Many in Alberta support independence, and many more across the West want out of Canada. You can feel it in the comments online, in the conversations at coffee shops, and in the energy at townhalls. People are restless. They want it to happen now.
But here’s the hard truth—we are a long way from making it real. Why? Because right now, we are nothing more than scattered voices. We talk. We argue. We complain. And then we wait for someone else to organize it for us.
Yes, we show up at APP meetings and other events. We nod along, we learn, we show support. But support alone doesn’t build independence.
Human beings create nations. And in this movement, we are going to focus on the latter part of that word—the “being” part. Because declarations don’t build nations. “Being” does.
The Forgotten Power of “Being”
We call ourselves human beings, but too many forget that second word. “Being” is not talk. “Being” is action. It is putting your hands, your mind, and your will into the thing you desire.
Without “being” the thing we want, it will never manifest into reality. And that’s why so many fall back on government and organizations—because it’s easier to let someone else do it for us.
But here’s the problem: those organizations are not working for you. Not the government, not the unions, not the councils or corporations. They are working for themselves. Their workers don’t create freely—they follow orders, because their paycheque depends on it.
That is the game. When the organization pays the worker, it owns the worker’s output. It buys their “being.”
Government: The Parasite That Controls the People
A parasite, by definition, is an organism that leeches resources from a living host in order to extract its own life force and proliferate. In our society, the host is the human “being,” and the parasite is the organization of government.
But governments are worse than ordinary parasites. They don’t just drain resources; they extract our “being”—our work, our money, our creativity. They take the output of human “beings” and then feed a portion of it back in the form of wages, pensions, and programs. And with that exchange, they tighten control: paying people while dictating what they can and cannot do with their own work.
Step back and you’ll see it: government is the biggest employer in society. Bigger than any corporation. Provincial, federal, municipal—it doesn’t matter. Between health care, education, administration, law enforcement, and all the agencies stacked on top, 10–20% of the population is directly paid by tax dollars.
And guess who is organized? The government. Guess where they get their money? From you and me, through taxes. And where do they spend it? Paying people. Because government, at its core, is the parasite that controls the people.
So what happens? People care more about their next paycheque than about whether their work is contributing to a healthy society. That’s the true power of the salary: the ability to buy the “being” of a person.
And let’s be honest—we have all done it. Every one of us has signed on the dotted line, exchanging our “being” for money. What do you call it when you sell your “being” to the highest bidder? There are many words for it: mercenary, prostitute, pen for hire, sellout, hack, scab.
Here’s the hard truth—another word for it is employee. And everyone continues living as if we are not all selling out our “being” to the one who pays. And the largest one who pays is the government.
We have sold our “being.” We have sold the results of our hard work to serve the vision of the organization. And here’s the irony: we all complain about what government does—without acknowledging that it is built from our own work, our own funds, our own lives. The parasites at the top control our collective output because we hand it over to them.
Then we wonder why the world feels broken. It is because we have given our power away, piece by piece, until the very system that enslaves us is built from our own hands.
The Parasite Cycle of Government
They leech money through taxes.
They extract it to feed the life force of government.
The parasite becomes stronger and more organized.
They extract even more (there are always new taxes).
They pay people just enough of what they’ve taken to keep the human “being” alive.
Who Really Funds the Organization?
So what do we do about it? If we are the ones funding the very organization that controls us, then the responsibility is ours.
It’s time to defund the government in the only way that matters: by taking the resources we have and choosing where to put them. Choosing which organizations we empower with our own dollars.
Does the government allow this? Of course not. Because if you could choose where your tax money went, the whole system would collapse. Grassroots organizations would thrive. Bureaucrats would starve. And suddenly the parasites wouldn’t have a host to feed on.
That’s why taxes are mandatory, enforced by law. Because if it were voluntary—if people actually got to decide—we would finally see real democracy. A society where the people direct their funds, not the parasites at the top.
Reclaiming the “Being”
I don’t say this to shame anyone for their job. We’ve all been there. I say it to show the truth: the organization only has power because it buys our “being.”
But we can choose differently. Everything we value—schools, churches, railroads, homes, associations—was built by human “beings,” not by the state. It was our hands that created them.
If we don’t like the direction of our government, then we must “be” something else. That is our power.
A Call to Self-Organization
This is a call to the individual. To you, as a human “being.” You are not alone. Millions feel this way. But they feel powerless, waiting for orders, waiting for paycheques, waiting for someone else to act.
But who else is going to do it? The truth is we can. We must.
We need to self-organize. To redirect our energy, our “being,” and yes, our money—away from the parasites and into creation. It will take courage. It will take faith. But if we build it, others will come.
The Challenge Before Us
If this resonates with you, then it’s your responsibility to put your “being” toward something higher—something worthy of God and not the parasites of government.
If we keep selling ourselves to the parasites, we cannot be surprised when the world itself becomes parasitic. The evidence is all around us.
Our creation must be given to the Creator, to GOD Himself—not to bureaucrats, not to politicians, not to the endless machine of control. We must “being” in the name of Christ, for the love of neighbor and the love of self.
Because only when our “being” is rooted in God, expressed in love, and directed toward creation—not control—will we see a future that is free, alive, and truly independent.
So the question stands:
*What are you going to do with your “being”?