DAILY | Saudi Arabia's futuristic 'smart city'; Rejecting the WEF; Climate protesters avoid scrutiny
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 16 minutes
Words per minute
197.45198
Harmful content
Misogyny
14
sentences flagged
Hate speech
12
sentences flagged
Summary
In this week's edition of Rebel Daily, host Adam and co-host Adam Sowards is joined by his good friend and long-time co-worker, Ben, to discuss some of the latest news from across the country and around the world, including the arrest of a 76 year old man on a flight to the United Arab Emirates, the disappearance of a fellow passenger on a transatlantic flight, and the story of a man who was arrested for wearing a mask on an airplane.
Transcript
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are you tired of losing your rights and freedoms the alberta prosperity project has a solution for
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you join the community and learn more at albertaprosperityproject.com with you on board
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we can achieve freedom and prosperity for all of us oh hey everyone how's it going great to have you
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join us as you likely know you're watching rebel daily with me your host adam soos and today i'm
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joined by my co-host how are you doing buddy i'm doing all right pretty good enjoying the nice
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alberta weather while we have it and yourself yeah no it's great it's lovely out there we went
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to had a nice little interview with a couple ucp leadership hopefuls down by the river the other
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day great to be enjoying this nice weather as you've probably noticed i normally do this on
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monday but this will be sort of our alberta focused edition and as such it's actually sponsored and
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brought to you by the alberta prosperity project the alberta prosperity project is a not-for-profit
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non-partisan organization uniting all albertans to protect their interests freedoms and rights
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to learn more about the alberta prosperity project and how you can get involved visit
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albertaprosperityproject.com now this daily live stream is an incredible opportunity
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to be able to react to some live news um so to get some feedback on some stories as they're coming
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back look back at some of the sort of key stories that we've had over the last little while but most
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importantly it's an opportunity to interact with you our viewers that's why we started doing this on
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a daily basis we enjoyed this so very much we're streaming today on youtube rumble odyssey and getter
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you can also send us paid chats through rumble rants or odyssey hyper chats we love engaging with
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your feedback in that way uh we'll sort of towards the end of the show respond read to try and give
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you some answers on any questions you may have um so if you guys if you haven't done that before
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consider making today the day you you give it a go and then we can have a conversation with you
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some of the regulars out there it's great every day we get to know you we get to learn a little
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bit about you when you're participating in those hyper chats so very much looking forward to that
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um and yeah so consider chipping in that way and helping out uh so said what should we talk about
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for us today well i gotta say i'm gonna be coming to alberta right uh and being here for just over a
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year now i have to really learn to enjoy what alberta has to offer uh but before we kind of get into
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a little bit more about the alberta news that we have today i want to point just out uh something
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that's happening in the released in saudi arabia uh and uh this is her uh his royalness his uh royal
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highness has announced a new project online which is um i want to show you guys this and i want to
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talk about this so that you can see the difference between what's coming on in alberta and the rest of
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the world so that maybe if we uh increase prosperity and improve public health but also to build back
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better if the demands from the farmers are not met what do you think happens next i think the farmers
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will explode i'm afraid it will will be a civil war civil war is going to start up till a civil war
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i think that's gonna be farmers today or tomorrow they go to their homes and say if you don't come
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there we come to you well i know the farmers a bit and if they draw a line in the sand they draw a line
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i think they're going to be a small civil war i can imagine it's going to be a lot of mayhem
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a calm story that's really troubling and i'll i'll
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allow you to sort of fill in the details but kind of from what we've heard a bit of an older
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gentleman mr bialski was on an airplane making every sort of effort from what from what i've
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heard to wear his mask and it came down in the course of sleeping but basically another one of
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these crazy stories where an older gentleman maybe with some medical issues just being harassed
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and ultimately arrested because of some mask issues on an airplane what's the story we don't
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know much at this point but i'll tell you what we do know is that we have a 76 year old client which
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is obviously a senior um you know this fellow has had a double hip replacement he's got numerous
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medical conditions uh one of the nicest guys that we've ever come across uh on a flight west jet flight
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um just just trying to finish the flight i believe it was transatlantic as well i'll have to check the
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file um we've got so many of these fight the fines files and it's so bizarre to me adam to
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still be opening fight the fines files after the pandemic has supposedly come to an end
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this fellow was on the plane uh there's allegations from west jet that this uh you know kind gentleman
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was essentially belligerent and he was given a ticket under canadian aviation regulations for
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failing to wear a mask even though he was making best and reasonable efforts to wear a mask um he's a
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great guy it's just so bizarre uh to see the heavy hand of the government and these draconian uh mandate
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uh mandate implementations still affecting seniors and reasonable people in this province um as you
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know it's a little calmer all right apologies for the uh technical difficulty there we're back though
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and we're here to talk about alberta and some of the stories adam do you want to just touch base there
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on uh yeah yeah so yeah we do apologize for that we had some audio cutting out some issues you know
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they're testing some uh fire alarm fire alarm systems here messing with the internet not sure exactly
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what's happening but uh good to be back with you we were just talking about the uh obviously we've
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got this beautiful widespread green alberta province we love to share so much space um but you you you
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sort of found this incredible story coming from saudi arabia uh incredible maybe haunting maybe dystopic
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uh well you haven't seen it yet uh the video that they put out there but it's about the line
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a project that's going to be going forward in the middle east and it's this kind of
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uh revision of what a city should be and how the building should be constructed it's very interesting
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i don't know if we have that article uh on hand and then there is also the video aspect of that but
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it is a uh an incredible project uh whether or not it's a good or a bad thing i'll leave that aside
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for the moment until adam has a chance to look at the video but it's uh it is quite the project and
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it's they say what larger than the eiffel tower in height uh it's you know 173 kilometers long i think
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they said it was so it's uh it is really a massive project uh and it is kind of a a turning point you
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know we have cities we have you know cities that rely on a kind of grid structure and they're all
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laid out across the land all the buildings and homes and whatnot whereas in the line everything is one
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big building the entire community the entire city so it is uh it is quite the sight to see uh to say
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the least let's let's pull that video up there is a video i i'm actually gonna be live reacting to
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this i haven't seen it yet so let's go to the video of the line
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for too long humanity has existed within dysfunctional and polluted cities that ignore nature
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now a revolution in civilization is taking place imagine a traditional city and consolidating its
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footprint designing to protect and enhance nature the line will be home to nine million residents
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and will be built with a footprint of just 34 square kilometers there it is build the wall to provide
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a healthier more sustainable quality of life for civilization as they will lines communities are
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organized in three dimensions residents have access to all their daily needs within five minute walk
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neighborhoods and the line's infrastructure makes it possible to travel end to end in 20 minutes
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with no need for cars resulting in zero carbon emissions by leveraging ai technology services are
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autonomous saving you time and effort designed by world-leading architects the line is 500 meters tall
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200 meters wide 170 kilometers long and housed within an elegant mirror glass facade
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intelligent solutions create efficiency and year-round temperate microclimate with natural ventilation
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energy and water supplies are 100 percent renewable the line is designed as a series of unique communities
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offering a wealth of amenities providing equitable views and immediate access to the surrounding nature
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equitable views 40 percent of the world accessible within six hours at the heart of the globe's key trade routes
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a place for commerce and communities to thrive like nothing on earth seen before
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the line the city that delivers new wonders for the world when are you uh when are you going to be living there
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yeah when where do i put in my down deposit i don't want my community to look like a new samsung device
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um and like i mean it's so that is just like straight lines do not appear in nature like an organic embedded
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like community is a nice old farmhouse on a big lot with horses out back and and a forest growing around it
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that's the organic embedded natural real sort of thing that we're looking for this is a giant mirror facaded line
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uh in the middle of the desert it's about the most inorganic thing i've ever seen listen i don't doubt that
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this is going to be cool they're clearly going for some like vagasy mile type vibes here um given that
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it's saudi arabia and some of the other projects there maybe it'll falter maybe they'll actually get
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this done we know obviously some of the other countries uh the uaa qatar a couple of the places
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they have no problems using uh north korean slave labor but so it might get done and it might be cool
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but the the whole pitch of this as this like organic paying attention to nature on a fundamental sort of
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whether you're into poetry or art or engineering like lines like that don't appear in nature
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what was your response you sort of found the story but what did you think well it's it's ridiculous you know
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it's like you want to live in a box with you and your nine million friends that you don't know
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and you know one thing i thought about when i saw that is uh you know if we were to go through this
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kind of coronavirus response as the government had done in past you know in a facility like that
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well you're going to have your little key card that's going to tell you where you're allowed to go
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and if they decide that everything needs to get locked down well bang you no longer can use any
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of the doors in that facility and your artificial intelligence uh robot is going to deliver your
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food to your doorstep so you know i'm not exactly too keen on uh living in a box like that and it also
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makes me think about uh you know if you're trying to be environmentally friendly and it's a bit of a
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change of subject when it comes to vehicles um you don't you know you have a 10 year old 15 year
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old vehicle and it's you know reaching the end of its life you can get a new vehicle and you know
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some people would say that you should get an electric vehicle to be more environmentally friendly
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this and that but the amount of production that goes into an electric vehicle versus if you went out
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there and bought a second-hand vehicle you're saving the planet by buying that second-hand vehicle
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even if it is using a diesel or using uh any kind of fuel other than electric so it's just kind of i see
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this in the same way where they're trying to redesign civilization to what cost yeah you know
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and they say it's going to be environmentally friendly well batteries they go bad you're
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going to have to replace those batteries solar panels they need to be replaced um i think there's
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a lot that is wrong with this uh even though it is a cool looking thing you know you stare at it it's
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a wonder of the world so to speak as they would try and uh turn it into a marvel uh type thing but
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i just have no faith in it you know the other thing that really like strikes me is like and it's
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because you talked about that sort of everything is so disposable in society i think that's an issue
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like it used to be more like oh swap out for a new component now it's the whole thing goes in the
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garbage but how many like you see these massive like landfills of non-biodegradable uh windmill blades
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um or even like these batteries that are that are farmed from these lithium mines destroying places and
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they have to be charged with coal power instead of like more environmentally friendly ethical alberta
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oil how much of this like how much of this is going to be in 15 20 years and the stuff stops working
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well we can just build another uh it seems so disposable yeah yeah no it is and you know one
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thing as well is when it comes to the maintenance on a facility like that maintenance is going to be
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24 hours a day you know and you get a skyscraper obviously it's going to have maintenance most of the
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time yeah but in a facility like that it's going to be constant maintenance and that's at least how
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i would see it and you know another last thing i'll touch on for this line is it's segmented into
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communities that's you know part of the pitch quarantined in the community oh yeah oh yeah
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that's going to be a quarantine and not only that you know they say equitable views and this and that
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well i guarantee you you know this block community is going to have a much nicer more equitable oh yeah
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than the community adjacent to it or further down the line yeah you know um so there is going to be
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that separation of economic uh viability between those who have everything and those who have
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nothing especially in a place like saudi arabia and it just looks like something out of like like
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blade runner or some dystopic novel like you can see the like people in the desert attacking during a
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rebellion or whatever as well and it's so so much of this there may be some cool concepts here
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it could be a very cool sort of tech display um but almost everything here is just pandering to world
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economic forum talking points that is the crux of all of this and now i don't know if we can bring
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it back to uh alberta now and talk about some of this stuff um so yeah kick that off well um and
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you're gonna have to give me a little more detail into this but danielle smith yeah one of the
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candidates for the ucp leadership uh to replace jason kenny after he uh decided he would be
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stepping down as the leader and he was invited to step down kind of yeah um but either way danielle
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smith uh she's in one hand come out strong against the world economic forum you know saying we don't
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need these guys you know you're going to own nothing and be happy well that's not the plan
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for canada so to speak yeah but on the other hand and you're filling me in on this she's also
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touched up actually we have it on the screen right now so daniel's daniel how do you feel about the
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world economic forum and then let's let's see her answer there you know as she condemns trudeau and
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notley the world economic forum uh are anti-democratic elites who have been attacking
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our province for years no one in my government will be permitted to have any ties with their
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organization but then yeah in the other side of the conversation she was talking about net zero and
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she was advocating for a net zero stance which is very strongly tied in with the world economic
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forum agenda parse that out for me and maybe we'll pull that up uh shortly yeah yeah and it's it's
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very interesting because danielle smith was uh can she do it very much i i did a long extensive
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interview with her we talked about the world economic forum and lots of this stuff um and
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she very quickly went from a uh can she really do it to like a clear front runner in the eyes of just
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about everybody um and it was because she was uncompromising on freedom which for anyone out there
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paying attention the the management of copa 19 issues is why in a major way jason kenney is not the
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leader anymore most people weren't particularly upset with him on economics or the other stuff
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he was doing it was the copa 19 response of vaccine mandates all that sort of stuff so she right away
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was the first person and she was doing it i mean todd lowen would be the other person who very early on
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sort of paid a price but these are people who from the get-go were anti-world economic forum anti-lockdown
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sort of taking a bold stance on this um yeah here we go so for danielle smith to be to come out and
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uses net zero terminology now i've had the opportunity um to be at a number of sort of
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smaller town halls and remote regions and i've heard her talk about this at length and i think
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one of the major issues here is um you're doing yourself a disservice by using world economic forum
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talking points like that term net zero so many freedom oriented people so many sort of alberta energy
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ethical oil oriented people hear someone say net zero and they're like gross uh there'll be an
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interview coming out soon today in fact i did with todd lowen and we asked about why candidates even if
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they're ultra pro oil feel the need to sort of pander on these net zero type initiatives um during
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that ucp debate danielle smith said she's sort of done a complete 180 on this and now she thinks that
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net zero is attainable well canada barely emits emissions compared to these other contributors
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and when you calculate the sort of upcycling from trees we're we're almost there we're very close
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to there the sort of net contribution of canada is in the less than two percent range compared to some
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of these other countries well and not only that i should add you know given that we have the oil
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patch up here in alberta of course uh the amount of research and development that has gone into that
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and come out of that uh is is astounding and it's the reason why we have more efficient more
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environmental uh practices when it comes to the production of oil the production of natural gas
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it's because of the oil sands exactly and yet at every turn they're trying to just shun it they're
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trying to do away with it they're trying to hinder it in any way they possibly can even though if their
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end goal was you know environmental advocacy well then you would look to the oil sands instead of
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looking to china or looking to russia or wherever else because we actually want to uphold those standards
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yeah and you know to touch on you know we can say you know environmental advocacy right and for them
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environmental advocacy is you know no more nitrogen no more methane no more carbon dioxide for us it's
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just like clean up your mess yeah that's it's simple you cut down some trees plant some trees yeah he
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couldn't even do that no he couldn't even plant trees and this is i want to jump back to the saudi thing
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because we literally have the people virtue signaling on this and we're going to talk about trudeau in a
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minute but you have these celebrities jet setting all over the world yeah you have environmental and
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human rights violators like venezuela iran saudi arabia selling oil to these people virtue signaling
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because they have these little 100 mile projects whatever the line um meanwhile the most ethical
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oil on the planet both in terms of the environment and in terms of human costs people are apologizing
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for it and i don't think danielle smith is outright apologizing for it and given that i've had the
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opportunity to hear her speak at length i think what she's trying to say and in fact what she has said
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is listen like we've got the technology to do this it may be a scheme i don't think i'm not putting
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those words in her mouth but we can sell carbon capture to people and make money on it and we can
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sell our oil and make money on it so i think that there's a place there for like yeah sure you want
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to give us a billion dollars to suck some stuff out of the air it's anti-mining you're taking stuff in
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putting it underground well the the biggest irony of the whole environmental movement is that the more
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you go down that road the more you depend on oil the more you depend on natural gas to facilitate
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this environmental uh industry i guess exactly yeah so it they're in some senses they're shooting
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themselves in the foot for not being creative well and the other thing too is i mean the problem is
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sure it's like okay there's all this money out there the government's spending all this money
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let's take some of the money i get that sentiment in the sort of libertarian let's make money way
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but the problem and i think the problem lots of people have with using net zero terms and world
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economic forum terms is in a way you're validating and building up their system even if you're like
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well i don't really believe this is for the environment but we'll take your money you're
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feeding into and ramping up the system even if it's for personal gain and i think that the uh i think
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albertans are a little more principled than that i think they don't want to say well sure we'll do this
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we'll ramp up your system as long as we're getting rich well and lastly i'll just add to that there's
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this tweet i love i absolutely love it from uh lewis brackpool our reporter out of the uk and it's
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i believe it was cop 26 uh one of the environmental summits that was happening in glasgow i think it
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was um but either way on the highway to this event or in the area there's a big sign you know net zero
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you know save the environment and they the funny part about it was that this advocatorial or advocacy
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type message was being powered by a diesel generator on the side of the road right so it just sums up this
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whole environmental thing in a nutshell that is that's the crux of it it's like all of these things
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everyone preaching listen no one's perfect there's yeah there we go they're so fast good job in the
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studio thanks again isn't that just beautiful yeah that's wonderful this is this is it in a nutshell
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like you're gonna be able to find like some level of hypocrisy with everyone it doesn't matter i was
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gonna say with the pope but that's pretty easy um but with like it doesn't matter if it's a dalai
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lama or the worst uh environmental activist hypocrite in the world you're going to be able
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to find something but with all of this progressive stuff it's so self-evident it's like an orbrose
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everything they say contradicts everything else they say and they every single one of them is doing
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one thing while or saying one thing while doing another um the the people who work on oil rigs are
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like we're going to clean up after ourselves and we're going to provide oil for the world it's not
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this giant complicated web of complication and confusion um because they're not lying they're just
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providing an honest service and the thing is it's just a larger production right you know you like
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people will cry you know it's like oh they're destroying the trees or whatever well okay let's
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say there's you know 100 or whatever acres and they're going through that land well what do they
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do after they're done refining the materials that were underground they put everything back and they
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they plant trees they they regrow the natural environment that was there and a lot of the complaining i
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think does come from just the fact of how large the oil patch really is yeah yeah well and it's it's
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they really don't like another part of this is the anti sort of western sentiment yeah they don't
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like that like alberta no matter what will have a flex and the other thing too is we've got the
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farmers we've got the oil we can leave and be just fine it's it's the same thing and we we showed a
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little bit while we're having some technical difficulties the dutch rebellion stuff but alberta
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would be absolutely fine on its own um frankly we're sort of footing the bill for the rest of the
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country and where wherever you stand on separation uh alberta doesn't need ottawa and ontario but auto
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and ontario need alberta yeah exactly alberta has its own place to stand on yeah whereas ottawa is
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they're they're trying to punish us while simultaneously trying to take what we're gaining
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exactly so and it the the one of the sort of cartoon examples is this like oh there's like three
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ducks in a tilling pond like they're dead there's like there's like 400 bald eagles murdered by these
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windmills and no one's where the the generators no turbines no one's willing to go there or talk
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about it yeah windmills they they compete with cats don't they when it comes to the killing of birds
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oh yeah well and part of that is because a lot of birds of course migrate and they have their
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migration path which usually follows the wind and what else follows the wind oh the windmills oh
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what do you know so we're going to put the windmills in the path of the birds yeah and we're
00:24:15.020
going to call it environmentally friendly good job guys good job rubber stamp you did it yeah
00:24:19.640
unreal let's get into this we were going to take an ad break and watch the dutch rebellion trailer
00:24:24.480
did we get through all of that or should we throw to that again i think they watched probably most of
00:24:28.560
that very much looking forward to that yep okay we got through it so that's incredible uh kian has
00:24:35.980
been doing some incredible work on that so well and be sure oh sorry yeah uh lewis and uh lincoln as
00:24:41.160
well who went to the netherlands you know good on them uh there was a lot that was going on there and
00:24:45.320
there was a lot of reports that came out of that and of course uh now as you saw there's a bit of a
00:24:49.200
documentary being put together by uh our kian simone k2 as many of you might know him so i
00:24:54.200
encourage you guys to check that out what's the link for that uh that is i believe at farmer
00:24:58.040
rebellion.com um they'll confirm in a moment in the studio and for folks out there the trailer is
00:25:03.560
out now and i believe that's on rebel news plus coming out later today um it'll it'll likely be
00:25:08.940
available for everyone but uh this is a great time to mention uh we don't take those big handouts
00:25:14.120
from the government we rely entirely on your support and one of the great ways you can support
00:25:19.420
us get unprecedented access get access to those documentaries add free browsing on our website
00:25:24.220
is by becoming a rebel news plus member it costs eight bucks a month or less i think if you sign
00:25:28.960
up for a year it's like 667 um and that keeps us doing this incredible work keeps us pumping up this
00:25:34.500
content so do consider supporting us in that way well let's get into some more of this sort of climate
00:25:39.580
uh hypocrisy um there's so many places to go but i wanted to and we'll jump ahead a little bit just
00:25:45.580
just out of consideration for that but i wanted to talk about this environmental group uh claiming
00:25:51.320
that they're deflating tires on suvs in vancouver yeah i don't know if you guys are aware but that
00:25:58.740
actually significantly not we'll get into the how dangerous this is in the safety thing but in another
00:26:04.160
glaring element of hypocrisy that reduces the efficiency of vehicles like massively not to
00:26:12.860
mention the fact that it's it's literally incredibly dangerous and i think that could be criminal neglect
00:26:17.400
leading to like physical harm well this is insane yeah no it absolutely is and i think uh one of the
00:26:23.180
things i heard about that is uh i don't know if it was a lawyer if someone was just commenting on the
00:26:27.520
situation where they were saying uh that this group is going to start moving lower or considering doing
00:26:32.500
this same kind of activity in the lower mainland and this is the deflating of tires uh car vehicle
00:26:37.980
tires or trucks or whatever tires um and the the pushback that this individual had mentioned is
00:26:43.420
that there's going to be serious legal consequences if you try that you know so it maybe this is a one
00:26:48.200
off maybe they're going to keep on uh attempting this and maybe there will be legal consequences that
00:26:52.920
follow but um from what i understand this stemmed or maybe it stemmed prior to this but uh from new
00:26:59.260
and there was a similar activity that happened in new york a couple weeks ago uh either they were
00:27:04.100
slashing or deflating tires and then that movement kind of kicked off a little bit so i think this
00:27:08.460
stems from that um but either way yeah there imagine turning on your car in the morning and you know
00:27:14.720
you don't think anything of it you don't realize your tires are deflated you start the car you start
00:27:18.740
going well some people are maybe immediately going to realize but other people they're not going to
00:27:23.440
know what's happening maybe they'll just continue on driving and all of a sudden that tire gets ripped
00:27:27.360
off the wheel and you got no more traction so you're sliding down one of those hills in vancouver
00:27:31.020
and you're dead yeah and this is the thing is the person who's likely not going to notice that
00:27:36.120
there's certainly likely a demographic of families that drives suvs maybe mom busy rushing the kids in
0.99
00:27:43.340
trying to get to work um the the least likely person to notice a little in the wheels cars loaded with
00:27:51.100
kids the wild thing here is imagine we literally saw the coastal gas link like machete attack
00:27:57.220
we're seeing people deflating cars and creating a fundamentally dangerous situation and yet where's
00:28:03.140
like the the the emergencies act to stop these people exactly you know and i i spent a lot of
00:28:08.600
time down there in coots uh as people might remember there was the blockade there uh and near the tail end
00:28:13.700
or just after we had left i forget the exact day that this happened um but there was uh either in bc
00:28:19.120
or alberta a massive i guess it's fair to say it's an attack it was an attack on uh an outpost
00:28:25.600
so to speak for either a logging or an oil uh yeah it was the coastal uh link it was that one
00:28:30.600
yeah um bc and they they destroyed the facility like the buildings were destroyed the i think it
00:28:36.900
was the excavator uh had damage or some vehicles had heavy damage it's insane you know that is
00:28:41.760
terrorism in my opinion and you know i i don't mean to uh rile anybody anybody up when i say that
00:28:46.880
but terrorism is the you know you're trying to instill fear into these people yeah through these
00:28:51.000
attacks it's terrorism and i don't care if i rile anybody up well yeah um you're right but then
00:28:56.880
as well there's another uh blockade happening in uh bc right now uh yeah more probably some of the
00:29:02.580
same environmental people might be uh aware or probably tire deflating but uh 30 people have
00:29:08.400
now blocked uh rcmp vehicle at northwest bc pipeline site as protests continue uh the terror standards so
00:29:15.920
uh this is another one of the ball yep there we have it on screen so uh this is another one of
00:29:21.080
those uh environmental related blockades and especially related to a pipeline we've seen a
00:29:25.740
few of those uh like the other one in alberta who uh some albertan i'm not going to call him a folk
00:29:31.320
hero but he's been called the folk hero uh came in for the cn rail uh blockade and just was like no
00:29:36.500
we're going to move all this trash off the train track so i uh but that in bc and i've seen uh there's
00:29:42.860
one group down there that's really hard has formed a hard line defending the deforestation i forget the
00:29:49.920
exact name of the group but the the battle between rcmp police officers in bc and these protesters it
00:29:57.060
gets pretty wild like i'm not gonna lie it's pretty nuts it's it's all in the bush uh there's maybe you
00:30:02.220
know 30 to 50 people involved max it's not like a thousands and thousands of people on the street
00:30:06.320
kind of protest um but they there is heavy it's like a yellowstone scene it's not a war but there's
00:30:12.820
some conflict oh yeah oh yeah like yeah yeah sorry i'll let you continue no and i i just it i i
00:30:18.480
literally i think just you can juxtapose that with pastor archer pavlowski i know this is critical
00:30:23.700
infrastructure defense act in alberta i'm talking about but you literally have people blocking railways
00:30:29.780
blocking pipelines attacking offices literally engaging in uh critical infrastructure attacks
00:30:36.100
yeah which laws like critical infrastructure defense acts are meant to guard against yeah and
00:30:41.200
they're not being utilized in those cases for political reasons and then in the most i mean it's
00:30:45.960
literally the most peaceful protest yeah yeah and like this was this wasn't even the the you were
00:30:51.920
down in coots i was in milk river this wasn't like the literal guy blocking the road was charged
00:30:56.940
under the critical infrastructure defense act this was a pastor who visited them the the double
00:31:00.920
standards are wild and he was only there for one day yeah for one day he was there and it was hours
00:31:05.760
yeah it wasn't even a full day like it's yeah it's uh it's unreal and i now we are seeing we've talked
00:31:12.800
about this before and i will no doubt continue to talk about it there are significant legal victories
00:31:17.100
coming um but until those sort of certain groups getting special treatment and free passes
00:31:23.460
that stuff ends you know the the the coastal gas line that they're working on there i think it's
00:31:30.300
something like 19 of 20 of that community the bands elected councils have voted in favor yeah and the
00:31:37.060
other one it was like uh basically it was virtually unanimous or they like it was a split so 19 and then
00:31:41.980
a split something like that you can look up the exact numbers but effectively entirely unanimous
00:31:46.440
among all elected band councils the entire length of the railway the people pro the pipeline the people
00:31:52.740
protesting are largely coming in from outside or self-proclaimed hereditary chiefs or activists
00:31:58.720
they aren't the actual communities themselves that would benefit from this well and that's the thing
00:32:02.420
is a lot of indigenous communities do actually benefit from these larger number one employer of
00:32:07.340
indigenous communities exactly right so and it's a big shame that we see all this controversy uh you
00:32:12.500
know it's like pushing oil against the indigenous community when realistically it's these you know
1.00
00:32:17.340
uh i don't know what you would call them but these people have lived in basically cities their
00:32:22.160
whole life you know they hear about the the indigenous struggle of those in canada and they
00:32:26.820
it's like they're living through uh what is it avatar that vicariously yeah exactly vicariously living
00:32:32.920
through this avatar fantasy of yes where it's like oh these you know uh they're smart and they have a
00:32:37.760
different way of life and this and that uh but they need my help you know they need my help and i know
00:32:43.060
what they need that's the kind of mentality a lot of these advocates take well and you these people who
00:32:47.960
are preaching i'm like you ever been on the res yeah no they none of them have they've never talked
00:32:52.660
to these people i'm not professing to be an indigenous expert but we repaired the the church
00:32:57.480
roof we share their stories we speak with indigenous people try and give them an opportunity
00:33:01.220
to share their voice that's a lot more than these advocates have ever done yeah we don't speak for them
00:33:06.660
yeah we give them a platform yeah exactly and we don't we don't only go to the sort of trudeau rolls
00:33:13.600
out the same two or three sort of people who are going to echo his talking points and we don't put a
00:33:18.340
camera on the indigenous people who aren't even from the local community but they're they're protesting
00:33:22.980
we go and talk to the actual locals and i think that matters i i want we do have to take a little break
00:33:28.080
here um it's not so much a break but it's actually an opportunity for you to check out this incredible
00:33:32.000
uh work we're doing another uh little bit of incredible work by uh andrea humphries yeah and
00:33:38.240
matt brevner of course kudos he's doing some incredible work um setting the story straight
00:33:42.720
on some other uh indigenous stories giving some of those folks a platform and seeking the truth
00:33:48.220
wherever that may lead us so let's jump into this uh kamloops uh trailer and take a look at that right
00:33:52.520
away well the remains of 215 children have been found in a mass grave in canada many of you know
00:34:01.660
that just over a year ago the discovery of the remains of 215 children was found at the kamloops
00:34:08.140
indian residential school at the kamloops shaswamik first nation but what if i were to show you that
00:34:14.540
what i just said wasn't true and that in fact a year later not a single body has been found this mass
00:34:23.980
grave is a painful reminder of the genocide canada's leaders aren't condemning the burning of churches
00:34:31.260
no they're endorsing the burning of churches a juvenile rib bone that surfaced in the same
00:34:36.140
area you'd be surprised enough for those people who say you know i'm a doctor i'm a paramedic and
00:34:41.580
i am absolutely so happy because when you talk to actual indigenous people even the pope was just
1.00
00:35:02.460
here we were in edmonton we had the opportunity to speak to lots of residential school survivors yeah
00:35:07.260
and they're like trudeau is not for us he has his own agenda jagmeet singh justin trudeau it's just
00:35:14.040
repugnant that they're campaigning on this um meanwhile we still have 27 first nations communities
00:35:20.260
that don't have clean drinking water um which we're going to be doing a lot on in the next little while
00:35:25.160
here but they'll show up and campaign on these mass graves which in fact are not mass graves some of
00:35:31.720
them it has turned out have been uh upturned apple orchards and that disruption in the soil they
00:35:37.420
thought was a mass grave um i believe there might be like one one or two individuals where they don't
00:35:44.520
know exactly where they were buried lots of these were sort of lost cemeteries um but when you talk
00:35:50.540
about where some of these these sort of lost cemeteries are with indigenous people they're like we've
00:35:55.200
known about this forever this scandal is literally just political uh campaigning and these same
00:36:02.460
politicians who said mass grave mass grave villainy they never came back and said oh i guess we
00:36:06.660
overreacted and maybe maybe we shouldn't have done that because we saw dozens of churches vandalized
00:36:11.780
burned they generated this massive sort of wound and in fact there was this wound that was sort of
00:36:18.300
healing truth and reconciliation was underway um and then they just ripped at that scab as it was
00:36:23.680
healing um and i'm so happy that dre is doing that work and shedding a light on that what's your
00:36:27.800
sort of reaction to that no yeah likewise i really do look forward to seeing that uh once it's fully
00:36:32.220
available um and yeah it's it's a very terrible cycle that a lot of our politicians have fallen into
00:36:38.020
where they'll use sentimentalism to gain people's attention you know they don't i mean honestly most
00:36:43.420
of these politicians probably don't care about these issues that are on the ground let's say when it
00:36:48.040
comes to clean water supply or other issues like that um they they just don't care they use it as
00:36:54.580
like let me put it this way people enjoy rooting for the little guy you know the david and goliath
00:36:59.920
situation not many people are rooting for goliath in these kinds of scenarios they know this so they'll
00:37:06.040
take advantage of that and they'll they'll look to the smallest you know minority or any minority that
0.81
00:37:12.300
they can they'll put that skin suit on and they'll tell you you know you should be sympathetic you
0.77
00:37:17.640
should vote for me because we care about these people when really they don't these politicians
00:37:21.700
use people like this for the reason of sentimentally uh gaining followers and gaining attention because
00:37:28.560
most of the people out there don't actually follow the news in an in-depth manner yeah no 100% so
00:37:34.760
yeah that that it's so funny for all the language of misappropriation that's literally what they're
00:37:39.560
doing oh yeah the other thing too that is so shameful about it is they've also created a
00:37:43.980
narrative that it's like racist to ask questions or be be concerned so it's like we're gonna do all
00:37:49.300
this crazy stuff we're gonna blanket it in the sort of uh indigenous narrative and then if you ask
00:37:55.240
questions about it you're a racist and you're stepping on their their turf that that is not what's
00:37:59.860
happening whatsoever here um that is what they're doing themselves that's what justin trudeau jagmeet
00:38:04.880
saying people like this are doing let's jump back a little bit we're having a conversation
00:38:09.380
about the glaring hypocrisy and i mean you can talk about leonardo dicaprio you can talk about
00:38:14.900
fawcett whoever else um you want to talk about um but justin trudeau really really really just takes
00:38:21.460
the cake oh yeah tell us a little bit about the story yeah trudeau hits the nail on the head when
00:38:25.660
it comes to hypocrisy um and for all of the the crying that he'll do when it comes to you know
00:38:31.500
environmentalism you know we're gonna have zero gas fuel cars by 2035 or whatever fantasies he lives
00:38:37.520
and um i just want to read this one headline for you in one month trudeau used enough fuel to power
00:38:43.840
a trucker convoy in a month and you know right now he's going on vacation right uh kosarica more jet
00:38:51.180
fuel and recently he did this uh pit stop in calgary uh where he flipped some pancakes at a liberal
00:38:57.080
fundraiser event and because the stampede was going on it counted as a stampede event so he's like oh i'm
00:39:02.020
at the stampede you know hi everybody uh even though he gave nobody uh a due warning or due
00:39:07.260
notice that he would be there uh so it was very much so a surprise visit flip some pancakes take
00:39:12.760
some photos leave and that's that's two flights in one day over a photo shoot he didn't even stay
00:39:19.560
a couple extra days to actually do work yeah so if this shows you where he's at i mean the the amount
00:39:24.720
of jet fuel this guy spends is unbelievable and does it say that i think it was like there was 11 days
00:39:30.860
he hasn't been on a jet like in total or something insane in a year probably yeah it would not surprise
00:39:35.880
it's this stuff is it's absolutely just shocking this article is really great actually i urge people
00:39:41.980
to check it out because it breaks down like how many trips you could take in a hummer if you had a
00:39:47.240
honda like you could travel around the world however many times it's it's absolutely just the most
00:39:53.980
bizarre non-business oriented campaigning stuff and this isn't even i'm sure we're going to get
00:40:01.500
a tips on this we know how much this guy drinks and eats and consumes on these flights yeah it is
00:40:07.640
going to be so interesting and let me just add there the byline i think it was the uh justin chordeaux's
00:40:13.720
july jet travel also emitted roughly 85.8 tons of greenhouse gases into the earth's atmosphere
00:40:20.260
the yearly canadian average is 4.1 times so that's about 20 yeah 21 times roughly uh the amount of
00:40:28.900
greenhouse gas and that's just flying in july yeah so in in in just july just his flight alone i can't
00:40:38.100
even imagine the other stuff was basically the equivalent of of like 20 canadians for a whole year
00:40:44.420
same as a trucker convoy or a trucker convoy yeah you think about that you know i think about the
00:40:50.060
convoy that we had here um that that you know what this picture the same amount of fuel for one
00:40:56.300
person danielle smith said she did a 180 on net zero i'm going to do one right now too i'm a radical
00:41:00.840
environmentalist justin trudeau must be stopped um he is the most damaging uh environmental violator
00:41:07.200
in this country's history i am so interested to look back like once he's no longer the leader which
00:41:13.260
hopefully will be soon um to do like a a date like a quotidian cost analysis divide a cost per average
00:41:22.480
compared to past leaders of this country oh yeah i bet it's going to be jarring we could probably do
00:41:27.960
that already sheila's probably watching she's probably already ordering an atip well and what
0.66
00:41:32.760
we got to do is adjust for inflation of course just inflation that's why he's doing it he's like
00:41:37.240
inflation was 10 that's yeah yeah unreal unreal stuff um let's let's jump ahead a little bit
00:41:44.620
to save a little bit of time here but speaking of justin trudeau this is a perfect transition
00:41:49.560
um we've got this really great fun justin trudeau shirt i'm sure you've probably seen it it's doing
00:41:54.920
really well um the amount of people who've come up to me and said hey check out this really great shirt
00:41:59.320
um i got this rebel news store but we've got an ad for it let's just roll that ad i think dave
00:42:03.180
menzies shot this so i loved it exactly he's the best so let's jump to that ad now hey folks check
00:42:09.360
out the newest arrival to the rebel news store yes f is for fidel and f is for father i mean could it be
00:42:19.500
yes it half this photo the colored half is justin trudeau the black and white half is a young fidel
00:42:27.020
castro wait now or is it vice versa it's so confusing i'm a huge forensic files fan wouldn't
00:42:35.020
it be great if we could have a piece of justin's dna and a piece of fidel's dna and put the rumor
00:42:41.680
to bed once and for all but in the meantime we'll just have to walk around wearing this shirt hinting at
00:42:50.740
a great canadian conspiracy or is it in any event if you want to get this shirt folks go to the rebel
00:42:59.960
news store and check this out type in our new discount code that's summer s-u-m-m-e-r and if you buy
00:43:09.660
two unisex t-shirts you get an additional one for free what a deal like i said justin trudeau
00:43:19.900
fidel castro as i used to say on the abc detergent ads do you tell the difference i can't tell the
00:43:27.260
difference that's great i love that shirt you know i one thing i really love we've got so many
00:43:33.460
more designs now um kudos to some of the team i mean danny does some incredible designs i got to
00:43:39.060
give a shout out um some of the stuff that we had for the free the beef campaign which was which
00:43:43.640
was pretty darn successful i might add um but there's a steer on one of the shirts and it says i don't
00:43:48.520
need a warning label whether someone's a rebel fan or they're passionate about beef or their
00:43:53.840
they they think that just that castro is justin's dad there's something for you on rebelnewsstore.com
00:44:01.160
i love that the half of a's shirt i've got that one as well so uh check that out grab a shirt again
00:44:06.220
that goes a long way to keeping us hard at work telling these important stories sid you had a story
00:44:11.840
you wanted to share uh yeah well uh speaking of uh trudeau and the the castro look-alike situation
00:44:17.380
uh if you did want to do any research on that and actually go down to cuba uh or go down to
00:44:22.880
central america to do some investigating well for the last two years if you were unvaccinated that
00:44:27.080
wasn't an option as you know we've had some of the most restrictive some of the most draconian
00:44:31.340
vaccine mandates on the planet um and now we've got this headline here i'm just going to read through
00:44:36.880
the headline um and i'll i'll ask you after court documents reveal canada's travel ban had no
00:44:44.760
scientific basis what does that mean adam i thought science was religion well how could it
00:44:50.480
okay just go on you know i i would never on youtube dare to question the advice of our health officials
00:44:56.540
but it seems that whether it's arthur paulowski the court of appeals rulings or travel bans in the
00:45:03.100
country courts are now beginning to question the validity of some of these decisions um i don't i'm
00:45:10.160
not going to say too much more but it is very interesting and it will be interesting to see what
00:45:13.600
the health officials will be saying moving forward and what government officials will be saying
00:45:18.020
moving forward but even with the ability for the unvaccinated to now travel do you think they're
00:45:23.340
ever going to be able to catch up to trudeau's level of greenhouse gas emissions never never
00:45:27.060
probably not never not as not as individuals i don't think i don't think just the amount of time
00:45:33.040
uh spent sitting waiting for bags and going through security at pearson trudeau doesn't do that
00:45:38.280
and lastly i'll let you take over after is uh we've got what how many six million
00:45:42.860
canadians that were unvaccinated who couldn't travel meanwhile in a month that's how much
00:45:47.680
80 something tons of greenhouse gas emissions is what trudeau is going to spend on jet fuel
00:45:52.480
while millions of canadians are being denied that access to travel and you know the
00:45:57.240
this next story ties in absolutely perfectly but on the just glaring note of double standards and
00:46:04.260
hypocrisy you know what i'm going to talk about the story people are it's really resonating with
00:46:08.380
people uh and while we are having some tech difficulties you guys check that out i got an
00:46:12.940
update from chad williamson of williamson law a 76 year old man was flying i believe from france
00:46:18.860
to canada and being 76 years old having a number of issues i guess he had a double hip replacement
00:46:25.160
he's got some medical concerns while he was eating or taking some breaks trying to catch his breath i know
00:46:30.300
i've got like a little bit of asthma i'm like if ever not that i really wear a mask but the other
00:46:35.740
time flying hat too i'd be like struggling to breathe so this guy he was endeavoring to keep
00:46:41.000
it up and he actually he had it on his face and fell asleep and it slid down while he was sleeping
00:46:46.460
according to to this uh alec uh bielski i'm probably getting that wrong but i wrote it i should probably
00:46:52.120
know um but chad williamson was relaying that effectively it fell down and he was arrested for
00:46:57.900
non-compliance arrested he was endeavoring to wear his mask he didn't get on a plane which i mean i
00:47:04.900
don't necessarily think there's anything wrong with it he didn't get on a plane and say no i do what i
00:47:08.520
want get out of my way he was efforting yeah he wasn't being defiant at all he was just some guy on
00:47:15.500
an airplane you know and it's like uh this is a very simple situation and i can even picture for
00:47:20.900
myself you know very few times have i actually had to wear a mask and one of those times was you know
00:47:26.100
taking a flight and i remember on that flight and the flight back i would you know be on the flight
00:47:32.180
i would make sure i buy a pack of pringles or whatever a pack of snack food i'm not promoting
00:47:36.060
pringles uh just any kind of snack food and then the the rule is when you're on these planes is you're
00:47:41.440
allowed if you're drinking or if you're eating well obviously you can't do that with your mascot
00:47:44.440
so you just sit there for you know however many hours your flight is one by one yeah eating those
00:47:51.080
chips you know you don't you don't put the mask back on you yeah yeah this is exactly this is
00:47:56.760
exactly it it's science you know i can go a whole flight with my mask down because i'm eating something
00:48:00.740
and putting spit into the air and this and that whatever this guy falls asleep and his mask goes
00:48:06.020
down a little bit and he's getting arrested yeah it's unbelievable it's unreal we are looking forward
00:48:09.780
to more details um and we do want to make sure we get the story straight because i guess there was
00:48:14.160
one or two things before where he was taking too long eating and they were kind of harassing him
00:48:18.540
but this seems when he's like okay whatever so he put it on fell asleep it slid down this seems like
00:48:23.640
one of those sort of power hungry power tripping uh flight whatever we're supposed to call the flight
00:48:28.680
helpers um had a vendetta didn't like this guy and i mean from a common sense perspective 76 year
00:48:36.020
old man having some issues that's who you're going to make an example of and see that he's arrested
00:48:39.740
well these flight attendants got to rein it in like i've seen some of the videos where they're
00:48:43.420
they're getting frantic in uh at couples who have children young children who you know it's like a
00:48:49.240
four-year-old or a toddler you know two-year-old a baby that can't wear the mask or won't wear the
00:48:53.740
mask or gets all screaming and everything like that um and they'll kick them off the plane it's like
00:48:57.780
this is a literal child you know how heartless exactly how heartless honestly um and you know we've
00:49:04.480
seen this because a lot of people are traveling not for the sake of luxury like justin trudeau
00:49:09.440
but so that they can see family members who are dying travel daily for photo ops honestly right
00:49:14.500
you're not katherine mckenna or justin trudeau i guess and you know this is the other thing too is
00:49:19.040
the media that has just harped on this well pope francis while these laws were still in effect he
00:49:25.720
sure wasn't wearing a mask when he's flying over canada as well he shouldn't because he's an old
1.00
00:49:30.480
man with serious medical issues you can barely get anywhere it's incredible he crossed the ocean in
00:49:35.540
order to whatever you think of the apology he hauled himself across an ocean to say sorry
00:49:40.340
um by the way which most indigenous people we talk to were they're a little torn over the whole thing
00:49:45.280
but they they took him as earnest for lots of the malice of there are lots of people um buying into
00:49:50.640
justin trudeau's finger pointing at the church when it was in fact the government who paid for
00:49:54.140
and did so much of this residential school stuff trudeau's father has something to do with
00:49:57.740
his father cuts yeah it wasn't until 1997 that the last one was closed but hey we don't want to
00:50:03.940
talk about that it's that old guy who didn't wear a mask on airplane but the what i was getting to
00:50:08.260
sorry excuse my little uh diatribe but the the mainstream media who has been finger pointing
00:50:15.160
and snitching and heralding all these talking points well the pope wasn't wearing a mask they
00:50:20.560
didn't want to seem uncool because pope francis is not wearing a mask there's photos of all of them
00:50:25.660
not wearing masks on this flight exactly it's absolutely wild meanwhile while the we're moving on from
00:50:32.560
the pandemic things are starting to normalize again 76 year old man is arrested yeah it's it's it's
00:50:37.960
absolutely well you know and then there's the problem when you land sorry i'm going off uh but
00:50:42.860
there's a problem when you land with the arrive can app and i think there was another individual
00:50:46.340
an elderly man who was confined to a chair and his i think his son or the person who was with him was
00:50:50.820
arguing with the arrive can person this bureaucrat at the airport um who was saying you know you have to
00:50:56.560
have the arrive can app you have to download you have to do all this and that it's like this older
00:51:00.240
fellow doesn't have a phone yeah and these are the extremes that we're trying to push these
00:51:04.220
individuals to there was an incredible quote uh kian actually sent some of you were probably not
00:51:08.880
going to be able to pull it up on the fly um i think it was actually a national post journalist or
00:51:13.260
something um and they said for everyone tweeting like arrive can work fine for me why don't you go
00:51:20.660
tweet at to journalists writing on indigenous issues that your tap water is perfectly fine yeah
00:51:26.080
because that's basically the gist of it people out there have lost any sense of sympathy
00:51:30.020
and compassion in understanding that like there's people with respiratory issues there's people
00:51:35.340
by the way who have encountered abuse in their life sometimes sexual abuse who the sentiment or even
00:51:41.160
people with psychological issues that lead to sort of sensory problems i know one case we reported on
00:51:46.580
was a young uh girl who was kicked out of school because her doctor's note expired and her doctor was
00:51:53.020
apprehensive about renewing a note because they were afraid they'd get in trouble with the college
00:51:57.060
of physicians this girl changed like seven times when we got to the house like she kept going upstairs
1.00
00:52:03.080
with her parents because the the clothes was bothering her so it had to be just right for her to function
00:52:09.000
a mask was was like a it would be a borderline death sentence the school kicked her out this is the same
00:52:15.140
sort of stuff we've lost compassion we've lost sensibility and sensitivity for other people's issues
00:52:20.340
and it's very often these ultra liberal genteels saying everyone should mask no exceptions well i was
00:52:25.700
uh for one of the stories i was doing it was about a university and a student who was having a a mask
00:52:31.680
i don't call it a battle but a mass dispute uh whether or not he should have had to have worn one
00:52:36.060
on campus and then i looked at the university's uh policy when it came to mask exemptions and part of
00:52:41.880
that policy was the fact that if you have mask related acne if you have mask related you know issues of
00:52:48.200
any kind you know respiratory issues or uh bronchitis or whatever it might be and you have issues like
00:52:53.860
this that are related to you wearing a mask you're not allowed an exemption yeah isn't that just
00:52:59.220
despicable you know i i don't know what to say to that it's unreal well and i mean if you completely
00:53:04.680
accept uh all the health officials narratives which of course we do because we're on youtube
00:53:08.580
someone who has respiratory issues would likely be aware that they're more vulnerable to covet 19
00:53:17.680
and therefore they wouldn't likely not be wearing a mask they would be doing it because they have
00:53:22.520
trouble breathing i'm not gonna lie i'm a big guy i consume a lot of oxygen generally speaking and i'm
00:53:27.960
always talking which doesn't help but i have like a headache for hours after a flight if i have to wear
00:53:34.080
a mask i feel oxygen deprived i don't feel great so imagine someone with a serious respiratory issue
00:53:40.060
or someone even in someone 76 someone in their 80s and everything becomes a little more burdensome as
00:53:46.040
you get older not having any sort of compassion and the problem is is that the people who were
00:53:51.820
compassionate the people who were willing to take a stand uh they they got rid of them all yeah they
00:53:57.560
got rid of them all because lots of them weren't willing to go along with this and that's why the
00:54:01.200
critical thinkers the people who would be resolving so many of these air travel issues
00:54:04.600
today in this country well they're no longer working there yeah i do want to talk about this
00:54:10.560
absolutely unreal uh the dina hinshaw chief medical officer of health yeah i'd love a bonus like that
00:54:17.940
i'll sign up for one of those bonuses is she lying about kids with cancer dying from covet again or what
0.87
00:54:22.500
yeah that must get you a big bonus yeah it's unreal let's put if we can pull up that uh tweet i think
00:54:28.240
daniel smith brian gene i think was one of the first people to comment on this todd lowen i know
00:54:32.260
did a video on it and daniel smith also tweeted about this yeah dina hinshaw say what you will about
00:54:39.320
her bangs um it doesn't matter it doesn't matter if you are a staunch lockdown advocate or a freedom
00:54:48.880
fighting person who doesn't believe in any of this she did not use scientific evidence she sort of
00:54:57.000
followed other places which i mean you could argue maybe they use scientific evidence but it was very
00:55:01.520
much a chase you're chasing your tail uh when she was called to appear in court she had a very hard
00:55:07.060
time sort of saying we did this based on this study um there's a hesitancy to be accountable to be
00:55:13.420
open to questioning um and look at that bonus amount again i can you pull that up on the screen
00:55:18.980
one more time sorry believable it's unbelievable so her base salary already almost four hundred
0.99
00:55:25.060
thousand dollars three hundred and sixty three thousand dollars her covid bonuses 227 000 almost
00:55:33.800
228 000 i guess serb was too good for her yeah yeah and meanwhile us plebs you know we had to struggle
00:55:39.840
we were you know how many of us lost our jobs i used to work in a kitchen you know i can tell you a lot
00:55:44.340
of people in the cooking industry in the restaurant industry i should say lost their jobs along with
00:55:48.760
plenty of other industries and we were what you know get your serve you know you get your little
00:55:53.720
chump change every week every bi-weekly whatever it is meanwhile the bureaucrats who are locking you
0.60
00:55:58.860
down and destroying your jobs hundreds of thousands of dollars bonuses yeah we're all in this together
00:56:04.340
i'm just making 10 20 30 times what you're making it's absolutely offensive and the thing is is the
00:56:11.080
the reason these health bureaucrats arguably are overpaid or well paid is because eventually they
0.93
00:56:17.100
might have to deal with a crisis like this so dean henshaw has been making this almost four hundred
00:56:21.760
thousand dollar salary for years and then finally she has to do something substantive which i mean
1.00
00:56:26.680
most would argue she did a bad job and she gets bonuses this is so just across government across
00:56:33.160
the board and it is so integral that whoever the next leader of the ucp is fixes this because it's
00:56:39.900
insane yeah well how many times has she been caught lying how many times has she advocated for master
0.79
00:56:45.300
vaccines without scientific justification for her doing so yeah and how much of that is tied to these
00:56:50.280
bonuses yeah that's what i want to know yeah it's and that is a very very good question you know though i
00:56:56.280
i honestly my inclination on this is that there's just a it's so it's such a disconnect from the real
00:57:06.640
world that they're just paying their own sort of elite class that is separate from everybody else
00:57:13.520
regardless of anything like these people are just getting bonuses for working a bit of overtime
00:57:18.460
there's no justification a 300 to 400 thousand dollar contract covers a little bit of overtime
00:57:26.300
but a quarter million dollar effectively bonus while the rest of us in this whole narrative of we're all in
00:57:32.580
it together it's sickening it's absolutely and well it falls apart real quick as soon as you realize
00:57:38.800
you can't take trudeau's private jet to costa rica yeah that's where it falls apart yeah because it's
00:57:43.140
their stuff not yours it's their money not yours you get like i mentioned you know your little serve
00:57:48.120
you know a thousand bucks a month or whatever yeah while they get to live lavishly and the other
00:57:51.800
thing too is on on such a core level what that did and there's like these job shortages
00:57:56.940
the people who were working two thousand dollar a month or whatever jobs at mcdonald's well they're
00:58:02.700
like i'm just going to get served exactly the families who were actually for years contributing
00:58:08.700
through high paying jobs to the taxes extensively they got the same serve benefit as a kid who just
00:58:14.880
maybe didn't even graduate university it's it is such an absolute disconnect well that's actually
00:58:20.980
one of the things too is serve is how many prisoners got served yeah people that shouldn't have
00:58:25.140
been getting served we're getting served there's money just flowing out the door with these
00:58:29.320
politicians and none of it's going on there was a gang in montreal that was all claiming serve and
00:58:34.340
buying guns with it exactly like this this stuff is completely disjointed from reality and and there's
00:58:40.800
no sort of connect and the only solution to this is be whether it's the lockdowns you're talking about
00:58:46.060
whether it's the the millions of dollars being paid to a neck unelected health officials the only
00:58:52.640
solution to this there's nothing as far as restructuring or planning or accountability
00:58:59.220
metrics because these people are the one who implement those things we need smaller government
00:59:03.620
i brian gene had this incredible quote at the ucp debate and it was something i'm going to paraphrase
00:59:09.600
but it was something to the effect of we need government that we forget exists exactly like we literally
00:59:14.780
need government the government should not have billion dollars to squander on investment projects
00:59:19.080
because they don't if they have a billion dollars it's because they've either taken it from us
00:59:23.820
through our tax dollars or they borrowed it from our children and then they're paying themselves so
00:59:29.220
much money that if you're making six hundred thousand dollars a year who cares about a little bit of
00:59:32.560
inflation but for families trying to get by i can tell you month to month yeah we like i i paid off
00:59:39.900
like vehicles and i'm i've done everything as best i can but then you look at the month to month that's
00:59:44.680
like oh the the city of calgary took in i don't know millions of surplus so this year my my i think
00:59:50.460
my taxes went up my property taxes went up like 40 bucks a month they took in too much last year
00:59:55.960
now they're bringing their property taxes up 40 bucks a month during a pandemic when so many people
01:00:01.660
are unserved it's it's wild to see what is going on out there um but hopefully i'm i'm honestly
01:00:08.700
skeptical i'm not optimistic this is so institutional that i don't know if there is a leadership candidate
01:00:17.360
for the ucp for the for the federal politics as well that can actually destroy this megalithic
01:00:26.860
disastrous system it is so bad like you need someone extremely and you know it's it's sad to see that
01:00:34.200
jason kenny sort of went the way he did because i think he was enough of a personality with enough
01:00:39.100
experience that he could have gutted this thing and fixed it and set alberta back on track yeah but
01:00:44.900
he he just started playing the game the same as anyone else i don't know if one of these other people
01:00:48.800
i hope i'm wrong and i i'd love to hear from these some of these candidates some of these candidates
01:00:53.220
are saying all the right things but when push comes to shove are they going to say no we're not doing
01:00:59.000
that no health unelected health officials don't get five hundred thousand dollars well and you know
01:01:04.100
i think that's perhaps one of the issues with our political system even though what is it democracy is
01:01:09.260
the worst system except for all the other ones yeah but i think one of the problems is the the
01:01:12.920
donations that are received uh by our politicians in the the heavy donors that back them you know
01:01:18.760
you don't hear about them necessarily when they're campaigning and the the individual who is
01:01:23.060
campaigning may stick to what they say for as long as they can but once they're in that position of
01:01:27.960
power once those big donors are like you're not making change you want to be in here next round
01:01:32.480
well then you're going to have to play ball so there there is that that pressure that does come
01:01:36.520
from these heavy donors and these heavy uh sponsors and people who just generally have a vested interest
01:01:41.260
in the narrative going a certain way they'll they'll cling to these individuals and then come election
01:01:46.260
time whoever actually comes out of the day winning well then we see who they really are and you know
01:01:51.960
the the interesting thing there and i think that's something this is in the united states this is right
01:01:55.520
across canada something that needs to be uh sort of addressed we're running tight on time we'll speed
01:01:59.820
up after this but um is there are actually like reasonable election rules so people can't massively
01:02:07.060
contribute directly to a campaign but one of the problems is like you look at organizations like
01:02:11.300
the trudeau foundation like people while in office making a set amount and not and this is every
01:02:17.240
politician it doesn't matter if it's bush or obama or trudeau or whoever um they they come out of the
01:02:24.160
office millionaires yeah when they weren't necessarily when they went in there needs to
01:02:29.620
be metrics of accountability because that is purchased influence categorically um i really
01:02:35.500
quickly want to get through some of this other stuff here um particularly you know should we do one
01:02:41.420
ad let's do one ad and then we'll wrap up super quickly um we'll see if we have any chats coming in
01:02:45.960
here as well i haven't gotten any messages yet but we'll see if any chats but let's throw to this
01:02:52.960
adam sos here for rebel news you know our company is growing quickly and we'd actually like for your
01:03:01.380
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01:03:06.100
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01:03:19.660
so just waiting to hear back from the studio if we do have any super chats or engagement from you
01:03:27.600
guys um so hopefully they can hear okay wonderful so those will be coming uh momentarily here i believe
01:03:33.040
in the meantime yeah so you've got that uh pope article there is that the one you were looking at
01:03:37.420
yeah let's talk about that one quickly and then we'll get into these chats so of course as you guys
01:03:41.420
know the pope was in town uh i guess i should say in edmonton in canada he also went to quebec uh for
01:03:47.740
a little while and you were actually up there in edmonton uh to see this visit uh i guess come true
01:03:53.540
how was it what what was the from start to finish the end feeling of it yeah you know i what i went
01:04:01.140
the sentiment i went with and it's so interesting i think if you actually think about the people in a
01:04:04.740
sort of compassionate way um and you're genuinely interested in ameliorating situations pope francis
01:04:09.540
said that he hopes this is an opportunity for healing i went and spoke with one of the priests
01:04:13.460
who's involved in organizations saying you know that's great looking to the past and apologizing
01:04:18.060
is great but there's oil water advisories that are still in place from the residential school era
01:04:23.440
wouldn't it mean a lot more to do something tangible and that is almost universally what i heard
01:04:29.860
from people exactly is you know what let's let's have a let's have some tangible action let's have
01:04:38.040
some meaningful progress on things like clean water rather than simply apologizing for the past because
01:04:44.300
that would indicate through actions an actual change of heart exactly um so i think people
01:04:49.020
many people wanted to i was i was sitting with some mainstream media when they put the headdress
01:04:54.540
on and they tried to pressure those chiefs and elders into saying oh no and they said no we've
01:05:00.320
appointed him we've adopted him as one of our leaders yeah so i think the indigenous response was
01:05:04.580
it's hard and it's emotional but i believe him i i think that there was some of that there's that
01:05:12.060
incredible shot um there's still attempts to politicize this but i think the general overall
01:05:19.000
sentiment that i got was let's uh let's do something now let's let this extend to more than simply
01:05:29.080
uh an apology yeah what can this what can this do what was your take on that well no no i i like what
01:05:36.500
you're saying there and uh as well it's uh let's do something instead of acting like the ndp or acting
01:05:41.380
like the liberals who will just advocate for these individuals without actually giving them uh any good
01:05:46.900
resolve by the end of the day uh and that uh brings me to this uh headline there i see so after pope
01:05:52.700
called residential schools genocide the house of commons should too ndp mp so we have that uh
01:06:00.760
article there what do you think about that i mean i mean sure uh the pope calls residential schools
01:06:06.180
genocide but then this ndp mp what what what do you take of their perspective you know i i think that
01:06:14.700
and this is very sort of progressive language so i'm apprehensive to use it um but i think the
01:06:20.780
intention from the federal government by the way um who who instituted funded rounded people up
01:06:26.620
was very much and if if you don't like me using this progressive terminology i apologize in advance
01:06:31.560
the term sort of a cultural genocide i think is actually apropos it's it's very fitting because
1.00
01:06:37.720
the intention was to sort of delete the culture delete the language delete all of that so that they
0.96
01:06:44.200
could basically be assimilated into society um and so i think that that terminology is appropriate
01:06:51.960
i think this this rhetoric of calling the entire residential school program a genocide which is
01:06:59.800
evidenced by the fact that these mass graves it turns out they aren't mass graves most of the sort
01:07:04.260
of unmarked grave scenarios were like tuberculosis math mass deaths and there were proper burials
01:07:10.300
at the least do you think it's fair to say that this is a ideological genocide or a genocide of
01:07:15.300
the ideology because that that was kind of the purpose of the residential school is not the purpose
01:07:20.020
of the school wasn't you know take as many indigenous kids as you can and kill them no uh it was take them
0.97
01:07:24.360
away from their heritage their culture and ingrain into them the the backbone of the bible so to speak
0.99
01:07:30.500
from not necessarily from the most religious perspective but from those in the state who were facilitating this
01:07:37.140
yeah their their intention was very much and you can look into the the history of this from the
01:07:41.940
government yourself the government was just brutal there were times where they used terminology like
01:07:47.660
the indian experiment has failed and we must let them die um and then the catholic church actually said
01:07:53.600
whoa whoa we don't do that we're not going to let these people die uh by those points very often the
01:07:58.940
indigenous communities were dependent on the residential schools on the mission on the work that was being
01:08:03.560
done but the government's legacy on this make no mistake about it the intention behind residential
01:08:08.500
schools was to completely incorporate them into society now was that from a place of evil colonialism
01:08:17.520
the issue is as in europe they were sending their kids off to boarding schools in order for them to
01:08:23.880
be indoctrinated into society as well well it's um naivety and separation right like if you're across the
01:08:29.740
pond in england and you're somehow have a hand in this colonialization of north america and these
01:08:35.600
residential schools well you're looking at it from across the pond right so there there's already a
01:08:39.900
separation of okay well i send my kids to school they're they're going to send their kids to school
01:08:43.860
right it makes sense and it but then you come here and you see you know how it ends up exactly and it
01:08:49.300
doesn't excuse it and it doesn't discount what happened but i think we have to be one of the
01:08:54.740
conversations i had with the priest who was instrumental in organizing is truth and
01:08:58.100
reconciliation in the title is that word truth so if we are going to base the process of
01:09:05.220
reconciliation on rhetoric and lies and justin trudeau campaigns and allegations that these were
01:09:11.620
concentration camps there's never going to be reconciliation because that's not earnest dialogue
01:09:17.080
that is destructive rhetoric it's not a conversation it's not a healing uh process whatsoever um so i think
01:09:26.600
we have to be careful when we're using language because so much of what we've we've seen so much
01:09:33.320
of the division so much of the picking at that scab is because of politicians using language to make
01:09:37.880
points instead of attempting to address issues we're over time it's been great chatting with you uh we
01:09:42.920
have some some super chat so i'll read them out uh they'll pop up on the screen um and then we can
01:09:47.820
sort of interact with them uh sundrez says please interview christopher james do you know christopher
01:09:52.720
james there's probably a few i'm not sure yeah i'm not sure i don't know christopher james i will
01:09:56.700
look up christopher james uh sundrez also chips in two sorry six dollars on the first one chips in two
01:10:02.960
bucks and says please interview dr daniel nagasi from roomby alberta i have interviewed dr daniel
01:10:07.740
nagasi i think you have too i don't i know i have once or twice in fact twice for sure um and i think
01:10:13.320
drea may have as well but we've done a lot of uh i might have briefly yeah we've done a lot of
01:10:17.820
interviews with dr daniel nagasi very interesting fellow for sure and uh yeah he's smart and he's
01:10:23.320
direct and he doesn't shy away from things so yeah i think we have to do uh i don't think we can have
01:10:28.500
him on youtube though so you might have to check rumble yeah um yeah sundrez also says six young
01:10:33.780
doctors died last week in toronto from i don't even know if i can say this on youtube i can't for sure
01:10:39.280
um but just i'm gonna say six young doctors died last week in toronto from the i don't know
01:10:44.920
from something the the the thing that we're not allowed to say allegations made yeah um nothing to
01:10:50.060
do with that there is an article on that as well i can't someone wrote up a really great article on
01:10:54.400
that so that is out there um frasbo gives five bucks and says facts are facts quebec gets billions
01:11:00.740
of dollars from alberta that is why they stayed in confederation fact is alberta can go on its own
01:11:05.580
if the trudeau liberals stay in power i can see the breakup of canada the other thing we have to
01:11:10.380
do is rid ourselves of the wef and who yeah i think that's a fair comment to make yeah so well
0.98
01:11:18.660
and it comes to quebec as well i mean um well when it comes to the energy industry they mostly rely on
01:11:24.260
uh hydrodams yeah and that kind of production and they're i mean they signed a pretty deal with
01:11:29.460
labrador newfoundland and labrador a long time ago to get a lot of their energy for free not a lot
01:11:33.280
nowadays but back in the day um so they they just like taking from other problems yes i think that's
01:11:37.680
they like that and you know what it's uh a lot of people now are saying you know what
01:11:41.520
quebec said you know what we're out of here and then they got a deal i think lots of people on alberta
01:11:45.900
are and they're they're not emptily emptily threatening but they're like we're gonna go like
01:11:50.680
this this is a an abusive relationship if i could just touch on that i mean there's the federal
01:11:55.200
government and then there's the provincial governments and personally i don't actually have
01:11:58.340
a problem with quebec or whatever because they're just taking advantage of the federal government
01:12:02.200
when it comes to abusing the other provinces they're taking advantage of the federal government
01:12:06.440
whereas the other provinces and like alberta well we're being taken advantage of by the federal
01:12:10.960
government so you know this this uh squandering between alberta and quebec i think it's more so
01:12:15.700
just the federal government not knowing how to facilitate provinces that want different things
01:12:19.120
i think we have so much in common actually and when you start it was interesting you'll talk with
01:12:24.120
like some of those will be uh like quebec rodeo guys and alberta rodeos on a sort of fundamental
01:12:29.560
level we're both like leave us alone and i'm exactly i'm french so i can say this to an extent
01:12:34.020
i think i think the french can be a little uh quicker to anger um so alberta is just taking its
01:12:41.080
time but quebec was like this is ridiculous we're not doing this we're out of here so they got this
01:12:45.440
deal alberta's like wait a minute those guys might have been on to something uh quebecers and
01:12:49.640
albertans have more in common than you might think oh sure um sundress gives us another three
0.71
01:12:55.880
dollars and says something i absolutely cannot say on youtube nor will we post it but thank you
01:13:01.980
very much i really appreciate your support and we'd be happy to discuss it elsewhere certainly
01:13:05.860
um braspo gives one dollars back in 1972 national airlines had the best ads on tv here's a youtube
01:13:12.780
one i bet uh you couldn't show this ad today probably not still the farm smile on my face we can't share
01:13:19.620
the link but i'm sure national airlines you can youtube and check out that ad uh c1 cast gives
01:13:25.860
two dollars and said why would hinshaw not allow doctors to try early treatments with proven safe
01:13:31.200
drugs that may have caused the death of many people i think this is probably safe to say um and then
01:13:37.720
something something hush money that i won't say well i um in terms of the the hush money aspect i mean
01:13:43.660
who's to say right you know it's it's i'm not a right hand you know man i'm not there to detail
01:13:49.420
everything of what happened in her career over the last two years right but uh certainly when you
01:13:54.540
receive those kinds of funds and there's a narrative being emitted by hundreds of experts and politicians
01:14:01.860
around the world well you're likely to want to emanate that yeah um so and you know the other thing
01:14:07.340
on that that i think i will say that is completely safe and sort of self-evident and that no one should
01:14:12.000
have take umbrage with the lack the the sort of comorbidities that contributed to serious outcomes
01:14:18.340
the lack of sort of advocacy from health care officials to like go to the gym and get in shape
01:14:25.880
and address some of these comorbidities to significantly reduce negative outcomes um that's
01:14:31.080
this is not discounting something they they said or questioning it it's wondering why it wasn't sort
01:14:35.700
of emphasized because we did see that that was a sort of massive contributing factor to serious
01:14:40.860
negative outcomes so they'll tell you to take the drugs but they won't tell you to be healthy yeah
01:14:44.520
and i'm here happily not as a doctor not offering medical advice but pretty safely saying that it's
01:14:51.200
probably not a bad thing to be healthy i think that's all for our chats i don't think we're missing
01:14:57.160
anything else i want to thank you guys so much for the great interaction i once again want to thank
01:15:01.820
our sponsor the alberta prosperity project you can find out the incredible work they're doing
01:15:06.360
on so many of these issues we talked about alberta alberta issues fair deal for alberta
01:15:10.860
alberta sovereignty yeah so check those guys out and as well i just want to say uh you know if
01:15:15.180
alberta does end up ever taking that road of separation i'm sure the alberta prosperity project
01:15:20.640
will have a strong hand in helping the province and as well for those who were are in other areas
01:15:25.760
of the country who might not want to be in those parts of the country once alberta decides to
01:15:30.320
separate well come on over alberta is one of the most loving places in canada so
01:15:34.140
um i would encourage it and i i'm sure the app has a lot a lot more to add plenty of room at the
01:15:39.740
table so again thanks so much good alberta prosperity project.com and as always one thing
01:15:45.120
so much said good job today thanks to everyone in the rebel studios for making this possible
01:15:49.080
and most importantly thanks so much for you watching at home if you weren't there
01:15:53.120
we simply wouldn't be doing this so we really appreciate it yeah we're brought to you by the
01:15:57.180
viewers so that's you guys and thank you very much thanks