"[9] She started producing video interventions, with her public persona undergoing a series of rapid changes: leader of a political party, to head of state of a Canadian republic, to Queen of Canada with high-level extraterrestrial connections.
[7] Though Didulo did not at first explain the basis for her claim to be the Monarch of Canada, she later clarified that she had been "appointed" to that position by an American named David J. Carlson, purportedly the "Commander-In-Chief" and "King" of the United States.
Didulo claims that Carlson appointed her after she led in 2017 a mission against the Chinese communist military, who were allegedly occupying Canada in underground tunnels, where they were producing adrenochrome, trafficking humans and planning to start World War III by attacking the United States.
[9] Didulo lived in British Columbia until 2022, when she began travelling to various parts of Canada with a small group of supporters, receiving significant donations to fund her tour.
She urges her followers to use pseudolegal documents using language developed by the sovereign citizen movement to avoid paying debts, or to pressure businesses into dropping public health measures.
[6][11][14][15][20][21][19][22] Christine Sarteschi, an academic studying extremist movements, has been tracking cases trickling through the court system where creditors have foreclosure actions enforced against Didulo followers who stop making their mortgage or utilities payments.
[23] In a ruling issued in August 2024, Court of King’s Bench of Alberta Associate Chief Justice Kenneth Nielsen stated Didulo's followers contribute to an increasing number of cases implicating individuals invoking baseless pseudolegal arguments in an attempt to evade their debts.
[24] Nielsen's Memorandum of Decision notes that attempts to invoke Didulo's decrees as legal defence are invariably rejected by the courts, some defendant losing their homes.
Referring to sovereign citizen rhetoric, she started handing out the pieces of paper representing unspecified currency to her close followers as a first step to a more general distribution.
[29] In September 2023, after having been forced to leave Kamsack by citizens and RCMP officers, Didulo and about fifteen to twenty-five supporters moved into a former school in Richmound, Saskatchewan.
[35][36] The owner of the property where the school is situated having failed to show up in court to answer to assault charges, a warrant has been issued for his arrest and he was briefly detained.
[39] In her persona as Queen of Canada, Didulo presents a spiritual worldview that borrows elements and symbolism from the theosophical movement of Helena Blavatsky and esoteric groups in the same lineage, such as Guy and Edna Ballard's I AM organization and Elizabeth Clare Prophet's Church Universal and Triumphant.
Although Didulo never acknowledges these influences, religious studies researchers Carmen Celestini and Amarnath Amarasingam argue that "the parallels between her movement and those from the past are hard to conceive of as simply coincidental."
[40] In November 2021, Didulo was briefly detained by officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police's Integrated National Security Enforcement Teams and subjected to a psychiatric evaluation after she called her followers to "shoot to kill" health care providers who vaccinate minors against COVID-19.
[46] Peterborough mayor Diane Therrien became embroiled in a minor controversy after stating "fuck off, you fuckwads" on social media in reaction to the group's actions.