REBEL ROUNDUP | Huge crowd for Poilievre, Carney says Cons bow to Trump, Tamara Lich speaks
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 28 minutes
Words per Minute
167.9982
Summary
Sheila and Lise talk about the Conservative Party of Canada's largest political rally in recent memory, and the incredible amount of support that went into it. They also talk about some audio issues in the studio that may or may not be the result of jostling of the headphones.
Transcript
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Oh, hey, good morning, good afternoon, everybody, depending on which part of this beautiful country
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that you're in. I can hear myself in my ears. So maybe it's Lisa's mic picking up my microphone.
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But I am Sheila Gunn-Reed. You are watching Rebel Roundup. It's our daily news and opinion show
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wherein we talk about the news of the world completely unscripted. I'm your host, Sheila
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Gunn-Reed, and I'm joined in studio in my little dungeon under the stairs by my friend and my
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Tuesday co-host, Lise Merle from beautiful Regina, Saskatchewan. Lise, how's it going?
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Oh, we have had the best 24 hours. There is nothing to describe what we experienced in these last
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12 hours. Yeah, we can't wait to tell you about it. Yeah, we've got some audio feedback because I
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had to sort of create an audio situation in the studio today that maybe does or doesn't work.
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It depends. Let us know in the stream if the audio sounds okay. I think I'm picking up Lise's
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microphone and Lise is picking up mine. I might be able to fix that maybe on commercial break or not,
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or we just share a microphone. We'll see how that goes. Yeah.
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Um, yeah. Um, but, uh, jeez. Anyways, I gotta take that off. We're just gonna be doing a lot of
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jostling of the headphones today. Yes. Um, the reason Lise is in the studio today is because we
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were at, I think, Canada's largest political rally in recent history, um, wherein Pierre Polyev,
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leader of the Conservative Party descended upon Edmonton or just south of Edmonton between 12
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and 15,000 people were in attendance. It was a newly built warehouse, completely vacant. Uh,
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it was NHL attendance there. And NHL level energy in that building. It was incredible. And there is no,
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like, look at these people that look at the people in this room. It was absolutely incredible. Took three
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hours to get everybody in the line into the, through security and into the building. It took more than
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an hour to get out of the parking lot. And, uh, the, the energy in there was so good. Like the vibes were so
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good. And if you don't think that there is a movement backing Pierre Polyev, uh, this, this event last
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night just proved it, that there is a groundswell of support for the Conservative Party of Canada and,
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uh, and well done for, for the entire team that was working there for pulling this off. This is not an
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easy feat getting this many people in and out of the building safely. And, uh, it was incredible.
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It was just incredible. You know what? I'll tell everybody what we're doing here. I think our
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solution is to just remove our headphones and then put them back on when we need to watch something.
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Yeah. I think that's the best. Um, so if you are watching us on rumble, thank you for sticking
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it out on that great free speech platform. Um, you can support the work that we do over on rumble
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by giving us a rumble rant cut off. Yes, for sure. We're going to read it on air. If it's under that,
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we'll do our very best to get to it. Uh, and we appreciate you choosing to spend your money to
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support us. If you are watching us on YouTube, uh, that is still a censorship platform. So
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at, if you're watching the live stream, we're talking about things that are sensitive, we might
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cut the stream. Just be aware of that. Uh, although I don't think there are any of those things on the
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list, uh, today, but you can support the work that we do at rebel news by leaving us a super chat
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over on YouTube. And again, the same rules apply over the $5 us cutoff. We'll read it on air.
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If it falls under that, we'll do our best. But also if you're watching the recorded version of
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the show, you can leave something called a super thanks. That's their paid comment. And boy,
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we sure appreciate you for choosing us. Now, uh, we should get into, uh, what the media will surely
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downplay today. We landed on the location there at, I don't know, three 34 o'clock. They were already
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running out of parking space. Then, uh, this, this location, this warehouse there was the second
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location. Actually, they had to move the venue because they had so many RSVPs. They had like over
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8,000 RSVPs. So usually they thought, you know, like another 2,000 or so will show up and it ended
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up closer to 13 to 15,000. I see some people from the party quoting 15,000. I don't doubt it.
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The reason I know this for, and this, what you're looking at, this is taking up 530.
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This is very early in the, in the, in the evening. The event itself was supposed to start at about seven.
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It ended up starting at about eight o'clock. Yeah. And, and the entire time the lines were
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four and five people deep, uh, for kilometers. Like honestly, it was looped around the building.
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This is legitimately the biggest building I've ever been in, in Canada, outside of, you know,
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Las Vegas style casino. Um, and it was absolutely packed. Like it, it was just an incredible event.
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It's just to see. It took me eight minutes. So once the line started moving,
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um, and unlike other journalists, we don't sort of bully our way in. I like to wait with the people.
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Once the line started moving, I booked it to the back of the line. Like I ran and I should let you
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know, I run all the time. I'm a good runner. Um, I ran to the back of the line and then I ran to the
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front of the line. So I started at the back and you could see behind me, people are still coming.
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I'm walking at a good clip. You can see I'm like burning past these people. Right. And it took me
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like eight and a bit minutes even to get in the doors, uh, to catch up to lease who was already
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inside. It was, I was like, that's eight minutes of solid, fast walking to go. It looped around the
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outside of the building. People were saying that at closer to seven o'clock, there was a two kilometer
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walk to get in. And I believe it because when we were leaving, the cars were lined up along the road
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for kilometers. Yeah. Took an hour to get out of the parking lot and we were sort of towards the
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front of the parking lot. Yeah. It was, it was, uh, it was an incredible evening. And I got to say
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the amount of people that see Sheila Gunn-Reed and say, Oh my God, Sheila, thanks for being here.
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We love Rebel News. Oh, Rebel News is here. Thanks for doing the work you do. Um, it, it really is.
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It really is wonderful to see all of you guys in person and thanks so much for supporting us.
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So many people approached me and said, we watch the live stream every day. And I went,
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really? Well, isn't that incredible? No, Alberta is just stuffed full of Rebel News fans and thanks
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so much for supporting us. But Sheila, really, you know how many people ran up to CTV and said that
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same thing? No, I saw them actually packing up their stuff at five 30. They picked out some of the
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I guess, at least visually compelling people from the crowd as CTV would always do. Um, interviewed,
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uh, those people I haven't watched CTV's coverage yet, but in my walk around, like when I'm walking
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around, you can see me stop and say there's CTV packing up their stuff. And I show CTV packing up
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their stuff at five 30, just as people are starting to go inside, they were done. That was all. Uh,
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no, we were there till like 10, 15, 30. Yeah. Just to get out of there. Yeah, it was,
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it was incredible. And I did see some of the clips of the humorless marms from the CBC,
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you know, saying there was connectivity issues inside the building and we, we don't have a lot
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to say. Well, we have a lot to say on their behalf. And this was an incredible event.
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Did they tell you why there was connectivity issues? It's because they've 15,000 people in
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the building, right? That's NHL attendance. It, it was, I can't, I can't stop saying it enough.
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It was such an incredible event. We heard, uh, we heard from Pierre Polyev. We heard from Stephen
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Harper. We heard from, uh, uh, chief Billy Moran, Billy Moran from Enoch First Nation in Alberta,
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which is, uh, an incredible First Nation over here. And, uh, and the crowd just went wild.
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They were lapping up what they said. They did miss a couple of things, uh, amongst the women in the
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crowd. Okay. We, we heard that the conservative party is going to repeal the no more pipelines bill.
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They're going to repeal the, uh, the no more talking nice about oil and gas bill. We're going to do a
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lot of, we're going to do a lot of repealing of, of damaging liberal policy. But what we did not
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hear and what all of the women in the crowd agreed upon was we need to repeal bill C4 and bill C, uh,
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16. This is the conversion therapy bill. This is bringing us all of the problems in Canada that
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have eroded the rights of, uh, women as a sex based people. Um, and there was nothing but support for
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that. So this is a message direct to the conservative party of Canada. Your women and your
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men want to see an end to gender madness in Canada. And we need to start talking about this
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publicly and in person. The amount of support that you will get for dialing this madness back
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will be incredible, uh, bigger, if not, uh, bigger than, than the no more pipeline bills. I would
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imagine because it does impact every single person in that room. And, uh, here's their permission to do
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just that. Yeah. Uh, somebody who we don't normally see involved in politics. Although I think
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everybody realizes that he's a conservative just because he's a rural Alberta from Northeast Alberta
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country singer, Brett Kissel. He gave his endorsement for Pierre Paglia. Uh, you may know him as the
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country singer who does the anthem all the time at the Oilers games. If you're not a fan of Canadian
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country music, um, yeah, chief Billy Moran, he was the former chief of Enoch Green First Nation,
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which brought that first nation from not the greatest condition into wealth. Right. Uh,
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he's running for the conservatives in Edmonton Northwest. President of the Boilermakers Union
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was there. Ernie Stadnik, president of the Boilermakers Union. They just huge endorsement
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for Paglia. Those are the private sector trades that build all the things that you need in the world,
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and quitting your pipelines. That is so rare. And your major energy infrastructure. That is so rare
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for a conservative candidate to get an endorsement from a union of any kind. And there they were
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repping in the building yesterday. It was just, it was really quite, uh, extraordinary to see.
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Yeah. Uh, we've got, I guess, there was a, I tweeted it out. It was a clip of Stephen Harper
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coming out. And he looks so good and people love him. And I was so nostalgic because they played that
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nonsensical collective soul song that was his campaign song from, uh, 2015. You would recognize
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it. Yeah. You'll recognize it. The lyrics actually have zero meaning. It's, it's better now. I think
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it's called. Uh, I remember I used to blare it after the 2015 election loss, just in case Stephen
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Harper heard me and he knew that I still was, but he did a good job. He looked, he looked good. He
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looked happy. And he had some jabs at Mark Carney. Oh, did he? He came pointy at Mark Carney. It was
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making credits for things that he didn't do, which is a bad liberal habit. By the way,
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we look at all the blue-collar people in here. Like this is a working class rally.
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So many young people. You should have seen the young people. And, and all the way up to the
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boomers. Hey, the boomers were absolutely representing last night. They were there for the
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grandkids. They were there voting for the grandkids. Oh, and they, they were, they were absolutely
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motivated by what the conservative party said that they were going to do. It was, it was just an
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incredible show last night in Edmonton. Like really, it was a special event to be at. And
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I'm so happy that we were, we were able to be there. It was wild. Like just so many people,
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they were just in there and they had these B&R Eccles trailers, um, flat deck trailers, like
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oil trailers and people, you guys were sitting up on them. Yeah. I was here to catch everybody
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coming in and coming out. Uh, speaking of those trailers, can we tell Canada about Travis now?
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Before we get to what the pointed things that Stephen Harper said, we would like to introduce
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you to an off duty paramedic named Travis, who, uh, it was just so quintessentially
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Alberta male. Yep. Uh, this young Travis fellow, you saw him fly into action. Yeah. A lady. So,
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so people were standing at that point for like three hours in, in very close, uh, corners with
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other people. And it was very hot. It was a very long wait. And I looked over and there was just a
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guy standing, holding a lady up. She, uh, has lost her legs at that. You saw them sort of sink to the
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ground. This is Travis. Okay. Travis is in the gray and the blue jeans here. Travis, uh, springs into
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action, has latex gloves out of his hands. And he is on his knees tending to the woman who was having a
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medical moment. And, and just for the, we will hope that you're feeling better today, lady. Uh,
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we know that that wasn't convenient for you. Your family was real worried, but this, this guy,
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Travis, okay. Travis spends the first 15 minutes of the rally on his knees, offering assistance to
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the lady who went down in the crowd. And when he pops up, I said, I saw what you did. I'm going to
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talk about it tomorrow on the rebel live stream. And he goes, Oh no, no, no. All humble. Oh no,
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no. I was like, you, what you did was heroic. Anyhow, we are all sitting on these flat decks.
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Okay. They are six feet in the air. You could not get off the flat deck once you were on it
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because there were so many people on the stairs. And, uh, and this little, this little older lady
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taps Travis, who just rendered aid to another lady on the floor and says, can you help me down?
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And he said, put your arm, put your arms around me and look at him. Look at him. Okay. The entire
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Northwest corner of that building fell in love with Travis at that moment. Uh, I fell in love
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with Travis at that moment. Every woman in Canada is falling. I was just standing there.
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Just the comments on Twitter are insane. Oh, people want to know if Travis is single.
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People want to know if they can move to Alberta to meet Travis. Travis is an everyday Alberta hero.
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This is what they're all like. Like, this is what our men are like. Helping the little old ladies and
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just be like, he's the type of man that, that women will fake a medical condition to just have
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him hover over them. I was trying to think to myself, what could I do? Like, what could I do that
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would require mouth to mouth, but not like not CPR. You know what I mean? We need a medical,
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I couldn't think of anything right then, but anyway, Travis, you're a hero and just a,
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a perfect exemplary example of conservative Alberta men. And, uh, and I think you earned
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yourself a lot of fans. Now, another example of a conservative man, Prime Minister Stephen
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Harper was there in his elder statesman vest, taking some jabs at Mark Carney, who has been taking
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credit for Stephen Harper and his finance minister, Jim Flaherty's good work. So let's take a listen.
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You know, friends, I am in a unique position in this federal election. I am the only person
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who can say that both of the men running to be prime minister once worked for me.
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And in that regard, my choice, without hesitation, without equivocation, without a shadow of a doubt,
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Yeah, uh, it's, uh, it was just nice to see Harper there. Uh, people really appreciated him. He
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introduced, uh, Paulyas. So it went, uh, Chief Billy Morin introduced Harper, then Harper introduced
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Paulyas. Um, Patrick's, Patrick Paulyas was also there with Paulyas' mom.
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It was sweet. It was very sweet. There was a World War II vet in the audience.
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I need to say that that guy got a round of applause. Nobody appreciated him more at that
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moment than those 15,000 people. They just gave him a thunderous round of applause. And it was so,
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it was just so sweet. It felt really like the Canada that we remember. Like if anything, it,
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it gave me hope that things can return back to what we remember, uh, Canada being before this 10
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lost years of liberal destruction. Really, Canada, if you are able to attend a Pierre Paulyas rally,
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like that's where you're going to find your people. That's when you're going to find the energy,
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the good vibes, the positive vibes, the hopeful vibes. And you can't tell me where was Mark Carney
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last night? Uh, he was at the Vancouver airport Sheridan doing his, as I said, his mortuary man
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best to fill a room down there with maybe a couple of hundred, uh, not good boomers, but the selfish
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ones who watched too much CBC. That's what he was up to last night. Uh, we, Efron right on the ball,
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found the clip of Harper praising the, or sorry, Paulyas praising the World War II vet. I think he
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said something along the lines of, we want to make Canada, Canada, the kind of country that your
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sacrifice deserves. It would be, it was just a beautiful moment, like truly, truly.
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Oh, Olivia needs a couple more seconds. It's a two minute clip, but yeah. Yeah. Let me just
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encourage you again, Canada, if you can get yourself to a Pierre Paulyas rally,
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you will feel the energy that Canada used to have before this broken moment. It
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was, yeah. Effect on your psyche. Oh. As the convoy. Incredible. Yeah. Yeah. Okay.
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Let's watch. Strength means that we must rebuild Canada's military, the Canadian forces.
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Do we have any veterans here in the house today? Give it up for our veterans. Thank you.
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Thank you for your service. What an incredible honor. There he is. Look at this fellow here.
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He has D-Day on. Good to see you, sir. Where did you serve?
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In the Canadian Navy in the Second World War and D-Day.
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Another round of applause. Bless you, my friend.
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19. What a hero. What an incredible hero. Thank you, sir.
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We have to make this a country that is worthy of that hero's sacrifice, don't we?
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We will ensure that the young and the old have the support they need for a dignified life.
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We will also rebuild the armed forces, cutting back on bureaucracy, procurement boondoggles,
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and putting the money into frontline support for our troops.
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We will reinvest to buy four massive Arctic icebreakers.
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We will double the size of the first patrol of the Arctic Rangers so that we can reclaim our north.
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We will have the first northern Arctic base in Canada since the Cold War, CFB Iqaluit.
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And as my wife just reminded me, our soldiers, sailors, and airmen will be guided by a warrior culture,
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You know, contrast that against left-wing 19-year-olds who will start fights over not using the right pronouns.
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And then that man, who at 19 stormed the beaches of Normandy to defeat the Nazis.
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Who do we want our young men to be when they grow up?
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Do we want them to be wokesters or do we want them to be warriors?
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And that is, you know, the part of the cultural conversation that we must have in Canada.
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And I would suggest that it's, you know, we want a bunch of old guys like that guy who is 19 and being brave
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and earning all of the love that he got from that room last night.
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We've got Polly applauding the massive crowd in Edmonton, saying that it's the biggest political gathering of the 21st century.
00:22:49.340
Like those per capita, those are rallies are actually bigger than Trump rallies.
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When you think about per capita Canada compared to the United States.
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Like the amount of the amount of organic energy that is coming up to support the conservatives in public right now is insane.
00:23:10.620
Yeah, although we have to gauge that by the region of the country, right?
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It's this is Alberta and it's just it was outside of Edmonton.
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Edmonton is a socialist hellscape on a lot of days.
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I think even the people who live there might feel that way.
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I mean, Amarit, so he just failed natural resources minister, is the mayor there, was now taking a leave of absence.
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So he could run because being a mayor is a placeholder.
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I mean, you have to drive past the oil and gas fab yards to get to this location.
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But we've also seen Polly pulling the kind of numbers like 6,500 in Oshawa.
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I'll be real interested to see when he comes to Saskatchewan.
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And we don't quite, we haven't quite heard when he's going to come to Saskatchewan.
00:24:10.700
But it'll be really interesting to see the kind of numbers that he can pull in my home province of Saskatchewan.
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I think it also depends on the city that he goes to.
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So, let's have that video of Polly applauding the crowd in Saskatchewan.
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And be back in my home province here in Alberta.
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Look, this has got to be the biggest political gathering of the 21st century.
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It was really like I keep falling back on the word incredible because it was.
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The vibes were so high, just like just people dancing, being joyful, meeting their neighbors, looking forward.
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When's the last time you felt you felt like you could look forward to something in Canada?
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Yeah, we have been downtrodden by our federal government for so long that people have forgotten that there is good in the world and things to things to get excited about.
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As a matter of fact, I'm mad that there's not another one.
00:25:50.680
Yep, I left Regina at 3 a.m. to be here mid-afternoon.
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But they kept pushing it back and changing the location because of the insane amount of people that wanted to show up.
00:26:04.340
I had two hands on a camera, so I couldn't shake his hand.
00:26:06.960
And he's so delightful, actually, just so personable.
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The little stories that he told you about his dad jokes.
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And just, you know, if you have a husband who makes dad jokes, you're like, oh, yes.
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You have a couple of kids and your humor gets ridiculous.
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He told a sweet little story about his mom, too, about clipping coupons.
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And, you know, you just sort of, you just got a real good idea about the guy he was in person.
00:26:37.820
And so the more Canadians that can experience Paliyev in person, they should not hesitate.
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Paliyev also took aim at the Liberals over their unfair treatment of the Western provinces.
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My video from the crowd, I interviewed the crowd on the way in, and I did ask them, what will become of Alberta if the Liberals win again?
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And some were eager separatists, and some were very reluctant.
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But this is not a country that loves us or allows us to do the things we want to do to help everybody.
00:27:30.780
But our own Rebel News poll from like a month ago almost now, it was like a quarter of people were willing to leave if Carney wins.
00:27:40.940
Now, as we get closer to the election and the polls are going the other way, like the polls are looking better for the Liberals, it's closer to one third of people are willing to leave.
00:27:51.720
I think there will be a prairie fire lit if the rest of this country loses its collective minds and rewards the Liberals for 10 years of corruption and disruption by giving Carney, the outsider, a chance to run this country.
00:28:15.720
It will be viewed as an overt act of aggression against the West.
00:28:29.560
The people of Alberta and Saskatchewan are done.
00:28:33.840
After 120 years of abuse by our federal government, we realize what is at stake more than any other election that we've ever had in Canada.
00:28:46.060
So I would recommend that people down east really consider that.
00:28:50.960
Yeah, and a lot of people are like, fine, if you don't like it here, just go, careful what you wish for, because you just might get it, and then you won't have health care or roads or anything nice.
00:29:03.380
Okay, this is probably I'm saying that the Western provinces have been mistreated for far too long.
00:29:10.240
We're going to unlock the potential of our Western energy producing provinces.
00:29:16.720
And when I become Prime Minister, the era of Liberals telling the West to pay up and shut up will be over forever.
00:29:26.240
He also made an announcement that said, you know, for every new dollar in spending by the federal bureaucracy, they're going to have to get rid of a dollar in spending.
00:29:52.060
Which, oh, I mean, the only way it could get better is if they had to get rid of $2 to spend $1.
00:29:57.660
That's the only way that it could get better, but I understand people.
00:29:59.560
For every new hire in the bureaucracy, they have to fire two, and one of them has to be a manager.
00:30:12.120
For every new hire in the government bureaucracy, you have to fire somebody at the CRA.
00:30:16.280
That was Pierre Polyev just like wading very, very gently into the doge concept in Canada.
00:30:24.300
We know that he's listening, and this is what we want to see.
00:30:26.920
But we do know that our bureaucracies, whether it be on the federal level or on the provincial level, have been exponentially growing, especially since COVID.
00:30:37.380
And this is something that, unless you are providing a service, unless you are delivering for the people that you are supposed to be, well, that are paying your paycheck, if you're not accountable to those people, and if you're not doing a good job, if you're not providing the service, then why are you continuing to be employed?
00:30:59.500
And people were very, very excited to hear that.
00:31:02.600
There was one funny little joke that he told, I don't know if we've had time to find it or not, where he said that when he fantasizes about the day where a family pulls up with a rented U-Haul truck to move into their brand new home, and it is a condo made out of the former CVC head offices.
00:31:26.540
And just to know that the CBC was, like, in the room at that moment.
00:31:29.540
And to know what the entire crowd was thinking, it was pretty awesome.
00:31:33.340
You know, I should have asked Angelica about that, because she was up on the platform with the mainstream media.
00:31:39.120
Oh, you would, if you were the CBC in that moment, you would wish for the earth to open up and swallow you whole.
00:31:47.660
But they've earned this reputation themselves, and I don't feel the least bit bad.
00:31:52.400
They know what they signed up for, and it was dollars from the federal government, and that they've violated the trust of Canada.
00:32:02.740
We don't lie to you for money from the government.
00:32:04.400
But this is why you're welcomed, and this is why people love you in crowds, Sheila, because you're not paid to lie to them.
00:32:11.740
You tell them the truth, and you're brave about it.
00:32:15.620
I'm just grateful to be trusted by the people, because the reputation of journalists has been murdered by the mainstream media.
00:32:26.240
So we've got, I guess this is from this morning, Polly, I've held a press conference bright and early here, and he had an exchange with the Globe and Mail reporter over the size of the massive conservative rally last night.
00:32:40.780
Hi, Mr. Polly, I'm Laura Stone, Globe and Mail.
00:32:54.960
I actually want to know about your rallies and what your strategy is and who you're talking to.
00:33:00.560
Because you bring up things like woke mob, sentry initiative, bulldozing the CBC, I'm exaggerating, but getting rid of CBC HQ.
00:33:08.800
At what point are you just talking in an echo chamber to people who already feel that way?
00:33:14.160
Or do you feel like these are broadening the tent of support to liberal or undecided voters to get them on board with your campaign?
00:33:22.700
How many people do you think we had last night?
00:33:37.500
When was the last time we had a rally that big in Canada?
00:33:41.480
I've never been to one, a political rally that big, I don't think.
00:33:47.520
I know that if there were a bigger rally than that, you would know about it.
00:34:01.020
Listen, I think to have 10,000 or 15,000 people at one political rally, this is a movement
00:34:06.140
like we've never seen because people want change.
00:34:08.760
They want to put our country first for a change.
00:34:11.160
They've seen that after the lost liberal decade of doubling housing costs, of rising crime,
00:34:18.160
of taxes out of control, of our economy weakened under America's thumb, they can't afford
00:34:23.740
to live, and what they want is a new conservative government that will put Canada first for a
00:34:30.600
And that's why my speech talked about taxing taxes, green lighting housing construction,
00:34:37.460
expanding our energy sector, to bring home our jobs so that we can put Canada first for
00:34:43.060
That was the message yesterday, and that is the message that Canadians are going to vote
00:34:48.380
You know, it's kind of funny to see these guys like, oh, I want to talk to you about the
00:35:00.120
I think it was pretty evident that that is the largest political rally in recent history.
00:35:04.980
I have been a political follower since my early to late teens, and I have never seen anything
00:35:12.580
I haven't seen NHL attendance numbers for a political rally.
00:35:18.160
What we should be talking about is the lack of turnout for Mark Carney.
00:35:25.860
I wonder if there's any photos from his event last night in Vancouver at the Sheridan Airport.
00:35:34.140
However, I really, I sort of, her question was, was so loaded, though, because are you
00:35:39.440
speaking, are you speaking to your acolytes and your, you know, your, your dude bros over
00:35:44.460
there at the Conservative Party, or are you trying to broaden your base?
00:35:48.500
Everything that he said last night is broadly acceptable to the wider Canadian public.
00:35:55.840
The economy, undoing the harms of the last 10 years.
00:36:00.460
You're a crazy person if you don't think about those things.
00:36:03.220
There was nothing not to love about everything that was said last night to, to, I mean, the
00:36:11.240
So for her to position that question, like, oh, well, these are just initiatives that your
00:36:19.240
The vast majority of Canadians, the broad Canadian public writ large.
00:36:33.100
Because nobody really thinks about those things.
00:36:35.460
Why weren't you talking about the gender disorders?
00:36:40.740
Like, no, nobody wants to talk about those things anymore.
00:36:47.560
People only think they should care insofar as the people on the TV who have government
00:36:55.040
When you don't care about those things, you're like, well, maybe should I care about them?
00:36:59.780
Don't allow yourself to be gassed at caring about those things.
00:37:06.620
You think about, can I afford snow tires on the car?
00:37:12.340
And the other thing that he mentioned that I thought was so incredible was the way that
00:37:16.980
we're going to start dealing with criminals in Canada.
00:37:19.100
So it's no more serving your sentence at home with an ankle bracelet in your living room
00:37:23.760
playing Grand Theft Auto after you steal 10 cars.
00:37:28.120
Those people are going to go to jail, which I think is all broadly acceptable to the Canadian
00:37:32.980
public who understands that catch and release does not work in stopping crime.
00:37:39.380
We've got a couple of chats, then we'll take a break.
00:37:42.120
I'll take some advice from Olivia about how best to adjust the microphone situation in
00:37:46.800
You guys are hearing me get picked up in her microphone room.
00:37:55.640
And because I don't, like when I file my expenses for Rebel News, I was saying, how would our
00:38:04.200
And I feel like our donors would want me to sometimes cheap out on audio accessories that
00:38:10.400
are not for everyday use, but for exceptional circumstances.
00:38:14.100
And I regret it because you, I think we're all experiencing a little bit of audio problems.
00:38:18.700
And we're going to be doing a lot of traveling this summer together.
00:38:22.320
And we're going to be doing the show probably on the road.
00:38:28.760
Sometimes she needs a little help knowing that she deserves nice things.
00:38:31.540
So everybody tell Sheila that she deserves nice things.
00:38:34.440
Let's read a couple of these chats and then we'll hit an app right and I'll take some advice
00:38:41.680
John Black is a spy of Vox and says, that's great.
00:38:44.220
But Ontario is where Pierre Polly has to draw the bigger crowds.
00:38:51.500
Amazing to see 15,000 approaching turnout in Alberta.
00:38:58.920
Anyway, I honestly can't wait to see what he turns out in Calgary.
00:39:03.300
If he goes to Calgary, I bet you they get at least Edmonton numbers.
00:39:13.420
The same as Regina is a government town in Saskatchewan.
00:39:17.520
I would imagine that he would do better in Calgary.
00:39:20.780
They're even more conservative than the oil patch communities in and around.
00:39:26.800
And recall that he, he had like record audiences in Oshawa, Ontario.
00:39:32.140
6,600, I think in Oshawa, in particular, 10% of the town turned up.
00:39:40.080
And so this, I guess it just goes to show you that you, we should not be believing the polls.
00:39:51.420
Don't assume that everybody's going to show up and vote on your behalf yet.
00:40:24.360
Put it in the chat and we will get a good, a good little, uh, sampling of our viewers
00:40:34.760
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But we are fighting back, and there is strength in numbers.
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I'm so glad that you could come back on the show.
00:42:32.480
For those of you at home who aren't a watcher, frequent consumer of Dacey Media, Chris is
00:42:40.420
an independent journalist based out of Ottawa, who works really hard each week to document
00:42:49.560
But I think a lot of us know you from your coverage of the ongoing pro-FAMAS radicals
00:42:57.720
We wanted to have you back on because you were one of the journalists excluded, once
00:43:05.520
again, from the Mark Carney event the other day.
00:43:17.460
Karima, who happens to be my attorney, was excluded.
00:43:21.600
I was on your ex account and then I saw you reposting her work.
00:43:28.080
Now, tell us, were the Hamas radicals back again this weekend?
00:43:34.760
So actually this weekend, I think it may have been a planned weekend off because this upcoming
00:43:39.560
weekend, we're going to have our usual Saturday, 8 March, but we're also going to have groups
00:43:47.000
So this has happened a couple of times before and they were very large.
00:43:49.940
So over the weekend, we didn't see the normal Saturday March.
00:43:54.140
Also, there was a major incident at Parliament Hill over the weekend with a barricaded suspect.
00:43:58.220
So the entire area of downtown was shut down around the time that they would have normally
00:44:05.000
There was no March, but there's going to be one heck of a big one on Saturday.
00:44:10.760
So I'm going to be taking a few extra precautions for this one after the incident last time.
00:44:19.940
We know that we know that these people will go to unprecedented lengths to shut down people
00:44:30.420
And it's so important in this moment to be able to witness it as as Canadians from the
00:44:38.140
To see this happening is just unreal in Ottawa.
00:44:42.520
Yeah, and it's something that I've been watching happen right since every weekend basically or
00:44:48.640
multiple times a week at times since since the October 7th attacks.
00:44:52.680
And, you know, I've been showing this and showing this and showing this and things have been
00:44:59.960
We've seen people intimidated and chased around and and all kinds of things like that.
00:45:04.320
And, you know, I was starting to wonder what it would take.
00:45:07.300
And I guess it actually took me getting assaulted and police doing nothing.
00:45:11.000
And thanks to your help and a lot of people sharing the story, people are actually really
00:45:15.000
starting to see the mayor has had to come out with the mayor of Ottawa and and respond.
00:45:21.900
I'm hoping that it'll make a difference as well.
00:45:26.960
Hey, Chris, do we have do we know what happened there with the shutdown?
00:45:35.500
Yeah, so a call came in around shortly after 2 p.m.
00:45:39.040
It went out to everyone in Parliament to shelter in place.
00:45:42.420
So what happened was a lone individual made their way into the east block of Parliament.
00:45:47.360
There was an abandoned vehicle on Wellington Street when I got there.
00:45:52.060
But what I imagine is that that person left their vehicle and it was right in front of
00:45:57.020
So they went in through the gate and they got into the security area in the east block
00:46:01.460
and they ended up barricaded inside the east block.
00:46:05.980
You know, the area was shut down for blocks around.
00:46:10.780
They had police with their service carbines, robots.
00:46:14.380
So they took the situation very, very seriously.
00:46:20.500
And very little information coming out from Ottawa police.
00:46:23.200
And even since, very little information from police, really, except for that a single suspect
00:46:35.580
And he's been charged with, I believe it's two counts.
00:46:46.880
So, I mean, those are kind of minor charges, considering the entire downtown core was shut
00:46:54.160
But you're telling us that the police actually can respond.
00:46:59.760
Like, they do have the resources to be able to respond.
00:47:02.100
They're in and around the Ottawa area and they can respond to calls of violence.
00:47:10.900
That was a major takeaway for me because I saw a completely capable and professional
00:47:17.380
Even their interactions with me were drastically different.
00:47:19.600
You know, I came up to cover it and there was an officer who said I could go through
00:47:23.240
Another officer told me, oh, you're in the cordon.
00:47:25.940
But people that I've had, you know, issues with that other protest, everything was professional.
00:47:31.320
And as they should, right, this was what they thought was maybe a major threat.
00:47:35.620
Also, though, quite concerning that this isn't the first time our parliament buildings
00:47:40.040
We had pro-Palestinian protesters take over the Confederation building earlier this year.
00:47:45.720
This year, I saw a guy go up the steps and almost get in the House of Commons.
00:47:49.300
And now somebody actually breached the East Block.
00:47:51.560
So, yes, there was a response, but there may be a bit of a security issue as well.
00:47:56.600
So, well, I look forward to his three-year prosecution that cost $10 million.
00:48:04.040
Now, speaking of three-year prosecution costing $10 million, the real reason we wanted to have
00:48:10.340
Chris on is because he got exclusive footage of Tamara Leach's real first public statements
00:48:17.120
post her conviction for mischief and her acquittal on other charges.
00:48:20.840
So, tell us how that all came to be, that you were Johnny on the spot, ready to take, you
00:48:28.040
know, Tamara's first real public statements, her first real visceral reaction to the judge's
00:48:35.100
Yeah, so, yeah, so this took place on Saturday in Ottawa at a restaurant that's been very
00:48:40.980
supportive of freedom, freedom movement, I'd say in general, hosting, even though they
00:48:46.780
So, at KSO McKee, we was hosted, it was called An Afternoon with Tamara Leach.
00:48:55.980
I tend to go to most of these things, but it was basically, you know, like I'd held about
00:49:00.020
60 people, 60 to 80 people, and it was a lunch, but with a chance for Tamara to speak and address
00:49:05.480
what's happened for the first time, really, that she's been able to really speak publicly.
00:49:10.660
She still does have to be very careful about what she has to say.
00:49:13.240
She still has the more court dates ahead of her, sentencing hearings, and then the actual
00:49:19.880
So, she was limited in what she could say, but she did have some, what I think are some
00:49:26.880
And she also touched on how this has been for her, right?
00:49:30.140
This is years she's been going through this, you know, over 40 days in court.
00:49:34.240
Um, it's, it's been one long heck of a road and, uh, and it's lawfare, right?
00:49:40.200
So, she spoke to that and it was, uh, it was really nice to hear her be able to speak
00:49:44.220
kind of from the heart and, uh, be able to give her, her thoughts on what's been going
00:49:49.940
Now, I wanted to ask you, you covered this trial, I think as closely almost as we have
00:49:56.400
You've been around for a lot of the major milestones in the trial, uh, as long as it
00:50:04.700
Were you personally surprised by the judge's, uh, findings?
00:50:09.720
I know at Rebel News, we were kind of optimistic and Ezra is a former lawyer, so he has like
00:50:15.200
a, a legal mind and, you know, like he feels like he can kind of read the tea leaves of the
00:50:20.680
And that morning I was quite optimistic until like halfway through the judge's ruling and
00:50:26.940
it was quite a long ruling and I realized, oh dang, she's going to be convicted.
00:50:32.640
Uh, what, what was your sense of the trial and then, you know, the outcome, were you sort
00:50:42.760
Yeah, I mean, obviously I'm not, uh, not a legal expert.
00:50:45.220
I'm, I'm kind of a lay person, but I have spent a lot of time in, in trials, not just this
00:50:49.180
one, other one, so I have a bit of an idea how these things go now.
00:50:52.520
Um, I mean, the whole trial experience itself was, was shocked and all of it was crazy.
00:50:57.220
I mean, 40 days, um, the parade of witnesses, homicide detectives watching over things, you
00:51:02.760
know, that, that whole part was, was quite shocking to me.
00:51:06.220
Um, as far as the decision, I was somewhat, I was optimistic as well.
00:51:09.660
I was somewhat surprised, um, with the conviction for Tamara, honestly.
00:51:13.920
Um, you know, we were kind of waiting to hear the decision on the Carter application, which
00:51:18.580
is basically so they could use evidence of, of Chris say against Tamara.
00:51:22.780
Um, and I kind of figured that, that if that application couldn't apply, that, that probably
00:51:27.200
Tamara would, would be found not guilty of everything.
00:51:29.820
Um, I'm not shocked by the, by the mischief for Tamara, the one guilty.
00:51:33.720
It seems like the, the threshold or the standard now for, for being convicted of mischief is
00:51:39.580
Um, and that's very, very arbitrary, you know, who got charged, who didn't, um, so I
00:51:47.420
I mean, I think there was maybe a little bit more evidence.
00:51:49.460
I thought I figured he'd probably get convicted of something, um, a bit more worry for Chris
00:51:55.040
as, as you guys know, Tamara spent a significant amount of time in jail, um, prior to all of
00:52:01.900
So if it's anything like the other cases, I imagine the crowns may be asking for a significant
00:52:06.180
jail time, even with, uh, just the one or two convictions on what should be minor offenses.
00:52:13.960
Um, I kind of thought it might go this way and, and, you know, the government, you know,
00:52:17.500
they're not supposed to be involved in all this stuff, but, but people need their wins,
00:52:20.580
If they get even one, one conviction on one of the more minor things, it wasn't intimidation,
00:52:25.520
Um, they can still use that to, to put their story forward and say, we got to win and these
00:52:29.760
people are evil and everyone adjacent to them is, and you know, the usual stuff they do.
00:52:33.880
So now, uh, before I let you go, I just want to give you the opportunity to let people know
00:52:42.640
You don't have big backers like the federal government to support the work that you do.
00:52:54.960
So, um, I guess all of my, my work now is going up onto X.
00:52:58.260
So at Chris Dacey on X, um, if you follow me there, I'll leave a link.
00:53:03.020
So if you want to support me more, more directly, you can do so by, uh, you transfer to daisymedia
00:53:07.580
at gmail.com or through the, uh, daisymedia merch is available exclusively, um, on the veterans
00:53:14.180
So at the veterans for freedom shopping, you can get some daisymedia merch as well.
00:53:17.860
You know, I think we, I think we need some daisymedia merch.
00:53:21.680
I think we're going to do some cross promotion here, Chris, Chris Dacey from daisymedia.
00:53:28.920
Keep up the good work and we hope to talk to you soon.
00:53:36.580
Uh, we will actually, uh, we talked about the work that Chris did to get the Tamara Leach
00:53:44.620
Uh, why don't we show a little bit of it right here?
00:53:59.260
And like I said, we'll just, uh, we'll just deal with the next thing that comes.
00:54:05.680
And I, I came in mentally prepared for whatever was going to happen.
00:54:16.480
I can either cower in a corner and pretend like I'm some kind of victim, which I am certainly
00:54:21.520
Or I can, uh, hold my head up high and I know who I am and I'm confident in who I am.
00:54:29.460
You know, she's a picture of grace considering the last three years of her life.
00:54:45.180
Like I would be just the bitterest, angriest person given what, and not even what I personally
00:54:53.800
went through, but what my family was forced to go along with me through.
00:54:58.580
Uh, and the impact that it has on your kids and everybody around you and the personal
00:55:03.440
costs and just having them worry about you, I would be seething with anger.
00:55:16.120
She has more grace in her pinky finger than the entirety of our federal government.
00:55:21.220
Now, if people want to support Tamara, um, you can go to TamaraTrial.com.
00:55:26.880
That's your one-stop shop for everything to do with Tamara Leach.
00:55:31.780
You can support our journalism of Tamara Leach on Tamara Trial.
00:55:35.500
You'll find links to support her appeal of her conviction there.
00:55:44.320
Throw a couple bucks at the, uh, Democracy Fund.
00:55:49.200
And, uh, because this, this certainly is not done.
00:55:52.320
And you can also buy her book on the same website, Hold the Line, uh, which is now, I guess,
00:56:02.700
So it's illegal when a conservative grandma from Alberta says it.
00:56:06.460
Uh, we've got a couple of chats and then we'll move on.
00:56:09.820
But yeah, I cannot recommend enough, uh, following and supporting for Stacey.
00:56:13.560
He, he's a one-man shop and you've seen the police won't protect him, but he keeps going
00:56:28.920
Polls show Mark Carney supporters think a Carney liberal government will be a change of government.
00:56:41.660
All of them, all of them, and with more dangerous policy.
00:56:44.800
Well, that's, you get away with it by being boring.
00:56:57.620
And those are probably Easterners who don't want us to leave.
00:57:07.940
It's good to be liked by our, uh, Eastern friends and neighbors.
00:57:11.660
Uh, but the next time we do this, we must do it with a, and, and to which group to, what
00:57:17.860
Because that divide is going to be, that divide would be really interesting.
00:57:21.040
Oh, we've got more, uh, one more clip from Tamara, uh, addressing how when Tommy Robinson
00:57:26.480
visited Canada, he invited her to speak at a rally in London's Travolta Square.
00:57:30.900
And that's the same rally that led to his jailings.
00:57:34.760
These are two people arrested for speaking their minds, demonstrating against the government
00:57:44.860
Tommy Robinson was by publishing a documentary.
00:57:47.620
Tamara Leach was by participating in a peaceful demonstration against her federal government,
00:57:58.420
Chris and I were doing some fundraisers for some of the truckers and for some of the vaccine
00:58:05.980
And, uh, on our way back, Tommy Robinson, well, I'm sure you all heard what happened when
00:58:10.060
he flew in, he was going to do some speaking events and then he got detained and, uh, held
00:58:14.380
hostage in Calgary, which is actually not a terrible place to be held hostage in.
00:58:18.920
Um, anyways, he, he, he knew about us and asked us to go on his show.
00:58:27.180
And at that point he invited us over to go to Trafalgar Square for his rally.
00:58:36.140
He, I'll just give you the brief story on that.
00:58:38.920
So everyone I'm sure is pretty much aware of Tommy.
00:58:41.840
What he chose to do at that rally was to release a documentary that he made on some of the problems
00:58:50.060
I'm not going to get into it, but he did that knowing that there was a highly probable chance
00:58:54.840
that he would be going to jail, but it was important to him to get the truth out.
00:59:00.400
And as a matter of fact, um, I think this is okay for me to say, I know that Ezra had
00:59:08.080
And, um, Ezra said, you know, your video has got 60 million views.
00:59:13.200
Cause he's still in solitary confinement, you know, help yourself.
00:59:23.100
Um, so I was really fortunate to go over there and I was surprised how many of them
00:59:27.960
knew, like, I mean, I was surprised that I was, I was recognized by people there.
00:59:31.700
And, um, I mean, I've never been a huge fan of the F Trudeau stuff, but it was actually
00:59:36.380
quite funny because as soon as they, as soon as they introduced me, a hundred thousand British
00:59:42.360
citizens started that chant, it's, uh, it's, uh, it's funny.
00:59:57.000
She doesn't, she's so humble, like the humility, she doesn't realize how much she inspired the
01:00:10.620
Uh, Ezra likes to say that the reason he pays attention to what's happening in the UK is
01:00:16.140
because it's a precursor, uh, for what's what we can expect to happen in Canada.
01:00:21.140
If we don't do something right now, uh, we are five years away from people being jailed
01:00:26.500
for their, you know, social media posts, 30 people a day are being arrested in the UK
01:00:31.780
for saying inconvenient, impolite things, uh, according to the government on their, on
01:00:40.940
And we've seen such a change in the United States in these last couple of months, honest
01:00:46.920
And we have a unique opportunity, Canada to undo some of the harms and, and really course
01:00:53.020
correct where Canada goes in these next several years.
01:00:56.420
Uh, God help us if the liberals managed to pull off a fourth term.
01:01:05.500
Now we've got, uh, Daniel Smith, uh, remarking on Mark Carney, mocking her during a campaign
01:01:14.880
That was a big topic of conversation last night.
01:01:18.800
Uh, a lot of fans of Daniel Smith in the crowd, I think overwhelming majority, probably
01:01:24.060
unanimous her standing up to Mark Carney and just, you know, compare and contrast how she
01:01:30.820
stands up to Mark Carney and she's singled out for it by Mark Carney versus the butt kissing
01:01:38.340
And then intern gets from Mark Carney, but he basically said, Oh, we're not going to send
01:01:45.740
First of all, she doesn't need your dang permission.
01:01:47.860
She's going to go to Washington if she wants to go to Washington.
01:01:51.200
Um, but this, let's listen to what she had to say.
01:01:53.740
How do you feel about being mocked by the prime minister of Canada and liberal leaders, which
01:02:02.100
he did, I believe in Victoria, bringing your name up and the name of premier Ford, but more
01:02:07.680
so yourself and making you the butt of jokes during the campaign.
01:02:11.960
Well, I've noticed this with progressive men, how much they talk about how much they support
01:02:18.100
women until they meet a strong conservative woman.
01:02:21.080
And so this is a pretty consistent type of approach that I've seen, not only from the
01:02:25.480
current prime minister, but the former one as well.
01:02:32.240
I make sure that Albertans know exactly how I feel about issues.
01:02:35.640
And I'm going to continue advocating on behalf of my province, whether he likes it or not.
01:02:47.080
She's the most effective negotiator with the Trump administration.
01:02:51.040
But she is the most active listener in the entire nation of Canada.
01:02:55.640
She cares more about what Albertans think, what they want for themselves.
01:03:01.680
And she, again, she is showing us a masterclass in how our elected politicians should treat
01:03:18.680
And it's because she develops her feelings based on what Albertans tell her.
01:03:25.480
I mean, but yeah, leave it to Mark Carney to be a misogynistic prick.
01:03:28.660
To the most popular premier in the province, as it pertains to the support that she gets
01:03:37.620
Well, and if he's going to make fun of her, and she is the most politically powerful Albertan
01:03:44.620
right now, outside of Pierre Paulie, who is from Calgary.
01:03:48.460
If he's going to mock her and tell her to shut up, imagine what he would do to the rest of
01:03:56.940
If the woman was bringing our concerns both to Ottawa, but also to Washington, if she is
01:04:03.160
treated with such disdain and public condemnation, imagine what he would do if we got any ideas
01:04:09.120
about protesting the federal government this time around.
01:04:11.780
Well, because they, because don't forget that the liberals don't know what a woman is.
01:04:15.620
When anyone can self-identify as a woman, we'll just go back to C4 and C16.
01:04:20.560
When anybody can identify as a woman, then you can talk about them like this.
01:04:26.580
Then you can, you know, you can ignore them and publicly eviscerate them because there's
01:04:35.000
no expectation that you treat women with respect.
01:04:41.100
They must be repealed by the conservative government.
01:04:44.080
Uh, now we've got Mark Carney from his, uh, hoedown at the Holiday Inn or wherever it
01:04:55.920
Uh, I'm sure the Sheraton airport in, in Vancouver is lovely.
01:05:01.900
I may have even stayed there for work or working on a documentary.
01:05:06.240
Uh, I'm sure it's lovely, but it is not the largest warehouse I've ever seen in my life
01:05:15.920
So many people trying to share images to get around the lies of the mainstream media that
01:05:27.940
Um, but anyways, Mark Carney last night at the, at the, oh, Joe, the Howard Johnson, uh,
01:05:36.620
the ballroom down at the Howard Johnson, where next week, someone will be hosting a bar mitzvah.
01:05:41.820
Uh, this is, he says, Pollyev would kneel before Trump.
01:05:50.580
Oh, we heard about that last night too, on the Pollyev side.
01:05:53.800
Trump doesn't get to decide what happens to Canada.
01:05:58.880
Also, Stephen Harper reminding the crowd, all the bad things in Canada right now are not
01:06:08.660
Um, so anyways, this is him saying, even though Trump has endorsed this guy, because he will
01:06:15.760
be absolutely easy to walk over, uh, he's changing lanes and saying, uh, that, uh, Pollyev
01:06:27.160
He should have said it in the original Mandarin, but go ahead.
01:06:32.020
When you're in a crisis, my experience, what you need to do is distinguish between what you
01:06:39.920
And this, it's not really a big insight, but I don't think at 78, we can change Donald
01:06:50.280
And a person who draws their inspiration from Donald Trump, like Pierre Pollyev, he'll kneel
01:07:02.260
And as Premier Smith said, and I quote, Pierre Pollyev, Pierre Pollyev is in sync with
01:07:13.980
Pierre Pollyev is choosing to be willfully blind to the many and growing threats that
01:07:22.120
You know, I've never heard such an outrageously anti-American politician in my life, except
01:07:27.980
maybe Elizabeth May, who is herself an American.
01:07:32.500
Uh, and, but the way that he just integrated Danielle Smith there to a room full of left
01:07:41.040
That should say something to the people of Alberta, right?
01:07:44.220
They're like, you know, the kind of prime minister he's going to be if he's denigrating our, uh,
01:08:01.060
Uh, and again, this is, this is not Trump that has caused us any of the heartache or pain
01:08:08.500
Trump didn't inflate our immigration level so that we have no housing and infrastructure
01:08:15.880
Trump is not the reason that our healthcare system would sooner euthanize you than treat
01:08:24.640
Trump had nothing to do with the green slush funds.
01:08:33.800
Trump had nothing to do with why Canada is broken today.
01:08:37.800
And, uh, and the liberals had everything to do with why Canada is broken today.
01:08:43.920
Uh, we've got, uh, another update to our, uh, Western separation poll.
01:09:01.560
And 31% of you are from the rest of the country.
01:09:06.580
And so again, we've remained flattered by that.
01:09:10.160
Uh, we've got a chat here, uh, Northern Lights gives us five bucks from Ontario.
01:09:24.580
Actually, last night in line, uh, we were talking to a guy that just moved to Alberta from Ontario,
01:09:34.340
Their whole family is relocating to Alberta from, from Ontario.
01:09:38.040
And I, I gave them a, a, a hearty Western Canadian welcome.
01:09:46.220
Now we've, before we wrap, cause I realized we have technical problems.
01:09:51.080
You guys are probably hearing us in, in, in echo.
01:09:55.300
I, again, I, I'm so sorry that I kind of cheaped out on the audios app when I should have just
01:10:04.680
And I didn't because I'm trying to save money all the time because we're crowdfunded.
01:10:08.500
I don't have a sugar daddy named smart Carney to help us pay the bills around here.
01:10:16.040
Um, now I want to react to this with you at least because, um, there's just a lot of,
01:10:24.400
it's, it's, it's, first of all, it's a real cornucopia for the eyeballs.
01:10:37.040
Uh, it's a spokesman for the far left revolution party of Canada.
01:10:42.960
So these people are like the NDP, not radical enough.
01:10:47.320
The greens too sober, uh, the socialists and the communists too organized.
01:10:57.880
Now, I think the only thing that these people are revolting against is good dietary choices.
01:11:06.300
Um, they warn about the existential threat posed by climate change, particularly on quote
01:11:15.160
And he says the party will impose a policy requiring Canada to be net zero by 2045.
01:11:21.840
Uh, so I think probably close to the liberals, Mark Carney's targets, actually very near.
01:11:30.220
That sounds a lot like the liberal party of Canada, actually.
01:11:33.260
Uh, just watch this and tell me if these people could wage any sort of revolution.
01:11:39.540
Every human's needs are every human's rights, no matter color, gender identity, sexuality,
01:11:45.180
class, marital status, religion, disability, professional status, or any other identity
01:11:55.900
Water insecurity in Canada and across the world disproportionately affects First Nations
01:12:00.780
communities who face incessant long-term drinking water advisories.
01:12:04.640
This is why the revolutionary party of Canada will deprivatize the for-profit creation, extraction, and selling of water
01:12:15.320
and eliminate all contracts with companies such as Nestle and ban all future water extraction for profit.
01:12:23.540
Moreover, the revolution party of Canada is disturbed by and proactive in the issue of climate change,
01:12:29.140
of which the aforementioned issues with water supply stem from and are aggravated by.
01:12:34.300
Climate change and the global warming of our planet pose an existential threat to every living organism on Earth.
01:12:40.700
And let it be clear that this is not your fault.
01:12:43.340
Just the top 100 corporations are responsible for 71% of all greenhouse gas emissions since 1998,
01:12:53.280
We will not let stolen land be further desecrated by being wholly and irrevocably destroyed.
01:12:59.400
We stand in accord with missions and initiatives such as the Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty,
01:13:04.780
which advocates for global cooperation in the effort to expedite the transition from conventional to clean, renewable energy.
01:13:12.040
As with water security, the effects of climate change affect marginalized communities the most as well.
01:13:17.480
Global warming wreaks havoc on the Arctic at a rate and severity unlike any other region,
01:13:23.180
as the rising sea levels, thawing permafrost, severe weather, and loss of sea ice
01:13:28.780
are destroying the resources and lives of Indigenous communities.
01:13:33.620
This is why the revolution party intends to enact a national strategy
01:13:37.580
requiring Canada to be net zero in all greenhouse gas emissions by 2045 and a net negative by 2050.
01:13:44.880
The revolution party of Canada would also enact a slate of aggressive taxation policy on the ultra wealthy.
01:13:52.200
This includes a number of things, including a key point of scaling an annual wealth tax,
01:13:58.640
which looks like any person who has a universe, sorry, a ultra high net worth above 30 million US dollars is the definition.
01:14:07.260
They will be subject to an annual wealth tax of 1%, increasing to as high as 10%
01:14:11.640
for those who have a total wealth of over $1 billion.
01:14:17.580
Well, that's three minutes of our lives that we're never going to get back.
01:14:20.860
I'm happy we watched it because these are what the universities are cranking out.
01:14:28.240
This is the perfect example of a post-secondary grad in Canada right now.
01:14:33.940
They think the bottled water at the store should be free because making the bottles,
01:14:40.760
running the factory that bottles the water, shipping the water to you, that all just happens by magic.
01:14:46.920
There's no input costs to creating bottled water.
01:14:50.880
They're going to aggressively tax the most high-performing companies in the nation.
01:14:59.640
I didn't even know that these guys existed and I'm kind of, I don't, I want to go back to like,
01:15:06.340
there's only, there's only one thing more annoying than a, than a, what is this, a trans woman lecturing you?
01:15:15.300
An ally at the very least, according to his hat.
01:15:23.380
And he's in suffragette colors, which is the purple and the green, which I object to.
01:15:27.240
Those are the, that's the color of, uh, women's rights, of women's rights.
01:15:31.420
That's what he's wearing right there with his, with his silly little rainbow heart hat.
01:15:35.000
Um, but, but I mean, talk about insufferable, talk about insufferable and somebody that's
01:15:39.580
completely disconnected from reality in Canada.
01:15:42.600
I mean, honestly, why would CPAC give them a microphone?
01:15:59.020
And yet they, they, they, they, these guys, a microphone.
01:16:02.160
The press gallery turned up to look at these guys.
01:16:08.340
They're like Sheila, the revolution party of Canada's building a press conference.
01:16:12.680
There would be a cloud of smoke where I was standing.
01:16:17.900
Just to hear the virtue signaled word salad that fell out of his face.
01:16:21.080
I mean, the crazy thing is you can take everything that that man said and apply it to any radical
01:16:30.420
If, if Mark Carney stood up and said those words, none of us would have been surprised.
01:16:38.600
I think that's the reason I wanted to show you this.
01:16:40.840
It's crazy when it's coming out of one of the, the mouths of the revolutionary party people, but nothing he said there is not in values by Mark Carney.
01:16:57.300
Everything is part of the identity politics spectrum.
01:17:01.800
Everything is based on a, on a capitalist socialist spectrum.
01:17:07.780
And how are we going to take away things from the people and then give them to the rich elites?
01:17:13.340
That's basically the whole entire plan of all the rich elites have to have their money taken away from them in Canada.
01:17:19.880
But if you're like Mark Carney and your money's parked in Bermuda or the Bahamas or, uh, Ireland, which has a very favorable tax structure, by the way, for large corporations, which is why Trump is mad at them.
01:17:34.760
A lot of times is because they have this weird corporate tax structure.
01:17:38.580
That's very favorable to the likes of Brookfield asset management, which is probably one of the reasons Mark Carney has an Irish passport and one of the others, but, uh, he's a global citizen.
01:17:48.780
But, uh, yeah, like the rich people, when you say we're going to tax the rich, they just go, okay, thanks.
01:18:04.140
We're not going to endorse the NDP's carbon tax and then move to Britain.
01:18:08.820
We're like, Murray, don't leave us with your bad ideas.
01:18:13.300
And the crazy thing is like, that is not an option for normal, everyday working, regular Canadians.
01:18:18.020
Like taking all of your assets and moving them offshore so that you don't, you know, that you're sheltered from all of the taxes, the prohibitive taxes that the federal government unleashes upon us.
01:18:32.440
Uh, we must commit to taking down the globalist structure that has been, uh, abusing regular people for the last 40 years.
01:18:41.360
We're thinking about stuff like, uh, is it, will it, will I save money if I drive across town to fill up my car or am I using more fuel and it'll burn up my savings of going to the cheaper gas station?
01:18:55.940
Like that, those are the things that normal people talk about.
01:19:00.680
Should I drive across town waiting line at the Costco gas station or should I just fill up closer to home?
01:19:07.220
If I only fill it to half, will I be able to buy pork chops this week?
01:19:10.680
If I only like, those are the decisions that Canadians have been forced to make.
01:19:14.400
Uh, when in reality, we come from a country with staggering natural resources.
01:19:27.380
The UAE or the Singapore or, or like Singapore.
01:19:32.960
And it, it, it is only because of the, uh, liberal party of Canada that we are not.
01:19:40.060
Let's throw up the revolution party website just for fun.
01:19:52.640
These guys, I think they're eating a lot of everything.
01:19:54.520
When the people shall have nothing more to eat, they will eat the rich.
01:19:59.960
Unlike their global counterparts, Canadian billionaires tend to stay quiet about the underserved, undeserved,
01:20:11.960
Oh, you're hoarding your personal wealth if you don't give it to those three dudes on the stage.
01:20:19.380
Every time I hear the words marginalized community, I just literally check out.
01:20:22.820
Like if they, if somebody starts talking and says the words marginalized, oh, this affects
01:20:31.780
The 20 wealthiest Canadians could fund a universal basic income program all by themselves.
01:20:55.060
The NDP again are so bad that I defend Galen Weston now.
01:21:01.160
Uh, except for the fact that he's gouged for people in a rent price fixing scheme for
01:21:06.920
Oh, and also he, uh, the David Menzies good work on this.
01:21:10.920
He took, I forget it was $10 million, uh, one of, uh, the fourth richest family in the
01:21:18.720
country to $10 million from the federal government to upgrade their fridges to be more affordable.
01:21:26.440
Uh, see, in Canada, the wealth redistribution goes the other way.
01:21:31.060
We give it to the wealthy people, um, who are connected to the liberals now through the
01:21:36.400
Green Slush Fund and also through Galen Weston.
01:22:08.900
Who put up the NDP signs at the end of his driveway?
01:22:32.260
Yeah, I called him Minister Lady, Miss, Minister Mr. Lady Curly Fries.
01:22:37.920
Because he is married to the heiress of the McCain family fortune.
01:22:44.000
Who's the finance minister who forgot his, uh, French villa?
01:22:59.240
Hey, if we, uh, if we just name checked you on the program, just know that you could
01:23:05.900
send us Money Billionaires of Canada and we would talk nice about you on the, on the
01:23:15.200
Bill Morneau is married to the heiress of the McCain crispy fry fortune.
01:23:26.120
Margaret McCain, Sarah Irving, that's Irving oil.
01:23:35.400
Uh, Mark Scheinberg, Peter Gilgen, Jeff Skoll, Garrett Camp, Daryl Cates, the Oilers owner.
01:23:43.520
Uh, Andre Demare, Paul Demare, Lino Saputo, the cheese dudes.
01:23:50.340
Uh, Carlo Fidani, Jim, oh, Apostolopoulos, Peter, also of the same last name, Lino Boguslavsky,
01:24:20.820
Uh, unlike, you'll notice that you don't know a lot of those names because unlike in the
01:24:25.420
United States, our billionaires keep their mouths shut because, uh, they want, there's
01:24:30.940
a very small group of rich elites and you want to be invited to the parties.
01:24:37.860
They keep it pretty, they keep it pretty chill.
01:24:44.460
Larry Tannenbaum, big guy in Toronto sports and, and more.
01:24:52.240
Because I, my brain became accustomed to calling him Minister, Mr. Lady Curly Fries, who forgot
01:25:07.220
When you, when you have that much money, it becomes inconsequential and you can forget
01:25:12.980
Whereas if I get new, you know, mats in my car, I'm like, Sheila, look, I saved up and
01:25:21.060
In the meantime, I'm cheaping out on audio equipment.
01:25:30.780
Uh, we've got one chat and we'll wrap the show.
01:25:32.720
Thank you everybody for bearing with our technical difficulties.
01:25:37.700
Uh, special thanks to Chris Stacy for jumping on the screen with us from Stacy media, putting
01:25:42.680
himself in harm's way to get to school every single week, a true independent citizen
01:25:49.780
I've got a chat here from Randy Albert gives us 10 bucks.
01:25:54.320
Stop all payments until all provinces cooperate to have our pipelines.
01:26:06.500
That, I mean, that would be a great idea, wouldn't it?
01:26:22.280
We're running around, we're working, we're building, we're saving for a rainy day and all
01:26:26.200
the little foxes and the turkeys are laying out in the yard, doing nothing until the time
01:26:32.780
comes when, uh, we have to fight Trump tariffs and they have nothing.
01:26:44.820
Lise will be in her home and then we won't have to worry about these audio issues tomorrow.
01:26:51.600
I'll move my desk back and then move myself to the middle.
01:26:56.300
You pitched in a little bit to keep the lights on here at Rebel News.
01:26:58.620
We couldn't do the work that we do without you.
01:27:01.200
Um, and as you can tell by the state of the audio in the studio today, I really do respect
01:27:07.500
In such a way that I have a hard time expensing anything.
01:27:11.420
Um, that, uh, Lise, thanks for coming with me to, I think, a historic event last night
01:27:17.820
and, uh, get up and get on air with me before you get back on the road all the way to your
01:27:25.960
It's always a pleasure, Sheila Gunn-Reed, and I'll see you right back here tomorrow from
01:27:30.540
And as my friend David Menzies always says, stay safe and stay safe.
01:27:34.100
We recently also invested over $20 million to boost the competitiveness and resiliency
01:27:57.040
While the U.S. is trying to keep high quality, sustainable Canadian lumber out, we will use
01:28:06.160
more of it here in our plan to double the pace of housing construction in this country over
01:28:14.100
This is the most ambitious housing plan since the Second World War.
01:28:20.220
We will build our way out of the housing crisis.
01:28:23.240
We will build our way out of the economic crisis.
01:28:26.400
We will make housing more affordable in Canada once more.