The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 369. Truckers on the Frontlines of Freedom | Tamara Lich and Tammy Peterson
Episode Date: June 23, 2023Dr. Jordan B. Peterson, Tammy Peterson, and Tamara Lich break down the events leading up to, during, and after the internationally recognized Canadian Freedom Convoy, which sought to publicize and end... ridiculous COVID mandates as they heavily affected the multi-national trucking industry. Lich was a key organizer and has suffered for her role, spending a total of 48 days in jail over “mischief,” while being labeled a terrorist and being legally barred from using social media. Tamara Lich is a Canadian activist with a background organizing the 2018-2019 Yellow Vest protests in Alberta. She was also an early founder of the secession movement in western Canada known as WEXIT. Lich also had a prior career in the logistics field regarding Canadian energy and first became vocal about the unrivaled efficiency of her country’s fossil fuel industry, despite the mainstream media claiming otherwise. Dr. Jordan B. Peterson, Tammy Peterson, and Tamara Lich break down the events leading up to, during, and after the internationally recognized Canadian Freedom Convoy, which sought to publicize and end ridiculous COVID mandates as they heavily affected the multi-national trucking industry. Lich was a key organizer and has suffered for her role, spending a total of 48 days in jail over “mischief,” while being labeled a terrorist and being legally barred from using social media. Tamara Lich is a Canadian activist with a background organizing the 2018-2019 Yellow Vest protests in Alberta. She was also an early founder of the secession movement in western Canada known as WEXIT. Lich also had a prior career in the logistics field regarding Canadian energy and first became vocal about the unrivaled efficiency of her country’s fossil fuel industry, despite the mainstream media claiming otherwise. Dr. Peterson's extensive catalog is available now on DailyWire+: https://bit.ly/3KrWbS8 Ep.369 - Sponsors - Elysium: Get $50 off an Index test! Use code 'JBP50' at https://www.elysiumhealth.com/Index My Patriot Supply: MAJOR savings on your 4-week Emergency Food Kithttp://www.preparewithPeterson.com/ - Links - For Tamara Lich: “Hold The Line” (Book) www.theconvoybook.comOn Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Hold-Line-story-Freedom-Convoy/dp/1990583032/ref=sr_1_1?gclid=CjwKCAjwv8qkBhAnEiwAkY-ahuHKvQ2hmgh-MXOrv8GnPDsZb-Gf8n9CPWmgfNPdpRXefuTa7fA2IRoCnYgQAvD_BwE&hvadid=656260501629&hvdev=c&hvlocphy=9013184&hvnetw=g&hvqmt=e&hvrand=3321406421213699161&hvtargid=kwd-1958103710340&hydadcr=22565_13493330&keywords=hold+the+line+tamara+lich&qid=1687367278&sr=8-1 The Democracy Fund www.thedemocracyfund.ca For Tammy Peterson: Podcast https://www.youtube.com/@Tammy-Peterson
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone watching and listening. I am co-hosting this podcast today with my wife,
Tammy Peterson. We had Tamara Leach, our guest over for dinner last night. That went
very well. We thought it would be useful to talk to, to have both of us talk to her today.
Tamara Leach explains her roles in the yellow vest like relays that occurred in Canada,
the trucker Cornvoy.
Her role in Wexet, a Western Canadian independence party.
And as I said, recently, her leadership in the internationally recognized trucker freedom
convoy. We discuss the current state of Canada, the current dismal state under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
The tyranny he unleashed during the COVID pandemic, why so many patriotic Canadians are fed up
and the unprecedented punishment that's been unleashed upon those who like tomorrow
were daring enough to criticize their own leaders. Yeah. Oh Canada, indeed, looking
forward to talking to her. Tomorrow, maybe we'll start. Maybe you can let people know a little
bit about you. You said last night that you're from Saskatchewan. She probably explained
what the hell Saskatchewan is to everybody listening to begin with. And then you moved
to Alberta.
Why don't you just walk through where you came from?
You worked for the oil in the oil gas field too, which is, or an oil gas industry, which
is relevant.
So, you want to fill people in?
Yes.
I was born and raised in Saskatchewan, and I lived in Saskatchewan until about 1998.
And then we moved to medicine hat because of the Alberta advantage at that time.
We had really low energy prices there and a lot of people, a lot of Saskatchewan people
ended up in Alberta.
And predominantly, I worked in the energy sector there in logistics and organization and
administration, which is basically how I got involved in this because that was my skill
set.
So, I offered my services.
So what exactly were you doing?
You worked in logistics and administration.
So what were you doing in the oil patch?
And you said also you were mostly working with men.
What skill set did you develop?
I discovered I was really good at organizing.
I looked after frat crews.
I organized the frat crews and our frat fracturing jobs.
And so I was responsible for finding the equipment,
organizing the chemicals, the sand,
I dealt with the salespeople and Calgary,
and of course, our managers and stuff.
So, and I discovered that I was really good
at putting all these pieces together
in very tight, tight, hard lines the planet. Yes, that's right.
And really, really tight deadlines and such.
So, and I reveled in it and I was really good at it.
So, I was growing up and not really knowing
what my place was, of course,
trying to find your spot in the world.
And when I started doing that,
I just found it so fulfilling and I really loved it. What have you like about it? The challenge. Yeah, it was a challenge.
At that time, you know, we didn't always have, we were just a small base in medicine
hat. So we had to always find equipment from our larger bases in red, during grand prairie
and stuff like that. So it was just fun. It was like putting the pieces of a puzzle together,
but it had to be done.
And then of course dealing with a lot of, well, even at that time, where you're talking
the late 90s and the early 2000s, there was still a lot of consultants in the oil patch
that didn't like dealing with women.
And so that was also quite fun.
But yeah, it was something I discovered.
I was really good at and I enjoyed it.
And yeah. When did you start taking I was really good at and I enjoyed it. And, yeah.
When did you start taking an interest in political matters and why?
That actually started with my former husband.
So, when I met this, that him, he always had his nose in a newspaper.
And at that time, I mean, I was in my early 20s, I wasn't really interested in politics for sure.
And then I started reading the newspaper.
The National Post was the one that we subscribed to.
And I started really loosely following reporters like Don Martin, a Christy Blatchford, of course,
Rex Murphy.
And I just started really paying attention to what was going on.
And it was when the sponsorship scandal hit
that I thought, what is going on here?
Like, there was no accountability.
They were just spending taxpayers' money.
And then I started checking into question period.
And that baffled me also because I thought,
these people are just, it's theatrics.
It's like watching a soap opera.
And for me, I would rather turn on question period
and see two sides of the house sitting at a table,
working together to try and fix our problems
than just the soap opera theatrics that I was witnessing.
And so that's kind of what led into my interest in politics.
And that was when?
That would have been in the late 90s, early 2000s.
Yeah.
So it's about 20 years ago.
Yeah.
So I really just kind of started following it around then.
And I just couldn't understand why none of these politicians were being held accountable
for their actions.
And I mean, that was already 20 years ago and it's gotten much, much worse.
Back when they were accountable.
Yeah.
That's right, when they were supposed to be.
I mean, I remember, you know, somebody losing their job over a $12 loss of orange juice.
And now we have a prime minister that can just do whatever he wants.
And there's no account.
There used to be some integrity.
A little bit of integrity.
Well, he's figured out this interesting trick where if you have one scandal, the way
you deal with it is just to produce another and overlay it on top of the previous scandal. He seems to be able to confuse people constantly with a never-ending string of
increasingly dire scandals. I don't understand it, that's for sure, but here we are.
Now, when we were talking last night, you said, too, that you also started to detect,
and I don't know when this was, a certain amount of desperation on the political front
in the oil patch because of increasingly
draconian federal policies.
So in Canada, for those of you who are watching and listening,
the provinces in the west of Canada are pretty heavily
resource-based, and Canada's a resource-based economy
still in many ways.
And our federal government seems to have adopted
a globalist agenda.
I think that's fair to say and believe that human beings, especially those in Western Canada,
are doing nothing but raping poor mother earth constantly.
And so they produce legislation in a never-ending string to do nothing but devastate the economies of the West.
And of course, well, they're saving the planet.
And Tamara started to see some of that or not saving the planet, which is really the truth.
And Tamara started to see the manifestations of that
directly in the people that you were working with.
So you wanna explain that a little bit?
Yes, I did.
So they brought in the legislation,
and I wanna say it was around 2018-19.
They passed the bills, C69 and C48.
So Bill C69 is benign named the No More Pipelines Bill
and basically what they've done is they've made it
virtually impossible and definitely not feasible
for anyone to lay a pipeline
with all their environmental, this and that.
And of course, then they added the gender thing.
It had to fit into whatever it was nonsense.
And of course Bill C48, which was the no more tank,
well basically it was a ban on Alberta oil tankers
leaving the BC coast.
Right.
All the other tankers, fairies, cruise ships are okay,
just not if it's carrying any oil from Alberta.
And what that did was, it heard a lot of families, people that I knew and that
I cared about were losing their jobs and couldn't find jobs. And the situation I specifically
referred to last night, because I'll never forget it, was a grown man. And this happened frequently,
but he's the one that broke down. But you know, a grown man coming into my office two weeks
before Christmas, because he just lost his job
and begging me for a job with tears in his eyes.
You know, please take my resume.
And it was heartbreaking and devastating.
And for what?
I mean, I worked in that industry.
I understand the process.
I mean, Canadian energy is the most environmentally friendly and efficient way
to extract our resources than anywhere on the planet.
And we should be screaming that from the rooftops.
But again, we're made to feel ashamed
and like our oil is dirty and I was dumbfounded.
Yeah, well, the question is dirty compared to what?
Dirty compared to Middle Eastern tyrant oil,
or dirty compared to Russian oil, for example, and oil and gas. And the same thing applies on
the pipeline front and the tanker front, too. So Alberta still mues its oil and gas around oil in
particular. It does that on rail cars, which is a very inefficient way of doing. It's also very
dangerous because
it passes through cities. And we've had the odd catastrophe in Canada as a consequence
of that. And so, yeah, and what the Trudeau government has done has made pipeline development
so prohibitively expensive that no corporation in its right mind would take a risk on it.
And I don't know how long that'll propagate out into the future because the corporations
have learned that the Canadian government is an unreliable partner. And these are long-term projects. And so that's a catastrophe.
And this is a big deal for the rest of the world. You know, the German Chancellor came to Canada
last year and sort of the Japanese Prime Minister basically cap and hand and the German Chancellor
was a socialist by the way, which is sort of relevant in this context. Desperate enough, none the
last to go come and talk to his socialist buddy Trudeau and ask,
and really ask, and really beg in some ways for Canada
to open up its vast natural gas resources
to the European Union and aid our great allies,
you know, and our partners in freedom, let's say,
and Trudeau said, I can't make a business case for that,
which basically meant that we've
produced legislation in Canada that's crippled our industry so badly that no one could possibly
make a business case for anything because of the red tape and idiocy that was put in their
purposefully, although also ineptly, just so the feds could virtue signal about destroying
the economy to save the planet.
And then the Japanese Prime Minister showed up a couple of months later and asked for the same thing
and got exactly the same response.
And so instead of Canada benefiting from the billions of dollars
that the Europeans and the Japanese could spend,
while we were supporting our allies,
Japan, who's threatened by China,
and obviously the European Union who's threatened by Russia,
we left them to the tender mercies of our apparent enemies
because Canada is opposed to what Russia is doing in Ukraine,
for example.
And we forfeited that immense economic benefit
that Canadians could have accrued.
It could hardly be stupider.
And so you were seeing this play out in real time in Alberta.
Yes, I was.
And at that time, I started joining.
I found a local group in town that was doing rallies every weekend.
And so I joined that group.
And I started going to these rallies.
And we would basically stand outside of a Tim Hortons and hold signs and wave at people
as they drove by.
And then I became an organizer for those two.
So I set up their social media, which would later come into play in a bigger context,
and organizing these rallies. And we did that for quite a while, but nothing was changing.
What was the group?
Well, we actually started off mimicking the Yellow Vest movement in France,
which was really my first experience dealing with the mainstream media calling us a bunch
of racists and white supremacists and this and that.
And the white supremacy, that's a big thing in Alberta.
I mean, I know I lived there and there were just white supremacists every year.
I know, it's terrible.
It's absolutely terrible.
Ingle balls in their windows.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, I almost read some read their white supremacists.
And so I became active in that way.
And through that process, I met Peter Downing,
who at that point was starting the Wexit movement,
which was a play on the whole Brexit UK movement.
And then in 2019, when Trito won that election,
I contacted Peter and I said, I'm yours,
I will organize events or whatever you need
in Sotheastern Alberta.
And that was Peter Downing, was his name.
He had started, he had actually started
a big billboard campaign in Edmonton,
is about these bills that they were passing.
Well, because Alberta is largely,
you know, an energy resource dependent province.
And so when you start crippling that,
I mean, you're not just talking about the guys
that are drilling wells,
you're talking about all the service industries
or the communities that depend on all those toxic,
masculine males coming into their city area
and to their communities to spend their money, you know?
Well, I kind of tripped people down. I mean, you know? Well, I don't know how to trick the down effect.
People need to know this too.
So Alberta is a landlocked province, so it's hard for Alberta to get its resources out into
the world unless the rest of Canada cooperates.
And on the west, Alberta is bordered by British Columbia.
And the British Columbians often like to style themselves environmental socialists, and so
they like to block Alberta oil.
And that's a big problem.
And then, but also rather perversely, because of the way Canada is set up, the provinces to equalize
economic opportunities across Canada, hypothetically, we have this system called equalization payment,
and that means the richer areas of the country send, essentially send excess tax money to poorer areas.
And so as a consequence, Alberta, which has a very small population, about two million
people, has heavily subsidized Quebec for decades, billions and billions of dollars.
And the Quebec government in particular, although many of the Quebec were themselves, also
style themselves, saviors of the planet, and are opposed to Albert energy and its development
despite the fact that their economy is dependent in no small part on these transfer payments.
So they get to have all the money and also the moral virtue, which is a hell of a deal.
All the coastline heading over to Europe.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Well, that's right.
So they're rich in that way.
Yeah, coastline.
Yeah.
Well, they also Quebec also has no shortage of natural gas itself,
although they put a moratorium on its development.
There's enough natural gas in Quebec to,
to service Quebec, which, by the way,
imports natural gas from the United States
to service Quebec for 200 years in the European Union
for 50 years, and the Quebec government
has put a moratorium on its development
for reasons completely unknown and crippled the people who bought land in Quebec with the
intent purpose of developing the natural gas resources there.
When the government told them that that's what they wanted to do, and so, and that's
a story that hasn't broken in the Canadian legacy media because the people who had their
property essentially confiscated, this is like one of the biggest scandals I've ever heard
of in Canadian history, and no one knows about it.
Had their property confiscated,
can't even get the legacy media interested
enough to do a story on it.
It's just beyond comprehension.
So we have a very adult country at the moment.
All right, so you started getting involved politically
with WExit, for example, and working on the idea
that Alberta and the West at least had to put pressure on Central Canada, letting them
know that we're dead serious about not having the federal government for the second time demolish
Alberta's economy because for all of you who are watching listening, when Justin Trudeau's
father was Prime Minister back in the 1980s. He rammed through a policy
called the National Energy Policy, which devastated the Albert economy for about 15 years.
Broke our banks. Yeah, broke our banks. My parents lost their pension funds and the whole
teachers union lost their pension funds. I think 13 Canadian banks went bankrupt at that time,
which was the first time in Canadian history that anything like that happened.
Anybody who'd saved money, they lost it. Yeah.
So the West has been screwed by Trudeau's before, and now we're living through that again.
And so there is agitation in the West to put pressure on the central government, and
some of that pressure involves the threat of potential secession, although I think that's
very unlikely.
I know that Daniel Smith in Alberta and Scott Moen Saskatchewan and the Premier of Manitoba
have now put together a consortium to try to develop a port in James Bay, which is pretty
damn awkward because you have to go through the Arctic ice in a desperate bid to try to get
Western resources out to the rest of the world.
So we're basically at economic war
in our own damn country. You know, while we fiddle around not saving the planet instead
of cooperating together to make everybody in Canada as rich as Norwegians, which is
exactly what we should be aiming at and could have done decades ago if we weren't so damn
stupid. So stupid blind, what would you say? Moral, moral, falsely moral, virtue signaling, right?
Yeah, pretty damn pathetic. So all right. So you were working with Wexet and that was in 2000.
That was after the 2019 election. And so I joined the Board of Directors for two. We had
a Wexet Alberta. So what happened was there was a Wexet BC, Wexet, Alberta, Wexet, Saskatchewan, and Wexet,
Manitoba, and those were the provincial arms, and then Wexet, Canada, which we turned
into the Maverick Party, which was a federal Western Independence Party, so that we could start fighting for more rights, right?
And for more control over the West.
Yeah, more to be just left to hell alone.
Yes.
In Canada, people need to know this, too.
Resource development is a provincial matter, not a federal matter.
The federal government actually has no constitutional right to be interfering in this regard whatsoever. And so it's a real encroachment on, because Canada was set up as a true
subsidiary organization with each level of government having its requisite responsibility and
responsibility to federal governments. Government was actually quite limited and it didn't extend to resource development.
And so there is no excuse for the feds to continually encroach on resource
development territory. There's another aspect of Canada that people might find interesting in
so far as Canada is the least bit interesting. And that is that the West in Canada was only settled
about 120 years ago. And it's always suffered from, I suppose, what would you say, a quasi-colonial relationship with the powers that be in Eastern Canada, and there are no
shortage of Eastern Canadians who still think of the country that way that everybody in
the West is a bunch red necks, which is probably true, but red necks have their advantages,
and that they should really be told how to live properly by those who know better.
And it's certainly the case that there's a codery of Eastern Canadians, and there has
been for a long time, who truly do believe, the bloody WEF that they know how to live better and are perfectly
willing to impose that viewpoint on the rest of the country and the world. So you're part of
the battle against that and that's going on fairly intently in Western Canada for a long period of
time. It's thrown up all sorts of rebellious political parties over
the last 100-year period, some successful and some not.
All right, so you cut your teeth on the political front with the waxy movement.
What do you learn from that?
I learned a ton of that from that.
I learned, of course, being on that board, what we created a federal party from nothing. So I learned about creating the EDAs
and the importance of having committees and delegating and being organized. I mean, that
was a massive, massive, yeah, electoral districts. Yeah, writing, basically setting up candidates
and writings and stuff like that. And I met a lot of really good people. I mean, there's
so many great people in Western Canada
that are very concerned about what's happening to them.
So that was a massive experience for me.
And I got to work with Jay Hill
who was a whip for the conservative party four times.
And he was our leader.
And I learned a lot from both him and his wife also.
I mean, we just had such an amazing team.
And again, that would come in handy later.
Right. So you're expanding your logistics ability.
Yes.
Doing this.
And so it's interesting.
You know, you did what people should do in their life as far as I'm concerned,
which is you established a local base of competence.
So while partly within your family and then within the industry you were working at,
you learned how to organize.
And then you notice that maybe you had a political responsibility, which everyone does because
otherwise the tyrants have it and that's bloody well worth knowing.
And so you decided to step forward into the political realm and started, well, you learned
by doing.
And you started working, you know, it's a, it's, you're tilting it, windmills fundamentally
if you're trying to produce a Western separatist party
because the probability that's gonna fly is pretty low,
which doesn't mean it isn't necessary.
But you learn a lot as you go along,
be in a fool and stumbling forward.
And so you're doing that
and expanding your logistics capability as well.
Yes, and a different realm.
And that was one of the first speeches.
I was asked to give a speech at one of the first rallies that I attended back when we
were doing the Yellow Vest rallies.
And I didn't really know what I was going to speak about.
I'm not an orator.
I'm not a public speaker.
But what struck me the most was I thought, like, I'm sorry.
And that's what I wrote about.
I'm sorry.
I thought somebody else was going to come and fix the problem.
So I didn't worry about it.
I thought of politician, a businessman, somebody with some level of, you know, clout would
step up and solve the problem and say something and it wasn't happening and it wasn't happening.
So the first speech that I gave was like that and I ended it was like, I am somebody
else and you are somebody else and you are somebody else
You know, we can't sit around here and wait for me to it's up to all of us
Exactly you're doing your part and we're listening to your story
People got to listen. Yes. No, they have it in them. Yeah
Well, what if you learned on that front? I mean, you were very skeptical about any sort of political organization because you
hated young people.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, but I gave up young.
I thought, oh, you know, I can, I don't need to be a part of this.
Something happened when I was young, like a political sword when I was like 17, local
politics made me jaded and I thought
Okay, why don't you tell that story a little bit? Oh, I was a I was the supervisor for swimming pool in our little town in Northern Alberta
and
It had been built in 67 because they built pools all over Canada in
67 and because they built pools all over Canada in 67.
And it was a bit deep.
So when the kids came from school, they were six,
they weren't quite tall enough to be in that water.
And I'd roped it off so there were three sections,
but when the kids got in, I could see
even though there were teachers in the water,
I'd see I'd say that one's underwater,
pull that one out, that one's underwater, pull that one out, that one's underwater,
pull that one out.
So after it was over, I said to the board,
the town board, I'm gonna ask for a parent
to come in for every 10 kids from now on
because it's not safe.
And I can't, well, we don't wanna do this.
So the next day, the school showed up and they had no extra people, so I didn't, well, we don't want to do this. So the next day, the school showed up
and they had no extra people, so I didn't let them in.
So then the town council called me
and they told me that I had made a mistake
and I said, well, you know, I think that a mistake might have made
and but the mistake that was gonna be made
was there was gonna be a death of a little kid
and I could do that. And they said, I said, you can write me a letter and tell me how you want
me to run this place. I'll run it the way you want it. But I want you to sign that letter.
And they said, if we do that, you'd let a kid die despite us. Yeah, they said, that was 17.
And I was like, you know, and I could have said,
I could have taken their bluff,
but I was a 17 year old girl.
I didn't have that kind of whittspa.
So I quit the job.
You probably had the hootspa,
you didn't have the knowledge, strategic knowledge.
I had the hootspa, I didn't have the knowledge.
So I quit the job.
And then there was a local paper controversy
between the mayor and their story and my story.
And then I left in the local college.
Hired me to pick weeds, and that was good at the local college.
And what Tim learned, I learned that in part of it.
You know, she saw a certain degree of
narcissism and corruption at the local level and then concluded that that was the case at all levels
of the political which is true. Yeah, but still not an excuse not to do your part. And I learned that
over the years. And so when did you learn that? Not that long ago. Yeah, yeah, not that long ago. Yeah, yeah, not that long ago. But I know it now.
And that's all you can do is know it now and move forward.
Yeah, well, one of the rules that I've been
formulating as we tour is that any political responsibility
you abdicate will be taken up by tyrants and used against you.
Yeah.
And everyone has a political responsibility, right?
So, so well, you well, you obviously learned that.
All right, so now you're working with the WEx at party
and you're expanding your logistical knowledge.
What happens next?
COVID, right away.
Yeah.
So during my time in Alberta, about 2013,
I took a personal training course
and I started working in fitness
and then I actually started teaching and certifying personal trainers
and teaching CPR and nutrition.
And so that was one of the very first things when this all started.
I was like, what is going on here?
Because they started closing all the gyms.
And I'm not a doctor or a scientist,
but I know that if you're healthy and you're exercising,
your immune system is going to be stronger.
And then right away it came out that one of the comorbidities that was causing, you know,
the terrible reaction to the COVID virus was obesity.
I think the people who died had a mean, the mean number of comorbidities was four.
Yeah.
Right.
And in Alberta, the average age of death due to COVID, they said, was 84. But in Alberta,
the average age of death from anything, old age is 82. So then I couldn't understand why they
were locking the sol in her homes and telling me that my family wasn't allowed in my home.
That did not work for me. That did not work for me. So my husband and I ended up after we both lost our jobs
on the same day. We decided to drive out to Manitoba to visit my daughters.
Okay, why do you lose your jobs? We relate off. We relate off because we'd been sent home already.
Well, I'd been sent home for two weeks because of COVID and then of course there was the economic
impact that came down with that. And we were a satellite base basically in medicine hat. So we ran two crews out of there as opposed
to red deer where they had five or six crews or whatever. So they ended up shutting down our base
and laying everybody off, save a couple of gentlemen that were transferred. And we decided to drive
out to Manitoba to visit one of my daughters who was out there on the farm, because our choices were we can sit here in our house and do nothing
and watch the cars go by or we can go be productive and have a life and you know,
be outside and doing stuff. So and then when we arrived there I found out that I was going to be a
grandmother again. So we drove back to the minuteAT, packed up a bunch of stuff, and we spent 19 months during the
pandemic out in Manitoba.
And I ended up getting a job there with the local municipality, which was good.
That summer I got a job there.
And that's why I called it the pandemic of the carons, because I had, especially at Christmas, this one lady called me just freaking out and angry
because there's four cars parked across the street
at the Airbnb.
I think it's an illegal gathering.
Oh, yeah.
She has the same voice I do for carons.
Yeah.
And I said, there are four cars across the street.
Yeah, and I think you're having an illegal gathering.
And we should really do something about that
because there are children at risk.
That's right.
Yeah.
Pat, pat, pat.
I know.
And just thinking that she was, I don't know what she was thinking.
Anyways.
She, here's, here's what she was thinking.
I saw people in Toronto think this way a lot.
So I figured that 70% of Torontonians would wear a bloody mask for the rest of their life,
you know, without complaining.
And half of them would enjoy it.
And the reason for that is because it gave them an opportunity to tattle on their neighbors to inform, right? And you know, in East Germany, one-third of the people
there under the Soviets were Soviet direct Soviet informers, right? So if you had a family of six,
two people were re-informing on you to the government. You think, well, that could never happen
here. It's like, yeah, it could. And you'd be one of the people that would be doing it.
And you'd be happy about it.
And you'd pat yourself on the back for doing such a moral job.
It's like that proclivity for tyranny
and the delight in informing, you know, that's, you know,
and yeah, it's awful.
It was sad.
And I'm just thinking, I did my job.
I took all our information.
I passed it onto my CAO and I thought, it's Christmas.
Like this family probably hasn't even got to see each other
in the last year.
You don't have to go over there.
You don't have to go on their property.
You can just stay in your home and shut your mouth. And your windows and your curtains are quitt piring out like I just don't understand
that mentality. I didn't understand it. And they weaponize people doing the right thing.
They weaponize duty. And yeah, they used fear to weaponize duty. Yeah, yes.
Yeah, well, that's typical tyrant,
that's a typical tyrant approach.
Yeah, no.
They take that.
Fear, compulsion, power, you have to do this.
Why do you have to do it?
Well, it's an emergency.
Who says it's an emergency?
We say it's an emergency.
We know what to do about it.
Give up all your autonomy, grant us all the power.
It's like, oh, I see, that's why there's an emergency.
So you can have all the power. It's not an emergency at all. That's right. And if it is,
it's like, well, was it an emergency? There's always a bloody emergency of one form or another,
because life is just an endless catastrophe of emergencies. And if you remember at the beginning
of the pandemic, Justin Trito already wanted to invoke the Emergencies Act, so that he
could just spend, spend, spend, spend, spend, spend and do whatever he wanted and not be accountable.
I remember he wanted a free reign until the end of 2021.
Well, he basically suspended parliament anyway.
Yes, he's enrolled by Fiat the whole time.
Parliament in Canada has just become, it's like a side show.
That's not where the government actually operates.
It operates out of the Prime Minister's office.
Him and his bloody cronies, his wedding party crew.
Yes.
You know, and so we've lost, well, we've, I don't know if we have parliamentary supremacy
in Canada at all now.
And of course, the way that we've rearranged our judiciary, that we have activists judiciary
in Canada and increasingly the Supreme Court justices are nominated by the federal government.
And so they've captured the court system as well.
And so, well, and so here we are.
All right, so now you have a bee and you're born at about COVID, too.
And you're not very happy about what's happening in Western Canada.
So you're starting to become an irritated person.
I was very irritated.
And then I found Trishwood's podcast.
I was following the Dr. Brian
Bridal case and then the Dr. Francis Christian case. And what were those cases?
Dr. Brian Bridal is an immunologist and a verrologist, I believe. And he's got a long list of letters after
his name. And he started a new university. A Guelph. Guelph, yes, yes, well, that's right. I was reality.
And Dr. Christian was a doctor in Saskatchewan
at the University of Saskatchewan, actually.
And he started speaking out about vaccinating children.
What they both were, and they both lost their jobs.
And as a matter of fact, the faculty at the University
of Saskatoon were trying to talk to him
like that maybe he was crazy.
Yeah, yeah.
That phone call was disturbing.
Well, there's no cowards like faculty cowards.
Right, yeah.
You would probably know.
And so then I started, you know,
I started listening to her podcast
and she was just a light in the dark
because I was somebody that was finally talking common sense
in my opinion.
And then I started following Dr. Zav Zalenko.
I started following Dr. Robert Malone, Dr. Peter McCullough, Dr. David Martin,
you know, all these doctors.
Dr. Jay Bada-Cheria was starting to talk
about Stanford front too.
They really went after him.
He lost 35 pounds in three months
after he got pilloried by his peers
and compatriots at Stanford for being correct and careful.
Yeah.
And that also didn't make sense,
because science is supposed to be questioned.
So when they say we're following the science,
I always think of the S with the money sign S.
That's all I ever heard them say was we're following the science.
I never saw any of their science.
I did see science from these other doctors.
Mm-hmm.
And...
Science, by the way, isn't something you follow.
Science is not a set of moral prescriptions.
When it's a set of moral prescriptions,
it's ideology, not science.
You know, at its best, science is,
well, it attempts to be a value-free
and dispassionate portrayal of the facts.
Now, that's tricky because...
It's an investigation, that's what science is.
Yeah, it's an investigation.
Yeah, and the idea that, well,
and then what happened to is the politicians who were cowards devolved
their authority to public health experts and said, well, we don't actually have to make
any decisions.
The public health experts can, and they couldn't because they weren't economists.
They had no idea how to calculate relative risk.
They didn't take anything into account except keeping the public safe from a virus, which
was their job, not to calculate what would you call it.
The multiplicity of costs that would be associated with a peer public health approach to policy.
So the politicians have indicated their responsibility, and the narcissistic politicians enjoy doing
that anyways, because what you want is the glory, not the responsibility.
And what I noticed too is that the fear mongering, like the propaganda campaign was heavy.
And of course, at the beginning, everyone was talking about, well, we don't have enough
hospital beds and blah, blah, blah, blah.
And I'm looking, like, it's 24-7, my radio station became the 24-7 COVID information station.
And I'm thinking with all the money that you're putting into marketing and ads
and on posters and all this stuff.
Build some bags.
We put that into our health care system.
Which they didn't ever.
No problem.
No problem solve.
No, no, no increase in ICU capacity.
No, nothing that would have actually
in principle addressed, well, the problem
that didn't exist to begin with, but certainly,
that no development of ICU.
What did Canada spend some hundreds of millions of dollars
on portable ICU beds that were never even implemented, right?
They just sit in a warehouse storage costs.
I can't remember how many hundreds of millions of dollars
to spend on that, some appalling amount.
Right, so all the money was poorly targeted.
They never went after the actual problem.
Nope, yeah.
It just didn't make sense.
And everybody that I talked to, excuse me,
whether they were on the side where they thought
COVID was going to be the end of all humanity,
or whether they thought COVID didn't even exist,
everyone said to me something doesn't feel right.
And that was their intuition.
And that stuck with me.
And it, because it didn't feel right to me either.
And yeah, so I just started following these doctors and looking things up for myself instead of
just listening to what the, I mean, I stopped believing in the 2016 American election. I quit
basically watching the news. So, and, you know, that's about when the legacy media got finally corrupted, right?
And I mean, part of that's because they're facing such an onslaught of competition from
the online, well, from the online media, essentially, they're going to die.
As you can see, that happening, Canada and CTV and Bell Media, laid out all sorts of journalists
yesterday, including top journalists, right?
And so, and they certainly deserve their their demise like like nobody's business.
But it's part of the inevitable triumph of the distributed media because there's no way the old
legacy media outlets can compete with them. And they started losing their best people and then
competing on the clickbait front. And, you know, it's just a degenerative spiral and we're seeing
that play out. So, yes, we are. Yes, we are. It's a travesty.
So now you're still in Manitoba while this is happening?
Yes, I was. Actually, my husband and I just moved back to...
We both got offered our jobs back in October of 2021.
And we moved back to Alberta and both went back to work at the end of November.
And then we moved into our new house on a week before Christmas, and then two weeks later the convoy started.
So it was kind of funny even when I got back,
I looked like two college kids had just moved into this house
and dropped everything,
because I was obviously gone for a while.
And yeah, so we went back to work,
and then middle of January,
my friend Cindy sent me a TikTok video that Chris
Barber had done.
This is January what year?
January 2022.
2022.
Yes.
Where Chris was advocating for, he had a massive TikTok following.
I guess that's a trucker thing, TikTok.
And he was calling for a Canada wide shutdown, just wherever you are, shut off your trucks, don't move.
And Bridget Belton, who is a trucker from Wallisburg,
I think it's Wallisburg, Ontario,
had reached out to him too,
because she was having issues crossing the border already.
So why were the truckers upset specifically?
There was border crossing issues,
but why are the truckers in particular?
Because after two years of our prime minister
calling them heroes and liking them
to soldiers
going off to war, he decided to implement
the cross border trucker mandate.
So unless they had a vaccine passport,
they would have to quarantine for 14 days.
So especially in Ontario, where you're,
they're always like some people are doing this every day.
How do you feed your family?
If you can, if you have to take 14 days off every time you cross the border, it's impossible.
So these people, these blue collar heroes, I call them that he had
propped up and, and complimented and saying their praises from the rooftops at all, all of a sudden become public enemy number one.
And that was, that was it for them.
And that's telling because I'm telling you,
they went for the healthcare workers and the doctors.
And I thought for sure, just like my speech,
somebody was gonna say something.
They came after the RCMP and I was like,
somebody's gotta say something.
And then the military and then the education system.
And all of a sudden there's all these mandates. And nobody was saying anything. say something and then the military and then the education system.
And all of a sudden there's all these mandates and nobody was saying anything.
And finally when they came for the truckers, they're like, no, no, this is not acceptable.
So I got that tick-taught from Cindy the about Chris and I actually massaged her because
there had been a convoy that came out here in 2019 that was advocating for our energy
industry. And I said, well, what do you think about a convoy that came out here in 2019 that was advocating for our energy industry.
And I said, well, what do you think about under convoy?
And she's like, well, it didn't really
accomplish much the first time.
And I said, yeah, you're right.
And then I messaged a friend of mine in Manitoba.
And I said, what do you think about a convoy to Ottawa?
And he said the same thing.
So in the meantime.
Well, so what was it about the convoy idea?
You think that was attracting you?
I mean, you're pursuing it with some degree of of fervor, even though in your own admission,
the last time it occurred, it wasn't that helpful. Why do you think that idea? Because you needed to
bring it to Parliament. I've seen rallies at the legend Alberta, Regina, all the provinces.
I've seen rallies, massive protests everywhere.
The mainstream media was not reporting them and nothing was changing.
So we needed to get to Ottawa.
And in the meantime, Chris and Bridget and another group had been talking,
should they do slow rolls or a shutdown and then kind of collectively,
basically what it was was a very small group of people that had a lot of similar ideas that knew something had to happen.
And so I called up Chris and we discussed the convoy to Ottawa and I said, my background
is logistics organization at the administration.
You're going to need social media and you're going to need money.
I'll start you a Facebook page, a Twitter account and I'll set up a GoFundMe account.
At that time, I didn't know that GoFundMe was as left leaning as they were.
Oh, I should let everybody know, too.
Tomorrow under constraint by the Canadian government is no longer allowed to engage in social
media.
Do you want to talk about restrictions that have been placed on?
That's one of my conditions, one of my very broad conditions.
I am not allowed to log into my accounts,
post to my accounts, or ask anybody to post on my behalf if I do I go directly back
to jail.
Right. So you're essentially muzzled on the electronic communication.
Yes. That's right.
Now why can you do a podcast like this?
Well, after the POEC report came down and I just could not stand to listen to Justin
Trudeau tell people
how we had their backs and he was keeping them safe anymore because my head was going to explode.
Keith and I went through my conditions very carefully. Very carefully. I was taking,
it sounds stupid, but I was like taking words out and I was rearranging the sentences to see if
there was any possible way that I could be arrested for speaking.
And what we concluded was that so long as I am not organizing a protest or advocating
for a protest, exercising my freedom of assembly, basically, it's okay.
Now how is it that it's possible for your right to freely assemble and your right to
freely speak? Obviously, how is it possible, even if that's been abrogated? What have you
been charged with? Let's start with that. I've been charged with mischief, counselling to
commit mischief, intimidation, counselling intimidation, and I believe the other one is obstruct
a police officer and disobey a court order, I think,
which would be the emergency act I'm assuming.
And which of those was the court charge?
It was the mischief.
But that was just out of it.
Which comes out to commit mischief to begin with the charge.
That's right, I was charged.
So think about that, everyone.
That was the initial charge.
It's not mischief, which is, you know, not one of the world's most serious charges, even
though that that can be relevant at some time, but counseling to commit mischief, which is like the derivative
of a crime, right? So I don't even know what that means, but I guess I guess you're going
to find out because they're going to drag you through court. How much time have you spent,
jail? 48 days. Well, 49 days, 48 nights. Right. Right. And on what grounds, precisely,
why did they hold you oh well
originally I was denied bail because the judge judge bourgeois who we found out
later was a which law former liberal candidate French French yeah yeah it's just
funny that the Julie bourgeois yeah it is kind of funny those bourgeois they hate
the proletariat so okay so he was a former liberal.
She was.
Yes, she was a former liberal candidate.
Candidate.
Yes, yes, this is Canada.
She was, and she didn't recuse herself from the case, because it wasn't the political
case obviously.
That's right.
Yeah.
And so, oddly enough, like Chris Barber was arrested just before me, and he was, had
his bail hearing and was just sent home.
And then of course, it was a long weekend,
it was family weekend.
And so we didn't have my decision heard
until Tuesday morning, but by then she'd watch
this entire violent, horrific take down
of the convoy protest on TV.
And so when I came in, she went upside,
one upside, went up one side of me and down the other.
And basically said I was a minister of society
and a danger to her community.
She said my community 12 times.
Where is she?
Where is she located?
Oh, she's icy.
So you were honking her into a state of frenzy.
Oh, I see.
Yeah, I know.
There were a lot of the Haudenosaunee who didn't take kindly to being honked at.
It's traumatizing.
You know, you have people whose lives have been destroyed coming peacefully, complain about it
after being oppressed by dimwitted moralizers for two years. Which was frustrating because, you know, we didn't want to go.
We definitely didn't want to upset the Ottawa residents.
That was never our intention.
And, but you have to have some level of disruption.
But for me to hear people talking about honking horns,
when we just drove across Canada.
And I had people every single day and still to this day telling me
they were planning to take their own lives or that they had family members
that had already taken their own lives or that they were living in their car.
They lost their business. They couldn't go kiss their mom goodbye before she died.
And you're going to
complain to me about honking horns. Are you kidding me? And so for me, that was a real
eye opener because, you know, of course, we always know that there's the laptop class
is what we call them now. But it was really the sense in some cases, not all of them,
because there's some beautiful, lovely people in Ottawa. We had a lot of support from
Ottawa residents and a lot of federal government employees. But it was almost a sense
of like how dare you blue collar workers with your dirty hands come and set up and
shine. And your ability to do things. Yeah.
That's the most annoying part of blue collar people. They're good at doing things. It's
really hard on people who can only think abstractly, because they like to think they live in some sort of,
what would you say, privileged moral universe
where their ability to deal with abstractions
is what constitutes real.
And then they always end up depending on those bloody
blue-collar people whenever anything needs to be done.
It's very, very annoying.
Yes.
Yes.
So shortly after we got there, there was an injunction order, so we did have to stop
honking horns. And honestly, the majority of us at the core organizers were relieved, because it
was getting to be a bit much. And you know, when you've got like speakers up on stage and people
are still honking their horn, you can't hear them, right? So that was good. I mean, we're glad that it stopped
for the most part. But again, not all of them stop because you're talking, this was not,
there was no bosses. This was a completely organic movement. These truckers just showed
up. They're very strong people. They're independent thinkers. You know, they have a lot of responsibility
on their shoulders. Lots of them are business owners.
So they're going to do what they're going to do.
I mean, to be honest, if they were the sort of people who could be told what to do, they
wouldn't have been in awe of what was right.
That's right.
Yeah, absolutely.
So let's go back to when you were envisioning this.
So you were starting to think about a corn void.
How did it actually start to come about?
Miraculously.
So we started, I got the Facebook page going,
got the GoFundMe going,
and then we had road captains from every province.
So what those were, were truckers normally
and like Northern Saskatchewan, Southern Saskatchewan,
Northern Alberta, Southern Alberta,
and they organized their friends and truckers to come.
And then we would just all meet along the highway.
So one of my...
How, over what period of time was this organized?
How long did it take?
Ten days.
Ten days.
Oh, that's fast.
Right.
Well, so that obviously shows that, like, it was tight.
It was tight, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, it was tight.
Yeah, it was tight.
Yeah, because everybody clambered on board right away.
That's right.
Which shocked us.
I mean, and we recognized within 24 hours.
In my head, my vision, I thought we'd maybe raise $20,000.
A few truckers would drive across Canada,
stand there with some signs, hop back in their trucks,
and come home.
So within 24 hours, we had over $100,000 in donations already.
And so with my experience with the Mavic Party,
I was like, I need a finance committee.
Boom.
So I got some volunteers.
We created a finance committee.
And then I was also monitoring our social media.
Why did you do that?
Because the fundraiser was set up with my name on it.
And it was important to me that Canadians that were donating
A had a sense of who I was because that's a lot of money.
They were trusting me essentially with their money.
And I wanted to explain the whole process like how we were going to be accountable
and transparent. I had two bookkeepers on the committee and we had an
accounting advisor and accountant from from medicine hat. And I just and it was their money., an accountant from Minnesota.
And it was their money, so it was their decision.
I wanted to let everybody feel like they had a say in this.
Basically, I was running a government type, or running this organization, I guess,
how I thought the government should be run.
Open and transparent, and I just wanted everyone to be at ease
that we were going to follow through, and we were going to keep them informed every step of the way.
So tell us what happened on the GoFundMe front.
Yeah, so I didn't know a lot about GoFundMe when I started the campaign. I just know it was a big
crowdfunding source. And so I set up a GoFundMe to start collecting donations.
And as we were, well, obviously, I mean, the money
just started pouring in. And it was, it became very clear to me right away that they were
kind of dragging their feet.
Who was that go fund me in releasing the money? Okay. Okay. So because they'd send an email
with, you know, three questions on it, we'd answer those questions. Then we'd get an email
with five questions on it. And we'd answer those questions, then we'd get an email with five questions on it, and
we'd answer those questions.
And it just was as constant back and forth for about two weeks.
Finally, when we got to Ottawa, the Thursday, right after the lawyers all arrived, we had
a meeting with all of our lawyers, go find me their lawyers and our accountant.
And it was great.
They were going to release everything.
They were happy with all of our answers. And we woke up the next morning and they had
frozen our campaign. How much money was in it that put that point?
Ten million dollars. Who froze it? Go find me. What happened was...
Why did they froze? Because the city of Ottawa and the Ottawa City Police had contacted
them and said that we were terrorists basically.
I see. I see. Oh yes. Well, yes.
Right. So, so who's the blame on that? Is the blame on Gulf Fund?
Yeah. Is the blame on the people who call new terrorists?
I would say both. I would say both.
Why both? You think Gulf Fund, we should have told them to go to hell like you said.
They should have. Yeah. That's right. Exactly.
And what happened to Gulf Fund, me for goodness sake.
Right. Right. right, exactly. And what happened to fund me for goodness sake, is that I have to.
Right, right, right, right.
I'm sure you did your job.
The ironic thing is, is that we've
watched the Black Lives Matter protests.
I watched the Chaz Chap, Autonomous Zone,
that they had set up in Seattle.
And at some of these protests, people got raped.
They murdered businesses were looted
and burnt to the ground.
Yeah, but that wasn't a good cause to you.
That's right.
That was for a good cause, right?
That wasn't like Confederate flag flying Canadians.
Not C's.
Not C's.
By the way, for everyone watching and listening,
there are no Confederate flag waving Canadian Nazis.
That's not a thing.
Nobody waves the Confederate flag in Canada.
Most Canadians don't even know what the hell the Confederate flag is. And no one can tell you what the hell the Confederate flag is.
And no one can tell you what the hell the Confederate flag is.
And no one can tell you what the hell the Confederate flag is.
And no one can tell you what the hell the Confederate flag is.
And no one can tell you what the Confederate flag is.
And no one can tell you what the Confederate flag is. And no one can tell you what the Confederate flag is. And then if I remember correctly, they then announced that they were going to distribute it to charity unless people wrote in specifically and requested a refund and that they were going to pick the charity.
Correct. Right.
That Black Lives Matter, though, they got their money.
They did.
Even though there was raping, murder, all kinds of things, they got their money.
Of course, that was in the States, wasn't it?
Yeah, but that shouldn't make a difference. And then, well, and then, and then,
give send go, didn't abide by the dictates of the Canadian state, right? So they had,
they had a bit of a spine. So you flipped from go fund me to give send go, and then you raised
another 10 million dollars. What happened to it? Well, the government of Ontario wanted to
seize it immediately.
And it was were conservatives by the way, right?
Yes, this is true.
And so the writing was on the wall.
We were never going to get those donations across into Canada.
So Jacob Wells, one of the founders,
his minister founded, gives him a go, decided that he was just going to refund everything.
And I know that the lawyers got up and said, sister founded, Gif Sen Go decided that he was just going to refund everything.
And I know that the lawyers got up and said, no, you're not going to.
We're going to file whatever.
They needed to file to stop that from happening.
And he said, by the time you have your paperwork done, it's going to be back in your accounts.
You have no jurisdiction here.
So kudos to him.
Yes.
So what had happened was go fund me had had released one million dollars into my account.
And so I'm actually quite happy that it did cost them a million dollars because they ended
up refunding everything.
After that statement where they were just going to donate it to whomever they wanted to,
Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida stood up and said, no, you're not.
I am going to have you investigated for fraud.
And then all of a sudden it was no problem to refund everybody.
And then, yeah, with the gifts and go, so...
And then what a...
Yes, so that was like a precursor to the bank account seizures, fundamentally, right?
So basically what we had in Canada was a situation where people were voluntarily donating
money to a political cause, a protest, and that the government
interfered with the receipt of that money by interfering with the operations of a private
company that wasn't even a Canadian company, right?
At the same time, the Canadian government was claiming this was complete bloody 100%
absolutely reprehensible lie that almost all the money that was going into the trucker
corn void was American, make America great again, Republican types who wanted to overthrow the Canadian government
because of course everyone knows
that's what Republican Americans want
because they don't like democracy in Canada
whereas the truth of the matter is
most Americans don't even know where the hell Canada is
and the ones that do know really don't care
and they're certainly not agitating
especially on the Republican side
to overthrow Canadian democracy
and they also, the government also intimated
that it was being funded by Russians.
Yeah. Right.
Russian. So if it wasn't Russians,
it was mega Americans because you know
the Russians and the mega Americans,
they're obviously exactly the same people.
And they're all profoundly interested in
producing a January 6th type insurrection in Ottawa.
So that was $20 million that was essentially seized
in one way or another by various branches
of the Canadian government.
Right now, you said there's some of that money
that's still around, I think.
Yes, there is.
So when Jacob and Gif Sen go refunded the Gif Sen go money,
there was about $3 million that was in stuck
in the payment processor stripe.
So that was seized and that's now in an escrow.
There was, we had just over $400,000 in e-transfers
because right away when I said,
the go fund me, people were messaging me saying,
don't trust them.
That's right.
So that was kind of my first concern.
I was like, oh geez, I probably should have looked
into this a little bit more.
But what do you do, live and learn?
Yeah.
So we're accustomed to operating on trust, eh?
That's where our societies are rich.
It's because you can generally operate on trust
or you could.
Yeah, so far, yeah.
Yeah, so far.
Yeah.
So that money also went into the escrow account.
And then, a gentleman by the name of Chris Gara
had started an organization.
We had a ground zero team, we called it an Ottawa,
that was getting everything,
all the infrastructure in place for when we arrived,
like food, showers, hotel rooms.
How many people did come to the convoy?
How many truckers were there?
Do you know?
Approximately?
I have no idea.
Where did they come from?
They came from all over.
They came from the coast of BC. They came from the coast of BC.
They came from the coast of Newfoundland.
Oh, wow.
They came from the Northwest Territories.
Oh, yeah.
We had Americans that came up and joined us.
Oh.
And that was funny, because we had a finance committee
in place.
So we put procedures and processes in place
so that this would all be accountable.
And we had all of you.
And so one of my jobs was going to be to stand
at the gas pumps and record every trucker that came through with their truck number and their name and their receipts, which in the first day was not even possible.
And one of my other jobs was to get truck counts every day, but that was impossible because the situation was that a lot of people couldn't go all the way to Ottawa. So they would join us for like 100 kilometers or a province
or, you know, they'd get to the Manitoba border.
So we always had people coming and going.
What did you see when you came across?
Oh, please tell me.
The most beautiful show of humanity in the unity I've ever seen.
I've never seen anything like it.
After all these years of, you know, especially living under this in the unity I've ever seen. I've never seen anything like it.
After all these years of, you know, especially living under this Prime Minister,
who has tried to constantly divide people
by race, religion, culture, income bracket,
geographical location.
Gender, gender, yes.
Gender identity.
Yes, yes.
So we were coming through Manitoba.
We were coming through Headingly,
and it was the most massive crowd I've ever seen.
And there was native drummers on the side of the road,
dressed in their full regalia,
and standing beside them were like four-seek gentlemen,
and standing beside them were hudder-right women
with their children holding signs.
Thank you for giving us back our future.
And beside them was nuns and full habits.
And to me.
You know when the nuns are protesting that things aren't good.
It's right, exactly.
Yeah.
And the hudderites.
Right, absolutely.
They're not known for their political favor.
We had them all the way from medicine hat, all the way through Manitoba, and I found out
after because my dad's great friends with a lot of the colonies down there, that they would
go to one intersection on the back road, watch us go by, hop in their bands or trucks, drive
two miles down the road, and they did this to just watch us, you know.
A good one.
Yes, and support, and it was just incredible,
because it didn't matter.
None of your background even mattered.
Right.
It was, we were just Canadians.
Right.
For once.
For once.
Come on, you know.
And what sort of distances were people driving?
Like, because lots of people watching and listening
don't know how big Canada is.
So you said, from medicine hat to Ottawa is 36 hours.
36 hours, I think that's about 3500 kilometers.
And so, which is quite a long ways, but we had people, the clan mothers that joined us,
came from the Northwest Territories.
And they had, there was truckers that had come from the Northwest Territories.
And, and the East Coast, Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia.
This was truly a Canadian movement.
Like we had people from everywhere.
Northwest, here to us.
I didn't know that.
Yes, yes.
Which shows you that people like you said earlier were ready.
Well, and desperate.
I mean, the thing is, for the...
So first of all, this was in the middle of...
This was in the middle of the winter.
Right, right, and that's winter.
It was minus 20 in Ottawa for most of that protest day.
Yeah.
And then those truckers were taking their rigs out of service for what, two weeks, something
like that.
Some of them are longer, three weeks, right, which is a major economic hit.
You have to be driven to some degree of desperation.
And it's not like Canadian truckers like Dutch farmers are known for their political activism.
I mean, they've never been a politically active class in Canada.
There's no history of even laborer agitation on the trucker side in Canada.
So the fact that it was them that finally had had enough is really telling,
while just like it is telling on the Dutch farmer's scene, right?
And the yellow jackets to some degree.
I mean, the French are a lot more volatile with their political demonstrations,
but Canada doesn't have a history of this.
This isn't something that ever happens here,
just like it never happens in the Netherlands.
And so, all right, so you're driving down the road
and you're seeing all these people,
and this thing is like ballooned like mad way
beyond what you had initially envisioned.
And you're on your way to Ottawa.
What happens when you get to Ottawa?
We pulled up onto the hill.
Well, we got into Arnprier on the Friday night
and Saturday we drove up around noon.
We met at noon and drove into Ottawa.
And the crowds, all the way from Arnprier right into Ottawa,
were amazing.
The overpasses were filled with people.
And it was just so beautiful.
And we got up there and there was massive crowds
up on Parliament Hill too.
And so when we got out, I mean, it was just,
by now people knew who Chris and I were.
So there was lots of people coming up
and asking for photos and talking to us and stuff.
And it was so surreal.
Yes, yeah.
And you know, Chris and I talked on the way out
and we didn't have a plan for when we got there.
I mean, just getting there was such a massive undertaking.
And we, I mean, Kudos to Chris, he led that convoy.
Oh, Chris is in jail.
Barbara, nope, he's not.
He's back home in Saskatchewan.
So let's walk through that briefly.
Who ended up jailed? Chris was arrested in Saskatchewan. So let's walk through that briefly. Who ended up jailed?
Chris was arrested in prison for one evening.
I was arrested in jail for 18 days.
Pat King was arrested and he was in jail for five months.
He was the leader.
He was involved in it.
Yeah, he wasn't the leader of it.
But yeah, I was actually in jail last summer
when he was finally released, finally.
But there's still people in jail this year.
There were still people in jail.
Yes.
Of all the coots boys are going through
their pretrial right now.
I mean, they weren't affiliated with us.
That was all separate groups and stuff,
but I mean, what's happening there
is just unbelievable to those guys. And Aaron Aldrich was another one.
I don't know if you've ever seen the photos, but there's a gentleman in lots of pictures with a tuk and a big belly.
He never wore a shirt, always smoking cigarettes.
And that was Aaron.
And he just had, he's finally back in Alberta.
I think he went back last week.
He was, he got out of jail when I was on my way out
for the inquiry in the fall.
And he had to stay there with his surety until last week.
He hasn't seen his mom since 2022.
Oh yeah.
Okay, so what's happened?
So now in order, you have all these trucks gathered.
There's hundreds of them.
Or there are thousands of them by this point. Thousands of trucks by this point. So everybody's shocked at So now in Ottawa, you have all these trucks gathered. There's hundreds of them or are there thousands of them by this point?
Thousands, thousands of trucks by this point.
So everybody's shocked at the magnitude of this,
including the Ottawa, bourgeoisie,
who aren't very happy with all the honking.
There's a lawsuit about that,
a that you're also facing.
$400 million class action suit.
Yes.
Because of the economic harm caused by the trucker coin boy.
Yes.
Right.
Not the two years of business collusionusion shutdowns and locked in your home.
Right.
And do you think that there was a deleterious impact of the trucker coinvoy on businesses
in Ottawa?
Absolutely not.
We never told them to shut down.
It was the city that advised them to shut down because they had to paint at us as hooligans
and thugs before we even arrived.
Yeah. I mean, they're just remote. Racists, bigots, misogynists, right? Right. them to shut down because they had to paint at us as hooligans and thugs before we even arrived. Yeah, yeah.
I mean, they're just big.
Racists, bigots, misogynists, right?
Fascists, conspiracy.
Infraurated by the Russian.
Yeah, yeah.
And the mega types.
That's right.
Forget about them.
There was a Black Rocks report that just came out.
I think it was the week before last.
It was a public safety, a health, a safety Canada memo that was sent out internally to all
these businesses saying that we were entering federal buildings and causing damage and disruption,
which was a bold faced lie.
Just nasty lies, nasty nasty lies, and why?
Because we don't, we don't have, and I said this in my testimony,
when you lead a country,
you do not get to pick and choose who you lead.
You are responsible for every single person in that country,
whether you believe in what they believe or not.
You don't get to call them names.
I mean, now our prime minister's calling parents,
oh, right.
Yeah, he has, they want to say or.
Don't know if far right, even worse, that's right.
You think that you should be able to have the last say in relationship to what your
children are being taught in school.
And now you're essentially a Nazi because, of course, that's what far right means.
That's right.
Right.
So that means our Prime Minister now believes that if you believe that you should put your
child's interest as the paramount concern of your life, that you're essentially far right.
And so if Canadians had any sense,
which I'm afraid generally they don't,
they would listen to that
because he's actually serious about what he's claiming.
So we know that what the new Brunswick Premier came out
and made it illegal for schools
to use gender transforming pronouns without parental,
without informing the parents,
which seems like the minimal thing they could do and Trudeau pelerate him, but the vast majority of Canadians agree with
the New Brunswick premiums statement.
And if they were informed, a lot more of them would agree, because Canadians as general
rule don't pay much attention to politics and don't know what's going on.
And if they actually knew what was going on, a hell of a lot more Canadians would have
agreed with the New Brunswick Premier.
So... I know Kudos to him, like like who saw that coming out of New Bruns?
I know, I know, he grew a spine.
He did, and so on and so on.
They're starting to rediscover their spines.
That gives me hope.
It's really something.
Yeah, well, you have Daniel Smith and Scott Moll who looked like they've got some spines
and Pierre Paulie have might have one as well.
Yeah.
The Premier of New Brunswick, right?
Yes.
Without came out of right field, you might say?
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, that's really encouraging to me.
All right, so you're an Ottawa, and we're all watching this from the outside.
I was on tour and Tammy was Tammy at that time.
We would have liked to have come to Ottawa.
I did speak at one of the events electronically.
And so what we're watching from the outside and what we see from the outside
is that despite the fact that you're being painted as misogynist,
racist, big-and-megaerate flag-wearing fascists,
there's like no violence, there's children there,
the bloody government conspired to threaten the truckers
with the removal of their children,
which is one of the most reprehensible acts
I'd ever seen a Canadian government commit.
It might be number one, freezing your bank accounts.
That'd be the contender for top place.
But the idea that the government would threaten those protesters
with the removal of their children by social services,
that was like, they were crossing the line
in a big way there, boy.
But that's what they did the whole time.
It was all constant provocation.
And what did the OPP have to do with that?
The OPP were absolutely amazing.
The Ontario, the Ontario Provincial Police. So obviously right away when we
recognized before we left how much support we were getting, you know, I said we
need to let our local police departments know when we're coming through so that
they can make arrangements and everything. And so that's what we did. And the OPP were just the most amazing organization to deal with.
They were very organized.
They were professional.
They were polite.
They were supportive.
And I firmly believe if we could have dealt with the OPP for the whole duration of this
thing, it would not have ended the way that it did.
And out of the inquiry, what I learned was besides the OPP, we were
the most organized and professional organization out of them all.
Well, you were right wing. Those left wingers, they have a hard time organizing.
Right wingers were pretty good at keeping things straight.
That's right. And they were just, they were wonderful. And we had a phone call from a gentleman called
officer Pierre. He was, I think, he was French, but he was
OPP. The night after the raids, because the first thing they
did was they raided Coventry, which was where we had a lot of
supplies and donations and a lot of trucks parked and they went
in there. And they is who? The Ottawa City police, they had
snipers on the roof. And they stole food, they stole fuel,
they stole firewood, whatever they could take, basically.
Now remember, this is minus 30 in Ottawa.
Right, yeah, I lived there.
It's cold, in fact.
It is cold.
Colder than it is in Alberta, really.
It's cold, minus 30.
It's cold, you know, last outside very long.
No, 30. Oh, Alberta, really. It's cool. Mine is cool. You know, last outside burial. No.
Oh, half an hour.
And then they started taking the Jerry cans, which is when, I mean, this is the beautiful
thing like I was saying last night about Canadians.
He calls us a fringe minority.
What do Canadians do?
Everyone's got a t-shirt or a tattoo or a hat or a bumper sticker, like they owned it.
Like now we're proudly the fringe minority.
Right. And they said they were going to, they were going to confiscate Jerry cans. And
so Canadians came out in, in hordes with empty Jerry cans. Yes. Yes. And that was with
that spontaneous, totally spontaneous. Nobody organized that. They just started showing
up some of them were empty, some of them were full of water, like some of them we had
fuel in them,
but because they were threatening to start charging people
that were bringing it in with mischief.
And again, Canadians just took that and ran with it.
You know, that's, it was just,
they even had a Jerry-Can fashion show on the stage.
You know, so it was brilliant.
So now what's happening?
Okay, so what's happening as the protest progresses,
what's the mood in downtown Ottawa,
and what's actually going on?
You have a center stage,
you're a couple of center stages set up,
and there's people speaking,
tell us a little bit about what you would have experienced
being there.
It was like Canada Day on steroids.
It was the most beautiful, loving, healing atmosphere ever.
I mean, strangers were hugging and crying on each other's shoulders
and people were singing O Canada and flying our flags
so proudly, finally.
It was a beautiful, beautiful atmosphere,
which was not what the mainstream media, of course,
was reporting, but it was very jubilant, very happy.
The thing that struck me the most, though,
was people would come up to me and hug me
and cry on my shoulder and tell me their story
and thank us for what we were doing.
But it was the immigrants who, when they came up to me,
had this look of desperation in their eyes, like nothing I have
ever seen before, it was gut-wrenching, you know, and because they've lived through this,
they've watched all these signs. Now they're escaped. Poland, Russia, Iran, Romania,
Eastern Europe, China.
People under despotism.
That's right.
People that have escaped communist countries.
Yeah.
And I'm telling you, the look in their eyes was...
And we've seen that look in Eastern Europe plenty.
Yeah.
Because the Eastern Europeans, they're not very happy
with all the woke nonsense they see in developing the West.
Yes.
You know, when we've gone through Eastern Europe,
they tell us consistently, it's like, what the hell are you people doing?
Don't you know what that did for us for 70 years?
You're walking down exactly the same pathway.
How can you possibly be so blind?
It's like, yeah.
Well, they remember, man.
Communism.
Yeah, well, that was particular.
Yeah, let's do it again.
That was particularly German and Albania, because that was the worst of the communist countries.
Nice to know, 82.
They were under lockdown to 1992.
That's only 30 years.
Yeah.
They found a hundred-room bunker, like 100 yards, an underground 100-room bunker, a hundred
yards away from their parliament building.
Under the main square?
Under the main square.
No one knew that was there that the Defense Minister had had built in secret at the height of the belief in Albania
that Albania was the center country of the world and that everyone was just waiting to
invade because everyone wanted what the Albanians had.
We went out on a boat into the ocean along the Albanian coast and we could see these
little things that looked like small Adobe houses up in the hills and that's what those
were. Yeah, well, you hills and they asked what those were.
Yeah, well, you couldn't see them because they were anyway.
Three floors the way up the mountains.
They were tunnels into the mountain.
So they spent all their nation's money on underground tunnels and tunnels into the mountain
because they had to be careful because the world was after them.
And then the people of the country had nothing.
Nothing. That's communist. Yeah the country had nothing, nothing.
That's communist.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Albania, yeah.
Well, they remember fear, fear and tyranny, boy.
That's for sure all under the guise of compassion and morality, which is the epidemic we're facing
in the West.
Well, it is.
I mean, we're basically crafting legislation and policy on hurt feelings.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, for false moral reasons.
All right, so you're having a big celebration in Ottawa
and the legacy media are trying to paint you as misogynists and fascists and bigots
and so is the lead, the puritive leader of Canada.
And the, and you actually manage, God only knows how you did this,
to keep that entire enterprise both peaceful and positive, right?
And I know I've talked to BJ Dictor about this a fair bit too, that that was actually
a conscious aim that you did everything you could, the organizers did everything they could.
And I believe the truckers themselves did this spontaneously to ensure that they were going
to remain respectful to people in authority and to the general public and to the businesses that they frequented.
I know that the crime rate in Ottawa fell during the trucker convoy.
I were no overdose deaths downtown Ottawa.
Yeah. People had hope again just for a while.
Well, they were sharing food too.
The streets were clean. There was no garbage on the streets.
It was my dad. I didn't meet this gentleman myself,
but my dad told me the story of this homeless man
that had gone up to one of the food tents.
And they were feeding him every day,
and he asked if he could stay in there,
because it was warm.
They had heaters, and they said,
you are welcome to stay here,
as long as we're here, provided you do not drink.
No drugs in here, no drugs period,
and you have to help out.
And when they left, he said that that was the first time
that he felt like he belonged somewhere.
Yeah, I bet.
He had a purpose.
Yeah.
Right?
Yeah, well, you can't live without a purpose.
Yes.
Yeah.
All right, so what happens now?
What happens?
Walk us through the crackdown.
Now, I was talking to Dictor in particular around the time when the convoit was starting to,
when a lot of pressure was starting to be put on the convoit. I know you guys were really trying
to figure out should you stay, should you go, had you accomplished your goals. So what's the
now the government starting to crack down? Walk us through that, and then walk us through the decision-making processes that you engaged in when you decided to, well, to what, to
bring it to an end, I suppose.
Yes.
We didn't decide to bring it to an end, that was the government.
Okay.
So, very quickly right away, well, I recognized even on the way there that we were going to
need lawyers.
Every time the finance committee would say, it's almost at another million, you got
to bump it up another million, and so I would bump it up on the thing.
But I mean, it was bittersweet because I would be so excited.
Like we were taking in a million dollars a day at that point, but at the same time, I
would just get sicker and sicker to my stomach.
Because I knew when you're talking about millions of dollars, the lawyers are coming.
And boy was I right.
And so very quickly after we got to Ottawa,
we contacted the JCCF and they flew in five lawyers,
two of them which stayed with us on the ground.
My husband was on that flight as well.
And the JCCF is the Justice Center
for Constitutional Freedom,
is a charitable organization, civil liberties organization.
And that's the organization that gave you an award two years ago.
Yes, yes, that's right.
The George Jonas Freedom Award last summer.
Right, last summer.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, there was legal trouble around you accepting that, too, wasn't there?
I had to go to court to ask.
Well, that's pretty funny,
that you had to go to court in Canada to go accept a Freedom Award.
That makes perfect sense.
Because I was banned from Ontario.
Like, ban from Ontario.
I'm gonna do a cover like that.
Are you sure you should do that?
Which is hilarious.
I know a lot of people that are trying
to get out of Ontario.
I don't know a lot of people that are trying
to get into Ontario.
But anyways, yeah, so we had to go to court and have a hearing so that we could have
those amended so that I could attend. And also my youngest daughter was going to go to university
in Ottawa. So, I mean, I was having a bit of a tough time being banned from Ottawa also. So,
we had that all changed. All right, so now we're talking about what's happening as the government
starts to crack down on the convoy.
So how does the pressure start to mount?
Yes.
Well, there was always pressure because there was always rumors.
I mean, this is the great thing about having people like Danny Bullford there in Tom Quay
and Thomas O'Connor because they were able to disseminate like what was factual and what
was just wild rumors. I mean, right from day one, we were hearing they were coming to disseminate like what was factual and what was just wild rumors.
I mean, right from day one, we were hearing they were coming to arrest us.
We're going to be rated. It was every day.
So so what led to that was we get there in the city of Ottawa.
Quit some estate of emergency.
Right.
And we're like, okay, what does that mean?
And really all I saw was little groups of cops standing around doing nothing,
turning to slightly bigger groups of cops standing around doing nothing. Then Doug Ford invoked
the state of emergency for the province of Ontario. Same thing. I just saw this group of
cops standing around doing nothing, turning into a bigger group of cops standing around doing
nothing. So when he invoked the emergency, that could be worse.
Yeah. That could be worse. Yeah. So when he invoked the emergency's act, I personally didn't even know it to a federal.
Federer.
Federer.
I mean, I thought it was ridiculous.
There was definitely no security threat to the security of Canada.
We were in Iowa.
Right.
And that's supposed to be a last ditch moved by the federal government in the case of like
serious civil war like violent insurrection, right?
This is sabotage or espionage.
When you step outside the constitutionalurrection, right? This is sabotage or espionage. When you step outside the
constitutional limits, right, this is to be used extraordinarily sparingly, right, under the only
the most dire of circumstances. And yet he announced it because Ottawa residents were being traumatized
by honking, which had already been brought to a halt, right? Yes. Many, many, many days previously.
And Chris Barber said, well, we embarrassed him.
And I said, no, we didn't.
We just handed him a platform and he embarrassed himself.
But he backed himself into a corner.
And he ran out of the city when you got you.
He did?
He did, didn't he?
Yes.
They skirted him out of the city for his safety.
We found out he was...
Didn't he say he had COVID?
He was a COVID.
He was a COVID.
Well, first of all, he came out and called this racist.
Then he came out with his big fringe minority
with unacceptable views.
Then all of a sudden, he had been exposed
to somebody that had COVID,
even though he was three times vaccinated.
Then all of a sudden, he's skirted out of Ottawa
for his safety.
And like I was just saying,
we found out after he was skiing in the Laurentians.
Just ludicrous.
Like who does that?
Well, it was obviously time to go skiing.
Yes, that was very important.
In the state of emergency, yes.
Yeah, yeah.
A Doug Ford was also snowmobiling during that time, too.
So they were obviously very concerned, very concerned.
And I mean, the pressure just started getting more
and more intense. And the irony
of the invocation of the Emergencies Act was that Keith Wilson, myself and my husband,
were on our way to go meet with the honorable Mr. Brian Pekford. And on the way over, we
heard on the radio that Justin Trudeau was going to be invoking the Emergencies Act.
So imagine that moment, we walked in and Keith told Mr. Peck for it about that.
And he just sort of like sat in the chair.
Right.
And Peck was one of the creators of the last, it actually put the potential for the powers
for the emergency act in place and has stated very publicly that the Trudeau government by no means or by
no stretch of the imagination had encountered a situation that necessitated what the original
framers of that document would have considered a genuine emergency.
So I mean, just he just went full on nuclear and that's when the bank accounts were being
frozen as well.
200 Canadians, right?
280 Canadian citizens.
And had the money stolen.
Mothers were stuck at the grocery store till.
Unable to pay for their groceries.
Families were unable to buy medicine for their children.
They couldn't pay mortgages.
People couldn't pay or receive their child support.
There was no parliamentary oversight.
There was no court order from a judge.
Christopher Eileen couldn't do it fast enough.
I mean, she was giggling like a school girl when she announced it, which was appalling.
At the evidence that came out at the inquiry, she wanted to label us as terrorists so she
could seize our assets.
It was disgusting.
And so I'm doing a lot of American media right now
to promote my book.
And that's one of the things I always say is that
this isn't just a story for Canada.
This is important.
Because if they can do it in Canada,
the most peaceful, passive, and polite country
on the planet, it can happen anywhere.
And it will happen.
Yeah, well, I know like one of the things we did learn traveling around, if you tell me,
and I've been in, like, 250 cities, something like that in the last two years, and Canadians
have no idea what the bank account thefts in particular did to Canada's international
reputation.
I mean, first of all, I think Trudeau is regarded around the world as the worst leader of the
G7 by a large margin. And I would say,
especially in Eastern Europe, that's true among those on the left, as well as those on in the center
and on the right. And the most egregious error he made was taking bank accounts. Like, people cannot
believe that happened and certainly not that it happened in Canada. That was just an absolute shock
of an absolute 100% violation of trust in the government, but
also trust in Canada's banking industry and in the separation of the banking industry
from the government, which is something we want to keep separate.
We really want to keep that separate.
Well, they're not.
So no, no, that's for sure.
Well, we're still the digital currencies.
Not one single president of any bank stood up and said, no.
I think was it one of the banks apologized later?
Yes, right.
I was thinking of a scholarship.
Yeah, I think it was the bank.
No, the scholarship apologized.
Well, I'm sorry, an apology doesn't cut it.
No, that's for sure.
Where were you guys when they should have been standing up and saying no, we need like
a court order from a judge or anything?
No, we need like 10 court orders for judges.
Right.
This isn't something we do overnight because we cow-tow to the tyrants in Ottawa.
Exactly.
That's for sure.
But it was intimidation.
Yeah.
What was the rush to close the bank accounts?
Yeah, well, everything's in emergency.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
So things start to get tense in Ottawa.
And how does that play out on the ground?
Well, a lot of people started leaving
because they were threatening to take insurance
and seize vehicles like children.
And take the children, pets.
Again, back to the provocation.
It's sort of a pets.
Yeah, they were going to come take pets.
Take those pets.
They tried really everything that they could.
And so a lot of people started leaving,
which we were encouraging because we didn't want.
We didn't know it was coming.
I mean, I never in my wildest dreams imagined that was coming, but we didn't want anyone to get
arrested or lose their jobs. I mean, these people have suffered enough. And I remember
the Wednesday before I was arrested, I was at the Sheridan and a group of our court people started leaving and a Quebec mother,
one of the road captains, was taking off and we said a very tearful goodbye.
And I went up to my room and I was upset crying because we were saying goodbye to, these
people became our family.
And I reached into my pockets and of course every time I was on the hill, like people
were literally stuffing money into my freedom pants, I called them my pockets and of course every time I was on the hill, like people were literally stuffing money into my freedom pants,
I called them my freedom pants.
And I was like, oh my God, so I ran back downstairs and I just gave her everything I had.
And we said another tearful goodbye.
My dad had come into town with my sister, they brought some supplies,
and they were also picking up my other sister.
And we were at the Swiss hotel and I remember Dad said, well, we're going to, my sister
wanted to go to Gattonville because she'd never been to Quebec.
And I said, no, Dad was like, well, we'll get a room and then we'll leave in the morning
and I said, you guys need to get as far away from here as you can now.
And I started walking upstairs and I remember I turned around,
and I just said, I love you, Dad.
That's when the rumors were flying that you and evil truckers were going to regroup somewhere outside of Ottawa,
in preparation to retake a city.
That's the right, yeah, yeah.
Which is something, you know, that I find a little bit odd that they don't give us credit for,
especially after what came out of the inquiry.
I mean, we outnumbered and overpowered them.
If we had been there with an agenda to take over Ottawa and overthrow the government, we
could have done it.
They were not prepared.
The Ottawa City Police was in a shambles, an absolute shambles.
I mean, one hand didn't know what the other one was doing.
And would that happen to us in real time?
A liaison officer comes to the Swiss
to deliver a message in halfway through his message.
We're like, what?
Because we had a different message.
He gets on his phone and finds out it was the wrong message.
Like this is happening right in front of us.
Oh, wow.
The ineptitude of that organization was stunning.
Right.
And you're saying that in contrast to the Ontario
coverage police.
Yes, they were amazing.
What do you think the difference was?
Like why do you think it was so inept and auto-wide, but working at the Ontario level?
I don't know, bureaucracy.
Yeah, but they're both bureaucratic, right?
One woke bureaucracy.
Yes, one maybe not so woke.
Maybe, maybe.
Sounds like it, maybe.
Because the clowniness, the clowniness of that sounds woke.
Yeah, right, right.
Yes, I think that's a large part of it.
And I mean, chief slowly, who was the police chief
at that time, was having a lot of problems internally
with his people not listening to him.
Yeah, well, no wonder, when you listened to him,
publicly, you thought, well, there's
someone that no one should listen to.
Yeah, you're right, but you know what?
I did get to go up to him at the inquiry and I shook his hand and I said,
thank you for your service and I'm sorry for the fallout.
Yeah.
That's happened to you because he, I believe he did the best he could.
He was under a lot of pressure.
Did he do and say a lot of the right things?
Absolutely not.
But this is very telling.
There's six weeks of testimony at the inquiry. Justin
Trudeau, Christopher Elin, Markament, Achino, David Lemeni, all these clowns, sorry, all these
members of parliament were on the stand, an examine for about two hours. Peter slowly was on the
stand for two days. Two days. So he was being scapegoated. Yeah. Yeah.
He was being scapegoated.
And I remember the day that he announced his resignation.
Everybody in the room was just cheering and celebrating.
And they thought this was excellent, that this chief,
and I was, he and I are like, this is not good.
Number one, a man just lost his entire career today.
And number two, what's coming next is gonna be worse.
And we were right.
So it was very intense, lots of people were leaving,
we were saying a lot of goodbyes.
And I went and did the video the night before,
because we were pretty sure we were gonna be arrested.
And I wasn't gonna leave Like, how can I leave?
I wasn't going to leave all those people there.
You know, that's my perspective.
I mean, I don't mean to sound cliche,
but I mean, it kept them goes down with a ship.
So we made plans.
We got some people out of the Swiss hotel
because we thought if we're going down,
we need someone to keep the ship afloat.
So I sent Keith and Eva to a different hotel.
We sent the account somewhere else
and some other people somewhere else.
And I'd been walking around the last few days
there seeing these F2DO flags
and people yelling at reporters.
And while I do believe that we were all justifiably angry,
my perspective is we can't win. we can't meet hate with hate.
And that was my message from the start.
We can only do this peacefully, we can only do this coming from a place of love in our hearts,
no matter what you think. And it was upsetting me.
So I went up and I did that last video and discussed that.
I just said, please remember that Justin Trudeau
has three kids that have that same last name.
And just like I have three kids.
And my kids are waking up to see me
called horrible names.
One of them woke up to read that I was dead.
And Jill, at that point obviously,
but this is the stuff that they were seeing.
And I'm just thinking, think of them, even if you hate him, think of them.
Think of those reporters that are out there doing a terrible job.
I mean, they're probably just trying to feed their families is what I said.
And I don't think that's the excuse.
They can't.
They can't.
I agree.
I agree.
But I get your point.
Yes.
And yeah, and then I was pretty sure
that I was gonna be arrested and sure enough
the next day.
The next day, yeah.
You arrested.
And what was that like to be arrested?
Well, for somebody that's never even been in Facebook jail
before, it was quite, quite an eye-opening experience.
I spent the evening in the police at the police station in the cells there, which was awful. I'd spent the day walking around
with a veteran talking to people and signing flags or whatever, just talking with people,
listening to their stories. And so by the time we got back to the Swiss, I was quite
damp and cold. And then Danny and I made the decision to go out and turn ourselves in after Chris had been arrested. Number one, the
lady that owns that hotel. And had you been charged at that point? So why did you turn yourselves
in? Because they arrested Chris. Yeah. We knew that they were looking for organizers. We
turned ourselves in because we didn't want them coming to the Swiss hotel because she's
such a sweet woman.
We saved her from bankruptcy.
She was two weeks away from bankruptcy when we showed up.
We saved her business.
My husband and Danny's wife were both at the Swiss hotel
and I can't even imagine the trauma
of having to witness something like that.
I mean, I had it easy.
I was in jail.
It's the people around me that really suffered. The people that cared about me that really suffered. I'm fine. I was fine.
I mean, it wasn't great. No, it sucked.
But I, you know, I prayed. I just said, okay, God, we've exposed so much. You're obviously not done with me yet.
And if this is my job, it's thy will, not my will.
And one foot in front of the other, you just keep on keeping on.
I knew it wasn't the last time.
Well, you guys, maybe we should do,
because we're starting to encroach on the end of our time.
Maybe we should talk about what the trucker can
avoid accomplished.
So let me lay out some of the things I saw,
and then please, please elaborate.
So, well, first of all, it was a model for a peaceful demonstration of great magnitude,
well-organized under a tremendous amount of duress, right?
And in an inhospitable climate, literally speaking, and an inhospitable political climate,
under assault by the lying legacy media and by the top leaders of the country.
So that's all quite something.
And yet it was extremely peaceful.
And not so peaceful that it was impossible
for the people who were trying to pillory you
to even find single events that weren't entirely fabricated,
that indicated that anyone there
at all was causing any untoward trouble.
And that was always what I was looking for.
Because I thought you guys would be infiltrated by like that the wingnuts would show up sooner or later. But we
mitigated that. That's what I was saying. It was like C&E'd fill an aid, you know.
Antifa came in right away, so we set up block captains, and they would do patrols to make sure
that the people were safe in their trucks, so they'd walk the streets. So you had jobs for them.
Yes, I mean, that's what I'm saying. And that worked with Antifa.
Pardon me?
That worked with Antifa.
Yes, yep, yep.
So they just need something to do.
Yeah.
That's really not that surprising.
Yeah, exactly.
But the superintendent of intelligence for the OPP testified at the inquiry that the
lack of violence was shocking. That his words.
He also testified that what he was hearing coming from the media and from our politicians
did not match with the intelligence that they were getting off the ground.
So again, Lion Mendocino is up there every day talking about how violent we were and
on and on and on.
We're rapists and arsonists and insurrectionists and it was all a lie.
The night they arrested those two guys
in that apartment, they knew.
They knew the night they were arrested
and were with the arsonists.
Yes, and they still stood up.
They still stood up.
No.
Described in the Canadian media.
Well, it's going to be, it's going to be.
Where were they arrested?
I'm gonna make sure these guys are held accounts.
Where were they arrested in Ottawa? So there was those these guys are held accounts. Where were they arrested?
In Ottawa.
So there was those two guys that were trying to burn the apartment building down.
To lock the doors.
To lock the doors.
And a lady walks by apparently sees these guys.
I mean, it's all documented on Twitter.
I've got all of them.
So a lady comes into the apartment building, sees these guys trying to light a fire and
then goes up to her apartment.
Yeah. Right. Glenn McGregor was first on the scene. He was there before the police were called.
Yeah, that was quite that was quite the state of affairs. Just an absolute bloody
what what lie from from beginning to end. Really, really quite stunning. All right, so you managed
this extremely peaceful demonstration that was broadcast intently around the world
despite all of the legacy media lies, and that's all they did pretty much was lie about it.
And that was a model for people around the world. I think I know for a fact, because I've talked to the Dutch
farmer organizers that the Canadian protests were, what would you say, inspiring, inspirational.
Yeah, and that's happened in many countries.
And I think it's also given the Dutch farmer's heart, and that's produced somewhat of a political
transformation in Holland, which is in the Netherlands, which is a really big deal.
And then there were radical changes in Canadian policy after you guys were after the
trucker coin voted. And so, well, let's talk about what you faced right at the end.
I mean, we saw a footage of the police come riding in with horses
and we saw, you said, we talked last night about the woman
who was trampled by the police.
You want to help talk about her for a moment?
Yes, I was just fortunate enough to spend the weekend with her
and Chaba Vizi too.
Kandy was a carnival worker here in Ontario,
and she was there protesting peacefully.
I can't remember the reserves she's from.
She's Mohawk.
And she was there with her Walker, and they trampled her.
And she's got a broken clavicle,
which has not been addressed yet.
Well, she needs help, right?
So she's unable to work right now,
clearly traumatized, you know,
it was devastating what they did.
And also, Traba, who is just one of many,
was surrendered peacefully, came out of his truck
and was badly, badly beaten.
He had broken bones in his neck.
He had a broken wrist, an internal bleeding.
Did you say they were neighing him?
Yes, there's footage.
I've sent it to you guys, there's footage.
Yeah, he surrendered peacefully,
and you can see these cops, like literally,
with all their might, neighing this guy in the back.
It was atrocious, and he surrendered peacefully.
It's not like he was resisting arrest.
I mean, we had all talked with Danny.
We all knew what to expect if they are gonna arrest you.
Don't resist.
Tell them who you are, like identify yourself,
and then that's all you have to do.
Just go.
So, and then a lot of these people were arrested, handcuffed, left in cold transport units,
or patty wagons for hours, driven out to the outskirts of Ottawa and dropped off in a snowstorm.
No way.
Way.
Oh, wow.
Really?
Thankfully, Melissa McKee from Biker's Church and her husband who were just the most beautiful
people, they were very involved.
Their church was like a sanctuary.
And so what she'd been doing was a lot of the people that she knew, she would have them
write her number on their arm, and their lawyer's number on their arm.
So when that happened, or if that happened, they could call.
Because I mean a lot of these people, they don't know anybody there.
If I got dropped off on the Oskarce of Ottawa,
I would have no idea where to go.
If I had no cell phone or, you know.
So in the aftermath of the Tucker Convoy,
now the conservative party essentially shattered itself,
which was the goal of the convoy.
Right.
But we became the unofficial opposition.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
What else do you think the convoy accomplished?
It restored how this speaks to Christ.
I don't know why this always makes me cry.
People were proud to be Canadian again.
The two words that I heard the most,
the first one was hope coming all across Canada.
It was the number one word I heard
and the second one was pride.
Yeah, hope, that's a hard thing to give people.
I mean, I myself, Canada today,
is always one of my most favorite holidays
until the last few years and I was quick going.
But I mean, I was the one that would always take
my kids to the fireworks.
Like, this is important, you know?
I grew up being fascinated watching the Americans
and their passion for their country and their
flag.
I was always fascinated by that.
Yeah, American people are getting that sort of thing.
Yeah, but there was never that sense here.
That was my first experience imagining what that must be like.
I think we opened a lot of eyes.
Well, in a lot of the COVID tyranny started fall part in the aftermath of the truck of Cornville.
And it started right.
Well, it should have been a super spreader event.
We should have already had of COVID.
Right, right, right.
I could tell you one person, I know there,
that got COVID or had COVID.
Yeah, what was more like a super spreader event
that took down COVID tyranny, right?
Because things really did start to open up after that.
And I know the politicians denied that there was any connection,
but it was pretty bloody obvious that there was a connection.
So that was really heartening to see.
You know, because you know, one of the things to remember is that,
well, that might have been the thing.
Who knows, right?
Because we toyed with totalitarianism for two years.
Like we seriously toyed with it.
And then we walked back from the brink.
That's what it looks like to me if you want to read it optimistically.
I mean, impestimists would say, well, maybe we didn't have to
toy with totalitarianism to begin with and fair enough.
But sometimes people have to be hit pretty hard in the back
of the head before they wake up.
And it is possible that we woke up and will decide not to go
down that road.
And I think that if that's the case, then the trucker
convoy played a signal role in that.
And that's not nothing.
You know, that's extraordinarily important. You know, and that's pretty funny if that's the case, then the trucker convoy played a signal role in that, and that's not nothing.
That's extraordinarily important.
And that's pretty funny, if that's at least
in part a consequence of your decision
that maybe you had some responsibility too,
just by the side, what the hell do you know
when you're just another person?
There might be more to be in just another person
than people think.
Yes.
Well, I think Chris Barber said it best,
and we were still traveling to Ottawa in the
convoy at this time, and he was on the radio, and we were just talking, or he was talking
with other truckers.
The boat, I don't even know what was waiting for us or what we were going to accomplish.
And he said, we've already won guys.
And he was right.
Like people came out and came together, and, you know, there's a gentleman that did a
blog on a North Bay.
And he, and his blog, he said it was so dark.
Like, it was, everyone had the sense before we started that they couldn't last one more
week.
So this gentleman in North Bay had done a blog and in this blog, he said, he said, there
was a sense that people could not go on even one more week.
Like this was dark times, really dark times.
And nobody called anybody, nobody organized any groups of people to go out.
People just got up and got their families up off their coach and they went out to the
side of the road.
And then when they got to the road, there was all these other people, there are thousands
of people there.
And I can imagine the darkness.
That's right.
It's winter.
Yes, cold, man.
Yeah, we just wanted it.
That's why it's cold.
Yeah, yeah.
But all of a sudden, there's all these people there.
And they're like, they didn't feel alone anymore.
And they didn't feel like they were going crazy.
Because that's how I felt sometimes.
I was like, how?
What the hell?
You guys not see what is going on here?
Like am I the only person seeing this?
Mm-hmm.
And so it was just so beautiful.
It was honestly the most beautiful show of humanity
I've ever seen.
And Canadians did what they do.
We had more donations than we knew what to do with.
We were taking food as far away as Sudbury
to the food banks, because there was so much.
You know, out at the farms, we had the little outposts.
I mean, there was dog food, lip chap, gloves, tampons, everything.
There was everything under the sun
that Canadians just donated and drove.
Yeah.
You know, and that's the Canada that I grew up in.
Yeah, well, maybe we'll hang onto our freedom.
You never know.
It's possible.
We're going to find out over the next decade.
That's for sure, because we're really
toying with things on both ends at the moment.
But yeah, while it was heartening to see this happen,
and while it was heartening to see its effect, for example,
and the Netherlands, that's a big deal, right?
That what the Dutch farmers are doing there.
That's everybody in the world should have their attention
focused on that, because that's battlefield central.
These local battles aren't local at all.
And that's why so much international attention
was focused on the Canadian trucker coin boy at that point too,
because everyone had the sense that this is about more than,
well, it's about more than Canada.
That's for sure.
And it's about more than the local concerns
of a handful of misogynists,
bigots and Confederate flag waving fascists.
That's for sure.
Well, I mean, never before did we quarantine
the healthy to protect the vulnerable?
Yeah.
Never before.
Yeah, well, and to no good end,
and as a consequence, we've produced a tremendous amount
of damage and it'll take decades,
really to sort out exactly the cost of all that.
Yeah.
Well, I deal with that.
I have a daughter that has developed a drinking problem.
She suffers.
She can't drive from Manitoba to Medicine Hat without having two panic attacks.
She's depressed.
I mean, her graduation consisted of her putting on a gown and a mask and having a photo
taken.
Her graduation.
Yeah, we took a lot from those kids, boy.
Yes.
You know, that's your whole school life is getting ready for that one moment.
And then she went and did a semester at the University in Calgary,
locked in her rest. I mean, she should have been going to pubs.
Absolutely.
At full tuition.
Let's not forget that.
That was the university's contribution to the totalitarian catastrophe. It's like,
well, we won't actually offer you any services, but we'll take your money.
Cute. Well, look, we can end this with. Yes. Cute. Yes.
Well, look, we can end this with some hope.
You know, the trucker Cornvoy did accomplish a lot.
And we didn't get a chance to talk to you about what you're facing now in the future.
Maybe we'll do that on the daily wire plus side.
For those of you who are watching and listening,
thank you very much for your time and attention.
And to the daily wire plus people for arranging this on very short notice,
because Tamara just came over for dinner last night. We decided to do this.
Then that's very helpful.
I'm gonna talk to Tamara for another half an hour
on the daily wear plus side.
And you guys who are watching and listening,
you might consider heading over there
and providing them with some support,
that YouTube has been on our case
because I'm allied with the daily wearer folks
for better or worse at the moment.
And they've really launched somewhat of a full frontal attack on us in the last couple of weeks better or worse at the moment. And they've really launched, you know,
somewhat of a full frontal attack on us
in the last couple of weeks.
And that's not good.
And so if you're concerned about that,
well, one thing you can do or think about doing
is to provide the daily wire plus folks with some support.
They've been very good partners for me,
for whatever that's worth.
And Tamara, thank you very much for agreeing to talk to us today and Tam. Thank you for
purchasing today. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah.
Yeah. For sure. I appreciate it. All right, everyone. Good. Thanks a lot.
you