DAILY | Ezra on Tucker, Trudeau's India Trip Hotel Expenses
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 4 minutes
Words per Minute
162.46432
Summary
Sheila and David talk about how they met, why they got married, and how they became a couple. They also talk about what it's like raising a kid with a dead parent, and what it was like growing up in a religious cult.
Transcript
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Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, you have tuned into the Rebel News live stream
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on this, a Thursday, July 8th, 2021. I'm David Menzies and well, my co-host, you know,
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I nickname her the Triple E. She is the epitome of execution excellence. She is the she-devil
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with a sword. She is the Khaleesi of Northern Alberta. She is Sheila Gunn-Reed. How are you
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doing, Sheila? David, I'm doing great. But, Justin, I would be doing much better if I could see this
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Skype feed in my monitor because I just, I long to see David's smiling face. That's all I want in
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the world. It's 10 a.m. I need my David fix. Oh, there you are. That's great. Perfect.
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Not many people say that. Not many people want to see my face. Not many people of the female gender
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in high school wanted to see my face. So what a wonderful compliment you gave me, Sheila.
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You know what? Read the story of the ugly duckling. You know, you're just growing to a beautiful swan
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and it's fine. When is, when, oh, when is my Cinderella, or should I say, cinderfella moment
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going to happen, Sheila? I think the day that that beautiful lady, Menzies, said,
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fine, I'll marry you. I think, you know, I think that's the day that you had your cinderfella moment.
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Actually, it was kind of the other way around. I have the firm belief that, oh, yeah, Sheila,
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you know how it works. Basic. I'll tell you, it was way back in 1990 and Lady Menzoid and I,
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the future Lady Menzoid, we're driving along and we had just come back. And this is always the
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trigger, I think, from one of our friends' weddings. And we're driving up Bathurst in Toronto. And this
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is what she said. David, I'm beginning to wonder about the direction of this relationship. And the
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translation is, a ring goes on this finger in three months or it's adios muchachos. Okay. So,
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yeah, it was kind of a nudge nudge into that. So, there you go. How did it happen for you, Sheila?
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That's funny. How did we get married? Like, how did the proposal? I don't, it was not even remotely
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that interesting. It was like, well, you're going overseas to work. You're going to a dangerous place.
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I don't think it's appropriate for your mom to have to deal with getting your corpse home if
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something happens. And he's like, yeah, you're making a lot of good points. And I'm like, okay,
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well, then we should just sort of formalize it. And that, I mean, it's, it's not romantic. It's
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practical. And I think that's sort of how I am anyways. And it's sort of how he is. And
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you know what? Well, it works for us. So, it's good.
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Sounded like the negotiation you'd go through to buy a minivan or something.
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Yeah. But you know what? It works. It works. You know, not everything is a fairy tale. Not
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everything is like romantic music and getting swept off your feet. Sometimes two practical people
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build a practical life and raise some practical kids doing practical things. And that's just how
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it works out. Yeah. But it helps with the romantic music. We once went to a Hungarian place and they
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had a guy with the violin. And I said, can you play something romantic? And he said, sure. He said,
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what do you want? I said, how about hold that tiger? And he had said, hold that tiger. That's
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a romantic song. I said, it is for another tiger. Oh my goodness. Okay. Should we tell everybody what
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we're doing here? We are four minutes into the show. Things are, they're going so fast.
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Yeah. They're going so fast. People are probably going to start checking out here.
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Um, this is the rebel daily news live stream where David and I do things other than give
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relationship advice. Um, we talk about the news of the day. It used to just be on Friday, uh,
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hosted by Ezra pandemic struck. Everybody's sort of locked down. The news is changing day by day.
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So we thought, you know what? We're around you're around. Let's talk to you for an hour every single
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day at noon or 10 AM. My time 9 AM on the West coast. And it gives us a chance to interact with each
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other, which is fun because I'm not in the office like everybody else is. So it helps me feel
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connected to everybody, but, uh, it gives us a chance to interact with our viewers. Um, and if
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you are watching us on YouTube, which is where we used to primarily be until YouTube fell out of love
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with us and, uh, they're actively doing their best to de-platform us. They've already completely
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demonetized us taking $400,000 right out of the middle of our company, but we're still streaming
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there. So if you're watching us there, thanks. Nice to meet you. Might I suggest you move over to
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a platform that doesn't care about your politics and really that's what I want. I don't want even
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a conservative platform. I want a platform that doesn't care about my politics and allows for the
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free market of ideas. And so we are also besides the censorship platform of YouTube where it's great
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for you to find us, but don't stay there. Join us over on odyssey. Um, and while you're there on
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odyssey, you can do something called a hyper chat and you have to buy some of their library
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cryptocurrency and you can give us a little bit of it if you want to support the work that we do,
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because we don't get any money from Justin Trudeau. We're also over on super you again,
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a great free speech platform. You can leave us a tip over on super you and we're also
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streaming on rumble. So you do have some alternatives to the censorship garbage fire of
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YouTube. You know, Sheila, speaking of relationship advice, um, I look at the boardroom and I look at
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those plaques that YouTube used to send as one, I think was for a hundred thousand subscribers. One was
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for hitting the million mark. And, um, and now it's gone from sending us beautiful plaques that
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we've put in the boardroom proudly on display too. Um, could you kind of like leave now? I mean,
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You know, it's, we started off so strong, right? You know, like they liked us, we liked them and
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then, you know, they, they got cooler friends, I guess. You know, it's just like, you know,
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we were, we were great together and then they got more popular than we did. And then they started to
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want to hang out with the cool kids and we weren't so cool anymore. And so they don't like us.
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And my theory, Sheila, 2016 was the year. I mean, that was when Donald Trump got elected.
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That wasn't supposed to happen. The Silicon Valley Mandarin said to themselves, have we given this
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kind of, uh, uh, person, a platform in which to, uh, become president of the U S this, this was never
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in the cards. I mean, the, the first shot across the bow was, um, Brexit, but you know, that was way
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over there in Europe across the pond. But when Trump became the real bonafide U S president,
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that's when I noticed a shift in the wind, Sheila, in terms of the censorship.
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Yeah. I mean, we all saw it in action. Trump went around the mainstream media. That's what
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the beauty of social media was, at least in its inception was you could go around the,
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I guess, self-censorship and selective news coverage from the mainstream media. And for Trump,
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he could speak directly to the people, um, and connect directly to them. His message did not
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have to be filtered through the crones at CNN. He could just talk directly to the people he wanted
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to talk to, which is the American people. And I think in, um, I guess in response to that,
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um, that's where the censorship started moving, you know, like the, these conservatives are talking
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to each other online. We have to make sure that they don't talk to each other. We have to make
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sure conservative politicians don't tell the other side of the story. Like even when it comes down to
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what happened, um, on the Capitol with the riots, we saw CBC taking an active approach to censoring
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in their comment section, anything that said, um, maybe Donald Trump didn't incite the riots.
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And here's the link to his Twitter statement. CBC actively censored that out of their comment
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section until such time as Twitter actually took it down. So even what, like they were taking down
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evidence of the facts to fit their narrative. And I guess that's where we are now. And we've got
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president Biden. So it's only going to get worse and how perverse it is that, uh, ex president Trump
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remains banned on so many social media platforms. I can never get used to saying that, but we'll see
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what happens in the near future. Now, Sheila, I don't, Mr. Producer has neglected to give me the topic
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sheet, but I believe you wanted to talk about, um, when Mocha and I had a little visit up to
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Stirling, Ontario. And, uh, what was once a beloved water hole for almost a century? Well,
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tis no more. Oh, the water hole is still there, but you just can't use it. Check out this video, folks.
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Now here's another interesting sign and it reads, this fence cost Stirling Rodden taxpayers $48,753.
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Can you imagine that folks after going through all this misery in the pandemic and all the economic
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havoc it has created? Somehow this little township has found almost 50 grand to spend on a fence to
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further make people's lives miserable. Unbelievable. I think there's enough space in between those two
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fence posts there for me to squeeze through. And I'll continue walking, looking for hopefully
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a hole to get into the water. David Menzies for Rebel News here in front of Harold Quarry,
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just north of Stirling, Ontario. Well, folks, I can tell you what a incredible July summer day it is
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here in this region. It's like 33 degrees in the shade. It's so hot. I saw a dog chasing a cat and they
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were both walking. Hey, enough with the bad jokes, but I'll tell you something that's really not
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funny. For almost a century, this water hole in the quarry has served as a place of recreation
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for people in this community. People would go here to swim. They'd go here to get drinking water. They'd
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go here to get water for other needs. And then just a few weeks ago, this fence surrounded the quarry.
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A fence, I should point out, that is topped with barbed wire. And suddenly, no one is allowed here.
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There's even trespassing signs and no parking signs. And what was once a cherished summer place to go to,
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and in winter too, when the water would freeze, it was a place where people would skate. Well, it's off limits.
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And the reason is safety. Evidently, the insurer for the town said that there were serious potential
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liability issues with this swimming hole at the quarry. Now, I'm not sure if they're worried about
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people drowning. I'm not sure if this is a COVID thing. But nevertheless, the mayor and the council,
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who I've reached out to, by the way, and they haven't returned my email, the town said,
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okay, we'll wall it off with an almost $50,000 expenditure so that on a hot summer day like
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this, nobody can go swimming. Now, recently, about 50 people violated the rule. The Ontario
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Provincial Police came. They didn't lay any charges, but they had a talking to, to the people violating
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this no swimming rule. And it is just inexplicable, folks. I mean, a playground has potential serious
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liability issues. Should municipalities all across our great dominion tear down the swings and the
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monkey bars and whatnot so that nobody gets a sprained ankle? Well, in any event, one of the things I want
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to find out is that last Monday, when those demonstrators slash swimmers came by, how did
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they get into the quarry? I mean, this town is really serious. That is razor sharp barbed wire.
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So I'm just wondering how they got in the fence. As you can see, it has three locks on it. So they're
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not fooling around. I'm going to walk around the perimeter and see if there's a hole in the fence,
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because you know what, folks, I, uh, I brought my swimming trunks and I could sure go for a dip right
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Huh. So I'm going to try the other way around, walking along the highway.
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As you can see, this is where people would park, but, uh, that's off the charts too, because
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they've got a new gate here and naturally the gate is locked. Wow. Talk about a no fun zone, eh?
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Now this is interesting. Here is a sign and it reads, water is a human right. Well, you know what?
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I would agree with that. Without water, we cannot survive. And to fence off this water like this,
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Now this is interesting. I see another layer of fencing here, which might suggest that this is
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where the original fencing was clipped open to let people get down the hill and into the quarry
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for some, uh, water recreation. But, uh, I don't know. I'll keep walking.
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Well, Sheila, I did solve the mystery later when a passing farmer came by about those Dominion Day
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protesters that had the swim in. Um, they brought ladders and they brought thick blankets. So you
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climb up the fence, throw your blanket over the barbed wire and jump off onto the other side.
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And he said, there's now speculation that the council might dig into more taxpayer revenue and
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make a higher, uh, barbed wire fence. In which case he said, well, we'll just bring high, taller
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ladders and more blankets. But Sheila, what is your reaction to this? No fun zone madness that we see.
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Municipalities, governments in general, just a bunch of insufferable fun burglars. I mean,
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the, I've seen less fencing and like easier fences to climb at a women's prison. Like I don't,
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they leave razor wire to keep people out of the local swimming hole. What inspired this? Like
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what necessitated the government costs? Were there just like, Oh, citizens are having like fun. Let's
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go burgle it. What, what prompted all of this? Well, Sheila, it's part and parcel of a trend that
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I noticed beginning back in the 1990s. And it was lawyers going to councils. And I lived in an area of
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Toronto East York at the time where this actually happened. They said, you know what? We're looking
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at that playground equipment could pose a certain danger. And in that borough, tons of playgrounds
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were eradicated. What used to happen, Sheila, is that a mayor or a council person or the entire
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council would have a spine and they would say to the lawyer, by the way, don't blame the lawyers on
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this folks because they're just doing what they're supposed to do. Say, you know, here are some
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potential, you know, so potential hazards. If, if a kid fell and, you know, broke, broke their arm,
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you might get sued by the parents that they're not saying tear it down. They're saying here's a
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potential, but what used to happen is you'd have politicians, elected officials say, thank you very
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much for your advice. We're going to roll the dice. We don't want to tear down the swings and
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the monkey bars and the slides and make summer miserable for the kids. So if that lawsuit does
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happen, we'll take it when we come. We've gone from that to increasingly, oh, well, we got a legal
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opinion. We got to, we got to get rid of this. I remember five years ago for Rebel, I covered where
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I live right now, Sheila, in Richmond Hill. The Richmond Hill Council got a legal opinion that
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we shouldn't be playing O Canada before council meetings start because of all that, you know,
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that God lyric. It might offend atheists and they stopped playing O Canada. They've since rectified
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that with regime change. And one last thing, Sheila, I want to say is that, um, when I reached out,
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uh, to the mayor and he did get back to me sending the note from the insurance company saying we might
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have to raise your premiums if you let people go there. I'm still not sure if the concern is a
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drowning issue, a slip and fall issue, or is it more of this COVID-19 madness that if people go there,
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they won't socially distance. I don't have an answer to that. And, um, so this beloved waterhole,
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and I can't find any support by people on the street for being walled off like this,
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it's gone much like our beloved, uh, colleague in, uh, Coburg, uh, Tamara Ugolini. Uh, once again,
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their gorgeous Sandy beach has a Berlin wall fencing that off from the people that do do COVID.
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Sheila, I'm sick of this. I'm sick of these gutless wimps in a position of power capitulating
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to the bogeyman, you know, under the bed that doesn't exist.
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Well, and think about just the possible consequences of all of this. So we have to
00:19:05.060
fence off the waterhole that was easily accessible. It looks like it's got a nice,
00:19:13.300
It does. Um, we, we've got to fence that all off in the interest of public safety.
00:19:17.240
So now the only way to get in is to roll under the fence at like a mocha did. And there's a steep
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drop off when you roll under the fence. Um, because as you can see all the way around,
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like there's steep edges, except where they've got the, the like nice grade blocked off or get a
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ladder and some blankets and hopefully you don't catch yourself on some razor wire. So that's how you
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get in. So people are going to get in. They're just going to do it in a more unsafe manner
00:19:48.240
because the politicians decided to put up this fence to make everybody more safe.
00:19:52.080
No, uh, well put Sheila. And, uh, I, you know, I'd have some understanding if someone came forward
00:19:58.340
and said, well, Menzies, look at the stats. Do you know, we have an average of 12 people drowning in
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this waterhole every summer. Sure. Nothing could be further from the case, from the case. Uh, Sheila,
00:20:09.180
when I spoke to that farmer, he said about five years ago, um, a woman tragically committed suicide
00:20:16.140
by driving her vehicle into that, uh, body of water. Uh, that is a deliberate act. That is where
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someone is trying to terminate their life. And unfortunately she was successful in doing so.
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So I don't even think that counts as a, as a drowning death because it was intentional. So this is a
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solution to a problem that doesn't exist unless it's more of this COVID madness that is fun in
00:20:44.280
life. Well, and so, okay. So we have one suicide there. Very tragic, terrible. Um, uh, are they doing
00:20:53.800
this in the name of that woman? I wonder what her family has to say about all of this. And secondarily,
00:20:58.700
how does that constitute putting up this barrier all the way around? If that's a thing that you think
00:21:05.120
is going to happen again, why don't you put some concrete barriers at the bottom of that nice
00:21:08.700
slope so that nobody can drive their car in anymore? Wow. You know, yet again, Sheila Gunn-Reed,
00:21:15.020
you have proven why you need to run for office and make the decisions. Don't say those things.
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You are, you are a one woman common sense revolution, Sheila. So, uh, good on you. Yeah. So,
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uh, basically to, to put an epilogue on this, uh, Moke and I will be going back probably this
00:21:36.140
Saturday. We understand it's dependent on the weather. If it's hot and sunny, there will be
00:21:40.300
another swim in protest. And, uh, some of these people, I can tell you, Sheila, they want to get
00:21:46.600
ticketed by the OPP. They want their day in court to argue how insane this is. And, you know,
00:21:53.060
where are the tickets when you really need them? Yeah. The cops aren't, aren't playing ball in,
00:21:59.680
uh, uh, giving tickets, but maybe that'll change on Saturday. So, uh, if you're in the Sterling area
00:22:06.140
in the afternoon, uh, and, and you want to go for a swim and you want to come on camera to Rebel News,
00:22:12.840
uh, Moke and I are hopefully going to be there if there is indeed another swim in protest planned.
00:22:18.940
You know, these are like small town, local stories, like, but they get international interest
00:22:26.520
because everybody lives in a community that does this sort of dumb stuff. Yeah. Like everybody
00:22:32.100
knows a local project or a local government decision that is really expensive, really stupid. And in
00:22:39.560
search of, uh, like a solution in search of a problem, everybody knows one. And so that's why
00:22:45.440
it's like, yeah, it's little Sterling Ontario, but everyone, everybody is interested in these kinds
00:22:50.820
of stories because they're just so stupid and perennial and irresponsible in terms of finances.
00:22:58.220
I mean, almost 50 K for that fence. And you can tell the residents are not on board there. They're
00:23:06.420
using this as a protest site. You saw the sign water is a human right. You saw the other sign
00:23:12.080
shaming the council for the almost 50 grand spend. So there was no popular support for this. I wonder,
00:23:18.880
uh, if Mayor Mullen and the rest of the councillors are going to survive this, uh, when the elections are
00:23:25.380
held, uh, next year, I think it's next year. Um, because that's one way to bring about, uh, common
00:23:32.180
sense regime change. You could put a lifeguard on duty there for the summer months for $20,000.
00:23:41.340
If you're concerned about safety, you know, like you can make it a summer student job and they could
00:23:47.160
have saved some money, created a job for a summer student. Although I hate the idea of government
00:23:50.500
creating jobs, but if it's a safety issue, um, whatever, they could have done this for half
00:23:55.280
of it and allowed the people to still use their watering hole. I wouldn't be surprised Sheila in
00:23:59.940
a small community like that in that township volunteers. Yeah. Just if it meant, uh, saving
00:24:06.940
the swim hole, uh, you know, I could see easily that happening, but, um, well, uh, yet more misery,
00:24:15.160
uh, maybe due to COVID-19, which has absolutely nothing to do with a virus, right?
00:24:22.560
Yep. And Justin just sent me a quick update here about Odyssey. Oh, he says, yes. So Odyssey. So
00:24:31.380
one of the platforms that we're streaming on good free speechy platform, this is the update he sends
00:24:36.120
me because Odyssey has been working on something. They're listening to the people unlike YouTube,
00:24:41.660
and they've been working on something to help creators monetize, um, beyond, um, just donating,
00:24:48.100
uh, a hyper chat cryptocurrency donation. So he says, Odyssey does have a tip function ready.
00:24:55.300
You have to have some of their library cryptocurrency to be able to tip and it's in U S dollars right now,
00:25:01.380
but that will change. So, um, it says soon, just clip the support video under the video to tip. Okay.
00:25:11.920
Click. Okay. So he said it's changing soon. Just clip the support video, click,
00:25:18.100
the support video under the video to tip in a regular currency. So, um, Odyssey's support button,
00:25:27.280
Justin. So I don't know what you're, yeah, you're having eight conversations. None of them are with
00:25:34.840
me. So anyways, what Justin meant to send me in this note is Odyssey does have the tip function
00:25:40.100
ready because they've been working on that. You have to have some of their library cryptocurrency
00:25:43.700
to be able to tip and it's in U S dollars right now, but that's going to change soon. Just click
00:25:50.340
the support button, even though Justin wrote video underneath the video to tip in regular currency.
00:25:57.540
So that's another way that you can support the work that we do here on Odyssey. So you can, uh,
00:26:01.880
do a hyper chat or also tip the video creator directly. So I think that's wonderful.
00:26:06.220
That is fantastic customer service. And I should point out, uh, Sheila, we are not
00:26:10.440
adverse to receiving U S dollars as opposed to the Canadian peso. So if there's anyone out there
00:26:16.820
sitting on a stack of Benjamins that they want to send our way, by all means, you know,
00:26:22.920
we are equal opportunity, uh, recipients. So there you go. And tip us in Mexican pesos. I don't care.
00:26:30.360
Yeah. If you own a wheelbarrow, we're more than happy for that. Speaking of, uh, the U S our beloved
00:26:40.000
boss, Ezra Levant was on Tucker Carlson on Fox yesterday. And once again, Ezra knocked it out
00:26:47.900
of the ballpark. Now we'd love to go inside Canada site, but we can't get there. It's like 1985 Albania.
00:26:53.640
It's a closed country. So instead we're speaking by satellites tonight. Ezra Levant with rebel media
00:26:58.920
within Canada. He joins us now. Ezra, thanks so much for doing the show. What is going on in
00:27:04.020
Canada? Serious. I mean, this is, it's hard to believe what's happening in Canada. What is this?
00:27:09.260
Well, I'm reluctant to use the word Kristallnacht because, uh, we're not there yet. That's was the
00:27:16.320
night of the broken glass in pre-Holocaust Germany where they smashed and burned and killed Jewish
00:27:23.740
synagogues. It was a precursor to the Holocaust. Obviously we are not that far gone yet, but what
00:27:30.420
do you call it when literally dozens of churches are being systematically vandalized, torched? There
00:27:37.660
was one fire in the BC interior that wiped out a whole village of 250 people, two people dead,
00:27:44.200
and it is not yet determined who caused it, but it was in an area where other churches have been
00:27:51.000
torched. So it may actually have its first victims. The crazy thing is this is so explicitly an anti-church
00:27:59.240
hate crime wave. And yet Justin Trudeau, who is normally the first and the wokest, waited a week
00:28:07.080
before saying anything. And he literally said, that's not the way to go. That was as tough as he got.
00:28:14.100
He introduced an anti-hate crimes bill in parliament that's targeting mean tweets and Facebook posts,
00:28:22.820
but literally you have church after church being torched by Antifa style terrorists. And he's almost
00:28:31.400
silent on the matter. And his right hand man finds it understandable. I think these are dark days for
00:28:37.360
religious freedom in Canada. When they're burning churches and the head of the BC civil rights
00:28:42.260
commission says burn it all down. I mean, that person sounds like a dangerous lunatic. Is that,
00:28:47.480
I mean, who is that? What is going on? And she hasn't been sacked. That was over a week ago that she
00:28:53.900
said it. In fact, various board members of her civil liberties association have supported her.
00:28:59.420
By the way, these churches often have aboriginal indigenous congregants, and they're saying,
00:29:05.980
don't burn our churches down. It's the Canadian equivalent of when Black Lives Matter burns down
00:29:12.980
black owned businesses in black neighborhoods. That does not help black people. In Canada,
00:29:18.960
most of these churches are aboriginal focused. And you often have, in one case, white Antifa style
00:29:26.500
vandals are filming themselves desecrating a church. And the trouble is from the very top,
00:29:33.280
it's either silence or tacit support. Yeah. And I'm ashamed to say that American Christian leaders
00:29:40.640
mostly have been silent about it too. And I wish they wouldn't be. Ezra, I appreciate that report
00:29:45.300
from Canada. I hope sometime to be able to visit Canada once the borders open. But in the meantime,
00:29:49.880
thank you. Thank you. Now we'd love to... You know, Sheila, I think Ezra really nailed it when he
00:29:58.640
compared the churches that cater to aboriginal people. They use it for weddings, funerals,
00:30:05.420
community centers. So who are we saving right now? And contrasting that to what happened last summer
00:30:14.100
in many cities in the United States with Black Lives Matter protesters going into black neighborhoods
00:30:20.800
and burning down black businesses. How did that advance the cause of social justice rights in the
00:30:28.580
U.S.? How appalling. Well, it's one of those instances of, you know, like in a horror movie when
00:30:34.640
the phone call is coming from inside the house. The phone call is definitely coming from the inside the
00:30:40.420
house once again here, where you have a bunch of white do-gooders, by and large, telling Indigenous
00:30:47.580
people what's best for them. And these white do-gooders are saying, your church isn't what's
00:30:53.280
best for you. You can't, you're not capable of making a decision about what church you have in
00:30:59.760
your community and the church that you attend. They are part of the same problem that led to the
00:31:05.560
residential schools, where they think that they know what's best for Indigenous people and how they
00:31:10.420
should live their lives. And they don't have a moment of self-awareness when they are running around
00:31:16.200
burning churches, built by Indigenous people, attended by Indigenous people, beloved by Indigenous
00:31:22.600
people, that Indigenous people look to when they are dealing with the trauma, this generational trauma
00:31:29.660
of residential schools. Many of them turn to their faith and their religion. That's what it's there for.
00:31:35.860
And then you've got these activists saying, no, no, no, I'm here to rescue you.
00:31:41.160
But they're living out this dream of being the white saviour and burning down their churches for
00:31:47.600
them. Yeah. And as Ezra mentioned, our Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau, Sheila, he would normally
00:31:54.460
be the first and the most woke when it would come into commenting on a place of worship being burnt
00:32:03.000
down. And his language, it basically boils down to, hey, it's not cool, man. And his little buddy,
00:32:09.780
Gerald Butt, says it's understandable. And Sheila, the question I pose to you, it's more than 20
00:32:17.800
churches, I understand, that have been vandalized or incinerated. And could you imagine if it was just
00:32:25.660
two mosques, one mosque, you wouldn't be able to hide from the media and political outcry day after
00:32:34.800
day after day? And I don't want any place of worship torched. I want to be clear about that.
00:32:40.220
But the double standard, it's unbelievable. Yeah. I mean, I mentioned it in the morning meeting.
00:32:47.980
Why aren't we addressing this as though it were terrorism? These are, if you look at it through that
00:32:54.200
lens, these are terror cells committing terrorism in Indigenous communities. They just happen to be
00:33:01.820
doing it to Indigenous Christians, so nobody seems to care. Or churches that are completely unrelated to
00:33:09.480
the residential school system because they don't care about the residential school system. That's
00:33:13.400
just their excuse to attack churches. Like they attacked a Polish Catholic church in downtown Edmonton.
00:33:19.960
No relation to anything. And Pope John Paul II, St. John Paul II, sorry to my priest who may or may not
00:33:27.580
be watching. You know, he was the most pro-Indigenous pope literally in the church's history. His entire
00:33:35.380
1984 trip was just a reconciliation apology tour. And they vandalized his statue in front of that church.
00:33:43.320
And it was an inner city church too. So it's like, you know, you're not attacking affluent white people,
00:33:51.500
Well, you know, can you blame the Antifa types and whatever who are torching these churches when
00:33:59.520
you have a Gerald Butts and a Prime Minister Trudeau and that woman that Tucker, that's what I love
00:34:06.840
about Tucker. He doesn't beat around the bush. Tucker called a dangerous lunatic with the BC Civil Rights
00:34:13.660
Association. I mean, how insane is a civil rights association when basically they're saying it's
00:34:19.840
your civil right to commit arson, right? And meanwhile, turning a complete blind eye for the last year and a
00:34:26.780
half of Canadians having their actual civil rights trampled on because of these crazy COVID fines that we
00:34:34.560
are increasingly getting. Sheila, I just can't believe it. And I can understand why these vandals
00:34:42.100
and arsonists are so emboldened when you have the people at the top saying, eh, no biggie.
00:34:48.800
Yeah. Or they're like, I get it. Maybe this isn't the way, but I get it. I understand. Like,
00:34:54.760
that is not the proper response to religiously motivated terrorism, which is what this is.
00:35:00.760
It is. It is. And, you know, the apologist left on the church burning issue sure were not happy with
00:35:10.280
me when I took a picture that I took of a church in Batnaya, Iraq, and put it side by side, a church
00:35:17.760
in Edmonton that had been vandalized. And one had ISIS graffiti and one had graffiti that had recently
00:35:25.140
been placed on the church. And they sure didn't like pointing out that they were apologizing away
00:35:30.640
things that ISIS does to churches in Iraq, or at least ISIS did to churches in Iraq.
00:35:40.080
They didn't like realizing that they were behaving like the Canadian Taliban. They didn't like that
00:35:45.860
dose of reality. Wow. Well, as Tucker said, dangerous lunatics indeed. That's what they are,
00:35:52.480
Sheila. I think they're mentally ill and they have access to gasoline.
00:35:59.100
Well, and how long? That's the thing about these anti-religious nutjobs. They don't understand the
00:36:04.900
comings and goings and the day-to-day life inside a church. So in my church, my parish priest lives in
00:36:12.760
the rectory under the church. He's got his offices down there and there's some banquet halls and stuff
00:36:18.840
down there. And he lives down there. They converted some office space so that he lives down there and
00:36:23.720
saves money. I mean, he's taken a vow of poverty. So if they come to burn down my church in the middle
00:36:29.100
of the night, are they going to kill my priest? Are they going to burn him alive? Because that's the
00:36:33.400
potential here when they do these things, because these anti-religious nuts don't realize that that's
00:36:39.260
a normal practice in a lot of churches, that the priest lives in the church or adjacent to the
00:36:44.140
church. So when does this stop? When some priests die? When the night caretaker dies? When the cleaning
00:36:52.420
crew dies? When Susan from the parish council, who's in there collecting the weekly offering to
00:36:59.400
take to the bank, when she dies? When does this stop? No, that's a great point, Sheila. And in the
00:37:06.440
Department of a Perfect Storm, we have regions of Canada that are having record heat waves. The last
00:37:13.040
thing you want is a burning building because there's a chain reaction effect, isn't there?
00:37:19.200
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I just I can't believe. But then I can believe that we have politicians who are
00:37:27.320
saying stuff like it's understandable. This is probably not the way to handle it, but it's
00:37:32.100
understandable. Like, I can't believe that that's where we are. And it's almost homogenous when it
00:37:40.200
comes to the mainstream media. They are saying the same things. And that's why Ezra had to go on
00:37:46.260
Tucker. I don't think anybody is more attuned to the church burnings than we are. We're sending
00:37:52.680
people out to cover the church burnings and vandalisms. And it's hard to keep up because
00:37:56.940
there are so many. But there's such a lack of interest in telling the victims side of the story
00:38:04.780
in these church burnings in Canada that the only people within Canada in the mainstream who are
00:38:11.440
interested. Well, there's really not none. Ezra went on Tucker because the Americans are hungry for
00:38:18.240
the other side of the story. And you can't get that from the outside looking in if you only consume our
00:38:24.360
A hundred percent, Sheila. And I think one of the reasons why they're ignoring this incredible story
00:38:30.220
is that if they were to report on it, they would be cheerleaders for the arsonist. I really believe
00:38:36.720
that. I think there are so many far left people that have, you know, wormed their way into the
00:38:43.040
mainstream media that if they didn't have their media job, they'd probably be out with a Molotov
00:38:49.300
cocktail, tossing it in the wee hours of the morning, too. So what a disgrace.
00:38:54.660
Yes. Did you ever get a list of things that we're supposed to be talking about?
00:38:59.660
I did. And before before I do so, do we have any chats that we have to catch up on, Sheila?
00:39:06.740
That's a that's a great question. And I'm sure we do.
00:39:09.480
OK. OK. We've got a super you shout from G Mike three says hi. Shout out to Justin.
00:39:17.340
Wonderful. We've got a hyper chat from History Club World. Good job, Sheila, on your report. It was
00:39:23.740
quite interesting. I think you're talking about the India trip one, maybe. And it's got me worrying
00:39:29.880
about Trudeau. Tell Ezra, good job for being on Tucker. Tell Justin, good job for putting on such
00:39:34.140
an amazing show. And tell David, good job for his nicknames.
00:39:39.060
Geez, that sounded like a participation award at the end.
00:39:45.620
That's funny. Yeah. If we have time, we should talk about my access to information story. It just
00:39:53.060
went up today, just went up this morning. If you are just tuning in, you can see it at
00:39:58.580
audit Trudeau dot com. You can sign our petition there and help fund our legal complaint to the
00:40:04.460
auditor general to have the India trip completely forensically audited. I'll give you a Coles
00:40:11.520
notes version, although we'll maybe if Justin has time, we'll show a clip.
00:40:15.280
Yeah. And Sheila, you waited through 700 pages, right?
00:40:24.240
Folks, Sheila Gunn-Reed went through 1,700 pages. So you did not have to. Please, you've got to support
00:40:35.180
us for that. Nobody does it better than Sheila Gunn-Reed when it comes to finding the gold
00:40:41.080
nuggets in these access to information reports. And this is a whopper.
00:40:47.120
Yeah. We've only got 15 signatures on that. People who are watching right now, just leave
00:40:52.500
us running in the background, go over, click on that, sign it. I'll give you a quick Coles
00:40:57.140
notes version and maybe we'll show a clip in a minute. So during the India trip, Justin Trudeau's
00:41:02.460
underlings, the bureaucrats who were planning, wanted to have fancier hotels than their expense
00:41:09.000
accounts would allow. So they pressured an Indian hotel to give them a phantom room, executive
00:41:16.020
level room. So something the prime minister would stay in. Charge them for that one. So
00:41:22.160
overcharge on this side for a room they never planned to use to undercharge their rooms.
00:41:29.960
So it was like an expense scheme. Charge us over here because our budget for the prime minister
00:41:35.760
is much higher and you can stick us in these nicer rooms and use the room that we're not using to
00:41:43.760
reduce the rate. So undercharge, overcharge so that they could abuse your expense accounts while
00:41:49.160
they're in India and stay in nicer hotel rooms. And that's not the only time I saw them trying to do
00:41:53.920
that. There's another story where they tried to do something similar, claiming that the minister of
00:41:58.600
foreign affairs was coming. And so the Indian government would pay for her room, but she wasn't
00:42:06.040
coming. So they wanted to assign that room to someone else. That's in another story. I'll show
00:42:09.480
you all those documents, but all the documents are there. They even break down the math in case the
00:42:16.060
hotel is having trouble understanding their little scheme. No charge us for this room because it looks
00:42:23.280
like the prime minister is using it, but we're not going to use it. You could re-rent it. You can do
00:42:27.060
whatever. Put that on a bill for us and then artificially reduce these rooms over here for us.
00:42:33.700
Very sneaky. You know, Sheila, do you think maybe the Canadian Revenue Agency might be interested in
00:42:40.720
this information or is that just so much wishful thinking on my behalf? We want, yeah, so Justin
00:42:47.020
highlighted it there. So it got even worse because as it turns out, the hotel, very grateful for the
00:42:56.360
business from this huge Canadian delegation. We took way too many people there. They were, they said,
00:43:02.920
oh, we're already giving you that room for free. So don't worry about it. Like the extra room. And so
00:43:11.040
the bureaucrat said, no, don't give it to us for free because that's going to throw a monkey wrench
00:43:15.360
into our little scheme. Charge us for the room you're giving us for free. And you sprinkle the cost
00:43:22.820
savings amongst the other people to artificially decrease their rates. So they, I guess money's
00:43:29.340
no object when the Canadian taxpayers footing the bill, like the hotels, like, no, we actually are
00:43:34.380
giving it to you for free. Use it, do whatever you want with it. And they said, no, no, no,
00:43:37.840
you have to charge us for it because we need to fake it on this other side. Very sneaky.
00:43:43.780
You know, it reminds me of a, it's a story of a few years ago, Sheila, where it was found that the
00:43:49.980
Liquor Control Board of Ontario was offered, it might've been by, through Bacardi, but don't quote
00:43:55.280
me on that. But it was a bit by a big liquor supplier that since you're buying so much from us,
00:44:00.040
we can give you a bulk discount, which is basically how Walmart and Costco and the like operate.
00:44:06.600
And the LCBO said, um, you know what? It's already in the system at this rate and we'd rather not,
00:44:14.460
you know, bust our candy asses for 10 minutes reprogramming. So just charges the regular and
00:44:19.920
we'll, we'll pass on the cost to the, uh, Ontario consumer who we, uh, lord over with our liquor
00:44:26.100
monopoly. It is unbelievable how politicians and bureaucrats are so good at spending our money.
00:44:33.020
Yeah. Yeah. Oh, that just enrages me because in Ontario, you don't have a choice. You have to
00:44:39.640
pay what the government stores are charging. Well, it used to be, it's our way or the highway.
00:44:45.420
You can't even do that anymore. I can't drive the Buffalo and buy my hush. The border's closed.
00:44:54.360
The worst. Yeah. So anyways, uh, if people want to go to audit Trudeau.com,
00:45:01.000
we are hiring a lawyer to file a formal complaint letter to the auditor general asking that that
00:45:07.200
India trip be audited because I have 1700 pages of documents. I'm still going through them and I'm
00:45:15.360
concerned that I don't even have them all. Um, so a forensic audit is necessitated here because
00:45:23.020
you know what, David, if you or I tried to do that at our private jobs, holy would we ever get
00:45:28.180
shown the door? Um, it's, it should be a fireable offense, but it looks like it's a regular practice
00:45:35.500
because they were just doing it all over the place in these documents on the one trip. So imagine what
00:45:41.600
other big, huge trips that they're doing this stuff on. Here's the other factor, Sheila, say we leap
00:45:46.280
ahead several months and the audit goes through and he's found guilty. What's the penalty? Much like
00:45:51.440
these ethics violations, like what, 350 bucks or something like that. And, you know, getting a
00:45:56.740
stern, don't do it again. I mean, that's the other factor is like I, without knowing the nuances, I'm
00:46:04.220
sure the penalty is a joke. Oh, I'm sure. Um, and that's part of the problem here. Um, and that's,
00:46:12.040
you know, I guess one of the reasons why they don't care if they do these sorts of things,
00:46:16.000
um, that could potentially be illegal. I'm not saying they are, but I'll leave that up to the
00:46:22.140
auditor general to decide. Um, but that's part of the problem here is that, um, at the end of this,
00:46:28.860
they might just get a slap on the wrist. However, I think it is really important to hold these people
00:46:33.940
to account. Um, they should not be abusing the tax dollars of Canadians this way. They are already
00:46:43.400
going on an expensive trip to India. If you've got to stay in a room that has a queen instead of a
00:46:51.320
king, who cares? Apparently the bureaucrats cared because they had this expense scheme going on where
00:46:57.680
they could get themselves the nicer room and hide the cost of it in another place.
00:47:02.540
I guess we were all so distracted by their Mr. Dress Up, uh, haberdashery,
00:47:08.400
which is still maybe one of the most embarrassing moments in, uh, the Justin Trudeau liberals regime.
00:47:16.660
Uh, I just can't get those images out of my head. I had to relive it all this past week. Um,
00:47:24.640
especially when the Bollywood stars, I think it was in the New York times or the New York post when
00:47:29.160
the Bollywood stars are like, uh, this guy's more Bollywood than Bollywood, like the Bollywood
00:47:34.320
stars who wear costumes and, and participate in grandiose displays as a matter of their job. They
00:47:41.900
were like, uh, this guy's a little much. Yeah. I mean, to put in perspective, uh, Sheila, it would
00:47:47.920
be like, um, if an Indian, uh, came to Canada from India and dressed in the full regal RCMP uniform,
00:47:58.900
you know, uh, thinking, well, isn't this what Canadians wear on the street? No, you'd stand
00:48:05.660
out like a sore thumb. Yeah. Although I kind of like when people from foreign countries come here
00:48:10.860
and they'd like get in the full cowboy getup. I kind of like that. I think it's cute.
00:48:17.060
Yeah. I had to relive a lot of like Justin Trudeau namaste-ing his way through India. And I was like,
00:48:23.540
ah, three and a half years later, it's still awful. Okay. We should get to some of these, um,
00:48:32.140
uh, chats here because we only did two and it's, uh, 11 minutes left in the show. We've got a super
00:48:38.680
you shout from Annalisa. Good morning to my two favorite people looking very, very handsome. My
00:48:44.740
sweet Menzies. Yeah. And I said the same thing. I think he looks great today. Too kind Annalisa.
00:48:48.940
Uh, and then, and then Annalisa left us a super you tip of $10. Annalisa. Boy,
00:48:58.980
you're so nice. Again, no accounting for your taste in men, but super nice lady.
00:49:05.360
We've got a super you tip from BB icon tipped us $2. Well, that's great. Thank you. Every little
00:49:11.420
bit helps. Uh, we've got a rumble chat from joyful art from the heart. We're so glad to see this
00:49:17.120
last night on Tucker. Millions watch this. Our mainstream media ignored it, but now everybody
00:49:22.880
knows. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, just think about it. If there were a spate of church burnings in Europe,
00:49:30.440
and sometimes they go through that, um, everybody gets up in arms naturally. And we should,
00:49:35.260
this is happening in Canada. And as Tucker points out, like we're, we're basically 1985 Albania,
00:49:43.080
like our borders are closed. We can't say certain things on the internet. They're censoring our free
00:49:48.000
speech. I, I noticed this morning on Facebook that Chris Biddle, the horrible liberal MP, uh, is bragging
00:49:55.820
about the new gun control legislation being enacted today. Um, and it's like, so like our gun owners are
00:50:04.940
being convicted of pre crimes. And, um, if they've had any mental health problems in the past, like
00:50:12.560
long their entire lives, by the way, they've made it so that if you've had depression or whatever in
00:50:17.920
your life, and you may have been suicidal as a teenager or whatever, that can hurt your ability
00:50:22.420
to buy a firearm today, like as a, as a 40 something year old person, like that's how bad it is. And when you
00:50:28.380
think about it, uh, the Americans must look at us like we are absolutely insane. Like what's going
00:50:34.540
on in that country, those poor people. Well, you know, Sheila, when the borders open, I suggest you
00:50:41.160
and I, uh, fly to Albania and ask the Albanians, what was it like in 1985? And was it worse than 2021
00:50:49.780
Canada? Yeah. Let's compare notes with the Albanians. I've ridden on one of those East
00:50:58.200
German Soviet era trains before. And, um, I, the ambiance is pretty similar to what it's like
00:51:06.480
traveling around in Canada. The track didn't go down a meandering mountain or anything like that.
00:51:11.900
Something that makes you curl up in the fetal position. Does it? Okay, good. Straight,
00:51:17.360
straight. And I, but I couldn't look at my phone when I was on the train. I was, no, it's not good.
00:51:22.880
Um, we've got a rumble chat from frog soup, getting great exposure for rebel. The only person
00:51:29.500
telling the real news. Yeah. Sometimes it feels that way. I mean, we do have some fellow travelers
00:51:33.520
with a true North who's actually, I, I must give them credit doing some great job covering the church
00:51:38.780
burnings. Um, they're really documenting them as they go. Um, but yeah, it's, it's, you know,
00:51:45.800
just like mostly us post-millennial to Western standard to some extent, a little bit too.
00:51:50.900
Um, we've got a hyper chat from history club world rebel should try to create a show on Fox that gives
00:51:57.240
you one hour to report what is going on in Canada. Like when CTV or global goes to play CNN coverage of
00:52:04.260
American events, unless they make themselves look high and mighty. But you know what, you know,
00:52:10.120
wouldn't it be great if Ezra was a weekly guest, 10 minutes a week, uh, doing the state of the union
00:52:16.580
address of what's happening in Canada. And I mean, I know a lot of Americans don't care what's
00:52:21.080
happening North of the border, but these kinds of issues, these resonate. And, uh, with Justin Trudeau
00:52:27.700
and power and the way we're still locking down this nation, there are so many great stories for
00:52:33.940
Ezra to expose on Tucker's show that I think would get traction. Well, and I think too, for our American
00:52:40.660
friends who are just getting into the swing of Biden, um, let us be a cautionary tale of what
00:52:49.200
happens when you elect someone so far left and easy, manipulate, easily manipulative, manipulated,
00:52:58.120
manipulated, easily manipulated, because as you know, Justin Trudeau can barely string a thought
00:53:03.580
together, even as I struggled to say that one sentence just there, but he can barely string a thought
00:53:09.120
together. It's all the people behind him who are pulling the strings and his advisors. Biden's very
00:53:14.940
similar. Um, and so I think Americans are very interested in what's going on in Canada because
00:53:22.480
we're about five years ahead of you. Um, and so if you don't want these problems that we're
00:53:28.060
experiencing in Canada now, think about being reactive right now in, in the United States.
00:53:35.720
Yeah. We're, uh, five years ahead of you and, uh, 30 years behind Albania.
00:53:41.300
Yeah. I might've mixed up the math on 1985 and 2021, but you know what I'm trying to say folks.
00:53:47.280
I know it. Um, for me, it'll always be 2001. My music tastes, my clothing tastes like everything. I just
00:53:55.720
live in 2001. So whatever. Um, uh, rumble chat from share 21. Good job, Sheila, 1700 pages of jargon.
00:54:05.360
And you still found the nuggets. Now we do have a research helper who helps with these things and
00:54:10.960
he's invaluable. He's great. Uh, he's great. Um, he files access to information requests for us all
00:54:18.920
the time. He keyword searches things to make life a little easier. He's absolutely incredible,
00:54:24.280
but he ain't free. So, um, if, if people want to help with our access to information and research
00:54:31.180
needs, I'll direct you to a website. It's called rebel investigates.com. We file, I would say daily,
00:54:40.160
at least three or four, sometimes even more when we're trying to hit these different agencies with
00:54:45.760
the same requests, those all costs money. When they come back, we have to read through them.
00:54:50.940
Our researcher helps us. He's amazing. And quite frequently we get denied. So we need to appeal
00:54:58.300
and then the appeal costs money and filing for the appeal takes time and, and blah, blah, blah, blah,
00:55:03.180
blah to ask questions. The mainstream media gets money from Justin Trudeau to ask, but they're not
00:55:09.180
going to ask him because they don't want to show anybody what he's doing behind closed doors.
00:55:13.080
So, um, anyways, if you want to help with our, um, access to information needs,
00:55:19.340
it's at rebel investigates.com. No, you're not going to get this information from the mainstream
00:55:24.420
media folks, because like a good dog, you don't bite the hand that feeds.
00:55:29.260
What did I, you know what? I, our researcher actually sent me an email this morning saying
00:55:34.320
something like global news is three weeks behind Sheila. And that's because we have a great
00:55:40.080
researcher who helps with watching some of the like contracts sites, um, for the federal government,
00:55:47.580
like buy sell.gc.ca. And he flagged to me a story about how they were hiring a contractor to lecture
00:55:57.940
white people about how racist they are. And I think I did that story three weeks ago, right when the,
00:56:03.420
the contract was posted or the 10, like the ask for the contract was posted. And I see that,
00:56:09.500
I think it's global news just followed up on it today. So, I mean, that's how, that's how good he
00:56:14.780
is though. That's why, you know, we get ahead of things because of him. No, a hundred percent. And he
00:56:20.780
has, um, a memory that would put an elephant to shame. And, but that is the thing. When I say the
00:56:26.820
mainstream media doesn't cover this, sometimes the story that we break is so egregious, so outrageous
00:56:33.540
that they have to begrudgingly put something on the record, make it look like they are actually
00:56:39.480
doing real journalism. And that's why on that story, global was so far behind you.
00:56:44.320
Yeah, always. Um, so we've got a super you tip from Sojourner tipped us $2. Well, thank you very
00:56:51.780
much. And then Sojourner says, but they don't say it's understandable when lockdown protests
00:56:58.120
break COVID rules. Yeah, no kidding. Yeah, no kidding. It's, they can understand how a church
00:57:02.580
got burned down, but they don't understand why you don't want to wear a mask in a grocery store.
00:57:08.140
Uh, we've got a rumble chat from Ryan Rostey. Trudeau is a disgrace in every imaginable way.
00:57:14.120
Another rumble chat from books and tea. Americans are appalled regarding the church burnings. Yeah,
00:57:19.180
they are. We've got a hyper chat from History Club World. Rebels should maybe start a second
00:57:24.760
dinnertime live show. History Club World just wants me to like die of overwork. What you see on air
00:57:34.420
is the least of the things I do in a day. Anyways, I bet it would be more, I bet it would make more
00:57:40.500
money. Well, it depends. I mean, as soon as these other platforms really get their monetization going,
00:57:45.500
that could be the case, it would be a good thing to get news to your audience and entertain them.
00:57:51.840
You know, that when we were allowed to make money on YouTube, our like evening, um, things are
00:57:59.800
breaking. Let's just jump on air. Live streams always did really well. People always watch them.
00:58:05.100
People donated a lot in the super chest. They always did really well. And sometimes it's the best way to
00:58:10.560
deal with like, oh, there's a cabinet shuffle, which there is in Alberta, although I haven't heard any
00:58:15.260
news about who got moved out of what quite yet. But sometimes that's the best way to deal with
00:58:19.980
news as it happens is to just react. Um, but, um, you know, as these other platforms ramp up their
00:58:27.340
monetization, that might be something we should think about. I'm game. Oh, I'm me too. You know
00:58:33.300
what? This, the studio is always set up, right? Like my computer never moves. The camera never moves.
00:58:38.860
I just get in here and flip on a light and get working. Um, okay. So the next one is a rumble chat
00:58:46.020
from Chrissy's kingdom. JT comes out West. Did he go check on the arson? Yeah. I thought not he did.
00:58:53.060
He did not, but he did go get a picture taken at a residential school, unmarked graveyard with a teddy
00:59:00.280
bear. So, I mean, just literally standing on the graves of dead kids to get a photo.
00:59:05.540
Just gross. Just yuck. You know, by the way, um, there, you know, like there are still indigenous
00:59:15.720
communities with boil water advisories that Justin Trudeau said he would fix. Um, thanks for
00:59:21.780
the photo, but actually do something to help indigenous communities. You know, you're, you're
00:59:26.020
absolutely right. What is, that was supposed to be a project from day one about getting clean, uh,
00:59:32.220
drinking water to so many of these reserves. It's been completely forgotten. And, uh, if he's going
00:59:37.840
to do a photo op like that, and I, you know, I'm with you, Sheila, in terms of taste, that is
00:59:44.680
borderline. Um, why doesn't Justin Trudeau also address the fact that it was his father when he was
00:59:51.280
prime minister, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, that was the last prime minister to sign off on these
00:59:55.380
residential schools. That's something that seems to get forgotten in the narrative too, isn't it?
01:00:00.100
Yeah. Jean Chrétien, I think was, he was the Indian affairs minister at the time. Um, when, uh,
01:00:09.400
Pierre Elliott Trudeau signed off on these things, pretty sure Jean Chrétien is still alive. How come
01:00:14.820
nobody's talking to him about him? Um, you know, if this were a conservative who was still alive and
01:00:22.860
who participated in this, the media would be camped out in front of his house, but because it's Jean
01:00:27.560
Chrétien, literally nobody's talking about it. I bet you, I just said that. And a substantial amount
01:00:34.400
of our viewers had no idea, had no idea that Jean Chrétien was the Indian affairs minister
01:00:39.040
when Pierre Elliott Trudeau signed off on the residential schools and he's still alive.
01:00:45.520
I can almost hear Jean Chrétien's answer involving those words like, uh,
01:00:50.700
a proven proof, you know, the line I'm talking about, Sheila.
01:00:55.920
Yeah. We should, while, however distasteful Justin Trudeau's picture at those unmarked graves
01:01:03.580
was, can we just take a minute to appreciate that he didn't show up in full regalia?
01:01:11.080
You know, can we just make, be glad he didn't show up in his like buckskin jacket or whatever
01:01:20.100
You know what? That is your bang on Sheila. That I wonder, I really do wonder if that crossed
01:01:29.640
his mind, that thought popped into his head and his advisors said, ah, no, we kind of learned
01:01:35.900
our lesson with the other Indians in India when you did that ridiculous dress up affair
01:01:41.460
with, uh, Sophie and the kids. So, uh, I guess we'll never know.
01:01:46.340
You know, that spontaneous jumping out from behind the curtains and Trudeau dancing, that
01:01:53.500
was sort of planned, but not really. He wanted to do it. And I have this in access to information
01:01:58.460
documents. He wanted to do it. His advisor said no, because it would be
01:02:04.700
insane. Right. But then at the last minute, he just did it anyway. So I think he's hard
01:02:10.940
to handle like, yeah. And you know what? Our national shame. And, and there was a, I remember
01:02:18.440
shortly after that, there was a brilliant parody on Radio Canada, the French CBC service about
01:02:26.040
this trip. And that's when all the SJWs came out screaming about how offensive the parody was,
01:02:35.600
but they were parodying the real life prime minister doing exactly the same thing. I mean,
01:02:42.520
it's hard to make sense of the world sometimes, eh, Sheila?
01:02:45.880
I don't know the rules anymore. I just live my life. I don't know the rules. I don't make the rules.
01:02:50.640
I'm just going to do what I do. Um, I think we've got a couple more hyper chats. Yes. So we've got
01:02:57.200
one from Rosti says, thanks for giving the people a voice. Oh, you're welcome. Another hyper chat from
01:03:01.560
Celtic Mutt. David is not correct. About what? There are, there are many of us here in the States
01:03:09.720
that are watching what's going on in Canada as a cautionary tale. As Sheila just said, we love our
01:03:15.320
Canadian brothers and sisters. I hope you pity us a little bit too. I stand corrected. And I'm,
01:03:20.340
and you know what? I'm glad I'm incorrect. I love to think that what's going on in our country
01:03:25.580
engages an American audience. So thank you. And we've got a super new tip from Token. Well,
01:03:33.320
thank you very much. I tipped us $10. Wonderful. Thank you. And I think we're all caught up and we're
01:03:38.360
only four minutes over time, David, instead of, you know, what are we reaching some days, 20,
01:03:44.120
25 minutes over time, Justin, you're going to get your lunch at a decent time.
01:03:47.740
Oh, we can hardly wait. And by the way, there's somewhere in Toronto that if you go and get your
01:03:54.000
vaccination shot, Harvey's Canada will give you a free burger and an ice cream cone. I wonder if
01:04:01.240
that's enough to seduce those that are on the border of getting vaccinated or not.
01:04:07.600
But yeah, I wasn't sure. I wasn't sure about the complications and stuff. And, and I was worried
01:04:12.820
about, you know, whether or not it's right for me, but free ice cream. Yeah. Sign me up. Like,
01:04:18.340
I can't believe that that's the thing now. A free burger, you say? Does it come with cheese and fries?
01:04:23.760
Yeah. Throw bacon on there and I'll, we'll think about it.
01:04:28.400
Yeah. Then I'll get both jabs. Unbelievable. Yeah. Well, folks, uh, the hour went by so fast. Thank
01:04:34.520
you to all the people, uh, out there who made a generous contributions. We really depend on that.
01:04:40.520
So thank you very much. And Mr. Producer behind the board, of course, the epitome of execution,
01:04:46.180
excellence, Sheila Gunn-Reed. And until next Tuesday, uh, I'm signing off. Uh, Ezra will be here