DAILY | Freeland confronted in Alberta; Western U students revolt; UCP leaders debate at APP event
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 10 minutes
Words per Minute
166.15237
Summary
Sid Fizard from our Calgary office joins us to talk all things Alberta politics. We talk about the Alberta election, the leadership race, and the news of the day. We also talk about some of the things going on in the Alberta landscape.
Transcript
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are you tired of losing your rights and freedoms the alberta prosperity project has a solution
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for you join the community and learn more at albertaprosperityproject.com
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with you on board we can achieve freedom and prosperity for all of us
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oh hey good morning good afternoon everybody and welcome to the rebel news daily live stream i'm
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your host sheila gunreed and on mondays normally you expect my friend adam sos but today we have
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sid fizard from our calgary office sid how's it going i'm doing pretty great and uh we had a fair
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few events in the last couple of days to talk about so i'm happy to get to it nice to hear with
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our be here with our viewers yeah the uh alberta landscape's been pretty busy this last little
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bit it's never boring out here and as our friends know monday is sort of the alberta centric show you
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have two albertans a lifelonger and uh a refugee from toronto with us today um and on every second
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monday our show here is sponsored by our friends at the alberta prosperity project um you can find
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out more about them at albertaprosperityproject.com but basically they're a non not-for-profit non-partisan
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educational society uniting all albertans and businesses and organizations to protect their
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interests freedoms and rights and flex our muscles a little bit against uh ottawa uh actually i think
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we have an ad from alberta prosperity project let's go to that right away
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ah okay we'll go to that in a bit sorry i put the the office on the spot i just really don't want to
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forget um to show their ad so um yeah i'll tell everybody we're doing what we're doing because um
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obviously apparently i don't know um so maybe the refresher is good for me um and then we'll get
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into the news of the day so we are streaming currently on youtube but youtube is a censorship
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platform so if we talk about something that might get us cancelled off of youtube we're just going to
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cut the feed there but the good news is you can watch us on three other places that really don't care
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about your opinions you can watch us on getter we're streaming on getter but you can also watch
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us on rumble and odyssey and the beauty of those two platforms is that they allow you to support the
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work that we do completely willingly through a paid chat on rumble it's called a rumble rant
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on odyssey it's called a hyper chat so we'll sort of do our best if i can remember to collect your paid
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chats if you send them and then we'll read them on air at about the 30 minute mark um please
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producers push me in that direction if i forget um so if you leave us a paid chat to support the
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work that we do unlike what the mainstream media you know justin true makes you support them whether
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you like them or whether they're busy calling you racist um we we invite your voluntary uh support
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and if you leave us a paid chat we'll read your comment query question story idea on air i think
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that's it now uh let's get into the news of the day because we didn't get a chance to talk about it
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last week because i don't think we had an albertan available to do the stream to talk about it but our
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friends at the alberta prosperity project they did a full debate and they had uh dr dennis modry who is
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the top dog over at app and our ezra levant asking the questions in the debate and so there were the
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three front runners well i guess the fourth front runner wasn't there because he's scared of the cbc
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so we had daniel smith and we had todd lowen and brian gene and these guys absolutely roasted ottawa
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um they were as ezra said in the morning meeting talking like pundits instead of uh politicians
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which i think is probably better because it's a little bit more candid um i like how they call us
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a right-wing media group in the cbc article and so they were talking about um there there were some
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really good questions about what's the or else instead of strongly worded letters to justin trudeau
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every time he stomps all over things that are should be within the purview of the province's
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rights um daniel smith proposed um you know doing as much as we can within confederation to fix the
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relationship with ottawa before we pulled the shoot uh i think todd lowen sort of of the same mindset
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and brian gene was like no we have to work with ottawa um and that didn't get him a lot of great
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responses from the crowd but he did have some good ideas and kudos to all three of them by the way
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for showing up because the media was pressuring them i know the party was pressuring them not to go
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um some of their other inconsequential fellow candidates for the leadership of the ucp
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also pressuring them not to go with malicious lies by the way um so they went and more importantly
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than anything in all of this you have to talk to albertans if you want to lead them and i've seen
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polls right now that show that more albertans than quebecers right now are expressing some form
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of separatist sentiment now what does that mean i don't know but maybe it means uh we want to leave
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the country be our own country join the united states have some sort of sovereignty association
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be recognized as a distinct society like quebec is maybe we need to execute the firewall letter
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uh the historic firewall letter we maybe we need to uh have our own police force run our own pension
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plan collect our own taxes whatever that means more albertans want that right now than quebecers who
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currently have much of that relationship so to discard these people as fringe radicals is bad idea
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genes um but you are sid i want to ask you about this because i'm a lifelong albertan so i've seen
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separatism come and go in waves um and i think stephen harper sort of extinguished the idea of
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separatism all across the country quebec didn't want to leave all of a sudden and neither did the west
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when stephen harper got elected because he sort of rejigged the relationship with quebec and the west
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wanted in that was our thing we wanted in we wanted to have you know this footing within the country
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where people would understand our financial contributions to uh to confederation and stephen
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harper recognized that so that sort of extinguished the separatist movement before but it's back with
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vengeance as it normally is when there's a trudeauan power um you've you know you are a transplanted
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torontonian so when you hear people like leela ahir who's running to be the leader of the united
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conservative party and many of those people in the room at the app event those are ucp voters like
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they're not separatists you don't go to sorry i let me correct myself they are unwilling probably
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separatists there are people who love the province probably love the country but feel pushed out
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and they are interested in what ucp leadership hopefuls have to say about this so they're not
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quite ready to leave they are willing to cast a vote for the ucp which seems to be a federalist
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party um what do you think about how you know those people are being talked about in the media and by
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leela ahir who's also running to lead the ucp calling them you know sort of extremist homophobic
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nonsense uh well i think the media does the uh separatist movement a disservice to say the least
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and it's i think it does the disservice actually because every time the media talks it just grows
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sorry i i've been talking no no go ahead no no that's okay um like from a torontonian perspective
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like you hear about let's say equalization is one of those things like from the gta no idea what that
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means equalization is it's there's just a word to it but then when you come here right well you know
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it it it's open to question but in once you come here to alberta and you see the people and you talk
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to them and you find out a little bit more about the issues that they're advocating for you really
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do see that they've been given the short end of the stick for a very long time and you find out
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about situations like equalization and you realize that it isn't and like a lot of the people uh the
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sentiment that you alluded to where it's we don't want to but it's on the table um that's kind of
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the approach that i think a lot of people have here because of uh the long line of uh disrespect
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that they've received from ottawa basically and from coming to alberta from toronto i now share that
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sentiment as well yeah it's funny there's a lot of transplanted people who come to alberta for the same
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the same reason generations and generations and generations of people including my ancestors came
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to alberta it's for opportunity it's for space um it's to make it's for prosperity for prosperity to
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make your way in the world in the way you want to do it um so for the freedom too um and so there are a
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lot of people recent transplants to alberta who get here and they're like holy heck we had no idea
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where do we sign up to this uh getting more autonomy business um tarik el naga is a great
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example of that um our friend tarik el naga he ran for the maverick party he's a transplant to the
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country he came out to came out west fell in love with cowboy culture and realized we're getting a raw
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deal from the rest of the country now most people don't want to leave most people in alberta see
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themselves as canadians but they feel like there's my friend tarik el naga boy don't we look good
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that's at the app event um you know it's shocking i i clean up okay but so does tarik so um you know
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like a lot of people come here and they have no idea that we for example pipelines is a huge issue
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we you know like people who are you've been working you've been learning a lot on the energy file
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as since you've come to alberta and you know if you from the outside if you consumed all your
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information from the mainstream media this is just a pump jack riddled wasteland you know like
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bakersfield california by the way um but um it's not you know like people don't know about the
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reclamation process and how small of a footprint a pump jack and an oil lease has to have it's
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mandated by law and how green and clean and and we take that stuff very seriously um and so when
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we're being told no you can't sell your oil not only to the rest of the country but to the rest of
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the world we'd rather have it from venezuela or bakersfield or um no sorry we don't want your lng
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your liquefied natural gas we'll get it from russia um you know it's if you told a quebec industry
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that they couldn't do business and do what they do best there would be absolute outrage they'd flip
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their lids and they'd get their way but albertans have just been taking it for a long time because
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we haven't been executing the same powers within confederation that quebec has and we're tired of
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being told to shut up every time we talk about it well and the one of the big ironies i think about
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uh the oil sands in particular is the fact that think about the negative connotation associated with
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an oil spill whether it be on land or in the ocean it is the end of days for anybody who's advocating
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for the environment and they talk about the oil sands as you know this open pit mine and all this
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destruction tail ponds whatever but at the end of the day this oil is already naturally seeping out
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of the ground natural oil spill and it happens to be the largest one on the planet if not uh up there
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so the irony i see is the fact that instead of cleaning up this big dangerous oil spill it's no
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you're bad for trying to take the oil out of this environment yeah it's odd and i'm so excited to
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see you just sort of peeling back the layers and learning all the good things about alberta
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that uh we know inherently as albertans but um we forget that the mainstream media is the wall a lot
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of people have to climb over to get their facts about who and what we are out here um so it's funny
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to see well not funny but it's it's uh fun it is fun to see you sort of discovering uh it firsthand
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and like the the lies the scales falling off your eyes as you learn it all it's it's great well even
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uh just going back and seeing steven gilbeau our now minister of the environment and climate change
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a role that's name got changed as trudeau entered office but that's aside from the point uh seeing
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gilbeau in the oil sands and well he was at his time in greenpeace it's uh it's funny to see how
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even back then it's the same people that are still condemning it even though they know and they should
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know at least that it is environmentally uh there's a an amount of environmental integrity that is brought
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to the table uh the technological advancements make the industry cleaner around the world and all of
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these things are neglected because oil bad because oil bad and uh you know when they say you know
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you're not respecting indigenous rights but there are a lot of indigenous partnerships in the oil
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sands um because those jobs are in their communities they don't even have to commute they don't have to
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leave reserve they can work there in their communities and you have somebody in ottawa saying
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sorry no you get to stay on welfare and enjoy generational poverty i mean it's just atrocious um i could talk
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about this forever but we are on a time limit and uh let's talk about one of the things that came out of
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the app debate we can throw to this clip but it is i think so i think she's the front runner um we've
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got brown jean daniel smith and travis taves who's sort of the establishment jason kenny pick um who was
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on the lockdown cabinet who was also featured in uh that picture of the sky palace where jason kenny was
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breaking the gathering rules he's in that picture but all of a sudden now he's like no the lockdowns
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were bad i'm like you were you were you were the guy locking everybody down but okay um anyways uh
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daniel smith suggests firing the alberta health services board in the leadership forum and that
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i think if i recall correctly got a standing ovation from the crowd
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miss smith i had the great opportunity to interview brian peckford the last living signatory
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to the charter of rights and freedoms and he told me the two most important words in section one
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are reasonably demonstrable there was nothing reasonable and there was nothing demonstrable
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about the decisions that they made and it's been proven the justice center for constitutional freedoms
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keeps winning case after case after case they've got dr dina hinshaw before the courts and essentially
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if you look at some of that testimony it comes down to well we didn't really have any evidence we were
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just doing it because everybody else was that's not a good enough reason to violate your rights we are
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a signatory to the charter of rights and freedoms and everyone let us down like the house of commas
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let us down the senate let us down the media let us down the medical establishment establishment let us
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down we are the last bulwark against a lawless ottawa it's part of the reason i feel so strongly
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that we need to pass the alberta sovereignty act we need to make sure that we stand up for the rights
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and freedoms of our citizens at all times amen sister
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so in keeping with this theme question oh i don't know if that's the clip we have the one where she
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suggests firing the ucp board uh that's sorry that's not the clip let's uh i i don't know if
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we have a clip of that but um some mainstream media snoop uh already wrote it up so it's in the edmonton
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journal and danielle smith suggests firing the alberta health services board in the leadership forum
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uh she did uh she she called the alberta's the alberta provincial health authority and the college
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of physicians and surgeons who have gone about the business of silencing any doctors who said that
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which is completely acceptable these days that masks don't work and now i can say that on youtube and
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that uh because they changed the rules just last week and i can also say that vaccines don't
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necessarily stop the spread of covid which is what a vaccine is meant to do but if you said that
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two weeks ago you'd be canceled and if you said that as a doctor two weeks ago even though it's
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demonstrable you could have your license suspended and there are doctors in this province who have been
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saying what is 100 true from the very beginning they were treated like pariahs they had their careers
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ruined anyways she is saying that the alberta the the whole board should be fired and the college of
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physicians and surgeons she called them lawless and uh suggests firing the boards of both bodies
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uh perfect yes there must be a reckoning for these people they have ruined far too many lives to not taste a
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little bit of that which they doled out to everybody else and think about the double standard where
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they're able to make well they can make any statement they want uh so long as it's for your
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health and safety they can't be argued against um and even to the point of uh well sorry that's uh for
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us in the censorship we're not allowed to say half the stuff that we'd like to uh but on their end
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they've got uh health bureaucrats who are saying that people dying of cancer uh people dying of
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covid are actually dying of cancer actually dying of covid we saw one situation there and there's i'm
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sure many others i know of somebody who went to the hospital to have a baby she tested positive for
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covid now she wasn't sick but it's just they routinely test you now for some reason for a disease so
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dangerous you don't even know you have it unless you get a test she went there to have a baby and
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then was counted as a covid hospitalization yeah because that's how they were jigging the numbers
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and so danielle smith it was all part of a question that the boss man asked ezra levant he asked them
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to describe and this what a great way to put this a truth and reconciliation process whereby victims of
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the lockdown could air their grievances so time to rip the band-aid off we need to find out what
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happened what went wrong who made the decisions and the people who made the decisions need to hear from
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the people they harmed and smith suggested alberta's government should hold alberta health services and
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the college to account before conducting a public review uh and she wants to hear from people who
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suffered during the pandemic specifically those who lost to loved ones and there are multiple different
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ways that happened through canceled surgeries delayed cancer treatment um through uh suicides
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um and concerned and overdoses by the way and have concerns about the mental health of youth
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these are things that someone has to be held account held to account for and we begin by putting
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new leadership at the top with people who made this decision in the first place and then todd lowen
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who is running to lead the party that kicked him out for speaking out against the lockdowns he said
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that alberta health services has to be gutted and it should start with dina hinshaw by the way who
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i think makes thrice what the uh premier makes um she's unelected unaccountable she's too busy
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to testify in court and then she took a vacation the next day uh she's dodged accountability on all of
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this and everything she says she's not a politician but everything she recommended and did was purely
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for political reasons and there is a wake of destruction behind this woman that she needs to
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be held account for and the health minister by the way under jason kenney tyler shandro and i forget who
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the guy is now um they're responsible for this too because everything she did she could not have done
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without they're okay yeah well and with so many of them we hear that it's the recommendation of
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health canada well where does health canada get its recommendation while the world uh health
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organization and so forth it's always the that's the person who said this is the right thing to do
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that larger group of more uh important distinguished individuals that we should all listen to
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yeah yeah it's just they pass the buck all the way up the chain and it's like okay great if we're
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just going to listen to the world health organization who has been infested by china um then why do i need
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you why do i need a health minister why do i need dina hinshaw why do i need dr theresa tam why do i need
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everybody in between at least if we're going to do exactly what the world health organization is telling us
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to do which is exactly that which china is telling the world health organization to tell everybody to do
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why do i have to pay for all the liars in between why exactly um okay that now that that's out of my
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system i should let everybody know that our friend adam sos was at the app uh leadership debate with me he
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has a full video coming out he's got interviews with people he's um interviews with candidates um so
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and i think i'm also in that video uh i gave my comments um although uh i feel like i just gave a lot
00:22:07.620
of them right now and the boss and ezra's doing his show on it i think tonight so um but to see
00:22:14.420
ezra's show early and ad free you need to be a subscriber to rebel news plus just go to rebel
00:22:19.460
news plus dot com to get access to that it's eight bucks a month but you get access to my show
00:22:23.420
ezra's show david's show kat and nat's show and andrew chapados's show so that's like five shows and we
00:22:30.900
never raised the price since the inception of the thing so we're fighting inflation uh a little bit for you
00:22:37.320
um so anyway stay tuned if you want to see more from that um maybe now are we prepared to go to
00:22:53.160
you have to understand that freedom is not free and you cannot have prosperity without freedom
00:23:06.460
it is then that i can confidently state alberta would summit the wealth of nations and become
00:23:19.500
one of the most desirable efficient highest per capita gdp producing countries in the world
00:23:26.460
hey folks check out the newest arrival to the rebel news store yes f is for fidel and f is for
00:23:51.340
let me let me ask you this father i mean uh why do you think it is yes it has this photo the color
00:23:56.540
testosterone levels are is justin trudeau the black and white half is a young fidel castro
00:24:03.100
wait now or is it vice versa it's so confusing i'm a huge forensic files fan wouldn't it be great if we
00:24:10.460
could have a piece of justin's dna and a piece of fidel's dna and put the rumor to bed once and for
00:24:18.460
all but in the meantime we'll just have to walk around wearing this shirt hinting at a great
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canadian conspiracy or is it in any event if you want to get this shirt folks go to the rebel news
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store and check this out type in our new discount code that's summer s-u-m-m-e-r and if you buy two
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unisex t-shirts you get an additional one for free what a deal like i said justin trudeau
00:24:54.460
fidel castro as they used to say on the abc detergent ads do you tell the difference i can't tell the
00:25:01.860
difference do you know what by the way if somebody wants to gut alberta health services i'm willing to
00:25:08.540
listen to the founder of the alberta prosperity project dennis modry i don't sorry i should call
00:25:15.020
him dr dennis modry um while uh people like leela ahir the fringe candidate for the leadership of the
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ucp might write him off as some sort of radical he is uh a prominent heart surgeon actually i think he
00:25:29.580
performed the first heart transplant in western canada and he's been fighting with alberta health
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services since 2015 when they tried to suspend his service his uh his uh his ability to practice
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um and they it sounds like they produced um some fraudulent uh statistics about mortality rates in
00:25:52.440
and around when he was operating and uh so he knows about the corruption at alberta health services
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and he was fighting with them seven years before we realized just how bad they were so um also when
00:26:04.780
somebody is a cardio and thoracic surgeon performing heart and lung transplants i'm willing to listen
00:26:11.280
to them on issues of uh pulmonary uh diseases like covet 19 and so when he says you know there's
00:26:20.380
probably another way to do this i'm i'm willing to listen to that guy and not dina hinshaw who before
00:26:26.280
in the before times only time you heard from her was when she was warning us about the potential for
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lyme disease because ticks had moved into the region and to keep it in your pants during the
00:26:35.320
calgary stampede so you don't get an std that's the only time we ever heard from this woman that's
00:26:39.980
the only time i wish to ever hear from her again well that's uh one of the great shames as well as not
00:26:45.480
only is it the media censorship that we're seeing but as well doctors nurses people in the health
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industry there's a countless number of individuals who have been censored uh throughout the last few years
00:26:55.540
yeah absolutely uh well it looks like my skype is getting a little pixelated but let's get to a
00:27:01.480
couple chats and then we'll move into the other big thing that happened over the weekend somebody yelled
00:27:06.840
at the deputy prime minister and so the world stopped and uh justin trudeau had to issue a statement
00:27:13.340
because as you know he's a prominent male feminist um and so the story again is albertans bad
00:27:21.360
conservative bud uh freeland who also proclaims herself to be a prominent feminist is too delicate
00:27:28.940
to handle public criticism so anyways these feminists have to pick a lane either you're like
00:27:33.720
built like a man and can do whatever a man does and you're not delicate or the world has to stop
00:27:38.640
because somebody yelled at you somebody pick a lane anyways let's get to some of these chats um adam
00:27:44.420
ottawa and gives us a buck says speaking of quebec-based industry i seem to recall snc lavalent thank you
00:27:51.280
very much or bombardier for that matter getting a free pass from justin trudeau at the expense of a
00:27:56.560
cabinet minister to boot yeah yes yes absolutely uh heaven and earth to keep those jobs going
00:28:02.400
heaven and earth all kinds of crooked business uh getting rid of cabinet ministers just to protect
00:28:07.960
your friends at snc lavalent um and you know meddling with ethics but all alberta wants to do
00:28:19.680
exactly well actually on the note of snc uh lavalent the next time they're uh they make the
00:28:27.320
headlines there's an office in calgary so i i know exactly where to do the shoot for that
00:28:31.080
oh gosh they're just the worst i mean they're i think they're building bullet trains in iran
00:28:38.820
if i recall correctly maybe that was bombardier one of those two i confuse my uh corrupt quebec
00:28:45.500
companies sometimes uh katrina panova gives us 10 bucks well thanks very much hello and cheers all
00:28:52.960
the lovely rebels this rumble rand is specifically a donation to andrew does in substitution of me
00:28:58.760
donating to a current thing fund okay great thank you very much shout out to andrew yeah and
00:29:07.140
yorgi yorgi or jorgi jorgi i don't know how you say that sometimes the j is a y so uh give us a buck
00:29:13.180
hello it's been a minute i see that the political establishment and all other establishments have
00:29:17.680
been speaking out against the narrative i want accountability and won't rest until i i think you
00:29:23.360
won't rest until you get it so um neither will i uh that's part of our job here at rebel news we
00:29:29.160
speak truth to power and we hold powerful people to account which sometimes uh people do in a clumsy
00:29:36.120
and clunky way as occurred over the weekend um or maybe it was early last week uh when christia
00:29:45.100
freeland was in our province which claims is her province although i don't know when the last name
00:29:49.900
she was really living here is but she's the latest target of public threats and intimidation against
00:29:55.820
women in canadian politics somebody yelled at her in public now it was profane i wouldn't suggest
00:30:02.880
that you do it but does it happen all the time to anybody who's in the public eye and often
00:30:11.340
conservatives yeah you better believe it um if if being yelled like it's it's the reason we live in
00:30:22.020
a free society is because we can yell at politicians and not go to jail for it that's the whole point
00:30:28.560
now you don't have to like it you don't have you can disagree with it you could say don't swear
00:30:34.640
don't call her names whatever don't make threats of violence naturally of course that's illegal but
00:30:41.820
politicians getting yelled at in public is as old as time and if you don't like it you know what go be
00:30:48.040
a librarian well i think on an international level as well we uh we treat our politicians with uh
00:30:54.880
uh pretty pretty large kid gloves so to say yeah yeah um and uh you know it's funny because
00:31:04.180
everybody now is all worried about oh the treatment of women and prominent female figures okay thanks
00:31:12.340
justin trudeau i think is even speaking out about it oh although um i didn't hear a lot from him when
00:31:18.760
his bodyguards ragdolled drea um or when his bodyguards uh you know assaulted david menzies and
00:31:27.580
he's like justin trudeau's like oh we gotta bring the heat down on political discourse aren't you the
00:31:32.920
guy that called everybody a bunch of racists and fascists because they disagreed with you politically
00:31:36.780
even completely peaceful people you said there was no space for them in public so you know what
00:31:42.320
they're doing they're making space for themselves in public that's what happens when you push people
00:31:46.640
into a pressure cooker i don't agree with the um like look at this this is what happened to david
00:31:52.180
no i don't agree with uh maybe the clunky way that someone confronted freeland um and we'll we'll show
00:32:02.420
that clip in a second but is it violence no it like is it the worst thing that would happen to any one of
00:32:10.240
us here at rebel news on on uh a year on the job probably not um let's show this do we have the
00:32:18.080
sort of bleeped version because i don't want to i don't i mean it's pretty rough but can we do we
00:32:23.100
have the bleeped version of what was said to freeland because we can dissect this a little bit because the
00:32:29.700
guy who did this plays no favorites he yells at everybody but when he was yelling at conservatives
00:32:35.340
nobody seemed to care shouldn't you guys have the itinerary since you guys are hosting all of
00:32:43.740
this stuff for her okay it's not bleeped good luck to you all
00:32:54.380
christia yes the fuck you doing in alberta you fucking traitorous fucking bitch
00:33:02.900
get the fuck out of this province you don't belong here you're a fucking traitor you fucking bitch
00:33:10.080
yeah go shouldn't you guys have rough it that's rough and jarring right but i get called a bitch
00:33:21.820
frequently in public you should you should you want to see what just read my twitter mentions
00:33:28.340
underneath that picture of tarik el naga it's nothing but a bunch of people telling me off
00:33:32.700
and calling me ugly like i care um but you know who who cares like she wasn't threatened
00:33:41.480
she wasn't assaulted um and that guy has said something similar to pierre paulia but i know you
00:33:50.840
have something to say so i don't want to cut you off oh no no uh do we have that pure clip um because
00:33:56.380
i mean this isn't like a liberal attack or a christia freeland specific attack i mean perhaps
00:34:01.820
maybe a little bit christia freeland was on the radar but it seems like generally politicians
00:34:06.300
yeah exactly this guy has his eye for politicians they're the ones who who uh change our lives with
00:34:13.380
the laws and guidelines that they put forward so that's who he's addressing i'd say less so than any
00:34:17.680
specific uh individual so if this is you know the attack on christia freeland as they're trying to
00:34:22.440
claim it to be or the assault uh as uh our mayor here in calgary has uh mentioned i don't know if we can
00:34:27.380
pull that up for a second but it's uh they're they're trying to describe it as as i mentioned
00:34:32.300
the assault and sheila you were actually literally assaulted uh a little while ago that's correct
00:34:37.060
isn't it yeah in 2017 a male feminist named deon buse if you want to see that just go to
00:34:42.140
deonbuse.com we'll own that url forever um he punched my camera into my face at the women's march
00:34:49.700
and then the hideous cat ladies all around him told me to calm down said hey calm down like that
00:34:58.680
guy just punched me in the face tell me to calm down um and then a couple of those uh hideous
00:35:04.280
awful hobgoblin women who don't have children they just have abortions those behind him told me
00:35:12.540
look at them smiling then they comfort him then they whisk him away um that's me with the toque
00:35:19.420
yelling at the women um because they're telling me to calm down then they take him away so that
00:35:26.000
the police can't find him it's fine when we put out a bounty one of his relatives turned him in
00:35:31.720
um but uh they they told me to calm down told me well maybe i shouldn't have been bothering him
00:35:39.820
like my politics where my skirt was too short kind of thing maybe i shouldn't have been dressed that
00:35:44.600
way and somebody wouldn't have attacked me you know what i mean um and i got victim blamed by
00:35:50.400
organizers from the women's march they were defending this guy against me saying i must have done
00:35:57.580
something to invite it and literally the last thing i said to him was i'm just trying to have a
00:36:03.020
conversation here and he could have walked away at any point i'm standing there with a microphone and a
00:36:08.860
bigger camera it wasn't like my little cell phone that i use these days it was on a tripod i'm in a
00:36:13.600
crowd of 800 cat ladies so you can't really move around um and they whisked him away they didn't
00:36:20.560
even ask me if i was okay they told me to calm down after this little weep punch to camera one of my
00:36:27.540
biggest regrets is not cold clocking that guy but then it would have the story would have been rebel
00:36:32.340
news reporter assaults male feminist at the women's march and then you know that's the story so that guy
00:36:39.040
was charged um and he we also sued him in court and these people decrying the treatment of christia
00:36:49.480
freeland most of them said nothing when that happened um they didn't say anything when uh drea a female
00:36:57.880
journalist of color apparently people like rachel gilmore uh mainstream media tiktok journalist that's
00:37:04.260
a thing now uh she's really outspoken about the treatment of female journalists of color um i didn't
00:37:11.120
say anything when drea was like tossed by justin trudeau's uh security but freeland gets yelled at
00:37:19.920
just yelled at now she's sworn at i probably don't don't do that it's not a good look but um
00:37:26.920
i sorry i'm i'm having a hard time finding a lot of giving a rip about this i just i just don't
00:37:34.840
have it in me well here here's the thing is the reason why the politicians in my opinion the reason
00:37:40.220
why they wouldn't say you know don't punch a journalist or this or that and don't defend
00:37:44.240
independent journalism uh it's because what does that benefit what's the benefit for a politician
00:37:49.280
have more eyes on everything they're doing well and then you have this incident in here with
00:37:53.620
christia freeland and some guy yells at her and uh other politicians are calling it an assault well
00:37:58.120
what benefit does that have for the politicians well maybe they can get some more security maybe they
00:38:03.080
can uh you know get a private detail wherever they go and they can always have themselves behind this
00:38:08.740
wall uh between them and the public yeah let's show that clip of this guy confronting pierr polyev
00:38:17.640
and then i want to talk about god gondic because we sort of hinted at it a couple times
00:38:22.000
but i think sid's right about how they're quickly changing the narrative and i want to show i want
00:38:29.020
to talk about how that is a replication of what happened with the invocation of the emergencies act
00:38:33.920
but let's go to this clip um of this guy confronting polyev
00:38:37.880
oh do we oh we just have a sorry uh olivia whispers in my ear we have a different polyev clip
00:38:45.440
so i think this is one of just polyev getting rough treatment out in public which nobody seemed to care
00:38:51.300
about at the time because um he's not a liberal lady oh they just found what i talked about so
00:38:58.800
things are changing very quickly in my ear so uh this is live tv so bear with us so why don't we roll
00:39:03.680
let's roll whatever we have and we're all going to find out together what we're watching
00:40:39.560
You can't really hear a lot of what's going on, but that's the same guy that yelled at Chrystia Freeland.
00:40:43.500
Now, what I find astounding about this is that guy jumps the stage, gets right over Polyev's shoulder while he's with somebody else.
00:40:54.120
They walk back to deal with whatever's happening.
00:40:59.860
Then Chris Warkenton, another MP, sort of takes him away, and he's still pointing and gesturing near him.
00:41:10.480
If that were Justin Trudeau, that would have been an assault because he put his hands on him.
00:41:18.140
That guy would have had his bank account frozen, and he would have been flattened by security and taken away.
00:41:24.380
He would be 49 days in jail like Tamara Leach, but that's the same guy.
00:41:36.100
Again, nobody cared when it happens to Pierre Polyev.
00:41:39.420
I'm having a tough time caring that somebody yelled at Chrystia Freeland in public.
00:41:43.500
I just – sure, don't do it, but I just – to like – the amount of outrage, give me a break.
00:41:51.140
Well, did Jody say anything about that incident?
00:41:57.340
So the mayor of Calgary, who is an insufferable progressive of the worst kind, to the left of the NDP.
00:42:04.640
Like, to the left of the NDP, to the left of the Greens.
00:42:09.060
I don't know if she's a communist, but she's like to the left of the NDP.
00:42:17.760
She said, I've been asked by some people why I haven't made a public statement about the assault.
00:42:22.580
Pay attention to that word here because this is the most dangerous word in all of this.
00:42:27.480
This is more dangerous than getting yelled at by a guy in public.
00:42:35.060
To be blunt, I had to sit with my thoughts for a couple of days.
00:42:39.140
Like, somebody else getting yelled at is the most, like, destructive thing that ever happened to them.
00:42:43.300
Like, I can't believe that there are such soft people in politics.
00:42:47.200
Because this incident is not isolated and brings up too much pain.
00:42:54.940
I think these politicians have to be soft because there's so many influencers that dip their toe into the race.
00:43:01.660
Or dip their hat into the game, I guess I should say.
00:43:05.200
Like, how many people have come to, let's, just because she's on screen, Mayor Jody Gondek.
00:43:10.040
How many people have come to her outside of the public eye and said, I want this to happen.
00:43:18.960
Oh, well, then you're going to have to do this for me.
00:43:20.520
You know, there's all these shady things that happen in the political arena.
00:43:24.140
And that's why I think these people, even though they might put on a tough face and, you know, how dare thee.
00:43:28.600
And, you know, they advocate to any degree that they might.
00:43:32.000
I think that's all because they themselves don't advocate for themselves.
00:43:36.680
They are very submissive to the powers around them.
00:43:43.780
Judy Gondek, the reason I think it is very dangerous that she used the word assault is because now we're watching the narrative change in real time.
00:43:55.860
What was rough language in public, which is distasteful, but not illegal.
00:44:06.140
Unlike with Polly, who that guy put his hands on him.
00:44:13.620
To call it an assault is dangerous and it's shifting this into a more serious situation.
00:44:20.680
And it is exactly what we saw with the invocation of the Emergencies Act.
00:44:26.400
We heard that it was quickly a violent, seditious threat to overthrow the Canadian government.
00:44:35.860
And anybody who was there was like, these bouncy castles, the street cleanup, these like open air soup kitchens for the homeless.
00:44:44.540
This terrorist, Tamara Leach, who is only charged with mischief, which is like the minorist of crimes.
00:44:52.420
People are still calling her a seditious terrorist and it's like she's charged with mischief and counseling to commit mischief, which is not even committing mischief.
00:45:03.040
It's saying, hey, do that stupid thing over there.
00:45:05.920
It'll be cool, which would make like your entire teenage years illegal under that, you know, under that sort of application of the law.
00:45:15.320
But they're moving it to assault, which means now we need to deal with it legally as though it's assault.
00:45:22.700
And OK, so maybe we don't have the tools in front of us.
00:45:26.440
But what if we started making the tools all of a sudden to shut up these prickly people in public who are telling us what they think of us because now we're calling it assault.
00:45:37.620
And so when words become violence, then what you do when someone comes at you with violence, you are justified also now when using violence to retaliate because friends, we're only defending ourselves.
00:45:51.380
And that's why switching the meaning of these words and upping the ante of these events is so dangerous for freedom, because when they start defining words as violence,
00:46:02.740
they will use the violence of the state now to shut up your words that they've determined are violent.
00:46:08.940
So I'm very worried about just how quickly this is sort of evolving into something much more serious than in reality it really is.
00:46:19.960
Well, and, you know, Sheila, I'm not sure if you know offhand, what's the and maybe do, maybe don't,
00:46:24.740
the cumulative amount of days that pastors have spent in prison behind bars for peaceful actions that they've taken.
00:46:33.640
How many days? It's over 50. I mean, that's art for alone.
00:46:45.280
Then Tim Stevens was, I think, three weeks, maybe all in.
00:46:50.200
Um, we've got, um, Phil Hutchins, who we should never forget about.
00:46:56.920
He in, uh, Eastern Canada, he spent a week in jail.
00:47:09.420
Um, so, uh, you know, there, there are people who have experienced the force of the state
00:47:17.480
Um, uh, I wouldn't be, uh, surprised to see more legislation come out of this
00:47:25.520
because Justin Trudeau is a reactionary legislator, right?
00:47:28.880
Like he uses bad things to quickly take away your freedoms.
00:47:32.820
Ask the firearms community how that's working out for us.
00:47:37.760
There's actually a bit of an investigation, uh, over there in Nova Scotia
00:47:44.040
that, uh, that, uh, a bit alludes to, as some people might remember.
00:47:48.160
Yeah, there's the, um, the, uh, mass casualty commission that is underway.
00:47:54.620
And they're showing just how cynical Justin Trudeau's, uh, gun control legislation was that they
00:48:02.720
stood on the graves of people who died, um, to push through Justin Trudeau's latest gun
00:48:10.300
And, and, and then again, in the wake of, uh, the Uvalde shooting, they decided to ban the
00:48:17.740
importation of handguns and we're like, that's a failure of policing in Texas.
00:48:26.460
In fact, what I saw unfolding in Uvalde where police refused to go in to, uh, a mass casualty
00:48:35.020
event inside of a school only tells me that I shouldn't rely on the police for my self-defense,
00:48:41.120
but instead Justin Trudeau, uh, used it to disarm Canadian gun owners who have no guilt
00:48:49.500
And so, again, I say just how quickly they're changing the, what actually happened here.
00:48:56.400
I'm worried that we're going to see another crackdown on our rights here.
00:49:00.820
And maybe we can throw to Justin Trudeau his, his completely, uh, I mean, his statement,
00:49:16.760
Well, while we're pulling up, uh, or looking for that clip there, I just want to mention,
00:49:19.820
you know, you, uh, you talked about how, oh yeah, let's play that first.
00:49:22.440
I want to take a moment to address, um, in part the video we saw this weekend of the deputy
00:49:29.800
prime minister being subjected to some extremely disturbing harassment and threats.
00:49:39.340
Sadly, this is something we're seeing more and more of.
00:49:42.480
Certainly, uh, members of this community have seen it.
00:49:45.180
Uh, but we're seeing increasingly, uh, people in public life, people in positions of responsibility,
00:49:51.540
particularly women, uh, racialized Canadians, uh, people of, uh, minority, uh, or, uh, different,
00:49:59.840
uh, community groups, uh, being targeted, uh, almost because of the increasing strength of
00:50:09.180
your voices, of your positions, of the impact you're having around the world and around.
00:50:18.000
Throw to the clip of Drea getting ragdolled by his, uh, um, his security because yes, she
00:50:24.520
is indeed getting attacked because of the rising sound of her voice and the rising impact of
00:50:32.520
That's why Justin Trudeau and had his security toss her aside when she asked a question about
00:50:48.120
I'll just say what I was going to say before the clip is that, um, uh, you mentioned how
00:50:55.500
they're kind of using in the case of the, uh, the shooting that happened in Nova Scotia,
00:50:59.220
the, uh, they're using the graves of victims and they're standing above them to make their
00:51:05.940
And this is very much so, I think the way that Trudeau operates at a base level.
00:51:09.000
And you think about, uh, Drea Humphrey and the reporting that she's been doing on the
00:51:13.400
Uh, and of course, many people are familiar with the Kamloops situation.
00:51:16.860
Uh, there was a quote, you know, re-revealing, uh, of the potential for a burial ground.
00:51:23.000
And there's a lot of, uh, explosive, um, emotions that came out of that.
00:51:28.520
And Trudeau did absolutely everything he could to capitalize on, on that.
00:51:32.760
And what are we left with at the end of the day?
00:51:41.420
But did we even get the truth a year and some later?
00:51:44.080
We still don't have the truth of what happened there and, and what people found.
00:51:48.600
And nobody seems to be interested in finding it out because the truth might not align with
00:51:54.360
Um, and you know, uh, just on a, uh, just a, a less analytical note.
00:52:03.580
Freeland, Freeland, without any sort of, um, evidence whatsoever, froze the bank accounts
00:52:12.960
of thousands of people, treated them like terrorist financiers.
00:52:19.620
Freezing someone's bank account like that can cause unbelievable undue financial hardship.
00:52:26.920
People are still, to say the least, they're still recovering from it.
00:52:32.340
That is missed truck payments, missed mortgage payments, can't buy groceries, can't put gas
00:52:38.640
in the car, can't pay for your kid's sports, pay for your kid's medicine because of her
00:52:49.340
Heaven forbid one of those people whose lives she destroyed, find her out in the real world
00:52:57.180
She did this and she might hear from it from the people that she did it to.
00:53:04.600
She cackles like a banshee while she is potentially destroying lives.
00:53:09.440
So, sorry, you might get some blowback in the real world, lady.
00:53:15.320
No, to say the least, um, the, the amount of damage that's been done over the last two
00:53:19.220
years and the fact that they think they deserve this, you know, cozy, warm blanket around
00:53:22.780
themselves, these politicians, well, who, who, who granted you that?
00:53:26.880
Who, who told you that you could step into public office?
00:53:29.660
You could affect the way that millions of people's lives work.
00:53:35.200
You can change everything about them, everything their kids learn.
00:53:40.300
And do you think that you're exempt from criticism?
00:53:48.380
And, um, yeah, just, you know, when you have pushed people into, um, being unable to buy
00:53:55.500
their kids food because you froze their bank account because they disagreed with your politics,
00:54:02.500
Your people are going to confront you in public and it is going to get a little passionate.
00:54:07.420
Like I said, uh, in our planning meeting for this, if she froze my bank account because
00:54:12.160
I disagreed with her politically and my kids paid the price for that, I would be inventing
00:54:18.540
If I saw her in public, I would, because when you get between, uh, a dad and their kids or
00:54:24.100
a mom and their kids and you for doing nothing wrong, except holding a different peaceful
00:54:30.120
political view, there would be, I would be using swear words.
00:54:36.180
There would be a whole other like urban dictionary, um, entry just for the words I used against
00:54:47.460
It won't be pretty, but, uh, and I, you know, it's just the way it is.
00:54:55.100
We have a clip, uh, this is posted from Twitter, a radio Geneva account, and they say hungry people
00:55:04.940
Let's not see that here in Canada, but you need to understand the visual and quite literally
00:55:10.000
the difference between some guy yelling at Chrystia Freeland and politicians actually fearing
00:55:15.480
for their lives in other countries because they're destroying lives of people.
00:55:18.480
We are the most tolerant country on the planet.
00:55:20.440
You know, we say sorry after every other sentence and our politicians deserve to hear a little
00:55:26.620
They don't, I'm not going to say they deserve this to say the least.
00:55:29.180
Um, but this is what is happening around the world.
00:55:32.440
This is to contrast what's happening here in Canada.
00:55:36.200
You know, sorry, Justin Trudeau can call people literally the worst thing on the face of the
00:55:40.280
earth, like a white supremacist, racist, extremist, simply because they disagree with his handling
00:55:48.380
He can call those people, all those things allude to the fact that they are Nazis or whatever.
00:55:53.680
And if somebody gives it back to them, they cry about it.
00:56:04.040
If you can't deal with the ugly, intense, emotional side of it.
00:56:08.380
I don't recommend that people do this to their politicians, but it's out there and you're
00:56:14.620
That's what, that is the flip side of living in a free society.
00:56:19.420
It's not always pretty, but people get to yell at their politicians in public.
00:56:25.240
If you want it to be illegal, find a way to wheel your way into the royal family in Saudi
00:56:31.640
If you yell at one of those, you will end up in jail.
00:56:34.940
You will have economic prosperity and literally no rights.
00:56:38.080
So if that's how you want to live, there are places in the world where you can get that,
00:56:42.400
Um, we should, before we go, cause it's in the YouTube title and we're already at 11
00:56:50.000
o'clock out here in the West and I have a story to do two of them before, and I'm going
00:56:55.540
Um, so, um, we should talk about what happened at Western University.
00:57:00.420
So Western is the, uh, former university that used to, uh, employ Julie, Dr. Julie Panassi,
00:57:07.880
who is the pandemic ethics scholar over at the democracy fund.
00:57:11.740
And they have mandated a third jab to their students.
00:57:15.840
So after they've paid their tuition, they get this other thing dropped on them after they've
00:57:23.660
paid their tuition saying, okay, you know, those first two that didn't work here, get the
00:57:28.080
Um, and so there was a protest at Western U over the weekend.
00:57:36.540
Uh, let's, uh, let's, uh, her audio is great here because she's an ethics scholar.
00:57:45.320
So she did the ethical thing and she was fired for it.
00:57:50.180
Um, which means the people teaching ethics don't actually believe in ethics now at Western
00:57:54.320
Neal, um, but she came there to support the students.
00:58:00.980
I think I've intentionally driven as far away from campus as I've been for the last two
00:58:06.540
and a half years, but it's time, it's time to come back and looking out into the crowd
00:58:11.040
It's just the most beautiful thing I could imagine.
00:58:13.980
As 10 years old, I've taught philosophy, ethics in particular, at Huron College for eight
00:58:24.260
years and I was terminated last September for questioning and refusing to comply with
00:58:30.280
Huron and Western's vaccine mandate and doing it in a very public way.
00:58:34.480
And the irony is that I was fired for doing exactly what I was hired to do.
00:58:43.600
So we do have a full report from that protest coming out.
00:58:49.320
Uh, we also have a full report from other things that the democracy fund was up to over
00:58:54.200
So they had a, um, um, sorry, my computer's frozen up.
00:59:00.900
Um, they had an event where they had panelists, including everybody's favorite Jewish grandma,
00:59:06.400
Barbara Kay, uh, speaking, uh, about the issue of having biological males in women's spaces.
00:59:12.200
So their, their event is called protecting women's spaces in the age of transgenderism.
00:59:18.080
And we also have a full report from, because our friend Tamara Ugolini was on the scene there.
00:59:23.240
So the democracy fund is starting to release clips.
00:59:25.920
So, um, if you follow the democracy fund on their social media pages, you'll see some of
00:59:30.720
And then we had, uh, interviews with the speakers from on the ground there and some of the attendees.
00:59:38.680
This one clip, I want to show this, even though I know we're over time because I didn't know
00:59:43.160
this and I have a daughter who plays high level sports and we're already, we're looking
00:59:48.040
at universities where they're going to take her.
00:59:50.320
So, um, I didn't know that this was something that she could encounter if she plays, uh,
00:59:57.880
university level sports, which she will, if she chooses to play in Canada, which is looking
01:00:05.160
Um, I didn't realize that this is something that she might come up against.
01:00:09.740
And by the way, um, although we do not have a title nine in Canada, we do have, um, uh,
01:00:16.180
in terms of for sport, we have the Canadian center for ethics in sport.
01:00:21.120
The Canadian center for ethics in sport was founded after the doping scandals of the 1980s.
01:00:28.680
And the word ethics was put in there because its primary purpose was to ensure that doping
01:00:36.120
did not occur again in sport on anything like, and that it would be wiped out in sport.
01:00:41.220
Uh, in effect, um, men playing in women's sport is a form of doping because their, their, their
01:00:52.420
And that's even admitted, by the way, that's even admitted by trans activists who say, well,
01:00:58.800
That's, that's their only, that's their answer.
01:01:01.500
And the Canadian center for ethics in sport, I think you should know, uh, that their guidelines
01:01:05.620
are what, um, are, what, uh, are followed by all high school and university sports in Canada.
01:01:11.560
And they, they not only allow for any, um, female identifying male to go into, but without
01:01:21.080
any testosterone suppression, anything, not only that, but they allow, they allow, uh, uh,
01:01:32.200
And then the next season identify back into, you know, even in the same, within two sports,
01:01:42.660
So that just shows you how, how, isn't that crazy?
01:01:45.820
So if you were a dual sport athlete, you can identify within the same season, same school
01:01:51.520
year, let's say you run track as a male, but play rugby as a female.
01:01:58.340
Well, I'm, uh, I'm paraphrasing, but what did she say?
01:02:01.780
That inclusion was more important, uh, than a, a fair challenge, a fair competition, I
01:02:10.080
Which robs, which robs opportunities from girls like my daughter.
01:02:14.060
Um, and I'm old enough to remember when testosterone was a banned substance for women to dope
01:02:20.580
Well, and I think it's just, uh, uh, a note I want to make is the word inclusion, you
01:02:25.720
know, uh, perhaps the, the first insight one might have is to say that inclusion is a good
01:02:29.980
word or it's a positive, uh, but any tier, uh, any tyrant wants everything to be included
01:02:35.120
under his domain or under their domain, perhaps I should say.
01:02:38.440
Um, the inclusion aspect of this is just a matter of, uh, forcing everything into one level
01:02:52.040
Um, and that's, uh, I just want to say that about inclusion and the fact that they use this
01:02:59.500
Uh, but at the end of the day, it's what they're doing.
01:03:04.680
I'm going to start using the phrase buttery language more often because I like butter better
01:03:09.520
Um, but it is true and their inclusion excludes female athletes from opportunities.
01:03:22.760
Um, let's get to some of these chats because, uh, you got a busy day.
01:03:26.240
You got a video to finish up and I've got a written piece.
01:03:35.220
National outrage over Freeland receiving some mean words, but not a peep when you were assaulted
01:03:41.300
They're like, well, maybe, maybe, maybe she should have left him alone.
01:03:45.100
You see, uh, I still, one of my greatest regrets is just not talking that guy.
01:03:50.660
I have like three inches on him and I'm stronger than him, but, uh, I did not because, uh, then
01:03:56.800
you know what the story would have been violent Sheila assaults, peaceful male, uh, phrase
01:04:04.560
Beau, that's Fraser McBurney, Hamilton's, um, most dedicated protester.
01:04:10.900
It looks like mother earth isn't cooperating with the climate hoaxers and global warmers.
01:04:14.780
August is on the verge of being tropical storm free for over the third time in 60 years.
01:04:19.560
They're going to blame that on climate change too.
01:04:22.000
More storms, climate change, fewer storms, climate change.
01:04:27.060
You see, warmer winters, climate change, colder winters, climate change.
01:04:31.940
That's why they don't call it global warming anymore and they're moving towards using the
01:04:35.440
phrase, phrase climate disruption instead of, uh, climate change.
01:04:40.620
Well, well, they, they have to stop using the term climate change because the climate
01:04:44.200
changes point blank, period, bottom line, like things aren't going to stay still.
01:04:48.720
The weather's not going to stay the same every year.
01:04:50.900
Uh, the, the world temperature isn't going to stay the same every year, except in their
01:04:55.300
eyes, well, they've set a goal at where the temperature should be, where these other
01:05:01.000
And now they it's, they've set a standard, uh, a direct, um, point that all of these things
01:05:10.000
Meanwhile, the environment and the climate itself looks at these numbers and thinks
01:05:14.300
nothing of it because it is the force of chaos.
01:05:16.260
It is not an orderly thing to challenge the environment.
01:05:19.580
So it, the whole thing's a farce in my opinion, but I'll, uh, continue on.
01:05:28.140
Cause we know how unpredictable weather is like that.
01:05:33.260
Um, well, tell me what the weather's going to be three Thursdays from now.
01:05:47.400
Um, and you look at the weather, it's like, all right, what's the weather going to be like
01:05:52.160
You know, is it going to rain at three o'clock?
01:05:53.620
Oh, it might, you know, 20% chance of rain at three o'clock.
01:06:00.680
Like we can't even tell you what the weather's going to be three weeks from now.
01:06:04.220
What makes you think that we can tell you where the climate's going to be at three years
01:06:10.100
If anybody, my farming friends, if you've tried to combine or putting up hay, putting up
01:06:16.660
hay is the worst because you have to have optimal conditions to cut it, optimal conditions
01:06:21.100
for it to dry, optimal conditions for it to bale it, and then optimal conditions to bring
01:06:26.920
And somehow you have to like, heaven forbid you work another job and you have to work
01:06:33.560
Um, it's, you really, truly understand how unpredictable the weather is when everything
01:06:52.480
Uh, said great job on our inaugural Monday show.
01:06:56.160
Um, I look forward to perhaps next Monday or maybe somebody else, but I think you did
01:07:01.460
Uh, thanks to everybody in the office who puts the show together behind the scenes.
01:07:06.560
I know we were calling for clips that maybe you weren't ready for, and that's, uh, me being
01:07:11.740
Uh, thanks to all of our web team who work behind the scenes to make sure that you can
01:07:20.640
Thanks to everybody who pitched in to keep the lights on.
01:07:23.920
We know that there are other places that you could spend your money on and Justin Trudeau
01:07:27.320
is leaving less of it in your pocket, uh, than ever before.
01:07:30.640
So we appreciate that you chose to give a little bit of it to us.
01:07:35.420
Um, I think I'm, I think I'm back here tomorrow.
01:07:39.020
Uh, I'm not sure with, oh, maybe David Menzies.
01:07:42.700
Um, and as David Menzies always says, stay sane.
01:07:47.040
To address, um, in part the video we saw this weekend of the Deputy Prime Minister being
01:07:53.160
subjected to some extremely disturbing harassment and threats.
01:08:01.940
Sadly, this is something we're seeing more and more of.
01:08:04.960
Certainly, uh, members of this community have seen it.
01:08:07.960
Uh, but we're seeing increasingly, uh, people in public life, people in positions of responsibility,
01:08:14.000
particularly women, uh, racialized Canadians, uh, people of, uh, minority, uh, or, uh, different, uh,
01:08:22.680
community groups, uh, being targeted, uh, almost because of the increasing strength of your voices,
01:08:33.080
of your positions, of the impact you're having around the world and around our country.
01:08:41.100
And we've seen it, you know, first of all, over the past many years, anytime, uh, a woman
01:08:46.340
speaks up on social media, she is so often subject to harassment and toxicity that we're
01:08:53.080
actually seeing, um, her rights and her voice and her freedom of expression, uh, diminished.
01:08:59.140
We need more women and racialized Canadians and diverse communities to be strong voices
01:09:10.380
in politics, in media, where we're seeing, uh, reporters increasingly getting attacked
01:09:17.540
for calling out hatred and indifference and, uh, and, uh, and, uh, and discrimination.
01:09:24.960
We have to ask ourselves what kind of country we are, what kind of country we want to be.
01:09:29.140
We started off this convoy calling it taking back our freedoms, but our freedoms are nobody's
01:09:40.400
So we're going to restore everybody's freedoms.
01:09:42.860
You know, lots of people came here wanting to only do a day and, uh, the word with all the truckers
01:10:02.900
is they're now staying for many days, you know, like a lot of people now are planning
01:10:36.260
When your job and your livelihood is healthy...