REVEALED: Danielle Smith's Secret Plan to Stop Carney | Stand on Guard
Episode Stats
Words per Minute
152.66083
Summary
In this episode of Stand On Guard, host David Creighton talks about the lack of action from the Conservative Party of Canada on joining the World Health Organization's pandemic agreement, the King Charles Throne Speech, and why we need a safe supply clinic.
Transcript
00:00:00.800
Hi, welcome back to another Stand on Guard. I'm your host, David Creighton.
00:00:04.360
So nice to see you today. It's a beautiful day. Well, it was, anyway, when I woke up at five this morning and started working.
00:00:12.760
But hopefully we'll get some sunshine today in Ottawa. It was a horrible May in more ways than one.
00:00:18.700
Thank you for joining me today. I've got a lot to talk about. I think you'll find it interesting.
00:00:30.000
The Prime Minister lied and his minions continue to lie.
00:00:47.120
Yes, please like the station. It's important. And it really does help. It really does help. When you like the station, we beat the YouTube algorithm, which has been suppressing me now in a big way for weeks.
00:01:06.640
But we're getting above it. And by the way, thank you again for all the people who said hello at the Jimmy Dore concert.
00:01:13.640
And, you know, I can't walk into my local Walmart and literally in any day and somebody says, you're David Creighton.
00:01:20.540
I watch your show every day. And you don't know how much that uplifts me.
00:01:24.040
Because, as I said, we've had some dark days lately. And it brings a little bit of light into my life.
00:01:32.200
So please support the station. Share it with your friends and family. Because YouTube is not sharing it with your friends and family.
00:01:39.100
It's the same audience. And they don't want my numbers to go any higher.
00:01:44.340
They don't want my subscriptions to go any higher.
00:01:49.460
So, you know, we discussed this last week with Jimmy Dore about borderline stations.
00:01:55.060
Even though he's got a huge audience, it's not getting any bigger.
00:02:02.580
And that's what happens when you speak the truth to power, as we try to do here.
00:02:09.300
So I wanted to go over a few slides before I got into the videos.
00:02:19.500
I said I would do this every day until I heard a response from the official opposition.
00:02:26.080
So I am going to put an official request in to the leader of the official opposition office.
00:02:34.920
Or I think it's the OLO, Opposition Leader's Office.
00:02:38.480
Yes, I actually used to work in and around there.
00:02:44.680
But why did not the Conservative Party of Canada say anything about Canada automatically being part of the WHO, the World Health Organization's pandemic agreement?
00:02:58.860
Not a word, not a peep, nothing, no word of protest, no debate, no vote, nothing in the House of Commons.
00:03:05.000
And I'm still saying this is outrageous because this is the sort of thing you say, well, how is this going to affect me?
00:03:22.220
And I'm just trying to find my phone because I might be getting an interview here.
00:03:42.300
Is there such a thing as a safe supply of toxic, lethal drugs that will kill you?
00:03:59.720
Well, you know, I think even some addicts would say that because it's no answer to addiction to keep giving people so-called safe drugs.
00:04:13.760
The people who live there, they're happy about it.
00:04:17.600
Because all it brings is misery, drug paraphernalia, people passed out, people urinating and defecating in the street, and chaos.
00:04:30.980
You know, I expected better from Raymond D'Souza.
00:04:37.000
And, you know, he's an old National Post standby.
00:04:40.900
So I'm not going to say anything nasty about Raymond, but I really find this incredible, that a conservative writer, small c, conservative writer, would say that King Charles Throne speech was a constitutional triumph.
00:05:00.340
Sorry, Raymond, it was a constitutional failure, disaster, catastrophe.
00:05:11.460
Because the king gave away our land to First Nations people.
00:05:16.700
He claimed they never ceded it to either the British Empire or Canada.
00:05:27.580
So I'm sorry, the land that I own, that my house is built on, I own it.
00:05:34.660
The government doesn't own it, and neither do some First Nations who claim from some 16th century agreement.
00:05:45.220
Let's move on with equality of all races, of all ethnicities.
00:05:52.060
Not special status for one group, namely First Nations.
00:06:03.840
I have to say that every day because this country has gone mad.
00:06:07.640
This country has gone crazy over racism, over ethnicity, over identity politics.
00:06:30.460
The collectivization of rights means that individual rights are eroded and eventually disappear.
00:06:38.060
And you have a series of collective rights, which with competing groups, competing tribes, competing collectives, fighting each other for supremacy.
00:06:58.660
We want individual rights, not collective rights.
00:07:04.940
Now, before we get to this First Minister's Conference, which I have to say is bizarre.
00:07:19.460
However, she is a couple of, two or three moves ahead of him on the chessboard.
00:07:32.360
She's playing along with the game in order to force Mark Carney's hand.
00:07:42.960
Mark Carney is pretending he's got the better hand, but he's bluffing.
00:07:47.220
All of those who know poker, you know how if you bluff, you can sometimes win the game.
00:08:03.180
Let's listen to Mark Carney and Doug Ford in this little love-in at the First Minister's meeting in Saskatchewan.
00:08:11.660
But let's listen to Mark Carney, and how many times does he stop and say, I'm a terrible public speaker, but he's playing a big game.
00:08:25.560
He's playing for time, and I know where this is headed.
00:08:36.980
I'd like to just follow you all the time in making remarks, because I just want to reinforce everything the Premier just said.
00:08:49.700
Maybe not every single time, but on issues of nation building.
00:09:02.880
He wants to co-opt every Premier, every province, as part of his master plan.
00:09:09.840
Thank you for the great Saskatchewan hospitality on very short notice.
00:09:14.000
It was really only a month ago that we spoke and struck the date for this meeting,
00:09:19.200
and under challenging circumstances, and just reiterate the Northern Prairie Provinces,
00:09:24.380
the challenges of the wildfires that are raging,
00:09:28.020
and the cooperation that we're seeing across the provinces, across Canada,
00:09:32.280
volunteers, the Canadian Armed Forces, help from some of the Americans as well,
00:09:37.880
30,000 evacuees, and bravery and charity, the best of Canada being shown.
00:09:51.120
and we know these forest fires are a direct result of climate change.
00:09:58.240
I'm surprised he didn't, but I'm grateful he didn't.
00:10:02.640
There was a first minister meeting in the province of Saskatchewan.
00:10:10.500
One of the conclusions of the meeting was that they should meet again.
00:10:16.540
You know, it was a little suspect, and here we are.
00:10:18.780
The conclusion was that first ministers should meet on an annual basis.
00:10:25.280
And I think it's a testament that both for first ministers,
00:10:28.980
but very importantly, supplemented, if not superseded,
00:10:32.780
by the Council of the Federation and your leadership, Doug,
00:10:35.640
bringing together the provinces to help build this country.
00:10:40.920
Back in 1985, it was the run-up to what would then be the free trade agreement
00:10:46.780
with the United States and a long process of integration
00:10:49.820
that brought great prosperity to both our nations,
00:11:03.720
But that situation, as we all know, has changed.
00:11:06.680
We're in the process of redefining our relationship with the United States.
00:11:12.120
Minister Leblanc and others leading those discussions.
00:11:14.960
But working very much in partnership around this table
00:11:18.080
in terms of our priorities and how we're defining it.
00:11:20.960
But also taking matters very much into our own hands
00:11:29.360
notre destin économique, notre destin de sécurité.
00:11:40.480
And I really want to salute the leadership around this table.
00:11:44.640
I can't keep up with the flurry of announcements
00:11:59.220
to interprovincial movement of goods and people.
00:12:05.880
an ability to advance projects of national interest.
00:12:41.480
And he wants to know how he can slip this one through
00:13:04.140
Remember he said Canadians don't even use steel?
00:13:13.400
when's the last time you used steel in your life?
00:13:45.880
Of course, Doug Ford is very much partly responsible
00:14:03.860
So Doug Ford wanted Mark Carney as the prime minister
00:14:06.800
because he really liked working with Mark Carney.
00:14:09.320
The two of them are on the same page in everything.
00:14:11.420
Thank you, prime minister, for bringing us all together.
00:14:13.440
And I want to thank you, Scott, for hosting us.
00:14:23.060
It's been a great wine and cheese party the night before.
00:14:25.680
We can be more resilient country and coming together.
00:14:39.340
And I feel if everyone cooperates and collaborates,
00:14:49.500
we will be a superpower when it comes to energy of all forms.
00:14:57.360
to make sure that we have large national infrastructure projects
00:15:02.940
that will benefit every Canadian from coast to coast to coast.
00:15:07.180
And, again, I just want to thank everyone for joining us.
00:15:10.640
I look forward to having you in July over to Ontario
00:15:36.720
They're talking about Canada being an energy superpower.
00:15:40.660
But none of the legislation passed by the Trudeau government
00:15:49.000
We still can't have tankers off the west coast of Canada,
00:15:55.660
None of the Trudeau-era legislation has been repealed.
00:16:10.820
talk about the bottom line for her and her province.
00:16:25.420
She wants him to commit to repealing the legislation
00:16:38.400
Can't happen right now under the current legislation.
00:16:45.780
Because you come in with a number of asks of Ottawa
00:16:59.580
he's not afraid to talk about being an energy superpower.
00:17:02.820
He's not afraid to define that as being both conventional
00:17:14.140
over what we were witnessing from even just six months ago.
00:17:19.600
that with the value of the product that we have in Alberta,
00:17:22.420
our bitumen is probably the highest value product
00:17:25.980
We've priced it out with 165 billion recoverable barrels
00:17:32.620
You just simply wouldn't leave a $9 trillion asset
00:17:37.460
for both provincial as well as the federal government
00:17:44.640
So when we talk about building a new bitumen pipeline,
00:34:17.000
Thank you so much for all three of you who watched today.
00:34:25.220
Once again, though, YouTube is putting its thumb on this broadcast.
00:34:32.620
I'll be back again, possibly this afternoon, if we have a good question period.
00:34:36.680
I will be commenting on the first five or ten minutes.
00:34:43.380
I hope to have the spokesperson for the ostrich farm on to give us an update on what's happening there,
00:34:51.640
because I know they've reached out to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
00:35:01.180
Apparently, the letter did catch the attention of the agriculture minister, but perhaps not enough.
00:35:08.980
Maybe a personal visit will make a difference, because there's no bloody way these birds should be shot or strangled
00:35:17.140
or whatever they do to them, simply because there was an avian flu outbreak in November, December of last year.
00:35:29.320
This has been David Creighton, broadcasting live from our nation's capital in Ottawa.