Rebel News Podcast - June 09, 2023


DAILY Roundup | Alberta's new cabinet, NDP backs trans athletes, Trump indicted (again)


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 11 minutes

Words per Minute

184.65718

Word Count

13,117

Sentence Count

9

Misogynist Sentences

31

Hate Speech Sentences

12


Summary

Sheila Gunn-Reed and Adam Sos discuss who's driving the car, who's in charge, and who's not. Plus, Sheila and Adam discuss the new leadership of the United Conservative Party of Canada, and what it means for the future of the party.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Adam go I remember we said you're hosting today no you said you want to do the nuts and bolts
00:00:19.860 right off the bat okay well hello everybody and welcome to the rebel news daily roundup
00:00:27.160 and an argument machine between Sheila and Adam about who's driving the car today uh this is
00:00:33.980 where we talk he's driving I guess I'll do the nuts and bolts so this is where we talk about the
00:00:39.900 news of the day unscripted and you know what to be honest with you we just had a meeting about who's
00:00:44.720 doing what about 10 minutes ago we still forgot um and normally the show is hosted by David Menzies
00:00:52.180 but on Friday it's a special sort of Alberta or Western focused show um and it's hosted by myself
00:00:58.580 Sheila Gunn-Reed and my friend and colleague Adam Sos in Calgary and currently we're streaming on
00:01:05.920 YouTube Rumble Odyssey and Getter we're also on Locals.com we have a Locals community there if
00:01:13.980 you'd like to join us you'll get access to all of our paywall content and other behind the scenes
00:01:18.780 sort of stuff as well as all of our free stuff so that's one way that you can support us if you're
00:01:22.940 watching us on the censorship platform of YouTube another way that you can support us is by moving
00:01:27.640 your viewership over to a less censorious platform like Rumble or Odyssey on Rumble and support the
00:01:35.320 work that we do here at Rebel News by leaving us a paid chat called the Rumble Rant um if you leave
00:01:40.500 us one of those we'll do our best to address your question query comment story idea towards the end of
00:01:45.040 the show or you know whenever one of our producers butts in and says you know what we got a bunch you
00:01:49.200 guys should talk about these now or on Odyssey uh there's a couple different ways you can support us
00:01:54.000 on Odyssey they have uh their own cryptocurrency called the library but also you can do it in
00:01:58.500 regular old fiat currency there too and those are called hyper chat so if you leave us a hyper chat
00:02:03.220 we'll do our best to address those on air live so it's a great way to support us while taking the show
00:02:08.700 in your own direction it's sort of the democratization of the news so I think that's it
00:02:12.880 I'm going to turn everything over to Adam now if that's the plan take it away Adam that is the
00:02:19.120 plan discussed 10 minutes ago uh wonderful obviously so much good news to get to today
00:02:24.880 happy to have you here Sheila um I guess just right off the bat I do want to let folks know
00:02:29.380 um that uh Danielle Smith uh newly minted and now with a clear mandate um the first time she was
00:02:36.260 actually elected as the leader herself um not solely by the party but by the province um both in
00:02:42.440 terms of seats and the popular vote set today to uh announce a cabinet um so this will be a
00:02:48.880 massive uh sort of determining factor in how this party is going to move forward and what her
00:02:54.700 leadership will look like a great deal of the leadership core in cabinet positions um that were
00:02:59.880 left with her um they were basically Kenny holdovers um not to say that they were loyal to
00:03:05.340 Kenny and and opposed to Daniel Smith but some of that legacy definitely carried on a number of
00:03:11.000 those sort of key figures whether it be Tyler Shandro, Jason Copping, Casey Maddu, all people in
00:03:15.960 critical ministerial positions um those people are now no longer part of government uh they were they
00:03:21.660 were uh unsuccessful in their bid for re-election by the narrowest of margins we're now learning um
00:03:27.240 it remains to be seen if a couple of those in the case of Tyler Shandro are going to be judicially
00:03:33.220 reviewed but it seems like on recount the the margins extended a bit so um it's looking like
00:03:38.520 uh Daniel Smith will have a largely new crop of people to pull from um some interesting key figures
00:03:44.040 who've been at the sort of forefront of her campaigning uh whether they be former leadership
00:03:49.020 candidates or just people who've been intimately involved um we're going to bring you the results
00:03:53.980 we won't cut to it can be a bit tedious they do a sort of formal swearing in for everybody but if
00:03:58.040 if that announcement does become available let you know uh but is there anything you're watching
00:04:01.780 closely Sheila? Yeah I'm watching health finance and justice which are always like the big
00:04:06.560 three um yeah in Alberta but I think generally speaking in other provinces so who will be the
00:04:12.980 health minister who will be at finance and who will be at justice and in our meeting that we were
00:04:16.860 where I forgot what I was supposed to be doing when the show kicked off um you know I had sort of
00:04:24.680 given my choice not my choices but whom I think uh might be on Daniel Smith's radar um and given their
00:04:32.400 high profile during the campaign so you know if the campaign announcement was not being made by
00:04:37.400 Daniel Smith it was really being made by Brian Jean or Rebecca Schultz and so um I I suspect that Brian
00:04:46.680 Jean might end up at finance he's you know he had been a wild rose leader he had been a challenger um
00:04:53.940 for the UCP leadership twice but he's very likable he's well liked people trust him um he's sort of
00:05:02.780 a fixture within the party and I can see him at finance but you had him at health
00:05:08.980 yeah you know he's a very successful businessman so I think finance makes perfect sense um but I know
00:05:15.640 with the history with what happened with his son with the fact that he is a very likable guy and he's
00:05:21.120 very passionate on that issue I could see that being a clear fit but I mean he'd be equally as
00:05:25.420 capable in uh in either position I just think for for a province that the health care system is
00:05:31.080 reeling um I think the NDP was a bit closer than they'd like and lots of people that was concerns on
00:05:36.080 NDP uh promises on health care not that I think they would have delivered them but someone like
00:05:40.820 someone very likable like Brian Jean tackling that I think that would be good um and then one of the
00:05:45.260 other high profile people we talked about Rebecca Schultz um well she's currently on municipal affairs
00:05:49.700 she's been talking about arena deals a lot she's very sort of invested in sort of the the financials
00:05:55.120 that that seem to resonate within a city like Calgary so having her on an important uh portfolio
00:06:00.480 like uh like finance or health care for that matter but finance I think there's a fit there but those
00:06:05.300 two it could almost be switched I could see that going either way the one thing we did agree upon in
00:06:09.660 our meeting and I think we'll both be kind of surprised if it isn't the case is that Mike Ellis who
00:06:13.960 is public emergencies and safety um did some really sort of powerful stuff we had the opportunity to speak to
00:06:19.060 him during our Rebecca Schultz as well but uh during our live stream coverage and as well as after that
00:06:23.700 addictions announcement but Mike Ellis um a minister already a former cop he seems just just sort of
00:06:30.660 earmarked for this justice uh position so it'll be interesting now we could be wrong about all of this and
00:06:35.460 it could completely flip the script on us but I think those three are probably reasonably good bets for
00:06:40.360 some high profile ones um but it could be interesting another name that is out there uh someone like Todd
00:06:44.900 Lohan um who would be sort of a significant and I'm not I'm not necessarily sure where he would go
00:06:51.220 but to bring him into a significant position after he was ejected by Kenny would be sort of a repudiation
00:06:56.100 of that and uh an affirmation of like this is a big tent party all voices will be tolerated uh included
00:07:02.080 and considered so that that would be an interesting play as well I think yeah you know I see Todd Lohan
00:07:07.540 at environment I think they probably want to uh shuffle the remaining Nixon out of that file um just
00:07:15.160 because of the stigma attached to him uh being such a Kenny Kenny loyalist being Sky Palace I see Todd Lohan
00:07:21.720 at environment um but and because of just where he is you know he lives in a a forestry based riding so
00:07:31.680 I mean I think he's probably the right fit for the job I also think we might see some um cabinet
00:07:39.460 ministers come from in and around the Edmonton area but not of course in the Edmonton area because
00:07:44.420 it's a sea of orange in Edmonton but I think you might see maybe Jackie Armstrong Holmenek um or
00:07:52.580 or one of the other sort of somebody from the suburbs given uh yeah like municipal affairs where
00:08:01.380 they're dealing directly with the cities I see something like that sort of to let the voters
00:08:07.300 of Edmonton know that we have not forgotten about you that you're not going to be excluded from
00:08:11.780 consideration in cabinet and I think it would be interesting if one of maybe some one of the
00:08:16.480 young new faces uh or one of the people who may be been on the backbench just some of the young
00:08:20.880 people who've been working incredibly hard are very well liked um get some surprise positions but
00:08:26.420 again in 20-30 minutes for all we know they could start announcing this stuff we don't have an
00:08:30.880 exact timeline for when so let's move on to some yeah let's move on one more story I want to talk
00:08:37.360 about on the Alberta front before we move on I just in the 10 minutes between we had that meeting and
00:08:42.340 then I forgot what I was doing um I one of the reasons I was looking at this is because it was
00:08:47.220 announced this morning according to stats can that Canada as a nation lost 17,000 jobs a little over
00:08:57.060 17,000 jobs in nine like in the first decline this is the first time the jobs numbers have fallen in
00:09:04.200 nine months but wouldn't you know it Alberta our jobless rate shrank in May so while the rest of
00:09:12.960 the country is dropping jobs and the unemployment rate is going up things continue to get better and
00:09:18.200 better here in Alberta and so if you were on the fence about casting that ballot for the UCP voters at
00:09:23.880 home know that you did the right thing because you can see that Alberta is completely divergent
00:09:29.940 from the rest of the country on so many issues on issues of economy on issues of job creation on
00:09:36.000 public safety addiction we're doing things different here and it's manifesting in good things every single
00:09:41.480 day you know when you have a common sense approach and you reject the sort of woke politics and
00:09:47.040 everything uh and keep in mind this this all considering the fact that Danielle Smith is very much a
00:09:51.940 progressive personally but she doesn't need that to be at the forefront of every political decision
00:09:57.480 she wants to make political decisions it would seem that'll benefit everybody more jobs are good for
00:10:02.580 you it doesn't matter if you're gay straight Sikh Muslim Christian a better economy better jobs better
00:10:07.960 opportunities well that helps just about everybody um I did want to get into another Alberta story here
00:10:13.280 as well and it's on the fire it's on the wildfire front this is a story that's obviously affected
00:10:18.180 you personally but you know it's absolutely wild to see I was hoping this would end during the campaign
00:10:23.780 I figured the NDP would sort of launch their attacks lose their minds and then well that strategy
00:10:29.580 didn't work let's let's move on and try and be a little more constructive and practical no that's not
00:10:34.400 the case um Smith pledges arson investigation into 175 wildfires with no known cause um yeah this is
00:10:42.220 pretty much I could read here but it basically boils down to them hiring an arson investigator from
00:10:47.260 outside the province um following an unseasonably an early destructive wildfire season this is the
00:10:53.320 most non-contentious self-evident reasonable thing that anyone could ever do there if you have a
00:11:01.700 problem with this you're an unhinged lunatic uh cue the NDP um they've uh numerous outlets actually
00:11:08.880 CTV went off about um how Alberta Premier is downplaying the links between wildfires and climate change
00:11:15.220 and then and then uh Nagwan Elganid um the newly barely elected um I think she what's the recount
00:11:22.620 at now it's like like still less than 100 or 100 something she defeated Whitney yeah she defeated
00:11:28.700 Whitney Isik um and so she says uh on Twitter here step one is uh step one in problem solving is
00:11:35.020 defining the problem climate change is the challenge we need to solve here but circulating arson social
00:11:40.260 media conspiracy isn't going to address climate or wildfires the world is on climate the world is in
00:11:46.660 the climate mitigation and building resiliency phase let's get to work so she's like they ask her is this
00:11:52.580 from from climate change she doesn't say no she's like well it was an unseasonably high situation there
00:11:59.680 are a bunch of reports of arson out there um let's let's get to the bottom of this and figure out what's
00:12:04.440 actually happening here and they're accusing her of peddling conspiracy theories saying that this is
00:12:09.900 climate change is a conspiracy theory saying we're going to hire investigators to figure it out
00:12:14.160 is rational sensibility I just imagine being the arsonist and and getting charged and going to court
00:12:24.540 and then telling the judge oh no no your honor Justin Trudeau and literally every progressive in the
00:12:30.060 country said it could not have been me and my matches and my uh gasoline it was actually climate
00:12:37.480 change it was the climate gods Sheila's SUV made them angry and so uh fire started yeah you're right
00:12:45.900 to say that this is climate change and not arson is the real conspiracy theory here to say that my SUV
00:12:52.920 somehow did so much damage to the weather it told the climate gods not to have it rain in April and May
00:13:01.460 um and to even go back further we didn't have a big snowpack my SUV did that not the guy with the
00:13:09.420 matches or not the guy you know throwing his cigarette butt out the window it wasn't that guy
00:13:14.080 it was all those other things that had to happen for these fires to burn are these people insane and you
00:13:21.020 know what I really like yesterday I did American media hits all day long because they're looking
00:13:25.860 for someone who's not crazy to talk about the fires and you know being from Alberta and northern Alberta
00:13:31.600 and then this year so close to where the fires were um I can speak to this with a level of experience
00:13:37.420 maybe not expertise but it's fascinating to see people now rediscovering the cycles of nature right
00:13:47.500 like you're from Alberta I'm from Alberta we get smoke plumes every single year almost especially
00:13:53.160 where I am because I live like right where the grasslands crashes into the boreal which is another
00:13:57.960 point we're one third forested by the boreal which is like the world's largest continuous forest so of
00:14:04.900 course we're gonna have we're gonna have forest fires but we have smoke plumes in that like orange
00:14:09.640 apocalyptic sky every year maybe every other year couple of times a year we get it from BC we get it from
00:14:15.960 northern Alberta we can get it from grass fires from the south it's not unusual for us the only reason
00:14:21.980 the environmentalists seem to care right now is because the smoke plume now is coming from the east
00:14:26.540 and it's ending up over one of the most populous regions in North America so it's frightening to the
00:14:32.740 people who are so out of touch with nature because they haven't been off concrete in 10 years so they
00:14:38.760 forget that nature exists and those of us who live within it this is just this is just spring right like this is
00:14:45.480 just spring sometimes you get floods sometimes you get fires but that's what it's like when you live
00:14:49.540 within nature people who live outside of nature are just experiencing it for the first time in a very
00:14:54.100 very long time and it's very scary for them yeah yeah there's definitely a disconnect for folks who
00:15:00.680 I mean I live in the city but I get out enough I experience it we're just on the outskirts of town
00:15:05.240 here so like they don't really get that and and within within nature there's cycles of destruction
00:15:11.620 rebirth it's normal when those cycles clash with your square concrete buildings within the city
00:15:17.320 and we're getting a little bit into romantic poetry here but there's it can be jarring but this is
00:15:23.600 normal life and I think there's also a bit of sort of selective memory people like I don't remember
00:15:28.520 there being fires before it's like well there was no in people's defense this year has been bad and
00:15:35.060 that's why the premier sanely enough is saying well we should look into this even in Calgary in the last
00:15:39.800 couple of days there's been fires and one of them they caught an arsonist almost immediately so
00:15:44.980 there there are cases of arson taking place this is this is also factual so um is there more than
00:15:51.000 usual very very probable it's been it's been hot it's been dry maybe yeah maybe but statistics show
00:15:59.240 that oh and this like this is it natural resources Canada data shows that there is there are actually
00:16:06.900 fewer forest fires burning fewer hectares of forest over the course of the last 10 or so years so
00:16:14.040 the fires are not getting worse you people are just noticing them down east that's the problem we
00:16:20.840 always have them they're not as bad as they have been in the past um you're just noticing them now
00:16:27.180 because the smoke is bothering you well and there's also the fact that very often if there's fires
00:16:32.420 during an election cycle it becomes a point of contention and they draw more attention to it
00:16:38.500 especially with the NDP's negative style attack ad uh the fact that they defunded a bunch of stuff but
00:16:43.740 but didn't want to talk about that and then talked about the one sort of elite repelling crew um they
00:16:48.140 they really wanted to make this seem like a negative failure um which is which is not great i mean you
00:16:53.580 saw quite the opposite with Brian Jane during the fires uh up north uh how everyone came together and
00:16:58.800 they were collaborating um so not great to see one thing i did want to touch on and this is actually
00:17:03.460 someone i've known for a long time he does a lot of storm chasing uh kyle brittan but he's a weather
00:17:08.040 guy storm chaser a bit of an expert whenever there's one of these stories i kind of send him a message to
00:17:12.680 get a bit of perspective on it um and there's been a video on social media sort of circulating of a bunch
00:17:18.600 of fires erupting at once and everyone's like oh clearly these are set by people um i believe it's the
00:17:23.400 quebec fires um one people probably couldn't set those fires in that sort of unison quite as fast
00:17:29.760 so very very clearly what's happening here is a storm front goes over lightning strikes in the ground
00:17:35.840 just because like hundreds of people have asked me what what is actually happening here and it can
00:17:39.400 start deep root fires or small fires that don't show up on satellite that storm then passes through
00:17:44.960 you can see it moving down to the right he's even provided a link so you can watch like the storm move
00:17:49.500 through on satellite and then after those high lightning strikes hit within that community and
00:17:53.960 clear out you see smoke start to emerge so just for folks out there i know there's there might be
00:17:58.840 like a a rush to sort of some confirmation bias and you want to see oh look this is a unified setting
00:18:04.880 thing this is very very normal this is what you would expect to see and i've known this guy for
00:18:09.920 probably 15 20 years so um we had an off the record sort of chat about this and then he went public
00:18:15.060 and sort of put out this statement um so yeah do do look do check out these resources they are available
00:18:21.100 you can check out um fire sources um causes of fires which ones are known which ones are unknown
00:18:27.480 current status on fires potential causes storm patterns that have gone through the area so the
00:18:32.560 information is very much out there and most of what we're seeing now pretty standardized except
00:18:37.540 the the alberta fires were a little bit bizarre in how early they are and where they were so i think
00:18:43.920 that that once again very rational to suggest hiring uh an investigator to take a look let's touch
00:18:50.640 really quickly we're on this sort of climate fire front on this greta thunberg thing um and then we
00:18:55.100 will uh well i think we're a little bit overdue for an ad break unless you had something else on the
00:18:59.160 fire front no i didn't really i just think that uh it's like to to suggest that the environmentalists
00:19:08.040 are that organized the environmentalists remember are largely urbanites they're not people with
00:19:13.940 survival skills they're not going to go out in the middle of the bush set their alarm clocks or their
00:19:21.780 watches to the exact same time or within this how a storm rolls through and then start lighting fires i
00:19:28.840 just don't think they're that smart organized or have that many survivalist skills like starting a fire
00:19:34.360 to stay alive i just don't think that they can do that yeah it when you see like a fire set not too
00:19:40.000 far from a town uh with within relatively close proximity to a church and the church is damaged
00:19:45.980 probably be suspicious complete middle of nowhere in a forest right after a lightning storm
00:19:50.740 probably from the lightning storm but who knows maybe we could be wrong um so greta we'll do this last
00:19:58.240 note then we'll jump to a commercial break here um school strike week 251 everything has changed
00:20:03.740 greta has changed the climate there's no more fires no more catastrophes today i graduate from
00:20:08.140 school which means i'll no longer be able to school strike for the climate uh this is the the last
00:20:14.200 school strike for me so i guess i have to write something on this day yada yada yada what what do
00:20:19.080 you make of this uh this uh school striking greta thunberg what was the joke from uh from ricky
00:20:26.380 gervais about uh missing more school than greta thunberg but uh it's uh it's it's i i what what
00:20:34.960 does it accomplish well and how is she graduating when she literally hasn't attended in well what is
00:20:40.900 it 250 some odd weeks like there's 52 weeks in a year like what has she been doing like five years is
00:20:49.040 that five years she's been at a school yeah by the way she's 20 she's 20 you know how old i was when i
00:20:56.640 graduated from high school 17 you want to know why because i went every day and she is 20 she should
00:21:04.400 be halfway through university i had a child i had like a one-year-old at that point and she's out there
00:21:09.580 holding a sign thinking she's a productive human being she hasn't gone to school in five years how
00:21:17.100 i just want to know how she graduated at all and what's this the let's see here the picture there's
00:21:23.020 a trans flag um every time every time i don't know what that has to do with the the climate but
00:21:32.120 anyways more greta being greta i still love that clip of ezra tracking her down and asking her
00:21:36.940 question did that sign say forests are not renewable well that's a shocker to me oh yeah it does it does
00:21:44.820 say that oh my gosh stop investing in our deaths expect resistance a little mushroom underneath me
00:21:52.000 feel like i should invest in their dad the guy on the left looks like the guy from the ucp protest with
00:21:58.600 the fedora from that clip ezra played the guy kneeling on the left pat king friday's future okay
00:22:07.620 all right well there's some characters there have fun looking through that um really quickly before we
00:22:12.400 jump to this ad break i do want to mention an incredible event that's coming up from canadians
00:22:17.380 for truth um i think you've had the opportunity probably to come out to one of their events but
00:22:21.620 it's uh thurn flurry a canadian icon olympian uh jamie sellay another canadian olympian incredible
00:22:27.840 champions but it's really great to see they sit down with very interesting guests they've had
00:22:32.400 uh tamara leach a number of other people all come down and they have conversations you're just not
00:22:37.840 likely to see in the mainstream media well coming up soon sunday june 18th i'm at the great eagle
00:22:43.920 event center in calgary alberta um they will be having sarah palin for their fire and ice show
00:22:49.880 presented by canadians for truth this is going to be an absolutely incredible event some great
00:22:54.840 conversations touching on on a number of issues it's really interesting whenever i go to one of
00:22:58.940 these events and i'm going to cover it um i'll sort of come up with like a topic or a theme that i want
00:23:03.660 to explore and it's always like my questions line up perfectly with where where they are so if you're
00:23:09.180 watching this if you enjoy these streams um if you're sort of a critical outside the box thinker
00:23:14.220 this is probably a perfect event for you so i do encourage you to go to canadiansfortruth.ca
00:23:21.020 find this event again uh sunday june 18th an evening with sarah palin fire and ice presented by
00:23:26.860 canadians for truth we're going to have a large contingency of rebels there so grab your tickets
00:23:30.980 coming down come say hey to us as well i'll be doing a report on location as well as an interview
00:23:35.480 with sarah palin um so you'll have an opportunity to maybe come on camera be in a rebel video so
00:23:40.000 that's always fun so yeah we're looking forward to seeing you down there i'm hoping this thing can
00:23:44.220 really sell out because they're bringing some more big guests i can't share all the details but
00:23:48.560 more big guests coming over the coming months uh really doing something big they've been so welcoming
00:23:54.040 so nice to us as well so i encourage you go to canadiansfortruth.ca check them out support
00:23:59.720 the important work that they're doing great to have some alternative uh sources out there sharing
00:24:04.280 different perspectives on some critical issues so yeah yeah and sarah palin was really one of the
00:24:10.520 first modern victims of cancel culture and she really came out the other side and the the ferocity
00:24:16.280 by which the feminist movement attacked her for being a traditional wife and mother but also
00:24:21.300 an accomplished woman as a governor um just you know if she were on the left she would have been a
00:24:27.540 darling a darling of the left but her her crime was being a woman of the right yeah wow so on that
00:24:35.040 let's jump to an overdue ad break and then we'll carry on right from there when we get back
00:24:39.160 canadians for truth proudly presents an evening with sarah palin former alaska governor and vice
00:24:45.740 presidential candidate sarah palin's remarkable journey and steadfast dedication to speaking up when
00:24:51.260 it's easier to stay silent are just a few of the many reasons you'll want to hear from her
00:24:56.000 this event will be hosted by olympians theo flurry and jamie soleil and promises to provide valuable
00:25:01.940 insights inspiration and entertainment get ready for an incredible evening sunday june 18th 2023 the show
00:25:10.120 starts at 7 p.m at the gray eagle event center in calgary alberta but act now because tickets for this
00:25:17.580 will not last
00:25:18.820 well back to the streets of calgary a safe metropolis one of the best places to live in calgary
00:25:47.560 in the world um that is until gott gondek took over and the streets became overrun with violent
00:25:54.600 crime it was really interesting talking recently to jerry forbes like the icon from cj 92 on just how
00:26:00.840 much over 25 years uh the city's changed it wasn't until a couple of years ago that it really was
00:26:06.860 borderline not safe to go to these train stations there was cops everywhere but they weren't situated
00:26:11.660 at these critical areas because frankly they didn't want to deal with this catch and release
00:26:16.080 judicial system that we have but it's gotten worse and worse and worse um i know daniel smith has made
00:26:21.100 efforts in the ucp government um to bring more authorities in to have marshals working to secure
00:26:26.220 these areas again pretty wild though now this is a little bit little bit back so so hopefully things
00:26:31.800 are starting to get better but a retired bull rider suffered a fractured skull in an attack
00:26:37.680 on a c-train platform i just want to put into context how tough bull riders are like cowboys are
00:26:48.100 like bull riders are nuts like like most cowboys will not get on a bull these people are so incredibly
00:26:53.960 courageous so for on the city streets hopping on the c-train to have a bull rider's skull cracked it
00:27:01.760 is absolutely unbelievable um is it the same way in edmonton is it just as bad like are things just
00:27:07.400 going downhill with progressive governments in these cities that are voting increasingly ndp shockingly
00:27:12.340 i think it might even be worse in edmonton viewers if you're watching might i suggest if you really want
00:27:18.360 a snippet of what's happening in downtown edmonton i avoid downtown edmonton like the plague i avoid
00:27:23.600 edmonton generally speaking but for sure downtown edmonton because i kind of like my car i don't want it
00:27:30.820 stolen i kind of like myself i don't need to be stabbed or harassed on the street but edmonton
00:27:37.240 the downtown core of edmonton is a place of just extreme human misery and the city has made it worse
00:27:45.480 because the city for a time was basically turning a blind eye to the fact that the lrt stations were
00:27:53.700 turned into just drug use centers in fact the the city government was making it worse because what
00:28:01.440 they were doing was they were handing out needles and and i don't know i was gonna say street and
00:28:07.600 doing it like municipal street ministry but that's the wrong word when you're encouraging people to
00:28:11.420 languish in their misery they were doing street outreach which involved giving away needles uh in the
00:28:18.860 lrt stations which is you know to use a phrase from the movies if you build it they will come
00:28:25.760 and so the drug addicts knew where you could get needles so that's where the drug addicts went which
00:28:29.260 made it even more difficult for people to just use the lrt station to go to work and a lot of if you live
00:28:36.080 and work downtown you need to use the lrt station to live and go to work because you also have a
00:28:40.600 municipal government that is waging a war on cars so so they don't build apartment buildings with
00:28:45.920 enough parking stalls and um you know they don't build um workplaces with enough parking stalls
00:28:52.200 because they want you to get onto the public transit system which is dangerous and dirty and disgusting
00:28:58.080 and um this is what it is so i i think calgary you might be playing catch-up now as adam pointed out
00:29:06.480 um daniel smith has deployed um additional policing resources to the downtown cores of both cities um
00:29:15.680 deploying sheriffs down there to try to make it a little bit safer for the law abiding to just
00:29:20.120 use the facilities that they're paying for um and i think it's starting to help i know that the
00:29:26.940 chinatown association the business association that's right near the downtown core they were
00:29:32.200 sort of outraged by the lack of resources being uh spent to keep their communities safe they work
00:29:38.300 really hard to to clean up their neighborhoods and the municipal government was sort of shoehorning
00:29:43.340 everybody down there not in their backyards we'll put it in the backyards of the chinese community so
00:29:48.440 um i'm happy to see danielle smith not only um take a strong stance against public safety in our
00:29:55.520 downtown course but to address the root cause and i hate to use that word since justin trudeau did
00:30:00.040 but the root cause of the addictions and gang problem down there which is really fueling just
00:30:05.640 the fact that it's increasingly dangerous just to go to work if you work in the downtown
00:30:10.440 so we we just have some breaking news here the cabinet has been uh set and surprising uh results
00:30:18.760 to be honest we were pretty much off the mark across the board um incredibly interest yeah some
00:30:23.880 incredibly interesting and potentially surprising uh positions for folks here uh the cabinet is 25
00:30:31.120 members a decrease from 27 i don't mind seeing that whatsoever and they did lose a couple spots so
00:30:37.720 that that kind of lines up um daniel smith will carry on obviously as premier and minister of
00:30:42.680 intergovernmental affairs um mike ellis will remain in the same position uh but he has also acquired the
00:30:48.740 deputy premier um add-on so that's that's a bit of emotion yeah that's awesome he's been great um and
00:30:55.020 then he'll carry on with minister of public safety and emergency services i i think that makes sense you
00:31:00.440 know he's so passionate about this particular project that it would have been a bit of a shame to lose
00:31:05.780 him on the addiction sort of recovery and emergency response front um so perhaps that relates to that
00:31:11.640 minister of advanced education rajansani that makes sense given the area that she's in uh close to the
00:31:17.360 university not quite the varsity district but i believe one of the closest regions to the varsity
00:31:21.460 district um so so that very much makes sense um i'm just i don't know if we want to go through
00:31:28.280 every single one of these i suppose we may as well for folks out there who are interested
00:31:31.000 minister of affordability minister of affordability and utilities um vice chair of treasury board
00:31:36.880 nathan newdorf um minister of agriculture and irrigation rj cigarettes and that makes sense
00:31:42.120 uh just south of the city minister of arts culture and status of women tanya fur no problem there um
00:31:49.080 minister of children and family services cyril turton um minister of education uh demetrius
00:31:56.060 nicolaitis you know that one actually makes sense that's one i was wondering about he was advanced
00:32:00.860 ed before yeah and he he's very passionate about education we're trying to set up an interview
00:32:06.600 just during the election time but he very much just talked about education he's a big proponent
00:32:11.120 um very intimately connected in the community here his family is a greek family restaurant
00:32:15.520 um so mr free speech on campus too he's pretty firm on free speech on campus so i'm happy that when he
00:32:22.160 was at advanced ed um you know he it took him a while to get there to speak out against some of the
00:32:28.180 cancel culture things that were happening against professors but he did eventually um so i'm not
00:32:33.920 mad to see him stay at education or be moved to education uh energy and minerals brian this one
00:32:41.600 makes perfect sense it does yeah i'm surprised to not see him in sort of a high high profile one
00:32:48.040 but to have someone like yeah to have someone like brian gene going all out on pushing this it is in a way
00:32:54.360 i think a commitment from this government to saying we're going to have one of our top people focused
00:32:59.500 on pushing this critical resource in this province i think it's a very pro oil yeah he's from fort mack
00:33:05.460 he's the right guy for the job for sure for sure yeah um minister of environment and protected areas
00:33:11.600 rebecca schultz very interesting um choice yeah yeah i i would have envisioned her somewhere higher
00:33:19.500 but again she she does do very well i think in the municipal regions perhaps voters who are concerned
00:33:25.800 about this um perhaps edmonton voters or people who are in the 20 margin areas to see someone with a
00:33:31.780 high profile on environment maybe that was the intention with this um you can't help it doesn't
00:33:39.840 you can't help but feel a little bit like both with brian gene and rebecca schultz being very much at
00:33:44.140 the forefront being former leadership candidates they aren't being thrust into a they're going to be the
00:33:49.260 next lead yeah i'll i'll add something to that just on the flip side those are two portfolios
00:33:55.520 wherein daniel smith has absolutely promised to take justin trudeau to task on issues of environment
00:34:01.240 and energy so she put her two um you know her two closest allies now they were leadership contenders
00:34:09.400 but it looks like they're very close allies to her and they're very competent that they were very
00:34:15.320 high profile during the campaign i think there were some of daniel smith's strongest campaigners
00:34:19.020 so to put them in portfolios where they are going to be challenging the feds every single day
00:34:26.580 looking at it now like looking at it it makes perfect sense these are not demotions these are
00:34:33.080 battleground ministries well and unlike putting someone into a like clear-cut promotional like
00:34:40.760 you're the minister of health education one of those really big ones justice finance whatever it may be
00:34:45.380 i think this is elevating these positions and saying where alberta is going to be moving forward
00:34:51.940 and i think it is also putting people on these contenders who's having both of these people
00:34:56.740 acting as the advocates on these fronts they're very much in line with what with what daniel smith
00:35:02.440 has said and she's received some pushback on some of her environmental talk but she has talked about it
00:35:08.600 very much in the sense of selling carbon capture bringing in green technologies unlike the feds who talk
00:35:13.980 about that stuff and do it at the at the sort of penalty or the reduction of oil i think daniel smith
00:35:19.580 wants brian gene going all out selling alberta oil around the world and then she also wants rebecca
00:35:24.260 schultz promoting our environmental opportunities and alternatives bringing in new business investment
00:35:29.440 in that way so very interesting along the lines of what we said before not necessarily environment but
00:35:35.720 forestry and parks todd lowen i think that makes sense this one is one i want to get your
00:35:40.580 i want to get your opinion on um adriana lagrange long time uh health moving or long time education
00:35:47.800 minister rather yeah education moving over to health what what do you make of that move
00:35:53.260 i think she's about to fight with the unions in the health like the health sector because she took
00:36:00.020 on the unions in education fair and fair and brought forward the uh government's agenda
00:36:06.620 and basically told the unions to stuff it we'll work with you if you want to work with us but if
00:36:12.040 you're not going to work with us then we're just going to do what we're going to do and i think this
00:36:16.760 signals a strong revamp of the health sector yeah yeah no i think that that probably makes sense i
00:36:23.540 didn't even consider that uh you're being the optimist today saying this is great and i'm like i don't
00:36:27.580 know about this um you know that that makes sense she had she was tackling union she was tackling an
00:36:32.000 institution standing up against constant pushback and say what you will she did so somewhat competently
00:36:38.400 certainly so to have her in this new position where they're going to be cleaning up making some
00:36:41.920 changes um i think that's good having someone with some gravitas and some experience uh that makes
00:36:47.480 perfect sense um muhammad yassine on minister of immigration and multiculturalism uh rick wilson carries
00:36:54.700 on minister of indigenous relations i think he's been doing a really good job yeah the lots of the
00:36:59.460 uh local communities and chiefs seem extremely happy um attending a number of ucp events um during the
00:37:05.300 campaigns uh minister of infrastructure pete guthrie minister of jobs economy and trade matt jones that's
00:37:12.160 a bit of an interesting one um i believe he was on affordability before so that would definitely be a
00:37:17.660 uh uh promotion uh for him i would imagine this is an interesting one uh minister of justice mickey
00:37:25.380 amory uh what do you make of that one i've had the opportunity to talk to him a few times but
00:37:30.000 that one i did not see coming no i don't know much about mickey amory actually and to my great shame
00:37:37.580 but uh you know he's calgary cross um he's young um yeah that's all i know and he's a former lawyer
00:37:47.500 so yeah i mean but most politicians are former lawyers or at least have a law degree um i don't
00:37:53.560 know much about him he was children services before if i recall correctly yeah that's right um and you
00:37:58.400 know what one thing you know what one thing that is i don't know sorry go ahead one thing that is
00:38:02.720 encouraging one thing that is encouraging there is when i did have the opportunity to interview him
00:38:07.920 i've spoken to him a couple times um but on on the children's sort of uh bureau within that ministry
00:38:15.280 um one of his big sort of advocacies was for sort of individual rights and and uh daycare is not to
00:38:22.720 be sort of brought into this envelope of like the the trudeau vision of a like sort of monolithic
00:38:29.400 state-funded thing um he wanted to advocate for individual rights responsibilities um and now that
00:38:36.400 doesn't directly carry over to the justice position i think it is promising to see that while given the
00:38:43.420 opportunity to address things on a different front he was advocating for individuals uh freedoms and a
00:38:48.980 little bit of subsidiarity something that i espouse for break it down to the sort of lower levels of
00:38:54.860 authority so that they can deal with things more locally but this would be i think go ahead sorry
00:39:00.980 no i was just gonna say he's another second generation mla too there's another second generation
00:39:05.780 mla on the list here um yeah yeah it's funny this is this i think this is the biggest promotion
00:39:12.000 yeah this is the biggest promotion by far i think this this catapults him onto the the spotlight i mean
00:39:18.860 winning in calgary was big this may be uh we need one of these strong voices within calgary um also with
00:39:25.120 all the talk of concern and criminality within this area um having him within calgary tackling justice
00:39:32.420 that's big um i'm sure i'll have the opportunity to speak with him soon about this because he's been
00:39:37.500 very open uh and willing to have conversations so that's an interesting one that's one that we're
00:39:42.200 gonna have to follow closely and react to uh great to see uh dan williams on that portfolio
00:39:48.000 of mental health and addiction um i did have the opportunity um he's one of those incredible
00:39:53.480 advocates um he spoke out in defense of students unvaccinated students who weren't being allowed
00:39:58.880 to return to school um he recently also issued a letter in defense of catholic education and the
00:40:04.920 merits thereof i interviewed him on that as well um dan williams is just a solid egg he's a good guy
00:40:09.700 um and he's compassionate i don't want to go too much in his personal story because i don't know how
00:40:14.640 much of it is shared publicly but he has some sort of personal testimony on this thing so i think he's
00:40:20.000 going to be a passionate advocate um rick mckiver i believe carries on on municipal affairs he and
00:40:25.760 schultz were both on that before as well so uh no change there he is one of the sort of instrumental
00:40:30.360 people whenever something can't quite get done especially like the ring road around calgary
00:40:34.500 rick mckiver was the guy to kind of put the pedal to the metal um jason nixon seniors community and
00:40:40.640 social services i believe that was rajan sani's position before so a little bit of a downshift reduced
00:40:46.820 profile i think i think some people might have expected him not to be in a seat in one of these
00:40:54.720 cabinet or ministerial positions at all but a bit of a reduction there that should get some people
00:40:59.280 off his back um minister of service uh for alberta and red tape reduction dale nally um naley nally
00:41:08.060 i think it's nally um minister of technology and innovation nate glubish that's a good fit
00:41:12.400 um minister of tourism and sport joseph scow he can easily dunk so that's a perfect fit yeah i was
00:41:18.860 gonna say he's like the biggest man in all of politics in canada yeah well you can hop on his
00:41:24.760 shoulders and get a good view so that's a perfect fit i'm joking he's the best he's always willing
00:41:28.480 to join us but almost every interview i do both dan williams and joseph scow are like so tall i'm a
00:41:34.400 tall guy i'm six two they're the only people i have to like angle the camera like upwards i know
00:41:39.380 kind of get the interview from underneath you know how far i'd have to back the camera up just to get
00:41:43.940 all of us in the frame because i'm down here and they're like way up there i interviewed schultz
00:41:49.540 right before him and it was like down to completely up it was it was a complete flip um devon drasheen
00:41:57.400 on uh economic corridors and transportation and then here's an interesting one president of treasury
00:42:04.580 board and minister of finance nate finance yeah you know what though he's following in his dad's
00:42:10.140 footsteps um who his dad doug who was also the finance minister here in alberta back in the old
00:42:19.140 pc days yeah interesting um another couple key positions shane gets in chief whip um joseph scow
00:42:27.660 house leader that's that's awesome um treasury board members i don't know if we need to go through all
00:42:32.660 these people probably don't care very much but uh treasury treasury board members cabinet policy
00:42:37.080 committees all that good stuff um so there will be an alberta first uh policy committee uh building
00:42:42.820 communities policy committee um economic diversification policy committee and a public
00:42:48.420 safety and wellness policy committee so tackling those critical issues there head on so uh there's
00:42:55.060 nothing there that upsets me there's some definitely that amy one's going to be interesting he's a very
00:42:59.020 competent guy as you mentioned a lawyer um and he seems to be right on some issues so that that'll be
00:43:04.480 interesting to see is anything else i think too with uh amory he doesn't have any baggage i think you
00:43:10.700 need a justice minister who doesn't bring with him any baggage uh not particularly a kenny loyalist
00:43:16.240 not particularly a smith loyalist um not a lot of lockdown baggage tied to him so i think that's maybe
00:43:24.040 who exactly you need well lagrange kind of is the is the one really nixon kind of but not quite so i
00:43:31.620 think lagrange is the only really really big kenny holdover massive name who's in a massively critical
00:43:36.860 position still yeah but i think she's poised to fight with the unions which yeah i can't wait to
00:43:44.220 see what happens next yeah well it's it's good to see i i think you don't want complete turnover
00:43:49.900 because that that sort of sows some seeds of disruption to have some of the people still involved
00:43:55.220 but still new voices coming in i think that's good for the party so that's healthy um i think
00:44:00.320 probably what we'll do now we'll jump to one last ad break then we'll fly through the rest of our
00:44:04.460 stories get to some of your rumble rants chats whatever they may be and we'll call it a day so
00:44:09.040 let's jump to a quick ad break now and we'll get back to these stories right after perfect
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00:45:36.640 to get into um some of the uh pride month antics that we are seeing uh we'll start with the higgs
00:45:49.140 government faces caucus revolt over changes to lgbtq school policy in new brunswick um you know this
00:45:58.220 story for me the the core of the sort of change here that's receiving some backlash is that students
00:46:03.820 under 16 who identify as trans or non-binary non-binary rather won't be able to officially
00:46:09.700 change their names or pronouns in school without parental consult uh yeah good this is this is the
00:46:16.640 norm for all of society and all of culture forever until the last six minutes um the the outrage over
00:46:24.580 this of course your children can't change their genders or do anything they can't go on a field trip
00:46:29.180 they can't watch a pg rated movie without getting permission uh this this is insane to think that
00:46:35.880 this one thing is exempt everything else you need permission form but this one thing is absolutely
00:46:41.760 exempt and unquestioning and people are acting as though this is a change to the law this is a rebuttal
00:46:48.520 to a new fangled thought process whereby kids under 16 can have private relationships with their teachers
00:46:55.760 at schools and not keep their parents informed on something as critical as changing their gender
00:47:01.420 identity um this is so sick that this has become normalized this sort of grooming behavior where
00:47:08.580 teachers this is literally because we i used to work in a church we do a whole bunch of training about
00:47:13.520 what to watch for as grooming behavior and the number one indicator is people like teachers or
00:47:19.320 whether it be church workers teachers camp workers your local drag library story hour performer
00:47:24.780 one of the key things you look for is is targeting children and setting up sort of special agreements of
00:47:31.440 communications away from the parents because the second you establish that we've got our own little
00:47:36.560 secret i'm the one not your parent that is basically the inroad that's how people groom i'm not calling
00:47:42.440 anyone here groomers specifically but i'm saying 100 100 this is your textbook grooming behavior
00:47:48.740 now all of a sudden in the course of a couple years we've gotten to the point where we're like
00:47:52.880 yeah no i'm outraged that they want the parents to know what's going on with their kids in the school
00:47:57.740 this is completely backwards i think that this outrage is manufactured or at least or if not it's
00:48:03.120 completely diluted no you're an absolute weirdo if you think you're gonna have a secret with my child
00:48:09.220 without me knowing i know everything and if i don't know everything i'm damn sure gonna find out
00:48:14.440 because that's my job as a parent no unrelated adult i don't care if you have access to my kids
00:48:19.440 seven hours a day actually i care extra if you have access to my kids seven hours a day without me
00:48:24.960 being there i want to know what's happening and you're not going to have secrets with my kid and if
00:48:30.680 you think you're going to have secrets with my kid then now we've got a problem but this is simply as
00:48:36.540 adam you rightly point out a reaffirmation of normalcy of normal appropriate behavior of adults
00:48:43.880 who are in positions of authority and power over other people's children you don't get to change
00:48:49.840 my child's gender without me knowing what you don't get to change my child's gender whether i know it or
00:48:55.940 not that's not something that can happen that's biologically not real but to think that i don't have
00:49:01.660 any input in any of this besides just the stomping all over parents rights and the incompatibility with
00:49:09.140 biological reality we know that kids who are struggling with gender identity whether because
00:49:17.440 they just struggle with gender identity or they've been infected with some sort of social contagion
00:49:22.020 by an activist teacher or tiktok or whatever we know that those kids are at an increased
00:49:30.220 probability of suicidality so either they will try to take their own lives they will have suicidal
00:49:37.760 ideations self-harm or they may actually succeed in taking their own lives because those things go
00:49:44.600 hand in hand so it is a great irresponsibility for these teachers to not inform oh my god am i frozen
00:49:55.020 okay it's a great irresponsibility for these teachers to not inform the parents that the kids
00:50:00.620 are struggling with their gender identity because parents need to look out for suicidality and if
00:50:06.100 you're keeping this secret this is a secret that could cost a child their life so if you care about
00:50:10.620 the health and safety of children you must inform parents every step of the way besides the fact that
00:50:16.820 it is completely normal for parents to know what their kids are doing if it like let's let's concede
00:50:22.000 their argument this is about safety okay perfect then you must inform the parents and there's also
00:50:27.940 the fact that the like breakdown of a natural and healthy relationship with your parents contributes
00:50:33.140 to that if if the concern here is about safety well if the concern is say the child is going to be
00:50:40.040 hurt when they get home or they're going to be abused when they get home well that would be a matter
00:50:44.060 for social services and there are metrics in place to tackle those sorts of problems so that is not what
00:50:49.640 this is addressing whatsoever but i i had a conversation actually with a principal um and they
00:50:55.500 the the school had a child who was identifying as trans now they actually uh would would come to youth
00:51:01.800 group and they'd sort of feel included and loved and all that stuff was all good um but the principal
00:51:06.480 was like oh we don't want to challenge and we don't want to share any information with the parents or
00:51:09.840 anything like that and the fact is for children who are being encouraged push or or sort of at least
00:51:16.760 facilitated towards this outlet before they're in a mental capacity before they've developed enough
00:51:22.040 to make it make an informed decision as you said the suicidal ideation is something like 50 percent
00:51:27.560 now you didn't see 50 percent suicidal ideation um during african-american slavery you don't see
00:51:33.760 suicidal ideation during select level during sex slavery right now in the world you didn't see
00:51:39.200 suicidal ideation like that during the holocaust there's basically no time of horrific persecution
00:51:44.940 in human history where you see suicidal ideation appreciate sort of reaching anywhere near that
00:51:50.580 level the only community that experiences that is communities that have are dealing with identity
00:51:56.020 disorders that's the only place that you see this so excluding children from their families alienating
00:52:02.160 them dividing them and then encouraging them down this route that is from the evidence from what we're
00:52:07.740 seeing clinically not age appropriate you're encouraging them towards that path and these people say that
00:52:14.100 it's in the name of love it's in the name of inclusive inclusivity it's not it's in the name of cowardice
00:52:18.560 if you love these children you know what if some kid wants to be called sally and wants to wear a dress
00:52:23.260 have a conversation with their parents about it deal with it in whatever way you have to deal with it be loving
00:52:28.160 supportive don't necessarily encourage it but do what you have to do but covering it up masking it concealing
00:52:34.220 it from the parents is categorically wrong and it is a recipe for disaster this lies in the sort of underlying
00:52:40.100 progressive mindset that the government knows better for your children than parents do parents will love
00:52:45.360 their children a million times more than the state ever will and in the odd cases whether it's because
00:52:50.480 of substance abuse or mental illness or whatever where they are not loving their children then the
00:52:55.600 state can step in and stop those abuses we need to stop treating parents being like well i don't agree
00:53:00.100 with your gender dysphoria because this is what we believe that is not abuse plain and simple
00:53:04.160 um a couple more stories on the same way i just want before we before we button that up there's a
00:53:09.840 bigotry of low expectations here that um but it's apparently an acceptable bigotry the presumption here
00:53:17.000 is that uh christian parents or parents who object to uh gender theory are going to be abusive harmful or
00:53:25.240 uncaring to their child who is struggling with these things so these things must be kept from the parents
00:53:30.320 that's bigotry that presumes that those parents are inherently bad parents instead they're probably
00:53:36.640 really great parents who just want to be involved in every aspect of their child's lives um and are
00:53:41.560 being purposefully excluded by activist teachers so there is an inherent sort of underlying anti-christian
00:53:48.720 bigotry here that nobody wants to talk about absolutely and we can we can this is actually perfect
00:53:54.040 we'll jump one story ahead here um it's very interesting to see that it is always the sentiment that
00:53:59.960 it's anti-christian and that christians are the ones doing this if we can pull up on twitter um
00:54:05.040 these protests at some of these pride events uh we've got these young uh kids and uh they're not
00:54:10.780 they're not christian they they're muslim um nature's healing yeah they're stomping on pride flags now is
00:54:17.480 stomping on flags maybe the nicest or most appropriate way ah but uh when when we're looking at the
00:54:23.640 extremes that we're facing in the society by juxtaposition uh it is certainly not just white
00:54:29.160 christians who are opposed to this um we saw with kathleen when we see right across so many of these
00:54:34.600 things when they go overboard it is very often whether it's the armenian dads fighting antifa
00:54:38.940 or this it's these groups who take a stand you know what social conservatives are uniting all over
00:54:45.960 the place and i like to see that now stomping on flags i don't know i i can understand how that's
00:54:50.720 objectionable but is it any more objectionable than the sisters of perpetual indulgence the those um
00:54:58.000 men who dress as female nuns to mock the people amongst us who are least deserving of mockery nuns
00:55:05.540 women who devote themselves to a life of service and chastity and devotion and charity and community
00:55:14.740 they're being mocked by these men in makeup um so is is that any more offensive than stomping on some
00:55:22.380 rainbow paper i'm not sure yeah no i don't but one is fine the other the government will call it hate
00:55:28.180 crime except they're muslims so they'll probably get a free pass we're gonna ignore it we're gonna
00:55:32.520 imagine if that was a redneck if that was a redneck in a truck doing burnouts on those jail immediately
00:55:37.940 okay let's talk now let's jump to this video um changing changing topics entirely here uh former
00:55:47.080 president donald trump has released a video uh responding to being indicted um so some of the
00:55:52.420 massive news of the day um yesterday really but uh some shocking news here certainly and then we'll
00:55:57.680 sort of go through some of the tweets and provide some feedback but uh we have that video ready jump to
00:56:02.360 that very sadly we're a nation of decline and yet they go after a popular president a president that
00:56:13.780 got more votes than any sitting president in the history of our country by far and did much better
00:56:20.740 the second time in the election than the first and they go after him on a box's hooks just like the
00:56:29.240 russia russia russia hoax and all of the others this has been going on for seven years they can't
00:56:35.200 stop because it's election interference at the highest level there's never been anything like
00:56:39.980 what's happened i'm an innocent man i'm an innocent person they had the muller hoax the muller report
00:56:46.040 and that came out no collusion after two and a half years that was set up by hillary clinton and democrats
00:56:53.320 but this is what they do this is what they do so well if they would devote their energies to honesty
00:57:00.700 and integrity would be a lot better for our country they could do a lot better they could do a lot of
00:57:05.260 great things but when you look at what's happened to our country in the last three years we were
00:57:11.040 energy independent we had a strong military the rest of this is just goes into your basic campaign
00:57:18.620 stump speech but what happened here is donald trump has been indicted because he had boxes of documents
00:57:24.000 um even though joe biden also has boxes of documents um in his garage apparently next door to his
00:57:31.320 what was it uh corvette camaro i don't know what he drives i don't care i don't think he should have a
00:57:36.460 license quite frankly so i hope that car's collecting dust but he had it just in his garage he's got these
00:57:43.040 boxes of documents this is something that presidents do uh because they have the ability to declassify
00:57:48.980 anything that is in their possession any government documents so um this is clearly a witch hunt because
00:57:54.900 donald trump is up double digits on the closest uh republican challenger and uh the democrats in the
00:58:02.660 deep state as they say um are going to do everything they can to protect their guy from not only challenges
00:58:09.980 from without so like trump but also challengers from within um as in uh opening up him to um a challenge
00:58:20.880 from the young kennedy politician who would like to become president so i don't know this is just madness
00:58:28.080 yeah well you know it's interesting and i mean i think the progressives you see it's the same thing
00:58:34.020 here in canada it's it's the just true token of all these violations any conservative politician
00:58:39.760 would have been done by now but it seems there's a free pass um i like to santis's comments on this
00:58:45.060 actually about how this is clearly a targeted uh persecution prosecution as well um it'll be
00:58:52.140 interesting to see though if this opens a can of worms if this does proceed if then they're they
00:58:56.780 manage to flip the script and the bidens uh have some come up and throw what they do frankly i mean
00:59:02.100 politics is not clean there's a pretty decent probability that most people have been have been in the
00:59:07.360 american office of president um have have done enough to probably get themselves into trouble
00:59:12.820 um certainly a lot of them have they seem to be able to skate through if all of a sudden they set
00:59:18.220 this precedence maybe donald trump did do enough and there there is grounds for him to be targeted maybe
00:59:23.240 i'm sure he isn't perfectly crystal clear but compared to some of the past actions that we've seen
00:59:27.960 compared to the actions um of of this government presently i don't know it certainly opens a can of
00:59:37.360 worms here so yeah you're you're electing the next president you're not canonizing the next saint
00:59:42.520 um so you just to get to that point in your political career i'm just going to assume you've done some
00:59:48.280 shady stuff like or like waltzed all over the boundaries of what's legal and what's not
00:59:54.440 um but this kind of stuff blows up in the democrats face because what this does is it takes your like
01:00:00.880 your civilized nikki haley voter and they say oh hell no and they move over to trump and they're
01:00:09.260 or the chris christie voter who's i don't know campaigning against trump for some reason um i don't
01:00:15.680 know if you saw his announcement i'm like are you are you campaigning for joe biden i'm unclear um but
01:00:21.840 but those people who are like oh like chris christie kind of you know he's what i'm not
01:00:28.220 sure why but anyway um those people end up in the trump camp because they see this as an attack on them
01:00:34.220 and on republicans and all those people the normals of the world that they can use all the political
01:00:40.400 machinery to shut you up too if they can do it to trump they can do it to you it scares people over
01:00:45.620 into the trump camp and that's going to blow up in the democrats faces and i cannot wait
01:00:49.800 yeah it's going to be something else um we're just going to pull up one quick other video here
01:00:54.680 before we get to our chats and wrap up the ndp is it the ndp thing i love it yeah yeah well let's run
01:01:01.260 that clip and we'll react to that and then we'll wrap up with some chats mr speaker exclusionary policies
01:01:07.500 that ban trans women and girls from sports are cruel human rights violations there is no credible
01:01:13.100 scientific evidence to support these bans the real threat to women's sports is not trans women
01:01:18.260 it's systemic and discriminatory underfunding of women's sports human rights protections are only
01:01:24.700 meaningful when the government takes a stand in defense of rights and against discrimination
01:01:29.000 my question is what is the minister of sport doing to bring an end to trans exclusionary policies
01:01:34.480 at organizations like swim canada the honorable minister for sports
01:01:39.640 i'd like to thank my colleague for his question
01:01:45.160 it's fine she's just gonna say yep we agree that uh boys should be allowed to tackle sheila's daughter
01:01:53.840 on the rugby field that's what they're gonna say like especially they're talking about swim canada
01:01:59.620 like read the room people that is the flashpoint of all of this stuff is swimming it's leah thomas
01:02:09.000 liar thomas pretending to be a woman because he was a mediocre male swimmer so then he tucked his wiener
01:02:16.240 into a lady's swimsuit and cleaned the clocks of all the female athletes who had worked their lives
01:02:21.800 to be in the place that they were and so then they stand up and say there's no scientific evidence
01:02:27.300 there's no scientific evidence that things happen to male bodies that don't happen to female bodies
01:02:32.860 during puberty that you don't have a larger heart larger lung capacity stronger cardiovascular system
01:02:39.520 bone density muscle mass that testosterone has an effect on muscle mass like i'm old enough to remember
01:02:45.400 last week when testosterone was a performance enhancing drug and now you can just have it coursing
01:02:51.360 through your body and compete against my daughter what is wrong with these people and it's just like
01:02:56.980 it's there's no scientific evidence this is the funny thing the same people say trust the science
01:03:01.380 there's no difference sheila you could work out as long as you want for your entire life i could stop
01:03:06.780 working out immediately right now and i will always be able to lift twice what you can lift no matter what
01:03:12.640 you do um literally uh you can look at i can almost lift like in every category the women's like
01:03:19.260 records and i don't work out all that much it's in this this cognitive dissonance between reality
01:03:26.400 and this sort of need to adhere principally to these insane this is empty vapid rhetoric nobody
01:03:35.280 believes this whatsoever and the human rights violation that's occurring is young girls women
01:03:41.660 being exposed not only to athletes who can clearly outperform them and make their sort of career seem
01:03:47.720 meaningless in a way it's so brutal what is happening here but it's also the literal exposure
01:03:53.340 to male genitalia i believe leah thomas was seen several times erect in the women's locker room
01:03:59.440 like this is insane that we're acting like that person is the victim of what is happening here the
01:04:05.980 other thing that i want to touch on here and it's because i'm so sick of hearing about this it's been
01:04:09.420 debunked so many times women tend to get more funding as athletes the other thing too is they also get a
01:04:16.040 greater share of and you can look at these numbers for yourself you can take basically any professional
01:04:20.440 sporting event like i i think they did it for soccer men make 10 times as much as the women but
01:04:26.860 they're getting something like six percent of the pool um of money that's being made women get like 25
01:04:32.740 percent of the money being made but there's so much there's so much less money going into women's
01:04:37.740 sports because people don't watch it as much they get more funding they did a breakdown i think it was
01:04:42.460 of the wnba and saying they wanted more profit sharing well the nba is basically paying to keep
01:04:48.980 those leagues afloat and if they got a profit share they'd actually each owe something like 80 000 a
01:04:55.240 year because it's all in the hole they're losing money so you can i i like attending women's sports
01:05:01.040 games women's hockey has come a long way um some of the girls can even skate almost as fast as the boys
01:05:06.020 it's pretty incredible to see uh so to encourage women to compete with each other to have sports all that
01:05:11.640 stuff is absolutely incredible but we don't have to lie about it we don't have to pretend they're the
01:05:15.980 same as men and we certainly don't and shouldn't allow men to compete with them when there's clear
01:05:21.300 distinctions there um there create some sort of alternative league um sabine hoffen hossenfelder
01:05:27.960 um who's an astrophysicist did a breakdown of this and said there should be a league where steroids
01:05:33.260 are allowed there's no rules whatsoever you can compete in whatever sort of category you want
01:05:38.540 everyone will hit balls 800 yards and throw a thousand at them yeah sure let's completely open
01:05:44.320 it up but you can't have it let's put robots in it too let's add robots exactly the mix
01:05:49.200 identifies as a woman whatever i don't care so this is wild this is crazy anyways i think sorry just on
01:05:57.380 that note there there are sports that are women's sports that are interesting to watch like yes women's
01:06:03.700 rugby they're as big a draw as the men like their world cup they filled their stadium it's an exciting
01:06:10.740 sport the the league does a great job at promoting it it's fun it's engaging for the fan it's not too
01:06:17.060 expensive to attend and a whole generation of young girls are getting interested in the sport
01:06:22.500 their professional league is exploding in the united states the premier sevens is because it's fast
01:06:28.240 exciting and it's fun but women's soccer is really boring like like really really boring
01:06:35.060 there's like the 12 nothing win by a bunch of old retired guys there's a video online it's a it's a
01:06:41.040 one-legged a team of one-legged men versus a local women's team so they're dudes on crutches
01:06:46.520 with one legs and they clean up like they dominate it's sorry so boring yeah and but you look at this
01:06:53.420 you look at sports like volleyball has higher viewership internationally than then you better
01:06:58.320 believe it hockey for example yeah that's women no one's watching the men play volleyball so yeah
01:07:03.660 it's it's it's it's wild there's there's there's i don't know there's ample opportunity for sports
01:07:07.680 lots of canadian athletes without being forced you look at penny alexiak she's one of the biggest
01:07:12.420 athletes in olympics can she swim faster than the men no but it doesn't matter she's a hero she's an
01:07:17.460 icon we're talking about swim canada you can look at somebody like that and they didn't need this sort
01:07:22.060 of nonsense but what they did have was an opportunity to compete against people with
01:07:26.440 biological similarities not people who were going to quite literally blow them out of the water
01:07:30.980 um wild to see and again this goes back to what we're talking about at the start of the stream
01:07:35.420 that they this thing that seemed crazy six minutes ago now if you're opposed to it these progressives
01:07:44.600 are like how dare you how dare you take this position and we need to change this back to the way it
01:07:50.460 used to be like that's not the way it used to be they're referring to a time when this didn't exist
01:07:55.300 as this being the norm which isn't the case whatsoever i think people are waking up to this
01:08:00.840 though the second you go after people's kids children's sports you saw the muslim families when
01:08:06.040 you go after schools that's when everyone was like okay okay that's enough uh people are rejecting
01:08:10.700 this on mass uh the the budget of uh the ad budgets backfiring for bud light and some of these
01:08:17.040 other organizations yeah people people are waking up we've come a long way from being skeptical of
01:08:23.320 the soviet athletes because we're like is that a dude is that lady is that runner and dude to like
01:08:28.980 oh that is a dude and isn't it beautiful like we've come like the whole circle now they're the
01:08:34.260 only russians anybody likes it's completely flipped if you're russian bad if you're russian trans
01:08:41.360 athlete though that's good so those people are yeah it's wild sheila anything else before we hit
01:08:46.540 these chats no let's get to the chats we're over time all right ableist sl uh regressives taking over
01:08:53.200 open source software community are pushing licenses that ban everyone that doesn't cater to them
01:08:57.480 from using uh forking their software can governments ban those licenses no idea that's a really good
01:09:03.800 question it seems like a whole report for someone very tech oriented yes and i'm always like
01:09:09.500 when this question is can the government anything i'm like i hope they don't i hope they don't get
01:09:17.660 involved you heard it here first government you're not allowed uh fraser mcburney great to see you
01:09:23.420 again all caps locked five dollars usually on sundays i'm at hamilton city hall but this sunday we're at
01:09:29.260 bay front park having our potluck picnic if you're uh part of a group come our group come join us
01:09:35.520 we'll have fun 12 to 3 sunday fraser mcburney um and another one from fraser mcburney again all caps
01:09:41.460 locked five dollars while shopping this week i met three women one from cuba could not speak english
01:09:46.420 the other two women um were from zimbabwe uh what uh what is their skill lead that canada needs
01:09:54.080 very nice people i don't know i didn't meet them so maybe they're very high skilled expertise maybe
01:09:59.080 they're business owners maybe they're opening a restaurant hard to say but uh if she's from cuba i want
01:10:03.960 her if she's from cuba i'll take i want her she's yeah she's a refugee from an authoritarian regime in
01:10:09.360 search of freedom so um welcome if she's from cuba exactly awesome well thanks so much it's been
01:10:21.740 great thanks for everyone who joined us whatever platform you joined us on a bit over but we did
01:10:25.940 have that whole big cabinet announcement right in the middle we're happy to be delivering that
01:10:29.620 information to you we'll continue to bring you the other side of the story uh when it comes to
01:10:34.080 this newly formed government and some of the action they take uh sheila any final words for our viewers
01:10:39.640 no i just want to thank everybody for tuning in i want to thank everybody in the studio who works
01:10:44.540 behind the scenes i want to apologize for the um hard start of the show where i forgot that i work
01:10:49.760 for this company and what i'm supposed to do and i want to thank everybody who pitched in a little
01:10:55.560 bit of money to keep the lights on and adam great job today and as david menzies always says stay sane