Where would you build a factory: Trudeau's Canada, or Trump's America?
Episode Stats
Words per Minute
168.62837
Summary
A record number of Americans are now working and getting paid more than the inflation rate, and the economy is doing even better than it has been for a long time. But there are still a lot of people who don t like the idea of manufacturing and want to know why.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
Hello, my Rebels. I've got great news. If you're an American, 196,000 new jobs created last month.
00:00:06.320
I've got bad news if you're a Canadian. Almost 10,000 jobs lost last month.
00:00:11.240
And do you think those numbers are going to change? Well, yeah, I think they're going to get worse for us.
00:00:16.600
Before I let you get to the podcast, could you consider becoming a premium subscriber?
00:00:22.240
What that means is you get access to the video form of this monologue, the interviews I do,
00:00:28.780
and Sheila Gunn-Reed's show and David Menzies' show. So you get a lot of good stuff and you get the
00:00:36.420
moral satisfaction of knowing you helped pay our bills. You can do all of that at the rebel.media
00:00:41.280
slash shows. It's eight bucks a month. That's a bargain. I hope you do. The rebel.media
00:00:48.600
slash shows. Without further to do, here's today's show. You're listening to a Rebel Media podcast.
00:00:55.820
Tonight, Canada has a new carbon tax and a ban on pipelines and tanker ships. America,
00:01:02.960
they've got 200,000 new jobs created just last month. Where would you build a factory?
00:01:08.280
It's April 5th and this is the Ezra LeVance Show.
00:01:10.540
Why should others go to jail when you're a biggest carbon consumer I know?
00:01:16.360
There's 8,500 customers here and you won't give them an answer.
00:01:20.420
The only thing I have to say to the government about why I publish it is because it's my bloody
00:01:26.280
The US job numbers are out for March and they're amazing. 196,000 new jobs created in the United
00:01:38.940
States. The unemployment rate is 3.8%. Just think about that for a moment. It's hard to believe,
00:01:45.420
but here's my favorite part. I'm reading from the New York Times here, the liberal newspaper,
00:01:49.020
and so you know they hated saying it. Average hourly earnings in March were 3.2% higher than a
00:01:56.160
year earlier. So not only is there a record number of Americans working, but they're all getting paid
00:02:02.980
more. They're getting raises more than the inflation rate. Inflation in the US is about 1.5% per year.
00:02:10.080
So Americans are getting raises that are double the rate of inflation. This is so good. And I love the
00:02:16.460
kind of jobs. I mean, I suppose every job is a good job and every job that gives you a pay raise is a
00:02:21.520
good job. But look at this. Construction jobs. You see the graph on the right there?
00:02:28.380
1.32 trillion dollars worth of construction jobs on an annualized basis. And it's growing.
00:02:34.360
The chart on the right shows it's growing. And this one, here's what manufacturing is doing.
00:02:40.080
Let me read this from the Institute for Supply Management in the US. It's a bit technical,
00:02:44.020
but I think you can get the gist of it. It's basically a survey of business leaders,
00:02:48.200
factory owners across America. It's a panel of businessmen reporting how their industry,
00:02:53.420
their factory is doing. And over time, it's a very useful predictor. Why not ask a factory owner
00:02:57.720
how things are going? Let me tell you what their panel of businessmen says.
00:03:02.820
Comments from the panel reflected continued expanding business strength supported by gains
00:03:08.220
in new orders and employment. Demand expansion continued with the new orders index returning to
00:03:15.520
the high 50s. The customer's inventories index improving but remaining too low. And the backlog
00:03:22.440
of orders index softening to marginal expansion levels. Consumption, production and unemployment,
00:03:28.640
continued to expand and regained its footing combined with a combined 6.2 percentage point gain
00:03:33.780
from the previous month's levels. Okay, let me get out of the technical wording. Inventories are
00:03:38.800
falling. That means that when factories make something and it just stays on a shelf,
00:03:43.660
that's shrinking. The amount of buffer they have, there's more orders for things than there is
00:03:48.700
production of those things. Let me just say it even more similar. Times are good and they're getting
00:03:54.400
better. They'd better rev up the factory to keep up with demand. This is all about manufacturing.
00:03:59.140
Those are the heavy jobs, the factory jobs, the hard hat jobs, the 100 grand a year paying jobs.
00:04:05.560
It's exactly why Michigan and Pennsylvania and Wisconsin and Ohio voted for Trump in the first
00:04:09.780
place. The first time in the generation that voted Republican. I want to show you that Michael Moore,
00:04:14.940
that old clip I used to show you. You know he's the working class Democrat. He's a Democrat for fashion's
00:04:21.760
sake, but he's one of the few American Democrats who doesn't sneer at the deplorables. Because although
00:04:27.000
he's a millionaire filmmaker now, he still knows that in his bones, he's a deplorable who will never be
00:04:32.640
accepted by the nouveau riche Clinton or Obama Democrats. Watch this clip. This is what he said
00:04:38.920
on the eve of Trump winning. Donald Trump came to the Detroit Economic Club and stood there in front
00:04:47.680
of the Ford Motor executives and said, if you close these factories as you're planning to do in Detroit
00:04:55.360
and build them in Mexico, I'm going to put a 35% tariff on those cars when you send them back and
00:05:03.060
nobody's going to buy them. It was an amazing thing to see. No politician, Republican or Democrat,
00:05:10.380
had ever said anything like that to these executives. And it was music to the ears of people in Michigan
00:05:18.560
and Ohio and Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, the Brexit states.
00:05:28.080
I got to do a show one of these days about my steelworker friend, the one who actually
00:05:32.600
was starring in an anti-Trump steelworker ad. I've had back and forth with him. I should do a video.
00:05:38.440
The promise is being kept. It's happening. Now, I'm not an American. I have no stake there
00:05:45.660
other than as a friend and an ally and a neighbor, but I couldn't be happier for them. I suppose I
00:05:49.800
do have a stake. I just said it. I'm a friend and an ally and a neighbor. Because of course,
00:05:54.080
how America goes, well, that'll affect how we'll go up here too. We'll benefit from all that extra
00:05:58.340
demand. We'll benefit from all that extra wealth creation. But only by accident. It's almost as if
00:06:04.340
Trudeau doesn't want us to benefit from a strong American economy. He's so busy fighting Trump.
00:06:12.300
Over the last year, he's fought Trump in so many weird ways. In these negotiations we've had
00:06:18.800
on the NAFTA, demands about feminism and global warming, he delayed the deal by a year to argue
00:06:25.200
about these things. And so the deal is not being ratified yet. By the way, we have not
00:06:28.880
re-ratified NAFTA. And maybe it won't be done. Look at this terrifying headline from yesterday.
00:06:39.540
As you may have seen, several Canadian car factories have shut down in recent months,
00:06:43.020
or at least announced a shutdown in Oshawa, the GM plant. And just a few days ago, the Fiat Chrysler
00:06:48.540
plant in Windsor. Trump wants to scoop up those factory for Americans. And as I told you in January,
00:06:55.340
I think it was, Trump signed a new Buy American executive order. Just shutting out foreign
00:07:00.860
companies from U.S. projects, including huge infrastructure projects. Now that barely got a
00:07:07.180
peep in the mainstream media in Canada. I don't know why. I haven't seen Trudeau or Chrystia Freeland
00:07:12.200
push back against it. I don't know why. Stephen Harper made that one of his top items with Barack Obama
00:07:17.080
when he brought in Buy America. So yeah, it's good times to be in American industry, even the oil
00:07:23.640
industry. You know, back when I wrote my book, Ethical Oil, almost a decade ago, America was the
00:07:28.340
world's largest oil importer. Now they're exporting record amounts. Look at that. Including perversely
00:07:37.700
exporting oil to Canada. Seriously, American exports oil to Canada, especially eastern Canada,
00:07:44.560
buy rail because Quebec won't let pipelines through to Quebec and the Atlantic from Alberta.
00:07:51.900
So they're buying American oil instead. Look at this headline. This Texas area is expected to
00:07:57.560
double oil output to 8 million barrels in just four years, boosting U.S. exports. That's from
00:08:01.900
CNBC. That Texas area they're talking about is called the Permian Basin. There's me wearing a cowboy
00:08:09.120
hat visiting them a few years ago. Boy, I love that trip. Look at that. It was great too. That's near
00:08:15.000
Midland, Texas. It was an amazing visit. They love oil and gas there. I think in some ways they love it
00:08:20.780
even more than Albertans do because they've had it longer. It reminded me of Alberta going there,
00:08:25.560
but with more barbecue joints. The friendliest people love them. Now, oil and gas production is
00:08:29.840
growing so quickly where I was standing there because I frack for oil there now. That Texas,
00:08:37.380
in fact, just West Texas, is going to produce nearly as much oil as Saudi Arabia. Just Texas.
00:08:46.240
So obviously they need more pipelines. Well, no problem. Here's a map from Bloomberg. Look at that.
00:08:54.240
These are all new pipelines that will be completed this year alone. There's four pipelines there that
00:09:02.960
will literally carry barrels per day. So two of those are almost a million barrels a day. And as you
00:09:09.440
can see, it takes it right to the coast there to refineries and then get them on boats,
00:09:13.820
get them on super tankers to go anywhere in the world. India, China, Taiwan, Korea, even to Europe.
00:09:20.660
Why not? Why not displace OPEC oil for our allies? That could have been us. That could have been
00:09:27.300
Canada. But Trudeau and Notley and B.C.'s John Horgan and Catherine McKenna killed that. You heard
00:09:34.600
the de facto prime minister, Gerald Butts. This was his plan all along. Remember this?
00:09:39.120
We think that the oil sands have been expanded too rapidly without a serious plan for environmental
00:09:45.960
remediation in the first place. So that's why we don't think it's up to us to decide whether there
00:09:51.640
should be another another route for a pipeline, because the real alternative is not an alternative
00:09:58.040
route. It's an alternative economy. Yeah, there was never any chance, was there?
00:10:03.580
So that's the United States. State of affairs, 200,000 new jobs, four new pipelines. I'm jealous.
00:10:11.380
Just the pay raises for working class Americans. When was the last time that happened?
00:10:17.180
But how's Canada doing? Well, thanks for asking. Our job numbers are out now too. Canada lost 7,200
00:10:25.780
jobs in March, ending six-month string of gains. So we lost jobs, and the CBC state broadcasters
00:10:32.860
trying to put the best spin on it. But we lost jobs. How? How? How is that even possible?
00:10:39.140
America is booming. We're right next to America. So how are we losing jobs? You heard inventories
00:10:45.340
are down. Orders are up. They should be raiding our pantry, buying our stuff. You can't blame
00:10:51.680
it on low oil prices. Oil prices are solid, high enough for a rebirth of that industry, but
00:10:56.320
not so high as to punish oil-consuming parts of the country like Ontario and Quebec. But instead of
00:11:01.960
a 3.8% unemployment rate, well, Calgary now has the highest unemployment rate of any city in Canada.
00:11:08.800
The oil patch is still out of business. Here's the CBC graphic today. So a loss in construction jobs,
00:11:17.100
you can see. A loss in forestry jobs, fishing, mining, quarrying, oil and gas. But look at that
00:11:25.000
right near the top. 9,600 new jobs last month in public administration. That means government
00:11:33.760
workers. So they'll be just fine. Why don't we have new pipelines? Northern Gateway Pipeline,
00:11:42.640
Trans Mountain Expansion Pipeline, Energy East Pipeline, $30 billion plus in new jobs just to
00:11:49.480
construct them. Tens of billions more in the oil that would go through them and in the oil production
00:11:57.700
to feed them. We don't have that. Instead, we have a new carbon tax that came in this week. We have new
00:12:05.220
anti-pipeline and anti-tanker legislation working its way through parliament. We have some crazy lady
00:12:11.000
shouting about how her taxes are going to change the weather or something.
00:12:15.780
So let's talk about climate change for a second. Who believes it's real?
00:12:21.460
Who believes in science? We got a report last year that said we have 12 years to take serious
00:12:30.420
climate action. We are all in this together. We need to act.
00:12:35.220
Yes. Shouting at the weather ain't going to change it, lady. Hey, last question. If you were
00:12:42.020
going to build a factory somewhere or invest in a company somewhere, which side of the Canada-U.S.
00:12:48.840
border would you choose? I mean, if you were Canadian, you'd probably have other criteria on
00:12:54.920
your mind, like where you live, where you grew up, where's your family, where's your home. You know,
00:12:59.340
emotional factors, factors of inertia. If you live in Canada, you probably think of Canada first.
00:13:04.060
But if you were someone who made decisions purely on financial reasons, on objective reasons, say if
00:13:11.360
you were a bank or a stock market or a pension fund, someone who was paid to make cold-blooded
00:13:17.820
decisions, someone who was paid to make money for others, someone who wasn't spending just millions,
00:13:23.340
but who was spending billions, would you invest billions in Texas or in Alberta? Would you build
00:13:32.540
a new car factory in Michigan or in Windsor? You don't need to answer. Today's job numbers
00:13:53.340
Hi, folks. Bernard Hancock here, running to be your next MLA for Grand Prairie. And I wanted to talk to you
00:14:11.060
today because my campaign, I was fashionably late to the dance, but it's come to the point where I feel
00:14:18.260
that it's, I got a call on me to put a campaign out there that offers a different vision for Grand
00:14:22.960
Prairie. And I'd like to tell you today why I think I'm the man.
00:14:27.220
Well, that's our friend Bernard Hancock with a nickname Bernard the Roughneck. We've been following
00:14:32.940
him for years. In fact, he's spoken at several of our rebel rallies against the carbon tax and in
00:14:39.760
support of oil and gas workers. And as you can see, he is an oil and gas worker who's decided to throw
00:14:46.380
his hat into the ring in the provincial election in Alberta as a member of the Freedom Conservative
00:14:53.600
Party, the party started by Derek Filderbrand. Joining us now via Skype from his office is our
00:14:59.180
friend Bernard Hancock. Bernard, great to see you again.
00:15:03.980
Great. I was very excited to see your campaign launch. In fact, I saw it live on my phone. That
00:15:09.620
was a very high tech way of doing it. I love the fact you did it. Where was that rig? Just tell our
00:15:14.440
viewers, because we call you Bernard the Roughneck in an affectionate way. What kind of work were you
00:15:19.860
doing? What kind of work do you do on any given week or month?
00:15:24.000
Well, actually, I'm in full campaign mode. So I was just visiting some people over at a local coil
00:15:29.040
tubing outfit. And I was over visiting the chem van and the N2 pumper and was just walking around in
00:15:35.560
the yard and just decided to go and film that live.
00:15:39.080
Well, I thought that was great. Obviously, your man who is from the oil patch.
00:15:43.680
Is that part of your campaign? Tell us what you're running to achieve.
00:15:50.060
I think there's a point at which advocacy can work and it can accomplish things. And I don't
00:15:55.300
regret anything I've done. Mistakes I've made, I hope I've learned from them. But on the advocacy
00:16:00.220
side, you can only ask so many times and lobby so hard for politicians to go one way or the other.
00:16:06.620
And at the end of the day, I think a natural progression for what I want to be able to accomplish
00:16:12.600
in terms of sticking up for the oil patch and working people is to throw my shoe in the ring
00:16:17.700
and run for elected office, actually. Because I mean, our town of Grand Prairie, we're an oil and
00:16:23.900
gas hub up in the peace country. Our town runs on oil and gas. Oil and gas makes the clocks run on
00:16:29.400
time. And I'd say a lot of other industry in this town is dependent on oil and gas. But there's greater
00:16:34.940
issues in oil and gas at play. And we're in such a time that I don't think there's many points in
00:16:40.960
Alberta's history like this. And we have a choice. I mean, I don't think there's any choice. We cannot
00:16:45.500
go back to another four years of NDP government. But in going about these changes and voting the
00:16:53.740
government out, we need to scrutinize who we're voting in. And we need conservative opposition to
00:16:59.240
hold this government to account. Because I was a loyal member of the UCP. I was in the trenches
00:17:05.780
working hard for unity a couple of years back. And when Mr. Kenney became leader, I was wholeheartedly
00:17:11.920
endorsing him and behind his leadership of our party. And too many promises have been broken.
00:17:18.920
And I don't have confidence that we're going towards anything other than a revamp of the
00:17:23.780
progressive conservative party. And I don't think that's in the best interest of Alberta's future.
00:17:28.520
I think Grand Prairie has a lot of potential. And I think the Freedom Conservative Party,
00:17:32.840
it offers an unwiped caucus and a platform for me where no one bought me. No one like,
00:17:40.060
I don't owe anyone any favors. I'm running of my own volition. And I think I'd be a good
00:17:45.160
representative for Grand Prairie just to provide that unwiped voice, that check on, say, some excess
00:17:51.520
or some move away from conservative, limited government, small tax values.
00:17:55.880
So I got to tell you, I've always hoped that one day Alberta would have a conservative
00:18:00.480
government and a more conservative opposition. That was briefly the case when Jim Prentiss was
00:18:07.940
premier and the Wild Rose was the opposition. But then, of course, they tried to absorb the Wild
00:18:14.140
Rose opposition and it was a mess. Tell me a little bit more about the Freedom Conservative Party.
00:18:19.940
We've spoken to Derek Fildebrand about a few months ago. How many candidates are you fielding?
00:18:25.680
And what are your prospects, both province-wide and in Grand Prairie?
00:18:30.500
Ezra, we've got 24 candidates running across the province for 1.2 million voters.
00:18:34.980
And we want to put a conservative choice on that ballot, an accountable, limited government,
00:18:41.880
small government, low taxation, high personal freedom. And that means freedom for LGBT as the
00:18:47.840
same as it does for Christians, for Muslims, for anyone, because we don't want to put labels on
00:18:52.480
people. We want to start putting forth policy that brings Albertans together around shared identity
00:18:57.700
rather than dividing us into these groups and playing identity politics.
00:19:04.280
Sorry, I was going to say, who's the incumbent in Grand Prairie where you're riding? Is it a
00:19:08.600
New Democrat or is it a conservative? I can't remember off the top of my head.
00:19:12.240
There is no incumbent, actually. Grand Prairie used to be split right down the middle on 100th Ave
00:19:17.120
between Grand Prairie Smoky, which was north of that, all the way to Valley View. That was
00:19:22.160
Todd Lowen from the Wild Rose was the MLA. And on the south side of 100th Ave was Wayne Drysdale
00:19:28.900
with the Progressive Conservative Party, and that was Grand Prairie Wapiti. Well, now Notley
00:19:35.020
gerrymandered our city into one urban riding. And so it's really a toss up and there's no
00:19:41.540
incumbent candidate in this race. So and there's actually a very strong Alberta Party candidate in
00:19:47.700
the race. There's a strong NDP candidate in the race who ran against Todd Lowen and narrowly lost last
00:19:54.020
time. So, yeah, it's a real toss up in this coming election in Grand Prairie. And I think
00:19:59.720
throwing my hat in the ring kind of brings some excitement, makes some people sweat. And hopefully,
00:20:04.240
actually, I can offer a positive vision and something different for people, you know,
00:20:10.040
to bring accountability to the legislature and to have someone who ain't bought and who only works
00:20:14.620
for the people of Grand Prairie. And how have you been received? It was only a few days ago that
00:20:18.940
you made your announcement there from a work site. Have you had any feedback? Do you have
00:20:23.940
a campaign team at all? Do you have posters or brochures or lawn signs or any of those things?
00:20:30.820
Are you doing door knocking? What have you been up to since you threw your hat in the ring?
00:20:35.760
You know, campaigning's hard. I didn't realize how tiring it was, but no, we've been going hard.
00:20:42.620
We got our campaign lit and business cards. We got a website up, www.roughnecknation.com.
00:20:53.320
We have our lawn signs that are coming tomorrow. Like I say, I didn't even plan to run until the day
00:21:00.540
the writ was dropped and I was asked to. So, my signs are just coming into Grand Prairie tomorrow
00:21:07.240
morning. But we're going to have my ugly mug up across town and up everywhere. And yeah,
00:21:13.540
we're door knocking. We're coming to a door near you in Electoral District 63, Grand Prairie.
00:21:19.300
And yeah, the response has been really good because I talk to people and the biggest thing
00:21:24.940
is we got to get pipelines to market and we need government to get out of the way of business.
00:21:30.960
And so, there's a really strong response. And also, Notley scheduled this vote during a breakup.
00:21:37.240
So, that's when most people in the oil patch have a small amount of time off once a year. And all
00:21:43.080
these guys are going to be home and ready to vote and they have a reason to vote. I think you're going
00:21:46.920
to see huge voter turnout. So, it's a toss-up. In my riding in Grand Prairie, I really don't know what
00:21:52.000
the outcome is. And that's what makes it exciting because it's anyone's race to win. And I'm getting
00:21:59.000
out there and I'm talking to a lot of people. And you know what? There's more to life than just
00:22:02.880
pipelines and oil and gas. Like, we offer a credible plan to tackle the opioid crisis because here in
00:22:10.040
town, we're having, like, endemic rates of overdoses and death in Grand Prairie. And it's not just
00:22:15.900
fentanyl, but also with the crystal meth, the pent in town. It's out of line. And the property crime
00:22:21.400
that results from that, the vagrancy, the hospital costs, the policing costs, the court costs,
00:22:26.920
like, this is an issue that needs tackling now. And it's not just about the money, too. Because
00:22:31.560
it's like, I know people and I know people who know people who are really negatively impacted by
00:22:36.540
the opioid crisis, who are addicted. And we need to treat people as health patients, not as criminals
00:22:43.740
who are the users of the product. But we do need to crack down on the criminals, stiffen the sentences
00:22:48.520
up, and really get this filth out of our community. Because the drug crisis in Grand Prairie, that's an
00:22:55.520
issue I talk to a lot of people about. And the UCP people, they just say, oh, no safe injection sites
00:23:00.380
and no harm reduction. And they don't want to listen to evidence. They don't want to listen to
00:23:04.160
experts. So, like, that's one issue right there, where we offer, I'd say, a more 21st century,
00:23:09.800
more progressive, but ultimately more successful approach to a really pressing issue. Like, it's not
00:23:16.540
all about money, Ezra, and not all about pipelines.
00:23:19.360
Well, Bernard, it's very interesting. And it's exciting to see you throw your hat in the ring. I remember
00:23:23.420
vividly your passionate call to arms for years now. You've been doing it for years with rallies and
00:23:31.580
on videos and just in the community. So, I salute you for running in the campaign. And I look forward
00:23:37.580
to watching your results on election night. Good luck out there, my friend.
00:23:42.280
Ezra, thanks so much. And for all your viewers, you can follow me at at Roughneck Nation, R-U-F-F,
00:23:48.020
Neck Nation. That's on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, Snapchat. Go to my website. If you
00:23:54.680
guys know anyone in GP that wants to help out, I'd love to have the help. Roughneck Nation could
00:23:59.340
use some help. And as well, if you want to donate, go to my website. And you can donate there super
00:24:04.420
easy. But otherwise, I just want to say thanks, Ezra. I really appreciate what you, Sheila,
00:24:08.880
and Key and Dew in Alberta. And yeah, thanks for the well wishes. And I'm going to be out
00:24:13.900
there. Hopefully, your viewers in Grand Prairie will see me around. All right. There you have
00:24:17.400
it. Roughneck Nation, a.k.a. Bernard Hancock. Nice to see you. Well, thank you so much, Ezra.
00:24:23.100
Right on. Stay with us. More ahead on The Rebel.
00:24:27.120
Hey, welcome back on my monologue yesterday about Trudeau and the SNC-Lavalin scandal.
00:24:42.940
Carol writes, too many people from SNC-Lavalin are connected to Justin and the liberals. Yeah,
00:24:48.940
I just scratched the surface a bit yesterday. I mean, their chairman is the former clerk of the
00:24:54.060
Privy Council, Kevin Lynch. How did that happen? Frank Iacobuchi works for both SNC-Lavalin and
00:25:00.680
Justin Trudeau. How's that even possible? Yeah, I think I'm increasingly of the view that Trudeau
00:25:07.100
doesn't want that to go to trial for personal reasons. Who knows? Jan writes, you're right,
00:25:12.700
Ezra. Trudeau plays women against women. That's passive aggressive behavior. That's what men who are
00:25:17.460
cheating do when they're caught and kicked out by their wife. Very interesting observation.
00:25:22.000
I think if you look at a lot of Justin Trudeau's personal style, it really tracks that of like a
00:25:32.940
pickup artist, which he surely was for at least 30 years of his life. I think he's a manipulator.
00:25:40.860
I think guys see through it. I just keep coming back to that poll that Angus Reid did that only 25%
00:25:47.440
of Canadian men would vote for Trudeau. Only 25%. I think some of it is ideological. Men are more
00:25:53.920
conservative than women. But I think it's stylistic. It's aesthetic. It's personality-based. I think men
00:25:59.920
see a sneaky male feminist liar manipulator. And I think men actually have better radar to find those
00:26:07.700
scammers than women do. On my interview with Noah Alter, Bruce writes,
00:26:12.660
I just signed the petition at stanwithaviva.com. What angers me is how cowardly people are when
00:26:17.780
these leftist thugs bully them and with names and fake news stories. Yeah, calling them names for
00:26:25.460
sure. And that's the thing. I mean, I'm Jewish and I'm in Toronto. So I have some proximity to this
00:26:31.780
story. But I was just as mad. You'll remember I did a show or two maybe even on the Covington Catholic
00:26:37.340
School in Kentucky. Same thing. Good kids, high school kids in Washington for a field trip,
00:26:43.680
sort of ideological field trip. They were just good kids. And then some left-wing mob went nuts
00:26:48.380
on them and the school threw them under the bus. And that happened here in Toronto. And I think it's
00:26:52.800
gross. I think it's gross. Well, that's our show for today. Until tomorrow, on behalf of actually
00:26:57.940
Monday, until Monday, on behalf of all of us here at Rebel World Headquarters, see you at home. Good night.