Shaun Newman Podcast - 2'sDay Mashup #60
Episode Date: June 20, 2023222 Minutes hops on to discuss this week's headlines which include Sask EA removed in Esterhazy, Garth Brooks and Bud Light, Atlanta Braves completely mess up Father's Day and agreement betwee...n AB/SK/MB. This week Major Sponsor is Infinity Leasing Inc. For more information head here: www.infinityleasing.ca/ To enter contest for $50 gift card to Vance Crowe Legacy Interviews follow & DM or shoot me a text with the business you'd start: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100064001141223&mibextid=LQQJ4d https://instagram.com/infinityleasing5?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA== Let me know what you think Text me 587-217-8500 Substack:https://open.substack.com/pub/shaunnewmanpodcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Let's make it illegal to have empty construction zones on streets.
It's completely pointless and all it does is undermine the speed limits that are enforced in regular ones.
You want us to take them seriously?
You people should make it seriously too.
Right now, if you drive through airdry, you have to slow down while they're constructing an overpass.
There's construction above the highway, but you have to slow down to 80 to drive past.
what the hell is possibly going to happen
that you need to worry enough to slow down to 80
because there's people 40 feet above you working on shit.
Come on, get your fucking shit straight.
Mash up 60.
I figured what the heck, we might as well give 2's what he wants, you know, folks.
It's another week and 2's wanted to rant a little bit.
I figured what the heck.
I mean, we could probably do that.
I let off with a rant last time about,
about YouTube.
So I figured maybe two is that something that was really, you know,
bird and saddle.
Oh,
oh,
it drives me crazy.
I remember one time back when I lived in Calgary,
there was construction going on on the south side of Glenmore,
and the north side of Glenmore was slow down to 50.
So you had to slow down to 50 because there was construction like 100 yards off the road
on the south side.
And I called the city.
And I was like,
just explain, let me just walk you through this.
In order for me to affect this.
this construction zone
with my driving in any way
I have to go
through the barrier
between east and westbound traffic
I have to go through three lanes
of oncoming traffic
through the ditch
through the fence
up into the field
and then drive
into their construction zone
you really think it's necessary
to slow everybody on westbound
down to 50
public safety
we got a busy
week this week. Okay? Like we, I think we're up to like 14 or 15 things. We don't even have,
there's so many, like, we were saying before we started that we could just do a week of audibles.
It's just like, it's like an avalanche of just like stories every which way. So before we get there,
mashup 60 brought to you by Infinity Leasing. Infinity Leasing thinks outside the box. And rather
than fixating on the beacon scores, they strive to understand their clients and business and asset
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to find out more. And I know Tuesday is sitting there going, you're doing the ad read again. Well,
Tews, tell them a little bit more if you'd like. Oh, I mean, they don't just do that stuff. They
offer the expertise as well.
Like they offer clerical services.
So I think they do some HR stuff.
Don't quote me on that.
But I know they help you with the bookkeeping and whatnot if that's something that you want to do.
Like they're they're kind of a one-stop shop.
If you want to start a business, these are the people that can help you.
If you want to expand your business, they can help you.
If you want to be an owner-operator, they can help you.
And I think it's awesome.
Like, Sean, if you were going to start a business aside from podcasting, that you would
need to borrow some money to start for some kind of capital expenditure what would it be if i was
going to do something other than pocket i'm actually like listening i'm like maybe i should just go
talk to them right now and expand this sucker you know so that i'm actually you know can hire a daycare
so i can do the the tuesday mashup just out of the studio i wonder if they'd be like oh that's a
great plan we'd love to finance that tuesday how about you how would you do because i'm doing it
man i'm doing it this is this is this is fun i don't know if i could
be like, hey, I want to start a, I'd probably, I'd probably pay a bunch of money to pick up
the Arizona coyotes and move them to, I don't know, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan or something.
That would be cool.
I'd get a boat and I'd look for sunk a treasure.
That'd be my business pitch.
I'd be like, I just need a big winch on the back so I can haul these bad boys up.
What's the, what's the contest this week?
It's $50 towards a Vance Crow legacy interview, correct?
Yep.
How do you want them to, we're going to, I'm going to use the text line.
all over again. Text, what do you want?
Text or tag us in any random social media.
If you were going to start a business,
if you're gonna take out a loan and start a business
and buy something cool that you could build a business around.
What is it?
What would it be?
What would it be?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
As fanciful or practical as you like.
Man, the best name might just get picked out of the hat.
Anyways, I'm excited to see what that is.
So there you go.
50, another random, but I feel like we'll probably give
honorable mentions to anybody who says anything really awesome.
Really cool.
Yeah, the dairy cartel is going to be like, more cows.
More lobbying.
He's going to spend it all on lobbying.
Well, let's get this show on the road.
We got a busy, busy night here, okay?
We're going to start with citizens stealing from liberals.
I'm going to try and keep us to the timer task.
Here we go.
Thieves steal vehicles every six minutes on average in Canada and not even the justice
minister is immune.
Report warning of a rise in number of automotive thefts in the
country was published Thursday, just as CBC News learned that two government-owned cars provided
to Justice Minister David Lamedi had been stolen, according to government of Canada docs.
He's had two vehicles stored, one in 2021 and one in February 2023.
And in a new report, the Canadian Finance and Leasing Association says Toronto alone has seen a 300%
surge in vehicle thefts since 2015.
The group estimates that car thefts are costing the country roughly $1 billion annually.
Okay. How crazy is it? I mean, you know that there had to be something like this, but apparently we give, at least at the ministerial level, we just give them vehicles. Here, just take the keys. Go. Have fun.
These people make like $280,000 a year or some crazy thing like that. They could pick up the fucking lease that we know on their Highlander. Come on. Like this is like just the amount of perks that we give them.
Like, could you just imagine?
Like, if you just went in to, you know, assuming that you still had, you know,
a regular working for the man job, you just went in and you were like, we all voted.
We get vehicles.
I'm working.
I'm working for the man.
If they don't like what I'm doing, I'm out of a job, buddy.
I got to, you know, if they don't like what us and we're not tuning in, I'm still working.
I'm working more for the man than these politicians are there supposed to be.
Another, a different man.
Sure.
Or woman, if, you know.
if we're going to get all yeah sure yeah okay well anyways yeah i mean yeah they're getting paid boatloads
money our money and we're just keep giving and giving and giving and they get stolen anyway
and just take a minute to appreciate the irony of some random canadian stealing from the government
instead of the other way around uh that's good you'd have to be stupid
to vote conservative okay so this this is an
Angus Reed, where this stems from is an Angus Reed study.
20% of people in Montreal have favorable opinion of conservative party of Canada leader Pierre
Pileev slightly higher than Halifax at 18% where sports were the lowest.
The city's in Canada, I don't know, does this shock you?
The city is in Canada where Pollyev is most favored are Saskatoon and Eminton,
followed by Calgary.
I was like, okay, anyways.
Overall, one and three people in Canada, 34% have a favorable opinion of Pierre Poliiev,
including a minority of Canadians in all age groups,
incoming income and education levels.
The study also found that Pierre Pollyev's popularity
decreases among Canadians who are more educated
while Justin Trudeau's increases.
We might have just found our problem.
Pierre Pollyev's favorability rated among university graduates,
23% while Trudeau's was 51%.
And so then you get this on Twitter.
Gail Vaz-Oxlade, stupid people vote conservative,
uneducated people vote conservative,
scared people. There's a lot of them. Fear in the conservative pool, vote conservative.
And yeah, and the fight was on.
I know a lot of people with master's degrees that vote conservative, or at the very least,
we'll absolutely not vote NDP and liberal. It's funny, though. I mean, you've got this
correlation between people, I mean, there's so much indoctrination in universities,
and anybody who's gone can tell you about this firsthand.
It's absolutely insane.
And so they were, she was talking about or they were talking specifically about Halifax and how unfavorably Pollyev is thought of in Halifax.
Okay.
There's employment by industry in Halifax.
And the funny thing that Angus Reed and nobody ever else breaks down is how do you feel about politicians and do you get paid by the government?
right and look at look at how difficult it is to parse this you've got um health care and social
assistance um professors scientific and tech educational services construction public administration
so if you add up health care educational service public administration um information culture
and whatever the hell the other one is and you don't look at utilities even
It's 81,000 people.
And that's not including the professors because it's not really broken down enough in this professor's scientific and tech services.
Right.
So you've already got of 239,000 without counting some of the other ones that are definitely going to be in the mix, but not explicitly laid out.
You've got a third of them in Halifax that are already there.
Like where do mail carriers work?
Like Canada Post.
How does Canada Post fit into that?
right is it transportation it's definitely not business but anyway the point is is that whenever you
want to ask the interesting questions that could really parse this data it's never fucking
available and yeah okay so i hate defending polyev because i really don't like the conservative
party myself but when you look at it and you say you've got probably just about half of
this city employed at the government teat of course they're not going to like
Hollyev because he's the closest there is to any opposition of the unions, right?
Yeah, I mean, it's honestly makes pretty much clear sense to me, uh, twos.
Shit show, a shit show for mandating, uh, shit shows.
If, if ever released today, the godfather would possibly have no chance of winning best
picture Oscar.
That's because the Academy of Motion Pictures, Arts and Sciences is beholden to a new,
Inclusivity standard. Starting in March 2024 awards, movies will not be considered for best picture
nomination unless they meet two out of the four standards. One of them is featuring a lead or a significant supporting character from an underrepresented
or ethnic group. Having a main storyline that focuses on an underrepresented group or at least 30% of the cast comes from two or more of underrepresented groups, that is women, ethnic minorities, LGBTQ, or the disabled.
and I mean yeah it like it well here I'm I was gonna like you can just you can just
scroll through this on like the standards they're looking for right and one one of
the lead actors or significant supporting actors is from an underrepresented group
and they list Asian Hispanic Latino black African American indigenous Native
American Alaskan native Middle Eastern North African Native Native Native
of Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander,
other unrepresented
Raytheras, Nisity, General
Assembly, General Ensemblecast,
goes on a list, LGBTQ.
Think about this for a second, right?
Okay, so they use the Godfather as an example.
And, I mean, there's that whole kind of
flashback where there's all that time spent
in Sicily, I think it was,
was where they came from, right?
Yeah, I believe you're correct.
Where the family came from.
Okay, so, but one way,
the other, the whole movie's all Italians.
There's only one country in the world that speaks Italian.
Would you care to guess what it is, Sean?
All right?
I would say that on the global scene, Italians are already fairly underrepresented in every category
except hand-talking.
You know, it's funny.
The way I look at this, too, is, you know, when it was inclusivity and everything, what were
all the actors doing?
Oh, yeah, this is great.
This is great, this is great.
And now it's going to fuck them.
Because literally, you know, to get nominated for the best picture,
you have to fit these things.
And what's going to happen?
All the people that were like, oh, yeah, this is great.
It's great.
Now it's in their industry.
They're not going to get the work anymore.
And now they're not going to get the work anymore.
And they're going to be like, well, I guess I shouldn't have just gone along to get along.
Should have grown a set and started talking about some of this stuff.
Because now it's sitting there and you're like, what the deuce is going on?
Like, who's going to go watch that?
Like, it's just, ugh.
Well, I mean, now you're going to have Chris Rock, Will Smith, and Dwayne Johnson
fighting for every single best picture or best actor Oscar.
And as much as I love Dwayne the Rock Johnson.
Can he win?
Can the Rock win a best?
Can he pull that off now, now that it's kind of slanted a little?
Kind of slanted a little, Sean?
Really slanted?
Can you imagine showing up to the Oscars and Dwayne the Rock Johnson?
Johnson wins best actor.
I hadn't thought about that.
Oh, man.
I would just hope that they would have, you know, like,
McMahon coming out and just,
just clotheslining them and then grabbing it and holding it up.
And then just kind of just, yeah, or, you know,
like, you know how they have the giant Oscar off to the side?
Someone just comes from there like it's the top rope.
Boom, drops them.
They're, you know, a folding chair comes from the front row.
I would just love to see him make the Oscars a shit.
show if you ever won it.
Oh, man.
Canadian media gets its bell rung.
Me and the brothers were talking about this.
This should be the happy news, man.
I mean, it almost was.
Uniform is deeply concerned and outraged
about today's announcements from Bell, Canada,
enterprises to cut 1,300 positions,
and to close six and sell three radio stations
in response to not being able to outweigh Bill C-11.
Uniform, I put this part in,
because I thought a little bit of background on Uniform
was nice.
They put it right at the bottom in the article.
Uniform represents more than 10,000 media workers, including 5,000 members in the broadcast and film industries.
Anyway, so they were upset that they got a whole bunch cuts.
Which means that they can be totally neutral when it comes to layoffs in this sector.
The radio stations that are gone, Winnipeg's Funny 1290, Calgary's Funny 1060,
Emmington's TSN 1260, Vancouver's B&N, Bloomberg Radio 1410, and Funny 1040, along with London's News Talk 1290,
where we're told their play workplaces were done.
In an open letter published on online Wednesday,
Bell Canada president and CEO Merco Bibic said
Bell Canada expects to lose more than 250 million
in legacy phone revenues per year,
while as news operations incur 40 million in annual operating losses,
he said Bell radio stations have been sent
have seen profit cut in half since the start of COVID-19 pandemic.
It's illegal to go anywhere for like two fucking years
and people still aren't tuning into your TV station,
it's not them, it's you.
Right?
I mean, look at you.
You went full time.
You've been doing it for over a year.
We did a live stream of the Alberta election.
First people ever to have the map other than,
other than CTV and global.
Yeah.
All right.
We had like a quarter of CBC's viewership on that.
And we had major fuckups where we're like, what the hell?
Although lots of people I've been running into since then, like just this weekend, came up, shook my head and said it was freaking awesome.
They loved all the fuckups and everything.
And me looking like a train had hit me for a while and everything else.
So people certainly enjoyed it.
Yeah.
And so I mean, like when you look at it, yeah, if you've got this incredibly giant bureaucratic bullshit organization that is just getting ran circles around it by small lean operation.
that can do a better job of you
because everything's not done by fucking committee.
Of course.
And you know what?
It's not your fault.
It's not the viewers' fault
that you have decided that you're not going to adapt.
They needed to get leaner and better
and they're staunchly refusing to do it.
And because of it, they are dying.
This is like a trilobite saying,
no, I'm not going to evolve.
And then you know what happens?
60 million years later.
or you're just the only place you exist
is in some fucking rocks.
Great things can happen when you vote
for your working conditions.
So in House of Commons,
they voted to make hybrid sitting permanent
on Thursday evening.
Speaking, you know, we've got more hybrids this week
than just David Lamedes Highlander.
The outcries of opposition,
which said the debate on it, was rushed,
the Liberals managed to pass a time allocation motion with the support of the NEP, surprise, surprise,
to limit debate on the way MPs are to conduct their sittings in the house from now on.
The move came after the proposal was tabled late last week and was subject to only a few hours of debate.
Since the start or since the start of the pandemic in March 2020,
the government has had to introduce temporary provisions to allow parliamentary conduct to their work virtually.
The current hybrid measures were set to expire at the end of June,
so liberals decided it would allow MPs to continue participating,
virtually in debates and committee meetings and vote electronically indefently.
Okay.
So, crazy thing happened this week in Ottawa.
The NDP voted to not work so much.
Here's my question to you.
Could this be a good thing?
Oh, absolutely.
I do think it's a great thing.
I just think that it's just classic them.
No, I, like, when you look at, you look at an MP, sorry, MP who's sitting out here,
this actually benefits because when you look at what it takes,
takes to be an MP and have to travel there and all the blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And now all of a sudden, all the time you waste, all the cost, everything like that goes.
I actually, I think this, you know, for all the things the liberals are doing and the conservatives are
saying, and just opposed, if I sit here out in Saskatchew and Alberta, now you can actually,
because one of the knocks on it is like, there's a ton of people that would probably enjoy doing
the job.
And then they look at the time commitment.
And they go, how the hell can I do this?
We live in the most remote place and I got to travel to Hamilton and I got to bounce over here.
And now they've opened it up where all of a sudden you never know.
You might be surprised what this does for the West.
Like in terms of the quality of candidates?
Yes.
There's a lot of, there's a lot of ridings where it can only go up.
But honestly, like when you look at this, like this.
I know, but think about it.
Like just from if I bet you I'm not going to speak for her,
but I bet you Chris Sims thinks that this is a really good thing.
because the amount of like,
wasted dollars, flights, everything.
Flights, meals, accommodations,
all of the added logistics thrown in.
They're going to find a way to piss it away to.
Sure.
And then the other thing is, is that they don't really get a whole lot done as it is.
And if they're spending a whole lot of their time flying,
well, you know what?
Now, instead of spending a whole day flying across the country,
maybe you could just sit your ass down and get something fucking accomplished.
Right?
I don't.
In terms of productivity, I think it would be great.
But yeah, classic NDP.
Oh, this is going to make us work less?
Yes.
Tidewater access making waves.
And I'm going to pull up the, Jordan Peterson said this could be a big deal.
What he's talking about is after years of fits and starts,
a memorandum of understanding between the Alberta Saskatchew and Manitoba governments
has been reached to explore the feasibility.
So basically they're going to drag this on for another little bit
because explore the feasibility, anyways,
of building a deep water harbor at Port Nelson on the Hudson Bay
to export natural resources such as potash and liquefied natural gas.
Premier Daniel Smith confirmed the agreement in Calgary on Tuesday,
which had reportedly been reached with transportation and economic corridors
Minister Devon Dreshan and his cohorts in Saskatchewan
and Manitoba prior to the election which is awaiting final.
approval. The three provinces will contribute to perform geotechnical and other studies to establish
a right-of-way rail and utilities lines from Alberta across northern Saskatchewan to Port Nelson,
which would be expanded to handle deep water vessels. And then the work would be performed by
Nisdnan, meaning all of us, a First Nations owned corporation comprised of local communities
across the route. I think it's great. And I found it really interesting that this didn't come up more
during the Alberta election.
I think we were the only people who were really talking about it
except for maybe the candidates.
Because I mean, I heard about it for the first time
when Shane was talking about it.
And I was like, okay, so you guys have a memorandum of understanding.
You're taking first tangible steps
towards accomplishing this where if Quebec says,
oh, we don't want to, but still send us your, how do you say,
money?
You say, get fucked.
Speaking of Manitoba, overall I think it's great.
It's just every time I see like, oh, they're going to study and they're going to do this.
Like, you know, like I got to work on getting, you know, bugging Shane Getson or bugging
seeing if I can get Danielle back on the podcast.
Because I just like, what does it mean?
Like how long are we away from this actually being something that gets, you know,
shovels in the ground and get going on it and moving?
Are we a year away?
Are we 10 years away, right?
Like, I mean, you know how these things are.
drag on. Well, they do drag on a little bit. And Manitoba, that new premier, I can't remember
her name, but she, she didn't really seem super enthusiastic about the idea like six, eight months
ago. Yeah. When it was first mentioned. It seemed like she was going to, well, yeah, it seemed like
she was going to push back on it a little bit. But just like everything else in Manitoba,
that didn't have any teeth. This comment comes in off the last one here quick. Sandy said,
as long as they give up their free travel vouchers.
She's talking about that...
Exactly.
Yeah.
Talking about the politicians and their ability to travel all over the place.
Anyways.
Canadian justice system works just as intended.
And we're going to pull up this here quick.
We like to say people kind, not necessarily mankind.
It's more inclusive.
There we go.
Exactly.
Yes, thank you.
And the budget will balance itself.
Man, you are one pathetic loser.
Well, that's ending.
You can see him getting sworn.
What we're talking about is Mendocino.
And I guess I could turn up the here.
I'll play it again for the people watching here.
So it's Mendocino at a press conference.
We don't need to listen to the questions they ask.
You know, like, when was the last time you saw a sitting politician get swarmed like that?
Oh, I can't say I have, but you had menacino dropping the ball on that.
You had Sejan not reading a memo on some damn thing or other.
You had Bill Blair saying that he never got the memo on the Chinese interference.
And then there was one other one too.
Well, yeah, and it's just their go-to.
It's not that we're evil.
We're just stupid.
So here's what's going on.
The headline is basically,
can Mendocino keep his job?
Since appointed public safety minister in 2021,
he was forced to walk back efforts to legislate a sweeping gun ban,
had holes poked in his justification for the use of the emergencies act,
holes, more like absolute giant missiles in the side of his ship.
Anyways, and has become a target person over the government's muddled management of foreign interference.
Before that, he was immigration minister,
hand on the flow of people, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And, of course, right now, the outrage over Bernando's transfer, and you're going, okay, who's
Bernardo?
Sorry, Bernardo.
Sorry, not, anyways, you're probably wondering who that is, and maybe more specifically who
Bernardo is.
He's a serial killer.
I'm wondering her Bernando is.
Who's Bernando, Sean?
Tell me more about this guy.
This is bananas.
Bananas is bananas.
Serio, he's a serial killer and rapist twos.
He's 58 is serving a life sentence after.
being convicted in 1995 of the kidnapping and aggregated
sexual assault and first-degree murder of two teenage girls.
And you go, well, I wonder how old they were, 14 and 15.
And he was declared a dangerous offender and has been transferred
to a medium security prison.
And that's what got, well, that's where all the, anyways, that's up to speed.
Okay, so I'm going to defend Mendocino on this one, ish.
Hmm.
Yeah, bear with me here a second.
All right.
So the big complaint that everybody seems to have is that a memo went out to Mendocino saying,
Hey, Paul Bernardo, Canada's most famous serial killer is going to be moved to a medium security prison.
And they're wondering, well, why didn't Mendocino step in and stop that?
Okay.
His, his bullshit excuse if I didn't read the memo, it's actually probably true because it seems like they just do whatever they can to.
it's that plausible deniability.
If you don't know about it, it didn't happen.
But here's what he should have said was just like,
I don't know, do you guys really want federal ministers
moving pieces on the board when it comes to Canadian justice system?
He should have maybe been a bit of handled the media a little bit better
and maybe not tried dodging them all day long and everything else?
But I mean, do we actually want whoever our federal justice minister is
from whichever party in whatever year,
do we really want them to take an active role
in tipping the scales one way or the other?
Jesus Christ, look at Tamara Litch, right?
And I'm not, yeah, and so, look,
I'm sure there's people just screaming at their windshields
and their steering wheels right now.
Like, twos, you jackass,
we can't have him moving to medium security.
And I'm saying, you're right, actually,
there should be laws in place that says that that guy doesn't even get to see the sun again for the rest of his life.
Correct.
But the justice ministers should be making those laws not actively circumscribes, you know, going around, whatever the hell the word is.
The current ones on the books.
Yeah.
As far as what you're saying, you're saying two different arguments here.
One is he should never get ever.
and it's like, yeah, you're probably bang on right there.
And the other one is going, do we ever want, no matter who it is,
giving them the power to do that, and you're probably right there as well too.
So I'm going to leave it there and we'll carry on.
Christians and Muslims crusading together against a common enemy.
This has been maybe, I don't know, maybe this was predictable,
but this has been very interesting to watch.
So essentially, you've got a whole bunch of things going on, right?
You get the Muslim community up in arms about what's going on in schools with the LGBTQ2S2SL plus community going on.
Anyways.
I think you're missing like 18 letters.
Sure.
Like honestly, they're going to have to start using emojis, Sean.
I try and rattle it off too just to see how sharp my brain is.
Because if I can rattle up, I know.
Did you see that clip of Trudeau or he just fucked it all up?
Oh my God, just bungled it up.
I mean, too, you're like, you're like, yeah.
He's like, you guys know what I'm talking about.
It's the drink box water bottle sort of group.
So, and it extends, like, this isn't just, you know, some spot in Canada.
Like, this extends into the states.
You've got, you got stuff in Alberta, you get stuff in Ontario, in Nova Scotia.
And that's what we see and hear about.
So here's one of them, a Democrat Maryland elected official,
apologized on a Sunday afternoon statement addressed to the Muslim community,
days after she blasted their children who spoke out against an LGBT-plus curriculum at a Montgomery County Public Schools Board meeting as being aligned with white supremacists.
And it went on to say Montgomery, Kristen Councilwoman, Kristen Mink, had gotten so triggered because these young children,
so these young children came in and explained why they were not okay with what was going on.
We're complaining that their parents couldn't opt them out of LGBT indoctrination at school.
You may not be aware of it, but many Muslims, even normally moderate,
ones take a pretty dim view of all this gender fluid nonsense.
They don't like it.
They don't want their kids to be forced to fed it,
and they're not shy about speaking up about it.
And that's what we're seeing.
And you're seeing supposedly Muslims and Christians hate each other.
And you're seeing them like, oh, yeah.
Imagine you look back on their history.
You're like, yeah, okay, so there was like a couple hundred years
where we took turns burning down Jerusalem.
And we set people halfway across the world,
just massacred.
on mass. It was an on mass massacre.
It was very massiest. And, and then we're just, but you know what?
We need to just put aside our differences and fight this common enemy.
It's like some kind of game of throne shit happening right now. And this, these are the
white walkers. And so it's just like, and it's not even that big of a deal. It's just,
don't pull your dick out in front of my kids.
Is that, and the fact that you've got to have,
I don't even want to buy you.
Like honestly.
And then, of course, you know, we're talking about how we've got the Muslims and the Christians coming together.
And once again, the Jews are being left out of everything.
Poor bastards.
The one time in history, they don't get left out of something.
And it ended very poorly for them.
But, yeah, so you've got like just everybody all over the map.
It's just like, don't show my kids your balls.
And that's somehow a controversial statement.
minute. Yeah, I mean, I'm going to hit the buzzer. I could probably let you rant about it.
Like, we should have opened the show with a rant about this because it's just getting so, like, insane.
It's just, it's gotten so insane that, like you say, thousand-year-old enemies, or supposed
of enemies are like coming together. Like, man, let's unite. Let's boot this out and let's just carry on with life.
Want to be friends? Yeah, we want to be friends. Like, that's interesting. That's interesting.
Papa, let's move on to something else that seems to never, like this story won't go away either.
I keep having fun with it.
Like, it just keeps coming up every week and I'm like, yeah, let's go with it.
Papa loved Papa.
See, it's a take on a song that.
I got it.
Sales issues and controversy around Bud Light continues to unstable, continue to be unabated in the U.S.
as country singer Garth Brooks is the latest to get caught up in the ongoing saga.
It comes as a country singer Garth,
Brooks was asked whether his new bar in Nashville, Tennessee, would serve all kinds of beer,
including Bud Light.
And he said, inclusiveness is always going to be me on a live stream following the news.
Our thing is this.
If you come into this house, love one another.
If you're in a, if you're an A-hole, there are plenty of other places on Lower Broadway to go,
he said at a Billboard Country Live interview.
And the news is following Constellation Brands claiming Mexican Lager, Madella Especial,
is now the number one selling beer in the U.S.
taking Bud Light, according to reports.
The U.S. distributors said its sales topped 33 million in the four weeks from May 28th,
which is a 15.6% rise on the last year across the same period, while Bud Light sold 279 million,
which is 22.8% fall since the same period of time.
Yeah.
They've lost almost 20% market value.
Like this has just been this ongoing free fall.
Did I mention Paul's Pizza at any point in the last couple weeks we've been talking about
Paul's pizza? No.
Okay. Well, remember when
during the live stream, when
we got the thing like, hey, we're
at a pizza place in Airdrey?
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Is it Paul's pizza?
And then it was. Yes. That was Blaine,
that was Blaine Stephan, yes. Yes.
So that place, I was in there
a couple weeks ago.
And
and just as a joke, I was like, oh, hey, can I get a
bud light from you guys? And
they're like, we took that off
the taps.
like they didn't even
they didn't even wait to see how much
their sales dropped
they just right off the bat
said we're not interested in serving
this fucking beer here
so get out
like imagine being a liquor rep for these guys
right now like imagine how tough
that must be
I mean so as a Canadian's for truth
Sarah Palin over the weekend
and they had they had Bud Light
in the cooler
I mean you had Bud Light at the S&P Sean
I know and I'm like
did we leave it there just so it could be a butt of the joke the entire night like because i mean
literally got so the canyans for truth it literally got i was drinking coquony i never drink
coquony but my options were coquine or bud light and then a whole list of other drinks and i'm like
well this isn't even a choice like i mean like you know coquine it is so confused you're just like
all i had was coquery bud light or a whole bunch of other stuff that's that's literally what you just
said sean i'm so confused right now
I just wanted, they only had two options for beer folks, is what I'm trying to say.
Oh, okay.
Or maybe they had three, maybe they had three.
I shouldn't single it out that way.
But I was like, but, like, really.
But, I mean, that's, that's downtown, downtown Calgary, right?
I highly doubt they probably overlooked it just like I did at the casino.
The first thing, me and two just sit in there.
And I'm like, why don't I have Bud Light and the thing?
And the, the, the bartender is like, I know.
We haven't sold one.
It's just, don't worry about it.
I've been getting asked about it all night.
I'm like, well, no kidding, right?
Like, I mean, of all the places that have but light, this is, this is probably not the place.
No, no.
All right.
Buzz me out.
Honest coverage gets burned in Canada.
Man, okay.
I'm going to try.
I'm going to try and skim this really fast because there was a ton of articles in this.
So CTV, here's, here's part from a CTV article.
This year's wildfire season in Canada has been wild, and then it goes on the list how much.
It says experts say the reason for wildfires are so pronounced this year is because of changing climate,
which is creating the conditions for fire.
You get the point.
The word arson doesn't appear once in that article.
It does not.
Canada is currently experiencing.
Actually, it talks about how humans and lightning are the two ways fire starts, but humans have been declining.
And so anyways, this is still CTV.
Canada is currently experiencing its worst wildfire season of the 21st century and matters are expected to get worse.
The federal government has said the amount of false.
forced burned by wildfires projected double by 2050.
Okay, that's CTV.
Here's Glob and Mail.
Nobody in the market foresaw COVID-19.
However, we're being told to expect much more such shocks.
Central banks and generous governments won't be able to rescue us every time.
Man, I almost...
Read the headline.
Read the headline.
Damn it, I don't...
Now I've got to pull up the headline.
You can kiss your pension and the economy goodbye unless we fix climate change.
Okay.
So then I could go into the 71 year old man who got arrested on Friday for basically
burning a hundred homes.
He started a fire that ended up going wild in California and injuring and blah, blah, blah, blah.
But this is the one I wanted to spend just a little bit of time on because I've reached out to
this guy.
After I read this, I'm like, I'm reaching out of this guy.
This guy should come on the podcast.
This is interesting.
Here's the phrase they're interested to.
Unfortunately, politicians, supporters and climate activists rushed into exploit this unusual
event to push their agenda. They made a lot of glib claims about the climate change
causing wildfires to become more common. For instance, Prime Minister Trudeau tweeted,
we're seeing more and more of these fires because of climate change. That statement is
false. Amid the smokescreen of untrue claims, nobody seems to have bothered
looking up the numbers. Canadian forest fire data are available on the
wildland fire information system. Wildfires have been getting less frequent and
canned over the past 30 years. The annual number of fires grew from
1959 to 1990 peaking in 1989 at just over 12,000 that year and has been trending down since.
From 2017 to 2021, the most recent interval available, there were about 5,500 fires per year,
half they averaged from 87 to 91.
The annual area burned also peaked 30 years ago.
It grew from 1959 to 1990, once again, peaking in 89 at 7.6 million hectares before declining
to the current average of 2.4 million hectares.
and 2020 marked the lowest point of that on record with 760,000 hectares.
The records show that the fraction of fires each year that becomes major,
more than 200 hectares in size, peaked back in 64 at 12.3%.
From 59 to 64, it average 8.7%, then dropped a 3.4 in the early 80s.
And from 2017 to 2021 in April, it had climbed again to 6%,
but that's still well below the average of the 60 years ago, from 60 years ago.
So, I mean, it makes sense that it peaked in 1989 because Calgary was on fire that year.
So why did this guy just brush you off?
I walked in. No, I literally emailed them like today. I have no idea. I hope he comes on.
I just, I'm like, why has nobody laid it out that beautifully, you know, and they probably have.
Because calm, rational conversations don't sell newspapers, Sean.
I agree. But like, everybody's running around climbing.
it's hysteric. They're trying to do all. And it's like the data is sitting right here, folks.
Just, just like look at it, you know? I think we've realized pretty thoroughly over the last few years
that reading is not something people like doing. Yeah, the global news here's the new extreme weather
is going to be our new normal, says one climate expert. It's like, you know, experts can just go
on the garbage can. Anyways, I'm just, did you listen to the Rogan interview he did with that Kennedy guy?
Oh my God.
We got Twitter files today, boys.
We got Twitter files.
Okay.
And we're going to have a little fun with that.
Interesting tidbit out of that was, you know, it's a great point.
I've never heard anybody make before.
But he said he's like, we would, when we were trying to sue companies for whatever it was that they were doing, we would have our experts and they would have their experts.
And they were both experts in the field.
They were both widely recognized.
And they were saying literally the exact opposite things.
So when it comes to people trusting the experts,
there's no consensus among experts.
And just because somebody is an expert doesn't give their opinion validity
because you can have two legitimate experts to say exact opposite to it.
I agree.
Liberals want to make Alberta illegal.
And I'm just going to pull all this up.
I thought that, you know, we can read off the entire thing that Daniel Smith said.
But Ottawa is proceeding with their Sustainable Jobs Act,
which was formerly called Just Transition.
And then here's the picture, Daniel Smith.
And if you haven't seen the entire thing,
I really do encourage all Albertans to go take a look.
But it says, basically, you know,
Alberta will not recognize, cooperate with or enforce any attempt
to phase out our provinces, oil and gas industry, or its workforce.
This is non-negotiable.
Yeah.
So Seamus O'Regan had said in an interview the other day
that he's not going to do any rhetoric anymore.
he's going to pass into law this whole just transition thing moving forward,
although it's doing a rebranding.
And if you've got to do a rebranding on the legislature you're passing,
maybe you just need better legislature, right?
But this is interesting because it's shaping up to be,
it's a bit of a game of chicken, right?
Where let's see which one blinks first,
because the federal government saying,
we need to fuck up this Albertan economy.
and Daniel Smith is saying,
we've got the Sovereignty Act.
Now, the interesting thing is,
will she invoke it?
And then the other interesting thing is
who will the Supreme Court side with,
given the fact that they're all based in Ottawa
and fucking Quebec.
I think that it's not looking too good.
But if she presents a really good case
and it gets shot down anyway,
separatism, ding, ding, ding.
Yeah, well, she's going to have the support
of a ton of people.
Just be like, no, we're not doing this.
We're just,
Yep. We're just not going there.
That's me anyways.
No, it wouldn't be a week of the Tuesday mashup with things just, you know, continuing to get to the point where you're like, I don't know what we're going to pull up anymore.
But we just keep finding new ways to enlighten our listeners.
But here it is.
Field is racist.
We will now racist your questions.
Smith College has removed the word field from its social work program as racist.
The reason it reminds some of the fieldwork of slaves.
The department formerly known as the Office of Field Education will now be referred to as the Office of Practicum.
This is all part of Smith College's plans titled toward racial justice in advancing inclusion, diversity, and equity at the school.
I think people are getting pretty used to inclusion, diversity, and equity by now.
The old terminology is getting hammered home.
Using terms like fieldwork is now considered triggering and might be.
microaggressive at USC the school explained language can be powerful and phrases such as going to into the field or field work may have
connotations for dissents of slavery and immigrant workers that are not benign this change supports anti-racist social work practices by replacing language that could be considered
anti-black or anti-immigrant in favor of inclusive language we're all better twos.
How fucking entitled are these people? They pick out fields because
because their particular brand of slavery
happened to work in fields?
I mean, how many slaves worked in
fishing boats in the Mediterranean
during ancient Roman times?
I mean, look, what's
the biggest thing any slaves ever built?
I would say probably the pyramids.
Are we going to not talk about Pythagoras anymore
because it's going to remind all the Jewish people
of the time that they spent hucking giant
chunks of limestone
from big quarries to build giant pyramids?
Like there's there's so many things like you, you had Mesopotamian slaves that were brewing beer and doing all of the accounting and stuff, right?
So I mean, let's not do taxes anymore because it's going to remind the Mesopotamians of the time that they were slaves.
I'm all for that, right?
There's just, there's so much that happened with slavery over the years.
And but your slavery is somehow more special than everybody else's.
And speaking of field of dreams.
dreams.
Did you hear what happened with Atlanta this weekend?
The Braves.
No.
Okay.
All right.
So it was a beautiful moment out of Father's Day weekend, right?
Mm-hmm.
So infielder Charlie Culberson, he's going to be playing on Sunday, a Father's Day game,
and his dad's going to be there, and his dad's going to throw out the first pitch.
Okay.
Okay.
Beauty, right?
on Father's Day.
How great is this?
Like an hour before the game,
they tell him the pack his shit
because he's going back to the minors.
They pull his dad from throwing the first pitch.
And then they just ask around like,
who all's got their dad here?
And they get somebody else's dad to throw the first pitch.
The team didn't revolt on that, man.
Like, what the hell are they doing?
That's what blew me away.
Like, I was like, like, if they went around,
like, who all's dad's here,
I'd be like, are you seriously doing this?
you guys can fuck off
I'm gonna go get a hot dog
yeah
I mean
the Atlanta Braves can fuck all the way off
I'm actually gonna
I'm actually gonna agree with you here
we got to
I was mentioned in last week
that we got to start doing something
on Twitter each week
because there's just crazy stuff
going on every week
and people need to know about it
and this week has been no different
so here we go
the next guy that's
says shenanigans.
Hey, Farva, what's the name of that restaurant you like with all the goofy shit on the walls and the mozzarella sticks?
You mean shenanigans?
Oh, I'm trying about shenanigans, right?
Oh, I love that movie.
I was just trying to have some fun, folks.
Here's what it is, okay?
This is how it starts.
Professor Peter Hotez, MD, PhD.
He'd been on Joe Rogan once upon a time.
He's been on CNN and all these different things, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Anyways, if twos brought it up, if you haven't watched Kennedy Jr. on there, like, just go listen to that guy for, like, it's just, oh, it hurts your brain.
Anyways, so this is what starts it off. I believe it's this tweet. It says Spotify has stopped even short, I assume is what he's trying to say, of trying to stem Joe Rogan's vaccine misinformation. It's really true, Anna Marilyn, just awful. And from all the online attacks I'm receiving after the,
this absurd podcast.
It's clear.
Many actually believe this nonsense.
So then it just goes on and on and on.
Joe Rogan goes,
Peter, if you claim that RFK Jr.
is saying is misinformation,
I'm offering you 100 grand to the charity of your choice
if you're willing to debate him on my show
with no time limit.
And so then it goes...
And then it just exploded.
It explodes.
It just goes on.
Be serious, Joe.
Here's what he, you know, he comes back.
Be serious, Joe.
What you throw out for your hunting buddies on a weekend, a 50 million endowment,
which you Spotify, RFK Jr. can easily afford, not for me, but so we can continue making
low-cost patent-free vaccines for the world's poor, preceded by RFK Jr.'s public apology.
By the way, I saw this tweet, you deleted, because Joe Rogan had saved it and put it back on.
This is a non-answer. I challenge you publicly because your public quote tweeted and agreed with
that dog shit vice article. If you're really serious about what you stand for,
for it, you now have a massive opportunity for a debate that will reach the largest audience,
and it goes on and on, you know.
But then other people were topping it up.
Well, that's right.
It's up to millions now.
So if I keep scrolling here, and you go, he then goes, I'm quite concerned about,
so this is this Peter Hotez again, I'm quite concerned about the Elon Tucker link,
then Folden Rogan and RFK Jr, and it becomes a pretty formidable colonel
with neo-fascist leanings in some ways darker or perhaps more dangerous than Trump in my opinion awful I just hope team Biden is
is preparing and so like Rogan's you know this goes back and forth this is Joe freaking Rogan he's got 11 million followers every episode he does and you know and it goes on and it goes on and so then Berenson
Alex Berenson gets in the mix of it and he's tweeting and then it goes up and it goes up and it goes up and I'm I just a guy is just
had on here if I scroll far enough Steve Kirsch who was just on the podcast last
week like I wish I would have known like you anyways I just I there's no way I
could have known folks but I just up the Joe Rogan debate offered to 600k for
Hotez to debate RFK Jr so he's adding a hundred thousand to make it 600k if
you go on debate them and you're like this is like what is going on and then
there's a ton of videos come out about you know basically about the HOTES and
how you know he starts off
being like the vaccine isn't safe.
You know, we can't rush it and then one by it.
And it just changes.
And all of a sudden he becomes, you know, a guy pushing vaccine, vaccine, vaccine.
Like, they don't even need the debate.
But you get the point.
And it just goes on.
Patrick Bet.
David comes in, starts talking about it.
Like, it's just, anyways, it goes on and on and on and on.
Super cool to see on Twitter.
It's super cool to see Joe Rogan.
And these guys be like, all right, let's cut the shit and let's get a debate going here.
Oh, no, we can't because that's going to legitimize a guy who's running for the Democratic Party.
and you're like, you're all fucking insane.
Yeah, he's not running Republican.
Democrat.
That's what I said, isn't it?
He's challenging for the Democrat.
I'm just pointing out.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, that's their party.
And this guy who's, I mean, granted, I'm pretty sure there's some stuff that isn't
going to hold up to scrutiny that he said.
But it's, it got me thinking, actually, you know, about how that guy, that one scientist who
published the first thing about vaccines being linked.
autism and how he had his medical license stripped.
And I'm like, you know, I remember thinking at the time, well, you know, obviously if this
thing's been totally debunked and he had his medical license stripped, he's full of shit.
And then I started thinking like, well, you know what?
I've seen some pretty weird stuff over the past few years.
I wonder if there's more to it.
And I don't think there is, but it makes me wonder.
Oh, I think I disagree.
I think there for sure is.
At this point, I'm like, hmm.
there's for sure more to it than what we know.
Oh, for sure more to it.
But to the extent that Robert was saying, I don't know.
You think he's blowing smoke?
I think there's a few things.
Like you look at it like he talks about mercury in the vaccines, right?
And the thing about it is, is okay, look at salt.
You've got, you've got, shoot.
sodium and chlorine and chlorine pretty bad for you but when it chemically bonds with sodium
you get salt that you need to live and it's not just like they just put drops of mercury in in the
vaccine it's it's part of a compound it's something blah blah blah that has um merck elements of
mercury in he was saying to's one in 37 kids yes one and 30s yes one and 30
Now, and once again, that could be something very minor to something very serious compared to their one in a million.
And at the start of this vaccine rollout that we went through with COVID, they were saying, oh, it's like, you know, it's like it's one in, well, I can't remember now.
I mean, the story changed.
The story changed all the time.
I don't, I don't, I don't give a shit what you're about to say.
I actually don't because I just, I think, no, there's like, is it one in 37?
Okay, maybe that's a little steep, but they're saying one in a million kids goes down and has an issue.
There is some Tom.
That's still too high.
Well, it's ridiculous.
It's just ridiculous.
And now they won't go on and debate him because they're going to, what?
They think they're going to legitimize him?
By him, by them not going and debating, they're legitimizing him.
Exactly.
Because if everything they're saying is true and verifiable, it would be really easy to just get up.
He'd say in there about Fauci and the meetings he had and then they wouldn't send them anything and they basically, yeah, we don't have anything.
Like, like, if you want to like flat earthers.
This isn't Sean Newman going on Joe Rogan and say, yeah, you know, I got these kind of things and whatever.
Like, RFK, the more I start looking fall on this guy, I'm like, this guy is well, well educated.
Like he's been in some things that most people don't get to see.
He's been invited into meetings he don't get to do.
He's well researched.
It doesn't mean he's 100% right.
No.
I mean obviously
but at the same time what he's talking about
has been something that we've been told
you were a quack if you even
think that and now you look at it
which is bullshit yeah and absolutely
and they they should debate
him and if what they're saying is easily
refutable or pardon me
if what he's saying is easily refutable
then they just go on there and mop up the floor
with them and make him look like an idiot like I love
free speech not only because
it allows you know people that you might agree with
to say whatever it is that they're thinking.
But also, it gives stupid people a chance to really out themselves.
And if what Robert Kennedy Jr. was saying was completely out to lunch,
it should be very easy for them to go up there and be like, listen, ass face.
Here, here, here, here, here, done.
I agree with you.
I agree with you.
I agree with you.
And one of the,
and one of the things that I really enjoyed about Rogan,
is he has had multiple debates on there from both sides,
and he does a really good job.
There's a reason why I really like Joe Rogan, folks.
He does a really good job of letting them go back and forth,
and at the end, you can decide who won.
On this, I just don't, when I watch what the doc did just on his interviews,
you go, this is going to be a, like, there's no way he's doing this.
He does this, like he's going to get lamb-baseded,
worse than what's his pick when he came on to talk to,
Rogan early on from CNN.
What the heck is that doctor's name?
Oh, Sanjay Gupta.
I tell you what.
That to me was like,
that was better in any movie I think I've watched
in the last 10 years.
And to me, you get RFK against this guy?
Like, this guy?
No, they won't even get close
because at the end of the day,
he's just going to tuck tail and run.
But anyways, very, very interesting.
But imagine somebody like,
like, if you,
had a Peter McCullough
type thing that was pro vaccine
and could just like, you know, when
you talk to him or when he talks to Rogan
and he'll just list off like
just no matter what direction of the conversation.
But wouldn't that be an interesting conversation?
This study. This study. This study. This is what
they said. Here's the details.
And like to have somebody, because there's got to be
somebody like that on the other
side. There has to be. 100%.
And so you just have to duke it out.
Sure. But it's a roguing
guest who calls him out for spreading
misinformation, then calls him a neo-fascist, and basically they're aligning this weird coalition
and he says, Biden, he's like, okay, you're going to call me out, get on the show, and debate this
guy, and we'll make it fair and everything else, and the guy is, it's just, it's ridiculous.
Anyways, this, folks, I'm going to make sure we, unless Twitter goes quiet, it seems like
every week, uh, twos, there's something new that is going on where you're like, oh my God,
we got to talk about this. I could be wrong on that.
this could be like how the who found their drummer
no the the who
so back before they got famous
they had whoever their original drummer was
and he sucked and uh what's his name
that ended up being their drummer
was like front row at one of their concerts
and he was like you fucking suck
you're the worst and that dude was like
you think you can do better get up here
and then he went up
knocked the lights out and became their new drummer
All right, SACC EA fired under Esther Hazy circumstances.
Love the headline.
An educational, and you know I'm going to pull up here,
and I'll pull up the Western Standard article so people can see what we're looking at here.
Educational assistant in Saskatcham was fired for Facebook group post
to a story promoting parents keeping their kids home on June 1st
in protest of Pride Month in the school system.
Leah Mayer worked with kindergarten to grade five students at PJ Gillen Elementary School
in Esther Hasey until her termination.
on June 12th.
Leah's post to the Facebook group was from someone else
who wanted it shared with the group.
Leah asked, I would like to know how you guys assume
that I was in favor of the post or that share.
Leah was told in the termination meeting
that sharing things is the same as making the post
and if you don't speak out, you were in favor of it.
The termination letter said the Good Spirit School
Division prides itself on maintaining
and respectful and inclusive,
we're getting tired of those words yet?
Anyways, respectful and inclusive environment
promotes diversity, equality, and the well-being of students and employees.
Diversity of everything but thought.
And GSD, this was the final quote in there, was,
it does respect the rights of our employees to express their opinions outside the workplace.
It is essential that our employees uphold the core values of our organization,
both professionally and personally.
Well, there you go.
Honestly, I feel like she's probably got some kind of a legitimate case for wrongful dismissal.
and this whole thing is getting absolutely out of hand.
And it's crazy how scared these bureaucratic organizations are of the cancel mob.
Because that's all this is.
This is a bunch of people who are like,
I would rather fire this person that potentially lose my job for not taking a stance,
regardless of my thoughts.
This is the Edmonton Eskimos all over again.
It is.
It is.
It's just a different form of it.
You've got this bureaucrat saying, well, you know what?
I could be under fire if I don't fire this person, regardless of what I think.
So I have to fire this person.
And then I'll have my easy, safe job with my cushy pension.
I can confirm that Lee is going to come on the podcast.
I actually, I just was like, oh, yeah, I texted her.
And so it should be interesting to hear the story.
I mean, it's like right here.
I mean, I mean, it's right here.
Esther Hasey's a long way from Lloyd, dude.
No, it's not what I mean.
what I mean is, it's in our own backyard, folks.
Like, you know, Saskatchewan.
That's what I mean to, is all right?
Like, this is pretty close to home, I would say, to a lot of people.
Yeah.
What I'm getting at, and it just seems like it does not relent, you know?
And that's why I'm going to give this one.
Hope they don't shit on your bubbles.
Shit on you?
Who?
Shit hogs.
Big dirty shithawks.
Oh, man.
We haven't had any real good NDP story.
lately and I haven't been able to use that thing and I'm like
well we get we can I mean they've
kind of been tucking their tails lately after
after not winning you had notly
kind of publicly
saying that she was going to spend some time
considering her options
and so yeah she's
she's just doing a slow play on that
and yeah mark my words
you're going to see nenshi and lucasic
fighting over that leadership
spot well here's your here's your final one
of the night two's ancestral
sword discovered
Here, I'll bring up the picture.
It says a bronze sword more than 3,000 years ago,
or a bronze sword, yeah, more than 3,000 years old,
which is so well preserved that it is almost,
that it almost still shines,
has been unearthed in southern Germany.
There you go.
Yeah, so how cool is this sword?
Yeah, it looks, it looks badass.
It got discovered less than 100 kilometers
from my ancestral house.
home.
So you're thinking maybe that was
this, this is
the twos, because
it's got that octagonal hilt
and that means it's eight sides.
Two times two times two
is what?
Everything's twos, man.
Everything's two. Everything's coming up to's
folks. But I mean, like how cool is that that they
just, I mean, aside from the grave robbing,
the fact that they just
dug this up and the
sword looks that awesome after 3,000 years.
Anytime you get into, you know, like digging things up and unearthing really cool stuff,
it's like, man, like history is so freaking cool.
And like, once again, how often do you see a sword in that get a shape?
Maybe, you know, I'm not in that world.
Maybe it happens all the time.
But that thing is like, looks in pristine condition, you know, as much as a 3,000-year-old sword can look.
Well, there was a Norse sword that was found in like a slew, I don't know, a couple years ago that some kids were just, they were swimming in it.
And one of them touched bottom.
And they're like, oh, what's that on the bottom?
And then they dug up a sword.
But it was just, just rotted away to practically nothing.
And it was going to get restored.
That's the thing.
Like, you know how stuff from the Titanic is all covered in corrosion and stuff like that?
Yeah.
when you find all these old swords in whatever,
the Scottish Highlands or whatever else,
they tend to look like that.
They do not look like they just came off the showroom floor like that,
that one that just got found in Bavaria.
That's pretty cool.
That's pretty cool.
Well, that's almost it.
Mash up 60.
What do you got?
You throw me another kerpo.
Well, no.
We talked about this.
So right now the votes are being counted for the port.
Yeah, we did talk about this.
What is that?
Are you going to pull up?
Yeah, sure.
Just give me a sec here.
Presents.
Oh, no, I don't want to present.
We're talking about Maxime Bernier running in Manitoba.
Window.
All right.
You got to let me show it.
Oh, yeah.
Bring it up.
Yeah.
Here we go.
Okay.
So Maxime Bernier has almost 18% of the vote.
So I don't know what's going to.
happen with the PPC.
That would be an interesting thing for us to chew on one of these days.
I've got a lot of thoughts about the PPC and the conservatives.
So go back up.
So conservative Brandon Leslie is leading with 15,000 votes, 63.5% of that riding.
And the People's Party PPC Max Bernier has 4,500.
So he is essentially toast, yes?
Yeah.
I mean, there's, I mean, polls reporting, they've had 88.
So there's no way for him to win anyways.
No, no.
Check this out, though.
This is one of the other by-elections happening right now.
Winnipeg South Center.
You've got conservative, NDP, liberal, Green Party, PPC, independent.
Rhinoceros Party is running, which is awesome.
I love the rhino party.
I like the, they want to run on that platform.
Then you got one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight.
Oh, my God.
Look at all of those.
Oh, it just refreshed again.
Look at all of those independent candidates.
How would you even run that election?
Carefully?
To have a debate and everything else.
Like, I mean.
Yeah, I don't know.
But I think that's crazy.
I don't know if I've ever seen that many independents in one riding before.
That's more independence than.
Well, let's do this.
Let's throw it out to the listeners, since we're going to, you know, like,
We got to cover Manitoba.
That's right.
So somebody out there knows why.
Like why?
Why the hell are there so many independents in this by-election?
Someone explain this to me.
And what riding?
What riding is it?
It's Winnipeg's South Center.
South Center.
Winnipeg's South Center.
Somebody out there from Winnipeg has to give us a little bit of an idea of what the heck is going on there.
That's wild.
Rhinoceros parties running a candidate, which is great,
because they've got a great platform.
They want to privatize the Senate.
They want to,
shoot,
what else?
They want to repeal the law of gravity,
and they want to chop down the mountains
so that all burdens can see the Pacific Sunset.
And,
you know,
amongst other things.
Cool.
Cool.
Yeah.
Well,
that's going to do a mashup 60, man.
You know,
60 in the book.
We're,
uh,
we're starting to rack up the night.
Onwards and upwards, you know?
It's kind of been fun.
I was, you know, on a fun little side tangent before I kick you off, I was thinking about this today.
Last night I drove home, went to Sarah Palin, and this morning we had donuts for dad.
So I should have started this off with happy belated Father's Day to you.
Happy belated Father's Day to you too.
This morning there was donuts with dad at the school.
And so I was like, I'm not missing it.
So last night I drove from like what, the south side of Calgary.
I left it maybe like 7.30 and got back just before 1 o'clock.
And as I roll into Lloyd, I'm like, I didn't edit my episode for this morning that's supposed
to release in like less than two hours.
So then I got home and I'm like, all right.
So I went and I, you know, like put it together and everything else.
And I was laughing this morning because I'm like, you know, if Sean of five,
years ago could see Sean of now have something that he's that consistent and like loves doing
and make sure he never misses on I'm like I don't know if I probably would have believed it but
I'm like I can't I wouldn't have been able to go to bed folks and like woke up at nine and
just released it would have eaten at me I wouldn't have slept that would have got up and what I went
what I was wondering is to do is do you have anything like that and if not or if you do it
do it was like kind of like you know you had to just keep going because I heard Rogan
talk today actually about um how
Now, when it comes to working out, it's like brushing his teeth.
He's like, I have to do it.
And I make sure I write a plan and it's just like, it's like brushing my teeth.
I do it every day.
That way I never miss.
And it's just, it's part of what you do.
And I was wondering, does twos have anything like that?
That's interesting.
I've kind of phased through hobbies a little bit over the years, like where, like I'm always doing, I don't know,
some kind of a hobby or something like that, right?
I haven't brewed much lately, but I was really fastidious with that,
like where every three weeks I would do another batch.
And then it got to the point where I had to give a whole bunch of it away,
which made me very popular.
But things like that.
I tell you what, it fell off during the government reaction to COVID.
but I used to be just
I used to be really fastidious about
adult sports
which was mostly volleyball
but some slow pitch too
at this stage of my life I can't really do
tackle football anymore
well then this is what I'm going to challenge
you know we got we got the $50 from Infinity
so certainly you can text me about that
or tag us in social media because I'd be interested in that
But I'd also be interested to hear what people have that type of like consistency on or
I don't know, just like you do something because brushing the teeth is certainly another one, right?
Like I assume lots of us when you brush your teeth, it's a simple one.
But like as you get older, it's like, oh man, I can't go to bed until you know you give the old pearls a little scrub, right?
And I wonder, I'm asking, I'm sure I'm going to get a long text from somebody tomorrow explaining how they got into X, Y, Z.
It doesn't matter.
I was just curious because I was like,
I was laughing at myself today because I,
you know,
I'm home at one.
I got to fire up the computer,
not that it takes that long,
but I got to do this.
And then I got to do it done.
And I'm just war out, right?
And I got to be up to get kids off to school the next morning
because I'm driving them out there.
And, you know, anyways,
I just,
I was laughing because I'm like,
that's really,
I didn't know if I had that before the podcast.
Now with the podcast,
like I just,
I could have a bullet wound in me
and I'd be sitting there,
you know,
like,
In the hospital, when we were having kids, Mel was laughing at me because she's like, yes, you can, you know, you can go podcast.
And I'm like, it was just, it's just become part of life.
Anyways, a final thought on mashup 60.
It's good.
All right.
I'm quite happy about it.
I think it's great what you're doing.
Well, I mean, for us.
I don't tell you that.
I don't tell you that often enough.
For us, though, Mondays at 9 has become kind of like that.
We just, that's what happens.
And sometimes we switch it up.
and people on this get very upset.
They're like, I showed up Monday at 9 and you weren't there.
It's like Mondays 9 o'clock live streaming for in a 52 year, 52 weeks in a year.
I would say 50, maybe 49 of them.
We hit that time slot.
It's just, you know, you got to work around some schedules.
Either way, that'll do it for 60.
Thank you, sir.
Thanks to everybody tuning in.
Your pleasure.
And look forward to hearing some feedback and all that good stuff.
