All Episodes
Nov. 28, 2024 - Rebel News
38:00
SHEILA GUNN REID | Nova Scotians tell Trudeau: 'Take your carbon tax and shove it!'

Sheila Gunn-Reid slams Trudeau’s Liberals after Tim Houston’s Progressive Conservatives won Nova Scotia’s election, citing $50B deficits and a "carbon tax on being alive" despite suspended heating oil levies. Chrystia Freeland’s "lack of vibes" excuse ignores voters’ affordability crisis—top issues tied to carbon policies—while Trudeau’s 1.5% emissions claim clashes with his jet-setting hypocrisy. Gunn-Reid mocks progressive identity politics, like Boissineau’s alleged Indigenous heritage fraud, and pushes petitions to scrap the carbon tax and defund CBC, framing small government as the antidote to economic and ideological overreach. [Automatically generated summary]

|

Time Text
Rocklink's Conservative Approach 00:15:01
You know, a lot of the big banks are infested with this DEI climate change nonsense.
Do you really believe that your investment advisor at one of the big banks has your best interest at heart?
Or are they simply following the investment mandates from head office?
That's why we've partnered with Rocklink Investment Partners.
Whether you're looking to save for your kids' education, plan for retirement, or build a legacy, Rocklink's team of like-minded conservatives will provide you with the expertise and stability you deserve in this uncertain world.
Give them a call today at 905-631-5462 or email them at info at rocklink.com.
That's rocklink with a C, info at rocklink.com.
Absolute bloodbath for the Liberals in Nova Scotia last night.
And then our finance minister says, it's not a lack of money plaguing you.
It's just a lack of vibes.
I'm Sheila Gunn-Reed, and you're watching The Gunn Show.
Economists have been talking about the vibe session and the fact that Canadians just aren't feeling good and that that is having real economic consequences.
And the Canadian economists making that point are right.
Well, there you have it from the woman in charge of the Canadian economy, Chrissy Freeland.
It's not the government picking your pocket and taking more in the form of taxes and levies than ever before, leaving you struggling to pay your bills, cover your mortgage, feed your kids, and maybe have a little leftover for some fun and recreation at the end of it all, and maybe put away a dollar or two for a rainy day.
Oh, no.
Your problem is not big government robbing you every step of the way.
It's the feels.
You're having a problem with your vibes.
You got to get your vibrations up.
Is it any wonder that the Canadian economy is in a death spiral right now?
You know, with this is the people we have in charge and Justin Drow thinks that she's the woman for the job joining me to discuss this,
the Nova Scotia election and the message it sent to the federal liberals about the carbon tax and the carbon tax rebate, maybe sort of kind of that Canadians will be getting very soon is my friend Chris Sims of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
Take a listen.
So joining me now is a good friend of the show and my dear friend Chris Sims, the Alberta director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation.
We're recording this on Wednesday morning and on Tuesday night.
Huge election victory in Nova Scotia for Tim Houston's progressive conservatives.
And I think it was not just a win for Tim Houston, but an absolute, complete rejection of the Trudeau Liberals and their carbon tax.
And that is evidenced in the complete collapse of the Nova Scotia Liberal Party.
Yeah, we thought so too.
This was a really good indicator that even places like Atlantic Canada or the Maritimes, they're kind of distinct areas, depending on your terminology, are rejecting the carbon tax.
And one of the reasons I was really heartened to see that, particularly in Nova Scotia, I've got a lot of family there, a lot of roots there.
They date back to the 1700s, is that the politics there is a bit different in that quite often, especially with the older set, you're kind of born into a party.
It's totally alien to most of us out here out west.
But there, not always, but especially among the older set in Nova Scotia, you were either born because into a liberal because your father was a liberal and his father was a liberal.
Same thing with the Tories because your father was a Tory and his father was a Tory and you vote along those lines.
But this kind of jumped over that fence.
Also, as a taxpayer federation representative, I was really heartened because, of course, a huge chunk of Nova Scotians have gotten a suspension on their home heating oil fuel tax.
So the Trudeau government has put in a three-year moratorium on charging its carbon tax against furnace oil.
Now, furnace oil is almost exclusively used in the province of Nova Scotia.
But you know what?
They're not buying it.
It was fascinating.
So they're still paying through the nose of the pump, yeah, for gasoline and diesel, but they didn't buy the whole payoff of like, oh, we'll, you know, reprieve you from your home heating.
They're like, nope, no thanks.
And we think that the carbon tax played a huge factor in this.
And so we're definitely going to keep holding that provincial government to account, though.
Like there can't be any funny business about a cap and trade.
They have to make sure their budgets are balanced.
They have to do all the right things from the CTF perspective.
But we're taking that as a win, as a rejection of the carbon tax.
Yeah.
I looked at the abacus data top issues for Nova Scotians heading into the election.
And two of the top four involved the carbon tax.
So over two-thirds were concerned about making life more affordable.
And 40% were concerned about reducing taxes.
So the other two were the perennial fixing health care.
Another 100 years, we might fix it.
It seems to be an issue in every election.
And then the other one was improving housing and reducing homelessness.
But also we know that, you know, affordability factors into homelessness as much as mental health and addiction does.
So really, three of the top four are touched by carbon tax in Nova Scotia.
Yeah, big time.
I just saw some, I can't, honestly, can't even remember his name.
Some member of parliament, the lower mainland with the Trudeau government who's paid, by the way, backbenchers in Ottawa are paid $200,000 per year, plus pretty much all of their expenses are paid, like their rent is paid, their travel is paid.
They don't pay their heat bill.
So what I found interesting is he thought he was dunking on the idea of scrapping the carbon tax of, oh, you get more back than you pay in, which is such a canard.
Like anyone with an ounce of common sense knows that you can't give the government a 20 and expect a 50 back at no cost to you.
The thing here, though, is that he was missing the point.
He was only thinking about physically filling up your own vehicle with gasoline at the gas pump and not the farmer paying the carbon tax, the trucker paying the carbon tax, and all of that layer cake from hell, that is the carbon tax that is baked into your everyday expenses, which helps make life unaffordable.
So yeah, with all those polls saying that things like taxes, affordability, those elements, they're all intertwined with this federal carbon tax.
And Nova Scotians have a right to be super ticked off because before this carbon tax was imposed upon them by the Trudeau government by Ottawa, they had met their targets without a carbon tax.
They had a, you know, a very tiny one.
I think it was one or two cents per liter for gasoline in their own provincial form.
But that wasn't good enough for the Trudeau government.
They bigfooted them anyway with this punishing federal carbon tax.
So they've really kind of, I hope, voters are paying close attention and they've learned their lesson that this is not about the environment.
It's not about meeting your emissions targets.
They just want to control you and take your money.
Well, and as you say, it is about controlling you and taking your money, because if it were about global emissions, maybe Justin Trudeau wouldn't tell you you need to pay the carbon tax.
Excuse me, I'm jetting off to Brazil to become the keynote speaker, if that's what he was, at the Global Citizen Summit.
That's what he thinks he was anyway.
Yeah.
How much time do you have?
All the time you need.
So I watched this, so you don't have to, dear listener.
He was one of many world leaders that schlepped onto the stage in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
I honestly can't even remember what the summit was called, but on the stage, it had these gigantic lights that says global citizen.
And then you sit in front of them.
Getting a tan off these lights.
This is it.
Like if there were such a thing, I don't know.
The Babylon Bee couldn't make fun of this because it's just right there.
It's already parodying itself.
And so Trudeau flew down there, burning jet fuel, sat on stage to wax philosophic about the carbon tax and about global warming and about emissions and up with peopledom and all this stuff that you've heard it before.
But he went on for 21 minutes and 37 seconds.
And I listened to him twice because I had to get the clips.
Poor soul.
I know, I actually, it's still here by my desk.
I kept my pepto close.
But in all seriousness, what blew my mind was he was asked, of course, about, you know, global emissions and all that stuff.
And what's super weird is that he seems to forget what he said back in like 2015, 2016 in Tulamont en Parl, that big talk show out of Quebec, when I paraphrase, he basically said, we omit so little about 1.5% of global emissions that Canada could cease to exist and stop doing everything and we wouldn't make a big dent in global emissions.
Again, he said it in French, but he said it.
And that's actually true.
Even if Canada stopped heating our homes and growing food and taking our kids to school and running our lights, it wouldn't make a dent in global emissions.
But no, he didn't get into that, Sheila.
He actually started really getting up on his own talking points, kind of.
Yeah, he did highlight his own supply.
He did.
I'll let you.
That's exactly what he did.
And he got ahead of himself and he started saying really weird stuff like, we know when people are in an affordability crisis and they're in survival mode and they just need to hunker down and they're worried about feeding their kids and paying their rent, that they can put the environment, paying the carbon tax, on the back burner, but we can't do that.
He kept repeating that, like out loud with his face.
So translation, Sheila and all of your wonderful listeners, the prime minister of Canada, who, by the way, was born wealthy, born rich, literally on Christmas Day, raised in a mansion at 24 Sussex, who has never had to even wonder where his rent is coming from or where his next bill payment will be scraped together, never experienced that in his life.
He actually said, feeding your kids and making your rent should be lower in priority for you, Canadian taxpayer, than paying his carbon tax.
It's mind-blowing, but this stuff just doesn't seem to stick to this guy.
The challenge we're facing right now is that the direct pressures on individuals and households, the affordability crisis being kicked in the teeth by inflation around the world over the past few years, the concerns around the rapid pace of change, the instabilities we're seeing, the shifting geopolitics, the disruptions of the supply chain have a lot of individual citizens, voters,
families really worried that they're not able to make ends meet.
And it's really, really easy when you're in a short-term survive.
I got to be able to pay the rent this month.
I got to be able to buy groceries for my kids to say, okay, let's put climate change as a slightly lower priority.
And that's something that's instinctive.
When the storm comes, you want to hunker down and just sort of huddle up and wait for it to blow over.
We can't do that around climate change.
And unfortunately, we have an awful lot of political amplification of the kind of narrative that is directly opposed to that.
It's some very, very profitable oil and gas companies and entrenched interests that very much want people to put in opposition affordability and the fight against climate change.
And that's really the challenge we have to take on.
Everyone sort of understands, oh, yes, we need to grow an economy and protect the environment at the same time.
But when it comes to putting dollars in pockets for people, they don't want to hear about, oh, if they just pay a little more for an electric car, then that'll be protecting the environment.
They can't pay a little more for an electric car right now.
There's a sense that affordability is in direct contrast with our moral responsibility to protect the planet.
And that is something that unfortunately people have been amplified and used propaganda, misinformation, disinformation, and flat out lies to scare people into saying, oh, no, no, no, we got to take care of our household budget and bottom line first and environment second.
And that's one of the things that we've really tried to tackle in Canada, because ultimately, even as we talk about global collective action and responsibility, we have a first primary responsibility to citizens in our own countries, because if they're not on board with us stepping up to fight climate change, both at home and around the world, they will withdraw political support from parties that are focused on doing that.
And that's the challenge we have to tackle.
I think it is sticking.
I think it is finally sticking.
I think people are seeing through the mainstream media and the liberal rhetoric on this, because at the end of the day, you have less money in your bank account and people are starting to figure out why.
You cannot, as you say, give 20 bucks to the government and they're going to give you back 50 while creating nothing and psychling it through the hands of a hundred bureaucrats who don't work for free.
Gst Cut Controversy 00:13:26
I think people are finally, I think, I think I saw Burton's, we figured it out a long time ago.
I think the other parts of the country are finally catching up.
And that makes me very happy.
Christy Freeland, though, she says, you're not really experiencing a recession.
You know, it's not that you have less money in your bank account than ever before.
You just have fewer vibes.
A lot of economists have been talking about the Vibe session and the fact that Canadians just aren't feeling good and that that is having real economic consequences.
And the Canadian economists making that point are right.
She's in charge of our economy, okay?
God help us all.
It could be, I guess, all things considered, if we have a big thinker like that in charge of the economy, it's by the grace of God, things are not worse and things are bad already.
Is it any wonder they've doubled the debt?
Like, really?
Like, this is why.
If anybody's sitting there late at night, like Plato, just sitting there thinking, chin in hand, how it is that this government has managed to double the debt in nine years' time, it's because our finance minister of a G7 country says stuff like, we're in a vibe session repeatedly.
She didn't just say it once.
I think she said it three times in that little press conference she gave me.
She thought she was saying, like, this is so this is what this means, Sheila, that they focus grouped this.
Right.
That's what that means.
In my conspiracy side of my brain, I'm like, Mark Carney told her to say that to sabotage her because he wants to lead the Liberal Party and he wants to make sure that she doesn't even stand a chance in a leadership review.
But why does he?
I don't know.
Why?
Honestly, dude, go do bank stuff or something.
Like, why would you want to say that?
Do that to yourself.
But so this is the thing.
So this isn't the first absolutely absurd thing that this government has said.
Remember, we were all promised that they would grow the economy from the heart outwards.
Right.
And that the budget would balance itself.
And that we were in a, I'm trying to remember exactly what Trudeau said.
We were in a she covery after a she session.
Right.
Makes me just embarrassed.
Makes an ovary just cramp to think.
Adults said these things.
Okay.
Our finance minister, our prime minister are saying these things.
And the reason why it's so incredibly frustrating is because it's so obvious that they don't get it.
And yeah, this finance minister, Sheila, I must stress, Krista Freeland has never balanced the budget.
No.
Not one time, not even by mistake.
And the deficits are eye-watering.
It's supposed to be around 40 billion.
I'm hearing, because our fiscal update is late as of this taping, it's like a month late.
I'm hearing that the deficit is going to be closer to $50 billion with a B.
So it's no wonder that we've got a doubled national debt because we've got the finance minister saying silly, silly things like we're in a vibe session.
No, we're not.
You can't pay your taxes and vibes.
You can't pay your rent and vibes.
Can you pay your Disney plus subscription and vibes?
Freeland should try that.
Let me know how it goes.
You might be able to.
I'll find somebody who watches Disney and I'll get them in.
You know, and it's just so insulting, like as a woman to hear them say stuff like she session and she covery.
Well, this she doesn't like paying 30% more for groceries because we've got a bunch of idiots in charge in Ottawa.
And, you know, Freeland, the last time she was in charge of something, besides our country's economy, which is chilling, she was the head of Reuters Next.
And there is no such thing as Reuters Next anymore because they put Christoph Freeland in charge of it.
And so Justin Trudeau saw her and thought, that's the one.
That's the one for me.
Remember when we were warned that he would run this?
So this is one of our t-shirts, shameless self-promotion.
Support your local money printer, right?
So remember when we were warned that Trudeau would run little itty bitty deficits?
That didn't happen.
He wrote, he ran enormous deficits.
So that was wrong.
We should have built a bigger boat.
We should have built a bigger boat.
Let's talk about the GST cut offered to us by the liberals.
They're saying, good gracious, Canadians, can't you take your pittance saying it'll save us $200 plus dollars or something like that?
But in reality, it's much, much less.
Maybe, maybe $10, maybe two jugs of milk.
I mean, thanks.
I'm for tax cuts in all their forms.
Yep.
Yes, cut everything.
But let's not overstate the value of this nonsense right now.
Agreed.
So I wanted to start with the good news because I think it's my duty to do that.
It's always a good thing when people get more of their own money back.
So that's a good thing.
I don't need to tell you, you probably get the same emails.
We are seeing so many emails, Sheila, of people who are just tooth and nail, like really, truly, yeah.
They're crushed under the weight of government.
They're crushed.
And so I will never begrudge those folks getting, they're supposed to be getting 250 bucks in February, like as a payment on top of them suspending the GST on groceries and essentials.
So I will never sniff at them getting their money back, even if it's 250 bucks that can buy you a decent chunk of groceries.
You can throw that down on your heat bill.
That said.
So that part is good.
The problem here is it is too little and it's way too short and it's really short notice.
So three things.
One, it sounds like the feds did not get the provinces completely on board with this to the point where the newly elected premier of New Brunswick apparently was barely consulted about this.
And in places that have an HST, so for those of us in the blessed land of Alberta, this is something foreign, it's a harmonized sales tax.
So say you have a sales tax provincially in New Brunswick and you have the federal sales tax, the GST that we have to pay here too.
Thank you, Brian Mulroney.
In places like New Brunswick, they harmonized it.
So it's now called the HST in places like New Brunswick.
When I lived in Nova Scotia, it was disgusting.
It's 15% on everything.
It's gross.
So shopping is not fun there.
So in places like New Brunswick, though, it was interesting because the premier, newly elected premier there, was saying, what about the provincial portion?
Like, are you saying this is now just a hole you're blowing in my budget?
And apparently the answer from Ottawa was, oh, well, yeah, maybe.
That's like blindsiding a liberal premier.
This is it.
And like we rang on about bureaucrats and I still will.
We've added 100,000 of them or so.
They get paid too much, all that stuff, yada, yada.
There are occasionally within departments adults in the room.
It has to.
Otherwise, like the lights wouldn't stay on.
Okay.
What blew my mind is that the adults in the room in finance and in treasury weren't on like, what's going on here?
How is it that they didn't work this out completely with places like New Brunswick?
And what I heard from folks who are still in Ottawa is that the bureaucrats were freaking out about this.
Like freaking out.
Yeah.
And the liberals did it anyway.
They did it anyway.
So that's one thing.
So this is a schmozzle even within the liberal government, within the Trudeau government in Ottawa between the craps and the politicos that are like, hey, everything's expensive.
Let's do something.
Right.
Two, two.
GST isn't applied to most grocery items.
Right.
No, not to generalize, but us moms who do the big grocery shopping, we know this.
So I know that if I'm super rushed and I'm super busy and I have a little bit of extra money, I will cut corners and I will buy my kids that cut-up fruit tray.
You pay GST on that because of the work and the labor and the additives that have gone into it.
You know, they've rinsed it in lemon juice, blah, blah, blah, blah.
There's packaging.
There's a whole bunch of things that have to go into processed to make it processed, even though it's fresh fruit.
So you pay that.
Same thing with, I believe if it's seasoned rotisserie chicken, you'll pay a GST on that.
So imagine convenience.
If it's super convenient and out of the box and it's been processed in a way, you're typically going to pay GST.
The hilarious thing, Sheila, is that if you look in the background of Trudeau's announcement with Christie Freeland, where he's like, no GST for two whole months.
And you look in the back, there's bread, there's big honking bags of pasta, there's peanut butter, like stuff you don't pay GST on now.
Trudeau doesn't pay for his groceries.
I know.
But health goes and buys it.
And then we pay for it.
Right.
But this, I'm going to give free advice to any person wanting to go into politics.
I don't care if you're running with the blue team or the red team or whatever.
Don't do this.
Yeah.
Don't act like this.
Don't talk like this.
Always understand how much a jug of milk costs.
It was one of the best pieces of advice that the late, great former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher always had.
She made sure all of her cabinet ministers knew how much a jug of milk cost.
Because if you don't, you wind up doing stuff like that.
And it just doesn't ring true.
The other element, there's two other elements.
Third element is that the retailers are apparently flipping out too.
Because now they're worried that everybody's going to hold their gift buying until after the initiation date, mid-December, and they have to change all their tills over.
And the other element is apparently they've left out most of the seniors.
Yeah.
We are getting inundated with email from senior citizens saying, why am I not getting a $250 check coming up in February?
Why is this only for working people?
What was hilarious, did you see the response from the Liberals in question period yesterday to that point?
I saw a clip from Brian Pastafum, who I really enjoy.
Yes, he said the National Post.
Canada's tourism minister insists that $250 checks are only for working people and that the Liberals have already done just lots to help the seniors.
So can the seniors just shut up?
We've done a great deal for seniors and we'll continue to work hard to protect vulnerable people.
The $250 check is to support people who are working.
It's a way of showing government support and it's a way of telling workers that we see them.
What about seniors?
The legislation we introduced last week is a GST holiday.
It's a measure that will help workers.
So again, free advice.
Don't do that.
Don't leave seniors out of things.
Okay.
Don't ever suggest that they're asking for too much than you're able to give.
Just don't do that.
Figure it out.
Work out your comms and don't anger those folks because number one, a lot of them are still struggling.
Okay.
And number two, they're the ones that pay attention a lot and they vote.
They vote.
They're tuned into this stuff.
Cable TV watchers of political shows and news, it's the older people.
It is.
It is.
They even pay attention to City Hall.
Yeah, they do.
These folks have got time.
They've got the time.
They have the time.
They do.
They're like the elder statesmen.
They're like the unpaid actual Roman senators that sit back and watch what's going on.
So yeah, huge mistake.
And we know what just as a purely political theater watcher, it's amazing that they left seniors out of this.
Like that is a rookie mistake.
Like, again, I think they just rushed this.
They were like, oh, dang, we're plummeting them polls.
Give Back Tax Money 00:05:47
We're headed for a wipeout in Nova Scotia.
We have to do something, give the people some of their money back.
And I think they didn't think about the rest of it.
They didn't think about the economic implications for retailers in the lead up to Christmas.
They didn't think about the seniors.
They didn't think about harmonized sales tax.
They really didn't think about, I was going to say the fine details, but I think any of the details other than like, oh, shut up.
We're giving you some of your money back.
And, you know, at the end of the day, this is an acknowledgement that Canadians have too high of a tax burden.
And the GST is part of that.
Yep.
Yep.
We just need tax cuts across the board.
The first thing they can and should do is cancel the carbon tax.
That will make everybody's tax burden go down.
And then we can start working on actually reducing the GST permanently and for a long time.
Yes.
The carbon tax is really a sales tax on just generally being alive in this country.
Production and sales tax on being alive in this country.
Yes.
Right.
It's cumulative added every step along the way of the supply chain.
Now, before I let you go, because I know you have a radio hit to do, give us a quick rundown on Alberta's challenge to the federal government's emissions cap.
Oh, we're fully in favor of Premier Daniel Smith putting the boots to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government to defend our energy industry, mostly because this will severely punish people.
It'll hurt them in their wallets.
It'll make everything more expensive.
And we are tired of Alberta being treated like this.
And it's very similar, we believe, to the No More Pipelines Law.
And we are fully in support of the Premier fighting them like this.
When you work it out, it actually winds up being kind of like a fourth really heavy carbon tax when they do an emissions cap or a production cap, which is really what this is.
It's a production cap on our lifeblood, which is energy.
So yeah, it's definitely something that we support the Premier for doing.
Yeah, it's a cap on Alberta jobs, which will only drive up the cost of fossil fuel energy in this country as they limit supply.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay, Chris, I know I have to let you go, but please tell us how people can support the incredible work that you folks do over at the CTF.
Oh, thank you.
Yeah, go to taxpayer.com.
All joking aside, you can get shirts like this.
You can get defund the CBC.
We have some funny stop the gun grab ones that you can get there too.
I don't think we even make money on them.
It's just for fun.
The most important thing, though, is to sign the petitions that speak to you that you care about.
So scrap the carbon tax, defund the CBC, that sort of stuff.
If it means something to you, sign that petition.
And that means now you're part of that army.
And the next time it's time to make a politician's life a little bit more miserable and send them thousands and thousands and thousands of emails and make them think a little bit harder, you're going to be one of the army.
Great.
Chris, thanks so much for coming on the show.
Thanks so much for advocating for just normal Canadian families like mine and like thousands of Rebel News viewers out there.
just admire and appreciate the work that you do well we've come to the portion of the show wherein as always i invite your viewer feedback because without you there's no rebel news I say it every week.
It remains as true as ever.
Without you, there's no rebel news because we will never take a penny from Justin Trudeau to do the work that we do to hold him and his government and his crazy lion MPs to account.
So we rely on you.
And because of that, I should care what you have to think about the work that we do here.
And there's a couple ways that you can provide your viewer feedback to me.
You can send me an email if it's about the show today.
Put gun show letters in the subject line, send it to Sheila at rebelnews.com.
How easy is that?
Or you can leave a comment on a free clip of the show wherever you might find it on Rumble over on YouTube as well, if you're fine with the censorship over there.
Today's comments actually come by way of Rumble comments, not on the show, but on a video that I did calling on the firing from the Liberal cabinet and then the resignation in shame of liberal MP Randy Cocahontas Boasino for his many,
many, many scandals, including faking Indigenous heritage.
If you want to learn more about that and sign the petition, go to firerandy.com and there you'll understand why I call him Cocahontas.
So let's get right into it.
Connie Marie123 says, Trudeau never paid for a meal in the last nine years.
He has said that people should care more about climate than feeding our children.
Trudeau has completely lost his mind to say that to the parents.
How dare him.
Chris Sims brought that up today.
That, you know, people are struggling, people are hunkered down, and yet it's the most important thing that we do to pay a carbon tax so that Justin Trudeau can go to Brazil on a vanity trip to lecture us.
He doesn't believe anything about carbon emissions either.
If he did, that would have been a Zoom call, right?
Anyway, this is the mixed priorities of these people.
They don't understand how the other half lives at all.
Identify Based on Feelings 00:02:28
Sam Hill 613 says, Randy, that's Randy Boissineau, is the Edmonton version of Buffy St. Marie, a fake.
Now, for those of you who don't know, Buffy St. Marie, Barbara Santa Maria, if you go by her birth name, is a woman who masqueraded as Indigenous for her entire career.
Unbelievably, she helped develop the Cree language curriculum in Saskatchewan.
Except all of it was untrue.
And I think it was CBC that was her undoing, which is only fair because they're the reasons she was foisted upon us.
She was on Sasame Street saying, like, I'm a real Indian, not like one of those fake ones you see on TV.
Instead, she was just like a regular old white lady from the Eastern seaboard.
Let's keep going.
If an Italian woman, yeah, Beverly Santa Maria, can be a native singer for decades, then Boissino can identify as a Cree green energy entrepreneur.
Funny.
MPO 400 says, so what?
We have men pretending to be women for scholarships and everything else.
we need to get a grip on reality again.
Isn't that the truth?
I mean, if a guy can just say, you know what, I feel in my bones, I'm a woman, as if he would ever know what that feels like.
I don't even know what that feels like.
I just am.
But if men can identify as women, why are we protecting this class of indigeneity?
Either we believe in reality, which I do, or we don't believe in reality at all.
And you can just identify based on your feelings.
And I think the progressive have to, they have to sort this stuff out.
And you know what?
Randy is not the only fake liberal Indigenous person this week.
I think there's a by-election in BC where the local Métis nation has distanced themselves from the liberal candidate there because they're like, we talked to her and she can produce no proof of her indigeneity.
Biologically Encoded Feelings 00:01:16
Okay.
It's a real problem.
But this is the natural progression, right?
Like if you think that being a woman is a feeling, then why isn't everything else a feeling?
Why isn't your cultural heritage a feeling as well?
Or is that biologically encoded?
Because if that's biologically encoded, I believe this might be biologically encoded also.
They need to figure out what's going on because their ideology does not make any sense.
All right.
All right.
I think that's it.
That's a few questions, queries, comments from you guys.
Again, that's Sheila at RebelNews.com.
If you want to send me a note about this show or any of the work that I do around here, and don't hesitate to leave some comments wherever you find our work on Rumble or on YouTube, it helps us get higher up in the algorithm, which puts more eyeballs on our work, which helps spread our message of reality, small government, and personal responsibility across Canada and beyond.
Well, everybody, that's the show for tonight.
Thank you so much for tuning in.
I'll see everybody back here in the same time, in the same place next week.
Okay, deal.
Export Selection