The October 19, 2025 edition of Radio Québec’s Web Journal delivers a long, political analysis framed entirely through the Q worldview—the idea that the “storm” is unfolding and that the balance of power in the West is reversing.
1. The “Beginning of the Storm”: Legal Reversals in the U.S.
The show opens with the indictment of John Bolton, Trump’s former National Security Advisor, presented as proof that the “hunters have become the hunted.” The host connects Bolton’s case to others—Jack Smith, Fani Willis, and Letitia James—arguing that the prosecutors who went after Trump are now themselves under scrutiny. This is described as unprecedented in Western politics, the start of a judicial purge turning back on its authors.
Bolton’s case, with 18 counts under the Espionage Act, becomes the prime example. Though accused of selling or leaking classified documents, Bolton is predicted to face only a light sentence—or none at all—because, according to the analysis, he was actually working for the Patriots all along. Like Mike Pence, Robert Mueller, or James Comey, Bolton supposedly played a controlled opposition role, helping expose corruption from within. His prosecution, therefore, is framed as a mirror operation, preparing public opinion for the future indictment of Clinton, Biden, and even Obama.
2. America as the Model of Restored Justice
This “return of justice” in the U.S. is contrasted with what the host calls a rotting Canada, where law enforcement protects the powerful. The American example becomes a metaphor: institutions can still cleanse themselves if the right forces are in play.
3. Canada: A Democracy in Name Only
Canadian opposition leader Pierre Poilievre is cited for saying Justin Trudeau committed criminal offenses—taking an illegal paid vacation, interfering in the SNC-Lavalin case, and allowing Chinese influence in elections—while the RCMP looked away. The host claims that by merely stating this, Poilievre has been branded a “threat to democracy.”
The argument broadens: in modern Western societies, anyone who exposes systemic wrongdoing—rigged elections, biased courts, state corruption—is instantly labeled an extremist. For the host, that inversion defines today’s “liberal democracies”: defending the rule of law now makes you the enemy of the state.
4. Canada’s Economic Collapse and U.S. Ascent
Economically, Canada is portrayed as a sinking ship—soaring debt, uncontrolled spending, and industry flight toward the U.S., especially in Ontario’s auto sector. The contrast with Trump’s nationalist economic strategy is constant: America is booming, Canada is imploding.
This sets up a broader geopolitical argument. The global economy is supposedly undergoing a massive realignment toward an America–Russia–China axis. The symbol of this shift is a proposed tunnel under the Bering Strait, connecting Alaska and Siberia—a decades-old idea revived after the declassification of JFK-era documents, allegedly shared by Russia with U.S. congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna.
For the host, such a project would end the Cold War symbolically and literally. A new trade corridor through the Arctic would replace Atlantic routes dominated by Europe, leaving the EU and Canada isolated. Trump and Putin, he says, are working toward this realignment: pragmatic, nationalist, post-globalist cooperation against the decaying Atlantic system.
5. The Middle East: Peace Through Pressure
Turning to the Gaza ceasefire, the host claims Donald Trump has achieved a diplomatic breakthrough—“a hero to both sides.” When Israel briefly resumed bombing, it is described as a message to Trump rather than a breakdown of peace.
Here the analysis veers into pure Q-style geopolitics: Trump supposedly pressures Netanyahu through his control of the Epstein files and possibly the 9/11 secrets. The timing of Virginia Giuffre’s memoir, accusing a “well-known Prime Minister” (interpreted as Ehud Barak), is linked to Israel’s actions. According to the host, Trump uses blackmail material to enforce peace, and the renewed airstrikes were Israel’s way of pushing back diplomatically.
6. The Global Shift: The Fall of the Old West
The analysis widens again. As the West loses Africa—French bases closing in Mali, Niger, Chad, Senegal, and Côte d’Ivoire—the BRICS alliance (Russia, China, others) fills the void. Citing Xi Jinping’s recent speech at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the host claims China openly calls for an end to Western dominance and a restructured UN Security Council.
The world, in this vision, is moving toward a multipolar order:
the U.S., Russia, and China cooperate through economic pragmatism;
Europe and Canada cling to old ideologies (climate policy, Ukraine war);
the new age is defined by sovereignty over globalism, trade over ideology, and peace through power.
For the host, Trump, Putin, and Xi are not enemies but strategic partners, designing the post-globalist world.
7. The Q Framework Behind It All
Throughout the episode, the narrative follows Q logic:
A corrupt elite once controlled Western governments and intelligence services.
Trump’s presidency was part of a long-term military intelligence operation to expose and dismantle it.
Apparent losses, arrests, or contradictions are planned optics—staged events meant to teach, not to harm.
Every crisis (Bolton, Israel, Poilievre, Europe’s decline) fits into a single overarching Q timeline.
The “mirror effect” and “double game” concepts are used repeatedly: actions that seem to hurt Trump actually serve his long-term plan.
8. Final Synthesis
By the end, the message is clear:
The old Atlantic world (EU, Canada, liberal institutions) is collapsing.
The Patriots’ plan—the alliance between nationalist leaders and anti-globalist forces—is unfolding.
What looks like chaos is the controlled demolition of a corrupt order.
The core formula—Peace and Prosperity—is presented as Trump’s compass: the storm is not destruction, but purification. According to this reading, the global realignment has already begun, and the “corrupt temple” is about to fall.
The October 19, 2025 edition of Radio Québec’s Web Journal delivers a long, political analysis framed entirely through the Q worldview—the idea that the “storm” is unfolding and that the balance of power in the West is reversing.
1. The “Beginning of the Storm”: Legal Reversals in the U.S.
The show opens with the indictment of John Bolton, Trump’s former National Security Advisor, presented as proof that the “hunters have become the hunted.” The host connects Bolton’s case to others—Jack Smith, Fani Willis, and Letitia James—arguing that the prosecutors who went after Trump are now themselves under scrutiny. This is described as unprecedented in Western politics, the start of a judicial purge turning back on its authors.
Bolton’s case, with 18 counts under the Espionage Act, becomes the prime example. Though accused of selling or leaking classified documents, Bolton is predicted to face only a light sentence—or none at all—because, according to the analysis, he was actually working for the Patriots all along. Like Mike Pence, Robert Mueller, or James Comey, Bolton supposedly played a controlled opposition role, helping expose corruption from within. His prosecution, therefore, is framed as a mirror operation, preparing public opinion for the future indictment of Clinton, Biden, and even Obama.
2. America as the Model of Restored Justice
This “return of justice” in the U.S. is contrasted with what the host calls a rotting Canada, where law enforcement protects the powerful. The American example becomes a metaphor: institutions can still cleanse themselves if the right forces are in play.
3. Canada: A Democracy in Name Only
Canadian opposition leader Pierre Poilievre is cited for saying Justin Trudeau committed criminal offenses—taking an illegal paid vacation, interfering in the SNC-Lavalin case, and allowing Chinese influence in elections—while the RCMP looked away. The host claims that by merely stating this, Poilievre has been branded a “threat to democracy.”
The argument broadens: in modern Western societies, anyone who exposes systemic wrongdoing—rigged elections, biased courts, state corruption—is instantly labeled an extremist. For the host, that inversion defines today’s “liberal democracies”: defending the rule of law now makes you the enemy of the state.
4. Canada’s Economic Collapse and U.S. Ascent
Economically, Canada is portrayed as a sinking ship—soaring debt, uncontrolled spending, and industry flight toward the U.S., especially in Ontario’s auto sector. The contrast with Trump’s nationalist economic strategy is constant: America is booming, Canada is imploding.
This sets up a broader geopolitical argument. The global economy is supposedly undergoing a massive realignment toward an America–Russia–China axis. The symbol of this shift is a proposed tunnel under the Bering Strait, connecting Alaska and Siberia—a decades-old idea revived after the declassification of JFK-era documents, allegedly shared by Russia with U.S. congresswoman Anna Paulina Luna.
For the host, such a project would end the Cold War symbolically and literally. A new trade corridor through the Arctic would replace Atlantic routes dominated by Europe, leaving the EU and Canada isolated. Trump and Putin, he says, are working toward this realignment: pragmatic, nationalist, post-globalist cooperation against the decaying Atlantic system.
5. The Middle East: Peace Through Pressure
Turning to the Gaza ceasefire, the host claims Donald Trump has achieved a diplomatic breakthrough—“a hero to both sides.” When Israel briefly resumed bombing, it is described as a message to Trump rather than a breakdown of peace.
Here the analysis veers into pure Q-style geopolitics: Trump supposedly pressures Netanyahu through his control of the Epstein files and possibly the 9/11 secrets. The timing of Virginia Giuffre’s memoir, accusing a “well-known Prime Minister” (interpreted as Ehud Barak), is linked to Israel’s actions. According to the host, Trump uses blackmail material to enforce peace, and the renewed airstrikes were Israel’s way of pushing back diplomatically.
6. The Global Shift: The Fall of the Old West
The analysis widens again. As the West loses Africa—French bases closing in Mali, Niger, Chad, Senegal, and Côte d’Ivoire—the BRICS alliance (Russia, China, others) fills the void. Citing Xi Jinping’s recent speech at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the host claims China openly calls for an end to Western dominance and a restructured UN Security Council.
The world, in this vision, is moving toward a multipolar order:
For the host, Trump, Putin, and Xi are not enemies but strategic partners, designing the post-globalist world.
7. The Q Framework Behind It All
Throughout the episode, the narrative follows Q logic:
The “mirror effect” and “double game” concepts are used repeatedly: actions that seem to hurt Trump actually serve his long-term plan.
8. Final Synthesis
By the end, the message is clear:
The core formula—Peace and Prosperity—is presented as Trump’s compass: the storm is not destruction, but purification. According to this reading, the global realignment has already begun, and the “corrupt temple” is about to fall.