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Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 3 minutes
Words per Minute
161.23573
Summary
Chris Scott is the owner of the Whistle Stop Diner in the small town of Mirror, Alberta. He was a small town diner, general store, and gas station owner in a town of about 1,000 people. And now he's going to trial.
Transcript
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Oh, hi, everybody. Ezra Levant here. How are you doing? It's great to be back in this chair.
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Don't mind me having a little sip, a little cuppa. I love doing these live streams. I wish
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I had more time to do it. And I hope in the weeks and months ahead, I will. I'm going to try and do
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more journalism. Hey, did you know I got invited to go on Tim Poole's show? I'm going to be doing that
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next week. And I'm going to try and get out and about. I'm going to cover the trial.
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Not the full trial, because it's a many-day, multifaceted trial. But remember Chris Scott?
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He is the owner of the Whistle Stop Diner in the small town of Mirror, Alberta. Our chief reporter,
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Sheila Gunn-Reed, has been carrying the heavy burden of that reportage for years now. He was
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a small town diner, general store. I think he's got a gas station there. Like in a town, Mirror,
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Alberta, I think is maybe a thousand citizens. So you're not, you don't have a bunch of places to go
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for basics, for basic groceries, for gas and stuff like that. He probably had the post office outlet
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there too. And if he shuts down, what do you got to do? You got to go all the way to Redview. You
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got to schlep another hour. So he, like it's such a small town. My high school, Western Canada High
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School, had 1,800 kids. The town of Mirror, I'd have to Google it. I think it's a thousand people.
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So you live there. You know everybody. You know what's up. You know everybody's business.
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And yeah, there's Sheila. Throw that on the screen, some B-roll. Sheila went down there and hung out
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there. And I have not yet been there. It's like an everything store. General store in the old
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school tradition of it. And it looks like he makes some great burgers too. And that's the thing.
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Okay, you and I in the big cities, we're used to eating out. But in a place like Mirror, Alberta,
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there's not a lot of places to go out to eat. I think it might actually just be this place.
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So imagine that's being shut down. And I think Chris Scott's attitude was, look, I'm going to open
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up and people who are scared of this vaccine, of this virus rather, people who obey Teresa Tam
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and Anthony Fauci and believe everything they think in the media don't have to come.
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And it could be a matter of personal choice. And I'm sure it divided the town. It's a divided
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nation. But the enforcement officials have pursued him with such a vitriolic vendetta. It's incredible.
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And the reason I know this is because I've seen some of the disclosure in the legal proceedings
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against Chris Scott. This is a very long way of saying, instead of just hanging out here at our
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world headquarters, I'm going to get out in the field. I'm going to go out there. There's an important
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hearing. I think it's on April 12th in the courthouse in Red Deer because the government
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is hiding documents from Chris Scott. And that's the thing. You may know that when you go to court,
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you have the right to all the evidence that is relevant in the possession of the prosecution,
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especially exculpatory evidence. That's a fancy way of saying stuff that shows you're innocent.
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Obviously, the police are going to show you stuff that makes you look guilty. That's no favor to you.
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But the law requires that if you're being prosecuted, the crown, that is the prosecution,
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has to show you the good, the bad, and the ugly. Police notes, internal emails, wiretaps,
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everything like that. And they've been hiding it. And in fact, it only came out because at the last
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hearing, one of the dopey prosecution cops, health cops said, oh, you wanted all those emails too,
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where I would come back from the office and banter about what I did. And we would scheme
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against Chris Scott and try and find out who his landlord was and pressure him and try and find out
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who his insurance was and pressure them and pressure his family. Oh, you want that stuff too?
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That shows our prosecutorial misconduct? Oh, I didn't know I had to give you that. Crooked, crooked timber.
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So if I'm not mistaken, on April 12th is the day that Chad Williamson, the rock and roll cowboy lawyer
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for Chris Scott, demands from a judge that the government be ordered and compelled to live up to
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their constitutional duty to disclose to Chris Scott all of their dirt, not just on him, which of course
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they would willingly give, but their own dirty business. And I think it's going to be a very
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important matter. And I don't know if Sheila's going to be coming down. I'd be thrilled if she
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came down. We could have one of those Whistle Stop burgers. If you go on the Whistle Stop website,
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you can find their menu. And they've got this huge burger. It's got to be like a pound of meat. It's
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almost like, you know, in, in, in those, um, B movies where there's a place that if you finish the
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entire meal within 60 minutes, no one's ever done it. So if you actually do it, it's for free. It's
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almost that size of a burger. The Whistle Stop or yeah, throw the, throw their website on, on any,
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I've not been to the Whistle Stop yet, but for heaven's sakes, if I'm going on the way to Red Deer,
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or yeah, yeah, yeah. Show that. They got some good grub. Can you click on their menu? Like it's
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more than just like, it's a truck stop. It's a cafe. I think it's a gas station. I haven't been
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there. And, um, if they got the menu, I want to show it. Cause I'm, I have been thinking about that
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giant burger. Okay. Maybe their website needs a little bit. So he looks like he's got some merch
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there. And yeah, Chris Scott. Oh my God. Just rebel. Well, there he is a rebel. Absolutely.
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He's a rebel. Don't worry if you can't find it. Anyways, uh, I've been thinking about this burger
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for about two years. And by the way, I met a couple of guys who flew in to, uh, patronize
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his establishment. They flew in by helicopter. They flew in by helicopter. I think Sheila was there when
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that happened. And I later bumped into those guys. They were so excited about this one business
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person who was fighting for freedom and keeping his shop open. They literally flew in by chopper
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to patronize. So if I understand my day correctly, I'm going to be zipping out to Calgary,
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driving up to Red Deer. I'm going to live tweet from the trial, say hello to Chris Scott
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and hopefully get out there to mirror in person to get me one of them hamburgers and maybe take a
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second one back to Toronto with me to feed the entire clan. It's a very long way of saying I'm
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looking forward to getting out in the field and do a little bit of journalism. You know what? When I
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was in Davos in January and when I, and I bumped into Greta Thunberg and I bumped into Albert
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Buller of Pfizer, I really enjoyed it. And you know, I look back at those vids, both of which went viral
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and all, of course, all I see are the flaws and the errors. Oh, I should have asked that or I should
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have done that. But you know what? I still got a real kick out of it. And at least in those two
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cases, I felt like I had some questions to ask because there's me. That was me on the left,
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in case you're wondering. Because I felt like I had been following Greta for years and I was
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actually surprised I had the chance to ask her questions. I had to control myself because she's
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a very small person physically. And of course, she's a soft-spoken woman. Well, she's not soft-spoken
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when she's scolding. But you got to be careful you don't come across as a bully. And I don't think
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we did. And with Albert Buller, frankly, I could have been more bullyish because he's such a scoundrel.
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My point is, I really enjoyed getting out into the field. And both of those, there was an element of
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luck that we just happened upon Greta Thunberg. Actually, we waited two hours for her in the cold
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outside of a building. And they tried to hide the fact that she was still in there.
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And with Albert Buller, it was pure luck that we encountered him outside the high security perimeter
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of the Davos sort of inner sanctum. But luck favors the bold. And you got to get out there and you got
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to wait sometimes. So I really enjoyed those. And I want to do some more of that. You know, we send our
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people on journeys. We recently, just last week, we had our British journalist, Callum Smiles, in
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the Netherlands, covering the Farmer Rebellion out there. It's easier for them to get to Holland
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because it's just across, you know, it's really, it's probably not even a one-hour flight
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from London to Amsterdam. So, you know, I think Callum did a really good job out there. And he was
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out there with our cameraman producer also. It would be a long journey to schlep from Toronto to there.
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But I want to get out there. I want to get out into the field again. And, you know, because there's
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so much news that you can get. There's so many little flashes of color, colorful anecdotes that
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you only get by being there, that you only get by being there. And, you know, everyone wants to be
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a pundit and a commentator. And that is valuable. People, we need the battle of ideas. But what is the
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raw material of punditry? Obviously, it's primary news gathering. And if you allow the left to have
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a monopoly in primary news gathering, they have the largest bias factor of all. What do they show
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and what do they hide? What do they leave on the cutting room floor, as they used to say in the age
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where there was actual film and you would cut it and leave it on the floor? That's how they used to
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edit back in the day. When they said cut, they actually meant cut.
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So, for example, Albert Bourla has been interviewed 200 times over the last three years, but just not
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with a particular set of questions. And Greta Thunberg has been interviewed endlessly,
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but they're more stenography than challenging questions.
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So having actual news gatherers in the field, I think, is a comparative advantage
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of Rebel News. It's one of my favorite things that we do.
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And I'm going to try and do a little bit more of it myself.
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I was really glad that we sent a team down there to Ohio, to East Palestine,
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which is where that train derailed, and then they had a controlled burn of some toxic chemicals.
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I'm glad we sent our people down there. I'm not sure if we had the ability to stay there
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for like a month, which was probably required, but we were there for a few good days.
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So I want to do some more of that, and I'm going to be doing some of that
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in a couple of weeks there in Red Deer, Alberta.
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And I'm going to be down in Tim Pool's show seven days from today, so that's not really
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doing journalism, but it'll be nice to be on that platform. He's got a great audience.
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But today I want to talk about some fun stuff that we're covering.
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And I want to start with a strange video that I saw on social media. I saw it on TikTok and then
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I saw it on Twitter. And it's from Ontario. I'm not sure if it's from Toronto proper or
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where. And on Twitter alone, it's got a third of a million views, this video.
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And then, as you can see, it's actually originally from TikTok, which is where I saw it.
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So this thing's been seen a million times. Now, Olivia, can I sort of say stop and can you pause
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it in certain places? This is a video, and I think it's legit. Like, I don't think the cops here
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are his buddies making, I think this is real. This is a guy who happens to be black, and the cops come
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to his house, and they make demands of him. And he's a young guy. I'm going to guess he might even
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be a teenager, or maybe he's early 20s. Like, he's not in his 30s or his 40s. He may even be a student.
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I think it's his parents' house is what the last moments of it tell me. So this is him. I don't
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know if he's a minor. I don't know if he's under 18. But that probably is relevant, his age.
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He's such a nice guy. He's so Canadian in that he's so friendly and cooperative. But folks,
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I am here to tell you, sometimes you should not be friendly and cooperative in life. And I know
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it's human nature to do what you're told, especially if a cop comes to your house and
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you're 17, and the cop says, blow in this breathalyzer. Well, what are you going to say?
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No. Is he going to arrest you? Is he going to take you away? Is he going to handcuff you? Who are all
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these people? What are your rights? What's his explanation? So without further ado, let's play this
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video. And Olivia, I might say stop, because I might want to comment on something before playing the whole
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clip. How long is the whole clip? It's about two minutes. You know, it feels longer because there's
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so much happening in it. So I might say halt just if I want to talk about something. Okay,
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let's play this clip. I sympathize with this guy. I like this guy. He's obviously a law-abiding guy.
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He's obviously a nice guy. He's obviously a cooperative guy, friendly guy. Seems like a good egg.
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But all of those positive qualities I just described put him at a disadvantage when dealing with a cop
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who I believe was acting outside the law, and certainly unethically. Take a look.
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No worries, man. It's no biggie. The cops are here. We had to do a breath lighter test because
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I don't... You were weaving in and out of traffic.
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We received a traffic complaint from the OPP. Oh, wait, wait. It's not going. Yeah, yeah.
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We received a traffic complaint from the OPP advising of a possible impairment. You're
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swerving in and out of lanes. Yep. So now I'm here to administer an alcohol screening device.
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So right now I demand that you provide a sample of your breath into an approved screening device
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for proper analysis of that breath to be made and for you to accompany me for that purposes now.
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Okay. You understand? Yeah, I understand. Okay. So I'll demonstrate it once. I'm going to turn
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the machine on. Okay. Pause there for a sec. Oh, gosh. The police are really here.
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What the heck is going on here? Yeah. Just click pause for a second.
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So I'm looking at him now. How old would you say he is, Olivia?
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You think he's 25. So I'm wildly off when I say he could be like 17 or 18. You could be right. Now
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there's three people that we see here. There's that other lady. And then there's, of course,
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the person with the camera. I'm guessing they're siblings. Okay. You think he's 25? Could be. He's
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so clean shaven. I can't tell. I mean, I'm getting old. Everyone looks young to me. But
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did you hear what the cop said? So the cop looks like he's with a local police force. I don't know if
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he's Toronto or Brampton or whatever. But the cop says, the OPP, that's the Ontario Provincial
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Police. So some other cops said you were swerving. So I've come to your house to take
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a breathalyzer from you to see if you were drunk. Okay. So where are those other cops? And did they
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see me? And how do you know I was the driver? And I've been at home? And how do you know I haven't
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been drinking at home? And if it was such a problem, why didn't the cops pull me over?
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And who were you? And what was the witness? And was the cop who saw, where's the cop who saw me?
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This is a game of broken telephone. You're just sending people to my house. And on what, and you
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come up on my property with no search warrant because some other cops said to. This is what's running
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through my mind. But I used to, I mean, I'm a lawyer by profession. I haven't been a member of
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the Law Society. I haven't practiced in more than 10 years. But I don't even think you need to be a
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lawyer to know that a guy coming to your house and asking for a sample from you, your breath, your
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blood, your urine. These are things that sometimes police take samples of. Your hair for DNA.
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Hey, you and what search warrant? Just so some cop says I was swerving and we don't see that cop and
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that cop isn't here. And it obviously wasn't important enough for that cop to stop me. And
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that cop communicated to you in some way. We don't know what that way was. And you've come to my house
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and there's three of us standing at the door. And are you sure it was me? And where's your search
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warrant? And why are you asking for these things without saying you don't have to give it? Well,
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because the cops will get away with whatever they can get away with. Keep playing the clip.
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You take one deep, we're all in pairs. You take a deep breath in, make a tight seal around the tube
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and blow out just like you're blowing up a balloon. So
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and then it'll click. Okay. Stop. It'll think for a minute. And then it says zero because I don't
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have any alcohol in my system. Okay. Okay. So you can do that. Absolutely. All right.
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No offense. I just want to know like you guys need all these people here. So he's getting trained.
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By that fellow there. I got you. Okay. And when I, when I show up alone, they always send a second
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person just in case things go squirrely. Okay. Because imagine if you were impaired, some people
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don't want to get arrested, right? It'd be a big fight. So I'm going to pop this fresh straw on for
00:17:56.920
you. Okay. Okay. Stop for a second. Who are all those people and what are they all doing on this
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property? And I couldn't quite make it up in my earphone, but I heard this earlier. Did they say
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one of them was like a, was like a student or something or a trainee? Did they say that Olivia?
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They said that in some part of this video. I had a little trouble hearing it in my earpiece.
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And he said, Oh, we just have, in case you're drunk and things get out of hand, if we need to arrest
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you. Okay. Well, if he's not arrested now, why should he even be talking to you? In fact,
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what are you doing on his private property? What are you doing on his property? And again,
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this guy, he's so friendly, isn't it? This black guy, I don't know if he's a kid. I thought he was
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younger. You think he's 25. You're probably right. He's not 17. So he's not a minor, but I think he's
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obviously stressed and his reaction under stress is to be super friendly and gregarious. But I don't
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think he's relaxed. I don't think he's happy. I think just when he's under stress, he just smiles
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a lot and is becoming very solicitous. And, um, and all of a sudden a whole bunch more cops are
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right behind him. And then he says, what are you doing here? Well, in case things get out of hand,
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we're here to arrest you. Well, right there, I hear that he's not under arrest. So what are you
00:19:20.980
doing on the property? And what are you demanding things of him from? This is not a check stop. This is
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not a roadside check stop. The legality of roadside check stops has been challenged. All right, fine.
00:19:32.560
We're not going to talk about that today, but you're going to his house after the fact. There's no
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continuity here. You claim, or you claim you heard hearsay that he was swerving, not bad enough that
00:19:45.160
he was pulled over. And, and you've come to his house an hour later, two hours later, has he had
00:19:51.660
something to drink at lunch? You don't ask that. And this guy is obviously afraid. He's surely
00:20:00.500
unarmed. You got a bunch of cops with guns coming to the door saying, if you don't cooperate, if
00:20:07.880
things go pear-shaped, we're here to arrest you. Well, get off my property before I sue you for
00:20:19.340
Me? No, I'm not nervous. I already passed my test.
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All right, my man. So deep breath in, seal and breathe out.
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Hard, hard, hard. Keep going, keep going, keep going, keep going, keep going, keep going. Perfect.
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I don't know, but I'm satisfied that there's no impairment here.
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So I appreciate you being so cooperative and helpful.
00:20:52.640
Yeah, handshakes all around. We're friends now. I came to your house and terrified you.
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It actually continues a bit. He goes upstairs. The version I saw, I think it was on TikTok.
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He goes upstairs to talk to his parents. You saw when he blew zero, that laugh, that explosion
00:21:14.580
of emotional relief and release. And then that, hey, give me a high five, man. We're friends.
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I came here with the threat of arresting you. No search warrant. I came onto your property.
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I reached through your door, Jam. I demanded you give me a sample, none of which had a
00:21:29.340
legal basis, but we're friends, right? And you wonder why people hate police and fear
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police. Hey, give me a fist bump because we're Canadian. When we break the law, when we intimidate
00:21:40.480
you, when we don't tell you your rights, when we come on your property and trespass without
00:21:44.680
a search warrant, we're Canadian. Hey, yeah, a handshake. Handshakes all around. We're friends.
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We're friends. We're friends. Look at that guy. He's the stress of his life there.
00:22:05.860
What is this? Hey, some cop said you were swerving. I've come to your house. Well, either
00:22:13.680
he was swerving or he wasn't. Maybe you were on your cell phone. No, I wasn't. Well, if
00:22:21.180
you were certain I was swerving, charge me with swerving. Pull me over. I'll tell you one
00:22:31.180
thing. I'll admit in the moment it's hard to do it. I remember some cops came to our office
00:22:37.780
here once. And I wasn't at the front door, and this was years ago. And the young lady at the
00:22:44.540
front door let the cops in or maybe called. I can't remember exactly how it went down. But when
00:22:49.620
the cops come in with great charisma and confidence and urgency and they assume the close, that's
00:22:55.820
cops often assume you'll just do what they say. And their body language and their form of
00:23:01.960
communication is so confident, they don't even allow you to think for a second that it's optional,
00:23:07.440
that it's elective, that it's voluntary. Through sheer projection of psychological force, they can
00:23:15.600
get you to do many things that they have no legal authority to do so. And I remember when the cops came
00:23:20.160
in here. And I've replayed that moment in my head 20 times. And I'm not blaming myself and I'm not
00:23:27.180
blaming the young lady who went to the door. I tell you I'm not. Because in fact, I'm sort of
00:23:32.180
making the point of how hard it is. I'm a former lawyer. I think about the law a lot. I think about
00:23:39.300
civil liberties a lot. I think about private property a lot. And even I allowed myself to be
00:23:45.620
bamboozled. The cops coming in here, they were searching for a guy. I won't go into the details.
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If I could redo that again, I would say to the cops, get off this property in 30 seconds or give me your
00:23:56.560
names because I'm going to sue you for trespass. And I probably would have gone into the office and
00:24:01.560
the guy they were coming for. It was a nothing offense, by the way. And he was acquitted. It
00:24:05.960
was complete BS. It was they were trying what they were doing. And I I'm not identifying who this
00:24:13.120
person is. And I don't I don't mean to. They were trying to embarrass one of my employees in my eyes
00:24:19.900
by raiding the office to give him some charge on. So it was a stupid thing. And he was acquitted of
00:24:27.140
it in the end. And it was not a violent thing in any way, not a fraudulent thing in any way. It's just
00:24:31.320
a BS thing. It was so obvious in retrospect that they were trying to embarrass this guy in the face of
00:24:41.240
his fellow employees. And in my eyes, thinking maybe I would fire him. Because if they didn't
00:24:48.000
have a case against him, maybe they could ruin his life by making me fire him. I did not fire him.
00:24:55.600
And I guess all I'm saying is in the moment when police come in high kinetic energy, confidence,
00:25:03.660
volume, take you by surprise, your reaction is to comply like that lad did. And his two,
00:25:09.980
I assume the brother's a sister or whatever. I think there was a sister and maybe a brother.
00:25:15.840
The instinct is to comply. So I'm not judging too harshly because I just told you a story when I
00:25:21.040
myself was bamboozled. But if I could do it again, and if I advice for you, and and it would be
00:25:28.440
ask for a search warrant. Say you do not consent to the search. Now, if they provide a warrant or provide
00:25:38.080
some compelling and convincing legal explanation why you must submit to a search, fine, don't do it.
00:25:43.440
Certainly don't fight them physically. But I tell you this. If some cop knocked on our front door,
00:25:50.520
I would say, what is your business here? I wouldn't be rude off the bat. I would not.
00:25:56.180
But I would say, what is your business here? And if they said, we want this, this or that, I would say,
00:26:02.160
show me your warrant or get off this property before I call the police on you.
00:26:16.340
I don't think police deserve the benefit of the doubt with a warrantless search.
00:26:21.900
Because we saw how so many cops were willing to abase themselves by being mask police,
00:26:27.780
six feet of separation police. Absolute disgrace to the badge and their oath they took.
00:26:39.540
Speaking of bringing the administration of justice into disrepute,
00:26:47.860
what they're contemplating doing in New York is one of the gravest threats to the rule of law in
00:26:56.220
America, certainly in my lifetime and maybe in a hundred years.
00:27:15.420
a Soros candidate. Soros had the attorney general project
00:27:18.540
and the secretary of state project, which is just what it sounds like.
00:27:22.160
You can try and win the presidency. And, you know, it's very, very important.
00:27:29.700
The major parties spend a billion dollars each on that campaign, a billion with a B.
00:27:35.020
And then all the super PACs and all the free labor involved.
00:27:41.200
And of course, it is the biggest prize of all, the presidency.
00:27:43.560
But if you had a million dollars and you wanted to make a difference,
00:27:51.700
you would probably look to get an attorney general in various states or districts.
00:28:04.420
I don't know who's appointed and who's elected.
00:28:06.620
I don't understand the American system well enough, but some of them are elected.
00:28:18.160
The secretary of state is what they call the foreign minister
00:28:22.800
The federal secretary of state is the foreign minister.
00:28:25.760
But the secretary of state in each individual states,
00:28:33.160
And so George Soros is smarter than your average bear,
00:28:41.660
maybe hundreds of millions of dollars every election season
00:28:48.440
he is also savvy enough to spend tens of millions of dollars across America
00:28:52.880
putting in radical attorneys general in important states.
00:29:24.520
They all, oh, he's going to jail over Stormy Daniels.
00:29:38.280
that the media thought, oh, for sure we got him now.
00:30:35.100
But then Donald Trump later fought with her in court,
00:31:52.180
Trump indictment could land as early as Monday.
00:33:54.880
And you've got a radical Soros district attorney.