Rebel News Podcast - July 09, 2025


REBEL ROUNDUP | RCMP calls trad values 'extremist', Wages up as immigration down, Alberta fights DEI


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 28 minutes

Words per Minute

152.46077

Word Count

13,426

Sentence Count

1,059

Misogynist Sentences

27

Hate Speech Sentences

36


Summary

Rebel Roundup is a daily news and opinion show hosted by Sheila Gunn-Reed and Lise Merle. This week, the team is back with a special guest to discuss the latest in anti-authority and anti-Canadianism.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Oh, hey, good morning, good afternoon, everybody, depending on which part of this country that
00:00:08.700 you're in, you are watching Rebel Roundup, our daily news and opinion show.
00:00:12.600 I am your regular host, Sheila Gunn-Reed, and I'm joined today by our regular Tuesday
00:00:19.480 and Wednesday co-host, my very best friend in real life, Lise Merle from Regina, Saskatchewan.
00:00:26.160 Lise, how's it going?
00:00:27.220 Hello, my darling Sheila Gunn-Reed.
00:00:29.440 Hello, Canada.
00:00:31.260 Well, Sheila Gunn-Reed, we have a problem because today's lineup has my pantyhose in a bunch.
00:00:37.320 Okay, not often, can I say, can I claim that reading the lineup has just got me on, has
00:00:44.400 got my teeth on edge today's, and I can't wait to get into it with you because, as always,
00:00:50.840 I feel better after, this is my therapy, okay?
00:00:53.240 I don't go to therapy because I get to do this twice a week, and I can't wait to get into
00:00:58.240 it with you.
00:00:58.660 Yeah, the show is just wild today, and, you know, it's easy to feel crazy when you're
00:01:05.880 looking at this and our public institutions are saying these things, and you're like,
00:01:10.000 wait, no, it's the kids who are crazy.
00:01:12.460 It's not, it's not me.
00:01:14.100 And we're here to help you feel that way, that you're not alone, to look at this stuff
00:01:19.560 and think, man, society's crazy, because society's losing its marbles, and it's real easy to want
00:01:24.700 to check out of it altogether.
00:01:26.740 Trust me, I know.
00:01:27.600 But before we get to that, I want to tell you how you can support Rebel News, but also get
00:01:33.560 involved, have your say.
00:01:34.620 We're going to democratize the show a little bit.
00:01:36.760 So if you're watching us on the wonderful free speech platform of Rumble, who allowed
00:01:41.700 us to be monetized when nobody else did, and they don't actually care about your political
00:01:49.940 viewpoint, which is, I think, how you want a social media platform to be.
00:01:52.920 You want it to be the free and liberal exchange of ideas, small l liberal, the marketplace of
00:01:58.760 arguments, and let the best one win.
00:02:01.440 That is Rumble.
00:02:02.840 So if you're watching us on Rumble and you want to get involved in the show, have your
00:02:06.040 say.
00:02:06.320 Hear your comments read on air.
00:02:08.000 You can leave a Rumble rant if it's over the $5 US cutoff.
00:02:11.860 We are making it obligatory.
00:02:13.800 We must read it on air.
00:02:14.740 If it's under that, we'll do our best time permitting.
00:02:17.460 And usually, if I'm not running up against a meeting or if the studio isn't required
00:02:23.280 for other things, we do get to them all.
00:02:25.540 So that's how you can support us.
00:02:27.580 Because as you know, unlike our, I was going to say peers, I think peers is probably the
00:02:34.300 right word, in the mainstream media, we'll never take a penny from the government to do
00:02:38.640 the work that we do.
00:02:40.460 And if you are watching us on YouTube, where, as I say frequently, I believe it's a glitch
00:02:45.800 that we are re-monetized over there.
00:02:47.880 But let's roll with it for as long as possible.
00:02:50.580 You can leave a super chat.
00:02:52.640 Same rules apply, but there's also an additional way to support us if you're watching the recorded
00:02:57.740 version of the show.
00:02:58.820 You didn't catch a slide because you were gainfully employed somewhere.
00:03:02.080 Fine.
00:03:03.040 But you can watch the recorded version of the show and leave a super thanks.
00:03:06.740 That's their paid comment.
00:03:07.760 So we're turning the show over to you to have your say.
00:03:11.900 And I'm sure you're going to have many, many, many opinions about the stuff that we're going
00:03:16.140 to talk about today.
00:03:17.360 For example, this.
00:03:21.260 Let's do the first thing because it is infuriating.
00:03:25.700 Did you know that according to the National Law Enforcement Agency, and I believe the FBI
00:03:32.000 sort of got in trouble for saying something similar not all that long ago, they were basically
00:03:37.020 made a laughingstock and the RCMP upper echelons, the brass, not the normal guys who live and
00:03:45.260 work in your community, their kids play on your hockey team, not those guys, not the guys
00:03:48.780 you see down at the gun range.
00:03:50.300 These are their bosses.
00:03:51.900 So reserve some empathy for the regular boots on the ground RCMP officers right now.
00:03:57.040 They have decided that if you, let's say you believe that family is the cornerstone of
00:04:06.160 society, that government should fit in a teacup.
00:04:12.560 Well, you just might be an extremist.
00:04:15.100 I bet you didn't know that.
00:04:17.160 Let's hear it from the RCMP.
00:04:21.420 And when you're finally, I wanted to ask when you're talking about seeing individuals engage
00:04:25.920 in that anti-authority and perhaps escalating their beliefs or their motives in that level,
00:04:31.840 I'm wondering what the public can do in order to be vigilant or what they can do to help
00:04:37.100 in trying to ensure that there is safety and security on that front.
00:04:43.560 Well, radicalization in general quite often will show by people isolating themselves and
00:04:50.120 changing their behavior, like changing what they're saying on a subject, like becoming more extremist.
00:04:57.680 And if someone you know was very believed in equal gender rights, but all of a sudden are leaning towards
00:05:07.600 like traditional values, and that might be a sign that they're becoming more extremist.
00:05:13.760 But we also have to remember that having the most extremist views is perfectly legal in Canada,
00:05:19.440 and that it's only acting with violence to prove that view that becomes a criminal offense.
00:05:29.800 Well, thank you so much for offering some clarity here.
00:05:32.540 We appreciate your time.
00:05:34.600 Thank you so much.
00:05:35.540 Okay, this woman is an argument for not having women in positions of power herself.
00:05:42.560 Am I being an extremist right now?
00:05:44.800 Thank you.
00:05:45.360 When I see people like that, women like that, who could quite likely just be your regular old
00:05:51.460 DEI hire, checked a lot of identity boxes, I'm like, this makes me feel like maybe they
00:05:56.240 shouldn't have given us the vote when I see stuff like this.
00:06:00.360 Um, so what they're talking about here is some, uh, Canadian Armed Forces members were
00:06:06.400 charged, um, because it's a court, and again, nothing's been proven in court.
00:06:12.960 I don't have all the details, but the charges are related to potentially starting a militia
00:06:17.640 and seizing some land.
00:06:18.960 Now that's what the RCMP are saying.
00:06:20.660 The facts have not all been hashed out in courts, but that, that's not what she was talking
00:06:26.700 about here because she said radicalization in general might be when someone changes their
00:06:32.780 viewpoint on certain issues.
00:06:34.540 So being open-minded, radicalization, she says, uh, you know, when they, when they move
00:06:41.900 from being open-minded about, um, gender roles to being more traditionalist.
00:06:49.240 And start talking about it and start talking about it.
00:06:51.740 And then start talking about it.
00:06:52.360 Right.
00:06:52.540 So let's say you went to church, you all of a sudden have found the Lord.
00:06:57.880 And now you think there are pink jobs and blue jobs.
00:07:01.440 Um, and mom's place is best with the children and dad's place is best being the hunter gatherer,
00:07:08.840 i.e.
00:07:09.260 out in the workforce.
00:07:11.100 Uh, you have just found yourself to be, uh, an RCMP.
00:07:16.140 I labeled radical.
00:07:17.420 Like if you start eating right, working out and, uh, mom quits her job to be at home with
00:07:23.100 the kids instead of shuffling off to the, um, child prison of daycare, uh, you are a radical
00:07:30.040 of some sort.
00:07:31.060 Imagine being a normal RCMP officer and this, this is who's in charge.
00:07:36.980 Could, could you imagine being one of the normal RCMP officers and hearing this out of your
00:07:43.800 institution, the institution that's supposed to uphold and represent you?
00:07:47.700 Could you imagine like never has the RCMP given itself a better reason to be absolutely
00:07:54.260 abolished in Canada than this right here?
00:07:57.120 Because when she talks about traditional, traditional values, what she's actually talking
00:08:01.740 about is conservatism, uh, conservatism and traditional values go hand in hand.
00:08:07.300 We're not talking about fiscal conservatism.
00:08:10.440 We're talking about cultural conservatism.
00:08:12.480 And when, uh, when people change or start talking about their beliefs, it is because
00:08:21.880 it is because they are looking for community and validation.
00:08:25.660 Now, a great many of our viewers will agree with me when I say there are only two sexes.
00:08:31.900 There are men and there are women.
00:08:33.680 Right.
00:08:33.840 Gender is not real.
00:08:35.020 Gender is not real.
00:08:36.560 It is, it is a, it is a left-wing construct that has had ruinous consequences to our society
00:08:42.740 and our culture, um, in, in Western society.
00:08:45.680 And that so many of us are speaking about it publicly, uh, this is a real problem for captured
00:08:55.320 institutions like the RCMP who have bought the DEI scale, um, wholesale.
00:09:02.400 They've bought into it 100%.
00:09:04.940 But, uh, again, nothing has, nothing has shown the institutional degradation of the RCMP quite
00:09:16.540 like this woman.
00:09:17.600 Congratulations, lady.
00:09:18.780 Look what you did.
00:09:20.540 You've got the whole country talking about you.
00:09:22.720 You've got the whole country talking about you.
00:09:24.880 Good job, lady.
00:09:26.140 Good job, DEI hire.
00:09:27.660 Way to go.
00:09:28.660 Right.
00:09:28.920 This is right up there with the land acknowledgement before they talked about the missing kids
00:09:32.560 for RCMP's greatest hits in the last month or so.
00:09:36.300 Um, yeah.
00:09:38.020 And what does this do for young men and women, quite frankly, who are considering a career
00:09:44.760 in law enforcement and then they see this and they're like, wait, but I go to church.
00:09:49.000 Uh, I'm a practicing Catholic.
00:09:52.300 Uh, I guess this institution is for just crazy people.
00:09:55.880 I guess so.
00:09:56.800 And so now you have this, it will be the institution of the RCMP abandoned to the lunatics, um,
00:10:03.880 because all the normals are like, you know what?
00:10:06.920 Maybe not.
00:10:07.980 This is not for me.
00:10:09.760 I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna find success within this institution considering my, considering
00:10:14.680 my radical viewpoint.
00:10:16.800 Yeah.
00:10:17.020 Deeply held beliefs, deeply held conservative beliefs.
00:10:20.180 Um, the RCMP has had staffing issues for the last at least 10 years.
00:10:24.860 They are in a staffing pit as it pertains to getting their members to be able to sign up
00:10:33.720 to go to more remote areas.
00:10:35.700 And this is going to do nothing to help their staffing issues.
00:10:39.960 So again, I'd like to congratulate that woman, that spokesperson from the RCMP for running
00:10:44.840 her mouth like this and showing us exactly who the RCMP is.
00:10:49.260 Yeah.
00:10:49.700 Way to go, guys.
00:10:50.780 Way to go.
00:10:51.100 Again, another reason, another reason not to trust a public institution in Canada because
00:10:55.980 they tell us who they are.
00:10:57.480 Yeah.
00:10:57.840 And again, this is not a reflection of the guys who actually do the real policing.
00:11:02.340 Yesterday I, I, uh, dragged the nerds at the, uh, the firearms program at the RCMP.
00:11:11.420 Now I'm dragging the, uh, DEI hires who go on national news and make pronouncements that
00:11:17.380 people with traditional values are extremist, um, and I know this is further on down in the
00:11:26.940 schedule, but I think it dovetails nicely into this because as you know, in Alberta,
00:11:30.960 we have recently announced a creation of our own provincial police force.
00:11:34.640 Us too in Saskatchewan.
00:11:36.280 Yeah.
00:11:36.920 Saskatchewan Marshall Service.
00:11:38.480 So ours is the, like we have a police, like we had our, uh, sheriff previously, but this expands
00:11:45.460 their roles and they're there to fill in the gaps.
00:11:47.300 Um, so now it's more of a provincial police service as, as opposed to like peace officers
00:11:52.040 who are filling in the, in the gaps.
00:11:54.600 And we have a, uh, police chief now for that person.
00:11:57.580 And this sort of detaches us away from the madness of what's going on.
00:12:02.680 And so, uh, our new, our new municipal affairs minister, Dan, Dan Williams.
00:12:14.700 He was the former minister of mental health and addiction.
00:12:19.840 Um, he has said this yesterday, keep away from wokeness and DEI.
00:12:26.000 The new minister warns municipalities.
00:12:29.160 So Dan, he did incredible work at, uh, addictions and mental health.
00:12:33.960 In fact, I think the entire, uh, ministry staff in the office there were in recovery.
00:12:39.900 Um, and they took a recovery focused approach.
00:12:42.840 None of this were given drugs to drug addicts and where, where the federal government fell
00:12:46.860 down, Alberta stepped up.
00:12:48.860 For example, uh, indigenous health is a federal mandate, but they weren't building, uh, treatment.
00:12:55.380 They weren't doing anything.
00:12:56.320 Yeah.
00:12:56.420 They weren't building treatment beds on reserve.
00:12:58.100 So Alberta stepped up and did it.
00:12:59.460 And we said, you know, like they're, they might hand out drugs in BC, but they'll serve as
00:13:04.500 a good foil to what we're doing here.
00:13:06.900 And, uh, our, uh, overdose rates went way down because, uh, we don't abandon people to
00:13:13.300 drugs.
00:13:13.600 So Dan said, I want to make sure that Edmonton and Calgary are doing their jobs.
00:13:18.740 There's not a left-wing and right-wing way to plow a road or deliver water or treat wastewater.
00:13:23.880 These are just the obligations of municipalities, but if they start veering into plastic straw
00:13:29.200 bands and DEI policies and legalizing business licenses for brothels, then they're way off
00:13:34.640 base from the responsibility of the municipality.
00:13:38.000 So we can't know, or sorry, he says, we know we can't have tertiary care and all sorts of
00:13:44.160 high-level care in every rural town, but we need to make sure that these big city centers
00:13:47.480 are working for rural residents as well as urban residents.
00:13:51.100 And, uh, he says the article goes on to say the elimination of programs deemed to DEI.
00:13:58.960 Incredible.
00:14:00.240 Has become a major thrust under the Trump presidency.
00:14:02.840 Those against DEI says it discriminates against people whose identities don't fall into certain
00:14:06.880 categories, blah, blah, blah.
00:14:09.000 But anyways, uh, Edmonton and Calgary both licensed rub body rub parlors and practitioners,
00:14:15.280 escorts and exotic dancers, uh, plastic bands or restrictions.
00:14:19.280 Meanwhile, are in place in eight Alberta municipalities.
00:14:22.780 And he says, if big municipalities stay in their lanes, do their jobs and do them well,
00:14:26.520 I have no interest in getting involved.
00:14:28.140 But if they're way off in left field, making up all sorts of problems that don't exist instead
00:14:32.320 of paying attention to the urgent needs of the residents and of all Albertans as hubs,
00:14:36.440 community centers and commercial centers for the entire province, then the province needs
00:14:40.660 to step in, uh, perfect.
00:14:44.660 Incredible.
00:14:45.620 Can't, can't say it any better than that.
00:14:47.580 What, what the government of Alberta is acknowledging is that anytime DEI gets involved
00:14:52.860 in a public institution, they abandon their mandate, especially as it pertains to municipal
00:14:59.720 governments.
00:15:00.320 So when you dump all of your resources into DEI initiatives in a public institution, you
00:15:06.500 are taking away time services and resources away from what you are actually supposed to
00:15:14.020 be doing.
00:15:14.800 And as governments wake up to this, they are realizing just how quickly taxpayer funds have
00:15:22.040 been, um, have been rerouted into crazy vanity projects by public servants who, especially through
00:15:32.020 COVID, this especially accelerated through COVID, who were looking for make work projects for
00:15:37.060 themselves, sitting on their thumbs, you know, in their home offices going, well, what, what can
00:15:41.900 we do to stay relevant?
00:15:43.480 What can we do to stay progressive?
00:15:45.780 Well, they adopted all of these DEI programs.
00:15:47.800 So it is excellent that the government of Alberta is, is tackling this issue, that we
00:15:53.960 are seeing the end to DEI in some government institutions.
00:15:58.180 And the more that we can, um, the more that we can encourage our provincial governments to
00:16:04.640 do away with this garbage, the better off we will all be.
00:16:08.780 Right.
00:16:09.480 I don't think municipalities should be paying consultants gajillions of dollars to have high
00:16:15.440 priced internal struggle sessions with their staff over DEI when the pothole on your street
00:16:21.340 is so big that it will knock the earrings out of your ears.
00:16:24.420 Um, and that's exactly what Dan Williams is saying here.
00:16:28.280 And if these municipalities think he's screwing around, uh, he's not.
00:16:33.080 Alberta will dissolve your municipality because municipalities are creatures of the provincial
00:16:38.640 government.
00:16:39.080 They exist at the leisure and pleasure of the provincial government.
00:16:42.020 They will dissolve your school board.
00:16:44.160 They will dissolve your city council if you don't listen.
00:16:47.920 And it has happened here.
00:16:49.920 Um, and when the city of Calgary went around the province to make a deal with the Trudeau
00:16:55.720 government for housing money that was tied to green initiatives, the province stepped in
00:17:02.060 and said, the hell you will.
00:17:03.760 Um, and if you think you are, you've got another thing coming.
00:17:06.640 So, uh, this, these municipalities should take these threats very seriously because not only
00:17:13.760 are DEI programs discriminatory, they're an absolute waste of taxpayer money and time and
00:17:20.500 resources.
00:17:21.280 Do what you were supposed to do and nothing else.
00:17:24.840 And I know I'm probably on an RCMP watch list now.
00:17:28.440 Well, welcome to the club, Sheila Gunn-Reed.
00:17:32.480 Welcome to the club.
00:17:33.300 But I do hope that what Alberta is doing is contagious to other provinces.
00:17:37.600 Uh, I can speak for Saskatchewan, for Saskatchewan as an example.
00:17:42.960 Uh, Saskatchewan has a bunch of agencies, provincially funded agencies that are absolutely captured
00:17:49.700 by DEI.
00:17:51.260 The Saskatchewan Association of Rural Municipalities.
00:17:53.940 This is, this is the organization that oversees all of the RMs in Saskatchewan.
00:17:58.340 They're celebrating Pride Month.
00:18:00.320 SaskSport, the, uh, volunteer-led organization that oversees all of, all, all amateur sport
00:18:07.300 in Saskatchewan.
00:18:08.400 Absolutely committed to DEI.
00:18:10.640 Every single one of our urban school boards.
00:18:13.620 Employees, reams of these, you know, $200,000 employees to sit around having struggle sessions
00:18:22.000 about gender and, and sexual identity.
00:18:25.220 The government of Saskatchewan should get on board the Alberta program right now, defund
00:18:32.680 everything having to do with DEI.
00:18:34.840 Absolutely everything.
00:18:35.840 If your job description has the words diversity, equity, or inclusion in, in the job description,
00:18:43.580 gone.
00:18:44.180 This, we need this behavior to be contagious across Canada because we have, we have, uh,
00:18:49.780 identified this, the citizens of Canada as a scourge on our society and it must end
00:18:55.400 at, uh, uh, uh, as soon as possible.
00:18:58.220 Completely.
00:18:59.600 Um, let's go to this next, uh, let the Mark Miller tweet.
00:19:07.940 Mark Miller.
00:19:09.240 Oh, your tell-off was so good.
00:19:11.460 It just gives me.
00:19:12.200 Mark Miller, the idiot who is now, um, in charge of the Justice Committee, who, as we
00:19:23.360 know now, did zero immigration checks when he was at immigration on the Egyptian terrorist,
00:19:33.380 ISIS terrorist, who butchered, uh, someone in an ISIS propaganda video, a crucified prisoner,
00:19:39.880 uh, was given citizenship only to one month later, allegedly, allegedly, allegedly, don't
00:19:46.840 sue me, Mr. Terrorist.
00:19:48.640 Um, only to one month later, allegedly plan a major terrorist attack with his son who was
00:19:56.940 granted asylum after being deemed not a credible, uh, applicant.
00:20:03.040 He went into New York, walked back in, I guess, through Roxham Road, must be, um, walked back
00:20:10.960 in and said, okay, fine, fine, fine, you're, you're fine.
00:20:15.700 And then he and his son planned, allegedly, allegedly, a terrorist attack on Toronto Jews.
00:20:20.280 And they were within hours, um, from that.
00:20:23.380 He, they admit they never checked.
00:20:24.940 Now, so he's at immigration, oversaw the collapse of the immigration ministry.
00:20:30.000 Now, he tweets yesterday, immigration caps are contributing to lower asking rents in Canada,
00:20:38.200 says the CMHC from the Globe and Mail.
00:20:42.820 If the rest of us said that, like, a year ago, hey, you're, supply, the laws of supply and
00:20:48.940 demand also apply to housing.
00:20:50.820 Yeah.
00:20:51.520 And, uh, so you need to pump the brakes on this, not because we hate immigrants, it's
00:20:56.320 because we can't house them.
00:20:58.440 It's supply and demand also works on wages, oversupply of labor drives wages down.
00:21:03.880 So you have inflated housing and lower wages to pay for that housing.
00:21:09.740 And it causes a catastrophe.
00:21:12.320 So now all of a sudden he says, ha ha ha, look at our immigration caps, which are where,
00:21:18.180 by the way, you were the immigration minister.
00:21:19.720 You actually could have imposed those caps at any given time, but you didn't.
00:21:24.400 And so I said that he is, what did I say?
00:21:28.480 Like an arsonist showing up to a fire.
00:21:30.360 He started with a bucket of water and then claiming to be a firefighter.
00:21:33.400 Like, this is a problem that you started.
00:21:37.160 You did it.
00:21:38.200 And then you're like, look, we're capping it.
00:21:40.860 And it's as Chris Dacey points out, I think in the comments there, if you had said this
00:21:47.320 to Mark Miller, 90 seconds ago, 120 seconds ago, he said that you hate immigrants.
00:21:55.360 If you said, Hey, just, would you mind pumping the brakes?
00:21:58.240 Actually?
00:21:58.480 Yeah.
00:21:58.880 So from September 19th, 2024, Liberal Immigration Minister Mark Miller says, I know you don't
00:22:04.500 like immigrants.
00:22:05.560 Let's watch this because now he's like, he's saying he's taken the Chris Dacey position on
00:22:13.620 this approach.
00:22:14.300 And he's like, look at, look, I'm so smart.
00:22:18.080 Mr. Miller, Minister Miller, thank you.
00:22:21.620 Are you going to take accountability for the destructive immigration policies that you
00:22:24.440 have, sir?
00:22:25.080 I understand you don't like immigrants.
00:22:26.760 I, that's, excuse me, sir, that's a false misrepresentation of me.
00:22:30.260 I, I actually appreciate all Canadians, but I don't appreciate our infrastructure being
00:22:35.420 overrun with reckless policies that burden our hospitals, take jobs from young people and
00:22:40.420 take housing options away from our communities.
00:22:42.180 Housing.
00:22:42.520 So that's the fact.
00:22:43.360 It's a simple supply and demand equation.
00:22:45.620 We have too many people coming in and we cannot accommodate them.
00:22:48.340 This has nothing to do with not liking immigrants.
00:22:50.480 This has everything to do with liking Canadians and protecting our Canadian economy so that
00:22:54.740 we can actually take these people in and actually accommodate them.
00:22:58.020 So can you justify why we're taking in more than one million people a year, sir?
00:23:02.200 Why?
00:23:02.460 It's very easy.
00:23:03.100 How many houses does Canada build, sir?
00:23:05.300 Does Canada build enough wellings to accommodate a million new people every year?
00:23:09.000 Does our hospitals have enough places for a million new people needing health care every
00:23:12.840 year, sir?
00:23:14.020 Dismissing us as racist does not solve the problem either.
00:23:16.400 And it's a major problem with the rhetoric of your government.
00:23:18.800 Yes.
00:23:19.080 Do you think it's okay to call Canadian citizens racist because you want to avoid the conversation?
00:23:23.700 You said we have a problem with immigrants.
00:23:26.220 That is a misrepresentation.
00:23:27.940 That is dishonesty.
00:23:29.160 And it's everything that I would expect from your despicable government.
00:23:33.600 He came up to you respectfully and asked you a question.
00:23:36.840 You accuse me of not liking immigrants, sir.
00:23:40.040 That's not true.
00:23:41.280 Thank you.
00:23:42.440 Liar and a coward.
00:23:44.240 Yep.
00:23:44.800 Liar and a coward.
00:23:45.820 So that's right blend asking the questions.
00:23:48.060 And then Chris Dacey pointing out that he will call you racist to shut down conversation, prickly
00:23:56.520 questions on his policies.
00:23:59.700 It's the new shut up.
00:24:01.380 It's racist, racist.
00:24:02.460 But this is what the Liberal Party of Canada does when it wants to shut down conversation,
00:24:09.860 when it wants to not listen to dissenting voices, when it doesn't want to hear the concerns of regular
00:24:16.500 everyday Canadians who are bringing their real concerns to government.
00:24:20.660 They label you as a racist.
00:24:22.400 They label you as an Islamophobe, as an extremist, as a racist, as a transphobe, as a homophobe.
00:24:33.360 Like, pick your slur.
00:24:35.660 This is what the government of Canada thinks about you, regular Canadians, when you bring
00:24:43.840 up your real and valid concerns.
00:24:46.320 Just the other day, I drove through downtown Regina and was just shocked, absolutely shocked
00:24:51.200 at the amount of homeless people on the streets.
00:24:53.680 And yet, we have this open-door immigration policy that has forced the most vulnerable
00:24:58.960 people out of their own homes.
00:25:02.320 Rents may be decreasing because of an immigration, of a very, very new immigration cap that the
00:25:08.520 Liberals have just gone on to.
00:25:10.900 Right.
00:25:11.040 But not enough to fix any of the homelessness problems or any of the issues that this is
00:25:16.640 creating.
00:25:17.020 Right, because wages are still down because we're still letting in all these temporary
00:25:21.560 foreign workers.
00:25:23.040 Oh, just by the busload.
00:25:26.540 By the busload.
00:25:27.640 Yesterday in the chat, yesterday in the Rebel chat, I saw a screencap of Saskatchewan job
00:25:36.680 postings, looking for temporary foreign workers.
00:25:39.900 These are in rural areas of Saskatchewan that have more than enough people able and willing
00:25:44.620 to work.
00:25:45.820 These are kids' jobs.
00:25:47.320 These are absolute starter jobs, like entry-level jobs that any teenager with a food safety
00:25:53.140 certificate could do.
00:25:54.760 And yet, they are specific.
00:25:56.680 Here it is.
00:25:57.600 This is absolutely insane.
00:26:00.640 So at the very bottom there, at the very bottom there, we have the Red Barn in Mooseman,
00:26:05.460 Saskatchewan.
00:26:06.260 Dairy Queen.
00:26:06.900 The Red Barn in Mooseman, Saskatchewan.
00:26:08.660 Famous for its burgers.
00:26:09.500 I was actually just talking about the Red Barn with the buddy from Alberta.
00:26:13.200 It is so good.
00:26:15.200 But here they are, looking specifically for temporary foreign workers to fill roles that
00:26:20.840 young people in the town of Mooseman could absolutely do.
00:26:24.860 So Mark Miller, what a disgrace.
00:26:28.500 What an absolute disgrace.
00:26:30.000 But again, Mark Miller is part of that cohort of elites, right, that are insulated from feeling
00:26:38.180 the consequences of their bad policy decisions.
00:26:41.640 Nobody in the Liberal Party of Canada or a government employee feels or sees the consequences
00:26:48.440 of their bad decisions.
00:26:49.980 And that is the disconnect that we have here.
00:26:53.000 Yeah, and there's a whole host of programs that incentivize employers to hire immigrants
00:27:01.520 and temporary foreign workers over Canadians.
00:27:07.200 There's a whole host of programs, and those should all be eliminated.
00:27:15.180 Well, they're getting grants.
00:27:17.780 They're getting wage subsidies.
00:27:19.640 It makes economic sense.
00:27:21.080 If you're an employer, it makes perfect sense.
00:27:24.300 Why would you hire a Canadian kid for 15 bucks an hour when you could hire a temporary foreign
00:27:30.220 worker for the equivalent of 10?
00:27:32.500 Straight out of India.
00:27:34.620 I read an account of a woman who had a conversation with somebody working in a Canadian grocery store
00:27:39.640 recently, and she just got to talking to this kid, very young, and obviously not from
00:27:46.600 Canada and said, well, how did you get this job at this very well-known Canadian grocery
00:27:52.220 store?
00:27:52.740 And the kid said, well, there I was in India, and I saw a job posting in Canada.
00:27:59.160 They interviewed in India, brought them over, and that's it.
00:28:02.620 This, like, this is how it's working.
00:28:04.740 The pipelines of temporary foreign workers from their foreign country into Canada is so slick
00:28:10.760 and so smooth and has been made so easy by the federal government that we need a clawback.
00:28:16.340 We absolutely need a clawback.
00:28:18.020 You're right, Sheila.
00:28:18.720 Every part of this needs to be dismantled.
00:28:21.300 Yep.
00:28:21.480 Um, and it's funny how it took three trimesters worth of time for Mark Miller to become the
00:28:29.580 racist he accused Chris Dacey of being.
00:28:33.100 It's really, it's really, uh, it's really telling that, isn't it?
00:28:36.260 That he eventually just came around, but his first, uh, but that his first response was,
00:28:41.840 how dare you ask, how dare you ask pointy questions of me, you racist, you, you, you racist, marginalizing,
00:28:53.920 uh, traditional extremist peon, because that's their response.
00:29:01.520 That's what the government thinks of you.
00:29:03.340 Someone from our web team did a search and checked if there are temporary foreign workers,
00:29:09.180 uh, job, like job postings for temporary foreign workers out my way.
00:29:16.520 And they found, uh, for Fort Saskatchewan.
00:29:21.440 So that's the closest major municipality.
00:29:23.340 If you can call it a major municipality.
00:29:25.080 I mean, it's an industrial and agricultural hub.
00:29:27.300 Holy crap.
00:29:28.860 Oh, I'm just looking at it.
00:29:30.200 Oh, this is going to blow your mind.
00:29:31.840 This is absolutely going to blow my mind.
00:29:32.820 The Brand Hotel.
00:29:33.740 So if you're from the prairies, you know, these old hotels that are in the, in downtown.
00:29:37.680 This is not like your best Western on the comfort in, this is the old bricks and mortar turn
00:29:45.060 of the century hotel downtown and all these little hotels downtown, mostly they don't
00:29:50.100 really function as hotels anymore.
00:29:51.620 They're just sort of historic buildings with a bar in them, your local dive bars in them.
00:29:56.320 The Brand Hotel is hiring a temporary foreign worker as a manager.
00:30:01.280 Tell them the salary, Sheila Gunn-Reed.
00:30:03.480 Say the salary.
00:30:04.720 30 to $35 an hour.
00:30:06.400 Oh, what on earth?
00:30:11.380 Assistant manager.
00:30:12.320 So again, these are, and I'm sure because they can offer that much because there's a
00:30:17.700 government top up, right?
00:30:19.100 The wage subsidy.
00:30:20.400 When the, when the government takes care of 50% of the wages, well then, yeah, it makes
00:30:24.640 it real.
00:30:25.700 It gives it, it gives it real incentive.
00:30:27.620 Actually looking at the bottom of this, bottom of this list.
00:30:29.900 Here we go.
00:30:30.240 Hotel manager at the comfort in.
00:30:31.740 So this is $37 an hour for a temporary foreign worker.
00:30:38.340 I think that's by the Cal Tire, if I recall correctly.
00:30:40.700 Then there's the, uh, some, a private, we don't need to show that actually.
00:30:44.500 Maybe we don't want to show that guy's name.
00:30:45.700 Um, uh, somebody wants a private childcare provider as if there aren't, uh, nannies and
00:30:51.920 babysitters available around here.
00:30:55.480 I know several young ladies with their babysitting certificate.
00:30:58.800 It's summertime.
00:30:59.820 They're not in school.
00:31:01.160 Uh, assistant manager down at the subway.
00:31:03.160 This is, this is crazy.
00:31:05.680 Child, just going back to that childcare provider in a private home.
00:31:09.240 So this is looking after somebody, a babysitter in someone's home, a babysitter, a part-time
00:31:15.880 nanny salary, $21.91 an hour.
00:31:18.660 And this person is getting a, is getting, well, maybe getting a, uh, a wage subsidy from, from
00:31:26.160 the government of Canada, because why else would it be on the government of Canada website?
00:31:29.840 Just crazy.
00:31:30.400 It's atrocious.
00:31:31.660 It's atrocious.
00:31:33.620 Now I know that the unemployment rate is actually quite low in beautiful downtown Fort Saskatchewan
00:31:39.320 because of our close ties to industry, but still it's summer.
00:31:43.640 These are kid jobs.
00:31:44.840 Like this is, this is insane.
00:31:47.540 It is insane.
00:31:48.660 This is, this is, uh, well, this, this makes me look forward to Western separation.
00:31:54.340 Long haul truck driver.
00:31:55.980 Yeah.
00:31:56.540 This makes me look forward to Western separation when we can be in charge of our own immigration
00:32:02.620 numbers.
00:32:05.180 Wow.
00:32:05.780 Home support worker.
00:32:07.380 Anyway.
00:32:08.460 That's wild.
00:32:09.520 It's just wild.
00:32:11.220 Yeah.
00:32:11.520 Just for the record, every single one of those jobs that's being advertised for temporary foreign
00:32:15.260 workers, uh, could be made available for, for actual Canadians and are not.
00:32:20.380 Right.
00:32:21.900 Uh, speaking of problems of immigration, uh, this, uh, I think Tamara also has a piece
00:32:27.320 on this homelessness homelessness in Toronto has more than doubled since 2021, according
00:32:32.080 to latest street needs assessment.
00:32:33.720 Wonder why is, could it be because all of the, uh, immigrants and refugees to Canada land
00:32:42.200 in Toronto?
00:32:42.800 Uh, it's more than doubled in the last three years, according to the city's latest street
00:32:50.500 needs assessment that was conducted in the field last October and finalized this spring
00:32:55.320 and found that an estimated 15,400, that's almost the population of Fort Saskatchewan.
00:33:00.160 That's crazy.
00:33:01.520 We're unhoused in Toronto last fall in 2021.
00:33:05.920 It was roughly 7,300.
00:33:08.840 Doubled.
00:33:10.500 Doubled.
00:33:11.020 Doubled their homeless population.
00:33:13.060 And let's not, let's not forget Canada, that Toronto is another city that's wholly
00:33:18.720 committed to DEI, uh, Mayor Olivia Chow just announced a couple of weeks ago that they
00:33:24.060 would be topping up Toronto, the Toronto Pride Festival with, uh, with hundreds of thousands
00:33:31.460 of taxpayer dollars because Google and Home Depot pulled out.
00:33:36.120 Let's also not forget that Toronto Islands has the world's longest rainbow sidewalk, the
00:33:42.860 world's longest rainbow sidewalk.
00:33:45.320 So while they are dumping money into crazy gender initiatives and festivals and all of
00:33:50.200 these, you know, shame initiatives, uh, they have 15,000 people on the streets that, that are
00:33:57.100 unhoused and in a climate such as Canada's, this is, this is very, very near to a death sentence.
00:34:05.660 You cannot survive on the streets of Canada with our extreme shifts in temperature and, uh, and
00:34:11.920 expect these people to be okay.
00:34:13.440 So, so, so I mean, what, how shameful for Toronto, how absolutely shameful for Toronto.
00:34:19.580 Um, also, could they maybe do something about the drivers of homelessness outside of the federal
00:34:25.040 government's wild and crazy immigration policies?
00:34:28.040 Could we maybe do something about the, uh, drug problem in Toronto, the supervised consumption
00:34:33.260 sites?
00:34:34.200 Uh, I saw that they're all up in arms because the province was going to close five of them,
00:34:37.860 but, uh, you know, maybe we shouldn't facilitate the things that drive social and moral decay
00:34:46.700 in our cities, um, like drug abuse.
00:34:50.360 Well, we know, we know that those can do that too.
00:34:52.860 Yeah.
00:34:53.160 We know that addiction addiction.
00:34:54.880 So whether it be, whether they're like this, whether it be drugs or alcohol or whatever
00:34:59.680 it is and homelessness go hand in hand when you can't be, uh, you can't be responsible
00:35:05.280 when you are feeding an addiction, when you are actively feeding an addiction, all of
00:35:10.680 your resources go towards feeding that addiction.
00:35:12.620 And this is why we see people, uh, go from, from being, um, from being contributing members
00:35:20.480 of society into it, into an addiction and falling into homelessness and crime and, uh, and
00:35:27.520 dysfunction.
00:35:28.480 Yeah.
00:35:29.060 Yeah.
00:35:30.060 But you know, what's important to Toronto pride sidewalks, longest one in the world.
00:35:34.280 Well done sidewalks and your mayor in her little dancing contests while the city burns around
00:35:40.620 her again, another person that's completely insulated from, from the consequences of her
00:35:47.100 own decisions.
00:35:47.900 Yeah.
00:35:48.640 Uh, I still on the immigration issue.
00:35:52.420 And again, this story is broken by black box.
00:35:56.000 This is once again, a story, as I talked about the other day of the federal government using,
00:36:01.820 or sorry, excuse me, the liberal party using their exclusive access to federal polling research
00:36:11.460 paid for by you, the taxpayer to craft their electoral strategy.
00:36:17.800 So I told you before it was $1.6 million for them to pull Canadians out of the Privy Council
00:36:25.280 about their views on the Americans.
00:36:27.840 And they said, our greatest fear is the Americans.
00:36:30.060 Cause they, whatever, they pulled boomers in Toronto.
00:36:33.680 And then, so what happened?
00:36:35.460 Elbows up, elbows up, right?
00:36:37.160 That was the, they took that data that ended up in the hands of liberal political operatives.
00:36:42.120 And then it was turned into an election campaign slogan, right?
00:36:47.540 And you paid for it.
00:36:48.480 That's, that's crossing the streams as they say.
00:36:50.980 Well, they did it again on immigration.
00:36:54.640 Uh, Canadians in Privy Council focus groups.
00:36:57.660 So that's government funded focus groups that the PMO has access to.
00:37:04.120 Question cabinet's rationale for record high immigration quotas.
00:37:07.820 A pollster's report on the findings was delivered to the government, which was being headed by
00:37:15.880 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau only weeks before.
00:37:19.080 And not, it should be clear here that this information was not given to the conservatives,
00:37:25.700 right?
00:37:25.900 This is government.
00:37:26.920 So the government has it only weeks before then liberal leadership candidate, Mark Carney
00:37:31.680 announced that the system isn't working.
00:37:33.780 So asked to share their perspectives on the current state of Canada's immigration system,
00:37:37.820 almost all described it as negative in terms with a large number of the impression that
00:37:41.800 the system was experiencing considerable strain at the moment, said the report.
00:37:46.360 On balance, it was widely felt that the rate of immigration had been exceptionally high
00:37:49.560 in recent years and there was currently not enough housing, jobs, or other resources.
00:37:53.500 Uh-oh, RCMP labeled extremist available in Canadian communities to meet the economic
00:37:58.220 and social needs of newcomers.
00:37:59.680 Literally everything right blend said to, uh, Mark Miller, but Mark Miller turned around
00:38:06.480 and called he and Dacey, uh, that, you know, racist, that they hate immigrants.
00:38:13.280 Um, but then the government, which was also the liberals, took this and put it into their
00:38:20.740 campaign strategy.
00:38:21.860 So a gift from Canadian taxpayers, this internal polling data exclusive only to the people who
00:38:28.160 had eyes on it.
00:38:29.000 And then they used it as campaign materials.
00:38:31.760 You know, you know, what's, you know, what is it is just crazy about this is they won't
00:38:37.840 listen to the, to the citizens of Canada.
00:38:40.880 Even when we speak to them in the official languages, loud and clear about our experience,
00:38:46.300 the things we want and the things we need out of our federal government, they won't listen
00:38:49.660 to the people of Canada.
00:38:50.640 What they need is an expert panel of internal pollsters to validate, uh, what Canadians are
00:38:59.140 saying before they'll take this seriously.
00:39:00.620 And this is such like, this just goes to show you the huge disconnect between the federal
00:39:05.180 government and the people that elected them to represent them.
00:39:09.900 I am so tired of having our actual valid concerns being ignored by the federal government only until
00:39:17.860 it gets to such a crisis point, such a crux that they have, that they have, you know, no
00:39:24.420 option, but to address it, but only after they've consulted with their panel of experts, mind you, you
00:39:30.340 know, your opinions and my opinions don't matter unless they pay someone to tell them that they do.
00:39:37.580 It is, it is, it is a ninched.
00:39:41.060 Uh, the date of the polling was January 20th.
00:39:51.260 So just one trimester after Mark Miller called everybody a racist for thinking, maybe we have
00:39:59.440 too many immigrants in this country.
00:40:01.420 So they probably had the polling sort of ongoing, uh, during that time.
00:40:05.040 At the time.
00:40:05.820 Yeah.
00:40:06.280 At the time.
00:40:07.780 Isn't that interesting?
00:40:10.300 Well, Mark Miller showed himself to be a thoroughly useless politician and, uh, and his naked contempt
00:40:18.160 for the people that he's supposed to be representing is really deplorable.
00:40:20.960 It really, it really is how this guy remains employed by the federal government is beyond
00:40:25.920 us.
00:40:26.640 He seems awful frail too.
00:40:28.620 And you notice all the men in the liberal government seem frail.
00:40:31.880 He, he looks, he, he looks like a walking corpse to be completely honest.
00:40:37.600 Like that, that pallid skin, the sunken eyes, the, the, the lurching down.
00:40:44.060 To Tim Commons mummy is what he looks like.
00:40:47.080 Like, your skin is just stretched over his bones.
00:40:51.420 Looks like he's coated in Vaseline as to not crack open.
00:40:55.220 Yeah.
00:40:56.360 Yeah.
00:40:56.980 They opened his sarcophagus in the morning and dust just anyways.
00:41:03.820 Oh, remember that one time we showed a picture of his hand, his fingers.
00:41:08.620 I at least have Mark Miller's fingers up close and we, we just wanted to, it's not good.
00:41:14.960 Not a healthy man.
00:41:16.180 That's for sure.
00:41:16.720 And this is the guy that gets to tell you what to do, Canada.
00:41:19.280 That's good.
00:41:19.500 All right.
00:41:20.100 Right.
00:41:20.600 He's got your best interests at heart.
00:41:23.120 And scares, it doesn't look like he's taking care of himself all that well.
00:41:26.240 Okay.
00:41:26.500 We've got this, um, from Canada's envoy.
00:41:32.360 No, sorry.
00:41:33.320 The Palestinian ambassador to Canada.
00:41:36.580 This is what she's saying.
00:41:39.320 She feels Ottawa is on the brink of officially recognizing the statehood for her people.
00:41:44.640 As she also takes note of tougher language from Canada on Israel's actions in Gaza.
00:41:52.800 She says accountability means everything to the Palestinian people.
00:41:57.640 You're still holding the hostages.
00:42:00.260 That's all we're looking for.
00:42:02.020 Actually, quite frankly, I think that's what the Israelis are looking for.
00:42:04.960 Um, said Mona Abu Amara, who is at the end of her four-year term is the chief representative
00:42:12.100 of the Palestinian general delegation to Canada.
00:42:16.020 Canada could have done better and must do better.
00:42:18.440 I'm sorry.
00:42:18.900 We're not taking lessons in morality from people who are still holding hostages.
00:42:26.300 And I will be appalled and I'll become one of the greatest champions of Alberta independence
00:42:35.720 if Canada recognizes Palestinian statehood after what they did on October 7th.
00:42:42.680 You do not reward butchery and terrorism with a state.
00:42:48.780 You're giving them what they wanted.
00:42:50.440 You're showing the world that terrorism works if you do that.
00:42:53.980 And this is, this is completely, uh, this, this piece comes to us originally from CTV news
00:42:59.700 and it is, it is, uh, it is completely irresponsible for CTV news to platform ideas such as this from
00:43:09.900 the Palestinian ambassador to Canada because what this is doing, and we see this, we see
00:43:15.800 this over and over and over in the mainstream media is the, the floating of ideas through the
00:43:21.220 mainstream media that start a lot like this, where, you know, a high level official, this
00:43:27.680 one, the Palestinian ambassador to Canada, um, says something that deviates from the, from
00:43:35.720 the opinions of actual Canadians.
00:43:37.380 Okay.
00:43:37.940 But what they're doing is making it palatable for the mainstream media, uh, uh, user base,
00:43:45.900 will say to, to, to accept these ideas as, as something that we all are accepting of when
00:43:52.920 in fact, uh, I think a great, the, a great majority of Canadians would disagree with this.
00:43:59.360 Do not want to get involved with cozying up to, uh, the Palestinian state, to the terrorists
00:44:06.700 that support it or, or for the destruction of Israel.
00:44:10.160 So, uh, shame on CTV for this, for platforming this.
00:44:16.040 Yeah.
00:44:16.360 And, uh, there, she says some other crazy things in there that just are not true and, and CTV
00:44:22.660 publishes it without skepticism or even context.
00:44:26.060 Yes.
00:44:26.660 So she says, uh, she, she cited comments made by foreign affairs minister Anita Anand made in
00:44:38.580 describing Israel's military campaign as aggression caused against the Palestinian and the Gazan
00:44:43.900 people in Palestine.
00:44:47.000 They want their hostages back.
00:44:48.740 In those comments, the minister took the unconventional step of citing Palestine instead of the Palestinian
00:44:55.480 territories.
00:44:57.220 And Anand also said that by restricting humanitarian aid in Gaza, Israel was using food as a political
00:45:02.820 tool.
00:45:03.220 Now, uh, the Gaza humanitarian foundation was launched by Israel or was launched.
00:45:14.680 It's sort of an Israeli backed thing.
00:45:17.000 Um, and, uh, it's backed by American and the Israeli government and it bypasses traditional
00:45:26.260 relief groups.
00:45:27.140 It's funded by the Americans and the Israelis to provide food aid into Gaza.
00:45:33.180 Why?
00:45:33.640 Because you cannot count on the UN to provide food aid.
00:45:36.940 Um, so while Anand is saying that Canada or that the US and Israel are blocking food aid,
00:45:43.260 they actually are backing an organization that is providing food aid, even though, uh, Palestinians
00:45:50.360 are some of the most well-funded quote unquote refugees on the face of the earth.
00:45:55.280 But the food aid doesn't get to them because the local terrorist warlord takes it.
00:46:00.860 Well, that, that's exactly right.
00:46:02.040 And the same pathways that the food aid takes to get into these areas are the same pathways
00:46:08.440 that, uh, that weapons get into these areas.
00:46:12.760 So this is why we can't trust the locals to manage their own food aid distribution.
00:46:18.060 This is why America and Israel must, uh, must be able to manage it.
00:46:21.840 What's really interesting in this piece is, um, this, um, this ambassador, this ambassador
00:46:26.540 to, uh, to Palestine said in a June 10th consultation event, Canada co-hosted with Qatar and Mexico at
00:46:34.460 the United Nations headquarters on how to peacefully resolve the Israel-Palestine conflict and advance
00:46:40.960 a two-state solution.
00:46:42.980 So the UN is hosting trilateral, I guess it's trilateral talks on, um, how to advance this,
00:46:50.960 this, uh, Palestinian stance on kicking Israel out of its own, uh, territory.
00:46:58.540 This is wild.
00:47:00.160 Like it's, we're supposed to forget all the, how all this started.
00:47:03.100 A terror wave swept into Israel from Gaza, which Israel turned over to the Palestinians and
00:47:13.080 they even dug up their dead, um, a wave swept out of Gaza into Israel where 1200 plus people
00:47:22.120 were murdered in the most horrific of ways.
00:47:25.000 We know what happened because the terrorists themselves recorded it.
00:47:29.740 Two, we all thought we, we all saw those horrific images.
00:47:33.920 251 people were taken hostages.
00:47:36.300 They still hold roughly 50 of them.
00:47:39.180 Yeah.
00:47:39.420 50, 50 people being held in fortress, awful conditions, uh, in terror tunnels.
00:47:47.900 So that aid money that they get, they use it to build tunnels.
00:47:51.580 Uh, when Israel left, they left behind greenhouses and all kinds of agriculture.
00:47:56.060 It was not a wasteland when they left.
00:47:58.480 It was actually kind of a resort and, and, uh, agricultural hub.
00:48:02.840 And, uh, they took all of that and pivoted it towards terror.
00:48:07.380 Instead of growing food for their people, they dug up the, uh, irrigation pipes and used them
00:48:16.180 for bombs.
00:48:19.060 Anyway.
00:48:20.100 Sad state of affairs, Canada.
00:48:21.580 That we would be taking this stance.
00:48:23.600 And, uh, again, shame on CTV for this.
00:48:26.200 Yes.
00:48:26.780 Just deplorable.
00:48:27.860 This is Palestinian propaganda.
00:48:32.520 Let's go to this, uh, tweet from my friend, Michelle Rumpel-Garner.
00:48:37.780 Uh, she's commenting on a judge's ruling here.
00:48:42.400 And this is atrocious.
00:48:45.400 She says, she says, she says, this ruling is unreal.
00:48:48.460 She, by the way, Michelle is the, uh, member of parliament for Calgary Nose Hill.
00:48:55.180 Um, so she says, oops, I've just ended up in a very wrong place.
00:49:01.440 She says, this ruling is unreal.
00:49:03.120 This pervert, of course, it's out of Ontario.
00:49:06.780 This pervert who isn't a permanent resident.
00:49:08.920 So what is he doing here?
00:49:10.720 He's just a visitor, I guess, temporary resident.
00:49:12.500 Mm-hmm.
00:49:13.280 Was given 90 days house arrest with a conditional sentence so that it wouldn't go against his
00:49:21.620 permanent record so he would have a chance to stay in Canada.
00:49:25.340 And then she lists the court file, uh, and he was, uh, yeah, competing an indecent act with the intent to insult or offend contrary to section 173.1.
00:49:46.120 On December 9th, 2023, the victim was alone in her basement apartment when Mr. Singh, then working as a Bell Canada technician.
00:49:54.260 Oh, hired as a temporary foreign worker.
00:49:56.320 Temporary foreign worker.
00:49:57.700 Yes, yes, yes.
00:49:59.980 And we know that they don't have to, temporary foreign students, uh, don't have to go through certain protocols, uh, responded to a service call to come to her new residence and install an installation cable for her Wi-Fi router.
00:50:13.340 After using the victim's bathroom, Mr. Singh came out with his pants unzippered and his, oh, gross, his member exposed to the victim.
00:50:22.960 He then left his junk out of his pants for a period of time of some 20 minutes.
00:50:28.580 Can you imagine the horror of this woman?
00:50:31.280 During this time, he made inappropriate comments to the victim about her physical attractiveness and asked her untoward questions about her dating status and whether he could find her a job.
00:50:41.480 Um, whether he could find her a job with, I think maybe this means with his employer, the victim was traumatized by this incident.
00:50:50.440 The Crown wanted 60 days in jail, one year probation, uh, an NDA, a non-communication order, which would have resulted in his deportation.
00:50:59.560 And, uh, they said the counsel for Mr. Singh argued that a conditional sentence is a suitable sentence.
00:51:07.580 It would be in the best interest of Mr. Singh.
00:51:09.400 I don't care.
00:51:10.660 And contrary to the public interest, that's wrong.
00:51:13.720 Alternatively, counsel argues that a suspended sentence would be appropriate given that Mr. Singh has abided by his undertaking following his arrest.
00:51:23.020 Oh, but he's been such a good boy after his arrest.
00:51:26.900 So you're just going to leave him alone, Canada.
00:51:29.240 We just got to, we just got to leave the guy be.
00:51:31.540 See, there's, um, this was just all lost in translation.
00:51:34.940 You see where he comes from, it's normal to go into women's actual residences, expose yourself for over 20 minutes and, uh, and, and, and do these devious things.
00:51:45.860 Totally normal.
00:51:46.700 Totally normal where he comes from.
00:51:47.980 Like, this is insane.
00:51:49.240 He should be in the first plane out of here.
00:51:51.240 The absolute first plane out of here.
00:51:53.020 Where?
00:51:53.640 I don't care.
00:51:55.000 I actually don't care because this, what this shows is that Canadian women aren't even safe inside the walls of their own homes.
00:52:03.280 Yeah.
00:52:03.860 It says Mr. Singh is 23 years old and a resident of India.
00:52:07.800 Perfect.
00:52:08.280 Off you go.
00:52:09.720 You're India's problem.
00:52:10.920 He has no prior criminal record.
00:52:12.460 Well, I guess that we know of, uh, I think he could probably.
00:52:15.560 It could have been expunged.
00:52:16.520 Could have been expunged.
00:52:17.280 Could have been expunged, but also I don't think you get in that much trouble for these sorts of things in India.
00:52:22.140 Uh, he came to Canada on a student visa.
00:52:25.960 You don't say.
00:52:27.900 That's how we don't know if he has a criminal record in India because he came on a student visa.
00:52:34.360 You don't.
00:52:34.680 Which, as we heard from Raquel Doncho yesterday on the show, that you will not be screened for criminality if you come in on a student visa.
00:52:47.400 Just wild.
00:52:48.140 Then he was issued a work permit by Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada in November of 2022 that expires in November of 2025.
00:52:56.160 So he's coming in on all different kinds of tracks.
00:52:58.520 You're not supposed to do it that way.
00:53:00.640 Mr. Singh has no dependents in Canada.
00:53:02.720 His goal is to become a permanent resident and then sponsor his family members to come to Canada.
00:53:07.180 Nope.
00:53:07.480 Out.
00:53:07.820 Out.
00:53:08.140 Out.
00:53:08.480 Out.
00:53:08.760 Goodbye.
00:53:09.240 Get out.
00:53:09.560 Goodbye.
00:53:10.000 I'll help you pack.
00:53:11.200 Get out right now.
00:53:12.100 Me and several male family members will help you pack.
00:53:16.080 Out.
00:53:17.440 Get out.
00:53:17.860 And his work permit is still valid, even though he's been convicted of this.
00:53:23.300 So he could be, listen, he could still be working for his employer or one very, very, very similar to his last employer.
00:53:30.460 Like this story just highlights the absolute depravity of our immigration system and how they are failing, how it is failing Canadians.
00:53:40.040 This is a horror show.
00:53:42.640 We have to hit an ad break.
00:53:44.080 We are like 55 minutes into the show.
00:53:46.820 Have not hit an ad break.
00:53:48.240 I want to tell you guys about a couple of things.
00:53:51.320 First thing, Rebel News had its happy birthday back in February.
00:53:56.960 It was our 10th birthday.
00:53:58.000 I'm not a day one-er.
00:53:58.940 I'm like a year one-er, but I'm not a day one-er.
00:54:01.180 And I've explained my circumstances around that before.
00:54:04.280 My excuse to not go back to work full-time, she went to school full-time.
00:54:11.020 And then so I didn't have an excuse to turn down Ezra Levant anymore.
00:54:13.720 And it has been a love affair with journalism ever since.
00:54:16.640 So, but we are turning 10 years old.
00:54:21.300 We've already turned 10 years old, but we want to celebrate with all of you.
00:54:24.140 And, you know, February, it was the election campaign and the liberals were running a leadership.
00:54:29.640 And parliament was pro-rogan.
00:54:31.020 There was so much news.
00:54:32.480 So we just didn't have, we just couldn't even plan it.
00:54:35.440 We were doing journalism every day.
00:54:36.800 And we still do journalism every day.
00:54:38.080 And we just decided there's always going to be a reason not to have the party.
00:54:41.520 So let's have the party.
00:54:42.900 So if you go to happybirthdayrebel.com, can you show the screen again?
00:54:48.340 Because I need to read from it.
00:54:50.880 Thursday, September 18th, 6 p.m.
00:54:52.840 Carriage House Hotel and Conference Center in Calgary.
00:54:56.580 Live music, cocktails, snackity snacks.
00:54:59.980 Selfies and meet and greet.
00:55:01.240 Photos with your favorite journalists.
00:55:02.600 Join us in Calgary for a celebration marking 10 years of journalism, truth-telling, and standing up for freedom.
00:55:10.560 And as they say in the website copy here, it's a celebration of what we've built together.
00:55:15.400 And I cannot stress that enough.
00:55:17.640 Because we will never take a penny from the government.
00:55:20.840 We only live on.
00:55:22.800 We only fight these fights because of you.
00:55:25.740 You have helped us beat Justin Trudeau's Debates Commission in court twice.
00:55:31.500 You have helped us help people all across the country through something that started with a little project called Fight the Fines, which grew into the Democracy Fund, a major civil liberties charity.
00:55:44.680 You've helped us tell the stories of the forgotten people.
00:55:47.720 You've helped us make documentaries to put down a marker in time to document the things the government either wants us to forget or not even talk about.
00:55:57.140 The freedom convoy, medical assistance in dying, the attacks on the churches.
00:56:00.700 We've done documentaries on all of these only because of you.
00:56:04.700 So how could we not include you in our birthday party?
00:56:07.180 Like, plan to come.
00:56:10.240 Plan to come, Rebel viewers.
00:56:12.320 This is going to be an evening not to forget.
00:56:15.080 I'm going to dress like it's prom.
00:56:16.820 That's what I'm going to do.
00:56:17.760 You want to do that?
00:56:19.000 Girl, all day, every day.
00:56:20.900 All day, every day.
00:56:22.120 We're going to take awkward prom photos with you guys.
00:56:25.200 Okay?
00:56:25.460 We're going to take – I'm going to get a background.
00:56:27.100 We're going to get a prom, some sort of prom background.
00:56:29.320 And this is going to be our absolute best night of our lives.
00:56:34.520 Coming up in Calgary in September.
00:56:37.200 Get your tickets.
00:56:38.620 Sheila, tell them where.
00:56:40.720 Happybirthdayrebel.com.
00:56:42.560 We want to see you all there.
00:56:44.240 We'd love to see you.
00:56:45.340 In your prom finery.
00:56:47.000 Oh.
00:56:47.880 Somebody please show up in a powder blue tuxedo with a bow tie.
00:56:50.840 I'm going to.
00:56:52.260 You're going to.
00:56:53.560 David Menzies probably has one of those if I had to guess.
00:56:57.520 Okay.
00:56:58.000 One more message before we hit an ad break.
00:57:00.080 We'll come back and do – we'll see how much of the last few things of the show
00:57:03.480 that we can breeze through, time permitting.
00:57:06.040 So let's ask, what is the best place in Canada?
00:57:11.880 The reason I'm asking that is because somebody is posing that question.
00:57:15.620 Don't miss this year's Canada Strong and Free Networking Conference in Calgary.
00:57:20.020 It's on September 5th and 6th.
00:57:22.160 It includes speakers such as Tristan Hopper, Lord Conrad Black, Premier Daniel Smith,
00:57:27.240 and Preston Manning.
00:57:28.980 And these things generally sell out.
00:57:30.780 So you want to go – well, not while we're on the show, but after the show.
00:57:35.840 Early bird rates are available until August 4th.
00:57:38.700 Reserve your tickets today at canadastrongandfree.network.
00:57:43.720 And you'll get more details there.
00:57:46.520 So you can see the list of speakers.
00:57:49.100 And again, personal plug, personal seal of approval on Marco Navarrogini.
00:57:53.880 He's a really important thinker in the Western independence movement.
00:57:58.400 He's thought about the implications of being a landlocked place and what that would mean
00:58:04.460 for trade deals and moving our products.
00:58:06.540 And he's thought a lot about the other places in the world who said,
00:58:10.320 you know what, we're just not getting along.
00:58:12.160 We'll go it our own way.
00:58:13.500 And so it doesn't have to be an adversarial fight.
00:58:16.060 But if the Liberals want it, I guess let's rumble.
00:58:19.860 Anyway, so let's hit an ad break and then we'll come right back.
00:58:22.060 Gun bands make great distractions.
00:58:25.380 Trudeau may be gone, but Carney has picked up his same rhetoric.
00:58:28.480 We will quickly, and I mean quickly, reinvigorate the buyback of assault-style firearms.
00:58:35.180 Hunters, collectors, competitors, and defenders of tradition are still being targeted.
00:58:44.160 While criminals run wild under liberal policy.
00:58:49.600 But we are fighting back.
00:58:52.060 By delaying and dismantling unjust legislation.
00:58:57.320 By confronting policy at its source.
00:59:00.080 Like on the global stage at the United Nations.
00:59:02.980 Through our unmatched record of political lobbying.
00:59:06.320 And our Save Firearms program.
00:59:09.560 Actively saving firearms from government crushers in real time.
00:59:15.020 And we're not done yet.
00:59:16.880 Join us.
00:59:18.420 Canada's National Firearms Association.
00:59:20.460 In defense of freedom.
00:59:22.500 Canadians know the national anthem.
00:59:26.800 They stand in silence to remember those who died for this country.
00:59:30.820 But not every Canadian knows their rights and freedoms.
00:59:34.360 The Freedom Passport will change that.
00:59:36.800 It looks and feels like a Canadian passport.
00:59:39.260 But contains the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in a portable, easy-to-read format.
00:59:45.700 The Freedom Passport.
00:59:47.600 Order one for yourself and for all the freedom lovers that you love.
00:59:52.060 At freedompassport.ca.
00:59:53.980 Do you agree with me?
00:59:56.020 It is time to make Canada great again.
00:59:59.980 And that is why we at Rebel News have teamed up with MCGA hats to introduce, well, the fashion sensation of 2025.
01:00:10.940 Oh, and by the way, these beautiful hats, they are made in Canada.
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01:00:21.700 So what are you waiting for, folks?
01:00:22.980 Show your pride.
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01:00:42.700 Don't be shy about it.
01:00:44.360 Wear this cap.
01:00:45.520 Let everybody know you want to make Canada great again.
01:00:50.080 Alberta powers Canada, but Ottawa keeps limiting our potential.
01:00:55.480 The Alberta Next panel wants your ideas to strengthen our sovereignty within a united Canada.
01:01:00.760 Help decide what's next for Alberta.
01:01:02.960 Visit alberta.ca slash next.
01:01:07.160 All right.
01:01:09.820 Let's get into this article from one of the good ones still working the mainstream media, Jamie Sarkonok.
01:01:18.520 She's awesome.
01:01:19.360 She's just awesome.
01:01:20.780 She's great.
01:01:22.700 Liberal funded charity.
01:01:24.700 You and I have talked about this a lot, about how the liberals give money to their favorite
01:01:32.040 NGO genderwang charities to do the things the feds are not allowed to do.
01:01:39.560 So the feds are not allowed to wander into provincial jurisdiction like healthcare.
01:01:45.520 But there's nothing stopping them from giving them bags of gold.
01:01:49.360 Okay.
01:01:49.920 Giving non-governmental organizations.
01:01:53.080 So this is outside of the federal government proper, but they give their friends in radical gender NGOs the bags of money to do their dirty work for them.
01:02:04.980 And so we've talked about how in Saskatchewan, it was EGAL.
01:02:12.480 Yes.
01:02:13.100 Who get gazillions of your money from the federal government.
01:02:18.260 Yeah.
01:02:18.540 The same with UR Pride, the University of Regina Pride group.
01:02:24.620 Yeah.
01:02:24.800 Same, same, same, funded by the federal government to overreach into provincial jurisdiction.
01:02:31.520 And Faye Johnstone's racket, let's not forget those guys.
01:02:34.740 Because they organized against conservatives during the federal election campaign.
01:02:42.340 Sure did.
01:02:43.500 And they were getting money from the liberal government to do exactly that.
01:02:47.580 You know what you get when you give these genderwang charities money.
01:02:52.540 You know, just real quick, it would have been great for the Conservative Party of Canada to bring this up during the election period.
01:03:01.180 Oh, it would have been a winner.
01:03:02.620 But no, anyway, here we are.
01:03:04.320 These radical NGOs are now interfering in Alberta.
01:03:11.960 Yeah.
01:03:12.140 Tell them how, Sheila Gunn-Reed.
01:03:13.440 So they are challenging our law, which restricts medical gender transition on minors.
01:03:21.640 They're challenging it.
01:03:23.000 So these childless self-sterilized weirdos who are fully funded by the federal government, by the radical gender extremists in the federal government,
01:03:33.140 they give these people money to launch legal action to undo the will of Albertans in court.
01:03:43.700 Well, to undermine the province of Alberta and undermine the province of Saskatchewan.
01:03:49.660 If it weren't for these federally funded NGOs, there would have been no challenge to our laws.
01:03:55.620 And yet here we are.
01:03:56.940 What Saskatchewan did right off the bat was drop the notwithstanding clause for the first time in Saskatchewan's history.
01:04:02.600 On a cultural issue, they dropped the notwithstanding clause.
01:04:06.100 Didn't help, though, because the notwithstanding clause is supposed to be a great big stop button to any federal overreach.
01:04:13.260 It was put in our Constitution for a reason, knowing that there may be differences in opinion from the federal level to the provincial level.
01:04:23.160 And it is a way for the provincial governments to stress their autonomy.
01:04:28.200 You can't overrule us.
01:04:29.480 It's an emergency stop button.
01:04:31.900 In Saskatchewan, this was supposed to stop any challenge from federally funded NGOs from going forward.
01:04:38.020 And yet it didn't.
01:04:39.260 Yet it didn't.
01:04:39.920 Now, in Saskatchewan, they're pulling a unique end run around consequences for teachers.
01:04:44.980 That's why they're doing that.
01:04:46.720 It is wild.
01:04:47.780 What they're doing in Saskatchewan is they are not, they know they can't stop the implementation of the law because the notwithstanding clause means notwithstanding whatever crap you were trying to pull in the courts, this law will remain, as they say, operational.
01:05:06.240 So the law will remain operational.
01:05:08.360 What they are doing in court is trying to have the law ruled unconstitutional but operational, which means it would mean nothing in practice.
01:05:20.900 It wouldn't rescind the law.
01:05:22.720 But what it means is these teachers who will flout the law.
01:05:29.380 Oh, and they are.
01:05:30.620 They are.
01:05:31.040 And they are.
01:05:31.760 Like all the time.
01:05:32.920 Yes.
01:05:33.240 The teachers who will flout the law and not alert parents that they're teaching weird things or that their kids are going by a different name in school or whatever.
01:05:41.840 When they flout the law, they can go and say, well, what they were asking me to do has been ruled unconstitutional.
01:05:51.540 Thus, I can't face professional sanctions for it.
01:05:54.900 So what it means is the law is operational, but the people who are supposed to comply with the law won't get in trouble.
01:06:02.480 That's right.
01:06:03.520 That's exactly right.
01:06:04.620 And this is happening in nearly every single elementary and high school across the province of Saskatchewan.
01:06:12.120 I can speak specifically for the city of Regina and Saskatoon.
01:06:15.460 Every single school has a gender and diversity club.
01:06:18.060 Well, guess what they're doing in those gender and diversity clubs?
01:06:20.280 They're socially transitioning kids behind their parents' back still every single day.
01:06:24.580 And the government and the teachers union are at such an impasse.
01:06:29.220 But this is EGAL's way.
01:06:32.240 EGAL, by the way, gets millions of dollars in federal funding, 71% funded by the federal government.
01:06:39.260 Same bad actors.
01:06:40.580 And they're the bad actors in Saskatchewan.
01:06:42.720 They're the bad actors in Alberta.
01:06:44.720 They're the bad actors across the country of Canada.
01:06:46.940 EGAL is not an organization that should be federally funded, number one, but that should be tolerated by society, number two.
01:06:56.480 But here we go with EGAL in Alberta doing the exact same thing.
01:07:01.400 They're challenging Alberta's laws that are protecting minors from gender ideology and specifically the medicalization of minors to medically transition them or surgically transition them, thus causing them irreparable and lifelong harms.
01:07:19.760 Here comes EGAL with their bags of money to challenge the government of Alberta on their laws that are protecting children.
01:07:28.100 And now would be the time, Danielle Smith, for you to also drop the notwithstanding clause.
01:07:34.180 You know, I asked her about that because I asked her about it in a press conference.
01:07:37.720 I wasn't satisfied with the answer.
01:07:39.200 So when I got a chance to sit down with her for an end-of-the-year interview, I said to her, look, I wasn't satisfied with the answer that you gave me.
01:07:45.560 So I'm going to ask it again.
01:07:47.220 And she said, look, I want this to play out in the court because we firmly believe that this will win in court.
01:07:55.860 And I think the idea is if this wins in court, it stops this baloney from happening in other provinces, right?
01:08:03.940 And so it'll set a legal precedent.
01:08:08.440 So she was, but she also said, look, if it comes time that this will be overturned, we're dropping the hammer if they're not withstanding clause.
01:08:17.180 Okay.
01:08:18.500 Okay.
01:08:19.100 So that's assuming that our judiciary isn't absolutely overrun with left-wing activists.
01:08:24.520 Sure, sure, sure.
01:08:25.020 And we know that it is.
01:08:26.020 Because they got an injunction already.
01:08:28.380 That's right.
01:08:29.440 And I really, you know, I would, listen, I would be on that boat too.
01:08:35.300 I would be on the boat too where it's like, listen, we're just going to let this play out in the courts so we can look at once and for all.
01:08:41.400 However, when there are lives of children at stake, when there are children being harmed, when there are children being walked down this path, and it starts in schools with social transition, with pronoun changes, with name changes, with gender and diversity clubs or gender and sexual identity clubs in schools.
01:09:02.420 When it starts there, they are put on the path of medicalization, and once they are put on the path of medicalization in Canada with mature minors at the age of 13, you can make decisions for yourself.
01:09:14.460 This is the way it is in Canada.
01:09:17.020 This is how 13-year-olds can have abortions and their parents don't know about it.
01:09:20.560 When there are children being harmed, we do not have any time to waste.
01:09:29.280 This has gone on for long enough, and it must be stopped as soon as possible.
01:09:35.540 The end.
01:09:36.960 Anything else is unacceptable.
01:09:40.780 This entire thing has gotten so out of hand.
01:09:43.880 We've seen it happen across the world, and we've seen it dialed back across the world, whether it be Denmark or Sweden or the UK or the US.
01:09:52.440 Canada is the lone holdout as it pertains to gender issues, especially as it pertains to children, and it must stop immediately.
01:10:02.060 There is no room for argument on this.
01:10:06.280 We do not harm children.
01:10:08.540 That is the pinnacle of our society, of a civilized society, is that we do not harm children, and we know what the gender ideology does.
01:10:22.060 We know that child transition does, and we know that the medicalization of minors will have devastating long-term consequences.
01:10:31.580 We do not harm children.
01:10:32.600 This must stop as soon as possible, right now, by any means necessary.
01:10:36.260 Sorry, did you say Belgium?
01:10:38.540 What did I...
01:10:39.080 Denmark.
01:10:39.860 Denmark, okay.
01:10:40.740 Denmark, Sweden.
01:10:43.040 Denmark, Sweden, the UK.
01:10:44.440 Well-known hardline conservative places, right?
01:10:48.540 This is...
01:10:49.180 And they've rolled it back.
01:10:50.500 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:10:52.520 Let's skip ahead, because the Ottawa protester story, we're going to have the journalist involved on the show tomorrow, Karima.
01:11:00.520 So we will...
01:11:01.540 Oh, I can't wait.
01:11:02.820 We'll just talk about that tomorrow, because I know we're running out of time.
01:11:06.300 Let's go to the National Police Federation.
01:11:09.100 So this is the RCMP Members' Union.
01:11:11.480 They represent 20,000 normal RCMP officers, not the crazy lady that we heard from in the beginning.
01:11:17.240 These are the guys who...
01:11:18.300 You'll meet them at your gun range.
01:11:22.200 They say, we're disgusted by the parole board of Canada's decision to grant day parole to Pingo Atakolala, who is convicted of murdering Constable Douglas Scott in 2007.
01:11:35.380 This is a slap in the face, oh, hi, Triggy, to his family, colleagues, and every officer who risks their life to protect our communities.
01:11:44.060 And just for context, this happened in Nunavut.
01:11:47.360 Constable Douglas Scott was 20 years old at the time, and Colala was sentenced to life in prison with no parole eligibility for 25 years, and not even 18 years later, he's being released on day parole.
01:12:03.120 The decision is not only profoundly disrespectful to Constable Scott's family and colleagues, but anyways, they go on from there.
01:12:10.520 He was killed while responding to a call for help, serving and protecting his community.
01:12:18.760 And Colala accessed his parole under the now repealed Faint Hope Clause.
01:12:28.760 And the National Police Federation believes this decision undermines public safety and the values of our justice system that it claims to uphold.
01:12:36.060 And they're calling on the parole board and the government of Canada to reconsider this decision immediately.
01:12:42.520 So it sounds like the Faint Hope Clause is, you know, it was repealed, that, you know, if you're sentenced, you're sentenced.
01:12:49.560 But because he was sentenced prior to the repeal of that, so some 20, 18 years ago, he gets to still access that.
01:12:56.800 It didn't change retroactively.
01:12:59.620 So he's doing an end run.
01:13:01.520 He's jumping through a loophole, and the parole board, for some reason, is letting him.
01:13:04.980 They could easily just say, actually, no, you should at least sit there for seven more years before we talk about this.
01:13:13.720 I've said for years that the parole board of Canada should be required to house the convicts that they let out early in their own guest bedrooms.
01:13:27.480 Put them in the house next door so they know how the community feels.
01:13:30.260 Exactly that, because just like the RCMP, just like the federal government, just like the Liberal Party of Canada, members of the parole board of Canada do not suffer the consequences of their policy decisions or of the decisions that they make.
01:13:47.960 They are not the people that were devastated by this loss, and it really is such a terrible loss.
01:13:56.180 20 years old.
01:13:57.120 I mean, that kid had his whole entire life ahead of him.
01:14:00.660 What a difference he could have made, you know?
01:14:02.580 I mean, it is just an unfathomable loss, especially to our country, and especially to his family and loved ones.
01:14:14.980 And when the parole board of Canada releases convicts like this early, regardless of what loophole he jumped through, it is a slap in the face to victims.
01:14:30.320 It is a slap in the face to the community that's going to have to absorb this person back, right?
01:14:35.760 Like, I'm of the belief that if you prove yourself to be this unhinged, right?
01:14:41.720 Like, if you can do this once, you can do this again.
01:14:44.700 Of course you can do this again.
01:14:46.240 And that should be considered.
01:14:48.760 But the way that the parole board of Canada makes their decisions is not in the best interest of the community.
01:14:56.480 It's not in the best interest of the victims.
01:14:58.240 It is always in the best interest of the convict.
01:15:01.960 And this is an abomination.
01:15:04.300 And really, my heart just goes out to this kid's family, 20 years old.
01:15:07.280 I mean, there's nothing worse.
01:15:09.900 Yeah, it's atrocious.
01:15:11.980 And, like, the parole board didn't have to grant parole.
01:15:14.740 That's the thing.
01:15:15.240 Like, he could...
01:15:15.760 That's the thing.
01:15:16.620 That's the thing.
01:15:17.720 He, let's say, even through a legal loophole, he's allowed to apply because of the faint hope clause, which still applies to him.
01:15:26.000 They could say, on principle, no.
01:15:30.740 On principle, no.
01:15:33.240 But they gave it to him.
01:15:37.540 Another thoroughly shameful public institution in Canada that has lost or abandoned their mandate.
01:15:48.860 Yeah.
01:15:49.580 The parole board of Canada.
01:15:50.860 Shame.
01:15:51.820 Yeah, and I see it all the time on the show.
01:15:53.420 Like, I'm not against redemption.
01:15:56.000 That's why I think there should be, like, as they say in the United Kingdom, like, your conviction should be considered spent after a certain amount of time where you have lived in the community and done great things.
01:16:08.680 And I think the record suspension process is too onerous for people who were convicted of minor things many years ago.
01:16:18.240 And it actually is prohibitive to people trying to make their way out of the socioeconomic class that they seem to be damned to because they have this criminal conviction.
01:16:29.160 And it prevents, you know, it prevents, you know, traveling both ways.
01:16:32.520 I think the United States is hard on this and Canadians are hard on this, too.
01:16:35.400 I think, as I said repeatedly, a long-haul trucker who was convicted of assault in a bar fight when he was 18 years old and now he's 40 and he wants to come to Jasper?
01:16:45.720 Let him.
01:16:46.820 Let him.
01:16:48.140 Let him.
01:16:49.060 And I think it goes the other way, too.
01:16:50.720 The Americans are very tough on Canadians who do this, too.
01:16:53.360 And I think there should be some mercy around that sort of stuff, but not this.
01:16:59.640 This is.
01:17:00.180 No.
01:17:00.760 No.
01:17:01.980 Look at this.
01:17:02.700 He spent less time in jail than that young man was on the face of the earth.
01:17:07.000 That is just wild.
01:17:09.220 And although I do believe in redemption, the risks to community and the further traumatization of this young man's family must be upheld over any rehabilitation or redemption of the convicted.
01:17:34.940 These are one of those things where you can rehab and you can rehab in jail.
01:17:39.420 You can go on to do great things behind bars.
01:17:42.040 Yeah.
01:17:42.560 Yeah.
01:17:42.880 And I would really, you know, in Canada, I remember there was a case in Saskatoon many, many years ago where a woman killed a whole car full of really beautiful, vibrant teenagers and we talked to their families on the radio.
01:17:56.740 And one of the things that isn't considered is what the victims' families would like to have happen.
01:18:04.300 Because I do believe, I do believe that we should be, we should be concentrating on their healing and resolving their trauma before that of the convict.
01:18:16.060 And that's something that just does not happen in Canada, unfortunately.
01:18:19.680 Yeah.
01:18:19.840 So, um, let's end on the daily cringe.
01:18:23.420 Um, it's out of the corner of my eye.
01:18:27.880 I thought this was John Tory, but no, it's Rosie O'Donnell.
01:18:31.800 And, uh, Rosie O'Donnell blames Trump for the Texas tragedy because he cut wasteful spending at the National Weather Service.
01:18:42.320 So let's see her, uh, God, she looks like deputy dog more and more all the time.
01:18:49.020 Let's, uh, let's listen to this.
01:18:52.600 Didn't she leave the country?
01:18:53.560 And what a horror story in Texas.
01:18:55.320 Flash floods in Texas.
01:18:57.500 The Guadalupe River.
01:18:59.700 51 missing.
01:19:00.980 51 dead.
01:19:01.860 More missing.
01:19:03.580 Children.
01:19:05.100 At a camp.
01:19:05.740 And, you know, when the president guts all of the early warning systems and the, um, weathering forecast abilities of the government, these are the results that we're going to start to see on a daily basis.
01:19:21.000 Because he's put this country in so much danger by his horrible, horrible decisions and this ridiculously immoral bill that he just signed into law.
01:19:35.720 As Republicans cheered.
01:19:39.120 As Republicans cheered.
01:19:41.540 People will die as a result and they've started already.
01:19:44.360 Shame on him.
01:19:48.480 Shame on every GOP sycophant who's listening and following the disastrous decisions of this mentally incapacitated POTUS.
01:19:58.700 What?
01:20:03.080 Hard to believe.
01:20:04.140 It is hard to believe because it's not true.
01:20:07.980 No, well, that's, that's exactly the thing.
01:20:10.760 Shut the hell up, Rosie O'Donnell.
01:20:12.180 The Guadalupe River has experienced numerous significant floods, particularly in Texas Hill Country, where rapid runoff from heavy rains can cause water levels to rise dramatically.
01:20:23.540 Verified major flood events have occurred on the Guadalupe River in 1838, 1848, 1868, 1872, 1921, 1936, 1952, 1972, 1973, and 1987.
01:20:42.440 Was Trump there for that, Rosie O'Donnell, for all of those other events?
01:20:46.180 This is geography and weather that happened.
01:20:49.260 This is not Trump's fault.
01:20:51.140 This is not Trump's fault.
01:20:52.360 And for anybody who's ever tried to, tried to install a water level meter, they are infamously hard to be able to predict these kinds of weather events and, and, and fast water rising.
01:21:09.220 And this is over a huge geographic area.
01:21:12.120 And although what happened on the Guadalupe River this week in Texas, in East Texas, and our hearts go out to you guys in East Texas right now, it was not the fault of, of President Trump.
01:21:24.360 This is a naturally occurring event that Rosie O'Donnell should be ashamed of herself for putting this on the shoulders of President Trump.
01:21:30.800 Well, and what she said is patently untrue that cuts to the National Weather Service prevented people from being alerted from, from the AP of all places.
01:21:42.120 The National Weather Service office in New Braunfels, which delivers forecasts for Austin, San Antonio, and surrounding areas, had extra staff on duty during the storms.
01:21:51.520 Where, where the office would typically have two forecasters on duty during clear weather, they had up to five people on staff.
01:21:58.520 There were extra people in here that night, and that's typical in every weather service office.
01:22:03.400 You staff up for an event, you bring people on for overtime and hold people over.
01:22:08.520 And, uh, they issued several flood warnings.
01:22:13.480 It had, this had to do with timing when the, um, when, like, this happened at 1.14 in the morning.
01:22:21.980 Yeah.
01:22:22.460 Yeah, this, this also has to do with, uh, the soil conditions of East Texas.
01:22:27.660 They're very clay-rich.
01:22:29.280 Clay does not absorb water well.
01:22:31.900 It actually repels water.
01:22:33.800 Uh, and so this leads to really, really high runoff into rivers.
01:22:38.400 So rain falls on hills.
01:22:39.940 It runs down the sides of the hills and into, uh, into low-lying rivers, which then, um, break their banks and flood over flat surfaces, the flat topography of the area.
01:22:52.460 They're just so crazy that they will blame a weather catastrophe on someone for political reasons.
01:23:00.760 They did this in Alberta during the Calgary floods.
01:23:04.060 And, uh, it was very damaging to a town called High River, which was at the time Danielle Smith's constituency.
01:23:13.200 She worked overtime just saving people's dogs.
01:23:16.100 People were texting her saying, my dog's in my house.
01:23:17.840 And because she was the local MLA, she could go and get their dog.
01:23:21.540 And she had these crates of animals.
01:23:23.400 And she would just, was a real hero of the floods.
01:23:27.600 But anyways, uh, people were like, this is because conservatives don't care about climate change.
01:23:33.200 And it's like, do you hear yourself?
01:23:35.360 We, and, and, and we hear this every, every, uh, every time there's a forest fire.
01:23:40.680 We hear this every time there's a forest fire, it's then offloaded onto, uh, onto climate change.
01:23:47.320 Well, if you paid more attention to climate change, you are never going to stop mother nature.
01:23:52.220 Mother nature is never going to stop creating weather.
01:23:55.080 And, um, it's time that we get off this alarmist bus and do the best we can with the knowledge we have and, and, and try and protect people.
01:24:03.600 But, but we, we've all seen mother nature and her wrath and when she decides to lash out, there's, uh, practically nothing that can stop her.
01:24:13.180 Fewer people die now in, uh, weather events than ever in human history.
01:24:17.860 Than any other time.
01:24:18.940 That's right.
01:24:19.460 Because we have these advanced warning systems.
01:24:21.460 But the reason I bring up the high river situation, um, was because like the answer is quite literally in the name of the town.
01:24:29.840 Right.
01:24:30.320 It is on a flood plain.
01:24:33.120 The high wood river was prone to flooding so much so that they named the town high river, high river, but yet it was my SUV that done it.
01:24:44.240 Like my goodness.
01:24:46.180 Okay.
01:24:46.240 That's what the climate zealots will say anyway.
01:24:48.000 And in any case, uh, it's just not cool.
01:24:50.500 It's not cool to, uh, to politicize, to politicize weather events to advance a left-wing narrative.
01:24:56.920 Yeah.
01:24:57.340 It's just, and where is she?
01:24:58.880 She's in Dublin.
01:24:59.620 Like, didn't she leave the United States?
01:25:02.920 Yeah, she did.
01:25:03.700 I believe Ireland has some problems of its own lately.
01:25:07.400 Zip it.
01:25:08.020 You left.
01:25:08.820 You left.
01:25:09.580 So, okay.
01:25:10.520 You're gone.
01:25:11.820 Um, please quit haunting the United States with your nonsense.
01:25:16.160 Like some sort of John Tory poltergeist.
01:25:19.900 Um, we've got Nana Awake gives us 10 bucks and says, when judges protect immigrants and criminals over citizens, Canadians need to accept there's no saving it.
01:25:29.360 Alberta must separate to break this corrupt system.
01:25:31.540 It's the only hope of protecting Canada.
01:25:34.080 Amen.
01:25:35.140 Nana Awake.
01:25:35.920 Amen.
01:25:36.700 I agree.
01:25:37.760 Uh, our, to be in charge of our own judiciary, our own currency, our own immigration, our own healthcare, our own systems, our own institutions.
01:25:46.300 I mean, nothing excites me more.
01:25:48.880 So, thank you so much, Nana Awake.
01:25:50.700 That's just such an awesome thing.
01:25:51.180 Maybe we'll elect our own judges here.
01:25:54.040 I would love to elect our own local sheriffs.
01:25:56.480 Give me a Grady Judd.
01:25:58.120 Girl, without question, this is what we are doing.
01:26:01.620 These lifetime appointments of left-wing activists are over in the new country.
01:26:06.620 Okay, here comes my favorite sentence again.
01:26:08.980 Okay, right.
01:26:09.280 In the new country.
01:26:10.080 In the new country, uh, we are going to have elected positions because if you don't do your job and if you abandon, uh, your mandate, then you are shown the door.
01:26:19.700 Yes.
01:26:20.120 That's just how it's going to work.
01:26:21.820 All right.
01:26:22.340 We are half an hour over the top of the show, but, uh, it's just an opportunity to get paid to talk to my best friend, which is fine by me.
01:26:29.800 Um, we should wrap up the show.
01:26:31.900 I got to get into a, a weekly meeting right away.
01:26:34.640 Lise, thanks so much for hanging out with me two days in a row.
01:26:38.560 And, uh, as always, we'll talk very, very, very, very, very soon.
01:26:41.980 Well, this is, this is my pleasure.
01:26:44.260 As you know, these are my favorite two days of the week and I will see you guys.
01:26:47.780 Take care, everyone.
01:26:48.660 Okay.
01:26:49.320 Take care, everyone.
01:26:50.840 Uh, it's not as bad as it looks.
01:26:53.060 It's not as bad as it looks.
01:26:54.580 Let's not see you next week.
01:26:55.720 Same place, same time.
01:26:57.240 Thanks to everybody who works behind the scenes at Rebel News to put the show together for you so that it's there, however you want to consume it.
01:27:03.740 Thanks to you guys who pitch in a little bit to keep the lights on here at Rebel News.
01:27:07.220 We could not do it without you.
01:27:09.580 And thanks to all of you who do the free and easy, very easy thing of sharing the show or a clip of the show with someone you think needs to see it.
01:27:19.180 It helps us get around the intense internet censorship to speak directly to you.
01:27:25.880 And as my friend David Menzies always says, stay safe and stay sane.
01:27:33.740 Thank you.