thinking about doing this. We've been wanting to do this. We need the guidance. We need the role modeling. We need the leaders, which for finding in both Shane and Carlton and their relations, there are so many other people supporting this project behind the closed and private doors that when people come to us for guidance and assistance, we can help them. So this is more of like a starting point, a configuration to meet the changing times. All right. So now, and thank you for explaining that, Melissa, because clearly I didn't completely understand what you're planning to do with the facility. It makes a lot more sense now. One of the things that we didn't want to, and I'm going to take a bit of a left turn here, ladies. One of the things that we had discussed that we wanted to do with this interview was to provide a guide to people in other areas of the country of how to properly set up a private members association and what the benefits of that are. So could you cover that now? And just, and I know we're going to be providing people with contact information so they can contact you if they want more information, but would you please give the viewers just an overview right now, because I know you've learned some things in the last three years about how to do this and do it right. So if just, if you give that rundown now, please. You know, that's such a great thing. And I know Kanisha and I would do a good job, but I think Shane would really do a great job in talking about the private member association and even offering assistance. We would be directing people to his guidance and his leadership because that's where we glean ours from. So Shane, take it away. Oh, thank you, Melissa. Yes, of course. Well, a lot of people do have interest in PMAs and what all that means, private membership association. Where do they come from? Well, they go back a long, long ways back to Europe. (33:15 - 35:29) These are some of the ways in which the people, the peasants, if you will, got around royalty or the Kings and Queens of the day, the aristocracy is, if you will, that overrule, you know, and we're kind of being back in that overrule again, we feel it. We know the public can be a very dangerous place. We have to always remember that privacy trumps public, lawful trumps legal. And this really goes back to, for me, more so America than it does Canada. Why did those PMAs get started way back in the 1700s and 1800s? It starts with alcohol, as strange as that it is. A lot of the counties in the Southern United States are known as dry counties. There's, you know, there's, you can't find all in there and the good men and women of America and those counties said, well, hold on, I'm an American, I'm a man and I'm a woman, you know, I have autonomy here, I have self-determination. And I feel that, you know, okay, your public has voted not to have alcohol in the community, but we will come together in the private to produce these clubs so we can, you know, enjoy our spirits. And this is where this starts, you know, in 1700s in America. And, you know, as America got more and more, you know, advanced and rolling on, obviously you get more and more bureaucracy, you get more and more restriction. And people have just come together to form these private membership associations to remember how strong we are in the private. And that the, even though America and a lot of those counties may be dry or have these rules and regulations, many PMAs exist in America so they can get around it. And, you know, these are many even politicians, lawyers. In fact, the, you know, the bar guild association is a PMA that all the lawyers belong to. So these, you know, any Masonic brotherhood is a PMA, you know, Knights of Columbus, so on and so forth. (35:29 - 37:48) These are all PMAs. These are people where people come together to practice. It could be a certain pastime. It could be a search and study. It could be many, many things. And through this, of course, there's been challenges within the courts of America, the courts of Canada, you know, and a lot of these challenges went to the rate to the Supreme court and more, more, times than not, they've always ruled in favor of the PMA because privacy trumps the public lawful trumps the legal. And this is part of our ask. When, you know, when we buy this school, we're asking the other members come on with us so you can receive the education. You can receive the training. So you start off as a member, you're learning your chops, you're learning your skills. You're a student. Okay. This is the only time you want to put a title on yourself with a small S student verb studying. Okay. Why do you want to be a student? Students are always immune. Okay. The law doesn't affect the student because they're immune to it. They're studying after all this is about study. So when we talk about the next group is the minister, and this is where we get back to that criminal code of Canada here at our PMA, we changed the name slightly. We didn't go with private membership association, then it's a language thing. So what do we really go with? Well, we love private private's a good word. That's really, really strong. We went with a minister and cooperative. So we're really us Carlton. We're a PMC private ministers cooperative. Why do, why do we pick minister? It goes back to the criminal code of Canada. Ministers are not to be impeded upon. They can't be intimidated. They can't be, uh, uh, they can't have their travel restricted ministers. And I'm not saying they're like Holy rolling ministers, like from churches. I'm talking about the ministers of Canada and the ministers of the church, the ministers of the Canada got their idea from the ministers of the church, but the ministers, like the minister of agriculture, health, transportation, finance, so on and so forth. All those ministers are ministers because the criminal code of Canada protects them. Okay. (37:48 - 39:32) You can't intimidate a minister. It's that's a, that's an offense. And one, eight, zero, the criminal code. So we really studied that. And we really went with the private minister cooperative cooperatives, another great word. Okay. It's not a corporation. If I can interrupt with a practical question to put this in terms that people can do something with that knowledge or of understanding what you're doing, you said earlier, and it's a correct statement, lawful trumps legal. And so what people have been calling a PMA or private members association, you guys are calling a private ministers cooperative, which is fine. Would you please give the viewers some examples of what you can do as that PMC that you would not otherwise be able to do? Number one is this. You cannot do business in the public because it's a com either commercial thing. It implies taxation. It implies regulation. So if there's any small businesses out there, and this is why I personally got into PMAs. Okay. Because I was having a hard time doing business in the public because of the modalities that Carlton and I offer. We are direct competition for pharma, big pharma. They don't like that. So therefore they have all these regulations and taxations amongst a million other things that are not conducive to what we do. An example, we had a website for many years, blackfeedhealth.com great website worked until it didn't work. Meaning that they looked at our medicine day, meaning the payment processors, the people between you and your credit card, they're called gateway payment processors. (39:33 - 41:13) They said, Oh, we don't like your medicine. Those are pseudoscience and carry no weight. So they cut our access off to transact. Okay. No big deal. It makes us better entrepreneurs. Okay. It makes us be more engaged with our community more in real life. And that's made us awesome at speaking and engaging and working with people at a real level because yeah, you don't have the access to go to the website, but if you can find us at one of these private markets or one of these private interviews that we do, we we're more than busy. We, we were more than busy. So the PMA has allowed us to A) have our business back, uh, B) it's allowed us to walk in our authority. So when we're, you know, doing the things we want to do, even on this farm that we're at, we had to turn this into a ministry because of the legalities of putting just a couple simple buildings on this land that are on skids, non-permanent structures, putting C cans on this land, non-permanent structures. But the, the, the, the cities still wanted to come here. You want to bring a compliance officer and a peace officer and a, you know, a city, a counselor, and they wanted to walk the land and count our chickens and look in our buildings. And, and the landowner here says, okay, let's do that. And we're like, no, no, no, no, let's not do that. Because once these creeps come onto your property, you will be in contract for the rest of time. They will not leave you alone. There'll always be something more to comply to. Okay. So we said, Whoa, let's, let's re let's rethink this idea. Let's contact the city and say, Hey, we've turned this into a church. They said, Oh, that's wonderful. You can come and get a permit at the city for your church. (41:13 - 42:37) We said, no, no, no, no, no. Genesis one 26 through 29. We got our permit and all our abundance and all our, uh, resources from God himself, because it's state, it states that two books in the Bible that they don't want to talk about in a proper church. Ones that have charitable tax status. Okay. This is a huge problem. No one even knows how big this is. When you have that charitable tax status, that ability to issue a taxable receipt, you are inviting the spirit of Jezebel into your church. Who is that spirit of Jezebel? She's a demon. Okay. This is the public. This is Babylon itself. You've just invited Babylon into your church. So now you can issue tax receipts. Yay. That's a good thing. Now you have to abide by Jezebel, the public. Now you have a relationship with the, with the municipal government. This is why guys, God bless his soul, like Artur Pawlowski in Calgary, other pastors in our area had so much trouble because they have a charitable tax number, but yet they didn't want to go through the COVID narrative and, and, you know, the massing of their flock and the, uh, the guidelines that the AHS set for. That's why Pawlowski went to prison. Okay. Because he, he maintained his charitable tax status, but while operating in the dangerous, dangerous combo. Yes. Carlton wants to say something. (42:40 - 47:32) We are faced with a contractual crisis on this land. It is contractual basis of the relationship between members, whether it be in private of a say association, but while the association may have the outward appearance of being an independent entity from a legal perspective, it is simply an aggregate of the individual members of the association who are bound together according to the terms of our contracts. I have made a contract with each of you today, and I'll continue making contract with you going forward. Unlike a corporation, which has perpetual existence independent of the entity of its shareholders or members, the unincorporated association is a fluctuating body of members who join and exit the arrangement. Every time a new member joins or exits the association's contract is novated to reflect the new parties to the agreement. So contract theory plays a huge role in this. I wish I could just give a simple contract theory course, but there is entire textbooks related to this. So we have now blossomed out of needing a single conversation into needing a whole workshop just on this one topic. And just from this awesome conversation today, you're starting to see why we now need a whole facility to have these long and very specific conversations so people can sort out where they are on the land, reorient themselves, because, well, we want to give them the contract, but if they don't have the definitions inside the contract sorted out in up here and in here, then they will be coming to us with a different interpretation. Okay. So if I could return to you ladies now, I'd like to ask, because it's, I came into this interview with my own misconception. And that misconception was that in a single interview, we could teach people how to build a private members association or what you guys are calling it, a private ministers cooperation, whichever, it doesn't matter which label you put on. And it's clear from this conversation, you can't do that. So now we have to talk about practical steps. And it seems to me that practical step number one is that you guys have got years now of experience doing this between the four of you and, you know, moving into this facility would be part of that step. So practical steps that we need to take at this point in time to take all of that knowledge that you have learned along with these two gentlemen in the last few years to take not only your own private members association or whatever the PMC, if we want to call it that, to the next step, but also to be able to effectively, and I'm using that word very carefully, effectively disseminate that information to people across the country so that they can do the same thing. Well, yeah, I think it's really just about breaking it down. This is sort of why yyc Rocks is in this relaunch right now, because, you know, it's been beautiful three years having all these members come in, but getting into these conversations, it's been really eye opening for me that the majority of our members, they don't even know they're in a private membership. They don't know the verbiage, they don't know how to do to actually be in the private. And essentially, that's putting us at risk. You know, we can't be talking about the offerings that we have, you know, when we're talking about ivermectin or these, you know, other modalities, they can't just be say, hey, we have all this stuff, right, that it's really exciting, but it is in the private. So the more that we are coming together, just having these conversations is really, really important. We need to prioritize that right now. And that's spreading that awareness. I think through the conversations here, we've learned that there's issues in the healthcare system, the judicial system, the educational system, people don't need to feel overwhelmed that I'm going to lose my license or I can't travel or all these things. It's just what are we doing in the day to day together and guiding us down this path. And I think the introductory course that Melissa is going to talk about with Shane and her is just going to be such a value for people to come in and join the conversation. (47:33 - 48:28) Yeah, Kenisha, that's really exactly what it is. The entry point for our participation offer today for people to come in, collaborate is exactly that. It's like, start your journey with the conversation, start to learn the basics, start to get the fundamentals so that when you look around, it's quite obvious to you what's going on. You're going to come from a place of inner standing. Like Kenisha said, we operate in this world that gives us stuff through our vision, tells us stuff, and then it jargons it up in our mind, which has been programmed by all these systems. And so that's really the first part of our offering today. It's this introduction to Sovereignty course. We're going to include amazing products from what Shane and Carlton have created from the land and from their own inner intelligence and their gifts to the world. It's going to be a detox program. It's going to be a 58 day guided detox program. And there's a whole bunch of things included. We're going to have those in a list for you so we don't have to go over them here. (48:28 - 49:23) But that's really the initial point of entry is, I want to be involved. I want to learn more. I'm ready to join the conversation. Now, I don't want to lead people into something that's not correct. We're not doing a PMA. This is not a PMA course. This is not a trust course. This is not all those kinds of courses. This is really the basic fundamental steps that even opens the door for you, that begins to open your eyes to that this is a reality. And then we can introduce people to groups, the private groups that can help with those paperworks and those hand holding of that later on. But this is really just joining the conversation as an initial point of entry. All right. And how can people do that? I know you're going to provide us with a link, which people will be placed beneath this interview. So the process is as simple as contact you, get more information. And then if they want to get involved in this, they can start that journey of getting educated into, as you say, into the language, into understanding all of this. (49:23 - 52:07) And then from there, you can put them in touch with organizations that can help them with the actual structure and paperwork and all of that. Of course. Our initial, like why we're here today is because we're in a time crunch. We need the money to close on this property. And we want, we don't just want one donor to come forward and say, Oh, you guys, I really like what you're doing. You're a great group of people. I'm just going to give you 300,000. Well, I'm going to take that if that comes, I'm happy to take it, but I want the energy and the effort and the mind and the heart of the people. We want to have as many people as possible, up to 300 people to partner in this initiative with us who are like, I'm going to give a thousand dollars because I want this course. I want this conversation. I want this medicine. I want access to this. I want to do it in the private with you. So they're going to contact us. They're going to become a part of our private membership, private member, sorry, private member association. And we're going to have that offering. That's an initial offering of a thousand dollars where people can come in, access to the course, access to the medicine. We're going to get some of that medicine included, which is going to be their 58 day detox. They're going to get a couple of tickets to our grand opening, which will of course be on a new moon ceremony at this beautiful, amazing, natural setting location. And then we have a couple other points for entry for people who, some people want to do it as an investment. So there is an investment that people can come in with a $5,000. There's a couple of ways they can get their return on investment that's detailed in the offerings that we're going to communicate with people and distribute with those that are interested. And there's also one that through the private ministry cooperation or cooperative that people can come in with $5,000 and actually be a part shareholder with that. And so we're just looking for people to say, yes, I want to be involved. We can share that information with them. Then they can choose the method of entry and participation contribution. That's going to be the right one for them. All right. Well said. Now, just before we close out, Shane, Carlton, Panecia, do you have anything essential to add that we may have missed that the viewers really need to know? Yeah, I'll go first. What I would tell the viewers, we're going to be going through some really challenging time as a nation, as a province. Things are going to get tough. Your money is being the value of the dollar every day is going to be less. I don't know if anybody's checked the price of silver and gold today, but gold's up over 4,100 bucks an ounce. Silver is over 46 bucks an ounce. That just goes to show you that our dollar is losing its buying power. (52:07 - 54:01) Spend your money right now while it's still worth something. If you want to know more about gold and silver, please reach out to us. We do offer works on health and wealth. If there's other ways you want to join this endeavor with metals, please come. I have a nice strategy on how we become our own bank. This stuff already exists. It's right here in Alberta. It's the only province you can do it in. I'd say just get on with us before it's too late. You don't have access to maybe fruits or vegetables. You don't have access to affordable protein. Beautifully said. We're really about not promoting any fear. It's just about meeting people where they're at. We know what's coming. It's not to live from a place of scarcity, but a place of knowing where we're going, what we need to do, what we need to create together. That's our focus. I know here in Calgary, helping the land property out is our remote hub. Like Melissa said, we want to get a lot of these going. It really is a stepping stone as well to another location that we are working on getting here in the Calgary area down in the foothills, which is hoping to be our second school for the community here in Calgary for September. We have lots of things on the go. It really is truly just coming together and just being in that state of generosity, giving and service to community, no matter where you're at, what you can give. There's lots of people who have trades and different backgrounds who can be putting their energy into us as well. It doesn't always have to be monetary. It's just anything that you can give, we're open to receive.
Thanks Will!
Interesting BUT very confusing!
I watched your program though somewhat a waste of my time.
Confused! Just like government presentations.
Thomas