Scene: A living room in Vancouver. Joe and Nelly are hosting Prime Minister Mark Carney. Kylie Minogue sits as a special guest. Tom Cruise joins via video call from Los Angeles.

Prime Minister Carney: Joe, Nelly, thank you for this meeting. Your proposals about home-based AI doctors, inviting sick people here, natural remedies, and involving the Church of Scientology are highly unorthodox. Canadaโs healthcare depends on licensed professionals and evidence-based standards.
Joe: Prime Minister, Iโll be straight with you. Iโm guilty of practicing medicine without a license โ and Tom Cruise and I went fishing many times without a license before that lake died. The lake died from duck feces causing eutrophication. Nature gave us a clear warning. Without Canada taking a holistic approach to medicine, Canadaโs sick will also die โ just like that lake.
Joe: Let me explain Rockefellerโs medical influence. Old man Rockefeller and his foundation basically took over medical education in the early 1900s. They funded the schools, pushed chemical-based allopathic medicine, and sidelined natural remedies. Thatโs why weโre stuck with this system today. Rockefellerโs chemicals do harm to the patient. Radiation curing cancer is a complete oxymoron. If radiation cured cancer, why did 150,000 people in Hiroshima and Nagasaki die? Shouldnโt they have all been cancer-free after getting hit with massive doses of radiation? The AMA and old man Rockefellerโs nuclear medicine men are peddling snake oil. Nothing has changed since the wild wild west โ itโs still the same con men in fancier suits.
A simple dandelion is free. You can pick it from your backyard. But radiation and chemo? They cost tens of thousands of dollars. In America the patient ends up bankrupt and dead. Canada’s socialized, so called free medicine, is paid for by the taxpayer. The whole country will end up bankrupt under this system and our parents and grandparents euthanized. Thatโs the real tragedy.
Nelly: Thatโs right, Mark. American medicine is junk medicine, shaped by clowns like Morris Fishbein, who ran the American Medical Association like his personal circus โ more focused on gatekeeping and protecting profits than genuine healing.
Nelly: (gesturing proudly) To show whatโs possible with a holistic path, let me present my cancer-free dandelion medicine patient: Kylie Minogue. Diagnosed with breast cancer in 2005, she used natural dandelion-based remedies as part of her journey. Over 20 years later, sheโs vibrant, healthy, and completely cancer-free.
Kylie Minogue: It was a powerful experience. Supporting the body naturally made all the difference.
Joe: Exactly. So tell me, Prime Minister โ are we really going to let the Americans bamboozle us with their junk medicine? Are we going to keep paying them a thousand dollars for a bag of salty water โ some overpriced IV drip they dress up as treatment? We have better options right here.
Tom Cruise: (leaning forward intensely) As a former Canadian, I can see the last straw of these Rockefeller-trained allopathic doctors, who have not cured a major disease in the last hundred years, is medically assisted death. That is a tragedy and proof that Canadaโs free health care is a fraud. They donโt heal โ they manage symptoms until they offer you death as the solution. Enough!
Tom Cruise: (continuing) Prime Minister, hereโs my question: Can the Church of Scientology use naturopathic science to heal people under the aegis of my Church of Knowing? We can combine auditing, spiritual technology, and natural approaches like dandelion and other naturopathic methods to clear engrams and truly heal body and spirit โ without the toxic junk from the pharmaceutical world. Joe and Nelly are offering real hope. The people deserve choices, not waiting lists and eventual euthanasia.
Nelly: Our door is open to everyone. Anyone sick can come here. Weโll print what the AI doctor recommends. Under a sensible administration, using the AI doctor will be fully legal. Weโll combine it with natural and spiritual approaches.
Nelly: (turning directly to Carney) Mr. Carney, do you actually care about Joni Mitchellโs health, or are you just trying to score political points? Sheโs a Canadian icon who has dealt with serious health challenges. If you truly cared, youโd support real holistic options instead of defending the same failing system that leaves people broke and dead.
Prime Minister Carney: (looking visibly unsettled) Joe, Nelly, Tomโฆ your points are strongly worded. I hear the frustration with costs and the desire for more natural approaches. But we must base policy on evidence, not anecdotes. Radiation and chemotherapy have saved many lives when used appropriately. Dandelion has laboratory interest but is not a proven cancer treatment. Getting proper credentials through an online holistic medicine program would allow you to practice legally and safely.
Tom Cruise: (firmly, with conviction) Safety? The real danger is a system that canโt cure people after a century and then offers death as the final โservice.โ Kylie stands here cancer-free for over 20 years thanks to natural support. The lake died from neglect, and so will Canadians if we keep trusting the same failed Rockefeller model. A free dandelion versus tens of thousands for chemo that still leaves patients bankrupt or euthanized โ thatโs the choice. The Church of Knowing is ready to help people heal spiritually and physically. The people are waking up.
Nelly: Kylie is living proof. The future belongs to AI, dandelion, naturopathic science, and spiritual knowing โ not junk medicine and snake oil. Our home is open.
Joe: The lake gave us the warning. Canadaโs sick donโt have to die waiting or bankrupt the entire country.
Tom Cruise: (smiling confidently, delivering the final blow) Exactly. History will remember who stood for real healing and who defended the old guard. The time for change is now, Prime Minister. The people deserve better than a fraudulent system that ends in medically assisted death and national bankruptcy.
Prime Minister Carney: (sighing deeply, clearly outmaneuvered) โฆIโll take all of this under serious advisement. There may indeed be room for broader dialogue on complementary and holistic approaches moving forward.



Scene: Trout Lake Park during a steady drizzle in Vancouver.
Prime Minister Nelly Furtado stands beside a rain barrel while Joe watches water run down a nearby cabin roof.
PM Furtado:
Look at that roof, Joe. Thatโs the first thing people should think about when collecting rainwater โ the roof itself.
Joe:
So some roofs make better drinking water than others?
PM Furtado:
Exactly. The cleaner and smoother the surface, the better the water.
She points upward.
PM Furtado:
The best roofs for rainwater collection are:
1. Metal roofs (the gold standard)
Smooth steel or aluminum roofs are the best.
Rain washes them clean easily
They donโt absorb contaminants
They last decades
Water quality is usually excellent
Joe:
So a simple metal roof turns the whole house into a giant water collector.
PM Furtado:
Exactly. Many off-grid homes use them for that reason.
PM Furtado continues:
2. Clay or ceramic tile roofs
These can work well too.
Theyโre natural materials and fairly clean, though they collect a bit more dust in the grooves.
3. Slate roofs
Also very good. Slate is natural stone and doesnโt leach chemicals.
Joe looks at a nearby house with dark shingles.
Joe:
What about regular asphalt roofs?
PM Furtado:
They can collect rainwater, but theyโre not ideal for drinking water because:
asphalt shingles may leach petroleum compounds
they shed tiny granules over time
Theyโre fine for gardens or washing, but for drinking you want better filtration.
She pauses and adds another warning.
PM Furtado:
And there are roofs you should never collect drinking water from:
treated wood shingles (chemical preservatives)
tar roofs
asbestos cement roofing
Joe nods.
Joe:
So the perfect setup is a metal roof, gutters, and a barrel.
PM Furtado:
Exactly. Then you clean the water before drinking.
She lists the purification steps again:
First-flush diverter to remove the first dirty rain
Mesh screens to stop leaves and insects
Boiling to kill pathogens
Activated carbon filters to improve taste and remove chemicals
Ceramic or microfilters for bacteria
UV purification for viruses
Distillation for ultra-pure water
Joe listens to the rain hitting the metal lid of the barrel.
Joe:
In a rainy city like Vancouver, people could collect thousands of liters a year.
PM Furtado:
Exactly. In a place like this, letting rain run down the street drains is like letting free drinking water escape.
She smiles as the barrel fills.
PM Furtado:
The sky provides the water.
All we need is a good roof and a clean system to catch it.
Scene: Rain continues falling at Trout Lake in Vancouver.
Prime Minister Nelly Furtado and Joe stand beside the rain barrel when a black limousine pulls up. A sharply dressed executive steps out holding a case of bottled water labeled from Nestlรฉ.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Excuse me! Canadians โ especially people here in Vancouver โ should not be drinking free sky water. They should be paying for our premium bottled water.
Joe:
Paying for rain?
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Of course! Itโs purified, branded, packaged, and sold responsibly.
PM Furtado:
You mean itโs put in plastic and sold back to people after taking it from public water sources.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
That is called business, Prime Minister.
He gestures toward the rain barrel with visible disgust.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Frankly, collecting rainwater should be illegal. Some governments have already tried it. You saw what happened in Cochabamba in Bolivia when private water concessions were introduced.
Joe:
Yeah. People revolted because water prices exploded.
Nestlรฉ CEO (irritated):
Yes, yes โ the so-called Cochabamba Water War. A terrible precedent for corporate stability.
Rain drips loudly from the roof into the barrel.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Honestly, if people start collecting rain everywhere, where does it end? Next thing you know theyโll grow their own food and stop buying things entirely.
Joe:
Terrifying.
PM Furtado:
Let me get this straight. The sky gives Canadians free water, and your solution is to outlaw the sky?
The CEO mutters under his breath.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Damn blasted meddling kidsโฆ like those children from Fรกtima Sanctuary seeing miracles everywhere.
Joe laughs.
Joe:
So now rainwater collectors are like the Our Lady of Fรกtima Apparitions kids?
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Exactly! People believing in visions, miraclesโฆ and free water.
PM Furtado:
Hereโs the difference. This miracle falls from the sky every week in Vancouver.
She points to the overflowing barrel.
PM Furtado:
And Canadians are perfectly capable of catching it, filtering it, and drinking it.
Joe picks up the barrel lid as rain pours harder.
Joe:
Looks like the sky just undercut your business model again.
The Nestlรฉ CEO sighs and climbs back into the limousine as rain continues to fall freely across Vancouver.
Rain continues falling as the limousine from Nestlรฉ idles nearby. Joe watches the rain barrel overflowing while Prime Minister Nelly Furtado folds her arms.
Joe:
You know, this bottled water thing has a strange history.
Nestlรฉ CEO (rolling his eyes):
Please donโt tell me this is another conspiracy theory.
Joe:
No conspiracy. Just marketing.
Joe picks up a plastic bottle from the CEOโs case.
Joe:
Back in the 1970s and 80s, most people in North America drank tap water. Bottled water was barely a business.
PM Furtado:
Cities already had safe drinking water systems.
Joe:
Exactly. Then companies realized something amazing.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Innovation?
Joe:
No. Branding.
Joe holds up the bottle.
Joe:
Take public waterโฆ or pump groundwaterโฆ put it in a plastic bottleโฆ convince people itโs healthierโฆ then sell it back to them for a thousand times the price.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Premium hydration services.
Joe:
Right.
Rain taps on the barrel.
Joe:
And then things got controversial when corporations started buying water rights in poorer regions.
PM Furtado:
Which is exactly what caused the protests in Cochabamba, in Bolivia.
Joe:
Yep. When the water system was privatized, prices went up dramatically. People even feared rainwater collection could be restricted.
PM Furtado:
That sparked the famous protests known as the Cochabamba Water War.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
A regrettable misunderstanding between markets and citizens.
Joe:
Markets trying to meter the rain.
The rain barrel overflows.
Joe:
Meanwhile here in Vancouver, the sky dumps billions of liters of water every year.
PM Furtado:
And we already have some of the cleanest municipal water in the world.
Joe gestures toward the clouds.
Joe:
Yet somehow people are paying more for bottled water than gasoline per liter.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
Consumers appreciate quality.
PM Furtado:
Consumers appreciate marketing.
Joe laughs.
Joe:
Imagine explaining this to someone from 500 years ago.
He points upward.
Joe:
โWater falls from the skyโฆ but we buy it in plastic bottles shipped across the continent.โ
The rain intensifies.
PM Furtado:
My policy is simple.
She taps the rain barrel.
PM Furtado:
Protect public water
Allow rainwater harvesting
Reduce plastic waste
Keep water a public resource
The Nestlรฉ CEO sighs and shuts the limousine door.
Nestlรฉ CEO:
First the rain barrelsโฆ next people will start collecting sunlight.
Joe:
Careful. Donโt give the solar companies any ideas.
The rain continues pouring over the rooftops of Vancouver.
PM Furtado:
โMy friends, people talk about the Age of Aquarius like itโs some mystical hippie dream. But if you look around the world, youโll see what it really means. Water is becoming the most precious resource on Earth. Rivers are drying up. Glaciers are melting. Nations are already arguing over who controls the taps.โ
A reporter raises a hand.
Reporter:
โPrime Minister, are you saying water wars are inevitable?โ
PM Furtado:
โTheyโre looming if we keep treating water like oil โ something to hoard and profit from instead of something humanity shares.โ
She holds up a glass of water.
PM Furtado:
โLook at this. The oceans contain 97% of the water on Earth. Yet billions of people still struggle for clean drinking water. Why? Because the technologies that could change everything are moving far too slowly.โ
Reporter:
โWhat technologies?โ
PM Furtado:
โDesalination. But not just the giant energy-hungry plants people think of. Iโm talking about next-generation membrane systems โ especially gravity-driven membrane desalination. Systems that can purify water with minimal energy, sometimes using only pressure and gravity.โ
She pauses, letting the idea settle.
PM Furtado:
โThese kinds of systems could make small coastal communities, islands, and drought regions independent for drinking water. You donโt need massive fossil-fuel plants to run them.โ
Another reporter speaks up.
Reporter:
โAre you suggesting these solutions are being ignored?โ
PM Furtado:
โIโm saying that when water becomes a commodity instead of a human right, innovation doesnโt always flow where it should.โ
She smiles slightly.
PM Furtado:
โThereโs an old line from Gordon Gekko in Wall Street โ โGreed is good.โโ
She shakes her head.
PM Furtado:
โGordon Gekko is wrong. Greed is not good โ not when it comes to water. In the Age of Aquarius, water isnโt supposed to be a weapon. Itโs supposed to be life.โ
Joe from the back of the crowd shouts:
Joe:
โSo instead of fighting water wars, we could just desalinate the ocean?โ
PM Furtado:
โExactly. The Earth already gave us the reservoir. Our job is to use technology and cooperation to share it.โ
She raises the glass again.
PM Furtado:
โThe future isnโt about who controls the last river. Itโs about making sure everyone has a cup.โ
Tony Demelo: โJoe, Iโm sick of slaving away in the Vancouver industrial zone for peanuts. Iโm done.โ
Joe: โTony, listenโremember those webpages I built for you and my cousin Annie Bosko for your reality show? Totally free from Musk or Zuckerberg. All yours.โ
Tony: โYeahโฆ but whatโs the catch?โ
Joe: โNo catch. Just a littleโฆ cousin swap. You swap cousins with me.โ
Tony: โSwap cousins? Joe, are you serious?โ
Joe: โDead serious. I know Borat says you need to trade a gallon of insecticide with Nellyโs father for her hand in marriage, but this isnโt Kazakhstan, Tony. This is Vancouver. We swap cousins.โ
Tony: โI donโt knowโฆ I donโt really trust Croatian girls.โ
Joe: โI get it, Tony. But my cousin Annie? She takes vows with God seriously. You wonโt find a more devoted co-starโor cousin.โ