Rebel News Podcast - November 20, 2025


SHEILA GUNN REID | Sheila takes your questions on the UN 'climate change' conference


Episode Stats

Length

34 minutes

Words per Minute

152.21373

Word Count

5,236

Sentence Count

108

Misogynist Sentences

3

Hate Speech Sentences

16


Summary

In this episode, I answer your questions from the Londes in Belém, Brazil at the United Nation's COP21 climate change conference. I'm in the kitchen of our Airbnb, so the audio is not great, but that's okay.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 I'm answering your questions today from the LEM Brazil at the United Nations Climate Change
00:00:05.780 Conference. I'm Sheila Gunn-Reed and you're watching The Gunn Show.
00:00:08.960 You know, friends, I hope my audio is okay because I'm recording it with my earbuds instead of my
00:00:32.420 regular studio setup because this is not my regular studio. I'm actually sitting at the
00:00:39.340 kitchen table of our Airbnb in Belém, Brazil. I'm here covering the United Nations Climate Change
00:00:47.620 Conference. We haven't done one of these in a few years because they were being held in places where
00:00:54.540 the press wasn't free and I knew that I would be asking prickly questions if I went to one of these
00:01:02.220 conferences in, you know, Egypt or the Emirates and I didn't want to get arrested in those places
00:01:10.860 because I just can't help myself. And, you know, if I don't get to ask questions then I will
00:01:17.360 go around the city and show you what's really the environmental situation in these cities. So
00:01:24.000 just for my own safety and because I know myself we didn't go. But this year it was in Belém, Brazil
00:01:32.060 named after Bethlehem so it's sort of odd that the climate cult took the place over. But it's a
00:01:39.740 little more free. Now I probably won't be allowed back in the country to work. To come here you need
00:01:44.860 a visa and I'm sure next time my visa will not be approved. But that's okay because I feel like I
00:01:52.080 left it all on the dance floor. I'm recording on my phone so if I'm looking in a strange spot I'm just
00:01:58.720 sort of making sure that my audio levels are okay. So all that is to say I was not able to book a regular
00:02:06.880 show guest. Sometimes I actually run into people at these conferences like in past Tom Harris from the
00:02:14.260 International Climate Science Coalition. But not this year. So as always when I'm busy and I'm
00:02:20.640 traveling I rely on you. I turn the show over to you guys and then I ask you for your viewer feedback and
00:02:27.120 hopefully many of you subscribers got, all of you subscribers I should say, got an email from me
00:02:33.980 asking for your questions so that I could answer them on the show today. I got a feedback
00:02:38.060 and I'll read those today and then I have um I want to go through the comments on one of the videos
00:02:45.040 that I did which I think was pretty good journalism and I'll tell you the backstory of the
00:02:49.820 the video and why it's sort of it feels rushed and because it was but I just didn't want to say it in
00:02:57.140 the video because I didn't want to make the video about us but you know you're subscribers I trust you
00:03:02.560 guys and you'll understand. And um then I'll go through regular viewer feedback as I always do at
00:03:09.760 the end of the show. So thank you for bearing with me and uh let's get into it shall we? Again hopefully
00:03:17.460 the audio is okay. It's this is a fully tiled kitchen and so if it sounds like I'm in a sewer um I
00:03:24.320 apologize. I'm doing my best. I'm trying to let Kian sleep because he has to start his flights back
00:03:30.580 today. Uh Kian my videographer producer. I just don't want to bother him with the audio setup.
00:03:35.780 Uh I have to start tomorrow and I think I have three red eye flights. Four. Four. Four flights to get
00:03:45.640 back to Edmonton and I will not. I'm reporting this on Wednesday. I start heading back tomorrow. I will
00:03:53.140 not be home till sometime after midnight on the 23rd. So that's a very very long time.
00:04:00.580 Okay uh but that is just how the flights are to get out of here because 55,000 climate change
00:04:09.940 delegates are here and I think we'll get into that in the very first letter here. All right.
00:04:17.020 It got suddenly very dark in here. First letter comes to me from Ken who writes hello Sheila.
00:04:26.920 Hi Ken. I wonder how many publicly funded delegates are attending this event on Prime Minister Mark
00:04:35.340 Carney's credit card payable eventually by Canadian children of today tomorrow. I wonder how many
00:04:40.360 duplicate delegates that's a great question are attending from various federal provincial and
00:04:45.020 municipal government sanctioned organizations. The true and full cost? I don't think we'll ever know.
00:04:51.520 This is Canadian spending restraint. Good luck and keep up the good work. Well thank you. Uh here's what I
00:04:59.940 can tell you. The official Canadian federal government delegation is about 220-ish delegates who will be
00:05:09.660 attending all the plenary events inside. Voting to make sure that you're stuck with a low flow
00:05:16.360 showerhead in a low flow toilet to save water while their sewage is literally being pumped into the bay
00:05:25.460 around here. It's crazy how nobody is actually looking at the city you count we're in. Um but of those
00:05:35.460 delegates like they were unsatisfied with the accommodations here available. So the UN brought in
00:05:44.280 two cruise ships and built a special multi-million dollar high security dock for the cruise ships
00:05:51.880 so that the fancy people could stay there and they didn't have to stay in the like local accommodations
00:05:57.340 which are so expensive because you have the world's busy bodies flying in. You get this Airbnb
00:06:04.760 very expensive but it was safe and clean. Uh but I can work. I'm from the farm. I can deal with uh not
00:06:15.060 necessarily things being the cleanest but uh this is one of the top two dozen dangerous cities in the
00:06:22.440 world and we just wanted to make sure that there was a place where we could be safe uh to work after
00:06:28.920 we've been working all day. Um but yeah you are right about the size of the delegation. This
00:06:36.560 delegation I think is the second largest after 2015 when they signed to the Paris Accord and maybe
00:06:45.440 2016 when everyone was like going to the funeral for climate change because Donald Trump got elected
00:06:51.260 I think that was in Marrakech, Morocco. I think they had about 240 then. But that's just the official
00:06:56.480 delegation because all these NGOs then send people and most of the NGOs in Canada have at least some
00:07:06.560 money in their hands from the federal government. You know like Equitaire and Ecojustice and Pembina Institute
00:07:14.720 all those guys get money and so they are just quasi official delegates on behalf of the federal
00:07:22.040 government and then the municipalities send people for some reason and the provinces send people for
00:07:29.240 some reason and uh like for example the mayor of Montreal a few years ago uh said he's white
00:07:40.200 what's that about thousands and thousands of dollars just to send her here for what
00:07:47.460 what was she gonna do? Anyway it's all just we're on the hook for all of this. These people get to
00:07:53.280 circumnavigate the globe and we get lectured about our summer road trips.
00:08:01.300 So how do you how do you topulate those costs? They're hidden all over the place. It's in the
00:08:08.020 hundreds. Maybe millions of dollars.
00:08:10.960 But surely millions of dollars to send all the Canadians here. It has to be. Like a budget hotel
00:08:19.520 right now in this city is like a thousand bucks a night Canadian.
00:08:27.460 Because that's the unavailability.
00:08:29.100 That's why we chose this Airbnb. It's far from the venue. But it's safe and clean.
00:08:37.860 We were getting on the cruise ship is what I'm saying.
00:08:42.460 Next letter.
00:08:46.380 From this is from Tom Ackland who says why is Canada a part of this? Well we have the prime minister who
00:08:54.500 wrote values and we had for 10 years Justin Trudeau who was so excited to make sure that his government
00:09:04.260 was the signatory to the Paris Accord which would pave the way for a nationwide consumer card and tax.
00:09:15.380 But yeah should we be a part of this?
00:09:17.140 What do we get out of this? Except this global government signing like signing over our sovereignty
00:09:25.060 to this global government that will dictate whether or not your son who is a welder gets a job one day
00:09:31.300 on a pipeline.
00:09:35.300 How can we get out of this for Canada and Canadians? We just don't have to come. I mean the Americans sent
00:09:41.580 basically nobody this year. I was actually kind of excited because I thought oh
00:09:45.300 Donald Trump for example in years gone by I think it was in on Germany so maybe 2018
00:09:54.660 2017. He sent the frackers like because the Americans have seen a drastic reduction in their
00:10:03.700 greenhouse gas emissions and that is because they're fracking. The fracking renaissance
00:10:08.980 actually lowered their greenhouse gas emissions if you care about those sorts of things. But it
00:10:13.460 is you know because they had the ability to reach natural gas that they were unable to extract before
00:10:21.060 and they it sort of shifted the reliance from coal. And uh they really didn't have a footprint here and
00:10:29.620 good for them. Why? These people are going to tell you to get off coal, stop drilling for oil and gas,
00:10:38.660 uh drive electric cars, uh drive electric cars and that's and and hinder your industries and get off
00:10:45.220 meat, stop animal agriculture. The Americans are none of that. So why even come, right? By not coming,
00:10:54.100 it it sends a real message that you're not going along with any of this.
00:10:57.620 He continues to write and I'm sure most comedians think of this similar to the way I do. Rich people
00:11:04.660 using a narrative to get their way by telling us do as I say not as I do. I'm also pissed the budget
00:11:11.780 got a pass and Carney didn't talk to Daniel Smith by the gray cup. He's a jackass but I think it's his
00:11:18.100 plan. He will continue to hurt Canada and pull up any roots in Canada and settle in near Trump in the USA
00:11:25.300 after he gets as much help as he can do to help Trump. I don't, I don't think that Carney wants
00:11:33.860 to help Trump. I'm not anti-Trump by you stretch the imagination. I think that uh Donald Trump is
00:11:40.420 pro-America and that's his like laser focus and if it hurts Canada that's not his concern. He wasn't
00:11:46.980 elected to be the president of Canada. He's the president of the United States for the Americans and
00:11:52.740 he's going to do what's best for the Americans even to the detriment of the Canadians. Now if the
00:11:57.940 Canadians were a lot easier to get along with I think we would have an easier goal of this
00:12:04.100 and that has been historically our relationship. You know that I say it all the time but
00:12:11.940 the relationship between Canada and the United States I think is the greatest military, security,
00:12:18.740 strategic, cultural, and trade partnership the world has ever known in the history of human
00:12:26.100 civilization. A find a better way. Find where two cultures are so close, yeah moderately distinct I
00:12:34.900 guess in the eastern parts of the country. I think the westerners like in the prairies we don't see
00:12:40.500 ourselves all that distinct culturally from the Americans and their cultural breakdown is
00:12:45.940 east west not north south um but think about that in the history of humanity I don't think there's
00:12:52.900 ever been a greater relationship and yet in 10 years of the liberals in power that has gone absolutely to
00:13:00.820 shit. Tease a colloquialism of my people um and the liberals should be wearing that around their neck
00:13:10.420 and nobody is I think that's to the detriment of the conservatives I think they really should be
00:13:14.340 pushing that narrative like we had a good relationship and then these guys undid it in fact
00:13:21.460 the first time that Trump was in power it wasn't this bad so what happened and it's because Mark Carney
00:13:30.580 campaigned on Trump is bad because he couldn't campaign on Justin Trudeau is bad and I'm going to
00:13:38.900 be different because it's literally the same guy he gave them the same ideas he gave them those ideas
00:13:45.620 so he the liberals couldn't campaign on their own record so they had to campaign against something
00:13:50.420 and so I think that's what happened is they that Mark Carney saw an opportunity not that I think that
00:13:58.180 that's what happened I know that's what happened because we've seen um surveys and uh briefing notes that
00:14:05.700 came out of the uh prime minister's office and the privy council where they were polling Canadians on
00:14:13.140 their sentiments about Americans and then they were then using that government paid for uh data and then
00:14:20.980 crafting their campaign strategy around it which is not what you're supposed to do because that
00:14:26.740 information is meant for um policy it's not meant for liberal party campaigning the liberals have been in
00:14:33.380 power so long that they see the government as them and them as the government and they're actually
00:14:38.180 two separate things all right let's see what else we got uh next one is from
00:14:50.340 Enzo who says where's our tax dollars going we need to account for every tax dollar sent to the
00:14:56.500 United Nations I think you're talking to me about what I've shown you in the city and it's probably
00:15:02.900 one of the reasons I'm not going to be allowed back into Brazil hopefully the construction noise of the
00:15:07.780 window isn't getting to be too much um a lot of money floating for this conference and instead of
00:15:20.820 holding this conference uh money should have been spent on improving the lives of the citizens of
00:15:28.340 these people they're lovely um despite the fact that the city is very dangerous
00:15:34.260 I did not have a bad interaction with anybody here the entire year time
00:15:38.260 and they live in parts of the city actually in most of the city I should tell you in abject squalor
00:15:49.700 60 of the city is a favela of some form which is to use the language of the left irregular housing
00:15:57.700 the people don't on the land it's not collect connected to the sewage system no sanitation no garbage
00:16:03.940 pickup maybe they have electricity but it's precarious and likely borrowed and they
00:16:15.540 are
00:16:15.780 not getting any better like things are not getting better for these people and in fact the united
00:16:24.500 nations and this conference itself has made it worse because the united nations has used one neighborhood
00:16:31.540 what we found as a dumping ground for their construction garbage we found the signs um that were sort of
00:16:39.940 hidden in a vacant lot and we found where the people in the favela as it's called were using
00:16:49.060 the united nations signage that had been discarded by the united nations to make a fence
00:16:55.060 and same community is where the sewage raw untreated sewage because like almost not like
00:17:08.820 under five percent you know sometimes you see the number is four percent sometimes you see it as two
00:17:13.860 percent uh if it's under five percent it's real bad um five percent of the sewage it's even
00:17:20.740 treated treated in the city when it rains the gutters just run brown what's hurt uh
00:17:33.620 and this sewage is being routed through these communities and then out into the bay
00:17:38.420 the bay that is the mouth of the amazon that we're all supposed to protect it's like the u.n isn't
00:17:44.020 protecting it why do i have to drive less in alberta and not use a plastic straw because the city of
00:17:51.940 belem and by extension the united nations can't figure out how to pick up the garbage can't figure
00:17:57.940 out how to treat their water 2.5 million people live here 60 percent live in abject squalor i'm sorry
00:18:05.940 if 50 000 people through flew into your city you know what they should be doing
00:18:10.340 grabbing a garbage bag and picking up garbage if you care about this place
00:18:16.180 every one of these 55 000 delegates plus all the ngos and the protesters and busy bodies give them
00:18:22.660 a garbage bag tell them to come back when it's full that's what i love to see that makes a real difference
00:18:30.020 like a real difference i'm in alberton i'm sure many of you watching i'll do the same thing when you're
00:18:35.940 out on the trails you know like i'm an avid trail user i live next door to a national park and when
00:18:43.620 i see garbage on the trail i pick it up i pick it up i take it out um that's why i kind of hate the
00:18:50.500 to like canada canada strong pass or whatever that mark carney's doing where he makes the national
00:18:55.460 parks free because every time they do that it opens up the park to garbage like it's just you
00:19:04.900 you can see it like overnight diapers in the lake whatever but if these environmental activists
00:19:11.540 really cared about the environment like really cared instead they just care about you know global
00:19:18.740 socialism imposing global socialism on us through a wealth transfer who's actually cared they would be
00:19:24.660 out in the streets with a garbage bag but they don't care like they they think if they take money
00:19:31.700 for me and give it to i don't know al gore the weather will get better and the streets will get
00:19:37.620 cleaner and that's not how it works people have to put the work in they're not putting the work in
00:19:42.420 um that's one thing i know about socialists they're gravely allergic to uh well work that's why they
00:19:52.660 want everybody to just get their ubi because they don't they'll just get the lining you won't have to
00:20:02.980 work all right uh let's go into a couple comments on a video that i did on finding the place where
00:20:15.380 the un was dumping their garbage and i'll give you a little bit of backstory
00:20:18.340 we heard that the united nations had been dumping their construction garbage in this community when
00:20:27.860 you know it we found the dump site that the united nations is using now i'm not somebody who believes
00:20:35.780 in the term environmental racism or i haven't been actually you know it's usually used to describe
00:20:43.140 uh oil and gas companies trying to give indigenous people well-paying oil and gas jobs in their
00:20:50.900 communities but i think this is real environmental racism this is a poor community it's largely mulatto
00:20:58.260 it's mixed race and they don't have any power and the very powerful world's elites have decided to hide
00:21:06.340 their environmental carnage inside of their community and they don't have any power to stop them
00:21:12.660 this is real journalism that the journalists inside of the climate change conference refuse to do
00:21:19.540 because it doesn't fit the narrative and they're too scared to so we saw in local portuguese brazilian
00:21:28.100 instagram stories locals complaining about the united nations dumping garbage in a favela we knew the name
00:21:35.620 of the favela it was dia da barca maybe i'm saying that wrong but that's how i would say it in western
00:21:42.580 canadian and we could see in the background certain buildings distinct buildings and so we got on
00:21:51.060 google or and we started looking and we could see a cross street that was close we needed an address
00:21:58.500 where we could get a driver to drop us off and so we get and we knew that it was really dangerous for us
00:22:06.500 to be running literally running through this community with our backpacks and our very expensive
00:22:13.220 camera in my song um and the driver said yeah i'll wait but you have two minutes two minutes
00:22:23.860 and so we thought okay we'll run out to the water we'll take a look at what the conditions are there
00:22:29.220 like and you can see in our footage it's very rushed but we had two minutes to run to the bay and a run
00:22:35.620 back because the driver wasn't going to wait for us he was like i'm going to leave you guys
00:22:40.340 in this favela because it's not safe for me and no one could blame him like you know so and we were
00:22:49.060 we were sort of dejected we're running back to the to the car like running 34 degree heat and
00:22:55.940 and i said to kian oh my god look there's the sun this is the the dump site you could see the sign
00:23:05.140 sort of wedged up uh behind like a fence where and it said cop 30 which is conference of the parties
00:23:14.420 30 united nations climate change conference and then i turns to look at as i'm telling kian i'm looking at
00:23:20.420 him and i'm looking over his shoulder and i see where the the locals are using the garbage
00:23:27.460 to build a fence because the united nations left it there and that that's how that story came together
00:23:34.340 but we almost didn't have this story and we almost got left in the fazella but we did it and yeah we we
00:23:41.620 were running quite literally for our lives nobody was chasing us but we just didn't definitely didn't
00:23:46.580 want to get left there so i thought i would go through some of the comments on that um
00:23:53.460 mike o'keefe 21 or sorry 2014 says it's called the one percent rich get rich on the backs of the poor
00:23:59.700 and blue-collar workers everyone is tired of this climate crap it's true the elites they don't actually
00:24:07.700 care about the environment they just care that everything around them is pretty and they don't
00:24:11.540 care about what how other people have to live absolutely disgusting abusing the poor and this
00:24:17.300 fake name of climate change that's can man 50 60 it's true you don't care about the poor right
00:24:25.780 i think you know that
00:24:28.980 i mean all their ideas make life worse for the poor carbon taxes at the cost of basic necessities
00:24:36.660 become out of reach for the poor the point of the carbon tax and taxes and climate change in general
00:24:43.620 i think is to uh distill the power at the top making sure the have-nots never become the haves
00:24:51.700 or never even think about becoming the house it's a big party and you're not invited
00:24:58.900 sacred 406 rights exactly hypocrites the un is just another corrupt entity preaching to others while
00:25:04.500 they themselves are the real problem and then berry brand 29 70 destroying the amazon rainforest so elites
00:25:14.740 can stuff themselves on beef and lobster arriving under private jets exactly exactly
00:25:24.500 uh the food inside the u.n complex uh in the public areas was actually less horrifying than i've seen in
00:25:30.820 the past and by horrifying i mean not entirely vegan i remember a few years ago when i went with
00:25:37.220 kian bexty to the united nations climate change conference in madrid
00:25:43.460 they were encouraging people to eat this vegan burger that was made with beets so it looked like a
00:25:51.220 blood and i think kian was going to throw up but he took one for the team good boy
00:25:57.060 good good good boy all right let's get to uh the regular letter now i'll tell you guys at home
00:26:07.140 if you didn't see your comment read on the show today i could be all you have to do is send me an
00:26:13.460 email it's sheila at rebel news.com put gun show letters in the subject line so that i know why you're
00:26:19.940 writing me because i get a ton of emails i promise you every single day and uh i don't want to miss
00:26:26.740 your letters to me specifically on the show because without you there's no rebel news and i care about
00:26:30.900 what you think about the work that we do here because if you don't like it why do it like we
00:26:36.020 don't appreciate it if you don't think it's quality journalism then what's the point right so uh let me
00:26:44.740 know so sheila at rebel news.com gun show letters in the subject line this one comes to me by uh
00:26:55.220 sorry for by way of the email and back in sorry this one comes to me by way of the email inbox um
00:27:06.580 although there are other ways that you can leave comments if you want to leave them on the free clips
00:27:10.740 of the show on youtube or on rumble wherever you find it that actually helps engagement with our
00:27:15.140 content and i do go looking over there as you just heard um and uh that sort of helps us get higher
00:27:23.540 up on the algorithm it's a really free thing that you can do that really helps us in in measurable
00:27:28.260 ways so but this one comes from the email it's terrence rollick who writes hi sheila
00:27:33.860 uh you recently made us aware of a proposal to increase the ranks of our armed forces by
00:27:39.380 recruiting the public servants you know it's crazy and training them for military roles
00:27:45.060 we please excuse my snickering at that suggestion well yeah excuse mine too uh when you consider
00:27:51.620 that ottawa citizens were triggered by horn honks and diesel fumes along with a reluctance to leave
00:27:55.940 home to go to work then i'm sure you can appreciate my skepticism yeah yeah these are people who threaten
00:28:02.340 job action because they have to go into their job think they're gonna handle a gun
00:28:07.380 do you imagine although they've been rattling the war savers about sending canadian soldiers to
00:28:13.540 ukraine for a long time now's your chance
00:28:18.580 may offer a more practical suggestion in order to overcome youth summer unemployment a program could
00:28:25.140 be set up to offer military training over the summer holidays for students a short boot camp so to
00:28:30.260 speak for any student volunteers i love this
00:28:36.020 not only would they be paid at least the minimum wage but would receive valuable physical training that
00:28:41.060 could lead to lifelong physical fitness and it actually might help deal with the problem of
00:28:47.540 retention and recruitment in the canadian military because they're having a real problem they're being
00:28:52.340 a little too woke obviously and nobody wants to join and nobody wants to stay and you might change the
00:28:59.060 culture not just of the military but of the country and young people and you know what i'm not sure we
00:29:05.540 actually well we do have to change the culture of some young people but young people are very
00:29:10.820 conservative these days all the data shows that but might might change a lot of things and teach young
00:29:18.180 people how to work right there's a youth unemployment crisis in this country not only oh sorry at the
00:29:26.420 the conclusion of their training they would be fit tough confident and well paid i love this i speak
00:29:31.300 from experience having taken basic training many years ago it was a life-altering experience that
00:29:35.540 could encourage these same students to pursue a military career or become involved with their
00:29:40.340 reserves it helps solve the youth unemployment problem and would be beneficial to the military
00:29:45.540 and the country this of course would require a conservative majority in parliament because this mere
00:29:49.380 suggestion would trigger the rule left youth spasms of outrage at the idea of teaching our
00:29:54.340 youth to use firearms safely and effectively cheers parents and look home i love this idea it's a
00:30:00.660 great idea uh every time i'm in israel i'm shocked at how normal the kids are like there's so few
00:30:07.860 weirdos there and i think it has a lot to do command to our military service and
00:30:12.740 i think in the western world we don't expect enough of our young people like in in the bygone era
00:30:24.500 uh kids were lying about their age to go serve in world wars like lying farm kids were just like 16
00:30:33.220 saying they're 18 so they could enlist and somehow our youth became coddled and frightened and got
00:30:43.620 triggered by the mere even thought of personal responsibility or being uncomfortable you know
00:30:50.500 you look around us there's medication for everything and really sometimes it's you're not even sick you
00:30:55.460 just are uncomfortable i mean you have a minor ache and pain or whatever and you're just medicating
00:31:00.500 because of it no now we've seen what tylenol has done to pregnant women and
00:31:07.860 there's value in being uncomfortable or maybe it's just because i look at this through a catholic
00:31:13.060 worldview but um we fast we offer our suffering um we because we think there's worse than that
00:31:22.580 it's a learning experience it makes you physically and mentally stronger and i think the young people of
00:31:29.780 this country could stand for that um and you know like in israel that entire country is protected by
00:31:35.380 zoomers zoomers like the people who need cry rooms in the western world over there they're dealing with
00:31:44.980 an existential threat of genocide upon themselves every day from all around them and they're zoomers
00:31:52.580 god we're not through my earbuds falling out we're not expecting enough of our young people
00:31:57.300 and uh i i think our young people are capable of so much more i think it's the bigotry of low
00:32:06.660 expectations and i'll be having none of it thank you all right i think that's the show i'm boiling
00:32:13.220 hot i had to turn the fan off is somebody gonna record and uh we're gonna get some work done with
00:32:21.060 the rest of the day whatever a little bit i have left and uh just thanks so much for bearing with me
00:32:26.740 as i put the show together and thanks to all of you who have supported my mission here uh as i said we
00:32:33.620 had terrible fights terrible flights to get here was three almost three days two and a half days and
00:32:42.180 two red eyes and like a 10 hour layover in columbia we're sleeping in an airport sleeping on airplanes
00:32:49.940 and then we got here at five o'clock in the morning six o'clock in the morning uh on the 15th and we just
00:32:57.220 got to work as you can see we're working all day every day you just sort of threw off our bags
00:33:03.860 brushed our teeth and got back out into the world because when you spend the kind of money you do to
00:33:08.340 come here you want to make sure that every single minute has value in it to somebody hopefully you
00:33:16.980 and uh anyways if you want to support our journalism here i know that i'm saying it's two subscribers who
00:33:24.020 you already support my work but if if you find any value in it uh you can support my work at rebelun.com
00:33:34.420 and just thanks so much thanks so much for being um reliable for making the world go around here at
00:33:40.900 rebel means you can do this without you guys uh thanks to the team back in toronto and across the
00:33:47.540 country who've been working really hard to keep up with me at ntn on the ground here uh make sure our
00:33:55.460 work is there for you guys to see it when you need to see it uh and for putting this uh mess of a show
00:34:02.020 today together appreciate you guys um that's it i'll see you back at home maybe i don't know i don't
00:34:08.020 know but uh as always don't let the government tell you that you've had too much to think