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Feb. 6, 2025 - Rebel News
01:41:47
REBEL ROUNDUP | Trump saves women's sports, US pulls out of UNRWA, Woke subsidies in foreign aid
# zofran us_tariffs ukraine 127_million_film_festivals 17_million_carbon_tax_failure 40_billion_over_budget_failure 40_million_taxpayer_funding 51st_state 5_billion_private_project 5g_free airplane_catering alaska_cruise alberta a_message_for_canadians bbc beirju_dutani big_tech_oligarchs bill_c_63 blacklocks blue_hydrogen brazil brookfield_asset_management c2c_pipelines canadian_heritage canadian_human_rights_commission canadian_jewish_association canadian_taxpayers_federation carbon_capture cbc cbsa cherry_point_refinery cja conservatism_vs_liberalism conservative_party_of_canada cowboy_boots danielle_smith david_eby davos_elite department_of_environment donald_trump drag_shows drea_humphrey dr_linda_blade east_german_doping_scandal economic_policy energy_and_pipelines ezra_levant françois_legault franco_terrazano geiger_counter gender_and_sports_policy genocidal_chants google government_funded_initiative hizbut_tahrir israel jk_rowling joe_biden jordan_peterson justin_trudeau kai lawsuit limousine_services lise_merle mark_carney mary_simon media_and_censorship melissa_lanceman montreal mujahid_dutani national_post nigerian_oil northern_gateway_pipeline ontario_ndp parks_canada patriot_addict pierre_poilievre politics potassium_iodide radio_guard_ace rcmp rebelnewscruisecom rebelnewsstorecom red_couch_tour riley_gaines rumble saskatchewan sex_toy_show sheertex sheila_gunreid slapp_suit title_ix tmu tommy_robinson toronto_metropolitan_university transmountain_pipeline trumps_granddaughter uae

REBEL ROUNDUP dissects Trump’s women’s sports ban—protecting female athletes like Riley Gaines—while criticizing Canada’s $40M drag show subsidies and alleged liberal censorship tactics. Ezra reveals a $800K SLAPP lawsuit by anti-Semitic activist Beirju Dutani, tied to Trudeau’s Bill C-63, and teases another high-profile case. Hosts mock wasteful spending—$1.7M on failed carbon taxes, $220K on Trudeau’s catering—and expose Blacklocks’ lawsuit over government password-sharing for media bias. They slam Quebec’s pipeline hypocrisy, Carney’s foreign investments over Canadian jobs, and warn of nuclear threats amid Ukraine-Israel tensions, urging viewers to resist "big tech" censorship by sharing the show. [Automatically generated summary]

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Rebel News Roundup 00:04:46
Hopefully you're having a good time with this podcast, but I guarantee a better time would be coming to Alaska with me, Drea Humphrey, and my other Rebel colleagues.
You've got to find out more at our special website, RebelNewsCruise.com, but it's taking place June 18th to June 25th, a vacation trip of a lifetime.
Again, that's RebelNewsCruise.com.
I'll see you there.
Oh, hey, good morning.
Good afternoon, everybody.
Surprise, Lise.
You're on TV.
This is the Rebels Roundup.
Rebel News Roundup.
It's a show that we will, we're, I think we're moving back to daily live streams, which I think you'll all like, which means I'm going to need a more regular co-host than David Menzies, who does some of the best man on the news journalism, man-on-the-street journalism in the entire country, which means, surprise, Lise Merle, my friend from Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan's famous get off my lawn mom, broadcaster and local politician,
sometimes she'll be co-hosting with me at least a couple of days a week.
I love her.
I think you guys too.
At least that's what the viewer feedback tells me.
Let us know in the comments how you feel about having Lise on the network a little bit more.
Lise seems pretty excited about it.
This is a place where we talk about the news of the day completely unscripted, as you can tell.
But first, Lise, how's it going?
Welcome to the show.
Well, hello, my darling Sheila Gunread.
Nobody is more delighted in the entire country than me to be here again with you guys.
I mean, I just, I just love it.
I mean, I love hanging out with you all the time, right?
And so the more Sheila Gunread I can get in my life, the better.
But I especially love the people that watch us on Rumble.
They get all spicy in the Rumble live chat.
I mean, those guys are just the best of it.
Just to kick it off, for those people who are watching us on the Rumble, on our Rumble stream, please drop in the live chat where you're watching from because I love Maps.
Okay.
And I'm going to go Google where you're watching from after this.
So please let me know where you're watching from.
And yeah, nobody could be more excited than me about this latest development because we love Rebel News and we love Sheila Gunread.
And so doing this a couple of times a week is just awesome.
Oh, that's so nice.
And basically the viewer gets to sit in on our daily chats that we have with each other.
So welcome because we share tweets and then we talk about them privately.
So now you get to experience what our friendship is like as like a voyeur, I guess, a little bit.
But also what is it?
It is kind of voyeuristic, isn't it?
Yeah, yeah, it is kind of.
But I mean, we're a great deal of fun when we team up.
And we've been doing this for a very, very long time.
Sheila and I actually, just for, just for everybody wondering, Sheila and I met back in the olden days on Twitter, back in the olden, olden days on Twitter.
11.
Truth, like it, it has been a couple, like coming up on two decades, right?
We're going to be doing this for two decades, but we were both stay-at-home moms, work-at-home moms, raising babies and telling off the left and trying to make each other laugh.
And we've just never stopped.
And so we're just so pleased to be able to share our unique round of humor and charm with you guys.
This is an Oprah full circle moment for us.
So thanks so much.
Minus nonsense of Oprah.
Minus the Oprah.
I mean, yeah, yeah, an Oprah-like full circle moment.
But yeah, nobody could be more delighted than us.
And I'm glad that I'm co-hosting with you today because we've got some very lease-centric topics today.
Yes, so big, big things happening in the United States that I know Lise cares about.
And I, as the mom of a high-level female athlete, I care about these things too.
But I should tell everybody how you can get involved.
Yes, please tell us where you are watching us from because Lise and I like to toodle around in the summertime and we just might toodle out to wherever you are, especially if you're on this peculiar prairie where we live.
But this is the Rebel News live stream.
As I said, it's completely unscripted.
We talk about the news of the day and we like to give you our spicy hot takes and sometimes our cold takes.
We want to hear from you.
So one of the best ways that we can hear from you without the censorship of YouTube is if you watch us over on Rumble because they don't care about your political beliefs.
Big Day for Female Athletes 00:10:31
They won't censor you based on those things.
And they won't censor us either.
And they allow you to support our work completely out of the goodness of your heart because you support Rebel News, unlike what Justin Trudeau does with the mainstream media, just giving them your money, even though they're unwatchable liars.
On Rumble, you can leave a paid chat.
It's called a Rumble Rant.
If it's over the $5 U.S., we are obligating ourselves to respond to it on air, but don't let that be the bar for entry because if we have time, and you know how we love to make the time, if it's under the U.S. $5 limit, we'll make the time if we have the time to read it on air.
And even sometimes the free chats.
Like if you guys are super funny or clever, someone will grab that chat and send it to us and we'll do our best to address it on air.
So all that is to say, big day for women and girls in the United States.
And I'm going to do my best to prance around YouTube's censorship because they really don't want us to dead name and misgender.
So we're going to have to couch our words, but know that we are not doing that out of acceptance.
We're doing it out of necessity.
Yeah.
Necessity.
So please understand that because while respecting our own consciences.
But first, President Donald Trump, I would say, a feminist president, given his protection of the rights of women and girls.
From now on, women's sports will only be for women.
Let's watch this.
In a few moments, I'll sign a historic executive order to ban men from competing in women's sports.
It's about time.
My administration will not stand by and watch men beat and batter female athletes.
From now on, women's sports will be only for women.
In recent years, the radical left has waged an all-out campaign to erase the very concept of biological sex and replace it with a militant transgender ideology.
We're honored to be joined today by many incredible advocates for women's sports, including the brave swimmer at the forefront of this battle.
And Riley Gaines is the person that I've been watching in my action this afternoon.
We're putting every school receiving taxpayer dollars on notice that if you let men take over women's sports teams or invade your locker rooms, you will be investigated for violations of Title IX and risk your federal funding.
There will be no federal funding.
With this executive order, the war on women's sports is over.
are restoring sanity and common sense, defending the rights and safety and pride of the American people, including our great, great, great female athletes.
I mean, what an awesome day for America.
What an excellent day for female athletes in America who have been denigrated, who've been attacked, who've been humiliated publicly by a press that is funded by their federal government to humiliate them in public.
What an amazing day.
I have tears in my eyes.
I don't know if you guys can see that, but I'm trying not to ruin my makeup because I so look forward to the day that this happens in Canada for our athletes too.
And make no mistake, this exact thing has to happen in Canada.
Right.
Because what's happening here now is worse than anything that happened in the United States.
This is, save for a couple of provinces, largely just Alberta, this is unchecked in this country.
Completely unchecked.
Without question.
Alberta, Alberta, and God bless her, Premier Danielle Smith, did more for women and girls by dividing sports into biological sex than any other leader in the country, like she does.
And in Saskatchewan, where I'm from, there are absolutely no safeguards to protect girls in sport.
Girls and women are having their podium places, well, I mean, stolen from them.
They're having their trophies and medals stolen from them.
They're having their opportunities stolen from them because let's not forget that so many elite athletes, especially just naturally talented girl athletes, use their natural talents to propel them through the university system to get scholarships.
This is absolutely unchecked in Saskatchewan.
As a matter of fact, I'd just like to put a call out for any Saskatchewan family or daughter who's been impacted by this and has a story to tell.
You can get in touch with me.
I am on your side.
Just put a call out.
And this goes for people across the country of Canada.
If your daughter has been negatively impacted by this, Rebel is on your side.
Get in touch with us because only by telling these stories and only by holding these people to account will we be able to dial this back.
And man, like I said, just what an incredible day.
What an incredible day in America.
What an accomplishment for Riley Gaines.
She was really at the forefront of this.
She didn't buckle, not even once.
You know, the entire forces of the left, and I include the media in that, were coming at her and hell-bent on ruining her life.
And there she is with Donald Trump signing this into law and not just signing it into law, but attaching the or else to this.
You will do this or else you lose federal funding.
Not a penny in federal funding coming your way if you violate the rights of women and girls.
That's exactly right.
And there are so many, Dr. Linda Blade did a really great rundown on Twitter about what this means for it.
It's not just that biological males can't compete against females in sport.
It means that universities must not continue on with this adoption of this insane initiative.
This means that if they do, they'll lose their funding.
It means that nobody from the international sporting community can do this in America when they come and compete in America.
And for Canadians, this is us.
So no Canadian team, okay, listen to me, no Canadian team may go across the border with a biological male athlete and compete against American, against American female athletes.
It is absolutely incredible what Donald Trump did using the executive orders, the powers that executive orders offer him.
And in Canada, I believe that Pierre Polyev is going to have to get very, very comfortable using orders in council or the notwithstanding clause to fix some of these egregious, grievous harms that have happened to female athletes in Canada and females as a whole to protect us from this egregious overreach of a minority rights, men's rights movement.
You know what?
And I think he will because he was pressed on this issue in that interview and he was like, yeah, there were only two genders.
I will be aware of two.
I will be aware of two.
What are you aware of?
Yeah.
I want to show this video because I watched this with my daughter, who is a female athlete in a contact sport.
As you rightly point out, this is a vehicle for a lot of high-level female athletes to make their way through the university system.
And they've been having there in the case of the volleyball players that David Menzies has covered.
They are being pushed aside and their scholarships are being given to men, biological men.
Can I just, for a quick second, eviscerate the male coaches who let this happen?
Can I just eviscerate cheaters who stand by and smugly smile as questions are being poised to them?
Do you believe that men should be competing against girls in this sport or against females in this sport?
And they stand there with their limp members in their hands and not, they don't have the balls to answer the question.
It's egregious.
It's absolutely egregious.
Every single one of those men should lose their jobs when this becomes illegal in Canada.
And I have no problem saying that.
Remember the East German doping scandal where they were dosing their female athletes with testosterone and we called it cheating.
We called it cheating.
I'm old enough to remember when this sort of stuff was cheating.
But I want to show this video because this is what it's actually all about.
And I watched this with my daughter.
It is of the little girls coming in for the signing and they're just pouring in.
Okay, I'm going to cry.
I know.
I'm just saying it right now.
I'm going to cry.
My heart.
Heartfelt Moment Protecting Girls 00:04:47
I think that's good.
I think we get the point.
But it is all kinds of female athletes that this is affected.
And this one thing that Donald Trump did changes their future forever.
Without question.
These are girls from every social background, every economic background, every interest group who would have been called hateful, bigoted extremists for standing their ground and not wanting to compete against boys.
Those are the faces of the girls that this executive order protects.
And I mean, we just can't be more happy for them.
We just can't be more happy for them as like from the people of Canada to the people of America.
You did your girls a solid yesterday.
And Donald Trump got stars hammered in his crown.
Yeah, we await our turn.
Now, speaking of radical extremists, if you get all your news from the mainstream media, JK Rowling, who actually should be a feminist darling, given the success that she's had with writing books and pulling herself out of poverty.
She says, congratulations to every single person on the left who's been campaigning to destroy women's and girls' rights.
Without you, there'd be no images like this.
Amen, sister.
Amen.
That is an image for the ages, isn't it?
Contrast that with creepy Joe Biden, okay?
With creepy Joe Biden with his decrepit fingers creeping up and coming in and kissing the little girls and having them being horrified.
Compare that image against, I mean, America, you obviously made the right choice.
You obviously, and wasn't Donald Trump just giving such grandpa vibes in that photo?
Like with all these little people around him, and he's there holding up his executive order.
He was just given, he was just given cool grandpa vibes there.
I just love it.
I just love it.
We know that he has a granddaughter.
Like he's got granddaughters.
He's got daughters.
So of course, this is deeply personal for him too.
But he has a granddaughter who is a high-level golf golfer, Kai.
That's right, Trump.
Yes, Kai, yes.
And so this is, I mean, if you're a dad, if you're a grandpa, if you're a husband, this affects you too.
And, you know, like we've spent the last three decades, I think, making chivalry out of vogue.
Chivalry is on life support.
I don't think it's quite dead.
And the women of the left have done their best to stick the pillow over its face.
But normal men have a biological imperative to protect the women and children in their lives.
Yes.
And we just saw it play out in an executive order.
It was just beautiful watching that.
You know, they're all just, they're all just with such great expectation watching the Sharpie hover.
And PS, I love the videos of the scratchy Sharpie, you know, the pointy Donald Trump.
I'm pretty sure I could do Donald Trump's signature by the amount of times that I've watched him do it.
But all of these little girls just so with such great expectation watching the Sharpie hover over the page.
And then as his signature is complete, they know that they are protected.
What an amazing moment for them.
What an amazing moment.
I'm asking the team to find what the opposite of those visuals are.
And it was from Toronto.
Hopefully someone can find it.
This is it.
Alex Y has found it for us.
This is the opposite imagery of this grandpa gathered around with all these healthy children and their loving mothers and dads that we saw with Donald Trump, strong grandpa vibes.
This is what that's, the Ontario NDP urging legal protections for drag shows so that these uh, this motley crew of weirdos um, these look like Mr Potato Head leftover pieces that you just stuck in and like maybe three arms and extra lips.
Um to uh, they were demanding protections for drag shows so that they could continue to show sexualized materials to children like this.
Ontario NDP's Drag Show Protections 00:02:19
And what an absolute kaleidoscope of the worst of humanity before us.
You know, if a meteor were to hit Canada okay, if a meteor were to hit Canada, I mean I would hope that it would blaze right into that podium, if i'm being completely honest.
But not to, not to uh, not to, not to beat a dead rainbow unicorn Sheila um, um.
But the federal government just gave that group for, you know, protections of that group right, another 40 million dollars.
Right in this last week there was a, there was an announce, a big shiny, sparkly announcement that that that that group just got another 40 million taxpayer dollars to continue the devious, awful work that has been allowed to to, to happen in Canada.
Uh, nothing is more offensive as far as i'm concerned it's.
You see what the liberals are doing here.
They fund these groups because they're going to need help campaigning, so they take your money and give it to these groups, so that these groups can point at the conservatives and say, you can't vote for those guys.
They're a bunch of racist blah, blahs.
Look at us, we're the normal ones.
Um, this is yes, it's the mobilization of yeah yes, it's the mobilization of political operatives.
This is what they do, and they did it just before an election, while the you know, while uh, Tariff Gate was melting down in the Universe, while thousands of Canadians are living on the street, while 25 of us are accessing food banks, 50 of those people being children and we are able to find 40 million dollars for this, for this precious group.
Of course, this is the government of Canada for you uh, let's one more, two more quick things.
We'll breeze through it.
Then i'll do an ad read, uh because uh, the last, I think, 15 or 20 minutes of the show.
Uh, Ezra's going to kick us off because he's got some important things to say about things that are happening to him.
I'm sure Olivier will bring up to speed, just so you know.
I've already donated, I know what you're talking about and I've already donated.
Bring God Back 00:08:07
So there you.
I think I might have been the first one.
So there you have it.
Yes, that's right.
I cannot wait to hear the breakdown.
Uh, so we've got uh, Donald Trump.
This video again, grandpa vibes, North American grandpa vibes, Coming off Trump in all directions.
Let's watch this.
The element, the everything that's going to be happy, people of religion are going to be happy again.
And I really believe you can't be happy without religion, without that belief.
I really believe it.
I just don't see how you can be.
So let's bring religion back.
Let's bring God back into our lives.
Thank you all very much.
Thank you very much.
I don't know what else to say.
I think it is, you know what it is?
It's refreshing to hear somebody say, do not be afraid to be a person of faith in the public sphere anymore.
Because for so long it has been, you know, like, ew, you're just an icky backwards person because you believe in a higher power than the government.
He's making it okay to say, no, no, no, I answer to a higher power and it's not the federal government.
I answer to my conscience and God who directs it.
That's exactly right.
And I think it's prudent to say that the most repeated phrase in the Bible is, be not afraid, be not afraid.
And to hear him, it's really interesting to hear his evolution because, you know, 2016, Trump wouldn't have said that.
But, you know, you take a bullet millimeters from entering the back of your head, and that really puts things in perspective.
And I know that there are a great many people of a great many faiths relying on it right now through these really, really challenging times, especially in Canada.
And to hear that is just so incredible.
I mean, that elevates him to legend status, doesn't it?
You know, and if you are a person of faith, so many of the stories of the Bible are about redemption, right?
And so for people who say, well, Trump was like this, he was a playboy, he was this, he was that, he was a womanizer.
Yeah, that's the point of forgiveness.
That's the point of redemption.
That everybody can have their Saul to Paul moment on the road to Damascus.
And then we say to them, okay, don't do that again.
Now get over here, you big lug.
We're hanging out now.
You know, that was one of the things Jesus said was, go forth and sin no more.
As in what you did in the past, you can leave behind.
We offer you forgiveness and redemption and some happiness if you start doing things our way.
And for Trump to say what he said there, that it's time to bring religion back, it might cause the left to prickle.
But that is literally the first commandment.
Like the first commandment, one of the oldest, the oldest laws of mankind is that you shall have no other God before me.
And that means the government and yourself.
That's right.
That's all.
So much of the less is driven by the God.
They see themselves as God.
Yes.
Yes.
The collective is God, where they together are more powerful.
And God, they become the God is what they worship themselves.
I believe we're specifically warned about that.
Yeah, we were.
We sure were.
One more thing about Trump being a legend.
He withdraws the United States from the UN Human Rights Council and permanently ends funding to the terrorists at UNRWA.
Now, we know that UNRWA was involved in October 7th.
United Nations employees were involved in the kidnapping and hostage holdings of 1,200 Israelis who were murdered and another 240 that were held hostage.
Those numbers continue to dwindle as hostages are released or declared dead.
But good for him.
American people should not be funding people who hate them.
They should not be funding terror and murder.
And I'm sure in the next few days, we're going to hear that.
Don't worry, UNRWA, I'm Justin Trudeau, and I'm here to top you up because that's what he did when Stephen Harper cut the funding to UNRWA.
Because back then, we knew UNRWA was funding terrorism or the very least enabling terrorism.
Stephen Harper was like, yeah, not a penny of Canadian taxpayers' money is going to this.
And one of the first things Justin Trudeau did when he was elected was return UNRWA's funding plus more.
And so that's right.
Just if I had to predict past behavior, predicting future behavior, we're going to see UNRWA topped up.
Well, and the way that Donald Trump and specifically our guy, Elon Musk, is, I mean, eviscerating the funding mechanisms for all of these deeply, deeply harmful programs that number one, don't act in the best interest of the American people.
Don't act in the best interest of the international community and serve to really destroy Western civilization.
The way that they're doing that is absolutely spectacular to watch.
So I'm not sure if this is on the list coming up, but right now they are going through the United, oh, what is it?
USAID.
USAID.
United States Agency for International Development.
The vet corruption that they have uncovered, the billions of dollars that are funding all of these initiatives that none of us, A, asked for and none of us, none of us want anymore is absolutely incredible to watch.
And I was, as I'm watching this, as I'm watching this sort of unfold, I started wondering, well, who, what is the Canadian version of USAID?
What is our Canadian version of USAID?
And it turns out the answer to that is Global Affairs Canada.
Global affairs.
Global affairs, but it's also everything.
Like the federal government just gives out money from all departments and it doesn't even have to seem to be within the purview of the department.
But global affairs, it's huge.
I'm going to ask you to put a pin on that because we actually have your tweet from that as the list on the list.
Oh, Afro is a trained professional.
Okay, so put a pin on that.
I'm going to do an ad read.
And then Olivia, perhaps you could whisper in my ear, do we have a rebel news ad that we need to run also?
Okay.
Okay.
And then we'll talk about the global affairs.
And then I think Ezra's going to jump on.
It sounds like he's going to be ready in a couple, two, three, four, five minutes.
So Patriot Addict.
Folks, Trump is finally back in office and it's only going to get better for the Americans from here.
We will have our reprieve soon as Canadians.
As a celebration, Patriot Addict is sending free Trump red knives to people who voted for Trump.
You know how I love a knife.
This is just their way of saying thank you for supporting him and being part of this moment in history.
Normally, this knife retails for $100, but right now you can grab it just for the cost of shipping, scan the QR code to the right to apply for your 100% off coupon code and claim your Trump knife today.
Man, I love a good knife.
I love a good jackknife.
I always have jackknives on my keys.
And you'd be surprised.
A lot of the men around me don't actually carry knives in the real world.
And I'm slightly disappointed.
Big News on Monday 00:14:39
Do we have a Rebel ad?
And then we'll bring Ezra on or do we want, Olivia, give me some direction.
Do we want to talk about, oh, talk about.
Okay, so we'll do an ad.
We'll bring it Ezra.
Okay.
This podcast is brought to you by Rebel News.
That's right.
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It's Ezra Live.
I just remember when I was down there in Sao Paulo recording that.
It was crazy.
Imagine the government just deciding one day you're not allowed.
Everyone on Twitter is banned.
Everyone is suspended and you can't log on.
People were downloading VPNs to get on.
It was pretty cool.
It was the first time I ever used one on my phone, so I encourage it.
Hey, censorship is in Canada too.
It's not just in Brazil.
I want to let you know what happened to me yesterday, I guess.
I was sued by someone named Beard Judani.
Now, that name might not ring a bell, but I think you might remember the case.
Last year, Justin Trudeau appointed him to be the chair of the Canadian Human Rights Commission.
So you'd think a person would be pretty sensitive and human rights-y.
This Beardju Datani had written so many anti-Semitic things online, but he did it in sort of a sneaky way.
He did it under a different name, Mujahid Dutani, his adopted Muslim name.
So Beardju, it was almost like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Beardju Datani applied to be the chief of the Human Rights Commission, was accepted.
Mujahid Datani wrote all these crazy anti-Semitic things, except it was the same guy.
He didn't disclose his nicknames or aliases, which he had to do when he applied.
It was a firestorm.
You can't put an anti-Semite as the chair of the Canadian Human Rights Commission.
That's reserved for the prime minister's job under Trudeau.
I kid.
He did finally, they put this guy, Datani, on leave, and then he eventually quit.
And I think he left in disgrace, but obviously not so much disgrace that TMU, Toronto Metropolitan University, hired him to work there.
It gives you a bit of a sense of how bad things must be at TMU.
Anyways, like I say, yesterday, I get this huge lawsuit.
We can show it on the screen here, $800,000 suing me for calling him anti-Semitic.
Well, that's what's going to happen when you write crazy anti-Semitic things.
And he's not just suing me.
He's suing Melissa Lanceman, the deputy leader of the Conservative Party, and he's suing a pro-Jewish lobby group called CJA.
He's suing us all for different amounts.
In my case, it's 800 grand.
I think it's absurd.
I think it's what they call a slap suit, strategic litigation against public participation.
Look, if you write, let me give you an example of things he wrote.
He wrote that Jews today are like the Nazis, and Hamas today are like the Jews hiding in the Warsaw Ghetto.
He said, obviously, he's with the boycott, divest, and sanction Israel group.
He actually wrote that terrorism is a very rational strategy.
He appeared on panels with extremists, including one guy who was a member of a terrorist group called Hizbut Tahrir, which is a criminalized terrorist group in dozens of countries.
Like he was, he went to a protest outside an Israeli embassy and was quoted by a newspaper denouncing Israel.
This guy was basically the kind of guy who you see in Canada today with a Palestinian flag shouting crazy from the river to the sea genocidal chants.
In fact, that was one of the chants at the protest he was at.
That's the guy Trudeau chose as the human rights boss.
And I'm going to give Trudeau the benefit of the doubt that even he's not crazy enough to have appointed someone knowingly.
They hired an outside law firm to investigate how this happened.
And the law firm said, oh, no, no, he's not anti-Semitic.
He just said some anti-Israel things, but it's not anti-Semitic.
But they acknowledged that he hid this from the government.
So that was the fig leaf of his excuse for quitting.
It's insane to me that he's suing me and Melissa Lanceman and Sija for calling him anti-Semitic when he wrote so many anti-Semitic things and he was on so many crazy panels.
Like, would you be on a panel with a member of a terrorist organization?
That's not just, that's not just, you know, LARPing.
That's not just play acting anymore.
This guy, the chutzpah of him, and instead of just going away and keeping a low profile, he is suing obviously a censorship move, obviously a slap lawsuit, as they're called.
I haven't spoken to Melissa Lanceman or Sija, but I can't imagine they're going to bend the knee for this guy.
We'll see how it goes.
The plaintiff, Beirju Datani, had a press conference in Ottawa today, which I think maybe sort of shows you what's up.
This is his attempt to sort of refurbish his reputation.
Yeah, good luck with that, buddy.
I think suing Jews for calling you anti-Semitic when you write anti-Semitic things, I don't think that's going to make the stigma of being an anti-Semite go away.
I think it sort of proves the point.
And that's the thing.
If you Google his name, Beirju Datani, B-I-R-J-U Datani, D-A-T-T-N-A-A-N-I, you'll see that hundreds of news stories were written about him.
If you type it into Twitter, Beerju Datani, on Twitter, you'll see thousands of people calling him out as anti-Semitic.
It's his anti-Semitism what did it.
It's not us calling him anti-Semitic.
That's the secondary response.
The primary cause was him doing and saying crazy things.
But what's so interesting to me is he is only suing three people, not hundreds of people, just three people, and they all happen to be Jews.
So it's quite something.
By the way, if you want to see the lawsuit, you can go to saverebelnews.com, save rebelnews.com, because I really feel like he's trying to crush us.
I think that's obviously what he's trying to do here.
$800,000 is obviously more money than Rebel News could bear.
That would nuke us.
And that's his goal.
That's him on the left there.
That's me on the right, if you're wondering who's who.
And that's my update.
I just thought I would jump in the live stream and tell you because it's sort of crazy.
Or you could just call it Thursday at Rebel News.
Like crazy things happen all the time.
I should tell you, we're always cooking up exciting things.
We always have exciting projects on the go.
Most of them we choose, but every once in a while we're thrust into a controversy we did not choose.
And this is an example of that.
But if you're wondering if I'm going to bend the knee, if you're wondering if I'm going to break down and say, I'm sorry for saying your anti-Semitic posts were anti-Semitic, and I'm so, so sorry for hurting your feelings when you said the Jews like me are the new Nazis.
It's not going to happen.
And I don't know how this lawsuit's going to go, but I think he should have in life just chosen a quiet life.
Instead, he's chosen to make his anti-Semitism the central topic of the discussion.
And I don't know if he knows what that's going to be like in a real court because he's used to these human rights kangaroo courts.
I'm not sure if he's ready to answer questions about his anti-Semitism because he will face them a little bit more rigorously than the liberals asked him about it.
So that's my update.
That's the news.
I want to tell you, and I'm bursting with excitement, bursting with a lot of things, but on Monday, we, Monday, it's our time to shine.
And I've got a lawsuit, an outward-bound lawsuit that I think will catch your attention.
I'm not trying to tease you.
Okay, fine.
I am trying to tease you just a little bit.
On Monday, let me just put it this way.
Get ready for some international news.
I will not be announcing our lawsuit on Monday.
Someone with a slightly larger profile than me will be announcing our next piece of litigation and might even not even be a Canadian.
I don't know.
But Rebel News does not bend the knee.
We do.
You know, there's an old Latin saying, I think it's the motto of the, not the Tudors, but of some Scottish king clan.
It's in Latin, though.
Nemo me impugn latchit.
Do you know what Nemo means?
It means nobody.
That movie, Finding Nemo, isn't that sort of funny that Nemo means nobody?
Nemo me impugn latchisit.
That means no one cuts me, lacerate.
Nemo me impugn latitude.
No one cuts me with impunity, which is different from saying no one cuts me.
You can't stop people from hurting you.
You cannot stop people from hurting you in life, but you can stop them from hurting you with impunity.
There are people who have tried to destroy rebel news, but they've broken the law as they've tried to do it.
And Monday, it's not Judgment Day because that's when Monday's lawsuit goes to court, but I've got some huge news for you that you can see I'm aching to tell you, but that has to wait till Monday.
And the reason I tell you that is it's not all fighting defense.
We're fighting defense today against this anti-Semitic liberal named Beerju Dutani, who thought that he could go online using his nickname and be undetected.
And he almost got away with it, didn't he?
Can you imagine?
By the way, Bill C-63, Trudeau's censorship bill, which is now thankfully being derailed because of prorogation, this guy, Beerju Dutani, would have been in charge of it, at least the Human Rights Commission part.
This is the guy who would be coming after, now that I think about it, he would be coming after Rebel News.
He would be coming after Melissa Lanceman.
He would be coming after Sija with the power of the state.
I guess he just can't get, he just can't shake that censorship bug because that's what he's doing as his own as a plaintiff.
And yeah, that's my update.
I just wanted to tell you what's cooking.
But I want to say it's not all defense.
It's not all bad news.
By the way, I think we're going to win.
And on Monday, you're going to see even more winning.
So much winning, you might get sick of it.
My friends, that's it from Toronto.
I'm going to turn things over to our Western crew, the lovely ladies of Rebel News on the West.
Thanks for letting me jump in the studio, you guys.
Thanks, Boss.
That's an Ari.
That is darling.
And I cannot, I'm just sitting here like this going, tell me now, tell me now.
Like I can't wait on Monday.
You got to wait till Monday.
Oh, you're killing me, Ezra.
You're killing me.
You know, I shouldn't do that.
I shouldn't tease like that.
I obviously have trouble keeping a secret, but I am in this case going to keep it secret till Monday.
And I think it's going to knock your socks off.
I'll talk to you guys later.
Thanks.
Thanks for being blessed.
Bye.
Yeah, no problem.
Bye.
You know, I have to tell you.
I'm putting half my teeth for Monday, okay?
There is big news coming on Monday.
Stay tuned, really, Canada.
This is really big news because Ezra is real bad at telling a secret.
There have been times where he has called me very late at night where he had a secret and he couldn't keep it.
So he had to tell it to somebody that he knew could keep it.
So he would call me and then tell me.
And he's like, I just had to tell somebody.
Okay, I'm telling you.
Goodbye.
I am the Fort Knox of secret keeping.
Like, if you have something that you just need to get off your chest, you can call me and it is, it is locked away forever.
Yeah.
Oh, well, I can't wait.
But this Datani, I mean, what a scumbag.
What an absolute scumbag.
Like, what a piece of work, okay?
Of course, because he didn't, because he wasn't able to ascend the throne of the Canadian Human Rights Commission, okay, and use the long arm of the government to punish his detractors and his critics.
Of course, he would attack Rebel News in a slapsuit to try and make us be quiet.
Well, Datani, I believe that, I believe that this is not going to, I believe that this is not going to go in your favor.
And I think that this is just going to shine a big old crazy spotlight on the way that bureaucrats and especially failed bureaucrats use these types of lawsuits to silence criticism.
Yeah.
And it was something that Ezra pointed out, and I noticed it right away when I looked at the list of people he was suing.
I'm like, tell me you're not an anti-Semite and the only people you're suing are Jewish.
You know, like a lot of people said a lot of true, but mean things about you.
The only people you're suing are Jews.
You know, I want to, okay, so the thing that perked my ears up was that he was trying to use like what, like a burner account or like a shady account to say, really?
I want to, I want to see all of this.
Like I want to see every single part of it because I love nothing more than when that happens, when people think that they're operating under, you know, under a shroud of anonymity.
And then it turns out that they're, that they are very, very corrupt and very famous public servants that are that are trying to do that.
Like that is just actually, that is one of my favorite things that happens when that's revealed.
So can't wait.
Can't wait to hear all about it, Rebel.
Keep going.
And just for the record, you guys, go to save, what was it?
SheilasaveRebelnews.com and donate to the legal defense.
I did that as soon as I got the email this morning.
Can't Wait To Hear About It! 00:03:44
I was like, yep, because we wouldn't be doing this for you if it weren't for your support, Canada.
And so whatever you can contribute to that, to that legal defense would be more than appreciated.
But we are nothing without you.
And it's only because of your support that we are able to do this.
So yeah, save rebelnews.com.
Yeah.
And if they can shut us up, then imagine what they could do to you.
Oh, there would be nobody telling your stories.
There would be nobody brave enough to tell your stories.
It costs a lot of money to be brave in this world.
It sure does.
It really does.
And to look this cheap, Sheila, like our friend Dolly Parton said, costs a lot of money to look this cheap, but it does cost a lot of money to be brave.
So, whatever you can contribute to that fund is so appreciated by us.
And thanks so much.
Now, speaking of bravery, I have an event I want to tell everybody about.
It's an event that I would love you, Ms. Lise Murrell, to be my plus one for.
And it is an event with our friend April Hutchinson.
She is doing an event with Fire and Ice.
So that's Canadians for Truth and Theo Fleury.
So it's on Saturday, February 22nd, 2025.
April Hutchinson, NHL legend, Theo Fleury, and our good friend Rebel News alumnus Adam Sos are coming to one of my favorite venues on the place on the face of the earth, Church in the Vine, where Lise and I have had pizza in the parking lot in lawn chairs.
And that's an Edmonton for Fire and Ice.
The event is, of course, being put on, as I said, by our good friends at Canadians for Truth.
You can learn about April's incredible story, her resilience, her victories, the challenges that she's overcome, and now her fight for fairness in women's sports for all women and girls.
To get your tickets, go to Canadiansfortruth.ca.
This is a wonderful venue.
Pastors Tracy and Rodney are incredible people.
They took a stand during COVID.
The Alberta government came after them, slapped them with an $80,000 fine.
With help from the Democracy Fund, they were able to fight back.
They are in our documentary, Church Under Fire.
They tell their story of doing their best to be a place of refuge for the isolated during COVID and their incredible victory over the hands of the state.
Wonderful people doing wonderful things, an incredible venue, giving a voice to Theo and April.
And that's on February 22nd.
So please go and I'll be there.
And hopefully Lise will be there too.
Oh, I would like to take this opportunity to reply like RSVP.
Yes.
To that invitation.
So Edmonton, Edmonton, we will see you on February 22nd.
And if only just to spend time with April Hutchinson, she is one of the most exemplary humans I've ever known, really.
She is a wonderful woman.
And Church in the Vine, I don't think that I'm exaggerating here when I say miracles work their way through that building.
And just to experience the atmosphere there and the magic that really happens there is incredible.
So yeah, that's what we're doing in the cold, dark Canadian winter.
It'll just be a bright light right in the middle of it.
So yes, if you're in the Edmonton area, please join us on February 22nd at Church in the Vine with April Hutchinson and Theo Fleury.
Yeah.
Now, the thing we put a pin in before we're going to come back to.
So we'll start by my article from a couple of days ago.
Bizarre Projects and Luxury Travel Perks 00:08:02
And I don't take credit for the data in this article.
I just saw that Franco Terrazano from the Canadian Taxpayers Federation was tweeting about it because a lot of this relies on his research because he was responding to what's happening with USAID and Doge coming in and saying, no, no more feminist basket weaver subsidies.
Thank you very much.
We need to respect the American taxpayer.
And so Franco was tweeting about all the stuff that the Taxpayers Federation has uncovered.
And I thought, well, heck, I better grab that and write that up.
So the expenditures range from bizarre projects to luxury travel perks.
And so my breakdown was $8,800 to fund a sex toy show in Germany.
$12,500 to let seniors in Taiwan, Austria, and Australia discuss their sex lives on stage.
Horrific.
With no involvement from Canadian seniors.
That's the one bright spot.
It wasn't your Grammy.
It was foreign Grammys.
$1,700 to fly a Canadian chef to India to cook Indian food.
And I think this is one of the Dragon's Den chefs.
And I think he was then on the panel to select Canadian senators, independent senators.
Then we've got corruption.
Oh, yeah.
$12.5 million spent on vacant land in Senegal.
$41 million wasted on buildings in Afghanistan, which were soon abandoned by the Taliban.
So we gave them to the Taliban and the Taliban's like, we don't even want this.
$15,700 spent on a cartoon exhibit at the Canadian Embassy in Washington, D.C.
This is why Trump doesn't want to deal with us.
$1.7 million in a failed effort to push carbon taxes on other countries.
I think we had Mark Carney doing that for free, but whatever.
Then we've, well, Mark Carney doesn't work for free, but at least we didn't have to pay him.
$12.7 million on promoting Canada at the Oscars in the U.S., Cannes in France, Berlin Ale in Germany, and Southwest in Australia and also in Texas.
$17,000 spent on limousine services for the Governor General Mary Simon Wilder.
$71,000, Sheila, not $17,000, $71, $71,000.
These numbers are giving me dyslexia because they're so troubling on the Governor General in Iceland.
$220,000 on high-end airplane catering for Trudeau and his entourage during a six-day Indo-Pacific trip.
And there's more because I used to routinely pull the food bills on his junkets.
I just haven't done it in a while.
I'll have to come back to that.
But that's Franco-Terrazano.
And while some of that is from global affairs, it's not all from global affairs.
Canadian Heritage is terrible at this too.
And even I did a report today because we're sort of launching a little come to us for the encyclopedia of this nonsense.
We need an infographic, Sheila, about how all of these organizations and how they interact with.
Like a spider web.
Yes, we need that.
Yes.
A lot of this is like funding academics to do busybody work instead of actually doing real work.
Like we could fire two out of every three academics and we wouldn't notice anything but a tax savings.
$14,000 to fund a study into whether or not superheroes actually have superhuman strength.
Like, why don't we just research the Easter bunny?
What is the preferred abode of the Easter bunny?
Does he live in a thicket or in a hole?
Like it's just the stupidest thing I've ever seen.
But this is this is the Canadian government.
We need a doge immediately.
This is what makes me sick.
While Canadians are at the grocery store considering whether they can afford to buy, you know, the brand name Kraft Sickles cheese slices or they have to pick the no-name cheese slices.
This is the level of institutional ineptitude that is happening in the background, like nobody's business and nobody is accountable.
And if you, you know, if you asked the Canadian taxpayer, the average Canadian taxpayer sitting there with their two blocks of cheese, you know, do you, would you be supportive of your government spending $71,000 on the governor general's limousine in Iceland?
I bet 10 out of 10 Canadians, 11 out of 10, 11 out of 10 Canadians would say, absolutely not.
Like, absolutely not.
This is, it's just imperative that we get a hold of our taxpayer funds.
And I mean, the Canadian Taxpayer Federation is doing such a good job at shining a light on this.
Like, high props to them.
Marco is a little feast, isn't he?
There's one other that I found quite astounding because I just don't even know how they spent this money.
And this is, again, part of my research on a story that I'm working on.
And it's actually going to be a series of stories.
But my research was like, I better lay out the case for why we need to do this work.
And one of them was, because it's not a small thing and it's not just global affairs.
I called it an instant classic.
The red couch tour.
They sent a couch across the country so that Canadians could sit down on this wandering Chesterfield and have conversations.
And that costs the Canadian taxpayer $155,000.
That is an expensive Chesterfield, Sheila.
That should go in the Aga Khan Museum in Toronto.
Okay.
That, that, that's a piece of Canadian culture.
Does not just make you sick.
Well, does it just make you sick?
And the most revolting part of it all is they called it the Red Couch Tour instead of the Red Chesterfield tour, which would have made it at least a piece of Canadiana.
Yes.
Yeah.
Like a wink at the Canadian word, but they didn't even do that.
And I think that was through Heritage Canada.
You know what?
You know what I bet happened, though, Sheila, in the background in the lead up to this is some interior designer was hired as a consultant to source and find the couch, right?
And then so they would have gone out into the world and got the exact right shade of red in the exact right fabric and made sure that it was all very environmentally sourced.
And then when it came to like naming the project, they were like, oh, somebody, somebody, you know, with the lick of sense about Chesterfields and furniture design said, you know, we should call it the Red Chesterfield because that's really Canadian.
And then the designer would come back in and say, oh, no, What makes a Chesterfield is the arm height on the piece of furniture, which is an actual true fact.
A Chesterfield is defined by a piece of furniture where the arm height matches the back height of the piece.
And this designer would have come in and made a very, very complex interior design ruling.
And then we would have given that person, you know, tens of thousands of dollars to help with the naming of this project that then eventually cost Canadians over $150,000.
It is sickening.
It is sickening.
Paying Per Tune 00:09:28
You know what we do, Sheila?
Me and you?
We get lawn chairs from Costco, okay, $35 each.
And we roll across this great country of ours, across the prairies, and we have the best conversations.
Total investment, 70 bucks.
Okay.
70 bucks plus the Costco pizza.
Yes.
Somebody should put us in charge of Canadian Doge.
Nobody could squeeze a budget like two young mobs could squeeze.
Formerly young mobs, we're a little bit more seasoned now, more wise.
But you put me in charge of Doge, that would not be happening.
Nope.
Nope.
You know what?
I'm a bit doji at the company.
So sometimes I'm like, excuse me, what are we spending that money on?
And everyone's like, no, no, it's a reasonable expense.
I'm like, no, it's not.
I'm not doing that.
I'm not paying for it.
We're not paying for that.
Speaking of we're not paying for that, we've got this tweet from you.
It says, if funding the woke lunatics at CBC wasn't bad enough in 2023, 2024, the Canadian taxpayers funded the BBC to the tune of over $1.6 million.
What's the total budget of the BBC last year?
Why do they need our money?
Oh, was it in there?
I'm looking.
Why do they need our money?
That is a fabulous question, Sheila Gunread.
That is a fabulous question.
Regular Canadian taxpayers pay $1.6 million to fund a foreign public media company in Britain that we don't watch, we don't participate in, and also played a big role.
And this will be like for our rebel fam who know this story, but the BBC played a big role in the persecution of Tommy Robinson.
So here we are in Cat, okay, Canada.
Here's your tax dollars at work going overseas to fund the persecution of Tommy Robinson via the BBC.
It is egregious.
It is egregious.
Canadians should be outraged by this.
Now, it's very difficult to find the total funding of the BBC per year.
The best I can find on very short notice is that the BBC, of course, as we know, is funded by the license fee.
Yo, maybe you got your TV license.
It's 169, almost 170 pounds per year, which is $215 US per year imposed on every TV viewing household.
So what is that?
Like $300 a year just to maintain the state broadcaster in the UK per household.
And we like this is where it says that we're given the money too.
Whereas in Canada, we pay the fees built into our provider, right?
Like our provider has to deliver Canadian content, the CBC included.
And then a portion of those fees are then delivered back to the CBC.
But in Britain, outside of the $1.5 billion, they also get funding.
In addition to the $1.5 billion in public funding that the CBC gets.
Yeah, but in Britain, you have to, like, you actually just get an invoice to your house.
Hey, want to watch Saturday morning cartoons?
Pay us $200 for your TVs in your house.
And that's been their funding mechanism since the birth of the CB or the BBC in the 1940s.
And you can't get away from it.
Now, there's more ways.
Speaking of which, I thought this was interesting that somebody pulled up Politico.
Tom Quiggan did.
He says, as it turns out, the government of Canada was also subsidizing Politico, so a U.S. news news outlet by buying outrageously priced subscriptions.
This is interesting because, okay, so $90,000 in 2024, total value earlier in 2019 was $116-ish thousand dollars.
Now, here's what I find funny: Trudeau just went on Politico, or Team Trudeau just went on Politico to talk about the tariffs.
Won't go really not on any real Canadian media outside of the CBC.
Um, when they go on uh Vashi Capellas's show, she's been just axe murdering them, so they've kind of stopped avoiding they won't, they're not sending their best to deal with Vashi anymore.
Um, but they just went on politico, and here's what really gets me: Blacklocks, I think, is engaged in a fight with the Canadian government because Blacklocks is a subscription model.
I think it's almost $300 or over $300 per person for Blacklocks.
Yep, just $300 a year.
Yep.
And their, what are they called?
Their enterprise fee for like a bigger company, it's like, I think it's close to a couple thousand, whatever.
Um, but if you rely on it, they're great aggregators and they're great like news pegs for you to work on other things.
And they're, they got bills to pay, they don't work for free.
So, whatever, they don't take money from Justin Trudeau, they take the money from the people who subscribe.
If you don't want to subscribe, don't subscribe, it's real easy, right?
Um, but they caught the federal government buying the single subscription fee, the personal fee subscription to find out what Blacklocks was saying about them, and then they pass that around around government agencies.
Oh, laughing off little black locks while dumping money at Politico.
Isn't that insane?
Yeah, I mean, props to Blacklocks, who really do amazing work keeping an eye on Ottawa in particular.
They're all over, they're monitoring committee meetings, they are doing freedom of information requests, and what a fantastic find for them.
But, but you know, Sheila, this is, I mean, this is the thinking of the government of Canada.
Well, if Black, if we gave Blacklocks $200,000, imagine how much they could damage us.
Imagine how much they could damage us.
But, but I mean, this is, this just goes to show you how anti-Canadian and how anti-democracy our federal government actually is.
I mean, I mean, good for Blacklocks.
Well done, them.
I'm just, I'm a huge fan of their work.
Oh, me too.
Uh, they do such great work, and I understand how terrible it is to sit through several hours, like full days worth of committee hearings where you're just having an out-of-body experience from the boredom.
And then one exciting thing happens, and you have to be watching, otherwise, you're not going to catch it.
So, you're just trying to pay attention while trying to do other things.
And you're suffering, like you're suffering.
This is some sort of scientific experiment on the tortured resilience.
Yeah, it's getmo stuff.
It's about the resiliency of the human mind.
And then all of a sudden, you catch the one thing that you have to be, and they do that every day.
Every day, mental, mental waterboarding is what they do.
And Sheila, make no mistake, they do that on purpose.
You know why?
They want to, and government, you know, whether whether you're talking about municipal or provincial or federal, government is always guilty of doing this.
What they do is they is they go into their meetings and they try and lull you into a state of mental catatonics so that so that you won't actually, you know what I mean?
You sort of, you sort of tune out because they do not want you to get to the crux of what they're hiding.
Like, like when I've, when we've watched Sheila, um, oh, leaked Zoom calls from Right.
All of the land acknowledgements and the announcements at the beginning and all of the self-flagellation that happens at the very beginning.
You know, 45 minutes of that kind of garbage is enough to make almost anybody tune out.
They want you to tune out.
So that you, that you, that you have to actually, you know, it is a form of torture.
You should, you should consider, you should consider taking that to the Canadian Human Rights Commission.
Thanks for tuning into this podcast.
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I should.
Parks Canada's Password Scandal 00:03:15
Now, actually, Blacklocks took this all the way to the federal court.
Oh, did they?
I just, yeah, I just looked it up out of the corner of my eye.
So a federal judge ruled that, and this was based on the federal government sharing Blacklock's password.
That the judge ruled that Canadians may share media passwords without payment or permission.
So basically, stealing a subscription from these outlets.
And again, this is the same federal government that just gave $200,000 to Politico for subscriptions.
They weren't willing to pay for the enterprise subscription from Blacklocks.
Why?
Blacklocks.
Blacklocks holds the government to account.
So BlackLocks caught Parks Canada managers circulating a single password by email.
I think they filed an ATIP and got them.
Yes.
So it said the court accepts that Parks Canada was subject to BlackLock's terms, said Barry Suchman, senior counsel with McCarthy Tetro of Toronto and Adject Professor of Intellectual Property at Osgood Hall Law School.
Those terms clearly limited the use by Parks Canada.
Genevive Patineau, a manager at Parks Canada, purchased a single password at the request of the Environment Minister's office to see one story records showed.
The story stated Blacklocks obtained documents proving Parks Canada secretly paid the CBC more than $94,000 for positive coverage of the agency's work.
Neither Parks Canada, of course, or the CBC disclosed the cash for coverage payment.
So Parks Canada and the Department of Environment at the time budgeted more than $282,710 a year for media monitoring, including $50,000 to Press News Inc. and $23,000 to Sedcom SNI Inc.
Manager Patineau had experience with the purchase of subscriptions for Parks Canada and should have known Blacklock's terms and conditions were plainly visible.
The gall of these people.
The absolute rampant corruption, the absolute rampant corruption of these guys.
But this is BlackLock.
This just goes to show you that, you know, smaller and especially independent media has to do so much work on the back end to make sure, you know, you know what I mean.
If they had, if they had a process in their back end tech that alerted them to multiple ip addresses uh, logging in with with the same password, they could have probably caught it sooner.
They could have probably caught or or at least stopped uh, stopped this, the um stop Parks Canada from sharing it within their, within their internal circles.
But they didn't.
But now they know that they have to.
Sheertex's Concerns 00:16:00
You know what I mean?
Because we're dealing with a completely corrupt and morally bankrupt federal government.
This is what we must do to protect uh, our independent media in Canada.
And it's crazy because the amount I mean how much would it have cost them to to, to subscribe couple of grand.
So instead they pay the CBC ninety thousand dollars and they pay political two hundred thousand dollars, while screwing the little guy.
I mean this is par for the course.
Par for the course for these crooked bastards.
Right that it said they had like a quarter million dollar media monitoring budget, but they screwed over little black box.
You couldn't, you couldn't have got that one person at Parks Canada, to set up a bunch of google alerts for what you wanted to monitor in the media.
No, that means that that's work.
That would be.
I mean, that's crazy.
She was on an EDO or on a, or on a trip to, on a trip to Uganda or something.
Uh right via via uh, what was it?
Uh foreign?
No, what was it?
The Canadian one?
It's just global affairs, global affairs, not foreign affairs.
Global affairs, Canada.
Yeah yeah um, we've got a quick ad read and then we'll go into just some of the follow-up from tariff mania.
Um, it's affecting the pantyhose.
I'll have you know.
So it's gonna be pantyhose.
Yes, gonna be bare legs for us this year okay okay, this one is from 1775coffee.com.
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Do we have a rebel ad or can we just go into uh, tariff stuff?
I guess we're going to tariff.
Okay, we'll hit the tariff stuff.
Um, let's talk about the pantyhose, Sheertex.
Temporary laying off 40% of their staff.
This signals that they don't think that Trudeau is going to meet the conditions of the deal that was struck last minute to avoid tariffs, right?
He has 30 days or whatever to avoid the tariffs.
This is Sheertex saying we actually don't think he's probably going to do that.
So Sheertex laying off 40% of their staff.
The confidence of the market is not supporting Justin Trudeau and his proclamations that he's going to get it done for Donald Trump.
This is the market showing that they are insecure, insecure with Justin Trudeau's promises.
They're laying off 40% of the company's staff just because of the promised tariffs.
It's a Montreal-based manufacturer of highly durable tights.
They employed about 350 people before the cut.
She placed the blame squarely on impending tariff changes being made by the U.S., where Sheertex does 85% of its sales.
So they're not just hurt by the 25% tariff, but also on the removal of de minimis exemption, which meant all direct-to-consumer orders under $800 were duty-free.
So that worries me if I'm ordering cowboy boots from the United States now that I think about that.
But this is, as you say, this is a company saying Trudeau is not going to meet the obligations that were laid out to avoid these tariffs, like deploying 10,000 people to deal with the border.
Where are we going to get those people?
It's not like there's an excess of RCMP officers kicking around.
CBSA is strained to the limit, and we certainly don't have that many deployment-ready troops on any given time, which is why we could be taken over at a moment's notice by anybody, not just the Americans.
So I express Sheertex's concerns with what is coming at us.
I feel real, real bad for those, the 40% of their 350 staff in Montreal who are going to find themselves jobless in these next couple weeks.
And luckily for you, Sheertex, I'm always in the market for some good control top hoes.
I'll be visiting your website because as long as we can still do business in Canada, then please let's.
But you know, how many, you know, where are we going to get these 10,000 people from, Sheila, you ask?
How many useless employees does the CBC have?
How many employees does the CBC have?
Because I would like to see each one of those entitled, entitled, privileged, privileged propagandists over at the CBC patrolling the long wide border, say between Saskatchewan and Manitoba on a day, a minus 40 day.
Then they would know what work is, real work is like the people at the CBC.
But yeah, if you want to free up 10,000 people, Justin Trudeau, that's where you can find them.
Lay off the CBC.
Just gut the whole place.
Hi.
Sorry, you were the anchor of CBC Vancouver.
Well, guess what?
Now you're searching sea cans for a living.
And Joy, yes, yes, that's what we should be doing.
Rosie Barton on the canine unit.
She'd be fighting the dogs for the bones.
Yeah, she'd be fighting the dogs for the bones.
Oh, God, that woman is such a boiled potato.
Okay, we've got another story.
Varco, Chris Varco at the Calgary Herald.
He says, a moment or a movement, Canadians support C2C pipelines near 80% amid threat of Trump tariffs.
And then he's got a sullen picture of David Eby, who says, basically, no, we don't need to worry about pipelines.
And we're hearing the same from Lego, actually in Quebec.
He's saying the same thing.
What do you mean, pipelines?
I'll tell you what we mean, pipelines, my guys.
First of all, BC, your export pipeline from Alberta, is not an export pipeline at all.
It was like a $5 billion project, Transmountain, in the private sector.
The government wouldn't just uphold the law and let the private company build the pipeline.
So they absorbed the pipeline instead of doing their job, turned it into like a nearly $40 billion fiasco, way over budget, way over time.
And now they don't know what to do with it.
This, a company would have built this and it would have been fine.
Now I got to listen to the liberals say, we bought you a pipeline.
No, you didn't.
You turned something that would have been a private sector success into a state-owned garbage heap.
And it's not really an export pipeline at all.
Yes, it takes money to, or it takes money in oil and gas to ports in Vancouver, but where does that export pipeline go to?
It doesn't go to China.
It doesn't go to Japan.
You know where it goes?
Cherry Point Refinery in Washington.
It still goes to the United States.
So we could have actually just went south and across and not have to have dealt with British Columbia.
And I see Lego saying that there's no need for an energy ACE pipeline.
Okay, so he says there's no appetite.
There's no appetite by the people of Quebec to host a pipeline that would carry that would carry products from Western Canada to the East Coast.
But I would like to point out real quick that the number one selling vehicle in the province of Quebec, where Legault is the premier, is a Ford F-150 pickup truck.
What do you think those Ford F-150 pickup trucks run on, Legau?
Maple syrup?
Absolutely not.
Do not say that there's no appetite for our product when your people buy vehicles that run on it, when your people have homes that are heated by it, when your people are kept alive by it.
Don't tell me that there's no appetite for it.
Just going back to last week's chat about Jordan Peterson's magnificent piece in the National Post.
If you guys haven't seen it and we're done here, go to YouTube and see his spoken word piece.
It's called A Message for Canadians.
He puts such a fine point on it that says, Canada, at this point, with Donald Trump breathing down the necks of Canadians saying, you know, I want to make you the 51st state, it is incumbent upon the government of Canada and all provinces to make Alberta and Saskatchewan and BC to a lesser extent a better offer than Trump could.
This, it was just incredible.
His spoken word piece is what I watched just before.
This is why I came in like a spicy cabbage roll today, Sheila, because it was so excellent.
Now, even to his credit, David Eby, who is terribly anti-oil and gas, he released a list of critical minerals and electricity initiatives they want to advance.
But they also include energy security projects like $4 billion Cedar LNG facility and the $1.2 billion expansion of Enbridge's transmission northern gas line.
And Lego, he's an outlier on this, even from David Eby.
The thing is, if the United States decides to cut off oil and gas to Canada, he's in a world of trouble because line five and line nine cut through the United States.
53 and that's oil and gas from Alberta, but it goes to the United States and then goes up back to Canada.
Yes, yeah.
53% of the oil and gas in Quebec comes from Alberta and Saskatchewan.
But the other 47% comes from the United States.
And so if we ever end up in a trade war again, and I feel like we definitely will as long as we have liberals in Ottawa, they have a strong reliance on oil and gas sourced in the United States, largely from fracking, by the way.
Now, here's the thing about Quebec: they have banned fracking, which is an oil and gas renaissance.
It unleashes gas fields we didn't know were possible.
And they're happy to take fracked oil and gas from the United States, from Pennsylvania, from North Dakota, but they won't develop their own.
So they're not against oil and gas jobs.
They're not even against oil and gas.
For some reason, they're against Canadian oil and gas and their own oil and gas.
Well, the reason why they can be picky about it, the reason they can ban it outright, you know, the exploration and the development of their own oil and gas is because of the humongous transfer payments that they get in the equalization formula in Canada.
When you are being perpetually funded by the have provinces, okay, by the hard, off of the backs of the hardworking people of Western Canada and North Dakota and Pennsylvania, well, yeah, then you could, you can sit on your little, your little golden pedestal of self-aggrandizement and sit and say, you know, we are, you know, we have, we, we are far morally superior because we don't do that kind of work here.
You know what?
If equalization was, um, if equalization was reconsidered and Quebec had to fend for itself, well, then they would have to make a decision to either develop their own resources or have their people freeze in the dark.
And I guarantee that, I guarantee that they wouldn't let their people freeze in the dark.
You know, and Mark Carney right now, I just, while we have this massive movement, 80% of Canadians saying, yes, pipelines, spider web them out, east, west, and north, let's move, right?
Yeah.
Because they realize now that the lack of foresight of the Trudeau Liberals and couple that with their green extremism have put Canada in a very vulnerable, precarious, terrible position.
Yes.
Right.
And we're leaving a lot of money on the table, by the way.
Third largest proven oil reserves in the world, and we can't build a pipeline.
Third largest proven oil reserves, and we've got to sell to a discount because we don't have any actual escort or export pipelines.
Escorts.
I'm thinking about the World Economic Forum and Mark Carney.
I wanted to talk what's happening out of the World Economic Forum.
So, of course, I had escorts on my mind.
Yes, who doesn't?
Who does?
Because that was in the Daily Mail.
But Mark Carney in 2021, I was poking around as I do because I watched the House of Commons committees.
And I just was like, when was Mark Carney's, when did he have some House of Commons appearances at committees, not running for leadership, but as the head of Brookfield asset management or as Justin Trudeau's advisor on financial matters?
And so he was called by, I think, the Conservatives.
Yeah, they had Brookfield.
And it was in 2021.
This was when I think it was this.
appearance at committee that got Pierre Polyev muzzled by leader at the time, Aaron O'Toole, for being too good at committee with Mark Carney.
And he was asked, would like, did you or do you support Northern Gateway pipeline, which is one, the liberals killed.
Harper approved it.
It would have been a northern export pipeline from beautiful downtown Bruderheim, Alberta, very, very close to where I live.
Bruderheim, all the way to northern BC and then export off to the rest of the world.
It would have instantly allowed us to get world prices for our oil.
And the Trudeau liberals had it die on the vine.
And so they were asking Mark Carney about this.
And he said, yeah, of course, that was a bad idea to ever consider building Northern Gateway.
But right now, Mark Carney's like, yeah, we need to build pipelines.
And it's like, you liar.
You were not hard of remembering, you idiot.
You were in committee testifying about it.
Maybe we, oh, I think we found it.
I called him Davos man, Mark Carney.
Yes.
It's a long clip, so we'll just play some of it.
Fossil Fuels and Double Standards 00:05:33
But it doesn't matter if we go long.
We're broadcasting longer and every day now.
So let's watch this.
Thank you very much.
Well, you know, they can bubble wrap the witness all they want, but these are serious questions to which Canadians deserve answers.
I'll move on to another one because Mr. Carney refused to answer the last one.
Do you support the Prime Minister's decision to veto the Northern Gateway pipeline, Mr. Carney?
I understand the veto of the Northern Gateway pipeline.
Do you support it?
Given both environmental and commercial reasons.
Do you support it?
I think it is sensible.
I wasn't involved in the decision, but I think it was a good question.
And yet your company has invested billions of dollars in oil companies in both Brazil and the UAE to buy pipelines.
You bought billions of dollars of pipelines as a company in the last five years.
Do you support those investments?
Mr. Polyev, there is a global energy system.
And one of the issues, I'm trying to explain a bit of how the economy works.
One of the issues, well, it may help.
One of the issues for this committee in thinking about a sustainable transition is that where is Canada's role in those as energy transitions from fossil fuels to renewables?
And in different jurisdictions, into different geography, it matters.
It matters.
And this is a fundamental point.
I'm sorry, this is a fundamental point.
You're finally getting the time.
You've explained it is relevant to this committee's what you're saying is you impose pipelines in Canada, but you support them in the UAE and in Brazil.
That's what you're actually supposed to do.
There are specific.
It is not a double standard.
It is a double standard.
No, it's not.
You make billions of dollars off foreign pipelines.
I would shut them down here at home, putting our people on board.
That you are a representative of the Canadian people.
And one of your responsibilities, including at this committee, is to fight for Canadian jobs.
Not foreign jobs.
Exactly.
To fight for Canadian jobs, the types of Canadian jobs that are durable and are going to move forward.
I grew up in Alberta.
I know the innovative nature of that.
Well, go try to give that answer back in Alberta because I grew up there too.
And I can tell you that people.
Yeah, I can tell you the people in Alberta to be ashamed with the answer you just gave.
You would give billions of dollars, billions of dollars to foreign pipelines while not allowing Canadians to build pipelines here at home.
That is the kind of elite Davos hypocrisy.
Could I please?
Madam Chair, this is really unbecoming of a member to badger any witness.
This is really truly unacceptable.
So we have a point of order from Monsieur Lemire.
I just wanted to note that the translation is very difficult.
We know that the conditions are very difficult for interpreters.
It's very hard virtually.
So I think that we should act professionally.
Thank you, Mr. Lemer.
That was the point that I've been trying to make since the beginning of the meeting: that we should not be speaking over each other because then you can't do translation.
Members, I want you to be able to ask your question.
I want the witness to be able to answer, but please don't talk over each other so that we can actually have the translation.
I think that anybody watching, I think that anybody watching.
You've just said you support your leader's decision to kill a Western Canadian pipeline that ships the most ethical product in the world.
Yet you also support your company's decision to invest billions of dollars in foreign pipelines in Brazil and in the UAE.
It's clear that this is not about the environment.
If it were, you'd be consistent and you'd oppose fossil fuels everywhere, but you're happy to profit off of foreign fossil fuel companies while killing jobs among our own people.
How do you address that flagrant hypocrisy?
It smacks of the Davos elite at its worst.
Okay.
First thing, absolutely, I support Canadian jobs and I support Canadian jobs today and tomorrow.
And in order to have those jobs tomorrow, what we need and what this committee can contribute is an energy transition.
Canadian fossil fuels, Canadian companies will play an essential role.
Brookfield itself is heavily invested in Canada, including in energy infrastructure for fossil fuels.
But it's also, and we connect collectively as Canadians, and we look to our parliament to support this, need to be putting in place the energies and industries of the future.
That means carbon capture and storage.
That means blue hydrogen, both of which are absolutely essential for Canadian jobs, jobs in my home province of Alberta.
And that's where the future lies.
Now, we need to have the overall picture, which is why, and I'll finish with this chair.
I emphasize the clear pathways, walking back from that, not jumping on specifics and not seeing the bigger picture, nor providing the support that Canadians deserve.
Thank you.
Funeral Director Vibes 00:06:27
You know, this guy is giving such funeral director vibes.
I mean, honestly, doesn't he?
He has the, he's giving funeral director vibes.
And everything he says, the more he talks, the more you can just hear like the language of the World Economic Forum spilling out of him.
Like, this is a man who Is so ingratiated in those elite circles that he just he just simply can't go off off the script that he's taught himself to say.
Just like Justin Trudeau has a script, you know, the one where he says Islamophobia, transphobia, homophobia.
Uh, he has a script.
Well, Mark, Mark Carney is just transition, carbon capture, you know, the diversification of our energy model, right?
You know, across the globe.
Like, this, I mean, this guy is just unreal.
But I've never seen, I don't think that I've ever, ever seen a man who lacks in charisma quite as much as Mark Carney.
Like, like, this is the antithesis to charisma.
And charisma in politics, as many of you know, is very, very important.
You must, you must be charismatic at some point.
This is, this is human Eeyore right here.
Oh, that's exactly it.
He is Eeyore made man.
He's just so boring.
And like, I like, I like a good nerdy politician a little bit.
I like Stephen Harper and his like sweaters and his just his little Lego hair.
I like that.
I like Polyev with his glasses better than like new Polyev without his glasses.
Like his hot dad Polyev.
Yeah, hot dad Polyev.
I kind of like that a little bit.
I just see Mill House.
I see Mill House when he, Van Houten, when he doesn't have his glasses on.
I, so, but even those nerdy politicians, they had something about their personality that was, it's kind of funny.
It's kind of sharp.
And you're sort of looking for this like super smart nerd jab where you're like, oh, where did that come from?
It's never coming from anywhere.
Mark Carney.
He's so boring.
So boring.
He is, he is the political version of tapioca pudding.
That is Mark Carney, like just bland, like absolutely bland.
I mean, I bet that he was great at boring the pants off of the senior kleptocrats at the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England.
I bet that, you know, nobody could command a boardroom into abject boredom and, well, what did we just call it?
Like mental torture, mental torture, quite like Mark Carney.
But this, I mean, is this the guy, Canada?
Is this the guy that we're going to pick to fight with Donald Trump?
We need somebody who can get a little bit spicy on our behalf.
And it, well, just by watching that last piece is not Mark Carney.
It is not Mark Carney.
And he said it was the right choice to cancel Northern Gateway economically and environmentally.
And economically.
It wouldn't have been a net benefit to Canadians in jobs, in revenue.
The fact that it would have instantly allowed us to get market access.
None of those things.
This guy's a banker.
It made sense economically to kill it, Sheila, to his stakeholders at the World Economic Forum at Brookfield and at all of the other Fortune five companies that he's involved in.
That's who it benefited.
Because while they're telling us that it's not economically or environmentally feasible to build pipelines to help our fellow Canadians heat their homes and fuel their vehicles and do all of the things that keeps our country running, what he's doing is negotiating oil and gas from places like Nigeria to be shipped to the east coast of Canada.
Like every time you guys, You know, tap up your thermostat on your furnaces in eastern Canada, you're burning Nigerian oil, and yet that like Mark Carney is not opposed to that.
Well, we have to ask ourselves why, and it's because he's responsible to his uh shareholders at Brookfield.
But yeah, he's not against heavy oil.
I mean, he loves Venezuelan oil.
Uh, he just doesn't like Canadian jobs.
And I'm so glad that Pierre Polyev pointed that out.
That whole committee hearing was a treasure trove of Mark Carney attack ads because uh, they also asked him, we'll talk about it tomorrow because I know we're out of time.
The Uyghur genocide and where he gets the solar panels for his green initiatives.
They ask him about how many birds his projects have blended up.
Um, yes, it's it's quite lovely the things that they did to him at that committee.
Um, and uh, I think that's really the only time that he uh has been asked some tough questions about his business dealings because usually he shrouds himself in I'm just an advisor to the Liberal Party, and so I'm not subject to ethics rules and stuff like that.
So, uh, I look forward to the debates, quite honestly.
I think it's gonna be great.
It is gonna be great.
I mean, Mark Carney is not gonna be able to hold it account all to Pierre Polyev.
Yeah, no, I mean, if he wins, if he, if he wins, I mean, what if those three women, one of those three women might steal it?
I mean, that Justin Trudeau, here's another point: Justin Trudeau just said on the world stage that, you know, United States should have elected a female president, and yet there are three liberal females running for the liberal leadership of Canada.
And who does Justin Trudeau support?
The non-woman, Mark Carney.
So that's telling.
Every time he says feminists, I hope that he develops an ulcer.
I know I am.
Yeah, and I've got my theories about why I think Carney is China's man in this race.
And maybe I'll talk about this tomorrow.
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Okay.
Olivia, I think we hit everything on the list.
No chats to read.
Okay, perfect.
Well, everybody, thank you for tuning in to the new Thursday, new, old, new again Thursday live stream with my co-host, my best friend, Lise Merle from Saskatchewan.
You'll see more of her on the network as time goes on.
Thanks so much, Lise.
Well, it's been just a pleasure.
And thanks so much to everybody who joined us on Rumble from Cobble Hill to Peterborough to Vancouver Island in Calgary.
We appreciate you guys so, so much.
And thanks for joining us.
And we will see you in a couple of days.
Yeah, that's very polka dot doorsy of you listing off where everybody's coming from at the end.
Remember, you look in the mirror and you say where everybody is?
Yeah, you just did a little bit of that.
I just do that every week because we are a wild and vast country and we need to learn more about each other and find the things that we have in common.
And so, yeah, I'm just delighted to be here and to be joining all of you.
And thanks so much, Rebel.
Love you guys.
Well, Olivia, thanks for putting this show together, Efron.
You too, thanks to everybody who tuned in.
Thanks to everybody who chips in a little bit.
Thanks to our sponsors from Rumble and all of you at home who now that you're done watching the show have enjoyed the show, you're going to send a link to your friends to help us get around the internet censorship of Justin Trudeau and his big tech oligarchs.
And I guess we'll see you tomorrow for the Friday live stream.
And as my friend David Menzies, who is enjoying two weeks off, but not really off, he's working doing some things at home.
As he always says, stay safe and stay sane.
I have to admit, my friends, I'm a little bit emotional tonight.
One of the things that comes with knowing that you're on a countdown clock to your last day means you get to be really ruthless about the things you want to do and the things that you don't want to do.
And let me tell you, if I am here tonight with you all, it's because, man, oh man, that I want to see you guys to celebrate one last Black History Month as Prime Minister.
Hopefully you're having a good time with this podcast, but I guarantee a better time would be coming to Alaska with me, Drea Humphrey, and my other Rebel colleagues.
You've got to find out more at our special website, RebelNewsCruise.com, but it's taking place June 18th to June 25th, a vacation trip of a lifetime.
Again, that's RebelNewsCruise.com.
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