Rebel News Podcast - January 20, 2023


EZRA LEVANT | Invest in Canada promotion glosses over the real opportunities


Episode Stats

Length

37 minutes

Words per Minute

161.098

Word Count

6,080

Sentence Count

426

Misogynist Sentences

4

Hate Speech Sentences

13


Summary

A conversation with Noor Bin Laden, the niece of a very famous and bad person, but she is a woman of valor, and it was a pleasure to get to know her and to talk to her about freedom in this unfree town of Davos.


Transcript

00:00:00.260 Hello, my Rebels. What a very unusual conversation with an unusual person. I met Noor bin Laden.
00:00:07.920 That name might ring a bell. She's the niece of a very famous and bad person, but she is
00:00:14.000 a woman of valor, and it was a pleasure to get to know her and to talk to her about freedom
00:00:18.260 in this unfree town of Davos. You will be surprised and delighted and impressed with
00:00:23.800 her. I certainly was. That's a habit. First, let me invite you to become a subscriber to
00:00:27.380 Rebel News Plus. That's the video version of this podcast. I want you to see her, and
00:00:31.480 I want you to see the streets of Davos as we walk through, and that's what our Rebel News
00:00:36.580 Plus is. It's a video version of this show. It's $8 a month, which is half the price of
00:00:42.220 Netflix. I think we're just as interesting. You know, we need the dough because we don't
00:00:45.720 get any money from Justin Trudeau. We just rely on you. All right, here's today's podcast.
00:00:57.380 We're waiting for freedom. Shame on you, you censorious bug.
00:01:11.920 Ezra Levant here for Rebel News. I'm walking in Davos, Switzerland, and we're here for the
00:01:25.080 World Economic Forum. Most of the people who have come to the World Economic Forum are not
00:01:29.480 from Switzerland themselves. It's a special treat to get away to the Swiss Alps in this
00:01:33.780 picturesque town, which in some ways reminds me of Banff, but of course, it's been taken
00:01:38.180 over by the largest corporations and governments and oligarchs around, but you do find the occasional
00:01:44.480 Swiss person here too. I mean, why not? You're in Switzerland, and I met someone who I've only
00:01:50.600 been following online. I met her in person, and she's so interesting. I thought, I'm going
00:01:56.320 to share this experience with you. The viewer's just out of interest, and what a wonderful world
00:02:01.440 we live in. Joining me today in our little stroll down the street is Noor Bin Laden. What a pleasure
00:02:07.060 to meet you. The pleasure is all mine. I've been following your work for a while, and so I was
00:02:11.420 very excited to meet you too here in the streets of Davos. Well, I'm flattered, and you're based in
00:02:16.060 Geneva, right, which is a beautiful city. I've never been there by myself, but it's an international
00:02:23.300 city. It's a United Nations headquarters. The Human Rights Council is there. Tell me a little bit about
00:02:28.260 Geneva. What do you do there? I want to get into who you are because you have a last name that
00:02:34.960 probably a lot of viewers are saying, Bin Laden? I know who the Bin Ladens are. Tell me a little
00:02:38.640 bit about yourself, and then I'll ask a little bit more about your history.
00:02:41.800 Sure. First of all, I'll tell you, Switzerland is a really beautiful country with many beautiful
00:02:47.980 spots, but as I like to say, it's a beautiful place where all of the globalists' dirty work
00:02:54.560 gets done. Well, including banking, that's a tradition that there's some bad guys in this
00:02:59.520 beautiful place. Yeah, I mean, the history of this country, of my country, you know, from my mom's
00:03:04.100 side, for the viewers who aren't aware, but my mom is Swiss. The history of this country
00:03:09.780 is fascinating, especially in light of the globalists and their agenda and how they've
00:03:15.160 set up the whole infrastructure over 100 plus years. Even we can go back to the early 1800s
00:03:23.740 when you look at the different institutions and organizations they've set up to reach the
00:03:31.320 point where we are today here in 2023 in Davos, where we are at the latest stages of the implementation
00:03:39.340 of the New World Order or the so-called Great Reset as they've rebranded it in light of the so-called
00:03:45.660 pandemic, COVID pandemic. That's a great point because we like to think that this is a recent
00:03:51.260 phenomenon. But when you think about it, President Wilson and his League of Nations, that was a
00:03:57.940 protean form of globalism, a utopian managed world. It didn't work, but it set the groundwork
00:04:07.960 for so many international globalist institutions. Tell me a little bit about the history of globalism
00:04:14.120 in Switzerland. You mentioned a little bit, but it sounds like you've been tracing things and following
00:04:19.540 things a bit. Well, you're absolutely right. The League of Nations was the first attempt towards this
00:04:26.700 world government. It failed, even though it was championed by President Wilson under the direction
00:04:33.940 of the British, because actually not a lot of people know this, but the League of Nations was
00:04:38.320 absolutely a British project. And in fact, the nervous system you will find once you go down the different
00:04:44.480 rabbit holes very much is in the UK, in the city of London. But it failed because, or rather,
00:04:52.760 it failed thanks to the American people and to the fact that the Senate wasn't as compromised as it
00:05:01.260 is today in the early 20th century. And so they still respected the will of the people who refused
00:05:08.720 to participate in this League of Nations. And so the US didn't come signatory to the League of Nations
00:05:18.140 because Americans were very wise to this push for the centralization of power, which would effectively
00:05:26.600 mean the erosion of their rights, which their forefathers had fought for so hard during the
00:05:35.540 revolution. It's a great reminder that the US system has checks and balances. The Senate has certain
00:05:40.780 powers to ratify foreign treaties. What a difference from the governance architecture here in Davos.
00:05:47.380 There's no democracy. There's no Senate. There's no elections at all. There's a president for life,
00:05:53.140 Klaus Schwab, and his cronies who often buy their way in for hundreds of thousands or millions of
00:05:59.060 dollars. So what they do here doesn't need the ratification of any legislature. And they're 100
00:06:06.680 years practiced at it more than Woodrow Wilson was. Yes. So just coming back on the historical aspect,
00:06:13.340 they failed with the first attempt with the League of Nations. And then fast forward a couple of
00:06:19.000 decades later, you have the creation of the United Nations after World War II. And as I mentioned at
00:06:27.600 the outset of the interview, the 20th century largely was the theater of the setting up of the
00:06:36.460 infrastructure for the globalists. You know, you make me think of all the different UN agencies
00:06:41.800 from the World Health Organization to the their attempt to have an international criminal court to,
00:06:46.880 you know, the there's international on aviation, on postal, everything, human rights.
00:06:52.540 So many different vehicles were set up in order to push policies and foist policies on nations.
00:07:02.180 And the goal is to supersede national laws and regulations, effectively rendering
00:07:08.480 the nation obsolete, which is the ultimate goal, right? They want a world where there is one
00:07:15.000 government, a centralization of power, and all these entities, including the WEF, the WEF, as I like to
00:07:22.520 call it, is basically a giant press conference. Because while there is some coordination, of course,
00:07:30.220 that takes place here, essentially, this is the communications outlet of the globalists, where
00:07:36.460 they roll out and publicly reveal, I call it also a controlled reveal of the agenda to let us plebs
00:07:44.460 know what it is they have in store for us. And what they do have in store for us is absolutely
00:07:51.580 terrifying and very bleak. I mentioned the centralization of power,
00:07:55.820 which will come in the form of the digitization of every single aspect of our lives. And you look at
00:08:04.300 the agenda for the week, and this is very much the main topic, the main thing that they are talking
00:08:11.980 about behind all the different topics, behind the Trojan horse of climate change. They are going to use
00:08:20.460 carbon footprints and different variables to justify the implementation of a social credit
00:08:29.340 core system, whereby we will just be hooked up to the grid, and they can decide what we do,
00:08:35.740 where we travel, how many times we can travel. I mean, for your viewers who followed your work,
00:08:41.340 they are very wise to the fact that the so-called pandemic was very much a trial run,
00:08:47.820 to see how we would react to the restrictions, to digital IDs. Some people loved it, they embraced
00:08:54.140 it, they became evangelists for it. Some people, they're thrilled by it. It's bizarre to me.
00:09:00.540 It's completely bizarre. But again, when you look at the 20th century, and in conjunction with
00:09:05.980 everything we were just talking about, you have the weaponization of mass psychological operations
00:09:12.860 to brainwash the population, to dumb down the population, to lead them to this apathy and this
00:09:20.220 subservience, where they don't even realize that they are willingly signing up for their own serfdom.
00:09:27.500 Incredible. Some people love their own serfdom if the chains rest lightly on their ankles.
00:09:34.700 They used fear. You know, you say it so well in your reporting, Ezra, they used fear. And they use
00:09:42.380 these events, many of which are completely manufactured. And they use these events to terrorize
00:09:52.140 the population to use these words like security, safety, climate change, all these these so-called
00:10:01.500 crises. So it's always the same. Listen, it's always the same model, problem, reaction, solution,
00:10:09.420 except that they are, they are behind to a large extent, if not exclusively behind the problems in the
00:10:15.820 first place, behind the crises. And then they pretend to be the saviors, the humanists, the
00:10:22.860 philanthropists that are going to come and do good for humanity when they are doing the exact opposite.
00:10:31.100 What are the counterweights to the World Economic Forum or the WEF, as you call it? What are the
00:10:37.980 countries or institutions or even corporations? What is against this? Because when I look through the
00:10:44.780 list of the board of trustees, I see some of the wealthiest people in the world, most powerful,
00:10:50.460 most connected. I see political figures, figures from the world of finance and media. You mentioned
00:10:56.620 media all along this street we're walking. You see all the regime media. They're not here to
00:11:03.980 to ask questions. They're here to synchronize. And so who's against that? Surely it can't just be
00:11:11.420 grassroots ragtag contrarians. I mean, on the media side, Rebel News is so teeny tiny, it's a joke
00:11:17.820 compared to these others. And in the world of finance and government, are there any sizable
00:11:25.260 counterweights to the World Economic Forum? Just to bounce off on what you just said,
00:11:31.020 you're absolutely right. There is a synchronization of all these different entities, of all these different
00:11:37.420 vectors that convey the information and the agenda. But to answer your question,
00:11:44.140 what the work that you're doing, Ezra, is absolutely vital because an informed population
00:11:51.420 is the only way that we have a chance to fight against this and to reclaim these institutions,
00:11:58.060 to dismantle the illegitimate ones and to push back. It's up to us.
00:12:03.420 But you and I and Rebel News and the ragtag critics, we're not even 1% of 1% as big. The budgets they
00:12:13.740 have here, the connections, the influence, surely there's got to be some countervailing force. Maybe
00:12:21.180 it's, I don't know, the World Economic Forum seems to love communist China. Maybe communist China doesn't
00:12:28.620 love them in return. I mean, I suppose Vladimir Putin in his own way is resistant to the globalist
00:12:34.620 world order, but he's quite marginalized, I think, in international circles. I'm just trying to think,
00:12:41.180 who stands against this mighty array of plutocrats? Surely it's got to be more than you and I.
00:12:48.460 Oh, for sure. It has to be we, the people. That's what I was just saying a moment ago. It has to be we,
00:12:55.660 the people. And we don't have a choice because they are moving forward with their agenda. But at the
00:13:03.660 same time, I would like to point out that even though we're not as big as they are in terms of
00:13:09.740 the media presence, in terms of the coverage that they get, because they've just captured so many,
00:13:19.180 so many aspects of our society, and they have such a strong stranglehold on the information sector.
00:13:28.220 But that being said, we are effective. We are more effective than we think, because they are changing.
00:13:33.980 For example, the nomenclature, the narrative, they are very much talking about the disinformation,
00:13:42.060 extremism. They're labeling us all these terms. They wouldn't be doing that if we weren't having
00:13:47.180 some impact. You don't shoot at a dead duck. The fact that they're trying to squelch small voices
00:13:52.860 on the internet through censorship and demonizing it as misinformation, I think that gives credence to
00:13:58.300 your point. Yes. And the fact is, listen, we're here, we're here in Davos. Have you heard the term
00:14:03.100 Great Reset? Oh, of course. Yes. Well, I haven't heard it from them, but I'm aware. I mean, I know
00:14:07.340 the book and I know the theory. But they haven't. Oh, they've stopped using. They've stopped using
00:14:11.420 the Great Reset. They've stopped using Build Back Better. Right. These terms are too tainted. Right,
00:14:16.620 right. Because it's caught on to them. So now they're calling, they're calling for cooperation in a
00:14:22.460 fragmented world. Right. You know, for further centralization and coordination. Again, they use
00:14:28.220 these terms that are positively connoted, but actually mean the opposite. So it's not cooperation
00:14:34.140 that they're looking for. It's coordination to further their power grab and just coordinate amongst
00:14:42.620 them. But no, listen, we are at an unprecedented moment in time and we have a window of opportunity
00:14:51.580 here. I think they overplayed their hand with the so-called pandemic. It's incredibly sad,
00:14:57.420 but everything that's coming to light with the jabs and the sudden deaths and the consequences
00:15:04.700 of the catastrophic restrictions, such as the lockdowns and all the destruction that ensued.
00:15:11.340 And unfortunately, that will continue to come. You know, we're headed towards a financial collapse,
00:15:15.980 an economic collapse that is going to be completely unprecedented by design.
00:15:21.340 And this is their final push. They're going to try to push the CBDCs.
00:15:25.980 That's the central bank digital currencies. Yeah. That's the government answer to crypto.
00:15:29.900 Yes. And one really important aspect that we have to note about the conference this year,
00:15:35.260 if you look at it, what underpins everything, as I said, is the digitization of all aspects of our lives.
00:15:41.500 Right. And there is this window of opportunity for them as well, because they've reached a point in the
00:15:47.660 development of technology whereby the internet of things, 5G, again, the CBDCs, the entire science also of
00:16:00.540 metrology of measuring things means that they will be able or that they are able to measure everything
00:16:06.860 everywhere all the time. And effectively, we are going towards digital jails for the population.
00:16:14.540 You know, I spoke to the head of COVID management here at the World Economic Forum,
00:16:18.380 and she confirmed for me what I saw reported, which is that if any one of the delegates test
00:16:24.940 positive in a PCR test, their card is immediately taken, yeah, deactivated. They cannot get, I said,
00:16:31.020 does that even apply to Klaus Schwab? She said yes. I'm not sure if I believe her. But they're testing
00:16:38.620 that social credit digital ID system on their own people here. I wonder if they're actually enforcing
00:16:43.660 it. She claimed they were. Well, let me ask you this. It's just so interesting to talk to you about
00:16:48.460 these things. And I met you, I mean, through the internet, I started following you on Twitter,
00:16:54.700 and I had seen other reports about you. I want to ask you just a biographical question,
00:17:01.260 because, I mean, you obviously speak for yourself. You have such an interesting
00:17:05.100 mind. You're a historian. You study things very closely. You're based in Switzerland,
00:17:10.300 which is a good place to do it. But our viewers must be thinking, Noor Bin Laden, who is she? Do you
00:17:15.820 want to talk for a minute about your family? Because I think people would find that interesting.
00:17:20.220 Yeah, sure. I mean, we could have, we could talk for so long about what we just discussed and
00:17:25.980 covered. There's so much more to cover. But just in relation to, to my background. So yes,
00:17:31.580 my last name is Bin Laden. My father is from the Bin Laden family. My mother is Swiss. I was born and
00:17:38.940 raised here in Switzerland. My parents split up, I was an eight month old baby. And so because of their
00:17:46.620 split, I was kept here in Switzerland, and had very limited to actually no contact with Saudi Arabia,
00:17:55.820 or that part of my family, through, you know, my through my life. But the reason why I'm here,
00:18:03.980 and I'm speaking out about this is because of my love for America, actually, and my love for freedom,
00:18:10.140 because despite my very strange, or peculiar background, I've been going to the US since the
00:18:15.820 age of three multiple times a year. And so I grew up with this very deep understanding of what the
00:18:22.620 founding fathers were able to achieve, you know, that, that juxtaposition of comparing societies like
00:18:28.540 America compared to, at the time, a society like Saudi Arabia, or different parts of the world where
00:18:34.700 the political or cultural landscape is very different made me acutely aware of what a blessing
00:18:43.500 it is to live in a free society. Well, that's an amazing answer. And by the way, I was just curious,
00:18:49.580 because people would say, Ezra, who is Nur bin Laden? Can I ask you a question about Saudi Arabia?
00:18:55.420 Because Saudi Arabia has a presence here at Davos, and so does the United Arab Emirates.
00:19:01.580 Do you see any prospect for the little green shoots of freedom to grow in the desert sands? Do you
00:19:10.380 think it's possible for countries that have been unfree to become free? I know the pendulum has
00:19:17.180 swung away from freedom, but do you hold out any hope? For example, Trump's Abraham Accords.
00:19:23.500 What do you think of those? Do you think that there's, do you think that people in the Arab world long for freedom, too?
00:19:30.940 You know, my focus is very much the fight against the globalists, because that really takes precedence
00:19:37.580 over everything. And the point that I was making answering your previous question is that,
00:19:41.900 for me, the United States very much, in terms of what the founding fathers were able to establish
00:19:47.900 with, you know, you mentioned checks, the checks of power, balances. I know what you mean,
00:19:52.540 the checks and balances of the, I mean, the American system is really wonderful. The
00:19:57.180 the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, how they managed to enshrine the freedoms of their citizens,
00:20:03.260 and very much the specific part where they're God-given rights, they're not granted by any
00:20:09.100 government. And so for me, the United States very much is the benchmark. When you look at all the
00:20:14.620 different societal projects, in terms of, of human rights.
00:20:22.940 Well, they really are, as others have said, the shining city on the hill.
00:20:26.940 Exactly.
00:20:27.820 Do you have hope for America? Because, I mean, there's a lot of, there's a big part of Americans
00:20:34.140 that are tired of being free, that want to embrace globalism, that love the lockdowns.
00:20:39.980 There's part of Americans that don't love America as much as you love America.
00:20:43.260 I think they've been lulled. You know, it's not just the case for America. I think it's the case for
00:20:49.100 all of the Western world. We've been lulled into this acceptance. And, you know, you look at the
00:20:56.780 educational system in America, and I find it so heartbreaking that kids, like children in school,
00:21:04.220 aren't being taught about what the founding fathers stood for. But that's by design, right? Because they
00:21:09.420 don't want people to be aware of their own sovereignty and their own rights. And so what I'm focusing on
00:21:17.180 is trying to let people know to bring back, to bring back this understanding of what it means to
00:21:26.300 be an American, because there's been so much brainwashing done to, to teach people and especially
00:21:32.460 Americans to hate their own country, when in fact, America is the only country that's
00:21:39.340 stands in the way of the globalists and their plan for a new world, new world order or one world
00:21:47.020 government. And so that's why it's so critical that America gets back, gets back on her feet.
00:21:53.980 Because if America is strong, America can stand in the way of this project. And so we,
00:22:01.180 the rest of the world, thus have a chance as well.
00:22:04.220 Well, that's incredible. What a wonderful call to arms. Last question. I follow you on Twitter,
00:22:10.940 and we'll put your Twitter handle on the webpage for people to follow too. Are you, is there a place
00:22:16.620 where people can get more content from you? Are you affiliated with any organization? Have you,
00:22:22.540 have you thought about writing a book? Maybe you have already. What can people do if they want to learn
00:22:27.500 more about you and your ideas? I understand the background, especially it's the first time. No,
00:22:33.020 it's great. Well, you're very kind. Maybe for your audience finding out. Well, not just about you
00:22:39.500 biographically, but your ideas, they're so spot on. And the fact that you understand America, maybe even
00:22:45.900 better than some Americans. And you understand the role America has historically played for freedom.
00:22:51.740 And it's, I'm touched by it. And I'm not even American myself. I'm Canadian.
00:22:54.860 Does anybody who loves freedom and who understands that cannot not love the United States of America?
00:23:03.340 I feel the same way. I mean, I mean, I love Canada. It's my home. I'm sure you love Switzerland
00:23:08.060 as your home, but America really is. Thank God for it. They are the shining exemplar. So like,
00:23:14.620 what do you read? Is there, are there websites you go to? Are there, are there public intellectuals
00:23:19.980 you follow? Who, who do you set your compass by? So, you know, there are two levels. There's
00:23:25.740 the micro level with regards to what happens on the political landscape in the US. So obviously my
00:23:31.820 go-to is Steve Bannon. Oh yeah. He's yeah. He has a lot of America first. He's really deep into that.
00:23:37.420 Yeah. Steve Bannon. 100% like America first, uh, America first people, obviously, uh, Darren J. Beattie
00:23:44.460 from Revolver News. Oh, he's very, he's a tough, he, he fights hard. He's one of my absolute favorites.
00:23:50.380 He's a real investigative journalist. Yes. A real investigative journalist. And, uh, I've, uh,
00:23:55.820 I've tried my best also to write about what's happened with the fake insurrection. Where do you
00:24:01.420 write? Do you, do you write with Revolver as well? I've written a few times for Revolver and then
00:24:06.220 for your viewers. Most of the work that I do can be found on my website, which is noorbinladen.com.
00:24:12.140 So you'll have also, um, my writings, uh, that I've self-published those on Revolver. I had done
00:24:18.780 a few for the spectator at the beginning. So I tried to put everything there and, uh, yeah,
00:24:24.700 my Twitter is also the best, uh, the best spot. Well, I have enjoyed our walk and talk through Davos
00:24:31.420 very much. And of course, please. Oh, please do. Yeah. For those who are very passionate
00:24:37.340 about history and especially the history of globalism, I cannot, uh, understate the tremendous
00:24:43.740 work of my friend, Richard Poe. Richard Poe. Okay. Publishes at Lou Rockwell. Okay. Great
00:24:50.140 person to follow. He's at real Richard Poe on Twitter as well. Great. I'm unfamiliar with this
00:24:55.100 work, but I'll check them out for sure. And, and you do have to know your history because otherwise
00:24:59.340 you'll be caught by surprise. Exactly. Noor, I have enjoyed this very much. It's
00:25:03.580 been a real pleasure to meet you. And I didn't expect to meet you here. I didn't expect to meet
00:25:08.940 allies here, but I've met so many, I've met people. For example, there was a young journalist from
00:25:13.740 Japan named Masako who said she saw our rebel news coverage in May and was inspired to do the same.
00:25:20.060 And so now she's here as a citizen journalist. I saw a couple of others. So, and I, and Savannah
00:25:25.420 Hernandez, who we were here with last time, I feel like there is a little counter WEF
00:25:32.060 community and you're obviously part of it. I hope we have a chance to meet again. I,
00:25:36.700 I really don't get to Switzerland often, but I tell you if I'm going to Geneva, I'm going to look
00:25:41.260 you up and we'll say hello. You have to, you have to look me up and we'll have to do this.
00:25:45.580 This is completely impromptu, but the thing that I wanted to say for me, you know, doing my work now
00:25:51.100 for about two years, quite as a recluse. It's so heartwarming that you guys made the trip and to
00:25:57.180 meet in person because, you know, it can feel quite lonely when you're doing this work behind
00:26:00.780 you. Right. I bet on your own. So it's been very reinvigorating to just be together in person.
00:26:07.500 So thank you so much. Well, I feel the same way and thank you. And great to meet you, my friend.
00:26:11.660 Great to meet you too. Right on. There you have it. Nur bin Laden. Well, we're going to check out those.
00:26:15.740 I know some of the sites she's referring to, but we'll certainly keep an eye on things and hopefully we'll
00:26:20.060 be able to talk to her from time to time, if not in person, at least by Zoom or Skype,
00:26:24.300 as the news breaks. Right on. There you have it. Ezra Levant for Rebel News. You can see all our reports
00:26:29.420 at wefreports.com.
00:26:32.220 I'm actually from Canada myself. Oh, yeah. Can I ask you? So are you handing this house on behalf
00:26:50.460 of the Financial Times or on behalf of Canada or who's... Financial Times. Oh, yeah. But this is just
00:26:57.100 an Invest in Canada promotion. So they hired you to be here on the street. Do you work for Financial
00:27:03.820 Times all the time or is it just... No, no, no. I'm just a promoter. So I saw this at
00:27:08.540 one of the airports in Alterheim, if I'm saying that right. And so where else is this being promoted?
00:27:16.220 I don't know, actually. Are you part of a team? Yes, I am. How many folks are working on this?
00:27:22.540 Here on the VEF, only four people. So four people at the VEF itself.
00:27:28.620 And what are the other things you're doing to promote it?
00:27:32.380 That's... Just handing it out on the street? Yeah.
00:27:34.060 Yeah, that's it.
00:27:35.100 Okay. Well, thanks very much. You know, I've actually already read it because
00:27:38.780 several people have given it to me. So I'll give it back to you. Nice to meet you.
00:27:41.820 Nice to meet you. Okay. See you later. Bye-bye.
00:27:46.460 That's a nice young lady handing out a Financial Times special sponsored edition. That's not actually
00:27:54.860 the Financial Times newspaper. That's a paid infomercial to invest in Canada. So Canadian taxpayers,
00:28:02.940 you heard her, are paying to have four people wandering around handing out an Invest in Canada
00:28:10.300 glossy brochure that was paid for once. You had to pay the Financial Times to make this
00:28:15.980 glossy PR document and then paid for again to have nice young ladies like her hand them out. When I was
00:28:22.380 at the private jet airport in Altenheim, if I'm saying that correctly, I saw a stack of them there.
00:28:28.380 I remember when I saw the free food and welcome gifts. So there must be thousands of those that
00:28:34.620 they're handing out. I'm not sure if handing out an infomercial like that on the streets of Davos is
00:28:41.340 going to generate investment in Canada on its own. And I don't know if it's going to generate investment
00:28:47.980 in Canada when the Prime Minister himself says there is no business case, for example,
00:28:54.300 for LNG, liquefied natural gas. You know, two, not one, but two national leaders have come to Canada
00:29:01.820 begging Justin Trudeau to let them buy Canadian oil and gas. It's funny, we're standing right outside
00:29:08.780 Project Ukraine is You. And we were coming in and I just saw that young lady handing out
00:29:14.540 the Financial Times. Do you know what the main weapon Russia is using to attack Ukraine is?
00:29:21.100 It's not a tank. It's not a drone. It's the oil weapon. It's the natural gas weapon.
00:29:28.460 The reason that Russia is so economically strong with foreign currency reserves is because they're
00:29:34.860 one of the world's largest producers of oil and gas. They're really tied with Saudi Arabia and the
00:29:40.140 United States producing about 10 million barrels of oil a day. But their real stranglehold on Europe,
00:29:45.660 especially Germany, is in natural gas. You can't actually put sanctions on Russia,
00:29:51.980 if you're Europe, because that would be tantamount to putting sanctions on yourself.
00:29:55.660 Is Germany simply going to stop using a third of its energy? So both the new Chancellor of Germany
00:30:02.940 and the new Prime Minister of Japan, they both came to Canada and said, please,
00:30:09.580 liberate us from this conflict energy. Liberate us from the conflict natural gas from
00:30:15.420 the Russian company Gazprom. Please let us buy Canadian ethical oil and gas. And in the case of
00:30:22.860 both of those countries, they really wanted the natural gas. And Justin Trudeau said no both times.
00:30:28.860 In fact, he didn't even have the courage to say no like a normal person would. He said, oh, well,
00:30:34.380 we're going to have the green energy revolution and hydrogen and what? These people need natural gas
00:30:41.420 to burn in their power plants now. They need natural gas so you can cook on a stove, so you can have a
00:30:47.660 furnace. And he gave this weird, goofy answer about hydrogen or ammonia or whatever. Take a listen.
00:30:54.940 We know that being a reliable supplier of energy is important. And we're going to continue to look
00:30:59.740 for ways to be that reliable supplier of energy. But even as we do talk about things like LNG and
00:31:07.740 other traditional sources of energy, we know the world is moving aggressively and meaningfully
00:31:15.340 towards decarbonizing, towards diversifying, towards more renewables. And that's where the agreements that
00:31:22.380 we've already seen to develop between Japanese and Canadian companies on hydrogen, on ammonia,
00:31:29.740 on various new technologies are really exciting. Yeah. So my point is, you've got four nice young
00:31:36.540 ladies earning a few thousand bucks over the course of Davos handing out these glossy brochures. They're
00:31:42.060 everywhere. Like I said, I saw them at the private jet place. But that's not going to convince someone to
00:31:47.260 invest millions, let alone billions of dollars in the country. When the stupid prime minister says,
00:31:54.300 there's no business case to sell oil and gas. No business case? Well, by the way, the Germans
00:32:00.140 since signed a deal with Qatar and no business case. Well, tell that's a Gazprom that's making hundreds of
00:32:06.380 billions of dollars selling their conflict energy. Canada has one of the stupidest prime ministers in
00:32:12.540 the world. And that's a big contest. For Rebel News, I'm Ezra Levan on the streets of Davos.
00:32:18.220 To find all of our reports at the World Economic Forum gathered here, go to wefreports.com.
00:32:30.540 Well, what do you think of Noor Bin Laden? I think she's very interesting. I want to do a little more
00:32:34.860 due diligence, look at some of the things she looks at. I want to understand her more. But wow,
00:32:39.020 was I impressed. Very interesting. In fact, I got to say, if I had my way based on what I know now,
00:32:45.020 I would like her to become an occasional contributor to Rebel News. I mean, she's in a faraway place,
00:32:50.380 Geneva, Switzerland. But that's an interesting town, especially if you care about freedom and
00:32:54.780 globalism and fighting for nation states as we do here at Rebel News. I like Noor Bin Laden. The name
00:33:01.580 startles you when you hear it. But when you get to know the woman, you are deeply impressed,
00:33:05.900 at least I certainly was. That's our show for today. Until next time, on behalf of all of us here
00:33:11.980 at Davos, Switzerland, where the rebels are on patrol to you at home. Good night. And keep fighting for
00:33:17.340 freedom. In a way, we lost a lot of innocence at that time. But I think there was a serious questioning
00:33:24.700 of what kind of values was this society promulgating and we didn't like it.
00:33:32.140 One thing that I've gotten off on lately is that basically, you know, I study fruit flies
00:33:38.220 and I suddenly realized that basically we're all fruit flies. If you're Canadian, then you definitely
00:33:43.180 know exactly who David Suzuki is. He was crammed down your throat since early childhood, thanks to
00:33:47.500 the CBC and his show The Nature of Things. And he's been painted as some sort of expert on climate
00:33:53.420 change when he is by training a fruit fly geneticist who doesn't seem to like humanity all that much.
00:33:59.500 You see, David Suzuki seems to think the world is overpopulated by people like you and me, but
00:34:04.300 definitely not by people like him. You see, he has five kids in at least four houses, including
00:34:10.860 one on the beach while he warns us about the rising oceans caused by your comfortable SUV and
00:34:17.420 all of your kids. And now David Suzuki has joined the war on gas stoves. If you weren't paying attention,
00:34:23.820 yes, unbelievably, there's a war on natural gas stoves with critics calling it a source of indoor
00:34:29.660 pollution linked to childhood asthma. That's crazy. Dr. Christy Ross is a pediatric pulmonologist.
00:34:36.620 She says cooking with gas can release chemicals that irritate a child's airways,
00:34:41.660 just like secondhand smoke or air pollution. A bureaucrat with the US Consumer Product Safety
00:34:46.860 Commission told Bloomberg he believes gas stoves are a hidden hazard and suggested the agency should
00:34:53.100 ban them. And the agency is relying on a December 2022 study in the International Journal of
00:34:58.940 Environmental Research and Public Health, which, according to the bureaucrat, found that indoor
00:35:04.140 gas stove usage is associated with an increased risk of asthma among children. There's a claim here
00:35:10.860 that 13 percent of childhood asthma is attributed to gas stove usage. But according to the Washington
00:35:17.660 Examiner, a news agency that dug down on this, the lead author of the study does not assume or
00:35:23.180 estimate a causal relationship between childhood asthma and gas stoves. So the whole thing is just
00:35:29.340 complete bunk, despite being reported as gospel truth in CNN, Yahoo, Bloomberg, etc, etc, etc. But these
00:35:38.060 people really don't need proof anyway. They've got the solution. They're just looking for the problem.
00:35:42.940 CBC has been talking about banning gas stoves since at least 2019 and probably sooner. And the David
00:35:49.580 Suzuki Foundation has just come out against natural gas stoves in a press release today. Although I'm
00:35:55.580 probably certain that David Suzuki has natural gas in at least one of his four houses. And according to
00:36:02.860 the Washington Free Beacon, the David Suzuki Foundation might actually be inadvertent useful
00:36:09.180 idiots for the CCP. As they point out, the Green Energy Group, the Rocky Mountain Institute, that's the
00:36:15.580 one behind the study cited in the Consumer Product Safety Commissioner's attempts to ban gas stoves.
00:36:22.460 Well, they partnered with the Chinese government to implement a quote,
00:36:26.300 economy wide transformation away from oil and gas. So the Chinese partnered with environmentalist
00:36:33.820 groups in the US to attack our comfortable first world lifestyle, but also the wealth creating
00:36:40.220 industry behind it all. And so since that inconvenient fact has come to light, the environmentalists are
00:36:46.540 quietly trying to gaslight you saying, oh, there's no war on natural gas. That's just a conservative
00:36:54.380 conspiracy theory, you know, except for New York State Governor Hochul backing a ban on gas furnaces
00:37:02.780 and stoves in new buildings. And we know that one of the leading causes of illnesses and death in the
00:37:09.020 developing world. It's not natural gas, it's lack of it. It's indoor fires and burning dung for heating
00:37:16.460 and cooking. What those people in the developing world wouldn't do for a clean burning natural gas
00:37:21.340 stove. The developing world must think that the Western world is absolutely cuckoo. For Rebel News, I'm Sheila Gunn-Reed.
00:37:37.020 I'm Sheila Gunn-Reed.
00:37:40.460 I'm Sheila Gunn-Reed.