Rebel News Podcast - September 09, 2022


DAILY | Haters pounce on Queen's death; Quebec might bring back vax passes; Bill Gates editing DNA


Episode Stats

Length

59 minutes

Words per Minute

149.65672

Word Count

8,959

Sentence Count

238

Misogynist Sentences

11

Hate Speech Sentences

7


Summary

Learn English with Ezra Levan. He talks about Queen Elizabeth II's life, her legacy, and her legacy's impact on the world. He also plays a tribute to former Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who made a stirring tribute to the late Queen Elizabeth.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Hello everybody, my name is Ezra Levan, I'm the Rebel Commander here at Rebel News.
00:00:17.900 That's a fancy way of saying to presidents, my pleasure to be with you, even for 15 or
00:00:21.740 20 minutes, a very momentous day, not just for the United Kingdom, but for all the Commonwealth.
00:00:27.740 As you may know, Canada is part of the Commonwealth.
00:00:31.880 The Queen was our Queen.
00:00:34.660 She was called the Queen of England, or the Queen of the United Kingdom, which of course
00:00:40.120 includes Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
00:00:43.640 But she was the Queen of Canada, the Queen of New Zealand, the Queen of Australia.
00:00:47.640 Other parts of the Commonwealth, she was not the Queen anymore, but she was still, I would
00:00:54.300 say, beloved.
00:00:55.060 I see that the, you know, the haters, the CBC, the other wokesters, have tried to turn
00:01:03.280 this into some demonization of the Queen, this imperialist colonizer.
00:01:07.360 In fact, the Queen presided over decolonization.
00:01:10.460 She, there were no new colonies formed under her reign.
00:01:18.140 And in fact, the fact that so many former colonies want to stay associated with the United Kingdom,
00:01:25.600 I think, proves the point.
00:01:27.760 Can we go to Boris Johnson's speech?
00:01:31.180 I tweeted it.
00:01:33.060 It's a great speech.
00:01:34.040 I want to play it for you in full.
00:01:35.460 It's eight minutes long.
00:01:36.460 Will you forgive me?
00:01:37.100 This is the best summary.
00:01:39.980 Yeah, it's right there.
00:01:40.880 Go ahead.
00:01:44.180 Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
00:01:45.860 Take a look.
00:01:49.880 Oh, we're just waiting for the audio there.
00:01:52.700 Boris Johnson, he's not the Prime Minister anymore.
00:01:54.780 He was booted out for a number of reasons.
00:01:56.920 But every once in a while, Boris Johnson shows he's got the stuff.
00:02:00.260 He's a showman more than a responsible governor, I think.
00:02:04.900 I'm actually sort of glad he's no longer Prime Minister.
00:02:07.460 But he's a wordsmith.
00:02:08.940 I think he's a dazzler.
00:02:11.140 He, of course, it's a long time.
00:02:13.580 He's been a commentator.
00:02:16.040 He talked his way into the mayor of London's job.
00:02:18.460 He talked his way into the Prime Minister UK's job.
00:02:20.560 But he wasn't quite as good as running things as he was good as running his mouth.
00:02:24.000 But on a day like today, words do matter.
00:02:27.220 And his remembrance of Queen Elizabeth was outstanding.
00:02:29.460 Here, let me play it for you in its full entirety.
00:02:31.400 Take a listen.
00:02:32.420 Johnson.
00:02:35.640 Thank you, Mr Speaker.
00:02:37.740 I hope the House will not mind if I begin with a personal confession.
00:02:41.940 A few months ago, the BBC came to see me to talk about Her Majesty the Queen.
00:02:46.620 And we sat down and the cameras started rolling.
00:02:50.600 And they requested that I should talk about her in the past tense.
00:02:55.680 And I'm afraid I simply choked up and I couldn't go on.
00:02:59.140 I'm really not easily moved to tears.
00:03:02.600 But I was so overcome with sadness that I had to ask them to go away.
00:03:08.280 And I know that today there are countless people in this country and around the world who have experienced the same sudden access of unexpected emotion.
00:03:23.340 And I think millions of us are trying to understand why we are feeling this deep and personal and almost familial sense of loss.
00:03:35.280 Perhaps it's partly that she's always been there, a changeless human reference point in British life.
00:03:43.280 The person who, all the surveys say, appears most often in our dreams.
00:03:49.060 So unvarying in her pole star radiance that we have perhaps been lulled into thinking that she might be in some way eternal.
00:03:58.660 But I think our shock is keener today because we are coming to understand, in her death, the full magnitude of what she did for us all.
00:04:11.540 And think of what we asked that 25-year-old woman all those years ago.
00:04:20.680 To be the person so globally trusted that her image should be on every unit of our currency, every postage stamp, the person in whose name all justice is dispensed in this country.
00:04:36.640 Every law passed, to whom every minister of the country, every law passed, to whom every minister of the crown swears allegiance, and for whom every member of our armed services is pledged, if necessary, to lay down their lives.
00:04:49.620 Think what we asked of her in that moment.
00:04:54.780 Not just to be the living embodiment in her DNA of the history and continuity and unity of this country.
00:05:03.980 But to be the figurehead of our entire system, the keystone in the vast arch of the British state, a role that only she could fulfill because, in the brilliant and durable bargain of the constitutional monarchy, only she could be trusted to be above any party political or commercial interest.
00:05:30.360 And to incarnate, impartially, the very concept and essence of the nation.
00:05:39.300 Think what we asked of her and think what she gave.
00:05:44.340 She showed the world not just how to reign over a people.
00:05:49.800 She showed the world how to give, how to love, and how to serve.
00:05:54.940 And as we look back at that vast arc of service, its sheer duration is almost impossible to take in.
00:06:03.620 She was the last living person in British public life to have served in uniform in the Second World War.
00:06:11.880 She was the first female member of the royal family in a thousand years to serve full-time in the armed forces.
00:06:19.220 And that impulse to do her duty carried her right through into her tenth decade to the very moment in Balmoral, as my Right Honourable Penta said, only three days ago.
00:06:32.240 When she saw off her 14th Prime Minister and welcomed her 15th, and I can tell you, in that audience, she was as radiant and as knowledgeable and as fascinated by politics as ever I can remember,
00:06:50.740 and as wise in her advice as anyone I know, if not wiser.
00:06:56.900 And over that extraordinary span of public service, with her naturally retentive and inquiring mind, I think, and doubtless many of the 15 would agree,
00:07:08.480 that she became the greatest statesman and diplomat of all.
00:07:13.060 And she knew instinctively how to cheer up the nation, how to lead a celebration.
00:07:21.420 I remember her innocent joy more than 10 years ago after the opening ceremony of the London Olympics,
00:07:30.040 when I told her that the leader of a friendly Middle Eastern country seemed actually to believe that she had jumped out of a helicopter in a pink dress and parachuted into the stadium.
00:07:43.680 And I remember her equal pleasure on being told just a few weeks ago that she had been a smash hit in her performance with Paddington Bear.
00:07:53.040 And perhaps more importantly, she knew how to keep us going when times were toughest.
00:08:01.660 In 1940, when this country and this democracy faced the real possibility of extinction,
00:08:08.800 she gave a broadcast, aged only 14, that was intended to reassure the children of Britain.
00:08:15.740 She said then, we know, every one of us, that in the end, all will be well.
00:08:25.680 She was right.
00:08:27.500 And she was right again in the darkest days of the COVID pandemic when she came on our screens and told us that we would meet again.
00:08:36.060 And we did.
00:08:37.160 And I know I speak for other prime ministers, when I say ex-prime ministers, when I say that she helped to comfort and guide us as well as the nation,
00:08:49.060 because she had the patience and the sense of history to see that troubles come and go and that disasters are seldom as bad as they seem.
00:08:59.920 And it was that indomitability, that humour, that work ethic and that sense of history, which together made her Elizabeth the Great.
00:09:12.660 And when I call her that, I should add one, Elizabeth the Great, I should add one final quality, of course, which was her humility.
00:09:20.040 Her single bar electric fire Tupperware using refusal to be ground.
00:09:26.760 And unlike us politicians, with our outriders and our armour-plated convoys, I can tell you as a direct eyewitness that she drove herself in her own car with no detectives and no bodyguard,
00:09:44.520 bouncing at alarming speed over the Scottish landscape to the total amazement of the ramblers and the tourists we encountered.
00:09:52.540 And it is that indomitable spirit with which she created the modern constitutional monarchy.
00:10:02.460 An institution so strong and so happy and so well understood, not just in this country, but in the Commonwealth and around the world,
00:10:13.640 that the succession has already seamlessly taken place.
00:10:18.040 And I believe she would regard it as her own highest achievement,
00:10:21.580 that her son, Charles III, will clearly and amply follow her own extraordinary standards of duty and service.
00:10:31.420 And the fact that today we can say with such confidence,
00:10:37.020 God save the King, is a tribute to him, but above all to Elizabeth the Great,
00:10:43.760 who worked so hard for the good of her country, not just now, but for generations to come.
00:10:50.220 That is why we mourn her so deeply.
00:10:54.940 And it is in the depths of our grief that we understand why we loved her so much.
00:11:02.620 Amen.
00:11:02.980 Well, that was great.
00:11:03.980 Well, that was great.
00:11:05.020 And you know what?
00:11:05.620 It's true.
00:11:06.700 And Boris Johnson can be a buffoon sometimes, but he was at his best in those remarks to the House of Commons.
00:11:13.200 And he's right.
00:11:14.040 I mean, Queen Elizabeth, you could say she was part of the greatest generation.
00:11:19.320 She wasn't quite old enough to, I think she was slightly younger than what we call the greatest generation.
00:11:24.620 But she joined the military.
00:11:29.440 And, you know, she obviously was not deployed into the Second World War, but she was a mechanic, if I recall.
00:11:36.420 And there's a great photo of her probably about 20 years ago using a machine gun, I think,
00:11:43.560 while some British Army troops look on.
00:11:45.320 I don't know if you can find that one.
00:11:46.380 And if you Google Queen Elizabeth machine gun, it's a great photo.
00:11:50.560 And I think the fact that that story about her as a 14-year-old girl telling, yeah, that's the picture there.
00:11:55.840 Put that one up.
00:11:56.380 Look at that.
00:11:57.620 I mean, actually, there's a wider angle shot of that that's even more impressive, if you can find it.
00:12:03.700 It's showing a little bit more in the background.
00:12:05.280 I think because she, as you heard, I mean, she gave that speech as a 14-year-old to tell other kids not to worry that everything would be fine in the Second World War
00:12:19.620 when they didn't know it would be fine, when things were tough and they were going to get tougher still.
00:12:25.380 So she lived through that and the Blitz and the Battle of Britain and the V-1 and V-2 rockets landing on London.
00:12:38.000 And so she never forgot how bad things could get.
00:12:42.320 She never forgot the importance of the military.
00:12:45.740 And we heard Boris Johnson say that she was not grand.
00:12:50.700 She was not grandiose.
00:12:51.840 Now, I mean, in some ways it's laughable.
00:12:54.560 I mean, she was the queen.
00:12:56.240 Of course, she's grand by nature.
00:12:57.960 But I saw some article in some left-wing website in Canada yesterday that the queen costs $57 million a year.
00:13:10.000 Oh, my God, that's a lot of money.
00:13:11.400 My first reaction was actually just $58 million.
00:13:18.500 That's it?
00:13:19.100 Do you think Justin Trudeau is less than half a billion dollars a year?
00:13:24.560 I mean, his jetting around alone, his security, his entourage, his limos alone probably exceed that of the queen.
00:13:33.380 I mean, she is the actual royalty.
00:13:36.500 And of course, she's cheaper than Trudeau and much cheaper than the president of the United States.
00:13:41.640 And I think one of the purposes of having aristocracy, like true royalty, is to keep politicians slightly more humble.
00:13:51.840 Now, that hasn't worked in the case of Justin Trudeau.
00:13:54.820 Trudeau put out a, not a eulogy, but a memorial letter, which was passable.
00:14:01.940 Well, it was nowhere near as loving and generous as the one he made for Fidel Castro a few years back.
00:14:11.100 That's his true love.
00:14:12.260 I think the queen passing is like if a mountain was suddenly gone.
00:14:18.220 If there's a mountain in your entire life, I'm 50 years old, the queen was 96.
00:14:23.060 My entire life was under Queen Elizabeth.
00:14:26.980 Ninety-six years old, that really is like a mountain is there every day.
00:14:33.180 Oh, you wake up?
00:14:34.080 Yeah, the mountain's there.
00:14:34.820 Everything's going to be fine.
00:14:35.680 The mountain's there.
00:14:36.360 It's going to be fine.
00:14:37.000 And then the mountain is gone.
00:14:39.540 And you thought, well, I just sort of thought that mountain won't be there forever.
00:14:42.800 That mountain was part of the landscape.
00:14:44.420 Yeah, I'm still where I am, but that old, reliable piece is missing.
00:14:50.580 And Horst Johnson was praising King Charles.
00:14:55.940 It's still hard to say those words, King Charles III.
00:14:59.880 And hopefully he will rise to the occasion.
00:15:02.100 But I'm not sure if we've seen all of his mom's qualities in him.
00:15:07.760 Certainly not in her grandson, Harry.
00:15:10.160 My hopes are with Prince William.
00:15:12.480 But imagine keeping it together for so long.
00:15:17.500 Not giving in to the instinct to be a celebrity chaser.
00:15:22.780 Not giving in to the instinct to be condescending or impatient.
00:15:29.220 You know, there's one more video I'd like to play.
00:15:31.600 It's in my Twitter feed.
00:15:33.540 I don't know if you can find it.
00:15:35.040 It's, I don't know who told the story.
00:15:37.820 It's a guy wearing a uniform.
00:15:39.800 I really don't know his name.
00:15:40.840 It was in my Twitter feed from yesterday.
00:15:44.020 Of some American tourists who were, yeah, that's the one there.
00:15:51.440 Can you play that one?
00:15:52.540 It's a great story.
00:15:54.780 Take a listen to this guy.
00:15:56.140 I don't know his name, but I think he was part of the royal household.
00:16:00.000 Anyway, take a listen.
00:16:02.460 On these picnic sites, you meet nobody.
00:16:05.460 But there was two hikers coming towards us, and the Queen would always stop and say hello.
00:16:09.660 And it was two Americans on a walking holiday.
00:16:12.320 And it was clear from the moment that we first stopped, they hadn't recognised the Queen, which is fine.
00:16:16.840 And the American gentleman was telling the Queen where he came from, where they were going to next, and where they'd been to in Britain.
00:16:24.320 And I could see it coming, and sure enough, he said, My Majesty, and where do you live?
00:16:28.340 And she said, Well, I live in London, but I've got a holiday home just the other side of the hills.
00:16:33.200 And he said, Well, how often have you been coming up here?
00:16:37.640 Oh, she said, I've been coming up here ever since I was a little girl, so over 80 years.
00:16:42.180 And you could see the clogs thinking.
00:16:43.480 He said, Well, if you've been coming up here for 80 years, you must have met the Queen.
00:16:48.020 I love it.
00:16:48.240 And as quick as a flash, she says, Well, I haven't.
00:16:50.180 The dick here meets her regularly.
00:16:53.480 So the guy said to me, You've met the Queen.
00:16:55.720 What's she like?
00:16:56.820 And because I was with her a long time, and I knew I could pull her leg, I said, Oh, she can be very cantankerous at times.
00:17:02.620 But she's got a lovely sense of humour.
00:17:05.220 Anyway, the next thing I knew, this guy comes around, put his arm around my shoulder, and before I could see what was happening, he gets his camera, gives it to the Queen, and says, Can you take a picture of the two of us?
00:17:15.160 Anyway, we swapped places, and I took a picture of them with the Queen, and we never let on.
00:17:20.640 And we waved goodbye, and then her majesty said to me, I'd love to be a fly on the wall when he shows us photographs to the friends in America, and hopefully someone tells him who I am.
00:17:30.440 Isn't that a great story?
00:17:32.040 Isn't that a great story?
00:17:33.060 How can you not recognize the Queen?
00:17:36.080 How can you not recognize her?
00:17:37.800 Well, I guess it's possible.
00:17:39.000 I believe that story.
00:17:40.100 Have you ever met the Queen, said the man to the Queen, and her answer, I haven't, but Dick here has.
00:17:50.160 How funny is that?
00:17:52.040 I believe that.
00:17:52.780 You know what?
00:17:53.120 She was a bit of a kidder, and her late husband was just a constant kidder, and of course, he always told politically incorrect jokes that got him into trouble sometimes.
00:18:04.400 You know, to show 96 years of restraint and self-control is hard.
00:18:12.280 How do you handle wealth and power and fame and literally being the personification of a country without it going to your head?
00:18:21.080 I mean, look at how Hunter Biden handled being the son of a senator and a son of a vice president.
00:18:26.920 Look at how Meghan Markle has just, and her hostage husband, Harry, look at what the fame and celebrity has done to them.
00:18:37.860 It's so gross to see them chase money in Hollywood like that.
00:18:42.020 How do you stand 96 years and not be arrogant and not be condescending, not be mean, not be impatient?
00:18:51.820 That really is remarkable, and I think she truly has been the strength to the United Kingdom and to the Commonwealth.
00:18:59.600 Now, it's about 1220.
00:19:01.820 I'm going to see if we have any super chats.
00:19:06.040 I don't think we have, and then I'm going to say goodbye.
00:19:07.980 My new move is to come in kibitz for 20 minutes or so.
00:19:12.260 Then we'll run an ad, and I'll hop out of the chair, and the other live streamers will come in here.
00:19:17.620 So do we have any live stream super chats yet or not yet?
00:19:21.060 But we have one.
00:19:22.620 Okay, I'm just going to open my phone and call it up here.
00:19:29.020 There we go.
00:19:29.780 Yorgi Yorgi says, I can't say I'm a fan of the monarchy, but living in Canada under Justin Trudeau for the past few years has given me a new perspective on the monarchy.
00:19:39.360 Not that I'd support it, but it neutralizes Trudeau in a way.
00:19:41.860 Well, that's exactly the point, is that there is someone waiting in reserve who, in case of emergency, break glass and push this button.
00:19:54.860 So at the end of the day, what happens if things get out of hand?
00:20:01.220 Well, the person who's on your passport and on your money and on your stamps and to whom the oath of allegiance for politicians and cops and everyone is said.
00:20:12.220 And if everything goes straight to hell, that person says, okay, I'm actually the queen, and this is my royal prerogative.
00:20:19.180 I'm not going to proclaim that.
00:20:20.360 I'm going to do this.
00:20:21.120 I'm going to do that.
00:20:21.640 And God willing, it never happens, but the fact that it's sitting there in reserve and the entire state is personified by this person who didn't choose the position, by the way.
00:20:34.020 And we didn't choose her and she didn't choose us.
00:20:36.620 It just is that way as a custom that dates back hundreds and even thousands of years.
00:20:43.240 Well, I think that's one of the reasons why the United Kingdom and the Commonwealth are so stable compared to other parts of the world.
00:20:53.380 And I think it took a very special royal family to let go of the grip.
00:20:59.140 You know, I forget who it was who said soon there'll only be five queens left.
00:21:04.320 The queen of diamonds, spades, hearts, I'm forgetting, clubs, and the queen of England.
00:21:14.520 And it may well be.
00:21:16.940 And the reason for that is that she's not an abusive monarch, not a tyrant, someone who serves.
00:21:23.560 Imagine that.
00:21:25.980 A royalty that serves.
00:21:28.320 And that was the secret.
00:21:30.300 All right, my friends, great to chat with you on this day.
00:21:32.860 We'll throw to a commercial and when we return, my colleagues will be in this chair.
00:21:44.060 Are you liking the banter on our live stream that you're watching right now?
00:21:47.960 If so, you should know that you can get exclusive Rebel News content by going to rebelnewsplus.com.
00:21:54.940 You'll get special shows from my colleagues, Sheila Gunn-Reed, Ezra Levant, as well as the Menzoid Menzies.
00:22:03.200 And you'll also get to view our exclusive documentaries, including the one that tells you the truth of what was actually discovered,
00:22:12.260 at least what is known to be discovered so far at the Kamloops Indian Residential School.
00:22:18.040 Take a look at the trailer.
00:22:19.600 Well, the remains of 215 children have been found in a mass grave in Canada.
00:22:26.380 Many of you know that just over a year ago, the discovery of the remains of 215 children
00:22:32.360 was found at the Kamloops Indian Residential School at the Kamloops Shaswemek First Nation.
00:22:37.500 But what if I were to show you that what I just said wasn't true, and that in fact, a year later,
00:22:45.560 not a single body has been found?
00:22:48.880 This mass grave is a painful reminder of the genocide.
00:22:54.600 Kamloops' leaders aren't condemning the burning of churches.
00:22:57.180 No, they're endorsing the burning of churches.
00:22:59.740 A juvenile rib bone that surfaced in the same area.
00:23:02.340 You'd be surprised that a number of people who say, you know, I'm a doctor, I'm a paramedic,
00:23:07.380 and this is definitely a human bone, and it's definitely not.
00:23:11.220 Except the chief.
00:23:12.800 It is.
00:23:13.700 How could people do it?
00:23:15.200 I don't know.
00:23:16.480 I don't know.
00:23:32.340 I don't know.
00:23:57.240 well hello everybody i know you just joined by the wonderful ezra levand who hosted the first
00:24:17.540 half of this live stream but now alexa lavoie and i are going to be taking over alexa how are you
00:24:22.760 doing i'm good and you i'm doing well thank you you look beautiful as per you so for those who are
00:24:31.520 just tuning in we're uh this is our rebel news daily live stream which airs every weekday at 12
00:24:36.580 p.m eastern time right now we're live on youtube rumble getter and odyssey we will probably be
00:24:42.240 switching off of youtube though because things may get a little spicy here you know the drill
00:24:47.100 youtube loves to censor us um so for those of you tuning in on rumble and odyssey be sure to send
00:24:52.500 in your chats we have about a half an hour left of the show that we would love to read them
00:24:56.500 throughout and we love answering your questions and you're we really do appreciate your generous
00:25:01.120 donations um should we jump right into things alexa oh yes all righty so uh woke haters are unleashing
00:25:11.120 bitter brew of bile on queen elizabeth i'm sure ezra levand spent some time talking about this on
00:25:16.620 the first half but it's pretty interesting to see some of the some of the reactions to queen elizabeth
00:25:23.100 ii's death um have you seen a lot of things on the internet about this alexa um i would say that
00:25:31.660 for my part this was pretty quiet um probably because as i say before uh i'm from quebec yeah so quebec
00:25:43.980 i've been colonized by the french so for us it's kind of a different situation um same our premier
00:25:55.980 yeah give his advice give his like opinion about it but for me i would say that is sad because that
00:26:07.980 she represents a really big figure um especially she dedicates herself for the monarchy and like all
00:26:17.340 um the majesty like the side and she she did it well a lot of people like loved her and cherished her yeah
00:26:28.460 um but for me i would say that of course it's sad but in the same time she reached the age that we
00:26:38.940 probably knew that what that was coming because it's not like if she was really young as
00:26:47.340 example uh that the princess diana that that was really submit and everybody was like
00:26:53.820 heartbreaking um a lot of people like probably are sad about what happened but in the same time i think
00:27:01.420 like she had like really a great life and full of experience and she she passed through so different
00:27:09.900 like time lapse of our uh existence almost the war everything yeah crazy like imagine being alive for
00:27:18.380 almost a hundred years um yeah and i think a lot of people really like her but those who hate her
00:27:23.020 really hated her so um i'll just read some tweets from some haters this is a girl named yuju anya she
00:27:30.380 tweeted it was taken down uh she said i heard the chief monarch of a thieving raping genocidal empire is
00:27:37.580 finally dying may her pain be excruciating and then she apparently doubled down uh and said may everyone
00:27:45.100 you and your merciless greed have harmed in this world remember you as fondly as i remember my
00:27:50.220 colonizers so those are some pretty harsh words for the debt now dead queen um i don't know what
00:27:58.780 do you make of that like i mean i believe in free speech i think this person's entitled to their opinion
00:28:03.020 but is it do you think it's disrespectful to tweet something like that about someone who just died
00:28:08.380 like three seconds ago like whether you like them or not i don't really know how i feel about it like
00:28:13.100 i don't have strong opinions on the queen i think she she didn't do anything like she's not a criminal
00:28:21.900 like i don't think she deserves this kind of common um a little bit of respect as well for the family
00:28:28.780 like you have a family behind too that is uh left behind so i think like it's important to
00:28:35.420 maybe take your emotion on the side and just like respect the fact that a lot of people need to
00:28:44.460 pass over like the death so yeah yeah people are mourning for this person um yeah it's just interesting
00:28:51.660 and it's it's i don't know i just don't think it's right to take to twitter to say something kind
00:28:57.260 of vile like that about someone just because you don't like them but again i'm not here to show for
00:29:02.620 the queen i i have some issues with the monarchy but i do believe in respecting uh the dead so yeah
00:29:10.140 it's just interesting um and i guess now apparently with the queen's death archie and lilibet who are
00:29:15.420 megan markle and harry's children are now prince and princess that's interesting did you what do you think
00:29:22.620 about that we we see like how it's going out afterwards uh i would say like we will really
00:29:33.180 see in action them yeah so would it be interesting like like it would be interesting to see their choice
00:29:41.100 their decision through uh through that if they were too young maybe or like now they they were in a good
00:29:48.940 position for doing it i have not really lots of opinion about that but i need to see it for having
00:29:58.860 really something to say because right now it was all on the majesty the queen to take all the big
00:30:06.220 decision and everything and now we will see uh maybe something maybe would be pressure yeah it's just
00:30:14.620 kind of interesting because weren't harry and megan absolved of all of their royal duties and
00:30:19.100 apparently i saw this on twitter i can't remember the source but megan markle was allegedly disinvited
00:30:24.860 from going to see the queen on her deathbed so there's obviously still that tension between them
00:30:30.060 i mean megan markle is just horrible i'm not a big fan of hers um but it's i don't know i just it's
00:30:37.660 interesting that uh their kids are now gonna oh yeah so she was disinvited yeah i mean oh that's that's
00:30:43.820 pretty like hot goss like that's insane um yeah i would say the same yeah it's interesting that their
00:30:51.500 kids are now going to continue on this royal path so to speak um and uh fran uh françoella go also
00:31:00.940 made some comments about this didn't he do you want to speak to that a little bit
00:31:04.540 uh it just you know it was in press conference i think it was uh just before she passed away and
00:31:14.620 we knew that she was sick and uh so some journalists asked mr logo if they it will like stop the campaign
00:31:23.180 or anything so he say i don't i don't know much about like uh the queen stuff and and afterward they
00:31:31.100 say but are you concerned about what is happening to the queen and her health and he say no
00:31:39.340 at least i was like okay um but that's transparent um yeah but i was like this is a bit
00:31:48.460 rude yeah i mean you gotta respect the honesty a lot of politicians like to tiptoe around things and
00:31:54.700 they don't really give you a straight answer so i guess it's refreshing that he's honest and as you
00:31:59.180 mentioned earlier like quebec has a bit of a disconnect from the monarchy just given your
00:32:03.740 history um we have a couple chats here should we read some of those before we get into our next ad
00:32:12.300 so this one is from adam ottawa thank you for your dollar i have a new t-shirt idea for rebel flatten
00:32:18.300 the monkey pox don't go to orgies oh my gosh that's funny adam ottawa you should definitely i'll definitely
00:32:25.580 pass that on to our store manager and see if he can whip something up for you um i think we have
00:32:31.580 one more here also from adam ottawa uh thank you again for your dollar do you want to read this one
00:32:37.500 alexa yes if it wasn't for the british we could have very have well become french or spanish citizen
00:32:48.060 not sure if that would be better than our british history i mean he's actually right yeah it's true
00:32:57.260 it is true yeah i mean you can't go back everybody you're almost being french oh my gosh imagine if
00:33:03.820 we're all french no i'm just kidding that's really funny no but like it's so funny because in my mind
00:33:12.060 i have always like that that image that the french lost the word and they were like
00:33:19.900 not moving yeah you gotta love that though you gotta love that the french
00:33:25.900 want to just preserve their french culture it's something i appreciate about quebec um despite it
00:33:32.300 we talked about this last week though despite it being one of the most disliked provinces in the country
00:33:37.420 yeah but you know what it's it's kind of normal because we we say we have a different constitution
00:33:46.860 we we think i'm not talking about everybody but some of the people want to separate uh the quebec uh
00:33:56.060 they want uh to be different they all wants to be different like different of the rest of canada and
00:34:03.260 like they kind of discriminate the rest of english speaker of canada for me it's just like we are a country
00:34:10.380 and if this is actually nice and beautiful that our country have two language and two um
00:34:16.860 history that come from different parts of the world so we should like share that instead of saying like
00:34:23.900 oh this part of the the country we don't like them for me it makes no sense you know we are all together
00:34:31.340 canadian and we should just like be together and unite yeah i'm with you i mean the country is
00:34:36.700 already so polarized and our politicians have made sure that that's the case obviously but i think
00:34:42.460 you're right like we do all have that common ground that we are canadians and we share this nation and
00:34:48.460 we all pay taxes together so at least that can bring us together despite our differences right
00:34:54.620 yeah and quebec pay a lot of tax yeah that's so funny um all right well i think we have some more
00:35:03.740 here do we want to play an ad before we jump into things all right we're just going to keep going
00:35:09.180 through we have to be a little careful here um because we may be talking about vaccines a bit so
00:35:14.380 if things get too spicy we may be switching off of youtube and on to rumble those listening make sure
00:35:20.060 you send in your chats we got about 20 or so minutes left of the show here we want to read
00:35:24.220 your chats throughout we love hearing from you guys um all right so we go we'll not want to go
00:35:31.260 re-imposing vaccine passports yikes so apparently i'm not surprised no me i will say yeah because mr
00:35:42.220 logo it's always playing or with the uncertainty of uh re-imposing stuff so it was the same with the
00:35:51.580 curfew always letting like something planned over our head that may be something will like we always
00:36:00.540 live in a anxiety to say okay do we will like use again the the vaccine passport with three doses
00:36:08.060 are you are you are or he's going to block us to have a normal christmas that he did for the last past
00:36:16.940 two years yeah or or or he's going to stop us to buy alcohol again and um other like things like as you
00:36:27.260 know like quebec they actually wrap up with uh like the non-essential like furniture
00:36:36.220 like in in shop they were wrap up you were not capable to touch anything that it was not
00:36:44.300 essential in the shop so for us it's just like what is going on he he say with like the bill that
00:36:53.340 he passed the bill 28 about um keeping the emergency uh the health emergency until the 30 of december
00:37:01.740 okay so of course that law passed because he is majority on 129 seats he have 76 feet yeah you
00:37:15.100 mentioned that last week yeah that's so pretty big yeah but i'm i hope like it will be at least
00:37:22.460 minority when he will be re-elected because he will be oh this is this is it's a fact what i don't
00:37:29.100 understand is is this what the people of quebec want like do people want a vaccine passport because
00:37:33.580 i went to montreal a couple months ago and it seemed like everything was back to normal everyone was just
00:37:38.620 living their life without any sort of restrictions not i didn't see too many masks and all that
00:37:43.740 is this something that people want like why would he do this potentially this is
00:37:49.340 they having power yeah like it's the the logo that we know today is not the logo that we saw
00:38:00.300 like in 2018 and 19 okay it's really more arrogant and always do that yeah i don't know i don't know if
00:38:09.180 it's the power but it feels like he is over everybody and everything and if you are in another line of
00:38:16.540 thinking than him you're black or you censor or you don't talk to me or he's really like straightforward
00:38:23.260 like really mad and and i would say like he just wants more power kind of like trudeau hey maybe
00:38:32.300 they're friends they are friends i'm sure oh yeah they must be because it sounds you're basically describing
00:38:38.620 our prime minister it's and and i know like our our other premier in canada logo is the words oh and i
00:38:51.420 would say it's worse than trudeau because he know what he's doing
00:39:00.220 ah i just these politicians in canada these politicians they're just they're just pretty bad
00:39:06.220 like we kind of got a short end here when it comes to politicians um uh we have another chat
00:39:12.700 here though so before we get into our next story maybe let's just read that um thank you for your one
00:39:18.460 dollar um this is from times i think times yes thank you um never been a strong monarchist however
00:39:26.780 this hurts like i lost generations of everybody yeah it's a pretty big deal 96 years
00:39:33.500 the part of the story sorry it's the part of this story that just passed away yeah absolutely it's
00:39:42.460 yeah it's a bit of a shock and yeah anyway i mean i'm sure we'll see so much more on this i know
00:39:47.660 louis brackpool our uk reporter is going to buckingham palace so i you'll definitely be able to see more
00:39:54.060 of rebels coverage of that at rebelreports.co.uk so make sure you all check it out you can sign up for
00:39:59.980 email updates for those of you who are big fans of the queen and the royal family and you'll get
00:40:05.020 some updates sent right to your inbox so that's great um i think we have a video here that we want
00:40:10.780 to play so uh maybe we'll just let the producers get that going and yeah i will explain afterwards
00:40:18.220 because it's in french okay great so for the english viewer i will explain the two videos after okay cool
00:40:24.460 so i guess you can just describe it because i think they're not going to play the audio because
00:40:35.660 it's in french so what's happening alexa so the man it's uh dr boileau it's our health public health
00:40:46.060 minister so he's actually talking that the consequences of the covet is worse than influenza oh and the
00:40:56.860 woman that is next to she's as well a doctor and she just say nope and and and and dr boileau just say
00:41:09.260 oh but it's the pen of the range of age we are talking about but it was just funny that she just
00:41:19.580 stopped him like saying no that's funny and and i was like this is the first time i saw that like
00:41:27.020 someone you actually say you're actually spreading this information it's no it's like influenza have more
00:41:34.540 damage than the covid that's crazy and and and and and he needed to rectify himself in front of the
00:41:45.340 press conference and i was like oh oh okay but the other one video this is actually the most funny one
00:41:54.540 so after the press conference finished you know uh they have always a generic that appear but
00:42:03.260 people think that you know the the press conference is is it's uh finished but we heard
00:42:12.380 them continuing to talk and we heard dr boileau saying i'm just wondering what we are going to do
00:42:20.780 with all these vaccine and you you heard like all the audience laughing oh my goodness so their mics
00:42:27.900 were still on that's so bad oh my goodness that's hilarious that was like yeah no kidding i bet their
00:42:36.620 tech people got fired that day that's really funny but no mainstream like did show that no mainstream say
00:42:44.460 like oh the microphone was still on and we can't hurt them and i confirm like it was on twitter i went to
00:42:52.220 the press conference on cpac and i listened it and yes they actually say that at the end i was like oh
00:43:00.780 that's is actually laughing about like oh what we are going with all these doses so does it mean that
00:43:06.860 people are not getting their boosters is that what it seems and they they don't know how to promote them
00:43:12.220 more but it's why i say like they don't want to say no to the vaccine passport because probably it would
00:43:22.140 need to spend all these doses that they spend money for that and now we see that the population is not
00:43:31.740 really receptive yeah so we'll see what will happen because now we are in youtube i cannot go further on
00:43:39.180 that but uh we'll see what will happen in quebec if uh they would use that as a tool to just sell more
00:43:46.380 to push people right that's a that's an interesting tactic i really hope it doesn't come to that for
00:43:51.820 all of your guys's sake that would be truly horrible um we have a couple chats here and then i think we'll
00:43:58.220 play an ad um do you want to take this away alexa yes of course beautiful so times one dollars thank you
00:44:09.180 uh scare about char being king is really connected to web love is reopening thank you so helpful
00:44:20.060 yeah i would say like me too everybody that is related to the web unfortunately it's all elites and all like
00:44:28.620 government almost like especially g7 yeah um but you the web is when we look at that it's it's not
00:44:38.460 the web that we need to be scared is the people who go and and and bring some crazy idea
00:44:48.220 that other people say hmm yeah interesting we will actually apply that yeah and this is actually the
00:44:54.940 problem it's it's the crazy people who actually go there with this crazy idea that for but it's not
00:45:04.620 it's the i would say it's the people that we need to fear yeah more than the organization yeah because
00:45:13.500 an organization is nothing without its people um yeah and i mean we were i was in the web editing room
00:45:20.380 here at rebel hq and there are videos uh involving the great reset and the royal family like on the royal
00:45:27.900 family's like youtube page or something i think dave shrigley one of our amazing editors here found it so i mean
00:45:33.340 they the monarchy does have ties to the world economic forum and i mean any sort of globalism we
00:45:39.260 should be not supporting in any way so yeah it'll be interesting to see what charles does with his
00:45:47.020 crown i don't know he's really old too like i feel like he's too old to be king but whatever
00:45:52.700 um we have one more oh he's like 74 like he's old oh yeah um all right we have one more here this is
00:46:01.260 from shauna marie g83 thank you for your five dollars the monarchy are climate alarmists and
00:46:07.420 there are theories that princess diana's death was not an accident there have been many accusations of
00:46:12.860 child trafficking involving the monarchy as well i mean yeah there's such a history that i mean there's
00:46:20.940 i mean it's just so hard to know what's true there's so much misinformation and i feel like they're such a powerful
00:46:26.540 family that they could you know control how we view them in a way right like with pr and and all that um
00:46:35.820 interesting but they are weird about the climate that is something that we've seen i mean they go to
00:46:41.660 all these climate conferences and they i mean i remember once um um not harry the other one charles and his
00:46:50.300 wife not charles who's what is the other one's name it's harry and um anyway whatever um they
00:46:59.900 would fly like coach and stuff to go to like climate things and it's funny like they're just
00:47:05.820 all it's all a charade honestly climate climate change it's it now it's like the new uh reason
00:47:13.820 of everything that what is happening in the world yeah oh it's prince william prince william sorry guys
00:47:19.660 yeah had a brain fart there um anyway yeah so uh i think we're gonna play an ad here and then we're
00:47:26.380 we're gonna yeah wrap things up pretty shortly
00:47:41.100 great
00:47:56.380 so fun that makes me want to go to the rebel news store we got some fun merch y'all need to check it
00:48:09.500 out it's great we have a lot of fun wearing our beautiful designs and having mugs see and yeah we
00:48:16.140 have mugs and like phone cases and hats too so y'all better check it out um lots of great collections
00:48:22.540 for all you freedom fighters and when you buy from our store you support rebel news so we appreciate
00:48:27.900 all your purchases because they help keep the lights on so and of course there's the famous
00:48:32.700 justin castro shirt which is a top seller in the store it's a good one yeah i should have one with the
00:48:39.980 face of uh lego but i don't know uh which other like face that he look like yeah i should check yeah
00:48:49.420 you should that'd be really fun i think get some cool french um cool some maybe half of lego and
00:48:56.860 half of uh trudeau oh my gosh that'd be funny because they're the same person allegedly no i'm
00:49:02.540 just kidding they're not um all right we have a couple more chats here and then we're gonna play
00:49:06.780 a clip for y'all we're wrapping things up here pretty quickly so if you have any final chats you
00:49:11.340 want to send in send them now um this is from hey the done do you want to read this one alexa
00:49:17.180 yes hey the done uh two dollars thank you very much i'm so happy to heard alexa representing the
00:49:26.700 quebec perspective maybe we could have a recurring feature on french idiom for the anglo for example
00:49:36.620 yeah someone who doesn't know how to do with that is ten finger oh this is actually the translation
00:49:49.340 but uh yeah but i represent quebec i tried to be as
00:49:55.980 uh i would say neutral neutral neutral on on my my perspective um but i as well like i would say
00:50:08.300 that mr logo is not like for like a big part of the population i would say that it's really just the
00:50:14.220 elderly that like him because um he you know he have all the votes for the elderly and they are the one
00:50:22.860 who vote for most of them and most of them they don't really go further to see what is the problem
00:50:31.820 in the in this society because most of them have like they are okay with what they have they are stable
00:50:38.220 they just want a stable government they don't want to be they don't like really the changing because
00:50:44.540 they fear of the changing so it's why we'll be re-elected since the um the society is getting
00:50:53.820 old and old and old and so the biggest part of the population it's elderly people interesting
00:51:01.180 that's really interesting because i mean as you know old people die and then it's the young people
00:51:08.060 who are left with the society that they voted for so it's kind of it's kind of unfortunate in a way
00:51:13.500 um hopefully there's a way to bridge the gap between the generations so that we can so that
00:51:18.060 you guys can elect someone that is you know everyone could approve of wouldn't that be amazing
00:51:24.940 yeah it would be it just i think it's been a while that they say that they they want to review and
00:51:32.060 change how the the the vote is working because now it seems like it doesn't really represent the
00:51:40.540 democracy right so the it's been a while like same missile ago say that he in his previous like
00:51:47.020 mandate say that it will change that he didn't right and uh now we say that he's not the priority
00:51:55.420 on his mandate so it seems like for him it's actually actually good because he get elected
00:52:01.660 must be nice all right we got one more chat here then we're going to play a clip this is from times
00:52:06.700 thank you for your dollar that hot mic clip alexa was talking about is it available can she or did
00:52:12.860 she do a story on it i think you we had the video on twitter right that's where we found it yeah i'm
00:52:18.620 gonna post it uh after the live stream on my twitter you can check it out it's the voice alexa
00:52:25.500 yeah and uh on twitter so what i would do i would just like put the small translation of what a
00:52:31.980 the the what they say and so you can just share it perfect all right we're going to wrap things up
00:52:38.220 real shortly here but before we go we're going to play this fun clip from bill gates woohoo
00:52:49.660 walter isaacson's new book the code breaker tells an amazing story it's about how jennifer
00:52:56.300 dowdena and other scientists discovered a new way to edit dna editing dna with precision has been a
00:53:04.860 holy grail for scientists for decades the dna of course encodes all of the biological functions and
00:53:13.100 so some of the mistakes in dna cause disease genetic disease if we could go in and fix those mistakes we
00:53:23.020 could save many many lives and get rid of these diseases crispr is a very fascinating tool you
00:53:31.260 figure out a part of the dna sequence that you want to change then you take the dna that's nearby
00:53:39.420 and create a guide in rna so that helps you locate the position and then you link this cas
00:53:49.020 enzyme which has the ability to do that cut and edit and so pulling together this guiding
00:53:56.700 rna and this cas enzyme editing uh becomes possible our foundation is funding work to see if we can use
00:54:05.500 crispr to knock down mosquito populations dramatically we're also looking at crispr to make better seeds
00:54:13.260 we're also looking at ways that crispr might help us with very accurate diagnostics and we're considering
00:54:21.180 how the crispr gene editing might lead to a way of curing hiv and things like sickle cell using crispr to
00:54:30.460 help cure disease is not very controversial but using crispr you could actually change the dna that would
00:54:37.420 determine your baby's eye color or skin tone most scientists agree that this is something that we
00:54:43.900 should not do walter's book does a great job talking about how it's a slippery slope and raising the
00:54:51.580 question of where should we draw the line and the relative role of the scientific community and
00:54:56.060 governments and help you make sure that we don't cross it there's no question crispr is going to save a
00:55:02.780 lot of lives that's going to raise uh issue ah ah he should stick to computers like what is this like
00:55:13.180 i just i'm sorry i'm i'm actually disturbed it's so disturbing like why why is a computer guy involved
00:55:21.420 in this it's so sinister like it just sends this chill down my spine oh i study genetic okay yeah i'm i'm
00:55:30.940 a biologist so i used to do genetic yeah and i know a little bit like like genetic is really complex
00:55:40.140 and you understand it or you don't so it's why like when when people do the exam is are you perform
00:55:48.780 or you fail you don't you are not like in the middle because it's a concept that you need to
00:55:56.060 understand how it's working and you don't touch genetic yeah because the genetic once you change
00:56:05.580 it just a little bit the error of the replication of your dna afterwards we create more and more and
00:56:14.620 more mistake and more and more error and we create like so much more disease or other like problem
00:56:22.540 and it's it's it's it's crazy because in our society example right cancer that is existing
00:56:32.220 we permit the cancer to stay in the dna it's why now we see more and more and more cancer
00:56:38.620 because usually in animal like animal who had the cancer they would just die and so they will not
00:56:46.700 let like pass it on replication that bad replication keeping in in the the life you know but us we to to
00:57:00.780 to try to keep and to perform it we just keep yeah yeah but it's it's just so sad because um it's why
00:57:10.860 immigration is good too like i would example because we mix two genetics that they are not close at all
00:57:18.060 so most of the time the baby would be stronger because you bring a genetic from two different
00:57:24.700 like opposite a new gene yeah a new pool yeah it's why it's good it's good for the immigration to to
00:57:31.340 are like to two people different country to to mix together so know that yeah it genetic is beautiful
00:57:39.740 it's really complex but you do not play with that this is actually get trying to play god yeah
00:57:48.460 yikes well that is truly horrifying um it'll be interesting to see what else this guy comes up
00:57:54.460 with i think we're gonna have to wrap things up though today oh i know time flies when you're having
00:57:59.900 fun thank you to everyone for tuning in to the rebel news daily live stream hosted by the beautiful
00:58:04.860 alexa lavoie and myself this show airs weekdays at 12 p.m eastern time on youtube odyssey rumble and
00:58:11.500 getter so make sure to sign up for email updates so you never miss a live stream and we'll see you guys
00:58:16.860 next week this is lewis brackville for rebel news and today i'm outside of buckingham palace in london
00:58:25.580 england where it's marking day one after the death of elizabeth ii the queen of england now for the
00:58:32.220 international viewers you're probably wondering what are the protocols and what happens next so
00:58:37.900 i'm going to just go through with you what happens on day one after the death of the queen now on the
00:58:44.700 day of her death the prime minister will be one of the first to be informed of the news and then the
00:58:50.220 message will be delivered by the queen's private secretary and sent to members of the privy council
00:58:57.740 office mps and senior civil servants will then receive a call and an email stating dear colleagues
00:59:06.060 it is with sadness that i write to inform you of the death of her majesty the queen
00:59:12.620 this will sit in tandem with an announcement on social media once that has been announced flags of
00:59:19.580 the union jack are to be draped at half mast on the day of the queen's death the soon to be crowned king
00:59:28.620 charles the third will then address the nation in a televised broadcast the prime minister liz truss will
00:59:37.500 then hold an audience with charles the third while the ministry of defense will organize a gun salute and a
00:59:46.060 minute silence will be held across the country if you want