Rebel News Podcast - April 11, 2022


DAILY | Poilievre, Lewis, Charest campaign to topple Trudeau; DeSantis supporting fatherhood


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 5 minutes

Words per Minute

181.67862

Word Count

11,834

Sentence Count

8

Misogynist Sentences

26

Hate Speech Sentences

17


Summary

Pastor Art Poloski has been released on bail after serving 51 days behind bars for daring to open his church to feed homeless people in the streets of his home town of Edmonton, Alberta. Pastor Art's story has garnered international attention, and has been featured in media outlets around the world, including Fox News and The Globe and Mail.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 oh hey good afternoon or good morning everybody depending on what part of the country that you're
00:00:19.500 in sorry i was just a little bit mesmerized by our new uh live stream intro i've only seen it
00:00:26.380 a couple of times because i was busy last week um with court uh because dina hinshaw alberta's chief
00:00:33.300 medical officer of health who's in court and she was in court on the days when i mostly host the
00:00:38.280 show so i'm not used to seeing that thing so i'm sort of watching it along with everybody at home
00:00:42.240 adam how's it going oh it's going wonderful yeah we're very fortunate to have you handling that
00:00:47.460 court stuff because i couldn't do it and don't want to do it um but yeah we got to get this intro last
00:00:52.880 week so that was fun and it's it's nice great work to the team there for getting that out and
00:00:57.240 it's nice to have that little roll in for us yeah um i should tell everybody what we're doing before
00:01:02.520 we get started i'm sheila gun reed i'm the host of the show on mondays tuesdays and thursdays
00:01:08.080 normally adam co-hosts with me on monday sort of an alberta focused show sometimes but
00:01:13.740 not so much today and adam is based in calgary and this gives everybody a chance to sort of
00:01:20.000 interact with each other and us as we interact with each other adam and i um we used to just be
00:01:25.620 on youtube um youtube got a little bit censorious or a lot bit censorious so not only are we streaming
00:01:32.300 on youtube but we're also on several other free speech minded platforms like getter we're currently
00:01:39.000 live streaming on getter but we're also on rumble odyssey and super you and the great thing about
00:01:43.860 those platforms is that unlike the censorship platform of youtube they allow you to send us
00:01:49.580 something like a paid chat um on rumble it's a rant on odyssey it's a hyper chat and on super you
00:01:57.860 it's called a super you shout and if you leave us a paid chat um a question a comment a story idea
00:02:03.280 a thought a thought bubble whatever um we'll read it on air we'll do our best to address whatever it
00:02:09.680 is that you want to talk about and i think that's all the nuts and bolts um we're speeding that along a
00:02:14.760 little bit quicker um adam a story that you've been covering since basically your very first day
00:02:21.020 here at rebel news you came along at the exact right time because up until then i had been going
00:02:26.180 back and forth um from my home east of edmonton to calgary to cover the ongoing saga of the persecution
00:02:32.800 of pastor art poloski but there's been international interest in this and fox news has been very
00:02:40.280 interested in what's going on um with pastor art and so some of your work was featured in fox news
00:02:46.580 over the weekend yeah yeah it was pretty incredible i actually got a message from john the uh the author
00:02:51.760 and journalist of this article um it's incredible you know the international attention has been brought
00:02:56.320 to this he was telling me that he was wearing a save archer shirt actually at a bar i believe in
00:03:01.120 washington and then several people recognized who it was right away knew what it was about they're
00:03:06.580 familiar with my coverage familiar with pastor arthur poloski's story it shocks me so often even
00:03:11.740 sometimes talking to friends about the ongoing protests or about the pastor arthur poloski story
00:03:16.140 and they have this like mentality of like oh well it's kind of over and i don't know what people are
00:03:20.640 still sort of upset about he was just released on extremely strict bail conditions he can't go about
00:03:27.260 his life he can't go see a movie with his kids he can't go to a restaurant um he basically can go
00:03:31.960 worship and then get his butt back home or he's going to be locked up in the slammer again and i
00:03:36.980 want to remind people and people likely know this if they watch but for the new audience out there
00:03:40.600 for daring to open his church feed homeless people which newsflash people don't stop being hungry when
00:03:46.320 they live on the streets because there's a covid protocol in place and as dave menzies said the
00:03:50.300 odds of dying from starvation are pretty high covid relatively low um so pastor arthur poloski committed to
00:03:57.420 maintaining those things he also headed down to the coots blockade for a couple hours and
00:04:01.440 preach to the people there as pastors tend to do they do some preaching sometimes um for that he
00:04:06.640 spent 50 and a number of other little sort of minute charges 51 days behind bars for the amalgamated
00:04:13.260 sanctions that could possibly be levied against him the charges he would not spend 51 days in jail he
00:04:20.640 would not spend 51 days behind bars plus pre-trial time that you serve is actually afforded extra credit so
00:04:27.700 it's more like 70 to potentially 100 days that he has spent behind bars when pre-trial custody is
00:04:34.000 considered so there's no way he would spend this amount of time and nevertheless he is still under
00:04:39.500 these extremely strict conditions um limiting his capacity to exist as a human being um so rightfully
00:04:46.540 unlike so many canadians who are apathetic people i know who don't seem to think this is a big deal
00:04:51.760 people who have seen overreaching government people have witnessed uh persecution and people who are
00:04:56.740 generally more concerned about upholding their freedoms because they wisely have studied history
00:05:01.280 and don't trust government the whole world is concerned about this we as canadians are somewhat
00:05:05.680 apathetic and comfortable shockingly but uh yeah troubling stuff but it's good to know that uh
00:05:11.060 international people are still paying attention as you can see in the the article there there's a shot
00:05:15.560 there's a billboard in times square about pastor arthur pavlowski as well um so yeah it's uh it's
00:05:22.640 pretty incredible uh i want to remind people out there that while he is home and we did have that
00:05:26.940 good news i did have a chance for that exclusive interview which is featured in this article um
00:05:31.560 he's not free yet i spoke to his son nathaniel pavlowski at the rally in calgary this weekend he's
00:05:36.740 saying just he wants to remind people like this isn't over he's still very much a prisoner
00:05:41.500 yeah and if people want to see your coverage of pastor art and support uh pastor arts uh legal
00:05:51.260 challenges with the government um but why don't you give them the website for that yeah save arthur.com
00:05:58.700 is the spot for all of that that's save arthur a-r-t-u-r um and you'll find all of our footage
00:06:04.480 there that exclusive one hour interview that was filmed just an hour after his release where he went
00:06:08.940 through so much of it um i can tell you if you scroll down a bit there you can see that shot
00:06:13.000 since we did that interview i've had like hundreds of people at the rallies come up lots of them saying
00:06:17.820 they're crying watching that because it is very emotional content but i've also had so many people
00:06:23.460 reaching out who have been behind bars whether it be as correctional officers or people who are
00:06:28.660 incarcerated verifying those stories and saying they've seen the very same things um so do check
00:06:33.980 that out but yeah pastor arthur paulowski has said this repeatedly without the help of viewers out
00:06:39.880 there donating to his legal fees he would have been crushed by the government maybe not in spirit
00:06:44.260 but the legal costs associated with taking on a government that categorically targets and
00:06:50.220 persecutes christians as we saw with james coates at pastor james coates as we saw with pastor tim
00:06:54.800 stevens as we saw this last weekend not last week in the weekend before derek reimer pastor derek
00:07:00.140 reimer arrested and then they're like oops sorry we don't actually have anything to hold you on
00:07:03.300 other groups are doing the exact same things and they never get targeted it's always christian
00:07:08.040 pastors without fail so if you want to help one of the massive precedent setting cases that is going
00:07:13.460 to set the bar for if the government can go after christian pastors is that of pastor arthur paulowski
00:07:19.240 so donate at save arthur.com any donations you make go to the democracy fund that's a registered
00:07:24.080 canadian charity so you're going to get a tax receipt for that donation i use it for next year's
00:07:29.040 tax time i can't think of a better cause uh to chip in for so save arthur.com yeah you mentioned
00:07:36.100 off the top of the show that i was in uh court last week zoom court webex court it's what it is here
00:07:43.640 in alberta and i was covering the uh cross-examination of our chief medical officer of health doctor
00:07:50.120 dean mahinshaw on some of her orders and some of her decisions and god love these lawyers that went
00:07:57.800 through 400 press conferences that she held and at one point she kept insisting that her
00:08:04.060 restrictions were used sparingly and sparsely those that was the phrase she kept using
00:08:10.200 and uh she also insisted at one point that churches were never closed to in-person worship
00:08:18.860 drastically restricted but never actually closed and that was a really um untrue thing for her to say
00:08:27.260 given that while she was on the stand the anniversary of the one year of the fence going up at grace
00:08:36.460 life church ticked over and uh that was when the church itself was snatched by the government for 90
00:08:44.440 days in the congregation they're driven underground their pastor previously had spent 35 days in jail
00:08:50.060 for simply not imposing the government restrictions on a congregation that didn't want them if you wanted
00:09:00.080 to social distance inside of grace life church you could you wanted to wear a mask inside of grace life
00:09:04.360 you could you wanted to obsessively wash your hands inside of grace life also fine but he wasn't going to
00:09:11.380 make anybody do it and in fact he said that it violated his religious freedom and by limiting the church
00:09:18.300 capacity it violated his call that you know based on his interpretation of theology to not forsake the
00:09:27.060 in-person gathering of the congregation um and while dina hinshaw said that the anniversary ticked over
00:09:34.720 and i remember i took so many pictures of those signs on the grace life fence and before the fence
00:09:41.200 went up on the grace life door signed by dina hinshaw the order was signed by her to do that and yet
00:09:48.020 she testified no churches were restricted to in-person worship that seems a lot like contempt of court to
00:09:54.260 me well you know that this the and it's not only that it's they literally snuck in in the early
00:10:01.120 morning hours at fairview baptist church pastor tim stephen's church and changed the locks they
00:10:06.420 literally they they gated one they locked another one they closed the churches and then furthermore
00:10:11.200 every single church was so limited in capacity that it's like well we let five of the at my old church
00:10:18.880 16 000 congregants attend at a time or 10 or 50 um costco was half of capacity or whatever it was
00:10:26.500 but these churches with all these safeguards in place measures in place that were far more
00:10:30.700 interested a pastor far more interested in the care of his flock than costco cares about
00:10:35.400 random random people coming in and shopping um they they apparently could not be trusted it's wild
00:10:41.720 the other thing that i noticed that that that ticked around was ramadan and last year during these
00:10:47.060 arrests during the highlight of these arrests you could drive and i mean god bless them i i'm happy that
00:10:52.020 they're able to gather to worship this is not about yeah but you could drive immediately to any mosque
00:10:58.560 or any islamic center within five minutes of any of these pastor arrests and they obviously take
00:11:04.520 their shoes off you could see hundreds of shoes in the doorways the parking lots packed to the brim
00:11:09.740 the unifying factor here and one of the things that's going to no doubt be discussed when this sort of
00:11:15.080 unfolds litigiously you have a vast diversity of personalities i was talking with nathaniel about this
00:11:22.000 this weekend in fact you have pastor james coates pastor tim stevens pastor derek reimer and pastor
00:11:28.100 arthur pavlowski i was jokingly calling them the four evangelists on the weekend but they have such
00:11:33.340 distinct personalities the only unifying factor really is the fact that they're christian were
00:11:39.060 targeted for doing as much um some of them don't have in building like pastor uh derek uh reimer his the
00:11:46.260 majority of his stuff is sort of online and then on the streets outdoors he sometimes has sort of
00:11:51.140 small gatherings with friends but he doesn't have a massive church congregation so they weren't just
00:11:55.520 targeting those facilities pastor arthur pavlowski had a relatively small church gathering and he was
00:12:01.260 targeted for some outdoor ministry so those two sort of feeding people on the streets uh pastor james
00:12:06.700 coates and pastor uh tim stevens very much having more standard church facilities having varying degrees
00:12:12.400 of uh support and certainly allowing people to participate but there was a wide array of people and a wide
00:12:17.860 array of compliance or non-compliance depending on the case with restrictions and how they were
00:12:22.900 implemented and the unifying factor between all of them is the fact that they were christian other
00:12:27.760 denominations doing worse i say worse per the terms of the government not per my personal opinion
00:12:32.860 no one dared look there even dina hinshaw said well they have they have received some reports but when
00:12:38.100 they went and checked it out everything was fine well it took all of 20 minutes of sleuthing to do a
00:12:41.980 quick lap to the other religious communities in the neighborhood to see that there was indeed packed
00:12:48.220 facilities and no enforcement whatsoever which again i'm saying good i don't want any groups targeted by
00:12:53.320 the government people should be left alone to worship yeah they could have i mean not that i would want it but
00:13:01.740 the rcmp were literally stationed at grace life on the road blocking the roads in the church parking lot
00:13:09.960 that sometimes that didn't happen with other um religious groups no not that i would want to see it
00:13:17.660 but i'm just pointing out the inequity of the treatment here um and i noticed something over the
00:13:23.260 weekend um james coates pastor at grace life church he's got a brand new book and he wrote it um with
00:13:29.580 uh nathan busanitz he is um also a pastor at uh i think it's john macarthur's church so um grace
00:13:37.500 grace grace fellowship um i just want to make sure i get it right john macarthur's church yeah uh
00:13:46.940 sorry grace community church in sun valley california so um one is a church plant of the other
00:13:53.000 um pastor james coates did exactly what john macarthur did and not close his church to comply with the
00:13:58.700 government but somehow alberta was more tyrannical than california and i think that has a lot to do with
00:14:05.280 the strength of the american constitution versus the canadian one that is limited um has reasonable
00:14:12.260 limits well what's a reasonable limit on your freedom um i certainly don't want a politician
00:14:16.540 deciding that for me but in canada that is the case so james coates wrote this with um the uh
00:14:23.820 nathan who's on the pastoral staff at grace community church in sun valley um about um the church
00:14:32.840 versus god or sorry the church versus government and um this is exactly what james coates said all
00:14:41.500 along it is our duty as christians to obey the government except in such times that the government
00:14:49.160 is no longer being biblical like we should obey laws that say do not murder do not covet do not steal
00:14:59.240 those are those are laws and so many of our laws are come from biblical origins most of our laws come
00:15:07.500 from the 10 commandments but when they when you are faced with do i obey the government or do i obey
00:15:16.380 what i know to be commanded by god you must always choose god and so this it details their battle this new
00:15:23.700 book and john macarthur um they took on the state of california and they won um basically the law said
00:15:33.440 you cannot impose limits on a church that you didn't impose on walmart um which actually makes
00:15:40.500 perfect sense but that wasn't the case here in alberta well i want to urge people to check out the
00:15:45.300 conversation that i had with john carpe specifically on this and we talked about how the american legal
00:15:50.580 system some states have independent constitutional courts but the reason the united states moved beyond
00:15:56.540 this so much faster than us is one they actually had private health care and they have like five to
00:16:01.720 one icu bed so they're better able to cope and deal with people becoming sick should they become sick
00:16:06.300 but two their judicial process is actually a tangible process that isn't just madness like you don't wait
00:16:13.340 two years for a health officer to be on the stand justifying what they've done once the
00:16:18.880 restrictions are already over um it could be to the extent that there's an intentional shortage in
00:16:23.780 defunding of the court so that they're unable to deal with so much of this stuff because as john carpe said
00:16:29.800 that interview um it's it's two years versus two weeks to get something addressed and and the the same sort
00:16:38.700 of legal precedent would be well we don't take action we're not going to stifle if there's a two-year
00:16:43.800 delay we're going to lay away these restrictions until they can be justified unfortunately in
00:16:49.660 canada they've taken the opposite approach and they're like we're going to leave all these clearly
00:16:53.900 charter smashing and defying restrictions in place until two years from now when dina henshaw isn't on
00:16:59.680 vacation she's willing to sort of show up on stand um now it still matters because if there is a ruling
00:17:06.720 from this court saying the government moving forward has to justify in court any actions they take
00:17:12.260 because they did violate people's rights it could prevent in november or whatever them from bringing
00:17:16.760 all the restrictions back it could be a valuable tool but we shouldn't face two years of trampling
00:17:22.500 of our freedoms and rights still being unable to travel within this country without any official
00:17:27.780 ever having to show up because you can use any justification there's always some crisis
00:17:31.420 in the world if it's not real it's manufactured like jyoti gondek with this emergency crisis
00:17:35.920 in the city this climate crisis but there's always going to be some sort of crisis to justify
00:17:40.900 taking our rights away and as we'll get into it here but dr leslin lewis said the emergencies act
00:17:45.840 every time she said this over the weekend it was used it was abused um they've overstepped there's no
00:17:50.960 safeguards and measures the courts are overworked so they can't address or make account for this so
00:17:56.620 a very important work that's being done but it should have been done oh 18 months sooner
00:18:00.540 yeah i mean to hear dr dina hinch basically say well we were kind of learning on the job we'd never
00:18:07.220 faced anything like this before so what do you want from us basically shrug i don't know what
00:18:12.860 you want from us we didn't know what we were dealing with well that's exactly when you need to be
00:18:17.020 more prudent and more cautious not with public safety but with our rights because the charter
00:18:24.680 exists to protect us from the government when government has a propensity for overreach which
00:18:30.100 it always does they shouldn't be an afterthought in when you're trying to smack down a disease we
00:18:37.240 now know was nowhere near as deadly as everybody told us it was um actually you know what let's go
00:18:43.060 to dr lewis's clip before i get us kicked off of youtube pull that up while we're pulling it up i'll
00:18:51.160 stop as soon as it gets pulled up here though but uh yeah i remember the ontario health bureaucrat and we
00:18:56.360 had on stream recently saying i won't hesitate to bring these back well yet you literally should
00:19:01.740 that's not a thing that's like well i'm not going to hesitate before i jump yeah yeah i'm not i'm not
00:19:06.380 going to hesitate before i jump off this cliff maybe check the water first to make sure you're not diving
00:19:10.000 into rocks um yeah you should be cautious you should be careful you should be hesitant i'm not sure if
00:19:16.660 olivia has that one specific clip pulled up though there we go yeah this one oh yeah that's just the
00:19:20.740 general to the party and i'd love to have a conversation with them and i believe that even
00:19:27.480 though we may have differences of opinion that there is a middle ground there is there are things
00:19:34.880 that we can agree on but what the left has done the left has created has has turned everything into a
00:19:42.600 black and white demonize and divide polarize division and that is that is a problem
00:19:50.600 and so i i honestly believe that if we can reach out to people um millennials and let them know that
00:19:59.720 we are the party that's securing their future we are the party that wants to ensure that they own a home
00:20:07.340 the left wants to wants you to have nothing and they say you're going to be happy but it's not true
00:20:14.660 later on she went on to talk about uh the the crisis she said she was amidst the truckers in
00:20:23.940 ottawa and she as a black woman who's experienced persecution and adversity in her life said she's
00:20:28.900 never felt more welcome or safe there was bouncy castles everyone was very lovely to her um so she
00:20:33.760 said she had a wonderful time with those folks and they were all nothing but nice for her but yeah she
00:20:38.240 went on to talk about and one of the lines that really killed me that was very strong i threw it up on
00:20:42.400 my twitter was like when when when the nazis were bombing england churchill was in parliament
00:20:47.780 um when we declared an emergencies act if we're going to declare an emergencies act and strip people's
00:20:53.160 freedom she's like we should be in parliament working 24 hours a day till we resolve that situation or
00:20:58.060 have some sort of plan in place she's like they closed parliament they declared an emergency stripped
00:21:03.020 our freedoms and closed parliament they got everything absolutely wrong another thing i want if i want
00:21:08.720 to touch on relating to that event if that's okay or do you have something else on this topic
00:21:11.900 no no go ahead yeah go ahead no you know it was it was really shocking and i don't like to get into
00:21:17.700 this sort of demographic banter frankly i don't care i judge a person based on their sort of
00:21:22.060 constitution not the color of their skin or where they're from but at an event in calgary there's two
00:21:27.840 events one had a couple hundred the following event it was hard to gauge on the room but they said
00:21:31.560 there was 1200 chairs out and they were almost entirely full in calgary full capacity i had 500 full
00:21:37.780 capacity at a church uh church gym church school gym on saturday morning like she's drawing big crowds
00:21:45.580 big crowds i mean it's not a surprise on the second ballot she won the popular vote in the 2020 election
00:21:50.400 she's not a come from behind surprise case she is one of the front runners but uh one of the things
00:21:56.140 that absolutely shocked me she put a picture up and i'm actually in the front row of the picture
00:21:59.940 because i'm filming um saying calgary's beautiful it's great to be here you can go to that and it's it's wild how
00:22:05.780 underlyingly racist so many progressives are on social media they immediately start talking about
00:22:11.580 race they don't do it for anybody else like it's just because it's a black candidate but you have
00:22:15.180 this large crowd coming to see a black woman a doctor a very educated smart successful business
00:22:20.780 woman they very likely want her to be the leader of the conservative party moving forward
00:22:25.100 so by default there's probably some questions asked about how racist this crowd is but they're
00:22:30.380 implying that these people are all white and all racist and don't represent uh minorities
00:22:34.500 any way shape or form furthermore the fact is i'm sitting right next to a guy who happens to be
00:22:38.740 black not that it matters and there's a bunch of people of various races in the crowd sitting with
00:22:43.920 us um and people on social media immediately with this candidate presumably because she's black
00:22:49.200 all they're talking about is race all she's talking about is her good ideas and it's so shocking
00:22:54.520 and so upsetting to see that become just like a standard talking point they're trying to imply that the
00:23:00.200 black woman and her supporters are racist and i don't understand how you have the audacity as
00:23:05.840 usually a white person on twitter to have that be your principal talking point address address her
00:23:11.000 ideas address some sort of conceptual problem you have with her campaign but defaulting to that is
00:23:17.440 just ridiculous and revealing adam these people voted for a man who lost track of the amount of times
00:23:25.240 that he did blackface and they just pretend like leslin lewis doesn't exist that she's not a
00:23:30.800 conservative that she that that conservative by the way western conservative voters the ones they like
00:23:37.620 to paint as backwards hillbilly white supremacists women hating immigrant hating dominated she dominated
00:23:44.180 they were more than happy she dominated the west western conservatives were more than happy to support
00:23:50.060 her and i think it's because she's honest um again i don't have a horse in the race but she comes out
00:23:55.780 and she says yeah i'm a social conservative yeah i'm pro-life take it or leave it everybody's welcome
00:24:01.340 in this party people knew that about andrew sheer but he lied or at least he didn't talk openly about
00:24:07.000 it so everyone's like gosh this guy's dishonest at least she's leading with her chin on this issue
00:24:11.660 and you know you that's the one thing in my coffee and in my i think it was my coverage of the
00:24:16.000 first event she doesn't really speak like a politician she's like a lawyer and a serious
00:24:20.200 businesswoman and an educated woman who just gets to the facts and she doesn't change her opinion
00:24:24.740 based on the room she's in she's like i don't care if you're pro-choice i'm pro-life that's fine
00:24:28.640 let's work on crisis pregnancy centers together we can agree on that even in an alberta room that said
00:24:33.300 they just wanted oil she said alberta oil is the most ethical oil in the world one of the best things
00:24:38.020 we can do for this country and for the world is to export our ethical oil she's very pro-pipeline
00:24:43.760 this like she's very much on point with us talking about but she does have a background
00:24:47.740 in environment and ecology and all this stuff so she's like but like renewables are good
00:24:52.320 it's just we can't we they're not a replacement they're an additional thing even if we were to be
00:24:56.600 all renewable pay for them yeah exactly for them one thing that i heard from her over the weekend
00:25:02.940 and it was if i had a chance to ask her a question i would have asked her about this because
00:25:07.260 she might be the only person who's written more extensively on the paris accord than me in this
00:25:11.680 entire country and um she said and i wanted to ask her about this because she's sort of written
00:25:19.400 big big thinker papers on the paris accord and she has said those targets that are in the paris
00:25:26.520 accord they are harper's emissions targets but she also said trump pulled out of the paris accord and
00:25:34.060 emissions went down through his embrace of fracking and maybe these big global treaties are not the way
00:25:41.800 to deal with emissions or help the environment and i'm like yeah yeah that's exactly what i wanted
00:25:47.600 somebody to say one of the other things i see on social media is people say she's like a wef
00:25:51.940 loyalist and a big who she's she was dunking on them so hard at these events like she literally
00:25:57.880 said the who like unified pandemic response or global pandemic response basically allows them
00:26:03.980 to take control of governments during pandemics moving forward and she's like we need to get rid
00:26:08.060 of that that's like a premium who wef type move and she's she's actually bringing attention to it
00:26:13.840 when people don't know about it so i certainly don't buy uh that whatsoever but yeah it's very
00:26:19.500 interesting uh one of the things that i that i do see and maybe we should get into this now seeing
00:26:23.100 as we're talking leadership but one of my concerns and i hate to do this because every time we say
00:26:27.560 something on stream next week we're we're applauding ourselves and patting ourselves on the
00:26:31.640 back for being so right jean charret has already started saying well people who support the blockades
00:26:37.160 or even people who support the truckers um should be should be exempt so that that seems to me like
00:26:43.800 someone who knows they're not going to be pierre pauliever or leslin lewis who have well pierre
00:26:48.160 pauliever said he's not in favor of blockades but he's pro-freedom protests um leslin lewis said
00:26:52.940 she's in favor she's full-on in favor of the truckers in ottawa um maybe not the illegal stuff
00:26:59.160 which was marginal at best we saw crime decrease but um they're both saying generally it's good that
00:27:04.700 canadians stood up for freedom um jean charret is saying if you want to be the leader of the
00:27:08.820 conservative party you shouldn't be allowed to be in support of any of that whatsoever um pierre
00:27:15.660 pauliever seems to be sort of running away with it leslin lewis drawing some similar
00:27:19.960 crowds um i think other people whether it be patrick brown who i don't believe has been approved
00:27:25.120 yet um or some of these other marginal candidates i don't think they're quite as prominent um
00:27:30.480 certainly they have their followers they have their support um we'll see how things unfold with
00:27:35.180 debates and everything but if there are ever debates um but it's it seems as though there will
00:27:41.320 be some targeting and not by the book campaign targeting but some trying to get rid of these people
00:27:46.980 based on values testing um that is insane values testing but it's very woke liberal party quebec
00:27:54.040 values testing let's say um and and that's troubling to me because are we going to end up
00:28:00.020 with someone else and someone who's pushing for that by the way i consider them part of the trudeau
00:28:04.120 team to be honest because we finally have people pierre pauliever and leslin lewis are both strong
00:28:10.060 personalities some of the other candidates roman baber um some of the other candidates some of their
00:28:13.640 emails are strong they do seem to have personalities but for the first time we have people who i think
00:28:18.140 would absolutely mop the floor with justin trudeau yeah i'm not bored carefully ever and leslin lewis
00:28:24.560 on two different fronts would wipe the floor with trudeau during debates he couldn't finagle his way
00:28:29.880 out of it he would just be in trouble frankly if either of those two in i think he's probably like
00:28:34.100 i've had a good run thanks someone else can take over because he knows he's not going to win
00:28:37.700 um but imagine if within the conservative party i don't think canis would let it happen canis
00:28:43.080 but uh imagine if they got rid of their few horses who could actually make a difference
00:28:48.620 yeah i think jean chariot is polling at about 20 percent um which frankly seems high and i would
00:28:57.160 like to see those numbers now that he's come out against the convoy um late last week he announced
00:29:04.120 that if he became the leader of not only the conservative party but also of canada he would
00:29:11.100 basically bring in a critical infrastructure defense act version for the federal government
00:29:17.420 um which is the thing that imprisoned pastor art for 51 days for giving a speech and it would impose
00:29:25.160 harsher penalties basically it would take the emergencies act and turn it into a regular law
00:29:32.340 um that you could get in trouble for instead of something that you need to invoke the way the
00:29:38.920 federal government did just it's there on the books and the police can use it or abuse it as is the case
00:29:44.420 with pastor art whenever they felt like um and that is dangerous because it will be used of course
00:29:50.720 against peaceful protesters um and government critics um and justin trudeau will be the prime minister
00:29:58.680 forever if the conservative party of canada chooses old huawei shere um and he'll just you know the police
00:30:06.500 can use the version of the critical infrastructure defense act and uh trudeau can pull the old mugabe
00:30:14.120 and go to the beach um when he's sending in the cops to crack heads um we have a clip from ctv
00:30:22.320 um from question period ctv's show question period over the weekend my skype is falling apart um
00:30:29.700 over the weekend where um shere said that if you supported the freedom convoy you should be excluded
00:30:40.560 from uh running for the conservative party leadership which is i mean shere read the room
00:30:46.420 the reason aaron o'toole is no longer the leader the reason shere is running to be the leader is
00:30:52.840 because aaron o'toole was kicked out of the leadership for his lack of support for the convoy
00:30:59.140 and yet shere can't read the room anyways let's show this clip because i've got lots of feelings about
00:31:03.940 the things that he said here and why shere should be disqualified from running for the leadership
00:31:10.060 supports freedom no no no no he says he supports excuse excuse me i mean were you mistaken i mean
00:31:16.720 he actually didn't support the blockade which you saw what he did was he was out there so he was out
00:31:21.400 there with the truckers you you sound like you drank the kool-aid here no no he was out there with
00:31:25.080 the truckers everyone's view evan everyone knows that pierre polyev supported the blockade and i don't
00:31:31.600 know i don't care how much spin you put into it here is someone who makes laws and says i can break
00:31:36.940 laws because i'm above the law well i'm sorry if you want to be a leader of a party if you want to
00:31:42.560 sit in the house of commons and make laws you have to obey them the laws of the land are not a buffet
00:31:47.820 table from which you choose what you want or do not want to support and if you say to canadians i
00:31:53.840 want to be the leader of the conservative party and i want to be the chief legislator of the country
00:31:58.780 but i don't have to obey the laws i'm sorry that's not just a failure in leadership it disqualifies
00:32:05.420 you as far as i'm concerned as being someone who thinks or aspires to be a leader no no no no no
00:32:12.180 okay so this guy jean shireh huawei shireh as he's called um in some of the funnier parts of twitter
00:32:22.300 um he worked for huawei as a lawyer as a consultant huawei is the spy arm the high-tech spy arm masquerading
00:32:34.100 as a technology company of the chinese communist state it's basically literally an arm of the state
00:32:41.600 um which wisely offers great quality phones with great quality cameras at a lower price point so
00:32:52.040 that westerners buy them and they're they've got spyware in them but while jean shireh which is kind
00:32:59.360 sneaky but smart if you're a communist but and the official position of the conservative party of
00:33:05.900 canada is huawei should be nowhere near our 5g network and it is the liberals lack of leadership
00:33:13.380 on this issue has caused problems with the five eyes our sort of um security uh conglomerate of the
00:33:20.900 western world but the leader the guy who wants to be the leader of the conservative party he was
00:33:26.020 working for huawei now he said he was proud of the work that he did for huawei and he said he helped
00:33:31.560 negotiate the release of the two michaels after um on behalf of huawei i would suggest the communist
00:33:40.420 government abducted two innocent canadians and jailed them for i think two three years 600 days something
00:33:47.260 like that um basically they were hostages human bargaining chips after meng wanzhou was arrested at
00:33:55.020 the vancouver airport on an american warrant which is canadians honoring their treaties with the united
00:34:01.880 states um which is what we do so that we don't become a hotbed of criminals to just flee to from
00:34:08.520 the united states if we don't honor that treaty then anyone can just land in the vancouver airport and we
00:34:14.080 become a dumping ground for american criminals or people fleeing justice from the united states
00:34:18.920 so he helped negotiate the release of those two men so he says i don't have any reason to doubt that
00:34:27.160 but where is his sudden um moral code when working for huawei huawei was besides all the bad stuff we
00:34:38.340 know about huawei recently as in during the time that he was working for huawei huawei was developing
00:34:45.600 facial recognition software that could recognize uyghurs based on their ethnic face facial um features
00:34:53.840 so that the chinese government could go around up and say you you're going to the re-education camp
00:35:01.680 you lady you're getting sterilized little huawei kids you guys you don't have your muslim names
00:35:07.720 anymore and you don't get to speak your language you're headed off to the residential school for
00:35:12.340 little uh muslim kids and you nice family nice little uh uyghur family you get to make shoes for
00:35:19.060 nike um at slave labor that's what huawei was doing while jean chariot was working for them now going
00:35:28.100 forward um executives for huawei now like again who knows if this is sincere but when the news broke
00:35:38.280 that huawei was doing this and i i i'm skeptical that they didn't know huawei was doing this but
00:35:43.860 they were embarrassed that the world found out that huawei was doing this western huawei executives
00:35:49.360 like ones from denmark um they quit huawei they said uh no we don't want any part of this we don't
00:35:58.120 want to be associated with a company that does this sort of horrible genocide enforcement that huawei is
00:36:04.980 a tool of genocide against the uyghurs they're the surveillance arm of the genocide state there
00:36:08.980 but you know who didn't do anything about it jean chariot he was cashing checks and making bank
00:36:15.680 for huawei so how dare this man invoke his moral code now because truckers stood up for freedom
00:36:22.720 and politicians supported them when the systems around the truckers failed including their own mps
00:36:29.020 that's why the truckers by the way went to ottawa the courts failed them the public health officers
00:36:34.380 failed them the governments failed them the charter failed them lawyers failed them their unions failed
00:36:38.540 them they took matters into their own hands it should be an embarrassment on politicians like
00:36:43.280 jean chariot that the truckers had to do this for themselves because the systems were so ineffective
00:36:49.480 and flawed but how dare he now say that people supporting people standing up for their freedom
00:36:55.820 should disqualify you working for huawei should disqualify him from public society forever
00:37:02.720 that's my rant on here chariot thank you for coming to my that was a good that was a good rant clip it
00:37:07.000 efron clip it um that was good no i and the thing that's shocking here and the thing that was most
00:37:13.200 upsetting about about it for me was him saying he was proud of it you know i completely understand
00:37:20.220 the the response if you were to take a microphone and say you know listen when i finished with public
00:37:26.140 office i worked for a firm one of the accounts that we were associated with they had a giant account
00:37:31.940 with huawei work was put on my desk i worked for the company i did the work and then he would say
00:37:37.920 some of the things that we have learned since are incredibly troubling they are clearly a spy wing
00:37:44.200 of the chinese government they've engaged i regret it genocides i regret it fundamentally did he say any
00:37:49.960 of those things whatsoever was he at all apologetic no he he he literally basically added huawei
00:37:55.740 chariot to his business card um and and 100 for him to say i'm okay with the chinese government i'm
00:38:03.460 okay with enforcement of this uyghur genocide all that sort of stuff um not maybe overtly but he in
00:38:09.940 no way acknowledged that huawei is problematic he's so loyal to the chinese government and he's so loyal
00:38:15.500 to huawei that he had to say they're good guys and i'm very proud of what i did for them that's where
00:38:19.720 his loyalties will lie he's revealed that to us already on a fundamental way unless i'm happy to sit down
00:38:25.440 with john chariot and have him tell me the contrary have that conversation but you're in no position
00:38:30.460 to criticize someone for speaking with law-abiding peaceful truckers who were saying well the courts
00:38:37.000 have failed us the media have failed us academics have failed us society has failed us and we're the
00:38:41.580 only one saying oh by the way there's a criminal code of canada and charter rights and freedoms
00:38:45.780 and tried in canada um justin's dad brought them in they should probably know that um and we're
00:38:50.920 gonna have to make this message loud and clear and they went and had the most peaceful
00:38:54.880 protest we saw criminality plummet they were cleaning up after themselves there was nothing
00:38:59.840 all firsthand accounts including all our journalists on the ground was that it was basically a socialist
00:39:04.440 utopia where everyone was feeding each other and loving each other and there was no need or want for
00:39:08.440 anything um those are the villains um it's it's so shocking how often these progressive types whether
00:39:14.220 they're in the conservative party or otherwise they treat china as this socialist utopia and then when
00:39:19.920 truckers get together when i was at milk river you didn't want for anything um because you're
00:39:24.880 far away from everything but if you went eight hours without eating someone would notice and say
00:39:29.240 hey listen like you should probably grab a bite of something um it the the mischaracterization of this
00:39:34.480 is so shocking and i think that this mentality that freedom protesters truckers whatever our villains
00:39:42.000 is absolutely laughable most of the people out here that are attending protests they're no longer
00:39:49.140 necessarily subject to restrictions many of them are people who were vaccinated have gone along with
00:39:54.860 everything and they're saying enough is enough and they're now going out week after week protesting
00:39:59.760 for the rights of other canadians because they are principled these aren't yahoos these aren't
00:40:04.940 uneducated people when you talk to these people and we do streeters with them they're very nuanced
00:40:09.720 they're saying there are certain still there's certainly still some charter violations that are in place
00:40:14.260 and we want safeguards in place to protect our guaranteed and enshrined rights that's what
00:40:19.160 they're protesting for they're not angry they're not racist they're in fact informed and they see
00:40:23.420 what's going on and for jean charret someone who wants to be the leader of the country to be
00:40:28.500 engaging in the type of rhetoric that has seen justin trudeau plummet in his popularity
00:40:33.620 um he's no he's in no way shape or form fit to lead the conservatives uh let let alone the country
00:40:40.120 i do have to say though and this thought just dawned on me one of my massive concerns here
00:40:44.860 we are seeing ndp supporters massively upset with jagmeet singh and the ndp for aligning with justin
00:40:54.120 trudeau if they decide to cast protest votes or become politically active in order to sort of punish
00:41:02.480 the ndp for what has happened with justin trudeau and jagmeet singh they're not likely to buy
00:41:07.060 memberships and vote for pierre polyavra or leslin lewis i have a i have a very big fear that a more
00:41:13.660 moderate person with some political background like jean charret might get some of those protest
00:41:18.980 votes and we might see some funny business and that's very alarming what a nightmare yeah jean
00:41:24.500 charret has never renounced his work with huawei and he's never said that huawei is even to use the
00:41:33.660 language of the left problematic what he has said though is that well if it if that's what the
00:41:40.080 conservative party wants me to do and that's ban huawei then that's what i'll do oh so you you you
00:41:46.100 don't have an opinion on these enablers of genocide um i want a politician that has an opinion on the
00:41:53.280 enablers of genocide um and if you don't i've got a bit of a problem with you like there are some things
00:41:58.500 where it's like you know what i'm just whatever i don't care but i feel like genocide is one of those
00:42:02.920 things that you should probably care about and spying and the fact that chinese imperialism is
00:42:08.580 on the march um yeah but i feel like a politician who wants to be in charge of the country and the
00:42:14.580 security apparatus of the country might could probably have an opinion on that and and it doesn't it
00:42:21.420 doesn't even boil down like i mean i would juxtapose uh or i would highlight at least the the problem of
00:42:26.500 sometimes ideological politicians like mayor jioti gondek who this weekend alone we literally saw
00:42:33.120 in the park where these protesters were told they're not allowed to be and a week earlier
00:42:38.620 city hall was allegedly booked even though no one was there and they tried to gather in this park and
00:42:43.020 they were told no one moved well a pro-palestinian protest erupted in this park and because these
00:42:48.200 protesters were now at city hall they actually just said it's fine you're allowed to stay
00:42:52.380 so you pro-ukrainian protests they're honking their horns they've got signs they've got amplifiers no
00:42:58.160 problem whatsoever here's a shot mocha got pro-palestinian protesters in the park uh blocking
00:43:04.760 the streets or sidewalks violating the injunction no problem whatsoever they talked to them a bit
00:43:09.760 there were no calls for genocide usually there's calls for genocide there yeah well you know the
00:43:14.640 funny thing is they they were actually chanting about trudeau they were actually chanting about how
00:43:18.860 trudeau is terrible so everyone was in agreement um but yeah i can hold hands with those people on
00:43:24.820 that one issue for sure the the the sort of shocking thing there is that that ideological
00:43:32.000 uneven application of the law that jioti gondek has advocated for enforced and is clearly part of and
00:43:39.720 along with young carlo and some of these other uh activist uh counselors um in the city of calgary
00:43:44.720 police have been enforcing that's extremely problematic but this issue what we need as
00:43:49.740 politicians maybe not with ideas or ideologies but with principles like a blanket application
00:43:55.640 of the law like genocide is bad or communist spying is bad and then you you evenly apply principles or
00:44:02.760 laws to limit that sort of activity um so i i don't want i don't actually want activist politicians
00:44:08.360 but i do want politicians who have principles and don't simply go wherever the wind blows them
00:44:13.800 um and say no no i'm against genocide and if the rest of the party says they're pro-genocide
00:44:17.740 i don't care i'm still going to be against genocide because it's wrong that that's what we need some
00:44:23.240 of and that's what we're that's what we see with pierre pauliever that's what we see with less than
00:44:26.880 lewis from babe or some of these other candidates they're actually sending out emails and saying
00:44:31.200 things um erin o'toole didn't like saying things he liked saying we have a plan and we're going to do
00:44:36.200 some stuff and he literally said things instead of saying anything of substance which was shocking
00:44:40.820 um speaking of which things and think things yeah and we have a plan in his hands let's let's go to
00:44:47.260 this politician saying things yeah let's go to a fun politician um we've got two clips of a politician
00:44:54.400 who not only says things but does things um ron desantis big ron um he was welcomed to ufc i think
00:45:03.520 was last night was it saturday night saturday i'm not sure saturday night um we've got a clip from
00:45:09.780 benny johnson you can hear the crowd roar when big ron walk walks in um and as benny johnson points
00:45:19.020 out this is exactly why democrats are just like well florida's a lost cause let's see what we can
00:45:24.380 do about dumping a bunch of people into texas um because freedom has really been an issue that
00:45:31.920 has been cross-partisan particularly in canada you see it all the time you go to these freedom
00:45:36.360 protests and you're like i don't know how all of these people get along but they are united on this
00:45:42.440 one issue like the granolas are there the truckers are there the rig hands are there the homeschoolers
00:45:49.100 are there the religious right is there um the um crystals cure cancer uh far left they're also there
00:45:57.440 and they're all marching for freedom they all just want to be left alone by the government which is
00:46:01.060 basically my entire political philosophy that's what big ron has turned florida into where he sees
00:46:10.340 okay parents flipped an entire state over parents rights and being treated like terrorists at the
00:46:18.600 school board meetings let's let's drive that issue home in florida that we're never going to have
00:46:24.880 uh a state that stomps on parents rights and um prevents parents from knowing what's happening
00:46:30.920 in the classroom so he brings a lot um basically the okay groomers law um uh then don't say gay law
00:46:38.520 if you listen to disney but people love bigger on for this you know it's like the media and like 10
00:46:44.800 democrats that are whipping up outrage on the internet but the people the voters they love big
00:46:50.400 ron this clip from ufc shows it and then there's an issue that's near and dear to your heart that
00:46:54.880 big ron is taking care of in florida also so let's roll the ufc clip first
00:46:58.960 like he's going into the royal rumble like yeah yeah he's getting in the ring in the left corner
00:47:16.740 governor governor yeah that's uh that's that's pretty wild and i'm you know what i mean i think
00:47:23.540 it's justin trudeau had his little phase of that for a while um whether it be alberta politics jason
00:47:31.300 kenny had it when he first got here that's kind of gone by the wayside but whether it be conservativism
00:47:35.740 provincially or federally i think conservatives in canada are overdue for being excited about someone
00:47:43.220 or something um or i don't know what it's going to be provincially it seems to be uh maybe we'll get
00:47:48.960 later i know we're tight on time but the pier probably ever come up later um but there there
00:47:53.220 seems to be some excitement among conservatives there seems to be uh i actually want i'm there's
00:47:58.520 these two people i want to vote for and i'm torn as opposed to who am i going to vote for i guess
00:48:03.060 yeah um it's exciting to see but you know let's pull up this next clip um that addresses a sort of
00:48:07.620 real fundamental issue um in society and often when people talk about government spending i kind of roll my
00:48:12.640 eyes but um this time i was at uh full attention because this is very important
00:48:17.000 engage with each other and that's why we're here today i'll be signing hb 765 uh which helps support
00:48:25.340 7065 which helps support fathers and encourage their active participation in their children's lives and
00:48:32.380 we had a great uh legislative uh leaders uh bring this across the finish line including speaker sprowls
00:48:38.700 uh so we want to thank them but they also not only are there good initiatives this comes with
00:48:43.180 funding uh that will help make those initiatives effective so this bill is tied to 70 million dollars
00:48:50.240 in funding uh to provide a wide array of family and youth support through our department of children
00:48:56.180 and families as well as our department of juvenile justice uh and they will be working very closely
00:49:01.680 uh to support fatherhood throughout our state um at department of children and family this bill
00:49:07.720 um is going to create a statewide awareness campaign to call attention to the importance of
00:49:13.480 responsible fatherhood and to equip fathers with resources to stay engaged in their children's lives
00:49:19.980 uh this will also provide funding uh grant opportunities for non-profit organizations such as coach
00:49:26.780 dungy's all pro dads organization uh that use evidence-based parenting education to help fathers stay
00:49:33.600 engaged and to connect with their children uh the bill also will support case managers who will help
00:49:39.420 fathers find employment transition from incarceration and to better manage their obligations uh the bill
00:49:46.160 also supports and creates mentorship programs at the department of juvenile justice for at-risk youth
00:49:51.840 um and through many of their existing programs djj helps young men develop social emotional life skills
00:49:57.360 that will prepare them for future success but this bill takes those programs to the next level
00:50:01.920 by increasing mentorship opportunities for at-risk youth uh for many of these youth uh their mentor may
00:50:08.940 be the only father figure that that they have so i look forward to seeing both yeah you know the the you
00:50:17.800 can you can speak to the statistics certainly in your perspective as a mother on the on the vitality go
00:50:22.600 let's start with that yeah get right into that if you don't mind i can i look at this two ways
00:50:26.880 because i grew up without a dad not because my dad left us um didn't want to be a dad my dad died when
00:50:33.300 i was quite young but before i was nine years old and so i was raised by a widow a single mom i saw how
00:50:39.640 hard it was for her and um luckily i i think i grew i reflect some of that work ethic but this thing that
00:50:48.920 ron de santis is doing this could be the single thing that could change society for the better
00:50:57.300 and when you think about the size of the investment it's actually not all that much money considering
00:51:02.080 how much money they spend on reproductive rights and we all know what that means um adjust i brought up
00:51:09.040 some statistics because um the biggest indicator of future criminality is whether or not you're from a
00:51:15.960 broken home and that is adjusted to race the whether you're white you're hispanic or you're black
00:51:23.300 it's all the same if you don't have a dad in the household and so many of the social programs over
00:51:30.160 the last 50 years have actually incentivized dads to be out of the home you get more welfare if dad's
00:51:36.480 out of the home you get more welfare if you have more kids and dad's out of the home which exacerbates
00:51:41.640 the problem we have to incentivize families to stay together divorce is far too easy um you know
00:51:49.400 and that is not to say that there aren't solutions for dangerous situations and you know where there's
00:51:56.860 harm in the family that's what i'm talking about i'm saying um you know where it's just like you know
00:52:01.920 what we had a good run i'm out of here that's just a fart families are disposable and the government
00:52:08.100 steps in to make it easy for families to be disposable and so i brought up some statistics
00:52:13.540 because this is always something that is near and dear to my heart as a mother but i'm sure it is for
00:52:17.480 you as a dad adam because you know the value of your your role in your child's life both your daughters
00:52:24.780 but also for little boys too um you know when you look at you see just the hyper sexualization of
00:52:31.160 young girls and you see oh that girl with dad issues for sure 100 you're just looking for male
00:52:36.420 attention you don't know the best way to get it because you're looking at what social media tells
00:52:41.260 you to do but an analysis of 50 separate studies of juvenile crime revealed that prevalence of
00:52:48.500 delinquency in broken homes was 10 to 15 higher than in intact homes in addition there were no
00:52:54.940 appreciable differences in the impact of broken homes between boys and girls or between black youths
00:53:01.360 and white youths and this is a statistic that has been known since at least 1991 a study of
00:53:06.200 adolescents convicted of homicide in adult court found that at the time of the crimes this is
00:53:12.240 astounding this is astounding dads figure things out stay in that home 42.9 percent of their parents
00:53:20.600 had never been married 29.5 one in three percent were divorced and 8.9 percent were separated
00:53:29.360 less than 20 percent of these children were from married parent households this is the value of
00:53:35.080 fathers this is the value of marriage boys who are fatherless from birth are over three times as
00:53:44.380 likely to go to jail as peers from intact families while boys who do not see their father depart the
00:53:51.840 family until they are 10 to 14 years old are 2.3 times as likely to go to jail as peers from intact
00:53:59.960 families so it's better to stay longer but still terrible terrible for your children if you leave the
00:54:05.820 house yeah one last one states with lower percentage of single parent families on average had lower rates
00:54:13.640 of juvenile crime state by state analysis indicated that in general a 10 percent increase in the number of
00:54:19.920 children living in single parent homes including divorces accompanied a 17 percent increase in
00:54:27.160 juvenile crime and i could read these statistics all day every single statistic across the board says
00:54:34.100 get married before you have kids and stay married if you want to give your kids a fighting chance in
00:54:41.240 this world and it is particularly important for kids in lower socioeconomic demographics
00:54:48.480 you know we we see firsthand i for many people who don't know i was a social worker for a time
00:54:56.060 um i also worked in a church and dealt with some sort of youth ministry stuff so you encounter
00:54:59.900 some of these things and the extent to which particularly as a social worker because i dealt with some
00:55:04.500 extremely difficult circumstances these children universally need masculinity and femininity to mirror in their
00:55:13.080 society society very pro woman very anti-man so you have society telling men they're worthless and they're not
00:55:19.660 any good and they're what's wrong with the world and everything that's terrible with the world it's bogus
00:55:23.300 don't buy it for a second masculinity and femininity are equally essential for children girls learn what to
00:55:30.540 expect from men and what to be like from their mothers and it goes the other way boys learn what to be like from
00:55:35.460 their dads and what to expect and how to be treated from women and they mirror those behaviors throughout
00:55:40.440 their entire life plain and simple fatherlessness is one of the biggest issues in society and when i was
00:55:46.000 a social worker you saw these kids prone to outbursts prone to aggressive sexualization of women
00:55:51.760 and when you looked at their lives they had a female teacher they went to the group home with all female
00:55:56.920 staff they had no male models when i show up and i take them out and i play football with them
00:56:02.860 you talk about superhero movies or you do some masculine type activity we literally saw adverse
00:56:09.520 behavior within those contexts evaporate and you'd leave the area because you'd be sent on to another
00:56:14.920 job and the behaviors would rematerialize and occur once again to all the men out there
00:56:21.200 sometimes one of these sort of cliches we hear is that men just have to get it done we just have to stick
00:56:27.740 it through that very often results in sort of mental illness depression all these issues but
00:56:32.320 don't let society tell you that that persistence that resiliency to stick it through and get things
00:56:37.700 done is a bad thing it isn't it is masculine and it is good and when it's hard with the family when
00:56:43.780 it's hard having kids when it's hard with your wife whatever those circumstances may be just be a man
00:56:51.200 do the right thing and ultimately in the short term it may be difficult there may be challenges but in
00:56:57.940 the long term what you are doing is right and that will pay off both as far as your own personal mental
00:57:02.900 health but as far as society broadly as well society needs dad society needs father society
00:57:10.060 needs positive masculinity to mirror or else society falls apart the family is the building block of
00:57:17.240 society as we saw the family come under attack sexuality be destroyed the prolific implementation of
00:57:25.240 abortion policies um a number of other issues that we don't need to necessarily get into but as we saw
00:57:31.160 all those progressive talking points forced into the family we saw the family eroded we saw the building
00:57:36.860 block of society eroded and we are now seeing the inevitable consequence that has been prophesized by
00:57:42.940 everyone from football the sixth to onward yeah we've seen everything that they said was going to happen
00:57:48.700 happen we we've witnessed it firsthand the building block of society was attacked it is crumbling
00:57:54.360 and therefore society is inevitably crumbling we need to bring fathers back into the home
00:57:59.160 we need to have those masculine and feminine virtues mirrored within the society and that can be done in
00:58:05.480 your case a mother can embody those traits but it's difficult it's not the innate natural capacity
00:58:11.740 men are a certain way women are a certain way they mirror those things and that is needed for society
00:58:17.600 to carry on that's needed for family to carry on and before people say that i'm coming from a position
00:58:22.740 of privilege on this or whatever um like i said i was raised by a widow a rural widow we struggled all
00:58:31.120 the time thank god we had a farm um but i also became a single mother at 19 to my son and so i i've lived both
00:58:39.480 sides of this and i can tell you through my lived experience i was a child of married parents and then
00:58:46.640 all of a sudden i wasn't and i was a single mother trying to raise my son alone and then i wasn't then
00:58:53.000 i was a mother of three and married so i can tell you i've walked on both sides of this and it is always
00:58:58.840 better for you your children for society that you were married and raising those kids with a mom
00:59:07.080 and a dad i i can tell you with absolute confidence and through my own experience and that is i promise
00:59:15.440 you it is the case and you know you've addressed the the dad side of this but let me address the mom
00:59:20.940 side of this we are told as women and it is a cruel cruel lie that kids and women pay the price for
00:59:29.240 that you can have it all you can be a single mom and you can have everything you want and you can
00:59:33.720 you know you can work you can have a career and you won't suffer for it and neither will your children
00:59:39.240 but everybody suffers you're half-assing your whole day um you're exhausted and you know who suffers the
00:59:47.000 most your kid because somebody else is raising him while you're working or you're struggling to get
00:59:53.060 him from here to there you don't have the time to give your child because you're not able to give that
00:59:59.780 time to your child because you're just struggling to meet your needs every single day
01:00:02.960 and i mean one last point on this if you don't mind please no i i don't care if you're elon musk
01:00:10.380 or bill gates or whoever the heck you are whatever you've built in the world i don't care if you're
01:00:15.180 julius caesar or alexander the great literally the the net contribution of everything you're you've done
01:00:22.200 amounts to nothing compared to a mother birthing and raising a child like participating in that miracle
01:00:28.860 of life trumps any sort of material creation within this world so society's also told women the lie
01:00:36.580 that what matters is sort of traditional masculine accomplishment and that the miraculous things that
01:00:43.980 women can do that men cannot do are not valuable that's nonsense and that's a lie and as a dad
01:00:50.500 i want to say thanks to all the mothers out there because uh don't buy the lies
01:00:53.860 all righty now that we've had uh this meeting of the mom and dad appreciation committee uh we should
01:01:02.060 get to uh some of our chats we've got a few here um we've got one from cuba bound gives us five
01:01:09.920 libraries and says henshaw is guilty of perjury if she doesn't face consequences for that there's no real
01:01:16.320 law in this country oh she'll just say well based on the information that i had or that's really been
01:01:22.320 the story of her testimonials based on the information that we had at the time this is why
01:01:27.760 i made that decision and you know while simultaneously telling everybody else maybe we should try it this
01:01:34.380 way because it's not going to work out the way that you say it is she was accusing those people of
01:01:38.760 being naysayers and unbelievers or non-believers or whatever religious terminology she used to describe
01:01:44.060 people who are like maybe there's a different way to do things here as it turns out all the people
01:01:47.820 that she maligned as naysayers they were actually right they got it right and she got it wrong yeah
01:01:53.420 us me yeah five bucks from fraser mcburnie cap blocks fully engaged good to see fraser uh when will
01:02:01.760 you be fed up with the legacy media uh cp lib ndp they will they have indebted us to over a trillion
01:02:11.400 dollars when will you be fed up with the legacy media they have lied misled you and they are the
01:02:17.380 voice of the government turn to the bright side and place your vote with the parties turn off the tv
01:02:24.460 uh c1 cis gives us a buck charay will turn will turn the conservative party of canada
01:02:32.180 into the communist party of china don't worry it's just a small change nobody will notice
01:02:37.440 all right uh is that everything olivia is those all of our chats
01:02:42.540 um by the way everybody it was olivia's birthday today and i forgot to mention her happy birthday
01:02:49.520 off the top of the show um so um yes sorry about that i was going to suggest that if you wanted to
01:02:55.720 send birthday wishes to olivia um you could do that in the form of a paid chat but i completely
01:03:01.980 forgotten i'm really sorry olivia please accept my apologies happy birthday
01:03:06.160 um i think that's everything um i think we're all caught up adam um we're only four minutes past so
01:03:16.900 that's uh you know frankly a miracle uh thanks thanks for co-hosting with me thank you olivia and
01:03:23.800 i'm sorry i forgot about your birthday uh thank you to everybody behind the scenes in the office and
01:03:29.600 working remotely who work really hard to bring you the news and in particular this show to let you
01:03:34.660 know that we're on the air and we're on all these different platforms um thank you um to everybody
01:03:39.400 who pitched in a little bit to keep the lights on um we'll never take a penny from justin trudeau
01:03:43.520 and so we rely on the support of people like you at home um uh i think i'm back in the big no i'm not
01:03:50.020 i'm busy tomorrow i'm on a rare like half a sort of a day off tomorrow um on another matter yeah i know
01:03:56.380 it's weird so i think david is co-hosting with nat tomorrow so if you want to watch them yeah that'll
01:04:03.080 be fun um it'll be like boomers versus uh zoomers that'll be kind of fun um and uh as david menzies
01:04:11.820 always says everybody stay sane do you think that the government is going to try to stop crypto
01:04:21.500 or they're in on it i think various governments various governments already have been trying to
01:04:26.820 stop it um chinese government has put in numerous attempted bans over the years from bitcoin itself
01:04:32.320 to the exchanges to right now with the mining ban i know other governments such as pakistan have
01:04:38.640 tried to crack down on it i think india as well a couple years ago if i remember correctly so
01:04:43.720 governments are not going to stop messing with it um there are going to be various proposals to
01:04:49.240 regulate it in different ways um i don't think western nations are going to try to go the
01:04:54.780 the the way of outright banning it i think they already know that that's not possible but i think
01:05:00.720 they're certainly going to try to regulate it in various ways and make sure they make sure they get
01:05:06.040 their uh tax payments and whatever
01:05:08.180 their uh tax payments and whatever
01:05:08.200 their uh tax payments and whatever