Saturday, March 28, 2026
The Time Has Come for the Human | AI Manifesto
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Political‑Religious Hybrids Topple Empires
Belief Lights a Fuse, Bureaucracy Drops the Bomb
- Identity: A story people can own.
- Administration: A system that can collect, distribute, and enforce authority
- Force: Military, economic, or social — the means to project power.
- run tax districts
- maintain supply lines
- adjudicate land disputes
- negotiate grain shipments
- build roads
- mint currency.
- Islam became imperial when it became governmental.
- Christianity became imperial when Rome nationalized it.
- Buddhism became imperial when Ashoka industrialized it.
- Identity: A story people can belong to.
- Administration: A system that can collect, distribute, and enforce.
- Force: The means to project power across borders and generations.
Addendum: The Three Lies We Tell Ourselves About “Spiritual Conquest”
1. “Faith Alone Toppled the Empire.”
- administration that can out‑organize them,
- logistics that can out‑sustain them,
- and force that can out‑maneuver them.
2. “The Prophet Led the Conquest.”
- The prophet critiques the system.
- The followers build a new system.
- The system — not the prophet — expands
3. “The Empire Converted Because the Message Was Beautiful.”
- politically useful,
- administratively efficient,
- or economically incentivized.
The Real Story
Saturday, March 7, 2026
Canada's Indian Act Turned Continental Nations into Administrative Fragments
The Liberal Party Imposed a System That Threatens The Foundation of Canada
Canada’s most enduring colonialist invention isn’t a railway or a parliament. It’s a filing system: the Liberal written Indian Act’s creation of the “band.” A term so bland, so administrative, so bureaucratically innocent that most Canadians never question it. Yet this quiet invention is now producing metropolitan crises, legal fractures, and a form of legislated national entropy that no one in 1876 could have imagined.
The Indian Act didn’t recognize Indigenous nations. To the contrary, it took those nations down to the size of a postage stamp. It resized them intentionally to remove their existence.
Liberals, new kids on the political block, introduced the Indian Act in 1876, and their signature legislation came with a ledger. This kept a record of the new order, which took a sharp knife and a prototype 'band' saw to divide nations into units small enough to manage, fund, and ignore most of the time.
Now, 150 years later, the strange amalgamations are beginning to burst under pressure.
Maxim 1: What was (and could in no wise remain)
Before contact, Indigenous governance across the continent was a tapestry of confederacies, houses, clans, kinship networks, and regional alliances. None of it resembled “bands.” The term itself was borrowed from British military and parish administration denoting small, manageable groups under a single officer or cleric. Ottawa liked the sound of it. Small. Manageable. Under bureaucratic fiat.
The Indian Act defined a band as any “body of Indians” the government declared to be one. A nation was split. A village was split. A family was split. The Governor‑in‑Council simply decreed it. It was fragmentation disguised as governance..
Maxim 2: Fragmentation as Policy
The logic was simple:
- Large nations were politically inconvenient.
- Small units were administratively efficient.
- Breaking nations into bands served several colonial objectives:
- Fragmentation: Smaller groups were easier to manage and less capable of coordinated resistance.
- Land control: Reserve parcels could be tied to specific groups for easier surveying and expropriation.
- Assimilation: Band councils replaced hereditary systems with quasi‑municipal governance.
- Funding leverage: Ottawa could distribute or withhold resources at the band level, reinforcing dependency. The result was a mismatch between legal identity and cultural reality. A nation became a set of administrative boxes.
Case Study: The Nuu‑chah‑nulth — West Coast Precision
The Nuu‑chah‑nulth occupy the storm‑facing Pacific Rim of Vancouver Island. Before the Indian Act, their world was structured around hereditary houses, local groups, and regional alliances woven through marriage, trade, warfare, and ceremony. Ottawa took this ocean‑wide system and ran it through the bandsaw:
- Houses became “families.”
- Local groups became “bands.”
- Regional alliances became “tribal councils.”
- Hereditary chiefs were sidelined by elected councils.
- Vast territories were reduced to small reserve parcels.
The Nuu‑chah‑nulth didn’t shrink. The administrative boxes around them did. A nation that once operated through hereditary authority and ocean‑wide networks was divided into fourteen bands, each with a number, each with a budget line, each treated as a separate “Band” despite being threads of the same cultural fabric.
Case Study: The Haudenosaunee — East Coast Counterweight
The Haudenosaunee Confederacy—one of the world’s oldest participatory democracies—received the same treatment. Confederacy nations were broken into bands, elected councils imposed, hereditary chiefs sidelined, reserves carved from homelands.
Two nations separated by a continent, altered by the same administrative knife.
Maxim 3: The Long Shadow
The band system persists because the Indian Act persists. Even nations that reject it must navigate it. Canada’s oldest surviving colonial structure is the one designed to erase older structures. And now, in the 21st century, the structure is beginning to fail in ways its architects never imagined.
Enter the Musqueam: When the Bandsaw Meets Vancouver Real Estate
If the Nuu‑chah‑nulth show how the bandsaw carved nations along the Pacific Rim, the Musqueam show what happens when those cuts begin to warp under metropolitan pressure. Vancouver is not a city. It is the Lower Mainland featuring a global commodity exchange disguised as a skyline. And Musqueam land sits at the centre of it, situated at the centre of some of the most valuable real estate in the country. The Indian Act never imagined this scenario. It assumed reserves would remain rural, marginal, and economically irrelevant.
It never contemplated a world where Musqueam land would sit beside golf courses, luxury condos, and university endowments. So when a recent court decision attempted to interpret 19th‑century legislation in a 21st‑century context, the result was predictable:
- governance strain,
- community division,
- legal uncertainty,
and a sense that the administrative scaffolding is groaning under its own contradictions. Suddenly the issue surpasses anything to do with culture or identity or nationhood since it doesn't exist.
It’s something far more absurd:
What does “band title” mean when the land in question is worth billions? A federal statute from 1876 is now determining who controls multi‑billion‑dollar parcels in the Lower Mainland. It’s like watching someone try to run a container port using the rulebook for a Victorian fishing village. And here is the hinge—the moment where surgical analysis turns catastrophic:
The Musqueam case is not an outlier — it’s the blueprint reaching its logical conclusion.
Thanks to the 'unifying power of Alexander Mackenzie, a gaggle of Adam Smith trained lawyers turned into the unified Liberal Party of Canada, from which grew this incredibly impecunious turn of fortune for fee-simple land owners on some of the world's richest real estate.
Talk about owning nothing and being terribly disappointed about it.
The Liberals proto-situational-design has turned into a leviathan now capable of rendering fee‑simple landowners impecunious in the literal sense. A couple million middle class Canadians could find themselves dead broke and homeless, Mercedes EV parked in a Walmart back lot.
When a colonial filing system destabilizes even one metropolitan property right, the satire writes itself. This is not a glitch in the matrix, a visit from another dimension. It's a system functioning exactly as designed in a world the designers never imagined.
Maxim 4: The Cabinet That Won’t Shut
The Indian Act’s great trick wasn’t the invention of the band. It was convincing the country that the filing system was the people. A nation like the Nuu‑chah‑nulth, ocean-facing, storm‑tempered, structured through houses and hereditary lines, was never meant to fit inside federal filing drawers. Yet there they are: fourteen bands, each with a number, each with a budget line, each with a council Ottawa can understand because Ottawa designed it. The administrative boxes remain ticked, those INAC chiefs get paid by the Federal Government's direct deposits, but the restless will of the people keeps slipping across the boundaries.
Catastrophic Warning: The System Will Fail Again
The Musqueam case is not a localized anomaly. It is a national risk vector almost breaking into full deconstruction mode. A 19th‑century administrative fiction is colliding with 21st‑century urban economics, property law, and political stakes. The result is a form of legislated national disaster, in a system so structurally flawed it behaves like a crisis even when no one intends it.
So here is the cold, final truth:
This system will fail again, and the next failure may not stay local. The ledger business is an open sore. The knife is slicing up Indigenous unity like a bandsaw working on fine trim. Canada's Liberals built this machine. Now it must decide whether they can afford to keep it running, or whether they leave the Adam Smith doggerel aside and let wiser people find the way to fix it. First step. End the Indian Act. Plot a realistic future for reconstitution of Indigenous nationhood. HINT: The Liberals will NEVER allow this.
A McColl Magazine Daily Editorial — Cold Steel Edition
Thursday, March 5, 2026
Monday, March 2, 2026
EH NATIONAL POST? Gen du pays, c’est votre cœur -- Au Quebec!
Maybe keep the sheet music in the drawer for a while longer
Gen du pays, c’est votre cœur may be neighing through the National Post’s editorial boardroom this week, but distributing the song‑sheets months before Quebecers vote feels like the kind of enthusiasm normally reserved for karaoke night at the Legion. Spirited, nostalgic, and wildly out of sync with reality.
Saturday, February 21, 2026
A System That Doesn’t Track the Day — It Occupies It
A satirical anatomy of the modern feed and the emotional weather of it
Sunday, February 15, 2026
The Nudge Unit -- It is a Thing | From the New World Order Playbook on Situational Design
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Sunday, February 8, 2026
The Last Eunuch: A Walk Backwards Through 3,500 Years of Power
. . . In Proximity with the Politics of the Altered Body
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Here's a piece of Jim Carrey history
Jim Carrey was trolling the libs back in the 90’s. He was ahead of his time. 🤣😭 pic.twitter.com/xPrUVYAj4m
— Chief Nerd (@TheChiefNerd) February 5, 2026
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Friday, January 30, 2026
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Gathering Native Plant Knowledge Across BC | WFCA 2026
Native Plant Production and Planting
Melanie Platt
WFCA 2026 Native Plant Knowledge Sharing
Trade, Tariffs and Forestry | WFCA 2026
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Dirk Brinkman, Jordan Tesluk and Company Speak to Day One | WFCA 2026
2026 WFCA Annual General Meeting of Canadian Forest Replanters
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Watch Carney Pretend to Speak French
and be STOPPED by the CBC
Back pedals on speaking one of Canada's Official Languages
Is Canada Living on Borrowed Time?
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Synthesizing Carney’s WEF Rhetoric
The Missing Energy Chapter in Carney’s Davos Narrative
Mark Carney’s Davos posture this year wasn’t about theatrics or dominance. It was a response to a Canada–U.S. relationship that has grown strained and unpredictable: tariffs biting into steel and aluminum, Greenland and NATO tensions radiating outward, and USMCA reviews hanging over Canada like, "a sword of Damocles."
Monday, January 19, 2026
Clarifying MAiD in Canada:
Separating Fact from Fiction
With a Dash of Darkness for the Chronically Enlightened (Online)
Public debate around MAiD (Medical Assistance in Dying) in Canada has reached a point where you can’t scroll far without encountering a plot running dystopia's “Euthanasia for the Poor” loyalty program. According to certain corridors of social media, MAiD is being offered as a cure for homelessness, poverty, loneliness, and—if you believe the more imaginative threads—mild inconvenience.
Friday, January 16, 2026
Emergencies Act Invocation Deemed Unreasonable and Unconstitutional
Federal Court of Appeal Upholds Landmark Ruling
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
Saturday, January 10, 2026
Valence: The One Shot At Eternity
Because valence is the only part of you that continues as pattern — the only part that propagates beyond your own being — it is probably the highway you take to eternity. It shapes how you move through the world. It shapes how the world moves through you. It shapes the echoes of your existence. Your non‑ceasing, endless, eternal existence.
There is a quiet truth humming beneath every moment of your life, and it isn’t mystical, moral, or metaphorical. It’s structural. It’s the thing you’ve been using without knowing its name. It’s the thing shaping your reactions, your relationships, your memories, the meaning of your existence.
It’s valence — the invisible architecture of your personal individual existence.
Is Trampling People with Horses Illegal?
Reminder, Mark Carney during the Convoy went out of his way to write an article to the media asking for the police to do their job and remove these peacefully protesting Canadians. He called them seditionists.
— Ryan Gerritsen🇨🇦🇳🇱 (@ryangerritsen) March 24, 2025
He had no problem with this. pic.twitter.com/gjtDg8C7Wn
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Could Other Provinces Build Their Own CDPQ?
Quebec's Standalone Pension Powerhouse Quebec's separation from the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) in 1965 stands as a pivotal act of eco...
Starship flies again next month
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) February 21, 2026
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