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July 16, 2022 - Rebel News
39:01
DAVID MENZIES | Dutch Farmer Protests; CBC Loses To Rebel In Omar Khadr Complaint

David Menzies highlights Dutch farmers blocking the German border with upside-down flags, protesting plans to seize 30–50% of farmlands and slash livestock by 95%, calling it impossible under nitrogen policies tied to WEF’s Agenda 2030. Lewis Brackpool warns this could spread globally, including Canada, where Trudeau’s Liberals might enforce similar measures. Alexa Lavoie confronts Trudeau at a restaurant over his climate policies and alleged hypocrisy while dining lavishly, citing police aggression against journalists like Tamara Leach, jailed for protest selfies. Rebel News mocks Trudeau with a Castro-themed t-shirt, framing his governance as authoritarian. The episode suggests far-reaching anti-farmer policies and a government dismissing public dissent through force and elitism. [Automatically generated summary]

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German Border Standoff 00:05:22
Welcome to Rebel Roundup ladies and gentlemen and the rest of you in which we look back at some of the very best commentaries of the week by your favorite rebels.
I'm your host David Menzies.
In the name of climate change, the Dutch government has declared war on its own farmers and guess what?
The farmers and their supporters, well, they are fighting back.
Louis Brackpool joins me for the latest news from the Netherlands.
And the other day, Alexa Lavoie bumped into Justin Trudeau at an Outremont restaurant.
Alexa had plenty of questions to ask, but suddenly it looked like the cat caught the PM's tongue.
Alexa will join me with all the nitty-gritty and letters.
We get your letters.
We get your letters every minute of every day.
And I'll share some of your hilarious responses regarding our new Justin Trudeau slash Fidel Castro t-shirt, which is flying off the shelves these days, by the way.
Those are your rebels.
let's round them up this is lewis brackpool for rebel news and today i'm in an undisclosed location about to follow farmers and their supporters to the german border where they plan to block the border between the netherlands and germany
Now people are starting to turn up now waving the Netherlands flag upside down as we know it's a call to distress or if their country is in a kind of crisis they would fly that upside down.
They also have the red bandannas which show the support for the farmers and there is a few people turned up already early and ready to hit the road to the German borders.
I'm going to be going around and asking people why are they here and why is this protest so important.
It's the WEF that was wants to have a whole world reset and we are the first one to pick out.
Do you think a lot of farmers know about the World Economic Forum and the Great Reset?
Yes, I know for sure because they already know that all the rules are bullshit.
Because I have a small child and I want her to know that it's the farmers that get the food on the table and the government is just wrong for doing this.
I think Europe is gonna go down.
Yeah.
Yes.
and the civil war is going to start.
So we're currently sandwiched in a convoy of supporters for the farmers where they're making their way to the German border on the A37 with plans to, I believe, block the border.
Now you're probably wondering, how am I standing in the middle of a highway on the A37?
Let's take a look.
Dutch farmer supporters have blocked it.
How do you feel?
How do you think the Dutch government has treated the farmers?
No, no, not who's not who's different.
Something needs to change.
Yes, yes.
I think the farmers have to be rights.
So why are you here today specifically?
We just want to go home.
Yeah, we are by accident.
Yeah, but we didn't know that this was going to happen.
No, we didn't know.
We're from a But we understand.
We understand.
If the police turn up to this blockade, what will happen?
What is your next move?
It's what the police do.
If they are, how do you say it?
Nice to us, we will talk with them.
But if they are going to fight with us, maybe we fight back.
It's on to the police.
If they want to talk with us, then we talk.
And maybe we can go somewhere else.
But most time is the police that go fight first.
I guess it's safe to say then that tensions are very high in the Netherlands right now.
I think they're going to say that we can stay here for a little bit, but he says it's dangerous behind the back of the queue.
Yes.
Because they're coming in with 100 on the 10 speeds, so it's dangerous.
And we said, yeah, then you have to put someone there with sirens on so they can see it.
What do you think happens next then?
I don't know if we have to leave.
I think we're going to leave because we don't want to fight.
We're just in peace with them.
And they are in peace with us, so it's okay.
There are good cops and there are bad cops and that's always, but they can always, maybe these are the good cops and they sometimes you have bad cops, but since.
It's like how they come to us.
If they come to us like this, then it's not good.
Well there you have it folks.
Agenda 2030 Concerns 00:11:53
The Dutch government might be fine with declaring war on its farmers but the farmers are not fine with this and neither are their supporters.
After all everyone has a skin in the game in that we all need to eat right and joining me now from Holland is our UK correspondent and that would be Louis Brackpool.
How you doing there Lewis?
How are you back in Canada?
Oh I'm doing great.
It looks like you're right in front of a beautiful postcard setting so I wish I was there with you.
Now Lewis I gotta tell you you and Lincoln J, you've been doing a great job covering this farmers' rebellion but can you rewind the tape a bit and take us back a couple of weeks?
What was the basis for the farmers rebelling against their government in the first place?
Yeah thanks for having me mate and it's good to see you.
So the Dutch government are looking to impose radical green policies against the Dutch farmers to reduce nitrogen emissions and in some cases and in some particular farms, up to 95% which, as we know, is basically impossible.
And to do this they want to take forcefully take around 30 to 50 percent of farmlands within the Netherlands, so that means they can well basically do whatever they want with it.
Really, they can build on top, they can do whatever on top of this under the guise of reducing nitrogen emissions.
They want to cut livestock as well.
So which means cattle and food, essentially so.
The farmers, who have been many of them, have been utilizing their farms For generations now, have decided, you know what, enough is enough.
We've been protesting these radical policies that have been creeping through up so suddenly since 2019, where they started mobilizing around the Netherlands.
But now it's accelerated so dramatically, they thought, do you know what, enough's enough.
We're going to go out and we're going to make our voices heard because the government aren't doing their due diligence for the people.
And Lewis, the government, who exactly are they trying to appease with these crackpot policies?
I mean, like I said earlier, we all depend on food.
These are farmers, I imagine with costs rising on a monthly basis, are having enough of a tough time.
But it seems that with the environmental zealots these days, nitrogen is the new N-word, if you will.
But why is this government seemingly bending the knee to the Greta Tunberg demographic as opposed to trying to have an environment for their farmers where they can make a living and feed the people?
Well, to be honest with you, Mark Rutz, the Prime Minister of the Netherlands, is a World Economic Forum puppet.
He's spouting every single World Economic Forum playbook under the sun, and he's so open with it.
He's spoken about Agenda 2030 and sustainable development on the Netherlands, where they want to, of course, cut things such as petrol out of everything.
So they say a similar thing that's been happening around the world.
And he's repeating mantras from the WEF, such as Build Back Better and Agenda 2030.
So it's quite clear to see who really is pulling the strings on the policies.
And it is, of course, the World Economic Forum up to their no good once again.
And it's all for everyone to see.
Unbelievable.
And you know, Lewis, when we look at those buzzwords, build back better, well, that's a fallacy.
All these policies are making our lives more miserable and more expensive.
The so-called new normal, it's actually abnormal if you believe in progress and exceptionalism.
So again, you know, it's a false narrative as far as I'm concerned.
It seems to be about virtue signaling and wokeism.
And I guess the ultimate question is: if you, you know, if there was a polebisite or a poll in the Netherlands right now, how many people, how many normal citizens are on board with this environmental madness in the first place?
It's a great question.
I think a poll came out recently, and obviously we know that polls are very inaccurate, so take them with a pinch of salt.
But a poll that I did read suggested that 80% of the public actually support the farmers.
And what we've been seeing on the ground covering this, there has been overwhelming support for the farmers, not just domestically, but internationally.
So that's definitely something to keep in mind.
We have seen, of course, some people that are against the farmers, which is, if I'm to give my opinion, is absolute madness because they are the ones that feed the city people for crying out loud.
So you've got these climate zealots in the city that are saying, yeah, sure, farmers should just give up their lands for the climate agenda.
And it's almost a shock when you hear things like that.
There's this massive divide between a lot of the city people and the rural areas.
And we see that everywhere.
But this divide, when we've spoken to people, maybe we've picked some really good people to chat to.
But there has been the odd one that has been quite, well, a bit of a climate fanatic, to put it so bluntly.
It's amazing because whether or not you're a climate fanatic, we all share something in common.
We have to eat.
And by eating, I mean, you know, beef, chicken, pork, not insects, as some of these World Economic Forum people preach to us.
You know, Lewis, when this began, the images were startling.
You saw massive farm equipment blocking highway.
You saw the spraying of liquid manure at government offices and so on.
Where is this all heading?
I mean, obviously, the farmers, for their very livelihood, want the government to reverse its stance on nitrogen and other policies.
Do you see them being successful or is the government in for a long-haul fight on this?
it's a very very good question because um from what we're hearing on the ground david uh they're very very unhappy and a lot i always ask the same question okay to every to every farmer and every supporter I say, if the demands are not met from the farmers, what do you think will happen?
And the same answer comes every time.
And that's a civil war.
Now, in my personal opinion, that's a very scary thing to hear.
Because, of course, naturally, people do not want that.
And I know that people do not want that.
And it's scary to hear that when you have this huge overreach from the government.
And it's, I can't quite explain it, if I'm totally honest.
This is just completely raw for myself, but it's scary.
And they are scared.
They're anxious that their livelihoods, and it's not just an occupation, it's something that's passed down from generations.
This isn't just a job or working in a shop.
You know, this is you're feeding the nation.
You're feeding Europe in the Netherlands case because they are a very large exporter in food and supply chains.
So this isn't a local issue.
This is an international issue.
So yeah, they are very worried that if their demands aren't met, that things will escalate and badly.
And one last question, Louis.
You said this is an international issue.
And I want to, you know, focus in on that statement because a lot of people might say, oh, the Netherlands, I wouldn't be able to find the Netherlands on a map, for goodness sakes.
That's way over across the pond.
My response, and I believe you interviewed farmers there, Louis, saying the same thing, is that right now it's the Netherlands.
In the near future, it might be coming to the country you reside in, i.e., and by the way, when it comes to Canada, I can totally see the Justin Trudeau Liberals getting on board the anti-nitrogen brigade.
And your farmers will suffer, and your people will suffer from increased food prices and even scarcity of food items.
Last word goes to you, my friend.
Okay, so we're seeing similar patterns everywhere in other countries.
For example, Britain, the government are actually handing out almost payments to farmers to stop farming in the height of, well, a cost of lockdown crisis where inflation is at its highest.
And it's just absolute madness what they're doing.
So that's my country.
They want to wean off farmers from actually farming and pay them to stop.
I tried speaking out to the farmers' union, I got nothing back.
Strange.
Canada, they've obviously signed a new treaty with the Netherlands.
That's a big impact where it basically gives more power to the multinationals.
So you're seeing this overarch in all the countries now, and especially with Canada.
I'm pretty concerned, if I'm totally honest, at where we're heading.
And this is all part of the Great Reset.
This is part of the Agenda 2030 that we keep hearing about.
And I think more and more people need to start questioning things a bit more.
I mean, we were always told that things such as the Great Reset and Agenda 2030 and the sustainable developments is some sort of conspiracy theory.
These practices are accelerating rapidly now.
And this is all being said by the World Economic Forum.
This is not something that we are saying as reporters or journalists and plucking it out of thin air.
This is coming from them.
And people need to start realizing that until something horrible happens.
Like what the farmers keep talking about.
So that's my take on it first.
Well, Lewis, I want to thank you for your time.
You and Lincoln have been doing a great job there.
And I think what's so frustrating for me, and I suspect our audience, is that farming is so fraught with difficulties as it is.
I mean, you could end up in a season where there's drought or the opposite might be the case, flooding and the crop is wiped out.
This attack on farming, it's not Mother Nature.
It's the elected representatives of these farmers.
It is a disgrace and it's shameful and it's a complete self-inflicted wound.
Let's hope this has a happy ending in the days and weeks ahead.
And we'll definitely keep our eye on this.
So thank you again, Louis.
No, thank you for having me on.
It's great to chat to you again.
And I think I'm off to put my new clogs on that I've been gifted.
So looking forward to that.
Montreal Police Intervention 00:11:48
It's the old-fashioned new age elevator shoes, I guess.
But I'm sure you'll look resplendent.
Thank you again, Louis, and you have a great weekend, my friend.
Thank you, you too, David.
And that was Lewis Brackpool in the Netherlands.
Keep it here, folks.
More of Rebel Roundup to come right after this.
Prime Minister, any answers?
Any answers for disrupting the lives of so many Canadians for the last 20 years?
Prime Minister, any answers?
Please answer the people of Canada.
The capital.
Oh, they are pushing the plan to hide Mr. Trudeau.
They are pushing the plans for it.
Can you believe that?
Non, ne me touchez pas.
À ce moment-là, traversée.
Je fais mon travail de journaliste, Monsieur.
Je ne vous toucherai pas, traversez de l'autre côté.
Sur quelles raisons?
Celle que c'est un ordre.
Un ordre?
La police vous donne un ordre et vous obéissez, ça finira.
Ecoutez, ne me poussez pas.
Non, vous allez traverser de l'autre côté.
Hey, vous n'avez pas le droit de me toucher, Monsieur.
Je veux juste vous rappeler qu'on a déjà une poursuite contre la SPB.
Votre nom, votre badge number.
Krukovski, c'est marqué-là.
C'est 084.
Bye-bye.
Tonight, we receive a tip that Mr. Trudeau was in Outremont for having a dinner with maybe co-worker or friend.
So we ran on the scene to see what is happening.
And what you can see behind me, police is there all around the restaurant.
They have a lot of citizens who are asking questions.
I'm going to take the chance to ask as well my question to them.
Let's check it out.
My trudeau, it is a moi.
We are talking about the chef.
I think I know, Monsieur Trudeau, you will work in what it is in the new version of non-digital traveler identity travel that you have with the World Economic Forum in 2006, Monsieur Trudeau.
Tamara Leach is a pacific manifestant who is currently in prison because she just took a selfie with another manifestant.
Do you think it's normal here?
Yes.
Yes.
One, it's an event in private.
Two, there are other customers in the restaurant.
The premier ministre is not privy, but...
Mr Trudeau would be willing to talk to people who have questions for him.
It's possible to respect the inquietude of the other people around.
Mr Trudeau!
Mr. Trudeau, do you support the new regulations on the emissions of carbon emissions that Marc Routet is trying to implement in Holland?
Do you support the regulations, Mr. Trudeau?
It's the same Prime Minister, who is walking in jet.
Who is walking in jet.
We're going to get the rest of our clients.
We're just going to let them sit there.
Why do they have taken a table outside?
If they want the privacy, I'm just in the trottoir.
Mr. Trudeau, why do you not listen to a part of your people who have questions for you?
Yes, I know.
Do you support the new regulations on nitrogen and carbon emissions that Marc Routet are doing right now in Nepal?
Mr. Trudeau doesn't want to answer to any question.
I tried to ask questions in French and in English just to see if he would answer.
And obviously, he's not doing it.
So we can see the nice meal that Mr. Trudeau is having, probably on our taxpayer your money guys and is eating your money and is not answering the question that he should answer.
Tell me in my face that I'm a racist.
Mr. Trudeau, avoid your sign with the World Economic Forum.
I've never been as close as Mr. Trudeau, but obviously he's not turning his face to the watch or to try to have contact with me.
He's completely ignoring a part of the people that is on the street asking questions to him.
Monsieur Trudeau, I'm a carbon foot, Tamara Lich que tune manifesto pacific manifesto and present a selfie with our manifestant civil liberty.
Well, there you go, folks.
Once again, the Montreal Police Service is living up to its reputation as perhaps the worst police force in Canada.
Then again, when it comes to Justin Trudeau, he's also living up to his reputation as perhaps one of the worst prime ministers in Canadian history.
Unbelievable.
And joining me now for more on this encounter is the reporter who encountered Justin Trudeau in Outremont herself, and that would be Alexa Lavoie.
Bonjour, Alexa.
Okay.
Well, Alexa, that was really something.
You heard about Justin Trudeau being at this open-air patio that was accessible, at least in an audio and visual way, from the sidewalk.
And I got to ask you the first question.
Given all the discourse regarding Prime Minister Trudeau, how in the world did he think it was a good idea to be you know, seated somewhere where the public could access him because it wasn't just you.
It seemed that everybody had an axe to crime that day.
Is he that delusional, Alexa?
Yeah, so this is the most incredible thing.
His seat was the one next to the street, okay?
And on the table, there were four, but he took the most visible seat in the table.
So for my part, and as well, I was looking at the security that was with him, probably RCMP, but they were not doing anything.
They were just standing on the side of the street and not even close from him.
So if something was happened to it, like happened to him, they were really far away.
They would not have been like possible to react to protect like Justin Trudeau.
So probably because a lot of people came really close to Justin Trudeau.
I think it's the owner of the restaurant who called the police or I don't know, because it seems that the police wasn't there when I arrived.
They came afterwards, maybe I would say five to 10 minutes after I came on the scene.
You know, that's very interesting, Alexa.
But regardless, here's the thing.
You were on a sidewalk.
And geez, I'm getting visions of deja vu given what happened to me in Toronto in December.
Of course, they can ban you or anyone from the restaurant.
That's private property.
But you cannot be pushed away from a sidewalk.
That's public.
We still have allegedly a free press in Canada.
We're still allegedly a democracy.
What in the world were the Montreal police saying to you to justify pushing you off the sidewalk, getting a little handsy with you, which I did not like to see?
They were on thin ice legally, as far as I can tell, Alexa.
Yeah.
So first of all, they say that it was a municipality rule that you were not allowed to do nothing and just stand in the street.
You needed to be always in movement.
So it's why I started to walk around.
And they say, no, you can go there.
You can go there.
I was like, yeah, but you just asked me to be in movement.
So it's what I'm doing.
And they say, no, you cannot be here.
You need to go to the other side of the street.
This is a municipality rule.
And I was like, no, you have no rule in the municipality that say that I cannot be in the public space as a sidewalk.
And so they try to use intimidation as like being really close to me and say, move.
And I was like, why are you doing that?
You will not intimidate me.
I'm here for doing my job.
I'm a reporter and you have no right to ask me to move from a public area because you decided of your side that it was a new rule that you created for that special event.
You know, I'd like to see that rule because I don't believe it.
The idea that you've got to walk and talk like you're in a penitentiary yard and it's exercise time and that's all you're allowed to do.
I mean, I bet you in Newtremont, there are panhandlers that are just standing there doing commerce, if you will.
So I can't see why there's a stipulation banning the practice of journalism.
But in a way, Alexa, I got to tell you, you got off lightly, I think, because I harken back to my experience in 2019 in Montreal.
Justin Trudeau had, it was an election campaign then, and Justin Trudeau had a photo op arranged at a boxing gym where he was sparring with another boxer.
And when he was getting back on his bus behind a police wall, I was like on my tiptoes raising my cell phone to ask him questions.
And a member of the Montreal Police Service pushed me so hard, I actually fell completely backwards.
My head bounced off the concrete sidewalk.
Trudeau's sparring partner, to his credit, came running out of the gym.
He witnessed it and he was very concerned.
He said, are you okay?
But what I'm getting at is this outrageous use of force.
They know who I am.
I have the rebel mic flash.
I don't have a weapon.
They know the prime minister is under no physical attack whatsoever, unless I guess we live in a country where impolite questions are considered physical assaults.
What do you make of how the Montreal police are so heavy-handed when it comes to cracking down on journalism, Alexa?
But I think it's not like cracking on journalism.
I think it's cracking on rebound news because they don't attack CBC.
They don't attack like other mainstream media from home.
It's just us.
Every time it's all about, we don't want reband news to be around.
And we need to mention that it was not regular police that day.
It was the riot police.
So they are the ones that was probably sending NATO during the Freedom Convoy.
They are the ones who are respecting the order that they receive out there.
And so they probably know that Ruben News is not legitimate, but that is not true.
We are independent journalists.
We are not receiving funding from the government.
And this is the most respectful way to do our job.
No, you're quite right.
And I remember more than a year ago, it was a Montreal police officer who accused us of being with, what was it, Jew media or Jew news, something like that.
I mean, what the hell was that?
If You're Buying, Act Fast! 00:09:23
But, you know, getting back on track, I thought the questions you asked were excellent, Alexa.
Tamara Leach, our political prisoner, still behind bars, shockingly.
What's going on with the Netherlands?
Is this to come to Canada in terms of the war on nitrogen, the World Economic Forum agreements, and so on and so forth?
And I thought the Prime Minister could have done himself a service by respectfully answering your questions.
Instead, as much as he likes to talk about sunny ways and his government being the most transparent in Canadian history, he just ignored you like you were some mosquito at that patio.
If you were in his shoes, Alexa, how would you have handled things?
First of all, I would probably ask you like to have maybe one person or two security and just go in the street and say, I'm going to talk with you and we will try to discuss or we will try to talk.
Most of the people who were there that day was, I would say, 85% children.
That was not a threat in the street.
Most of them was just normal people who wanted some answer.
Like that woman who sees her basket at the grocery increasing and seeing her mother not be able to buy the stuff that she used to do because the inflation is there when we saw that Mr. Trudeau is eating a really nice meal with wine and just like mocking of all the Canadians who now cannot afford to buy all the food that they want or the gas that they need.
And so it's what I find that the most outrageous.
It's like he doesn't care.
He's eating his meal when he is like putting like, I don't know how many million, I think 8.5 million in the company for cricket fun, probably like for what now introducing cricket as a protein for their citizen during the time that he is eating like nice meal and not private himself from like what climate change.
I'm sorry, but it's the perfect example of a law for me or a rule for me and a rule for thee.
No, you're quite right about that, Alexa.
And it's just more of the same going back to last year when you were at the leadership debate, which we needed another federal court order to get into.
And he completely snubbed you and our audience and Canadians in general by saying, well, by copying one of his boyfriend's tactics, Jugmeet saying, which is, I don't take questions from Rebel News.
Absolute cowardice.
But we'll end up with this.
I think at the end of the day, Alexa, even if this wasn't your intention, you humiliated this man.
He's used to being lavished with praise and going through very controlled photo ops.
And yet here was you, a reporter not on the federal government dime.
Here were some citizens who had an axe to grind with him.
You asked these impolite questions over and over as he was trying to eat.
I'm sure he was steaming.
I did the same last September at an election stop over in Richmond Hill when he went to campaign at a food truck event.
I also asked prickly questions.
Of course, I think I paid a price for that in December when his Royal Canadian henchman beat me up for staying on a sidewalk to scrum him.
At the end of the day, I think that's a victory for you.
When it comes to seeing Justin Trudeau in the future, are you going to change our ways, Alexa, or are you going to continue to get at him with these questions that the likes of Rosemary Barton and company at the CBC would never dare ask?
I will continue to make him answering the question that the population wants to heard.
And I will tell you, it will know my name soon.
There you go.
Okay.
Well, Alexa, like I said, you didn't get answers to your question.
Your questions, rather.
That was the bad news.
The good news is you weren't beaten up.
So wear that as a badge of honor.
Thank you so much, my friend, and you have a great weekend.
Thank you, you two.
Thank you.
And that was Alexa Lavois in Montreal.
Keep it here, folks.
More of Rebel Roundup to come right after this.
Hey, folks, check out the newest arrival to the Rebel News store.
Yes, F is for Fidel and F is for father.
I mean, could it be?
Yes, half this photo, the colored half, is Justin Trudeau.
The black and white half is a young Fidel Castro.
Wait now, or is it vice versa?
It's so confusing.
I'm a huge forensic files fan.
Wouldn't it be great if we could have a piece of Justin's DNA and a piece of Fidel's DNA and put the rumor to bed once and for all?
But in the meantime, we'll just have to walk around wearing this shirt, hinting at a great Canadian conspiracy.
Or is it?
In any event, if you want to get this shirt, folks, go to the Rebel News store and check this out.
Type in our new discount code that's summer.
S-U-M-N-E-R.
And if you buy two unisex t-shirts, you get an additional one for free.
What a deal.
Like I said, Justin Trudeau, Fidel Castro.
As they used to say on the ABC Detergent ads, can you tell the difference?
I can't tell the difference.
Wow, last time I checked, folks, that advertisement had some 20,000 views.
And these shirts are indeed top sellers.
So if you want one, please don't delay putting in your order.
As for the comments, well, you know, one of the reasons I love our audience is that many of you are so savagely funny with your comments, especially when it comes to weighing in on the right honorable Justin Trudeau.
Watching trains go by writes, if you are going to buy one, get it quick before the lawsuit and injunction, LOL.
Hey, my friend, your advice is not all that far-fetched.
The Trudeau Liberals are all about censoring the internet with various bills they want to enact as laws in the months ahead.
I wouldn't put it past Justin to have a new law regarding a dress coat code for Canadians, namely, thou shalt not mock a liberal prime minister.
After all, on Dominion Day weekend, F. Trudeau flags were actually banned from Parliament Hill.
Like Fidel, our Justin is a huge fan of censorship.
A Redneck's Life writes, I like that one, David.
I have some liberals in my area and they absolutely love Justin Trudeau.
And wearing this shirt by them would be good.
Hey, Mr. Redneck, please write back and let me know what neighborhood you live in.
I'd love to meet people who are still Justin Trudeau supporters.
And I just want to ask them one question.
What has been Justin's greatest accomplishment in these past seven years?
Typically, they are shocked into silence by that query.
Albert Corbale writes, good job on reporting on Brown.
The conservatives are right to oust him.
I love the t-shirt.
Well, you know what, Albert?
Maybe we need a Patrick Brown t-shirt as well.
Hmm, what image could we put on that?
Maybe Pinocchio's elongated nose?
Perhaps a pair of smoldering slacks?
Maybe a voice bubble emerging from Sneaky Patrick saying, trust me.
Oh, what an embarrassment of riches when it comes to mocking that lying liar.
Sharon McDonald writes, I know I would never put a picture of that creature on my body.
You know, I feel your pain, Sharon, but consider this.
Think of the pain Justin would endure seeing this shirt on your body.
I mean, talk about a trigger.
And Scotty writes, someone get on the phone to Cuba and get one of Justin's drink box water bottle sort of things when he discards it.
There's a crowdfunding campaign, if ever there was one.
I'm getting some of those shirts.
I'm already a huge collector.
Nice work, guys.
Well, thank you so much, Scotty.
But just a word of caution, I wouldn't wear this particular shirt if you are indeed Cuba bound.
Cuba's Drink Box Bottle Request 00:00:32
The authorities down there might not like any sort of haberdashery that raises questions about the not-so-dearly departed Fidel Castro.
Say, do you think that Cuba, like China, is one of those basic dictatorships that Justin Trudeau has admiration for?
Yes.
That was a rhetorical question, folks.
Well, that wraps up another edition of Rebel Roundup.
Thank you so much for joining us.
See you next week.
And hey, folks, never forget, without risk, there can be no glory.
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