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May 27, 2022 - Rebel News
01:11:05
DAILY | Rebels wrap up in Davos; Conservatives debate en Francais; Trudeau in BC, what happened?

Alexa LeBoir and Matt Brevner dissect Justin Trudeau’s canceled $1,000-per-plate fundraiser amid protests, questioning racial slur narratives and lingering vaccine passport policies like Quebec’s unvaccinated candidate ban. They critique Legault’s ("Charé") liberal roots despite conservative support, his sovereignty debate evasions, and Bill 96’s divisive language law, while highlighting West Coast economic grievances—15%+ inflation, gas prices, and nickel mining deterrence. Unproven vaccine injury claims, monkeypox messaging inconsistencies (SIGA’s $10M U.S. deal), and a Montreal church enforcing vaccine passports underscore systemic distrust in media and governance, revealing Canada’s deepening polarization under institutional overreach. [Automatically generated summary]

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Canada Guys Discuss Racial Issues 00:08:44
Good morning.
Good morning.
Welcome to Rebel News live stream.
I'm your host today, Matt Brevner with my co-host, the wonderful Alexa LeBoir.
How are you doing this morning?
I'm pretty good.
And you, Matt?
I'm doing good.
I'm doing good.
This is my first time on the live stream.
It's been a few months, so I'm pretty excited to be back.
There's so much going on in the world today, and honestly, it's hard to keep up.
So I'm excited to go through these events with you today.
I swear, it feels like every 15 minutes something that's just mind-blowing, you know, shocking and awful, awesome.
Awesome.
So anyway, today is no different.
What's going on in your world?
Oh, my God.
A lot of things happening in Quebec.
I cannot believe like, yeah, so many, so, so many stuff, especially like our government to try to pass so many crazy bills because it's majority and he see like the elections coming.
So yeah, of course, it's crazy, but I saw like so many stuff happening in the West Coast as well.
So, and as well in Davos in Switzerland.
So, we'll try to catch up today what is going on for the last week.
Sorry, sorry, I'm having a bit of a technical difficulty.
I'm not getting any audio.
Oh, you know, Dancer, I understand what I say.
That's so sad.
Yeah, sorry.
I missed that whole thing, Alexa.
You were muted on my end, so I'm gonna have to apologize.
It's okay, not a big deal.
It's like every day we mute the French one and we continue our life with the English one.
Yeah, that seems to be a pattern in our country as of late.
But let's get right into it.
A couple days ago, Justin Trudeau was in town for a few meet and greets in British Columbia, in the lower mainland, my hometown.
And the last event he was scheduled for the day was actually a $1,000 plate fundraiser, where he was scheduled originally to be meeting with Premier John Horgan to make an announcement about the 2025 Invictus Games.
Protesters met him there.
It was 50 at first.
It grew to about 150, but they were quite loud and quite aggressive.
And it turns out that he didn't end up making the appearance.
We had thought maybe he had snuck in through a back door or something like that, but for security reasons, they called it off.
However, the next day, when this was reported in mainstream media, Global and National Post and CBC, they reported that Trudeau didn't go because racial slurs were being hurled.
Firstly, I'm not saying that that didn't happen, but I was there and I didn't hear it with my own ears.
And secondly, I don't really understand why.
I think I lost you.
Oh, can you hear me now?
Yeah, now, yes.
Okay, okay.
How much of that did you get?
Just the small hand, the hand of what you say.
So you were just talking about Trudeau, I have heard like about racial things.
And so you were there on the scene.
You didn't notice anything of that.
Yeah, we didn't notice any racist slurs.
Was the typical F Trudeau, which has become an international slogan, which seems to follow him around whether he's in the UK or whether he's at the United Nations or wherever else he is.
He is.
But I thought it was interesting that he would then take that opportunity.
Well, of course, he would take that opportunity to say he didn't appear here in front of these people who paid $1,000 a day to see him because racist slurs were being lobbed.
I don't see why that would stop him from appearing somewhere.
Like words would stop him from appearing somewhere.
I could see it being a security risk or whatever else.
And that should have been the appropriate headline.
But of course, you know, the race-baiting liberals took every opportunity they could to make it about something else.
But if we have that clip, I think it would be good to play it so people can see what the scene on the ground was like.
So I would call him like a coward, sorry.
But oh, like, how did he know that you have some racist slur or something like that?
He never shows up anywhere that they have like a big protest as a freedom convoy, as every kind of protest.
Oh, but he knows every single word that the people have pronounced or showed during these protests.
I'm sorry.
You actually build a story that fits in your narrative.
And afterwards, you have a good reason to not showing up like where you need to be.
Yeah, totally.
I think it was just a little bit too convenient.
What I didn't appreciate is the Globe and Mail article actually that I wrote or read, it linked somehow what had happened to Jagmeet Singh and Peterborough to some sort of quasi-racist, racist motives or racist intentions.
And honestly, I just think that's sloppy.
It just goes to show how out of touch these elite politicians and media party folks are if they can't understand why you know people in the only country in the world now other than North Korea where you can't fly or board a plane or Even leave because of your medical status, which should be private information, anyways.
You know, we're well past all of this, but people can't understand why folks might be upset with our politicians.
It just shows how tone-deaf they really are.
It must be racism, right?
Because it couldn't have anything to be with 7 million people not being able to leave their own country or being held politically captive.
But, anyways, yeah, we got you.
Yeah, we got your clip.
Yeah, let's run that.
Shello, Canada.
You guys are disgusting!
Let him in.
Okay.
Okay.
You guys want to be shaking?
Yeah.
Yeah, there you go.
It was, that was, that was one thing we actually noticed.
I had never seen that many Range Rovers in succession at one place at one time.
There was a lot of money at this event.
I will say, though, the temperature of this protest was higher than some that I've been to previously, even with more people.
I think it just goes to show how polarized we really are as a country and how broken things really are in Canada and even in the West generally.
I can understand why the prime minister did not appear at this event, given there was only one entrance and one exit.
If you're concerned for your safety, he is the head of state.
He is the leader of our country.
So his security is important.
His physical safety is important.
Protest Temperatures Rise 00:03:39
However, for it to be labeled as somehow racist just because of that, I don't think that's fair.
And I think that diminishes the true concern of these, not only these protesters, but a lot of Canadians.
Like there was a poll yesterday on the Canadian Health Twitter asking about whether people would get boosted and whether they think the mRNA vaccines are safe and effective.
And it was overwhelmingly like nine to one, no.
And this is on their own government Twitter.
So, you know, people still can't read the room.
You know, we're reading in the WEF that Moderna is complaining that they have to throw out, what was it, 30 million doses, 30 million boosters, because the general public isn't educated enough as to why they're good for them.
I thought that was really interesting too, but it just, they're unapologetic in their pandering, you know.
Yeah, it's really unfortunate.
It's so funny because everybody thinks that okay, like vaccine passport is lip.
We have no this issue anymore, but it's still in at the federal level.
But I don't know if you heard like recently, but in Quebec, for all the party except for the conservative party of Quebec, they will all obligate their candidate for the next election to be vaccinated.
So that's on the middle.
If it's like a request, what is going on?
What will happen after the election?
Are you going to put it back because you asked your candidate to be vaccinated?
Are you planning already to put that in place?
I don't understand why your request will be to be vaccinated when the vaccine passport is not there anymore, the mask as well.
So everything should be like a good way to say that everything is gone now.
Okay, it's fine, but why requiring that?
And if you're not, you cannot be a candidate for the next election.
So something is going on.
And it's really sad to say that.
And if it's like that as well to the federal, for the next election in 2025, it would be weird, no?
I'm not even sure if it's legal.
Yeah, I don't know if it is either, but it seems there's a lot of things being done in haste and without due process.
It's hard to tell how much of this pro-vax vaccination narrative that's still occurring is because of the digital ID push that's happening, not only in Canada, but globally, linking some sort of digital ID to your vaccination status,
your social standing, your economic standing, et cetera, which is one of the main topics, not only at the WF forum over this past week, but also these protesters were genuinely more like every protester we spoke to, they're aware of what's happening.
Usually these protesters are six months ahead of the general public, maybe more than that.
But they were all very concerned about the vaccine passport.
So I wonder how many of these politicians are actually concerned about the issues that they're pushing, or if they're just being useful idiots, or if it's a little bit of both, a little bit of a halfway point.
It's kind of hard to tell.
I would say both.
I would say a little bit of both too.
But just I don't remember if we saw to our audience that now we are on YouTube, but if we pass to subject or some topic that is really not permitted on YouTube, because as you know, like the censorship, it's still there.
Concerns About Global Elites' Sovereignty Impact 00:13:20
So you can follow our live stream on Rumble, SuperU.
We have as well ODC.
And do we have another platform?
I'm not sure.
Maybe RebelNews.com will have all of them there.
But if you want to send us a super chat and participate with us on our back and forth today, you can do that on those three platforms, not on YouTube.
YouTube has gone out of their way to make it very difficult for us to share the information with you.
So I'll take it.
I'm just talking with YouTube.
What is going on?
Like, did he try to remove every piece of fun out?
Yeah, any shred of truth.
If it's not, you know, virtue signaling in the narrative, they don't want anything to do with it.
But that's okay.
Yeah.
All right.
Did you see this?
Did you see this clip of the CEO or high up anyways from Michael J. Evans or J. Michael Evans from Alibaba Group, the president at the WF?
Do you see this clip when he's talking clip when he's talking about?
It's kind of concerning how much liberty these global elites feel that they have and not only liberty, but duty to interject themselves in our day-to-day and our everyday life.
Like, I don't know what gives them that merit, but let's check.
Let's check the footage and we will discuss about it afterwards.
We're developing through technology an ability for consumers to measure their own carbon footprint.
What does that mean?
That's where are they traveling?
How are they traveling?
What are they eating?
What are they consuming on the platform?
So individual carbon footprint tracker.
Stay tuned.
We don't have it operational yet, but this is something that we're working on.
Thank God.
Like, no, no, that's nothing about control.
And they never specify us.
They say they, they, they will be tracked.
They will be like, we will know where they go, where they have been.
So it's actually like, that's, remember me?
I don't know if you have watched the non-digital traveler identity, but it's the same.
You can track where they have been, where they are going, where, what they did, how much money they have.
It's about the same.
Like now they would be like, okay, you used too much of your carbon footprint.
Now you need to stay home.
Yeah, it seems kind of inevitable, right?
And unfortunately, through social media, especially platforms like Facebook, we've been into openly sharing our information.
You know, as much, like information that used to take tons of research and tons of money to gather, like who your friends are, what your religious views are, what your political views are, what your vaccine status is, what your opinion is on certain.
We just give all of that information away for free.
So we've kind of, as a society, we kind of got duped.
I feel we set this ball in motion.
And now this is just the natural progression of all these things.
I don't know what gives any of these people authority over our lives other than their profit margins, which is concerning, but I guess, you know, in some sense of the word, it's always been that way.
There's just, you know, they're not pretending anymore.
It's like the rich rule the world.
Doesn't really matter who you vote for in sense, not that you shouldn't participate in the democratic process, but you know.
It's just so disturbing.
Like in the same time in the web, the World Economic Forum, not only they were talking about the food, the carbon footprint that you can track, but as well on the pill, on the digestible, with the chip on it for the complying of the.
I don't know if Efron have like that footage, but I think it could be really good to show because it's been like a conspiracy theory for a while.
And now it's not anymore.
As like the laboratory in Yuan where was coming from COVID-19 was a really big conspiracy theory.
But right now, it seems like every piece of conspiracy theory is getting to be chosen.
True, true, yeah.
Efron's got that clip that you mentioned.
We're going to run that right now.
It is basically a biological chip that it is in the tablet.
And once you take the tablet and dissolves into your stomach, sends a signal that you took the tablet.
So imagine the applications of that, compliance.
The insurance companies to know that the medicines that patients should take, they do take them.
It is fascinating what happens in this field.
This field, yeah.
Man, I know.
This is like unreal.
This guy is like straight out of a James Bond movie or something.
And it's interesting because it takes so long for the media and then for public opinion to catch up to what these people are saying in real time.
Like he was one of the first people to admit, oh, yeah, maybe we were a little hasty with the mRNA technology.
We should have maybe released just a traditional vaccine and maybe would have helped more.
But you don't see any of these reports coming out.
You don't see people talking about it.
Yeah.
And they're not hiding.
And that's, you know.
And for the World Economic Forum, okay, do you find that normal?
That everything is live streaming.
Like you can watch everything on the what is going on there live on their platform, but our journalist was not allowed, first of all, inside to film.
And same, they try to stop them outside to try to film as well.
So what they are hiding that is not showed during the film, their live stream.
So it's probably something that they don't want to show to us because the security is so high.
Sure.
I mean, everybody who's in there, if they're not a multi-billionaire, they're vetted and they're sticking to a script.
So they can't afford, you know, because essentially the World Economic Forum is a big fundraiser, right?
It's an opportunity for all of these countries and all of these corporations to band together, raise money for social initiatives or economic initiatives.
So all it takes is one, you know, Alexa Lavoie or one Abby Yemeni to ruin that whole thing.
One question that's off topic to derail the whole thing.
You know, it's funny that we're talking about the vaccine passports.
Like, did you see that clip with Bill Gates?
He said himself at the WEF location, basically admitting that vaccine passports are useless.
Do we have that clip?
So many things happen, so we can, I lost track.
Let's check it out.
The idea of checking if people are vaccinated, you know, if you have breakthrough infections, what's the point?
The idea of checking if people are vaccinated, you know, if you have breakthrough infections, what's the point?
He said it himself.
He said it himself, which, you know, it's interesting because he was a major proponent early in the pandemic for vaccine passports, especially for travel.
Now, maybe what he's saying in a localized setting, it doesn't make sense if someone is standing inside and someone's standing outside of the building.
If there's a COVID outbreak, it affects everybody.
But my question is, like, what is that line?
And if you're going to, you know, if you're going to, if you feel it's appropriate to infringe on people's sovereignty and their nationality essentially by vaccine passport and limiting their travel, but you don't think it's okay in a localized setting or a city, who are you to make these decisions?
Like to me, I find that very concerning there, that there's no due process around that or any sort of checks and balances.
And Bill Gates and the WHO just get to decide what's appropriate and what isn't appropriate.
Yeah, but they can decide now what they really want.
Like when we look at, it's so funny how people react with this organization, you know, with the World Economic Forum.
Some people are like, oh, talking about that is conspiracy theory.
And some other people say, no, they are a threat for the sovereignty.
And so we will ban every people who wants to assist to the forum, annual forum.
Like as Podiyev says, that he wants to ban any minister or like I senior to attempt that when Mr. Chare said, oh my God, last time I was there with like Mr. Alper, and that is not a threat to the sovereignty of Canada.
So seriously, who is right?
Yeah, it's tricky.
I think there's obviously things in our country don't make much sense right now.
You know, we see our leaders say one thing and do the complete opposite and then blame you for it.
And that's been happening for this whole pandemic.
So I think people are looking for an answer.
They're looking for someone to blame.
Now, obviously, some semblances of globalization can be good for an economy or for a country, especially when it comes to trade.
But the issue is when social issues are being parroted alongside economic issues that are then decided by these heads of state and corporations, where the countries that are involved, like the people like you and I, don't have any sort of say on it.
And not only that, these things then get pushed back to us as social issues when in fact they're really economic issues.
So there's a lack of transparency and there isn't proper checks and balances.
And I think that's why people are getting upset and concerned.
And then, you know, you have clips like the Alibaba fellow basically saying, yeah, we want to just track your every move.
It's like, of course, that's going to, you know, that's crazy.
Whether that comes to fruition or not is one thing.
But clips like that or people speaking about these things, it's concerning and rightfully so.
You know.
I don't know if you saw, like, the question I asked to M. Charest, but have a look like all your answers to me.
M. Charest, bonjour Alexandra, la voix pour Rebel News.
Avec l'influence croissante d'organisations telles que l'Organisation mondiale de la santé et le Forum économique mondial qui s'infiltre au sein des cabinets du gouvernement canadien, comment allez-vous assurer la souveraineté de la nation pour que le pays puisse faire ses propres choix économiques et en termes de santé face à ses intérêts mondialistes?
La PSU n'a pas eu de questions.
Pas avec M. Charest, merci.
Bien, oui, pas de collègue.
Bon, écoutez...
I think the forum or the OEF minus the Canada sovereignty, I tell you with Stephen Harper.
En follow-up, envisagez-vous de voir le Canada adopter l'identité numérique et, si c'est le cas, quels mécanismes seront en place pour empêcher ceux au pouvoir de désactiver notre identité ou notre argent?
Car on doit se l'avouer qu'avec le gouvernement Trudeau, ce qu'il a fait aux camionneurs a laissé un goût amer aux Canadiens en termes de sécurité numérique.
Bon, écoutez, je vais prendre ça comme étant un commentaire.
Et s'il y a d'autres questions, je vous en prie.
Ah, I was not expecting more, like, as an answer.
Because that was my premiere for like nine years.
Can you believe that?
And what is like I asked him a question about Huawei.
Unfortunately, it was in French and we need to translate it at the debate.
I just asked him about Huawei, the fact that he worked for the company.
Now he wants to ban it from Canada.
What did that, what did change for the last past few months and why did he work for them?
So just that what he say that it was under a government, conservative government that Huawei integrate Canada and it just worked for them and it just life go on.
Like it just sometimes you work for a company, it turns it back and we change our mind afterwards and just like just make it really less bad than it is.
Mr. Brown's Hockey Ring Controversy 00:03:49
Like just like, oh, but that's life, ma'am.
That's it.
And I was like, okay.
But have you seen Lincoln J did catch Patrick Brown for a question about the okay ring and you should see the face of Mr. Brown.
He looked like really, he was like really happy at the beginning.
He's just like, oh no, what's going on?
I don't know.
I think it's what it's what it's what it's what it's worth it for rebel news uh we've seen you shut down Brandon public parks playgrounds and other public facilities under threats of $880 public fines and worse my colleagues and I witnessed you breaking your own rules heading to play hockey with your friends and you lied about that too what do you say to voters that don't believe you because of your past actions you
Well, I certainly don't agree with Rebel media and was very clear that I was one of the few big city mayors that pushed back against the closures of recreation.
And I'm sure you know that complaint from Rebel was found to be factually incorrect.
And I'm proud of my record during COVID-19 to have been one of the few big city mayors in the country who didn't have vaccine mandates and pushed to make sure that recreation was open to stay active, to stay fit.
It can be incorrect, the complaint when we had the video.
We have it on video.
Yeah, we should show that just for context so the viewers can decide whether this is factually incorrect or not.
And especially, oh, yeah, that's the perfect.
Yeah, David Menzie.
Well, folks, we're getting the bums rush, but holy mackerel, I think I see Patrick Brown himself.
Oh, hey, how are you doing?
Mr. Brown, right?
David Menzie with Rebel News.
You're in a city facility?
What's that?
You're in a city facility?
Yeah, so are you.
Yeah.
So are you playing hockey here?
No, I'm just coming to check in our facility.
So I'm going to check you.
You're not supposed to be here, actually, guys.
We were told that you play pickup here.
Mr. Brown, how come the kids in Brampton can only practice sports, but your buddies can play hockey?
Yeah, so I don't know why you are harassing people in the city of Brampton, but you shouldn't be.
Who's harassing who?
Your guys handed out 122 bylaw violations in one week.
Mr. Brown, why is there a hockey game going on in this arena?
I thought you're only allowed to practice sports, not play them.
And who is paying the thousand dollars a day, Mr. Brown, for this ring?
Mr. Brown, are these taxpayer dollars being used for your buddies to play hockey on this ring?
Or are you paying it?
Or perhaps we'll lead Solomon.
So Mr. Brown, Is there one law for me and one law for thee in this city?
Mr. Brown.
And he can't even, he doesn't even park his Mercedes straight.
And I was, I almost laughed because I was like, oh no, the car will not start.
And I was like, that would be hilarious being stuck in the parking with David Menzie, the other side of the window, and just keep like asking questions.
Why Quebecers Feel Different 00:13:56
And as well, I don't think that is the most like economic car in dangerous climate change time.
I mean, you know, why can't these guys just admit it sometimes?
They're human.
We don't, you're not Jesus, man.
We don't expect you to be perfect.
You make mistakes, and that's okay.
Admit your mistakes, show your humanity, and move forward.
I don't understand this.
Yeah, it's just gross.
It's really unfortunate.
But I will say that during the French debate, some of them, like, we knew that they had no English, but they did an effort to do it and to participate to it.
I will say, like, for everybody who tried to learn another language, as me, sometimes I find it really hard to express myself in another language.
But I don't really like the fact that Mr. Charé did say many, many times, oh, but they didn't really like not that.
And you say, what was really the question again?
Like, in the sense that nobody answered the question that he was asking, because probably they were reading what they wrote on their paper, being prepared to it.
But I was like, okay, you have the chance to have like two language, but try to defend yourself in Chinese and come back and be like more like, okay, self-conscious.
Like, okay, now like maybe at the beginning when he was trying to learn English, I'm not sure he was like perfectly good.
So I just, that was really bothering me.
Like he was the only one to always say, but they didn't really answer the question or like being a little bit more like, I would say, like that, snubbish.
Well, how often does he not answer a question?
He did it.
He literally did it.
He literally did it to you.
He's made a career out of it.
But I have a question for you that may be a little bit spicy.
But as you know, a native Quebecer and French speaker, how important is it to you that the next leader of Canada is fluent, extremely efficient and fluent in French?
How much does that sway your opinion as a voter?
So I would say that I'm not as some of the Quebecer are really like, you need to speak French.
I like, you need to represent Quebec because a lot of people are like really patriotic and really like, we are Quebecer.
We are there since the beginning.
We lose the lost the word, but we're still there, you know?
I'm not like that.
I'm just like, if you make an effort, I would say I would not take someone that they have no French at all because for me, it didn't take the time to really share a part of our culture to be French.
So for me, it's really important.
It to really do an effort.
And I can see that you can understand what we try to say.
I would say, okay, that's great.
If it looked like the best option as a leader.
But I know that some people would not vote for people who doesn't have French at all.
So I think unfortunately some of the candidates lost Quebec completely.
And as you know, Quebec was kind of liberal, but I think we have a lot of conservatives in Quebec.
So it's really important for them to win Quebec.
But as you know, like since the beginning, we only had like three candidates who came here to see the supporter.
I didn't see Roman Barber here yet.
He's planning to come, I heard.
I didn't see Patrick Brown as well.
And I will say his name, Scott Aitchenson, but he told me that I'm not pronouncing his name correctly at the debate.
I told him, I'm sorry, I'm French.
It's probably why I don't like pronunciate your name correctly.
But I was so in shock because everybody messed up my family name.
Okay, Lavois is not something that people are used to, but I would not say, oh, by the way, this is wrong.
My name is not this, it's this.
Like, I find that, again, I find that a little bit like arrogant.
Well, yeah, if you're going to hold a French reporter to that standard, your French better be flawless.
You know, and maybe that's something that we could run back to throughout the campaign.
I'm not sure how fluent he is, but again, surprisingly, I found that Scott Aitchinson had pretty good French, like really well pronunciate French to compare to, I would say, Patrick Brown, because everybody say, oh, Patrick Brown is good in French.
But he knows French, but it's for the pronunciation.
It's like sometimes it's really hard.
So it was kind of funny to see the debate because they were some of the candidates you saw them, they were uncomfortable to be there.
Like they were like, okay, I'm just waiting the time that I have like the right to talk.
And some of the, some other, like Charé, Polyv and Brown, they were like eating to each other and back and forth.
And that was really surprising.
And a lot of people like in the audience were like shooting and shouting and yelling and charé, chare, or polyer, polyer.
But I didn't really heard like other names get it out than Polyève and Charé.
But it's funny as well because they bring the law and 96 into the debate, but it's a provincial jurisdiction level.
But a lot of people are against it.
I think some of them didn't take really stands for it, but we know that Aitchenson, just before the debate, he sent like a letter to say like, I'm against it.
I'm standing for a minority English speaker in Quebec for their right and their freedom.
And I think it's a good thing because a lot of people are concerned about this law.
And especially, I don't think it's a good law to be enslaved in Quebec because we have already the law 101 and the law 22 that make the French language our official language.
So it's so funny how they bring so many problem issue of Quebec into the debate when Quebec is only one province in all Canada.
So we need to stop to always focus on the Quebec issue.
I have the impression that we take too much space to compare of the rest of Canada.
I have my own vision.
Like, okay, nice, we are different, we are the minority, but like at one point, like, stop it.
Like, it's okay.
Like, it's just because I think for years and years, the fact that we focus really much on Quebec and the fact that we are different, we are really into the French and everything that may rise a kind of hate from the English side and say, why they are so different?
Why they try to be like out of the rest of Canada?
It's why that I think it raised some hate that should not be there, like separation at one point.
So, we see polarization is starting way before COVID-19.
Totally.
Yeah, I think that's why we're seeing an increase in populism in politics in Canada, because quite frankly, on the West Coast, we feel irrelevant.
We feel like our voice doesn't matter.
In fact, during the election, by the time the ballot counts, you can get to Alberta.
Never mind BC, the election is usually already over.
Alberta's dying.
You know, they have, we're sitting on some of the largest oil reserves, cleanly produced oil reserves, you know, in the world, and they're not being extracted.
And people's quality of life is getting snuffed out, and they don't feel like hurt.
And I think a prime example of this would be the polarity between Pauli about the envoy.
I think we have, which is, I feel predominantly a West Coast issue, which is why it seems like the East, some politicians on the East Coast are taking such a hard line against it, calling it, you know, illegal or whatever.
Maybe we have a clip of that.
It's a bit ironic to hear Mr. Polyeva talk about law and order.
He's the one who's supported an illegal blockade in Ottawa.
Remember that.
Remember that?
Please, order, please, order.
S'il vous plaît, s'il vous plaît, s'il vous plaît, on perds tout à l'heure.
Please, we're wasting time.
Please be quiet.
And it's that, like, shall I continue to say that it was an illegal blockade?
Okay, some part was probably was, but at some place, no.
And I think Polyeb didn't support the illegal side of it.
He supported the people who wanted to express themselves, express the fact that they lost everything and to have back their freedom and their rights.
So it and but Charé still used that card against him.
But at one point, like we need, we need to say, like, seriously, it's boring because you have nothing else against him.
Well, right.
It's gaslighting.
Like, ultimately, you're basically saying that all of this inter movement that started in Canada wasn't important.
And what these people had to say didn't matter.
And in fact, these people are still being disenfranchised.
It started, I would make the argument preceding the trucker convoy, it really started with the laying off of the nurses and the silencing of the doctors, which in BC, anyways, are still, you know, provincial employees are still not able to work because of their vaccine status.
And we still can't fly.
So I think I have a hard time on the West Coast understanding how popular Charay is.
And I guess he is popular in Quebec, but to me, he just seems like a liberal.
I don't see anything really conservative about any of his policies.
They don't really make any sense to me.
And I think seeing the Conservative Party take a little bit of a baby step right has been good for them.
And I think they need to keep doing that.
I don't see how fits into that.
People need to understand the people who were there on support of Charé, they are liberal from Quebec.
They are not conservative.
They were following him during his campaign and when he was premier of Quebec, when he was in the Liberal Party.
And now they follow him because they loved him during it, but they were liberal for nine years and more, maybe.
And so, so I think it's why, like, now we bring the liberal from Quebec to begin to be conservative.
So that would hurt Trudeau.
Right.
Right.
We have a clip of the crowd from the debate.
Oh, man, that is actually crazy.
Yeah.
S'il vous plaît, elle va commencer.
Le débat va commencer, s'il vous plaît.
S'il vous plaît, merci.
Merci.
Merci, s'il vous plaît.
He's not cocky at all, hein?
Have you seen his face?
Like, he loves it.
Yeah.
And it's a funny part that they actually had a side of Chare supporter and a side of Polyev supporter.
Really?
Like, they were really in two sides.
So, me, I was really next to the Char side when I was filming.
And I was just like, whoa, what's going on?
You have so much like Char supporter.
What's what happened?
And yeah, that was a big, big, it was really like when I questioned people, or they were for Char or they were for Polyev, but I didn't see much like for other candidates at all.
And unfortunately, I asked like some of them, like, who is the candidate?
Inflation's Impact on Trust 00:06:12
They think that it will less perform for them.
A lot of people say less than Louis.
Unfortunately, I think French is, she's really better in English, I would say.
She's really good in English, but in French, it's not her power or strength.
I don't think so.
But think is, everybody was focusing on we want to develop, especially in Quebec, they were like, we want to develop and to extract our mineral and our like natural energy.
When, okay, did you actually mention that Legault did ban the development of gas and oil in Quebec?
So, all you will do something if the provincial level block you to do everything, right?
Yeah, it's there's definitely confusion around what's a provincial issue and what's a federal issue.
To mention, you know, one of the one of the biggest concerns, which you mentioned, is the federal government's willingness to block bank accounts, right?
What people may not understand is that sends a signal to independent investors all over the world that if you invest in Canada, you're not safe.
The government can shut you off or seize your assets.
You know, that doesn't exactly say welcome foreign investment, especially for something like, you know, for example, Quebec is sitting on large nickel mines, which are used for the LFP batteries for all these electric cars.
And, you know, we have the ability to offer a sustainable approach to that, fair wages, community involvement.
But if these corporations that the Trudeau government are trying to woo into our country don't have faith that Trudeau and his team economically know what they're doing firstly, secondly, have a control on the economic situation and the money printing and in our currency, they're not going to invest here, no matter what that is.
So I think there needs to be some accountability as to who's responsible for what.
And that's also a part of our job too, as the media to explain to people because people just are so fed up.
They're just getting upset about everything these days.
And I think there needs to be a little bit of like a focused concentration on what to be upset about to whom, so we can ask a better question.
But I think people are just fed up on everything.
Like it's not just like Trudeau regime, but I think it's on the provincial regime as well.
And I think we need just a change in all politics because right now I think it's got something is going on that we want to change something, but nothing is changing.
Like we try to have an election with Trudeau, but it results on many million of dollars spending for the same result.
And now, like, I'm really curious of how our election will turn and our Ontario will turn because I'm the ASCO, but I'm wondering for the rest of Canada as well, like, do we see a changing on the leader or they would be the same?
So if it's the same, are we going to enter in the same kind of time that we just passed of the last two years or it will getting worse?
Or what is or do someone will be like elect and will be fighting for the freedom and the right of their citizen?
Yeah, you know, the harsh reality, and I think we all can feel it as Canadians, is our country is in a very dire position.
You know, people don't trust our institutions.
The people don't trust the news.
The people don't trust that the media and the government has their back.
Our household to income debt ratios are amongst the highest in the world.
Inflation, you know, economic are saying it's about 8%, which means real inflation is running about 15 or plus, just so people understand.
Economic inflation means what the dollar is worth.
Real inflation means what you can buy with your dollar.
So people are feeling squeezed.
BC, we have the highest gas prices in North America, not just in Canada.
And people are, they don't see a way out.
So unless our politicians really buckle up and figure some things out, I can't see Canada being able to continue on the path that it's on now for the next 10, 20, 30 years.
We can't even, we don't have a federal identity anymore.
You know, we don't know who we are as Canadians.
There's such divisiveness and polarity, even in the municipal level, between what our children are being taught.
Even something as outrageous as agreeing on what a woman is now in Canada is so controversial.
We can't discuss that.
Never mind tackling big issues about the war, like the war in Ukraine or Canada's role in NATO or how much money we're printing or whether we should stick on a fiat currency or go to a hardback or a gold back standard.
Like we can't have sober conversations about any of this stuff.
And we're starting to see it spill out on the streets, like these protests, like people getting in Jagmeet Singh's face, people stopping Trudeau from being able to attend this dinner.
And this is just honestly a sign of things to come.
And this isn't about the angry protesters.
It's about these people who feel like these people have no choice.
They've had everything stripped from them and they don't have hope.
You know, so the thing is, when people feel hopeless, that gives the opportunity for a politician to provide hope to the people.
Now, whether that is willed for good or bad is yet to be seen.
More often than not, if history has taught us anything, more often than not, this lack of hope can be corralled to cause damage.
And usually through that, a new system emerges.
Signs of Change 00:15:38
Now, I don't, I'm not advocating for that.
And I hope I don't have to live through that.
I'm just saying from everything that I'm seeing going on in our country and even in the West right now, it just seems kind of inevitable.
Like there's tension in the air and people don't really know how to get out of it.
You don't want to be the next leader of Canada?
I can't speak French.
So just for that or just because you don't want to speak French?
I don't think I'd be very popular, to be honest.
I have very unpopular opinions, unfortunately.
Maybe you, I'd vote for you.
Maybe I could be in your shadow cabinet, Alexa.
Yeah.
But people will say, oh, she doesn't speak any like good English.
She'd be a leader.
But by the way, for the people who didn't know, we had like the first release of the documentary of what happened to the court.
How do you say it?
Coots.
The Coots documentary that had been created by Kian Simon, one of our reporters, and really well made.
So the first release was yesterday.
It was really exceptional because it was all the tickets was sold.
But we will have another one on Wednesday.
Do you know where exactly it is?
I think it's Alberta in California.
It's Canyon Meadows Cinema in Calgary on the 1st.
And, you know, it's really interesting because Kian and Sid were actually with the truckers in the lockdown.
So they got the type of, you know, we, Rebel News, we got the coverage that no one else was getting because the people trusted us.
They trust us to tell the story adequately.
And it was a really special moment because all the truckers actually came to the event last night in a big limousine.
And they gave Kian the standing ovation.
So, you know, people feel empowered when they're able to tell their story correctly.
And Keen did an amazing job.
He's been doing awesome work with Lewis on the great reset mini dock that he's doing.
He's just, his storytelling game has gone up and up and up.
So I'm really proud of him.
It's really cool to see how he's the talent, you know, his burgeoning talent.
And yeah, so that's going live.
I believe it's going on Rebel News Plus.
It's going live today.
So be sure to check that out on Rebel News Plus.
And yeah, if you're in Calgary, go check it out in person because it was quite the event from what I hear.
We have some tickets available still.
We will show you just an excerpt of the trailer, just for you know a little bit what we are talking about.
If we have it.
We're here for all Alberts.
Canadians, we're here fighting for the freedoms of not us, but our kids, our grandkids, the future of this province, this country.
We are prepared to put everything on the line.
The small fringe minority of people who are on their way to Ottawa or who are holding unacceptable views.
I've also received reports in the last hour of people allied with the protesters assaulting RCMP officers.
No, that was an assault between the two civilians, between a protester and a civilian.
So Jason Kenney's statement was not true at the press release.
I can tell you what I just told you, sir.
They have just blocked the border here in Coutts, Alberta, to Sweetgrass, Montana.
We don't want to put anybody's land in jeopardy.
That is the very last resort.
But this is something I don't, I've certainly never seen before.
Freedom and peace and loving.
That's the Canadian way.
It's not like CBC or any of these other mainstream news channels are making it out to me.
I am not a white supremacist.
We're not backing down no banding to this.
We're not backing down no banding to lift.
We have, this is our only battle we have.
Wow.
That like goosebump.
Me too.
Yeah, that's awesome.
Yeah, definitely, definitely check that one out.
Hey, we've got a few, we've got a few super chats.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, maybe I'll run through those.
Fraser said in all caps, which I guess he's very upset.
Fraser, who had the COVID-19 flu?
Both recovered.
In the last year, I know four people who have had bad reactions from the jabs, two with heart trouble, another with kidney problems, another with liver problems caused by the jabs.
I'm so glad I did not take the jabs.
You know, it's funny.
Well, it's not funny you say that, but at this protest, the Trudeau protest a couple days ago, we interviewed this woman from China who got both of the Pfizer jabs shortly after.
She was mentioning that her menstruation was just going crazy, like she didn't have a period for months, and then she couldn't stop, which turned into hemorrhaging.
And now she has breast cancer and a tumor on her bladder, I believe.
And she has no history of cancer in her family or anything at all.
This is, of course, anecdotal, and this hasn't been proved yet because good luck getting a doctor in Canada to say that that's the case.
It's very difficult to prove a vaccine injury, but she's convinced.
She otherwise had a perfect bill of health and now she's, you know, she's fighting for her life.
And it's really concerning because she's obviously not some sort of crazy white supremacist.
She's an immigrant from mainland China who's at a protest being deemed racist because she's protesting Trudeau because her life has essentially been ruined.
So yeah, you know, unfortunately, Fraser, these stories are becoming too common in Canada.
And I don't think that history will look kindly upon us for this time.
And it's something like that is really concerned me because I was looking at some of our mainstream media.
We go back many, many years ago, I think more than 10 years ago, and they were doing debate and platform for the people who had like injury after the vaccine that they gave.
I think I don't know if it was the flu H1N1, but they give platforming.
They were investigating all that.
Now we don't heard anything.
Nothing, nothing.
This is really a problem.
Yeah, it doesn't make sense.
And it doesn't take much to see that it doesn't make sense.
But yeah, we just got to keep on keeping on, you know?
Yeah.
But now we have RMT60.
$1.
Thank you very much.
I really like Ezra's interview with Roman Barb on Ezra's show.
He stands for Freedom.
My five candidates for upcoming CPC leader are Roman, Pierre, and Lesnar.
Nice to see you, Alexa and Matt.
Hi, nice to see you too.
Yeah, I will say that I don't have fab right now because I want to report on all of them and see their side of the story, their ideology, what they see for the future.
Because sometimes we can take a part of one candidate, but forget to watch really closely what others have to offer.
So we'll see.
I really at the end when it would be the vote, or I stand for, but right now I just want to report equally to show for the people to really understand who is the different candidate.
I don't have it.
I don't really have an opinion.
Well, I do have an opinion.
I'd like to say biased though and partial, but I will say that I hope that whoever it is is transparent and is willing to tell us straight how it is and isn't trying to just butter us up.
I think as a country, we're ready for that.
We're not looking for someone who's necessarily going to wave a magic wand and fix everything.
I think the average Canadian understands we're in a bit of a hole and we just need somebody who's willing to be honest with us and has a has a plan.
So that's all that I can hope for.
We don't want the best liar.
We want the best leader.
Right, totally.
That's good.
I like that.
So do you want to read the next one?
Sure.
Cheryl Don V. Thank you for the dollar, Cheryl.
Is this new law in Quebec aimed at new immigrants trying to deter new immigrants from settling in Quebec?
Alexa, maybe you can comment on that.
If you say what is deter, I never heard about deter.
Deter.
So like to persuade someone from not coming.
Like to like.
The new law is the Bill 96 that brings the new immigrant to have French cool.
So more French cool, more franchised them.
I don't think it's for them to not come into and sell themselves because as you know, like Quebec government just inject more money, more million of money for the lodging and for helping the new immigrant.
Same if they ask to close the Roxanne Road.
And that they inject the, I think it was 50 million of dollars that they injected before asking for the Roxanne Road.
If I'm right, if I'm actually right.
So we know that we have a big problem because we have, but it's maybe a good thing because now we reach the fact that we don't have any place, any shelter for them.
So the money would probably go to help to have more place to put them like in apartment or like hotel for their quarantine and when they arrive, because we cannot receive them and say, oh, you will sleep in the street.
That doesn't like fix the problem.
Right.
So, you know, similar things are happening in, well, just in Canada as a whole, like with this rush to bring in Ukrainian immigrants, women and children, specifically because the men are being held back to fight.
And yes, we want to welcome people into our country who are, you know, being disenfranchised and disaffected by war.
But the way the government's setting it up is they're bringing women and children in here.
They're providing them with basically two weeks of housing and two weeks of money to get by.
And then after that, they're left to fend on their own.
But they're women and children, otherwise not able to enter the workforce.
So what are they going to do once they get here?
You know, it's something, it's one thing to just say, hey, yeah, we're pro-immigration, welcome with open arms.
And then, you know, not helping people actually acclimate when they get here.
I think that's just kind of cruel, to be honest.
It is.
Would you want to write and read the other one?
I think you're better than me to read it.
Sure.
All right.
This is from AMT 60, $1.
Thank you.
Alexa, earlier in the year, Beck was going to impose a health tax on the unvaxed.
Did they ever do it?
I hope not.
I heard monkeypox vaccines will be given out in QC soon.
Oh, so we had like, actually, first of all, the tax for the unvaccinated didn't pass.
I think he didn't pass the legal process.
I don't know why he didn't go further on this, but they finally let it go.
But we had the press conference, I think it's yesterday, with the Al Public Minister.
And so they will start the vaccination against the monkeypox, but only available for people who get closely in contact with some people who had symptoms.
So our people who had the symptom as well can have the vaccine.
But my point of view is like, if you had it, you're supposed to be humanized.
No?
Why do you get the vaccine afterwards?
Yeah, I don't know.
The vaccine is, it's like a helmet now.
It's not like a preventative.
It's a, I don't know.
This whole thing hurts my head.
I don't understand.
I'm not even going to pretend to understand the logic behind any of this.
You want to read?
Yeah, I don't know.
I don't have anything to say on that.
I think it's crazy, but I'm not a scientist.
So I'll leave it at that.
But no, it's just like for me, it's just like the whole press conference was like really in the shadow.
They were not wanted to give where was the like what was the place of the occlosion.
They say like to be careful with your sexual like interaction, like your sexual action with people who can be close contact with someone who when some people say that it's not true.
It is not by sexual act that you got it.
So right now I have the impression that some people say something and some people say another thing and we don't know.
And they try to make it like really look like don't don't be scared.
Like it's only a couple of case.
And if you have like some symptoms, just wear the mask and lockdown, not lockdown, but like stay home Until quarantine yourself until like you see that everything is out, like you don't have like the, how you say it, like when you have like some, I don't know, like the symptoms are the source.
The cesentombia, exactly.
And I was like, okay, you don't want to say where the occlusion comes from because it can target some of the people who have it.
But okay, but during the COVID, nobody was really worried to say where was the occlusion and everything.
So what's going on there?
Yeah, I didn't realize that it was airborne.
I thought like if it was like you know, shingles or any sort of like variation of like the herpes virus is by skin on skin contact.
But I guess if you have to wear a mask and a and a respirator and like, I don't know.
But I, I, but I'll tell you this much.
I'll tell you this much.
SIGA, which is the stock ticker, which just sold 10 million doses of monkeypox vaccine to the United States, is up 25% today.
Image of Health 00:04:39
So there's your stock tip of the day.
This is not financial advice.
Thank me later.
Thank you.
Anyways, we get to the next, the next one here.
GGCT.
So nice to see you both here today.
Have you have missed you, Matt?
Oh, thank you.
Thank you, Rebel.
Thank you both.
God bless you and keep you.
Well, that's nice.
That's so kind.
God bless you too.
Thank you.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I fall in love with you, Matt, with your song that you release.
I actually say every day.
Thank you.
Yeah, there's some more music coming soon.
But yeah, I'm working on that in the shadows.
Yeah, thanks.
It's really kind.
I appreciate it.
5LBRY, masks and church for non-vax in Montreal.
Did you hear about this?
I will investigate on this.
It would be nice to know which church we are talking about.
But it's true, like some school now, you still need the vaccine passport to be our volunteer or to go inside of the school.
And so I have the impression that everybody can decide what they want to do with their business.
Right.
You know, and I would say, as a Christian, I think somewhere the church has failed over the past couple of years.
And I mean, the Western church specifically over the past couple of years is making an idol out of things of the world.
For example, the mask or the vaccine or the institutions.
And that's concerning to me as a Christian specifically.
But, you know, I'll leave that for you guys to ponder and synthesize.
Anyways, I think that wraps it up.
I think we have, there's one more thing I'd like to leave you guys with today, other than obviously check out the journalism that's happening in Davos at WEFreports.com.
We sent six independent journalists there from all over the world.
We're getting coverage that literally no one else is getting.
And it's really spicy and really interesting.
So make sure you check that out.
Abby's just killing it out there as per as per usual.
I just love everything that he did.
It caught so many people on camera.
And I think everybody will love to watch that.
Yeah, it's just, he's just so good at his job.
He's fearless.
You know, he's not willing to, he's not afraid to spark up a conversation with anybody.
But yeah, maybe we can leave, we can leave you guys with a clip of Avi versus the WHO security and not being allowed entrance.
Oh, yes.
That's a good one.
Thanks, Guy.
Yeah, thank you, guys.
Soon.
Sounds fun.
Stop.
Ah, you guys are the same team.
Yeah, yeah.
Is everything okay?
Now stop to film.
Why?
Because you have not authorization.
Not film.
One second.
Why do you need authorization here?
Yes, it's double virtue.
Why can't you film the World Health Organization?
Because it's official if you said double verse is bad.
Yeah.
Duble Verchau, when you film.
It's okay.
Okay.
You film.
If I say it's bad.
Maybe I do.
So what does it matter?
We can film if we like the World Health Organization, but if we're reporting badly on the World Health Organization, we can't film.
So they don't seem too happy with filming the World Criminal Health Organization.
Hey there, mate.
Bonjour.
Do you speak English?
Very few.
You are of the profession, you are a journalist.
You are...
We will contact the control center to see if you have an authorization to...
Bring someone in English and speak French, right?
This is the Yemeni journalist, Y-E-M-I-N-I, Avi, of his name A-V-I.
My name sounds good in French too.
This is certainly an image of health.
He's got his masks tied to his security belt.
It's very secure.
Taste of Tyranny 00:00:53
Please, just one moment.
Okay?
Thank you.
What?
One moment.
Yes.
It's possible to film your interview, okay?
Just for the image.
The image, yeah.
Yes, not inside the building.
Well, not going inside.
That's okay.
Yes.
Okay, thank you.
Just around.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Thank you very much.
There you go.
So that's the thing you've got to learn when you stand up for yourself against tyranny.
And that's what it is.
That's a taste of tyranny.
That's what it looks like when authoritarian states and rulers try to shut you down.
If you stand up for yourself, nine out of ten times, at least while you're in a democracy, you will win.
But that'd be a lesson.
Avium for rebel news.
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