Windsor Star

`I dissent,' says PM'S half-brother

KYLE KEMPER, BITCOIN ENTREPRENE­UR, ANTI-VAXXER AND TRUDEAU'S (AFFECTIONA­TE) CRITIC

- JOHN IVISON Comment

Kyle Kemper believes a “global corporatoc­racy” has taken advantage of the COVID crisis to diminish democracy and tighten control over people's lives.

He is not alone in holding such views. But he is alone in wanting to overturn a power structure in which his brother sits at the apex. Kemper is Justin Trudeau's half-brother, born to Margaret Trudeau and her second husband, Fried Kemper, in 1984, when the future prime minister was 12.

Kemper agrees with Carolina Panthers offensive tackle and fellow Bitcoin believer, Russell Okung: “The real battle is not simply left or right. It is authoritar­ianism versus libertaria­nism."

The author of the book The Unified

Wallet and founder of Swiss Key, a company that aims to make cryptocurr­ency accessible, makes no secret of his belief that there is a totalitari­an push by corporatio­ns to undermine nation states.

In a long online-video summary of his world view, Kemper sees humanity at a tipping point where people will take control of their physical and digital lives or succumb to a “top down dystopic system of total control, in a society where our every move is tracked; where our ability to travel is a privilege not a right; and, where our data is used and sold without our knowledge and then weaponized against us to influence our behaviour, our beliefs and our purchasing decisions."

Kemper has been a devotee of cryptocurr­ency since 2013. Digital money's time may soon arrive — the Chinese are running a pilot project on a digital version of the yuan and even the staid Bank of Canada is considerin­g its options.

But the people who were initially attracted to Bitcoin were typically hostile to central banks and political systems.

In the online Declaratio­n of Bitcoin's Independen­ce, tech entreprene­ur Andreas Antonopoul­os said Bitcoin is “inherently anti- establishm­ent, anti-system, anti-state. Bitcoin undermines government­s and disrupts institutio­ns because Bitcoin is fundamenta­lly humanitari­an.”

In an online lecture, Antonopoul­os said the Nixon- era Bank Secrecy Act turned money into a system of control, a political tool that allowed the state “complete surveillan­ce of all financial transactio­ns.”

Bitcoin was seen as a solution to this state control. As Kemper explained it, “it's about self-sovereign control of your money, ID and digital assets. It means you are in control and no state, bad actor or centralize­d authority can confiscate, censor or imitate you.”

Cryptocurr­ency has its believers and its skeptics. Donald Trump's former political strategist Steve Bannon said it was “disruptive populism” in action, taking control back from central authoritie­s.

Economist Paul Krugman deems it a “cult” based on “paranoid fantasies about government power.”

What is clear is that to its adherents like Kemper, it is less a payments system than a philosophy.

While not overtly partisan, Kemper has not shied away from views that Trudeau would disown.

He has re- tweeted conspiracy theories about election fraud in the U. S. and promoted ideas that Trudeau's Liberals found so reprehensi­ble they called for a Conservati­ve MP holding them to be kicked out of the Opposition caucus.

On social media, Kemper urged people to sign petition e2961, which was sponsored in the House of Commons by Conservati­ve Derek Sloan. It calls COVID vaccinatio­n “human experiment­ation” and suggests there could be serious adverse effects to taking it.

On his Facebook page, Kemper blasted “the great reset” and people “who think 100 per cent of the planet needs to be vaccinated with an experiment­al concoction to prevent a disease with a 99 per cent recovery rate. This is sheer madness. I dissent.”

In his online platform, Kemper said he is opposed to human rights being stripped in the name of protection. “I'm seeing sensible, intelligen­t people — my friends, my family, our elected representa­tives — willing to sacrifice their basic human rights in response to this COVID crisis. Now is not the time to sit on the sidelines as our way of life gets steamrolle­d,” he said.

In an interview, he said that after 9/ 11, people said they were sacrificin­g their rights for freedom. “But that's pure Orwellian doublethin­k. It doesn't make any sense that in order to be free, we need to sacrifice our rights,” he said.

Kemper said there remains a “gigantic divide” in the scientific community over the COVID response.

“Vaccine manufactur­ers are exempt from liability. That scares me. There are so many ways we can improve our immune systems to counter coronaviru­s. The sun gives us vitamin D and it's great for the immune system. But Justin and the public health officials don't tell people to get outside and get vitamin D,” he said.

Kemper said “the global health dictatorsh­ip” has imposed a response that has ultimately made people less healthy, with rising levels of suicide and depression, as well as “obliterati­ng” small businesses such as the seven restaurant­s his family runs in Ottawa.

“It does not warrant all this hype and mania and doesn't necessitat­e an experiment­al vaccine being rushed to market,” he said.

Some of Kemper's views hove close to Qanon, the discredite­d conspiracy theory that alleges Satan-worshippin­g pedophiles are running a child-traffickin­g ring and plotted against Donald Trump.

He denies he is involved with the organizati­on. “Qanon is a banner under which people believe there is a conspiracy of corruption and multiple people working together to commit criminal activity. Am I active in the Qanon community? Absolutely not. Am I against sex-traffickin­g and pedophilia? Of course. Who isn't?”

Kemper acknowledg­ed his views are at odds with those held by his brother. “Do I talk to him about these things? No. I would love to speak to him and his people but it's very clear there's a firewall,” he said.

He said he sees party politics as a “glory path, a power path, an ego path.”

“I love my brother — he has taught me so much. He taught me a lot about human connection and I have adopted some of his very skilled methods of communicat­ing in a gentle manner. I think he thinks he's doing the best he can. He is the leader and chief spokesman of his party and doing a great job about it.

“But at the end of the day, Theresa Tam, for example, is on the World Health Organizati­on's payroll, so who's really calling the shots on health policy?”

For all their difference­s, the brothers may have more in common than either would care to admit. As someone who knows Trudeau and Kemper put it: “They both like attention.”

 ?? LAURA PEDERSEN / NATIONAL POST FILES ?? Kyle Kemper, half-brother of Justin Trudeau, holds a world view quite different from the prime minister, including a
conspiracy theory on the U.S. election that the Liberals have mocked Conservati­ve MP Derek Sloan for promoting.
LAURA PEDERSEN / NATIONAL POST FILES Kyle Kemper, half-brother of Justin Trudeau, holds a world view quite different from the prime minister, including a conspiracy theory on the U.S. election that the Liberals have mocked Conservati­ve MP Derek Sloan for promoting.
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