Rebel News Podcast


DAILY | Supreme Court overturns Roe v. Wade; All-day waits for passports; Justinflation


Summary

In this live stream, we talk about the situation in the passport office in quebec and what happens if you miss your flight and you have to wait in the rain to get your passport in time. We also talk about how the government is handling the situation and what they should do about it.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 hello everybody hello matt so we are i'm good how about you i'm doing well yeah good to see
00:00:26.000 you again it's been a little while it's been a while huh uh it's so bad you are the opposite of the
00:00:32.800 canada that's just how it is so yeah canada in 2022 so welcome to everybody who are joining us
00:00:42.680 for the live stream daily live stream we are always live between 12 to 1 for the eastern time
00:00:52.840 of course um so today we have lots lots of topics to cover up um but in case or maybe if we are going
00:01:03.720 to touch a subject that um as you know like youtube doesn't like and can censor uh we will change
00:01:11.880 platform but i think today we are fine i think uh we have nothing uh that we cannot discuss on
00:01:17.980 youtube especially like when we think at bilcyon 11 that's coming up um we're not talking now about
00:01:25.240 it but um yes so you can follow us on youtube rumble super you and odyssey and as well get her
00:01:34.340 so um if you don't want to follow youtube and another platform let you're free to go to another
00:01:42.520 platform if you want to chat with us if we have like something that you want to discuss about what
00:01:47.500 we are talking about you're going to send us a super chat so we will answer to all of your
00:01:53.620 questions at the end um of the live stream and um and let's dig on what we wanted to talk about today
00:02:03.020 uh matt uh how is the passport office in your place because here in quebec is crazy
00:02:13.780 well i'll tell you this much i was looking on facebook marketplace yesterday and i thought
00:02:19.320 you know what maybe it's time that i get a part-time job waiting at the passport office
00:02:23.360 because people people are charging thousands of dollars right now to wait out you know for 24 or
00:02:29.640 48 hours sometimes longer than that you know to get to get their passport spot in time because
00:02:35.260 people are getting stuck here and it's it's i never i've never seen anything like this in my
00:02:39.700 lifetime so it's pretty crazy yeah here is i went there i went to montreal because i knew that it
00:02:47.480 was the total cow uh the day before i went there i know that people have run rush run like inside of
00:02:55.460 the building it was a complex gifabo in montreal and um so the thing is like people were claiming for
00:03:03.240 a ticket because nobody was giving like number of tickets for waiting online so everybody was like
00:03:08.380 doing whatever they want and so the police intervened they came inside and they pushed
00:03:13.920 everybody out of the building and now people are stuck in the street like especially in the street
00:03:20.440 day and night they are sleeping there they say like i have an appointment but i'm not trusting
00:03:25.280 nobody because nobody told me like i should go home everybody say no don't leave because you can
00:03:32.060 leave like lost your place and i saw people crying in my face like saying like we just lost our flight
00:03:39.300 it was this morning we lost it and some people like was the night that the same day at night that i was
00:03:48.160 talking with them and they were like i didn't have to get they take 80 people per day and they say
00:03:53.520 i'm gonna lose my flight i'm gonna lose my entire vacation costs and some people like that i was
00:04:01.460 talking with it was a group of five or six people uh they needed to pay 800 dollars each for change the
00:04:09.100 date of their flight for the day after imagine who will pay them like the cost because some of them
00:04:17.060 have applied in april and mid april or beginning of april and they had the special date like they had
00:04:24.560 like uh the date in june to receive it but it didn't receive it so um so what do you do when you have
00:04:32.540 an expecting date to arrive of your passport you did your job you apply on time you pay your your flight
00:04:40.360 afterwards and and you never like receive your passport and now you wait like outside uh and one
00:04:48.820 of the night it was pouring rain like i'm not pretty kidding so a woman say like my my my father that is
00:04:57.280 is the ability needed to cover like during the night because i have two little children at home that cannot
00:05:03.060 be alone and my my dad was sleeping there it under the rain for waiting for me and since um they were
00:05:14.340 going to lose their flight and same if they did that like what what happens if they miss their flight
00:05:21.220 there's obviously no accountability from the government there's no you know reimbursement of lost travel
00:05:26.340 fees and these are people who went out of their way above and beyond months ahead of time to make this
00:05:32.000 all happen so i mean what's the government's excuse as to why things are so backed up nationally i don't
00:05:37.920 understand what the problem is the the problem is um people are working from home so we have about
00:05:46.360 29 000 employees for uh canada services 18 of them 18 000 of them are working from home and just in the
00:05:56.920 province of Quebec it's 3 600 people who are still working from home this is incredible ontario is
00:06:05.180 about 6 000 and something um i think the west is 5 000 and something but imagine you cannot produce a
00:06:14.080 passport with like really serious like confidentiality information from home if they are doing that from
00:06:22.040 home i will like say i'm a bit scared for my private information if they are doing that from their
00:06:27.860 place because everybody can hack the access of these information so it's supposed to be like a central
00:06:35.840 bank of data that they they cannot have access from the office but now what we can see is like most of the
00:06:44.320 people are working from home so and and one day um one of the the people were waiting they say they went
00:06:51.560 out and say oh sorry we have one of the printer uh that is uh not working so we need to repair it but
00:06:59.840 i asked them like i said uh how many like printer they have inside
00:07:03.940 oh my goodness so like it's like 50 percent like of the production was like down
00:07:13.920 and i was like nobody's doing anything like the federal should could have like
00:07:21.660 like resolve this problem asking people work from home to say you go back at the office and you work
00:07:31.520 people will work during the night and as well the weekend so we will like do a bunch of working
00:07:37.580 right now solve that problem and after that we will get back to normal but what they did
00:07:44.660 nothing it seems like uh you know the the tinfoil hat conspiracy theorists in me can't help but think
00:07:53.580 that all of this backup is intentional you know because once identification verification all moves
00:07:59.420 towards biometrics and being digital well now you don't have to go to the passport office in person
00:08:03.720 and now you don't have to wait in line and you can just send your eye scan or your your thumb print
00:08:08.460 through your phone and then you know pick up your passport so i don't know it it's really strange to
00:08:13.880 see like all of our canadian infrastructures just slowly decaying and breaking down over the past
00:08:19.820 couple years and a part of me sometimes i think it's just you know incompetence but there comes a
00:08:25.700 point where you have to wonder like is it really just incompetence because this isn't this is
00:08:29.900 inexcusable like our travel system in canada has basically become the lapping stock of the western
00:08:34.880 world over the past you know six months especially so i really hope that we can figure it out especially
00:08:39.540 for the sake of these people who all did the right thing and i need to get home or need to travel for
00:08:43.600 work or whatever else it's really tragic but the only thing here is like the government knew that
00:08:50.320 that will happen like with all the restriction left with the travel restriction left for some of them
00:08:58.640 because uh our quarantine is still there for unvaccinated um but still they knew that that will
00:09:07.400 happen and how it's worked it's like when you made the passport most of the time it's good for 10 years
00:09:14.240 or five years so yeah probably a bunch of people didn't make their passport that went to a hand
00:09:22.260 at the beginning of the pandemic and through the two years so every passport that going to end out of
00:09:31.040 their time and now you cannot travel if your passport is just valid for like couple of months i think it's
00:09:36.820 six months so everybody in this all large scale of time that just realized in the same time oh we are going
00:09:44.060 to travel because now it's summer vacation is there we can do it it says and we were not able to do it
00:09:51.720 since two years okay and everybody applying the same time but the federal government should have known
00:09:58.620 that it's coming up and they probably knew that it was coming up but the thing is like we know that
00:10:03.960 the digital identity as you say they want to implement that in especially for pearson airport and
00:10:11.140 montreal airport and as we know that air canada is one of the partnership of this digital identity too
00:10:18.400 so at the end of the day like the like the airport say oh we solved the problem but they can sell some
00:10:26.120 of the flight most of the flights of course that they solve the problem but uh they think it's like
00:10:31.860 all these people are waiting online for having their passport but it's not only the the people who wait
00:10:37.280 for their passport need to know that people are waiting for their their visa to come into canada
00:10:43.800 are not capable to have it in time so a lot of people are stuck in their country and say uh we
00:10:49.860 cannot travel in canada because uh we didn't receive our visa in time so it's really bad for tourism
00:10:57.260 and it's really bad for our economy as well who would want to come to canada anymore
00:11:03.520 i wonder that every day but a lot of people wonder like if the people waiting for their passport is it
00:11:14.620 for running away or for going to vacation it's terrible yeah and you know like in in la presse
00:11:24.780 newspaper they were saying like oh yeah but passport canada are going to check for if your flight is
00:11:32.480 coming up soon so you will be prioritized and and uh shouldn't they have been doing this from the
00:11:39.480 beginning though but why just now i don't understand i don't know but they they are not doing it so i
00:11:47.820 asked a couple of people do do uh the officer like come to talk to you because it's not um agent or
00:11:54.700 officer that's from passport canada that come outside they are security so security doesn't
00:12:02.100 talk to talk to people at all you just ask them if you are from for your passport you still wait
00:12:08.880 online for people who have other uh appointments for canada services like paying tax or anything
00:12:15.260 but that's you don't wait you just go inside with them but when it comes with the passport
00:12:21.420 you need to wait online but nobody i have asked them do you have a flight that's coming up
00:12:27.960 no no nobody came to talk to them same like the legacy media i've been pushed out to record them
00:12:36.600 and to to report there they have been pushed out of the office and so something is going on there
00:12:44.340 uh that nobody wants us to report on and either like mainstream so this is a kind of uh hilarious uh
00:12:54.460 and outrageous uh dark time i think it's a dark time when you you see like some some of the american
00:13:01.760 people were walking in the street asking like what is going on here and when people were saying like
00:13:07.540 oh we are waiting for our passport they were like what yeah it's crazy it reminds me of seeing footage
00:13:14.860 from like venezuela of people like lined up in the passport offices and trying to get out of the country
00:13:19.460 but they can't it's like really bizarre to see that happening in canada but um yeah but if our
00:13:24.640 it's not only canada that's true that's true but if our liberal government has taught us anything
00:13:31.320 you know all we need is a little bit of international media coverage and then trudeau
00:13:35.580 will do a little you know he'll dance and do his doggy trick and he'll make something happen real
00:13:40.440 quick and snap his fingers but it seems like he doesn't really care what canadians are dealing with
00:13:44.680 and just again it's just more of the same you know because i i saw that after posting a lot of
00:13:51.700 thing about the passport in canada a lot of people say oh in france is the same sweden is the same but
00:13:58.360 it's look like it's mostly g g7 country interesting
00:14:03.520 so what are they what's the whole what's the hold up what are they trying to push through before they
00:14:10.600 renew everybody's 10-year passports i don't know but it's just interesting to see that it's not
00:14:17.600 the third world country or it's not um you know small country it's really about the biggest
00:14:25.320 like country as uh france canada sweden uh but sweden is that big but it's it's a country that it's
00:14:33.340 kind of we we we talk a lot about sweden and we did talk a lot about uh switzerland too because
00:14:41.920 switzerland didn't like join like all these restrictions and everything so like it's mostly
00:14:50.720 about rich country i would say like really developed country that when we look at maybe uh colombia or
00:14:57.660 um other country in south africa south america i didn't say i didn't hurt anybody waiting like
00:15:06.580 that for passport yeah i mean they don't travel as much yeah fair enough so uh it looks like it looks
00:15:19.520 like trudeau just did another interview with cbc radio uh defending of course defending his vax mandates
00:15:25.940 in the emergency act decision this this guy can't take he can't take accountability for anything it's
00:15:31.380 like it's almost like if he feels like if he admits he was wrong about one thing just one little thing
00:15:36.880 then you know there will be a crack in the patina that is this perfectly put together world leader and
00:15:42.940 everyone will see him for the you know the failed dictator that he is and it's really it's really
00:15:47.880 embarrassing but you know he leads off by saying you know justin trudeau says people who chose not to
00:15:54.060 be vaccinated against covid19 must accept the consequences of those decisions including lost
00:15:58.860 employment and restricted access to transportation and other services it was their choice and nobody
00:16:04.000 ever was going to force anyone into doing something they don't want to do the prime minister said in an
00:16:09.740 interview with cbc radio's the house airing on saturday but there are consequences when you don't
00:16:14.720 you cannot choose to put at risk your co-workers you cannot choose to put at risk the people sitting
00:16:19.960 beside you on an airplane trudeau said before leaving for international summits in africa and
00:16:23.920 europe leaving for international summits in africa and europe eight days after he tested positive for
00:16:28.440 covid not even following his own restrictions so i don't know why he was allowed to travel or leave
00:16:32.780 the country but i guess you know more more examples of rules for thee and and not for me
00:16:38.600 but it's really uh again it's just this divisive rhetoric that isn't scientists scientific and it's been
00:16:44.860 debunked by multiple governing bodies and scientific bodies internationally but again our prime minister
00:16:50.320 just sticks to talking points and you know political ideology and he just he won't take any
00:16:57.720 responsibility for the damage that he's he's caused to our national fabric and not only that he'd rather
00:17:02.560 just not look at it it's really disgusting i'm really tired of it to be honest i i find that so
00:17:10.460 like stupid when we see like you were wrong admit it yeah like it's it's only two words i'll like three
00:17:20.940 words i was wrong you were wrong like what are you saying it doesn't make sense when we look like it
00:17:29.920 me i always take that example for the traveling when i go to montreal i cannot take a train
00:17:35.660 that is way more spaces way more like good for the air and you're not really close to nobody
00:17:43.680 but you can you can take a bus a bus that you are like that with someone else the air is not really
00:17:52.920 good and uh at the end of the day i have more risk in the bus than in the train so where is the science
00:18:01.920 in this yeah i'm sure you cannot explain no period no it's just punitive and it's the same with the
00:18:10.460 with the emergency act you know this flip-flop saying yeah we consulted with the police to invoke
00:18:15.540 the emergency act and the police wanted it and then you know police literally the same police they
00:18:20.180 claimed they you know consulted on record saying no we did we didn't you know so it's just uh
00:18:26.780 it's this this article makes an interesting point in cbc it says he's taking on about him taking on
00:18:33.540 more divisive uh traditions there's a little bit of uh pierre trudeau in his politics the longer he's
00:18:37.900 in office which meaning meaning now that he's been in there long longer he's more he's more willing
00:18:42.880 to scrum with the media he's not worried about being liked as much um which i guess we're we're
00:18:48.200 definitely seeing but you know what like if he was willing and i will say as as someone who's obviously
00:18:54.040 a very vocal uh uh critic of of trudeau and the liberal policies um the thing that that gets me
00:19:04.540 the most is the gaslighting and how stubborn they are if you could admit that you were wrong just for
00:19:09.460 one second okay well then at least that opens a window for dialogue and discourse at least we can
00:19:14.820 feel like we're meeting on an equal plane and we can have a conversation we can work through the
00:19:18.540 issues that are facing our country together and that instills trust in our institutions even if i
00:19:23.860 disagree with you if i feel like you know you're man enough or humble enough to admit that you were
00:19:28.440 wrong okay well then we can start there but when you're not and when you just double down on things
00:19:33.420 that are obviously wrong like you know i've been i've been debunked and refuted and failed over and
00:19:38.980 over again issue after issue after issue it's like okay well you're not you're not uh a benevolent
00:19:45.360 leader you're a dictator at that point because there is where where is the democracy you're going around
00:19:50.320 the whole world talking about how we need to combat you know failing democracy in nation states and like
00:19:56.520 you're contributing to it you're leading that that charge so it's very uh yeah i don't know it's
00:20:03.820 to talk about for me it's just losing losing more and more rights and i think like what we get
00:20:13.720 through the years we are losing it like slowly um just by example uh the trial uh the supreme court that
00:20:24.600 just like um gave the verdict about joe and wade uh trial yeah uh this is another proof of losing
00:20:33.960 rights that we fight for it that supreme court have given in 1973
00:20:41.680 three the right of the woman for abortion and now they just lost everything um and i was just
00:20:50.460 looking like a row row it was um a divorced woman who who win the right of abortion in 1973
00:21:00.440 and and now i don't know what happened but the supreme court gave the right to ban abortion
00:21:08.240 and now we are talking about most of half of the states in united states that want
00:21:14.900 to ban abortion what is it done you as a man about this
00:21:21.140 yeah it's uh it's interesting because things are more polarized and divided than ever um traditionally
00:21:32.620 the united states being a republic it works a little bit differently than than canada does
00:21:38.400 meaning uh traditionally the states are supposed to have more individual powers and because there's
00:21:44.720 such a strong evangelical christian base i was that are socially conservative in the united states and
00:21:50.020 it's built into their fabric you know obviously there are some people who feel uh male or male or
00:21:56.280 female they feel that uh abortion is is is murder right um so the question is what it's it's tough it's
00:22:05.300 like it's one of those it's a it's a it's a it's a perspective on life where coming from it on opposite
00:22:13.000 sides you're going to see things completely differently right um and this is this is maybe
00:22:17.740 not a fair example but i was on a missionary trip in uganda two summers ago and uh there was this girl
00:22:24.860 there um so in in you in uganda um young girls are not very valued and the reason why that is is
00:22:33.440 because a family will maybe have eight to ten children uh the women marry off so they can only
00:22:39.400 afford to send one or two kids to school usually the boys because the boys go to school to get
00:22:43.980 educated and they come back to the village and they work for the village raise money for the village and
00:22:48.520 whatever else so it's very like 50 people in that community may be reliant on one or two people who go
00:22:54.120 to school and come back um so this this girl she was uh one of the fortunate ones she was educated
00:23:00.480 she was actually college educated and when she was in college um she basically got date raped by
00:23:06.460 somebody that she was she thought was her friend and uh she decided to have the child and you know at
00:23:13.860 17 years old i was asking her well you know why when when you had why would you decide to do that
00:23:21.220 especially given like the social conditions there specifically and she said to me she's like you
00:23:25.760 know when the tears are in her eyes she said to me like it wasn't his fault like it wasn't my son's
00:23:30.500 fault he didn't ask for that and i was just like i was really profound i was profoundly shooken by that
00:23:35.840 like really in my spirit like that really like broke my heart because i see obviously there's in in
00:23:42.860 society we argue the extremes right it's only the it's the extreme voices that get the loudest attention
00:23:48.720 like the the people that um you know are champ are are showing up at pro-abortion rallies claiming they
00:23:56.840 want to use it as like a contraceptive and they love having abortions i love killing babies like we've
00:24:01.840 all seen like the social clips the people that are very loud and very and that you know but it's
00:24:05.820 obviously life is more nuanced than that and it's and most people fall into that like 95 percent of
00:24:10.800 people fall into that gray area category so it's just it was really um sobering to me anyways to see
00:24:17.640 like a little bit of a different take and it really opened my eyes up to realizing that it's
00:24:21.520 not as calm it's actually far more complicated sorry than the the talking heads make it out to be
00:24:27.380 and it's very personal you know um either way you know because it seems you know and i feel strange
00:24:36.100 even speaking on this but to be honest like yes could there be more infrastructure could we provide
00:24:42.020 more infrastructure for women who decide to have children outside of wedlock and outside of uh
00:24:47.060 that social safety net yes certainly however is being born into poverty a good enough reason to not
00:24:53.500 live and i would i don't think that that's the case either so there has to be some sort of
00:24:58.980 middle middle ground there but anyways this is it's a little early in the morning to be talking about
00:25:04.500 abortion me my point is um yeah for abortion i i understand both both sides like i understand that
00:25:16.440 some are using it uh instead of contraceptive pill uh like they just get pregnant all the time and just
00:25:23.460 get aborted that it's easygoing thing but i understand that in another way some people
00:25:30.080 like sometimes you get older as a woman and you think that you will not
00:25:36.980 fall pregnant okay and and and when that happened you just like have like big eyes and just like
00:25:44.200 what is happening right now like i'm too old what's going on i thought like my body would not
00:25:49.140 be able to create anymore uh as when you get close to menopause or you know so sometimes it's just
00:25:57.000 like a surprise and it's a bad surprise when you get like a certain age if you have a baby you can
00:26:03.780 have like a really bad consequences on your body and some of some of the women can die as well like
00:26:09.980 having baby too late because it it's not the time for having it like 30 or into 20 it's probably the best
00:26:19.340 time but when you get too close to 50 or late 40 it's not really good for a woman and it's not very
00:26:27.820 good for the baby as well like because baby can have more like um i i would say genetic disease or
00:26:35.400 or other malformation or you can have like other disease created because the body are not as much
00:26:42.960 nutritious nutritious for the baby as i say like with like nutriment or other other stuff uh but my
00:26:51.840 point is now that that pass legally imagine some woman who was waiting for the appointment
00:27:00.740 receive a call from the clinic i'm sorry but um we cannot proceed to your abortion uh we are sorry about
00:27:09.140 it and so all these women turn to other state that need that would probably do some abortion
00:27:18.720 they call them right oh we are sorry we don't have any space because everything filled up in a couple of
00:27:25.480 uh hours before days before or so they need to travel really far away they don't have money so they
00:27:34.220 will ask money for other people for the gas because the gas is incredible like i and they will need to
00:27:41.140 travel to there to get an abortion because some people have like what i think being raped or some people
00:27:49.660 um they met a guy that like i don't know if you know but as a woman i know that when you begin in life
00:27:59.080 and you have like a very sexual like relation but i will say that some guy doesn't want to wear a
00:28:06.260 freaking condom because they don't feel comfortable on it or they they prefer without it and as a woman
00:28:13.640 sometimes you don't want to to shock or make them like angry at you or you know some girl will like
00:28:24.720 comply to it and at the end who will have the consequences it's the woman and the woman will
00:28:30.840 like destroy their life because the state say oh you cannot abort but is actually the guy who put
00:28:37.360 pressure to not wear a condom well i think that there's a uh i do think that there's a misconception
00:28:45.860 that um there's a stereotype or a cliche anyways that having a child is a shameful thing to do
00:28:52.740 like somehow having having a child is synonymous with ruining your life and throwing your career
00:28:57.320 away and statistically if we look at you know gdp for household incomes like married families with
00:29:02.580 children actually tend to earn more and have more productivity than single people so it's it's maybe
00:29:08.060 inconvenient and scary but the math doesn't necessarily back up that it's like a career
00:29:13.360 but when it comes to the the state specifically it's it's difficult because for people who actually
00:29:19.200 believe like okay if i'm a doctor and i believe that abortion is murder especially after the first
00:29:26.180 trimester should i be forced to to do that i don't know i don't think that's that's fair if someone
00:29:32.280 truly believes that or even as a taxpayer like let's say if i'm a taxpayer in texas and i believe
00:29:37.340 abortion is murder should my tax money be going to fund something that is morally egregious to me
00:29:42.540 i don't think that that's fair either so maybe you know i don't i don't know like this is something
00:29:48.240 that i ask myself in bc all the time especially with the legalization or decriminalization anyways
00:29:53.500 of like heroin crystal methamphetamines all of these hard drugs which will soon be followed by
00:29:58.280 government uh legalization and distribution like do i want to pay for that no but do i have to like
00:30:05.580 right now i do have to because this is where i live and that's how my tax dollars are distributed you
00:30:09.840 know so obviously it's it's everyone has their own everyone has their own choices to make
00:30:15.440 we have to be accountable for the choices that that we make and we can't it's it's not fair to
00:30:20.520 have other people clean up after a mess at least that's that's where i stand on this issue um it's
00:30:26.860 you have to be naive to think that if if abortion is is illegal now somehow people won't do it or they
00:30:32.680 won't have they won't they just won't have safe access to it where they where there are so i think
00:30:37.280 that the bigger battle for the pro-lifers ahead is changing the culture into especially the public
00:30:43.000 dialogue into thinking that yes uh having a child is the worst thing that could ever happen to you
00:30:48.140 because i don't i don't think that's true in fact like you know seeing friends and family that have
00:30:53.900 had unplanned pregnancies throughout different stages of life it's always turned out for the better at the
00:30:58.480 end of it at first it was it was scary and they didn't know what but you know i'm i'm i'm at least
00:31:04.680 personally and i can only speak anecdotally but i'm hard pressed to find people that have had
00:31:08.560 uh children that were unexpected that was like they were you know completely ruined their life
00:31:13.760 and i don't mean like postpartum depression after one year or two years but you know generally life
00:31:20.080 is a life is a blessing not a sentence at least that's how i you know choose to look at it but
00:31:24.980 again i'm a man and i would never uh you know everyone can make their own decision you know and i
00:31:30.460 and i respect that but that also doesn't mean that um people have to agree with the decisions that are
00:31:35.940 good i i will do uh i really i you know i'm biologist and i i study birds but um i as we see
00:31:45.740 at this moment we see a lot of inflation so less and less opportunity to get food for the family
00:31:52.280 to get the family really well so mother can can choose to say i cannot afford with the cost of life
00:32:02.400 to have another child it's impossible because that will cut the portion that we give to other
00:32:09.520 children to having another one and and all of them would be miserable and my life would be miserable
00:32:15.660 uh and that's it's it's the most important point because now with like all the cost of the life
00:32:23.140 um the medium medium wage people and less would not be able to afford to have so many kids now
00:32:32.800 but when you look at birth because we talk about like oh human are bad we are doing abortion and
00:32:41.040 everything but birds do abortion by themselves so when they create eggs inside of their womb
00:32:49.360 and they they see that they have not enough food around them they will reserve their eggs
00:32:58.300 for keeping the nutriment for the number of eggs that they will give birth so they are doing himself
00:33:06.740 an abortion when they see that they cannot afford to have more baby that they did produce inside of
00:33:13.820 their womb so i think it's a natural thing to just if you see that you cannot afford to get uh birth
00:33:23.280 you just give it give the children away but that is heartbreaking because you don't know in
00:33:31.780 which gain of the hand that that baby will uh fall into or taking the decision before
00:33:39.980 before before like the baby is completely formed to just like say i i cannot afford it but i can
00:33:47.760 understand when you get too too late in the trimester like when the baby is almost like form formally
00:33:56.680 to to to get like aborted it's just why you didn't do it before right that is only my only question
00:34:04.960 yeah that's well i think that there's you know there's there's so much social pressure there's
00:34:13.880 social social pressure to have the child there's social pressure to not have the child and it's it's
00:34:18.800 like and i know this is going to come off tone deaf so to our to our female viewers i i apologize but i
00:34:25.820 you know i i feel like as a man um we have no say in the conversation like but that's not true the
00:34:33.120 accountability if if the child comes so for example like if if i'm if i'm with my wife or my girlfriend
00:34:40.380 and my girlfriend gets pregnant she decides she doesn't want to have the child but i really want
00:34:45.640 to have the child even if she doesn't want to raise the child i'll take full custody full financial
00:34:49.960 responsibility for that child i have no say in that however if the child is is then born and i want
00:34:56.480 nothing to do with that child well i'm still responsible for child support so i i don't think um
00:35:02.560 i think uh and you know it's even if you expound out if you look i believe that a lot of the
00:35:08.760 problems that face us social politically can come back to economics and fault and fathering like weak
00:35:14.500 fathering weak mothering and and economics so i think this destruction of the family home uh even
00:35:21.700 before the baby comes like rupturing of the nest to use like the bird analogy is uh also you know
00:35:28.440 critical into what what we're facing um but again that's just my two cents you know like in in uh in
00:35:35.680 the new testament you know and i understand i understand it for like the christian perspective
00:35:39.460 but i understand why christians are so for a lot of reasons but the idea of even in the first
00:35:43.880 trimester why it's so egregious to some uh very socially conservative states is you know the the in
00:35:50.260 in the new testament it talks about it writes about uh the apostle uh john the baptist recognizing the
00:35:56.780 the baby the fetus of john the baptist jumping for joy when it recognized jesus in mary's belly
00:36:02.220 right so like it's um i i knew you and i informed you in your inside your mother's womb so that's very
00:36:08.020 a part of like uh christian theology and and ideology that life began begins right at conception so
00:36:14.060 that's a whole nother you know the states obviously isn't a theocracy but it's as it's as close as it
00:36:19.980 gets to the west you know uh in the west to a theocracy as far as like a biblical morality forming
00:36:26.460 fundamental laws so i can see why people are so upset they take it like you know why this is such
00:36:32.060 a personal issue um because there's also there's also shame built into the whole thing right there's
00:36:39.700 people who have been on one side of the argument or others you're going to be very hard pressed to
00:36:44.840 find someone who hasn't been uh hasn't been exposed or or uh affected by abortion whether that's them
00:36:55.520 personally or someone that they love right so this is obviously like a very personal issue and when
00:37:00.660 we're talking about very personal issues like that you know it's easy for uh obviously personal
00:37:07.700 personal experience um shame guilt embarrassment whatever else to also build into the conversation
00:37:15.020 um so i i you know this is this is like a lame answer but i i do feel like the only way things
00:37:21.660 are ever going to change is like a reformation of like culturally around like our discussion and
00:37:26.820 dialogue around sex around contraception around parenting and what these things mean and then
00:37:31.980 how to approach them responsibly right because like ultimately reproduction is a consequence of sex
00:37:40.980 you can't make a baby well i guess these days you can make a baby in a test tube but
00:37:45.600 you know you can't fundamentally up until very recently in human history of any species you can't really
00:37:51.660 you know make a child without fornication and that's how you reproduce right so that is the
00:37:58.280 fundamental uh cause at least that's that's you know pleasure is like it is is a bonus you know
00:38:05.860 but if it didn't feel good people wouldn't do it you know so i guess it's like a nature some say god
00:38:11.820 some say nature's built-in incentive incentive to reproduce right yeah but i don't know sorry i'm
00:38:18.680 on a complete rabbit hole right now i come back on what you say like that men
00:38:24.660 doesn't doesn't have really that voice heard about it because it's i think it's you need to be both for
00:38:35.240 conception yeah of course it's the woman who uh are wearing it for nine months but in the same time
00:38:42.360 um the fact is woman sometimes they would use the men like they will like i so many times
00:38:54.180 i see a couple okay the woman is so in love and but the man is going to let her go because
00:39:01.200 he didn't love her anymore oh incidentally she's pregnant and she will keep it and she don't
00:39:09.520 let him like having any word on it and i see like so many couples being broken right they all together
00:39:17.420 for the child but they don't like each other but i saw that really really more often than we think
00:39:26.660 broken like family and uh but for because the woman choose that no i want that for a couple
00:39:35.360 and i want a baby with him and so i'm gonna keep it it's not right it's not right yeah that's
00:39:46.700 definitely not the best way to start a family you know or build trust or do anything anything healthy
00:39:52.420 you know but again it's like the the child is the consequence of uh sex so is is is a life being
00:40:03.140 wanted enough of a deciding factor whether that life is worth living or not i think is a is a
00:40:09.800 that's that's the question that i'm always going to come back to personally and it's and especially
00:40:15.920 like i don't know if you remember but should we be like having less people hurt
00:40:22.960 no we need more people like our birth rates our birth rates are falling off a cliff right now in
00:40:30.400 the west and you know it's funny because i have this i have a theory you know if you look at um
00:40:36.180 all of these progressive agendas right whether it would be the trans agenda or the lgbtq agenda or the
00:40:42.520 the pro uh in some ways you serve the pro the pro choice agenda or uh the hard the hard drug
00:40:49.700 initiative or uh having dual incomes you know all of these things uh decrease birth rate like all of
00:40:57.880 these things decrease birth rate so if as soon as birth rate starts to slump productivity starts to
00:41:03.000 stuff starts to slump and the economy starts to slump so the only way that you can prop up that economy
00:41:08.640 is by bringing in you know mass amounts of immigrants who have who are socially conservative
00:41:14.940 who do procreate and who do have children to then bolster the the failing economy because the
00:41:21.280 the resident population isn't isn't having kids and the thing the crazy thing about the birth rate is
00:41:27.960 it only takes one generation for things to fall off the cliff and go terribly bad right and we saw that
00:41:33.340 with china's one child policy how they did that and then things went terribly for them and now they're
00:41:38.180 trying to create all these incentives so people have will have children because you know if there's no
00:41:43.000 if there's no workforce productivity stops so i think canada is definitely going to see the effects
00:41:49.920 of that and i think we already are seeing the effects of that to be honest sorry were you talking
00:41:56.100 about no but the climate change agenda like uh to because we are too many people on earth so we are
00:42:05.380 using too fast their resources on earth so we will reach like the end of our research
00:42:11.620 research so resources uh very soon so we need to be less people who are hurt for using less
00:42:18.880 of our natural resources it's not a thing that has been like around since a while like that we
00:42:26.860 shouldn't be less people and now they are banning abortion so it's just like i think it's just two
00:42:34.160 ideology that's it's controversial yeah all of these progressive global uh climate change especially
00:42:43.120 to all of these agendas are just uh encouraging people to not have children encouraging people to
00:42:49.240 to not procreate i'll share i'll share an anecdote with you last year uh dre and i covered one of these
00:42:54.560 uh extinction rebellion protests at the lionsgate bridge in vancouver which is the main bridge
00:43:00.300 downtown and it's funny because anyway trudeau and and sing and these they have nothing to say
00:43:05.540 about these you know progressive protests but as soon as it's a conservative one but anyway so these
00:43:09.820 guys shut down the bridge and i was speaking to one of the organizers his name was tillicum tom
00:43:13.880 60 year old guy he's been a green he was a member of greenpeace and he's been an uh an eco uh eco
00:43:20.700 protester eco ally as he put it for basically his whole life and uh he i was i was asking him like why are
00:43:27.460 you out here today he's like i'm out here for my son and i'm like okay do tell he's like well my son
00:43:31.760 is he's 21 years old he's a brilliant guy and he said to me something something a couple days ago just
00:43:36.380 broke my heart and i'm like well what's that he's like dad i don't want to have kids because i don't
00:43:42.400 want to bring children into this mess of a world that's gonna you know end in 10 years because of
00:43:46.640 climate change or whatever else and this guy has like tears in his eyes as he's telling me this right
00:43:51.640 and the thing is it's like tillicum tom this tom guy because of the rhetoric from the far left
00:43:58.520 because of this climate change rhetoric he's never going to be a grandfather so because of that he
00:44:05.020 feels so much pain for this environment this social environment that he actually created within his own
00:44:09.600 family the seed of doubt that he planted within the heart of his son that his son doesn't even want
00:44:13.980 appropriate his son will never experience the joy of fatherhood and because of that tom will never
00:44:18.160 experience the joy of being a grandfather and ultimately if we're not bringing new people
00:44:23.600 into this world who's going to change it who's going to be the person to cure cancer who's going
00:44:28.440 to be the people to reform our government who's you know like who are going to be the great minds in
00:44:32.240 in the tech and technological evolution for good if we're not having children no one will do that
00:44:38.780 that won't happen ultimately you know so it's uh it was it's really sad he couldn't you know sometimes
00:44:44.260 we're so close we can't see the forest from the trees we can't figure out you know and he was so
00:44:49.060 wrapped up into it he's so gung-ho on this ideology that he can't see that it's his own ideology that's
00:44:55.520 contributing to the sorrow that he feels it's not the world's fault it's not everybody else's fault
00:44:59.820 it's what he clings on to and believes so much that's actually like destroying his family it's really
00:45:06.040 heartbreaking you know but i think that's really sad liberal cities coastal cities are falling
00:45:13.260 victim to that this idea that you know having a child is a is an awful thing it's a it's a curse
00:45:19.000 instead of a blessing it's better to focus on your career a hundred percent and um this this idea that
00:45:25.660 gender isn't uh gender binary is a social construct like all these things they all they all contribute to
00:45:32.600 not procreating to not having children and to not experiencing what a family is and a lot of these
00:45:37.460 ideas are being championed by people that come from broken families and ultimately hurt people hurt
00:45:42.240 people right so it's it's just i don't know it hits it hits a tender chord in me because i've seen like
00:45:49.060 i see how people's lives change when when they become parents i see how they they enter like the second
00:45:53.920 gear and that's not to say that every child is obviously that's not to say that every child comes in
00:45:59.200 like a perfect circumstance you know but at the same time maybe there needs to be more reverence
00:46:04.460 around what sex is and how we how we respect our bodies and who we decide to share our bodies with
00:46:10.380 which is the most personal thing i believe that we can do and having the ability to create life is
00:46:15.900 just such an amazing thing you know so anyways no but i i understand perfectly what you say
00:46:23.260 and that story is really it's really sad yeah
00:46:28.400 and i think that's a it's a lot of you know it's a lot of people feel this way right why should i bring
00:46:37.400 a child into the world when it's just gonna melt or the economy is ending or whatever else it's like
00:46:42.020 ultimately it's it's such a how imagine waking up every day feeling that way viewing the world through
00:46:50.260 that lens that everything is over you know there's nothing that we can do to make it better
00:46:54.640 and and oh what a terrible way to live your life you know and and at the very least at the very least i
00:47:02.060 think these these politicians and these corporations that are championing these messages um without any
00:47:07.640 accountability um they're responsible for literally like robbing people of their joy in their future
00:47:14.420 because they're planting these ideas and at least you know on the on the centrist conservative side
00:47:20.660 of the aisle i see more hope you know like we need if we roll up our sleeves and work hard we can make
00:47:26.120 things better but i don't i don't see that from the left i see this is your fault everything's going
00:47:30.920 to hell the world's on fire so well that's not a very inspiring message you know and obviously we're
00:47:35.800 going to see people reacting the way they are violent protests uh divisive narratives a hateful rhetoric
00:47:42.100 etc because they don't believe in the future they don't believe that there's anything there's no hope
00:47:47.060 for them there's no joy for them so what do you expect you know because what my what i saw so far like
00:47:56.240 since i would say especially like during the pandemic but a little bit before too but polarization is
00:48:04.700 getting like so high it's so crazy how people are thinking two opposite way and i i don't know how
00:48:14.920 how you make that happen to have like really two sides that is completely not capable to talk to each
00:48:23.440 other it's just impossible their mindset is just black you know usually debate make it like more
00:48:32.500 gray zone that you can discuss i have some opinion you know like it was when i was younger like we
00:48:41.320 always keep able to discuss about issue topic or other stuff but now it's just like no i know what i want
00:48:51.740 i know what i'm thinking and i know i'm right so shut up and you have no possibility
00:48:58.900 to discuss to discuss to nobody anymore and this is the most scary thing that i saw so far
00:49:07.220 rising in canada yeah i think that there's uh i personally think that there's two contributing
00:49:15.580 factors to this uh this current state where we can't have conversations or or be accepting or
00:49:22.320 tolerant of people with other views um firstly um if a country canada has no national identity
00:49:30.800 right if you look at like the some like a country like the united states let's say in like the 60s 70s
00:49:39.440 80s even earlier than that it was built on this idea of like a judeo-christian framework so meaning
00:49:44.620 the law on the land is is biblical morality so whether you believe in god or you don't believe in god
00:49:50.980 the way that we relate with one another is based on on these rules so and everyone could agree on
00:49:56.340 that right but as it's it's kind of like a game of agenda right so if that's like a foundational block
00:50:02.420 and then you pull that block from the base it may seem like things are getting higher but in fact
00:50:07.480 it's weaker right the foundation is shakier so i think we're at a point now where we can't agree on
00:50:13.920 what is right and what is wrong and what the truth is and we're all fundamentally starting on a
00:50:18.360 different playing field so there isn't anything really in common for us to to to for us like
00:50:24.160 there's no middle ground there's no commonplace because now political issues or social issues are
00:50:29.340 being conflated as moral issues or they're religious they're they're uh yeah essentially
00:50:35.940 like wokeism is a progressivism is a religion right so that's that's the conversation that we're
00:50:41.460 having now and there's nothing in common and also this these things are exacerbated by a decline
00:50:47.660 and quality of life so as people as everything becomes less affordable uh the political divide
00:50:54.100 goes further and further and further and ultimately a lot of these issues are being driven economically
00:50:59.460 right because people are it's harder for them to get by so they feel further strained and the reality is
00:51:06.360 like oftentimes people that are on the very far right spectrum and the very far left spectrum
00:51:11.140 actually have more in common with each other than people in the middle because the people that are on
00:51:16.320 the far left and the far right are usually the downtrodden in society they're usually socially
00:51:21.320 outcasted usually um you know just they're usually struggling financially they they they find no place
00:51:28.780 in society they find no way to get get ahead but in the age of social media now those voices have the
00:51:34.900 loudest megaphones so even though they don't represent the people in the middle that actually have more
00:51:39.540 in common than not have in common with one another these are the voices that dominate culture
00:51:44.140 and then our politicians and the grifters and the corporations take advantage of these talking
00:51:50.000 points cultural hegemony which is like marxism 101 and then that becomes you know that that's the
00:51:56.460 diatribe but that just spreads division further and further and further and i think that's where we're at
00:52:02.280 right now in 2022 and that's why reasonable people are getting swept up into all of this nonsense on the
00:52:08.460 news that's why people can watch the news and think that oh my oh my god there's nazis in ottawa it's
00:52:14.500 like well no there there isn't you know there really isn't but it's like that's the echo chamber
00:52:19.320 you know yeah so we have like the the people who actually believe really well in the mainstream and
00:52:28.100 the people who just realized that they have been like people like mainstream was lying for a while
00:52:36.120 and politicians too and they just write their voice it's like being really angry about it so it's
00:52:41.740 probably why now we see like that kind of polarization that people were so sure that everything that's been
00:52:49.280 done during the pandemic saved their life and you have the other side where you see like that is a scam
00:52:56.560 like why why people have like locked me down in my economy that now i i need to suffer from
00:53:04.720 inflation and consequences on mental illness and and now we see the disaggregation of the society
00:53:13.860 going faster and faster so we see some people who are rising their voice against and the other one that
00:53:21.760 rise their voice for it so it's just just it's probably why we see like as much deep polarization but
00:53:31.760 anyway we did talk a lot about the things that now it's already like uh five before one so um we have
00:53:42.420 a couple of chat uh should we uh begin by uh fraser fraser is say talking about government
00:53:50.820 incompetence have you any news on the church fire and who is responsible for setting these fire
00:53:58.260 or is that move on nothing to see here is it cam loops here um you you went on the ground there maybe
00:54:07.060 you're you're better than me to answer to that yeah so dre and i went back to cam loops uh to come
00:54:13.320 loops to shwetmuk first nation and the cam loops indian school uh and we actually shot quite a lengthy
00:54:19.900 record you can expect a full-length documentary coming back in the following weeks um the narrative
00:54:25.940 that was blasted on the huge megaphone of the whole world is quite different than the one that's being
00:54:32.660 subtly subtly uttered so um you know most people think it's it's quite different than what's actually
00:54:39.000 developing um the church the church fires uh that took place first in the okanagan and then
00:54:44.540 all over the country it's hard to persecute those i mean we can obviously see what the motivation is
00:54:51.060 um but any sort of uh proof that these are all affiliated um or they're definitely correlated but
00:54:59.400 that they're they're affiliated i haven't seen any police development on that um but you know again
00:55:06.060 anecdotally after being in okanagan and visiting some of these sites and seeing you know these were
00:55:11.200 functioning a lot of them were functioning churches uh that had indigenous congregants um so
00:55:16.840 people the word on the grounds it seemed to feel like people felt it was it was bad actors that were
00:55:22.980 not actually from the reserve that were going around built burning these at least in okanagan
00:55:26.760 um but again uh to my awareness there hasn't been any uh arrests
00:55:31.280 uh that's a yeah pretty good like a complete answer though thank you for five dollars
00:55:40.320 um we have aquaski 36 36 36 one dollars thank you manitoba government will not repair the badly
00:55:51.100 vandalized queen victoria she was against slavery segregation no one will be charged though they know
00:55:59.780 who fit this all involved oh what do you have to tell about this there was hundreds of angles
00:56:08.420 of who you know of the protests that pulled those down and if they wanted to persecute i'm sure they
00:56:15.280 could um but you know ultimately ultimately our canadian politicians especially our progressive
00:56:23.460 canadian politicians saw this uh canloops school uh disclosure as an opportunity for canada to have
00:56:31.600 its very own george floyd blm moment and they ran with it and it dominated our news cycle it dominated
00:56:39.380 in the middle of a pandemic our prime minister calls an election and our election dialogue and
00:56:45.740 debate is completely dominated by the canloops narrative and reparation with very little talk
00:56:50.680 about our failing economy very little talk about affordability very little talk about uh actual
00:56:56.120 uh environmental issues rather than just like platitudes and talking points and it worked for them
00:57:02.360 and you know now that it's done and now that they've been re-elected even even the promises that
00:57:08.360 were made to these these uh these bands like for example the canloops indian school they were promised
00:57:12.620 27 million dollars to come from tribe tribe uh for um mental health and job stimulus and they still
00:57:19.580 haven't received a penny of that so you know again it's the government just playing people against each
00:57:24.260 other and benefiting off of it so i don't think that we will see arrests because the queen queen victoria
00:57:31.420 getting knocked down in manitoba benefited the media it benefited the liberals they took advantage of it
00:57:38.100 and now that's it you move on you know so i don't think that we'll see anything come of it
00:57:42.740 personally too expensive to replace um what have you seen what they put in montreal like they put a big
00:57:51.220 like freaking a ring a big ring in the air that costs like a couple of millions of dollars
00:57:58.740 and that represents nothing and i was like this money can go maybe to help citizens with like
00:58:08.440 inflation or maybe like for like the gas or something like that but no they put like a massive ring
00:58:15.460 look do you see it on your screen this is oh my goodness yeah why why like i was i was shocked i was
00:58:25.720 like what's the point to put that and that especially because you have no no meaning no no representation me i
00:58:35.420 would be more scared that that ring like fell on my head but yeah um i'm not going like to say i'm going
00:58:42.780 to see the massive ring when i see like how many the money they spend for that instead of the
00:58:50.220 of the citizens who are suffering right now i just blew my mind but anyway fraser send us another
00:59:00.360 uh chat one dollar is thank oh no it's akweski first one dollar is first um thank you very much
00:59:07.860 akweski thank you um she just wanted to thank us thank you you thank you uh she said thank you to
00:59:14.800 you both that's really nice thank you uh fraser one dollar is thank you fraser um if you're going to be
00:59:24.460 sexually active then use the pill i agree or like now you have pill for men uh-huh yeah i think that's
00:59:35.100 great i think you know it doesn't always work no that's the issue i think a lot of people do use it
00:59:40.580 because yeah i was watching one pill that i'm taking and it's made by pfizer and i was like
00:59:48.880 should i really take that
00:59:50.440 yeah i'm boycotting anything pfizer forever for the rest of my life yeah
00:59:58.040 yeah pfizer is everywhere uh we have another one it's from king 77 34 one dollar is thank you king
01:00:08.400 for alexa tabarouette hola oui tabarouette oh by the way it's quebec day so uh bonfire du quebec
01:00:19.460 pour toutes les quebecouis qui nous regardent uh so yeah it's quebec day today so every every shop
01:00:26.240 is slow so um i'm trying to get milk this morning and i was really paying to find a place open
01:00:33.740 i i think it's only in quebec that this day it's really a celebration i don't think uh nobody else
01:00:42.160 uh it's a great that in canada so i can we don't celebrate ontario day but we don't really celebrate
01:00:49.880 canada day because it's the moving day for quebec people so uh for everybody from canada if you end up
01:00:57.640 to canada canada day in quebec province you will see a lot of moving truck and don't be surprised
01:01:05.400 it's normal it's not because everybody is running away
01:01:10.220 well they can't they can't go anywhere they can't get a passport anyways so they're stuck
01:01:16.920 thank you for uh doing this with me today alexa i really appreciate it and uh your your graciousness
01:01:24.740 around the sensitive debate and topic that dominated our live stream today thank you for
01:01:30.240 humoring me here sweetheart as always so and happy quebec day to you uh thank you matt you know like
01:01:37.880 i'm always talking about you how talented you are i hope that all our viewers know that matt is a
01:01:44.540 really talented uh singer and if you didn't like check what he's doing is is this is really just
01:01:51.480 incredible uh seriously it everybody needs to see like matt braver bravener uh may have all your
01:02:00.480 playlists on my spotify i find like your vision of uh what is going on it's uh really well done and
01:02:07.620 uh you're smart you're smart oh thank you and you're well spoken
01:02:12.260 so now i'm going to send you some flowers oh i will yeah it's always nice to get your flowers
01:02:21.620 while you're still alive right so i'll i'll take that yeah exactly i really appreciate that yeah
01:02:26.520 take it because you will not receive much yeah it's true all right and thanks to everybody tuning
01:02:33.940 in on the live stream on all the different uh networks and uh we will be back on monday
01:02:39.080 yes ciao everybody we love you see you soon we love you take care
01:02:45.080 did not uh put any uh undue influence or pressure it is extremely important to highlight
01:02:51.680 that it is only um it is only the rcmp it is only police uh that determine what and when to release
01:02:58.520 information uh the commissioner's statement the minister's statement we're very clear on that yes i
01:03:03.980 still uh very much have support of uh confidence in in commissioner lucky