Rebel News Podcast - August 06, 2021


DAILY | Taxing Family Farms, Debunking Pat King


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 3 minutes

Words per Minute

171.6785

Word Count

10,971

Sentence Count

9

Misogynist Sentences

20

Hate Speech Sentences

9


Summary

Sheila Gunn-Reed won $50 in the Heart and Stroke Foundation Lottery and is now in the process of donating the winnings to charity. Meanwhile, she still has to pay the bill for the scotch she bought from the LCBO.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Good afternoon ladies and gentlemen you have tuned into the Rebel News live stream on this
00:00:20.780 a Thursday August 5th 2021. I'm David Menzies and my co-host oh wow my co-host she is she is
00:00:28.280 always my winning lottery ticket she is the she devil with a sword she is the Khaleesi of Northern
00:00:34.540 Alberta she is Sheila Gunn-Reed how are you doing there Sheila? I'm great David thank you so much for
00:00:42.120 asking how are you doing I never ask you how you're doing how are you doing? I'm doing great
00:00:46.240 because I went to my mailbox today and I had a big debate with Mr. Producer about the authenticity
00:00:52.660 of this being a win I won $50 in the heart and stroke lottery and Mr. Producer mocked me because
00:01:01.800 the ticket cost $100 so I'm kind of $50 in the in the red but then again this is for a good cause
00:01:09.540 it's for charity I'm probably going to need the heart stroke foundation the way things are going
00:01:14.880 these days so I call that win-win where do you stand on this Sheila?
00:01:19.140 I think that every day that you are on the right side of the dirt is a win in the heart and stroke
00:01:25.540 foundation lottery of life that's what I think David you're a winner every day you're still alive
00:01:31.340 well Mr. Producer wants me to donate that $50 to the heart and stroke foundation and I'm going to
00:01:40.360 meet him halfway I'm going to use the $50 and another $50 to buy another heart and stroke foundation
00:01:46.360 when I win the top prize of a million then I can start being daddy big bucks and making real nice
00:01:52.080 charitable donations but right now there are bills to pay Sheila yeah David let it ride just let it ride
00:01:58.920 now I wanted to ask you uh speaking of lotteries because lotteries has been one of the things that
00:02:07.580 have um I guess the lottery people have pushed you around in the past but I think roles of scotch
00:02:13.600 glenfarkless 105 which of course is an excellent product and is completely out of stock at the
00:02:20.360 mismanaged government run uh liquor bureaucracy control board of Ontario and uh when I got home
00:02:27.140 I only had two and you'd think that this would be a really easy fix see they come in cylinders so I
00:02:34.480 didn't know um that I had only two bottles and I couldn't tell by the weight because they have to take
00:02:41.600 um the ball the the cylinders out of a locked cabinet bring it to the cash desk so the first
00:02:47.240 time I actually lifted it was when I got home and right away I knew it was a little light a little
00:02:52.320 light by 700 milliliters and um I I'll give credit where it's due I reached out to the website hello
00:03:00.760 LCBO and within 24 hours they instructed the store to give me my bottle and then when we went to pick it up
00:03:09.020 the manager a like if there's a comic book to be created along the lines of superman super girl
00:03:17.120 super dog super monkey this is super Karen and she decided on a whim despite being told by the head
00:03:24.140 office she wasn't going to give it to me and she told me to go back to head office which I thought
00:03:29.540 was redundant which we did and we reached out to the public relations person and the customer service
00:03:35.760 guru um such a guru Sheila that every time you called her customer service yeah every time you
00:03:44.980 called her number she never answered it went right to voicemail and you were greeted with this message
00:03:50.540 the person you are trying to reach has her voicemail box full so so uh that was a dead end too
00:04:00.160 so the most recent update and I'm sorry I've gone on so long about something that really is quite
00:04:06.820 people want to know people want to know David this is very important to people they're emotionally
00:04:11.260 invested in you getting your liquor it's unbelievable um uh we have our lawyers now on it they have just
00:04:18.340 recently sent a demand letter I mean can you imagine folks a 110 bottle uh that the LCBO admits is mine
00:04:28.400 bought and paid for I guess it's a new promotion eh Sheila only a government liquor monopoly would come
00:04:32.940 up with that buy three get two um yeah so the demand letter is either about to be sent or has been sent
00:04:40.420 and um this is staggering to me I mean could you like you know Sheila if this had happened in your neck
00:04:49.720 of the woods I mean once upon a time Alberta had a government-run liquor monopoly but in the early 90s
00:04:56.660 I believe it went into the private sector where it should be government's role should be to regulate
00:05:02.240 and tax not to warehouse and retail uh booze or lottery tickets or anything else and tell me how
00:05:11.180 would this play out if you went to your local mom-pa liquor store and uh this mistake was made
00:05:17.540 it wouldn't play out here because there's a requirement to give customer service when your
00:05:23.300 customer can just go to the liquor store that way two blocks over there's competition and so they
00:05:28.680 compete for the customer in Ontario they don't have to compete for the customer if you want to buy
00:05:34.300 booze you got to buy it from either the government or the agency stores and that's the end of it so
00:05:39.080 there's no obligation to provide you any sort of customer service they I mean the the idea that they
00:05:45.440 even have a customer service person is just a make work project obviously and they're not even
00:05:50.520 working all that hard because her voicemail is full why even bother you don't have to compete for the
00:05:55.440 customer you don't have to treat them well who cares right isn't amazing and you know Sheila it has
00:06:00.860 even become more egregious during this time of COVID and by that I mean when it comes to spirits
00:06:08.700 which the LCBO has a monopoly on it is our way or the highway literally I would have to drive
00:06:17.520 to Buffalo and cross the border and get but you can't do that right quarantine so it's our way or our way
00:06:25.140 yeah I mean in Alberta if I don't like the liquor store up the road well it's not up the road I mean
00:06:32.200 I live in the middle of nowhere however because it's privatized there are liquor stores literally
00:06:36.720 in the middle of nowhere but if I don't like that one I just go to the other one and I go to the other
00:06:41.120 one and I give that guy who treated me right my business you get abused by the government you have
00:06:45.840 no choice but to shop from them it is astonishing Sheila and so uh to wrap this as soon as we get a
00:06:52.760 response from the LCBO and by the way I don't want 110 dollars I want a bottle of Glenn Farkless 105
00:07:03.340 and I'll tell you why Sheila I mentioned their incompetence in keeping this great bottle in on
00:07:08.840 the shelves I want them to run go through hoops go all the way to Scotland to get this bottle
00:07:15.960 and bring it to me because that is far more valuable to me right now than money they don't
00:07:21.980 I mean I can't even believe we're talking about this for an organization that has revenues in the
00:07:27.800 billions annually uh Sheila that this is even an issue but I I like I said to our legal team no no no
00:07:35.300 no gift card no cash give me the bottle and if that means that these bureaucrats at the liquor
00:07:41.960 monopoly have to get off their ricotta cheese candy asses and make some phone calls and get that product
00:07:48.920 back on the shelf well then I call that win-win Sheila I hope you get an apology too for that from
00:07:55.920 that store manager I hope you do though even if it's insincere and humiliating because these forced
00:08:02.520 apologies they're never sincere right but I think it's a victory to wring it out of somebody especially
00:08:07.500 somebody who thought that they could just steal from you and just be like okay well thanks bye I
00:08:12.080 think you deserve an apology from her because she wasted your entire day you knew everybody's name
00:08:16.780 before you left the store you were there that long Sheila she called the police on us you know for and
00:08:23.440 and you know I mean people think we might be going on a bit about this but the thing is I believe that
00:08:29.100 that video had more than 100,000 views yeah on our YouTube channel and I think it hit a note Sheila of
00:08:38.440 millions of Ontarian liquor buyers who have been so mistreated by this grotesque bureaucracy you know
00:08:48.680 have been so disrespected you know and in addition to paying outrageous prices because they are a monopoly
00:08:57.080 I think it resonated and this was just so over the line you know a person honestly by the way you know
00:09:06.820 Sheila I gotta tell you if I was pulling a scam here I wouldn't go through all these hoops I just
00:09:11.260 take the bottle and walk out the store they they lose millions every year by people openly stealing they
00:09:17.480 have a they have a laissez-faire hands-off policy so I don't have to go through this crazy scheme if
00:09:25.240 people think it's a scheme um so in other words another honest Ontario taxpayer getting the shaft
00:09:32.520 from the provincial government I think that's why it got so many views well and there's also the
00:09:38.540 whole like Albertans would look on this with horror right we look at this with horror and we're like
00:09:43.820 holy that could be us if not for the foresight of Ralph Klein right so it's it resonates with
00:09:49.700 everybody so Albertans are a little bit horrified but also a little bit smug because we don't have to
00:09:54.240 experience that so you want to watch it too and it's it's not just about a hundred bucks it's about
00:09:59.360 again one guy of many that don't have a platform who got screwed by the government and we're also that
00:10:07.940 you guys are paying government workers to sell liquor is like that you're paying government wages
00:10:12.840 and government benefits to sell liquor that also I mean that's mortifying it's grotesque and I can
00:10:18.980 tell you one last thing in June Sheila we were out um in um Kleinberg uh to cover uh a protest there
00:10:28.200 and somebody pulled up he honked his horn furiously I thought it was someone that was going to flip me
00:10:33.140 the bird for some reason quite the contrary he thought I might be at this protest and this viewer and I mean
00:10:42.900 I'm so humbled by this so honored he gave me a bottle of Johnny Walker blue which retails in this
00:10:52.060 province for $340 I tried to decline it like five times he insisted I take it and um uh you know she
00:11:02.500 like goes back to what we've always said could you imagine a CBC or global or CTV reporter having uh cash or
00:11:11.060 goods stuffed into their hands by their audience it just wouldn't happen right no the the the pocket
00:11:18.360 and money it goes the other way with the CBC they reach into your pocket and just take your money um
00:11:25.540 yeah we have the best people we just have the best people and uh we're so grateful for them because we
00:11:30.460 wouldn't be here without them there's nothing that we would be doing without their support and they're
00:11:34.940 they're the best and you know when you meet them out in the world um I'm just you know I think some
00:11:40.700 people are they they might recognize it like like I could tell it at a corner of my eye if I'm at the
00:11:46.320 Canadian Tire and somebody recognized me I know um and I think sometimes people are scared to approach us
00:11:52.660 because we're just going about our regular lives but I want to hear from you I'm so grateful I can't go
00:11:58.560 shopping in Canadian Tire to buy plants without the fact that these people are giving me a job
00:12:04.560 so please approach me I want I want the opportunity to say thank you to you you know Sheila I think
00:12:10.520 your face should be on one of the Canadian Tire uh bills you know one of the I spent a lot of money
00:12:16.260 there are they still giving that out by the way or is that all digitized now it's all digitized mostly
00:12:21.740 I don't I don't know my kid has a wallet full of it probably in the name of COVID too right
00:12:28.020 what did you do with your Canadian Tire money when you were a kid did you buy hockey sticks with it
00:12:32.480 that's what mine do I can't remember what you know if I was smart I would have kept the bills
00:12:39.980 in pristine mint condition because evidently there's a collectible community of uh Canadian
00:12:46.520 Tire money so you can get far more kind of like you know comics right but not stamps I inherited some
00:12:53.380 stamps and I tried to sell the stamps and the the guy at the the collectibles place said
00:13:01.740 they're basically worthless I said what he says I would just use them the mail letters and I go
00:13:07.200 some of these go back to the 1960s he goes nobody's collecting stamps anymore so I've got all these
00:13:13.780 binders of mint condition stamps that are completely worthless do you know what though keep hanging on
00:13:21.420 to them because someday people are going to be like did you know that people used to send letters
00:13:25.460 in the mail so keep hanging on to them they might not be worth something but they might be historical
00:13:32.080 artifacts one day yeah you know yeah kids once upon a time those people working for Canada Post
00:13:38.880 they weren't just shoving junk in your mailbox there was actually correspondence from your aunts and
00:13:44.780 uncles and grandparents imagine that let grandpa tell you about the time that we paid people way
00:13:51.960 too much money to deliver these things to our mailboxes and then they would strike because they
00:13:57.660 wanted us to believe they were really important but when they went on strike nobody noticed oh but
00:14:02.560 Sheila back in the 70s when they when their union was very radicalized it did bring the country to
00:14:10.620 its knees you know because there was no such thing as emails and computers and iPhones and but they
00:14:17.140 wouldn't dare strike today because you no one would notice in fact they might be doing people a favor
00:14:24.500 yeah I don't I've got less stuff in my blue bin now yeah I live out in the middle of nowhere so
00:14:31.720 they don't deliver junk mail out here very much so I have a sister-in-law who lives in town and she saves
00:14:36.440 me junk mail because it's a treat for me to have like an actual flyer to read it's kind of fun
00:14:41.000 wow well from mail monopolies and liquor monopolies I guess we've covered all the bases Sheila what is
00:14:47.540 the ostensible policy reason of this show which we're already a quarter into right I guess we'll talk
00:14:54.840 about the big tech monopoly now so this is the this is the rebel news daily live streaming it used to
00:15:02.700 just be hosted by Ezra on Fridays and it used to just be streamed on YouTube but then the pandemic
00:15:10.900 struck and everybody was at home and we couldn't really travel for work and nothing was open so we
00:15:15.240 thought let's sit down talk to our viewers for an hour every single work day a lot of you were at home
00:15:19.820 and you know why not sit down and talk to you and the news was changing so fast that you know sometimes
00:15:26.140 you do a full produced video to address a subject by then the news is stale so sit down talk about the
00:15:31.560 news of the day and it was a great way for you to support the work that we do through something
00:15:35.160 called a super chat on YouTube but then YouTube the mask slipped and oh lord behind there was a
00:15:42.420 monster a censorship monster they've completely demonetized us on YouTube it's cutting a $400,000
00:15:48.380 hole right through the middle of the company now there are 1.5 million people approximately or pretty
00:15:54.980 close to who watch us on YouTube we don't want to abandon you and YouTube doesn't want us there so
00:15:59.120 we remain streaming there for spite even though we can't make any money off it and you know nothing's
00:16:06.220 free and Justin doesn't work for free so we are also streaming on other platforms like rumble
00:16:11.820 where you can watch us there it's a great free speech company you can also watch us on super you
00:16:18.680 which is a sort of a new-ish company and while you're there you can send us something called a
00:16:24.140 super you shout and you can tip us as a creator there for our work if you want to support us and
00:16:29.740 on odyssey they've really been um responsive to the people who are on their platform both as creators
00:16:36.940 but also as people who just watch stuff on odyssey there are a bunch of different ways that you can
00:16:41.680 support your favorite content creators on odyssey you can do it by purchasing some of their library
00:16:47.320 cryptocurrency if you're a regular viewer i don't know anything about cryptocurrency but boy if you
00:16:51.600 want to give us some we're happy to take it you can buy some of their library cryptocurrency and you
00:16:55.980 can donate it to us in a couple of ways through a hyper chat um so you can send us some of that while
00:17:02.200 we're broadcasting and we'll read it on air you can also tip us in uh in a library cryptocurrency as
00:17:10.820 the content creator but you can also tip us as uh a content creator using good old-fashioned fiat currency
00:17:17.520 so there's a bunch of ways that you can support the work that we do even though youtube is evil
00:17:22.560 shayla i have no idea how you are able to memorize all of that it i mean maybe you missed your calling
00:17:29.580 maybe you should have been an actress oh david i act like you're funny all the time
00:17:35.480 i'm kidding touché yeah well um to be or not to be uh i see the first video on our list i don't like
00:17:47.000 the title of this one sheila kian was allegedly assaulted at a protest let's run the video and
00:17:54.300 check this out yeah yeah yeah the majority of all nazis the majority of people in the shavis
00:18:00.400 union's back communists so if you want to lose your freedom stick with the union you're going to be
00:18:08.800 in trouble sticking with the union go to projectcalgary.org what was that oh look at this crazy lady
00:18:16.360 look at this crazy crazy lady uh attacking people
00:18:22.520 well you know sheila um my initial reaction is it's not exactly a d on buse punch in the nose like
00:18:39.800 you received that that woman's day march uh back in edmonton uh many moons ago but still um
00:18:45.920 completely unacceptable some uh karen doesn't like the idea that she's being filmed in public where
00:18:52.360 you have 0.0 percent chance of having any kind of privacy because you're in public you're being
00:19:00.840 filmed all the time by multiple cameras and um luckily we have a boss ezra levent that doesn't like
00:19:10.520 our people touched doesn't like our equipment manhandled and we're going to find out who this
00:19:18.420 person is and uh take action what are your thoughts sheila
00:19:21.760 ndp come and get your grandma she's acting up i mean they're doing these large scale i mean they
00:19:30.560 say they're like public health protests so gathering in large numbers to protest i guess
00:19:36.980 gathering in large numbers being allowed to do that but this lady she's so concerned about public
00:19:42.920 health that she comes over she's touching her mask all over the place and she's putting her hands on
00:19:47.400 our guy like what what's wrong with you lady even she doesn't believe this garbage about you know
00:19:54.260 distancing and whatnot but let's talk about the cop he's standing right there
00:19:59.060 and this out of control grandma she's agitated she i to look at her though i'm not so sure that
00:20:05.940 she normally behaves like this she doesn't seem like uh antifa grandma she just seems like she's been
00:20:12.160 radicalized by fear maybe but there's a cop right there and she what what are you doing you can't put
00:20:21.320 our hands on you can't put your hands on our guy you just can't so where's her warning where's her
00:20:28.060 like ma'am show me your id there's none of that happening it's just like this grandma reaches out
00:20:34.540 and grabs kian maybe kian reminds her of her grandson or whatever but you can't go around
00:20:40.580 scolding young men with your hands in public lady sorry and while it might seem minor because kian's
00:20:47.080 young guy and this is somebody's little bitty out of control grammy um the point is if we don't put
00:20:54.420 a marker down this escalates and this escalates and k2 is all k2 that's what we call kian number
00:21:01.300 two because whoever heard of a kian and then all of a sudden we had two um whatever um but k2 is
00:21:10.220 already on antifa's radar and so if we let somebody's little bitty out of control grandma get
00:21:17.400 away with this and the cops not we allow them not to enforce uh the law here in this instance um
00:21:25.380 what happens when antifa gets the same idea and so we need to it it needs to be a like a sphere of
00:21:32.200 deterrence around our people all the time a hundred percent and you know the funny thing is if you are a
00:21:38.680 demonstrator sheila uh even if it's media that you consider hostile to your cause isn't the
00:21:46.580 ostensible policy reason of taking part in a demonstration to get your message out saying
00:21:52.400 that the reason i'm here you know to get that you know proverbial free advertising for your cause and
00:21:59.180 by the way speaking of causes am i getting this right sheila this was a lockdown protest but not an
00:22:05.360 anti-lockdown protest basically a pro lockdown protest yeah these people want so in alberta
00:22:13.120 they're ending contact tracing uh we're ending quarantine if you're sick um because apparently
00:22:19.860 there's a high percentage of our population that's vaccinated and even though people are crying about
00:22:25.200 the delta variant our hospitalization rates are way down way down so we're putting an end to the case
00:22:32.860 count porn we are not testing people unless you require hospitalization if you have the sniffles
00:22:38.200 do what you normally do with the sniffles wash your hands don't sneeze on people whatever
00:22:42.980 so these people are out there because they want more of the case count porn that they get in the news
00:22:50.940 every day and there is only one reason to continue counting cases especially when people are not sick
00:22:58.320 and not hospitalized and that is justification for further lockdowns so when they will say in the
00:23:03.300 media oh we're not for lockdowns we just want you know the data they're stopping collecting the data
00:23:10.040 there is only one reason to continue to collect that data and that is to use it for another lockdown
00:23:15.320 in the fall and so they're out there asking for more and it is all public sector unions it's the
00:23:21.000 health care unions and the uh public education unions you can see it in their signage it's protect
00:23:27.560 uh education you know these people they're cutting health care no we're just not giving you the
00:23:34.480 increase you wanted that's a big difference you're still getting an increase it's just not at the
00:23:38.700 percentage rate that you wanted you're still you know like heaven forbid these people get matched
00:23:42.680 to inflation but whatever um so that's what they're out there doing and you know that they want to see
00:23:47.700 masks in schools in the fall my kid was out there last night playing full contact rugby on the field
00:23:53.600 getting stepped on spit on whatever and these people want her to go in the fall and socially
00:24:00.780 distance from her little friends for another year in a classroom um even though they all hang out at
00:24:05.780 lunchtime over at the mall um that's what they want they want to i call them childless comorbidities
00:24:11.760 because to look at them you're like no you don't you don't have skin in this game except for the
00:24:17.520 fact that you live in fear of the virus because of your lifestyle choices but what does that have
00:24:21.800 to do with me and my kids right you know sheila you make perfect sense in identifying who these pro
00:24:30.260 lockdown people are because of course they're in the public sector that means unlike so many
00:24:37.100 canadians who have been laid off for the last year and a half they haven't lost their jobs unlike
00:24:43.280 so many thousands of businesses that have gone bankrupt they haven't lost their business unlike
00:24:49.300 so many who have experienced mental health issues because they don't have a job or their business has
00:24:55.020 gone bankrupt they've never had to suffer that it's all about them right it's all about whatever raises
00:25:02.660 they can uh get uh increase in benefits etc and yet they are in a very you know privileged position
00:25:12.640 they haven't had to suffer like those in the private sector have had to suffer i wonder how many
00:25:18.480 people were at that protest it must have been really pathetic because can you imagine being
00:25:24.560 unemployed and the owner of a now defunct business going yeah uh premier kenny i want more lockdowns
00:25:31.200 no reasonable person would want to join that protest well and to bring this all back to the reason we're even
00:25:39.180 talking about this is we sent kian and adam down there to the protest and we had to have security
00:25:46.880 for them we sent to security with them because these people think that they can touch our people
00:25:53.960 without consequences and there will be consequences i don't care if you're somebody's grandma or dion
00:25:59.640 views you don't touch our people and from what i understand um and from some of the footage that
00:26:06.480 is coming in already from that from the event um there's no way that adam and k2 could have
00:26:14.860 went in that protest without security there were people you know chasing them yelling at them
00:26:21.460 uh trying to put their hands on them thank god we had security there it's a very um expensive thing
00:26:27.640 to hire the executive level security for our people but in the interest of bringing everybody the
00:26:33.440 other side of the story we cannot be too scared or too intimidated to cover this stuff because
00:26:39.120 there's a reason why these people never put their hands on global or cbc is because they act as press
00:26:45.180 secretaries for whatever public sector union is faking an astroturf protest of parents give me a break
00:26:53.180 um you know so i i guess the moral of the story is we need to have something like journalist
00:27:01.500 defense fund that's our security fund just so that we can go about bringing you the news because
00:27:08.580 sometimes the news is dangerous for us and people think that they can put their hands on k2 or adam or
00:27:15.220 me or you or even ezra um so anyways if you'd like to contribute to help keep us safe please donate
00:27:23.800 at journalist defense fund uh dot com it sure came in handy for the guys last night oh 100 you know i'm
00:27:30.700 looking forward to seeing the whole video sheila are you do you mean to tell me that these are
00:27:35.180 public sector workers acting so belligerently or were there elements of the antifa types at this
00:27:43.460 protest uh i think it's six of one half a dozen of another and sometimes i don't think there's a
00:27:50.080 distinction between the two it's like saying oh you know the liberals and the mainstream media and
00:27:55.460 you're like oh is there a distinction because i repeat myself you know what i mean um so i think
00:28:01.760 it was uh there was a lot of strong overlap there um and uh you know that the guys were it sounds like
00:28:09.800 in some pretty serious danger last night and the cops were there but we had to have private security
00:28:14.240 because uh grandmas get out of control down there it's just and the the most ironic part of all of
00:28:21.680 this is these are the same people who say no we need to maintain social distance to protect the
00:28:27.920 public health and there they are getting handsy with our guys and you know they're also the people
00:28:34.860 that are all about safe spaces and safe environments meaning that if you use the wrong pronoun they're
00:28:42.300 misgendered and they they're crushed by that meanwhile they're throwing actual fists and grabbing onto
00:28:49.960 equipment you know creating real danger as opposed to uh uh fantasy danger speaking of uh real danger
00:28:59.380 uh i want to uh just tip everybody off to a story that i was working on last week um sort of relive
00:29:06.820 some nonsense um of dion buse i pulled access to information on cbc's communications with dion buse and
00:29:14.680 they gave him that uh advertorial about how well his guitar business was doing during the pandemic and
00:29:20.840 they called him uh dion james instead of dion james buse which is the court the name they used in court
00:29:28.980 um and uh there they were what the way i i hate to give away too much of the story but cbc
00:29:38.380 i have it in their communications they were watching my reaction to the story online so they
00:29:47.400 knew they knew who he was they knew and they continued their communications with him well after
00:29:53.520 the story broke and the firestorm happened where everyone's like uh that guy punched a lady what are
00:29:57.960 you doing uh they talked to him well after that well that's spectacular then sheila because i would
00:30:04.360 imagine cbc would be very much about feminist causes and anti-violence against women how do they
00:30:12.940 put somebody that punches a woman into a puff piece about his guitar business and meanwhile not even
00:30:19.280 mentioning what his real surname is i don't know ask me how gian gomes she got away with it for so long
00:30:25.420 you know it's a systemic problem down there at the cbc where is that guy these days that's a name i
00:30:31.840 haven't heard in like maybe three years do you know what though that's a good thing
00:30:38.080 that's great uh justin wants us to get to some of these chats because uh i do want to address um some
00:30:47.380 of the pat king stuff because i did take the time i did take the time to read the full transcript of
00:30:53.420 what happened and examined um the ahs um originating uh documents um and what is being portrayed in the
00:31:02.960 media is definitely not reflective of the reality of what went down in the courtroom and i'm not sure
00:31:07.640 if that's intentional or otherwise i don't want to read too much into that um but i will as always reach
00:31:13.900 out to the other side for their explanation but i i just want to go through everything so that people
00:31:19.220 can see this is actually what it says and this is what you might be seeing in the media and that is
00:31:26.320 not what went down so anyways uh a hyper chat of one library from snap phase uh keep exposing the
00:31:35.960 truth as you see it that's the plan friend we've got a super you tip from amt60 you tipped us two bucks
00:31:42.400 thanks very much thank you amt60 when is the alberta election i'm retiring soon in ontario and i'm
00:31:48.340 thinking of moving out to alberta if open we're already open get out here what are you doing in
00:31:54.660 that prison province don't even consider it just get out here just go and sheila i understand great
00:32:01.840 real estate deals to be had right now in alberta many parts of alberta isn't that correct
00:32:06.340 yeah oh i'm telling you um me and uh kathy shadel our dear departed friend kathy shadel we used to play
00:32:14.600 a little game we had an email thread of what can sixteen hundred dollars a month get you where you
00:32:19.540 live versus what does sixteen hundred dollars a month get you where i live and it is uh mcmansion
00:32:25.460 here that you can get and she would be like here's the shanty here's the cupboard that you would have
00:32:31.320 to live in in toronto and i'm like oh because um you could have a farm of like half an hour out of
00:32:38.700 down for sixteen hundred dollars a month live in your dream of being left alone for the rest of
00:32:43.760 your life or you can live um literally over a fridge in toronto so yeah i mean if you are considering
00:32:52.400 moving out to alberta now's the time economy's just starting to heat up uh big things are happening in
00:32:57.060 the oil patch going forward um so if you are moving make the decision now and i don't think you'll
00:33:03.580 ever regret it i truly believe it is an opportunity and i mean you know we're we're having some fun
00:33:09.100 with it but it it is ultimately a sad story isn't it sheila i mean the reason why housing prices are
00:33:16.760 such a steal right now in so many parts of alberta you've had so many debilitating factors declining
00:33:22.780 oil prices justin trudeau's energy policies now joe biden's energy policies it's one cascading
00:33:31.340 uh disaster after another that has made a a boom town like calgary into a bus town but hope abounds
00:33:39.120 i think you're right i think things are going to be coming back so i think there's a real opportunity
00:33:43.680 right now this might be the time to buy and the place to buy it's in alberta yeah i think this is
00:33:50.140 you are sort of at the base of an upswing here in alberta so if you want to make the decision to
00:33:55.940 move out buy or get into a long-term lease now's your time now's your time and i don't think you'll
00:34:01.120 ever regret it i even when it's miserable here it's beautiful and there's i mean i just i've
00:34:07.140 experienced toronto traffic i don't i don't know why you people deal with that i don't i don't know
00:34:11.460 i have no idea well you get a plug-in hybrid and you get to drive in the hov something you would never do
00:34:19.080 we don't even have special lanes for like hovs here we don't we don't we mean i wouldn't i would
00:34:28.620 be special in alberta with my vehicle oh you'd be special but for a thousand different reasons david
00:34:35.140 they put um these uh electric car chargers i don't know it must have been an initiative um
00:34:44.380 coming out of head office at the farm supply store at pv mart my favorite farm supply store so i'm like
00:34:49.620 is this a maybe something that was cooked up in one of their bc based offices whatever they did it
00:34:55.860 anyway but i've never seen anybody use it all they ever use it for is loading lumber
00:35:00.700 into somebody's big pickup that's all i've ever used it for
00:35:05.200 chicken feed just loading chicken feed into the trunk that's the right part
00:35:10.540 oh golly okay so we've got a uh a rumble chat from on the bit did david ever find someone wearing
00:35:20.200 the menzoid shirt and give them that hundred bucks no i have not and it's causing me great grief because
00:35:27.500 i know the people are out there i've seen the i've seen the sales in the store so i know those people
00:35:32.800 are out there in the wild you just have to find them i i think it's just being in the wrong place at
00:35:38.820 the wrong time uh both me as the giver and uh the person wearing the shirt as the gifty and uh but
00:35:46.140 it and it's my own money and that might not sound like a lot a hundred bucks but it's going to more
00:35:50.580 than pay for the cost of the shirt and it's coming out of my coffers not the company and again no
00:35:56.320 friends no family no co-workers i'm not running some kind of scheme here like the lcbo would do
00:36:03.000 so uh yeah that offer is on the table and i can't wait to give that what do they call the hundred
00:36:10.500 dollar bills a brownie right sheila i can't wait to give that brownie away do they call it that i had
00:36:17.220 no idea maybe that's that's gang talk i guess it's true it is brown
00:36:25.800 um we've got a super you shout from annalisa i just watched lago and trudeau talking about making
00:36:35.980 vaccines mandatory for federal employees wow no way do you know i was uh talking to a friend about um
00:36:43.860 how this is being done in the military and so uh they're basically they're not me it's not quite
00:36:53.700 mandatory yet however it can stall your career if you don't take this because they can render you
00:37:00.560 non-deployable which basically stops your career where you're at yeah and so it there's uh it you're
00:37:09.440 not able to you know when you're non-deployable that's it for you basically this is you're just
00:37:15.040 stalled right there and so there's heavy pressure for um the military to take these vaccines and
00:37:21.620 they're the whole process of okay well you can you go in you go to your vaccine appointment and you sit
00:37:28.780 there and you talk to the guy and then they'll never know your friends will never know whether or
00:37:33.820 not you got the vaccine you just walk out but i think you walk out with certain paperwork that
00:37:39.280 indicates that you didn't take the vaccine so then all of your the people on your team who you rely on
00:37:45.500 if you are deployed and to you know to be responsible for your life now there's this division that's
00:37:51.920 happening there and i think it's uh it's a catastrophe and of all the the groups of people
00:37:58.120 we probably shouldn't be doing this to you know uh them a hundred percent sheila and have these
00:38:05.380 leaders really thought this out sheila what if you are in the category where medically you cannot take
00:38:12.260 this vaccine what happens then they don't care they don't care they they just think that everybody's
00:38:18.480 going to take it because they've been successfully um weaponized by their tv into a state of radicalized
00:38:26.840 anxiety that's what's happening here cult leaders used to have to do this stuff in person
00:38:33.200 you know like they used to have to go and get you and then take you away from your family and put you
00:38:41.020 somewhere and isolate you but now like the government does it with their stay-at-home orders and then the
00:38:46.480 tv proselytizes to you about how scared you should be about the end of the world instead of like the jim jones
00:38:52.300 character it's very it's weird it's weird you know if you if you read a lot into cults and i do i don't
00:38:59.100 know why i just do it's one of those things i'm interested in you see a lot of like cultural overlays
00:39:03.320 happening all over the place yeah different brand of kool-aid same result yeah exactly that's exactly
00:39:10.860 it um we've got a super you show from alberta separatists remember ordering products from sears and
00:39:16.840 other catalogs and having delivered by snail mail yeah that was exciting because we didn't always go to town
00:39:21.980 like we just and my mom didn't want to take three yard apes to town like we were just farm kids so
00:39:29.280 getting us to behave in a sear is probably not the easiest thing for her so yeah we did a lot of mail
00:39:34.100 order stuff back when mail was irrelevant um now when you say that sheila just just so we're clear
00:39:42.820 you're saying mail m-a-i-l being relevant not m-a-l-e because i have a little skin in the game
00:39:50.580 about being relevant as a male do you know what david i think you're highly relevant i like men
00:39:56.400 but the other ladies out there like the the radical feminists they think you guys are irrelevant
00:40:02.780 obsolete i don't okay just i like you guys
00:40:06.440 yeah justin says you might be irrelevant but i don't know that's a lady menzoid decision you know
00:40:17.020 if she's fine with you what's it got to do with me um we've got a hyper chat of five libraries from
00:40:22.340 rebecca henderson our pro lockdown protest super spreader events well i don't know it was blm depends
00:40:28.840 on politics right is cbc global or ctv going to report and label these protests as covidiots no
00:40:34.920 they're not not at all no no and you know on that note sheila last friday i went to the skydome i
00:40:43.020 refused to call it the roger center given that old man rogers bought the joint for four percent of
00:40:48.440 the construction costs but i can tell you this you know to show you what lack of science there was i
00:40:54.500 didn't learn this till later watching the game on tv that there's only 15 000 people allowed into
00:41:02.200 this stadium that seats 50 000 for baseball all the expensive seats it's chock-a-block just like 2019
00:41:11.040 right no the cheap seats is where the social distancing is and the upper bowl the 500 level
00:41:17.500 is empty how does that make sense also my friend brian went to the game he said at the skydome it is
00:41:24.400 now cashless because we don't want the the wuhan virus paper bills being passed around guess what
00:41:30.240 sheila that means the credit card terminal to process the credit and debit cards is being handled
00:41:37.880 literally by thousands of hats right yeah how is that any more sanitary there you go none of it none of
00:41:47.580 it makes any sense whatsoever nothing like the coronavirus can get you or not get you based on
00:41:55.020 i guess your yearly annual income and your ability to afford an expensive seat unbelievable follow follow
00:42:01.500 the science they tell me and i'm trying i'm trying i'm just not seeing it um we got a rumble chat from
00:42:09.380 chronic bud 99 i'm happy that jason kenney told the mainstream media to stop fear-mongering about the
00:42:14.160 covid hysteria me too feels like there's almost an election a couple years out you know that's what
00:42:20.880 it feels like uh i also saw that our chief medical officer of health dina hinshaw who has been
00:42:27.760 responsible for the incarceration of pastors by the way so take this for what you will but she wrote an
00:42:35.200 op-ed i think was in the national post about like it's time to move on from all of this and i agree with
00:42:40.320 her but i think then that should mean that we need to allow the people she's arrested and and or at
00:42:46.380 least had arrested and incarcerated and fined and charged it's time for them to be allowed to move on
00:42:52.280 with their lives too so i would love to see uh like a a complete pardon sanctuary issued to all those
00:43:00.640 people who have experienced lockdown tickets it's time if you want us to move on from the lockdown
00:43:05.740 then give us the chance to move on because i'm still fighting all those problems you know i hope
00:43:11.600 in her article miss henshaw didn't use the phrase forgive and forget because i think that's too much
00:43:16.740 of an ask right now sheila yeah yeah you know the only thing that's going to save jason kenney is that
00:43:22.860 people don't forget rachel notley i don't think they're ready to forget what jason kenney did to them
00:43:29.900 okay we've got a rumble from truckwares.com hundred dollars is just a brown okay now we know
00:43:40.240 it's just a brown not a brownie a brown i don't know no i'm i've never heard it referred to as a
00:43:46.580 brown i've heard it referred to as a brownie and like i said maybe it's a gang thing or a gangster
00:43:50.580 thing but it's a hundred bucks if you want 250s you're gonna have that too where did you ever hear
00:43:58.140 gang lingo other than on tv where would you hey listen i live in the mean streets of richmond hill
00:44:06.260 sheila all that you know yeah yeah uh we've got a super you show from devil's advocate what would
00:44:12.720 david do if three or four people showed up first at the same time wearing the shirt that's a nightmare
00:44:19.220 because uh i if it was four people that does that mean 25 each in which case um i could imagine
00:44:27.440 fans becoming haters or do i dig deep or do i find an atm and give them all it's like that joke i know
00:44:35.260 but i don't have time to get to the punchline of the two uh the you know the arab and the israeli
00:44:40.140 rubbing a magic uh lantern at the same time and they get three wishes each but i i cannot say the punchline
00:44:48.060 on a family hour so uh i'll cross that bridge when i get to it i guess sheila
00:44:52.900 i don't think it's ever gonna happen but if it does i think we move to rocks paper scissors
00:44:58.860 i think that's the fairest way to do it right coin toss rock paper scissors
00:45:03.360 uh justin i think we should move into the pat king stuff just because um because it's in the
00:45:11.880 headline yes um and i think we should because i think it's really important and then maybe we'll go
00:45:16.760 out on uh polyev's ad um because i thought i thought it was really good um and it's causing
00:45:22.320 some controversy i see some like uh well-kept academics are saying oh you know take this can
00:45:29.880 you even believe this stuff from the party that ended the wheat board and these are like western
00:45:34.600 based academics telling me what western farmers want and i'm like my friend's dad sort of went to
00:45:39.400 jail so i'm pretty sure we didn't actually want it thanks you know that's amazing but well you know
00:45:45.600 sheila and on pat king uh you have far more knowledge about this individual than i do so you
00:45:51.780 know please uh why don't you set the table this is of course um all about um information that isn't
00:46:00.000 quite right about pat king getting a major victory for albertans in a court of law and and by the way
00:46:07.100 folks when we deconstruct this um don't shoot the messenger and don't accuse us of being psyops or
00:46:14.960 controlled opposition that's not the fact sheila has the facts because she's gone through the court
00:46:20.880 transcripts and what did you discover sheila sure um and let me preface this by saying i don't have
00:46:27.120 any skin in the game i don't really know pat king at all but i do have an interest in making sure that
00:46:33.860 the truth is out there uh i think that's one of the things that ezra always tells us follow the facts
00:46:38.780 where they go doesn't and then we'll make our conclusions but we can't throw out some facts
00:46:44.240 um or uh you know like go on uh have a conclusion and then just craft a story around it that's not
00:46:53.220 what we do here so um i think by now everybody has seen the stew peters at least the headline
00:47:02.380 of the stew peters uh rumble chat that he had with pat king who is a red deer based activist an
00:47:10.560 anti-lockdown activist and before that he was a pro oil and gas activist and again i i don't know pat
00:47:16.420 king from anybody really um but justin would you mind bringing up the headline of that uh rumble
00:47:24.120 stew peters story if you could because i forget the exact headline um and i also want to preface
00:47:32.860 this by saying i court report all the time so i i don't want to say i'm not saying that i'm smarter
00:47:39.520 than anybody and i'm definitely not saying that lawyers are smarter than common people lawyers are
00:47:44.240 just common people with an expertise in law so let's get that out of the way right away but i do
00:47:49.200 court report so i have some familiarity with legal jargon that the regular lay person might not have
00:47:53.920 you don't need it you're not court reporting right like no no uh no uh disrespect intended but
00:48:00.180 so i want to first point out the timeline of all of this here um because it says freedom fighter court
00:48:08.580 victory ends masking shots and quarantine in alberta now if you know the uh masking and basically the end
00:48:18.360 of our lockdown was july 1st that was the end of our lockdown this court case transpired roughly on
00:48:25.800 july 19th so that stew peters would attribute credit to pat king i don't think is accurate or fair and pat
00:48:35.840 king's uh court case didn't do any of that but i actually took the time to read the transcript of what
00:48:43.460 went down in court that day and i also read um the originating documents from alberta health services
00:48:49.600 about what went down now in that video pat king says that ahs has no material evidence that
00:49:01.440 covet 19 exists it says the chief medical officer has no material evidence and in the video he presents
00:49:10.540 this as and i don't know if this is intentional or otherwise that means that there is no evidence
00:49:17.120 that covet 19 exists now that's not the case it may be the case it may not be the case but that's not
00:49:25.760 what that statement means material in legal jargon means relevant evidence and then those proceeding
00:49:33.340 or the court filings go on to explain exactly what that means so justin could you bring up i sent
00:49:39.680 you a document earlier um about uh the ahs their response okay so i went through this with a fine
00:49:49.140 tooth comb so that you could see let's go to number eight because the first part is all um
00:49:56.200 just sort of setting the scene so number eight i'm going to read this off my phone um it says the
00:50:02.980 chief medical officer has no material evidence that doesn't mean that there's no evidence it means
00:50:07.660 material or relevant evidence to this case number eight is important mr king has no evidence showing
00:50:14.920 that the evidence sought from the chief medical officer is likely to be material so let's just cross
00:50:21.740 out material and say relevant to the provincial court proceedings contrary to and then it gives the
00:50:27.120 section of the code regarding his ticket so what that means is the chief medical officer has no
00:50:32.880 information about his specific ticket and as such the justice of the peace did not have jurisdiction
00:50:39.320 to issue the subpoena and it should be squashed on this basis so this is a jurisdictional issue
00:50:44.540 so uh let's go into number nine mr king explained the reason for the subpoena in the document he
00:50:53.220 attached a schedule a to the subpoena it is clear that mr king seeks evidence relating to the rationale
00:50:59.460 for orders issued by the chief medical officer of health under the act he seeks evidence about
00:51:05.620 crafting the statute so he wanted the chief medical officer of health to produce evidence of isolation
00:51:13.580 of the coronavirus and i don't really know what he means by that but that's what he asked for and then
00:51:19.620 if we move on to number 10 this is this is i guess the really the most important part he's asking for
00:51:27.840 these things that are not relevant to his ticket and there's a reason they aren't relevant to his
00:51:33.520 ticket and it goes to procedure and charter issues that he failed to raise sooner so let's go into
00:51:39.500 section 10 the provincial court proceeding is about the december 5th 2020 enforcement of the law
00:51:46.760 when mr king was issued the ticket not the rationale for the law so they're saying this is about the
00:51:53.800 ticket you can't ask about these other these other things and because you can't ask about those other
00:51:58.500 things because it's not relevant to your ticket we are not going to produce it because it's not material
00:52:03.900 to the case or relevant to the case the chief medical officer of health does not have and mr king does
00:52:12.060 not seek from the chief medical officer of health so he didn't ask for it any evidence about the ticket
00:52:18.120 issued to mr king on december 5th 2020 so instead of asking the chief medical officer of health for
00:52:23.740 information relating directly to his ticket that he could use in court to fight his ticket
00:52:27.780 he asked for all this other stuff that's not relevant and they're like well why didn't you ask
00:52:33.780 for stuff relevant to your ticket because if we had it we would produce it but you didn't ask so
00:52:37.680 we're not producing all this other stuff because it's not relevant and here's the reason it's not
00:52:41.780 relevant further there can be no constitutional challenge to the act or orders issued by the
00:52:49.400 chief medical officer of health under the act in the absence of proper notice to the attorney general
00:52:56.040 of canada and the minister of justice and solicitor general of alberta under the judicature act i'm
00:53:03.860 sorry i said that wrong and mr king has not given any notice in the provincial court proceedings so
00:53:09.880 what they're saying there and i read through the transcripts to find when this happened
00:53:14.400 pat king tried to raise a constitutional issue and the judge said you can't do that now you should
00:53:23.260 have done that that sooner um because you had to do that sooner to give notice to the court so you can't
00:53:31.120 ask for these things that you would use to argue against your ticket on a constitutional basis all this
00:53:37.020 like grand information about the virus from the chief medical officer of health because you didn't
00:53:42.100 raise that issue soon enough so they don't have to produce it and so we're just dealing with the
00:53:48.540 ticket the circumstances of how the ticket came to be that's what happened there i hope everybody
00:53:54.300 understands that i know there's a lot of legal jargon there but i tried to break it down um
00:53:58.980 it doesn't mean that there is no evidence that alberta health has not isolated the coronavirus
00:54:07.480 it also doesn't mean that there is evidence that they isolated the coronavirus it just means that
00:54:13.600 that evidence if it's out there or not out there they didn't have to produce it because it's not
00:54:19.200 relevant to the ticket in court that pat king was fighting and that's it and that i think is
00:54:26.500 salient to debunking the hysteria around all of this not only was alberta open three weeks prior
00:54:34.220 to this court case but what this court case did and what transpired in the court case is not what's
00:54:40.740 being presented in the media and i don't have any skin in the game except for the fact i want everybody
00:54:46.640 out there to know please do not try this yourself because if pat king had a lawyer he could have raised
00:54:53.320 those constitutional issues sooner when appropriate and maybe he could have got access to this
00:54:58.560 information but he didn't have a lawyer he was trying to navigate this himself and you know what
00:55:03.660 he got the tickets thrown out and i don't think he got them thrown out for any other reason than the
00:55:08.200 court is like this has gone on too long this is a waste of the court's time goodbye i think that's
00:55:14.040 what happened there um but the moral of the story is you need a lawyer sometimes to navigate these tough
00:55:22.880 legal issues pat king got as far as he could on his own i think the crown and the court just got fed up
00:55:28.480 with him frankly and tossed his ticket and you know what great i'm glad he doesn't have to pay it
00:55:33.380 but what you are seeing on the internet is not what these documents say both in the transcripts
00:55:39.200 and in the filings by uh alberta justice lawyers they just it's just not the two things are not
00:55:46.120 existing in the same reality no uh well said sheila and i think you're right i mean two things
00:55:51.920 one is because there are so many procedural matters and because as you said there's so much legal jargon
00:55:58.220 this is truly a cautionary tale when it comes to what our boss likes to refer to as
00:56:05.040 homemade lawyering don't do it folks um especially for something incredibly complicated like this this
00:56:13.160 is not fighting a speeding ticket right and it just shows you what can happen when you think you know
00:56:20.020 how to proceed with the case and yet as sheila mentioned all the procedural matters all the legal
00:56:26.060 jargon uh you're destined uh for failure secondly um as we said right off the hopper this case did not
00:56:34.420 end the masking rules the uh the the shots the quarantine that had already occurred if there is
00:56:42.360 a victory because that was the big thing in the headline and block cap victory uh it's that mr king
00:56:48.180 and i'm happy for him it looks like he got his ticket tossed he didn't deserve a 1200 ticket
00:56:53.300 just for protesting no of course nobody so that yeah that that that's a victory um and that's it
00:56:59.740 all this other stuff it's it it's irrelevant it it it was not argued and um you know uh sheila this
00:57:08.780 has really become a runaway train and and i'm not saying this with any glee i think the reason why
00:57:14.320 we're getting literally dozens of emails every day saying what about the pat king story why aren't you
00:57:20.120 covering the pat king story i think it's because people in a hopeless situation are looking for any
00:57:27.300 scintilla of hope just like the thousands of people that now believe we have a new queen of
00:57:33.700 canada queen ramona uh you know i i mean it's laughable but it's heartbreaking too because people
00:57:41.680 are at their wits end uh with these lockdowns and restrictions and everything else but as the
00:57:48.380 saying goes if something looks too good to be true you know how that plays out sheila yeah i'm of two
00:57:55.520 minds of this i mean it's pretty clear that we've got non-lawyers dealing with complex legal issues
00:58:02.480 here so misunderstandings happen so i'm trying to not read that into this that this is some sort of
00:58:08.280 sinister misrepresentation of what's happening that being said if this is a misunderstanding of
00:58:16.880 what happened it's time for a public correction from everybody involved yeah because in the interest of
00:58:23.040 accuracy uh and integrity i think everybody involved from stew peters on down pat king you too let's let's set the
00:58:33.500 record straight what is being presented in the media and online is misleading thousands of people and if
00:58:41.600 people would just take the time to read the court transcripts and to understand what the word material means
00:58:47.040 in the course of a legal proceeding it is not the way that everybody's representing this and if it is a
00:58:54.000 misunderstanding let's clear the air and fix this because you know i think the longer this goes on
00:59:01.040 the longer my mind sways towards the fact that this is purposeful misleading so let's fix it right now
00:59:07.380 guys and you know what sheila if i do say so myself i think a fantastic story idea for you would be for
00:59:14.140 you and mr king to have a one-on-one interview and get to the bottom of this i think that would uh
00:59:20.880 that would be a much watch video a must watch you know i tried to send him a facebook message this
00:59:27.160 morning and i wasn't able to um if somebody has uh contact information for pat king or if he has uh
00:59:33.960 an email address i would love to send him my questions um because i i have an entire email that i typed
00:59:41.160 out took me an hour because i was going back and forth between court documents so that i got
00:59:44.860 everything right um versus and watching the video so that i could meticulously go through what was
00:59:49.820 represented in the video versus what i was reading in the court documents i have an email typed out i
00:59:54.700 just don't have an email address to send it to i cut and paste it i was going to send it in facebook
00:59:58.080 can't do that so um i would love to send a written email to pat king so that he can answer these
01:00:04.080 questions for me if this is all an accident if this is all inadvertent because we've got lay people
01:00:07.960 trying to navigate the legal system i get it i want to put that on the record too if this is like
01:00:13.160 yeah i didn't really know what the word material meant okay great i'm happy i didn't really know
01:00:18.360 it either until i started court reporting and you get a crash course in legal jargon really fast
01:00:23.220 um so i i understand that that could be inadvertent but the longer this goes on
01:00:27.940 we've got a problem now well she'll i do believe i have a contact that
01:00:32.060 will have uh mr king's uh perfect number for you so i'll get on that right after the live stream for
01:00:38.280 you perfect and i customer service 1101 that brings us to 1101 and we didn't show the um
01:00:45.240 uh pure poly of video but uh i've got time if you've got time justin
01:00:49.520 is he asleep at the switch when the government attacked family farms with tax hikes
01:00:56.380 pierre poly of fought for us he made them back down he protected our way of life so we can keep
01:01:02.260 feeding canadians he's fighting for us
01:01:05.320 yeah um so it makes perfect sense that one of the first things erin o'toole did was demote him from the
01:01:15.660 uh finance critic uh position sheila what what's your opinion on that what what was the ostensible
01:01:21.620 reason for that uh you know the sun can only shine on one i think is the problem there um and it's
01:01:29.340 funny because these pierre poly of yeah he he was fighting for farmers however uh erin o'toole's about
01:01:36.040 to slap them with his own carbon tax of sorts um if erin o'toole gets elected so you know you got
01:01:42.100 to give me again something different to vote for but i did think it was funny that like the
01:01:46.980 uh i don't know it's on my twitter account i forget what i think he was from concordia university or
01:01:51.940 something like that some uh some academic professor um telling us that the answer to um
01:02:00.940 the problems with farming and trade wars and all that stuff was that um we need more socialism he
01:02:07.420 literally said we need more socialism leave it to an academic a career academic to say you know
01:02:12.460 what those farmers want out there in alberta handouts you know like give me a break and coming
01:02:18.920 from someone that sounds like a laurentian elite uh who probably has never held a farm implement in his
01:02:24.980 entire life it's a bit rich isn't it sheila yeah yeah um i forget it's too far gone but yeah there was
01:02:33.120 i think he was from concordia concordia university um guy who's like remember that these guys are the
01:02:39.440 ones that ended the wheat board i'm like yeah i do that's why i still kind of like them actually like
01:02:44.280 again something that eastern-based farmers didn't have to live under and so i mean if it was a good
01:02:50.220 thing for everybody why didn't everybody have to live under it why was it just for us i'd like to put
01:02:55.460 that professor on a concord and fly him out of here but they don't fly those planes anymore well sheila i think
01:03:02.180 we're uh just after one o'clock so uh i think we need to wrap it um special thanks to mr producer
01:03:10.620 behind the board all of you who donated all those fancy weird currencies it helps pay our bills and
01:03:17.260 we're very grateful for that so on behalf of sheila gun reid this is david menzies signing off the big
01:03:22.700 boss man ezra will be here tomorrow in the meantime stay sane
01:03:26.860 and then start by monday
01:03:33.620 and then start by handful Vikings
01:03:36.020 and then start by meeting
01:03:38.760 and then start by meeting
01:03:40.380 at a daha
01:03:41.240 see
01:03:41.440 and then start by meeting
01:03:42.880 in the meantime
01:03:43.040 and then start by meeting
01:03:44.240 again
01:03:44.920 again
01:03:46.660 and then start by meeting
01:03:48.840 and start by meeting