Hmmm. Thanks for your thoughts. The conservative base in Canada is not well organized. More has to be done on a grassroots level. I don't work in politics but I have a background in politics. I don't think the PPC will be able to win a seat in this election. The other way is to mass infiltrate the upper-levels of the CPC party with traditionalists, which is more or less behind the scenes, we need the traditionalists to take over the party. But as I said before, our only path at this moment is at the grassroots level and making those connections.
Don't get me wrong I would like the PPC to be a viable party but it's just not one at this moment. There should be more conservative and traditionalists involvement at a grassroots level, like with community centers, colleges, and in universities. This all requires massive funding, which is the issue here, the Canadian Laurentian elite are not traditionalists. The Western provinces alone are the only ones capable funding a shift in right-wing politics.
As for Quebec, you're correct on the social issues. Quebec tends to follow Paris in terms of social issues, and unfortunately Paris is, well, a left-wing city. France is politically a mess, and Quebec follows France. I have quite a negative view with French politics in general mainly because I disagree with the French Revolution, and consequently, I am not fond of the politics of the French Republic. Quebec never experienced the French Revolution, but they emulated it with the Quiet Revolution. It's this secular humanist politics where people are viewed as interchangeable by the state, not understanding that tradition and culture is what binds people together, and the complete spiritual destruction of their Christian heritage.
We need a right-wing conservative movement broadly aligned with Christianity and Western civilisation in Canada. The current right-wing politics centred around low taxes and business incentives is shallow, it is corporatism, it is not conservatism. It must begin with the grassroots. It's difficult to achieve this when mass immigration imports non-Westernised and non-Christian people en mass per year.
Hmmm. Thanks for your thoughts. The conservative base in Canada is not well organized. More has to be done on a grassroots level. I don't work in politics but I have a background in politics. I don't think the PPC will be able to win a seat in this election. The other way is to mass infiltrate the upper-levels of the CPC party with traditionalists, which is more or less behind the scenes, we need the traditionalists to take over the party. But as I said before, our only path at this moment is at the grassroots level and making those connections.
Don't get me wrong I would like the PPC to be a viable party but it's just not one at this moment. There should be more conservative and traditionalists involvement at a grassroots level, like with community centers, colleges, and in universities. This all requires massive funding, which is the issue here, the Canadian Laurentian elite are not traditionalists. The Western provinces alone are the only ones capable funding a shift in right-wing politics.
As for Quebec, you're correct on the social issues. Quebec tends to follow Paris in terms of social issues, and unfortunately Paris is, well, a left-wing city. France is politically a mess, and Quebec follows France. I have quite a negative view with French politics in general mainly because I disagree with the French Revolution, and consequently, I am not fond of the politics of the French Republic. Quebec never experienced the French Revolution, but they emulated it with the Quiet Revolution. It's this secular humanist politics where people are viewed as interchangeable by the state, not understanding that tradition and culture is what binds people together, and the complete spiritual destruction of their Christian heritage.