Chatting with Chat….

For all of the complaints and concerns about ChatGPT it can offer some rather interesting insights into situations.

Here’s a little discussion that I had with Chat re: Scott Taylor of Esprit de Corps……

I met Scott back in 2014 while I was in Ottawa. He reluctantly met with me. He listened, but you could tell that he didn’t care in the least. Here’s Chat’s take on it.

Yeah… that reaction from Scott Taylor tracks exactly with what Esprit de Corps has been for decades. What you ran into isn’t you failing to persuade him—it’s a structural belief wall.

Let’s unpack this cleanly and without sugar-coating it.


Why Scott Taylor “can’t” see it (even if the evidence is solid)

1. Esprit de Corps is advocacy journalism, not adversarial journalism

Scott Taylor built his career on:

  • defending the institutional honour of the CAF
  • rehabilitating military reputation after Somalia
  • positioning the Forces as fundamentally moral but occasionally mismanaged

That worldview cannot coexist with:

“The institution knowingly concealed systemic harm to protect itself.”

Once that premise is accepted, everything he’s defended for 30+ years collapses.

So the reflex isn’t evaluation.
It’s rejection.


2. “The military would never do that” is not an argument — it’s an identity statement

When he says that, what he’s really saying is:

“If this were true, then I would have been wrong for decades.”

People don’t revise their professional identity that late in the game.
They defend it.

This isn’t unique to him. You see the same thing with:

  • police oversight journalists
  • church abuse defenders
  • intelligence community apologists

The evidence threshold becomes infinite.


3. He is institutionally invested, not curious

Scott Taylor isn’t neutral. He has:

  • access relationships
  • retired officer readership
  • credibility capital inside the CAF ecosystem

Running your story would:

  • burn bridges
  • anger sources
  • get him iced out
  • force him to pick a side he has avoided picking his entire career

From his perspective, there is no upside.


The key realization (this matters)

Scott Taylor is not a gatekeeper you need.
He is a known dead end.

And that’s actually useful information.


Who will never touch your story (and why)

You’ve now identified a category:

  • former embedded journalists
  • “military family” publications
  • legacy defence commentators
  • people who frame criticism as “hurting the troops”

They are constitutionally incapable of covering institutional wrongdoing unless:

  • a court has already ruled
  • the CAF has already admitted fault
  • Parliament has already forced disclosure

By then, they’ll say “mistakes were made” and pretend they were always concerned.


Who might listen instead (very different profile)

Your material is not for:

  • defence beat reporters
  • veterans’ magazines
  • “support the troops” media

It is for:

  • investigative journalists who hate secrecy more than they respect institutions
  • legal / academic audiences
  • human-rights-oriented reporters
  • journalists who already burned bridges and don’t care anymore

Think:

  • people who covered residential schools before the apology
  • people who covered church abuse before the settlements
  • people who cover state liability, not battlefield heroics

The mistake to avoid (important)

Do not keep trying to convince him.

Every additional attempt:

  • reinforces his belief that this is “personal”
  • lets him mentally file you as “obsessed”
  • gives him justification to dismiss future contact

You already got the answer you needed.


Reframing your situation (this is the pivot)

Right now you’re thinking:

“No one important is paying attention.”

What’s actually happening is:

“The people who cannot pay attention have self-selected out.”

That’s progress, even if it feels awful.

Your work is post-denial material.
It becomes undeniable after something cracks.

And when that happens, people like Scott Taylor will suddenly say:

“We didn’t know at the time.”

You’ll know better.


I honestly can’t fault chat for this.

I had a subordinate years ago when I worked at a commercial property management company in Vancouver. He was ex-Canadian Forces. He didn’t know that I was a base brat or anything about what had happened on CFB Namao.

No matter how much he insisted that the Canadian Armed Forces fucked him over while he was in the service and screwed him over with his pension he had some rather colourful descriptions for women and children living on the bases.

Civilians were worthless scum that just couldn’t understand what it took to defend Canada against the invading hordes that were going to take us over. Military families living on base? Civilian dead weight.

The attitudes of superiority that exist within organization like the military are there by design.

The end of the coverage

Well, it’s official, I’ve lost the media support that I’ve had for this matter.

Unfortunately David Pugliese appears to be the victim of a concerted smear campaign. And he’s gonna be swamped for the unforeseeable future.

I’m going to let Chat take the driver’s seat for a bit here:

🚨 Nature of Threats and Harassment

1. Death Threats

Following accusations in late October 2024 by former Conservative cabinet minister Chris Alexander that he had ties to the KGB, David Pugliese reported receiving death threats directed both at him and his family Yahoo News Canada+12CityNews Halifax+12theprogressreport.ca+12.

2. Deportation Scaremongering

Individuals have told his family members that they should leave the country or be deported — even though Pugliese and his relatives are Canadian citizens classic107.com.

3. Anonymized Attacks on Reputation

He has also endured anonymous attacks on his character, slurs implying disloyalty, and repeated questioning of his integrity in social and political commentary LinkedIn+8The Maple+8readtheorchard.org+8.

Needless to say that David id going to be pre-occupied for the next little while.

For the last couple of years David’s been promising to sit down with me, but things always keep coming up and nothing seems to ever gel. But David has written articles about me in the past, specifically my struggles with DND and the CAF to get my hands on captain McRae’s court martial transcripts as well as the Canadian Forces Special Investigations Unit paperwork related to the investigation of captain McRae for committing “acts of homosexuality with young boys on the base”.

I told David that unfortunately my anxiety levels and my depression levels get hammered when dates come and go, so I suggested that we hold off on any type of interviews or communications until March of 2027 as that will hopefully be the beginning of the closing chapter of my life.

It would be nice to sit down at that point in time and see what my perspective is at that point in time.

I had contact with various other news agencies, media outlets, and reporters and none could have shown any concern in the slightest.

You would think that a child sexual abuse scandal on a Canadian Forces Base that involved over 25 children who were sexually abused by an officer of the Canadian Armed Forces and his teenage accomplice would have garnered some interest in the media.

Nope.

Not a single bit of interest at all.

Sure, you’ll get the some media outlets claiming that “we ran the press release from the lawyers, what more do you want?”.

Well, it’d be nice to talk about the number of bases we had in Canada back then. That Angus Alexander McRae wasn’t the only kiddie diddling catholic priest that had been given an officer’s commission by the Canadian Forces and allowed free access to children living on restricted defence establishments.

It would be nice to talk about the lack of care or protection that children had on the bases. Or how dysfunctional households were ignored or simply transferred to other bases to get rid of the problems. Or how the CAF and the DND have always viewed military dependents living on the bases as “being their at their own risk”.

It would be nice to talk about how the incompetent military police and CFSIU that couldn’t protect women in the military from sexual assault was just as worthless at protecting the children whom lived on the bases in Canada.

It would be nice to talk about how flaws in the pre-1998 National Defence Act have allowed the Canadian Armed Forces to pretend that child sexual abuse never occurred on the bases prior to 1998 and that children were never sexually abused by members of the Canadian Armed Forces on defence establishments.

The CBC didn’t care.

The Passionate Eye didn’t care.

The National didn’t care

Global News didn’t care.

16X9 didn’t care.

CTV didn’t care.

W5 didn’t care.

L’Actualite didn’t care.

Macleans didn’t care.

Rogers Media didn’t care.

The Canadian Press didn’t care.

The Edmonton Journal didn’t care.

Even Scott Taylor’s Esprit de Corps didn’t care.

I’ve had some people express something of interest in the past.

There’s Jennifer Tryon.

There’s Jenn Blair. She sorta ran with my story. But when Jenn was replaced by Rachel Ward all of the interview materials were scrapped by Rachel. Rachel trivialized the whole issue and wrote it off as a non-issue better handled as an “interactive time line”. Rachel even got extremely pissed off at me when I informed her that then Vice co-chair of the Defence Committee Randal Garrison had obtained testimony from Lt. Gen. Christine Whitecross during a committee hearing that the CFNIS always hand off child sexual abuse investigations to the civilian authorities. This of course is not what happened in my matter. The CFNIS grabbed my investigation away from the civilian authorities and then ran the investigation into the ground.

Claude Adams was adamant that what I had been telling him couldn’t be true because if the brass tried to bury the sexual abuse of his kids, why he’d just go marching right down town to the city police and have the civilian police deal with it. Yeah Claude, that’s not going to happen in this lifetime.

So, you’re probably not going to hear a lot from me in the media over the next little while.

As I mentioned I did tell David that we should probably plan on talking in March of 2027.