EPISODE · Jun 19, 2026 · 3 MIN
The Glue That Holds Canada Together Is Breaking
from The LeDrew Three Minute Interview
Has Canada lost its social contract?In this episode of The LeDrew Three Minute Interview, Stephen LeDrew speaks with Dr. Michael Bonner about social decomposition, loneliness, crime, freedom, and the future of community in Canada.Bonner is the author of The Crisis of Liberalism: The Origin and Destiny of Freedom, a book that examines the philosophical and theological foundations of modern freedom and the challenges facing liberal democracy today. The book argues that a renewed understanding of freedom can help address the deeper problems facing liberal societies.LeDrew begins with the visible signs many Canadians are talking about at kitchen tables and restaurants: theft, disorder, violence, declining trust, and the feeling that society is coming apart. Bonner widens the discussion, arguing that the crisis is not only about crime, but also loneliness, isolation, and a form of freedom that leaves people atomized rather than connected.The conversation explores:Whether Canada’s social contract is breaking downCrime, disorder, and declining public trustLoneliness and isolation in modern societyThe difference between freedom and atomizationWhy communities and voluntary associations matterWhether government can fix social breakdownAnd how Canadians might begin rebuilding shared civic lifeBonner argues that people naturally want to form the kinds of associations that hold society together — families, communities, churches, clubs, neighbourhoods, and civic institutions — but that elites and governments often need to get out of the way and let those bonds reform.As Canada faces rising disorder and declining trust, this interview asks whether Canadians can rebuild community before government resorts to more surveillance, control, and intervention. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What this episode covers
Has Canada lost its social contract?In this episode of The LeDrew Three Minute Interview, Stephen LeDrew speaks with Dr. Michael Bonner about social decomposition, loneliness, crime, freedom, and the future of community in Canada.Bonner is the author of The Crisis of Liberalism: The Origin and Destiny of Freedom, a book that examines the philosophical and theological foundations of modern freedom and the challenges facing liberal democracy today. The book argues that a renewed understanding of freedom can help address the deeper problems facing liberal societies.LeDrew begins with the visible signs many Canadians are talking about at kitchen tables and restaurants: theft, disorder, violence, declining trust, and the feeling that society is coming apart. Bonner widens the discussion, arguing that the crisis is not only about crime, but also loneliness, isolation, and a form of freedom that leaves people atomized rather than connected.The conversation explores:Whether Canada’s social contract is breaking downCrime, disorder, and declining public trustLoneliness and isolation in modern societyThe difference between freedom and atomizationWhy communities and voluntary associations matterWhether government can fix social breakdownAnd how Canadians might begin rebuilding shared civic lifeBonner argues that people naturally want to form the kinds of associations that hold society together — families, communities, churches, clubs, neighbourhoods, and civic institutions — but that elites and governments often need to get out of the way and let those bonds reform.As Canada faces rising disorder and declining trust, this interview asks whether Canadians can rebuild community before government resorts to more surveillance, control, and intervention. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Glue That Holds Canada Together Is Breaking
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