Nat and Kat’s Rebel News Daily unpacks the Netherlands’ farmer protests—facing a 40% emissions cut—while Alexa Lavoie exposes ArriveCan’s $5,000 fines and digital failures at Montreal Trudeau Airport. They critique Trudeau’s Reconciliation Day performative gestures against Indigenous housing crises and mock Carrie Burassa’s alleged identity fraud. The episode also dissects transgender activism, citing Macy Gray’s backlash over biological sex distinctions and a 4,000% surge in gender identity claims, while rejecting terms like "birthing parent" as erasure of women’s reproductive reality. Abe’s assassination underscores systemic failures, from border apps to cultural appropriation, revealing how governments ignore dissent until it explodes. [Automatically generated summary]
It airs every weekday at 12 p.m. Eastern Time, hosted by different hosts.
Today we are joined by the lovely Alexa Lavoie in Montreal and Kat here.
I'm Nat.
Thank you all for tuning in.
We're live on YouTube, Odyssey, Rumble, and Getter.
And be sure to send your chats throughout the show, and we'll be happy to read them at the end.
Maybe we'll read some in between.
Who knows?
But yeah, we're looking forward to it.
How are you doing, Alexa?
I'm good.
And you never better.
Never.
Literally never.
Things are great in the world.
Yeah, everything's fine.
Everything's fine, you know?
I think we want to start off by addressing what's, I mean, you know, just following up with our boys, Lincoln and Lewis, who are in the Netherlands.
Nothing going on there, though.
Yeah, nothing.
Boring stuff is just another blue-collar revolt that's making actual impact in the world, much like our Truckers Convoy from this past winter.
So yeah, Lewis Brackpool and Lincoln J are in the Netherlands right now, covering with Boots on the Ground, showing you guys the other side of the story, which is what we do best.
You can follow all their coverage at farmerrebellion.com.
And it would be great if you could chip in a few bucks just to offset the cost of their meals, their accommodations, and just support our independent journalism.
They're hungry.
They're really hungry.
They're so so young men.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Do we have any cool clips that we can play to show some of their footage, producer Olivia?
Wonderful.
We'll get to that in a second.
We'll get to that.
Anything new with you, Alexa?
Oh, recently in Montreal.
Yeah, you moved, right?
Yeah, so I trade my wall with rock.
Yeah.
Very organic.
She's so organic, you guys.
It's true.
That's fun.
Moving is the worst.
It is the worst.
It's the absolute worst.
I'm about to move.
So wish me luck.
Oh, really?
I haven't found a place yet.
Step one is to find the place.
Step two is to cry.
Yes.
Yeah.
So Alexa, have you been following a lot of the coverage in the Netherlands?
Do you have an update that you want to like, like, what's your take on everything that's happening?
But my point of view is like they are imposing a reduction of 40% of emission of carbon and nitrogen, but all you can produce any farm produce if you're not doing emission.
And that will impact not only Netherlands, but that will impact most of the country around and as well as Canada, because Netherland is like one of the biggest product of farm produce.
And so it's, it's, remember me, I would say like the Freedom Convoy, like everybody is like united for one cause.
And whatever you are, different in all you think or all your value is maybe not perfectly the same, but we are all there and we unite our harm and we are fighting for the oppression that is coming from their government.
So I find that really beautiful to see because we saw it during the Freedom Convoy, how peaceful it was.
But like they attacked the farmer and you know the farmer, it's it's I don't think it's some people that you should like attack because they are spending their life with dirty hand, dirty hand.
That's a really hard job.
They are doing that for the people.
Digging, doing some agriculture, Taking care of cows and sheep.
And this is all for us.
Without them, we are nothing.
Yeah, they're more speedy guys.
I was going to say, like, don't bite the hand that literally feeds you.
Like, I don't know why the gut, like, how the government thinks that there would be no reaction from farmers is just insanity to me.
Yeah, it's insane.
What do they think people are going to eat?
Bugs.
Yeah, like, seriously.
Literally, they think we're going to eat bugs.
Yeah.
Like, that's actually, and I refuse, guys.
I will starve.
I would rather starve.
Yeah.
I think we have another clip here.
Let's play that.
So we are on our way to Irbeck, where we're going to be meeting some farmers and having a chat with them.
And also, we've been told that a conference is going to start at around 5 p.m. Amsterdam time, where the mainstream media are going to be talking to the farmers head on.
And we're just going to turn up.
They're aware of international reporters arriving into the Netherlands to cover this issue because, like we said, it's not a local issue.
It's more of an international issue.
And we are joined by reporter for the post-millennial Katie Davis Court.
It's an absolute pleasure to have you with us today to be reporting and collaborating.
So we can't wait to start.
And yeah, we're going to have updates throughout the day.
Head on over to farmerrebellion.com.
You can chip in and help fund our trip and help us get the other side of the story to you guys.
That's farmerrebellion.com.
An update soon.
Nice.
Yeah.
Those boys are working hard.
Yeah, it's just so important to have like citizen journalists on the ground.
Like they're in the action, I think.
And you're so well versed in this, Alexa, because you were really in the thick of it during the Truckers Convoy.
Literally.
Yeah.
Like literally.
Hopefully no one gets shot like you did.
Yeah.
It's really sad.
I really wanted to go in the Netherlands, but maybe next time.
Hopefully there is no next time because we don't want another revolt.
But yeah, you should go.
Maybe for something else.
Yeah, maybe some other tragedy that is going to happen.
Well, the scariest part about this is Justin Trudeau is talking about bringing the same thing to Canada.
And at first, it's going to be mandatory reduction of 30%.
Sorry, not mandatory, voluntary reduction of 30%.
But farmers are like, okay, when that doesn't work, when most farmers refuse to do that, they're worried it will become mandatory.
And that's so this is super important to lay the groundwork for what's going to happen here in Canada.
And obviously, like we've mentioned, like these, like, I hate to say this, but like the elites, they don't seem to care about the average, like the average working family.
And yeah, well, they are not going to be the ones eating bugs.
No.
You know, it's what I was saying.
They want them to reduce their emission of carbon when, oh, damn, they take their product and they probably like destroy most of the planet with their own carbon footprint than the farmer.
Yeah.
Well, the, um, I don't, I forget Melanie Joy.
What's her name?
She's the Minister of Foreign and Foreign Affairs, I think.
Yeah.
Excuse me.
She is currently in Fuji.
Fuji?
Oh, that's always nice.
Is it Fuji?
Is that in Indonesia?
Fuji, it's in, it's a small island close to Indonesia.
Okay, yeah.
So she's there for a G20 summit.
But it's like, like with all the things that are going on in the world, and especially the fact that you're going to talk about carbon footprints and emissions and stuff, like you could have Skyped.
Yeah.
You could have Skyped in, Melanie, but you know, she's on a beach somewhere right now.
She probably flew private.
She didn't have to go through Pearson Airport.
She didn't have to go through that nightmare at the airport.
And Yeah, we'll get to the airport situation in a bit, but I don't understand.
I've been to Fiji before, and it's a really small place.
And I think as much people make sure it's Fiji.
I don't think it's really adequate, like, I don't know.
I don't think it's adequate to have as much people there.
Yeah, I'm going to look it up because it's somewhere in Indigenous.
Oh, Bali.
Sorry, it's not Fiji.
It's Bali.
Oh, Bali.
Just back into Bali.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah.
Bali is also beautiful and full of beaches.
Am I right?
Yeah, sounds like a vacation that our government is just taking and they're calling it a meeting or whatever.
That's great.
You can join by Skype like we're doing with Alexa right here.
Imagine we had to fly Alexa here private jet just to have this conversation.
We'll do that next time.
Yes, Alexa.
Oh, yeah.
Perhaps we should maybe jump into one of our first stories here about one of our favorite global elitists, Bill Gates.
Everyone loves Bill Gates.
He is a beacon of health and wellness.
Bill Gates' Farms00:03:38
So apparently, guys, he got approval to buy up to 2,100 acres of North Dakota farmland.
What's he doing with that land, guys?
Yeah, it's digging his whole preparing for the apocalypse so that he can survive or something, or he's going to build a bunch of bug farms or something.
If I was an economist, I would have a better grasp on the situation, but I'm thinking it has something to do with controlling the supply of food.
Yeah, and I think these are potato farms.
Yeah, yeah.
And I know he already owns, I think, the majority of potato farms in the USA.
And I think the majority of McDonald's french fries are come from those farms.
So if you buy McDonald's french fries in the States, you're basically paying Bill Gates.
But who isn't?
Yeah, or maybe vodka.
We don't know.
Oh, true.
Darn.
That's true.
He does look like he drinks a lot.
Conjecture.
Yeah.
Conjecture.
Remember, we talked about that.
Yeah.
It's just my opinion.
It's super interesting that this is happening at the same time as the farmer rebellion in the Netherlands.
And maybe one, like, I was reading a piece from Brian Lilly this morning saying that you're probably going to see Canadian tractors protesting very soon here in Canada, either A, to support the Netherlands and B, to kind of get ahead of Trudeau's to prevent these net zero goals.
And you know how it's going to be labeled by the good prime ministers and racists and anti-science, even though they're literal like earth scientists.
Well, especially because in Canada, I mean, such a diverse country already, but farmers, that's a diverse industry.
It's not just a bunch of white people.
It's people from all over the world, all sorts of backgrounds, like coming together and feeding us.
Like, it's insane that much like our truckers.
Yes.
Yeah.
But it doesn't.
The farmer is not only in Netherlands, it's as well like in Germany, in Italy, and they're all joining all together.
And I think it's mostly European coalition that they are raising their voice, as we saw so far.
But it's probably we start here soon if they are imposing the same regulation for the emission.
And because at one point, these people have sacrificed all their lives to keep their farm up and survive.
They are not rich people at all, at all.
Most of them, like they are, they are just living good with the minimum.
And they are doing that because they are passionate to be a farmer.
Yeah, and I think a lot of them, it's in their family.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So they are just proud to have that, what they are.
And it's always like a good emotion to be proud of what you are producing, the quality, what you are offering to people.
And it's what mostly they are proud of.
So they are not doing that for the money.
They're all doing that because it's all their life.
It's all their passion.
It's what they have for culture from their parents.
And you're taking that away from them?
Yeah.
And it's going to literally starve them out of business.
Like there was some stats, and it's kind of convoluted.
It's about how much money specifically farm families are going to lose.
But there was this one stat that said a reduction for a farmer with a thousand, like as an example, a thousand acres of canola, a thousand acres of wheat stands to have their profits reduced by approximately $38,000 to $45,000 to $40,000 a year.
That's hugely significant.
Good Ads, Bad Apps00:13:51
Huge.
That's so huge.
And who cares, though?
They're only families starving.
Like the politicians clearly don't care about that.
And it's like, and so the ones that can make it are going to scrape by, and many will just go out of business and sell their land.
And, you know, this is again, tinfoil hat, but who's going to buy that land?
It's probably like large landholding companies and they're going to put up condos and townhouses.
Yeah.
Or, and what happens when it's people like Bill Gates, these like globalist elitists who own all of our land and they are in charge of production.
Like, what are we, what are we going to do?
Yeah.
We're going to eat bugs.
Yeah.
Like, and even if they were saying that there are alternatives to the nitrous oxide or whatever they use, I guess it's not nitrous.
Oh, yeah, nitrous oxide.
So there are, the government is saying, well, there's these alternatives you can use, but they produce lower yields and they use plastics in the soil to like delay the whatever.
I don't know.
I'm not a scientist.
So the point is, it's like they're going to be like little microscopic plastic particles in the soil producing less food.
And it's going to be, we're going to have more microplastics in our diets than we do now, which is also like a record high.
And it's like, again, and that will not have any detrimental impact on our health in the future at all.
Certainly not.
We're going to be great.
It's going to be like Barbie, all of us.
Can't wait.
Alexa already does look like Barbie.
Yeah, she's gorgeous.
Yeah, you're perfect.
I think we should, I think we should jump to an ad break.
But again, everyone, go follow Lewis and Lincoln J on Twitter and head over to farmerrebellion.com and chip in a few bucks and support our boots on the ground.
Oh, this is a good ad.
Oh, this is a fun ad.
This is a good ad.
You're going to love it.
You might hate it.
You're like
we're smiling.
No, we're not.
Well, that's that makes me want to go buy some merch.
I'm wearing some merch.
I have mine.
Oh, yeah.
I have mine.
Yours is from the Rebel News main store.
Yeah, that's cute.
What does it say?
Yeah, but I have my misunderstood one, though.
Oh, yeah.
This one remains nothing stay at home.
That sounds smart.
It's a good advice.
I have the gray shirt that you wear at the beginning.
The gray.
Well, thank you for your support.
Fan fave.
It is a fan fave.
But actually, guys, right now there's a really good deal at the Rebel News store.
If you use code SUMMER and you buy two unisex shirts, you get one for free.
So use code summer at checkout, buy two unisex shirts, and you get one for free.
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And I think it's all summer long.
So be sure to take advantage of that and buy some misunderstood merch.
Yeah.
Super cute.
It's super cute.
You're gonna love it.
You're gonna just love it.
And the shout out to Isabelle, who edited that for us and filmed it.
She's so talented.
She puts up with so much of our she does.
They all do.
Yes.
All of them.
All right.
Speaking of crap, feds threaten to fine Canadian travelers for not using Arrive Can app.
Yeah.
Felix.
Alexa, we were talking about this this morning a little bit, but you actually went to the airport recently, right?
Yes.
So I went to Montreal Trudeau airport.
And I just wanted to check if the situation of the management with the luggage and the delayed flight have been rectified.
But no.
Yes, but no.
We still heard in the news that it's still going.
But what I saw in the ground, it was mostly like people had a good experience for the customer service and for their luggage as well.
But when it comes to the ArriveCan app, it's where people get a little bit mad, upset, and some angry.
People need to understand that ArriveCan have it's mandatory to arrive in Canada or you risk a LT fine of $5,000 and a big interrogation from the border services.
That's always fun.
Yeah, but the app had been like created for like it's a small app, okay?
But a lot of people need to download it, not only Canadian, but as well tourists that want to come in Canada.
So the app is not made for having like millions of people to download it.
So recently the app have crashed down a couple of times.
And what I heard so far from travelers, their flight had been delayed because the hub have crashed.
So the flight was not capable to fly.
So they were stuck at the airport.
We think that the application is restarted.
So at one point, the guy was talking to me about the friends' flight.
All Canadians went to the flight and all other tourists stay behind because of the ArriveCan app because they were not allowed to jump on the flight because of that app.
This is incredible.
Since when we are stopping people to not enter in our country just because of an electronic pass.
Yeah.
What if you're in a room on your phone?
What if you're an old person?
This is like this, it goes back to the same thing about using your health app, the vaccine now, the contact tracing.
It's kind of Aegis.
It's super Aegis.
And the whole point of the whole thing boils back down to the beginning of the pandemic.
This all revolves around the pandemic, which at the very beginning was to protect the vulnerable, which at the very beginning was elderly people who were most and are still the most susceptible to COVID.
So in trying to protect them, we've created this new digital society that completely alienates them.
It's terrifying and sad.
Even my, like, honestly, my mom's not even elderly.
I doubt she would be able to work this thing.
She's like, teach me Twitter.
And it's like, it's no, it's so.
Yeah, how do you help someone like that?
And she's not even old.
Like, she's kind of old, but she's not that old.
Like, think about actual old people.
Like, they're like, well, I'm sorry.
I have my print.
Some people print their tickets out.
Yeah.
They have their passport.
No, my husband's grandma just got a cell phone, y'all.
Like, just.
And so, what is she supposed to do?
She's supposed to download the ArriveCan application.
Exactly.
It's just ridiculous.
And it's funny because Health Canada also laid all the blame for all of the issues we're seeing in the airports on actual travel.
Yeah, that's what's like Minister of Transport or surge in travel.
We've been trapped in Canada for two years.
Like, of course, people are taking a moment because who knows if this moment is temporary to be able to go on a trip.
Like, I see family that they haven't seen.
Like, it's not all going to Hawaiian vacation.
For sure.
And it's like, don't you think the government and airports could have at least tried to be better prepared?
This should not come as any sort of government.
Prepared.
I know.
You sound crazy.
I know.
I'm such a crazy person.
The kidney didn't have to like forget one thing.
The passport, the regular passport, the paper one.
Yeah.
This is your right to freely pass in your country without hindrance or delay.
And it's not what is happening right now.
They have taking away our right to pass freely in our country.
And nobody did say nothing.
And nobody seems caring about it.
It's another right that is taking away from us.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I feel like the system before COVID, when we were arriving from international flights into Canada, it was fine.
Like there were no issues with it.
So I don't get like if a system isn't broken, don't try to fix it.
Like it's just completely insane.
And it said the article said that the conservatives are trying to call for this sort of return to pre-pandemic travel rules.
So we'll see what happens, but it just seems like things just are continuing to become more and more inefficient within our government.
But ArafCan, it's all about the vaccination data.
It's what they want.
And as well, because if you scan it first time, it's linked already to your passport.
So afterwards, you don't need to scan your ArafCan hat, but they will know if you're obligated to do a quarantine.
So they will know that it's who to survey, like who to look at when they come back for their quarantine.
So they will know where you live and where they can track you and where to call you if you're respecting or not your quarantine.
It's all about that.
So it's an invasion of privacy, essentially.
I mean, that's not new for them.
No.
But it's also ironic that in an effort to protect people from COVID, they're having people like sleep in the airport.
Like there's hundreds of people, thousands of people stuck in the airport waiting for their flights and they're sleeping on the ground.
Their luggage is all like unattended.
And it's like, okay, this is for our health.
Yeah.
Once again, I ask.
Nothing about sleeping on the ground should be for you.
And there should be like people coming through and moving on, coming through and moving on.
But when you're stuck in there, like COVID is an airborne virus.
So like you're just breathing in more and more particles from other people.
People who've been all over the world, really.
Yeah, no, it's just, it's all craziness.
It's all craziness.
It's crazy.
You know what else is crazy though, y'all?
Rogers.
Rogers.
Oh, yeah.
Rogers.
Have you all heard about Rogers?
You want to know?
No, because I have no freaking she hasn't heard anything because she can't read the news on her phone.
But apparently there are outages across Ontario and Quebec.
You're obviously not affected by this, Alexa, because you're on this call right now.
Yeah.
But that's like a big deal.
This is a very huge deal.
And I was, my first question was, like, are people going to be compensated for these outages?
Like, you pay for your phone, you pay for your internet, and now you're not able to use it.
Yeah, I've been through this before the last time there was an outage, and I did ask, and they're like, yeah, we can compensate you.
It's about $3 because it was only out for a couple hours.
So they're like, based on the amount that you pay per minute or hour, they're like, yeah, it's like two or three bucks.
And I was like, oh.
But like, we rely on our phones for literally everything.
Like, what if you miss the most important call of your life because of an outage like this?
And for me, I drive a long way alone in a car.
Like, yeah, what if you, what if your car breaks down?
Yeah.
Like, I'm stuck and I can't even call anyone to come help me.
obviously it's not just about me but it's like all the people who are now without self-service it kind of but in the same time guys uh before in the past i had the padget i didn't have any phone so i know you are able to live without your phone not me that's a good point i know yeah i was thinking that i was like hey i'm free But it's more like if you're not capable to live without your phone, this is a big, big issue.
First of all, I'm scared.
But the thing is, if Roger have this kind of problem, of course, he should recompensate it to people who doesn't have a line.
But in the same time, maybe people would turn and say, maybe I would quit that company to have another one.
And it's why they need to do something.
Yeah.
And maybe you're right.
Like after my initial panic that I couldn't order Starbucks on my way into work this morning subsided, I was like, you know, at least the government's not listening to me and tracking me right now.
Like, I know that's kind of a tinfoil hat, but it's like, it was almost like sort of a relief in a way.
Cause I was like, you know, it's not like I'm, no, people are going to think I'm dead.
Like, I will get to work.
I will drive home.
I know the way.
I think the scariest thing about it is like the fact that most people don't have cash.
So we're not able to do transactions.
And it's like, wow.
And the government has been hell-bent on trying to push this cash society.
So it's like, it just made me think.
I was like, I should just always have cash on me.
Like, we have to keep circulating cash into our economy because what are people doing right now?
They're stuck.
They don't know what the hell to do.
Yeah.
It's funny because on the one hand, they're trying, like you just said, they're trying to make this a cashless society.
And then, oh, your RiveCan app won't work now.
And oh, your digital passport, your vaccine passport, none of that's going to work.
But that, so that they're, they're pushing us in that direction.
But things like this, which are unforeseen by the government, kind of take the veil off.
And maybe we should all live like Alexa used to and just be like, you know what?
Because it might get to the point.
And I've talked about this before where if they say you have to attach your bank account to your vaccination status, you have to have this digital ID.
Oh, because like they do in China.
Oh, you're not vaccinated.
Oh, you said that thing on Twitter.
Now you are denied for your mortgage.
Now you can't get a bank loan.
These are slippery slope.
It's a slippery slope.
And these are potential things that are going to happen to us.
So maybe instances like this are going to push us in the direction where it's like, you know what?
Maybe I get a flip phone.
Maybe some basics.
Good old-fashioned telephone calls and I will survive because we might need to anyways.
Scary, but because don't forget that I was traveling 10 years without any line of phone or internet all by myself.
Slippery Slope Risks00:14:04
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
That's why you look so good.
Yeah.
Stress.
Yeah.
It's a valid point because there was initial terror for me, but then it's like, I'll be okay.
And I made it.
I made it.
You guys, I'm here.
She's here.
I got great.
I got on the highway.
She got Starbucks too.
So I still got Starbucks.
I went back with cash.
First of all, yeah, these are my problems.
Is it time for another ad break?
Yeah, let's do another ad.
Shall we?
Yeah, let's do an ad.
Do we have any ads?
Another one of ours.
Just kidding.
Let's watch it again.
First time wasn't embarrassing.
Oh, my God.
We'll watch it in reverse this time.
Oh, Alexa hates it.
That's good.
No.
It's fine.
The fan will love it.
Yeah, one fan will love it.
Yeah.
My husband.
Yeah.
My mug?
I know.
It's pretty cool.
So is this hoodie I got on.
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Well, that was fun.
That was a good one.
Yeah, she's the best ads.
But guys, don't use Drea 10.
No offense to Drea.
Use code Summer because if you buy two unisex shirts, you get one free.
That's such a good deal.
No offense, Drea.
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But people need a deal in this economy.
Times is rough, you guys.
Times is tough.
Tough times in Japan as well.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
I saw the video of that.
Yeah, horrifying.
So assassinated Japanese leader was apparently a close friend to Canada.
So Japanese prime minister Shinso Abe was assassinated on a street in Western Japan by a gunman who opened fire on him from behind as he delivered a campaign speech.
Yeah.
That's just so horrible.
It's shocking and horrible.
Like, again, and Japan is one of those countries that has extremely strict gun laws.
So, you know, I'm not going to.
Criminals always obey the law.
Yes, of course.
And that's what we know.
Yeah.
I don't really have much of a take on this other than the obvious.
It's like, don't murder politicians or human beings that you might disagree with.
It's awful and sad.
And he was a cool guy.
Yeah.
And it also just speaks to like we were talking about, like gun control laws.
Like they obviously don't control illegal criminals who do illegal activities with guns, huh?
Huh?
Yeah.
But when we look at that, okay, okay, Trudeau say, I lost a really close friend.
Japan is one of the country of the G7 and Boris Johnson as well.
So now we see like slowly all maybe the leader going away.
But I don't like murdering someone is actually the worst thing to do in the world.
But it just people are fed up.
And they are created the fact that people are not capable to live in that world anymore.
If you take the time to listen, everybody, that will not have happened probably.
Like taking the time to talk with your population, saying like what is going on?
What is wrong?
What people are not capable to end on anymore.
But I have the impression like just looking at the patient of the people.
Have you seen all the video of people getting impatient when they come to customer service, asking questions?
People get crazy now.
It's insane.
I never see as much people losing their temper in front of small thing.
So if that happened, I'm not really surprised, I would say, but it's horrible.
But I'm not sure, do that will happen again because we're getting in really a dark time.
Yeah, that's a really good point.
Like, I think to your point, Alexa, like in this expedited society that we live in, we expect everything immediately right away.
And especially because of our phones and because you can, like, like, for instance, again, not to talk about me and my Starbucks, but on my way, when I couldn't get my order in, I was like, oh, like my initial response was like, blood rage, murder.
I was like, oh, I can't order my iced coffee.
And then it's like, that's crazy.
That's just the world we live in has made us into these monsters that immediately expect everything to be sorted out.
So when you're faced with an actual human being, you might lose your mind.
And like, thank goodness, I don't do that on humans.
I just do it in the crazy prison of my own mind.
But like, you're so right.
I think that there's more anger and less patience than ever before.
I think too, because like the government has just really screwed us on a global scale and people are fed up.
Like the government, as you kind of mentioned, Alexa, like they've forgotten who they work for and we're just doing whatever they ask of us.
And I think people have just finally had it.
And it's very scary because people are going to go to extreme measures.
And that's just the last thing anyone wants.
Like we don't want people getting assassinated.
No.
And we're against it.
Yes.
I think that's, I think, like against the murder of all.
Yes.
Yes.
That's fair to say.
Yeah.
It's really sad.
Exactly.
But in the same time, like I would say the same that we say, like Trudeau should listen his people.
Every prime minister should listen their people.
And but the society has created the I don't know if you remember in the past, but the customer was always like the king.
You have all the rights.
And that was taken away from us.
Now the customer have no right to do anything.
They are not, the service is miserable because the employee are not missing.
So they are keeping like what they can.
And so that frustrate the society, they frustrate the people that we are always being naturally served really fast.
And now we just see like we are oppressed from everywhere, not only from the government, but from our purchase.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, I recently went to Service Canada and they actually have signs up there that say any like offensive behavior will not be tolerated.
It's because people get so frustrated with these government employees who are extremely slow and it's almost as if they're slow on purpose, but you can't do anything about it and you have no rights, even though our taxpayers pay their wages a little too, they get paid well.
So it's just like, of course people are frustrated.
It's just, it's so gross.
Take that out on a human.
Of course not.
It's not the person behind, like, and I know that's not what you're implying, but it's not the person who's going slow's fault, really.
Because what they have no incentive in a government, they've bought incentives incentive to work hard because there's no accountability whatsoever.
And that needs to change.
I think that's the biggest thing.
But like the bit, the only solution I can see is to abort government.
That's all.
Because anything government, it just slows everything down.
It makes everything worse.
And the bigger the government, the longer the lines, the more miserable the employees.
And then the more miserable the country is, honestly.
Let's just shrink government.
Yes.
God willing.
Yes.
God willing.
Peaceful.
With our words.
With our words.
Yes.
And our demands.
Yeah.
Be kind to people, guys, even government employees.
Yes.
Okay.
That's the takeaway.
Should we talk about our favorite subjects?
Yes.
Well, gender mostly.
We're going to talk about race and gender.
But Nat and I love to talk about gender issues on our show.
We love Leah Thomas.
Yeah.
So if you love Leah Thomas too, go to watchmisunderstood.com and watch our show for free.
Okay.
So here's an interesting story.
Queen's University should apologize, create process to validate Indigenous identity.
So when I read this at first, I was like, huh?
Yeah.
But it turns out that this is a way to stop people from falsifying their Indigenous status, which is like anyone who pretends to be a minority is gross.
That is just so gross.
And it's sad that like Queen's University now has to put in a whole system just to make sure that they can validate identities of Indigenous people.
Like that's just so, it's pathetic that that has to happen, but apparently it does because people are trying to get ahead in life by pretending to be minorities and Indigenous people.
And it's like, guys, like we have, again, the culture has created this world where being a victim.
Exactly.
Like to be a minority and impress minority is like brownie points.
Yeah, exactly.
And it's like, that is so pathetic.
It's very exploitative.
It's gross.
It's so exploitative of people's culture and it's disgusting.
And there was that Canadian professor who got caught.
What was her name?
Carrie Burassa.
She got caught and it was all over the U.S. news too.
And she would wear like full Aboriginal garb and stuff.
And it turns out she had zero Aboriginal blood.
It's so gross.
I don't know.
What do you think, Alexa?
First of all, I think a lot of people have a little bit of blood of indigenous because when we colonize some people, a lot of people came to colonize have had baby with indigenous.
And it's a good thing because you mix the genetic together.
So the genetic gets stronger at the end of the day.
Yes.
And that is true.
A lot of Canadians do have some Aboriginal blood, but they're not all walking around in Aboriginal garb claiming the benefits.
It's not rooted in a lot of people's identity.
It's not in their blood.
Yeah.
But for me, I don't know what is the point to just climb.
I'm indigenous and look at me.
I'm indigenous.
Okay.
Fine.
Like it's fine for you.
But what that brings to me, absolutely nothing.
So why you like I can say, hi, hello, I'm blonde.
Hang on, everybody.
Look at me.
And what does it do for indigenous communities?
Like, it's not bringing them clean drinking water.
It's not, it's just so self-promoting.
And it's, it's very self-centered.
And I think, I mean, I'm glad.
I kind of am glad that people are getting caught in this.
Hopefully, this kind of there's a shift culturally because it's just, this can't continue.
Yeah.
No.
Well, I think it takes away from the actual struggles that Indigenous people go through.
Like Nat just mentioned, clean drinking water.
Like that is a basic fundamental right that people should have access to clean drinking water.
And they're diminishing all those actual struggles where people are like, oh, I want to be a, I want to get like Senator Elizabeth Warren.
Warren, yeah.
Like getting into wherever Yale or whatever, wherever she went on an Indigenous scholarship.
Like you are taking away from actual Indigenous people when you do that.
And the indigenous people were there before us.
And I would say now they are in other land that they are not their land, but they are tolerated to occupy that land that it's come from probably government company as Ido Quebec, you know.
And they have, they all live in one really small house and they don't, they ask for more house.
Like I was watching a documentary the other day and they asked for more house.
The government provides them the material, put the material there for them to build their house.
Some of them, the wood and all the material is still like on the ground because they don't know how to build a house.
If you give me the material, I will look at the material and say, okay.
Yeah, it's a nice plank of wood.
Yeah.
Same.
Yeah.
I'd be like, yeah, it's the same time.
Yeah, but it's the same thing with the water.
Like they keep going to buy some plastic bottle of water because they don't have running water at their place.
This is completely outrageous that in 2022, we have some village that doesn't have running tap water.
Yeah, and isn't that something that Trudeau was trying to like, didn't he make a promise?
Wasn't that in his first term?
Yeah, he was supposed to try to improve that.
No, but he's way more interested in making it seem like he cares about indigenous communities.
Yeah.
I mean, we all remember Reconciliation Day on September 30th in Tofino.
Yeah.
We were all.
Yeah.
We all are privy to that wonderful photo.
It's way better to buy a lot of vaccine and wasting in the garbage.
Yeah, that are expiring now.
And to vilify, criminalize, and freeze the bank accounts of peaceful protesters.
And like go on and the Emergencies Act, like all the money and time and energy that was dedicated to destroying the lives of truckers, like when you literally have young children who can't drink clean water.
Like that's a bad take.
After making that one of his campaign promises in the very beginning, I think.
I'm pretty sure he did, but I mean, don't quote me on that either.
Anyway, you know, he's sad.
He's a bundle of joy.
Yeah.
We love him.
Love him.
We love him.
But anyways, that's interesting.
What else is going on?
Why Gender Matters00:14:40
So days after Grammy award-winning musician Macy Gray came out against transgender reassignment surgery, which she criticized on Pierce Morgan uncensored, the musician was attacked online by transgender activists and their woke allies, allies.
You know, these activists are just so loving and kind to people who disagree with animals.
They just, they always handle things so respectfully.
Like adults.
I hadn't even heard of this.
I didn't know what statement she made.
All I saw was scrolling through Twitter that Macy Gray, the musician, had to apologize for a statement.
And I was like, oh boy, what could it be?
And all she said was, just because you go to change your parts doesn't make you a woman.
Yeah, I think we have the clip here.
Can we play that?
Love to hear.
Let's try her out.
If I asked you what a woman is, what would you say?
Let's say a human being with boobs.
I don't have to start there.
Yeah, I mean, the dictionary is quite straightforward.
It just says adult or female, right?
Now, a lot of people.
Yeah, see, now that's a little getting confusing.
Oh, that's going to happen.
And I'm not sure why, really.
It's a bit like this whole issue of transgenders in sport.
I support all trans rights to fairness and equality.
Me too.
But not where you have people born to obvious physical superior bodies.
Me too.
Transitioning and then thrashing the women at their sport.
I totally agree.
And I will say this, and everybody's going to hate me, but as a woman, just because you go change your parts doesn't make you a woman.
Right.
Sorry.
Sorry.
You feel that?
I know that for a fact.
Like, if you want me to call you a her, I will, because that's what you want.
But that doesn't make you a woman just because I got you a her and just because you got a surgery.
Because people do feel that there's biological sex and then there's gender identity that you can identify as whatever you like in terms of gender, right?
That's the freedom we live in.
But actually, you can't change the mechanics of biological sex.
They are what they are.
Well, just like a woman go through just that.
Yes, because gender is not a performance.
Yeah.
And also people get confused all the time.
Gender is one thing.
Like she, like they just said, you can go by any gender you want.
That's fine.
I will respect your choice and call you whatever you want to be called.
I'm not trying to be a dick.
However, sex is biology.
Gender and sex are different things.
And to say like woman is, I don't know, people will argue that woman is a statement of gender.
Female is a statement of fact.
It's male or female.
This is biology.
And as a biologist, dawn of time.
Yeah.
Like you probably feel the same way?
Yeah, but I think the only exception I would say is the El Mafrodit.
Like people intersectionally born.
And there are people with two sex.
Yeah, that's not being transgender.
That's true.
And I'm sure if we looked up the percentage of that, it's like very minimal, I'm sure.
Probably so minimal.
I think I did once and I forget the number, but it's like it's inconsequential.
And those people deserve all the respect in the world and they can choose how they want to live, et cetera.
But the number of people who identify as transgender, as we know, has skyrocketed like 4,000% in the last like seven years.
So it's like, those people are not intersex.
Those people were not born with double sense of genitalia.
It's just those people went down the wrong Tumblr.
Yeah, they went on a Tumblr page and they got confused.
And to attack a woman like Macy Gray, they are calling her a TERF, which is a trans exclusionary radical feminist, which, you know, Nat and I have been called as well.
It's a way to minimize women and erase women.
Yeah.
And it's funny because one of the next stories we're going to talk about is: I don't want to get ahead of myself, but in an effort to be more inclusive, they're going to exclude, exclude women by saying you can't be called a woman, you have to be called a chest feeder or a bleeder.
Like, these are disgusting ways to define a woman.
If you want to be inclusive, stop trying to exclude women from being called women.
Yeah, because being a woman is like a beautiful thing and it should be celebrated.
What women can do with their bodies, you know, reproductively is a beautiful gift and that should be celebrated by people.
And it's being completely erased by like a minority, an actual fringe minority of people.
Yeah.
Like it's insane that we're bending a knee.
And she minorized.
Yeah.
But she shouldn't have apologized, frankly, because she said nothing wrong.
She said she would be respectful.
Yeah, she did.
She said she respects them as humans and that they deserve all the rights any human deserves and she'll call them whatever they want to be called.
And that's exactly how I feel.
And then they go and call her a TERF.
And it's like, no, she just is, she's a friggin scientist and stating the facts.
She's not a scientist.
She's a musician.
But the point is that she's stating facts of science.
She's saying, A is not B.
And they're like, A is B. How dare you?
And it's like, okay, like, it's not, just because it's determined that it's mean now today, it's still truth tomorrow.
Yeah.
And it's narcissistic to think otherwise.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But people need to understand that most of the time when people are doing are transgender, it's because it's all when you are in the womb in your parent.
It depends on the effect outside, but the hormone that is transmitted to the baby would develop more the feminine part in your head or the masculine part.
It's why like some people are more masculine than feminine.
And afterwards, it's not because you feel like completely like a man that you should not maybe question yourself, do I really want to go until the end?
Especially when you're really young.
But if you're doing it, everybody would respect your choice and we call you by what you want to become.
Yeah, if you're not.
But don't like go and don't go and hurt someone because, and what she said, it's actually legit.
She didn't, she did nothing wrong on what she was saying.
And especially she brings the respectful way to say, I will respect your choice.
And it's what is a society.
I'm going to respect you, but respect me as well.
Yeah, and they don't.
No, they don't.
That's what's like, that's what is so funny about it.
They're so aggressive.
These, what are they called?
Transgender activists and their woke allies, as they call it in the article.
Like you people are being so hateful.
Like, is it, you want us to be inclusive of your identity, but you can't be inclusive of my identity, which in my world, you are still your natural born sex.
How come my, like, my views are not tolerated, but your view that you're a woman is?
Like, it's, well, yes, we should respect each other's delusions.
Even if you think I'm delusional, you should still respect my delusion as if I should respect your delusion.
Like, why can't we all just be like, sure, you think you're a woman, I think you're not.
Like, let's just still go have lunch.
What's the point?
We can agree to disagree for sure.
And it's funny because the same people, you know, are the people who told us to follow the science during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Yet they completely ignore the science when it comes to gender ideology.
It's so hilarious almost.
It's really difficult to follow because, you know, some people have a gender, but outside, they don't wear any identification.
So they wear men and woman in the same time.
So they are not her, they are not him, but inside they are accepting that they are a man or a woman, but they wear both gender in the same time.
It's called a new thing.
Like it's called being endogenous.
Like you can wear like David Bowie.
Like he was still a man.
Yeah.
He was still a man.
You can wear makeup.
Like being a tomboy.
Exactly.
Like this is why it's so sexist and it's homophobic too.
Because if you want to be a gay guy who's effeminate, that is honestly being a man.
You're still a man.
And a lot of gay people will agree.
Like I knew a gay guy who was like, he said that he, what did he say?
He was a biological essentialist and that people were coming for him because of it.
But he's like, back in the day, being gay was something to be proud of.
But now it's like, well, are you sure you're not a woman?
Like, no, I'm sorry.
I'm still a man just because I happen to like effeminate things that you call effeminate.
Like, aren't we?
I've said this a million times, but aren't we past living in a world where if you want to wear pink or you want to bake, you're a woman?
Like, isn't that some 1930s nonsense?
Like, I, oh, I like sports, so I'm a man.
Yeah.
Like, that is so stupid.
It's so small-minded.
That is the society who say that you're a man.
You should be strong.
Watch your sports.
Yeah.
Don't cry.
Yeah.
You should die.
And I thought we were pushing against that, but it's like we're bringing that ideology.
Well, and that's what we see so often with all of these sort of Marxist kind of like, you know, critical theorists.
It's so progressive, these policies and these ideologies and ideas that it's regressive.
Like we're literally going back in time.
Like we're literally like women are about to be erased.
Yeah.
This is Star Trek.
This is it.
Shout out to David.
And, you know, there's a U.S. teachers union that's proposing to ban the word mother now in favor of birthing parent because men can apparently have babies in 2022.
Did you guys know that?
I don't know any guys who can pop a baby out.
Again, like I'll say, I'll say this till my face turns blue.
You can be gender neutral.
You can gender yourself however you want.
But if you're pregnant and about to give birth, you are a female.
Yes.
You are of the female sex.
And that's okay.
That's fine.
You can be a female who identifies as whatever you want, but you're still a female.
The only females can have birth, give birth.
Yeah.
It seems like.
But probably they talk about transgender that they are a man, but they are a baby, but they begin like the mother, but the father.
Yeah.
The father, but I give birth.
If you give birth, you're a female.
Yeah.
It's like, it's not hard.
And like we've said this before, but like most people don't use terms like chest feeding and birthing person.
It's literally a small minority of people who are trying to erase gendered terms.
And it's wrong because it will erase women in the end.
Like, okay, only women can give birth.
That's a privilege.
That's a blessing.
It's very cool that only women can do that.
It's one of the few things women can do that men can't.
So I think that it should be celebrated, not erase.
And it's just, it's just, it really boils my blood.
And in this article, they mentioned how out of touch the teachers' unions are because, like you just said, Net, most people don't use that language.
Most people are like, oh, she's pregnant.
It's like, he's pregnant.
Like, most people don't talk like that.
So for the teachers to, they're just so out of touch.
And the scary part of it is like, oh, okay, whatever.
They're out of touch.
It's like, well, they're molding the minds of the youth, which is absolutely terrifying.
Yeah, it's scary.
And I'm sorry.
Women have their period.
Yeah.
That is actually make us suffer.
Yeah, it sucks.
I'm sorry.
If you don't suffer like that, you're not, you cannot say like you're gray men.
That is a great point.
And nothing boils my blood.
Well, there's lots of things that boil my blood.
But one of the things, Starbucks.
But one of the things is Alexa just hit the nail on the head.
It's like, okay, so you want to identify as a woman, but you've never had a period.
Yeah.
You've never been fair.
You've never been punched in the boob.
Yeah.
Yeah.
An older schoolmate.
Ooh.
When you're developing.
Ooh.
Yeah.
Like periods come for the rest of our lives until we go through menopause, which is also awful.
Ask your mom.
Yeah.
Awful stuff.
It's like, so being a woman sucks.
Yeah.
Just kidding.
But it's like you get to, you get all the joys.
You get to do the hair.
You get to have the privileges.
You get a seat on the subway.
Not so much anymore, but you don't have to actually get period cramps and feel like you want to murder everybody.
You don't have to deal with any of the actual hormones of being a woman.
Body hair.
You get all the perks and none of the like crap.
Isn't that fun?
Isn't that crazy?
Must be nice.
I have no respect.
And like, I was thinking about that in terms of Leah Thomas, the trans swimmer from UPenn.
So I remember we were having a conversation in the editor's room the other week about how in UFC and in tennis, women have mentioned, oh, like when they're doing their post-game interview and they lose, it's like, well, what happened there?
And they will say, oh, I have period cramps.
It's awful.
I couldn't concentrate.
I couldn't play at my best.
And it's like, you know, hopefully next time I'm at Wimbledon, I'm not on my period or whatever.
Guess who never has to deal with that?
Leah Thomas.
Leah Thomas.
Like she never has to.
And it's not just when you're on your period.
It's the cycle up and down.
Like there's, you have all these changes.
And as especially, I mean, maybe swimming, like you're in a pool.
Hello.
You don't want to be in a pool when you're feeling.
You don't want to wear a swimsuit.
No.
And like as a fighter or as like as a golfer or any of these sports that require a lot of like focus mentally, when you're, your hormones are all out of whack and you're feeling crazy, like you can't focus on the game like you would if you were just a man.
Yeah.
So it's just, and yes, they're on hormones, which will make them feel certain ways.
It's just, it's not, you can't.
But if they're post-puberty, they'll never really be able to properly lower their testosterone levels.
And they'll never feel the emotional highs and lows and the pain of being a woman, but they get to have all the stuff.
It's just, I don't like it.
We should probably get into some chats, but Alexa, do you want to, one final thought on this before we jump into what I say?
I agree because, you know, when I'm in my period, I want to kill everybody.
I'm crying for nothing.
I'm just like, and I'm actually like in my bed for one day because I cannot wake up and I cannot do anything because it's too pain.
And whenever you take pills, they say, oh, take pill for the pain.
No, it's not working.
Yeah.
And they're bad for you.
They're bad for your liver.
Like they make, I had to get period cramp pills that were so strong that I could, they were like, oh, you can't drive when you take these because they're like, they're so strong.
I was like, that's great.
How am I supposed to go to work?
And that's great for my liver.
That's great for my mental health.
Like that's our option.
Turns out it was my diet and I fixed my diet and it helped a lot.
But they don't talk about that.
No one tells you about that.
They're just like, here's a pill that will knock you out and you'll get arrested if you get in your car.
It's great.
Oh, to be a woman, Leah.
Thomas, to be a woman.
All right.
We're so beautiful and we smell amazing.
That's all that matters.
It's going to hurt.
All right.
Should we read some chats?
Now that we're done talking about periods, Andrew Chapados is going to kill us.
Yeah.
Uncomfortable Bonds00:04:33
Sorry, guys.
From Georgie Georgie, thank you for your $1.
The Bill Gates story is very James Bond Hunger Games-like.
Yes.
He's crazy villains.
And Bill Gates is one thing, but Klaus Schwab is literally a Bond villain.
He's literally like, we're gonna take over just first.
And he's like, I mean, I'm wearing black leather, but you know, it's creepy.
And you're right, Georgia Georgie.
Sorry.
It's it's so creepy.
The world is becoming a bond movie.
It's pretty cool.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Life imitates art.
We have another one: $5 from Sondourn.
Sojourner.
My husband went to the grocery store today with the outages.
It was chaos in there, but he had $10 cash on him and could get his item.
We recently went to using cash whenever possible, and the advantages have been surprising.
Smart.
So smart.
And I also think about it in terms of panhandlers or street performers and people who rely on the generosity of others in terms of like cat.
Like whenever I have change and I see someone who looks like they're in need, I will give it to them because I am very, very privileged.
And people have opinions on that, whether you should or not.
That's fine.
That's your own personal choice.
I'm not going to shame anyone for not or for doing it, whatever.
But that's my choice.
I like to do it.
But lately, I've been like, I have no cash on me.
I can e-transfer.
I can't.
And it hurts me because it's like, they, where how's helping them?
Who's helping them?
Like, obviously, they can get a job and sure, whatever.
But like, a lot of them are mentally ill.
They're not going to get a job or they're addicted to drugs.
And it's not my place to be like, well, get off of drugs.
Like, there's, if you have empathy, you like to give money to people and you have no cash on you, it feels horrible.
Yeah.
It's uncomfortable.
It's uncomfortable.
And sorry, like, it's a horrible feeling.
So I've, I've been trying to carry cash too.
Yeah.
They should just get cell phones.
You can e-transfer them.
I'm totally kidding.
But like, is that what the world's coming to?
Like, you know, some sometimes I just like use my because my phone, my, my, my card is on my phone.
This is not a good thing, but I do it.
But sometimes I just go and buy some food and just give it as much as I can.
Yeah.
That's a good alternative as well.
Yeah.
Or the government should just, like I said, give them cell phones.
I'll e-transfer.
Yeah.
Or they should give us little Apple like tap things.
Yeah.
I'm totally kidding.
But yeah.
But let's just, let's make cash.
Let's normalize cash.
That's what we're taking away from people.
Yeah.
All right.
Any more chats?
I don't think there's any more chats, but we have another $5.
Oh, thank you for your five dollars.
Thank you.
So we can just chat ourselves.
Is that all we have?
Is that all we have?
Yeah, I think.
Okay, that's it.
So we scared people away with our period talk, I think.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
People always say, no.
Yeah, they hate it.
But it's very new and scary.
Yeah.
It's a reality.
Why we cannot talk about these stuff?
Like, I know in the past it was like tidy and not talk about it.
So taboo.
But now I think it's in 2022.
I have the impression that we can talk about everything.
Yeah.
And it's really important that everybody knows about it.
And especially men.
Like, I know that they know, but some of them, like, they don't pretty realize what we are passing through.
And I think it's really important.
Yeah.
It's only plagued women, every woman for all of time.
Yeah.
So it's not new.
It's not unique.
Yeah.
Thanks, Eve, for getting the apple.
Yeah.
But yeah, especially when you, when we have to defend ourselves as women all the time.
And like, why do we deserve spaces for females only?
Why should male prisoners and inmates not be put with female victims and prisoners themselves who are often victims of sexual abuse, domestic abuse?
Why do we have to defend these things?
Well, we have, it seems like when talking about being a female, it's always going to come back to, you know, we're not as strong as men on average.
We are more vulnerable in multiple ways.
We are often, not always, but the ones who carry children.
We are prone to more illnesses because of our bodily functions.
It's like we shouldn't have, it sucks that we have to explain this and defend ourselves all the time, but this is why we talk about it.
So sorry, gents.
But it's a reality.
Invited back to do the live stream.
And here at Rebel News, we follow the facts wherever they lead, and they are leading down our uteruses today.
And we are sorry for that.
We are sorry.
But it's a fact.
Get used to it.
Yeah.
Yell chat.
But I will say for some things, sometimes the girls are dangerous.
Yeah.
Especially Rebel girls.
Yeah, we are.
I talk a lot at S-I-H-I-T when I'm on my.
Vulnerability And Beyond00:01:45
I'm like, he's going to get it.
They're going to get it.
Don't mess with the Rebel girl.
Don't.
No.
Especially not Alexa.
She's been shot.
Yeah.
We will say it wasn't a bullet, though.
Yeah, but still, she was shot and it hurt.
And she's a star.
Yes.
It's okay.
It hurt, but we survive.
When they don't kill you, you survive.
You're a survivor.
Yeah.
Well, thank you guys for tuning in to the Rebel News daily live stream, which airs every weekday at 12 p.m.
Different hosts every day.
Be sure to hit some different coasts.
Yeah, definitely.
And be sure to sign up for email notifications so that you can be reminded every day.
Again, that's at 12 p.m. Eastern Time on YouTube, Odyssey Rumble, Getter.
And please send in your chats to other people.
Maybe you'll be more interested in what they have to say.
But yeah, hopefully we'll see you guys next week.
Yay.
Bye, Alexa.
Bye.
I just want to express condolences to the people of Japan for the assassination of Shinzo Abe.
Shinzo was a great leader, great man, and was a heck of an ally to this country.
I mean, he understood freedom.
He understood the threat posed by China.
And he understood the importance of having a strong U.S.-Japan relationship.
We in Florida are actually hosting a summit in November with the southeastern United States and with Japan.
This is partially to try to increase business ties and investment opportunities.
And we're so looking forward to that, but this news is certainly going to cast the pall over that.
And so we are very, very sad to hear that.
And the world lost a really, really great leader.
And, you know, we hope that the people of Japan get through this time properly.