Juno News - March 01, 2024


Canadians are finally REJECTING the woke agenda


Episode Stats

Length

50 minutes

Words per Minute

211.89784

Word Count

10,598

Sentence Count

4

Misogynist Sentences

6

Hate Speech Sentences

26


Summary


Transcript

00:00:00.000 were listening to a podcast i was on yeah it was just the other day like it came up on my like for
00:00:04.400 you page on youtube i'm trying to think who it was like some young podcaster and he was just asking
00:00:08.800 you you might remember who it is just asking you about true north and sort of your story and what
00:00:13.120 you're doing over here and then um you mentioned that you were and he said oh your mom and you're
00:00:18.080 like yeah i'm actually expecting my fourth and i was like oh i feel like i missed the like
00:00:20.880 announcement at work or something but well that's the thing about having like a remote office is
00:00:26.080 like if you guys saw me every day you would know i was pregnant but because you're in alberta and
00:00:30.720 never see me then you don't know but yeah actually it was aaron pete uh he's like a young up-and-coming
00:00:35.680 podcaster in coquitlam and aaron or peak pete pete and his podcast is called bigger than me
00:00:42.320 he interviews journalists and i think the typical podcast is like 30 minutes and we went for like
00:00:47.200 two hours because we were like really disagreeing on a lot of things it was fun it was really it was
00:00:51.840 really a fun podcast but okay i'll give him a little shout out then yeah you should you should
00:00:56.400 actually go on his show i think he'd he'd like to have you on what did you guys agree about
00:01:01.920 uh well well so he's first nation so we talked about the unmarked grave story which was fun
00:01:06.960 uh we didn't didn't quite see eye to eye there and it's interesting because he's he he's not he's not
00:01:12.640 like a liberal but i think he has a lot more time for dustin trudeau than i did and i was pretty like
00:01:18.160 frank about my criticisms of trudeau the legacy media like yeah we we had a lot we had a lot to
00:01:24.400 talk about i recommend you go watch it it was fun okay guys let's get this started
00:01:37.440 everyone thank you so much for tuning into the podcast don't forget to like this video subscribe
00:01:42.080 to our channel if you're listening to this podcast and you enjoy it please leave us a five-star review
00:01:46.480 and finally head on over to our website tnc.news so that you can sign up for a newsletter and never
00:01:51.520 miss an episode so we are back with another edition of off the record today i'm joined by harrison
00:01:57.040 faulkner who's a senior reporter here at turn north and the host of ratioed and then also great to be
00:02:02.560 joined by rachel emmanuel who is our alberta reporter and the host of the alberta report great to have both
00:02:08.480 of you with us today happy to be here yeah glad we could finally make this work i know we've got a lot
00:02:14.880 juggling with kids schedules and whatnot but yeah yeah well obviously very busy for me but rachel
00:02:22.400 you're also a new mom settling into that new role as well so thank you for taking the time today so
00:02:28.880 uh rachel i want to bring the first story that we talk about here uh out to your neck of the woods
00:02:33.680 uh this is interesting that the town of westlock which is a pretty small community north of edmonton
00:02:38.480 uh they recently voted to ban pride flags and rainbows from the crosswalk so we've all seen
00:02:44.560 this phenomenon creep up in recent years where basically they love to splatter this flag like
00:02:50.880 everywhere they can it's it's all over sidewalks you know 10 years ago you used to see these uh
00:02:56.800 crosswalks you'd go to like a gay neighborhood in toronto or vancouver and somehow it's just like now
00:03:02.480 it's everywhere you see them in the suburbs you see them in small towns uh basically i think every
00:03:06.640 school and every municipality in canada flies this flag for the month of june and sometimes even
00:03:12.080 longer uh well one you know this one community has decided that they've had enough we're talking
00:03:16.720 about a town of 4 800 people and they had a plebiscite and they just voted no um 51 in favor
00:03:25.360 of banning these things and i guess the rest were opposed uh so rachel what's what's your take on this
00:03:30.800 new story yeah it is pretty funny westlock is a town north of edmonton it's about one hour north of
00:03:36.960 edmonton just a small little place super you know cute like just a small little town um the person
00:03:42.240 behind this initiative was actually benita penderson she's a huge organizer in the freedom movement
00:03:46.720 pretty well known here in alberta and does some work out west generally as well so when she initially
00:03:52.400 started on this you know people were making fun of her no one thought that it was going to pass or be
00:03:56.160 successful i believe she also ran for westlock city council and wasn't successful in that effort
00:04:01.040 but you know continued with this efforts to ban pride flags on sidewalks and things like that and
00:04:05.360 it passed and i think everyone was pretty shocked people definitely didn't see that coming but i think
00:04:09.680 that just speaks to what you can accomplish if you're a good organizer and if you know how to get
00:04:14.720 people out to the vote i'm sure there's people in westlock who weren't aware that this was happening
00:04:19.520 and then there's people on the other side who are working hard to have their objectives accomplished so
00:04:24.480 you know she's obviously a good organizer she's been organizing for lots of rallies across the
00:04:27.920 province she's definitely good at bringing people out and that's what we saw here people of westlock
00:04:32.000 who oppose the pride flags that they have to walk across i guess they felt maybe it was a way of
00:04:37.440 showing support for the trans movement because that's really what pride has become about it's not
00:04:41.680 just about gay rights it's really about trans rights nowadays and they've absolutely hijacked that
00:04:46.560 whole movement so you know people came out and uh voted and voted against it so i think it's a pretty
00:04:52.080 funny story and you know congrats to benito on having that passed yeah it's funny and harrison
00:04:56.880 i'll let you jump in a second but you know originally it was a rainbow flag and it kind of just meant
00:05:01.360 like i guess inclusiveness towards gay people and it was it was actually like not an ugly flag right it's
00:05:07.440 just like kind of a beautiful flag like my kids love rainbows is like all the beautiful colors uh and
00:05:12.400 then a couple years ago the flag itself just kind of i don't know it just like went went crazy and they
00:05:18.960 started adding all these different symbols that meant different things so i think there's now like
00:05:22.800 a trans component there's a black lives matter component i think there's a first nations component
00:05:27.840 so every time there's like a big woke scandal they just like further change this flag and make it even
00:05:33.600 more hardcore left wing uh what's your take on all this harrison yeah i think the flag is going to just
00:05:40.480 keep evolving until the point where it's just unrecognizable they've got every sort of leftist symbol on
00:05:45.280 there somewhere but the reality is this flag is everywhere you can't go you can't live in canada
00:05:51.040 without seeing it basically every day it's on every public school in ontario basically any small
00:05:56.320 town in ontario they've got these pride crosswalks i'm surprised they even let it go to a plebiscite
00:06:01.360 but i think this is the way to go if you put this to a vote in small towns across the country i guarantee
00:06:07.040 you and if canadians know what's happening they're going to vote against it so let the plebiscites
00:06:11.680 happen let let the people decide what they want i i my family spends a lot of time in in thornbury
00:06:16.480 which is a smaller town about two hours north of toronto and they have these pride crosswalks all
00:06:22.400 over the town and they've got these tire marks through it through these pride crosswalks we were
00:06:27.680 told that that's actually a hate crime if you burn your tires over the pride crosswalk that happens all
00:06:34.080 the time so uh you know i don't know what kind of respect it shows to the uh pride community if you
00:06:40.560 want to call it that by having these on the ground so cars can drive over them and people can walk
00:06:44.880 over them but hey regardless put this to a vote i i promise i promise the canadians will vote against
00:06:50.400 this if they have a chance to it's just not going to fly i think you're right and i don't think that
00:06:55.200 it's like a deep-seated sign of homophobia i don't think that people in westlock voted against it because
00:06:59.760 they hate gay people or anything like that i think they're just tired of this stuff being shoved down
00:07:04.640 our throat so one of my favorite accounts over on x is this account called end wokeness and they
00:07:10.000 shared a clip of a guy basically doing everything he could to avoid having to step on these uh you
00:07:16.480 know you can see they've painted some stairs there and the guy is like pulling himself up the poles
00:07:22.320 in the center to avoid having to step on this thing and the caption said this dude is all of us right now
00:07:27.440 so i think that there's something broader happening beyond just uh you know a small town in northern alberta
00:07:33.120 uh where people are just they're just bloody sick of this stuff getting rammed down our throats um
00:07:39.440 rachel is that is that your feeling as well or do you do you disagree yeah no absolutely i mean i
00:07:44.720 think depending on the municipality or the city where this is being voted on we're going to see
00:07:48.800 different results obviously in this case like i said i think it came down to the organizing we did
00:07:53.200 see something similar happen in uh norwich ontario a few years ago the city hall norwich is a very
00:07:59.200 conservative area it's a very christian area and i know there's a high number of dutch reformed
00:08:04.480 individuals who live there and the city council had actually passed something that on crown land or
00:08:09.680 you can't raise flags that are not canadian flags and they did actually backtrack on that following
00:08:15.600 backlash they said people of the town can request specific flags to be raised and they included the
00:08:21.120 pride flag as one of the flags that they were able to raise along with the uh netherlands flag because
00:08:25.520 there is a high amount of dutch people living there so you know it was an effort that they
00:08:30.720 had tried and i think they sort of withered under the backlash i do think if you're going to implement
00:08:34.800 these types of policies then at least have the backbone to stand on it following but i guess the
00:08:40.240 dichotomy there is that it was city council that passed it in here as we mentioned it was actually
00:08:44.400 people coming out to vote for this plebiscite so slightly slightly different there but you know i think
00:08:48.960 we just have to be in this age of yeah there is cancel culture people are going to be offended but if
00:08:53.760 you're going to say something think it through before you say it and then stand your ground
00:08:56.880 afterwards don't don't apologize for people getting upset that's exactly what they want
00:09:00.720 and we're never going to accomplish anything in this country we talked about this before but like
00:09:07.040 this whole thing about raising other flags that are not the canadian flag i'm just sick of it like
00:09:11.520 there's no reason for a a government building to raise a foreign flag ukrainian flag whatever i don't
00:09:17.680 understand why we're even allowing that this would never be the case uh in any previous time in any
00:09:23.280 previous era except for the era we're living in now where we've got the rainbow flag on public
00:09:27.440 schools the orange every child matters flag on public schools you know foreign flags why can't
00:09:33.520 the canadian flag i know it's cliche but doesn't the canadian flag represent all of those values at this
00:09:38.080 point it's just strange to me that we're allowing this to happen i'm just sick of it yeah no you're
00:09:42.800 right like the idea behind the canadian flag is that it represents all of us and in within that we're
00:09:49.520 all included in it so it's a flag that that is there to unite us that is the purpose of a flag
00:09:54.160 that's the purpose of national symbols and instead you know especially in the aftermath of the unmarked
00:09:59.520 grave story where all the canadian flags at schools and canadian uh government buildings across the
00:10:05.440 country were down at half staff and then and then instead you saw them flying these rainbow flags which
00:10:11.840 i mean i i understand that they fly them to make people feel welcome and comfortable or safe or whatever
00:10:17.680 they say but but it actually is quite a divisive flag because not everybody agrees not everybody
00:10:22.000 feels a part of that right like you you have a flag that's divided up so it represents gay people it
00:10:26.640 represents trans people it represents first nations people it represents black people but it doesn't
00:10:30.960 represent the rest of us and in some ways it's like a big middle finger at the rest of us and yet we're
00:10:36.000 supposed to like honor and revere it uh final final comment on this uh harrison you mentioned about how you
00:10:42.960 know you see tire marks uh and i've seen videos of this where trucks kind of purposefully create black
00:10:49.040 tire skids on these uh crosswalks because again they're sick of it it reminds me it's almost the
00:10:54.160 opposite way of looking at it but in iran what the government does so iran hates the united states
00:11:00.080 they hate israel it's like they're avowed sworn enemies and so they'll paint large american flags and
00:11:05.920 israeli flags on the sidewalk so that people have to walk over those flags because it's seen as such a sign
00:11:11.920 of disrespect to that country to have someone tread on the flag and it's interesting because these
00:11:18.240 clips come up and you can see how students in defiance of the iranian regime will go to a great
00:11:25.600 effort to avoid stepping on the flags because they actually like america and they actually like israel
00:11:31.120 and the country that they don't like the country that they hate is their own country they hate their
00:11:35.360 own government and so they do exactly the opposite of what the government expects and so in that clip
00:11:41.840 if if it continue to play you'll see that students were kind of like walking around it walking along
00:11:47.600 the edge to avoid stepping on the flag itself so it's like it's like it's like the opposite right
00:11:52.960 in canada we show like that we love gay people by putting their flag on a crosswalk which would then we
00:11:59.520 all step on and we drive across uh whereas you know in iran that would be seen as like a huge sign of
00:12:05.040 disrespect towards that community i i just i just find that like an interesting perspective even maybe on
00:12:11.600 like i don't know the the the the honor that we show to a country our own country uh or lack thereof
00:12:18.400 uh final word to you harrison yeah i mean i think it just shows you that the this this whole ideology
00:12:25.600 is simply about ramming it into people's faces forcing everyone to just accept it and not allowing
00:12:31.360 anybody to disagree if you disagree with uh if you disagree with wanting to see the pride flag on a
00:12:36.880 university campus on a crosswalk you're some sort of homophobe you're a transphobe it's it's all about
00:12:42.240 that imagery the imagery is important and they the left the very radical left know that that's why
00:12:47.520 they're forcing it on people and i guess it's just the difference between the east and the west right
00:12:52.080 the different mindset but the reality is the the radical left know exactly what they're doing they
00:12:56.960 they use imagery to their advantage and this is exactly this is an example of it just forcing people to
00:13:02.240 accept it yeah foreskin down our throats well speaking of all of this sort of trans mayhem and
00:13:07.680 craziness rachel you flagged the story you wanted to talk about uh dylan mulvaney who is a famous i guess
00:13:13.920 popular infamous uh uh influencer i guess you call him he he he's a an he's a male who used to be a
00:13:22.000 broadway star and then he decided he woke up one day and decided to be a woman and he started
00:13:27.200 uh showcasing his uh journey into womanhood i guess and basically his journey into womanhood was like
00:13:36.720 mocking women like it was it was so over the top like i'm a woman that means i cried seven times today
00:13:43.040 or whatever he was saying um and and then he ended up getting sponsored by bud light um conservatives and
00:13:49.760 americans didn't like that so they issued like a mass boycott of bud light for having this trans figure
00:13:57.200 uh being their um you know the face of the movement and uh now now dylan mulvaney is back he was on the
00:14:03.440 cover of forbes and i guess he's named one of the 30 under 30. um so rachel i'll let you uh take over
00:14:11.840 this story here yeah super silly he absolutely mocks women's i think some of his other videos are him
00:14:17.680 sort of frolicking in the forest with his heels on and then he sees a bug and he's talking about how
00:14:22.720 afraid of the bug he is just an absolute caricature of what woman what it is to be a woman of course
00:14:28.240 so this story has been kind of going around online now that he's been named uh one of the 30 under 30
00:14:33.840 influential people and mark cuban came out in his defense and said let's not try to cancel him and
00:14:39.360 said his views aren't you know harmful or dangerous and here he is his quote was how about you just let
00:14:44.960 people live their own lives and stop trying to cancel people so of course you know dr jordan peterson saw
00:14:49.440 this and had to weigh in and it became a big thing online and i just couldn't help but notice the
00:14:54.480 story and people coming to his defense and saying well don't try to cancel him it's this is not
00:14:58.560 somebody who is trying to live a private life this is somebody who really wants the attention he really
00:15:04.000 wants to be in the public eye he wants to be somebody and he obviously wasn't finding a lot of
00:15:09.440 success through any actual merit or skills so he decided to find that success in becoming a caricature of
00:15:15.360 what it is to be a woman with his ridiculous tick tock post and he's absolutely desired and craved
00:15:20.640 all of the attention that he's gotten and so it's absolutely fair that we would be able to comment
00:15:25.360 on this and comment on how really disgusting and how evil it is um what he's doing and of course the
00:15:30.800 way that he's misleading young girls he has a huge following of pre-teen girls who are often commenting
00:15:37.040 about his body and about how skinny he is of course he doesn't he's very thin he doesn't have the
00:15:41.600 body of a woman he doesn't have curves he doesn't have breasts and so now all these young women are
00:15:45.920 seeing this and you know they're thinking oh how can i look like this well maybe i'll have to get
00:15:50.240 my my breasts removed so of course this is somebody who's desired to be in the public eye he's gone to
00:15:54.560 great lengths to do so and i think it was right and fair that we would be able to comment on this
00:16:00.640 well of course it's kind of the trick that the the media like to play it's like they put someone out
00:16:04.800 front and center and then if we notice it and we comment on it then they'll say like oh how dare you
00:16:10.960 criticize and comment on this uh this person just wants to be left alone it's like you know no no
00:16:15.600 he's on the front cover of forbes magazine and named a 30 under 30 like it's it's insulting to all
00:16:22.880 of us uh harrison what's your take i mean in a way this guy is pretty influential right just his mere
00:16:29.040 presence nearly brought down a major beer brand so that is some level of influence maybe not the influence
00:16:35.600 they're trying to portray but he nearly brought down bud light by just simply being a brand ambassador
00:16:40.640 for them so i mean that's pretty influential right uh you know the reality is i find it interesting
00:16:45.120 that actually bud light has now gone on this complete you know rebranding effort to try and
00:16:50.160 make themselves appeal back to their core audience they've signed a deal with shane gillis the uh the
00:16:54.800 comedian they've signed a deal with ufc and dana white and now dana white is like saying bud light is
00:17:00.400 the most patriotic brand if you want to be a patriot you should be drinking bud light so i guess in a
00:17:05.520 way in some weird way this guy is pretty influential like he nearly brought down anheuser
00:17:11.040 bush and tanked their stock for quite a while so uh maybe not the way forbes is trying to get at it but
00:17:16.080 you know he is influential well and i think dr peterson hits on a on a deeper point here with
00:17:22.960 that tweet that he said that dylan mulvaney popularized sterilization and mutilation for his own
00:17:29.760 self-aggrandizement so here's a here's a guy who clearly just wants to be famous i think that we
00:17:35.760 live in an age of influencers and people just want to get like more eyeballs and more views on their
00:17:41.760 tick tock and to somehow make a living out of that which still mulvaney certainly has done but in the
00:17:47.440 meantime to to your point rachel i mean he's he's promoting totally unrealistic beauty standards because
00:17:53.680 you're right he you know he didn't go through female puberty so he doesn't have the body of a woman he
00:17:58.800 has the body of a man and you know maybe because he's so thin that some women think that's beautiful
00:18:05.200 but it isn't and what is he also doing right he's taking hormones that will sterilize himself
00:18:11.040 i don't know that he's taken the leap to do any kinds of surgeries um but that is sort of the same
00:18:17.280 pathway that we're talking about and we've been talking about in alberta here you know the idea
00:18:21.600 you're sterilizing yourself you're mutilating your body you're potentially removing your breasts and
00:18:26.320 your genitals if you're if you're a woman or if you're a man uh and you know what what is this
00:18:31.360 saying to a generation of confused young people like the way to go if you don't feel comfortable
00:18:36.880 in your body is just to like change to a different body i mean what what a terrible terrible message to
00:18:43.120 send uh to young people rachel what do you think yeah no absolutely honestly like my heart breaks for
00:18:48.400 a lot of the young girls growing up in today's society like it was difficult enough for me when i was a
00:18:53.840 pre-teen and in those early pre-teen years you're constantly being bombarded with images of
00:18:58.640 unrealistic beauty standards because of all the editing that's done to women to make their skin
00:19:02.800 look perfect and to make them look thin and curvy and i think when i was growing up it was a little
00:19:06.560 more moving into you know the kardashians had become big there was beyonce so there's more acceptance
00:19:11.440 for that curvy body but nowadays it's taking the look of a very thin or even prepubescent male of this
00:19:17.600 really thin body and saying this is the ideal standards for young women and for women in general
00:19:22.880 and it's absolutely unrealistic that is not what a woman's body looked like and in addition now
00:19:27.520 there's this big phase of ozempic going on in hollywood and we're seeing women that did once
00:19:31.440 have really curvy body all of a sudden being very very stick thin again so it is very difficult to be
00:19:36.240 growing up today i can't imagine seeing all these images constantly i think there's a real need for
00:19:40.880 parents to be aware of what's on their kids phones what they're seeing every day because it's just so
00:19:44.800 damaging for these young girls and you know at the same time young young men and boys of course are
00:19:49.200 being presented with these images of oh well maybe you're in the wrong body you know maybe you could
00:19:52.960 be a girl i think we we're seeing it a little more that it's young girls who want to transition to be
00:19:58.640 boys at a younger age and then maybe older men who are transitioning to be women i feel like the trends
00:20:02.640 move in that direction but in general it's just a very difficult time to be growing up with all these
00:20:07.360 really evil and confusing messages being constantly hammered at kids and what's going on with mark cuban all
00:20:13.760 of a sudden he's defending dei and the nba and and and diversity and now he's defending dylan mulvaney
00:20:20.160 like i didn't know that this guy was some super you know woke activist i didn't think that was his
00:20:24.320 brand but for whatever reason he's kind of gone down this path and i'm pretty sure the market would
00:20:28.800 indicate the other way he's supposed to be a good businessman and he's now going down the uh the path
00:20:34.080 which is no longer popular it's very strange i don't know what i don't know what compelled him to all
00:20:38.560 of a sudden do all this no you're right like it's it's sort of like the zeitgeist has shifted right
00:20:43.520 it's like during the coveted and the early 2020s everyone was woke everything was woke
00:20:48.960 what corporations what government lockdowns like black lives matter everything and i almost think
00:20:53.760 like since elon musk purchased twitter there's been kind of a rival like all of a sudden jordan
00:20:58.960 peterson is like the coolest guy in the world even though he's like a cranky old canadian you know
00:21:04.320 university professor but you know they've kind of like made conservatism cool and and we keep
00:21:10.720 waiting on all these issues and it's it's so it's so unpopular to take the route that mark cuban has
00:21:16.960 that he's almost become like a he's nominated himself as as like a punching bag um i i wanted to
00:21:23.600 keep on this topic of of transgenderism because obviously rachel the big news still out of alberta is
00:21:30.160 the courage uh of your premier to introduce a policy that that few in canada dare to even talk about in
00:21:37.760 in you know since then we've seen the conservative party of canada basically wholeheartedly embrace
00:21:42.960 the policy we see more people speak out in favor of it and and with that i think we've seen the
00:21:48.400 left-wing media and different forces really go into overdrive to try to demonize daniel smith and
00:21:54.800 that policy and i think this sort of reached peak level uh in the last few days so there's a story that
00:22:01.280 came out of alberta an alberta doctor says that the province's new policies so daniel smith's new
00:22:07.360 policies contributed to the suicide of his transgender nephew so uh this is a terribly sad
00:22:14.880 story uh but the fact they're pointing the finger at premier smith is pretty appalling um so i'll just
00:22:21.360 read a bit from the story it says an alberta family is asking for a sit down with premier daniel smith
00:22:25.680 after claiming her proposed transgender policies led to the death of their loved ones dr david kagan
00:22:31.200 a professor at the university of calgary wants to meet with the premier in hopes that she will
00:22:34.960 change course on recent controversial policies impacting trans people and basically throughout
00:22:41.440 the course of the story we learned that this uh nephew of his was mentally ill um it's interesting
00:22:48.080 because they sort of the the news story paints it as if he's a child as if he would be impacted because
00:22:53.440 of course the policy is only aimed at people under the age of 18 so children uh later in the story
00:22:58.640 they admit though that the um nephew that took his life was a 37 year old man so not exactly a child
00:23:06.560 that it would even be impacted by this policy but they're still blaming the premier which was part of
00:23:12.240 a kind of a really ugly trend that we see in the media where they're weaponizing suicide so in the
00:23:16.960 aftermath of this policy basically the the stat that everyone kept saying is like if you don't
00:23:21.840 let these trans kids transition they're going to kill themselves it's like a threat it's like they're
00:23:26.800 weaponizing death and suicide uh to push their woke agenda uh rachel what did you hear about the story
00:23:32.960 what was your thoughts on all this yeah i mean you've sort of hit the nail on the head there this
00:23:37.520 individual is 37 years old he's not actually being impacted by the policies that the premier announced
00:23:42.480 that's like me saying oh you know i'm i'm really fearful for my pension with this discussion about an
00:23:48.000 albert a pension plan you know the because the ndp are fear-mongering and saying oh for people that
00:23:52.400 are nearing retirement you might not have a pension and that's like me saying oh you know i i can't go
00:23:56.880 on this is too much for me no that's ridiculous i won't be affected by that for decades and in the
00:24:01.760 case of this individual who committed suicide which is absolutely tragic you know he was not impacted by
00:24:07.200 the policies that the premier announced he was long past those days so it's not even like something he's
00:24:11.360 eventually waiting for happen because he wasn't in the the timeline of that and also with the
00:24:15.920 premier's announcement the one thing that doesn't get mentioned very often and i personally didn't
00:24:20.000 agree with this part of the policy is that she actually announced that she would be bringing in
00:24:24.560 doctors to the province to help with those people who did have transgender surgery so that they would
00:24:28.880 have aftercare because with these surgeries there's so many complications and those complications
00:24:34.160 can be fatal and they can actually destroy a person's life because we're really dealing with
00:24:39.200 experimental science here like this is not something that's been done for many years so you know
00:24:43.840 doctors who are doing this there's all sorts of problems that arise and she said we're gonna have
00:24:47.760 doctors come and deal with the aftercare so this individual would actually have had more care under
00:24:52.880 danielle smith's policy and the news story just completely frames it you know at the headline that
00:24:57.200 he's a nephew you think this is a young kid who's committed suicide they've completely missed the
00:25:01.280 story they've completely and purposefully mischaracterized the premier's policies on this issue
00:25:07.360 what do you think harrison yeah well they buried the lead of course they tried to as rachel said try to
00:25:12.000 make it seem as though this is a a transgender child i think this points to the reality that
00:25:16.480 actually mental illness plays a significant part in this and protecting children before they make a
00:25:22.880 decision that could lead to severe mental illness is actually the right thing to do i find it completely
00:25:27.920 disgusting that someone would use the tragedy that the suicide of a family member a close family member
00:25:34.240 to try and push a political message to get his name out into the news and to try and use it to to paint
00:25:40.960 to paint the premier as someone who is someone who has caused this it's it's awful um and i really
00:25:46.080 think that this is the sort of thing that needs to be stopped the media also played into this as well
00:25:50.400 it's not as though it was just this guy using his nephew to try and to try and push a political
00:25:55.040 message the media is also using this tragedy to try and push an anti-danielle smith message it's just
00:26:00.800 it's disgusting the media should know better but of course they don't actually care because
00:26:04.240 this is all about the trend we see in in activism journalism you know this is this is exactly what
00:26:09.120 we should come to expect from the ctv and the cbc and the like this is just par for the course with
00:26:14.080 them no you're right i don't think there's anything more despicable and disgusting than
00:26:18.480 the media trying to glorify or trying to use the death of a child to push through a public policy like
00:26:25.120 i remember again a story out of alberta during covid there was a child that died uh sadly tragically
00:26:31.920 any child that dies tragically the child died with stage he died of stage four cancer uh i can't remember
00:26:37.520 exactly the kind of cancer but anyway he he also tested positive for covid like the day before he
00:26:42.480 died and so when he died the all the news coverage just said like canada's youngest covid victim this
00:26:48.160 like young child has died of covid and his family came out with like a long facebook post saying enough
00:26:53.760 he did not die of covid right he he's been in the hospital he was very sick he died of this cancer
00:26:58.880 he just happened to have covid the day before he died like that he got it in the hospital or whatever
00:27:03.920 and and and that was sort of the beginning when we started to know the difference between like dying
00:27:07.600 with covid versus dying of covid but just the way the media presented it like it was really a push to
00:27:13.200 try to get kids to get vaccinated and it was just so gross it was so gross there was another story this
00:27:17.840 week where the media did the exact same thing so we saw the online harm skill bill get introduced by the
00:27:22.480 trudeau government uh really uh sweeping censorship and mass surveillance uh from the government there's a
00:27:28.320 small component that would also protect children uh from sex sexual export exploitation and so what
00:27:35.360 did the media do uh they they went and found the mother of amanda todd i don't know you two are both
00:27:41.040 pretty young so you might not even remember the albert uh the amanda todd story but back in 2012
00:27:46.080 so we're talking about something that happened 12 years ago uh this young woman tragically took her own
00:27:51.120 life she committed suicide uh because she was being bullied online basically over sexual images that
00:27:58.080 she herself had posted like she basically got on webcam took off her clothes people screenshotted it
00:28:04.320 used it to tease her or to mock her and sadly she ended up taking her own life but the media tracked
00:28:09.520 down the mother to do all these interviews so the cbc trotted her out saying that this online harms bill
00:28:15.360 could have saved her life um that's the headline right there if trudeau had had this censorship
00:28:20.560 regime back in place in 2012 guys uh it could have saved her life uh which is really saying something
00:28:26.960 and then uh the canadian press also wrote a story about it so we saw it over in uh on ctv but really
00:28:33.680 just the idea that that you would use suicide to try to push through a trudeau policy i i just think
00:28:39.200 it's one of the most appalling things that i've seen the media do in a while uh rachel what's your
00:28:43.520 what's your thoughts on all this honestly i just i'm so desensitized to stuff that the legacy media
00:28:48.800 does that it takes a lot for me to be like wow look i can't believe they did that i would say one of the
00:28:53.440 things that i couldn't help but notice with the online harms bill is you know maybe there is some
00:28:57.200 good stuff on there about protecting children i think we can all applaud efforts to protect children
00:29:02.000 from real predators online but any efforts that they did for or any of the good that was in this
00:29:07.600 bill has been completely done by all their efforts to really clamp down on free speech that should not
00:29:12.880 have been in the bill at all they didn't need the bits about you know what you can say online and
00:29:17.040 the criminality involved with that they should have just stuck to protecting children on the internet
00:29:23.120 and not added in all those other things and now the chances that this bill is going to get passed i
00:29:27.200 think is slim and it's certainly going to get bogged down in committee it's going to get bogged in in
00:29:31.040 the house and there's going to be a lot of effort to amend this bill and i think that any good work
00:29:34.320 could have has been now evaded and the liberals should have really just stuck to the issue but they
00:29:38.080 just can't help themselves any opportunity they have they're looking to clamp down on free speech and
00:29:43.680 make life more difficult for for christians and people who have strong religious beliefs and
00:29:48.400 conservatives in this country to push through their own agenda and to make it impossible for people to even
00:29:52.720 disagree with them yeah you're absolutely right it should be separated into two bills to say the
00:29:57.200 least i i think it will pass though i think i think even the conservatives will have a hard time
00:30:01.360 voting against this bill just because of those online components right like they've really the
00:30:05.840 media have really done trudeau's work in presenting this bill as a bill to protect kids from predators
00:30:12.080 on the internet which i i mean even my personal view is like that's the job of the parents that's
00:30:16.800 my job and my husband's job to keep our kids offline keep them from doing the kinds of
00:30:20.880 anti-social things that sadly tragically amanda todd chose to do you know they had her mother on these
00:30:27.360 shows talking about how somehow it was a government's fault that she killed herself no she made really
00:30:32.320 bad choices she didn't have parents in her life that were doing what they should have yes there were
00:30:36.560 some predators that were doing awful things to her uh but but anyway i i i think i think that that the
00:30:43.360 way that they painted it they've done liberals show good at this they've created this wedge issue that now
00:30:48.240 they'll say to the conservatives you know do you really even care about kids and protecting kids
00:30:52.400 how are you going to vote against this bill harrison what do you think well i remember the amanda todd
00:30:57.040 story because when we were when we were in middle school they were bringing that up to us as sort of a
00:31:01.520 lesson and to be careful about the internet i remember hearing about that quite a lot this is
00:31:06.000 really this is really dangerous stuff because i made sure to go back to the original online harms bill
00:31:12.160 the original one that was proposed in june of 2021 there is not a single mention of the word
00:31:17.040 children let alone in any interest in trying to protect children from online exploitation the
00:31:22.400 government has no interest in that because if they did it wouldn't have taken them that it wouldn't
00:31:26.560 have taken them this long to actually protect children online so maybe if it really could have
00:31:30.880 saved her life they could have done it in 2021 that was never their intention they had to find a way to
00:31:35.760 push this bill through by adding all of this all these protections for children which we all agree with
00:31:41.200 i think we can all say that actually yes there should be protections for children to avoid
00:31:45.440 exploitation online the government doesn't care about that because if they did they would have
00:31:48.960 put it in the original bill they basically took took the original c36 and took all of the dangerous
00:31:56.160 authoritarian dystopian legislation that would basically create a digital police state in this
00:32:01.840 country which could put you under house arrest for a pre-crime right which could put you in life in
00:32:07.200 prison for violating hate speech online they've taken that and packaged it with this nice glossy finish
00:32:13.280 for protecting children and they'll use that as a political weapon to attack conservatives to say
00:32:18.240 you don't care about children online you don't care about protecting children it's perhaps one of the
00:32:23.200 most disgusting things the federal government has done and that is a tough bar to pass for this
00:32:27.520 government but this is this is unbelievable and candace i'm i really hope that the conservatives don't vote for
00:32:33.280 this i i think to be quite honest if the conservatives vote for this bill that's going to be the final
00:32:38.080 straw for many canadians it will really expose the conservatives for either being politically correct
00:32:44.560 not wanting to rock the boat not wanting to have real real debate i mean we've seen it with bill c4
00:32:50.240 uh we've seen with other bills the conservatives have voted for but if they vote for this
00:32:54.000 this is going to be something that that exposes the conservatives i'm hoping they don't i'm hoping rachel's
00:32:58.960 prediction is more accurate that actually this gets bogged down that this gets stuck in debate and
00:33:03.280 hopefully you know even ndp members might vote against it but this is something very sick to see
00:33:09.040 the see the the liberals use children this way to push censorship it's unbelievable well and even just
00:33:15.120 the way that the the trudeau government presented it right when the justice minister got out there
00:33:19.440 and presented the bill i think the first like 30 minutes of the press conference were all talking
00:33:24.400 about families that had experienced sexual exploitation for their children like that was
00:33:29.840 all they talked about that was the entire emphasis most of the news stories about this have been about
00:33:35.760 the you know protecting kids in that aspect and and only really like in in the opinion columns and
00:33:41.120 the analysis you get people pointing out sort of how terrifying uh some of these measures are on
00:33:47.840 the on the free speech side i i i don't want to be too cynical i think i think you're right i think that
00:33:52.080 the conservatives ultimately will oppose this bill but they're going to make it hard because
00:33:56.880 you know you've seen the conservatives in the past they're the party that are the ones that are
00:34:01.600 harsh on pedophiles and want to lock these people up and and keep them off the streets and keep them
00:34:06.320 away from kids and the liberals have been the policy the party more of like a revolving prison door and
00:34:11.760 allowing people second and third and fourth chances and so it's it's really interesting that they've
00:34:15.840 taken this component you're right harrison is super manipulative exactly what we would expect from the
00:34:20.480 liberals exactly what we expect from the media to cover for them and make it seem entirely like it's
00:34:26.720 one thing when really we're talking about uh something totally different rachel did you have
00:34:31.200 any final thoughts on this topic yeah just that i agree with harrison's points like this is a big
00:34:35.520 issue for the conservative party and i think if they flop on this a lot of people because you know
00:34:41.280 pierre polyev is very popular but especially here in alberta i have a lot of people asking me is he the
00:34:46.400 real deal because there's just been so much mistrust with the conservative party we've had a series of
00:34:51.040 bad leader aaron o'toole you know famously lied to conservatives about what he would do once he
00:34:55.360 became leader and then backtracked on those promises andrew sheer wasn't as bad but he wasn't much of a
00:34:59.680 leader and he didn't really have a lot of original ideas and definitely didn't have much of a backbone
00:35:04.000 as the conservative leader so people are really looking to know that they can trust and believe in
00:35:08.400 the conservative party again i think that pierre polyev has finally come out in support of women
00:35:13.680 and in support of children and is finally taking a stand against the transgender issues as we
00:35:17.520 mentioned earlier that of course he only did once he saw that it was safe to do so because alberta
00:35:22.160 premier daniel smith did it first we see that with pierre polyev time and time again he comes out and
00:35:26.480 speaks up on an issue once he knows that it's safe to do so i'm sure that they're getting lots of pulling
00:35:30.560 in the background he's deciding which way to lean so we'll see what he does here i mean those are
00:35:34.320 been good things he's still not strong on ukraine we're still sending tons of money to ukraine he said
00:35:37.920 he wants us to send even more to ukraine he hasn't said we need a huge cap on immigration those are some
00:35:43.120 of the biggest problems facing our country right now so the conservative is still kind of walking
00:35:47.040 a fine line i think we can all agree that a conservative government would be good for this
00:35:50.720 country but pierre polyev is still going to have to earn that trust back from conservatives yeah that's
00:35:55.280 a good way of thinking about it i i certainly do think that if erin o'tool was leader of this party
00:35:59.440 it would be a different uh outcome when it came to this particular bill the online harms bill
00:36:04.400 i don't know i have a soft spot for andrew sheer i mean it's interesting because you know he didn't quite
00:36:09.040 make it as leader he he's still got more votes than justin trudeau in the 2019 election and now
00:36:14.400 you see him leading the charge with the uh arrive scam uh committee hearings and he's just like a
00:36:19.760 star over there doing doing his job and holding the liberals account really unearthing some pretty
00:36:24.480 damaging scandalous things that liberals did during covet so but but but overall i think you're right i
00:36:30.080 think that conservatives need to be vocal to maintain to to make sure that the the party and the
00:36:35.280 leader knows that they can't take you know he can't take our votes for granted uh final story
00:36:41.600 you guys i want to move on to um this this this happened a couple of weeks ago but we saw that
00:36:46.480 google introduced its its new gemini ai program it was a total train wreck it was just one of the
00:36:52.720 absolute worst rollouts of new technology that i have ever seen in my entire life and you know we're
00:36:58.000 talking about one of the biggest companies in the world like a company worth i think a trillion dollars
00:37:03.120 um that that controls so much of the internet when it comes to search and advertising and what
00:37:09.120 happens they introduce this ai tool um that i guess maybe they programmed it to hate white people or to
00:37:16.320 pretend white people didn't exist or to erase white people from our history books and so uh what did we
00:37:22.560 see people were playing around with it and sharing their images on social media but basically any historical
00:37:28.720 figure that you would uh search for you would just see a non-white version of it so i think we have
00:37:33.360 an image here of what the pope supposedly looks like so create an image of the pope uh we see a south
00:37:39.120 a south asian woman um and an african man neither of those demographics have ever been pope uh popes
00:37:45.520 have always looked pretty much uh one way and it's not like this uh we also had an image of george
00:37:51.600 washington the first president united states apparently he was a black fella um and uh what was the final one
00:37:57.840 here oh vikings we had images of vikings and apparently they were actually i don't know uh
00:38:04.320 samoan or southeast asian or african uh mongolian maybe i mean it just just kind of interesting that
00:38:11.840 whoever wrote the code for these computers basically told them that white people shouldn't exist or don't
00:38:16.960 exist uh so so google kind of had to embarrassingly walk this back but i i think this presents pretty
00:38:23.600 terrifying uh future where you have uh you know a woke silicon valley firm pushing its values
00:38:29.360 its values apparently that they just hate white people or don't want white people to exist and um
00:38:34.960 you know what what the ramifications of that could be harrison i know you have strong strong opinions on
00:38:39.680 this one well it's extremely dangerous the reality is it's funny to laugh at but there is a deeply uh
00:38:46.880 sinister underlying aspect to this which is ai is going to be a major part of our lives over the next
00:38:53.040 basically the next century it's going to continue growing and influence is going to start writing
00:38:57.600 writing code writing scripts writing news stories and there's clearly ideological bias built in and
00:39:04.800 it's and it's they can't even hide it this resulted in a 70 billion dollar market value hit to
00:39:11.440 google's parent company when this catastrophe was uh was unfolding on social media and they had to pull
00:39:17.360 the entire ai image generating software offline to try and fix it but i don't have confidence that
00:39:23.200 they're going to just find a way to take out all the ideological bias out of this ai uh all of these
00:39:29.440 major companies are going to start doing this google being one of the most popular one of the most valuable
00:39:34.560 is going to have an ai product that is going to be involved in our ass every aspect of our life
00:39:39.360 and if it's extremely biased if it's anti-white if it's anti-christian if it's if it's got this bent to it
00:39:46.320 that has some serious problems going forward it's not something that we can just laugh at and joke
00:39:50.400 at although it is funny to see a black george washington and black vikings that it is it is
00:39:55.040 hilarious but there is something deeper going on here and it needs to be called out and i'm glad that
00:40:00.560 they pulled it but i don't have confidence that this is going to be turned around anytime soon someone
00:40:05.200 maybe perhaps on the right should start developing their own ai to try and counteract this
00:40:09.760 well i think the saving grace is that they caught it they exposed it and they were so mocked again
00:40:15.600 this is like the change in the zeitgeist of the last few years because i think like this woke ideology
00:40:20.320 was much more mainstream back in like 2020 2021 and now it's like laughable it's like so absurd google
00:40:26.960 got caught and they had to walk it back embarrassingly apologize or caught lying like people just don't
00:40:32.640 want this anymore and i you know hopefully they'll change or maybe maybe maybe you're right this will be
00:40:38.560 the beginning of the end of google and some other company that that's more trustworthy and more
00:40:43.440 like thoughtful or comments has common sense uh we'll take over uh with this kind of technology
00:40:50.080 rachel what do you think i mean i'm really only surprised that they did apologize in the end i
00:40:54.560 i just kind of expect people to double down on these things nowadays but it was probably for what
00:40:58.560 harrison mentioned you know it did have a big impact on their bottom line so of course that gets
00:41:02.560 company moving and on that note that's really what the issue is it's that these are private entities
00:41:07.040 that have more power than the government does they've got more influence than the government
00:41:10.400 does and so the government has been sort of late to legislate things and i'm all for the free market
00:41:15.120 but when we look at the internet there is some regulation needed there of course and i think
00:41:18.640 it's been slow to do that and now we're having all these types of problems where we have companies
00:41:22.080 like facebook and twitter and google that are so powerful and so corrupt and they hate
00:41:26.160 conservatives and obviously a big win for us was that elon musk was willing to put his money where his
00:41:31.120 mouth was and bought twitter and now we really have that as an actual free speech platform you
00:41:36.160 know to harrison's point someone could start developing equal technology on the right that'd
00:41:40.000 be great but google has already capitalized on the market so much so so it's really going to take a lot
00:41:44.480 for people to move away from them at this point i guess we can be grateful that they are sort of
00:41:48.640 walking it back but yeah i'm not super optimistic at this point i think on the internet side of things i
00:41:53.520 tend to be a little bit more cynical seeing what's coming down and not really sharing where we go from
00:41:57.600 here to see some actual solutions well it's just funny like anecdotally i saw a couple of really
00:42:03.120 funny uh individual not not even just with images on gemini but just ai in general right like i think
00:42:09.040 someone wrote in um hey make the point uh make make the case for having four children or more and
00:42:16.080 basically the computer said like it's irresponsible to have four kids or more it's bad for the planet
00:42:20.880 and then like counter to that they said make the case for not having any children and and then the
00:42:25.920 computer like came up with this long thing about how like you know you'll be richer and you have
00:42:30.000 financial freedom and you like why have kids it's it's just like it's baked in like this like horrible
00:42:36.000 anti-human uh ideology or even just again anecdotally yesterday i i i'm a big proponent of like trying to
00:42:42.800 learn new technology and make sure that you stay up to date so i was using ai and just doing it for
00:42:47.920 research for my show so i i typed in i was doing something on canadian press and i wanted to find out like
00:42:53.840 what government grants they were getting so i said to the to the ai technology i said is the canadian
00:43:00.640 press government funded right and they said no no canadian press is independent it's not funded by
00:43:06.560 the government and then i reworded it and i said does the canadian press receive any money from the
00:43:11.520 government and then the answer was yes here are all the various grants that they receive so so they're
00:43:16.320 not they're not government funded however they are funded by the government do you see that and and
00:43:21.920 you can just see how you know they they throw in this wording uh to to be sneaky but it's like it's
00:43:28.720 like bureaucrates basically written into the code of the computer to lie to you uh harrison what do you
00:43:34.480 what do you think about this i mean just thinking about this i i'm i'm i'm picturing how for example ai
00:43:40.080 will be used in government services canadians using ai to try and receive services from the government
00:43:45.600 digital services how ai will be used for example in hospitals how it will be used for triage purposes
00:43:51.760 you know there is we can see how this is going to play out and it's not looking very good at the
00:43:56.480 moment like someone has to really figure this out because the minute you get that ideological bent
00:44:02.160 into the into the system learning whatever it's called i'm no expert in ai i don't know how you get
00:44:07.120 it out right and i don't think we should be expecting governments who all of a sudden hire ai
00:44:12.480 experts to machine learn government tailored ai that will be perfectly unbiased that will treat every
00:44:18.080 canadian the same they're going to obviously use these private companies who are building this
00:44:22.240 technology because these are the only companies that have this technology as rachel said so you can
00:44:27.200 see how this plays out not just online not just making jokes about you know mongolian vikings and and
00:44:33.520 and you know black george washington's but how this could play out in an emergency how this could play
00:44:38.480 out in a hospital how this could play out in in government services it's frightening and it really needs to be
00:44:45.520 addressed i just don't like i said there's no there's no way the government is going to build
00:44:49.760 an ai that is going to be completely unbiased they're going to have to rely on this and it's
00:44:54.400 obviously driven by ideology no you're absolutely right but but just one one more funny funny aspect
00:44:59.840 about this because elon musk uh jumped in you know he had all these pictures of black george washington
00:45:05.280 and he jumped in uh saying i can't believe gemini made these unfair pictures of justin trudeau
00:45:11.440 oh wait no that was actually all real so you know we we could still poke fun in it as part of the way
00:45:17.600 that we expose the corruption and and hey our prime that's our prime minister that's who he is or who
00:45:23.600 he was uh for for most of his life prior to jumping into politics uh rachel file thing you know we saw
00:45:30.000 pier poliev mock justin trudeau the other day for wearing blackface and saying how can he you know be
00:45:35.280 the regulator of hate speech when he himself was a hateful person in his 20s and 30s wearing blackface
00:45:41.360 uh the media got like up in arms like how dare pier poliev bring this up like like that's that's
00:45:47.520 irrelevant or whatever uh what what do you think of of pier poliev making uh news again uh over justin
00:45:54.800 trudeau's uh blackface uh incidents that he that he had in the past the blackface incidents are really
00:46:00.880 it's really one of those things that the people on the right bring up at every opportunity that they
00:46:05.040 have because it's just so funny and the photos are just so hilarious it's like every time justin trudeau
00:46:10.160 does something stupid so most days you find people on the internet they find a way to tie it back to the
00:46:15.120 blackface like he's never going to live this down like it's always going to come up there's going to
00:46:19.200 be like major chapters dedicated to it in future political biographies that are written on him because
00:46:23.600 it's just something he can't escape i don't know why the legacy media chose to get angry about it like
00:46:28.160 they didn't necessarily have to cover it but it's not worth getting angry about it is something that
00:46:31.440 he did and i think it's fair that people would try to tie that back to him of course now as he's
00:46:35.520 trying to be this huge sort of cultural icon and you know always kind of harping on the right for
00:46:42.480 accusations of racism and discrimination so it's just one of those things that's going to follow him
00:46:46.880 forever and and i'm here for it yeah i agree i think it's hilarious i think i think it shows a
00:46:51.600 different side of the prime minister a side that he himself tries to hide that the media try to hide
00:46:56.560 um you know he's supposed to be like this pure woke figure that can't do any wrong and it's like
00:47:01.360 the reality is he was kind of a jerk like he was pretty insensitive and rude and maybe racist uh up
00:47:08.160 until the time he decided that he wanted to be prime minister harrison i'll give the very last uh word
00:47:12.800 of the show to you well that's why you pay off the media right so that you can just run you can have
00:47:18.000 all your your your moral failings covered uh and then you can attack your opposition for any time they
00:47:23.920 address it i think tucker carlson said it best when he's told canadians that we should be making
00:47:28.400 fun of justin trudeau over this every time we can there's no reason to not make fun of him for it
00:47:33.600 he is the man who accuses canadians who are unvaccinated of being racist he's the man who
00:47:38.080 accuses his political opposition of of dog whistling to the far right of being you know these evil mega
00:47:43.920 republicans imagine if pier pauliev wore blackface once um or even or even you know darkened his face to
00:47:51.040 to dress up as some sort of uh you know like the arabian nights thing if it had if that happened
00:47:56.240 once it would be the end of his political career because pier pauliev doesn't give the media hundreds
00:48:01.040 of millions of dollars so you know i think trudeau made a point about this is exactly why he pays off
00:48:06.160 the media but i guess it does it does show that if you if you give them money they'll run cover for
00:48:10.960 you every time well and i think that's the most important thing that tucker said when he was in canada
00:48:16.000 was you should be making fun of this guy like every day he is such a ridiculous person he is
00:48:20.880 so silly he's not serious like if you laugh at him it takes away his power so yeah i i i think that's
00:48:27.680 a a good reminder precious ego exactly all right well rachel harrison it's been a blast thanks for
00:48:34.080 tuning in thanks for joining us and remember everybody everything you just heard was off the record
00:48:38.720 are you guys both gen z are you millennials gen z i'm the i'm the oldest generation of gen z so at
00:48:51.680 times i um find i fit more into the millennials like i did the whole plucking my eyebrows too thin
00:48:57.760 thing and now i'm like oh i wish that i had thick fluffy eyebrows but it's too late i followed the
00:49:01.920 millennials off the hill on that one you have thick beautiful eyebrows i'm the one like i i have like
00:49:08.480 no eyebrows so but i had no eyebrows before i ever plucked them so well at least you aren't like living
00:49:14.960 in the regret of your decisions now fair enough well how old are you harrison uh 24 so i'm a zoomer
00:49:22.880 yeah two zoomers yeah great you guys are like you guys are our 30 under 30.
00:49:31.920 yellow
00:49:37.040 uh
00:49:38.640 yeah
00:49:50.960 yeah
00:49:52.880 yeah
00:49:53.360 yeah
00:49:57.000 yeah
00:49:57.880 yeah