Rebel News Podcast - August 18, 2023


DAILY Roundup | Yellowknife evacuation, Trudeau Liberals mull 'far-right game plan', CCP influence


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 8 minutes

Words per Minute

177.72963

Word Count

12,248

Sentence Count

24

Misogynist Sentences

8

Hate Speech Sentences

18


Summary

Sheila Gunn-Reed and I discuss the crazy weather forecast, Canada mulling a game plan if the U.S. takes a far right authoritarian shift after next year's presidential election, and why Canada should be worried about it.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 well hello everybody and welcome to the rebel daily roundup very happy today to be joined by
00:00:20.800 my co-host Sheila Gunn-Reed. Sheila how are you doing today? I'm doing great is it as rainy there
00:00:25.640 as it is here is it raining? No it's not but I think it's supposed to be which like we're not
00:00:30.400 allowed to turn on our sprinklers right now so that would be great and we can talk about that
00:00:35.620 in a bit but it was like 36 I think even 37 yesterday so it was wild last night the wind
00:00:41.640 was howling I know that originally it was supposed to rain a lot on the weekend which might hamper
00:00:46.940 some fun plans but I think that forecast has shifted so the fun plan should be safely in
00:00:52.800 order before we get to some of the stories of the day I do want to get through some of the nuts
00:00:57.080 and bolts so if you're joining us you're likely joining us on Rumble, Odyssey, YouTube, Getter
00:01:01.380 wherever you're watching us we're so happy to have you I do want to encourage you guys to consider
00:01:05.260 checking out and moving over to one of the platforms that doesn't really care about what
00:01:09.420 people say but instead just wants to give them a platform to share their own ideas one of those
00:01:14.480 great platforms unlike YouTube is Rumble and another really nice thing with Rumble in addition to allowing
00:01:19.460 people to share their own opinions and having some some great programming beyond just Rumble
00:01:24.160 news as well you can actually participate in the show through what's called a Rumble rant
00:01:28.180 you chip in a couple bucks if there's a story you think we need to get to if there's a thought you
00:01:33.240 have if there's anything along those lines whatsoever that way we can interact with you
00:01:37.520 unlike the mainstream media who predominantly just interacts with the government that gives them
00:01:41.120 handouts we actually care about what our viewers think Rumble rants are one of my favorite
00:01:45.320 parts of this show so considering that you can also support us on Locals.com subscribe you'll get
00:01:50.480 access to all our regular content plus a lot of the sort of behind the scenes exclusive access
00:01:54.620 you don't get anywhere else with that said let's get into some of these stories of the day and there
00:02:01.960 are a lot of them we'll start with this article Canada mulling game plan if US takes far right
00:02:08.380 authoritarian shift Melanie Jolie always bringing some great great stuff to the table I'm being facetious if you
00:02:15.140 can't tell we are certainly working on scenarios Jolie said in French during an interview it's funny
00:02:20.440 very often it's in French that they that they say these these things foreign affairs minister
00:02:25.240 Melanie Jolie says Canada has been considering a game plan for how it would respond if the United
00:02:29.760 States takes a far right authoritarian shift after next year's presidential election obviously they have
00:02:35.580 no concerns with the current far left authoritarian shift but that's another story we are certainly
00:02:39.840 working on scenarios said Jolie in a French during an interview with a Montreal radio station
00:02:44.420 Wednesday Jolie added that Ottawa's close political and economic ties to the US means that we must
00:02:49.320 certainly prepare several scenarios she suggested Canada has a game plan in mind but wouldn't get
00:02:54.880 into details in general there's our game plan precisely to be able to manage what could be a
00:02:59.720 rather difficult situation I will work with my colleagues and with the mayors and the provincial
00:03:04.720 premiers and the business community with the unions with everyone in the country so that we are ready
00:03:09.460 regardless of election outcome the article goes on but I mean uh foreign interference
00:03:14.800 yeah you know yeah yeah like this is not a good look because first of all there are two political
00:03:23.780 parties in the United States they're both pretty centrist you know what that's not true I will call
00:03:29.500 the Republican centrist and the Democrats who used to have a centrist wing and now it just seems to be
00:03:35.820 Joe Manchin is the only guy occupying that and everybody else is totally colonized by the radical
00:03:41.100 far left um it's not a good look for you to demonize right now 50 percent of the voters in the United
00:03:48.920 States and your potential greatest trade ally um for voting Republican if that does indeed happen
00:03:56.440 uh in the next election cycle like that's just crazy you are setting yourself up for confrontation
00:04:03.280 um and some pretty serious protectionist policies directed at Canada if Donald Trump wins next time
00:04:10.460 because these guys just can't shut their mouths and let nature take its course in the United States
00:04:16.300 this is not our place shut up it's and voting Republican does not make you far right or authoritarian
00:04:21.520 that like Justin Trudeau missed Mr. Locking Down Everything forcing Canadians to be vaccinated to travel
00:04:27.460 within one of the largest most vast countries on the face of the earth um he's the authoritarian who
00:04:34.640 went wild demonizing Canadians every time he got near I was going to say the pulpit but um well that
00:04:41.700 is actually probably accurate because I think a lot of what he says is cloaked in religiosity but every
00:04:50.040 time he got near a microphone he was ranting about my fellow Canadians and how dirty and gross they are
00:04:56.440 and how they don't have a place in society and what are we going to do about these people who just
00:04:59.640 won't listen to my crazy ramblings and follow my lead and get a million boosters like who is he to
00:05:05.360 first of all lecture anybody about authoritarianism but also shut your mouths shut your mouths before
00:05:13.100 we're in a trade war please thanks well and it's such it's just all it is is vapid divisive rhetoric
00:05:20.100 like it it's all these politicians do is divide divide divide if you disagree in any way shape or
00:05:26.860 form divide divide divide it was really I actually went to see uh Anthony Jeselnik the comedian last
00:05:31.380 night very crude so if that's not your thing uh don't check it out but the opening act it was
00:05:35.460 interesting she came out and she started talking about how she's pro-choice um but then she said but
00:05:40.260 for people who are pro-life out there I get where you're coming from um and the line that she said that
00:05:44.640 just killed me it wasn't funny it was more of like a political statement but she's like politicians
00:05:48.580 want us divided because the more we're fighting each other the less they actually have to do
00:05:52.720 and it hit the nail on the head that these politicians think that if we're pointing the
00:05:57.380 fingers at each other if we're fighting each other if it's all in fighting there's going to be no
00:06:02.060 metrics of accountability for them that is what this Justin Trudeau government is all about the people
00:06:07.900 who are still voting for him he doesn't want them pausing for even an instance to look at what he's
00:06:13.380 doing he wants to continue directing it look at those dirty unvaccinated people look at
00:06:18.520 the scary republicans in the united states look at this look at that look at anything but me that's
00:06:24.520 the Justin Trudeau liberal style of governance and there's more of this i mean it's the rule book of
00:06:29.980 propaganda to accuse somebody of what you're doing and this far left authoritarianism that we're seeing
00:06:35.260 in canada they're like we don't want the americans copying our playbook on the right that's their real
00:06:39.760 concern i think so yeah not surprising but pretty much on par um there's something of a can do you have
00:06:46.720 anything on that before we go on sorry yeah just before we move away from that uh i'd love to know
00:06:51.400 what their big fat game plan is by the way like what are you gonna do to take on a country 10 times
00:06:56.720 your size in the economy population and uh i think what international political power what are you gonna
00:07:02.900 do except probably compromise our trade deals with them and uh make sure that everything is bad and
00:07:09.240 by the way um it have you noticed they're taking a harder line stance on the potential for republican
00:07:17.820 government in the united states than they are taking on china like that seems a little bit
00:07:22.060 weird right on everything and we'll talk about this in a little bit i know you talked about it yesterday
00:07:27.300 but it doesn't matter if it's net zero or foreign interference or yeah china gets a free pass alberta oil
00:07:33.800 republicans in the united states all villains that must be stopped um there there does seem to be
00:07:40.280 though uh in reply to this general sort of under trudeau we've seen this swing to the left this
00:07:47.880 continued progressive push this uh ceaseless trend towards wokeness um and whether it's daniel smith or
00:07:55.440 now under pierre palia the federal government um or the the hopeful federal government at least after the
00:08:02.180 next election um by their metrics the conservative party um they're to debate several anti-woke policy
00:08:07.620 resolutions oh and you know the the mainstream media are gonna lose their marbles over this stuff
00:08:13.700 i can't i can't wait i can't wait to see them freak out uh but it looks like it's pretty normal
00:08:18.560 stuff anyways i'll be quiet you keep going no no by all means weigh in whenever yeah and this is the
00:08:23.180 thing is most of these things are completely normal but they're obviously going to be blown it's like
00:08:28.600 we're going to put an end to the craziness and they're like oh no they're they're bigots but
00:08:32.360 yeah let's read through here but conservative party of canada members attending next month's
00:08:35.700 national convention are set to debate several anti-woke policy proposals true north has learned
00:08:40.120 for folks out there a policy proposal is a member a group within the party effectively just putting
00:08:44.520 something forward for the party to discuss and then vote on so these aren't these aren't official
00:08:48.900 policies aren't party policies someone has brought this forward the party will vote on it
00:08:52.740 resolutions advancing to the convention will address gender ideology as well as diversity
00:08:57.720 equity and inclusion i guess there's an acronym for that now uh other right why anyways other
00:09:04.300 resolutions touch on free speech fighting child grooming and promoting medical freedom things that
00:09:10.640 everyone should always agree to forever except for the last few years apparently true north had a look
00:09:15.920 at the list of 60 policy resolutions that are set to be debated at the convention listen we can go
00:09:20.960 through all these uh if you're so inclined um let's read through a bit of the gender ideology one because i know
00:09:26.640 that's a hot button one right now and then if anything else jumps up to you this thing basically
00:09:30.900 this thing basically protects women's spaces and so all the feminists on the left are going to
00:09:35.780 tie themselves in a big huge pretzel trying to figure out how they oppose this because a conservative
00:09:42.840 brought it up but these are the people who would not shut up about women's only spaces
00:09:47.300 um like six years ago 30 seconds ago but all of it and it define it does what matt walsh asked us all to do
00:09:56.760 define what is a woman they're going to put it in writing uh hopefully if this resolution makes it to the floor
00:10:02.660 we will be the party of knowing exactly what a woman is um but i i i don't know because you also
00:10:10.480 like while these policies are great and you know like there's one that addresses child grooming
00:10:14.980 like tougher sentences for pedophiles great uh the left will find a way to oppose that too um but
00:10:23.580 uh we also have to realize that the party eda so the electoral district association so the put the
00:10:32.260 you know like the local writings that are proposing these ideas they also have to sort of run through the
00:10:37.960 gauntlet of overly politically correct party brass that might prevent these things from getting to
00:10:44.820 the floor yeah you know that's going to be that i i know what the liberals are going to say often when
00:10:50.800 you get the very interesting surprises is when you're actually at these things and someone brings
00:10:55.900 forward a policy that you're like yes this is so common sense and then some 40 year old 40 year
00:11:01.820 party guy or whatever someone who's been part of the institution forever comes up and some of the
00:11:06.280 sort of inventive things they aren't quite as rote as the left it's it's really surprising i'm sure
00:11:11.660 we'll probably have some folks there checking this out bringing uh all the perspectives alexa alexa and
00:11:17.940 guillaume will be there covering this hopefully if the party allows them accreditation this is my uh
00:11:25.560 signal to the party right now allow our journalists accreditation they're going to do honest journalism and
00:11:31.060 if i find out there's a cbc reporter in there and you've blocked a rebel news one boy i'm not gonna be happy
00:11:36.720 don't pick it up with us they wouldn't do that adam said forcefully
00:11:41.400 um yeah they did do it they've done it in the past yeah it's been a while though that was yeah it's a new
00:11:50.580 thing yep that was the shiro tool days i think to an extent so uh but yeah so anyways it is it is good
00:11:57.780 to see let's see what comes to pass ultimately if this is just a few people with good ideas putting
00:12:03.100 these forward and it gets quashed um it's going to go a long way to telling us that the party really
00:12:07.200 has not changed that much um but if we see some of these adopted and i mean they can be amended a
00:12:12.760 little bit but if we see at least a shift towards acknowledging protecting children rejecting uh radical
00:12:19.280 gender ideology defending free speech and medical choice that will be a strong uh signifier now this
00:12:25.680 stuff can be boring you're there for like a whole weekend they're talking about policies
00:12:29.560 but it is really sort of the the behind the scenes boring legislature and uh policy type stuff that
00:12:37.080 ultimately forms uh the policies that turn into law um so this stuff really does matter so if you
00:12:42.720 haven't been out to one of these things before if you're not politically active this is a good way
00:12:46.460 to get into the ground floor everyone in conservative politics uses this term grassroots well the people
00:12:51.820 who've been to 100 board meetings and brought this policy forward or these policies forward they're
00:12:56.340 the real grassroots not the jason kenney campaign that was structured by a bunch of professionals
00:13:01.060 real grassroots politics is this type of stuff well and it is a chance for this party to distinguish
00:13:06.320 itself and rebrand itself after the dark boring years uh vanilla vegetable lasagna years of
00:13:16.160 erin o'toole and andrew shearer where you're like how are you ostensibly and tangibly different than the
00:13:24.100 liberals on any issue mister we're gonna have a carbon tax but we're gonna call it something else
00:13:29.720 um they whipped the vote to support the paris accord um they kowtowed to the lockdowns they didn't
00:13:37.900 stand up for medical freedom they they didn't uh support the convoy in any real tangible way
00:13:43.540 this is a chance post choice of uh pierre polyev as the leader to make themselves something different
00:13:53.500 and something new and to offer canadians a real alternative to the like i said the vegetable lasagna days
00:14:02.240 of erin o'toole just noodles and butter very boring um it's it's a chance to be something different
00:14:09.520 and listen to the people let's see if they do it because what i know about conservatives is they
00:14:14.540 are famous for snatching uh victory from the jaws of or snatching defeat i guess in this case from
00:14:22.380 from from uh the jaws of defeat yeah no and you're dead on there it's like the the ideas become popular
00:14:30.960 even like whether it be andrew o'toole or shear um they're like oh we're gonna like defund the cbc we're
00:14:35.880 gonna do this we're gonna do that and then push comes to shove and they have an opportunity to do
00:14:39.800 it and they completely back off from it um and fold like like a like a cheap tent um we need a
00:14:46.120 conservative government that's not going to do that and i have to say like pierre polyevra
00:14:49.100 don't get me wrong every politician is going to respond to the sort of spirit of the age to an extent
00:14:53.860 they shouldn't necessarily but uh pierre when he gets pushed back he seems at least compared to
00:15:00.180 what we've seen over the past few years to stick to his guns um hopefully that holds true uh still
00:15:05.820 waiting for him to sit down with me with for that long exclusive interview and prove that he actually
00:15:10.640 is open to a full access and transparency to the media so uh still waiting on that from his team
00:15:15.840 though i've talked to them and they've been like yeah for sure sure sure sure um let's do that because
00:15:20.000 it's it's long overdue that'd be that'd be a good step towards proving you're not going to cave
00:15:24.300 kowtow and uh do what other folks have done because frankly some of those other people have even
00:15:29.020 talked to us in interviews so time to change that um on that note i think we are going to jump to a
00:15:34.720 quick commercial break and we'll come back with some more stories we're facing an imminent threat
00:15:41.520 a planned blackout of all news content in canada is coming to facebook and instagram threatening to
00:15:47.340 silence rebel news and those who depend on us for the other side of the story the cause well
00:15:52.600 justin trudeau's new censorship law bill c18 which demands social media companies pay news outlets
00:15:58.880 for the news stories their users share on the platform it's a shakedown and a desperate attempt
00:16:04.740 to keep the mainstream media afloat it seems the billions in taxpayer subsidies just aren't enough
00:16:11.280 to keep the country's propagandists in business but meta facebook's parent company has chosen to
00:16:17.760 block canadian news content rather than comply rebel news included many have already lost their ability
00:16:24.420 to access our facebook and instagram pages the blackout will soon affect every user in canada
00:16:30.400 but fear not we have had a plan to protect your access to our news content we've partnered with
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00:16:43.520 a month that you can maintain your access to our content across all your devices and unlike other vpn
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00:17:02.820 ones in communist china you can visit pia vpn.com slash rebel news and enjoy an exclusive 83 percent
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00:17:15.340 from anywhere in the world and stick it to trudeau's new censorship law safeguard freedom of speech
00:17:21.200 and join us to combat trudeau's censorship today at piavpn.com slash rebel news
00:17:27.380 well done sid that was a really good read and legit folks out there i mentioned this last week on
00:17:37.000 stream but i've been using pia for years they really are the best uh so do check them out the deal
00:17:42.280 they're giving us too like the deal that they're it's crazy cheap like it's crazy crazy cheap i can't
00:17:47.320 believe how cheap it is yeah and it's so easy like if you're we mentioned this last week as well but
00:17:52.040 if you're someone who hasn't if you're not particularly tech savvy you install this app you
00:17:57.460 press a button you're on your vpn literally right now even if rebel tags me uh to post something on
00:18:03.240 instagram or to access my own content i need to turn on my vpn otherwise it simply doesn't work
00:18:08.300 yeah they got me yesterday uh the team sent me something to be a collaborator on instagram for
00:18:15.880 and i was like oh i better watch this before i agree to this nonsense i'm just kidding but i didn't
00:18:20.500 have my vpn turned on and disappears and uh and then i was like oh i can't even watch myself
00:18:27.020 complaining about how bad the news is because that's justin trudeau's shakedown um and that's
00:18:33.900 how the big tech companies have reacted to justin trudeau i couldn't even watch my own self
00:18:38.940 complaining i can't even complain about c18 without the consequences of c18 coming to get me
00:18:46.000 so get your vpn is what i'm saying yeah for sure check that deal out now they are and really like
00:18:51.240 i mentioned there they don't hold on to your like records so the government can't can't seize them and
00:18:57.440 then prove you donated to such an answer or whatever anyways moving on um we're gonna get through a
00:19:02.060 bunch of stories here quick we've got lots of news today so um we want to touch on this briefly
00:19:06.320 um obviously like we've got folks in maui right now looking into that story telling the other side
00:19:11.280 of the story i think we're starting to work on plans to look at some of the canadian wildfires as
00:19:15.680 well but uh all 20 000 yellow knife residents now evacuating as a result of that massive fire
00:19:21.580 folks surely saw on social media west kelowna the massive fires in kelowna these fires are taking
00:19:26.960 place kind of all over the place and and unprecedented rates um and we are seeing now
00:19:32.760 that these are being investigated but there are far more incidents of arson uh than we've seen in past
00:19:37.760 years so that is extremely concerning um there's not too much to say politically here except the left
00:19:42.700 of course wants to say a lot politically um and and to to sort of politicize this tragedy as it's
00:19:48.960 unfolding the amount of people i've seen weighing in on social media saying like we need more wind
00:19:54.020 turbines and solar farms now in response to the northwest territories in northwest territories people
00:20:01.260 who are heavily reliant on fossil fuels you want them to go on to solar panels to combat climate change
00:20:09.680 uh i've got to tell you i'm working on a story about this right now uh i'm gonna film it after the
00:20:14.760 live stream here so we can't go late um because it's pretty newsworthy uh rebecca alti she's the
00:20:20.260 mayor of yellowknife and boy she's doing a great job up there um the entire community is being
00:20:25.400 evacuated i think more than half the residents of the territory are displaced at this point kudos to
00:20:32.400 my friends and neighbors in alberta for in alberta communities for absorbing the majority of those
00:20:38.260 evacuees we in alberta right now are absorbing more than half the people in the northwest territories
00:20:44.560 who are under evacuation order um the thing about alberta and i think the northwest territories this
00:20:50.300 rings true also is heavy industry is really an asset in times of crisis like this besides the fact
00:20:58.320 that they have the equipment to build the berms and fire breaks that you need this is what happens when
00:21:03.640 an entire populace is trained in evacuation techniques um because uh that was one of the reasons that
00:21:12.860 resulted in zero deaths except for a motor vehicle accident when fort mcmurray was evacuated a few
00:21:19.800 years ago and one third of the town burned when slave lake was evacuated um you've got people who
00:21:26.620 know how to evacuate because they are trained annually through their jobs in heavy industry in the north it's
00:21:33.300 mining it's forestry it's um all those sorts of things in alberta it's forestry again sometimes mining
00:21:39.720 um oil and gas you've got people who know how to you know get to muster points and they know you know
00:21:45.980 about confined space and you know about uh how to use respirators and all those things and it the untold
00:21:53.760 story of how um we are uniquely equipped i think in the civilized world to deal with these things is our
00:22:03.640 close relationship with heavy industry out here well these hard-working uneducated people they're uh
00:22:10.200 they're pretty darn good at this stuff for sure and it's incredible to see i know calgary calgary
00:22:15.300 alone is taking in 5 000 people they're fully equipped set up and they have capacity to take
00:22:20.160 more than that if needed the biggest issue right now is they're turning food donations away because
00:22:24.760 they have a system in place and calgarians are showing up in such a way that they're that
00:22:29.740 they're overwhelmed with resources it's incredible and then you mentioned uh that mayor i have to say
00:22:36.140 and this is a very rare occasion i've actually agreed with jot gondek twice in the last 24 hours
00:22:42.000 um which is which is incredibly rare one of the seven seals of the apocalypse are being opened
00:22:47.640 the incredible reply to this the capacity to tackle this say we're doing more it is fundamentally
00:22:56.160 albertan of jot gondek so cheers to her for that you're not going to hear this from me often and
00:23:00.940 now this um jot gondek calgary's mayor basically told the alberta ndb to go fly a kite and we talked
00:23:09.020 about this we'll talk about this in a bit but seen as we're on it um daniel smith the ucp um they've put
00:23:15.320 this six month uh moratorium on solar and wind because one there's questions about the sustainability of
00:23:22.200 the supply and the grid storage and all that but two because with their with with oil sites they're
00:23:27.300 talking about cleanups there's no plan there's no life plan yeah yeah there's no plan whatsoever so
00:23:33.120 they're saying okay well we need this so we can address this so it's environmentally sound it's
00:23:37.340 practical it's sensible and even joe t gondek is telling the ndp that what they're doing is the
00:23:43.480 sensible environmental and responsible thing moving forward now nobody likes the fact that some people's
00:23:48.660 jobs are paused for a couple months as they get to the bottom of this but the liberals and the ndp
00:23:54.140 people out there who are shouting about jobs they couldn't have cared less at all when oil people lost
00:23:59.540 their jobs when they they don't care at all about people losing their jobs they only care now that
00:24:04.020 there's political capital but it's incredible to see i mean jot gondek is wildly unpopular
00:24:08.900 hopefully she's waking up and realizing that she can't just push her own agenda she has to listen
00:24:13.680 to people but that's two check marks for jot gondek um there's a couple hundred maybe a couple
00:24:19.500 thousand x's she has to offset but a good start jot two in a row unblock me and i'll retweet you
00:24:25.320 i'm i'm frightened i'm just i'm frightened by these developments and and what it means for the end of
00:24:31.780 days like what is what is happening apocalyptic stuff so yeah but uh yeah uh thoughts and to a more
00:24:41.420 significant extent for you and i prayers to everyone out there who's struggling with this
00:24:44.520 wherever you are um we hope you your families your pets and your even your properties are
00:24:48.920 as safe as can be but uh take care of human lives first that's a priority folks um moving on to our
00:24:55.360 next story um a bit of a story and it is what it is weeks not days another bc ferry has broken down
00:25:01.660 and is expected to be able to service for a long time we don't need to spend too much time on this i
00:25:06.360 just wanted to point out this bc ferries is now independently managed but it's still owned
00:25:10.480 by the government um i've spent quite a bit of time in south america um and they have ratchet
00:25:17.080 don't get me wrong off the coast of argentina there's super ferries and it's very luxurious
00:25:20.720 there's a lot of ferries down there to get around they're super ratchety and they managed to fix them
00:25:26.820 and keep them going with a hundredth of the budget a thousandth of the budget of bc ferries this whole
00:25:32.680 mentality that things just break and can't be fixed is the most governmental thing i've ever heard of
00:25:37.320 and if this was a private institution it just wouldn't be happening yeah and people rely on
00:25:42.340 this like they commute and this is the height of the tourism season also like this seems like
00:25:47.480 it's we should have a solution for when things get broken yeah oh and there is what i guarantee you
00:25:56.920 what the problem is here is there's red tape and board meetings and and some there's i guarantee you
00:26:02.120 there's a guy at bc ferries right now who could fix this but it's not being allowed to um right he
00:26:09.260 needs to fill out a stack of paperwork and consult with the union rules i'm sure exactly yeah fill in
00:26:16.240 a t7 form and file it with yeah anyways just want to touch on that it's whether it's whether it's
00:26:21.320 museums losing 800 pieces or ferries not being able to ferry it's always you you can always go to the
00:26:27.100 bottom of the page and there's like a government of canada or government of bc or something thing there
00:26:31.000 fail safe it's a game i play whenever i hear about a corporation or entity not functioning
00:26:35.000 uh property now this is an interesting story because it very much echoes we're seeing so much
00:26:43.500 and there's there's more of this stories coming but alberta and saskatchewan um rejecting what
00:26:48.500 everything else everyone else is doing and we're seeing inflation the lowest in these provinces we're
00:26:53.520 seeing crime starting to be tackled we're seeing addictions being tackled scott mo daniel smith are
00:26:58.720 saying nope to everything that hasn't been working and doing things different um whether it be the
00:27:03.760 human trafficking task force established um here or the increased responsibilities of sheriffs
00:27:09.380 um sort of keeping an eye out on maybe police who weren't doing as much as they should be within
00:27:14.140 cities cores um daniel smith has been a big advocate um and so now uh the saskatchewan uh authorities have
00:27:21.040 formed a new police service yes um critics are questioning the lack of oversight oh yeah well
00:27:25.400 they should have questioned the lack of oversight over the rcmp and the police who weren't doing
00:27:29.420 their jobs uh the saskatchewan party government has begun establishing a new provincial police service
00:27:33.520 but the minister in charge says it won't have an oversight body until until boots are on the ground
00:27:38.100 christine tell minister of corrections hang on let's let's just stop for a second yeah i know christine
00:27:42.980 tell by the way sorry christine tell by the way an absolute fashion icon in saskatchewan that is a
00:27:49.320 stylish woman by the way i think she's the former police officer so she knows like it's not like she's
00:27:55.400 she's anti-rcmp she's a former cop um but i like that the critics sorry i didn't mean to interrupt
00:28:02.580 you but the critics we have the critics want the the critics want the bureaucrats in place before the
00:28:09.000 cops are in place yeah they want the government the government busy bodies in place before they have
00:28:15.000 actual cops so they're putting the bureaucracy over top of the safety of the community i'll be quiet
00:28:21.320 please go on and that no i literally as i read past that i was like i'll get back and say exactly
00:28:26.600 that it's so funny like no no we need a regulatory body we need to consult bc fairies on this before
00:28:33.460 we get no it's like we need people on the ground they're not saying we're not going to have an
00:28:37.860 oversight body after they're saying we're going to get people on the ground and have people over with
00:28:41.500 oversight over looking them but listen there's going to be rules and regulations in place but yeah
00:28:46.600 these people all they want is bureaucracy they don't want anything to be done whatsoever uh
00:28:51.540 christine tell fashion icon uh minister of corrections yes policing public safety uh now
00:28:57.460 has authority to form a new saskatchewan marshals service alberta's going to have sheriffs saskatchewan's
00:29:02.180 going to have marshals this is going to be cool uh set a recent order in council uh the order states
00:29:08.020 that the province's deputy minister will act in place of a board to oversee operations um so the plan
00:29:13.540 is to effectively have it operational in 2026 um this is really good i think um and it's a
00:29:20.520 repudiation of this rcp rcmp entitlement there are wonderful folks within the rcmp even throughout
00:29:27.160 coven 19 i encountered encountered a bunch of them doing as much as they could to help people
00:29:31.680 who are in a pinch there are also some very bad people but the thing is is is and we talked about
00:29:36.840 this i think last week or the week before so many of the rcmp or police who are brought in
00:29:41.560 to enforce and shut down protests and do all this stuff they were brought in from outside of
00:29:47.440 communities because the people inside of communities wouldn't do this to their own
00:29:51.520 people by localizing authorities these people have a greater level accountability to their local
00:29:57.380 communities they're known to their local communities and they're not waiting for feedback
00:30:01.580 from ontario and bc ferries i'm of course joking again but they can act to benefit and help and and
00:30:08.500 work within their communities there are cultural differences between ontario and saskatchewan and
00:30:13.600 vancouver that that local policing authorities need to be able to respond to so i think that this is
00:30:19.380 just uh good news plain and simple well it flies in the face of the whole defund the police movement
00:30:25.800 right yeah and yeah and this targets policing where it needs to be targeted you know we saw this in
00:30:33.420 alberta where our premier deployed uh sheriffs to the downtown core because the people who are paying
00:30:41.100 for the public services and infrastructure in the downtown core i.e the lrt system and the c train in
00:30:48.340 calgary couldn't use it because these places became open air drug markets um and so you know you got to
00:30:56.700 make you got to make your cities safe and if the cities are unable or is so often the case in
00:31:04.660 progressive cities unwilling to do it for ideological reasons um instead of calling in the social workers
00:31:11.420 the way the progressives wanted to our premier called in some cops um and hopefully it starts to
00:31:17.640 make a difference we know her drug policy is already making a difference in changing lives
00:31:21.400 but if you go into saskatchewan's plan for their marshal service um which i mean they're
00:31:30.400 lots of you have to look at this through sort of a a local policing lens as you pointed out so the
00:31:38.800 cities have their own police forces right regina has police edmonton has its police and um what they're
00:31:47.200 basically going to do is create a similar such police agency for the rural areas because why
00:31:53.700 can't we have our own cops so um like ontario has just like ontario has for a very long time
00:32:01.280 um so the ordering council states that the marshals are to detect disrupt and deter criminal activity in
00:32:07.600 rural and remote areas you know where we need the help but help is so far away they're also to
00:32:14.100 enforce provincial and federal laws locate and apprehend prolific offenders so recidivist jerks
00:32:20.180 the human crime waves on warrants and investigate farm thefts and damage done to crops caused by
00:32:27.120 trespassing this is all just like i love everything about this and so the urbanites in the in the
00:32:33.340 cities um who actually don't live in the downtown core where it's like plagued by um crime but like
00:32:39.540 who live in the suburbs they're like oh we don't like this because they don't have to deal with
00:32:42.980 trespassers and people coming on their property and the fact that cops are 45 minutes away when you
00:32:48.000 need them at this minute um those are the people against this stuff farmers are like yep yep we love
00:32:53.900 it um because this is targeted to help us which is something we've been saying for years and years
00:32:58.940 and years if you are not going to let us defend ourselves and make sure you have police who will
00:33:03.580 this is addressing that problem yeah you know and it's it's just what comes to mind we've got tell
00:33:10.600 taking the strong stance in saskatchewan mickey amory the justice minister here recently gave a rant
00:33:16.940 about how they're going to get hard on crime uh we had dan williams saying he really couldn't care
00:33:22.060 less what progressives say on on addiction they're going to help people get better uh minister ellis
00:33:26.820 minister of public safety and emergencies once again doubling down on how they're going to get hard
00:33:30.680 on crime the words of premier daniel smith when i was interviewing her on human trafficking uh not
00:33:35.880 just on human trafficking but on crime echo true and i said what's your message to folks out there
00:33:40.400 who are benefiting from this and she said not here that is the clear message from the government of
00:33:44.920 saskatchewan and the government of alberta right now they're saying criminals you're not welcome here
00:33:49.140 we're going to find you we're going to punish you you're not going to be back on the street on bail
00:33:52.640 we will see crime decrease over the coming months over the coming years um this is good news and i have
00:33:58.860 to say even last night those sheriffs being introduced i was in downtown calgary lots of
00:34:03.480 the sort of areas around olympic plaza around some of the c train stations the facts that the fact that
00:34:08.480 the sheriffs are there sort of looking over police officers shoulders whether they like it or not
00:34:13.220 whether it's subconscious or concerted the police are actually parked in spots where crimes take place
00:34:20.080 they used to just steer clear of there because you you put in a lot of effort do a ton of paperwork lock
00:34:25.720 somebody up and nothing would come of it they'd be released the cops in every sort of dangerous spot
00:34:31.680 within the city last night i saw a vehicle with two police officers in it keeping an eye out and i
00:34:36.560 didn't hear anyone screaming fighting yelling i think things are changing already i i certainly hope so
00:34:42.920 so good news on on the on the front of law and order out west moving on to some china related stories
00:34:51.180 chinese consulates task chinese students and aggressive intelligence ops according to canadian
00:34:57.220 intelligence beijing's top diplomats in canada are tasking and likely funding chinese student
00:35:03.320 associations and aggressive intelligence operations that include monitoring and coercing other students
00:35:08.780 and university officials canadian intelligence documents allege according to cesis investigations
00:35:14.320 these operations include a consul general tasking chinese students to investigate and gather
00:35:18.880 intelligence on the family of an alleged uh chinese economic figure it goes on and on but i think
00:35:27.300 involving students in this is just sick like it's it's another level it's kind of like you know
00:35:37.000 what well they're you'll see someone they're they're they're they're a chinese student you're like oh
00:35:42.160 wonderful they're coming to learn about freedom and culture no it turns out the government has them
00:35:47.220 operating as a chinese like spy this is brutal and it sounds just about on brand uh for for the chinese
00:35:54.440 government uh yeah what what do you make of this well i think probably i'm not surprised by any of this
00:36:02.100 i just assume that uh every organization that uh has direct ties to the chinese government is spying
00:36:09.760 on canadians or expats like i just at this point i'm just like yep if there's like any sort of link
00:36:16.900 to chinese officialdom i'm just going to assume they're trying they're spying but what i think is
00:36:23.440 the most important line in all of this is that uh the feds in particular justin trudeau have known about
00:36:31.080 this allegation since 2019 so good four years um so um it says the allegations are disclosed in a june
00:36:41.020 2019 canadian eyes only draft report for prime minister justin trudeau produced by uh nsi cop a
00:36:50.920 bipartisan intelligence review body and so this intelligence document was uh reviewed exclusively by
00:36:59.160 sam cooper's operation the bureau and it describes how chinese diplomats in canada have deeply infiltrated
00:37:04.920 campuses cleverly leveraging the protected spaces of higher education to attack the nation's democratic
00:37:11.380 and economic institutions so the feds have known about this for four years and what have the feds done
00:37:17.000 nothing why because the feds are benefiting from this like they are winning in ridings and conservative
00:37:25.680 chinese candidates are losing because they are not the preferred choices of beijing
00:37:32.060 yeah yeah it's wild and it's it's it's just part of a pattern that like when is there going to be some
00:37:41.200 sort of justice this liberal government this justin trudeau government we're going to talk you talked
00:37:47.720 about it yesterday we're going to talk about minister gilbo's direct involvement with this chinese
00:37:52.640 government but the that we we you can go on and on i can't even remember the instances you have money
00:37:58.000 coming in from a uh have a large chinese community in china to uh justin trudeau's uh eastern canadian
00:38:05.940 constituency um you have election interference you have uh police stations being set up it goes on and
00:38:13.160 on there are just no lack and there's no effort no no willingness no desire in fact there's an there's a
00:38:19.880 very self-evident uh sort of uh condoning of what is going on by this government across the board and
00:38:27.920 we talked about this off the top of the show it doesn't matter if you're opening coal factories uh
00:38:33.800 every year coal production sites electric and uh sites in china you can be opening one every day and
00:38:39.520 this liberal government will will encourage you while they're shutting down natural resources that are
00:38:44.940 far more ethical right here in alberta there's a glaring double standard and and what's the possible
00:38:51.160 motivation for it i mean one can speculate but it isn't rational it isn't in line with canadian interests
00:38:58.940 it isn't in line with the the needs of people who are struggling to pay their bills um there has to be
00:39:04.820 sort of a personal benefiting agenda for certain people justin trudeau nominally but what is it
00:39:11.400 as they say who benefits who benefits from this so china benefits but so does justin trudeau
00:39:18.360 benefits from the support of his favorite dictatorship because i think the liberals only
00:39:22.920 ideology is power at all costs and hanging on to power at all costs and they're willing to take that
00:39:28.320 help from anybody even if it means trading the integrity of canadian institutions and canadian
00:39:33.500 democracy for it yeah and i don't know if we're ever going to get to the bottom of if we're ever
00:39:38.820 getting an honest answer as to what conversations or dealings there this is such a pattern here that
00:39:46.300 this isn't simply looking the other way this has to be a two-way street there has to be networks of
00:39:51.920 communication for this to be happening on this scale if something happens once it can be a coincidence
00:39:56.520 twice the same thing three times you start to be suspicious but if you're talking about dozens
00:40:01.520 hundreds of instances of the same patterns of behavior um there's something undeniable going on
00:40:08.580 here and hey it'd be great if the rcmp would investigate that but uh i guess they won't maybe
00:40:14.000 we can send the sheriffs and uh the saskatchewan force out there uh to to investigate but uh and the bc
00:40:21.300 ferry cops yes and the bc ferry authorities um so we did talk about this yesterday but i do want to
00:40:27.280 touch on scott mo weighing in on this so daniel smith tweeted that uh uh after a recent news report
00:40:33.180 mr stephen gilvoe is a vice chair of a ccp environmental group i'm concerned is why the
00:40:38.020 minister wants alberta to be net zero by 2035 but it's okay with china getting there by 2060
00:40:43.220 now daniel smith said uh that this was recent but i think we broke this what five years ago you're
00:40:48.680 saying sheila yes so brian lily the post media bailout journalist has discovered an exclusive story that
00:40:54.780 uh rebel news broke uh in 2018 so good job brian you're a little late to the game um but uh yeah
00:41:05.660 so 2018 we broke the news that katherine mckenna the environment minister at the time was sitting on
00:41:11.600 this advisory board um of the ccp and not only does the canadian environment minister sit on this
00:41:21.220 advisory board but canada also pays 1.6 million dollars to china the world's second largest economy
00:41:29.860 for the pleasure of advising the chinese communist genocide heirs on their climate policy i like it's
00:41:36.600 just the stupidest thing ever so now five years later the mainstream media catches up to us and they
00:41:42.340 report this because and the new minister involved is stephen gilboe and um so now the conservative
00:41:50.680 politicians are outraged by this news that was broken five years ago um and uh you know what
00:41:58.980 late whatever but i'm happy at least now they're expressing outrage on this issue um yeah because i
00:42:06.620 think it is now in like the proper context just how infiltrated and how intermingled we are with the ccp
00:42:16.800 oh yeah yeah it's and it isn't like uh it isn't even a maybe anymore we talked about the pattern
00:42:23.360 being established there isn't even a pattern being established it's like yeah this guy works for them
00:42:27.820 i that how there's not yeah it works for them how there is not just an overt con like they're on the
00:42:35.080 board of the world economic forum they're working for the chinese communist party that's not how you
00:42:41.080 it's not acceptable under any metric and the fact there isn't a clear conflict of interest and that
00:42:46.820 the house isn't immediately saying well you have to resign this is ridiculous all of this stuff under
00:42:52.760 a conservative government prior to justin trudeau maybe not the weft board thing there's been some
00:42:57.260 of that before but all this stuff the people would be every headline would be deriding them they'd be
00:43:02.880 done in politics forever but now it's just business as usual and we've now got a couple generations
00:43:07.840 of liberals working for for this con this communist party that is engaged in an act of genocide
00:43:13.960 presently um is the if you care about the environment the greatest polluter the world has ever seen
00:43:19.980 and no one will ever ever ever catch them and the one of the greatest human rights violators but i mean
00:43:25.680 this is the thing is if you look at the policies that this government is enforcing if you look at the
00:43:30.980 way justin trudeau talks about certain groups of people if you look how justin trudeau acts he wants us to
00:43:37.000 be like china not an economic powerhouse but completely subservient beaten down with absolutely
00:43:43.020 nothing he said outright he admires the basic dictatorship and their capacity to get things
00:43:49.320 done he this is what he wants he wants to be the leader of canada the supreme unchallenged
00:43:55.140 leader of communist canada it's surreal but and again let's loop back let's loop back to melanie
00:44:02.360 joely saying you know we've got a plan if the u.s i guess votes republican but we've got uh because
00:44:10.020 voting republican might turn the place authoritarian i guess in spite of the constitution which actually
00:44:17.800 restrains the government and actually has teeth unlike the canadian charter of rights and freedoms
00:44:23.120 um that's what they're worried about while we have a minister of the crown working for the ccp
00:44:29.840 yeah we've got a plan it was provided we're still working the reason she couldn't provide details is
00:44:34.560 because it's still being translated from chinese um that is that's where they got their plan and
00:44:40.000 that's why she doesn't have details yet because it was given to them because a strong republican
00:44:45.520 government in the united states means a strong united states and china does not like that it doesn't
00:44:51.280 like that yes that's a great point good to see here though and speaking of good point that's how
00:44:57.080 scott mo starts his tweet perfect segue good point scott mo now why is the canadian minister
00:45:03.300 serving on an advisory council created by the communist party uh government of china welcome
00:45:09.340 premier of saskatchewan and leader of the saskatchewan party scott mo to the conversation rebel news
00:45:13.560 has been having for five years but again it is good to see alberta and saskatchewan once again saying
00:45:20.420 no no we're not gonna we're not gonna go along with this um we're saying no while the liberal
00:45:25.340 government may go along with this um we've got politicians with brass now who are saying no
00:45:30.280 absolutely not and uh come mess around with the west and you're gonna get the horns i'm happy to
00:45:36.020 see it you guys talked about this a bunch yesterday though so we can move on yeah yeah yeah it's really
00:45:41.240 good but it is good to see some politicians standing up um this is the most perfect toronto political
00:45:45.960 story i've heard uh insiders say doug ford's uh saved staff or blamed in greenbelt scandal yeah that's
00:45:51.640 because he's the one who blamed him pretty much um despite advice to let him go it's incredible in
00:45:57.480 any other industry other than politics the stuff that they just get away with or get blamed for
00:46:04.100 when it's not really them and then get to keep their job anyways is surreal the political aid blamed for
00:46:08.420 premier doug ford's 8.28 billion dollar greenbelt land swap debacle is back on the job and keeping
00:46:14.180 his head down ryan amato chief staff to municipal affairs and housing minister steve clark returned from
00:46:19.560 vacation in italy to a firestorm in the last week's auditor general's report this just 100
00:46:25.560 seems like one of those cases of can you take the fall for this it won't cost you your job
00:46:29.660 does it not yeah yeah they just pinned it on this guy he may or may not be implicated in it i'm not
00:46:36.260 sure but as long as he was like the public face of the scandal they're just like no it's that guy
00:46:42.360 and but he gets rewarded by getting to keep his job this is just like perfect political
00:46:48.940 nonsense um happens everywhere it's not ford it's not it's not the chief it's not the minister
00:46:56.460 it's none of the politicians it's just one of his chief one of his staff it's just an underling
00:47:02.480 he probably got a raise for taking the fall by the way i was elected to lead not to read that's this
00:47:09.080 that's steve amato's job he was he was the uh reader and he misread um so yeah that's it
00:47:15.160 in more toronto-esque political news toronto is exploring new taxes and a parking levy to tackle
00:47:20.760 budget deficits like all of us when things are getting tight we just demand more money
00:47:25.020 of people around us no we cut costs and behave more sensibly um a municipal sales tax a dedicated
00:47:31.660 9-1-1 levy more power for toronto parking authority to set higher prices graduated hike and land transfer
00:47:37.940 tax for luxury homes are among the flurry of revenue proposals city staff are recommending that
00:47:43.020 in order to stave off crushing this stave off rather crushing financial pressures uh when she
00:47:49.260 was elected back in june mayor olivia chow called for a special august meeting of executive committee
00:47:54.740 uh of the executive committee rather to deal with city's troubled finances that meeting is set to take
00:47:59.860 place next week and the report uh and the report the committee that's where uh will consider was
00:48:05.500 released today so i mean this is so toronto trudeau ontario every other politician
00:48:12.840 is like oh people can't afford anything things are brutal we need to make life more affordable
00:48:18.280 inflation is the worst toronto is like we need much much much more taxes because we're spending
00:48:23.720 in uncontrolled fashion right i just saw out of the corner of my eye there a 46.5 billion dollar
00:48:31.280 shortfall yeah would i see that's a crazy number for a city yeah like it it's insane and and you're right
00:48:41.140 like people are trying to go to work to buy food and you want to gouge them where they park their car
00:48:47.560 to go to work stop spending the money you don't have it the people don't have it do you think people have
00:48:55.520 extra money to just give to the city to go parking of course they don't stop spending the money a
00:49:01.460 photograph of rob ford's headstone would do a better job than olivia chow in this current council
00:49:07.540 yeah 100 and that's just so folks understand they're not saying the total amount they need
00:49:14.360 is 46.5 billion they're saying over 10 years the shortfall is 46.5 billion so they've like
00:49:21.960 over budgeted or under budgeted over 10 years by 46.5 billion and it's what's the population of
00:49:29.620 toronto right now i don't know 10 million eight or nine million something like that it's a mega city
00:49:34.940 how still but 46.5 are you paying for the construction of 15 burj khalifas what is happening
00:49:44.960 legitimately i don't i don't understand what is happening here by any metric whatsoever it's
00:49:51.600 impossible you could build you could literally build all of las vegas for 40s maybe not quite but
00:49:57.460 you could build a lot of las vegas for 46.5 billion dollars you could establish a new major
00:50:02.720 city for 46.5 billion dollars don't take this the wrong way but i was very recently in toronto
00:50:07.560 it's not that nice like it's fine it's fine but like you would still traffic still you know mayhem
00:50:17.680 still construction um there's that one stretch of construction that david mendes complains about
00:50:24.680 because the road repairs are now old enough to vote in the next federal election they seem to
00:50:30.000 have been going on that long um i don't know i just to quit spending the money find let's find
00:50:36.940 some cost-effective savings please can we pull can we pull the article up and just scroll to the
00:50:42.000 related image at the bottom for a second just because it's really funny if possible sorry if that's
00:50:47.460 a pain but uh the related image on this article is just golden i don't know if you see it there
00:50:52.420 it's a picture of the uh the beautiful beautiful skyline that has a 46 point that's not great
00:50:59.360 looking for a 46.8 billion dollar uh shortfall yes stunning looks like a futuristic uh former
00:51:08.680 soviet republic trying to fancy itself up hopefully the architect isn't watching because they're probably
00:51:15.140 crying but anyways uh yeah that's very very very toronto um we're going to skip the last ad break so
00:51:21.080 we can get through the last the rest of these stories um uh electric subsidies now 32 billion
00:51:27.740 dollars according to blackhawks um federal subsidies for electric car makers yesterday reached 32 billion
00:51:34.200 twice the annual output of the entire canadian auto sector my god it's pretty remark it's pretty
00:51:42.460 remarkable industry minister françois philippe champagne said yeah uh no warning another subsidy to ford
00:51:50.240 mortar company i think it's a big accomplishment that i love that this is just like one paragraph
00:51:56.080 and it's absolutely perfect i just have this i don't know i don't know if i'm not logged in presently
00:52:00.940 but that's pretty much all we need to know the the subsidies for electric car makers are double the
00:52:07.240 entire output for the entire auto sector this is these are we're talking about make-believe numbers
00:52:14.180 with under this government in this country these days so they're twice the amount of total the total
00:52:21.380 industry is just subsidies and then this minister thinks that this is that this is a big accomplishment
00:52:27.280 and pretty remarkable it's definitely pretty remarkable but in a truly horrific way
00:52:31.680 um i just pulled up the statistics in alberta because we do a really good job of tracking
00:52:40.640 registration registration by fuel type in alberta when you register your vehicle with the province you
00:52:45.680 have to tell them the fuel type and i always look at this because uh it shows you like the uptake
00:52:51.520 on electric vehicles and it sort of seems to be kind of it doubled a little bit and then it was like
00:52:58.920 one-thirded up you know as it went um so uh right now we have uh about 3.6 million vehicles
00:53:10.240 registered on the road 3.6 million now the feds have said we have to get those to be um fully electric
00:53:19.140 net zero vehicles all of them all the new vehicles by i think 2035 is the goal good luck good luck to
00:53:26.920 you people this every time i look at this i think you people are idiots because we've got uh 3.6 million
00:53:32.920 vehicles registered for the road in alberta and these are the ones you can drive on the road this is not
00:53:37.840 like um farm trucks that maybe don't get registered on the road or whatever and of the fully electric
00:53:43.580 ones we've got about 5 600 so they're throwing all this money at the uh electric vehicle industry
00:53:51.560 and people just won't buy them now last year there were 3 500 so an extra 2 000 have come on the road
00:54:02.440 in alberta but we are a population of nearly 5 million people we've approaching 4 million cars on the road
00:54:10.420 and we have like a statistical rounding error of fully electric vehicles no matter how much money the feds
00:54:17.460 dump at the automakers of our money like i think we could probably have purchased electric vehicles
00:54:25.300 for entire alberta cities yeah instead of just giving money to the automakers yeah if they really
00:54:32.400 care they could have just bought everyone cars yes get rid of public cars yeah it's wild what i'm
00:54:40.180 saying everyone gets a tesla the government could be like oprah they are like oprah except they're just
00:54:44.780 giving money to massive corporations and taking it away from canadians they're doing a reverse robin hood
00:54:49.720 um i am told by the studio we do have to do one more really quick ad break then we're going to come
00:54:54.180 back right after that do two more stories chats and we're going to get you out of here as close
00:54:58.420 to as possible as on time so one quick ad break already back with two stories do you want to start
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00:56:07.540 yeah good job nice walking through the forest getting that uh pre pre-pandemic feeling back
00:56:26.700 uh some really good news i don't know if you had a chance to touch on this yesterday but uh covid
00:56:30.960 charges have been dropped against ontario pastor uh you talked about it yesterday i know we didn't i
00:56:36.420 wrote it up for the website this morning uh pastor michael teason of uh i think it's grace baptist
00:56:43.160 church in simcoe ontario had his charges thrown yeah alliston simcoe county um he had his charges thrown
00:56:52.540 out um they had like a massive check stop operation at this church um back in april 2021 uh some narcs
00:57:02.980 uh decided that these christians were being a little bit too uh fellowshipy for their liking
00:57:11.020 during the time of covid instead of minding their own damn business they called the cops
00:57:15.080 the cops put them under surveillance and then did look like a check stop style operation except they
00:57:20.780 weren't looking for real public health problems like drunk driving they were looking for christians
00:57:25.640 who wanted to sing and worship together and they got the pastor there and uh his charges were tossed
00:57:30.520 out so good good good good good that is wonderful news we do have one more story that we want to
00:57:36.800 talk about today but i think we'll just uh jump to that as the as the stream wraps up we do have two
00:57:41.760 uh rumble rants here that we're going to get to the first one is from albertadon which is a very
00:57:46.640 good name five dollars uh can you have your tech guy format church under fire and other videos
00:57:51.120 so i forwarded to the tv from my tablet so i can watch on the big screen keep up the good work
00:57:56.860 that is a really good question uh we'll we'll take a peek at that because i know that i think we're
00:58:01.460 working on that i think we're uh adopting the ability to cast and stream uh from your tablet
00:58:06.700 in your phone um i know that we have received viewer feedback about that i mean that's sort of how
00:58:12.060 i like to force my family to watch things that i want to show them i just stand there with my phone
00:58:17.220 and then like cast it to the tv when they're trying to watch something that they want to watch i'm
00:58:20.760 like no actually you need to see this right now and so i know that i'm not the only rebel in the
00:58:26.800 universe who does those sorts of things so i we want to provide that to you to force your friends
00:58:31.940 and family to watch uh rebel news um when they're captive in your home so uh we're working on it
00:58:36.680 while you're at it cast it to your neighbor's screen they need to watch too i'm joking don't do
00:58:40.660 that um fraser mcburney office all the tvs while people are getting teeth full yeah um fraser mcburney
00:58:49.000 chimes in twice really appreciated uh first he says i'm so happy that i was able to contribute
00:58:54.780 to send the rebel to maui let's hope they are safe having been to maui many times it breaks my heart
00:59:00.240 last time i was there it cost me five thousand five hundred fifty dollars in 1998 prices have gone
00:59:06.440 up for sure and then uh five dollars what is the sentence for impersonating a cop when
00:59:11.380 do their trials start have they been deported yet that's i think that's in relation to the chinese
00:59:16.760 police stations so yeah probably shockingly if i were to do that the police would be here very
00:59:22.340 quickly but when chinese officials do it another story all together i mentioned uh before we sign
00:59:28.220 off here and jump to the video of the uh uh the two thousand people chill looks like you have something
00:59:33.300 to say go no i was just gonna say like you can just go to these chinese police stations like they're
00:59:39.200 not hidden you can just go to one at the democracy fund student journalism conference one of their
00:59:44.700 one little group their project was to go and investigate a chinese police station and luckily
00:59:51.240 they had someone who was a chinese speaker in their group so she went there and read all the signage and
00:59:56.920 it was like the funnest wasn't i mean it was fun is probably not the right word but it was really
01:00:02.840 uh you felt like you were with a tour guide taking you on this secret mission because she was able to
01:00:10.820 translate everything and it's just right out there in the open just yeah but i mean you'd have to have
01:00:15.800 a government with the political will to get rid of these uh spy and coercion operations um but nope you
01:00:23.040 can just like literally just go visit them yeah it's surreal um so yeah we'll sign off here and then
01:00:28.860 we'll jump to a video uh pierre probably ever shared this it's uh what what you can get for
01:00:33.560 two thousand dollars a month uh in this tiny little 200 square foot thing but i know she's got some
01:00:39.200 stuff to do so we'll sign off and then we'll jump we can watch that i'm good for i'm good for a
01:00:43.600 couple of minutes let's let's watch the video together and comment on it and then we'll go from
01:00:46.900 there this is uh this is this is where this is what they want you having it's wild this is the
01:00:53.220 neighborhood this is a 200 yeah 200 square foot apartment in downtown east side this is your living
01:01:01.040 room this is the price this is your bedroom this is your fridge this is your kitchen
01:01:14.960 and this is your dining room this is a space for your guests and this is your walk-in closet
01:01:26.160 now this is a bathroom this is this is a shed this i'm this is me being claustrophobic just watching
01:01:39.400 that i've stayed in hotel rooms that are bigger than that yeah that's a way yeah like two grand a
01:01:48.960 month you get a mick mansion out here in alberta especially where i live and like relatively close
01:01:53.820 to the city i can't believe like no wonder people are just evacuating ontario and moving to alberta
01:02:02.400 leave your politics behind thank you very much but please come here and enjoy the low cost of living
01:02:07.680 yeah and i i like if you're let's say for example you're like single fresh out of university you
01:02:14.060 finally got a good job you want to pay for house let's say that was an option and it was like 500
01:02:18.680 and you did it for a year in order to save up but no this is like a two thousand dollars this is what
01:02:24.920 a current generation they think living downtown in that and renting that for two thousand dollars a month
01:02:30.220 is making it that's terrible that's just the absolute worst as an alberton i just don't understand
01:02:39.100 how young people get ahead have a dream of getting married and starting a family and having
01:02:45.560 like a piece of grass in the backyard where your kids can toddle around and play that just seems
01:02:51.560 so unattainable in so much of this country and yet nobody is talking about the causes of it for
01:03:00.100 example can we hit the pause button on immigration until we catch up with housing starts it's not an
01:03:06.160 anti-immigration statement it's a pro-immigrant statement because i don't want immigrant families
01:03:12.280 new canadian families living in a broom closet they deserve an opportunity to achieve an affordable
01:03:19.520 canadian dream also like i i look at my son my son has a good job you know he's a pipe fitter
01:03:25.380 he's got a house got a car he goes on a little weekend getaways with his girlfriend and his little
01:03:30.280 buddies and he eats out and he does young people things right like he does young people things i don't
01:03:36.420 know how any young person in toronto has any money left over for fun and like doing normal young
01:03:45.520 people things i just my heart breaks for them oh just i don't know how it i don't know how they do
01:03:50.620 it it just it's so sad i i don't know how they get ahead and it's got to be depressing like you look at
01:03:56.500 what your parents have and of course you you want to work towards that you want to have a family have kids
01:04:01.720 have a car take your family on vacation maybe get a little camper trailer maybe have a second vehicle
01:04:07.500 maybe have a playhouse in the backyard for your kids you never get there in places like toronto i
01:04:14.340 can't see it happening it's brutal and the reason i'm laughing is not this is just absolutely brutal
01:04:18.860 did you see the uh the graduation speech that christia freeland gave oh let's show it okay let's
01:04:25.480 watch this someone is talking about this this is a graduation speech from christia freeland i just
01:04:31.400 put it in slack i heard it was i heard it was real real uplifting and inspirational gives you a lot
01:04:37.140 of hope for the future it's terrible uh yeah here we go our time of tranquility is over and we are
01:04:47.360 living in an age of change we're living through what president biden on a visit to my country in march
01:04:55.240 called an inflection point a time of transformation he said that comes once every five or six generations
01:05:04.800 now like it or not you are graduating into that inflection point and as some of the very best educated
01:05:14.020 people on our planet you have the rare and precious opportunity to shape it so what is this inflection
01:05:23.020 point what is this upheaval which is going to the roots of humanity itself there are many ways to
01:05:31.000 describe this transformational moment but i think they all come down to one fundamental question
01:05:39.040 does capitalist democracy still work that's the question being posed around kitchen tables in my country
01:05:49.640 and this one as parents wonder if our children can count on capitalist democracy's essential promise
01:05:57.200 of a future more prosperous than our present it is the question being posed in the muddy and bloodied
01:06:05.120 trenches of bakhmut as ukraine's brave democrats resist the invading forces of putin's dictatorship
01:06:14.020 she's criticizing and it is the question being posed by our shrinking glaciers and our warming oceans
01:06:21.240 glaciers are asking questions wordlessly but emphatically if democratic societies can rise
01:06:29.320 to the existential challenge of climate change now these are of course huge and fundamental challenges
01:06:38.340 i'm not here to counsel despair or retreat yates famously said of another generation that came of age
01:06:48.560 in a liminal moment like guys like what the best lacked all conviction while the worst were full of
01:06:55.360 passionate intensity
01:07:00.580 yeah what uh you should have closed that speech with a number for the suicide hotline like what is she
01:07:08.640 doing if you think if you think things are desperate the glaciers weep like yeah go talk to the
01:07:18.500 snowbank about how bad it is yeah like oh man terrible yeah that's our that's our government very depressing and
01:07:25.760 it's like you're being you're being launched birthed i guess from university into this terrible terrible world
01:07:33.320 that you created christian yeah like the system is out to get you you're the system sister like what
01:07:42.220 what are you doing you're like telling these young people you made it crappy and uh so just uh hang in there
01:07:49.980 you know like she's like we've made we've i'm proud to say we've made it the worst it's been in five
01:07:54.480 six generations yeah and then like that guy he's like
01:07:59.020 yeah he just literally looks that was like the the gem from the office he's like
01:08:04.480 oh yeah she should write for hallmark inspirational cards for hallmark
01:08:12.200 she's the worst imagine imagine if she takes the reins next what those debates are gonna be like
01:08:17.960 oh god have mercy all right well on that note i know you've got some important stories to do we are
01:08:23.540 all very busy but it's been a great pleasure uh co-hosting with you sheila i want to go ahead
01:08:29.660 you said it was fun super fun oh it's fun it was fun it's been we used to do these all the time it's been
01:08:35.040 a while so it's nice to be back at it uh thanks to olivia for holding the studio down
01:08:39.280 most of all though thanks for everyone who is watching at home we couldn't do it and really
01:08:43.760 there wouldn't be much point doing it if you weren't here engaging with us watching enjoying
01:08:47.020 the content looking forward to be back at it with you next week and as always i want to thank
01:08:51.820 you all so much for tuning in for rebel news i'm adam sos