Shaun Newman Podcast - Mashup 177
Episode Date: September 26, 2025222 Minutes is on to discuss this week's headlines. To watch the Full Cornerstone Forum: https://open.substack.com/pub/shaunnewmanpodcastGet your voice heard: Text Sh...aun 587-217-8500Silver Gold Bull Links:Website: https://silvergoldbull.ca/Email: SNP@silvergoldbull.comText Grahame: (587) 441-9100Bow Valley Credit UnionBitcoin: www.bowvalleycu.com/en/personal/investing-wealth/bitcoin-gatewayEmail: welcome@BowValleycu.com Prophet River LinksUse the code “SNP” on all ordersWebsite: store.prophetriver.com/Email: SNP@prophetriver.comExpat Money SummitWebsite: ExpatMoneySummit.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Masha.
Tell me whether I'm wrong or right.
Easter west up or down side to side.
I sit to stand and fall to fly.
If all of my impulsive plans, popping locking salsa dances on demand,
I follow leading off the map and stop the chatter, scream happily.
Welcome to the Masha.
Welcome to the MASHup.
Welcome to the MASH up.
Welcome to the MASH up.
Welcome to the Masha.
So this dog, good dog, mostly good dog.
He's been doing this thing all.
summer got lilac bushes and he picked one random branch and he's been reefing on it and pulling on it
and trying to get it to try to get it to break off and he loves sticks in general and so this has been
a big deal for him every time he's out running in the yard goes over that lilac bush reefs on it a
little while he's never going to get it though it's a fairly hefty branch and so one time he wasn't there
nobody's looking and i went and i pulled it like almost all the way off
and so then, of course, because he's a disagreeable bastard,
he doesn't go anywhere near it for like two weeks.
I'm like, he forgot about it.
And then he goes over, he's got the zoom, he's running around,
goes over to the lilac bush, grips it, pulls it free,
and just, and then he's running around all happy,
but this isn't a stick, this is a branch.
And so every time he's out in the yard,
he goes, runs over, grabs the branch,
and then he's trying to run around with it,
but he can't really maneuver anywhere.
do anything with it.
He's always getting caught in his neck and having a great time and loving it.
And you have never, I don't think there is anything you could ever give a dog.
It will make them happier than a sense of accomplishment on ripping a branch off of a tree.
Is that your good deed for the week?
I feel like it is showing off.
Oh, shoot.
I forgot to put a hat on.
I'll be right back.
You keep talking.
Well, welcome to Mashup 177.
doesn't want to show off his his messy hair i guess i don't know i tuesday i thought you look great i don't
know what everybody else thoughts um you know uh welcome to mashup 177 i'm saying two's he's not here
right now obviously but it's uh it's good to have him back uh on the show uh i you know i'm excited
to you know it's vesper i know you're probably watching it's always great to have somebody step in
and and fill in a roll can't speak highly enough about people hopping on this show but to
to have twos back with a hat on, looking, looking sharp.
I'm surprised you're not wearing the hat.
I got you.
When do I get to see that?
Well, I was literally, it was sitting right next to this one.
And I'm like, interesting, interesting.
You know, it's like when, you know, at the end of the first Iron Man movie,
when Terrence Howard right before he went crazy was like looking at the suit.
And he says, next time, baby.
Well, welcome to mashup 1787, folks.
It's good to be back.
If you like the show, make sure to like, share and put it out there.
Happy Airborne Friday, Jamie Sinclair and the boys.
We got a full show today.
We got our first guest in the background.
We're going to bring her on right away here because I assume her schedule is very tight.
But here, how about we start here?
Katie, welcome back to the show over at Universal Ostrich Farm.
Thanks for joining us this morning.
Hi, Katie.
Thanks for having us.
By the way, just real quick question before we get into the rest of it.
you went with universal ostrich farm and not universal farm of ostriches.
Yeah.
Which would give you UFO as an acronym.
Oh, that would have been good.
That would have been good.
I feel like that's a missed opportunity.
That was a missed opportunity.
But we've had many more just this last 10 months.
That's a fair point.
Well, I think for us and the audience, just bring us up to speed, Katie.
I think everybody's been watching social media and all the different things.
going on. Obviously, you being on ground level, you can tell us and bring everybody up to
speed of where all this sits. Well, this week was a big week. This last week, we were
baited by the RCMP. Well, the RCMP first rolled in probably about, I think it was like 50 cars,
50 police cars, ghost cars. They have the task for us here. They have command centers set up about
five kilometers up the road they have drone units they have had helicopters and we're just farmers
we're not criminals we're not armed and we're just trying to protect the welfare of our animals
and which is led into obviously the opportunity to learn that we need to try and save the agricultural
industry in canada as well but so they all rolled in they took over the canadian food inspection
agency is here as well. And it was very surreal. We were sitting standing in our pens. We knew
they were coming because everybody was saying that the hotels were booked up solid. There was
hundreds of police cars in Vernon. And then we had people watching the hotels for when those
cars were going to leave. And so we had about an hour and a half notice when those cars were going
to arrive. And we got, we had some people watching down the highway to give us another 10 minutes.
notice and we were just standing in our pens with our ostriches and we had our supporters standing
hand in hand down our public road and when you look down we looked at the highway and you turned
around and you're standing with your animals the one of them that's 35 and you saw headlight
after headlight after headlight after headlight of police cruisers it was a moment that I think
we'll have PTSD forever because we're
we have murderers and pedophiles and rapists walking our streets.
We had a missing child in, I think the crows nest pass at the same time.
And all that's only a few hours away.
Well, maybe like five or something probably.
Maybe they should have went and tried to find a child.
Maybe they should have went did something better with their resources than their time.
And so it was a surreal moment for a lot of people.
And then that led into a bit of a day of negotiations.
by a family basically now named Jeff Goddrey and helped us with that.
Then we had, they moved in and after a couple days just sleeping in the pens with the
ostriches because they wanted us out.
They were trying to serve as search warrants.
And those search warrants were, there was three of them.
They expanded our quarantine zone.
There was three properties.
they actually took over our, sorry, just one second, Jeff.
Sorry, just one second, Jeff.
No worries.
Yeah.
Yeah, sorry, the background.
So there's the three.
We are literally in a farmhouse that's in active turmoil all the time.
Three properties.
One was my aunts and it's a private property.
That private property, they didn't get served.
They didn't have any notice, but yet the police came in, opened their gate.
took over my aunt and uncle's property.
And then we were standing there, again, just watching everything.
So did they, they didn't have a warrant for your aunt's property?
Not my aunt had no idea.
She had never been contacted and they had not received a warrant.
They said that they slapped one on their trailer of the RV on their property that they
were not, that they're not at.
But that was just not true.
Everybody was screaming at them, a supporter saying, what are you doing?
That's private property.
but they just went in and took it over anyway.
So, yeah, my understanding is that the RC&P can't enter private property unless they have a warrant,
B, they're in hot pursuit of a suspect, or C, there's exigent circumstances.
So if they see somebody having a heart attack or something like that, they can,
but those are, my understanding is those are the three instances.
And I just want to say to your point before about the murderers and rapists,
Canada is basically the only country in the world where we give rapist bail and we sentence ostriches to death.
Yeah.
It's this is a surreal moment, you know, and then what then we, once they pushed the search warrant papers on us and we did receive them.
They let us know then that we have lost, we had lost all the rights to our property that they were taking over our property on that side.
Our animals were in their care now.
And we were to leave the pen.
Well, my mom and I decided that, no, we're here.
We're in the pen.
And let us humanely care for these animals while they prepare, while we were still waiting for our court, for our lawyer to go through the judicial processes.
Let us care for these animals.
Let us feed them humanely.
Maintain their routine, maintain their health, maintain their stress levels.
Because just when they had arrived, they had drones flying over really low.
put our whole farm into panic.
We had hens and roosters hitting fences.
We had a hen hit a fence.
She flipped over the fence twice.
Chambles broke her leg.
And so we just said, let us stay with these animals and keep them calm.
And finally, a few hours later about from us in the pen,
we got notification from the RCMP or Canadian Food Inspection Agency of Green Light
that we could go feed them.
And we got in the farm truck, went to feed them.
We started at the back corner.
should have started, I guess, at the front corner.
And at the minute we were far enough away from supporters or anybody to start to do filming.
They, but we were surrounded by four police cruisers and they told us to get out of the truck and arrested us and told us we were under arrest.
So that was another moment of looking at, you know, my mom in handcuffs and going, is how is this Canada?
You know, what is happening here when we are just farmers trying to do the right thing and keep our animals safe even while they're preparing?
We were not impeding their actions.
We were not violent.
We were not being aggressive.
We were asking for them to allow us just to care for the animals.
Were there any charges pressed?
There is.
There is.
So we'll have to go through those.
They're trying to say that we impeded an officer from.
following out his duties.
Then Section 35, the Animal Health Act,
paragraph one that they're trying to come after us with.
So we will be addressing those charges.
My mom and I have a no-go order on that side of the farm right now.
And the ostriches are in the care of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency right now, again,
where, you know, it's a little bit weird to say that it almost feels like, you know,
that the wolf is in the is in the pen with the sheep.
And they have been making it very clear that they don't want anybody to see what they're doing.
They've cut off all of our live stream cameras, security cameras.
We have video of them cutting the cords, taping over the cameras.
And again, they have any legal right to do that?
The lawyers following through looking at that.
So we are, they unplugged our Starlink.
They, what do you, you know, basically, I guess the biggest question is, what are you hiding, right?
What are you hiding?
Oh, absolutely.
We weren't hiding.
Those cameras were there for protection.
And if anything, those cameras would have protected them for, if they have nothing to hide, those cameras would have protected them,
showing the world that they were doing the right thing, not the wrong thing.
They would vindicate them if they were the good guys.
Yeah.
Another thing they did.
This is just a complete emotional or mental, um, uh, uh,
warfare is they actually went out there after everybody we were arrested and removed and they took
over the property and they went screaming saying it's an emergency emergency and screaming all through
the barns screaming hoping that it would flush out people but it put everybody on the property
in panic so um it was this again just tyrannical behavior of emotional mental warfare and this is
a display of complete punishment. What you see here, we're being punished. This is not justice.
We stood up to them. We challenged a policy that is meant to be challenged. It's been an operation
for 21 years. It is putting our Canadian farmers at risk and Canadians at risk of their nutritional
food supply and our food security and our sovereignty with being led through the directives of the
World Health Organization, the One Health Agenda and the United Nations. And,
this is punishment. What you're watching here is millions and millions of dollars,
the Canadian taxpayer dollars punishing a hardworking family that's standing up to do the
right thing. Absolutely. So basically the RCMP at some point when they were there,
they saw one of the ostriches put their head in the sand and they got mad because they thought
they were being made fun of. They don't put their head in the sand. I know. It's a myth. But I mean,
here's the thing is you you've got these African like they migrated here from Africa
and typically in Canada what we would do is we would give them all $3,000 a month and put
them up in a nice hotel in downtown Toronto but they're not even doing that because if I'm
understanding the way this all played out correctly you committed the most heinous crime
possible in this country which was when they said you need to kill all these birds you
said, well, what if we just tested them first?
And they said, no, if you test them, you'll be fined $200,000 and get six months in jail.
And that's the most heinous crime you can commit in this country is questioning a bureaucrat's
decision.
Yes.
Because a test would verify whether or not that decision they made was appropriate.
Yeah.
For 10 months, that's all we've been screaming for is allow us to do a.
live virus test, throw out your PCR test, and that from 2024, December 2024,
let's do serological testing.
Let's do the appropriate testing to show the world that these animals are still healthy
or that they are healthy.
But that goes against their bigger agenda.
You can see here that this has nothing to do with virus.
They've broken multiple quarantine rules.
The RCMP have been in the hot zone, driving around with their police cruisers.
They're up at the fence in the quarantine zone.
They're getting in their cruisers.
They're going back to the city.
They're going to hotels.
They're going and eating out.
Then we have the Canadian Food Inspection Agency breaking quarantine right at the fence in the quarantine zone, no PPE.
And then we were arrested.
They were in their hazmat suits out in the field to arrest us.
Then we proceeded to get in the police van.
They were in their hazmat suits when we got out to be where we were detained at a provincial sandpit.
And then one of them was still wearing their hazmat suits out of the quarantine zone.
And so we're like- What if you just got the ostrichs to wear masks?
Oh, we'd probably solve this a lot faster.
Katie, how many cops are there?
Like, a estimate.
What would just say, Jeff?
How many are here?
At total, roughly 100.
About 100?
Cops?
Yeah.
100 cops are there?
So we have about 70.
during their day and 30 for night.
So they do night shift, day shift.
So we're doing night shifts and day shifts.
And then we have our task force, remember this,
that is sitting on standby up at the command centers.
That is not including the command centers full of the chiefs and the chief officer
and everybody up there.
Then they have medics and stuff that they have to have that are up there.
And, yeah.
With all that police presence, you guys probably feel really safe, though, right?
Oh, safer than ever.
Thank you for a joke.
Well, going back to the missing child in Crohnest Pass,
I was talking to a first responder yesterday and then this morning.
So please correct me if I'm wrong.
Maybe the child has been found.
But as of this morning when I was texting with them,
the child was still missing.
So I'm like, 100 cops sitting there.
When you point to that, you know, what's, I don't know,
what's more important a child's life or, you know,
Like, you know, like I think we get the point.
But I just, I'm like the excessive force of 100 police officers being there is pretty wild when you got a missing child, you know, hours away.
And the fact that that child is still missing.
I believe that that was six and a child.
And this is questioning a bureaucrat.
You got to have a sense of perspective here, Sean.
Yes, I realize too.
Okay.
With, there was, there was a video I saw with First Nations stepping in.
Could you explain that to us?
Yeah, I wanted to ask about that.
Supreme Court. Yeah. Thank you. So yet we put out their plea for Native,
natives to indigenous to get involved that to help us protect these animals that hold
medicine. They deserve the right to be protected and treated and protected humanely. And we had
the signatory Indian band step up. And so we are working with them for protection and
protecting the ostriches, protecting the land. There are some more stuff coming.
out with that we did serve them with their notice and um that uh up protection there was a kind of a
contract and then we are waiting for one more document today there is another gentleman here that just
arrived as well and he has some interest with their band to assist and help us as well uh supreme court
supreme court we got our intern stay right at the very last minute um basically before they were
really setting up to start to kill the animals we set a big prayer big
beautiful prayer on the bleachers. Just finished that prayer in my phone ring from Omar Sheik.
He's just doing an amazing job. Our lawyer out of Victoria, letting us know that we had our interim
emergency stay granted by the Supreme Court of Canada while they decide if they're going to take
the case on, which they should take the case on being the international interest that this has,
being that this is now has indigenous rights and indigenous interest. This is made in
even more that valuable and why we should have our say in there and time in court.
That would allow us the full trial.
So this would be very important for us.
Our whole court of appeals and decisions have been based off the December 31st call date.
And that has really limited us to what we've been able to put in for evidence.
Our expert witnesses that are top epidemiologists, a virologist, and that these people,
these expert witnesses, everything should be able to be heard. So if we are allowed in Supreme Court,
that will allow us to talk about the full 255 days of health, them being a recovered flock,
if they were sick. Why they're so important to research and humanity? If they actually had one of the
most virulent strains in Canada, baby and influenza, and they're surviving and doing so well,
they actually have more value than anything because we should be researching why are they alive,
how are they alive? How did they heal? What could we learn from them? What could we use their
antibodies to protect humanity? And could this help on a global scale? So that adds a value to us
actually rather than needing to eradicate them. Another really big, beautiful thing actually is we got
the full endorsement of the Darwin Foundation.
So the Darwin Foundation is endorsing us and Sir John, Sir John in Barlow, the fourth, Sir John Barlow the fourth is going to be coming here for a press conference.
And that is just extremely, extremely a big win.
Conservatives, the BC Conservatives have stepped up.
And we are starting to get more momentum in the house and getting a lot of time and question period.
So I'd like to say thank you to John, or sorry, John Restad, Mel Arnold.
Of course, Scott Anderson has just been super important in all of that, Jordan Keely and Emily.
But we, you know, I think there was a video of me crying out in the pen, feeling just at the very end of our rope saying, where's our leaders?
where's our own politicians and why are we relying on international support only?
Have you heard anything from PETA?
Nothing.
No.
Nope.
You know, the only place we've heard from the Animal Justice Center.
Yeah, animal justice.
And so it's been disappointing.
But I think it's kind of opened up a lot of eyes into these organizations or foundations
that why aren't they standing up with one of the largest causes right now in Canada?
and especially with so many animals at risk.
We see, you know, I, yeah, it's, it's been disappointing,
but at the same time, I think the right people have stepped up at the right time.
And we've just been fortunate for that.
So, but yeah, it's been to everybody asks that.
I think everybody's reached out to, um, Ducks Unlimited, Pita to.
Dux Unlimited isn't really, um, talk to a farmer who's tried to work
with Ducks Unlimited in the last 20 years.
And I think you'd probably get a decent idea of why they're not really interested in that.
Kate, sounds good.
Yeah, Ducks Unlimited isn't the organization we remember when we were kids.
Yeah.
Okay.
Any final thoughts?
Any final thoughts, Katie, before we let you out of here,
uh, twos any final questions, I guess.
No, I think, uh, you did a great job of detailing where things are at and what's going on.
One side note, I saw that Rebel brought out a helicopter after the drones were banned,
which I'm not even sure.
I'm not even sure if they can ban people from flying drones over your private property.
But did the, was there any attempt to stop the helicopter from surveilling as well?
No, it was really funny.
So while we're detained, and my mom and I are sitting on two plastic chairs in the sand,
up in the sun, like it's sitting in the sunshine up there.
and we're looking up above and we hear a helicopter and I'm looking and I was like I thought that there was a no go zone yeah no fly zone and so we're looking in this helicopter circling us and circling us and I was like well they must be having a heyday with us it's Canadian food inspection agency and it kept tilting and then when we got home we found out that it was rebel news had a helicopter was circling up there and then the chief in command up there was came running
out of his trailer and he's like, that's not our helicopter. That's not our helicopter.
This big panic. How dare other people use the things we have? Yeah, but we've had those drones
are flying over our personal residents. We know that they're listening. They're following us as we
walk around the property. Drones are following us. Hello, RCMP. You guys are watching
right now? Smarting up, guys. Not in the back one. RCP, if you're
listening.
Yeah.
They just try not to be such giant dicks.
Yeah.
Well,
on behalf of everybody.
This has to be,
the world has just erupted with this display of punishment versus justice.
And I think that we have a really great opportunity here with people coming together,
showing that we don't need to wait for the government to do things,
but that people can protect each other.
And that we've seen that with the display of businesses,
that once these businesses found out what their rentals were being used for,
they actually called the Canadian Food Inspection Agency asking for their rentals back.
Yeah, I saw some stuff about that.
I was going to ask you and then it just slipped my mind.
So thank you for bringing that up.
So thank you to Clearway car and truck rentals.
Thank you to Sunbelt.
Thank you to Holiday Inn.
And for just standing up for the right side of history and just saying,
you know what?
We don't stand for the inhuman killing of almost 400 animals with no testing.
And we're not going to allow our equipment to go and be part of that.
So thank you for standing up.
And just goes to show the.
We can make the changes when we use our companies, when we use our voices to protect one another.
Katie, thanks for hopping on and giving an update there live on, you know, universal ostrich farm.
Thanks again.
We're thinking of your and rooting for you.
Okay.
Thank you very much.
Have a fantastic day.
We'll talk to you later.
I love how Toos adds in a head in the sand joke about ostriches.
I'm like, twos has got to be twos on this show.
We'd have it no other way, I don't think.
Tell me I'm wrong.
We got another guest sitting in the background.
We want to bring Sean in right now.
We might as well as sit in there.
I mean, he's been very patiently waiting.
And thank you for that, Sean.
All right.
Sean Buckley,
welcome to the show.
I've got my poor little camera thinks I'm far away.
You know,
can I comment on Katie because it was actually just a pleasure to hear her.
And, you know, she and those standing with her,
heroes. And you know, you've raised the point. They're basically standing up to bureaucrats.
And the problem that we have is, is out of a thousand farmers that the Canadian food
inspection agency shows up and says, we're going to slaughter your animals or do this or do that.
99 bend. Yep. And, you know, so, so Katie is the exception. And those standing with her are the
exception. I mean, the only other...
The ostrich among chickens.
Yeah, but if everyone stood, I mean, even if you're not able to get the public attention,
but if they knew every time they were coming that the farmer wasn't going to bend and there
were going to be charges and there was going to be yelling and screaming, you know,
back off.
It's the only way to slow this. And, you know, you do get punished.
Everyone who stands up gets punished. I mean, the only other Canadian food inspection agency
case that's similar to this is where farmers in Ontario, the farmer of Peace Corps
kidnapped or sheepnapped a whole bunch of sheep the day before the CHFA was going to come
and slaughter them because the flock, you don't know that story, the sheep napping story.
I'm feeling like we should have had you on with Katie at the same time.
I want to hear about this.
I'll come back and Katie and I have spoken about this.
So years ago, there was a shock, a flock of Heritage Shropshire,
sheep. And, you know, there's a voluntary scrappy program. Scrape is kind of the, the sheep version of
mad cow, except humans don't get scrappy by eating sheep. It's been with us as long as we've had sheep.
So there's voluntary program where you just collect the brainstem of sheep that die, you know,
unexpectedly, although sheep die all the time. And when you have, you know, 10 or so, the Canadian
food inspection agency will show up and
grab them and test them for
scrapy. Well, there was this
rancher in Alberta that was
in this program and lo and
behold, a ram, if I
remember correctly, it was USA 379, was the
Irateg designation, tested
positive for scrapey. So a ram from the
United States tested positive for scrape
well, the whole Canadian food
inspection machine gears up.
Oh, we got to eradicate scrapy
and the way they do it is is they
will basically go to every flock that's come in and gone out from that herd for several years,
and they will genotype them.
Certain genotypes are more susceptible for scrappy,
so they start slaughtering the most susceptible and see if they find scrappy.
Now, they're about a weekend.
They haven't done anything yet.
And then obviously there was a call from Washington saying,
we're not having a sheep from the United States test positive for scrapey.
So like literally you see on all the paperwork they scratched that out and they put in another one which was apparently a U from Montana Jones's ranch in Ontario.
But the problem is it's just so you know like they quarantine all these herds all over Canada.
They don't realize that this U that apparently is the U that tested positive for Scrapey they have quarantined perfectly alive on another ranch.
They never figure that out.
So, but this flock, so Montana Jones's flock,
was rare heritage Shropshire sheep.
And Rare Breeds International said,
if you slaughter this flock, they'll become extinct.
Rare Breeds Canada said,
if you slaughter this flock, they'll become extinct.
And Montana Jones, the rancher said,
well, just quarantine them.
Because everyone knows if you just keep live testing them over a period of time,
that testing is as robust and accurate as the dead testing.
But the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, true to form, would not relent.
So the day before they showed up, a bunch of farmers got together and took them.
And they were on the lamb for almost a year.
Oh, nicely done.
Before they were found and slaughtered and there was no scrapy.
But now they're going to, now they'll be extinct.
So thank you, Canadian Food Inspection Agency on behalf of Canadians that, you know, want to be in a police state.
Well, Sean Buckley, it's always a pleasure.
It's always a pleasure to have you.
Yeah, that was a joke.
Another joke is that I say, thank goodness it wasn't goats because kidnapping is very serious.
Ah.
But it was a tragedy.
And it's like there are bleeding hearts about it.
It's like these ostriches, it makes no sense.
You'd actually think because they survived and have natural immunity that they should be protected.
But that's common sense.
Well, I mean, that's the problem.
You're trying to apply common sense to a bureaucratic government organization.
And you think that it's the first mistake.
It's a common mistake.
Lots of people go in with that assumption that if it's a big giant,
poorly oiled machine that we dump millions of dollars into,
it's going to have some semblance of logic or reason attached to it at some point.
And if you just, if you don't go in with that assumption,
then pieces actually start to line up a little bit more.
Yeah, and hold that thought for when we get to, you know, the health issue that I'm here to talk about.
But I, but this ostrich farm and what Katie's doing is too important, you know,
so just the point I wanted to stress again is, is she and those standing with her are heroes
because they're standing up.
And the problem is we all have to stand up.
It's out of control.
And in almost every bureaucracy, it's out of control where they,
They don't feel they have to be accountable.
And when people stand up to them, they feel that they have to go to the wall just to teach us that resistance is futile.
It's almost like the Borg and Star Trek, you know, resistance is futile.
Well, I have news for you, government of Canada.
Resistance isn't futile.
And we're not going to give up.
Well, let's bring on then the topic of what Sean's here to talk about.
You're going on the world's greatest health show tour, October 4th to 25th.
Walk us through with Sean and, I don't know, bring us up to speed and maybe where you're going to be stopping.
Yeah.
So first of all, so we have a problem in Canada.
And again, it's bureaucratic.
So we've created our drug laws so that everything's a drug.
Oh, literally you're drinking water to treat dehydration.
That's a drug.
Dihydrogen monoxide.
You know, so everything's a drug.
And all drugs are illegal in Canada.
So we're not allowed to use anything for therapeutic purpose unless Health Canada approves it in the form of a license,
which from a legal philosophical perspective is just absolutely outrageous when it comes to things in our food.
So we're holding for three weeks, four days a week, an online health show all day.
But we're having ordinary Canadians explain how for their natural remedies,
Many are only alive because of them.
Many, you know, we've got people totally disabled and they become well.
Like the stories are absolutely compelling.
But it's illegal for people to be told this information because we have 100% censorship of truthful health information in Canada.
We've got all these benefits.
We've got this whole different medical system that gets better results.
And it's illegal for those who know the practical.
and the manufacturers to share them.
So we're sharing it because Health Canada is in the process of removing our natural remedies.
And there's millions of us that are only alive because of them.
There are tens of millions of us that would be disabled without them.
This is like pure life and death.
If I can give you an example on how ridiculous censorship is, you know, years ago I'm in a court case with Health Canada.
And I'm cross-examining a psychiatrist that they brought in as an outside expert.
and this psychiatrist runs a company that gets psychiatric drugs approved by Health Canada.
And he's complaining to me under oath.
You know, it's so hard to get a new antidepressant approved
because I have to give Health Canada two double-blind clinical trials
showing the statistical separation between the sugar pill and the drug that we pretend means the drug works.
And he says, you know, I run eight.
Right out of the gate, I run eight at the same time.
because I've learned I have to run eight double-blind clinical trials to get the two
that show the statistical separation between the sugar pill and the drug that I have to give to
health Canada to get approved.
Now,
he abandoned sticks.
Is that,
is that,
am I understanding that correctly?
What's that?
He does eight tests so that out of the eight tests,
there will be two that show.
Yeah, he runs eight clinical trials.
Now,
the other six,
they could be inconclusive.
Yeah.
They could show the sugar pill works better than the drug.
drug. They could show the drug works better than the sugar pill, but the safety signals are so bad.
They don't want to share them with Health Canada. They could be a combination of those things.
I haven't even gotten to the juicy part yet. Obviously, it's offensive that he doesn't
have to give all six to Health Canada. But what's truly offensive, and most people find
shocking, it's illegal for the chemical drug company to share with you the failed clinical trials.
When people complain to the chemical drug company of deaths and injury, it's illegal. It's illegal,
for the chemical drug company to share the reports of death and injuries with you.
All that a chemical drug company can share.
So if they get that antidepressant approved, they can say it's an antidepressant.
Now, the researchers hired by chemical drug companies are free to publish whatever research they want.
So we have publications in journals so we can access published research literature.
For some reason, unknown to me, the research.
researchers paid by chemical drug companies tend to, tend to publish the successful trials.
It's not the unsuccessful trials. I have no explanation for that. There must be some good
public interest reason for that. I'm being completely facetious. But most people don't understand
that we have 100% censorship other than the approved treatment claim. And this so operates
against natural health products. So the reason we have this censorship is to protect our
government-funded health care system and protect the chemical drug companies.
Because we've set up our drug approval laws so that the only drugs, by and large,
there's always the odd exception, but by and large, the only drugs approved to actually
treat conditions are chemical drugs, which is why if you go to the hospital or your medical
doctor for anything, by and large, you will be offered a chemical drug treatment.
and that's because we've structured our system
so they're the only ones that get approved.
Chemical drugs are awful at treating chronic illness.
In fact, the whole paradigm doesn't work.
We've kind of created this structure,
but I just want to stay on censorship.
So if we knew that you had to run eight double-blind
clinical trials to get the two for approval
and you didn't give the other six to Health Canada,
we'd lose confidence in the system.
if the law was and the law should be that you have to share all health information about any treatment,
if we knew there were those six failed trials, we'd never take the antidepressants.
They'd lose them in a boating accident.
What's that?
They wouldn't release those other six.
They'd lose them in a boating accident.
Yeah.
Well, and most Canadians don't know that drug trials are run on lakes and oceans.
So, I mean, it would make perfect sense for that to happen.
I'm just kidding about that.
But let's talk about how the censorship
acts against the natural products.
So natural products, nobody's worried about safety signals
because there are risks there, but they're so small.
For example, peanut butter poses more of a risk
than all of the natural products on the market.
Because peanut butter causes deaths every year.
You can go decades and decades
and not find any evidence of even a suggested,
death caused by a natural health product because we're talking about ingredients in our food supply
that we consume as foods.
Like why we wouldn't expect deaths, right?
So we're not, so nobody's worried about the safety data, but let me just give you an example.
So I'm in Alberta.
You know, the Alberta government stumped up a whole whack of cash to run a double-blind
clinical trial on a vitamin and mineral supplement for an Alberta company called True Hope.
And that clinical trial is being run by a branch of the faculty of medicine at the University of Calgary called Behavioral Research Unit.
So they're running it out of Children's Hospital in Calgary.
This behavioral research unit for like 25 years up to that point, they were created and all they do is run clinical research like clinical trials.
So this is what they do.
So we have a branch of the faculty medicine that runs clinical trials, running a clinical trial on a vitamin and mineral supplement that you can buy in your health food store.
And Health Canada shuts that down.
But there's still published research from it.
And for that product, there's like 30 peer-reviewed government-funded from governments around the world.
Peer-reviewed government-funded research published in journals, and many of them Blue Chip, like Journal of Psychiatry, Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology, it's illegal for that company to share that with you.
Sean, you're going on tour across Canada to talk about.
these things more get different citizens to talk about their experiences, professionals,
et cetera.
Walk us through this so the audience knows what's coming here in October.
Okay.
So what we're doing is to solve this problem years ago, we drafted a health charter, which is a
piece of legislation.
We need the government to pass, and it'll solve our problem.
So it basically entrenches our health rights and makes federal government actions and
law subject to the health rights the courts say that we have.
Your answer to the question right before I ask it.
Okay.
It basically takes the regulation of natural and traditional remedies and creates a new
ministry with actually a legal duty to protect and promote them.
And it creates a regulatory environment that demands good health outcomes.
So Health Canada is under no legal obligation in the Food and Drug Act to act in the
public interest, let alone get good health outcomes.
and they don't.
I mean, we don't have,
we don't have time for that year.
I don't think Maid would be a good health outcome for anybody, right?
Yeah.
So,
so we drafted this charter.
Well, you know,
people have been,
we started a paper petition.
And for years,
people have been sending in,
you know,
filled in petition forms.
We're now the third largest paper petition in Canadian history.
So for the last 157 years,
this is more Canadians have signed this.
than any other petition except two.
We have over 150,000 signatures.
So we're going to drive that petition across Canada.
We're starting in Victoria on October 4th.
And for three weeks, we're driving to Ottawa.
Two weeks in, we've got a group starting in Charlottetown,
PEI in driving to Ottawa,
and a group starting in Quebec City and driving to Ottawa.
We're meeting on the Hill on October 25th.
Now, along the way, we're having events at night,
and we're going to broadcast those.
but we're also going to broadcast during the day,
four days a week, an online health show.
So we start at 7 a.m. Pacific, 10 a.m. Eastern time.
We're going to start with opening statements that I'll give,
and then we'll be having ordinary Canadians sharing this forbidden knowledge
of how they're changed.
We're going to have health experts.
It's going to blow your mind.
It's absolutely going to blow your mind.
And then when we have the events at night,
those will be live broadcast also.
And the idea is to change the narrative.
To let Canadians know, this is a life and death issue.
There are benefits.
Let's have a reasonable discussion.
Let's regulate these understanding we need to protect the benefits.
If good regulation, you look at the benefits and the risks,
and then you arrive at how do we get the best health outcomes.
And it's time for that.
Like we just, you know, we're listening to Katie talk about Canadian food inspection agency.
I mean, Health Canada is just as bad of a machine.
I don't have time, but I could talk about court,
you know, a court case where the court found as a fact that Health Canada
killed people and acquitted my client saying,
like, thank goodness you didn't listen to them and were defiant.
It's legally necessary for me to acquit you
because it was legally necessary for you to break the law and defy Health Canada.
So we've, it's part of our standing up.
and Health Canada is in the process of bringing in this self-care framework
that's totally going to gut our industry and totally got our access.
And if we want to get out of this chemical drug model,
so go to nhppa.org.
We've got an interactive map there.
It sets out all the cities we're going to be in.
So if you're going to be in any of those cities, please come and please come to Ottawa.
Sorry, real quick, you said nhpp.org.
You've got NHPPA.
Yeah, it's NHPPA.
I'm sorry, I misspoke.
All right.
And that's what everybody knows.
It's just, we call these products natural health products.
So the first part of our name is just natural health product and then protection association.
You're going to be in Lloydminster here in the studio as well, Sean, which will be exciting.
But you're going to be in Lloydminster October 14th at the Legacy Center.
But once again, NHPPA.org, if they want to find any other of the spots you're stopping, correct?
Yeah, absolutely.
So like I say, you will see an.
interactive map. So when you go to the home page right at the top, there's a tab, find out more about the
tour. And if you scroll down there, it shows all of the stops from, you know, all three directions.
And then we'll also have a live page as we get closer. So that'll be in the next couple of days.
You can watch it live off our website. We're going to stream it on Rumble, stream it on X,
stream it on, you know, Facebook. We'll try YouTube. We've kind of pre-run some videos.
and curiously things like the word antibiotics is flagging some of them, right?
That one surprised me.
Like, we're not, this is, you know, but we're in a world of censorship.
It's funny, you know, we had a Twitter space or an X space yesterday.
And a ton of people pre-sign up.
No one could find it.
If you take Comedia away from the leftist, what do they have left?
Okay, well, here's just quick aside.
I know I'm going to piss off half the people watching.
Just full disclosure.
I'm fairly skeptical when it comes to natural medicine.
Do you guys have any resources or are you guys planning on addressing, you know,
just laying things out for people who aren't on board yet?
Oh, so actually, I mean, even just what comes to mind quickly is, you know,
there's three medical doctors that are presenting that all of them have practiced for at least 40 years
and halfway through their practice as medical practitioners they transitioned to integrative
medicine two of them becoming homeopathic doctors and you know and they describe the differences in
results and you know and you're going to have person after person after person let me just share two
examples and then i'll have to go and i'm picking stories that you know are not
the most scary ones. But you know, we had one lady Marion who's working at Health Canada at the time
of the story in Ottawa. She's a PhD immunologist. And she has chronic fatigue syndrome so severely
that it's all she can do to structure her life around work. She can't do anything other than work
at Health Canada. And by way of example, she explains during the interview, she got fed up one day
and just said, I am going to go out for supper with a friend. Now she can't sleep at night. So
she takes the day off work to nap as much as she can.
She's at the restaurant.
During the meal, she passes out and actually face plants into her food, which ended for her any extracurricular activity.
She couldn't drive home from work.
She'd have to nap so she wouldn't pass out in her car.
She's a young woman.
So she's got no social life.
She's getting depressed.
Her immune system's shot because she can't sleep.
She's catching everything.
And she was quite clear.
You know, if I didn't find an answer, I was going to kill myself.
And the Canada's leading specialist on chronic fatigue, she consults and he says, well, we don't have a treatment.
There's nothing we can do for you.
Well, she comes across to St. John's Wart.
Within 24 hours, she's sleeping the night.
Two decades later, she's never looked back.
Now, that's pretty interesting, isn't it?
And how many people like her are suffering?
You know, just another story that I want to share you.
It's not a serious one, but we, you know, a young mother who the doctor diagnosed.
with restless leg syndrome.
So what would happen is, is at the end of the day, the minute she got off her feet,
she describes it's like electric shocks into both legs and the muscles are twitching.
So she can't sleep.
The only way to stop it is by walking.
So she's up all night walking with this restless leg syndrome.
Well, she's tired as can be.
I mean, it's already tough.
But in the best shape of her life, probably.
With two young kids.
You know, she's becoming grouchy or immune systems.
compromise, she's catching everything that comes her way.
She goes to her doctor who says, well, yeah, you got restless leg syndrome, but we actually
don't have a treatment.
But what I can do is, is I can write you a prescription for a drug for Parkinson's disease.
And she looks into that, and it's just scary.
Like no one on this call would dare want to take it unless they were so suffering from
Parkinson's that they thought maybe it might help.
So she doesn't know what to do.
She goes to a naturopathic doctor who's like, well, yeah, you need magnesium by glycinate.
And within, you know, two days it's gone.
And when I shared this story with a whole bunch of other people that I've been interviewing,
and it's kind of like, well, yeah, like it's common knowledge.
Like it can't hurt you.
And if you're having muscle twitching, it's so likely that, that kind of first line of fence,
just try that.
And if it doesn't work, you know, we'll try something else.
It's kind of like dehydrated drink water.
Well, why didn't the medical doctors suggest that?
You know, we've had the three medical doctors that we've interviewed so far.
They said, like, you only get two to three hours of training in nutrition.
Well, here's the problem.
And then I have to run because I have an appointment.
Here's the problem.
And this might be a shock.
And so if people say, oh, this Buckley guy's crazy, I'm just going to stand by this.
And this is shocking.
The human body needs certain nutrients to be healthy.
Oh, who knew?
And Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency,
which has control over our food supply,
has so structured things that you can't be healthy.
You cannot in Canada get the nutrients that you need,
even if you're eating organic,
you must supplement.
You're going to be chronically malnourished.
And we're not getting the nutrients you need
to be healthy.
You're not healthy.
and then that manifests the sickness, and then we treat you the symptoms with a chemical drug
when you're suffering from malnourishment.
How many people just need magnesium?
You know, if you list the symptoms of heart disease and you list the symptoms of magnesium deficiency,
they're identical.
How many people are being treated for heart disease when they have magnesium deficiency
just because we've picked magnesium.
Our system is so broken and so backwards, and there's so much suffering, and there's so much
death and there's so much money being made that it's just outrageous and that's why you need to
follow this tour because we need to break this narrative.
Sean, thanks for hopping on.
If people are wondering where they can find you, nhppa.org and best luck on the road trip,
stay safe and we'll look forward to having Aaron Lloydminster, October 14th.
14th, yeah, looking forward to it.
And thanks guys for having me on your show.
It's because of shows like this that people like Katie can stand up, right?
So, yeah, you guys are doing a great service.
Thank you.
Thanks, Sean.
Okay.
We are now 51 minutes in and twos.
You have no idea how many questions I wanted to ask that.
I know.
I know.
I know.
I know.
I know.
We got lost to get to.
Now, do you want me to play the warning?
I was going to play the warning,
but I didn't even think about it.
Oh, we play the morning?
Should we play the morning?
We're like an hour in.
Just so everybody know.
The following program contains logic.
Critical thinking, economics, intellectual honesty, and historical common sense.
Leftist discretion is advised.
We got to add that in at the start of every show.
Okay, MASHIP 177 has been off the rails since we started in the best possible way.
Regardless, we got a whole bunch of things to get to, and I'm going to try and keep Tuesday task here for the next 40 minutes roughly.
Here we go.
Good luck.
Okay, the Quebec government is banning the use of recently invented gender-neutral words
and official communications in what it says is an attempt to preserve the clarity of the French language.
French language minister Jean-François Roberg quoted,
it's as if everyone has their own grammar, he told reporters, it doesn't make sense.
I just think this is wonderful.
What's not to love about this?
I find it astounding though
that
how far has this country fallen
that the lone voice of reason
is fucking Quebec
shout out to Quebec by the way
I was getting text and I should have brought it
I was planning a whole bunch of things
but I have a Quebec texter
and I'm not talking about Vesper
Vesper if you're watching I'm not talking about you
I'm talking about an actual other person
Quebec and I'm like
who's getting like one
full person. Shut out to you, Quebec, because I know Tews rags on you all the time, but yeah, I got a person texting me from Quebec. I thought that was pretty cool. And Quebec, there you go. Toronto experiencing severe housing downturn, only 118 new condos sell in August. The 118 condos sold marked a downturn of 59% from August 2024 and was 90% below the 10-year average.
90% below.
90% below the average.
So that's pretty stinking low.
We've been talking about this for a few months.
Toronto,
for some reason,
nobody wants to live there anymore.
There could be multiple reasons for that.
Interim parliamentary budget officer.
You want to show the one video,
I assume you do.
If you don't change,
this is done,
says interim parliamentary budget officer Jason Jacques.
Yeah.
So this is a little bit long, almost a minute and a half worth every second.
Stupifying.
Shocking.
Right.
This is not, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a, it's not a public debt charges is 53.6 billion dollars.
And that projection is going to increase to 20, 20, it's 82.
82.4 billion dollars. Is that sustainable?
Every dollar spent on debt is a dollar that is not spent elsewhere.
Again, how alarming is that for the average Canadian for the taxpayer?
Because there is only one taxpayer, right?
It should be very alarming, right?
These are, I don't know, I think I use the words in French,
which the translators probably got really well.
Like, stupefying, shocking, right?
This is not a it's not a it's not a it's not a it's not a it's not a funny fiscal outlook
It's it's a really serious fiscal outlook
It's and we don't lightly use the word unsustainable
Right? I unsustainable means
You don't have the option of saying maybe I'll wait a couple of years. I'll see how things go
It means if you don't change
this is done, right?
So it's very serious.
It's not only serious.
It's, it's, um, very serious.
But he's at a loss of words for how serious it is.
He doesn't know how to explain it.
He's like, he's almost in shock.
Like I just, I, he's talking about how much our debt rate, our debt GDP ratio is increasing.
And he's basically saying that we are borrowing so much.
money that we are spending on stuff that gets us nowhere, which is basically all government
spending, to be clear, that it's unsustainable, that we're done. Basically, we are more or less
screwed if nothing changes. Okay, BP oil, BPC's oil demand growth until 2030. There's a whole
bunch in here. I guess the current trajectory
scenario is based on existing policies
and pledges, okay?
And it's below two degrees scenario
reference to aim of limiting
global warming to less than two degrees Celsius
line with Paris Agreement, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Global oil demand is expected
to hit 103.3.4 million
barrels per day by 2030.
That's the current trajectory
before falling the 83 million by 2050.
And, you know, like,
they're just like going off of if companies,
If the world goes the way of the Paris climate agreement, oil will fall, but they're seeing it rise because, well, I mean...
The world is not going that way.
Right.
Right.
Yeah.
And while that happened, Parliament voted 192 to 140 to endorse cabinet's oil and gas emissions cap.
Right.
It would cost at least $3.4 billion and 3,400 energy jobs according to Environment Canada.
Shut out to.
That's not, yeah, shout out the black locks.
Yeah, so that's not, you know, industry advocates.
This is the government's numbers.
And that's the same thing with that PBO officer.
That's, that's a suit in Ottawa saying,
I have looked at the books and we are fucked.
Okay.
Here's a new poll from Angus Reed,
the number of Canadians listing U.S. tariffs
relationship is their top issue,
plummets to 20% for all demographics.
Shocking, the number one is 80% of the time
cost a living unemployment for young Canadians.
Yeah.
I don't think, you know.
Here's another one.
How would you currently describe the Canadian economy overall?
Everybody is about two to one saying,
poor slash very poor compared to good slash very good,
except for 65 plus, who is 48 and 48.
The only people think it's good are the people not in the economy.
Starbucks will be closing down hundreds of stores and laying off hundreds of employees in Canada in the United States,
according to an announcement on Thursday.
Their layoffs are in addition to a thousand job cuts the retailer made back in February.
Yep.
And what else do we got there, Sean?
restaurants are under pressure as consumers steer away from dining out.
And?
The city of Las Vegas.
Mayor says the city is suffering from a serious drop in Canadian tourism.
Quoted, we need you and we miss you.
Yeah.
And did you see the one?
I put it in a little bit after the fact about the vet.
The vets?
Yes.
The rising costs of veterinary care, nearly half of Canadian pet owners are avoiding taking
their pets to the veterinarian, basically because they can't afford it.
Well, that's exactly it.
The biggest problem young Canadians face is the cost of living slash unemployment.
We've got a situation where the only demographic in this country who thinks the economy
is working is the one that doesn't work themselves because they're retired.
Hundreds of Starbucks closing, restaurants struggling, mayor of Vegas holding press conferences
begging Canadians to please come back.
and people aren't even taking their animals to the vet.
Now this is something that's been obvious in its coming for decades to anyone who understands the fundamentals.
And what are those fundamentals?
Well, I'm glad you asked, Sean.
You can't spend more money than you make every year forever.
Supply and demand is a thing and it applies to currencies.
You can't just magically create something on a thin air and expect it to keep its value.
This is Puponomics 101.
The value of an object.
Decreases when people know that at some previous point in time that object was pulled out of your butthole and when you do that with literally half the money in circulation over a very short period of time Don't be surprised when the entire economy is covered in shit
We're now entering the find out stage well well well if it isn't the consequences of my actions
Someone told me time is a flat circle when we were kids
doing this meant you were saying someone was retarded.
Fast forward a few decades,
and the elbows up people make those little bastard versions of us
running around the monkey bars look like we're complimenting each other
over tea after lawn bowling.
And the whole time, our media pretends as anything other than the obvious answer,
why aren't people going to Vegas anymore?
Elbows up.
Why aren't people going to restaurants?
Well, it must be solidarity with the employees demanding a living wage.
And if they can't find a remotely probable reason, they just default to racism.
That must be why Starbucks is closing hundreds of stores and not because the idea of an $8
coffee has become a memory so wispy and tenuous as to doubt its veracity.
Did I really pay six bucks for an orange mocha frappuccino in 2014?
You know, if I'd have known how bad things are, I probably would have savored it a bit more.
and jokes aside, there are millions of people in this country right now thinking that about a couple
fucking coffee from a decade ago.
Listen, motherfuckers, the reason why no one is taking their dog to the vet anymore is because
they don't want to waste what little money they have left on something that they might
have to eat next winter.
How many disparate articles detailing the unique ways Canadians are broke does there have to be
before we put it together and say that this country is well and true?
truly fucked.
People have been waiting for twos to go full twos.
It seems we've hit a nerve, have we?
Tell me I'm wrong.
You're not wrong.
You're not wrong.
I mean, it's just the table's been set.
And here it is.
Everybody's screaming about how bad it's getting.
And, you know, you can't, everywhere we look, it's like, it's bad.
It's bad. What can't be that bad.
And they point to everything, including racism.
I love how there's just all these different articles,
like just all these different articles talking about,
oh, Canadians aren't doing this anymore.
And Canadians aren't doing this anymore.
And why do you think they aren't doing this?
The same reason for all of them.
Because they're working 80 hours a week and are barely keeping the fucking lights on.
That's why they're not going to fucking restaurants.
Tylenol.
During a White House news conference, Monday, Trump warm pregnant women.
Do not take Tylenol during the.
entire pregnancy, he said the food and drug administration would begin
notifying doctors that the use of a set of monofin can be associated with.
How is that new to you?
Acetaminophen.
Sure.
Anyways, with an increased risk of autism and then, you know, all insanity ensued,
too, including this.
I like this.
Tylenol, we actually don't recommend using 2017.
We actually don't recommend.
using any of our products while pregnant.
Thank you for taking the time to voice your concerns today.
Yeah, from 2017.
And then Canada just goes full retard.
They've got, you know, global news.
Experts say autism has no single case.
Experts have been wrong about everything for at least the past five years.
If you want to talk to somebody who's actually going to get shit right,
you don't talk to an expert.
You literally talk to anybody.
else. Go talk to somebody on the street.
And they have a better chance of being
right than any of the
experts.
Well, and it's not only the CBC.
Here's CNN.
Well, that was global. We're going to get to CBC later.
Sorry, but here's CNN,
right? They have
headlines posted. Here, I'll pull it up
so people can see this. The
latest one, Trump links, autism.
Of course,
the word's got to be in there again. I can't pronounce it.
Acetamine open and yes.
Anyways, used during pregnancy, despite decades of evidence, it's safe.
And then if you go back, you know, through the headlines, 2021, 2017, 2016,
common painkillers should be investigated for possible risks,
developing fetuses experts say studies, links on and on and on.
I'm not going to pronounce a stupid word, so twos can make fun of me.
A Cidaminopin.
Thank you.
Acidamin, all right.
Welcome to the master.
Sean literally screws up every word on this show.
Yes.
No, it's the mashup, Sean.
The say it with me.
From the comments, look, I remember being pregnant in 2018
and my doctor saying they don't recommend Tylenol or any pain medication while pregnant.
You got pregnant?
Flusi.
Yes.
So, anyways, Tylenol thing has been.
Keep taking Tylenol during pregnancy, Health Canada says amid Trump claims.
I it's Tylenol during pregnancy is safe and effective
but you know because we're all in this together
it should be administered through a glory hole
drivers we've been paying attention to all the things going on
on the Canadian roads there's I don't know
there's new videos all over what do you got for this
this week too I didn't even listen with the music on yet
I never heard the music
So it is a semi that is hit a gas station overhang above the pubs.
Yep.
And then here's another one.
So this is somebody upset.
There's a bunch of East Indian people driving around.
We'll show the video.
Show the video.
Let me see the video, would you?
Yeah, we don't need the music.
Come on.
How is this?
So people are.
upset about some tractors pulling some people you know like of all the things that i i think that's a
pretty is i don't know that's pretty healthy isn't that like small town saskatchewan right there
well that's exactly it look i understand who's going to be upset about that i mean if they're going
down the highway and like really causing accidents ever after crashing into gas stations yes yes if they're
lining up a bunch of antique tractors to just do a slow procession down the street i got to
be honest with you folks. Canada needs more of that. Well, and I assume there's some farmers out there
going, where's the John Deere Green or where's the, I'm sure, whatever, whatever color you like, folks.
Oh, yeah, yeah, the John Deer Green couldn't make it because you need an antique, you need some
antique $8,000 part to fix it. You know what? I know I'm going to, I knew I was going to set you off.
When it comes to tractors, people are always touchy about their brand and their thing and their one. I'm just
saying it would have been nice to have seen a couple different ones.
Strike, please, please, tell me, you got a headline for me.
I don't have a headline for me.
So the Canada Pro, Canada Post.
You didn't give me a headline?
Canada Post.
You didn't give me a headline.
It's now on strike.
It's a walkoff.
I don't have a headline.
I've got two lander.
If you're new to the show, we've been following the postal strike for forever, and we've been having
way too much fun with different headlines.
Tuesday didn't even give me a headline.
Okay, the liberal government says Canada Post is losing $10 million a day
and is effectively insolvent and will not provide them another bailout.
And basically, the postal union immediately went on strike again.
Yes.
So they also said with that, well, I told you I had something better than a headline and I had Zoolander.
Okay.
So listen to Cedeem motherfucker.
Not only did they say they're not providing another bailout,
but they are now allowing them to discontinue door-to-door service,
which is interesting because a decade ago,
Trudeau ran on an election platform against Harper saying,
we're going to allow them to do it.
Everybody's wrong in this.
The right thing to do in this situation,
is just to say,
we're a bunch of idiot bureaucrats in Ottawa.
We're not going to make the decisions for you.
You guys make the decisions.
You're not getting any more money.
Govern yourselves accordingly.
They've given them 45 days to come up with a plan
to implement the broad restructuring.
Yeah.
Now, just for some perspective,
in the time it took us to talk about this
and do the walk-off video and hear Sean crying.
Canada Post has lost roughly $34,722.22.
You liked the 222, didn't you?
That was just, I just groked.
I said, if something costs $10,000 a day.
You were happy when it came up with 222 at the end, though, weren't you?
Come on, be honest.
Be honest.
This is like one of the only instances where 222 is a loser or not a winner.
All right.
Guns, okay?
I just had Rod Diltecac on yesterday talking about.
the latest video that went all over the place.
You can show some of that if you like.
I liked this right here.
This is Chris Sims.
The police on Carney's gun grab quoted,
I can think of a time when a legal gun has been used.
I can't think of a time when a legal gun has been used in a crime in this city,
not one.
We know the gun buyback program is going to have essentially zero impact on the crime in Toronto.
That's Clayton Campbell, President Toronto Police Association.
Well, I mean, so the audio is like 20 minutes.
Even if we were to go through the transcript, it would take us some time.
But the key takeaways of this are is that the guy who had to recuse himself from dealing with Sri Lankan terrorists is the minister in charge of rolling out this debacle.
He said that it was political, that it was going to have no practical effect in a recording that he didn't know.
He didn't know he was being recorded.
he encouraged a private citizen to break the law,
said that if he was arrested,
he would bail him out.
And when he talked about the fact that the offered compensation does not line up
with the book value of the firearms or what was paid for them,
he offered to personally pay that guy the difference.
And this guy, as of this recording,
currently still has his idiot fuckstick job.
Oh, and I do want to say, though, there's one little clip.
You see, he's been getting absolutely roasted in, well, in the entire country, but also in Parliament.
And liberals are going to do what liberals do.
So when pressed about these things that I just talked about, here is his very well articulated response.
I do want to caution this member that he is really crediting lightly in the language he's using,
describing a particular group that he's concerned about, Mr. Speaker.
It is borderline racism.
And I do caution him to take.
Now, as far as I know, retards, not in the clinical sense, but in that sense,
are not a protected class underneath the charter.
there's nothing wrong with saying that really stupid people make really bad decisions.
I don't think you can,
I don't think you can be arrested for that just yet, just yet.
No different,
than we said NDP are not a serious party and that became a segment of the show.
I think then how many times have you heard by the way,
oh, this isn't a serious party or Canada isn't a serious party.
I know, I know.
We had some effects.
Oh, it's totally the mashup effect.
I like Libera's going to do what liberal is going to do.
I think that is, yeah, I think we should just start putting headlines under that.
Just throwing that out there.
Okay.
Goofy news, okay?
I don't know if this fits in a goofy news.
Joe Rogan Defends, you're going to criticize, well, whatever, it doesn't matter.
Joe Rogan defends Kimmel and tells conservative supporting censorship.
Oh my God, you're crazy.
Now, did you watch the entire interview that, that that clip was taken from?
No, I did not.
Okay.
So he was talking with that ginger from the bad friend.
episode or from the bad friends podcast.
I can't remember his name.
I just,
I don't know.
Anyway.
Anyways.
He's talking to that dude and they're going through what he said and he's like,
Joe Rogan talks about how he mocked Tucker Carlson for losing his job.
He's like,
and that's a problem.
And then he made fun of Roseanne for getting fired.
And that's a problem.
And what he was talking about specifically
at this,
this bullshit headline isn't going to tell you.
But what, you know, Joe Rogan defends Kimmel, he wasn't defending Kimmel at all.
What he said, the, oh my God, you're crazy is if you think that it's great that this government
apparatus is going after somebody because of what they're saying, you're crazy because at some
point, it's going to be ran by different people and it's going to come after you.
That's not at all defending Jimmy Kimmel.
In fact, what he said, the closest thing he came to defending him was he said, I can
can see how he's trying to set up a bit at one point.
I can see how he's trying to set up a bit should maybe be the quote in this,
because that's the strongest defense he gave of him in that.
But CTV will lie to you.
And unless you go to the source, you will believe it.
And this is, you don't hate the media enough in this country.
another day another stage visit this time to a Mexican rail yard used by Canadian Pacific here I'll pull it up I don't know if Tews wants to show the video
So the video is just CTV or CBC talking about this and so Carney on his big global trip
If you miss the mashup 167.5 this is where we talked about it this was the hard hitting journalism stuff that you come home
was unwilling to touch.
They were scared to touch.
I don't know if Sean was getting death threats or, you know,
maybe his government funding was going to run out,
but he did not want to talk about things like this last week.
And so I had to do a special episode to bring it all up.
And the one that Vesper and I talked about was the fake construction site
that got built for a press conference and then got taken down afterwards.
This one, put it back up, Sean.
Put it back up.
I don't care of you.
You get to fund it as much as you want, but we need to talk about this.
All right. Canada hasn't shipped wheat in sacks for like a hundred years.
When was the last time you went, when was the last time you saw a train driving through Saskatchewan with a bunch of sacks on it?
I would say the last time sacks was the guys that got arrested.
What year was that when they went across the border?
Oh, like 96 or something like that.
Something like that.
But that was their own personal stuff.
Correct. Yes.
Yeah.
The whole point of grain elevators,
for those of you unfamiliar with the agriculture industry,
those big tall buildings in the middle of fields
that are always right next to railroad tracks,
the whole point of them is so that you don't have to use sacks.
But they set those up for a photo op.
And the problem is,
is that when it's a bunch of idiots in Ottawa doing this,
none of them have ever been to a farm.
None of them have ever had a callus.
none of them have ever gotten a wicker that sliced their hand open.
None of them even know what grease is.
The closest thing they know is pomade.
And they're like, oh, well, if we're going to have a good photo op,
we need sacks of grain because that's how it all gets to the grocery stores.
Isn't it?
Farnsworth?
Well, I mean, I'm not an expert, but I do believe you are right, Jansen.
Yes.
Where can we get sacks of grain?
That's great.
Major League Baseball is going to implement automated ball strike challenge system during the entire 2026 season.
They tested it out in spring training this year and obviously they're going to implement it.
Two is your thoughts.
Well, I feel like a good time to do the testing on it would have been the time that they got the first female arm.
I knew you.
I figured that was the nail in the coffin for trying it.
Wasn't it?
I knew exactly you were going to drop.
If they're going to make us, if they're going to make us hire more female umpires that miss more calls than a deer with laryngitis,
we're going to have to, we're going to have to get AI to step in.
You know, on this side, folks, I was saying the twos before we started, 177 weeks in a row.
Now, we haven't been together for all 177, but let's say 150, you know, conservatively.
it's like even though I know where your joke's going
and why you put it in there, it's still funny to me.
And I don't know, that's something.
That makes me feel nice.
Yes, yes.
Okay.
Trump white host hangs image of Biden.
Auto put it on the wall.
Okay, I want to bring this pick.
Where did I put it?
I got it right here.
I got it right here too.
Well, I did it first.
Fine.
Fine.
Fine.
So he's got all the pictures of all the different presidents all the way along.
And a presidential walk of fame.
And then Joe Biden's auto pen and then him for his second term.
I think that's, I don't know.
That's funny.
Here's the thing.
If anybody's upset with it, I would invite them to please point out how that is factually
incorrect.
You may have skipped over one, though.
Tim Hortons is bringing back their vintage cups.
I actually saw one with one yesterday.
They're bringing back the vintage cups.
And I just want to go through the comments on this real quick.
Let's just read the comments.
Will they bring back vintage service and quality too?
They should be bringing back vintage employees.
When do they bring back vintage Canadian workers?
They should bring back while white workers.
I'd rather be dipped in battery acid without hepatitis.
Vintage staff next please.
please bring back vintage employees.
What about vintage coffee and vintage service?
What about bringing back Canadian workers?
How about the vintage hepatitis-free food and cockroach-free coffee?
And we could go on.
There's literally hundreds of these comments.
You know, it feels like there isn't a week where a government official just spends the taxpayers' dollar like they're made of it.
And I guess at times they are.
BC ministers slam for 6600 limousine bill on Boston trip.
The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is calling on BC Finance Minister Brenda Bailey to explain why she billed taxpayers.
$6,645 for a limousine service during a four-day trip to Boston in 2028, 2023, forgive me.
And Bailey and four staffers attended a conference in Boston with a total budgeted cost exceeding $44,000.
including over $600 to J.R. Limo Car Services.
I like the fact that they got comment from the BC correspondent for the Canadian Taxpayer Federation.
This is Western Standard article.
And you can see the quality in the writing because unlike when Global interviews Carson Binda, they actually got his name right.
Unlike Global, they didn't call him Karen Binda.
You realize Bailey is now overseeing the largest deficit in BC history at 11.6 billion, 665 million over budget and is presiding over interest payments costing taxpayers 100 million per week.
Do you see that at the end?
Sean, I get the fact that you're scared to talk about this kind of stuff, but that's why I did the special episode where we talked about the fact that they hired a comedian to help with David.
I'd like to point out, I'd like to point out, I'd like to point out I offered to come on with
he. He said, no, you're not allowed to come on it. Isaac.
I think my exact words were you're not invited. Let's be honest about it, Sean.
If you had actually wanted to talk about the stuff that didn't get covered, you would have.
Oh, interesting. Okay. There's an indie wrestler named Jesus, and he wrestles with out ever
touching his opponents. Show the video, too. Well, I don't know. Do people want to see this video?
Of course you do.
He caught that guy in midair with his mind.
Look at this.
Look at this.
And power slams him.
This is, this is awesome.
This is awesome.
This is, you know what?
The next time someone tries to tell you that wrestling is fake, you show him that video.
Unity Bus will travel across rural Alberta for signatures to keep province in Canada.
A red and white Unity Bus adorned with maple leaves will be hitting the highways of rural Alberta in an effort to collect enough signatures for a petition to keep the
province in Canada.
And that ends on October 28th.
They need to have their signatures in.
There is. Look, just a public service announcement.
Kids, if any of you are watching this,
do not go anywhere near a van that looks like this at all ever,
no matter how much free candy they offer you.
I think following it through rural Alberta could be really fun.
That might be a paper view action.
Okay. You know, Polly Market where you,
you can bet on, you know, do you think this is going to happen?
I wonder what the over under is going to be on how many dicks get spray painted on this.
Oh, I was thinking eggs thrown on it myself, but sure.
I feel like there could be, there could be a couple of choices.
I think the betting would be pretty high on that.
I don't, I don't know.
I mean, we're not pushing vandalism, folks.
We just go, like that thing rolling through rural Alberta.
Seems like a risky move.
And pink.
You're going to roll through rural Alberta with a pink
Ice cream bus of idiocy.
Like, do they have like the ice cream bus speakers and they're just going to play like the communist fucking China, Chinese anthem?
You know, some kind of like a communist death march or something.
I just, you look at this.
What a schmuck.
NASA considers nuking city killer asteroid before it.
collides with the moon. NASA scientists are weighing a drastic plan to launch nuclear bombs at a
city killer asteroid that could smash into the moon in 2032, although like the percentage of
that impact, they've got it almost zero, don't they? Yeah. Now, why are we so worried about the moon?
First off, for anybody who saw the Battlestar Galactica remake, the idea of having the moon
with a giant hole in the side of it sounds pretty fucking awesome to me. All right? For those of you
who don't know, go out and watch it.
Tricia Helfer is gorgeous.
I mean, taking back off no slouch either.
All right.
But here's the thing is that they're worried that this is going to end up for the next several years
pelting the satellites around Earth with tiny little micrometeer.
Debris.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But how cool would it be for there to be a, like how cool would that be to see?
That's the thing of a lifetime.
You look at that.
You're like.
all the cool stuff from Armageddon without any Ben Affleck.
A very mean squirrel.
Seeking food has sent at least two people to the ER.
Residents of San Francisco Bay Area City are on the lookout for an aggressive squirrel.
Now, for those of you listening at home, you might be thinking,
well, of course, they're scared of a squirrel.
They're from San Francisco.
go. And while
that's kind of my sentiment,
we actually managed to track this
down from the archives. This is
what it looks like
when things get squirrelly.
Oh, that acorn.
Ah!
Oh, fuck me.
Little bastard.
He's the back of it.
So, yeah.
I don't know. Why is that so funny?
I mean, the little
bugger is going after it, right?
Well, that's funny.
I mean, it's interesting that he was kind of attacking his head.
I would expect the squirrel to go for the nuts.
To do.
But just, just be careful, folks.
Squirrel on the loose.
Yeah.
Remember when we had moose on the loose?
Canada's mayors' counselors want a fast-tracking of projects that fight climate change.
More than 250 elected officials across Canada have signed onto a campaign calling on the federal government
to prioritize major infrastructure projects that help fight against climate change.
change and they're calling themselves.
Stop you there.
Stop you there.
This is everything.
Everything you need to know about this article is in that first sentence.
250 elected officials across Canada.
How many counselors do you have in the Lloyd Town Council?
I think it's seven plus a mayor is eight.
Seven plus a mayor.
Six and one.
It might be seven.
It's going to have something like four plus one all the way up to maybe, you know,
Calgary, I think it's 12 plus one.
Sure.
So every municipality.
and like that's that's the urban municipalities and the rural municipalities all have that
Alberta is getting ready for the municipal elections right now and you think about all those
signs you see and how every single town has a different set of signs you've got Tim Glass
who I don't know anything about him but I think he might be an idiot because he's running an
air dream for town council I saw a sign that said Tim Glass how do you
run in politics with a name like
Tim Glass and not say anything
about transparency.
There's a woman in Calgary.
I saw a sign
her name was Jennifer Wienes.
And it said say yes to Wienes.
And I'm like,
I think I need to hang that sign
by the bed.
This is,
every single one of these people
is running for one of ballpark
a half dozen,
a half dozen different positions.
I could probably drive for 20 minutes,
a 20 minute radius around where I live,
and I could find 250 elected officials
in this type of role.
So the fact that they did a Canada wide sweep
and they found more than 250 tells me
that they had probably about 198,750
that said no fucking thank you.
And I like the next line.
calling themselves elbows up for climate coalition.
I think that tells you all you need to know.
Ford government to table legislation banning speed cameras in Ontario.
It's the right thing to do and the wrong way to do it.
Explain to, explain.
The smaller government needs to be right.
No matter how stupid the idea, no matter how assinine it was,
this is the same thing I said when Toronto said they wanted to ban handguns.
You guys are idiots and it's not going to make a lick of difference.
You're putting a lot of time and effort into something that's going to accomplish sweet fuck all.
You're dumb for even thinking it's going to work.
And I fully support your efforts to do so for your community.
You wanted to comment on this.
Yes.
So this is a tweet from David Mosscropp, who is a politics writer, author, podcast host,
and for those of you don't know anything about him,
he has his blue sky link in his Twitter appio.
So this is that guy.
And here's him complaining about the fact that he says,
jokes on them,
it's always Monopoly Season in Canada because the country is run by three companies.
The crazy leftist is starting to point out the fact
that the country is ran by a few very small,
are a few very large, a small group of very large cartels.
The leftists in this country, things are so bad in Canada
that the pronoun people are one photo radar ticket away
from getting a bunch of MREs and stockpiling silver.
Patty Haydue.
Show the video.
Do we want to show this video, Sean?
Yes, we do. Yes, we do.
You're damn right.
Liberal's going to do what liberal is going to do, T's.
Mr. Speaker, do you know what the best predictor of future behavior is?
Past behavior, that's right.
And Canadians have watched.
This is her getting a standing ovation from the conservatives saying that.
Not at all understanding why they're cheering.
And then watch Stephen Gayball is in the corner, poke his head around and be like, what's going on?
Let her say it one more time.
Speaker, do you know what the best predictor of future behavior is?
Past behavior.
Yeah.
She doesn't get it.
Sometimes it just writes itself.
Ottawa assembling AI task force as it prepares refreshed strategy.
Yeah.
And so they've got this compelling photo of Evan Solomon, who interestingly enough was a journalist and he was a political commentator.
And he did all of those things for years.
And then once he got out of it because he got fired for facilitating,
basically brokering all his connections to facilitate art deals to people including Mark Carney.
He disappeared for a few years and then came back as a liberal.
What is his seat and is now the minister of AI and bullshit.
And here is him.
What a rousing, perfect picture of him.
look at all the poise.
Look at him.
Just, you know, don't look at it in the dick.
But that's what he's doing.
That's what he's doing.
Now, interestingly enough, that's an article from CTV News,
the same place that he worked at,
the same place that put up that picture.
And OK handsigestioner,
bowl cut added to hate symbols database.
The okay sign that Evan Solomon is making in there
from the same news organization
that's reporting on Amazon,
Evan Solomon is a hate sign.
You can't make this up.
Happy news this week.
Apple TV has indefinitely delayed the release of their new TV show,
The Savant, starring Jessica Chastain.
The series falls an undercover investigator who infiltrates hate groups online
to detect and prevent domestic extremists before they act.
Yeah.
I mean, it's just really interesting the way.
They put all this time, effort, and money into making the difference.
show dropped a trailer which got absolutely eviscerated because you know it doesn't show everything
because it's a trailer but basically the gist of it is is that she goes online into chat forums
and i don't know presumably joins discords and roots out all these far-red extremists
and there seems to be a little bit of blowback it's almost as though the winds of change
are afoot and connecticut to ban first cousin marriages which are still legal
in at least 16 states.
Yeah, yeah.
Go figure.
Connecticut, which is right next to Massachusetts.
Like, it is a little bit more than a stones throw away from Martha's Vineyard, but not much.
And apparently, they are now, you know, because it's 1925, they're banning first cousin marriages.
So, yeah, I mean, that's, I'd see that as kind of happy news.
I don't know.
What about you, Sean?
Who's the hottest cousin you have?
Weird question.
Um, community notes.
Uh, if you got some, send it to us, uh, right now.
Why are you avoiding the question?
There's no, what are you talking about, Tews?
Well, because they're making it illegal to marry your cousin.
Tews, who's, who's your hottest cousin, Tews?
Uh, Chad.
All right.
There you go.
Chad, it is.
Um, okay, wait a second.
We have a bunch of different things to get on to for community notes.
Okay.
October, uh, 18th, I believe.
right, October 18th, forgive me.
Prairie Rising Forum.
They just sent me the speaker list.
Martin Armstrong is coming to Saskatchewan.
And forgive me, I know everybody thought.
Read the whole list.
Martin Armstrong, Tiana, Truth Seeker, Wayne Peters, Bryce Wade, Jamie Sinclair,
Brett Olin, Matt Erritt, Tom Marazzo, Don Luchich, Zach Schmidt, myself.
I'm going to be hosting it.
And Brett Olin gave me this hat.
Streamyard just added this feature, so I don't know how to work.
If you, there, there's a barcode.
I guess that takes a rate to the website.
QR code.
The first good QR code.
Take advantage of it, folks.
So if you go there, that takes your rate to the Prairie Rising website.
They're selling tickets till October 4th.
You can't buy tickets at the door.
So if you want to get into this thing, Martin Armstrong is going to be back in Canada,
which I think is pretty wild.
And then not to mention Tiana and the rest of the room.
He's going to Regina.
He's going to Regina. So if you're interested in that,
Saskatchewan folks.
The barcode's there, Prairie Rising.
Like, that's a hell of a lineup.
Prairie Rising Forum.ca is where you want to go.
So that is coming up here in October.
That'll end up being bigger than we unify.
And then October 25th, Rod Giltaka after a conversation yesterday, he's coming
to Lloyd Minster.
He's going to be Profit Rivers' Customer Appreciation Day on the 25th.
And on October 26th, myself, Rodgill Takah, Chuck Prodnick, maybe a couple others.
I'm trying to work on twos, so twos, here's your open invite.
We're going to go shoot some guns.
So we're working on where that's going to be.
But if you're interested in, you know, being around Rodgill tack,
a Chuck Prodnick and others while we fire off some firearms,
probably at a gun range north of town, I would assume.
But once I have more details on that, that's October 26th.
Go to the trap shooting at Kit Scottie.
Sure.
The Mashbill January 17th.
This is why I did not want twos to announce this way back when,
because then now we're here.
That's why you didn't want me to?
Yeah, because you blew it open.
It's fun.
Uh-huh.
But we haven't,
do we have all the details?
No,
we don't have all the details.
Calmar Carling Club,
January 17th.
We will have more details on 178,
but mark it on your calendar.
If you're interested in coming to play,
a little curling and be around the mashup crew.
So if you don't know where Kalmar is,
it's just past the Edmonton airport.
Correct.
So,
Dick, MacDick,
live November 22nd.
Uh,
once again,
I'm going to try this QR code thing,
you know,
I guess you can go there and it takes a
different QR code.
Different QR code.
It takes you to where you can buy tickets for that.
He's going to be live.
All the funds raised that night going to the Lashburn Playground.
And we got the SMP Christmas party coming December 20th.
If you're interested in the table, shoot me a text.
And then the Cornerstone Forum is official March 28th in Calgary.
More details to follow along with speakers coming out.
So there.
There's a whole list of community events going.
I don't know.
I should check my phone.
and see if anybody sent me anything to.
Is you got any other ones?
The, I mean, I don't have my phone up and ready,
but the Longview counselor.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yes.
I'll pull it up.
Give me a sec here, folks.
Yeah, don't mind us.
Okay, tell you what, well, he's finding that.
Shannon Heinz.
I'm Evan Solomon.
Look at me.
I'm Evan Solomon.
Shannon Heinz is running for school trustee
in Ward 1 of Foothill's school division,
which includes the towns of Longview and Diamond
Valley, Diamond Valley, sorry.
She believes doing the basics of education while and putting as much personal and resources
on the front line.
And election is on October 20th.
So shout out to Shannon Heinz and all the others running in those elections as well.
Kudos to you.
There's some good people out there.
And forgive me if I missed any community events.
Is there any community notes in the comments?
I mean, we had a crazy amount today.
Yeah, there is.
Well, first off, you didn't read the one.
last week where the NDP was having a big event.
But here,
Canadianbredsettlement.ca.
Sean Rue is running for counselor
in MD of Wainwright Division 7.
Drew McKay.
Drew McKay is running as well.
Why are we mentioning all of this?
I know.
Well, I'm bringing it up right now, Tews.
Why do you think I'm, come on.
Oh, is right.
Oh, okay.
Anything else, Tuse, before we let everybody get out of here.
Yeah, here. Let me just present this real quick.
Really important event.
Carla Beck, I'm so excited for this.
emoji, four NDP leaders and the one and only Brian Top coming together to talk about our future.
Don't delay. Get your ticket today at Saskindip.ca.com.
C.A. slash reception dash Beck.
Saskatchewan New Democrats.
A conversation with premiers in waiting.
Now, I don't know who that's going to be.
because the only people on there are NDP,
but it's going to have
Claudia Chender, who's Nova Scotia,
Nahed Nenshi, the leader of the Alberta NDP,
Carla Beck, Saskatchewan NDP,
and Merritt Stiles, the Ontario NDP,
hosted by NDP strategist Brian Top.
Now, I don't know if they've got some other premierses
and, like, they've got some actual premiers in waiting
that you're going to be going, but if they do,
it could be a good event.
It's interesting that...
Mashup live on,
location at
premieres
and waiting?
Yeah,
October 4th,
2025,
get you tickets now.
I think you've got
better things to be doing.
And they,
did you see what they booked for it?
They booked TCU place.
I think that's a little bit optimistic.
Well,
maybe it is,
maybe it doesn't.
Who knows?
Well,
the thing about it is,
is you can't just move chairs
around.
You can't,
you can't hide the fact
that there's going to be
more empty space,
in the seats than in the teeth and that's saying a lot thanks for hopping on with us mashup 177
we're here every Friday morning 10 a.m. Mountain standard time twos is always Solomon if you're watching
have a great day yes too's as always great seeing you folks thanks for hopping on and join us if you
enjoy the show please share it with a friend or retweet it on x or all the lovely things we're back on
YouTube today, Toos,
I'm IT YouTube. Hey, I guess we're back
there for a couple days anyways, folks.
Nice. We'll get you off. Thanks for
hopping on. Tews, as always. We'll catch you next week.
All right, thanks guys.
Welcome to the Masha.
Tell me whether I'm wrong or right.
Easter west up or downside. I sit to stand
and fall to fly. Of all of my
impulsive plans, pop and locking salsa dances
on demand. I follow leading off the map
to stop the chatter, scream happily.
Welcome to the Masha. Welcome to the Masha.
Welcome to the matchup.
Welcome to the matchup.
Welcome to the nation.
