DAILY | UN owns The Science on climate; Prairies reject gun ban; Alex Jones' Poilievre endorsement
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 12 minutes
Words per Minute
168.71559
Summary
In this episode of the Rebel Daily, we take a look at the latest polls in the Quebec election, and the surprising rise of the new conservative candidate, Francois Legault, and why he's the best choice for the province. We also take a deep dive into the new Prime Minister of Canada, Jacinda Ardern.
Transcript
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it's the rebel daily every day at 12 noon we live stream this 12 noon eastern that's 10 a.m.
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in mountain time for example or 5 p.m. in greenwich meantime um you know i used to do
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a full hour every day but i don't have time for that but i want to get my feet wet again there's
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so many things to talk about and some of them you know are not serious matters that i would do a
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whole show on like we've got some serious stuff coming for you today i've got uh at my 8 p.m.
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eastern paywalled show i'm going to take you through line by line jacinda ardern's terrifying
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censorship censorship speech that she has um recently given the united nations i don't think
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it's been properly covered so that's on eight o'clock tonight and around the same time
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we'll be doing a live stream for the quebec election did you know that quebec is having
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a provincial election today i'm excited about it not because of the results in in question
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um unfortunately it looks like francois legault is going to be returned with majority government
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but the story of the campaign is the rise of i think canada's most interesting freedom-oriented
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politician his name is eric duem he's been a guest on our show before he's the head of the new
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uh quebec conservative party no official relation to the federal conservatives
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and look at this poll do you have that poll that i sent you olivia it's en francais but we can
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figure it out it's conducted by main street and see if you can put the as big as possible because
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it's the text is a little bit small i say again the incumbent premier will win he's just going to
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win and i'm sorry about that because i think he's being atrocious i think he had the heaviest hand
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of any politician in the country remember they put montreal in a lockdown a curfew
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from 10 p.m to 5 a.m it was illegal to leave your home for a while it was actually illegal to walk
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your dog for health reasons your dog had to poop in your house how gross and sick is that what a
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what an obviously unmedical unlawful uh curfew measure no no court struck it down they'll put that
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put that poll up i just want to show people here um so you can see on the left hand side it says
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cac legault cac is the name of the coalition avenir quebec and legault is the premier and you can
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see the liberals and then the pq that's the parti quebecois and qs that's quebec solidaire but you
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see it says conservative duem that's the new party so you see that first column there it says total
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so look legault has got 41 percent more than double the next guy he's going to get a large
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majority there's no denying it but look at who's in second it's our friend eric duem a brand new party
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and uh you can see it's broken down by gender um if um that means men and women so uh legault is
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more popular amongst women than men and then look at look at by age 16 to 34 the conservatives are very
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popular or 18 to 34 excuse me um and the quebec solidaire is popular too the conservatives are very
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popular amongst uh 30 somethings and 40 somethings people actually have to earn a living in fact under
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the age of 50 this new conservative party is the most popular party in quebec now look at why legault
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is going to win senior citizens in the very top right more than 60 percent of them are going to vote
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for legault and you saw the the the demogaine the the gender question as well basically old women if
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you're every old woman and most and many old men in quebec actually most old people in quebec are so
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afraid of the virus and we're so thrilled to be brutally locked down um they're all going to vote for
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legault they think he saved their lives um and maybe he did i don't think so i think he certainly
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terrified them but young people who were not ravaged by this pandemic who paid the price of the lockdown
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if you shut down a business it doesn't affect a 75 year old woman who doesn't work if you shut down a
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school that doesn't affect a 75 year old woman who doesn't work if you bring in a curfew from 10 p.m
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to 5 a.m that doesn't affect a 75 year old woman who probably goes to bed at 9 p.m
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and wouldn't dream of going out at night so the old and infirm who were terrified
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uh by the the pandemic and the fear porn of the government love big brother it's just everyone
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under 50 doesn't it's very interesting now i say again um and and here's his little campaign get
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out the vote here's a little pump up the size of that uh so eric drems is name young guy and um
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he's freedom oriented and i think he's done an amazing job and i acknowledge that he's not going
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to win today in fact because the size of the uh lead of the incumbent is so large um about 40 percent
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of the province says they're going to vote for him but legault might wind up getting 75 percent of
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the seats just the way it breaks down but i think the the story of the campaign really is this young
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guy eric drem who's just run an incredible campaign so then let me thanks for let me tell you about
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that tonight i will be co-hosting our live stream of the quebec election with our quebec reporter
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alexa lavoix who is going to be at eric drems headquarters tonight i'm very excited about it i
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don't know a lot about quebec i i admit that my french is very weak but i'm excited about eric drem
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and i'm excited about um alexa being there to cover it so that's one piece of news i wanted to share
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with you um speaking of lockdowns i want to show you two stories by black locks that's one of the
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few independent media in this country um it's my pinned tweet if you if you need help to find it
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um there's two stories today in black locks that really really rung a bell for me so click on the
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first one of them i just want to show and i won't read the whole thing um just put it up and you don't
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even have to you can log in if you like but i'm really not going to read much more than just the
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the headline but go ahead yeah show that one there the headline is repeal followed bad polling they
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have an interesting approach to headlines it's they're sort of mysterious i've read that story
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and it says that trudeau dropped the vaccine mandates and the flight requirements not for
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medical reasons it's crystal clear but because a major government poll with a liberal pollster said
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boss people really think you're overdoing it they think you're dividing citizens they think you're
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being mean they think you're being punitive people are really starting to uh despise you for this brutal
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lockdown and the government knew that and the pollsters knew that and it was the poll not nothing in terms of
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medicine that made them blink um and was there another link it's not that no tolerance from hedonism i'm
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worried that i might have put the wrong link in there
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yeah and then can you pump this one up as big as possible
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police and feds given a fail it's another amazing story by black locks which is one of the few
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independent media in the country and it shows again the government knew that citizens were shocked and
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grossed out by the brutal policing that trudeau invoked thanks and what's my point my point is that we're
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learning about this through black locks which like rebel news is independent doesn't take any money from
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the government the government knew what it was doing was deeply unpopular the government's pollsters said
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boss you're you're in the wrong track get out of this get out bail out bail out
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but the government held on as long as they could probably a year too long
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they didn't even bring in the lockdowns in places like flora
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but aren't we told every day that the truckers were deeply unpopular and that 90 percent of
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canadians loved the vaccine mandate like every single day not only does trudeau say that and trudeau's
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job is to lie whatever but the media which showed no skepticism no curiosity just repeated that
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propaganda but here we have proof not from some external source but from two government polls
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and focus groups and surveys extremely expensive detailed opinion research by the liberal government
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that said what we're doing is deeply unpopular and yet if you relied on the media party to understand
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your world around you you would think no you're crazy for disliking this martial law you're crazy
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for thinking maybe trudeau should have met with the truckers instead of smearing them you're crazy
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for thinking everyone doesn't like you know people being fired from their jobs for making a private medical decision
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if you believe the media party you would think that what trudeau is doing is deeply popular
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but the trudeau government itself knew what it was doing was unpopular isn't that incredible
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um i want to show you just two more things the first one's a fun one it's a vehicle it's a picture
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snapped in edmonton and i've heard of this vehicle going around can you zoom in as much as you can
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it says yeah just put it up on the screen that picture of this of this uh minivan
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twenty five hundred dollars bring a cup or self-serve now that's very funny and very silly
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uh or or is it frankly i mean obviously that's that reminds me of those 1970s shirts i'm uh you know
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i'm a bikini inspector or free mustache rides like it reminds me of sort of a slightly sexually
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inappropriate dad joke that's what it reminds me of but the reason jokes are funny is there's an
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underlying truth to them here's a guy saying twenty five hundred dollars for an unvaxxed sperm now we
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don't we just simply do not know the long-term effects from uh the vaccines how could we know
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it hasn't been long-term if you can believe it we're still under an emergency youth use authorization
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otherwise the drug would be illegal because it's not fully tested yet
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uh we we see that um traces of mrna show up in mother's milk they said that wasn't supposed to
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happen we see that the mrna affects women's menstrual cycles they they're busy this is not
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hidden anymore this is not disparaged as fake news anymore it's admitted of course and you think we're
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done learning about the long-term effects of mrna i have no idea whether or not um well actually we
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have seen uh scientific reports that go to sperm count and motility and things like that words i don't
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know what they mean but i probably should um you know six months a year ago you'd have your channel
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canceled on youtube for mentioning that now it's conventional wisdom how many people lost their
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accounts or were silenced or fact-checked by the pfizer liars for even mentioning that so here's a guy
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who thinks he can make twenty five hundred bucks uh per sperm donation and who knows who knows uh i don't
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know if i would have the chutzpah to put that on my vehicle um i wonder what kind of looks he gets on
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the highway i wonder if he has any takers by the way anyways let's leave those thoughts aside but i want to
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close with um a tweet i put up over the weekend i just came across it and i didn't have much to say
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yeah this is the one here pump it up as big as you can i said christia freeland's world economic
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forum and i say that because she's on the board of governors there which is an impossible conflict
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of interest christia freeland's world economic forum proposes personal carbon allowance programs
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and as you can see i link to the world economic forum do you see that i have a link there and i quote
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allowance program so you have like a carbon quota and once you're out of it you're out of it
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and i thought you know i you know i tweet too much it's a hobby i tweeted that and i moved
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like i literally just tweeted a page of the world economic forum's website with like five words
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in quotes but if you click on my tweet go back to my tweet uh if you please yeah and pump up that one
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there if you click yeah click on that one there what happens when you click on it
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oh oh it is coming up they took it down they took it i think did they just put it back up
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i think oh my god well this the story is even more fun now
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because as soon as i tweeted it over the weekend
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they deleted it as i said they literally deleted the page after i mentioned it never
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trust the world economic forum never trust christian feeling
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and this morning it said that because this morning i said to you olivia let's show people
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and we found an archive version and now that i said they deleted it they literally deleted it
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they put it back i think the world economic forum follows if not this show i think they follow my
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twitter account i swear to you after i tweeted that they took the link down and you and if you went
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there it said page not found 404 error and so then i did my second tweet pointing that out
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i'll let you read it for yourself but be careful that they haven't changed it
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while transport and buildings are the major drivers for emissions in cities
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the share of individual emissions is significant
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have had limited success due to a lack of awareness and fair mechanism
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yet there have been major developments in recent years
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that could keep that could help realize my carbon initiatives
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i'm going to go through it and see if they actually deleted things
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made changes to make it less threatening and put it back up
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because we do not know the long-term effects of the mrna vaccine
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china does not allow mrna vaccines in their country
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with your back and your hands and a little bit of hard work
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and i think as albertans we're fiercely protective of that
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the world's energy crisis has been grabbing newspaper headlines
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in a nutshell we're running short of petroleum resources
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my colleagues in the government and i have come reluctantly to believe
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this was alberta origin of the alberta separatist movement
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begins with the election of pierre trudeau as prime minister
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it was it was a deliberate and malicious targeting in the west which suited
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pierre trudeau just fine just like it suits justin trudeau just fine
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sunny ways my friends blackface there is an actual hostile government
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that was alberta why did your dad give everyone in western canada the middle finger
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really in politics you do have to make uh big decisions and whenever you make this big
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decisions there's going to be people who agree with it and people who don't disagree with it
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plenty of people want to leave this country it's not the kind of idea you'd expect
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to hear from someone who wants to win power and hold power it's a it is a radical idea
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and you would normalize the discussion and so maybe alberta wouldn't have to go because maybe
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the rest of the country and the rest of the world would say whoa don't go will you accept these
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changes instead that's what happened to quebec there's no maple leafs west of the manitoba borders
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why do we why do we have a maple leaf by unilateral decision on canadian flags think of how the american
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colonists we're in 1775 that's how a lot of albertans are today
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oh hey sid um i should just let everybody know because there are more showings booked for
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ungovernable and uh as you saw i'm in it a little bit um some of my earliest memories are of the economic
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fallout of the national energy program seeing my worried parents um anyways ungovernable that's
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our documentary made by kian simoni he's our head documentary filmmaker it's alberta's quest for
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independence we've got our live world premiere october 12th at canyon meadows cinemas in calgary
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it's at 7 30 um our next showing is october 19th it's at 6 30 i think the movie starts um
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it's or maybe doors open anyways you can get all the information that i don't quite have
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for you um at ungovernable is it ungovernable.ca ungovernable.com anyway um you can uh you can get
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uh ticket details there uh so the next showing is buffet royale carvery it's dinner and a movie
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um and then q a um and we love buffet royale because they um stood down the chinese consulate
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when the chinese consulate showed up to protest a book signing on their doorstep and their poor
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customers had to run the gauntlet of uh pro ccp protesters on their doorstep to come into the
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restaurant to enjoy our book signing of uh ezra's book china virus and then the next screening is our
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friends church in the vine are hosting us april 3rd or sorry october 30th that's a sunday
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and again 6 30 so very exciting it's albertadocumentary.com is where you get tickets for that
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said how's it going i'm going uh going pretty good and i you know i uh hearing this news in the the
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documentary that we've just seen um looking forward to seeing that in theaters it's it's funny how these
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issues just keep coming back it's the same problem in many ways uh and they just keep on doubling down
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of course ottawa and trudeau i guess 2.0 i imagine uh you could say uh but i'm sure you would have a
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much deeper knowledge of that you know it's uh it's why there are so many reluctant separatists now they
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tried it the other way you know there was a rise in separatism sort of before stephen harper took power
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for 10 years and he extinguished that because back then westerners wanted to leave because we never felt
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like we had been in the country you know so then when we got a western based prime minister we were
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in but nothing really changed the equalization formula didn't change we were still sort of treated as
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this colony and then the liberals always get back in and the problems get worse so
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for a lot of western separatists or western sovereignty so whoever they want to describe
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themselves they tried it the other way and now reluctantly they feel like nothing's ever going to
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change until we change this for ourselves and and um you know the kian's documentary goes through
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sort of the roots of western separatism what those why there are so many people who are so angry with
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ottawa so much so that even though they are patriotic canadians they say there's no other way
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um and offers some solutions um and i know our uh young ottawa based reporter william he watched it and
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he said he learned a lot you know like you know surface level why albertans think they're treated
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unfairly but when you dig down deeper and you talk about stuff like jingle mail how you know there was
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a time in alberta where so many people were email or emailing mailing their keys back to the bank that
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the mail in alberta would jingle uh because of you know the national energy program and and the spike in
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interest rates in the wake of that um people really don't understand how many lives were ruined
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by these unfair policies and and why so many people now say there's only one way forward and that is
00:23:19.200
on our own well and you think about the the price of oil and gas as well um and how it seemingly
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continues to go on the rise and many of the people who would promote that and you know i could say i guess
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christia freeland and other individuals within trudeau's government they don't acknowledge the
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fact that it's not just a number you know an x dollar value for a gallon of oil isn't just uh some
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capitalist understanding of the value of said merchandise it also boils down to the food that
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we put on our tables the farmers that are supplying that food the truck drivers who are delivering that
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food all of that carries on the the cost of oil as that increases so does everything else you know it's
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it's funny because the rise in the cost of oil is a very recent development not all that long ago we
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had negative oil prices here in alberta and we were the bad guys then and then price of oil goes up and
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oh we're the bad guys also then so there's really no way for alberta for a lot of people for this to be
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resolved unless there's a complete renegotiation of our relationship and confederation and that looks
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differently for different people and i think albertans are just sick of not being allowed to
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have the same conversations that quebec has perennially in quebec the idea of sovereignty
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or sovereignty association or complete separatism it's mainstream they have an entire culture built
00:24:42.160
around it here we even talk about like hey maybe we're getting screwed a little bit all of a sudden
00:24:46.640
you're written off as a white supremacist so even in our disgruntled nature with confederation we're
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treated unfairly compared to our friends in quebec who have somehow figured this out when we haven't
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quite yet anyway we should get on to the news of the day um let's oh i should tell everybody how
00:25:06.880
they can get involved so if you want to support the work that we do completely willingly you can watch
00:25:10.880
us on youtube that's fine but there's censorship platform um you can also watch us on getter but there's
00:25:15.760
no opportunity to interact with us um if you want to interact with us might i suggest you watch us
00:25:21.680
on rumbly rumble and odyssey and on both of those platforms you can leave a paid chat um on odyssey
00:25:28.160
it's a hyper chat on rumble it's a rant if it's over five dollars we'll read it on air because uh we're
00:25:35.040
causing a bit of a a cluster um reading all the like one dollar one dollar fifty cent uh chats although
00:25:42.640
we appreciate every little bit and they will make a graphic so that everybody can see your chat on
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air and is there some sort of bizarre feedback in my ear is it is it everybody oh did we fix that okay
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okay are we good it's fixed on mine and now olivia it sounded like you were vacuuming
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i was just trying to talk through it and i didn't want to stop you if you're cleaning that's
00:26:10.320
a good thing to do uh let's talk about uh first uh video uh climate nonsense it's titled uh on my
00:26:17.120
side and uh the un secretary for global comms global communications said they own the science on
00:26:24.320
climate change and i guess by owning it they mean censoring all opposing viewpoints um and if you have
00:26:30.720
an opposing viewpoint like i do where i'm like i'm pretty sure that um my suv is not more responsible for
00:26:38.320
climate change than bill gates's jet but anyways uh so they admit fully to censoring the science that's
00:26:46.800
owning the science i guess anyway um why don't we show that clip you know we partnered with google
00:26:53.120
for example if you google climate change you will at the top of your search you will get all kinds of
00:27:00.000
un resources we started this partnership when we were shocked to see that when we googled climate
00:27:07.120
change we were getting incredibly distorted uh information right at the top so we we're becoming
00:27:14.080
much more proactive um you know we own the science and we think that the world you know should know it
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and and the platforms themselves also do um but again it's it's it is um it's it's a huge huge challenge
00:27:28.640
that i think all sectors of society need to be very active in incredible to say the least um just
00:27:41.120
the fact alone that they're and they don't call it censorship right um what they say is that we're
00:27:46.000
working on this promotional material basically owning the science exactly the science you know it's
00:27:51.920
our science we own the science it's a very a totalitarian approach i guess to understanding it's
00:27:57.040
like oh yes we have this study and it will never be refuted because we are correct period done like
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it this is not a dialogue this is the united nations uh and they are i think no no better than
00:28:09.920
any politicians in fact they're probably worse because nobody voted for them yeah isn't that the
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truth they're probably worse because nobody voted for them they're completely unaccountable and yet
00:28:20.560
they're telling you what information you can consume and if you are somebody who produces
00:28:27.600
content on youtube where you question the science which that that's literally science to question
00:28:34.480
things and test your theories you are completely demonetized like our friends at friends of science
00:28:39.360
they never even bothered to try to monetize their work um and good thing is uh it didn't matter because
00:28:46.080
youtube just completely demonetized any content that questions the official narrative um much like
00:28:52.720
how they treated covet right like if you questioned the official narrative on covet it just so happens
00:28:57.760
that the covet skeptics turned out to be right a lot faster than the climate skeptics are because
00:29:03.680
to measure climate you need to take millennia sometimes millions of years um and hopefully youtube won't be
00:29:10.560
around then um but they also slap a warning label on it if you go to friends of science youtube page
00:29:16.400
right now underneath all their videos there's a uh un warning label because they question the science
00:29:24.000
behind climate change and they simply say you know what it's probably more likely the sun which is the
00:29:31.440
largest uh contributor to climate change than your suv they don't even deny that humans are contributing to
00:29:37.840
climate change because of course we exist and we create things around us like just by being alive
00:29:45.520
you affect your environment they just say it might be that big burning ball of gas in the sky that is
00:29:53.040
affecting the weather every single day but you can't say that because this lady who only works in
00:29:58.400
communications she somehow knows more about the science than um working geologists
00:30:04.160
and it's the same kind of science that we saw with uh um and this is a bit in disrelation but the
00:30:12.240
indigenous burial grounds and the revealing of 200 uh alleged bodies are around that underneath the
00:30:18.080
ground where they use this uh geo detection type device very vague a very very weak connection and
00:30:24.960
you know on on the topic of climate change it's just it really does amaze me because anytime someone
00:30:30.400
says climate change it's like yes the climate changes that's the point i mean imagine the entire
00:30:36.800
world we're just to stay still for an hour or a minute i mean that that would throw things into
00:30:43.200
total disarray if the world were to stop turning if the winds were to stop moving if the temperature
00:30:48.720
were to stay the same we would be in a very bad position um and you know honestly thank god for
00:30:54.480
climate change thank god that things uh move like you see a river a natural river will it kind of
00:31:00.480
snakes through the land and as it goes through uh it'll kind of clean out the soil it'll provide
00:31:05.920
more nutrients uh it affects the environment in a positive way and now what do we do well we put
00:31:11.440
rivers in tubes and expect everything to be fine and dandy we we go completely contrary to what nature
00:31:17.360
has presented us with and then we we cry foul when it doesn't do what we want it to do the whole
00:31:21.920
climate change thing is a joke sorry i'm crambling on there no i i think it's great for me it's just
00:31:27.440
so anti-human because we are treated by the climate cult i i call them because there are some reasonable
00:31:35.920
people well people on the other side but largely they're a doomsday cult and they treat us as though
00:31:40.960
we are uh a parasite a plague upon the earth instead of just the highest order of life you know there's
00:31:48.160
animals beneath us we can eat them they affect their environment too ants build hills we build cities
00:31:54.560
it's just we're nature we're part of nature too we're at the top but we're part of nature and
00:32:00.800
naturally we affect the environment around us just like everybody else does but for the climate cult
00:32:07.360
they think that we need to be exterminated and limited while they're trying to save some frog that
00:32:13.600
won't reproduce because it's really important but they think that there's just too many of us but
00:32:21.120
they get to choose which one of us get to reproduce and it's not me and it's not you but it's definitely
00:32:27.200
david suzuki and his five kids in his beach house um anyways we should move along by the way when david
00:32:33.920
suzuki moves off the beach i'll start to take his doom and gloom scenario about the rising oceans more
00:32:40.480
seriously and when like he there's this famous clip i don't know if we can dig it up it doesn't
00:32:45.120
really matter of him talking about humans like maggots we're maggots he said because he's actually
00:32:50.960
not a climatologist i don't know if you know that but he's a fruit fly biologist um so probably knows
00:32:56.640
as much about climate change as this communications lady from from wherever that was um but he has five
00:33:05.280
kids so he's an anti-natalist depopulationist but he had five kids it's just that i can't have five
00:33:13.520
kids because i'm the wrong kind of five kids right his are smart and um so they're worth the carbon
00:33:20.960
expenditures they get the carbon credits for life and i'm not i'm i'm one of the maggots apparently
00:33:26.640
for these people and it's so classist and gross too you know like they're they always say we want
00:33:31.600
to help the developing world why by depopulating it it's him it feels to me like you don't actually
00:33:36.640
like those people then and i want them to have electricity and you want them to drop dead i'm not
00:33:41.600
i'm not sure you like them all that much anyway you know i'm just for some reason i'm getting
00:33:46.400
flashbacks of the georgia guidestones uh even though they've been uh now torn down but you know we'll
00:33:51.920
see another time perhaps they dug up my suzuki clip and this is this might have been the first
00:33:57.200
time i saw this this is like this is the day i started to dislike hippies like this was the spark
00:34:02.800
i'm coming around to them again though i'm coming around because i think we hold hands on the whole
00:34:06.640
idea of covid and that's good enough for me but this with the like headband and he just seemed a little
00:34:12.320
bit dirty and i bet he had bare feet um this was the day i was like no those people are not for me
00:34:18.080
anyway anyway let's roll this oh even the music
00:34:38.480
we lost a lot of innocence at that time but i think there was a serious questioning of what kind
00:34:45.360
of values was this society promulgating and we didn't like it one thing that i've gotten off on
00:34:54.320
lately is that basically you know i study fruit flies and i suddenly realized that basically we're all
00:35:00.320
fruit flies like you hatch out as a maggot and a maggot can now crawl around it's got two dimensions
00:35:08.320
and it can ingest food at its will and it defecates all over the environment and some other smaller
00:35:15.040
maggots can even eat your defecation and get some nourishment out of it and the bigger you get the
00:35:20.080
more people you can or more maggots you can crush with your weight yeah most people in the world are
00:35:27.360
content to stay as first or second level maggots and they establish their own little area and
00:35:32.480
exactly what you said you know the the level of maggots he's a better maggot than you sheila
00:35:37.920
how does that make you feel he's a better maggot than me you know i just that just looks like
00:35:51.280
it makes me think as well it's like you're going to own nothing you're going to be happy and you're
00:35:54.560
going to eat bugs well it's what is this arrangement we've got going on now we are bugs and we're going
00:35:59.600
to eat bugs maybe it's because that's how much they value us and the quality of our food shows
00:36:08.480
yeah yeah they literally look at us like we're just filth and he's a better maggot than me um
00:36:15.360
but that's okay because who cares what that gross gross hypocrite thinks um let's move on to the next
00:36:22.640
thing um i think uh we have some liberal policies to thank for this on the state of uh the mental
00:36:30.720
health of farmers in this country one quarter of canadian farmers considered suicide in this past
00:36:35.360
year a research at the university of guelph revealed that canadian farmers mental health
00:36:40.240
worsened during the pandemic at a higher rate than the general population with one in four
00:36:44.320
saying they felt life was not worth living um let's keep going here 83 percent of canadian farmers
00:36:53.760
and these are like the toughest people on the planet um 83 percent of canadian farmers i don't
00:36:59.440
want to say the toughest people on the planet but these are not overly emotional people farmers
00:37:03.600
i can tell you that uh they have lower levels of resilience from the general population and higher
00:37:09.120
levels of burnout with 76 reporting moderate to high perceived stress interesting while rates of
00:37:15.440
moderate to severe anxiety disorders were slightly higher than average during the pandemic canadian
00:37:19.920
farmers were less prone to depression nonetheless to deal with stress and anxiety many farmers
00:37:25.600
utilized a variety of coping mechanisms at a higher rate than the general population including
00:37:39.120
how's everyone are we are we still alive are we still going here
00:37:52.960
uh yeah do you want to go on ad quickly and then uh so am i talking to the audience right now i
00:37:56.560
just want to make sure but yeah we'll uh uh perhaps we'll go to a little ad break uh and then
00:38:01.520
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00:38:10.960
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00:40:31.920
I have Starlink, so usually it's pretty stable out here in the middle of nowhere, but it did let me down.
00:40:41.500
They've resulted in eating more or less, sleeping more, self-isolating, blaming themselves, and consuming alcohol.
00:40:51.480
One in four Canadian farmers said they felt their life was not worth living, wished they were dead, or thought of taking their own life at some point during the year prior to this study.
00:41:01.340
Suicide rates among farmers are two times higher than the general Canadian population.
00:41:08.580
My God, if this were happening in any other industry, there would be something done about it, but not because these people are farmers.
00:41:16.120
Because the problem is, who really cares about these people?
00:41:22.360
These are the quiet, resilient, normally, people who farm the land, steward the land, and grow our food.
00:41:34.080
Constant demonization of what they do and attack and attack and attack from the liberals on everything that they do.
00:41:44.880
This is the fallout, the psychological fallout it has.
00:41:53.420
And because of that, men, and studies have repeatedly shown this, men, when faced with economic fallout, that's when they spiral into depression and suicide.
00:42:05.740
That's why rates of suicide are so high among middle-aged men.
00:42:09.340
And when you have the whole world saying, you're killing the planet by what you're doing, you're using too much nitrogen, your cows are killing the planet.
00:42:20.940
And then you add a carbon tax on top of that, and inflation, supply chain breakdown.
00:42:30.420
And then, you know, as a farmer, you're a price taker, not a price setter.
00:42:35.340
So you have to, no matter what your yield is, no matter what your cost inputs are, so fertilizer, fuel, labor, cost of equipment, maintenance, interest rates on your equipment, doesn't matter what your inputs are.
00:42:50.940
You can only get the global market price for your crop, which means that if inputs are high, you're just barely getting by.
00:43:00.760
And so that's the effect of all these bad policies and this war on agriculture.
00:43:05.780
That's what it's doing to our farmers, and it's terrible.
00:43:08.560
Like I said, if this were happening in any other industry, people would be doing something about it.
00:43:13.960
But because these are Western farmers, and they really don't vote liberal, nobody seems to care about them.
00:43:19.820
The fancy ivory tower people, the academics, they don't care about these people.
00:43:26.000
And honestly, I think being a farmer, that's something that every Canadian should have experience with.
00:43:29.780
You know, I wouldn't propose this, but I think it would be a good idea if, you know, there's this idea, you know, you spend a year in military service after you graduate high school.
00:43:39.880
Well, you know, maybe we should be giving people the opportunity to spend a year on a farm.
00:43:43.420
Because not only do they actually need the help, they're literally the ones putting food on our tables.
00:43:50.300
And this is how they're being treated by our government.
00:43:52.060
And farmers usually, they are, and maybe Sheila, you can speak to this more, a little more independent.
00:43:57.140
They understand that they're the ones who have to get things done.
00:44:00.000
And oftentimes, at the end of the day, it's the government who's making that harder and harder and harder.
00:44:05.320
Well, much like the war on energy, I guess you could say, the war on oil, all this does is increase our prices at the end of the day for everything in our society.
00:44:14.020
Yeah, it's all part of the same war on the West, right?
00:44:18.520
War on oil and gas, war on farmers, and largely.
00:44:21.020
You also have to think about this, and this is something that a lot of people outside of the West don't realize,
00:44:27.000
is that a lot of times the farmers and the rig hands are the exact same people because of the nature of the business.
00:44:33.700
So if you work on the rigs, you're trucking maybe, like my husband upstairs, the spring breakups,
00:44:43.420
when you can't be on the roads moving heavy equipment, that hits right when you need to put your crop in.
00:44:48.780
And likewise, in the fall, when the roads are mucky again, and you can't be on the roads, guess what?
00:44:55.460
And so a lot of farmers supplement their income in oil and gas.
00:44:59.840
Now, what do you do when the government has attacked both of those things?
00:45:03.060
What do you think that does to your mental health as a guy who's just trying to hang on to the family farm, feed his kids,
00:45:09.460
maybe have a little bit of money put away for a little bit of fun,
00:45:13.540
and now you're getting hit with interest rates that are out of control on your equipment?
00:45:20.520
And I don't think people really understand how, it's like a unholy convergence of two terrible things,
00:45:29.640
this war on oil and gas and the war on agriculture, which is, I think, a little, it's the war on the West,
00:45:35.540
the sort of push against toxic masculinity, which is just responsible men being responsible.
00:45:49.000
One by one, hardworking communities are falling to these rules and whatever else,
00:45:54.780
currently the Trudeau regime is putting forward.
00:45:59.380
And even on a societal level, this is one thing where maybe you can fill the gaps that I might miss.
00:46:06.260
When you're growing crops, you have the option of what kind of crop you're going to grow.
00:46:09.660
For the most part, I mean, there's certain things that, you know,
00:46:11.600
you kind of need to be ingrained in, like asparagus, right?
00:46:14.800
But if it gets harder and harder and harder to grow these unique crops or crops that aren't the standard thing,
00:46:23.240
then our diets at the end of the day across North America are going to get worse and worse.
00:46:26.940
Like the three main ones, corn, soy, hay wheat, or wheat, I guess for us.
00:46:32.200
This is going to fill our diet because these are the cheapest things to make
00:46:35.360
because our farmers can't afford to make anything that's better than the worst.
00:46:44.220
I'll add to that just on dumb things Justin Trudeau says and does and how it harms Canadian farmers.
00:46:52.020
Like when he's off parading, let's say he's gone to India.
00:46:55.100
Yeah. And he parades through that country in all manner of Bollywood style costumes and
00:47:02.900
to the point where the Bollywood stars were saying, literally saying Justin Trudeau is more Bollywood than we are.
00:47:13.900
Canadian farmers got slapped with a tariff on our pulses.
00:47:17.640
So lentils, chickpeas, the things that India buys from us because it's, you know, it's cheap protein.
00:47:33.500
Canada is the world's largest exporter of pulses.
00:47:46.680
Look at higher chickpea tariffs as a result of his trip.
00:47:50.300
He says it wasn't because of that, but it happened like, I don't even think his plane was on the ground and we were slapped with pulse tariffs.
00:47:56.620
So now you've got farmers with pulses in the ground already thinking that they're going to have a good year.
00:48:03.560
And then they've got tariffs now to deal with after the fact, which adds to the cost or it cuts out of their bottom line.
00:48:11.020
Justin Trudeau, we had to, our pork farmers had to deal with problems with China.
00:48:20.080
And then all of a sudden China is not going to take it.
00:48:22.300
And who do we have at the helm to help us, steward us through this?
00:48:29.840
So there's all these international forces at play where if you had a reasonable grown-up government, you could probably deal with them.
00:48:38.260
And every time he does something stupid on the international stage, farmers pay the price.
00:48:43.040
For example, right now, Russia is one of the world's largest producers of potash.
00:48:50.280
You know who else is one of the world's largest producers of potash?
00:48:55.040
Instead of saying, okay, you guys don't want to buy your fertilizer from Russia?
00:49:02.620
Let's give the world some freedom potash instead of this Russian business, just like how we should with our liquefied natural gas.
00:49:10.400
But instead, Justin Trudeau says, you know what?
00:49:12.460
No, we're going to have a war on fertilizer instead.
00:49:16.780
Instead of saying this is the solution to the world being reliant on Russian potash for fertilizer, we'll just go see our friends in Saskatchewan.
00:49:26.360
Instead, we're going to have a war on fertilizer.
00:49:29.720
Just like, you know, instead of ramping up production of natural gas, getting some LNG exports on the go.
00:49:36.280
No, he says, actually, sorry, no, we're going to move to hydrogen, the non-existent fuel source at this point.
00:49:41.780
Like, it's ridiculous, but this is just another thing that people don't realize that farmers are dealing with.
00:49:47.540
So you have your crops in the ground, your piglets in the barn, and then all of a sudden, Justin Trudeau does something stupid and, bam, tariffs, or China's not taking your product all of a sudden.
00:50:00.180
It's like when you're a farmer, it's months into the future, if not the next year or the next couple of years that you're looking into.
00:50:11.060
But then you've got Trudeau, you've got Christy Freeland, and they come by and they make these snap decisions.
00:50:15.860
And all of a sudden, your whole future is put into question.
00:50:20.520
All your carefully laid plans can be undone by Justin Trudeau namasteing his way through India.
00:50:27.940
It's very, very difficult to try to make a living when you're subject to, well, you pay the consequences for Justin Trudeau's bad behavior as a farmer over and over and over again.
00:50:52.920
$20, love and appreciate the sanity and common sense brought to us in part by Rebel News.
00:51:03.980
Of course, thank you guys and all of your donations.
00:51:06.220
It's what keeps us alive instead of, as we've mentioned a few times, Justin Trudeau and his help.
00:51:13.600
And then we've got Yuda Bursi, who kindly taught me how to say her name last week.
00:51:18.400
I was just guessing my way through like two years of you being a regular donor in the chats.
00:51:24.960
Anyways, Yuda gives us five bucks and says, love for her to explain how they own the science.
00:51:29.600
I think they own the science in the same way that Pfizer owns the science and Moderna owns the science in that we just won't release anything to the contrary.
00:51:40.820
And that's the same thing, I guess, when you own the means of communication, I guess you do own the information, right?
00:51:56.380
That's, you know, if I were to speculate on that, that's what I would say is it's not a matter of what the charts and graphs say.
00:52:03.700
It's a matter of what they know they can get away with in terms of public opinion.
00:52:15.740
And then let's skip ahead because we had some technical problems that maybe delayed the show a little bit.
00:52:20.700
But I want to talk about this no tolerance for hedonism story from Black Locks Reporter.
00:52:26.680
We'll get to that after I do Fraser's because I find it interesting what they describe as hedonism here.
00:52:32.360
And it's not real hedonism, like the things that gross me out.
00:52:43.740
Saturday, we held our last picnic of the season, a wonderful turnout by our Hamilton Freedom Fighters.
00:52:48.720
Sunday at a rally at Hamilton City Hall was, again, fun.
00:52:57.320
And the guy is addicted to protesting at this point.
00:53:05.860
At least he's not going to let them do it easily.
00:53:14.840
Sorry, Mr. Monsanto, for some of his reporting in Hamilton, too.
00:53:24.660
And he wasn't letting them bother the locals at the beginning of the pandemic.
00:53:31.540
Efron went home to Hamilton every single weekend.
00:53:33.920
And he was out there making sure that the police, if they were going to harass the Freedom Fighters there,
00:53:38.400
they were going to have to deal with Efron sticking a camera in their face.
00:53:51.460
Now, hedonism usually means, like, gross, morally questionable activities with other people.
00:53:59.960
Normally, I'm just dancing around the things that I want to say.
00:54:02.940
But anyways, the Canadian government described hedonistic pleasure, as it sounds like, going on vacation.
00:54:15.620
So Canadian travellers had a duty to swear off, quote, hedonistic pleasure during COVID lockdown, says Ontario Divisional Court.
00:54:21.560
A justice of the peace upheld a $4,500 fine for a woman he called cavalier and selfish for taking a Mexican holiday.
00:54:31.420
I suppose she should have been the prime minister on a private jet.
00:54:35.000
Some did not heed the government's request not to travel outside of Canada and were instead cavalier and selfish in their attitude towards social responsibility.
00:54:41.100
This, again, demonizing the healthy people, wrote Judge Richard Kwan.
00:54:48.280
They did not heed the scientific-based and consequential advice and did travel outside of Canada for hedonistic pleasure.
00:55:01.520
She went to Mexico on vacation, where people from all over the world go, including the United States, other first-world countries.
00:55:15.480
They throw some money into the local Mazatlan economy, and then they come back.
00:55:22.520
There's no insinuation here that she's sick at all.
00:55:27.980
And this judge didn't like it because he stayed home to stay safe.
00:55:32.320
And, by the way, I think it's pretty interesting.
00:55:34.640
More people have died of COVID in 2022 than 2021.
00:55:40.060
And that's weird because we're all supposed to be vaccinated.
00:55:43.700
And don't you know that the vaccine stops the spread?
00:55:49.300
Um, so, uh, it's just how they've painted going on vacation as, like, some moral failing.
00:56:04.760
Like, so, I hope this lady's appealing because this judge is very clearly biased.
00:56:10.280
It's insulting, to say the least, to see what this judge has said.
00:56:15.140
How would this judge handle the situation around monkeypox?
00:56:18.300
I mean, there was talk that that was a pandemic, too.
00:56:26.220
You want to talk about stopping some kind of alleged pandemic?
00:56:28.980
Well, maybe let's, uh, you can figure out that one, uh, before you start talking about
00:56:34.340
I mean, to tell, to tell somebody it's a hedonistic pleasure, uh, to go on a vacation.
00:56:39.460
You know, there are people, uh, that weren't allowed to fly to see their dying relatives
00:56:45.640
Oh, is that hedonistic of them to want to travel to see one of their dying loved ones?
00:56:50.460
Who's to say that she didn't just need a mental break?
00:56:53.000
You know, go to Mexico because things in Canada were chaos.
00:56:58.300
And you want to tell somebody while all of the politicians were going off on vacation
00:57:02.220
that a citizen can't because they were disrespecting the government.
00:57:05.660
Meanwhile, the government itself doesn't respect anyone.
00:57:07.940
So, yeah, sorry, uh, no, I, no, I, it's, it's 100% true.
00:57:13.380
Nobody even knows why this woman left the country.
00:57:18.880
Maybe it was, maybe she was visiting a dying relative.
00:57:21.800
Maybe it's nobody's business because this is a free country and these people have section
00:57:25.460
six charter rights and they can come and go however the hell they please.
00:57:29.320
Just like our politicians in Alberta, ours took vacations, um, all over Christmas break
00:57:34.920
after telling us how many people we could have in our homes for Christmas.
00:57:38.940
You know, it's just, was it hedonistic for my kids to want to be at my mother's funeral,
00:57:44.540
but they couldn't because there was some sort of limit on our 800 person church that they
00:57:51.840
I mean, it's outrageous, um, and in the end, none of it mattered, did it?
00:57:57.760
Because Justin Trudeau and Joe Biden with their, uh, whatever it is, 11 boosters combined,
00:58:04.440
Every time somebody walks past Justin Trudeau with a conservative idea, he comes down with COVID.
00:58:10.680
Um, so what, like, what are you ticketing this lady for?
00:58:22.800
A 27 year old woman, you were right, by the way, a 27 year old Toronto woman who flew
00:58:28.840
to Mexico for a working vacation on December 27th, 2020, just a day after auto or Ontario
00:58:42.040
The traveler on her return was fined for declining a COVID test at the airport and failing to prepay
00:58:53.540
By the way, those quarantine hotels, what a scam that is and was.
00:58:58.520
When I was listening to our, um, no COVID jails court challenge, as it turns out, if you showed
00:59:05.820
up at the airport and presented with symptoms of COVID or faked symptoms of COVID, because
00:59:12.300
I wish people had started pulling that little trick down at the airport, because if you showed
00:59:16.280
up and you're like, pardon me, um, you were, they sent you straight home to quarantine, the COVID
00:59:23.140
jails were only for healthy people to quarantine it.
00:59:26.860
And as it turns out, people were getting COVID in the COVID jails because they would show up
00:59:31.620
with no symptoms, then go there while they waited for their test to come back.
00:59:37.180
They might get clear of their tests there, but then go home and have COVID because they
00:59:44.140
But if you were sick, if you showed up at the airport sick, they didn't want you at the
00:59:48.700
You got to go home to quarantine because it's science.
00:59:51.720
For those who might not be aware, like these COVID hotels, these quarantine facilities, I
00:59:56.420
mean, there was sexual molestations that were happening in these buildings.
01:00:00.240
There was people that, uh, because of dietary restrictions, they weren't getting fed.
01:00:03.860
And even if they didn't have any dietary restrictions, the food that they were being given, it was
01:00:09.100
It was an insult to, to everything you would want to do to somebody if you were going to
01:00:14.800
I checked out one of these, sorry, I just checked, I checked out one of these on our
01:00:18.560
own when we sent our alumnus Kean Bexty into one in Calgary, we flew him out of the country
01:00:22.860
who said, you're going to Florida to make it worth your while.
01:00:25.740
But when you come back, you have to willfully submit to the sausage maker of the COVID jail
01:00:31.480
And it was your standard two and a half star Calgary airport hotel, uh, floors one, two
01:00:40.400
and three, or sorry, one, two, and four were for just regular travelers.
01:00:47.040
Floor three was a quarantine one because science.
01:00:51.120
Um, and that was infinitely more expensive than floors one, two, and four for some reason,
01:00:58.940
I guess for the pleasure you're paying for the pleasure of not being allowed to leave
01:01:04.260
Um, but it was, that was like the inflated COVID jail rate was on floor three.
01:01:11.160
If you're a hotel to get that contract, but everybody else could unwittingly stay at a
01:01:17.060
If you stayed on the first, second and fourth floor.
01:01:21.980
Well, and I even remember, I think there was an individual in Quebec, uh, where he was
01:01:26.380
at one point, he had had enough and he was like, I'm leaving.
01:01:29.100
And the security guards were actually preventing him from leaving the facility.
01:01:32.980
Uh, and there was another, I think this was in BC.
01:01:35.540
I'm not sure where there's this many problems that arose from these, uh, quarantine facilities,
01:01:38.920
but there's almost a riot at one of them because of the poor conditions.
01:01:45.700
And I think, um, honestly, uh, maybe this isn't fair to say, but with David Menzies, his
01:01:50.040
early reporting on them, uh, I think he really did kind of open that can of worms and the
01:01:54.040
government really had to take a look at it because all of a sudden everyone was aware
01:01:57.580
that people are being confined to these half-baked hotel facilities.
01:02:01.000
And like you mentioned, you know, you've got the COVID patients who are staying there,
01:02:04.740
the people who are returning from flights that have to stay in these locked doors, basically.
01:02:08.960
And then you've got regular travelers who are also in these buildings.
01:02:13.460
I've been in, uh, hotels where, all right, yeah, this floor, you know, you have your room
01:02:17.320
and then, you know, just don't go on floor X, Y, and Z because those are, you know, off,
01:02:24.780
So now people who are potentially sick are going to mingle in this facility with a bunch
01:02:28.580
of people who certainly have no reason to worry about being sick or anything else.
01:02:32.700
And it's the same thing with the lineups, uh, when it came to getting vaccination or when
01:02:37.640
it came to the lineups for just testing people, it's like, great.
01:02:40.960
Let's send somebody who's concerned about whether or not they're sick to a line of a thousand
01:02:44.680
people who are also concerned about whether or not they're sick.
01:02:47.020
They're all going to go talk to the same people, uh, probably touch the same doorknobs and whatnot.
01:02:52.520
And then they're going to go home at the end of the day.
01:02:54.300
And they're being told that they're less likely to be in danger, less likely to be sick.
01:02:58.340
When we've just exposed them to all of these people and this new environment that they
01:03:04.480
You know, one of the greatest examples of this was BC ferries at the very beginning
01:03:16.100
So it's like, okay, if you really wanted people to spread out and not get COVID, you
01:03:22.760
So that you can get fewer people on a boat and get them across over to Vancouver Island.
01:03:28.420
So they had like people packed like sardines onto these boats.
01:03:31.280
And I'm like, if you wanted people to get COVID, that's probably what you should do.
01:03:36.160
Um, but yeah, none of it made any sense whatsoever.
01:03:38.960
Just like, uh, the Montreal airport, the mayhem that's constantly there, um, because of arrive
01:03:45.120
can at the time, if you wanted people to get COVID, that's what you would do.
01:03:48.700
Like, it was just like the running of the water Buffalo there.
01:03:52.180
It just, people just pile into each other and it's like, how is this better?
01:03:57.700
Just get rid of this stupid app so people can just breeze through customs, but no.
01:04:02.900
No, anyway, that arrive can at has to go to say the least.
01:04:08.740
I think we're, uh, are we all caught up, Olivia?
01:04:14.860
I don't think we've gotten any more, uh, uh, chats at the moment.
01:04:21.900
Um, maybe while they're working on that, we can throw to this story about two more provinces
01:04:26.020
that are following Alberta's lead and saying, we will not, uh, deal with the feds, uh, unnecessary
01:04:34.060
targeting of lawful Canadian gun owners, which is great.
01:04:39.040
And again, I want to say, I appreciate what he's doing for Canadian gun owners, not expending
01:04:45.220
valuable RCMP resources on the most law-abiding sector of the population.
01:04:50.860
I simply wish he felt the same way when he was dealing with law-abiding, otherwise law-abiding
01:04:56.480
But I witnessed, uh, churches being fenced off by RCMP and patrolled weekly by the RCMP.
01:05:04.040
And I thought, you know what, uh, hope there's no actual crime happening in Alberta.
01:05:08.100
Um, so now he's come around to my way of thinking, I'm going to do my best to extend a little bit
01:05:13.680
Um, but Saskatchewan and Manitoba have also agreed that they are going to go along with
01:05:22.800
Um, BC, unfortunately they're governed out of, uh, Victoria and Vancouver, but you know,
01:05:28.400
that middle interior part of BC is very Albertan, uh, very, very Albertan, very Western.
01:05:36.880
And I wonder if the RCMP there are just going to quietly just say, we're going to look the
01:05:44.360
I wonder what the liberals are going to do to us because they're not afraid to drop the
01:05:51.300
hammer on political resistors when they're just citizens.
01:05:55.820
I wonder what they're going to do to our governments for standing up.
01:05:59.880
I just wonder, I wonder if they're going to compel the RCMP to rob us.
01:06:07.040
And, uh, this is even including some bolt action rifles as well, right?
01:06:14.300
Like I wouldn't shoot a chicken with the 410 and there's a 410 on there.
01:06:29.520
If you said person, a space alien who doesn't know anything about guns or fun, what should
01:06:38.920
That's what this, that's what it looks like here.
01:06:41.480
And then like handguns, we're the most vetted people in the country to own a handgun.
01:06:48.240
I've got to go to the range and I got to call some jerk and tell him I'm going to the range
01:06:52.120
and ask for his permission, go straight there, go straight back.
01:06:55.940
Um, and, and yet the liberals think that disarming me is going to help with the gang violence
01:07:04.620
problem in Canada's progressive defund the police kind of cities.
01:07:10.760
I just, I don't, you have to be crazy or dumb to even think that that's effective.
01:07:20.080
Well, and aren't they even trying to go after, uh, what is it?
01:07:23.820
Air rifles, um, the, the compressed air ones and stuff like that.
01:07:28.040
I, maybe not paintball guns, uh, but I remember a story David Menzies a while ago, right.
01:07:35.740
These aren't literally, these aren't even guns.
01:07:37.720
I mean, when was the last time there was a mass shooter who used an airsoft gun that
01:07:43.140
Um, and I think I saw the statistics actually, I saw the statistics last week and I think
01:07:47.280
it was six, six crimes in the entire country were committed by a replica gun.
01:07:52.340
And that might just have been brandishing it or something minor, right?
01:07:56.820
That's the thing is there's, there's the, there's kind of basically two firearm owners.
01:08:01.840
There's the ones who've jumped through all the government hoops and then there's the
01:08:06.220
And those are the people who are using those weapons in the ways that we are hoping to
01:08:12.580
He goes after the people who've already jumped through all the hoops.
01:08:15.360
Uh, and then there's, that doesn't even talk about the problem of 3d printing guns.
01:08:19.200
Um, these measures, these restrictions that they're putting in place, these are not only
01:08:27.820
How does my kids 410 bird gun have anything to do with a gangster who got his gun illegally
01:08:39.940
trafficked across the Canadian border because they don't know how to police the border properly.
01:08:45.040
So, uh, and I mean, all of this goes back to, are we dealing with border issues?
01:08:50.800
Uh, because if we dealt with border issues, we wouldn't have the crime caused by illegal
01:08:56.140
guns in Canada's big cities, but Canada's big city mayors want to blame small town Canada
01:09:06.040
And the liberals are happy to do it because I mean, there's no votes lost by attacking
01:09:13.000
Well, and what just happened with the two, uh, uh, knife, uh, attackers in Saskatchewan,
01:09:18.400
they clearly weren't using guns yet that they were still able to do a very large amount
01:09:22.840
And it's a very unfortunate, uh, that situation and how it unfolded, but nonetheless, if there's
01:09:27.400
somebody out there who's looking to do damage and they don't have access to a firearm,
01:09:31.280
well, I hate to be the bearer of bad news here, but there's a thousand,
01:09:34.540
one ways that you can go about, uh, your malicious intentions without a firearm.
01:09:43.020
Have you ever looked at the crime rates in Japan?
01:09:45.780
Like what they commit with like things other than guns through some actually, um, just,
01:09:52.980
yeah, just, you know, they, they picture these like gun-free utopian societies and I'm like,
01:09:58.600
I don't know, a lot of stabbing and poisonings happening there too.
01:10:04.060
Anyways, let's get to this last one from Fraser and then we'll wrap the show up cause
01:10:28.220
Well, from your lips to our subscribers ears, uh, Fraser McBurney.
01:10:34.120
Um, but this is Rebel News and we rely on the willing contributions of our viewers and supporters.
01:10:46.380
We'll just be grateful for whatever little bit that you, uh, send our way because we know
01:10:52.260
you have fewer of it in your pocket than ever before.
01:11:07.000
Um, thanks Olivia and everybody behind the scenes in the studio in Toronto, but also around
01:11:13.360
the country working hard to make sure that you can find the show.
01:11:16.320
Uh, thanks to everybody who watched today and special thanks to everybody who pitched
01:11:20.180
And we couldn't do any of what we do without your support.
01:11:24.080
And, uh, I think I'm back here tomorrow with David Menzies probably.
01:11:28.420
And as my friend, David always says, stay sane.
01:11:34.140
The internet's saying nobody knows who first coined it is.
01:11:37.460
If the situation was hopeless, the propaganda would not be necessary.
01:11:41.560
So as negative as things are, we got Bolsonaro, uh, we got Georgia Maroney and in Italy, we've
01:11:48.220
got, uh, the new Canadian leader set to beat Trudeau, uh, who's totally anti-New World
01:11:55.820
We are rising right now, but that concerns me because the deep state globalists are going