"Very good, very good, very good.
"Very good?" "Very good." "That's a lot." "Cool, we're saying that."
“"The one who was in the test computer field, focus management, finance, and so on."”
"Mega, but that's not what you're saying." "Eil, just a picture of the low-stoe building, and 40." "Very good." "Very good." "Hold your money."
"With a lot of money." "Caffe in his best form, with the new Cuban one-capable machine from Chiba." "And every Cuban-capable, special coffee from special buildings." "For espresso, coffee-creamer or coffee-creamer, of Knopfdruck." "The new Cuban one, with premium design, compact-bar-größer and a small project price at 1920 Euro."
"Thank innovative press-pro-technology, with every special aeromattage, with a lot of creamer."
“"And there are now the Cuban-capable machine in their Chiba-fiale and on Chiba-DE."”
"Canada's Prime Minister, Carnegie just torched Donald Trump in one of the most
powerful speeches I've seen.
He gave this speech in Dublin, in Ireland. Then he gave a speech before that in France, then the next to French President Emmanuel Macron. I want to show you just how powerful this speech is, as Prime Minister Carnegie talks about the organization
of a new world structure where the United States is essentially being pushed to the sideline. And middle powers are uniting Canada, Europe, and others to form their own superpower right now, as Donald Trump's America first, now means America alone. Watch as Prime Minister Carnegie talks about how the post- Cold War rules based order is breaking down. It's under threat, and how multilateral institutions have weakened,
and thus change is absolutely needed in Canada's prepared to lead. Here, let's play this clip. And for Canada and Ireland, it means harnessing our deep relationships, as sources of strength. And this is an urgent task now, because the world is changing rapidly.
Ireland and Canada are navigating a global rupture, not a quiet transition. The post- Cold War world rules based order is breaking down multilateral institutions of weakened economic integration from which we have benefited, is being weaponized. The international trading system, which we've relied upon for decades, is under threat. And at the same time, new technologies from artificial intelligence to cyber and quantum,
are changing the nature of war, the structure of economies, and the possibilities of human advancement. And then he gives his solution.
And this is an echo also of what we heard him talk about in that powerful Davos speech, a few months back,
where he said, "Look in a world where you have these great power rivalries that have developed, mid-powers can either become dependent on one of the great powers, or the mid-powers can unite, and we could be a great power if Canada, your opinion is because Ireland, others if we join forces together, think about how we can be unstoppable and stand up against these bullies." Let's play this clip.
The point is that in a world of great power rivalry, middle powers have a choice, which is to compete for favor of the great powers, or to combine to create a third path with impact. The nations that invest in their own capabilities and partner with like-minded allies will multiply their strength. They become a more effective block to deter aggression, to protect their supply chains, and to realize their core economic interests and because of the economic interests, their social values.
And again, speaking in Dublin, Prime Minister Karney talked about how right now many countries are self-included, are concluding, we must develop greater strategic autonomy, because the rules that we've come to expect in the past. The architecture, frankly, that was created in a rules-based order developed by the United States, Trump has thrown it out the window.
We can't depend on those rules, so we must unite together, again, a powerful message.
Let's play it. Right now, many countries or selves included are concluding that they must develop greater strategic autonomy, and the impulse for that is understandable,
“because when the rules no longer protect you, you must protect yourself.”
And a country that cannot feed itself, fuel itself, or defend itself has few options.
More from Prime Minister Karney here talking about how, for decades, governme...
and that has left our supply chains and trading relationships that have created dependencies, and we thought we could depend on certain countries, like the United States that we thought were allies, only for them to turn around and betray us in this way.
We must never fall for this mistake, again, we must never fall into this trap.
And I want, when I play these clips, I want our United States audience, our Canadian audience, our international audience. We have a very big international audience to truly reflect on a rapidly changing global world order, and how big of a deal it is that Trump really screwed this up. You know, I think about Donald Trump talking about how he was going to make the reflecting pool so incredibly beautiful,
“and how all you have to do is paint it blue, and it would get rid of the algae miraculously, and it would just become spectacular.”
And I think about that as symbolic of this broader situation, anyone who was looking at what Trump was doing with the reflecting pool would tell you, it's only going to attract more algae, you're going to screw things up and it's going to look horrible. Anybody looking at what Donald Trump has done with his tariffs against the world, his catastrophic and unlawful war and Iran that he went into a net. We'll tell you all you've done is just created a systemic shift in the global world order where you've,
irreparably weakened the United States, you realize that.
And here's what Carnegie says, let's play it.
“Because over decades, governments and businesses prioritized efficiency over resilience,”
we all have developed supply chains and trading relationships. They create dependencies. They can turn economic integration from an advantage, which is what it was into subordination. More for Prime Minister Carney here talking about true sovereignty, let's play it. But we recognize a second principle that building true sovereignty cannot be achieved in isolation.
It requires diversification, it requires partnership. And so we are focused on building a dense web of connections, said another way, ad hoc coalitions that work, issue by issue, with partners that share enough common ground to act together.
“And that's why Canada was the first non-European country to join the EU's safe defense procurement program.”
It's why we've signed 20 new economic and security agreements over five continents in the past year. It's why we're championing efforts to build a bridge between the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the European Union, something that would create a trading block of one and a half billion people, a rules-based trading block of one and a half billion people. These coalitions are also there to help solve global problems with a rules-based order that's under threat, so called variable geometry.
In other words, building coalitions that focus on specific issues, from AI with India and Australia to our critical minerals alliance with the G7 to nuclear energy with South Africa.
These are examples of what Canada is doing. He then talks about the Canada Ireland Europe relationship, let's play it. Canada Ireland and Europe are increasingly and more immediately vulnerable to once distant threats. I suggest that it meets this change, it meets this disruption. Canada Ireland and Europe can be pivotal, powerful, and purposeful, a force for good.
Pivotal because we are the most connected region in the world to each other and to others. Canada has 16 free trade agreements with 51 countries covering one and a half billion people, two thirds of global GDP, and we're on course to double that market access this year. The EU maintains preferential access to over 80 partner countries making it the top trading partner for 80 nations globally. Together we are powerful because we have the capacity to act together.
Combine the population is more than twice that of the United States with a larger cultural export industry and a more diverse one I might add.
Similarly, size GDP comparable are in decent.
Our collective defense budgets twice that of China's.
We're home to the majority of the world's top 100 universities and over half of the world's Nobel Prize winners. So together we are one of the largest economic cultural technological, financial blocks in the world.
“And I think this is very important where he talks about shared values, values and principles.”
And that's what we can rely on that Canada, Ireland, Europe, share the same values and implicit in this is that we don't share the values of this Trump magazine of America. We thought we shared those values, but we don't here in Canada and Europe, Ireland. We believe that climate change is a real thing. We believe in human rights. We believe in democracy.
We believe in these freedoms. And you don't in the United States.
“That's essentially what he's saying here play this clip.”
So with this common history, with these shared values, we have developed a unique world view, transatlantic world view, if you will, rooted in a simple but profound conviction that we are stronger when we are connected. That our prosperity grows when it's shared and that we are the stewards of our lands. And then he talks about, right before the speech, the rupture in the global system that's developed, let's play it. Now, there's one other threshold, but I'll mention, at which Canada, Ireland, Europe, now stand.
And that's the rupture in the global system.
“From rules based to arms based, from right to right, from values to vanquished, where will we go into a purpose?”
And I'd suggest that the thresholds that we have crossed and those before us have crossed, the shared values that have been forged in doing so will bring us forward. Earlier, he gave a speech as well in Ireland, where he talked about how Canada has worked to deepen our partnership with the European Union. Let's play it. Now, in parallel to our deepening relationship by laterally, Canada is also working to deepen our partnership with the European Union, particularly during Ireland's upcoming presidency of the Council of the EU.
We fully support your priorities for your presidency.
First, increasing competitiveness, simplifying processes, deepening investment, diversifying trade, focus on strategic sectors and resilience.
Bullstream security, with continued support of the EU for Ukraine, strengthening the defense and security industrial based, and finally, and foundationally upholding the values of the rule of law and democracy, indispensable to the foundation of the EU, but also indispensable foundational to our partnership between Canada and Ireland. And the Prime Minister Cardi, Karls' multilingual, so he gives these speeches in both English and French, and he answers questions in both English and French. So here's why you'll hear it as a translation right here. He talks about how he believes the new world order is being built out of Europe.
And that's going to be the center in Canada sees itself as a uniter between trans-Pacific partnerships, Asia, trans-Atlantic partnerships Europe. And you saw Canada take this very prominent role at the European Union Political Community meeting in Yeravan, Armenia. It's the first time in non-European country, like Canada was there, representing almost being treated as a European country, because Canada has become this unifying force under Prime Minister Cardi. And we are currently transforming our cooperation with the European Union.
Last June, we reached a new partnership with the European Union that has strengthened our cooperation on climate technologies.
And trade. In February, Canada became the first non-European member of the safe mechanism and initiative by the European Union on defense procurement.
We have already established 56 partnerships on critical minerals in more than...
Finally, I do want to reflect on this as well, because Prime Minister Cardi will acknowledge that Canada, because of the United States trade war against it, Canada has faced certain headwinds, right, because they're under attack from their former top trading partner.
What I love about what Prime Minister Cardi does, which is the opposite of what Trump does. He, Cardi levels with the people, you see, we, the people can understand difficult situation and problems.
We just need to be talked to and explain how we're actually going to get out of it, what the problems are, offer real solutions and stop defrauding us and stop making it about yourself, make it about the people.
“More from Prime Minister Cardi here is now in France where he talks about how the G7 is, he goes, look, the G7 is not running the world, it's important, but it's not running the world.”
There's a G7 meeting obviously taking place in France, let's play what he says over here. I don't go, I'm looking forward to this summit and I'm looking forward to this, I should add as well last point, the broader participation that will be at the summit, everyone from Kenya through to the UAE, who will be there at the broader outreach.
That's an important component of this, because the G7 is not running the world, it's important, but it's not running the world.
More for Prime Minister Cardi talking about how he likes President Macron's style, let's play it. Whether I had any advice for President Macron as outgoing G7 chair, the short answer is no. In the following respects, obviously, the extremely experienced statesman has known, for example, the question was specifically with President Trump, they've known each other, they were both presidents during Mr. Trump's first term.
“And I believe that President Macron's style, which is direct, it's concrete and it's ambitious, is well suited to making progress with all G7 partners, very much including President Trump.”
He was asked a question also about the Gordi Howe Bridge, which connects Michigan and Canada, and this was a major project between Canada and the Great State of Michigan. And Donald Trump, because of the near by bridge, there's a private bridge right nearby, and they petitioned Donald Trump, this American billionaire family, to basically shut down the Gordi Howe Bridge as a way to attack Canada. Donald Trump's regime has worked to like shut down this bridge as part of just the constant attacks against Canada, so Cardi was asked about that, watch what his response is, let's play it.
Yesterday you said it was due to technical issues, what are those technical issues. Look, it's the discussion, as I said yesterday, the was at the request of the US administration will look to work through what issues they have. I don't think it's productive to work through those in public, and our teams are working through, I actually haven't been briefed on it today, the specifics of it. It's important, we get this right, this is an asset for both countries and our people, most fundamentally, is going to exist for decades, so if we need to take a few more weeks to get it right and get it launched, we'll do that.
And then I'll leave you with this right here, Charlie Angus, who leads might as Canada, I think he said it perfectly on the last episode of might as Canada that he did about what we're seeing in terms of the growth of might as Canada, how might as Canada is really shedding the spotlight on Canada's leadership in the world and rightfully so, because Prime Minister Cardi and Canada have become leaders.
“Have become the leader, I think, in a multilateral, multi-polar world, we've seen a complete rupture of the old system and the rebuilt system with these mid-powers.”
We're seeing Cardi be a major leader in, you know, might as Canada really leading the way and shedding a light on it, such an honor to work with Charlie Angus.
Here's what he had to say, let's play it.
Steve, it's been amazing since we started the might as Canada network, you know, I mean, all my years, even I go back a long way, I was, I used to work for your show back in studio two days. We've got to have the heart of a gambler to stake your fortune on mining, that's the whole history of this town of Cobalt. This place is lived and almost died many times in the endless cycle of boom and bust.
As we are in such uncertain times and people are watching Canada and people a...
And so, and it's what we're trying to do is build that conversation, a conversation across borders across the United States, across Europe, across Asia, about democracy.
“And Canada, I think, right now, plays a role in it in a very significant way.”
There you have it folks, let me know what you think about this all. Hit subscribe. Let's get to 7 million subscribers and thanks so much for watching.
Thanks for watching. Be sure to add the might as such podcasts on Apple podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts for new updates every single day.


