Rebel News Podcast - July 09, 2021


DAILY | Ezra on Tucker, Trudeau's India Trip Hotel Expenses


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 4 minutes

Words per Minute

162.46432

Word Count

10,550

Sentence Count

790

Misogynist Sentences

10

Hate Speech Sentences

22


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

00:00:00.000 Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, you have tuned into the Rebel News live stream
00:00:19.880 on this, a Thursday, July 8th, 2021. I'm David Menzies and well, my co-host, you know,
00:00:28.300 I nickname her the Triple E. She is the epitome of execution excellence. She is the she-devil
00:00:34.840 with a sword. She is the Khaleesi of Northern Alberta. She is Sheila Gunn-Reed. How are you
00:00:41.700 doing, Sheila? David, I'm doing great. But, Justin, I would be doing much better if I could see this
00:00:47.160 Skype feed in my monitor because I just, I long to see David's smiling face. That's all I want in
00:00:53.720 the world. It's 10 a.m. I need my David fix. Oh, there you are. That's great. Perfect.
00:00:59.340 Not many people say that. Not many people want to see my face. Not many people of the female gender
00:01:05.080 in high school wanted to see my face. So what a wonderful compliment you gave me, Sheila.
00:01:10.900 You know what? Read the story of the ugly duckling. You know, you're just growing to a beautiful swan
00:01:16.700 and it's fine. When is, when, oh, when is my Cinderella, or should I say, cinderfella moment
00:01:24.340 going to happen, Sheila? I think the day that that beautiful lady, Menzies, said,
00:01:31.640 fine, I'll marry you. I think, you know, I think that's the day that you had your cinderfella moment.
00:01:38.860 Actually, it was kind of the other way around. I have the firm belief that, oh, yeah, Sheila,
00:01:43.920 you know how it works. Basic. I'll tell you, it was way back in 1990 and Lady Menzoid and I,
00:01:48.740 the future Lady Menzoid, we're driving along and we had just come back. And this is always the
00:01:54.120 trigger, I think, from one of our friends' weddings. And we're driving up Bathurst in Toronto. And this
00:02:00.960 is what she said. David, I'm beginning to wonder about the direction of this relationship. And the
00:02:07.760 translation is, a ring goes on this finger in three months or it's adios muchachos. Okay. So,
00:02:15.620 yeah, it was kind of a nudge nudge into that. So, there you go. How did it happen for you, Sheila?
00:02:20.920 That's funny. How did we get married? Like, how did the proposal? I don't, it was not even remotely
00:02:29.720 that interesting. It was like, well, you're going overseas to work. You're going to a dangerous place.
00:02:36.040 I don't think it's appropriate for your mom to have to deal with getting your corpse home if
00:02:40.340 something happens. And he's like, yeah, you're making a lot of good points. And I'm like, okay,
00:02:44.020 well, then we should just sort of formalize it. And that, I mean, it's, it's not romantic. It's
00:02:48.680 practical. And I think that's sort of how I am anyways. And it's sort of how he is. And
00:02:52.280 you know what? Well, it works for us. So, it's good.
00:02:55.600 Sounded like the negotiation you'd go through to buy a minivan or something.
00:02:59.300 Yeah. But you know what? It works. It works. You know, not everything is a fairy tale. Not
00:03:07.980 everything is like romantic music and getting swept off your feet. Sometimes two practical people
00:03:14.480 build a practical life and raise some practical kids doing practical things. And that's just how
00:03:19.180 it works out. Yeah. But it helps with the romantic music. We once went to a Hungarian place and they
00:03:23.880 had a guy with the violin. And I said, can you play something romantic? And he said, sure. He said,
00:03:29.880 what do you want? I said, how about hold that tiger? And he had said, hold that tiger. That's
00:03:34.680 a romantic song. I said, it is for another tiger. Oh my goodness. Okay. Should we tell everybody what
00:03:41.840 we're doing here? We are four minutes into the show. Things are, they're going so fast.
00:03:48.760 Yeah. They're going so fast. People are probably going to start checking out here.
00:03:52.480 Um, this is the rebel daily news live stream where David and I do things other than give
00:03:59.040 relationship advice. Um, we talk about the news of the day. It used to just be on Friday, uh,
00:04:05.140 hosted by Ezra pandemic struck. Everybody's sort of locked down. The news is changing day by day.
00:04:10.440 So we thought, you know what? We're around you're around. Let's talk to you for an hour every single
00:04:15.240 day at noon or 10 AM. My time 9 AM on the West coast. And it gives us a chance to interact with each
00:04:22.400 other, which is fun because I'm not in the office like everybody else is. So it helps me feel
00:04:26.860 connected to everybody, but, uh, it gives us a chance to interact with our viewers. Um, and if
00:04:32.420 you are watching us on YouTube, which is where we used to primarily be until YouTube fell out of love
00:04:39.980 with us and, uh, they're actively doing their best to de-platform us. They've already completely
00:04:45.980 demonetized us taking $400,000 right out of the middle of our company, but we're still streaming
00:04:52.520 there. So if you're watching us there, thanks. Nice to meet you. Might I suggest you move over to
00:04:58.680 a platform that doesn't care about your politics and really that's what I want. I don't want even
00:05:03.860 a conservative platform. I want a platform that doesn't care about my politics and allows for the
00:05:09.420 free market of ideas. And so we are also besides the censorship platform of YouTube where it's great
00:05:15.760 for you to find us, but don't stay there. Join us over on odyssey. Um, and while you're there on
00:05:22.380 odyssey, you can do something called a hyper chat and you have to buy some of their library
00:05:28.400 cryptocurrency and you can give us a little bit of it if you want to support the work that we do,
00:05:33.100 because we don't get any money from Justin Trudeau. We're also over on super you again,
00:05:37.360 a great free speech platform. You can leave us a tip over on super you and we're also
00:05:43.260 streaming on rumble. So you do have some alternatives to the censorship garbage fire of
00:05:49.220 YouTube. You know, Sheila, speaking of relationship advice, um, I look at the boardroom and I look at
00:05:57.480 those plaques that YouTube used to send as one, I think was for a hundred thousand subscribers. One was
00:06:02.760 for hitting the million mark. And, um, and now it's gone from sending us beautiful plaques that
00:06:08.980 we've put in the boardroom proudly on display too. Um, could you kind of like leave now? I mean,
00:06:15.720 what happened? Yeah.
00:06:18.660 You know, it's, we started off so strong, right? You know, like they liked us, we liked them and
00:06:25.560 then, you know, they, they got cooler friends, I guess. You know, it's just like, you know,
00:06:33.000 we were, we were great together and then they got more popular than we did. And then they started to
00:06:37.900 want to hang out with the cool kids and we weren't so cool anymore. And so they don't like us.
00:06:42.260 And my theory, Sheila, 2016 was the year. I mean, that was when Donald Trump got elected.
00:06:49.220 That wasn't supposed to happen. The Silicon Valley Mandarin said to themselves, have we given this
00:06:55.560 kind of, uh, uh, person, a platform in which to, uh, become president of the U S this, this was never
00:07:02.680 in the cards. I mean, the, the first shot across the bow was, um, Brexit, but you know, that was way
00:07:08.500 over there in Europe across the pond. But when Trump became the real bonafide U S president,
00:07:14.360 that's when I noticed a shift in the wind, Sheila, in terms of the censorship.
00:07:20.200 Yeah. I mean, we all saw it in action. Trump went around the mainstream media. That's what
00:07:26.280 the beauty of social media was, at least in its inception was you could go around the,
00:07:33.260 I guess, self-censorship and selective news coverage from the mainstream media. And for Trump,
00:07:40.080 he could speak directly to the people, um, and connect directly to them. His message did not
00:07:45.180 have to be filtered through the crones at CNN. He could just talk directly to the people he wanted
00:07:52.160 to talk to, which is the American people. And I think in, um, I guess in response to that,
00:08:00.800 um, that's where the censorship started moving, you know, like the, these conservatives are talking
00:08:08.060 to each other online. We have to make sure that they don't talk to each other. We have to make
00:08:11.800 sure conservative politicians don't tell the other side of the story. Like even when it comes down to
00:08:18.400 what happened, um, on the Capitol with the riots, we saw CBC taking an active approach to censoring
00:08:28.860 in their comment section, anything that said, um, maybe Donald Trump didn't incite the riots.
00:08:34.800 And here's the link to his Twitter statement. CBC actively censored that out of their comment
00:08:41.840 section until such time as Twitter actually took it down. So even what, like they were taking down
00:08:47.880 evidence of the facts to fit their narrative. And I guess that's where we are now. And we've got
00:08:54.640 president Biden. So it's only going to get worse and how perverse it is that, uh, ex president Trump
00:09:00.680 remains banned on so many social media platforms. I can never get used to saying that, but we'll see
00:09:08.060 what happens in the near future. Now, Sheila, I don't, Mr. Producer has neglected to give me the topic
00:09:13.720 sheet, but I believe you wanted to talk about, um, when Mocha and I had a little visit up to
00:09:20.160 Stirling, Ontario. And, uh, what was once a beloved water hole for almost a century? Well,
00:09:27.860 tis no more. Oh, the water hole is still there, but you just can't use it. Check out this video, folks.
00:09:34.320 Now here's another interesting sign and it reads, this fence cost Stirling Rodden taxpayers $48,753.
00:09:47.040 Can you imagine that folks after going through all this misery in the pandemic and all the economic
00:09:54.140 havoc it has created? Somehow this little township has found almost 50 grand to spend on a fence to
00:10:04.000 further make people's lives miserable. Unbelievable. I think there's enough space in between those two
00:10:12.000 fence posts there for me to squeeze through. And I'll continue walking, looking for hopefully
00:10:16.880 a hole to get into the water. David Menzies for Rebel News here in front of Harold Quarry,
00:10:27.900 just north of Stirling, Ontario. Well, folks, I can tell you what a incredible July summer day it is
00:10:34.860 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
00:10:42.740 were both walking. Hey, enough with the bad jokes, but I'll tell you something that's really not
00:10:48.600 funny. For almost a century, this water hole in the quarry has served as a place of recreation
00:10:56.900 for people in this community. People would go here to swim. They'd go here to get drinking water. They'd
00:11:02.260 go here to get water for other needs. And then just a few weeks ago, this fence surrounded the quarry.
00:11:10.500 A fence, I should point out, that is topped with barbed wire. And suddenly, no one is allowed here.
00:11:19.040 There's even trespassing signs and no parking signs. And what was once a cherished summer place to go to,
00:11:26.560 and in winter too, when the water would freeze, it was a place where people would skate. Well, it's off limits.
00:11:33.860 And the reason is safety. Evidently, the insurer for the town said that there were serious potential
00:11:44.180 liability issues with this swimming hole at the quarry. Now, I'm not sure if they're worried about
00:11:49.440 people drowning. I'm not sure if this is a COVID thing. But nevertheless, the mayor and the council,
00:11:55.100 who I've reached out to, by the way, and they haven't returned my email, the town said,
00:11:59.400 okay, we'll wall it off with an almost $50,000 expenditure so that on a hot summer day like
00:12:07.340 this, nobody can go swimming. Now, recently, about 50 people violated the rule. The Ontario
00:12:12.920 Provincial Police came. They didn't lay any charges, but they had a talking to, to the people violating
00:12:18.460 this no swimming rule. And it is just inexplicable, folks. I mean, a playground has potential serious
00:12:28.540 liability issues. Should municipalities all across our great dominion tear down the swings and the
00:12:34.940 monkey bars and whatnot so that nobody gets a sprained ankle? Well, in any event, one of the things I want
00:12:41.460 to find out is that last Monday, when those demonstrators slash swimmers came by, how did
00:12:48.000 they get into the quarry? I mean, this town is really serious. That is razor sharp barbed wire.
00:12:54.480 So I'm just wondering how they got in the fence. As you can see, it has three locks on it. So they're
00:13:02.060 not fooling around. I'm going to walk around the perimeter and see if there's a hole in the fence,
00:13:07.420 because you know what, folks, I, uh, I brought my swimming trunks and I could sure go for a dip right
00:13:12.820 now.
00:13:26.000 Well, there's another fence here.
00:13:27.960 Huh. So I'm going to try the other way around, walking along the highway.
00:13:43.260 As you can see, this is where people would park, but, uh, that's off the charts too, because
00:13:49.740 they've got a new gate here and naturally the gate is locked. Wow. Talk about a no fun zone, eh?
00:13:57.960 Due rigour, no trespassing signs.
00:14:03.340 Now this is interesting. Here is a sign and it reads, water is a human right. Well, you know what?
00:14:11.020 I would agree with that. Without water, we cannot survive. And to fence off this water like this,
00:14:20.120 what a travesty.
00:14:21.180 Now this is interesting. I see another layer of fencing here, which might suggest that this is
00:14:31.260 where the original fencing was clipped open to let people get down the hill and into the quarry
00:14:38.760 for some, uh, water recreation. But, uh, I don't know. I'll keep walking.
00:14:46.560 Well, Sheila, I did solve the mystery later when a passing farmer came by about those Dominion Day
00:14:52.000 protesters that had the swim in. Um, they brought ladders and they brought thick blankets. So you
00:14:57.960 climb up the fence, throw your blanket over the barbed wire and jump off onto the other side.
00:15:03.800 And he said, there's now speculation that the council might dig into more taxpayer revenue and
00:15:10.740 make a higher, uh, barbed wire fence. In which case he said, well, we'll just bring high, taller
00:15:17.400 ladders and more blankets. But Sheila, what is your reaction to this? No fun zone madness that we see.
00:15:24.720 Municipalities, governments in general, just a bunch of insufferable fun burglars. I mean,
00:15:33.160 the, I've seen less fencing and like easier fences to climb at a women's prison. Like I don't,
00:15:44.020 they leave razor wire to keep people out of the local swimming hole. What inspired this? Like
00:15:50.420 what necessitated the government costs? Were there just like, Oh, citizens are having like fun. Let's
00:15:56.780 go burgle it. What, what prompted all of this? Well, Sheila, it's part and parcel of a trend that
00:16:03.200 I noticed beginning back in the 1990s. And it was lawyers going to councils. And I lived in an area of
00:16:11.740 Toronto East York at the time where this actually happened. They said, you know what? We're looking
00:16:16.340 at that playground equipment could pose a certain danger. And in that borough, tons of playgrounds
00:16:24.580 were eradicated. What used to happen, Sheila, is that a mayor or a council person or the entire
00:16:33.420 council would have a spine and they would say to the lawyer, by the way, don't blame the lawyers on
00:16:39.800 this folks because they're just doing what they're supposed to do. Say, you know, here are some
00:16:46.300 potential, you know, so potential hazards. If, if a kid fell and, you know, broke, broke their arm,
00:16:52.080 you might get sued by the parents that they're not saying tear it down. They're saying here's a
00:16:56.940 potential, but what used to happen is you'd have politicians, elected officials say, thank you very
00:17:03.160 much for your advice. We're going to roll the dice. We don't want to tear down the swings and
00:17:09.400 the monkey bars and the slides and make summer miserable for the kids. So if that lawsuit does
00:17:15.720 happen, we'll take it when we come. We've gone from that to increasingly, oh, well, we got a legal
00:17:22.040 opinion. We got to, we got to get rid of this. I remember five years ago for Rebel, I covered where
00:17:27.740 I live right now, Sheila, in Richmond Hill. The Richmond Hill Council got a legal opinion that
00:17:34.120 we shouldn't be playing O Canada before council meetings start because of all that, you know,
00:17:40.200 that God lyric. It might offend atheists and they stopped playing O Canada. They've since rectified
00:17:47.340 that with regime change. And one last thing, Sheila, I want to say is that, um, when I reached out,
00:17:54.040 uh, to the mayor and he did get back to me sending the note from the insurance company saying we might
00:17:59.840 have to raise your premiums if you let people go there. I'm still not sure if the concern is a
00:18:07.120 drowning issue, a slip and fall issue, or is it more of this COVID-19 madness that if people go there,
00:18:15.040 they won't socially distance. I don't have an answer to that. And, um, so this beloved waterhole,
00:18:23.380 and I can't find any support by people on the street for being walled off like this,
00:18:28.920 it's gone much like our beloved, uh, colleague in, uh, Coburg, uh, Tamara Ugolini. Uh, once again,
00:18:36.620 their gorgeous Sandy beach has a Berlin wall fencing that off from the people that do do COVID.
00:18:45.440 Sheila, I'm sick of this. I'm sick of these gutless wimps in a position of power capitulating
00:18:53.240 to the bogeyman, you know, under the bed that doesn't exist.
00:18:58.500 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,
00:19:10.200 you know, easy grade to get down to it.
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
00:19:24.620 drop off when you roll under the fence. Um, because as you can see all the way around,
00:19:29.540 like there's steep edges, except where they've got the, the like nice grade blocked off or get a
00:19:37.200 ladder and some blankets and hopefully you don't catch yourself on some razor wire. So that's how you
00:19:43.120 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
00:20:03.160 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
00:20:24.360 someone is trying to terminate their life. And unfortunately she was successful in doing so.
00:20:29.380 So I don't even think that counts as a, as a drowning death because it was intentional. So this is a
00:20:36.820 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.
00:21:21.660 You are, you are a one woman common sense revolution, Sheila. So, uh, good on you. Yeah. So,
00:21:28.980 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,
00:33:50.180 that's for sure.
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
00:38:23.240 mainstream media.
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.
00:39:42.740 Yeah.
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?
00:40:19.920 1,700.
00:40:21.020 Oop! What am I saying?
00:40:22.600 1,700.
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.
00:44:06.400 Sure.
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.
00:44:50.780 So it's our way or our way.
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.
01:00:44.560 We'll talk to them.
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?
01:01:10.100 Oh, wow.
01:01:11.080 You know, can we just make, be glad he didn't show up in his like buckskin jacket or whatever
01:01:17.440 and turn it into a costume event?
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
01:04:53.260 tomorrow. And in the meantime, stay sane.