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May 17, 2025 - Rebel News
37:06
EZRA LEVANT | How did Canada become the world's 'Safe Space' for antisemitism?

Ezra Levant argues Canada’s political correctness and government figures like Trudeau and Carney enable antisemitism, citing Jonathan Yaniv’s slurs against Rebel News and unchecked protests near Jewish-owned businesses since Hamas’ October 7, 2023 attack. Experts Dr. Daniel Pipes and Ben Baird warn Qatar’s $40B influence buys U.S. institutional control, while Trump’s $4T deals ignore security risks. Levant criticizes Canada’s perceived appeasement of foreign-backed radicalism, contrasting it with Netanyahu’s hint at reducing U.S. aid reliance—suggesting a fractured global response to antisemitic threats. [Automatically generated summary]

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Subscribe for Exclusive Content 00:01:45
Hello my friends, Donald Trump is in the Middle East, but the Middle East has come to Toronto.
I'll show you a juxtaposition and ask you the question, which is more pro-Hamas, Canada or the United Arab Emirates?
But first, let me invite you to become a subscriber to Rebel News Plus.
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I'm going to play a very important three-minute video today, and I really want you to see it.
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Tonight, which country has the most terrorism and the most support for terrorism?
Saudi Arabia?
The United Arab Emirates?
Or Canada?
It's May 16th, and this is the Ezra Levant Show.
Racist Incident Exposed 00:03:20
Shame on you.
You censorious bug.
I saw a really racist incident a few months ago.
It was stupid.
It was designed to be flagrant and personal.
I knew both the racist and the victim of the racism, and it was so gross.
I was shocked.
You probably saw it because we published a video about it several times, and we took some steps to increase our security afterwards.
I'm talking about this.
Nigger, fuck you.
I have a picture of your kid on here, by the way.
You want to see it?
You like that?
You like that, Drew?
Look at all your little kitchen security over there around you.
I'm so scared.
That monster is Jonathan Yaniv, a transgender extremist, now also a convicted criminal, by the way.
He became famous a few years ago for booking himself appointments with female aestheticians who wax private parts.
He would book under the fake name Jessica or Jennifer or whatever he told them.
And then he would show up and they would be astonished that it's a big bloke.
And he would say, wax my balls or I'll sue you before the Human Rights Tribunal.
And he did.
Again and again and again, he did.
He abused so many women, almost all of them new immigrant women who were often working from home, often alone during the day.
Imagine that.
An absolute bully, an absolute thug.
He's a criminal, like I say.
He's suing us right now, by the way, in the same BC Human Rights Tribunal.
They know he's a vexatious litigant.
They know he's a criminal and a liar, but they're letting him abuse their system to take another run at us because we expose him and the BC Human Rights Tribunal is a joke in itself, anyways.
But wouldn't you agree that his racist tirade against Rhea was one of the grossest things you've ever seen in Canada?
I thought it was super gross.
It's so obvious and so gross when you hear it like that.
I'm not saying it's a crime to be racist, but if he was committing other crimes at the same time, he would have been charged, I think.
And of course, he has been.
Police in the greater Vancouver area are fed up with him.
They finally did charge him, and he was convicted.
And I think everyone's just getting tired of his antics.
But I'm here to tell you that that same level of bigotry and racism and grossness has exploded across Canada.
Obviously, what I just showed you was targeted against Drea, our reporter.
I don't think Yeniv generally walks around like that, just spewing his bigotry to anyone within earshot.
I think he just thought, what is the way I can terrify and offend and insult Drea?
The worst.
That's what I think was in his mind.
But let me show you what has been happening in Canada, particularly in Toronto, Ottawa, and Montreal, every single week since October 7th, 2023.
That was the day Hamas launched its terrorist attack on Israel, killing more than a thousand and kidnapping hundreds of hostages, including women and children and even babies.
Targeting Jewish Communities 00:17:01
I'm going to show you this because it happened just this week in downtown Toronto, right on University Avenue, which is in the heart of the city.
A modern, progressive, human rights-loving, liberal Toronto, right near the university.
I mean, Toronto is so sensitive.
It's a place where they're renaming streets so as not to offend people.
It's a place with safe spaces and trigger warnings.
I'm going to play a video for you now.
It's about three minutes long.
And keep in mind that the place they're protesting, Cafe Landwar, it's a restaurant they walk by and stop and harass.
It's a Jewish restaurant.
That's how it started about a century ago, back in Berlin, actually.
Of course, anyone can work there.
Anyone can eat there.
You don't have to be Jewish to be there.
I think most people there are not Jewish.
I'm just saying Cafe Landwar started in 1919 in Berlin.
So obviously all the Jews involved would have been driven out or killed.
Okay, let's watch.
It's a three-minute clip taken by our friend Karima Saad.
a look.
No, no.
We got to say this to make it a good show.
Now, you shall be arrested.
For property and the enjoyment of property.
You win that.
You know what you're doing.
There you go.
You've been warned.
I got it, don't worry.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, shut up.
I was on to something, right?
I had a good hunch.
I'm trying to get my scooter.
So if you see that, the table left.
The food uneaten.
That first table, if you go back to the video, you will see they left.
Who pays the bill?
91 kest.
How do you know they're supporting genocide?
We know, just google it.
No one's trying to talk to you.
You're very strong.
No one's trying to dox you.
Lots to look at there, a smoke bomb, a smoke generator.
Clearly a nuisance, clearly mischief.
That's against the law, by the way.
Mischief is defined as interfering with the enjoyment of property.
And the cops just look at it.
They didn't care.
They just look at the guy with the smoke bomb and didn't arrest him.
It clearly was causing mischief.
They stopped in front of the Jewish restaurant and smoked people out.
You can see that there were people there of every race, by the way.
One woman simply said, why aren't you doing anything?
Yeah, well, because they're pro-Hamas foreign agitators.
If truckers would have tried that stunt with the smoke bomb, they would have been arrested and jailed and prosecuted immediately.
I recognize some of those protesters, by the way.
There's this one guy who I met when he was harassing Jews outside a synagogue in North Toronto at the Pride of Israel synagogue.
Remember him?
I'm wondering what you're doing.
I'm wondering what you're doing.
I'm reporting on an anti-Semitic march.
Okay, so anti-Semitic, right?
You like to conflate Muslims with anti-Semitism?
No, just Hamas supporters like you.
Tell me how you feel.
Oh, like me, right?
Are you a Hamas supporter?
Well, tell me right now, do you renounce Hamas or not?
I never will renounce Hamas.
So there you go.
You're an anti-Semitic bigot.
All right, perfect then.
Are you a Canadian citizen?
Doesn't matter, baby.
I think you should be deported if you're not.
Right, deport me.
Well, I don't have that power myself.
Go back to Daddy Warbucks, boy.
Yeah, he's a professional agitator.
These are all professional agitators.
Many of them are foreign.
They're likely paid by Iran, which has hundreds of paid agents in Canada, according to reports from Global News.
Then they just start screaming, boycott, landworm.
Imagine if racists like Jonathan Yaniv met in front of a black-owned business, like a black restaurant, like there's Ethiopian restaurants in Toronto, for example.
Obviously, black-owned businesses.
A lot of the customers are black.
Imagine if they targeted a black-owned business, harassed the people there, set off smoke bombs, harassed anyone on the patios, chanted against black people and to boycott them, and used the N-word like Jonathan Yaniv did.
It was shocking to hear him do it for one minute.
Imagine if it was done week after You saw there were no arrests.
And I'm not talking about arrests for racism.
I'm talking for mischief, for setting off smoke bombs.
The truckers were arrested for blocking roads.
You can hear the police positively tell the protesters to block the road.
There are a few white Canadian leftists amongst them.
There always are.
I was in the UK.
I saw some old communists at the Hamas protests.
The U.S., it's a lot of trans activists.
Here in Toronto, it's communists and anti-Western extremists, but it is mainly foreigners who can't believe that they're allowed to be professional racist agitators, professional lawbreakers, and the police won't do anything.
In fact, the police will act as concierges, as parade marshals for them.
It only takes about 90 seconds for these bigots to achieve their goal.
All the customers leave the patio of Cafe Landwer because Cafe Landwer is Jewish.
That's why they're targeting it.
Let me read to you from the website for Cafe Landwer.
In 1919, on a picturesque street in the center of Berlin, Moshe Landwer opens a small and romantic coffee house, which quickly turns into one of the city's favorite hangout spots.
In 1933, with the rise to power of the Nazi regime, Moshe Landwer, along with his family, makes Aliyah and settles in Tel Aviv on Allenby Street, facing the sea.
He opened the country's first coffee brewing house.
So, yeah, these foreign extremists are purging the Jews from Toronto, just like Cafe Landwer was purged 106 years ago.
I never thought it would be possible.
There are 200,000 Jews in Toronto, a very important part of the community, from business to law to charity to politics.
But in the past five years, Trudeau and now Mark Carney have brought in far more than 200,000 people from faraway lands who hate the Jews.
It's got nothing to do with Israel, though.
It's just the Jews.
They'll scream anti-Semitic things, but unlike Jonathan Yanev, they travel in packs of dozens or even hundreds, and the police are just fine with them.
Do you see all the masks?
Antifa and Hamas, masked foreign thugs.
Few, if any, are even Palestinian.
The guy with the smoke bomb is actually a Pakistani Hamas loyalist named Shahres Hidri.
He's the one who lit the flare.
He's from Pakistan.
Pakistan is thousands of kilometers away from Gaza.
I am certain this clown has never been to Gaza, but there's no connection other than they just hate Jews, like Jonathan Yaniv hates black people.
I was shocked when that racist Yaneev lashed out at Drea.
It was really one of the worst little moments of racism I've seen in Canada.
It was his attempt to hurt her and terrify her.
I'm sure he is a racist.
I know he is, but imagine a hundred Yanives, 500 of them, funded by foreign governments like Iran, here under false pretenses as foreign students or temporary foreign workers or refugees, and they're turning the heart of our great cities into little versions of Gaza.
Obviously, no murders yet, knock on wood, but the terror is there and certainly the discomfort.
But more to the point, they're moving the Overton window.
They're teaching us something.
They're in control now.
Not just to the streets, but to in charge of the police too.
Do you see that one cop?
Badge number 7724?
Officer Chang.
Here is that same cop when David Menzies simply tried to report on Hamas last year.
They can demand genocide in the streets.
And I can't cover that.
Obey your oath, Mr. Men.
Officer, obey your oath.
You care.
Listen to me.
Don't let me under arrest.
Get your hands off.
Okay, then I'll raise your phone now.
Put your hands behind your back.
Governor Restor refusing to leave, eh?
Please off the wagon, Mr. Menzie.
Good point.
Effern, are you catching this?
Yeah.
Once again, transgenocide in the streets of our market.
It's the most crusader.
You're under arrest for refusing to leave promises.
Okay, Mr. Landon.
It's a public lesson.
This is literally the public speaking.
This is literally numerous times.
I try to be as nice as possible.
Mr., right?
You can have it, you know.
They assaulted me and you did nothing.
They assaulted me and you did nothing.
That's Officer Chang.
But here's that same cop with the smoke bomb Jew-hating racist.
You win that, you know what you're doing.
Hold on, there you go.
You've been warned.
There you go.
I got you nowhere, Gordon.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Shut up.
That's two-tier policing.
That's Canada under Mark Carney.
Makes sense.
If Anita Anand, the new foreign minister, was right there, she'd be completely fine with every word the Hamas protesters said.
Israel is blocking food and aid to Gaza.
What do you think of that decision?
And is the Canadian government doing anything to stop that?
We cannot allow the continued use of food as a political tool.
The prime minister has been very clear about that.
Over 50,000 people have died as a result of the aggression caused against the Palestinian and the Gazan people in Palestine.
And using food as a political tool is simply unacceptable.
And we need to continue to work towards a ceasefire.
We need to ensure that we have a two-state solution and Canada will continue to maintain that position.
Canada is in trouble, my friends.
Anyways, I started my show today by asking where Hamas is stronger, in Canada, in Saudi Arabia, or in the United Arab Emirates.
Well, here's the UAE's foreign minister.
This goes all the way back to 2017.
There will come a day that we will see far more radical, extremists, and terrorists coming out of Europe because of lack of decision-making, trying to be politically correct, or assuming that they know the Middle East and they know Islam and they know the others far better than we do.
And I'm sorry, but that's pure ignorance.
Yeah, he knew this was coming.
And just today, that same foreign minister spoke with Brett Beyer of Fox and reportedly said that Hamas cannot have any role in the future of Gaza.
How did we in Canada become more of an Islamist hotbed, more of a terrorist hotbed than the Persian Gulf itself?
Stay with us for more.
Well, I no longer value the opinion of the Nobel Prize Committee.
Can you imagine giving the Nobel Peace Prize to Barack Obama before he even took office?
He was nominated and won.
Whereas Donald Trump in his first term as president actually managed to cut the Gordian knot and through his Abraham Accords forged a meaningful peace between Israel and several of its neighbors.
The first time that was done in a generation.
And it was in a lasting way.
You might remember the Rebel News actually went on a journey.
We started in Israel and went to the United Arab Emirates.
We were skeptics, but we were convinced this is a real and lasting peace.
It was strained.
It was stressed during the Biden administration.
And clearly, the Hamas attack on Israel was designed even more to derail it.
But Trump is back.
And hopefully, the success of the Abraham Accords can be built upon.
Trump just visited the region, including the various countries, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, and Qatar.
Joining us now to talk about this are our experts on the subject, our Friends of the Middle East Forum.
We're joined by Dr. Daniel Pipes and Ben Baird, who will be introduced to in a minute.
Dr. Pipes, let's start with you.
First of all, thanks for taking the time with us today.
What do you make about visiting Qatar and Saudi Arabia and the UAE?
I sort of was of the view that Qatar was at odds with the other two parts of that meeting.
What was the purpose of the meeting?
Was it a success?
What are the possibilities?
What's cooking is what I'm asking.
Well, as ever with Donald Trump, wherever he goes, he makes news and he surprises us.
The goal was in large part to get deals done.
And the numbers being tossed around are absolutely gigantic.
I don't know how real they are, but one hears figures like 4 trillion US dollars, which is like twice the Canadian GDP, just astonishingly large numbers.
What are not talked about are national security interests, what are not talked about are human rights.
What is talked about is these vast numbers.
Now, clearly, the rich strongmen of the Middle East understand that this is the sort of thing that attracts the American president.
And so they have focused on that and have apparently delivered.
So if you're looking for deals, this was the trip.
There's never been one like it.
Well, in terms of business deals, and Trump has certainly, that's one of the ways he's trying to prove his success.
He's done that with Asian investors as well on the semiconductors and things of that sort.
And he's that's that's very important.
That is a meat and potato issue.
I would put it to you that more Americans care about trade and jobs and industry than care about foreign policy, which can sometimes seem abstract.
But I think you and I care about foreign policy for a host of reasons.
Did this realign things?
I sense there's a little bit of tension between Donald Trump and Israel, or at least Benjamin Netanyahu these days.
Americans Prioritize Trade 00:14:58
It's hard to read.
Putting aside the huge business deals, was there any movement on peace or moving forward with the Abraham Accords, which was so hopeful in the first term of the president?
Well, Mr. Trump made it clear that the Saudis will join the Arabian Abraham Accords at their convenience, which I take as coded language for when the king, King Salman, dies.
Rather, I think the emphasis was on support for Islamists.
First in Syria, a group has come to power that is looked over the five months since December has looked very bad, but yet now the United States is working to help them consolidate power.
And secondly, Iran.
It looks like, now there are contradictory signals coming from the administration, but it looks like something along the lines of the 2015 Iran deal are now being discussed with the leaders in Tehran.
So if there is an overarching theme besides making deals, it is getting to be more at ease with the Islamists in Syria and Iran and Qatar, all three.
I was astonished to see the president meet with the new leader of Syria, who short years ago, I don't even if it was years ago, was on a most wanted poster.
I think there was a $10 million bounty for him.
I suppose he wants Syria in his orbit as opposed to the Russian orbit, which it was before.
Let's talk about one of the countries that Trump visited, namely Qatar.
Ben Baird, you are the director of Middle East Foreign Action.
You're also the author of a new study called America for Sale, Qatar's $40 billion spending spree buys influence and control of elite institutions.
Tell me a little bit about Qatar.
I think everyone's heard the name.
Maybe they've heard of the airline or some of the sports teams they sponsored.
But in terms of the number of citizens, it's a small city, really.
I mean, Doha is the capital.
Most of the people there are foreign workers.
Give us just a little bit of briefing on Qatar, who they are, and where they fit in, because they have an outsized influence considering how small they are.
Am I right?
That's right.
You're talking about a country in Qatar that has a population of Qataris who are about equal to the size of Wyoming.
So it's not a very large country at all, but they have outsized wealth, outsized influence, not only throughout the region, but throughout the world.
And as our study showed, influence even here in the United States.
This is a gas-rich country that is using its petrodollars and not always for the right reasons.
And that's what confused me about him, because I had thought that there was sort of a taking of sides, that the Saudis and the UAE in Bahrain were worried about Iran, and Qatar was sort of on the side of the bad guys.
But I mean, I always thought that Qatar was the host of Hamas.
They were the financiers of terrorism.
They were the radical ones, even as the Saudis sort of trim their sails on radicalism and become more Western-oriented.
Are the Qataris today what they were five years ago?
Are they the financiers of Hamas?
Will they continue down that path or will they reform themselves?
There doesn't appear to be any evidence that there's any type of reform going on.
They like to occupy both camps by making outreach to the West while at the same time supporting Islamists and supporting Islamist ideologies through Al Jazeera, their media conglomerate.
And they do this.
They went over the West through a charm offensive, which our study found $40 billion across numerous American financial sectors.
We're talking about universities, K through 12, businesses, private equity firms, hedge funds, real estate trophy properties.
Qatar is deeply invested in America, even in our critical infrastructure.
As we seek energy independence from the Middle East, we are outsourcing our domestic energy supplies to Qatar, to a Persian Gulf state that does not have America's best interests in mind.
You know, I found it one of the strangest things of the last week or two was the announcement by President Trump that he was going to accept a gift of a jet, a Boeing 747 from Qatar.
I think it was Qatar.
Just now that I'm saying that, I'm astonished.
Could it be true?
And all I can think of is a flying Trojan horse.
I mean, Trump claims the gift will be, it's legal and it's ethical.
That's not even what I'm interested in.
To accept such a key strategic asset from, at best, a rival, more likely an enemy.
The first thing I thought of was when the U.S. embassy in Moscow was being built and how the Russian laborers put hundreds of listening devices in the construction of the new embassy so that it was rendered non-usable.
Like, why would you allow such a key piece of critical security infrastructure?
I mean, that was just one thought.
But even if that's secure, why are you taking foreign aid from Qatar?
And I just, that felt very, well, let me put it this way.
It didn't feel very America first.
What do you think of that, Dr. Pipes?
I'm in complete agreement.
But as I mentioned earlier, the strongmen, the rich strongmen of the Middle East, of the Persian Gulf, understand this and understand Trump's desire to have glamour, to have deals, to have economic success, and they pander to it.
And this proposed Air Force One is the most striking example of it.
And what is also striking is that it is arousing a rare opposition among Republican politicians who have taken a lot and who've gone contrary to their historic principles.
But on this one, they're saying, no, this is going too far.
It's not that important, but it is symbolic.
And perhaps it will suggest that there is a willingness among the Republican members of Congress and senators to say no once in a while to the excesses of the administration.
The UAE, and that's the United Arab Emirates we visited there a few years ago.
I was impressed.
What can I say?
I went in a skeptic, but to me, it was a real beacon of hope.
Their foreign minister told Brett Beyer that the future he sees for Gaza is one that has no role for Hamas.
And I found that bracing because I live in a country whose foreign minister would never say anything like that.
Our foreign minister just a couple of days ago denounced Israel as basically committing a genocide.
I think this same UAE foreign minister has in the past said that the West has to control its Islamist problem.
I didn't see any such, I didn't see any anti-Semitism.
I didn't see any Islamism when I visited the country, even though we were there for less than a week.
You can get a feel for the place pretty quickly.
Is that the future of the Middle East?
That sort of progressive post-conflict, post-terrorist, post-Palestinian Middle East?
Or let me just ask you about Gaza.
Is that the center of everything or is business in Dubai the center of everything now?
Well, the remarkable thing is that in Abu Dhabi in particular, but more broadly, the UAE and Bahrain and now emerging Saudi Arabia, you have a model with the Middle East, a constructive model, a model that's not quite there with human rights, is not quite there with governance and democracy, but is going in the right direction.
And unlike prior models, like, say, Egypt under Gamal Abdul Nasser or Iraq under Saddam Hussein, this is a constructive one.
So this is a piece of good news.
And you picked it up.
It is something that is going in the right direction.
And there are reasonable hopes that there will be better governance.
There will be more human rights.
There will be more values that we consider important applied in the Persian Gulf and more broadly in the Middle East.
I've got one last question for you, Dr. Pipes.
And Ben, by the way, it's great to meet you.
And we'll look forward to seeing studies from you in the future.
Dr. Pipes, I saw that Benjamin Netanyahu floated the idea of no longer taking foreign aid from the United States.
And I've always thought that taking foreign aid was a bad idea because I think Israel can afford its own military.
I think it's a talking point against Israel that it's on the dole, even though other countries get much more.
I mean, if you look at the cost that the United States spends annually on its military bases in, for example, Germany, 50,000 troops and 40 bases.
It's an astonishing cost that you wouldn't normally attribute to foreign aid.
But let's put all that aside.
It made Israel vulnerable to U.S. demands because it was, where's the quid pro quo?
We're giving you billions of dollars.
You better do this, this, and that.
And I felt that that really hamstringed Israel's response to Hamas.
What's the situation there?
Because I see that Israel is ramping up its actions in Gaza again.
Netanyahu's floating the idea of getting off the U.S. dole.
What's cooking there?
Well, once again, Ezra, you and I are in agreement.
Actually, Netanyahu has been alluding to this for a long time.
Back in his first term as prime minister in the late 1990s, he talked about this.
However, the pressures to accept American money, to go for American military aid, have always been stronger than this reluctance on his part.
Perhaps now it is a turning point now that the United States, even under so friendly a president as Donald Trump, has proven difficult to predict, difficult to work with.
It could be the Israelis finally to decide to make the break and to pay for their own military.
They did make the break on economic aid.
That's long gone.
Maybe now they'll make the break when it comes to military aid as well.
And I think that's good for everyone, good for both sides, both Israel and the United States, and this economic dependency, be an independent country.
Yeah, very interesting times.
You know, one thing I learned, I'll just close with this thought.
I was talking to our friend Joel Pollock at breitbart.com about Donald Trump and his, I thought, inexplicable preference for the liberal party in Canada's election.
I think Trump really did throw the election to the liberals.
And I didn't understand that.
Why would he eschew the conservative here who is much more similar to Trump, as conservative, has the same views on a host of issues?
And Joel said, Trump is America first.
He's not Canada first or Israel first.
And Joel's explanation was he thought Trump preferred for whatever reason to deal with a liberal.
And I think that maybe that's a mistake that the people who care about Israel make also is that Trump, sure, Trump supports Israel.
Of course he does.
But at the end of the day, if he's making deals in the Middle East, it'll be Trump's deals.
It'll be America first.
And that may not always be a solution that Israel prefers, just like I think what Trump helped put Canada into is not ideal for us.
And I say this as Canada's noisiest Trump supporter.
I don't know if you have any thoughts on that, but I think, I mean, Netanyahu has a friend in the White House much more than Kamala Harris or Joe Biden.
But Trump is his own man and he has his own course.
And it's not the same as Israel's course.
That's absolutely true.
And he probably should add Australia, because the elections in Australia, which followed those in Canada, were almost an exact repetition.
So Canada was not an outlier.
It was consistent with Trump's disdain, as it were, for conservatives and fellow democracies.
Very, very not expected and upsetting.
Yeah, well, I think it set Canada back, but hopefully we'll persevere.
Listen, it's great to catch up with you guys.
Thanks very much for both of you for joining us today.
And we'll keep following along at the Middle East Forum meforum.org.
Thanks, you guys.
Have a great weekend.
Thank you.
All right.
There you have it.
Stay with us.
Your letters to me next.
Hey, welcome back.
Your letters to me.
Modero says Gregor Robertson, that's the new housing minister, is totally clueless.
That is the kind of government that we face.
Yeah, I mean, it's so obvious what's going on.
A lot of people, their only savings are in their house.
And that's great for the boomers, I guess.
But if you are under 30 and trying to get a house, good luck to you.
You'll never do it.
And the Liberals have chosen the boomers.
And fair enough, it was the boomers who chose the liberals.
Phillips Deb said the only investor Carney is interested in is Brookfield.
Funny, they're gobbling up pipelines in Canada and the U.S. I'm not sure if Brookfield is buying pipelines in Canada.
I don't know if anyone is these days.
They're building them around the world, though, that's for sure.
Mads Roy says, I'm from Manitoba and I'd like to join with Alberta, Saskatchewan, and BC and show the rest of the world what the West can do when set free.
Yeah, I mean, the word separatism, I don't know why in my mind, I think of like breaking off from an iceberg and sort of floating away out to sea by yourself, but obviously nothing's going to move.
The borders of Alberta won't move.
The houses, the parks, the schools, the people will still be there.
All that's different is that layer of politicians from Ottawa will be replaced with politicians from Alberta.
A distant and partisan legislature will be replaced by a local one.
The bonds of friendship will still unite Alberta with the rest of the country.
It's that fools like Stephen Gilbo won't have Alberta to kick around anymore.
Well, that's our show for today.
We'll have a special show on Victoria Day as well.
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