DAILY | COVID science evolves; radical BC council bans fossil fuels; Canada's labour shortage
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 10 minutes
Words per Minute
177.09402
Summary
In this episode of the daily live stream, we dive into the latest headlines in the world, and specifically in our own province of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. We'll be discussing some of the key headlines that have been making headlines around the world over the past week, and we'll be talking through some of our favourite headlines from around the globe.
Transcript
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are you tired of losing your rights and freedoms the alberta prosperity project has a solution
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for you join the community and learn more at albertaprosperityproject.com with you on board
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we can achieve freedom and prosperity for all of us good afternoon everyone joining us at home and
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i guess good morning depending on what area of canada you're joining us from i'm your host
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tamara ugolini here with my lovely british columbia correspondent and colleague drea humphrey good
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morning drea how are you doing morning tamara i'm doing good we got a good lineup of combo hi everyone
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out there hope you're having a coffee if you're on the west that's right yeah we do have a great
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lineup i was actually really excited looking at some of the topics that we had outlined to chat
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together you know i was thinking about last night always feels like i'm kind of coming back and
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talking with a friend right we're just having an open dialogue and i think that's really important
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thing to to do regularly but i especially always appreciate when us rebels can get together and do
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that because we're so crazy busy all the time it's it's often like just push to the back burner
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to actually have those conversations so it's one part of the live stream that i find that i i appreciate
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and i enjoy um especially with you drea so thank you yeah and the viewers too because you guys get in
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on the super chats so it's nice to be able to hear from you guys as well exactly yeah it's a great way
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to engage with us so if you are just joining us this is our daily live stream uh we started this
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at the beginning of the pandemic because there was just so much news coming out every day so it's a way
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for us to kind of dissect and work through some of the latest happenings and in the world and more
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specifically here in canada since we are largely a canadian-based company um so today of course is
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thursday august the 11th and we'll be talking about some of the key headlines that we threw into our
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title but unfortunately at some point when we get into the covid nitty-gritty stuff if you're joining
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us on youtube we will not be able to uncensoredly share our opinions on some of the topics so
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unfortunately we'll try to do some of the covid or sorry some of the youtube friendly items first
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so we give our youtube viewers time to switch over to another platform those include um getter
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rumble and odyssey and on some of those other platforms you can share super chat so if you
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give a small monetary donation which we appreciate to continue doing the work that we do and keep the
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lights on and keep our technology up to date uh you can do that and then you get the opportunity at
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that point to engage with us directly on screen so we'll read your super chat and if we have a comment
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to make or some sort of dialogue to provide to that then we just go ahead and have that interaction
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so it's a great way for you uh our viewers to let us know what you care about the most so thank you for
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doing that all right are we just gonna dive in it are we gonna go i guess we should let's start with
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my province it's like you know doing its typical radical leftist things here especially in the
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environmental spectrum so i think the first article we have here is from the vancouver sun
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so victoria is being super ambitious when it comes to let's read this here it says almost all
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new construction in victoria from single family homes to towers will be required to be zero carbon
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producers by 2025 meaning they can't be heated with fossil fuels such as natural gas propane or fuel oil
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that's going to be costly i mean for the average person for the consumers like this is this is insane
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it says if we continue on it says citing concern about climate change and pollution victoria council
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has made the decision to accelerate the reduction of greenhouse gases in new buildings five years five
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years before provincial requirements such eager beavers out there uh this means that using electricity
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electricity to power equipment for space heating water heating cooking and drying clothes that's
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going going to be the things that would change in those buildings mayor lisa help someone joked in one
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of my interviews about her that ever since she's come she hasn't helped at all uh but yeah um
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very leftist mayor lisa help says each new building will last more than 50 years so raising the bar
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now is critical to meet our long-term climate goals and to preparing the taxpayers of the future to
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have less climate related costs down the road yeah the thing that really catches me there the 50 years
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right the buildings will be there for more than 50 years but i imagine they're going to go toward wind
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and solar to try to get the electricity i mean you still have to generate electricity somehow and
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that's traditionally and most cost effectively done by utilizing renewable energy um and fossil fuels
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that are renewable but i think that the plan there if i can read between the lines is to generate
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electricity then based on wind and solar generation um i want to note that those you know for instance in
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the case of solar panels the life cycle on a solar panel is approximately 25 years so if she's wanting
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buildings to last longer than 50 years well you're going to have to replace those panels twice in
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the duration of those that 50 years i just i don't know if there's that forethought of seeing these
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projects through that they can sensibly decide you know oh this is a great investment and plus
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i'm pretty sure in victoria there's like record rain season right is it it's dark and dreary there a lot of
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the year well yeah in bc it's slightly different than where i am out in the lower mainland but there
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is a ton of rain as well out here um so yeah that's definitely consistent without here but also i mean
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this is similar to what new york is promising to do as well or much of new york i think they want
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you know 70 percent of um their emissions down as well and then you have a lot of people raising issues
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there saying well what about cooking you're saying we can't cook uh the way we're normal and they're
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saying they're not even going to be able to cook here so you're right they're not thinking these
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things through at all i mean victoria declared a climate change emergency in 2019 so now you have
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all these people just you know actively working to fix another uh you know pandemic of sorts and this
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time it's climate change and people are just getting paid a lot of bucks to come up with things here
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and make decisions and you've got councils making these decisions to go five years earlier than the
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province and you've got your signature goals there the 2030 and 2050 dates that we hear all the time
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getting drilled into us and yeah i don't i don't think there's much thought in this it's not going to
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work out and whenever a city like victoria in a province like british columbia which is like the most
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tax is trying to say oh we'll do this now and you'll pay less later yeah give me a break
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later when it's like 50 years apparently later when they really see that the true cost of these
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things to replace solar panels i mean that's not that that that comes with a high burden of cost
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there you're basically starting from scratch i used to actually design solar panel arrays for
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buildings and businesses and homes residential areas very brief because i saw it was a scam
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i saw so early on that it was a scam because by the time people got their return on investment
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so you know they would put this huge upfront cost and there was all these grants and tax breaks and
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things supposedly to be given to them from the government but once he worked out the nitty-gritty
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of it which was part of my job um you you could see very clearly that once the people started to
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actually get the return on their initial investment which is you know upwards of twenty thirty thousand
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dollars the solar panels were at the end of their lifespan so they would need to replace them
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anyway so it was basically just uh not cost effective at all and would potentially be putting
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people actually in the red to try to do this and also there was a lot of legalities there where
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when you have a solar array for instance for a residential home at least here in ontario and maybe it's
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changed since i was in that field but you have to give all of the power that you generate back to
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the grid and then continue buying from the grid so depending on how much power you generate and how
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much you're using all the power you generate goes back into the grid and i think they would pay like a
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measly amount per kilowatt hour for it and then you still use your normal consumption and you had to
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legally do that you have to sell it all back to the grid and not utilize it yourself at for your own
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house so it's like kind of nonsensical right you think you would put a solar panel array on your
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home to fuel your own home but that wasn't the way it was working you're such a Jill of all trades
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Tamara you're just everywhere i don't know how you do it but yeah no you totally hit it on the nail
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there i mean this is the city we have you know one week we'll have people throwing manure at
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you know john horgan's office premier john horgan's office the next week they're slashing
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you know mom's suv tires to save the world so that they can't safely drive their kids to school or
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i guess it's summertime so not school i mean but it's just a clown show over there i'm sorry to say
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it if you live in victoria don't come at me but perhaps you agree with me and also apparently you've
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been in a climate emergency since 2019 so i don't know exactly that means i think like you alluded to
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that it's just the funding right as soon as they declare that a state of emergency that opens the
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door and the gateway to unlimited and unfettered access to provincial funding so thank you for that
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residents of victoria if you have anything to say to us in that regard how the climate emergency
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declaration has affected you please do let us know because other protesters now are taking to
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uh vancouver um to denounce fossil fuels once again so i think that they're planning a bigger
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demonstration this coming weekend drea if you could give us a sneak peek into your schedule do you plan
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on attending yeah i'm going to do it especially after seeing this um i'll definitely need security
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uh to cover it um but you know this if you guys have ever been to gas town this is such a you know
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a special place around every 15 minutes this clock um you know makes some beautiful sounds and there's
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a story on it and people always stop and go around it and here you have this radical extremist
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pouring molasses over it it's an anti-fracking demonstration let's watch a video of it
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i don't think we have sound if there i can't remember if there's sound i think there is oh there
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i think they were they were using molasses um to i guess be like the result
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of fracking and it was supposed to represent fossil fuels somehow um i wonder if they're going to
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have their bank account seized like are they this is pretty radical right it's very disruptive
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i know right and no of course that's reserved for freedom lovers but um yeah you know i don't know
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what uh parents base room basement this uh girl crawled out of but you know i just find it hard how
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are these people providing themselves they look like young adults and they're doing things like
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this i love in the article this vancouver is awesome article towards the bottom um it brings
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up david suzuki of course it brings oh my gosh i know that you see this you see what happened to the
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truckers just totally peaceful protest gets totally attacked but whenever it's something like this they
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always get a throw in like someone oh david suzuki told vancouver is awesome in a previous interview
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that he understands why groups such as extinction rebellion engage in civil disobedience adding that
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humanity is on a suicidal path well if it's a suicidal path i don't think it has anything to do with the
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climate might be something else going on there you know what i'm saying but i mean yeah there's always
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someone condoning this type of illegal activity when it's you know something radical and on the left
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exactly when it supports the current thing and i mean i think that we should also remember that
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david suzuki was the person who threatened to blow up pipelines i mean how is he over here saying
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society or humanity is on a suicidal path when who knows what kind of destruction and loss of life
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it would cause to literally blow up a pipeline like that is so radically extreme and it's and it's just
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being facilitated by all of the government policy that's coming in with all with this radical
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environmentalism that makes no sense like financially and output wise it literally does not make any sense
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as i've already kind of alluded to about the solar array stuff and the wind generation i mean all of them
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have really glaring issues wrapped in this virtue of trying to be environmentally friendly i mean
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wind turbines never decompose right there it's just it's insane it is in my opinion it is insane um
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i also wanted to know in this article that one of the demonstrators allegedly shouts into a megaphone
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uh they've destroyed the water table there's now radiation in the water table have they ever seen
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the absolute cesspools that have been created by lithium mining right because all of these alternative
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energy sources depend on batteries rely on yeah yeah and storage power so i have i guess they've never
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they aren't privy to the fact that that devastates the earth and leaves behind this like sludgy
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probably radioactive uh because it glows and looks very concerning colors yeah so again just hints
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further at the nonsense of all of these radical extremists again that are being like egged on
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by government this is being totally condoned and uh i'm i'm i'm interested to see how far they get i think
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in the article also they allude to the fact that they're going to like blockade something
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this coming weekend um so i'd be interested to know how that's addressed and dealt with if justin
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trudeau is going to invoke the emergencies act well don't hold your breath on that honestly blocking
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something for these types of reasons is very common here it happens very often there's actually been
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arrests and things like that so there probably will be a couple of arrests that's what usually happens
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but definitely nobody's bank accounts no mom's bank accounts will be seized for buying a you know t-shirt
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or something like that so or you know held without bail for 49 days collectively i mean how insane what a
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difference between how the government addresses radical left versus people just wanting to uphold
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their basic civil liberties just just wild um so i think with that we're going to were there any super
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chats on that topic i have to i haven't been able to click back into that section drea do you know if
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there's any super chats in there i feel like there should be yep we got one here from g melinda g60
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she donated two dollars to us thank you so much for that down here in texas we love your coverage hey
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how are you and i heard correct me if i'm wrong or i read that in texas you guys are actually making
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laws against this type of stuff right you can only yeah you guys are yeah we love you in texas too
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uh rebels or no sorry uh king 7734 donates a dollar thank you so much says ja me come to canada for
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a better life but i got a race a rasclat for a leader i don't know why i'm laughing it's not funny
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i'm sorry it used to be the land of the free here but you know with people like yourself uh coming now
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maybe we can stick together and and change it for the good so welcome to canada i'm sorry yeah
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basically if you were here before 2016 it was way different justin trudeau has just decimated what we
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had previously uh for our societal fabric and that's just been furthered by the way that covet has
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been handled by all levels of government and it's really sad to see and i'm hoping with good strong
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leadership eventually we can come out on this again upholding true canadian heritage so um with that
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being said oh sorry dra go ahead well i was just gonna say and i think people have been sort of
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pushed to you know canadians were known for being so nice and things like that i think we're just known
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for not saying what we really want to say and i think people are being pushed now that we're getting
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forced to be in this position where we have to kind of stand for our beliefs it's slowly happening so
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that will hopefully help with everything there's a lot of like the eeyore syndrome right like the
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we're just gonna go along to get along and we'll just yeah mosey our way through this and i think
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more and more people are seeing you know no uh if you don't like the way things are going nothing's
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going to change unless you start to stand up and speak up so um with that being said we're going to
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go to an ad break so we do have some sponsors on today's program um where i will read the ad and then
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we'll play a quick video from them so on august 25th 2022 you can join the alberta prosperity
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project the app and rebel news at the edmonton convention center obviously in edmonton alberta
00:18:58.100
for a very special ucp leadership dinner and forum where we ask your questions to the ucp leadership
00:19:06.640
candidates and find our and you can find out their agenda 2030 plan for alberta you can buy your
00:19:15.080
tickets at albertaprosperityproject.com check out their quick ad
00:19:46.480
so fun it's always nice to mingle in person after being like two years of prevented from having any
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form of a social circle depending on how much you bought into the narrative and complied
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but it's always nice to get back into large large gatherings again we actually in my family you know
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we tried to keep things as much as normal for mostly the children because we wanted them to
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have good strong social skills and ability to maintain that but it was really unsettling even
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for us I remember the first time we went to a play place again and it was actually we were hosting
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my children's birthday parties there and it was crowded and I was actually surprised how much
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the this play place how many people they let into the facility I mean I thought in like regular times
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it would be that seemed a little bit chaotic but especially coming out of the last two years
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even myself it was kind of unsettling and jarring just being with so many people in confined closed
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spaces you know and the kids are screaming flailing and running so I really feel for some people who
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have been so isolated but I urge you just to get back out there and get back integrated into society
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because it's so important to have that social interaction one thing we forgot to mention sorry
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before we went to ad break there on the topic of radical environmentalism there's also a plastics
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producer here in Canada that has decided to file a court application against the Trudeau government
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and their ban on plastics for to be phased in so this will be phased in December of this year so
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they're banning single-use plastics you know straws and cups and there is a group who has actually
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filed a court a lawsuit against them and I guess this is the second one actually I was reading this
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article that the they have also done the same in regards to the the harmfulness of plastics that
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the Trudeau government has implemented I think in 2020 or 2021 but it's so hypocritical at the time
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for instance when I was still a Tim Hortons frequenter which I'm not anymore and if you would like to know
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why that is you can head over to my petition at letkidscamp.com uh Tim Hortons foundation camps
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have been implementing potentially harmful and unscientific mandate on children and youth and
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all of their staff age 12 and up to attend their camps this past summer uh so prior to when I you know
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I get an ice cap right on really hot days it was like oh the ice cap is a great Canadian staple here
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at least for me in the summers and they give these they now give you paper straws but the whole thing
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comes in a plastic cup and you can get maybe I don't know five ten sips in before you're literally
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drinking the paper straw like it just disintegrates oh I know it's so disgusting and there's actually
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to-go straws being sent out this is in the U.S. and they're paper straws that are packed in plastic
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as well and it's just kind of like that's how much sense this all makes you know what I mean
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but yeah it never ends and when you read the article of course uh minister uh environment
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minister Stephen Gabel he says he's pretty confident this will fail like of course he is yeah under
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regulations Gabel finalized in June the ban is set to be phased in starting this December
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with an end to the manufacture sale and import of takeout containers stir sticks retail carryout bags
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cutlery and most straws I don't know about you but here it's very hard to get a bag like if you go to
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the grocery store most of them do not give plastic bags or anything like that I am you know infamous for
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forgetting my little bag so it's like each time I'm buying those cloth bags that I have no use for I
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have so many I even donated some of them to a thrift store so that's you know just I don't know
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you know is that happening to you guys already it is there's there has been a constant push and I'm
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kind of of the thought you know I like to lessen my my impact in terms of you know I cloth diaper I try
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to use the reusable stuff I would go to bulk barn with my own jars and refill it I mean I do make a
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conscious effort as a consumer to limit the amount that I consume and in the way of plastics and and
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single use things but I don't think that the government should come at people and start to
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ban it or limit your use or put like a plastic single use plastic allocation on your social credit
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score or anything like this I think that if the consumer wishes to go ahead and live that way because
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it is a lifestyle change then they obviously can can take that and if we maybe enable people and give
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more education but I don't think there should be mandates in place or this like radical I mean the
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thing for me that really comes up when I think about the ban on single use plastics is the the medical
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establishment and health I mean Justin Trudeau loves these vaccines and he just wants everyone to be
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boosted out the yahoo and how are how is he going to administer and his government going to push
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consecutive doses on to Canadians if there's a ban on single use plastics I mean the whole thing
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is plastic how do you make a syringe without plastic well they'll find a way right when it
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matters to them just like with the masks how many masks have people thrown out you see them in shopping
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cards and everything like this I went to a doctor's office I stepped out to go to my car to come
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something I came back in they wanted me to put another one on it I said I just put this
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they said it doesn't matter you have to put it on I'm thinking how many situations like that have
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we ignored the mounds of of face masks um everywhere it's just ridiculous but he'll just
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maybe he'll just refer to it as a plastic drink thingy he won't be able to label it and that will get
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him by a plastic injection yeah thingy water and also um I think that masks are the new paper
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plastic straw right I think that that has like just totally switched because actually yesterday
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so I have a video coming out on this the next day or two but I visited the passport office uh here and
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I guess the federal government is still imposing this crazy COVID theater so for instance in order
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to enter their their area in this strip mall so in the strip mall itself you didn't have to wear a mask
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but as soon as you entered past the service Canada doors you had to wear a mask the doors are open you
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know the airflow is flowing it's all the same uh and so of course I'm mask exempt so I never had
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the opportunity I had to be segregated away from everybody else because of that and my documents
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had to be handled in a way yeah there it is there was my little office for the day so that was me in
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like the middle of the line I think it was like 75 people and I actually used that chair so they
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segregated me over to the side and I don't want to give away my whole report because it'll be out but
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while I was sitting there waiting for them to handle my documents with this high-tech viral
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blocking basket that we had to pass everything back and forth in um they gave out so many people
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didn't bring masks and so they were providing them for free and countless amounts of masks and then I
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did see one lady like she came in she did her stuff and then she left and then she got a call that she
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missed something so she came back they had to give her another mask and these are like individually
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plastic wrapped KN95 so they're not cheap and I'm just looking around at you know how many masks
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they gave it the in the short time well it was pretty long actually the time that I was there
00:27:39.180
one day I mean maybe that's worth a freedom of information request because it was a lot of masks
00:27:46.440
yeah it's ridiculous I look forward to your report I know in BC I missed it but some people were
00:27:53.360
actually sleeping overnight to get into the lineup but they've kind of changed how you do things so
00:27:58.200
that's not happening anymore we do have a super chat for those of you just tuning in you're like
00:28:03.080
what is a super chat on certain platforms uh we're encouraging people to check us out on rumble and
00:28:09.260
odyssey for example so that if we say anything too spicy and get cut off you won't miss out on anything
00:28:14.820
and there you can also uh talk to us you can give us a small donation that helps pays for our
00:28:21.700
journalism really and you can also chat with us so we have amt60 who's donated a dollar thank you
00:28:29.660
very much and says did you see the oh the docu series called uninformed consent and dr trawzy's site
00:28:38.060
on dr trawzy's site sorry for butchering that very well done Canadian doctors speak out too yes
00:28:44.760
absolutely I saw it was very well done I actually did an interview with the director and one of the
00:28:50.360
doctors who's been interviewed on rebel news many times which is dr stephen mildhouse before it
00:28:55.760
launched but yeah I encourage you guys to check it out I know it's on liberty.com as well but if you
00:29:02.060
search uninformed consent documentary you should be able to find it by now and it's one of those
00:29:07.840
documentaries um when I interviewed the director he said this and I totally agree after watching it it's
00:29:13.020
one of those things where you're like if you've been kind of divided with people and they just
00:29:17.140
don't want to hear you but you're kind of like oh my gosh I need to tell my loved ones this um just
00:29:22.540
kind of say hey you know what if you love me just watch this one thing and then I'll leave you alone
00:29:27.920
unless you want to talk about it more and some people are actually doing that I know some people
00:29:32.140
personally who have sent it to friends that they haven't been able to go there with this conversation
00:29:36.900
and people are actually going wow like I've never heard any of this stuff so yeah yeah thanks for
00:29:42.800
bringing that up and Adam next on our list oh sorry there's one more no yeah Adam Ottawa who donated a
00:29:52.900
dollar says I got my rebel t-shirts this week to my surprise they came with four reusable plastic bags
00:30:00.540
saving me 20 cents thank you for the bonus gift well you're very welcome uh yeah if you guys want
00:30:07.700
to check out any of our rebel gear you can go to rebelnewsstore.com we're both wearing some of the
00:30:14.140
gear and I think we still have a code where if you buy two unisex shirts you get a second one free with
00:30:20.900
coupon code summer and again that supports our journalism so thank you so much and Adam I see here you gave
00:30:27.460
another dollar thank you for that I agree with Tamara about being sensible I was raised to reuse and repair
00:30:32.280
everything so reusing a plastic bag comes natural to me anyway it's not a new concept to reduce waste
00:30:38.460
as an individual yeah I agree I actually just started to see how much garbage we were accumulating at the end
00:30:44.280
of the week and you know when you put your garbage and you're recycling out and I just I wanted to reduce
00:30:48.400
it I just didn't want I didn't feel good about putting that much out to be collected and you know part of
00:30:54.220
my education my background was actually in sustainable design and uh and that green energy that's why I
00:31:00.900
was like I said designing solar panels there for a little bit right out of university I did see that
00:31:06.360
it's a scam but there are parts that I decided as a person as an individual to implement in my own life
00:31:12.000
and for my family but I do not think that the government should come in with the heavy hand of mandates or
00:31:17.780
taxes or any of this bogus nonsense to force people into that way of life um so that's where I take a
00:31:26.500
hard stand against that stuff but um speaking of the hard hand of the government uh we have an article
00:31:33.500
here that just came out from global news where they filed an access to information request to find
00:31:38.340
out how much the Toronto police force spent on dealing with i.e. preventing the potential convoy so
00:31:48.400
uh from February 2nd to 27th the Toronto police spent seven and a half over seven and a half million
00:31:57.280
dollars dealing with potential local convoy so of course that refers to the freedom convoy that hit
00:32:03.780
the nation's capital at the same time but potential I mean they didn't even they didn't even know for
00:32:09.880
sure and so they're spending this insane amount of money on a potential convoy and if we can go back
00:32:16.440
to that report as well so they spent seven and a half million and then they spent an additional
00:32:22.260
1.2 million sending Toronto police officers to Ottawa and then they break down some further funds and
00:32:32.320
things that happened and and some of that actually included uh what they paid the city of Toronto so
00:32:38.640
they actually utilized city of Toronto buses some more heavy equipment from various other private and
00:32:44.460
public sectors to help them blockades for anyone who doesn't know in Toronto there's the parliamentary
00:32:50.540
buildings all around Queen's Park it's like a a circle of that surrounds the parliament buildings
00:32:58.160
themselves building itself and so police blockaded like every two blocks parameter around Queen's Park
00:33:08.960
downtown Toronto for the better part of the entire month of February every weekend uh we can actually
00:33:15.340
maybe I don't know if we have a clip of the one day in particular where a few trucks and police had a bit
00:33:21.300
of a standoff at the intersection of Bloor and Queen's Park at the north end of the of the roundabout
00:33:29.400
maybe we can just show a quick clip of that report because I was on the ground that day and tensions you
00:33:35.740
know tensions rose for sure with the Toronto police service and a few of the truckers um I don't know what
00:33:43.080
would have happened had they have gotten through but I also want to note here that this is part of the
00:33:50.040
human rights complaint that Sarah Miller and with in partnership with us here at Rebel News and our
00:33:56.480
um chief editor Sheila Gunn-Reed just delivered hand delivered in Geneva Switzerland part of that claim
00:34:03.040
and again that was given to the United Nations human rights complaint under the universal declaration of
00:34:09.680
human rights that Canada and the government and the police have infringed on people's right to freedom
00:34:15.220
of assembly and freedom to protest what they think the government is doing that's wrong and so this is a
00:34:21.880
direct hindrance on people's right to assemble and protest their government and they spent seven and a
00:34:28.460
half million dollars to do it before it's even happening like you don't even get a chance to be peaceful
00:34:34.580
anymore in Canada and similar thing happened out in Victoria a couple of months ago they were making a big deal
00:34:40.620
the news was going off about how there was going to be a trucker convoy and they deployed people to in front of
00:34:46.440
the parliament and were slowing down traffic um you know there's officers everywhere well I had called to try and
00:34:53.760
cover the event I called the freedom leaders and they're like yeah we're not even doing that it's not even
00:34:59.280
happening we might do it next week they totally got the week wrong and so here they are slowing down traffic
00:35:06.060
disturbing everybody wasting the taxpayer dollars for no reason for something that isn't even going to
00:35:12.320
happen and they're going off I can't remember there was uh John Horgan said something don't quote me
00:35:17.560
exactly exactly like something like we don't want you here or go home or something like that but um it's
00:35:24.340
just totally ridiculous and I hadn't seen this firsthand but people told me that in particular if you had
00:35:30.620
flags in your car there for a while in Victoria you were getting directed outside of the downtown
00:35:35.560
core as well so I don't know let me know if that has happened to you the flag has been completely
00:35:42.080
um vilified all throughout this unfolding especially as the mainstream media continues to portray this
00:35:49.660
in a negative light um I just wanted to write just to go back to one thing with this article it was
00:35:55.820
a comment made by the Toronto police spokesperson and he said that or they I don't know uh their gender
00:36:02.060
I don't want to misgender them um ultimately the actions we took in an extremely dynamic situation
00:36:07.980
in partnership with our public and private sector partners so again that was like City of Toronto and
00:36:12.660
other heavy equipment buses that they used to blockade the blocks surrounding this potential protest
00:36:20.080
was successful in preventing unreasonable disruption while maintaining public safety and allowing
00:36:28.180
for peaceful demonstration I mean arguably no right they provided or conducted unreasonable disruption in my
00:36:38.020
opinion with the way that they literally blocked everyone and everything off from accessing those points
00:36:44.660
um and they didn't allow for peaceful demonstration because people were not allowed to access that area
00:36:50.820
when I went in to cover that on the Saturday actually I was stopped so there was like police checkpoints
00:36:56.860
all along uh the perimeter of Queens Park and so I was stopped trying to drive in to cover the protest
00:37:04.360
and I wish I was driving alone so I wish I had it recorded um but I wasn't able to get my phone out in time
00:37:11.980
and the police basically said you know what's your purpose for coming through and I I kind of looked at him a bit shocked
00:37:19.000
um and then he said is it I wasn't just going to be forthcoming with that information right and he said
00:37:25.220
is it work related um job related or education related and I said it's work related he said okay
00:37:31.240
go on through um no further questions but it was really unsettling that this is happening in Canada
00:37:37.380
exactly well people are peacefully demonstrating that is such an invasion and you know out here again
00:37:43.560
same thing I don't the idea of convoys at least out here is they're going to drive through they're
00:37:48.920
not going to stop the traffic and you have um you know the Vancouver mayor he put out a statement
00:37:54.540
basically saying oh you know we can't have these types of things because they're blocking
00:37:59.140
hospitals and things like that it's like no they're going to drive through so counter protesters came
00:38:04.140
to protect hospital staff I did a report on that um one of the convoys out here and the counter
00:38:10.360
protesters uh actually blocked the traffic they sat and blocked the trucks and vehicles with their
00:38:17.160
flags on that were just going to do loops they weren't going to stop any traffic and they stopped
00:38:22.160
so much traffic um yeah that was an interesting report they were pushing me around as well so
00:38:27.740
it's just the hypocrisy makes no sense and the money and the time resort like yeah I mean I guess
00:38:34.860
they couldn't spend eight million dollars on this and then be like oops sorry we got it wrong so they
00:38:39.580
have to be like yeah good job well done like it's it's insane it's just more hypocrisy of the new and
00:38:47.020
what I'm finding actually is just the old normal it's all just blatant hypocrisy and if you can think
00:38:53.080
critically you can cut through it with a knife because it is so thick it's um it's really gross but we have
00:39:00.800
another uh super chat thank you from frazier phrase bow uh frazier he gives five dollars frazier says
00:39:07.160
if I were the leader of al-qaeda would you call me a terrorist yes then why don't you call the wef
00:39:15.300
a terrorist organization the wef only wants to eliminate 90 percent of the world's population
00:39:22.240
um yes the uh the language is a little bit aggressive for for me to be able to um to verify
00:39:33.760
that but um definitely again it just hints at the hypocrisy of what these organizations are doing
00:39:42.200
what they denounce on one side and then facilitate on the other again if you're a critical thinker you
00:39:48.660
can see through it and so my hope is by just exposing some of that hypocrisy that it helps
00:39:54.500
people to see through it as well and all right and then we have the labor shortage in Canada so I
00:40:04.440
don't know I think we may have touched on this a little bit last week or maybe we were chatting um
00:40:09.080
off off record about it but the the signs up everywhere I'm seeing help wanted help wanted help wanted
00:40:16.460
and it's the same in BC yeah so this particular star article says a higher percentage of Canadians
00:40:23.480
between 15 and 64 are working now than before the pandemic so why is there a labor shortage
00:40:30.680
and um basically the article alludes to the fact that they're the baby boomer boomers have retired so
00:40:39.140
of course we saw that baby boom after world war ii and all of them are coming into their 60s and 70s now
00:40:44.300
and so many of them are starting to be at that age where they will retire but as far as i'm concerned
00:40:50.400
and from what i'm hearing from a lot of people who maybe are on the cusp of that age demographic
00:40:55.400
they actually just decided to retire early throughout the pandemic when all of the mayhem
00:41:00.780
started to unfold and especially like i've mentioned before with the mask mandates when they came into
00:41:06.340
effect so many people could not comply with that and they tried to in good faith wear their masks
00:41:10.880
but a lot of people struggled and if they were close enough to that retirement uh point in their
00:41:17.520
career they opted to take early retirement or just retire and get out of wash their hands of it
00:41:23.000
completely you know it's a combination of things you hit it on the nail there but also just in general
00:41:28.700
i mean uh where we live we're very busy we're not the easiest place for mental health and then you
00:41:34.380
throw on masks nobody's ever seeing a smile anymore there's a lot of people who were fearful of
00:41:40.280
customers right they were afraid of of you know if you remember the stuff that would go out about
00:41:45.900
you know your grocery store clerk it's you know this big hero because they're serving you and you
00:41:51.780
could basically be making them and their family die i mean a lot of people felt like their work had
00:41:57.460
become a battle a war zone everywhere that they went and so the stress of that in the environment
00:42:04.040
i mean it had to have all affected everything that's happening but it is interesting if they're
00:42:09.820
saying there's more people working now i i'm still not quite connecting the dots and i'm seeing it out
00:42:15.780
here too though the help wanted signs i've asked people um you know you know i notice these signs are
00:42:21.800
up everywhere in the area especially chilewack out here and they're like yeah it's been the last two
00:42:26.380
years and they usually say oh since serve and i'm like well you know that's not still happening but
00:42:31.600
maybe it's also a matter of people got used to being lazy like or just like getting by with less
00:42:38.820
money i don't know it's like it's it's grooming great for a universal income or something like
00:42:44.620
that i don't know what it is but i definitely think it's a combo thing things i don't know a lot of
00:42:49.100
people who have left canada as well or left provinces like they switch different provinces to try to find a
00:42:55.080
better life as well so there's just a lot happening at the same time i think i think so too i think
00:43:01.540
there's definitely gaps in this article where it leaves you with more questions than answered
00:43:05.480
yeah um one thing that i did note is this particular quote from uh trisha williams they they decide to
00:43:11.400
reach out to her for comment she's the director of research evaluation and knowledge mobilization
00:43:16.700
at the future skills center um she says well there's been great talk about the great resignation
00:43:22.860
throughout the pandemic um and its potential impact on the labor market the unemployment numbers prove
00:43:30.440
apparently that that phenomenon did not play out she says that the great resignation has been more of
00:43:37.480
a u.s story than a canadian one um noting that the canadian market saw workers switching jobs during
00:43:44.120
the pandemic but not entirely exiting the workforce so that is something that i have also heard and i think
00:43:50.840
and again we discussed this last week on the live stream as well that's like we have nurses i know
00:43:55.020
nurses and psws and health care workers who are now cleaning houses who are now babysitting kids
00:44:00.980
yeah because there's no child liking it sorry go on and yeah and they like it they they can
00:44:08.360
wash their hands literally pun intended of their job at the end of the day when they get home and they
00:44:15.480
don't have to worry about it they're not fatigued they're not burnt out they're not being underpaid
00:44:19.280
um so there's definitely that great resignation and she alludes to it being you know the um the great
00:44:28.520
uh switching of careers instead of a full resignation so people are still in the workforce
00:44:34.100
apparently despite the fact that there are help wanted signs literally everywhere but i think there
00:44:39.120
are help wanted signs in certain sectors so i'd be interested to break down where the most help
00:44:45.240
is wanted and needed and where did those people go to if they just simply switched careers well
00:44:52.680
switching also means there's training involved and i think there's been like almost new areas where you
00:44:57.900
needed new people to do things you never needed them before like stand at the door and see if you
00:45:02.680
have a mask like there's all of these different elements to it i just want to add to when you're
00:45:06.920
talking about the health care workers and yes we talked about that last week with the
00:45:10.160
nurses going into cleaning and liking it um i won't say which doctor but i spoke to another doctor
00:45:16.480
who you know is fighting and and trying to get you know rights and bc to be in the hospital and
00:45:22.720
everything like that but at the same time he's like if it wasn't for fighting for the betterment of my
00:45:27.100
country i to be honest i'm doing good like life is way less stressful you know i'm not getting called
00:45:34.020
at all hours of the day and everything like that and so that is the the danger we're seeing here is
00:45:39.740
where you have these skilled people who literally go to work to save your lives who've been pushed to
00:45:45.340
to not be there for us and are going you know what what was i dealing with all that stress before
00:45:51.580
so we're going to lose all these people even if they're allowed back these mandates have such a
00:45:56.060
residual effect um and it's all just working against us so yeah yeah i agree that we're going to get to
00:46:03.820
some super chats uh and then we have to speed things up because we have a bunch of covid related
00:46:08.060
topics to get to as well so um we'll go through these super chats and then we're going to have
00:46:12.620
an ad break and then we'll be switching we'll be cutting our youtube stream because we can't
00:46:16.940
unfortunately provide a great comment and express our real views on this platform uh they censor
00:46:24.240
everything that contradicts the widely accepted safe and effective narrative so we'll be cutting from
00:46:29.900
youtube join us on rumble odyssey or getter and of course you can send us super chats to engage with us
00:46:35.840
on the live stream there um phrasebo gives one dollar have you had have you have any information
00:46:43.540
on the crime the rcmp caused to the excavators at coots alberta i haven't been following that story as
00:46:50.340
closely as some of our alberta correspondents so fraser that might be a better um comment to one of
00:46:56.520
them but um what's the website we have a website uh that's specific to the alberta convoy
00:47:03.880
and i think it's just all convoy reports isn't it or trucker is it truckerlawyer.com
00:47:10.160
well we have convoy reports and then we have the trucker documentary would it be there i think
00:47:18.180
there's and there's the yeah the truckerlawyer.com and that's specifically about the legalities what
00:47:24.620
with what's happening there so fraser you may be able to find out what you're looking for at that
00:47:29.340
website unfortunately i apologize i'm just not as up on the alberta stuff as probably i should be
00:47:34.300
um wrong way 54 gives five dollars thank you i hope you're not too far down the wrong way
00:47:41.120
um sounds like the wef is making trudeau a billionaire with the never-ending covid jabs at
00:47:46.980
all of our expense pain and suffering definitely these pandemic profiteers you know they're not
00:47:53.640
suffered the financial fallout of any of these policies and so that again hints at the hypocrisy
00:47:59.360
of this alleged new normal c balak donates ten dollars thank you so much says i appreciate rebel
00:48:06.740
and all that you are doing are there particular are there practical ways we can fight against the
00:48:13.000
arrive can oh that's a good one god keep our land glorious and free so we have a special website
00:48:19.500
called no arrive can.com i know tamera you've done reports on that right um yeah alexa as well
00:48:27.140
alexa so one of the ways you can fight back is signing our petition so we can demand pressure on
00:48:32.720
that and our charity partners at the democracy david's like but i just wanted to say one more
00:48:39.660
thing our uh charity partners at the democracy fund are also looking for strategic plaintiffs to take on
00:48:46.660
to go ahead and challenge the arrive can and we have a form for that as well hopefully it's all on
00:48:52.580
in one place there for you um so check it out there uh and fill out if you've got a crazy story that you
00:48:59.720
think should help with that legal challenge then go ahead and sign the petition and fill that form out
00:49:05.520
as well please and share very important to share so you have the right people yeah i think what i'm
00:49:11.500
seeing on social media and you can find that on twitter and maybe other social media outlets as well
00:49:15.900
is that people are just choosing not to comply so i think it was something like 30 percent of
00:49:20.400
canadians have just straight up just not complied with the arrive can requirement and uh there's some
00:49:27.460
wording and things to use that i've seen on social media i mean personally i'm not a lawyer i don't want
00:49:32.180
this to constitute as legal advice because i've never navigated that situation but there's some
00:49:36.360
interesting things happening there with people who are you know standing their ground on that and
00:49:41.040
refusing to download it um amt 60 gives one dollar thank you did you sign up for cpc leadership so you
00:49:48.760
can vote for a leader i did and roman baber is coming to whitby legion tonight and i'm going so i can
00:49:54.740
meet him my three choices are roman pierre and leslin freedom uh no i don't i'm not a member of any of
00:50:02.720
the political parties and i do that intentionally so i personally won't be voting but um i really appreciate
00:50:09.440
that roman took a principled stance not as early as i would have liked to have seen you know i've been
00:50:13.680
in the covid dissident world since at least the end of march or end of april early may and um eventually
00:50:22.920
he joined on with that you know you could no longer deny the evidence showing that what they were doing
00:50:28.520
was harmful um so so i think that roman's a principled politician pierre and leslin i don't have
00:50:36.140
anything you know negative uh maybe i criticized pierre a little bit about the fact that he um
00:50:41.980
won't necessarily talk to alternative media or any media so i can't really complain because he seems to
00:50:47.780
just treat everyone the same in that regard yeah i think it's a strategy there but um lewis is starting
00:50:53.840
to speak out about something sudden adult death she spoke out about that uh she's uh i just saw today
00:51:00.940
actually she sent out a thing about tamara leach being a political prisoner so very interesting to
00:51:07.460
see what's happening as the race is going down um i like that she's speaking out and she definitely
00:51:12.200
spoke up before uh pierre but i wonder somehow if sometimes it's more like picking up where pierre
00:51:19.200
is lacking and trying to be like hey he's not talking about that so i'll go there but uh whatever
00:51:24.000
gets exposure to these things that are swept out of the rug i'm for it so yeah and then we have
00:51:30.060
the gram donated ten dollars thank you so much and says greetings from scotland i love that oh my
00:51:38.020
gosh that's amazing thank you so much for being here and for your donation i have a friend in
00:51:43.280
scotland and so if you're that friend hello back um but if not regardless i hear it's beautiful out
00:51:48.780
there i want to go uh shauna marie g83 gives ten dollars thank you very much maybe there are staff
00:51:57.720
shortages because those that took the job are no longer with us um so maybe we should just get off
00:52:03.760
of youtube but yeah we should have proceeded with caution on that one um maybe we don't know for sure
00:52:12.260
i mean there's definitely you can allude to it if you're still if we're still on youtube join us on
00:52:17.400
those other platforms we're going to get into some the covid nitty-gritty we have only a few
00:52:21.720
10 or so minutes left um so join us on rumble bit shooter odyssey and feel free to super chat us there
00:52:27.700
to engage with us directly um producer can you give me the one two in my ear when we're off of youtube
00:52:33.000
and we can comment on that when we can breathe it's like good it's like taking your course that
00:52:38.540
off journalistically it's like okay yeah the the squeeze of youtube and now we're okay we're free
00:52:47.200
ish um so maybe there are staff shortages yeah that's definitely something that we we didn't
00:52:52.920
even bother touching on because we're still on youtube but absolutely i would love to see one day
00:52:59.200
the real data there on how many people we lost to the jobs themselves but also who refused to comply
00:53:07.280
with the mandates and that goes back now over a year um so really sad for all the people who felt
00:53:15.480
coerced into it and then of course the people who have had to change their entire life based on the
00:53:20.260
fact they were no longer able to remain gainfully employed all right so i think now we're going into
00:53:27.000
uh the ottawa police detective who allegedly sought links between covid vaccine and child deaths right
00:53:34.800
so very fitting yeah so a detective is that where we're going next yeah yeah detective doing detective
00:53:42.000
work is now under investigation for doing the work that they were hired to do um wow i can't even i
00:53:50.400
mean i can believe this is the world we're living in but again the hypocrisy here and so apparently so
00:53:55.060
this is helen um gruce i hope i'm pronouncing that correctly uh so she began initiating her own
00:54:02.660
little digs into a number of baby deaths so i guess this occurred sometime between june 2020 and
00:54:09.860
january 22nd 2022 so you know the better part of a year and a half um the injections didn't start
00:54:18.020
rolling out though until december 2020 the very tail end there so i don't know why it would have
00:54:22.780
started in june 2020 if that's just more like a rough date that they give but that was a little
00:54:27.660
bit confusing to me because if she was specifically trying to target post injection phenomena that we
00:54:33.320
continue to hear about um but obviously the data is not in yet about that because it bulk of it would
00:54:38.760
have happened in 2021 and um so i guess she was going a little bit above and beyond her duties there
00:54:45.780
and contacting families and things like this but if you start to hear stuff on the ground and she was
00:54:50.960
the detective for um child child abuse unit and sexual assault so you know it's a bit muddied there
00:55:01.140
the waters in terms of if that was really her role and and if she was going above and beyond her
00:55:06.100
professional role to do this but i think this is the lord's work you know no one else is looking
00:55:11.480
into these connections and no one else is doing this investigation and if she had the resources to
00:55:16.360
try to find out maybe a hint of what's going on and probe more investigation then i think all the power
00:55:23.240
to her um yeah if anyone has a contact for helen gruce uh please send it to you know tips at rebel
00:55:30.420
news or myself tamara tamara at rebel news.com i'd love to get in touch with her and chat even if
00:55:35.500
just off the record and see uh if she needs any assistance even legally speaking of off the record
00:55:41.640
i did contact um an officer friend of mine just to get their input on this uh article and obviously
00:55:48.100
i'm not going to name the person but it was basically what you said you know great that they did
00:55:52.140
it if they did it's a legend but um also there are rules and you're not supposed to go over into
00:55:58.220
other people's investigations and so there is a lot of stuff like that and there are reasons that
00:56:02.440
that happens you can't go rogue and do sort of vigilante work and you know contacting family
00:56:08.720
members um typically you would say you know i have this hunch i have this feeling and you would go to
00:56:14.000
superior and say can i look into this so it's possible that happened and she was declined i mean i'd if
00:56:20.620
if i was in this position um it would be very hard if i really believe that this is happening which
00:56:27.560
i believe um and then i go and then i get shut down you're you're faced with that moral dilemma
00:56:34.080
you know what's more important getting to the bottom of this or not so i can certainly understand
00:56:39.600
but i i do understand both sides because um you know there's a lot of issues there even with privacy
00:56:45.700
of citizens and things like that that can get really muddy so just to play devil's advocate a little
00:56:51.500
bit there yeah no the waters are muddy in this situation um and i agree it would be a massive
00:56:57.640
moral dilemma and i always err on the side of being you know more moral in the sense of trying to see if
00:57:03.420
there's a real phenomena happening here with um with with newborn with babies newborn babies i mean they
00:57:09.500
have no voice they can't advocate for themselves they literally rely on the adults in their lives to do
00:57:14.280
that for them and if the adults are aloof or being misguided or misled on some of the science around
00:57:22.620
these things well then it's up to other people who are have that moral compass to maybe fill those
00:57:28.500
gaps um so again if anyone has a contact for helen bruce i would love to speak with her
00:57:34.520
um and showing that the science continues to evolve around the covet injections and maybe they weren't as
00:57:41.060
safe as an effective as they were originally sold to canadians as uh there's this new article out of
00:57:47.000
the epic times that 29 of young pfizer covid vaccine recipients suffered heart effects surprise surprise
00:57:56.340
so um this study came out of uh thailand i believe i thought i i thought i wrote it down here but
00:58:04.980
it was a fairly small um sample size i think it's just over 300 children that's always
00:58:11.040
a bit concerning yeah yeah it definitely has its shortcomings that's for sure um but even if it
00:58:19.140
was 15 percent like it's it's still a high number um and it's not the easiest thing i i can't speak for
00:58:27.960
thailand out here it's hard for researchers to even do this type of study and get the information that
00:58:33.240
they need and and find things like that so um yeah they studied uh 13 to 18 year olds so right in
00:58:40.980
that demographic that i had been investigating on with data analyst kelly brown you know the myocarditis
00:58:46.140
incident rates and um so out of the 301 students aged 13 to 18 there was a bunch of them that had
00:58:56.320
heart defects or heart heart effects so uh they experienced heart palpitations chest pain
00:59:03.460
and shortness of breath 54 had abnormal electrocardiogram results six experienced mitral
00:59:11.740
valve prolapse i mean wow that's severe um the mayo clinic describes that as a heart valve disease and
00:59:19.800
six had high blood pressure and seven were diagnosed with heart inflammation in an age demographic
00:59:26.900
otherwise not at all at risk of severe covid outcomes or you know more aggressively death
00:59:32.000
it it is so infuriating and in the past i mean 54 kids getting any kind of reaction let alone to
00:59:39.600
something like the heart which doesn't regenerate that would end it that would be the end of it for
00:59:45.200
everything and here we are in this maddening society now where it's like oh this is no big deal no big
00:59:51.320
deal there and you know it's it's frightening honestly and and the people who are seeing these
00:59:57.760
cases whether it's the triage or whatever and they're they're actually witnessing it they're still
01:00:02.560
in the hospital and they're still watching it reminds me of the the cop we're just talking about but
01:00:07.320
at some point you got to realize you are accountable for these things you can't keep
01:00:11.940
letting these things happen and not speak about them so it's beyond time uh if it's happening in
01:00:18.100
thailand it's happening here and now we've got babies getting involved so speak that's really sad
01:00:25.000
the end of that article uh there's subtitle reaction and i guess they they reached out to
01:00:30.380
several cardiologists after reviewing the paper um which said that this particular paper adds to the
01:00:36.380
body of evidence that the risks of the vaccine may outweigh the benefits i mean yes finally we're there
01:00:42.860
um then they quote dr mcculloch so he's been uh he's a cardiologist he's been dissenting on the
01:00:47.860
stuff uh since pretty much the onset um really an unsounded unfounded unsounded hero throughout
01:00:56.240
the narrative he says any form of heart damage in young persons is concerning since the long-term
01:01:00.740
risks of heart failure and sudden death with exercise are unknown thank you yeah mcculloch yeah
01:01:07.740
well and to show that um the risk versus benefit profile is starting to trickle out and actually
01:01:16.140
affect policy denmark has officially ended covid19 vaccinations for anyone under the age of 18 so
01:01:24.940
they're doing away with it completely i don't know why they're not doing it right away there's a
01:01:29.640
deadline um i guess as of the end of of august or maybe it was the end of july that maybe they don't
01:01:37.240
anyone under 18 would no longer be able to receive any of the covid19 vaccine so thank you
01:01:44.300
denmark but where's the rest of the world well yeah denmark's making exception for the immune
01:01:50.940
compromise i don't know why like if but anyways they're making exceptions and it probably i would
01:01:56.900
think that the delay has to do with just the fact that some people are going to go into shock about it
01:02:01.260
like you know so they're like giving giving those people unfortunately a chance to rush their kid in
01:02:07.420
and get it um instead of just doing what you should do and say this is a harmful experiment
01:02:13.340
it's time to end it um but yes thank you denmark for now actually they don't affect july 1st so you
01:02:21.920
already in denmark you cannot no longer under 18 unless i guess yeah you're immunocompromised and so
01:02:28.100
also though that prevents mandates from ever being coming into effect like here in canada we had
01:02:33.020
mandates for 12 and up in ontario you know for kids to play hockey and to play sports and to access
01:02:38.420
a movie theater or sit down with their friends at a mall to eat anyone 12 and up had to show a vaccine
01:02:44.320
passport so um obviously this sort of thing happens where the health authority no longer approves it
01:02:51.400
then those sort of mandate situations cannot come into effect naturally so yeah i'm looking at the time
01:02:57.860
my goodness it's been an hour time flies when you're having fun and we just got into the nitty
01:03:02.620
gritty but that's okay because uh i know that i will uh work on writing up some of the stuff that
01:03:08.100
we were going to talk about that didn't get covered so that will be coming soon on rebel news maybe you
01:03:12.660
as well but um yes and i'm sorry everyone i wouldn't normally mind staying late um but i do have
01:03:18.520
another interview scheduled right after so we're going to like breeze through these super chats really
01:03:22.460
quickly and um try to stay on time here so yeah i know drea it's always nice to catch up with you
01:03:27.740
um alexa lavoie hey alexa so that's our colleague our quebec correspondent um she gives us two dollars
01:03:34.700
thanks alexa thank you hello my two beautiful girls i just wanted to send you some love oh that's so
01:03:40.480
nice and my question is how did you start working for rebel news oh my gosh worst time to be going over
01:03:45.460
i know right that's such a long story so in very short for myself i uh was ranting on youtube about
01:03:53.540
everything that was going on and getting censored and ranting more and then uh rebel found one of my
01:03:59.200
videos yeah my story is way more my it's quite convoluted so i'll try to condense in the short of the
01:04:07.220
long is yeah i was engaging in some civil disobedience i had been denouncing the covid narrative
01:04:12.020
uh starting very early on like i mentioned in april um in my locale they closed down all of our
01:04:18.780
public spaces including green spaces so they closed down the forest the beach the riversides the
01:04:24.360
playgrounds that you couldn't go anywhere um and so after several months of that i decided to walk my
01:04:32.000
beach shoreline in defiance of the arbitrary closure of the beach itself i ended up being arrested and i
01:04:37.300
was detained and then i was charged criminally uh so rebel news had just launched their fight the fines
01:04:43.020
campaign at that time so if you're not familiar you can go to fight the fines.com and check out our
01:04:47.960
reports there but essentially anyone who had been hit with a covid related fine could apply to have free
01:04:54.580
legal defense on their behalf of the fact that this was all egregious and arbitrary and so i applied
01:05:00.600
and when david menzies came out and did the interview with me i guess ezra and the team liked the way that i
01:05:06.000
spoke and what i was about and they offered me a job so that was really great because the sector i was
01:05:10.340
working in previously had been completely shut down my husband and i actually lost our business
01:05:14.820
due to the covid lockdowns and um i figured after i had been arrested i'd probably never get hired
01:05:21.080
anywhere locally again so it was kind of all worked out and i absolutely love what i'm doing now so that's
01:05:26.720
kind of the short of the long of it yeah i feel like it's long i'll have to give my version
01:05:31.500
my longer version another time phrasebo gives another dollar thank you so much and says in the
01:05:37.080
case of the nurses that were fired they were headhunted out of canada and now are working in
01:05:43.300
florida with no snow i do know a lot of people have gone to florida that is for sure um here on now
01:05:51.080
gives a dollar thank you says i do sign your petitions do they work very good question um yes
01:05:58.060
they do one of the things that petitions do that people maybe don't think of is they help keep
01:06:04.280
people accountable so there are a lot of people who are lawmakers and things like that where they
01:06:09.080
can't just go and just say what they think they're supposed to be representing the constituents so when
01:06:14.840
you hand uh petitions like that it gives them an actual tangible thing and says hey listen we need
01:06:21.560
to discuss this issue this is how many people are involved and so that's what i've heard mostly off
01:06:27.120
record from from people that get these things like thank you so much for doing that because now i had
01:06:32.000
something to stand on so don't think that if you don't see some you know the law change tomorrow it
01:06:37.340
didn't have an effect behind the scenes i also think it's a great way also to show people just how many
01:06:43.560
others are interested in the same cause right when you see the petitions doing really well and it
01:06:47.940
garnered a bunch of signatures it's like okay we're on the target here we know that people agree
01:06:52.680
with whatever the topic involved in the petition is and it's a way to also just get feedback and a
01:06:59.180
feel for what canadians and the demographic and the audience cares about um and like you said yeah
01:07:05.540
have some accountability and and show the people who you're opposing their policy or what have you
01:07:10.340
hey this is how many people oppose what you're doing and are you going to consider their viewpoints or not
01:07:15.560
mm-hmm it gives a voice to the silent majority and it also lets people who want to get voted in next
01:07:22.580
time realize they better start paying attention to these issues so please sign and share petitions
01:07:27.800
um shauna marie g83 donates two dollars thank you so much and says 300 is not that small considering
01:07:36.920
the size of the so-called clinical trial and so that was in reference to uh what we just said about
01:07:43.620
what was it 24 29 right 29 percent yes 29 percent had uh an adverse reaction a heart-related adverse
01:07:54.600
reaction to pfizer specifically in a study in thailand and yeah it's not too small even if it was just a few
01:08:01.260
kids so that's insane it's very alarming and i wish every parent was properly informed about this before
01:08:08.240
they allowed their kids or or their kids especially i think she's referring to the clinical trial that
01:08:14.980
pfizer itself conducted in those age demographics and so it was like just over a thousand participants
01:08:19.740
right and but half of them so 500 roughly were vaccinated and the other 500 were the placebo and
01:08:26.640
so it's actually quite close in comparison to that which is why i said that 300 is not a large
01:08:33.260
sample size because those clinical trials have been denounced for not being substantial substantial
01:08:41.240
enough in terms of the participants and so yeah in comparison there it actually probably is fairly
01:08:47.780
similar to the placebo versus the control but in the grand scheme of safety testing it's very small
01:08:53.780
yeah yeah all right so we're just a mere seven minutes over thank you everyone for joining us and
01:09:00.300
sorry i have to fly off to my next interview i mean fly literally because i'll be like the
01:09:05.440
tasmanian devil like trying to eat and use the bathroom and prep quickly and then hop on the next
01:09:11.340
call so um thanks for joining us i think this is our official thursday spot so if you like what you
01:09:16.560
hear and you want to join drea and and i again tune back next thursday from 12 to 1 p.m eastern
01:09:22.640
and of course every day same time and place to hear from the other rebels as well all right bye for now
01:09:29.580
everyone we're at the epicenter of the initial outbreak wa1 washington one is considered the
01:09:38.260
ancestral model strength um this center i developed the answer
01:09:42.840
i created that's right you you let it loose i was in my kitchen
01:09:50.320
yeah you let it loose okay gain of function here we come
01:09:55.780
you were here making arancia italian meatballs and that's a gain of function