The Joe Rogan Experience XX
[0] Oh, hey fella, what do you got there?
[1] What is that?
[2] Legal marijuana in your hands?
[3] Do you want a closer look?
[4] You activist you?
[5] I'm such a radical, man. The streets are not safe when I'm out on the loose.
[6] Are you radical?
[7] You seem like a regular guy.
[8] Yeah, regular guy with an irregular amount of stress.
[9] With the walrus right there.
[10] Dude, you don't mind my putting it there.
[11] No, no, not at all, of course.
[12] Yeah, no, it stays on the desk.
[13] Yeah, that thing's amazing.
[14] This means as much to us as anybody.
[15] except for you well it's nice to see it this is my this is my happy place this is my safe place i got to travel across the country to be safe but uh it's it's certainly a pleasure to be here again and joe i always have to thank you i listen brother i thank you too i was texting whitney today i said you're a hero you're a legitimate hero for people don't know what this is all about i'll give everybody the backstory um phil used to work at marine land he was an orca trainer and he also trained a walrus named Smooshy.
[16] And Smooshy is still allegedly in captivity at Marine Land, although there's no photographic evidence.
[17] But you're pretty sure she's still there?
[18] I was told that she is still there and she's in good shape and I'm hanging on to that.
[19] Since you came on the podcast the first time, which was how many years ago now?
[20] So six years ago?
[21] I think that's 2013.
[22] So he's been living this lawsuit.
[23] life for six years, trapped in a lawsuit with a gigantic corporation with incredible amounts of money that's been trying to crush him.
[24] And they've made up stuff.
[25] Well, tell me what's happened.
[26] Give me your perspective on how it all went out.
[27] So back in 2012, I was forced to make a very difficult decision.
[28] I elected to speak out against the conditions of which marine lands animals were living in.
[29] I did so knowing the risks, knowing that Marine land was a litigious company, but I did so on account to the fact that the animals were suffering incredibly.
[30] Before quitting, I had an agreement with Marine Land that, look, I'm leaving.
[31] This is long before I'd spoken out.
[32] I'm leaving, but we have to establish that I can maintain this relationship with the walrus because I imprinted on her.
[33] It's important to stress that, that she thinks I'm her mom.
[34] She was a baby.
[35] She was a baby when she came in, so she was wild caught, and you can imagine, probably witnessed her mother get slaughtered.
[36] That's the method of collecting babies by the captors in Russia.
[37] And so she comes in traumatic at the age of, we estimate about 18 months of age, which is pretty old, in fact, in our experience, a marine land's experience of acquiring these wildcat baby walruses.
[38] and through a sort of traumatic experience with her that I was there with her.
[39] This anomalous thing happened where her brain circuitry opened up and much like in the wild where in the case of herd animals, the babies become familiar with the mother's sound, sense, look, everything.
[40] All the senses are acute.
[41] They're aware of where they are so that they can find each other amidst these thousands of animals.
[42] Well, this happened to her.
[43] So the brain circuitry opens, suddenly I'm imprinted on her.
[44] I wasn't prepared to leave Marine Land unless it was of the understanding that I can continue to help her because historically my relationship with her, you know, had everything to do with her health and well -being.
[45] I quit with the understanding with Marine Land.
[46] This was to be the case.
[47] I'd been gone for a month.
[48] I come back unannounced.
[49] They don't want to let me in.
[50] They're hiding something.
[51] I get in.
[52] I see her.
[53] she's in terrible shape I snap a few photos I leave now amidst this I say terrible shape what do you mean she was emaciated she was bone dry she hadn't eaten in my having been gone a month was the longest she and I have ever actually been physically apart I'd been trying to wean my presence off of her so that other trainers could be able to maintain a healthy healthy diet for her healthy lifestyle she was emaciated because she wasn't eating Because it's trash?
[54] I wasn't there for that month.
[55] I can't say, but she was certainly not eating.
[56] She was super skinny.
[57] They had her, of course, on a bunch of drugs, which include psychotics, valium, antidepressants.
[58] When I saw her, my jaw hit the floor.
[59] It's important to note that during this, some newspapers had been calling.
[60] They wanted to know why I quit.
[61] If we back up a little bit, it should be noted that in 2007, my relationship with Smushy sort of took off in the early sort of internet viral days and whatnot.
[62] We made front page of like CNN and Jimmy Kimmel did a piece.
[63] And so there was sort of that backstory of the, you know, I guess you would call it a fluff celebrity type thing.
[64] But nonetheless, my having left started, started to ask questions.
[65] I started fielding calls from this newspaper who was looking, who was keen on doing an investigation of Marine land.
[66] So I wasn't going to participate.
[67] I had no interest, again, stressing Marine land's litigious history.
[68] And also, look, I've got this relationship with a walrus that I sort of have to maintain.
[69] I have to keep this relationship with Marine Land healthy enough.
[70] So once I'd realized they weren't holding on to that end of the bargain, you know, the panic sets in.
[71] I'm a first time mom.
[72] It should be stressed.
[73] So I basically called the newspapers and I said, you put my face, my name.
[74] It doesn't matter.
[75] You just print it.
[76] Let's go.
[77] Let's get the story out.
[78] Story gets out.
[79] Well, Marine Land, as expected.
[80] starts their lawsuits.
[81] It's like a, it's almost like a scorched earth.
[82] They take a scorched earth, uh, sort of a method.
[83] And this was when the original owner was alive.
[84] He's no longer alive.
[85] He died during this.
[86] He died last year in, uh, in June, in fact.
[87] So, uh, years into this litigation.
[88] So, um, they sued me. They sued me for a million five.
[89] They sued my girlfriend.
[90] They sued other activists.
[91] They sued newspapers.
[92] They, they're suing everybody.
[93] the mistake they made is in all of their absurd allegations that they've yet six and a half years into into litigation yet to prove any of it they cannot it's never going to happen it doesn't exist it's a fictitious lawsuit it's full of lies and bullshit bottom line the mistake they made is they sued me for plotting to steal smushy that's where the headlines take off and they also called me the conier west of animal training yeah i remember we went That's how I got your attention on the internet.
[94] No, no, no, that's not how you got my attention.
[95] I sent you a tweet.
[96] I sent you a tweet.
[97] Yeah, but the Kanye West part didn't get my.
[98] Well, no, you said they called you.
[99] The tweet was, I said, Joe, you just say when I'll book a flight to come to L .A. I sent you the link to the story.
[100] The headline was Kanye West of Animal Training being sued for plotting the steel of Walrus.
[101] You wrote, they called you the what?
[102] And then you slid into the DMs and said, dude, if you're ever in L .A., I said, you just say when.
[103] Well, I started reading the story.
[104] When I started, I've, you know, I wrote a. a piece a long time ago on my blog and um i talked about it in one of my comedy specials that i had a crazy experience with dolphins once um when it was really really high and i had this um i mean it sounds silly to even talk about but i almost feel like i i kind of understood that they are like us but they just don't alter their environment well i realized like when they were playing with us when they were jumping by the boat and they were looking at you.
[105] They were looking at you while they were jumping around with the boat.
[106] And I was like, they're playing and they're looking at you like a person would, like a water person.
[107] Interacting.
[108] There's almost a language at this point.
[109] There's some level of bridged gap in the communication when you get to see that they're expressing themselves in interest in you and whatnot and scoping you.
[110] When you get really close and establish a relationship with these animals, that's when things start getting real squirrelly because you start to find that happy medium language.
[111] And now, all of a sudden you are starting to sort of speak, so to say.
[112] Well, I started getting really weird feelings about seaworld and animal captivity.
[113] Like, this, why do we need that in this day and age?
[114] Like, this isn't the dark ages.
[115] We shouldn't be put in whales and orcas and dolphins, putting them in these tanks, these fucking water, swimming pools.
[116] They're fucking swimming pools.
[117] and you have these things that are probably as smart as us in some different way.
[118] Like, we're so prejudiced in that we only think of intelligence as something that can manipulate its environment.
[119] That's our problem.
[120] Like, we're like, look at them.
[121] They're bitch -ass world.
[122] They don't have any houses.
[123] They can't write a letter.
[124] They're fucking stupid, man. Stop it.
[125] They're stupid.
[126] But the dolphins apparently have a cerebral cortex that's something around 40 % larger than a human beings.
[127] They have super complex languages.
[128] They're emotional intelligence.
[129] is the mystery, and it appears that it's far beyond anything we ourselves can understand.
[130] Same as Orcas.
[131] They've got that, they've got another part of the brain in the front, which is its function, in the front of the cerebral cortex, that function is to, as for communication and for, and for it, it enhances their emotional capacity to a point where we don't really know the depth of which they are, the power of their emotion, but we know that they stay with their families for their lifetimes the males born from from the mothers will will rarely leave the mother's side quite literally the distance of an orca itself the only time that male will go on is when it's matured and it will go to uh so it's procreate and then back to the mother and it will live its entire life as such and the sad fact about that is in my experience uh working with male orcas caught from the one of which caught from the wild a big bull orca is he was a mama's boy you can see something was missing he was traumatized from something and of course even myself as a regarded whale expert in the capacity of working at a freaking place like marine land even i would have never known this information when i started this this is not information that was available to us back and i started in 2000 it makes sense now this animal is traumatized from birth he's his will to live is just gone it and it the male it appears to me and in my experience the male sex of, well, I've worked with seals, I've worked with sea lions, I've worked with walruses, dolphins, belugas, and orcas, all of them die younger.
[132] The males die younger.
[133] And I think, well, definitely in the orcas and the dolphins cases is they just don't have that will to live without that strong maternal figure in their life.
[134] This is what I try to explain to people that don't see it.
[135] and they think that the dolphins get treated well or the orcas get treated well.
[136] This is what, imagine, if someone stole your son and put him in an air box at the bottom of the ocean.
[137] And dolphins and whales and fish just came by and stared at them.
[138] Imagine.
[139] And he lives his life like that with no contact other than with his dolphin handlers or whoever's taken care of him.
[140] And he just lives in this box missing his family, missing his loved ones missing his life confused lost and with with a language that is especially with orcas and dolphins they have a language that's so complex we haven't been able to really decipher it we don't understand how it works you know john lilly spent they spent i think decades working on trying to get dolphins to speak human noises he had a bunch of studies that he did and um he even had a it's a crazy story I'm sure you've heard of it.
[141] The woman who lived with the dolphin, she tried to establish a relationship with the dolphin where they made an apartment that was half underwater, but the dolphin always wanted to fuck.
[142] So she just jerked the dolphin off.
[143] And when she jerked the dolphin off, that was the only thing that calmed him down.
[144] And then she could do her work.
[145] So for her, it was just like a technicality.
[146] I just got to jerk this dolphin off.
[147] It's an animal.
[148] It wants to be rubbed.
[149] All the moral stuff that's attached to that is all in my own head.
[150] She's like, I'm just going to be a scientist.
[151] And they were like, guys, get that fuck.
[152] What?
[153] I think they were also injecting ketamine into the dolphins or something as well.
[154] I do not know if they were doing that into dolphins, but I do know that they did some experiments with LSD and that John Lilly, who is one of my personal heroes, he's the creator of the flotation tank.
[155] This was all John Lilly stuff.
[156] He was a pioneer in interspecies communication.
[157] He would take acid and think that he was communicating with dolphins.
[158] Did you know you're on the cover of one of his books?
[159] What?
[160] Yes.
[161] What are you talking about him?
[162] Your face is, I mean, it's, it's a spitting image on, in one of his books.
[163] One of Lily's books?
[164] Dude, I just have to look this up.
[165] Maybe even a simple Google search of traveler shit.
[166] Dude, it's in, there you are.
[167] How is that not you, man?
[168] I'm sorry.
[169] How is that not you?
[170] That's fucking weird, man. That's fucking weird.
[171] Yeah.
[172] Wow.
[173] So that's, I can't read that.
[174] What does it say something?
[175] The human, bio computer.
[176] Yeah.
[177] I didn't read that one.
[178] I read the deep cell.
[179] though the deep self's really interesting um and the deep self i think the deep self is the one that also has um diagrams on how to build a tank he was trying to get people to build tanks he was like listen man i found some shit out you got to try this the last time i was here uh not the last time two times ago you actually uh sent me to crash yeah my man crash out to crash at the float lab yeah and he uh you know i thought i'd be in there for an hour it turns i was in there for a couple And when I came out, I'm like, dude, I was waiting for the knock.
[180] He's just like, oh, no, man. I was just letting you stay in there.
[181] I'm like, oh, shit.
[182] I'm looking at the time going.
[183] Crash is like a legit hippie.
[184] Oh, yeah.
[185] Oh, yeah.
[186] He's great.
[187] He's great.
[188] He's the mad scientist behind Float Lab.
[189] Yeah.
[190] That's why those things are so well engineered.
[191] When I met him, I was like, what?
[192] I was like, tanks before that, when I, I first got a tank in like 2002, 2002, 2003.
[193] and um it was uh it was great but it was like it would break things would go wrong it flooded my basement it was like there was disasters it wasn't and then um my friend who was a tank technician there's actually tank technicians he said listen you got to check out this guy in venice so some mad scientist down there in venice was just making these super over engineered float tanks and he goes they look like walk in meat lockers right i was like what and then you had a pod you had like a pod installed I had, um, it was a very good tank.
[194] It's just that, uh, it just, it wasn't as well constructed.
[195] It also wasn't nearly as expensive.
[196] It just, he went the distance.
[197] He went the distance.
[198] And he still keeps, it keeps coming over here.
[199] I've got to change things.
[200] We're upgrading.
[201] We're doing it.
[202] It's like he's always, good for him, man. He's trying to enhance the experience for everyone.
[203] Yeah, he's always trying to make it better.
[204] He's the front of the line.
[205] And when I first started working with him, like when I first started having him on the podcast and, and I hired him to, the build me a tank and all that jazz.
[206] Like, there was no tanks.
[207] It was, it was real rare that you'd find tank centers.
[208] Now they're fucking everywhere, man. They're everywhere.
[209] Well, say this.
[210] The experience I had in his tank versus the one that I, there's a local place from where, where I'm from, uh, was hands down, a different experience because he really isolates you there.
[211] Whereas this was like a pod that they bought and installed in a room.
[212] I mean, it was great place.
[213] Well, his is super insulated.
[214] So there's no fucking noise getting in that thing.
[215] And he gave me the tour, the whole backstage tour, I was all back there checking I was like, wow, man. Yes, he's got a serious complex there.
[216] It's hard to appreciate.
[217] But when he first started making tanks like that, which, like, again, I think I bought one of his tanks in 2005, I think, somewhere around then.
[218] Dude, there was no one making anything like that.
[219] He was, he's making these super high -end crazy fucking double wall insulated tanks.
[220] And you get in there, it's just nothing.
[221] Yeah.
[222] Just nothing.
[223] And you just, whoa.
[224] You sort of get swallowed into the nowhere.
[225] Oh, you just get taken into the, this, and it's a good place to think about the subject that we're talking about today.
[226] We've got to stop doing that with dolphins and orcas.
[227] It's going to be thought of the same way we think about slavery today.
[228] It's, that it's horrific, we can't understand it, and we can't believe that compassionate human beings would be willing to isolate members of a super social, highly intelligent animal species and just put them in swimming pools.
[229] it's fucking barbaric it's crazy it's torture it's what's sad here is you know we're years removed from the documentary blackfish yeah and you know that was really impactful i mean arguably responsible for the paradigm shift that we're that we're experiencing here in north america and other places of course um but maybe it's time for people to revisit it i know sea world uh their stock and their value is sort of going up now granted they you know they change their numbers they skew it they have free beer day they pump the numbers up you know they have all these different promotions, whatever.
[230] I mean, everything that comes out of these, these facilities, these, assume it to be all bullshit, by the way.
[231] It's all bullshit, but not enough people question them on it.
[232] But as we speak, while we're amid sort of a paradigm shift here, and I mean, I can speak to it because, I mean, I'm very happy to say that we have very effectively decimated marine land, and we'll talk more about that.
[233] But over in China, this is now a burgeoning business night.
[234] And we discussed this a year and a half ago, and it's tenfold now.
[235] It's happening very quickly.
[236] And I'm sure you're familiar with the whale jail situation in Russia.
[237] Have you seen that?
[238] No, I am not.
[239] They've got enclosed in this bay.
[240] They've got over a hundred wild -cut bulugas and orcas.
[241] So there's about 10 orcas, if I'm not mistaken.
[242] And some activists flew a drone over it.
[243] This got worldwide attention, a lot of outcry, a lot of anger, of course.
[244] So what happened was...
[245] Jamie Showing it to us right now for the full.
[246] folks that are listening, and we're looking down at what looks like swimming pools with, uh, I guess those are belugas.
[247] Those have all been sold.
[248] Those are essentially sold and ready to go to China.
[249] Uh, but on account of the fact that the activists got this and created a real worldwide stink, um, all the negative press that came of it, uh, they've now resolved that they want to try to, well, they've, they've, they've hard considered, uh, releases, um, the governor in the area signed a intent to release agreement with the whale sanctuary project who sent a team to assess the animal's health and whatnot.
[250] And this was all of like three weeks ago.
[251] It's not a long time ago.
[252] And they assessed that all these animals should be released.
[253] It's a couple of issues.
[254] There's a couple of things that that are becoming conflicting.
[255] A, it's going to require a lot of cost if it's done responsibly.
[256] B, it appears.
[257] Okay.
[258] So what's happened is as we know, Russia is not exactly a democratic environment.
[259] Only one person makes the decisions.
[260] On account of what becomes of these whales, whereas there was some PR stunts to say, hey, we're going to, we want to release them.
[261] We want to do this to sort of mitigate the global outrage.
[262] The captors have propagandized this entire effort to, to free these whales as a means for the West to undermine the Russia's economy, so the whale trade economy.
[263] Here's where marine land comes into place.
[264] in a theory at this point, but it has these very intense implications.
[265] What we know about what Marine Land is doing currently in their transition from brilliantly successful business to virtually decimated, thank you, is they're shipping their whales out.
[266] We know two are going out.
[267] If it's not this week, it'll be very soon.
[268] I'll be shocked if they're not out.
[269] I'm in LA, so I can't say that it's happening right now.
[270] I think it may be very well be happening this week.
[271] They're going to Spain.
[272] We know that five other permits have been requested to send these animals now to the states.
[273] So was it they're liquidating?
[274] They're the intent.
[275] Yeah, they're going to liquidating.
[276] But the issue is if in fact Russia catches wind that marine land is sending their whales, let's use the worst case scenario to China.
[277] It validates the Russian captors propaganda and concerns.
[278] Suddenly what we're concerned is going to happen is those animals suddenly Putin says forget it, sell them, ship them out.
[279] That's a scenario.
[280] Why would you do that?
[281] Because again, the captors of propaganda is that the West wants to cripple the Russia's economy, their wild whale sale economy.
[282] So if marine land is selling whales to China from Canada, then suddenly the captors have a point.
[283] They'll say to Putin, look, they're selling whales.
[284] Why is it such an outrage that Russia's doing it when marine land's doing it?
[285] So there's that concern.
[286] The other one, and this just came up within the last 20 hours, is it appears rather than go the most responsible route, which we know is going to be a costly endeavor, but, you know, we're game and we're ready, is, uh, they're now considering just dropping the nets and saying, see you later.
[287] And letting all the animals go.
[288] Here's what we suspect.
[289] They're going to let the orcas go because they were captured illegally.
[290] There's some gray area as to whether the beluga whales have been captured illegally or not.
[291] So I think it'll probably start with the Orcas.
[292] Rather than move them to where they were at the same time of year when they were captured so that they can be next to their transient pods or their pods, they just want to drop this net and say, see you later.
[293] Well, that's as irresponsible as it can get.
[294] But that's crazy.
[295] It's like making someone a slave for how many years?
[296] and letting them move somewhere on the planet.
[297] But imagine their hope you can imagine would be, oh, see, it didn't work.
[298] Oh, Jesus.
[299] There's a lot of, there's a, this is a big issue.
[300] We're on it.
[301] There's a great team of activists over there.
[302] Would it be accurate to say that maybe what these groups are doing right now is recognizing that there's probably going to be some radical changes in the way these things are permitted, what's legal, what's not legal, and what.
[303] what people were tolerating is just not the same as it was 10 years ago.
[304] Catch them and sell them as fast as you can.
[305] Yeah, just get out while you can because it might come a point in time when not only could they not sell it, but they might be responsible for doing exactly what you said and bringing it back to the area where its family would be, which would be an incredible cost.
[306] It would be an incredible cost.
[307] It would be an undertaking unlike any other rescue that we know of.
[308] How much would something like that cost?
[309] I can't even imagine.
[310] I mean, I would be the wrong person to ask, I can't put a figure on it.
[311] I just know that it would take a lot of time.
[312] There would be a lot of dedicated, I mean, we would need to track the pods.
[313] Yeah, you'd have to figure it out.
[314] You'd need vessels that would be able to bring the whales out.
[315] And you would have to be able to somehow know they'd get it close enough to the other whales without freaking them out.
[316] It's a whole thing, but it's possible.
[317] I mean, that's the important part.
[318] Fuck, man. It's just one of those things that I really think as people we're going to look back on and we're going to go, man, how did we, in 2019 not know that that was insane.
[319] That is not a chicken.
[320] You know what I'm saying?
[321] I mean, that's not like something you could just keep in a cage.
[322] That's that So let's back up to as you know, for well over four and a half years, five years now.
[323] I've been advocating for Bill S203, which is a ban which is a national Canada wide ban against whale and dolphin and porpo's captivity so that would include no more breeding, no more import, no more export, any of that, okay?
[324] During these, this by the way, going down as the longest bill ever researched in Canadian history because it's been a lot of issues from opposition.
[325] One senator in particular, in fact, if I can have a moment to just give Senator Don Plet a big old, I win you piece of shit.
[326] Which camera do I look at for that?
[327] I win you piece of shit.
[328] Sorry, I should be more humble.
[329] Was that the other guy, the lawyer on the other side?
[330] No, no, this is the senator that has put every possible block in front of the past of this bill.
[331] He's tried to kill it silently forever.
[332] I mean, this is an epic, epic story.
[333] We've had to, as activists and the community at large, and again, I have to stress how much you've had a hand in this is I've had to have these campaigns where we literally flood the Senate servers to the point of crashing it on a couple of instances where they were going to kill the bill very silently through a sort of procedure.
[334] His role is a, it's called the Senate whip.
[335] So he actually yields a lot of influence and power.
[336] He, he, uh, creates the committees where people do the studies and everything.
[337] He sets the, uh, the dates for the committees.
[338] I mean, he had this thing studied for like 17 straight months.
[339] It was absurd.
[340] Again, the longest tenure in, uh, in, uh, Canadian legislative history, it appears, but this guy was, you know, doing his, uh, his, uh, so he was, do you think that, what do you think?
[341] Like, why was he doing that?
[342] He's one of these guys who looks at this bill and he sees it as a activist, sort of left wing.
[343] He's, he's one of these guys.
[344] liberal sort of fluff bill he doesn't see that it's necessary he went to marine land as an invited guest he's very publicly declared his friendships for John Holer I don't want to speculate as to whether there's been any money exchanges but I know he's certainly very interested in killing this bill and by virtue alone of activists pressuring and exposing all of his efforts we actually saved this bill on a number of occasions the most notable of which was just a few weeks ago where uh in the house of commons it appeared this bill was going to die and literally at the 11th hour i packed up we drove to ottawa i had a tweet storm set up we put pressure on i tweeted individual senators or rather individual members of uh of parliament and uh i promised them and you know this is a sensitive time in canadian politics for just and trudeau the leader of the liberal party i i promised them if this bill dies on account of the fact that what was happening was the liberals were going to propose amendments to the bill at the last second.
[345] That would send it back to the Senate for further review, at which point we know Don Plet was waiting in light to kill it.
[346] There was nothing we could do at this point.
[347] This was going to be his to kill.
[348] The fact that this was being facilitated by liberals was really an infuriating thing.
[349] But nonetheless, we applied an incredible amount of pressure.
[350] I drove my eyes down there.
[351] I got there.
[352] And I stood in front of every which one of them.
[353] And I looked them all in the eyes.
[354] I'm just like, I'm going to make you famous.
[355] I'm going to make you famous.
[356] And I'm going to make you famous.
[357] And I'm going to make you famous.
[358] and I don't want to speculate if that's what saved the day although it was mentioned in the House of Commons that special interest pressured them at the last second but in a in a last Is that legal?
[359] Can you say that to someone?
[360] I'm going to make you famous.
[361] I think it's my most effective tool.
[362] It's like a scene from like, what's that?
[363] What was the cowboy movie where Val Kilmer played Doc Holliday?
[364] remember tombstone yeah sounds like a line in tombstone right no you know what it's from uh the one with the bon jovi song you know those those you know shot down a blaze of glory you know you know those those those uh those cute guys in the it was of the 80s or 90s that were all like did a western movie together guns yes that's it's from that I'm gonna make you famous oh shit sorry I knew I'd heard it's from somewhere I think it's from that well I'd hope to I'd hope it was my line but nonetheless it's what's Emilio Estevez this is arguably the campiest cheesiest of the cowboy movies right is it the campiest today I didn't see it I don't know they're all handsome handsome devils um sorry so I show up and literally they right before the meeting starts the entire committee stands up and leaves the room now we're there and we're prepared for this to die I'm there for a funeral they come back in the conservative members of the committee propose their amendments the liberals which outweigh the uh the conservatives are you know they're all voting so they're just knocking these things down knocking them down knocking them down and then suddenly it comes to the liberals time to propose their amendments first guy comes up and he says i'd like to withdraw my amendment noted on the record sits down okay we'll go to number two I'd like to withdraw my amendment sits down number three I'd like to withdraw my amendment we're like holy shit I'm looking back you know I've got some we've got some people there that obviously with the same interest as me and you know I don't even know exactly what's going on at this point I just know that their faces are indicative that this we might win this thing and the fourth member of parliament stands up he withdraws the amendment and we save this thing in the last second And I absolutely know it was a pressure campaign because, like I said, I was going to come on this podcast.
[365] I'd already had this date written for some time.
[366] And this was going to have political implications that I don't know that the Liberal Party could have sustained.
[367] It's a really bad time.
[368] I think this came from the top down.
[369] Whereas efforts to kill it came from the bottom up.
[370] This came from the top down.
[371] You're not killing that bill.
[372] I think people are understanding what dolphin captivity really is, what orchid captivity really is.
[373] I think they're understanding that now And I think it's just one of those things that exists Because it's always existed But if it didn't exist now There's no fucking way anybody would ever let you do it If there was no captive dolphins and orcas If someone just went around and kidnapped them With what scientists know now About their social structure and their community Dude they're so complex The way they have fucking dialects right It's they have dialects Orcas have, they have, they share languages in different regions and actually have a different accent of sorts.
[374] I mean, it's, uh, it's really remarkable stuff.
[375] Yeah, right.
[376] It would be a global outrage if today, as day one, someone said, hey, look at this thing.
[377] Let's put this in this box.
[378] I mean, because we have them already.
[379] Well, because we have them and there's some legacy businesses that have been around for a long time.
[380] That's a great way of putting it.
[381] Um, you know, they have the means to fight.
[382] They know now that, look, this is not going so well.
[383] you can you can see it in all the advertising uh these days uh sea world almost rarely shows any orcas in their commercials although it seems the industry is uh sort of switching to baby walruses in fact they're they're they're they're the new orcas they're sort of the new brandable cute um yeah it really is it's happening all over it's happening in canada as well the vancouver aquarium is running with it um yeah and same as seaworld if you go to their their twitter it's you know i can't say that present day it's it's like literally the case today, but yeah, a lot of baby walrus stuff.
[384] It's where it's going.
[385] It's just they know that they can run with that, at least for the time being.
[386] What's crazy in all this is here this bill is passing.
[387] Now, we know it's going to pass.
[388] It should be, it should get royal assent come second week of June, uh, shy of some, some catastrophe.
[389] This thing will become law.
[390] Um, that's why marine land is trying to get rid of these whales as quickly as they can.
[391] They got to get them out of here because at least now they can just, well, It sounds like two export permits have been approved.
[392] So two beluga whales are going to Spain.
[393] You know, now granted that's being facilitated through the Vancouver Aquarium.
[394] This becomes an ugly mess here because when it comes to zoos, they're all part of these associations, okay?
[395] And these are industry voices.
[396] Anytime you're told, wow, this is an AZA accredited facility.
[397] You know, most schools, for instance, or general people would say, oh, well, it's accredited.
[398] It's a good place.
[399] No, no, no, no. What that means is these places facilitate.
[400] animal transfers and whatnot to other member facilities.
[401] It's really just a club.
[402] And this club protects the interests of these parks and keeps any type of oversight lack.
[403] They're lobby groups, basically.
[404] So what's happened is now through the Vancouver Aquarium, marine land, so marine land is sending these whales to Spain, but they're claiming them to be Vancouver Aquarium, uh, whales, which is not true.
[405] They were never on these animals inventory or rather this facilities inventory list.
[406] There's never been any knowledge of any of this.
[407] But what's happened is because Vancouver aquarium is accredited and has an affiliation with the AZA.
[408] So in Canada, we call it CASA, the Canadian Association is used in aquarium.
[409] And Marine Land is in fact not.
[410] They no longer have their accreditation.
[411] They didn't have the best of relationships shortly after all of our revelations.
[412] It's all just, right now it's just, the industry as a whole is breaking all of its own rules to facilitate getting these beluga whales marine land has 51 of them okay there's five born every year but they always have 51 and they don't they haven't shipped an orca out in nearly a decade at this point um i mean you do the math that what's going on exactly so they're dying they always have 51 they don't ship them anywhere else i can attest that yes uh when i was there and in my experience and you know you have to watch my words because i know marine land's lawyer Andrew Burns is listening.
[413] Hi, Andrew.
[414] I'll see you next week.
[415] In my experience, yeah, you're, for as many animals are born, you're just about losing as many.
[416] So you'll lose two old ones.
[417] You'll lose three young ones.
[418] Not all the ones that are born are going to be successful, just about half are.
[419] So what's happening now is the industry wants that bloodline.
[420] There's 51 captive orcas, whereas, you know, there's a lot of controversy in importing animals from other places.
[421] The states can't, in fact, they can't bring them in from Russia without a public consult period.
[422] it might still be the case with Canada.
[423] So actually the public might actually be consulted about the import of these five belugas that marine land is seeking permit for to export.
[424] So that's something that certainly as an activist level, I'll be, I'll be, you know, helping to guide towards the proper resolution.
[425] But yeah, that's all happening.
[426] It is a race right now to get rid of marine land animals.
[427] And, uh, I've had it is a wild time.
[428] It's a wild time to be inside the doors at marine land.
[429] as I can imagine, in the fences.
[430] And it's a most wild time for me to be on the outside because I've never in the last six and a half years of litigation and just of my advocacy and being sort of, you know, basically being engaged in war with Marine Land.
[431] I've never seen them work harder to suppress me and to try to silence me than they are now.
[432] As breaking news just today, Marine Land had built this fence, aptly named Phil's fence, around the park.
[433] And just today we found out, they blacked it all out with tarps because come, uh, this Saturday, uh, May 18th and certainly I'm inviting everyone to come join me. Uh, I'll be joining as an, as a guest, uh, a big demonstration outside of Marine land and we're going to protest it.
[434] Uh, as they're, as they're anticipating because on account of my coming on this show, they worked very hard to try to keep me from a coming, B, speaking of anything.
[435] thing.
[436] C, certainly not promoting this event.
[437] So I certainly hope that this event is a, is a, is a well -attended.
[438] How do they try to do that?
[439] Well, because we're in litigation, what happens in litigation is you come to a point where you start to negotiate.
[440] And so there's things that they want from me. There's things they really want from me. They want my silence.
[441] The problem is they're never going to silence me. It's not an option.
[442] I've said it before, I'll say it again.
[443] They can offer me a million dollars to shut up, go away.
[444] It's not going to happen.
[445] I'm not going to delete my Twitter.
[446] I'm not going to delete any of my tweets that have the word marine land in them.
[447] Is this a request?
[448] This is layers and layers.
[449] And there have been layers of requests.
[450] Basically, they'd hope that I wouldn't come here.
[451] They'd hoped something could be worked out.
[452] in our litigation we have so now i chased marine lands so back when marine land's owner was still alive uh i put forth a huge campaign to try to get him to be examined legally by my lawyer much like i've uh had to sort of submit myself to um but as these lawsuits and as as litigation continues to reveal itself as just a perfect method of abuse you know that they're just the only resolve these things appear to serve is to exhaust both parties and have them come together with a resolution.
[453] So after six and a half years, Marine Land seems intent on a resolution.
[454] They don't want to go to examinations.
[455] So while we were in, so while I was there to be examined a couple weeks ago, my lawyer said, take a walk.
[456] And the two lawyers began their talks.
[457] We put off the examination because we believed there could be some good faith that could be shown between parties.
[458] it became quite evident that it was not the case and when we were to resume our examinations which was to be last week Marine land on account of the fact that I was coming on this show through an absolute tirade and said we are not doing this now bear in mind this is a court ordered examination date I've got a trial coordinator who is trying to nudge this thing forward because I mean that's something that's a motion I had to win in the litigation itself is to try to get some someone to look at this thing so that it can actually move forward.
[459] Like let's get someone to manage it.
[460] So we're in case management.
[461] So that case management judge has issued a very aggressive schedule.
[462] It's in back in February, we had a court date of which thank you very much.
[463] I won, uh, handedly.
[464] Marine land had to pick up, uh, just a little more than $12 ,000 of my legal bill, which is really on this particular motion in this event, uh, kind of a drop in the pan, but, um, nonetheless, a, a sound victory in court.
[465] um you know we have a case conference call next week now i don't know where this stands because now marine land has breached the court's order so we went they didn't show up to the examination i got uh a fourth uh what's called a um certificate of non attendance it means the person that was supposed to be examined that they didn't show up uh marine land's owner john holler who's now passed away uh didn't show up to two of his examinations knowing full well that i'd have to pick up the 1700 bucks to just to be there to get the certificate and he's just not going to show up no big deal there doesn't seem to be any punitive damage at their end they they i mean we're almost seven years into this thing and they're still like brutalizing me but we're at a point where they're actually in a very uncomfortable position of having to keep this thing if you don't want this litigation to be on the public record and transcripts and evidence and everything you have to stop it seems to me the courts uh appear to facilitate resolutions of that sort they like settlements, I was promised to trial on day one.
[466] It's what kept me going.
[467] They're lying about me. They're lying about everything.
[468] Everything they're saying.
[469] And they're trying to exhaust you financially.
[470] Well, of course they are.
[471] I mean, that's, so the premise is, are you countersuing them as well?
[472] I'm countersuing.
[473] The premise of my countersuit is so that they couldn't merely drop the lawsuit against me over a period of time and then that just be it.
[474] And that I would, I would then have to actually file a motion to get some cost back.
[475] I'd be lucky to get 50 % and everything in the early days my lawyer said let's sue them back and so we did I'm suing them for abuse of process they're using the courts time resources they I mean even for that matter we can extend that to the police and other you know departments and organizations they're exhausting these things in bad faith they're doing it because they just want to try to basically they want to take away my right to free expression which is a Canadian chartered right I mean I'm protecting my own history here I mean this is insanity I can't even believe that after six and a half years I'm still here at risk of being silenced that the fact that I mean look full disclosure I'm out of money the last time I was on this show we raised I mean and again thank you so much 60 maybe almost 70 ,000 that's in a year and a half that's gone I spent my last penny last month it was a very aggressive last three months do you have a go fund me?
[476] I have a go fund me give out the information yes please what is it it's if you go to save Smushy .com, S -A -V -E -S -M -O -S -H -I .com.
[477] You can go there.
[478] There's a small documentary.
[479] It's a little dated now, but on account of the fact that legislation, nothing's really moved forward in the lawsuit and the legislation is only just wrapping up.
[480] It's still very current.
[481] So please spend the 14 minutes to sort of appreciate the story more.
[482] I guess you'll get a better, more context to it.
[483] There's, you know, some footage in there, some backstage stuff.
[484] It tells the tale quite well.
[485] It's a, it's a good piece.
[486] Yeah, folks, if you're, if you're hearing this, please help it out if you can.
[487] You know, just say it all the time.
[488] It's the thing I hate to do most is ask for help.
[489] It really makes me. Well, your intentions are pure.
[490] You know, you really are a person who is going about this because you feel like you are uniquely qualified to talk about it.
[491] You have the actual information.
[492] You know what's wrong.
[493] You know, and you are a part of the system.
[494] You understand it better than anybody on the outside.
[495] And they have my walrus.
[496] And they have your wall.
[497] walrus still we think and so when and so when in the litigation my lawyer says well here's what marine land's prepared to offer i say to my lawyer but what about the walrus and he says to me dude we talked about this this is crazy you're not getting a walrus and i said to marine land i don't want no money not a penny i want the walrus there's two left uh three have died in the last it's really in mere months uh secretly i find out what would you What did you do with her?
[498] I mean, ideally what I would like is I just want her transferred at this point to another facility.
[499] I would love to see her transfer to the Vancouver Aquarium or there's a facility in Quebec as well.
[500] I just want to be a possible, I just want to possibly be in her life.
[501] If she needs me, which we, I mean, there's a reason she's one of two still alive.
[502] If I would have commented, listen, would you move to Vancouver?
[503] If suddenly Dan Bilzerian gets on the horn says, Phil, I got this, uh, well, actually, well, wait, there's a back story to that too.
[504] I actually got some beef with him inadvertently, but we'll get back to that.
[505] But, you know, if he were to suddenly say, hey, I got this Arctic beachfront home and, dude, I'll buy you a walrus.
[506] Yeah, I'll move.
[507] Absolutely.
[508] I mean, she's got another 10 years of her life.
[509] Do you know, there's only one way I want this walrus to be with this walrus?
[510] Play the music.
[511] Is there a better end to this to the story?
[512] I mean, really, it all sounds so crazy, Joe, but here six, six and a half years ago, I was like, I want the walrus.
[513] Right.
[514] Suddenly, here I am negotiating for a walrus.
[515] Call me crazy, but look at this.
[516] So are they.
[517] willing to negotiate for the walrus?
[518] Is this actually in consideration?
[519] Yes, not without layers and layers of compromise.
[520] And, but bear in mind, not in the capacity that I see it, more of a, yeah, maybe, maybe we won't send her to China.
[521] How's that?
[522] Maybe we'll send her somewhere and not deter that facility from you visiting.
[523] Maybe we could do that for you.
[524] That's what, I mean, it's, it's really bad faith negotiate.
[525] The problem with, the thing that I have a hard time dealing with is, look, we're in litigation.
[526] In litigation, you have to exercise a certain amount of decorum, and it's not exactly my strong point.
[527] It's just not.
[528] I find decorum to be just a thick layer of bullshit.
[529] I just do.
[530] You want to hope that there's going to be some type of good faith negotiation.
[531] I want that.
[532] Marine land negotiates with additional hostilities and threats.
[533] It's not worked for them in six and a half years.
[534] What makes you think it's going to work now?
[535] So here I think we're going down a path of possibly good, good faith negotiations.
[536] The owner, the villain of the story is gone.
[537] He's out of the picture.
[538] The new president who is the widow, the wife is a wonderful woman.
[539] I mean, listen, if I honestly and truly believe if the lawyer himself wasn't the controlling mind of the business now, he's sort of facilitating this transfer of the business as it was to just being sold off, pieced off and, you know, distribute the wealth to the remaining family members, I think that we could, I think the story ends.
[540] on a good note.
[541] I mean, I have no hostilities.
[542] You know, I have every reason in the world to despise the man who sued me. And I don't.
[543] I don't even think about him.
[544] It was never about that.
[545] They made every case in the world, every argument that this was personal between me and him.
[546] Well, that's because you look in the camera and say, fuck you to people.
[547] It's personal between me and Don Pleit.
[548] You bet your ass.
[549] That's a different story.
[550] But you know what I'm saying?
[551] Did I make him famous?
[552] Well, you...
[553] In a way.
[554] Maybe.
[555] Maybe.
[556] So, where do you stand right now?
[557] well I don't know so next week we're having a case management the case manager is going to talk and we're going to see what becomes of marine lands once again skipped examination it's so hard to believe this is still going on dude welcome to my from the from the time you first came on the podcast to now that this has been just this scratch and claw every day of my life I live with this looming cloud of threat of like there's people of out there that really want me, I'm not talking physical threat.
[558] Okay, they did, they played their games.
[559] You know, I called every one of their bluffs, every, at every corner of this thing, but, you know, there's something about.
[560] When you say they played their games.
[561] Oh, they send goons to my house.
[562] There's video, in fact, that there's on that documentary you'll see these, they send some tough guys.
[563] I mean, they were sending people at 6 a .m. harassing my girlfriend while she's taking the garbage out.
[564] I mean, it really got pretty intense, um, but we stood our ground.
[565] I was like, this is not going to go down like this.
[566] It's like, you're fucking with the wrong.
[567] guy, dude.
[568] Like, listen, I come from a place called Welland, Ontario.
[569] I don't know that you're familiar with it.
[570] I'm going to assume not.
[571] Probably few people are, unless you're an avid hockey fan, because we have produced some pretty amazing NHL talent.
[572] But, you know, this population of like 50 ,000.
[573] I'm a wellander.
[574] I don't know any other, and I'm Frenchman.
[575] I mean, it's probably another thing to stress, but I don't know any other way to deal with things other than sort of fight it out, you know, you don't cower and run.
[576] You don't, you know, you stare the threat, especially when you're on the right side of things.
[577] I'm not going to sit there and take shit.
[578] I'm not going to, it's not going to work for them to continuously try to threaten me because, dude, I'm invested and I'm not talking money.
[579] I'm in on, it's like a hostage situation.
[580] It's how it started.
[581] My only interest is ending the hostage situation.
[582] Not my only interest.
[583] I shouldn't say that.
[584] Of course not.
[585] I have interest in, you know, I've been advocating for bills and obviously advocating letting people know that, you know, sort of taking the, you know, veil off the bullshit that the industry purports to be.
[586] You feel like you're negotiating for a hostage in Smooshy.
[587] They're they're using her as that type of chip.
[588] Yeah.
[589] That's their bargaining chip.
[590] That's what they got.
[591] And they're keeping this constant pressure on you.
[592] This constant financial pressure.
[593] Additional threats.
[594] Constant, like my lawyer in fact, and this is where it gets kind of weird because listen, I don't understand.
[595] He's supposed to be representing me. The answer is no to everything.
[596] Fight, fight, fight.
[597] fight.
[598] I want a trial.
[599] He instead is coming with, listen, this is not how litigation ends, Phil.
[600] Like, you don't seem to understand how this ends.
[601] You don't have a grip of how litigation works.
[602] And I'm just like, I'm glad that I don't, because my guess is I'm representative of about 90 % of the population that don't know.
[603] And it's important that we find out.
[604] I was promised a trial because they said I was this, this, this, this, well, let's get to that fucking trial.
[605] This is what I've been doing.
[606] This doesn't end with negotiations.
[607] I want the trial.
[608] I don't understand.
[609] Like, why would you sue me unless you want the trial?
[610] Oh, because it's a bullshit lawsuit.
[611] Well, then I want the trial because I need to show that.
[612] I need that on my record.
[613] I want that.
[614] I want the truth.
[615] They fucked with the wrong guy.
[616] I hate to say it.
[617] I'm the only, of all the lawsuits they've launched, and they launched in, you know, in excess of like 12 and threatened.
[618] And it's important to note I've been threatened and I'm constantly under threat of additional litigation.
[619] I'm the only one left.
[620] I'm the only lawsuit that's, I'm the only person who hasn't had to compromise their free expression.
[621] It's, uh, It's a dirty secret about the legal business, right?
[622] That this is a loophole.
[623] This is something people can do to people to silence them, just to drag them through hell for six years.
[624] Maybe 10.
[625] Who knows how long this goes?
[626] Right.
[627] And this is a case managed.
[628] I mean, I had to fight in court at great expenditure to get this case management.
[629] And if you put this up to the general public and had them look at what the actual facts are, and had them look at what these people, what their business is, what they're actually doing.
[630] It's game over.
[631] It's game over.
[632] It's a real problem for them.
[633] The real problem is it's an indefensible activity.
[634] Having those animals in swimming pools for people's enjoyment, like to, but to follow that up with trying to crush people, trying to crush my fiscal sovereignty.
[635] I mean, look.
[636] No, there's nothing good on their side for what they try to do to you, for what the business is.
[637] I like to operate in full sort of transparency because look, I guess I'm sort of sponsored by the public.
[638] So I feel like a level of transparency in all this, but, you know, I had a little bit of money.
[639] I'd won a TV show called Wipeout and I had 50 ,000 Canadian dollars tax free in the bank, which I sat on because I didn't know precisely what it is I was going to do with it.
[640] And I felt like there was a potential of a rainy day around the corner.
[641] It took that in the first six months to, six months to hire lawyers for everybody.
[642] Everyone that was getting sued, I was cutting, you know, $5 ,000 retainers for going, there's a purpose for this money.
[643] I only have it because I got on the show because of my relationship with the walrus.
[644] So I'm in for a good chunk of change here.
[645] It's crazy the lengths of which and the ability corporations have to destroy individuals.
[646] The fact that the court is there to facilitate it is precisely why I want to go to trial.
[647] I've been told the figures are, and please don't quote me and I'd love the facts, but I've been told that something in the area of like 90 % of lawsuits get settled without going to discovery.
[648] Well, I want to be, I want to be the 10 % or less.
[649] I want a resolution by the judge.
[650] I can sleep at night if the judge says, okay, it ends with this.
[651] Phil, you get $50 ,000 of your, at this point, in excess of 200 ,000 in legal bills.
[652] And Marine land, you lost.
[653] So, you know, you got to eat the shame and walk away.
[654] I would assume be more comfortable with that than if Marine Land says.
[655] said, here's $100 ,000.
[656] Don't talk about the, I mean, let's say in the best scenario, they said, here's a chunk of change.
[657] Let's just use $100 ,000 and said, just don't talk about the terms of the settlement.
[658] But other than that, you have no impeded speech.
[659] You can just be free.
[660] I would be more comfortable with the judge's decision than that $100K because then at least I know exactly what it is that I went through.
[661] The world can find out what function these courts have and what their version of justice is.
[662] I mean, I'm just still, I'm trying not to be jaded because obviously it's a heavy load to carry as in your day to day.
[663] It's, you know, I've been on the cusp of crazy.
[664] I'm thankful for plant medicine for sort of keeping me grounded and keeping me in, with the proper perspective.
[665] But plant medicine, listen to you, hippie.
[666] Yeah, well, they do try to call me hippie a lot, too.
[667] That's interesting.
[668] I mean, a little bit of a different version of hippie, I suppose.
[669] I mean, I don't mind war.
[670] Well, your, um, your guy cares about these marine mammals.
[671] Now, Walrus is like my daughter, dude.
[672] It sounds crazy.
[673] I believe you, man. I hate to stress it, but as soon as you consider that factor, you're just like, dude, he's got, they've got your daughter.
[674] That's a mess.
[675] Try to put yourself in a perspective that if they had your dog, your neighbor's got your dog and is, uh, unimpededly, uh, by your definition abusing or neglecting their life.
[676] And you're there to just watch silently.
[677] I mean, that's disgusting.
[678] That's a disgusting scenario.
[679] This is the poison that I live with.
[680] I need a proper closure.
[681] I'm relying on there being a level of justice so that one day I can live in this world without being just that old jaded dude.
[682] Look, last time I was sure it was not nearly as fucking gray.
[683] Like I'm starting to feel the effects of long term litigation.
[684] You don't have a podcast, do you?
[685] I want to do a podcast.
[686] I'm urged to do a podcast.
[687] Who's urging you?
[688] Well, people, you know, they just, you know, Phil, you was you.
[689] I have a podcast, do a podcast, do it.
[690] And it would be a real simple thing for you to do.
[691] I know, I'm running out of excuses.
[692] And you got a lot to say, and you're a great talker.
[693] Thanks, Joe.
[694] I appreciate that.
[695] Why don't you do it?
[696] I am considering it, yeah.
[697] People get mad at me that I keep suggesting that people get podcasts.
[698] Like, stop, bro, stop doing that.
[699] You know, you said to me when we were in Toronto at dinner, you said, you should be a comedian.
[700] I said, ah, I've heard that before.
[701] You could be a comedian, for sure.
[702] That's funny, because I've heard you mention that on a show a number of times, too.
[703] That too.
[704] I've said to people.
[705] Well, there's so few of us on, there's, more podcasters and there are comedians for sure like it's not even close there's like um i think there's more than 600 000 podcast now on iTunes so yeah there's not 600 ,000 comics there's like that's a big pool to wade in you know but i mean i'm in if i did it would be for my own purposes you know i would be comfortable there's categories of course and for someone new i guess you'd probably be in is conservation a category or wildlife or something like that you know you would you would launch pretty quickly and it would be fascinating for people to did you ever um heard like one of the really well produced uh npr podcast like uh the dropout was it npr do the drop out the one on elizabeth holmes and the theranos controversy the blood scanning stuff anyway it's uh an amazing multi -part series that describes how these people made this phony blood testing technology and sold it and made millions of dollars and was they were worth valued at billions and now they're literally virtually worth nothing so it's by ABC Radio that's who did it nightline that's what it was ABC News Nightline but something like that could if someone wanted to follow this and and document it from the beginning in a podcast form this is something that really could be like six one hour episodes.
[706] If you were talking about your history with training orcas, what you thought it was when you first got in, and we went into that in several of the other episodes, but think about this.
[707] You and I have talked now, how many times you've been on now?
[708] This is my fourth.
[709] Okay.
[710] So each time has been like three hours.
[711] So all those, all those hours of discussion, if someone, you condense that into your story, I think it would be super compelling.
[712] And then you could also update people on the kids.
[713] you could update people on the state of marine mammoth captivity legislation and because there are countries that are right now waking up and realizing this is crazy like this is almost like human slavery it's like finding aliens and just keeping them in a cage somewhere I mean the timing's right I don't doubt that so yeah I mean it's perfect again with the looming litigation I do get a little bit sort of tongue shy because this is just going to be I'll be suit again, man. It kind of freaks me out.
[714] I really, what, you know, it's the same premise of writing a book.
[715] It's like, great, write a book, but it's like, I can't do anything with it because I'll be sued.
[716] I'll be suiting.
[717] It's a virtual guarantee.
[718] Now, the, the, the, the, the, the bright side is, it seems to me, like, uh, Marine land is not going to be around for terribly long, a terribly long time.
[719] Once they're dissolved, oh, you bet your ass, I got lots to talk about.
[720] I mean, I would love if I could speak of everything without having to sort of watch, you know, I really do have to keep from saying a lot of stuff, not on account of it being illegal, but just on account of the fact that it will virtually guarantee me additional hostilities and, you know, legal issues.
[721] I can't do it.
[722] I completely understand.
[723] I do look forward to that day where I'm sort of free and unencumbered and just can just be fucking me again, you know?
[724] Yeah, well, if you're in that business right now, you got to be looking at the future going, we got to get out.
[725] We got to get out before they take us out.
[726] That's precisely what's happening.
[727] So the speculation is Marine Land's lawyer is now the sole controlling mine.
[728] And that's precisely what his job is to transition this from.
[729] We know that they've sold property.
[730] They sold the golf course.
[731] They sold the campground.
[732] We know now that they're, I'll use the word selling.
[733] It might not be the right term because Marine Land claims there'll be no financial exchanges.
[734] But, you know, that's yet to be seen.
[735] Um, yeah, the writing's on the wall.
[736] They're going to be gone.
[737] I don't think the wife has any interest.
[738] I mean, she's, she's pushing 70 something.
[739] She probably doesn't want to be a part of this.
[740] She's never really had a heavy hand in it.
[741] I mean, she had her, she had, she had, she sort of took care of the cash business aspect of it.
[742] She sort of, she had her role in it, but it wasn't like a management position making decisions on animals, health, importing, exporting things like this.
[743] Like, it's just beyond her.
[744] So what, what, what, what, what we've been told is that, uh, marine lands.
[745] owner in his final days, there's a wish list.
[746] This is what happens to the park.
[747] This is what happens with this.
[748] This is what happens with this.
[749] And you can bet your ass that there is something about a walrus and there's something about me in there.
[750] What it is at least that I know of right now is obviously hostilities till the end.
[751] I think that what's happening is the lawyer is fulfilling John Holder's wishes with me. I think it's, I think it's in the books that.
[752] He can't just end this thing or...
[753] I don't know.
[754] It's a very precarious time.
[755] I know.
[756] The guy's dead.
[757] Let it go, folks.
[758] The lawyer doesn't like me. Of course.
[759] You can't be in the same room.
[760] You talk a lot of shit, bro.
[761] You know what he actually said?
[762] He said him to go fuck himself or whatever you said.
[763] That's going to be in court document.
[764] I didn't say that.
[765] I said that to Senator.
[766] But he'll run with that.
[767] That's okay.
[768] Will it be in court documents?
[769] Oh, he's watching.
[770] He's listening.
[771] I mean, uh, I sort of half hope that he sues you joy to say that.
[772] I sort of half hope.
[773] Sorry.
[774] Sorry, I don't wish that on my best of friends, but, man, would that be something?
[775] It's not going to happen.
[776] How the fuck do you know it's not going to happen?
[777] No, you're just talking shit.
[778] You just put it out there, man. No, it's not going to fucking happen.
[779] We talked about this last stuff, too.
[780] I think that what they do in terms of that business, for their own sake, they should stop.
[781] For everyone that's profiting off that, you've got to find an exit strategy.
[782] And I don't just mean Marine Land.
[783] I mean, anyone who understands my language that's hearing my words, you should stop.
[784] This is not the future.
[785] You can't do that anymore.
[786] This is going to look horrible just a few years from now, where people who've seen blackfish, people who do understand what those things are, the more we find out about dolphins and orcas, the more we understand them, it's going to be more and more.
[787] It's not like, oh, wait a minute, we just did some tests.
[788] They're like crabs, bro.
[789] they're dumb as fuck like you just eat them it's not going to happen man we're more and more impressed with them the more we study them i am more than happy to negotiate with marine land that rather than signing any type of non -disparagement because i don't want my speech virtually locked in a in a in a legal document um i'm a forgiving person i don't need i'm only responding in kind to their hostilities they come at me with war I bring it back.
[790] I don't want to.
[791] I have to.
[792] I take it right back up to where they bring it.
[793] Then they do this.
[794] I got to do this.
[795] Then they do this.
[796] I'm like, what are you fucking thinking?
[797] It's like if they would just dial it back, I can be a happy, smiley, not chirping marine land guy.
[798] I don't have to be, I don't have to do that.
[799] I've done what I've had to to be where I am.
[800] The man who was, who created this scenario was gone.
[801] We don't need the hostilities anymore.
[802] So what is the lawyer's motives exactly?
[803] I don't know.
[804] But I can assure you, now that they've blacked out the fence, they're doing everything they can to suppress our information.
[805] They've bought up all the billboards in all the available billboards in Niagara Falls so that they've got Marine Land signs because we have put up, like as activists, activists have put up billboards, one of which was like right at the entrance of marine land last year.
[806] It was a thing of beauty.
[807] So they, you know, they bought all these things up.
[808] They really don't want bad PR right now.
[809] My guess is trying to get rid of the animals, mitigate the PR losses, because there's already a sound foundation of it, of the, of the, bad PR and sell the property, get rid of it all.
[810] And I think, you know, they're trying to fast track and accreditation so that they can facilitate animal movements and whatnot.
[811] My greatest weapon right now, unfortunately, is that I can assure them a great deal of, uh, of financial risk.
[812] I have and I certainly can and am right now.
[813] They need to take that into consideration.
[814] When you consider the price of a walrus and let's just use the number, a hundred thousand, which is a grossly inflated number for a walrus.
[815] And let's say marine land were to say hypothetically, well, why would we give you a hundred thousand dollar asset when it's going to cost us less than that just to finish this litigation and we'll owe you a 25k at the end of some shit?
[816] Why would we do that?
[817] It doesn't make sense.
[818] And I say to them, it's because I'm going to make that walrus cost you tens of millions.
[819] Consider that.
[820] Lose the hostilities.
[821] I'll make you guys heroes.
[822] We can do that too.
[823] The narrative doesn't have to continue.
[824] The narrative of war can end with with the dead owner.
[825] It could have ended, but.
[826] Well, they're all invested in it.
[827] And one of the things about lawsuits, it's like people, when they get it started, there's a game going on.
[828] You're trying to win.
[829] You're trying to win, trying to get the other side to cave.
[830] I mean, this is a lot of what this is all.
[831] And obviously, you've taken this very personally.
[832] And this is all part of you now.
[833] Can I explain something really messed up?
[834] Yeah.
[835] I now, because we're coming to an end, the law that I've been advocating for is going to pass.
[836] um this lawsuit is going to end the animals will i mean we're going to find out what's going to happen to them in the in the near future we already know what's what's becoming of some um i don't know what it's going to be like to live without a lawsuit once the prospect is got nice bro you're going to be on the beach your feet up when the prospect came around of me not having one anymore that's not how i saw it it's weird i'm oddly connected strangely addicted and married to a fucking lawsuit.
[837] I can't see past it.
[838] Listen, we'll get you through.
[839] You need more of that plant medicine.
[840] I'm going to look at that bag with there and says insane.
[841] I'm like, yeah, no, that's about right.
[842] That's be real stuff.
[843] That stuff will put you on the planet that's outside Pluto that we haven't discovered yet.
[844] And I see you've got the Tyson Ranch Box.
[845] Oh, yeah, man. I got a Tyson Ranch Box.
[846] He hooked me up.
[847] And then that big box is from, what is the company that gave us the big box?
[848] It was a speedweed that helped.
[849] But it's like, I think the extracts company, ABX Extracts, or I'm not sure who.
[850] who I honestly don't know.
[851] We should shout out that company.
[852] There's a couple different things in there.
[853] I was elbow deep in all those boxes, by the way.
[854] They're the best.
[855] And they're fucking, they brought me a war chest.
[856] So get in there.
[857] I'm actually going to be on, on Tyson's podcast tomorrow.
[858] Are you really?
[859] I was supposed to do it yesterday, and I was kind of stoked.
[860] And then it got postponed to Thursday.
[861] And I'm really, in what world am I sitting down smoking a bunch of weed with Mike Tyson?
[862] Well, it's the one that was created on account of these crazy decisions that I've made the fact alone that we've come together like this dude i'm talking with with whitney who's you know she she says to you that i'm a hero now she's my fucking hero man like i say it that crazy lady drove all the way to texas with a fucking pig she tried to like help this pig out that she found she fed the pig and they drove all the way to texas with it i love her level of crazy i think it's just fucking perfect it fits exactly what this needs uh and again i'm blessed that you that you sort of, uh, turned her on to, to me. And I know she was, she was looking to have a conversation with um, with regards to some legislation with, uh, dolphins and whale captivity and whatnot.
[863] And you sort of steered her in my direction.
[864] Yeah.
[865] Let me touch on the Dan Bilsarian thing.
[866] I heard, is he coming here on in May?
[867] Is that right?
[868] On the podcast?
[869] Yeah.
[870] Not that I know.
[871] Okay.
[872] Someone had said to me, oh, oh, oh, I hear Dan Bilsarian's going to be on podcast.
[873] He's been on before though.
[874] Yeah, I know that he has.
[875] I thought that he was coming out soon.
[876] It kind of made me nervous because, uh, so why?
[877] A couple weeks ago, Whitney's, like, just, just drilling Dan Bilzerian on Instagram for having this polar bear, right?
[878] There's a video of a polar bear at a fucking party, and he's feeding it.
[879] She's just, she's, what?
[880] A polar bear at a party?
[881] Oh, no, it was like a big, it was a big brown bear, like, grizzly.
[882] It was a big grizzly bear to party.
[883] Yeah, on a, you know, electric fence around and everything else.
[884] So she's, where was he?
[885] Probably one of his crazy.
[886] At his house?
[887] Yeah.
[888] He'd a fuck.
[889] Oh, Jesus, Dan Bilzarian!
[890] What the fuck, bro?
[891] Oh my God.
[892] He had a. Brown Bear at his house.
[893] Look at the size of that thing.
[894] Oh my God, I'm getting anxiety.
[895] Did he ever see the fucking, what was the...
[896] Yeah, the bear did you...
[897] Yeah, the one where the bear ripped the guy's throat apart.
[898] That was one in a movie, too, wasn't it?
[899] No, the bear was in a movie.
[900] The bear was in a football movie.
[901] Was that basketball?
[902] I think he's been in a few movies, but with Will Ferrell, where he's playing basketball and he, like, wrestled him in the middle of the basketball game.
[903] Was that the bear?
[904] Yeah, I think so.
[905] Well, there was a bear that had been in movies and had done stunts in movies.
[906] And this guy, the video was awful because the guy is literally just standing there.
[907] And the bear just goes up to him and just decides to attack.
[908] It rips his throat out in a second.
[909] It's exactly that video minus the this, which can happen at any freaking time.
[910] Only you got 45 girls in the back scantily clad.
[911] Easily could happen.
[912] And what's really crazy is that that bear that killed that guy, they went back to training him.
[913] they're not going to kill an animal that has value it's the same as the orca that killed all the trainers like they're not going to kill them it's just not going to happen but they were trying to figure out whether or not he was going to do it again like jesus christ what are you a soothsayer how are you going to figure out what a bear's going to do it's going to be a bear asshole it's going to do bear stuff the people that are bringing that are trying to have you interact with these animals like that they're they're relying on the animal's shock factor the shock and awe you know they're bringing these animals in the close proximity to scare you it's like that's a fucked up thing man That's the bear right there.
[914] Look at that.
[915] Oh, my God.
[916] Throat apart.
[917] So, so horrific.
[918] So back to the Whitney thing.
[919] So Whitney's just harping on Dan Bill's energy.
[920] He's deleting the comments as quick as she's tossing them.
[921] So I decide, okay, well, I'm going to weigh in now, right?
[922] So I throw a comment in, and I forget about it.
[923] I turn to go off, do my thing.
[924] And then that night, I'm on the Phil DeFranco show, not me personally, but he actually takes the comment because he got a lot of likes and stuff.
[925] I said something to the effect of, you know, that's an abused animal, blah, blah, blah, this and that said something, you know, smoke more weed.
[926] anyways they put the comment up oh by the way the guy who handles the animal he was sort of he was using some legal sort of jargon with me as if he maybe was talking about lawsuit and I said fuck it sue me legal jargon oh he went right into the guy who trained defamatory oh because I said that's a starved abused uh animal I mean I know how to in the history of wild animals when is a bear ever walked out and said hey I'm gonna become fuck friends with someone today you know fuck this well they start them out when they're a little cubs you know that of course right so they starve them they have abuse them.
[927] I mean, by my definition of abuse, but do they have to do that to train them?
[928] I know there are people who claim to love bears that trained bears to take care of bears.
[929] And I guarantee you they don't all do that.
[930] It says big no -no.
[931] There's nothing fun about abusing a drug -starved animal.
[932] Delete this and your pension for animal exploitation.
[933] Smoke more weed.
[934] I don't know if smoke more weed is like going to help that.
[935] It wasn't a chirp though.
[936] The way Phil DeFranco said, it was like, I was like, smoke more weed.
[937] You fool?
[938] I was just like, no, no, smoke more weed.
[939] Like go inside more.
[940] I think, oh, okay, got it.
[941] Yeah, no, it wasn't the chirp.
[942] Yeah.
[943] See, I feel like there are people that have bears that raise them.
[944] I'm not in any way, shape, or form endorsing, keeping bears in captivity.
[945] But what I see is people that have these sort of intimate relationships with these really well -fed bears.
[946] They're big and happy, and they feed them, and they're getting the pool with them.
[947] And it looks ridiculous.
[948] But I don't think they're starving that bear.
[949] and I don't think they're abusing that bear.
[950] And I don't think you have to do that.
[951] I don't think you could automatically assume that a bear is starved and abused.
[952] So I assume the starved part, I certainly can't say.
[953] But it's a big bear.
[954] That's a fat bear.
[955] Well, he's feeding it.
[956] It might be hungry that day.
[957] I mean, it's more tame.
[958] Look at the body on the bear.
[959] Oh, big, not emaci.
[960] That's a well -fed bear.
[961] You can have a well -fed animal that's hungry for a week.
[962] There's no question about that.
[963] But it's not likely that that thing star.
[964] And my definition of abuse is there's an electric fence around that fucking things, which is there?
[965] Yeah, you can see it about the ankle, uh, at about ankle, uh, there's a fucking electric fence at Daniel Zane's house.
[966] Well, I'm sure whoever, go back to that picture.
[967] I'm sure whatever installation, this, the, the person who brought this thing does, has to keep the animal within confines of sorts.
[968] Oh my God.
[969] Can't just imagine if it just went on a model killing rampage?
[970] Like, I think that's an electric fence?
[971] I, that's, again, an assumption I'll say, but again, I don't see how that wouldn't be, what the hell does that serve as a barrier?
[972] It's just a trip line otherwise for, you know, bikini party.
[973] That's a well -fed bear, though, son.
[974] Look at that thing.
[975] That motherfucker eats.
[976] That is a big -ass.
[977] If you want to get an animal to do something, if you want it to be docile, you have to train it.
[978] You have to sort of, there's breaking the animal in many cases.
[979] But I'll assure you, Joe, that food deprivation is in training is your most effective tool.
[980] It just is.
[981] You can find a healthy balance, right?
[982] But food deprivation is number one.
[983] You've talked about this, particularly with dolphins.
[984] To be fair, in my experience of wild animals, it is with marine.
[985] mammals.
[986] So I've not worked with bears.
[987] There are bears at Marine Land.
[988] It's a really, it's a disgusting display.
[989] It's archaic.
[990] It looks like it's out of the 1800s even.
[991] I mean, it really is a disgusting place.
[992] But the practice was to starve them.
[993] And what people do there is they pay like, I think it's a buck and they get like this, this little cup full of corn pops.
[994] And the bears are like wave in.
[995] Yeah.
[996] Historically, there's been bears.
[997] I mean, they've got like 40 or 50 bears in this little confined space.
[998] I mean, there's nothing.
[999] think, there's no more, no greater abomination of nature than I can imagine than a solitary, largely solitary animals are confined to a bunch of them of the species.
[1000] And then historically, they have ripped each other apart in the, oh, dude, it's crazy.
[1001] I can actually delve into marine land's history deeper than I can.
[1002] You get to hear the full spectrum of some of the things that happened.
[1003] And bear in mind, and it's important to note, it was a different time.
[1004] Different times, different things happened.
[1005] And that's just, that was the, that was the norm.
[1006] It's, you know, starkly contrasting time to when marine land started so but the stories are like really um it's jaw dropping it's really jaw dropping stuff but it's it's on one hand when you have children and you bring a child to the zoo on one hand it's really fascinating to watch this little person look at all these different animals and and and freak out and and see how amazing it is but that's the only pro is introducing human beings, like little human beings in particular, to these animals.
[1007] Everything else is a con, except for the animals that are, like, really endangered, and they protect them and help breed them.
[1008] And then sometimes they're responsible for some reintroduction efforts.
[1009] But other than that, it's an animal prison, man. It's weird.
[1010] I don't take the position or ideal.
[1011] I'm not this person that's trying to represent an ideology necessarily.
[1012] I'm not against all zoos, but I have to say that there's nothing more sad than seeing elephants, cats.
[1013] bears.
[1014] I mean, cats, man. The cats, when they're pacing back and forth, I mean, just get them out of there.
[1015] Whose purpose are you serving?
[1016] Is that good for you?
[1017] I mean, seeing an animal that's got zucosis?
[1018] I mean, it's a mental case.
[1019] And we don't know what the fuck's going on in their head, so we have no idea how disturbed they are.
[1020] Most people just watch and think this is just maybe normal or something, right?
[1021] A lot of people, we're not, see, because the veil is only now sort of coming off and people are sort of now getting the truth on the matters, you start to see things for what they are.
[1022] I watched the video on YouTube some weeks ago, and it was marine land in the 70s and man was this place busy and the people were just I mean they were they were climbing over each other to be next to the pool I've never seen anything like I worked 12 years I'd never seen the amount of people that this thing had and when you looked in the pool there's a bull orca who's he spans the literal length of the pool that he's in on the side with his this dorsal fin over and he's literally staring at the wall not moving and then you got two other massive orcas that are in this pool like maybe five times the size of this room kind of kind of thing and the people are celebrating like it's and the view the video has like this sort of corky music and it's kind of funny and fun and I'm watching it's going what a disconnect of time like where this you're looking at exactly what you see today in terms of the animals and the conditions that they're in yet here these people having knowing nothing about it just in the awe the beauty the majesty of these animals the majestic nature of these animals and yet we couldn't see for ourselves whatsoever how abusive and gross this was it's it was really a weird and strange thing But that's, you know, Marine land's a legacy business.
[1023] They built, they built themselves on, on having people come and experience the shock and awe of these animals.
[1024] And they, and they did very, very well.
[1025] but that time is long gone now.
[1026] Long gone.
[1027] I think we're going to come to a time in the future where people think the same way about zoos.
[1028] I think it's, uh, we're just, we're going to realize like, I get that you want to see them.
[1029] I get it.
[1030] I get you want to see them.
[1031] I get, I want to see them too.
[1032] But God damn, we got to stop doing that.
[1033] Like, this is no way also for you.
[1034] The problem is humans don't have any real experience with animals.
[1035] We have experience with dogs and cats, which are these domesticated, weird little fluffy friends.
[1036] They are not animals.
[1037] We don't have much experience with real animals.
[1038] And even the animals that you have experience with, they're urbanized.
[1039] You know, like pigeons that you can feed or squirrels that take peanuts from you.
[1040] you get out into the world in the world of the wild of forests and mountains and you see actual real animals and it's almost psychedelic there's like a weird paradigm shift that goes through when you see a wild animal in the actual wild like oh this is where it's supposed to be it kind of feels weird because you're in their world you would be to adapt because now you're like oh what because that the series of of tools that that animal has in its world that doesn't translate in captivity for instance is like, wait a second, that thing can spring on me climb on, like I'm in its world now.
[1041] To me, that's the awe of the experience of witnessing animals because since the year and a half that expired from our last show, you know, I had the gift of seeing dolphins in the wild.
[1042] I went down to, I can't remember what beach it was, but it was while I was in California.
[1043] And that was my first experience, in fact.
[1044] Again, I'm from a small place.
[1045] And then this year, I was able to go to Washington State and see orcas in the wild.
[1046] Now, I've jumped off orca's rostrums into the air so high that you're looking down into Dixie Cup to land.
[1047] I mean, that's pretty awesome.
[1048] But there's nothing like having seen a fucking bull orca with an eight foot mass on his back, swimming next to his mother and all the, I'd never, my heart sunk into my stomach.
[1049] I'd never seen anything more majestic.
[1050] Wow.
[1051] wow yeah do you know anything about what's going on in the pacific northwest where there's a pot of orcas that exists primarily on chinook salmon and they're starving so that's the so in fact it's important it's i'm glad you mentioned that because just yesterday and today um a bunch of different protections are being announced for the southern resident killer whales which are uh in the sailish sea so it's going to impede sort of vessel uh you know they're get they're really focusing on doing what they can.
[1052] What's happening there is they've got this Snake River Dam system that needs to be, what happens is they put this system in and the Chinook are just dying.
[1053] They can't get through.
[1054] The flow is gone.
[1055] And they put the system in a long time ago.
[1056] A long time ago.
[1057] So it's virtually over time has been decimating these populations.
[1058] No one really knew why, but we're at the point now that we know that these orcas exclusively is Chinook and there's just not enough.
[1059] And whereas they used to be massive ones, now they've got these little tiny ones.
[1060] And you know there was a, I mean, the plight of the southern resident killer whales is really, I'm glad that it's gotten getting global attention.
[1061] And I'm sure you're familiar with the mother who lost its calf and mourned for in excess of like 40 days and carried her on her head in the type of vigil.
[1062] I mean, this was this captivated the world.
[1063] I mean, you can't look at an animal capable of such suffering without being acutely aware of the damage you're doing when you separate them from their family, the natural environment.
[1064] Let me explain the difference.
[1065] When bears see their cubs dead, they eat them.
[1066] Yeah.
[1067] That's a difference.
[1068] Yeah.
[1069] This is the, you're talking about something that's insanely emotional.
[1070] It's a different kind of animal.
[1071] That's the thing that we're learning is the most notable aspect of these animals is their social, is their emotional intelligence capacity.
[1072] I'm afraid of what it is, the depth of which we're going to find out that they're capable of, uh, of bond because.
[1073] Well, particularly if there's ever some sort of a way of translating communication, if they figure out a way of breaking down those sounds and expressions into something that we can decipher.
[1074] We right now, they don't, I don't think they know much.
[1075] I've been underwater with orcas and dolphins, and I've heard them, you know, I've heard, forget, I can't even tell you the sounds.
[1076] I mean, they've got a wide array of sounds, but, you know, I could, you know, to the best of my abilities, I could tell you when an animal was excited based on their sounds, they were making, like when, when our orca, Neosha was pushing me underwater to do a rocket ride, which is when you jump off into the air and you do this big majestic.
[1077] jump you knew it was going to be a good one when she led out this squawk at the bottom of the pool before pumping her tail and launch you just knew it man this she was on she was on fire and then it was other times you just you just knew she wasn't into it and I could just I could know by the sounds you could really determine underwater sound alone you could really get to know your animal again I was there 12 years I mean I really got to experience a lot of things other people could never really truly understand which is really important that really important that I'm able to speak to these things because I mean even when it comes to the legislation that is passing I've had my name mentioned in the House of Commons.
[1078] I mean, this is a national stage.
[1079] I've had it mentioned in the Senate.
[1080] I mean, people care about what is coming on.
[1081] Just a few days ago, a Niagara MP.
[1082] Actually, this would be a great video if you could pull it up.
[1083] It'll be on my Twitter.
[1084] It's one of the things I retweeted with the MP, the local MP, he bashes marine land.
[1085] I mean, that is a thing of absolute beauty.
[1086] I'm glad that I'm able to talk and explain to people what it is that my experience has shown me and the things that I know because if people know they'll do better problem with their videos if we play that video it gets claimed oh really it's a host of Commons video it's public the government thing those usually are okay but I don't know if it's up to you it's from a news source oh but you know what the group that put it up because they yeah okay sorry about that if you go to my Twitter and you check it it's something to marvel it's beautiful you have to be really careful with you too we've had a shit load of problems Niagara region I can assure you this animal justice will have no problem with you doing this I'm good friends with that's okay Camillo Lab Chuck but we'll just tell people to get to it but just put that back up so I can read that it says marine land an unfortunate place with horrible conditions okay yeah he's I mean this is a member of of parliament this is this is the big stage right here and he's finally and it took a long time for people anyone in in public policy to ever weighed into this subject.
[1087] Now we got people outright saying, like, this place is a whole.
[1088] I mean, wow, how far we've come in the last six and a half years?
[1089] The world is changing, my friend.
[1090] Very cringing.
[1091] It's changing whether people like it or not.
[1092] And this is one that I think it's unavoidable.
[1093] This discussion and this resolution, this has to be, we have to come to grips with what that is.
[1094] It's just all kinds of wrong, man. It's all kinds of wrong.
[1095] and the fact that they're still suing you after all these fucking years.
[1096] As if they think it's working, as if it's serving them any purpose.
[1097] And here I am again on the fucking JRE.
[1098] Like, are you kidding me, dudes?
[1099] You don't even know the favor you're doing me. You don't even know what you've done.
[1100] Like, come on.
[1101] What do you want to accomplish?
[1102] What have you failed in accomplishing?
[1103] What do you think you're going to accomplish by continuing?
[1104] This is the virtual definition of insanity.
[1105] It's not a good move.
[1106] Jamie, who was it that was on the podcast So it was explaining the The processes in place Of reintroduction into the wild They were going to have stages and nets And stuff like that And these big outdoor areas Where they can transmit dolphins And orcas too Who was that?
[1107] Do you remember Too many goddamn conversations?
[1108] Was that me?
[1109] Was it you?
[1110] We spoke of the Whale Sanctuary Project I mean, that would be I mean, that's essentially the basis of it and the goal Was that, maybe it was you?
[1111] Was it discussing how there's places where they're going to have like intermediate steps?
[1112] Yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
[1113] Maybe you guys expanded on it with someone else, but no, that is the basis of this project is, and I mean, the good news is, the Whale Sanctuary Project, I mean, this thing is going to happen.
[1114] It is the future.
[1115] They're, they're well into the process of finding a site.
[1116] Considerations are being made for a Washington State's site, a Vancouver site, but it appears as though they're settled on maybe no of Scotia, the community there at large is looking to work with them.
[1117] That's a wonderful, that's wonderful news.
[1118] And I'll tell you something, Joe, once this law gets royal ascension becomes law, what happens is marine land is not able to export the animals unless the minister of the DFO, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans, concurs that it's in the animal's best interests.
[1119] Well, if such a site exists and marine land is keen on getting rid of their animals, we'll have a place for them.
[1120] I told you last time I was here that my dream is to save whales.
[1121] This might happen.
[1122] Additionally, if there's a real concerted effort, a real effort to rescue those animals in Russia, I may very well be a part of that team.
[1123] So where six and a half years ago, I was speaking of a crazy dream where there was no blueprint, there was no foundation, I just, I sort of threw myself into the universe and said, I'm just going to hang my hat on a dream.
[1124] I'm watching in real time as it's materializing.
[1125] That's a hell of a perspective.
[1126] Humbling.
[1127] That is amazing.
[1128] This thing that we were talking about with the Pacific Northwest, there are, it's the resident population that has an issue because they only eat Chinook salmon.
[1129] But then there, isn't there another pod that comes through?
[1130] transients and they're thriving because they eat everything the transients are they're they're giving birth they're doing quite well they eat marine animals they're correct yeah in fact while i was there and stuff when i was there the guy that was with us literally said can you smell that i'm like no what is that it's like smell that sort of oily weird she's like a seal is getting eaten somewhere she could smell next thing we know we saw the activity you know the dorsals and everything and yeah sure shit there's a pot of a certain smell she could smell that uh that the seal was being eaten why can't they teach these smart whales to fucking eat what their friends are eating why they have to be rude you what it is it's like they won't eat chinese food fuck chinese food bro you starving in death no i want a burger it's a rare occasion but there's something called a super pod where it's actually a congregation of all the different uh uh families of orcas into this into this event where they all they congregate and it's a big social event and and there's a conference that happens every two years in washington state called super pod which is organized by a good friend of mine jeff entry.
[1131] It's an amazing event.
[1132] I look forward to being there again and speaking.
[1133] I get to another place for me to speak and and roam about with experts and whatnot and learn a great deal of things.
[1134] But I was, we were on the cusp of that almost happening because the boats are radioing to each other.
[1135] Like, okay, well, we've got a family going this.
[1136] We got a family going this.
[1137] Like, wait a sec. There's three families going in the same, same directions.
[1138] Like, there's going to be a crossing of pass.
[1139] And this is where the boaters get really excited.
[1140] Either at the prospect of a super pot of sorts or conflict or are they?
[1141] conflict they fight?
[1142] Yeah, they could be.
[1143] But I mean, for the most part, it's verbal.
[1144] They just tell you like, stay away from it.
[1145] Yeah, exactly.
[1146] Fuck you.
[1147] Yeah.
[1148] I imagine their messages are quite clear.
[1149] And you've got a 15 ,000 pound bull male orca giving you the bird.
[1150] Yeah, you're going to listen.
[1151] Fuck, yeah.
[1152] Especially a transient.
[1153] Their mouths, man. Oh, yeah.
[1154] When you see their mouths wide open and see their teeth, you're like, what the fuck are you?
[1155] Why don't they start eating mammals?
[1156] And I wonder if anybody's ever studied the difference in the behavior.
[1157] between the transient pods that eat the marine mammals versus the behavior, the ones that don't exist on salmon.
[1158] Like maybe they have a different, maybe they're like, you know, like Avatar, like there's different kinds of people up there.
[1159] My go -to source is Ingrid Visser.
[1160] She is a top, she's the woman in New Zealand that swims with Orcas, rescues, hercas.
[1161] I mean, she is atop the, really the global spectrum of wild orcas scientists.
[1162] She'd be the one to talk to you about that.
[1163] I mean, you want to talk about a fascinating person to talk about.
[1164] to holy shit the wealth of knowledge she has and she is a she's a very passionate advocate I'm very proud to have done some very very good work with her I'd love to talk to her oh dude I want to have her on the show yeah I would love to talk to her I'm so curious about those things she would blow your mind well if there was a difference if at all in behavior if you were to invite her on the podcast she would get on the next flight from New Zealand and come here I can assure you that so well there's ever any interest for her bro I like I like being home fuck you I'll tell you what I think she may have actually put that out the universe.
[1165] Maybe she told me that.
[1166] They're amazing animals.
[1167] I've always said that, I mean, this is coming from a self -admitted Bigfoot dork.
[1168] I'm a Bigfoot dork.
[1169] I really wish Bigfoot was a real thing.
[1170] Sure.
[1171] But if Bigfoot was a real thing, it wouldn't be nearly as cool as an orca.
[1172] No. Like if we found some big, stupid, stinky stinky ape that's been hiding from people forever, and be like, wow, that's cool.
[1173] But is, is it much cooler than a chimp or a gorilla?
[1174] What, just because it's bigger?
[1175] No, what an orca is, is really cool.
[1176] That is a super intelligent super killer that eats sharks.
[1177] Stealth killing machine.
[1178] That has great whites tucking tail and running.
[1179] Just fuck up a great white shark.
[1180] Like it has no business, no business being in the ocean.
[1181] They're the perfect weapon in their world.
[1182] I mean, there's nothing that touches them.
[1183] They're literally at zero risk.
[1184] They have no predators.
[1185] I mean, they're just too damn strong and too damn smart and coordinated.
[1186] They do their kills as teams.
[1187] I mean, you're literally up against an army out there.
[1188] Try to be a 500 pound seal, and that would be a big seal.
[1189] An army of 13 ,000 pounds.
[1190] killer whales who has a who sort of enjoy playing with you a little bit before you die i mean it's i'll interpret as play but more often than not it's training the little the young ones on how to kill and stuff it could be a brutal thing i mean i don't love watching it personally because you know i've worked with seals as well you know i mean it's i take team orca all day yeah yeah me too you're not getting you're not getting great odds but uh put the house on it and you'll you'll get some returns one of the most amazing videos i ever saw was an orca with a beached seal the seal he had bitten it and tossed it through the air and the seal had made its way to the shore and it was actually on the land just with a little bit of water and the orca beached itself grabbed a hole of seal and just start smashing it in the water there and you see the water just flood red with blood and then it hops back and wiggles itself back into water and swims away and you're like holy fuck these things would beach themselves that thing's 15 ,000 pounds it's Oh, look at the beast that that is.
[1191] Now, do they ever get stuck?
[1192] Yeah, they do.
[1193] They do in New Zealand, in fact.
[1194] That's where Ingrid's work is, uh, is really special that she's, dude, this is a crazy story.
[1195] I have a friend that I grew up with, uh, Matt Harrison.
[1196] He went on to the, to be, um, real, uh, involved in the army.
[1197] He's like decades into the army now.
[1198] He was on a training mission in New Zealand.
[1199] They were doing this training on a beach and didn't they get called to go perform an orca rescue?
[1200] He's just like, oh, what?
[1201] So now he's running and now they've got shovels.
[1202] They're trying to figure this thing out.
[1203] and now Ingrid shows up as she's the person to call and now there's a photograph I'm waking up in the morning to a photograph of Ingrid at this end of an orca and my friend Matt Harris from the same place as me a little town and well at the other end of the orca and I'm like you gotta be fucking kidding me and I got to reunite the two of them back in Niagara Falls in the summer because Ingrid had come down again and uh Oh my god dude these are blessings that I couldn't have even ever imagined and yet here he was and he'd be the first to tell you when he came back it changed his world it changed them never again marine land done whereas before it might have been you know it wasn't necessarily case he was part of this rescue he's changed man like he's just I mean now he's fascinated with orcas like you can't imagine he he's he got the bug now that's amazing um listen is there anything else probably a million things but no no we're done for sure I I'd like to give a couple shutouts let's do give your shoutouts the Kanye West of marine mammals what they call you the Kanye West of animal training oh there you go absurd so animal justice Canada I got to do a shout out out to Camille, who's next to the lawyer.
[1204] Wait, they're calling you the Kanye West of Wall...
[1205] What the fuck?
[1206] That's it.
[1207] From November.
[1208] Wow, bro.
[1209] 2013.
[1210] That started at all, man. I say, wait, they're calling you the Kanye.
[1211] Wow.
[1212] The Kanye was a Walrus training.
[1213] Faus to defend himself against 1 .5 million out of lawsuit.
[1214] Wow.
[1215] Yeah.
[1216] Yeah, shout out.
[1217] It's been an honor to be your friend.
[1218] Oh, dude.
[1219] You've, you've changed the landscape of all of this, by the way.
[1220] I know you don't...
[1221] Look, I get it.
[1222] I can do this all day.
[1223] The first shout out is to you.
[1224] The last one's to you.
[1225] the one in the middle is to you, every one of them.
[1226] Like, you've changed my world personally, but you've really changed the landscape of this entire thing.
[1227] Whitney said it best today.
[1228] She goes, you know, Joe really is the guy to move the needle on this thing.
[1229] And I'm like, you damn right.
[1230] So like a couple of fucksy worlds out there as often as you can and just, you know, keep this stuff up because you've had a heavy hand in all this.
[1231] Along with, for instance, Senator Wilfred Moore, who is the person who tabled this piece of legislation, Murray Sinclair.
[1232] I got to extend a thanks to, to the leader of the Green Party, Elizabeth May, who's really taken this thing, it's her baby, and process this thing through.
[1233] And yeah, if you didn't hear me shout out your name, sorry, can't do it for everyone.
[1234] There's some very satisfying things about having a podcast, and one of the really satisfying things is being able to let people know about something that for them is very important.
[1235] Like, there's many people that are listening.
[1236] listening to this is many people that are hearing this that are trying to understand with your busy life with your bills and your relationships and your work and you're also living in a world where something is happening that most likely would be thought of as a horrendous act in just a decade or two decades and then we're going to be looking back saying how the fuck did we let this slide how did we do this and I think guys like you if it's not for your sacrifice, many millions of people don't understand this as well.
[1237] And that's real.
[1238] That's you.
[1239] That's 100 % you.
[1240] Your sacrifice, your ability to describe it so eloquently, and your courage to keep fighting this.
[1241] This is very important.
[1242] It's very important for the human race.
[1243] I've had faith through and through and it's not failed me. You're right.
[1244] You're right.
[1245] You're right when it comes to this.
[1246] You're right when it comes to these marine animals that are super intelligent, being stuck in swimming pools.
[1247] It's fucked up.
[1248] It's got to stop.
[1249] It's got to stop while we understand what it is.
[1250] You can't keep your head in the sand with this.
[1251] This is madness.
[1252] This is a terrible, terrible thing.
[1253] And we need to stop it.
[1254] Well, as much as I've had a hand in it, thank you, Joe.
[1255] My pleasure.
[1256] Listen, thank you.
[1257] Walrus Whisper on Twitter.
[1258] Instagram, yeah, I'm just learning Instagram, but I'm getting pretty good.
[1259] Is it all Walrus Whisper?
[1260] Well, there's a, the one on Instagram has got a little, it's got a little bit of a different, but I'm, you know, it's, it's attached to my Twitter there.
[1261] But if you look up Phil Demers, you'll find it all.
[1262] Okay.
[1263] I'm easy enough to find.
[1264] You're a bad motherfucker, Phil.
[1265] Thanks, my friend.
[1266] Bye, everybody.
[1267] See you.