Shaun Newman Podcast - Mashup 130

Episode Date: October 25, 2024

222 Minutes is got his feet up somewhere, so instead I'm joined by Canadian content creator Greg Wycliffe to discuss this week's headlines which include BC election waiting on mail in ballots, Trudeau... not stepping down, slowing down immigration, bill C-293 with Lawyer Lisa Miron and 11 teachers getting the boot in Quebec. Mashup collection https://snp-8.creator-spring.com/listing/the-mashup-collection⁠⁠ Cornerstone Forum ‘25 https://www.showpass.com/cornerstone25/ Text Shaun 587-217-8500 Substack:https://open.substack.com/pub/shaunnewmanpodcast E-transfer here: shaunnewmanpodcast@gmail.com Silver Gold Bull Links: Website: https://silvergoldbull.ca Email: SNP@silvergoldbull.com Text Grahame: (587) 441-9100

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:04 Oh, looky, lucky. It's Sean, and it's not twos, and there's no rant today. So everybody's going to have to suck that up. We got an interesting show for you today. We got a new guest host coming on for today. That's the first time in 129, 130 mashups. So that's going to be a lot of fun. So I'm looking forward to that.
Starting point is 00:00:42 But before we get there, before we get to all of today's show, a shout out to Tuesdays and his days off. I guess he's somewhere with his feet up, folks. Maybe he's probably sitting there with a cigar. or something in his mouth, feet up, kickback, listening to this, maybe. And of course, we're at 22 viewers and counting. Thanks for joining us Friday morning on the mashup. We're here every Friday, 10 a.m. Mountain Standard time.
Starting point is 00:01:08 And we got a whole lot of things to get to today. Let's start with how about we start with the fact we got the mashup collection. So if anybody's interested in rep in the rooster and all the good stuff, I'll toss that in the comments. we got happy Airborne Friday to Jamie Sinclair and all the military boys out there. Thanks for tuning in. A weekly reminder that it's six and a half years for the Coots to Christopher Carbert, Anthony Olenick. As we always do, we bring that up here. And October, well, actually, before I get to Saskatchewan election live coverage,
Starting point is 00:01:42 we did BC election coverage there. And it was a hit. It was a lot of fun. I showed out to all the people who came on and joined us. We had anywhere between 7,800 people at one time watching, and in total 34,000 of you fine people tune into that. So that was super cool to do. I'm not going to lie.
Starting point is 00:02:02 And coming up this October 28th, we have Sask Election live coverage coming, brought to you by our friends over at AMC Electrical. That's true McKay. He's been a part of the podcast before. And it's going to be streamed at 6 p.m. Mountain Standard Time on Rumble, YouTube, X, Facebook. and the lineup folks is going to be interesting. We got Jerry Ritz, John Gormley, Lees Merle, Neney, Ness, Quick Dick, McDick, Bradwell, Ken Rutherford, Angela Schmidt, Lee Harding, Gage, Hobrich from the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, Wayne Peters, Jamie Sinclair.
Starting point is 00:02:34 So that night is going to be something to pay attention to, I think. That's Monday night of SAS Live election coverage. A couple other things to keep in mind, November 1st and 2nd. We're going to be at the UCPAGM. that once again is brought to you by AMC Electrical and Bottom Hand Ranch Services. We're going to be a hospitality room on November 1st. So cash bar, bring your dollars and cents. Come have a conversation with me and twos as we're live there.
Starting point is 00:03:02 And then November 5th, we're going to have a little bit of fun with the U.S. election. And well, we'll keep you up to date on everything there and try and have a little bit of fun. Okay. That all being said, today we got no twos, which means I'm going to bring in our. our guest host today, a new guest host. This should be fun. Canadian content creator Greg Wycliffe of SaveFreeSpeech.ca. Greg, thanks for strapping it on this morning and taking the place of Sir Tews.
Starting point is 00:03:33 Hey, no problem. I'm honored to fill the big shoes of Tews. And I hope to do a good job today and telling everybody about the clown world of living in Canada. Well, I think you won't have any problems. if you have never bumped into Greg, folks, he's been on the podcast. Of course, you're out in Ontario, which should get this an interesting flavor, I would think. You know, it's first time that I've had, I think, you know, when I go back through the hosts that Tews had while I was gone, it was either Alberta or Vance Crowe, who's St. Louis. So you had a guy from the States, and we've had mainly Alberta co-host.
Starting point is 00:04:08 Now we're going to have a little side-to-side, coast-to-coast, if you would, of Canada. So thanks for hopping on and doing this. Yeah, no problem. I hope I can give a diverse perspective on what's going on. However, at the same time, I get a lot of comments of you don't live in Alberta. I thought you hated Ottawa so much that you live in Alberta. It seems like you would live in Alberta based on your opinion on Ottawa. But no, I'm in Ontario. I just also hate Ottawa like you guys. Diversity is our strength, I think is the slogan, isn't it? That's what they say, you know. Trudeau's never wrong. We'll get to, if wherever you guys are turning in from, make sure to, uh, um, comment, you know, Murray Henderson. Good morning, folks. Michelle Krieger and Zane and on and on we go. Yes, I know. Everyone's missing two's.
Starting point is 00:04:59 Yes. I know. I know. I get it. I get it. And, uh, Kevin Deeman. All right. Cool. Well, let's get to it. We got a full show today. Well, we got a guest, uh, going to join us here in a couple minutes as well to break down one of the things going on here in Canada. Either way, We'll see if we can't inform, maybe do a little entertaining this morning. Every rat but one fleeing the ship. This is a National Post article. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed he plans to stay put as the liberal leader passed the deadline. That is, of next Monday, given to him around by two dozen of his caucus members, triggering disappointment among some dissidents, yourself included.
Starting point is 00:05:39 Trudeau was provided that date and a letter read aloud to him during Wednesday's closed door. caucus meeting, which sources described as an airing of long simmering grievances about the party's troubles leading to upwards of around 30, which I'm pretty sure it was 24 now. Liberal members Parliament calling on Trudeau to step down. It's all about the election. It's all about winning. And Trudeau's just got that name recognition. So he's like, hey, I'm going to stay on the ballot. I'm going to be the guy, although people hate me. You know, who's heard of you? Who's of you, Mark Miller, like they're trying to get Mark Carney's name out there, someone that people have heard of. But at the end of the day, his international acclaim, his popularity, Justin Trudeau,
Starting point is 00:06:23 he wants it on the ballot. The liberal party wants it on the ballot because, yeah, I also think that him stepping down would sort of be a sign of retreat as if all of his BS ideas of progressivism are actually all nonsense, which they are. But if he were to retreat and step down, it would actually make it seem like there might be a cultural shift happening, which is happening, but it would signify that. And it would actually give a lot of the opponents and enemies of Trudeau a lot of oxygen. So I think that's kind of why he didn't step down for those reasons. The name recognition on the ballot.
Starting point is 00:06:59 And also I think it would show retreat, which would kind of question all of these progressive ideals that we've heard from Trudeau over the years. But isn't it giving an oxygen to, like him staying in? is giving oxygen everyone in the opposition because he just every time he opens his mouth
Starting point is 00:07:17 you're like oh man and every new scandal that breaks I'm like I can't imagine being a part of the liberal party and being like
Starting point is 00:07:24 this is a good idea Greg let's we're sitting having a beer let's keep Justin he's got great name recognition yeah he's got name recognition all right maybe they're sitting in there maybe they're sitting in there
Starting point is 00:07:34 like somebody's got to snap one of these right wingers has got to snap at some point you got to keep him in soon someone will snap and then we'll have have an excuse to push more nonsense. I don't, I don't know. I don't know. The COVID hysteria is back? Probably not. Alberta Federation of Labor President Gil McGowan says COVID-19 continues to be a
Starting point is 00:07:58 threat to people and the health care system. McGowan said COVID-19 is exacerbating dire shortages of frontline health care workers, quoted it's long past time for us to stop listening to the dires running the UCP, that is the United Conservative Party here in Alberta, and start getting serious about slowing infections, McGowan said Wednesday. It reminds me of the friend. You know the friend from high school who is messaging you all of a sudden? You haven't talked to them in years. And they're messaging you.
Starting point is 00:08:26 And you're like, why is this person from high school messaging me? And they're like, I'm part of this multi-level marketing scheme. You really got to check it out. You got to buy in. You got to buy in. That's what I feel in this situation. When people are trying to revitalize the COVID hysteria, it's like, guys, it's over. I'm not buying into your.
Starting point is 00:08:43 COVID thing. I'm not buying your product. You know, your cult is very weird. I'm not, I'm just not into it. I said no. I'm saying no again. I know you're trying to make money or whatever, but quite frankly, it's very off-putting that you keep bringing up this, this crazy multi-level marketing scheme. You know, I've seen the people behind this scheme. It doesn't look good. Okay. Quite frankly, I think some of them might be international criminals, you know, responsible for to fill in the blank, nothing good.
Starting point is 00:09:10 Who is the last? Not who. What was the last? What was the last? marketing scheme you got to call for and they're like they're still doing that they're still selling those health products that it's supposed to make you you know healthy in in two days what was the last one Greg that you that you that you recall uh I'm not going to name drop them but one of them had to do with like cleaning products that are like supernatural uh another one was um or or sorry organic uh that's right was like an energy drink and they wanted you to buy just like you know 30 energy drinks a month and you just subscribe to energy drinks for the rest of your life. This one is you subscribed to booster shots for the rest of your life.
Starting point is 00:09:50 And apparently it makes you healthier. Each new one makes you healthier because the virus is still evolving, you see. Right? That's the whole pitch. That's the whole sort of angle. It's still evolving years and years later. And yeah, you know, it's, I can't believe there's, you know what, they have all this product.
Starting point is 00:10:10 You know, maybe we should give them some sympathy. They have all, they're sitting on all this products. Guys, we made all these vaccine vials. We need to sell them. We need to get rid of them. We need to get them off the shelf. They're only viable for so long. So we got to try to, you know, get this back in the heads of our consumers.
Starting point is 00:10:26 Get it back on the news. Are you with me? It's like trying to get Trudeau elected, you know? It's like, I mean, it's, you know, hide and seek. Two men have pled, uh, uh, pleaded guilty to the contract killing of Sikh man who was acquitted in the 1985 bombing of an air India flight from Montreal to Mumbai. According to an agreed statement of facts released by a British Columbia court on Monday,
Starting point is 00:10:54 Tanner Fox and Joe Lopez confessed to the shooting of Singh Malik in 2022, but they remained silent over who hired and paid them for the murder. Malik was a prime suspect in the attack on Air India Flight 182, which exploded off coast of Ireland, killing 329 people. but he and another man, Singh Baggery, were acquitted after a judge determined that two key prosecution witnesses
Starting point is 00:11:19 were unreliable. He was shot dead in 2022 outside. His clothing import business he owned in Surrey, British Columbia. Yeah, but have you heard of the far right? The far right are real or the real terrorists in this country. You've got to look out for these right wingers,
Starting point is 00:11:36 you know, all this stuff about Sikh extremism. Sure, maybe they were responsible for the deadliest terror attack in Canadian history, but they still have not been listed as a terrorist organization. And, you know, all this talk of foreign interference, of course, and it's very interesting, the third largest major political party is led by Jagmeet Singh. And if I'm not mistaken, he's not even allowed to go to India. He cannot even step foot in the country of India. You know, and they call Maxine Bernier a terrorist. It's like, well, no, this guy who leads the orange party, he he if you want to call anyone a terrorist in the house of commons or at least a terrorist sympathizer
Starting point is 00:12:14 or at least has had dinner and broken bread with terrorist sympathizers or friends of literal terrorists uh it'd be jag meet sing he would be the guy where it wouldn't even be an exaggeration to to draw those connections and uh yeah but i'm really glad that uh at least all this foreign interference conversation is coming up but you know what i say to that it's nothing new guys it's nothing new it's been a thing for a little while. And yeah, there are scary people out there. But unfortunately, sometimes ceasis and the RCMP, when it's a slow day for them,
Starting point is 00:12:50 they're like, you know, all these right wing, all these right wing, we have to look out for ideological, motivated violent extremism. And it looks like people who criticize Justin Trudeau, not these Sikh men who are, you know, connected to the air India bombing. Here's,
Starting point is 00:13:07 Brenda Belonger said he was the second person assassinated from the Air India and Jagmeet was also labored a terrorist from that attack. He changed his name. He's on the terrorist list. I don't know if that's a rate to what you're talking. Yeah. He's on the list. Is this Tuesday commenting technically Trudeau and his ex also had dinner with Splody folks? He says, hey, Greg, looking great. So there you go. I guess he is signing on. You know, I am curious on the foreign interference. I mean, I'm pretty sure we've covered this at length. But you know, you talk about our government and you look at all the things
Starting point is 00:13:49 going on and you read all the reports. On your side of the country, what are people saying, Greg, about all this? I mean, the average person in Toronto doesn't even care about the politics. They're here for the free stuff. They're caught up in the rat race. And to them, it's kind of just a passing meme on their Instagram feed. So they don't think much of it. They don't think much of it. You know, what does the average person think of the foreign interference?
Starting point is 00:14:17 They, they pretend to care, I guess. You know, they're kind of caught up in sort of the mainstream sort of frame of the conversation, which is like, oh, they're looking into foreign interference.
Starting point is 00:14:28 They're looking into it. And it's like, yeah, I think it's kind of been a thing for a while. I also find it kind of interesting, too. I don't want to rub people the wrong way here, but I'm pretty sure it's a rule.
Starting point is 00:14:38 in the House of Commons that if you're going to talk about foreign interference, you cannot be a white person. You're not allowed to talk about foreign interference and be a white person. Every time, is it me or every clip that I see in the House of Commons? It's someone wearing a turban. It's someone who's, you know, non-white. Sometimes they don't even speak good English and they're talking about, we know, oh, you're about foreign interference.
Starting point is 00:15:03 It's like, really? Like, it's quite, uh, it's quite, uh, it's quite a, amusing the clown show of this country. Keep to the people commenting, I found this interesting. I didn't, I don't know if I just glazed over this at some point. Brenda says, fact, he can't go to the USA or back to India. And I was like, I didn't know that Jagmeet can't go to the United States. That I didn't know that.
Starting point is 00:15:26 And then another Mark Cole says, yes, India has Jagmeet listed as a terrorist to India and he can't be extradited because he is a politician. So that's, I mean, people are blowing my mind this morning on the comments. I didn't, I guess you hear all the stupid things he says and you see him sit down and, as you, as Greg's pointed out, break bread and talk to these people. But I didn't know a couple of those things. So that's very interesting from the chat. I appreciate people chiming in. And, you know, a guy who's been done a ton of work on this is a guy who's been on the podcast before is Moka Bersergan. He's been documenting the Palestinians and some of the protests going on in discussions in Calgary. It's making me wonder about
Starting point is 00:16:06 I probably should reach out and try and get them back on the podcast because it feels like there's a whole lot more to be talked about the people should know about. Absolutely. Definitely check out his Twitter, Mocha Bezegon, I think is how you say his last name, but he's been following the Calistani movement in Canada for some time now. And it is a sort of interesting juxtaposition because we all saw the sort of burning Canadian flag and they said, you know, death to Israel, death to USA, death to Canada. And the thing is, there's plenty of clips of Calistani's burning flags and, you know, destroying, like killing effigies of the Indian prime minister.
Starting point is 00:16:46 They've been doing this for a while now. But it's just interesting how that never got any sort of mainstream attention at all because this content is like outrageous to see this happening on Canadian streets, you know, a sort of foreign group of people who are, some of them are calling for their own nation state of Calistan in Canada. and it gets very little mainstream attention. And I'm sure if you get Mocha on the show, he would kind of illuminate why that is. The sort of teaser would be, there's a lot of connections between the World Sikh organization, the Calistani movement and people actually sitting in parliament
Starting point is 00:17:19 and sitting in other legislatures across the country, I think provincial ones. Don't quote me on that, but yeah. Inflation relief. The Bank of Canada claimed victory against high inflation, on Wednesday is it delivered its supersized interest rate cut and signal its policy rate will likely to continue falling in the coming months. The half percentage point interest rate cut marks the fourth consecutive reduction since June and brings the central bank's policy interest rate
Starting point is 00:17:49 down to 3.75 percent quoted high inflation and interest rates have been a heavy burden for Canadians with inflation now back to target and interest rates continue to come down. Families, businesses and communities should feel some relief. Yeah, I don't feel too relieved. I feel like this is only a temporary thing. I feel like things are still going to get more expensive. Is this signify an upward trend? Is the inflation going to completely reverse with these rate changes?
Starting point is 00:18:20 I'm not feeling too optimistic. This feels like a little bit of a breadcrumb, a little bit of a, hey, yeah, this is a sort of, almost like a pressure release valve to let us feel like things. aren't going to totally clearly in the downward trajectory. I don't know. That's kind of my perspective on it. But I mean, just, I read that article. Like, if I go talk to five people, five in a row and ask them about the cost of living right now, the cost of any, like, it's not even like, it's, it's insane.
Starting point is 00:18:52 You know? And you tell them, but yeah, did you see the rate change? The rate cut. They got a rate cut. It's like, okay. Yeah. Yeah. Have you seen the price of milk?
Starting point is 00:19:02 It doesn't really. It doesn't jay. Yeah. It doesn't help me this week. And it's funny when people kind of take these little statistics and say, see, see, things are turning around. And it's like, who are you kidding? And it really reflects the disconnect between, like you said, talking to actual people on the ground in real light in Canada versus sort of the Ottawa bubble people. I like to call it the Ottawa bubble where everyone.
Starting point is 00:19:32 one in the Ottawa bubble is rubbing shoulders with each other. The pundits are friends with the bureaucrats and they kind of form all of these opinions and they say, yeah, there's a rate change. And it's a good thing. And there's nothing else to worry about because I live in the Ottawa bubble and everything is fine and taking care of for me because of my pension. And the rest of the country is like, yeah, really feel like I'm not being represented here. Really feels like we're just getting the cold shoulder, being left out in the cold. And I'm sure, are you guys not used to that by now? The people out in Alberta, like, generally it's like, yeah,
Starting point is 00:20:09 oh, Ottawa treating us like crap again. Just another, just another Friday. Just, just another Friday. Yes. You know, it's funny, I didn't know what to do with this headline. Part of me is like, you go from the bank can, oh, interest rate cuts, we're all doing great. and then you got Trump in a barbershop.
Starting point is 00:20:30 I'll get to it. Politicians will say anything for your vote during a Fox News segment on Monday. Mr. Trump, former President Trump, took questions at a barbershop in the Bronx. When asked if the United States could potentially end all federal taxation, he said the country could return to the economic policies of the late 19th century when there was no federal income tax. Dare to dream, baby. Dare to dream. Why not? You know, I'm, I'm kind of like radical minded when it comes to the world of politics. And I say, because people are, oh, you got to be realistic in politics. But you also got to be unrealistic and you got to like say crazy stuff like, we're going to build a wall.
Starting point is 00:21:10 Like that was pretty outrageous when he first, when Trump first came out and said that. And sure enough, he kept pushing and saying that over and over again. So maybe, you know, no taxes for anybody, you know, like nobody's paying taxes. And I would even compare it. So what we hear from these like crazy people from, you know, the UN and World Economic Forum of you will own nothing and you'll be happy. That's, that's crazy. But that's still sort of like a ideal, an unrealistic ideal that they keep repeating and saying over and over again. So I got, I say we, we got to do the same thing, which is no federal income tax. Let's go back. Let's go back
Starting point is 00:21:48 to the good old days. You know, but before the was, what was it, World War I when they introduced the income tax or World War II. I'm not quite sure. World War I was it not? Yeah, I think so. So, you know, we're not at war. Maybe we're actually in a couple wars, but, uh, but yeah, no, I, I like the energy of kind of radical statements like that, especially if they're kind of pointed in the direction that I would like to go. It was great, because it was in a, it was in a barber shop, right, surrounded by guys. Can we go back? It's like, was Trump's getting, you know, like, I mean, can you imagine a world where we didn't pay, uh, didn't pay taxes. It was all tariffs, right? That's basically what they were alluding to. It's like, is it possible? It's like, well, sure, but like, is that actually going to happen?
Starting point is 00:22:35 No. Right. It's the idea of being surrounded by a bunch of like voters and the politicians like, yeah, and I'll like, sure. It's like he turns into Oprah all of a sudden. And I'll buy you a car. I'll buy you a car. You'll pay no taxes. You'll pay no taxes. Oh, this guy's great. We love him. Yeah. And walk out. ever see them again. Okay, let's see what 1913 is when Zane says income tax came in. And then a whole bunch of other thing. Well, I say that and then I'm reading these, but I'm not pulling them up. There you go.
Starting point is 00:23:15 Brenda Belongier says, actually, people are selling and becoming nomads because of pressure of cost living. That's going back to the inflation and 4.4.4.4. or five interest rate only applies to first time buyers and on and on and on it goes. Okay, here's here's the next headline folks. Politicians do the flip-flop game. Justin Trudeau, we're going to significantly reduce the number of immigrants coming to Canada for the next two years.
Starting point is 00:23:41 This is temporary to pause our population growth and let our economy catch up. We have to get the system working right for all Canadians. The far right is vindicated. All of the racist rights. of all the people, all the right wing evil people who opposed mass immigration have been totally vindicated. And I kind of take the perspective of did, did Justin Trudeau beat Pierre Polyev to the punch in terms of opposing mass immigration or at the very least kind of saying we should reduce the numbers and saying these should be the numbers? You know, of course, I don't like Trudeau. Of course he's
Starting point is 00:24:24 flip-flopping saying all these weird things that are counter to what his politics are to try and stay relevant or kind of release the pressure valve of how much people detest him. But I want to see more from Pierre Polyev here. I feel like this is the perfect opportunity for him to push hard against mass immigration now that Trudeau has kind of receded some ground. And I'm not really seeing that yet. I'm still seeing I'm seeing a lot of Polyev, you know, pander to different minority groups in Canada. I want him to, you know, champion Canadian culture and call out the radical demographic change that's happening in this country because there's no other way to describe it. I think if you even look at the stats of the sort of demographic change we're experiencing
Starting point is 00:25:07 in this country, you know, that's something that you should want to conserve as a conservative, but quite frankly, we're not seeing too much out of Polly-F here in terms of actually pushing back against mass immigration. And I think a great example is he, you know, don't get me wrong, Polyev's doing a lot of good stuff. He made a video some months ago all about the housing crisis. He's a smart guy.
Starting point is 00:25:32 He understands numbers and how all this works. In his whole video about the housing crisis, he doesn't once bring up mass immigration. I hope he starts to now. I hope he starts to connect the dots between the health care crisis, the housing crisis. crisis and the many other issues like the going on in Canada because it's all connected the rising crime as well to mass immigration.
Starting point is 00:26:00 So I'm hoping this will turn into, you know, a campaign for Pierre Polyeb to push back against mass immigration. But at the same time, I don't know, I don't know if he has the willingness to really kind of be, be bold and actually say the things that the majority of Canadians feel. I just wanted to pull this up. I pulled it up and when you finish point because, you know, you go like, oh, it's, mass immigration and everything's over. When you look at the numbers,
Starting point is 00:26:24 like am I reading this wrong? Like am I like, you know, 2025, 395,000 people are going to come in down from the 485 target. And then you go 2026, 380 down from the 500. And I'm like, I don't know. Like, I mean, it's down. They're bringing, it's down. It's a negligible difference.
Starting point is 00:26:42 The numbers aren't nearly low enough. Like it would be a drop in the bucket. And what? Over a million people last year or something? I think it was 1.2, wasn't it? Yeah, yeah. Between temporary workers, students, illegals, on and on and on. This would just be for permanent residency, so it doesn't even include that stuff like family reunification and everything else.
Starting point is 00:27:06 Right. So, like, part of it gets celebrated as this, like, giant victory or something. And what you're, I think you're pointing out is, like, he should be pushing harder on this. Because, look at the underlying number. and you go, holy crap, we're already in a pickle. Like I just did a roundtable on the housing industry crisis and the shortfall there. And it's only getting worse. The more, you know, like they're going to be millions upon millions of homes short.
Starting point is 00:27:34 You're like, well, what are we going to do? What are we going to do with all this? Absolutely. And when people show up and they're in the lower tax bracket and, you know, we have to pay for their health care as well. Like, you know, mass immigration connects to the cost of living as well. and if Polyev were to come out strongly against mass immigration and say, you know what, Trudeau, I'm so glad you said that.
Starting point is 00:27:57 Now you're not going to call me racist. That's great. We need to reduce the numbers way more. He would get so much support if Polyev said something like this. His entire base isn't, you know, everyone who supports him would love it if you were to come out and say something like this. But unfortunately, I feel like Polyev is still timid. He's still afraid of the media calling him names or something or he's playing it safe.
Starting point is 00:28:17 This is what, you know, Pierre Polyeff supporters always say, no, he can't say that. He's got to, he's got to play it safe. And it's like, well, you know, if you're a poll. If you can't represent your constituents as a politician, then what are you doing? You're not, you're not doing your job. And as I think it's becoming abundantly clear, even people who are apolitical are starting to say stuff. Actually, a joke that I say on stage in, in Toronto when I'm doing standup is, you know how I know,
Starting point is 00:28:44 there's too many black and brown people in Toronto because all of the black and brown people in Toronto are complaining about all of the black and brown people in Toronto you know everyone's talking about this and you know it's Pierre Pollyov this is your moment this is your moment to actually you know let's turn the tides on this issue and push back because right now his rhetoric is Trudeau broke the immigration system but I'm going to fix it and it's like can you actually just speak more directly
Starting point is 00:29:14 the issue of too many people are coming in here and we need to slow that down. You know, can we be more honest on this issue? That's what I want from Pierre Pauly. That's what I'm praying for. He's got the platform. He's got, you know, he's going to be probably the next prime minister. And if he doesn't get more honest and direct on this issue, that's a big red flag for me. That's a big red flag because, yeah, he's going to be the guy in charge soon.
Starting point is 00:29:38 And this is your opportunity, conservative party supporter to apply pressure. If you want to email your MP, hey, why doesn't, why doesn't Pierre Polyev push back more against mass immigration? This is his moment. Talk to your EDA. Talk to your other conservative friends. Say something because you matter. Okay. And it's only by applying pressure that the conservative party will move and do the right thing.
Starting point is 00:30:06 We're going to slide over to we got a guest in the back. Before we get there, we'll read the headline and then we'll bring her in. If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face. forever. George Orwell. We're talking about Bill C-293. I'm going to bring on lawyer Lisa Myron. You may recall Lisa, thanks Lisa for hopping on first. Hey, everybody. It's so nice to be here with you. You may recall Lisa from the podcast. She is lawyer Lisa on substack. She is writing extensively about Bill C-293. That is the Pandemic Prevention and Preparedness Act. And, you know, a couple things.
Starting point is 00:30:47 One is there was this big, like, I don't know how many times I got text saying it passed through Senate this week. And I was like, did it pass your Senate? Then I go look and I can't find anything on it. And the other thing I found really interesting is there's no CBC articles on it whatsoever. You can't find them talking about this document at all. So Lisa, can you bring us up to speed? Just bring us up to speed on Bill C-293.
Starting point is 00:31:12 Yeah, happy to. Okay. So it's at the second reading. And the senator who introduced the bill in her speech at the Senate references none other than the useless eaters herrari in introducing the bill for the second reading in the Senate. And I've got to say, boy, you know, the bill that goes after agriculture and meat eating and, you know, emphasizes bug eating or alternative. Routines, however you want to define that, references the useless eater. Like, she just has no, has no filter, this woman. It's at the second reading.
Starting point is 00:31:54 And something, I've got to say there's a lot of great things happening on Bill C-293. I did a live talk in Burlington on Wednesday, and over 100 people showed up. And, you know, I spoke to people. They're invigorated about Bill C-293. They want to stop this. And I met this lovely couple. And they spent dawn to desk printing up letters, Bilsie 293 letters, going into the public square and, you know,
Starting point is 00:32:24 going to shopping malls and telling people about Bilsley 293. And they have this printed up letter. And people are like 100% sign rate. Canadians are really responding. And they're actually taking their personal voices out there. That felt great. And my son came back. And he says he was in the restaurant.
Starting point is 00:32:44 And two old guys were talking about Bill C-293. So it's like it's like starting to bubble up so that he's, you know, she told two friends and she told two friends. It's starting to really, really happen. And this 17 hours ago, Alberta came out against Bill C-293 officially. Now just on one little narrow part of it, which is the agricultural thing. But now we've got, you know, a province in the game. We have to now explain the bigger aspect of Bill C-293, which is, it's a perpetual emergency act with such a low threshold to get in. There's no definition section in this whole thing.
Starting point is 00:33:30 And so to get into this perpetual governance on emergency act, all you need is that it's something that could prevent the future risk of something that could. cause a pandemic, none of which is defined. Like how big of a risk, right? This isn't like we're going in and it's bird flu and there's people. No. No. Like, and it's all about climate in this bill. So, you know, CO2 in the future could and temperatures could and there could be, you know,
Starting point is 00:33:59 no, this bill has to be taken out the back and shot. And I want Canadians to understand everywhere that Canadians everywhere are starting to work. So we're working together, you know, as a country. You know, like when would Alberta ever think that Ontarians are out there also like, you know, getting down and pushing against the beast, right? The man. And so we're doing it. I love it.
Starting point is 00:34:25 I got a quote. We have to explain now the NFP, which is the national focal points of the WHO, which were set up in 2005. And they kind of hit that through the pandemic. The national focal points for Canada are run out of Washington, D.C. at an organization called Pahol, the Pan American Health Organization slash WHO. And they list Health Canada, Public Health Agency of Canada, among others, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, as satellite offices of the Who. That's my terminology to explain it to you, but they're called NFPs. So what that means, when Bill C-293, this perpetual emergency act, right, with any kind of threshold that has expropriation, owning communications, like it's stawful, it hands it over to a satellite office of the who. So it is a coup.
Starting point is 00:35:20 It's not just going after our agriculture. So we got the agriculture where they're talking about that now. But we have to expand that discussion and we have to realize that they only got in because, apparently on the news, the agitation of Canadians. And thank you, Alberta, because you guys have been really delivering because they said Albertans have been really agitated. We'll get agitated. That's my update.
Starting point is 00:35:49 I got a question. Yes. Lisa, why do you think more politicians from the Conservative Party, Liberal Party, like I ever really seen any mainstream politicians talk about this or any mainstream? stream media outlets talk about this. Why do you think that is? Well, one, do they know how to read a bill? Like, I don't know, right? Do they know how to read a bill? Do they know how to read? Right. Like, the conservatives voted against this bill, but they didn't agitate to their people. Mind you. I mean, we're facing a massive, and I'm going to say it, I'm going to use my French,
Starting point is 00:36:33 We're facing a shit show all the time, right? Right? It's Bill C-10, then it's Bill C-11, and then, you know, it's Bill 63. And, you know, it's a, it's pound, pound, pound. And then the news cycle is also pounding all kinds of issues. And then there's the numbers, right? And then there's the Canadians really suffering, right? The homelessness, the 10th cities, the fentanyl.
Starting point is 00:37:00 It's a cloured piven strategy. But what I see here is Bill C-293 is the tip of the spear of the globalists. And they might have overshot their mark because Bill C-293 gets advanced by Erksine Smith in 2022, June of 2022. June of 2024, the International Health Regulations for the WHO pass. 4.1 of it basically necessitates Bill C-293. Right? And the pandemic treaty, the provisions of the pandemic treaty hasn't passed, has the same kind of content as Bill C-293. So Bill C-293 in their perfect world answers a call from international regulations that hasn't happened. So it's like what it plainly looks like to me when you put that together is that it's a conspiracy.
Starting point is 00:38:01 So if it was a legitimate WHO negotiation on the international scene, they wouldn't know what provisions would actually end up in the negotiation, right? If 196 parties were legitimately getting together to end up with a treaty and international health regulations, they wouldn't know the content of them. And then here you have Erk-Sign Smith putting together the bill that answers those two international items, one that only passed in 2024, but he puts his bill in in 2022. And one
Starting point is 00:38:37 that hasn't passed yet. So it both calls in to, and for me as a lawyer, you know, when I think about this, it calls in to really believe that this could be a conspiracy, both and enough evidence
Starting point is 00:38:52 that both the negotiation of the WHO pandemic treaty needed to meet this, 293, and 293. was supposed to land in perfect harmony in October of 2024. Right. So it's a, I think when you put that out. We don't believe in conspiracies on this side, Lisa.
Starting point is 00:39:14 Not at all. No, conspiracy theories allowed here. We're not allowed for a pinpoint. I'm teasing. I'm being a little, you could you give us an idea of where the, you know, if it was, if this was a hockey game and this is the, the bill C-293 being passed, like is it period three?
Starting point is 00:39:35 Is it, it's in the second reading in the Senate? Is that, is that right? And what does it look like? Are there's in a final stretch? It's in the final stretch. And you know what? There's all kinds of Canadians getting on the ice and getting, you know, in front of the goalie, right?
Starting point is 00:39:48 Yeah. Are there senators in like the Senate pushing back against it? We haven't seen the arguments of the speech that will push back. I can tell you that a one-click letter, just that one-click letter, has had to date, 237,000 emails from Canadians. And those aren't all independent advocates. Those are the totality of emails that are going to senators, MPs, MPPs, Governor General. The day that we got our high, we had $35,000 in one day, $42,000 the next day.
Starting point is 00:40:27 and the day after that, Trudeau's AIDS quit. And, you know, that's all a coincidence. I am sure. I am sure. But something's going on now that we have actually a provincial government stepping up into the plate. And so now we, okay, so someone's there. Now we're got to expand that. We want Ontario.
Starting point is 00:40:50 We want Doug Ford. We want Scott Moe. We want all of Canadians to keep agitating. because what's happening is our voices are working and we're actually rekindling those conversations in our communities. How can Lisa, how can people, if they're sitting here listening, what's the easiest way for them to agitate their senator, their elected representatives?
Starting point is 00:41:14 Okay. How about we drop my one-click link in the chat, you know, after this and you can have it appended? They should be writing their Senate and that's all online. Notable C-293 and explain the NFP maybe. Maybe that's what we've got to get to the next stage. But what other people are doing is they're taking that one-click email. They're printing that up and they're going and talking to the strangers and neighbors. And they're meeting their friends and colleagues and they're talking about something that's important to us.
Starting point is 00:41:48 I think it's completely beautiful. And I want us to keep pushing. Thanks, Lisa. appreciate you coming on and short notice giving us an update. Really appreciate the work you're doing. Keep moving forward. Thank you for giving a platform to this. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:05 Bye, guys. It's funny. I texted her, Greg. I'm like, oh, my God. I can't figure out this, this 293. So I texted her like 20 minutes before the show.
Starting point is 00:42:13 I'm like, what are you doing in 20 minutes? She's like, I don't know. What do you need? I'm like, well, I could really use you to come on and try and explain 293 to the audience of where it sits. So there you go, folks.
Starting point is 00:42:22 A little update from lawyer, Lisa Myron. on where we're at with, I don't know, Bill 2, C-293. All right, shocking. Mail-in ballots will decide BC election. You know, okay, I let off the start of this hour with like how successful our live election stream was and we had a bunch of different personalities come on. And people were texting me the next day.
Starting point is 00:42:45 It's like, well, what happened in the election? I'm like, I don't know. It was like 11 at night, our time, almost midnight. And we still didn't know. It was 46, 45 in favor of the NDP. and this is what the news of today is. The final outcome of the 2024 provincial election in British Columbia won't be known until at least Monday
Starting point is 00:43:01 with two crucial writing recounts starting Sunday afternoon. Initial counts for the October 19th provincial election show the BC NDPA are leading 4645. Okay. And then it went on to say Western standards that elections BC has revealed now that around 65,000 ballots have yet to be tallied. The office had originally said the number was closer to 45,000. And shocker, it's way higher than they think.
Starting point is 00:43:23 thought. Is democracy real or is it fake? Is this a real democracy? Is this authentic? It's very hard to know. And I think that the first step is to be, uh, you know, what's the word? Very, very active and insistent and, and, and sort of hypervigilant about it, you know, because this, the spooky, creepy thing about living in Canada is if our, if our elections were compromised, let's say are who would do something about it who would who would who would be doing the research uh and ringing the alarm bells about it because unfortunately i don't think the cbc would i don't i don't think any of these mainstream media outlets would these so-called investigative journalists that are the most popular in the country because they get subsidized by the government so i don't think they're actually
Starting point is 00:44:14 doing that digging and when you look at you know aside from that the other independent journalists like it would be up to us. It would be up to people to actually do that research to look in to see, oh, wow, they are compromised, you know? And I guess it's almost like there needs to be like a new organization in Canada who just hypervigently vigilantly focuses on this singular issue, which is election integrity across the country. We have to bring up, of course, what is it, the Dominion voting systems.
Starting point is 00:44:44 Well, I'm glad you did because I reached out to Chase Barber, right? Edison Motors. He's been on the show multiple times. And he sent me a text and he was trying to find out who's doing the voting election services in BC. And it shouldn't shock any of us that it's MNP. And MNP is the one he basically gotten a huge battle with because he was trying to get and forgive me, Chase, I wish I could have had you on to explain a little better than me. But basically he was trying to get some of the government funding for Edison Motors, right? They're green tech, right?
Starting point is 00:45:17 And MMP is the company that reached out, said, Would you like us to help you? It's going to cost you acts, but we'll guarantee you get so much funding. And he said no. And then the company that was monitoring the applications was MNP, right? So it was a complete copy. MMP was going to submit to MMP.
Starting point is 00:45:32 And now they're the ones doing the election system. You're like, oh my God, this can't, like, are we watching this in real time? I'm like, you know, it's a provincial election. And now we're seeing, oh, it's going to be a week after the election. and maybe we're going to get some results. It's like, what? Like, is this the real world or not? And what's even worse is this is kind of becoming a normal thing, right?
Starting point is 00:45:56 It's becoming a normal thing. It used to be, mail-in ballots. Next day, you will hear the results of an election. And now it's this normal thing of like, it might take a few days. It might take a few days for us to flub the number. I mean, it might take us to count them.
Starting point is 00:46:10 It's going to take a few days for us to count them properly, is what I meant to say. You had the U.S. election to it, which is the largest election in the world. So now it's become normal to hear that the election, where is it? It's like, why we don't know. They've literally said they're going to take a week to figure it out. A week?
Starting point is 00:46:27 A week to figure it out? You know, the amount of money the government spends on things, pay some people, get a man, let's count some votes and let's find out what we got for a government. Yeah, and I mean, it's alarming because people like you and me, we follow the politics to play by play, and we get very outraged or upset. are concerned about this going on. But if you talk to the regular Canadian, average Canadian, they might not be as alarmed or as concerned because it's not being put in their faces
Starting point is 00:46:55 as, hey, we might live in a fake democracy. This might be fake elections, you know. And I say that I mentioned starting an organization because somebody needs to do the work of looking into this stuff and then educating the rest of us to say, this is what the play-by-play looks like. This is how sketchy it is. just to kind of validate our concerns, or at the very least, to show the people who might be messing with our elections that, like, we're on top of you, we're going to hold you to account. Because I don't really see the solution to this problem other than us crossing our fingers and hoping they're not rigged.
Starting point is 00:47:33 You know what I mean? It's not a good feeling. It's not. It's, yeah, yes. I'm curious to get your thoughts on this. Alberta shenanigans, okay? Me and Two's talked about this last week, and the news keeps breaking on it. So Alberta Premier Daniel Smith, United Conservative Party leadership campaign manager,
Starting point is 00:47:50 Matthew Altime, has been caught saying he had busloads of Muslims coming to its annual general meeting. Former Alberta deputy premier Thomas Lukasjik accused Altime of trading Muslims like a commodity. This is what Daniel Smith is all about. He tweeted on Sunday. So this is them, you know, this recording comes out, and he's bringing in tons of a block of voters to the UCPA jam, right? Because the smoke has been starting to form around this leadership review, whether or not, you know, do people think she's getting to vote? I don't know. I guess I'll let people comment. But there's been enough commentary around is Daniel Smith the right
Starting point is 00:48:29 person to lead. And then this leaks that, you know, they're going to bust load in people. And I've heard from different people in the political sphere that this is just another lever they pull on getting the right people there to have the right message. But I don't know. Greg, am I like, what do you think hearing this story? I think it's similar to the last story, which is, you know, how manipulated are the politics in this country? And that's at every level. It's at the municipal level, provincial level, and also the federal level, you know, like, like how much, how, how, what sort of games are being played to, uh, influence the outcome of various different elections. That's not just elections of the province or the city. It's also elections of the actual parties. And here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:49:17 There is an incentive to manipulate the outcome of these elections. What's the incentive? It's power and influence. It's the right to pull the levers of power in this country. Because of that, there's definitely an incentive to manipulate the outcome using any tactic you might be able to to use. So in this case, are you suggesting that this guy is busing a bunch of Muslims to the to the AGM? Is that like the United Conservative parties like a big thing? Yes. It's the annual general meeting for the UCP party. And this year out of the four years that Daniel Smith selected, this is the one year where there's a leadership review. Meaning, you know, if she gets less than 50% in theory, not in theory. She gets less than 50%. Boom. She's out as later. And you have a leadership
Starting point is 00:50:09 race, right? And I wouldn't, I wouldn't have put that much thought into it because a lot of the people I talk to are quite content with Daniel Smith. Now, there's a lot that aren't, but now you start to see this and you go on, this is really strange, you know? Now you got, you got close to 6,000 people showing up for this thing. Yeah. Yeah. So my, you know, when you talk to the average Canadian, they are not super political. You know what I mean? Like the average Canadian, they may not be super politically engaged. And I think it's just kind of part of our, our nation's character at the moment. I think it's going to change as we face sort of more issues and problems. But so they're kind of naive. And I think for the people in politics, though, you need to stop being naive.
Starting point is 00:50:55 Because the people who I think might be manipulating our politics at higher levels or effectively, they are, you know, super cynical. They take advantage of our naivete. And I think that, like as I said, there's an incentive to to secure power right so that incentive is going to attract sociopaths manipulative people people who are who want power you know people maybe with malicious intentions uh so when you're actually if you're like us if you're more in the world of politics if you're part of one of these political parties especially you need to be very cynical you need to be very cynical in terms of who you're talking with, what their true incentives are, and, you know, just watch your back and be aware that there might be some funny business going on because, as I said,
Starting point is 00:51:43 there's an incentive to, yeah. No filter. I enjoyed this. Mel Gibson confirms he's not voting, or he's voting for Donald Trump. Well, I'll let him say it. Second term. With the president, with the president's not second turn. I know what it would be like if we let her in.
Starting point is 00:52:10 Yeah. That ain't good. Yeah. Miserable track record. A falling track record. No policies to speak out. And the board, right? She's got the IQ of a fence post.
Starting point is 00:52:28 Oh, man. And the IQ of a fence post. Give the win to Mel Gibson. You love it. You love to see it. You love to see it. You know, I, I, I. I was on a podcast last night talking about the supremacy of political correctness.
Starting point is 00:52:44 And it's like we're all sort of under the supremacy of the political correctness. We can't say the wrong thing. And I always love when anybody sort of opposes this supremacy, opposes it and says something, oh, oh, that's mean. You can't say that. Oh, she's a woman. That's mean. And at the same time, these are the same people, the same Democrats who are like,
Starting point is 00:53:03 oh, I wish they wouldn't have missed. like, you know, actually wishing death upon their political opponents and then shaming somebody else for, you know, calling somebody stupid, you know, like these people have no ground to stand on when it comes to, like, condemning Mel Gibson for being mean or whatever. It's, you know, it's a blood sport. Politics is a blood sport. It gets ugly. And I think in general, this sort of hypersensitivity to people saying something mean is, is part of the problem. You know, it's connected to cancel culture and all that nonsense. So, Diversity is our strength. A firestorm has erupted over revelations that the Islamic religious concepts have been abusively forced on elementary students at Montreal's Bedford Public School since 2016.
Starting point is 00:53:49 Concerns have now expanded beyond Bedford to three more schools in the area. Eleven Bedford Muslim teachers, predominantly members of the North African Marabi clan. I hope I'm saying that right. We're suspended along with their licenses. A committee determined the students were physical, psychological, and psychological. emotional well-being was being jeopardized. The teachers are accused of screaming at students, treating boys and girls differently.
Starting point is 00:54:11 For example, gender discrimination against girls not allowing, not allowing them to play soccer, and inflicting humiliating punishments on children with learning disabilities who were called lazy. These students were deprived of help because resource staff were barred from entering classrooms. Yeah, you thought residential schools was bad. No, but this is a crazy story. And once again, like,
Starting point is 00:54:35 I love your title for it. Diversity is our strength because this is simply something that you would not hear about talked about on the CBC because it has a negative implication upon diversity. It's like we have a bunch of, you know, African teachers who are enforcing Islamic beliefs onto their students violently and abusively. Like this is a crazy head. This is a crazy headline. Were you able to find like the CBC or anyone else like talking about this? No, no, I don't, you know, as you mentioned it, I'll Google it real fast again. It's just the Montreal Gazette and the West. Montreal Gazette, well, you know what? The CBC, here's the CBC, a Montreal Elementary School, this is their headline, a Montreal Elementary School is at the center of a secular, secular, man, I can't even say it,
Starting point is 00:55:27 secularism debate, here's how we got there. That's their headline. There you go. There's the CBC talking about them. can you control F African and see if it comes up? Previte. Get to the point. Control F?
Starting point is 00:55:41 Yeah, for like finding a word on the page. Oh, goodness. No, why would I be able to do that now? I'll do it on my own time. But it's it's very,
Starting point is 00:55:51 you know, I'm a kind of a media nerd. I like to like look at how the mainstream media does or does not cover things. And it would be my bet that maybe they do bring up the fact that they were African or there's like, there's an Islamic tilt. or that kind of colors the entire thing. But if it's mentioned, I can guarantee you it'll be at the bottom of the article. Nothing to do with the actual headline, nothing to do with the actual, well, sort of the actual
Starting point is 00:56:16 cultural weight or the sort of cultural trajectory, I guess, of this story, which is obviously significant. But again, like, let's read the headline, the CBC headline again and see if it has anything to do with culture. A Montreal elementary school is at the center of a secularism debate. here's how we got here. So nothing about teachers abusing students. And look.
Starting point is 00:56:41 If you look underneath that, Greg, you go provincial politicians accused of pouncing on religion for political game. Yeah, exactly. How are they framing it, right? They're framing it yet not on the actual story. It's very interesting. Very interesting. Heist fail of the week.
Starting point is 00:56:59 You know, before we got started, Greg was asking me, he's like, I got comments on everything, but this heist thing. And so if you're new to the show, like Craig, we do heist from time to time. This is probably the worst heist of all time.
Starting point is 00:57:13 And of course, it happens while Tews isn't here. A former pro football player plot to rob 1.2 million in marijuana profits three years ago, arrived when he discovered the bags full of stolen cash were too heavy to carry. So, you know, the bags being heavy is probably something we should have planned for. One, you're going to steal a lot of money. That's great. Anyways, so he chucked them in the Colorado woods and ran away. Okay, you think, okay, that's bad enough.
Starting point is 00:57:39 Here's where it gets worse. This is Devin Aguilar, former college stano who briefly played for the Tennessee Titans. He made another big mistake during the previously unreported December 2021 heist. He forgot his gloves, the gloves he wore for this in the bag, which was later found by cops. Just like that football game all over again where you forgot your gloves. Crap, it happened again. I forgot my gloves for the heist. crap.
Starting point is 00:58:04 What is this amateur hour? Man, that's, that's embarrassing. Wouldn't you, wouldn't you feel like such an ass to like steal this money and then throw it, throw it in the bushes? Wait, this is a bad idea.
Starting point is 00:58:19 Oh, wait. And while I'm, it's a bad idea, I'm going to put my gloves in the bag. She's like, what? Idiot. Yeah. What did, yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:28 He didn't go to practice. He did not go to practice for that. Practice? We talked about practice. I don't know how much people are falling up with Bricks, but obviously they had their big Bricks summit. Here's one of the pictures, you know, the new currency supposedly unveiled.
Starting point is 00:58:43 Here's a family photo. Well, it's the Bricks family photo, I should say. You know, you got a whole ton of countries all aligning on the other side. Very interesting story to follow. You know, one of the things that I read was they got Bricks Bridge. It's a modern blockchain. financial system to go against Swift. I don't know how much you're paying attention to this, Greg, but I thought it was newsworthy to bring up the fact that it was happening this week.
Starting point is 00:59:12 Dave, it's not Bitcoin. I don't even care. No, this is, I'm not a huge finance guy, but this stuff is certainly interesting. And people who are smarter than me are saying that, you know, America might be failing as the sort of like hegemonic power of the world, like the U.S. dollar might be replaced by this new currency. And unfortunately, I think the trend is where are things manufactured? Like a lot of things used to be manufactured in the Western world. And now all the manufacturing, a lot of it anyway, is in China. And there might be long-term implications of that.
Starting point is 00:59:48 And part of that might being a sort of sway of sort of financial power moving away from America in the Western world to bricks. So I don't, you know, I'm not a huge finance guy, as I said, but that's about all I can say on it, really. 50,000 smackers. Yeah, you heard that right. To find this guy, I'm going to pull up, I'm going to pull up his face here. So we got her handy if I can. There we go.
Starting point is 01:00:18 Everybody's like, Sean, come on. Here you go. Man hunt to locate Regina homicide suspect, Daniel Juma Derry Adam. Heatham, I don't know. It spans across West. The Bolo program, a national nonprofit. dedicated to highlighting wanted criminals announced on Thursday. It was expanding its campaign to locate this man.
Starting point is 01:00:37 The effort includes an extensive billboard campaign across Saskatchewan, and Alberta offers a reward of up to 50,000 for information leading to Atom's arrest. So I thought, heck, hey, mashup listeners, you see this dude, it could be 50,000 smackers in your pocket. Or to Ontario's in Greg's World. If you're wondering what he looks like, he looks like a Regina man. We're looking for a Regina man. If you, if you see him, he'll look like he's from Regina. He also has dreadlocks.
Starting point is 01:01:07 And here's a photo of him. But, no, that's, I mean, that's, it's, it's, I mean, isn't this the police's job, though? I mean, it's kind of funny. It's like, hey, citizen, we'll give you $50,000 to hunt down this Regina man. And it's like, isn't that your job? Isn't that why we pay taxes for you guys to, to find this guy? It's funny, though. I tell you what.
Starting point is 01:01:30 they did this on all the criminals, pedophiles, etc, et cetera, et cetera, I feel like, I feel like you would, the population would be like 50, 50 grand to find that guy. All right. Let's, let's find this guy. You can't be that hard. That's a fair enough point. Maybe this would be, if it was $5, I'd be like, oh, interesting. 50,000 dollars. Like, man, we, we should find this, find this, find this person, fund the mashup. And away we go. We got 50 in the bank. We could start this, our own thing, just following the Bojo project. and just start finding, find these guys. Is this an app?
Starting point is 01:02:04 Is this an app idea that we're going to develop together? Maybe, maybe. Oh my God. Oh, my God. Find the criminal. Find the criminal or, uh, that'd be crazy. Because I was just thinking of the, uh, the alerts you get on your phone. Uh, and you look down and it's like looking for a gray Honda, $5,000 reward.
Starting point is 01:02:27 Oh, I'm going to get off the couch and actually look then. Dang, you know. $50,000 reward. You'd be like, holy crap, out the door, hon, let's go. You know, he's in your area. He's in my area? I could get $50,000. It'd be like Pokemon Go, except you're looking for pedophiles and criminals.
Starting point is 01:02:44 I mean, that'd be a pretty cool app, would it not? It would be. Beneficial to society as well. Free speech, professional regulators in Alberta may soon have less control over censoring employees and members' personal opinions. and beliefs. A joint announcement from Alberta Premier Daniel Smith and Justice Minister Mickey Amory has come in response to growing concerns that professional bodies have been overstepping their boundaries by restricting free speech and requiring compulsory training unrelated
Starting point is 01:03:13 unrelated to professional duties. Quoted a diversity of opinions and beliefs is one of the hallmarks of a free, healthy, and democratic society. Premier Smith said, many of the greatest ideas and advancements in history started out as a non-conventional and non-conventional and controversial ideas that became popular in mainstream only after a few brave women and men were able to convince their fellow citizens of their value. And quoted again, what a doctor or lawyer believes or says about politics is not a reflection of their competency to practice medicine or law.
Starting point is 01:03:45 I also wanted to point out in Alberta, it says, is home of 189 regulated professions across 12 ministries. So that's, you know, when you start to factor in how many people are being censored by their, their governing body, 189 different professions.
Starting point is 01:04:02 And Marty up north, I pulled up his, his tweet because he put out a tweet as well. So shout out to Marty, who's been a guest host on here before, because he listed off a bunch, one of them being his background in engineering. So it's an interesting thing to follow.
Starting point is 01:04:20 Yeah, no, at the very least, I love this as a conversation starter from Danielle Smith. You know, I know people have criticisms of Daniel Smith, but she, at the very least, has been good at giving a voice to, you know, unvaccinated Canadians and people who have been discriminated against.
Starting point is 01:04:36 And at the very least, this is, you know, even if this doesn't lead to a necessarily policy change, it would be nice. At the very least, it's a good conversation starter because this is definitely a massive problem. Here in Ontario, I have a friend who is a doctor, and he has, you know, he's beholden to the Ontario regulatory board of Ontario physicians and and doctors or whatever it is. And he's shown me the magazine that he gets sometimes from them. And it is more progressive than the CBC sometimes. It is like, we need to talk about racism and medicine.
Starting point is 01:05:12 We need to talk about indigenization and Islamophobia and medicine. It's like, what does this have to do with me having a cold or breaking my leg? Is a broken leg of a Muslim guy different than my brain? broken leg. It makes no sense. And it's, it's not, it's not a subtle thing in some cases. Each regulatory board, I'm sure is different. But I'm sure you could talk to any number of people across the spectrum of different, uh, occupations. And they would say, no, it's heavy. Like, they push this stuff heavy in terms of trying to have very specific politics. And of course, this reflects what we're seeing in education. And you see it trickle through well, and the mainstream media and
Starting point is 01:05:55 so many different ways. And Zane is commenting correct here from Alberta. Wait, didn't UCP oppress one of theirs just recently? Jennifer Johnson. And that's what, everybody who loves the announcement, right? Because we've all been talking about this for a long time. It's all like, yeah, 100% she's right. But the criticism is Jennifer Johnson, right? And we've talked about that story. And so you go, wait a second, not the kettle call on the pot black? Like I'm just, you know, and that's a very interesting point to point out, Zane, I'm just saying. I'm just saying, saying we got a sharp audience here. You're not missing much and you're not wrong.
Starting point is 01:06:30 Zane's absolutely right. That was like a struggle session. That was a struggle session from a transgender person saying two plus two equals five. Trans women are women. Say it. So absolutely. That is the cock, the pot count calling the kettle black.
Starting point is 01:06:46 She is back a part of the UCP. I would like to point out, but he's not wrong there. California is not a serious state. I don't know how much we want to spend on this. but here, here. Okay, here's the latest, you know, like California at times, I'm like, resembles Canada so much.
Starting point is 01:07:00 So I'm like, is this coming to Canada at some point? Family lawyers are raising the alarm in California with about California's proposition three, which guarantees a right to marriage without defining what marriage is, opening the door to allowing new non-monogamous forms of marriage. So polygous marriage has been illegal in the United States since 1882, but a new California proposition, which California will be voting on in this new election season could change that. And California Proposition 3 titled the Right to Marry and Repeal Proposition 8 Amendment
Starting point is 01:07:34 is being marketed as the same-sex marriage law, despite same-sex marriage being legalized nationwide since 2015. So look out, folks. You could have a person married to 18 people. Well, I'm happy about this because now I can move to California and finally marry my dog. This is something I've always wanted to do. I've wanted to get married to my pet. You know, there is no definition of marriage. So that's what I'm going to do now, Sean.
Starting point is 01:08:01 I'm going to go marry my dog. But, you know, jokes aside, isn't it unbelievable how correct the Bible thumpers from the 90s were? Because to give you guys an idea, the Bible thumpers from the 90s said, we can't have gay marriage. There's going to be people marrying pets eventually. And it's like, this technically opens. that up to the possibility with this, with this new legislation of just making the definition of a marriage so broad. But I just think it's funny that more and more often, it's like,
Starting point is 01:08:35 we thought these crazy Bible thumpers were insane, but like they're kind of being validated and vindicated. They're looking awfully sharp. They're looking awfully sharp. Yeah. I mean, this, this is pretty wild. It is California. So, you know, I go, I should have just stuck it in here, the goofy news. Okay, the goofy news, folks, this week, I'm going to rattle off a couple things here. First, starting with a church, a church service ends after an eighth hour after guitar's, uh, guitar's delay pedal gets stuck. And here's, here's a quote from this article.
Starting point is 01:09:08 Like, I'm like, this would be, this would be rough. I thought we were just really going all in on oceans explained. That's a song. That song always feels intermittentable. When we hit chorus number 17, though, I started to suspect something was amiss. hours in, one of the backup singers just fell over. It was a worship service of attrition. At some point, somebody's just got to step up and say, hey, can we just stop singing
Starting point is 01:09:33 this song for the last three hours? Wild. German police say pizza order number 40 came with a side of cocaine. German police busted a pizzer in western city of Dusseldorf that also delivered a side order of cocaine when customers asked for number 40. That was one of the best selling pizzas criminal director. Michael Graf von Moltke told reporters in Dusseldorf, you don't say. And a New Zealand airport wants you to hug goodbye faster.
Starting point is 01:10:01 Travelers leaving New Zealand city of Dundon will have to keep their emotional farewells brief. And a new three minute time limit was imposed on goodbye hugs. Wow. Wow. I remember hearing about a code at our local pleaseria. You'd ask for extra green peppers if you wanted something extra special and green with your pizza. It costs another like, you know, 10 or 20 bucks for your pie, but, uh, so this isn't something new. No, it's not.
Starting point is 01:10:30 It's not, uh, you know, drug dealers will find a way. They will find a way. I, I think this is just newsworthy today, uh, here I'll pull it up on screen. I think this is, you know, whether you've been paying attention. I've been wondering when Joe Rogan's going to have Donald Trump on for a very long time. Actually, if you'd have Kamala Harrison, I think I'd listen to that too. And yet neither one of them is. doing it today, um, Joe Rogan, Donald Trump sitting down that I think that should be an interesting
Starting point is 01:11:02 conversation. Am I wrong on that, Craig? I feel like maybe it should be. Absolutely. I mean, Joe Rogan is kind of like the, the platform, like the most popular platform you can be on right now. And so it's kind of like the equivalent of a president, presidential nominee being on, uh, what, not carlin. what was what was the popular talk show host way back in the day the tonight show with jay leno yeah i was thinking of the guy before that but you know it's it's that culturally significant like like joe rogan today is the cultural significance of a talk show a late night talk show back in the day in terms of ever like the whole nation is going to be watching uh and what's cool about joe rogan is that it's like you know it's a three hour conversation so they'll probably
Starting point is 01:11:49 get into a lot of interesting stuff i'm sure i'm sure whether or not you see it live i'm sure clips will be filling up the news feed for weeks to come. And it's going to be great content, great fodder to see what Joe can bring out of President Trump. Johnny Carson, thank you. Yes, the listeners are young and dumb whippersnappers, not even doing it. The listeners are smart. The listeners are smart.
Starting point is 01:12:14 Yes, it should be interesting. Finally, folks, on today's mashup 130, we got some happy news. I think this was pretty happy. Bart workers fired due to COVID vaccine. mandate to get over one million each federal jury decides. That's down in San Francisco. A federal jury has sided with fire Bart. That's Bay Area Rapid Transit workers who sued the agency claiming the loss of jobs over COVID vaccine mandates. There are six of them in total and the lawsuit they will each receive more than $1 million apiece. That's huge. That's huge. That's justice.
Starting point is 01:12:49 That feels good. I feel good. I've forgotten about everything else we just talked about. And I'm feeling happy now. But hopefully that translates to something here in Canada and other COVID cases identical pretty well to this. You hope so. You hope that we're going to start to see our own. Mashup 130 in the books. Folks, I was happy to have Greg hop on with us.
Starting point is 01:13:13 Hopefully I wasn't too painful for them. I know there's some comments in there. People wishing Tuesdays is back, but saying Greg was doing okay. They're probably more harassing me saying Sean needs to just allow two. Tuesdays to host the show. It's usually how it goes. He only allows positive feedback of twos. So it's interesting. You know, they didn't know what to do this week. You know, they're like, why I can't say anything good about twos because I won't show it. Because I'm in control this week, folks, and you're learning. But I appreciate you hopping on, Greg. And doing this,
Starting point is 01:13:42 answering the call, I think this has been a lot of fun. Mashup 130 in the books. Your thoughts to close it out. Thanks so much for having me. And yeah, I think we covered a lot of good ground. happy to be on the show to try and attempt to Phil's two's massive shoes. Sounds like I failed, but hey, you know, the only way we can get better is by trying. That's not what I was saying. I thought you did fantastic myself. And I would point out that having a guy from the other side of Canada was interesting as well, because you have some interesting takes that, you know, me and two sit here in Alberta.
Starting point is 01:14:20 At times, we align a lot on a lot of things. things at times we just argue like an old merry couple either way thanks gregg for hopping on folks thanks for hopping on as well thanks for being here make sure to like share subscribe and we'll see you next week oh and tune in monday night would you we got the sask collection live stream it's going to be a ton of fun and you know just before i go i'm going to rattle off the name so everybody remembers cherry ritz john gormley lees merle ninne s quick dick mick bradwell ken rindindex fred angela smit Lee Harding, Gage Hogbridge, Wayne Peters, Jamie Sinclair
Starting point is 01:14:54 on Rumble, YouTube, ex-Facebook at 6 p.m. Mountain. It's going to be a ton of fun. Tews will be back. Greg, until next time. See ya.

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