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Feb. 8, 2024 - Viva & Barnes
01:48:24
Kristen Nagle, Canadian Nurse TARGETED! Quebec Goes FULL COMMIE! Coutts Men RELEASED! Crumbley Convicted!
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Time Text
Just want everyone to get scared for one second thinking I cut my hair.
I didn't cut my hair, people!
For goodness sake, how do I minimize the screen here?
There we go.
Minimize.
That's better.
It's not a joke, by the way.
The city has postponed Halloween.
They notified people to celebrate Halloween on Friday, November 1st.
Because apparently the weather is going to be too bad or dangerous to celebrate Halloween on October 31st.
I'm not joking.
I'm going to read you the notice from the mayor of the city of Montreal and from the city of Montreal's Twitter handles right now.
The city of Montreal invites citizens to spend Halloween on Friday due to the violent violent winds announced tomorrow, and to prioritize security.
The municipal services will be at the meeting.
Translation, the city of Montreal is inviting citizens, female and male, that is the citoyen, citoyenne, to celebrate Halloween on Friday because of rain and violent winds which Ah,
that's a good old Ford Explorer.
Nobody is cancelling Halloween for me.
Delicata squash, by the way, if you want a great delicata squash recipe, I'll post the link to that video right here.
Here.
We are making what I am coining.
We're going to stop this stuff.
Enough of this crap.
Go back and check out the Viva cooking videos.
They were good.
Do I look tired?
Do I look haggard?
Good morning, everybody.
I may have bitten off more than I can chew.
I was letting the locals community know this, that Marion is leaving me for a week.
Six days.
So she's taking off.
I'm going to be solo parenting for six days.
The day that she is taking off, I, you know, have...
What's the word?
I'm going on with Jeremy from the quartering at one o 'clock.
I'm going on with Jenna Ellis at four o 'clock.
I'm going to bridge the ties, people, between the DeSantis...
Crowd and the Trump crowd.
I'm going to bridge those divides so we can all come together and save the country from the imminent demise that would be another Biden or Gavin Newsom.
Another four years.
Three million illegal immigrants coming across the border this year.
Amazing.
So that's four o 'clock.
There's other stuff.
Then there's the family stuff in between.
And I got to get a car vlog out.
And anyways, that's it.
I've stretched myself too thin, but it's going to be fantastic.
Today, however, because I missed yesterday's stream, I have to do a stream today.
You guys know what's going on.
Canada is going crazy.
Quebec is going crazier than Canada.
The world is being torn apart at the seams.
And yesterday, I testified in a criminal trial.
I can make it public now.
I don't even know the names of the people, so it doesn't really matter.
But I testified remotely.
This is so good, people.
I testified remotely.
In one of those criminal prosecutions for mischief out of Ottawa.
So imagine this, people.
I took the sign off the wall because I didn't think the judge wanted to see Viva Frye and I actually wore a buttoned up shirt.
But I was called to testify so that video clips from my Ottawa coverage could be admitted as evidence because for those of you who don't know, if you want to admit...
A photograph or a video as evidence.
You have to have the person who took the photograph, the person who took the video.
Yes, I took that.
It was on February 8th, 9th, whatever.
Yes, that's what the scenery looked like.
Yes, that was on my iPhone.
And I did that.
And it was fantastic.
And the funniest part was the clips that were being played.
It had a lot of commentary.
I'm listening to me.
Back in the day, you know, short-haired Viva.
I'm losing it, but I haven't lost it yet.
But I'm getting to the point where, like, I'm realizing that...
Things aren't exactly what I thought it was.
And I'm listening to the commentary and I'm like, holy crap, I was making sense back there.
There's no way a judge can listen to whatever I look like now.
There's no way a judge can listen to what I was saying back then and say he was wrong.
There's no way.
There's just no way.
I'm walking the protest, talking to people.
People are waving.
Somebody calls me a...
Somebody in one of the clips, as I'm walking by them on the street, they didn't like me.
They knew me.
They didn't like me.
They said, go back and F your cousin.
And I'm like, oh.
So I testified.
And it was fun.
And so we're going through the video, and I don't know what the charges were.
I don't care.
I didn't want to know anything.
I didn't want the crown in cross-examining me to say, were you prepped by the other lawyer?
Which I wasn't.
I was prepared for them to ask that.
They didn't ask it.
I was prepared for them to pull up tweets where I tell Justin Trudeau to kindly go F himself.
They didn't do that either.
And it was fun.
Lasted like two and a half, three hours, so it's a good thing I didn't schedule a stream yesterday.
Today.
Okay.
I don't even know where to start to describe it.
Because Quebec City has effectively outlawed, they haven't outlawed as in recall, but they've prohibited the use of solid fuel devices.
Anything that burns solid fuel, wood ovens, wood stoves, wood heaters, corn, they've banned them because of alleged air quality problems in Quebec City.
It's such bullcrap, it will blow your mind.
We're going to talk about Tucker Carlson, the interview that's going to rock the world.
I put out a vlog yesterday, and it's the hypocrisy.
People say it's hierarchy.
It's not hierarchy.
It's lawlessness.
We'll talk about it.
Crumbly's mother getting convicted.
Look, I got a little traumatized from my discussion with Barnes, because apparently I don't know any of the facts of the case, and I should just shut my big mouth.
Not to say I predicted it.
It was an easy prediction.
They were looking for a conviction and they convicted her.
We'll talk about that briefly and some other stuff.
But my brother's coming in in about eight minutes.
And there's another tentative, tentative guest who might be coming in.
But I don't want to spoil it.
And that's it.
What was I just about to say?
Oh yes, that's right.
Before we even get into anything, let me make sure that we are live across the interwebs.
We're live on Rumble.
We are live on vivabarneslaw.locals.com.
Let me make sure we're good here.
For those of you who don't know how this system works yet, I am Viva Frye, Montreal.
Former Montreal litigator, people.
Former.
I don't want anyone thinking I'm speaking in any official capacity as a lawyer.
Former Montreal litigator turned current Florida rumbler.
And we start off on YouTube, Rumble, and vivabarneslaw.locals.com.
Then we end on Commitube, and we take the party over to Rumble exclusively.
And then when the stream is over, we head over to our vivabarneslaw.locals.com community for a little after party.
And I'll probably put it on supporters only today, you know, to thank our supporters and give them a little something extra for their financial support.
To allow me to keep doing what we're doing here, which is document the fall of the world in real time.
And now, let me make sure, because I'm absolutely neurotic.
I checked.
Okay, good.
You may have noticed as you come into this stream, it says this stream contains a paid promotion because it does, people.
Hold on.
I'm going to share this.
Because our sponsor of the day, of the week, of the day, is fieldofgreens.com.
Field of Greens.
I have it here, people.
I'm going to...
Hold on.
I'm going to show you here.
Well, you'll understand what I mean to say when I say it looks like swamp water.
It tastes delicious.
Let me see if we can do this.
This is the field of greens.
You stir it around and you...
I don't want to poke my eye out.
Lose an eye.
Live stream.
That one has lemongrass in it and it's delicious.
It's desiccated greens.
Not an extract, not a supplement.
Food.
Hence why you see USDA organic...
Where is it?
Right here.
Right there.
USDA Organic.
Most people know this, but most people don't.
You're supposed to have between five and seven servings of raw fruits and vegetables a day, and most people don't have that.
Most people don't have healthy food habits, healthy exercise habits, and we saw the consequences of that during...
Do I start calling it so-called COVID?
No, I won't get there yet.
During COVID.
Being unhealthy is like the opposite of being healthy, which pays dividends.
Get healthy habits.
Weed out the unhealthy habits.
You're supposed to have five to seven servings of raw fruits and vegetables a day.
Most people don't have that, especially when they're traveling.
Field of Greens, one spoonful has one serving of raw fruits and vegetables.
And if you do it twice a day, which is what you're supposed to, you get all the antioxidants, you get all the healthy stuff.
Boosted immunity, antioxidant power, full serving of fruit, full serving of vegetables right there.
And it's delicious.
Go to Viva.
Go to fieldofgreens.com.
It'll bring you to Brickhouse Nutrition.
Promo code Viva.
We'll get you 15% off your first order.
And just eat vegetables instead.
Now, first of all, you can do both, Chris.
Eat your fruits and vegetables, but you can't always do it.
And also, people need routines.
They need healthy habits.
And people sometimes have the routine of a cup of coffee in the afternoon.
Fine.
Other people have the routine of an energy drink in the afternoon.
A sugar-packed, toxic can of crap.
Others have the diet energy drink thinking they're being healthy.
Aspartame is not good for you.
So swap it out with a healthy habit.
And yes, Chris, I make the joke every time.
It looks like swamp water, and that is because swamp water is where life is born.
And it tastes delicious.
Hold on a second.
Oh, shut up, maple syrup.
Took your advice to exercise, and so far I've lost four pounds.
I was actually thinking about this the other day.
How losing weight is like among the most difficult things in the world because people, first of all, Maple, congratulations and keep it up.
Putting on weight happens so gradually and so slowly, you don't see it happening.
And then at the end of the year, you're like, oh, I weigh an extra couple of pounds.
Next year, I wake up.
And then before you know it, they say the average person puts on like a pound or two a year.
After 10 years, that's 20 pounds.
And it happens so slowly.
It doesn't come off quickly, and it's a dedication to say, day in and day out, I'm going to do something that I know in a year or two is going to yield benefits, but I'm not going to see it in real time.
And that's how difficult it is to keep pursuing it so that after a year, you're like, holy crap, I've lost four pounds.
I feel better.
My joints hurt less.
I can run.
If I need to outrun the zombie apocalypse, I can now run a solid three miles without losing my breath.
Okay.
Now, what I was about to say...
When my brother gets in, we'll bring him in.
If you haven't heard the news, it's...
I'll bring up the French article and I'll translate it in real time.
I'll preface this now.
We're going to start with the Quebec nonsense.
Here we go.
I'll just bring this up.
My brother tweeted it yesterday.
And I'm not saying...
Not that I'm calling my brother a liar.
I wouldn't call my brother a liar because he's not.
But every now and again, I see something.
I'm like, holy crap.
I know my brother wouldn't lie.
Did my brother misunderstand something?
He's been living in Ontario for a long enough time.
Did he misunderstand the French?
My brother tweets out, for the first time in its history, Quebec City has put its entire population on, quote, wood-fire lockdown, presumably speaking, presumably relying on air quality guidelines established by the WHO.
WHO?
Reasonable, worth it.
So I'm like, what the hell is he talking about?
I go and look and I get the article.
Journal de Québec, which means the Journal of Québec, for those of you who don't know.
Interdiction d'utiliser des poils.
Now, I translated this, and mildly inaccurately, because poil means a couple of things.
It could mean pan, it could mean pan-fry, it could mean stove, it could mean oven.
It also could mean naked, but I think you spell it differently.
Apoil means, you know, nothing but your hair.
Spelled differently.
Okay, so the headline doesn't even say, doesn't even limit it to wood burning.
It just says, restriction on using ovens and foyer, like heater, heating blocks, or kitchens, foyer, you know, things to heat.
As of Wednesday in Quebec, La Ville, the city, is issuing a notice of a temporary restriction for the first time in its history.
Because of the deteriorating air quality.
That's what the headline and the byline says.
Go into the article.
I'm not going through the whole thing.
Look at this.
Stephanie Martin.
Listen to this.
It's like, hey guys, we own your asses.
I'll just translate it instead of reading it.
It will be forbidden.
To use a wood-burning stove or a wood-burning heater.
As of Wednesday noon in Quebec, for the first time in its history, the city has issued a notice, temporary restriction, because of deteriorating air quality.
And then we can go read the article, which we're going to read.
But first, you know, this caused me to go back to my canceling Halloween.
Pre-COVID, I didn't realize how...
What's the word?
When you...
When you predict something prescient, my rage at canceling Halloween would become under COVID and wherever else they're going.
It's effing nuts and there's no but about it.
Now, I see my beautiful gray-haired brother in the backdrop.
Everybody, let me just make sure that we're good everywhere here.
Okay, here we go.
We're good there.
You may know my brother from such...
I was going to make a joke.
Other mothers, it doesn't matter.
He's my brother.
He's my actual broad brother.
Daniel Freiheits, you're in.
Hey, what's going on?
Dude, your background looks totally blurry.
Is your house okay?
You know, I was thinking about whether to go with the virtual background.
Oh, that's better.
Yeah, that's better.
Well, hold on.
Neurotic.
Center your face.
There you go.
Center your face.
No, it's the artistic.
It's the third, third, third, right?
Only if you're trying to do art and not symmetry.
But hold on.
Dan, talk for a bit, and I'm going to make sure that our audio levels are good.
Oh, yeah.
Otherwise, because I said I was going to be screaming, right?
So is it too loud?
Well, let's see.
I'm going to see what our chat has to say.
I didn't test my audio.
Good point.
No, no.
I'll test it on my end.
So, Dan, explain for the world who you are, if they're just meeting you for the first time.
Yeah, my name is...
You know, I only promote myself as lie and advocacy.
You guys can do the rest.
I don't promote my other work.
I'm a lawyer in Ontario, but on Twitter, on the line, my mandate is to raise awareness about the insanity, the use of force during COVID.
My mandate is to show that the use of force was not reasonable, was disproportionate.
There are other ways of achieving valiant outcomes in this whole pandemic.
Dude, I've hated the word mandate.
From the year 2007, when we first became lawyers, we're like, did you get a mandate?
What mandate are you working on?
You go to your senior lawyer, and like, here's the mandate.
He's like, mandate, mandate.
And I've hated that word for a decade, and I hate it even more now.
So you're fighting the good fight, and literally, for the people who need the help.
Well, yeah, and sometimes it translates into other paid work in terms of wrongful dismissals.
And I can't say the other stuff is paid, like vaccine injuries.
I've had a handful of folks that I'm trying to help get some money.
I can't say that that's paid work necessarily because there is, I think the vaccine injury support program ran out of money.
What was their budget?
Their budget was 2 point something million, 2.7, I think, with a good shot.
And then plus.
Several million going to the program manager.
And so I don't know that there's actually any money approved for...
And then they exceeded that in the past two years since the vaccines rolled out.
So that to me is immediately a flag if you've launched and forced people to get vaccinated with something that you didn't properly budget for because it's causing more injuries than you expected.
That's a bit of a flag for people who like to use what we call human reason.
But I can see that that's not very popular these days.
Just to please the YouTube...
Overlords.
Am I getting a Brickhouse Nutrition ad on my CBC News article?
Field of Greens, you're getting a double ad here.
2.8 million paid out so far by the Vaccine Injury Support Program.
Claimants expressed frustration over how long the agency in charge is taking to process claims.
And I don't know if I see the budget in here.
They paid out too.
Let me see if there's a budget.
But the word budget doesn't come up and I don't know.
2.8 million paid out so far and...
If they don't have the budget, they're going to make it exceedingly difficult for people to succeed on their claims.
Correct.
If I'm managing a fund that has to pay out claims and there's not enough money coming in to pay those claims, what do you do?
You slow it down a bit.
You slow down the claims.
It's the only logical thing you can do.
And when you do that, so also you have to possibly fire people, so it's going to delay things in that regard.
You delay the claims, make people wait.
Some people aren't going to wait because they're going to die.
So that's a bit of a problem.
And then you kind of reduce the payout that way.
Sorry.
We know that in Sean Hartman, Dan Hartman's son's case, he got his expert to definitively show that he can resubmit or appeal his vaccine injury denial.
Do you know, has there been an update on that?
I was just looking quick.
I don't know the status of that.
But yeah, I guess you can appeal within the Vaccine Injury Support Program itself, which is the cheapest way to fight these things, is through the Vaccine Injury Support Program.
Because going through the courts, as everyone knows, you know, it'll be hundreds of thousands of dollars.
And if you lose, you have to pay hundreds.
So it's like double the injury, right?
Yeah, the best way is to use a vaccine injury support program and kind of hope that it pays out in time.
It pays out the right amount.
But there again...
It's capped at 250?
Yeah, there's even like...
Yeah, it's like even a death loss of something like that.
Not even adjusted for inflation.
But really, the reality is that...
And that doesn't prejudice.
So even in the case of Sean, Dan Hartman, I think they could still even pursue a claim outside of the vaccine injury support program and then just have that offset against, you know, for punitive or whatever damages.
So, it's pretty wild.
It's pretty wild.
And what's, by the way, and I've talked about this before on your show, but what's even more wild is that when Trudeau launched this program, it was specifically with the assurance that you could find it on my, I have it posted somewhere, but the announcement in December of 2020 was specifically, publicly, on the representation that vaccines are very, very rarely cause any kind of serious injury.
One in a million, I think Trudeau's public statement was on this.
One in a million.
Of a serious adverse event from a vaccine.
And so everyone kind of was duped by this presser.
And I may take that up later somehow, some way, but that was a representation that was not founded in any semblance of fact or, you know.
Add it to the list, Dan.
Add it to the list.
Yep.
But that's not what was raging you last night.
You put up that tweet.
I'm like, no, you must be misunderstanding something.
First of all, okay, so I read a bit of the article.
We're not going to go too far into it.
Quebec City, for those of you who don't know, population, I'll say 250,000.
That might be too much.
It's like a clean, beautiful city, two and a half hours east of Montreal, right on the St. Lawrence River.
The air quality there, by and large, is exponentially better, cleaner, fresher than anywhere else, you know, any other big city because it's not a big city.
So when you put up this tweet that says that they're banning wood-burning stoves and foyer, I'm going to have to Google the translation for foyer, but like...
I think it's a foyer.
Yeah, but it's like things that heat the house, by the way.
I mean, people use wood-burning stoves to heat houses.
That they're banning it for an indefinite period of time because of poor air quality.
I had many questions.
You're going to answer one of them.
How the hell are they measuring the air quality?
Yeah, well, they have stations.
I remember because I was interested when they did this for Toronto when they determined that the air quality was so dangerous they had to shut kids down from sports back in the summer.
Same trick.
I'm like, wait, wait, wait, wait.
You're stopping sports again for kids.
Kids need sports.
Kids actually need to move around.
So I started looking into the air quality readers where they were located in the city, and there's a lot of variance within the city between air quality.
I'm like, and even under a tree, you can get better air quality.
It's like there's pockets of air.
There's air bubbles.
We lived in the bubble for three, four years.
You have to factor that into account.
The air quality is not uniform, and so let people make their own decisions when it came to sports and stuff, depending where they are located in the city, to choose.
Because I have an issue with the schools shutting down across the board, all outdoor sports.
You're off on a population.
I was wildly off.
Oh, you're spreading this information.
It's five...
Now I'm trying to rationalize my own mistake.
Well, that's just the...
No, the greater Quebec City area is 800 and some odd.
But I'm going to check the growth because that is much...
That seems high.
That seems high.
Dude...
Unless that's where all the newcomers to Canada have...
Well, unless my memory is stuck when I went to law school, which was back in 2000 and change, and then it was about 200 and some odd thousand.
All right, fine.
So I haven't updated my database in 20 years.
Okay, so air quality.
So yeah, there's a whole bunch, like, I'm not the expert on air quality, but just looking over, there's different metrics of what's in the air.
Like, there's like ozone, there's different particulate matters of different sizes.
So I think the one that flagged for this lockdown was the 2.5 micronanometer, whatever, the smallest particles.
Those were higher than the guidelines, so we gotta shut her down.
It's, I mean, I don't know what the, so I'm bringing up your tweet and the graph.
Oh, look at that.
Look at the 2005 AC.
Okay, so in 2005, okay, what number did they use?
25. Right now, and that's, I think, average over the 24 hour period.
Right now, I think they're measuring 17. So 17 is below the 2005.
So it's the errors.
This would have been fine three years ago.
But because of the World Health Organization, suddenly, you got to shut down Quebec City from the fires.
And by the way, by the way, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal have actually blocked fires in the cities.
You can't have a fire, I think, in Montreal for sure, and I think Ottawa I heard as well.
But how'd they do that?
A little thing called debate.
They had to debate it in city council because you can't, right?
It's called democracy.
Remember this thing we had before COVID?
No, no, no.
Now it's all emergency orders.
So now what Quebec City did was now it's an emergency because the World Health Organization changed the guidelines.
So now it's an emergency.
We don't have to debate it.
It's an emergency.
And by the way...
By the way, other cities use the emergency trump card too.
Hamilton, I think Hamilton uses for drugs.
A lot of cities are doing it for drugs.
Drugs and emergency.
Which initially I was opposed, but then...
Am I too loud, by the way?
No, no, you're good.
First of all, drugs I could understand as being an emergency, but they're going the other way in British Columbia.
What are they doing?
They're using the emergency order to decriminalize drugs?
I think they're using just to allocate more resources and I'm not sure, open up my...
I think bypass the normal democratic process, which kind of freaked me out a bit.
But then when I saw what was happening in Hamilton, I was like, you know, go for it.
Because I don't...
And I, you know, I don't think people understand these are not...
These are not drug overdoses.
This is actually, I believe, should be looked at as a bioweapon.
The way the kids are dying from these drugs, it's not like normal overdose.
This is like poisoning, and there's some force behind it.
Intentional poisoning of kids that are not drug addict.
These are not drug addict kids.
These are kids that sometimes just make a single mistake and die as a result.
And so, yeah, friggin' declare an emergency.
Bring in some responsible law enforcement or officers to figure out where these supplies are coming from and crack down big time.
But anyhow, that's another rant.
Let me understand this.
The WHO recently sets new air quality guidelines.
To save lives.
Quebec declares basically an emergency to prohibit wood-burning stoves.
And, uh, heating, heating, heating units.
Well, to save lives, Dave.
I mean, Viva, to save lives.
No, but it's so, it's so wild, it's beyond, it's beyond words.
Well, and this is the question.
What's the net effect?
So, yes, it'll definitely, you know...
Reduce smoke.
Was that really a source of major air quality problems in Quebec City?
Was there a report?
Was there an investigation?
And you're stopping people from having fires now, so some people are going to be detrimentally affected, either financially or their own health.
Some people may not be able to have fires, or they're so scared, maybe they'll die or have to check into ER for some reason.
Has that been studied?
No, you don't have to.
It's an emergency.
And we've declared the emergency based on these guidelines from the WHO that have changed.
In September 2021.
And you know as well as I do what was going on in Quebec in that time period.
That was right after we were all discombobulated from three months of friggin locked in your house, no sunsets.
So they did the whole one-two punch.
Punch you in the gut with the lockdowns and while you're recovering they go to declare the friggin change of the guidelines.
Well, it's absolutely inexplicable and unbelievable, and a preposterous joke.
Set aside the fact that people use wood-burning stoves to heat their houses.
We're now in the dead of winter, and they're going to tell people, some people, my mother-in-law uses a wood stove, a wood-burning stove, to heat the house, so they'll have to turn that off and go to electric if they have that capacity, and if they don't...
I mean, the other thing is, like, what are they going to do?
Are you going to have your Quebec Gestapo running around looking for smoke coming out of chimneys?
They will.
They love it.
They love doing that stuff.
Cirque du Québec is all over that.
They're going to see where there's smoke, there's fire.
Where there's smoke, there's fire.
Pun intended.
Right?
So, but here's the thing, too.
The social consequence, right?
You're going to have a house.
It's pretty cold, okay?
It's like, let's say, weather goes down to minus 20. Air quality is really bad.
Still, I don't know how.
More likely to get sick.
Okay?
Dad wants to start a fire.
Mom says, no, we're going to get a ticket.
Dad says, I'm really freezing.
Mom says, don't do it.
This is what families are now going to do.
These are the social implications of these policies that need to be studied and discussed and debated.
Because, yes, it's going to be exactly like COVID.
The people who are willing to take risks, people who weren't.
Then the lawyers have to pipe in, hey, I think I may freeze overnight.
Am I allowed to start a fire?
What's your legal opinion?
Oh, well, I can't tell you to break the law, but...
The law says you can't start a fire and you'll get a ticket.
But if you have to survive, if you're worried about your health or safety, I guess do it and then deal with the fine later or raise that in the defense when the crown drags you through a $5,000, $10,000, what is it?
I don't even know.
$50,000 fine?
Go nuts.
Six months jail.
Go full tilt.
It is.
I'm just going to send the link to, I think we're going to have a special guest.
Breathe.
Fly.
Breathe.
No, because this is, we had this discussion when they, you know, they've shut down the investigation suite into who bombed the Nord Stream pipeline.
They're not going to be able to identify them.
It's a mystery.
We can't see who it is.
We don't know who the cocaine in the White House came from.
We can't, you know, but we can get Grandma up in Alaska because she traveled to, you know, Washington.
When they blew up the pipeline, whoever it did, we don't know who it was, but as a result, you know, in Germany, in England, they were saying you have to turn your thermostats down, you have to preserve energy because, you know, we're going through an energy crisis.
Barnes and I were talking about it.
The two degrees will be the difference between an old person, a vulnerable person who can't necessarily pay the increased cost of living, turning it down and getting sick and then dying, going to the hospital.
And it's not hyperbole.
This is the way it works.
You're going to have the same thing out of Quebec.
I'm checking now the demographics of age population because I do recall Quebec City being relatively older.
You're going to have them saying, you're going to have people getting sick because they can't heat their houses properly.
Then they're going to say, well, the hospital system's overloaded.
Locked down because of that.
I mean, it's...
They cancelled Halloween, Dan.
Do you remember them cancelling Halloween?
Honestly, I've kind of like buried some of that stuff.
Cancelled Halloween.
Was that in Quebec?
It was in Montreal.
It was Valérie Plante, the woman who's now, you know, having mysterious collapsing spells after having...
Was it actual cancellation or strong recommendation or like...
Oh, they said we please celebrate on November 1st because of strong winds.
Oh, right, right, right.
That was out of Montreal.
But no, it's wild.
Look, as long as people know.
By the way, look, fires are also dangerous.
Fires also kill, okay?
So you've got to weigh the thing.
And you weigh the thing by letting people friggin' decide, let them be informed, teach them the risks or provide information.
But these emergency declarations, it's creating this mindset of crazy that's starting to percolate through the entire civil society.
And it's not the correct way of thinking or governing a society with this constant pretext of emergency over everything.
And just, you know, emergency decrees.
But we've now bypassed circumvented democracy.
I'm going to bring this up here.
Hachi says foyer equals fireplace.
Yes, foyer is a fireplace.
And then poil is a wood-burning stove.
But the thing is, the ordinance...
Oh, no, hold on.
I'm going to bring that up in a second.
Finboy Slick says, Viva Barnes Law, locals unleashed Viva car vlog.
Pushed my skills to my limit, but I think...
Hold on.
I'm going to go see what...
I'm going to screen grab this and just see what that is in a second.
I have your next car vlog right here, Viva.
I outdid myself on that one.
Link in the next rant.
Okay.
And Bargissa Ariane says, Viva, who's funding this...
They're leaving leaflets in several languages.
Oh, I know what you're talking about, Barbisa.
Hold on a second.
I've got to bring up the tweet from the city of Quebec.
And I swore again last night because I told you, you guys are a fucking joke and everybody on earth is going to understand you guys are clowns.
Hold on.
Tucker Carlson, Randy Man.
Dude, where is the...
Is this the one?
I think this might have it.
Here we go.
This is the tweet from La Ville de Québec.
Avertissement de deterioration.
And also, winter is when you have the cleanest air, by and large.
Just because of weather stuff.
The city of Québec is going to...
I'll just read the English.
All solid fuel appliances throughout the territory.
You have to Google what solid fuel appliances.
A solid fuel appliance is any heater.
That uses wood, wood pellets, coal, or even agricultural corn as fuel.
Some people have...
Dan, we grew up with...
What was it called in the basement there?
The furnace?
Oil.
Am I wrong or is that a solid fuel?
That would qualify.
Coal?
No, that's liquid.
I think oil uses...
Solid fuel.
Or liquid, I mean, it's liquid.
Yeah, that would be liquid fuel.
No, they can't stop liquid because liquid natural gas or natural gas.
They can't stop everything.
Anything physical wouldn't be good.
I don't know.
Anyways, so all that to say is, by the way, my translation, in as much as it was accurate, is not even as bad as the situation is.
Anything that uses wood, wood pellets, can have a smoker.
You want to smoke?
What did I just do here?
But, by the way, Viva, you're ignoring...
I don't know if you've...
You know about this new law that the NDP is trying to crack out.
You're not allowed promoting.
They're trying to crack down on the promotion of fossil fuels.
Did you hear about this one?
No, Daniel.
Okay, for later, for another chat.
No, but you can pull up a link.
I can't find it now.
But there's this new draft.
Alexa Lavoie from Rebel News just messaged me.
She said, have you seen Projet de loi 50 coming out of...
Quebec, which is going to tackle the forest fire crisis.
I haven't read it yet.
Maybe they'll make arson illegal?
Is that the plan?
They're going to make it double super mega illegal.
Double super legal.
Increase the penalty.
No, no.
The NDP, Jasmid, and I think even the Liberals want to do this.
They want to make it.
You cannot...
Okay, I don't want to speak too much about it.
You basically can't promote fossil fuels because they're basically so dangerous.
So...
I don't even, so the combination of these two, Quebec's emergency law and the fact that you can't actually promote fossil fuel, I'm more like wondering how that would actually play out in this situation in the future.
Anyhow.
You can't promote fossil fuel, but you can promote child genital mutilation.
I mean, it's an amazing thing.
Sterilizing your population.
No, they're not.
They're promoting choice.
They're promoting choice.
Yeah, a one-way choice.
You can talk him into it, but you can't talk him out of it.
The dog just seemed to have pushed open the door here.
Oh, right.
Conversion therapy.
I've got to take over the show now.
Okay.
Well, it was good catching up.
Thanks for inviting me on.
It's the only way we get to chat these days.
That's what you call Jewish guilt, people.
Why don't you call your brother anymore?
You don't know what's going on.
It's terrible.
Now your face is all red.
Alright, man.
No, that's good.
It's crazy.
You put out the tweet and it's idiocracy in real time.
It's getting views but not likes, which means it's getting seen on both sides of the political table, which is kind of what I was hoping for.
Keep viewing all people on both sides.
Whatever, all sides of the political spectrum.
I got no, you know.
No dog in the race?
No dog in this fight.
Just a homeless.
You stay with the objective language.
Oh, this is crazy.
They're going by who?
And I say, Quebec City, you've turned yourselves into an international laughingstock.
And I'm going to take it to the international waves and put it on blast.
It's insanity.
And by the way, if anybody thinks it's just Quebec, dude, California's doing this.
New York is doing this.
Michigan, to some extent.
You know, it's the trickle down.
We are witnessing a communist revolution in real time.
It sounds crazy, but there's no other way to describe it.
It's a full government takeover of all private lives and private assets.
Yeah, but again, at least in those situations, they weren't done via emergency legislation, whereas this one looks like...
I think that's how Hitler rose to power, isn't it?
Until further notice.
Until further notice.
Because it's so like, okay, so now the air is mourning.
Anyhow, it's ridiculous.
All right, man, go.
Now, you know, the next guest that I've got coming on, and she's confirmed, was recently fined $20,000 for COVID stuff, and contested it, and it was upheld, so we're going to hear this story.
Upheld?
Wow, okay.
And I believe she was condemned to the fine, and court fees and other stuff, which almost matches the amount of the fine.
Where was this?
I know surprisingly few details about it, so I'm just going to have to...
Okay, good stuff.
All right, man, go for it.
See you soon, bro.
Ciao.
Okay, bye-bye.
You're going down.
You're going down.
You smell terrible.
Oh, you're annoying.
Okay, let me text the guest, and I think what we're going to do now is move on over to Rumble.
Come on in whenever you're ready.
Smiley face.
Oh, you know what I'm actually going to do here?
Check this out.
I'm going to go like this, this.
I'll play the video if I can share this.
The story is unavailable.
Well, then I can't share it.
Okay.
Everybody.
NDP have become full dictators against the people.
It's a crazy thing where the liberals have become the absolute fascists in every sense of the word.
I made the joke yesterday.
We'll talk about it when we talk about Tucker Carlson.
But when a tweet reverberates throughout the interwebs, it's either because it's insanely stupid or because it's insanely observational.
And in the case of my tweet, it wasn't insanely stupid.
You do recall people complaining.
That Putin is a total autocrat.
He locks up journalists.
And these same MFers are now literally saying lock up Tucker Carlson for interviewing Putin.
Okay, so what we're going to do right now...
This damn thing...
Hold on one second.
This is very annoying.
Okay, we're going to put this behind my back.
And that's it.
Turtle's fake eyebrows.
I think I know what's going on with Turtle if I can project a little bit.
I believe it's something called trichotillomania where he compulsively pulls out his eyebrows and then he tries to fix it by either putting on something fake or coloring them over.
And it ends up looking terrible because you can clearly see the lines between where there is no eyebrow and where there is an eyebrow.
So I won't make fun of him for that.
I'll just make fun of him for being evil incarnate.
Alright people, here's what we're going to do.
I'm going to give you the link to Rumble.
And we're going to come on over to vivabarneslaw.locals.com so we can take the party over there.
Here.
The link is in the pinned comment.
Here's a link to Rumble.
And I'm going to give you the link to vivabarneslaw.locals.com as well if you're inclined to come to Locals.
Locals.
And then we're going to talk about some other fun stuff.
Okay.
And not that I care about numbers because I don't, but I like round numbers.
We're almost at 400,000 followers, subs, whatever you want to call it, on Rumble.
So maybe we'll get there today.
If you're not subscribed on Rumble, subscribe.
Let's get to a nice round 400,000 subs.
All right, ending on YouTube.
But before we do, let me just see if we're still monetized on YouTube.
They've been very nice to me these last little while.
Let's go to content, live, click on it, monetization.
We're still green.
Good.
We'll see.
They'll demonetize it in two days and tell me I broke some unwritten rule that they can't specify because that's how it works.
All right.
We are ending on YouTube.
Come on over to Rumble, the free speech platform, and we will continue this discussion there.
Boom shakalaka, done.
All right.
What's in the chat on the Rumbles?
Just talked over from Tube, says Hide White.
Let's Rumble, says Ginger Dog.
NDP is renamed Communist Party.
No, they're the new dictator party.
Just call them the new dictators.
Rockstar says, V's obsessed with numbers only round or consecutive.
Like, whenever the car odometer gets to, like, 3,456 miles, 0.7, and if I don't get a picture of it, it drives me nuts.
Or if I get to, like, 333,000, or 3,333 miles, you need to get a picture of that.
Such a round, beautiful number.
YouTube is asshole, says Rockstar.
Yeah, oh gosh.
You know, do I want to start with the other subject?
I will do a quick one until our guest gets in here.
Hold on a second.
Let me just get the...
Not to say a prediction that I'm so smart for.
Crumbly, Michigan, convicted.
We'll just go over the...
We'll take it from the BBC.
And, you know, Joe Nierman has been following the trial in thorough detail.
Joe Nierman, good logic, L-A-W-G-I-C, the following pro on Twitter.
So you should go follow him.
If anybody wants to, you know, quibble over details of facts, but Jennifer Crumbly, the mother of Ethan Crumbly, the mentally unwell kid who took a gun that his parents got for him to school and killed four of his classmates after what many could only describe as being pretty overt, in-your-face, loud cries for help that were ignored, I'd say by everybody, and predominantly by the school.
His mother is found guilty of involuntary manslaughter, which means that she was negligent, leading to the death of others.
And look, Barnes and I talked about it Sunday night.
Barnes' assessment was he doesn't like where this is going.
This is basically going to criminalize any form of gun ownership or certainly criminalize sensitizing youth.
And so it's going to de facto legally mandate Locking up firearms, which people should do regardless, but it's going to legally create regulations that you probably couldn't get away with under Second Amendment rights.
They're just going to find a criminal law application way of indirectly doing what they would not be able to do directly via legislation.
Jury has found Michigan mother guilty of involuntary manslaughter for failing to stop her son from carrying out the deadly shooting.
If that's the conclusion, and whether or not I agree with it, It was predictable.
Well, why not also the school that had heavy, heavy warnings and instead chose to send the kid back to class?
There's disputed elements here that I don't think are factually really up for dispute, and I believe it came out as evidence during the trial that the counselor, the individual who was tasked, you know, the counselor was tasked with...
Being a student counselor to 400 students, the school had like 1600, 1700 kids.
They had four student counselors for the whole school.
The counselor, I believe, testified that the school did not insist or even ask that Ethan Crumbly go home.
Didn't offer it as an option to the mother.
So they blamed the mother for not taking the kid home.
They blamed the mother and now convicted her for having gotten her son a gun and having failed to prevent her son, which, you know, reasonably foreseeable that he would have...
Crumbly, 45, is the first U.S. parent convicted of manslaughter over a mass shooting carried out by their child.
Prosecutors accused her of being negligent in allowing her son to have a gun and ignoring warning signs.
Her husband's going to have a separate trial.
I'm sure the evidence is going to be wildly different to allow them to come to a different finding of fact there.
And now we're getting another Brickhouse Nutrition ad.
Life in prison for killing four classmates at Oxford High in Michigan.
Seven people were injured.
There's some issues also that apparently, I mean, again, Quebec lawyer never did any criminal law and certainly no expertise in criminal law in the States.
There's some issues as to whether or not the 15-year-old kid at the time, although tried as an adult, could be sentenced to life without parole.
He'll have his own appeals issues.
If there are any.
The judge speaking to jurors said this was probably the hardest thing you've ever done.
Mrs. Crumbly appeared emotionless and stared straight down as the verdict was read in the court on Tuesday.
Charged with four counts and voluntary manslaughter, each carrying a maximum of 15 years, some relatives of those killed in the shooting expressed relief over the verdict.
The people spoke.
Buck Meyer, father of Tate Meyer, said 16-year-old killed in the shooting.
You can agree or disagree with the people, but this is how the system is supposed to work.
The question at the heart of the trial was whether or not the mother could have foreseen and prevented the deadly crime.
Ms. Crumbly and her husband James bought the gun.
Their son used just days before the shooting.
They were charged by police within days of the killing.
Yeah, I mean, I think I know how the chat's going to respond to this, but...
For more than two years, they have been kept in a county jail.
Let me say this.
They were charged by police within days of the killing.
Police had to search the pair and found them in an industrial building in Detroit.
Following a tip from the public, for more than two years they have been kept in a county jail unable to make bail.
Initially the parents were supposed to be tried together.
They sought separate trials.
James Crumbly is scheduled to go to trial in March.
And then we can hear the evidence from the BBC and we'll see if this coincides or if I have any major disagreements as to what I was able to see during the trial.
At her trial, prosecutors presented evidence that Ethan Crumbly had wanted mental health help and complained of hallucinations but said his parents did not get him treatment.
This, from what I understand, Was in a diary that Ethan was not called in to testify on, and it's unclear whether or not the mother even knew of the contents of the diary.
Chat, if I'm wrong on that, you'll let me know.
She said on the stand that she did not think her son had mental health problems.
On the morning of the shooting, the parents cut short a meeting about a disturbing drawing their son had made to go to work and declined to take the 15-year-old home.
My understanding from the evidence is that the school didn't suggest it, recommend it, or require it, and took no further precautions to make sure that the kid who they had just seized this drawing from was not a threat to anyone around him.
School officials sent him back to class without checking his backpack, which contained...
So, are they pressing involuntary manslaughter charges against the school?
And apparently there was evidence that the school knew that...
They had taken their son to a shooting range so that it wasn't totally out of the blue that the kid could have had access to a gun.
Just hours later, he killed four students.
Hannah, St. Juliana, Meyer, Madison Baldwin, Justin, both 17. Some experts have suggested the case against the Crumblies could lead to more charges for parents of children who commit mass shootings.
Yeah, no SHIT, Sherlock.
All right, and then we can go on for that for a bit, but I don't think we have to.
So, I don't believe that we have polling options yet in Rumble.
And I suspect I know what the chat's going to think, but one, proper verdict.
Two, not a proper verdict.
We'll see what people have to say there.
One thing is for certain, this is the precedent to do indirectly what they could not do directly.
In Canada, setting aside what you think of all the gun laws, in Canada...
Even if you have a non-restricted firearm, like a rifle, a longarm, it by law has to be kept unloaded, ammunition stored separate from the gun, trigger lock, and bottom line, you cannot own it for self-defense.
Yeah, so it's virtually unanimous twos.
In the States, I mean, I presume I'd have to go look in the history of the case law that compelling firearm owners to keep a firearm...
Stored, unloaded, locked, ammunition aside.
Can't do that.
What can you do now?
Go after the parents for the acts of their children via criminal law and basically create a criminal law risk to lock up firearms.
Most people are going to say lock up firearms anyhow.
Most people are going to say that.
Now the question is only in criminal law is this involuntary manslaughter.
And if it is for the mother, is it not as well to some extent for the school?
Sith22 says, I'll say a firearm, not a weapon, that is not easily accessible when needed.
Well, that was actually Jim Jefferies, that stand-up comedians bit.
He's like, you know, the people who said, I'm going to go get my gun and my safe, and when the people are breaking in, he's got an Australian accent, so he's like, you hold on there, you're in big trouble when I get my gun.
Yeah, when you are allowed to own a firearm for self-defense, storing it finger-locked, Unloaded, ammunition separate kind of defeats the purpose.
This is just a...
It's interesting.
I presume there'll be an appeal.
I don't know.
We're going to talk about it Sunday in greater detail.
But that's it.
One can be sensitive to the issue here.
And at what point getting a gun for a kid who you might think...
Is in a state of duress is a good idea.
Whether or not it becomes reasonably foreseeable that they would do such a thing is a whole separate question.
And then where does the blame go when the school had advanced warning and didn't do anything either?
And then I had another issue.
Oh, then the other question also is the kid was tried as an adult.
And so you're going after the parents for the acts of their adult kid.
There seems to be something legally incongruous there.
And so that's it.
Okay.
Anyhow, I don't have much to add on that.
I know the following pro good logic will probably have more insightful stuff to add.
But where I have insightful stuff to add, dude, we're going to get there.
If you haven't heard the news out of Canada, I mean, you have to have seen the car vlog.
The Cootsman.
I'm going to give you the update on the Cootsman because I think I just saw something here.
Hold on.
We got a, we got a, a crumble rant from the quartering.
This man is, this man is good at promoting.
Looking forward to our interview today at 1 p.m. Eastern, people.
Oh, we're going to talk, we're going to talk a lot of stuff.
I mean, I'm putting the Canadian stuff on blast because Canada's been in news recently for all the wrong reasons, as I like to say.
Jeremy, I will see you soon.
Thank you very much.
I'm going to have to pause and pee before then, but until our guest gets here, we're going to talk about what happened in Canada.
It's absolutely mind-boggling.
You thought the nanny state in Quebec was a problem.
I'm just going to get one article so we can see how the news outlets are covering this.
Coots released a plea deal.
I've talked about it at length, and you all know all of this because you've been on the channel for, you know, Longer than a month.
The Coots Four, colloquially referred to as the Coots Four, they were the four men who were arrested back in February 2022 on the basis that they had conspired to murder an RCMP police officer.
This was at the Coots...
It was, however, confused with Ottawa because when Justin Trudeau wanted to invoke the Emergencies Act, he says, look how dangerous this was.
We had people plotting murders of RCMP officers and coots.
We had an occupation in Ottawa.
We had no choice but to invoke the Emergencies Act.
It was part of the rationale, the justification, the bullshit narrative that Diagalon was a militia.
That these men who were accused of conspiring to murder the police officer were part of Diagalon because if you looked at the photograph of the weapons that they seized, there was a fishing vest.
It wasn't even a ballistics vest.
It was the fishing vest.
Coots firearms images.
There was a vest that had a Diagalon.
Allegedly.
Allegedly.
I don't want anyone thinking I'm on Reddit because I'm not, but this is where I got the picture from.
When they got arrested, because this is what you do when you're conducting an investigation, you show...
Get this out of here.
You show all the weapons that you seize.
And the conspiracy...
Look at all these big, bad rounds of bullets.
I mean, it's almost like you're in Alberta and people hunt out there.
As far as I know, I don't believe that any of these firearms were illegal.
I heard someone say that there might have been one of them that might not have been compliant with Canadian gun laws.
Look, they've got a machete.
So they arrested these four men on conspiracy to commit murder.
While the investigation is ongoing, RCMP lays out their orgy of evidence so everybody can see it.
And the issue was this vest right here.
I think you can see the cursor.
With what appears to be the white diagonal stripe on a black patch, which is diagonal.
So they say these four men were conspiring to murder an RCMP officer.
It's a massive threat.
There's like, you know, domestic terrorists.
Arrest them.
Invoke the Emergencies Act.
The Coutts arrest was the linchpin of Commissioner Rouleau ratifying Justin Trudeau's invocation of the Emergencies Act during that six-week public order emergency commission.
He says, oh, it was very violent.
Some of the crowd was peaceful, but some of them were violent and had nefarious intentions, referring to the Coutts for.
They've been in jail and remand in pretrial detention for over two years.
Two of them struck a deal on...
I'll call it relatively innocuous firearms charges.
I mean, I've long said that the firearm laws, the gun laws in Canada, are so stringent, are so excessive, with penalties that are so excessive, it's not intended to protect the public.
It's intended to deter private gun, lawful private gun ownership.
So they pleaded guilty to two relatively innocuous gun charges, of which any...
Even good-intentioned, law-abiding, innocent civilian could have inadvertently been guilty.
And the Crown drops the conspiracy to commit murder charge.
Poof.
Two years locked up, and they are let out free.
Two of the four.
The other two are still in there.
I'm not sure what their plans are, but I presume that they're going to have a similar fate because you can't have conspiracy to commit murder when you just drop that charge against two of the four who allegedly conspired to commit murder.
Maybe you can.
You can find some wacky fact powder that allows you to continue with the persecution.
Okay, global news.
This is the news.
No thanks.
Two accused in Coots blockade plead guilty to lesser charges.
Yeah, just whitewash it as much as you can.
What does this guy have to say?
We've got ahead of that.
We could have found that fire.
Let's hear this.
Let's hear this.
Nearly two years after the victims of a double shooting were found inside a car outside a gas station in Surrey's Fraser Heights, charges have been laid.
25-year-old Yusuf Kontos was arrested in Richmond Hill, Ontario, Tuesday.
I have no idea what this story is.
He's accused of first-degree murder and the homicide of 24-year-olds.
Okay, I don't want to hear that story.
It has nothing to do.
Two of the four men accused of conspiring to commit murder at the Coots Border Blockade have been released from custody.
You know, do you see how they say it?
Two of the four men charged with conspiracy to commit murder at the Coutts border blockade in southern Alberta have now been released from custody.
They don't say that the Crown dropped the charges just yet.
They say that they've been released.
They were accused of...
If I'm an ignorant Canadian reading this, I'm scared.
How do you release them?
Okay, perfect, comma, whenever you're ready, period.
And as soon as you're ready, smiley face.
Time zone issue.
The way they phrase this, it sounds like they just released the two men accused of committing.
They don't mention that yet.
They'll get there.
The Crown dropped the charges after locking these people up, torturing them, solitary, confined for two years.
Two of the four men charged with conspiracy to murder following the ferry boots have pleaded guilty to lesser charges, according to their law.
When are they going to say that the Crown withdrew the charges?
Let me just see.
Do they even do it in this article?
Oh, I think it looks like it's later on.
Let's just see here.
Two of the four men charged with conspiracy to murder following the February coups border blockade have pleaded guilty to lesser charges.
The Crown withdrew the conspiracy to commit murder charge after two years of torture.
In a statement of Global News, the Alberta Crown prosecutor said, "Chris Lysak and Jerry Menta entered guilty pleas in a Lethbridge court on Tuesday to fire Oh, yeah.
On February...
Okay, we talked about that.
My goodness.
Uttering threats.
In an email, Lysak counsel Daniel J. Song said Lysak maintains his innocence regarding all the charges.
Song said Lysak pleaded guilty to possessing a licensed and registered handgun in a place that was not authorized and said that at the conclusion of the sentencing, all charges of the indictment were withdrawn.
Because from what I understand, the charge to which Lysak pleaded guilty wasn't even in the original indictment.
I reserve the right to be wrong on that, but I don't think I am.
To be clear, Lysak did not admit to possessing his hand.
And just so everybody understands also, if you have a private acquisition license, a PAL, if you're allowed to own a small arm only after having gotten a special license in Canada because those are restricted firearms.
A long arm is not restricted.
I once owned a Remington 12 gauge.
Those you don't have to have, they're not restricted, so you just go do your firearm license, you can own a long arm.
In order to own a small arm, you've got to get a specific license.
You've got to have a specific reason for it.
And you can't just transport it willy-nilly.
You can't even go to the shooting range with it, under the new laws, as far as I understand, without getting the authorization of one of those frickin' firearm officers to transport your firearm, your restricted firearm.
Unrestricted, you can transport, not load it, obviously.
So listen to this.
It's just wild.
To be clear, Mr. Lysak did not admit to possessing his handgun for a dangerous purpose.
He did not attend the Coutts protests with the intent to harm anyone.
Song, who was hired by Lysak in November 2020, he said, he admits that his firearm was loaded with ammunition at the time of police seizure, but denies having loaded it and chambered the gun.
Look, whether or not it's negligence, one can understand if you are at the range and you don't clear your gun after you're done.
Negligence?
Dude!
Look, I'm not going to make excuses for people.
I'm just going to point out the obvious.
I got into our car.
We got a convertible with a soft top.
And I put the soft top down just to make a video so the birds wouldn't poop in the car.
And didn't latch it.
And then I started driving with the soft top down but not latched.
And it blew open as I'm driving.
Yeah.
It's possible.
You just forget.
And you just forget that your gun is loaded in Canada.
That can land you in jail for two years.
Some of you might think that that's reasonable and justified.
And others might think I'm making excuses for people who I think were innocent from the get-go.
Free to do that.
One thing is for certain.
You can have innocent human error when it comes to forgetting.
You put the gun down.
And with a gun, it's a very bad thing.
You shouldn't do it.
Because the consequences are much different than having your soft top blow off when you're driving and you look like a total jackass on the road.
But whatever.
That could have been bad also.
Agreed statement of fact says Lysak, who was from Lethbridge, learned about the convoy and decided to head to Coots.
He packed a suitcase and took his Remington rifle, Model 700, and ammunition bag so he could hunt coyotes if he found himself idle and bored, it says.
I guess you're allowed hunting coyotes.
So that's it.
So they're let out.
He had forgotten he had quickly placed his handgun in the bag when his daughters knocked on the bedroom at the door at the time.
That's plausible.
Mr. Lysak panicked, placed the handgun under the pillow of the trailer.
It says police executed a search warrant several days later, found a cache!
It's a militia!
When you go hunting, you have a cache of weapons.
Firearms.
I won't say weapons.
Including Lysak's semi-automatic handgun.
It was loaded with a round in the chamber, says the document.
Well, they have to wait.
How many paragraphs into this story are we before this propagandist news agency finally recognizes the Crown withdrew the serious charges?
They're let out.
They were charged with it and let out.
Oh my goodness.
Moreover, the charge that he pleaded guilty to does not suggest that Morin at any time took the firearms to Coots, only that he agreed to.
Okay.
And yeah, they're out.
And it's a bloody outrage.
I'm not even sharing this link.
Nobody should go read global.
Propagandists.
They cannot tell you in the header that the charges were withdrawn by the Crown.
They've got to let you think that these people charged with murder were released.
Holy shit.
Menace to societies.
And yeah, they're free.
And two years too late.
And it's a bloody outrage.
And I've been pinging, DMing, messaging people in politics.
The Conservatives want to, you know, prove that they're legit.
Start calling for investigations into this.
The fact that these men have been released from torture is the beginning, not the end.
Investigations.
This was a malicious prosecution corrupted from the beginning.
And I would like to know, through investigations, who called for it, who organized it, who orchestrated it, and who persisted in it when it became clear it was a load of crap.
They needed it for the POEC, they got it.
Then the federal court comes out and rules that Trudeau's invocation was unconstitutional, unlawful.
These men in jail are now liabilities.
You go to trial, and it proves the degree of corruption of this malicious prosecution.
The men...
Detained now.
We're no longer assets.
They were liabilities.
And the Crown drops the charges, lets them plead guilty to lesser charges that they would have pleaded guilty to probably from day one.
So that's it.
Okay.
People, this is the surprise.
The surprise guest.
I know of her story only from an Instagram story post.
She's going to tell it.
Kristen, you ready to come in?
Okay.
Everybody, I don't know where this is going.
I know where it's going, but I know nothing other than what I saw on an Instagram post, but I know the story's legit, so I'm not a crazy person.
Hi.
Assure the general public that you're not crazy.
Yes, yes.
Well, I don't know.
The general population depends who you're asking, I guess.
So I know the story's legit.
I've seen your Instagram post, but you'll have to tell people what the hell's going on, where you're from, what happened to you.
This is up in, you know, commie Canada now.
Yeah, I'm from London, Ontario.
I was a former nurse of 14 years, primarily spent in the neonatal intensive care unit, so I took care of premature babies.
I guess my kind of story, I'll try and summarize it really fast.
Started in 2015 with the birth of my first son, started getting very curious about food, became a holistic nutritionist, and that's when my whole nursing world started to unravel around me.
And I realized that health is so simple.
I didn't learn any of this in nursing school.
And that's when I found out that the medical system is corrupt and they want to keep us sick and controlled and as victims.
Let me stop you there if I may just put a timeline.
That's okay, I'm used to trying to go fast.
This is pre-COVID?
Yes.
So you've been crazy even before COVID.
I'm saying it as a total joke.
Yes, no, absolutely.
And how long had you practiced nursing for and when did you stop practicing?
Did you stop practicing pre-COVID?
No, I did not.
That kind of is part of the whole story as well.
So my second son was born in 2018.
I had already uncovered the lies around food, what we were told to feed our babies.
You know, baby's first foods.
I became really passionate about educating parents about the first 1,000 days of, you know, what to feed our children.
Then with the birth of my second son, it was the unraveling of childhood immunizations.
I became very bold and started speaking out about that.
That's when I really felt the betrayal of my...
As being a neonatal intensive care nurse, I had administered many Shots.
I'm trying to like...
You could...
First of all, we're on...
And not that I even care, but we're not on YouTube.
But if I publish this to YouTube, I don't care.
We're not going to say it.
Vaccines.
Yes.
Okay.
And what we call vaccines.
It depends on whether or not they actually work.
Okay.
Yes, exactly.
So I became passionate about that because I thought as a nurse, we're not taught this in nursing school.
Don't know anything about it.
Don't even actually know the diseases that they're getting the shots for.
So I, when I became passionate about food, I was like, well...
If I'm so concerned about what I'm putting in their mouth, what's being shot into their body?
So then I started to look at the diseases first, because I was like, well, what are even they for?
And when I went through all the diseases, like measles, mumps, rubella, chickenpox, all these things, it's like, well, this is nothing to worry about.
These are normal childhood illnesses.
They're rites of passages.
And there's things that we can do, and they're not to be feared.
So that was kind of how I approached it.
And then I looked at...
The ingredients and all the crap and everything in the injections.
And sorry for the background noise.
We're in an open space living.
I hear nothing.
Don't worry about it.
Okay, perfect.
To reiterate, we're still pre-COVID.
You'll let us know when we get it.
So this is 2018, and this was the first time I got in trouble with my College of Nurses of Ontario then for speaking out and trying to inform parents about injections and childhood diseases and to help remove fear and to make sure they're actually giving informed consent.
I would suspect they...
The biggest problem they had, set aside the vaccines, is maybe you've been accused of minimizing the seriousness of measles, mumps, rubella.
Yes, that.
Yes, absolutely.
Yes, that was some post that went into my college that, like, you were saying this about mumps.
I think there was a very specific one, actually, about that.
So at that time, I was...
Alone.
It was all new to me.
I wasn't ready to lose my license.
So I went through all the kind of protocol, did what I was told, took the slap on the wrist and said, you know, you're right, I'm wrong.
I won't do it again.
But as I was leaving that meeting with my College of Nurses of Ontario, I told my union rep at that time that if they ever come after the children and try to mandate things, there's nothing that's going to stop me from speaking up.
So all this was wrapped up in 2019.
I just didn't expect 2020 to come so soon.
When I saw what was happening.
So I...
If I may just actually...
Yeah, no, interrupt me all the time.
I talk a lot.
How long have you been a registered nurse for?
14 years.
14 years?
Okay, fine.
So 14 years as of today?
No, upon being terminated in 2020.
Okay, 14 years.
So 2006.
Where did you study?
University of Western in London, Ontario.
And if anybody doesn't know, Western is an amazing university, not that...
It means you're a smarter, a better RN, but Western is a very, it's a reputable, world-class university.
Okay.
Now, okay, so that's pre-COVID.
Yes.
In comes COVID.
That was PC.
It's important, though, because that's how it prepared me for what was to come.
So that's why the background story.
You've always been a heretic.
Is that the word?
A heretic?
You've always been guilty of heresy to some degree or another.
You've been skeptical, cynical, and whether or not you're a thousand percent right on everything, the questioning of the...
Orthodoxy in the medical community was something of a no-no even before, especially when it comes to the big V question, and especially so after.
Yes, exactly.
COVID hits now, by the way, and are you still, are you acting as a nurse?
I'm still working.
I'm actively working as a nurse, yes.
To quell some rumors or disinformation, where were you working and what was the environment like at the hospital, if that's where you were working, in the early days of COVID?
Yeah, so I was working at London Health Sciences Centre, a very big teaching hospital in London.
Working the neonatal intensive care unit.
And I saw everything coming, right?
Because they started the fear tactics in 2019 in December and move on.
And I was like, oh, this is not going to be good.
We shouldn't fear this, but I know what's going to come.
So I started speaking out to my unit.
And it was a very interesting shift because at first everyone was like, well, it's just a flu.
We don't need to worry about that.
It's fine.
And ignoring it.
And then as it got closer and closer, kind of January, February, more February, they started preparing our respiratory therapists and telling them that they would have to Float down to the adult ICU when I got busy.
And so there are the fears coming in.
You can see the shifts happening.
And then all of a sudden March comes and then the lockdowns happen and everything shut down.
And that's when all of a sudden the colleagues, their mindset shifted.
It went from like, we don't need to worry about this to all of a sudden the fear that just swept over everyone was incredible.
Now you've worked in this hospital for 14 years as of this time.
This hospital, nine years.
I worked in several different places before that.
The reason I'm asking is only year over year, your observations of what the seasonal flu does to an ER year over year.
Did you notice anything remarkably different about COVID year than, say, the prior year, 2018, which was notoriously bad?
Less?
Okay, that's...
This is anecdotal, people, but my goodness, is that the answer I wanted?
So, I mean, because 2018...
For whatever the reason in Canada was notoriously bad, if you remember it.
Yes, absolutely.
Yeah.
I was on the turn, you leave them, but even the stats, right?
Denis Rancor did this.
You can see the stats.
Stats Canada.
Even I was curious.
I did my own research, pulled it all up.
I wanted to compare and see and looked at it.
And it's like, oh, like 2018, 2017 were really bad years.
Really bad.
And 2020 comes around.
You in the medical community are hearing rumourings about this new thing or whatever.
In January, February, this is before March.
Whatever the hell the International Commemorative Day of COVID is.
I think it's March 11th.
So did you guys know or were you being rumored that this is a new thing coming out of China?
Yes.
Yeah, and they started to kind of like prepare and get people, you know, worked up and all these things come in.
And then when the, you know, how it spread, York, whatever that was, it was so long ago now.
All of a sudden, you know, that fear just took over our unit and it was restrictions on visitors, the masking, you know, the hairnets, the goggles, the goggles killed me.
It's like, oh my gosh, like we took PPE, right?
Like we're healthcare professionals.
We know how to administer proper protective personal equipment in the right situations.
Like, why are we wearing goggles for a so-called virus?
It did not make sense.
And the question I was going to ask, I've asked other medical professionals this as well.
This is just random, but I want to know.
Were they ventilating people who came in critically ill at your hospital?
I believe so, but we didn't have many coming in.
I didn't work in the adult ICU, but from the stories I got from other colleagues, like, yes, they were ventilating and doing kind of all the crazy things that, you know, heard from everywhere else.
But I just know that there was very minimal people in there.
And what was happening in the new natal intensive care unit, because it's a very unique space with premature babies.
Women that were high risk and had to go on the antenatal floor would have to be there sometimes weeks if not months on end waiting for their baby or monitoring.
They had to pick one support person.
And one person only could come in to see them during the entire time they were in there.
So they would go without seeing some family, some friends, sometimes their children for that time.
Then if baby was born, baby needed to have a C-section.
Dad or partner was not allowed in the operating room.
Even though there's like eight or more hospital personnel, that one extra parent was not allowed in there.
And not just that, by the way, who was I interviewing?
I'm going to forget who I think.
No, I remember who.
It was a member of our community, Ginger Ninja, talking about an incident where there was a mass...
Casualty event and you're saying like they were you could you could come one after the other but in 12-hour shifts but not at the same time and his observation which is anything you know anyone with half a brain says like what difference does that make if one of them is carrying it and they come in 12 hours later what bloody difference does that make exactly oh my goodness okay sorry so No, it's okay.
It's just crazy things and it's hard to relive it.
But I guess because this charge that we'll get into happened in 2020, it's making me relive all these things that started it.
Kristen, I was re-listening to the...
The press conference when Horatio Arruda and Francois Legault announced the curfew, and my wife heard it on my phone, and she's like, holy shit.
She doesn't swear as much as I do, but she's like, holy crap.
I immediately felt all of the terror and the trauma of the time.
Oh, they're going to tell us when we can leave our house now.
And it revives the trauma, just listening to that same crap over and over again.
So I totally relate to that.
Sorry.
No, that's okay.
So if dad was not allowed to see the birth of his baby in the OR to support his wife...
Mother.
If the mother had to be put out in general anesthetic, both parents would miss the birth of their baby and all of a sudden this baby would just arrive because no one was allowed in there.
And then, yeah, exactly what you had mentioned, that only one parent could be at the bedside at one time.
And having a premature baby, a microprim at 23 weeks is an incredibly stressful, traumatic time.
And they had to be there alone, supporting their baby, supporting themselves, trying to get all the information from the doctors.
And then, you know, swap because only one person could be at the bedside.
And then babies are only seeing masked faces.
Yes, go ahead.
I can't say what I'm thinking.
If there's not political retribution on this earth, it makes me want to believe in a heaven and a hell so that these people who did this can actually burn in hell.
It's inhumane, unscientific, psychological, physical abuse and torture.
Period.
Absolutely.
And that frickin' supreme leader in Quebec got re-elected with more seats because people are like, we want more of this crap.
It's crazy.
It's inhumane.
And in 50 years, I hope there's some form of political financial justice, but there won't be.
Sorry.
And listening to this is enraging.
No, it is.
And I just, and it did enrage me a lot to the point where, you know, I got myself into some quite a lot of trouble.
But, you know, even the babies, the mothers or the parents would not take off their mask the whole time cuddling their baby.
Some of our babies would be in the unit for 100 days.
All they saw was masked faces.
They go home, the mask sums off, babies cry relentlessly because they're not used to seeing faces.
There's a study done in the 60s called the Still Face Experiment.
And you can look it up.
It's out there.
And it showed the detrimental damage, the trauma done to babies when they can't see faces and they can't see expressions.
It affects their brain quite negatively.
And we have these studies.
We have this knowledge.
And the other crazy thing was our nursing union for years fought the mask mandate because if we did not get the flu shot, we had to wear a mask from November until April.
No shot, mask, or whatever the saying was.
Who cares?
But we fought for years.
We won.
Our nursing union proved that it was discriminatory and did not stop transmission.
And I just thought, well, all you nurses that fought for this, you're just so willing to slap this thing back on your face.
Like, you know it doesn't work.
But the response I kept getting from the union and the colleagues, well, this is new.
This is new.
We don't know.
But it's like, but...
If you actually believe in viruses, it's still the same size, whether it's new or not.
Like, it doesn't change the mechanism.
Let me bring this up just very briefly, Kristen.
I love the caveat that they have to add now, given how they have to twist the conclusion.
The Stillface experiment has shown us that the father's and mother's attention matters.
However, it is important not to overgeneralize the research results and assume parents need to respond and engage their toddler all the time.
Doing so would be unrealistic.
That's December.
No, 2023.
Yeah, that's totally changed.
Oh, no, I'm just saying.
Yeah, let me go.
Let's see if this has been updated.
Either way, there were so many things that were just, not that there should be any form of orthodoxy, but generally things that had already been demonstrably proven.
Children need to see in order to develop normally.
The masks didn't work on coronavirus.
That's why it set it on the box.
And nonetheless, we suspended all of what had otherwise been proven science to adopt basically religious-like faith in the COVID gods.
And do all this stupid stuff.
And okay.
All right.
Sorry.
No, it's okay.
No.
And just the last thing that I kind of remember at this point, it's been so long ago.
We closed down an entire gynecology wing that was attached to our unit because that was supposed to be for overflow patients.
And that unit stayed empty.
Empty.
For months.
For months.
Just empty.
Sat there.
Now, before we get into your story here, I want to read two chats because they're nice.
Green Thumb Nursing says, Thank you, Viva.
Kristen is a true gem inspired so many of us nurses to speak out and help me during the darkest days of COVID with CFLN.
What does that stand for?
Canadian?
Canadian Frontline Nurses.
Much love to you both, Canada.
Is with you, Warrior Mama.
And then we've got Finboy Slick who says, Kristen, likely saved more lives than we realized.
This is why people should stick to principles even when it's hard.
By the way, Viva, don't forget my link.
You want Rumble to see this.
Finboy.
I'm going to go back to the link here.
Hold on one second.
Okay.
All right.
Now, Kristen, get us into when you got into trouble.
Yeah.
Let's spoil the surprise.
How much is that trouble costing you for the time being?
Well, this current one is $20,000, but there's been others and there's more coming.
Yes.
Okay, tell us.
So, in my community, and I was just on a live right before, you know, this worked out that I was able to come on your show, and I was saying, for me, the lies were just so evident.
You know, the lockdowns, the fear-mongering, the social distancing, the bubbles, like, all that nonsense, the masks, it was, that was just all so much to me at the very beginning, that, you know...
I just remember a mother getting arrested by the OPP because she was going grocery shopping because she made a stop at her mother's house and drop off her children so she didn't take her children out.
We were not allowed to leave our house unless it was absolutely necessary.
Do you remember these crazy lockdowns?
I was speaking out and doing what I could.
By the time November 2020 came, it was just all...
Too much for me, because I think we were entering another lockdown.
Coming up to that was, you know, the strict lockdowns on Christmas.
But I was seeing the harms happening in my communities.
My, you know, the small businesses that I frequented were suffering.
Children, I was getting, because I have young children at the time, at the time this started, my boys were one in four.
We had a very strong community of children and they were suffering because schools were locked down.
Their sports were locked down.
Their aftercare programs were shut down.
Their support systems shut down.
Families were suffering.
I had six-year-olds.
Parents tell me their six-year-old was trying to kill themselves or pretending with credit cards.
And just the harms we know with putting this breathing barrier on their face with the harms that was causing.
Basketball nets, remember the playgrounds were taped up with yellow tape?
They put 2x4 or whatever that...
What's that wood called?
They put wood over plywood over the basketball nets.
They took off the swings from the swing set.
They chained up the outdoor dog run.
That was in April and that's when I was like...
You guys are out of your fucking minds.
This has nothing to do with anything other than total control.
Absolutely.
And at that point, like, it was just so evident how crazy it was.
And because people kept coming to me, because I guess I had established myself enough in the community.
With, you know, things I was doing and part of.
And so people trusted me and they came to me and I was like, I can't, I can't as a mother, as a nurse, as, you know, a member of this community, I cannot sit idly back and allow this to happen.
So I was able to speak at our city hall, September of 2020, about the masks on children and the harms it was doing.
And that video went viral.
And I guess that's when a few people found me and connected with me.
And asked me to speak at a rally.
And so my first public speaking event as a nurse at a rally was November 14th and November 15th.
It was back-to-back days, 2020.
At this point, I was already suspended from work.
I was suspended because colleagues did not like that I was living without fear outside of work.
I would tell people how to go into businesses without masks, how to boost your immune system, what nutrition, things you could do to add Healthy measures into your lifestyle.
Things you can do.
Preventative, proactive things that the government was not telling us to do.
Because I had gone back to school to be a holistic nutritionist.
So all I wanted to do was help people, give them tools, and remove the fear.
So colleagues did not like that I did not live in fear outside of work.
And they put in a lot of complaints about me to management, actually.
One was when I was sitting alone at my desk doing my reporting, kind of staring at the commuter like I am now, I put my goggles up off my head so I could see.
I'd pull my mask down a little bit.
And so I was suspended for improper use of PPE.
This was during in-person meetings.
This was while I was at work, when I was alone.
When I was alone at my desk, doing my reporting in my chart or on the computer.
There's levels of crazy.
And if this were like a Zoom meeting, that would have been level 11. But even alone in your office is level 10. Okay.
All right.
So people are filing complaints.
I mean, they're going after your ability to make a living.
Yes, yes.
Because they were scared of me.
Some people even said, like, I can't work with you because I know what you do outside of here and I'm scared of you.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yes, because I didn't wear a mask outside of work.
I did all the proper things while I was working, but that's beside the point.
Anyways, suspended.
And I just thought enough was enough.
A friend and I...
Decided we were going to organize a Freedom Rally in our hometown, London, Ontario.
And we did.
November 22nd, 2020.
So long ago.
November 2020.
And we had 200 people show up at this rally.
And it was the largest rally at that time in our small town.
It was the first big movement.
And I was already suspended when this happened.
I was ready for what was going to happen to my career.
I was ready for, you know, the fallout.
I was ready for all that stuff to happen.
What I was not ready for was the media and what the media was going to do to me.
I was a little naive when it came to that.
So CBC, I think if you Google it, it's LHSE nurse in hot water or something, you know, Kristen Eagle rally, it'll come up.
That article was what stemmed everything.
So I was placed under indefinite suspension.
Placed under investigation by my College of Nurses.
And that's another event that happened.
Get this.
I hate these.
Okay, fine.
Either way.
It's okay.
It's like Kristen Nagel, Raleigh.
Too many things will come up.
It doesn't matter.
And yeah, so that was the first one.
So I was devastated.
I was devastated.
They painted me as this picture of this dangerous, reckless nurse putting premature babies in danger.
And that's it.
Yeah.
Neonatal nurse in hot water after organizing London's Freedom.
You're outside.
You're outside.
No masks.
Yes.
She regularly shares her beliefs about health and the pandemic on social media.
Oh, my God.
Can you?
This is...
And people complain that, you know, I go on RT news.
Because that's state-funded propaganda.
That's CBC, man.
Oh my goodness.
Okay.
I'm going to give that link to everybody so they can go read the absurdity themselves.
So the awesome thing about that article, that is kind of towards the bottom, they shared one of my Instagram posts.
And it was me sharing a story about an establishment that would not give me food that I ordered and paid for because I wasn't wearing a mask, even though I could see it on the table.
And anyways, it was awesome that CBC put that in the article.
And I was like, yes, thank you for getting it out there.
Like, it is crazy.
Unbelievable.
So that was the start.
I was, you know, my reputation in my community was ruined.
Career was done.
Everything was done.
Family was pretty upset that I, you know, had smeared their name.
Through the mud.
And, you know, but out of that came a lot of support and a lot of love of people at that time in 2020 that felt very isolated, very alone, and were feeling crazy and didn't know what to do.
So in the darkness, there is always the love and support that comes out afterwards.
So I managed to pick myself back up and I found other nurses speaking out.
One was Sarah Shejunian.
I think she was on your show a while ago.
Two other nurses from the States, Nicole Sirotek and Nurse Erin, Nurse Marie.
She was the undercover nurse that did the expose.
And we formed Global Frontline Nurses.
And so we just wanted to get our message out.
We were all seeing the same stuff across the country, states, Canada.
And we just wanted a big audience to share what we were seeing and hopefully bring awareness to what was going on.
So we were told that we could have a really big audience in Washington on January 6th.
And me being a naive little Canadian who still doesn't really follow politics, I just don't enjoy it.
I didn't really know what was going on that day.
So we go down.
We speak at the Supreme Court on the steps of the Supreme Court on the Health and Freedom stage.
Dale Brigtree helped organize it, the High Wire.
Then, you know, Kevin Jenkins, Mickey Willis, Dr. David Martin.
It was great.
It was amazing.
We fly home.
And now we are domestic terrorists.
And I remain to this day on the U.S. watch list, as I found out when we are crossing the border to come on this trip.
So domestic terrorists for storming and riding the Capitol.
My name is still taught at three to four different nursing schools about what not to do.
And we are immediately terminated.
And then another investigation, of course, of the College of Nurses happened.
So that...
That's been interesting.
Let me show one thing here just to make sure I'm sharing the right link because we're going to get to it, but I want to get to it sooner than later.
This is the appropriate give, send, go for you, correct?
Correct.
Okay.
Now, hold on a second.
I also want to see if I can pull up Christian Nagel, domestic terrorist.
Yes.
When did you find out that you were on the list?
Is this on the way back after, like within proximity of the events?
No, this is just recent.
So I am currently in Costa Rica right now.
We flew out of Detroit on Halloween, October 31st of 2023, and we were stopped at the border, and I had to be questioned, and I was told that...
Shut the front door.
Who did I just have on?
I just had on from the Air Marshal...
The Air Marshal, whatever the term is.
Oh, yes!
Green Thumb Nursing, who said that she sent me your podcast on that because she knew that this had happened to me.
Yes.
And so she was sharing with me.
Yeah, if I had known this, I would have asked specifically.
So you're one of the people.
You're on a list.
Are you allowed flying through the States or just simply not allowed?
No, I flew.
But they have people tailing you.
Yeah, he was very nice.
He said, we just have to make sure you're not a threat to our country.
I'm sure you know what this is about.
We have to go over this.
And he was very kind.
He's like, it looks like you've been through a lot already.
It looks like, you know, you deserve this trip.
You should go.
And he's like, I just want to let you know that this will happen again.
And the next person speaking to you might not talk to you the way I am right now.
And this is, you're on a vacation.
You're not fleeing Canada.
This is not like, what's the word when someone goes on the run?
You decide to go on a vacation and this is how you find out you're on the list.
Yes.
That's...
Okay.
All right.
And by the way, now I'm piecing all of this together because I remember the story of the nurse who was dubbed a domestic terrorist.
Hey, that's me.
Holy...
It's a small world, but it's big sometimes.
Okay.
Wild.
So, I mean, when do you start getting the fines?
When do these legal...
So...
After that, that was international defamation of that.
That was blasted everywhere of, you know, Kristen Nagel, D.C., storming, riding the Capitol.
Just it went international.
So after that, and being a nurse who spoke out, I lost my job.
So Kristen Nagel terminated with cause was everywhere after that event.
So I began being asked.
To speak at rallies and protests.
I have to ask you the very, the crass industry question, indiscreet question.
You lose your job.
You have a kid at this time.
Two, yep.
Practically speaking, how did you make money to live?
My husband's a teacher and we were very fortunate that in 2020 we sold higher in the market and we downsized.
So we were living off of his income.
Wow, okay.
Yeah, well-positioned to minimize, to live off the devastation, or live notwithstanding the devastation.
Yes.
Okay.
Yeah, and then, I mean, well, and then 2021, he was at work with...
Mandates and things that came out, so that was interesting.
We got creative.
But, yeah, so I spoke at rallies and events and protests, and we formed Canadian Frontline Nurses, and Canadian Frontline Nurses took bold stands.
We spoke in front of the College of Nurses of Ontario, told them that we were not going to let them bully us or silence us.
We, you know, brought a whole bunch of nurses together, and we spoke across the country.
We drove all the way out west.
We did question and answers.
We spoke at events all over.
And through that, I earned myself 11 summons for speaking at rallies when there's restrictions and you weren't allowed to do that speaking at protests.
One of them being, I think you had pulled it up earlier, was attending a church service.
It was Easter Sunday.
I was summoned for attending there.
And last September, I was found guilty and charged $12,500.
For going to church.
What is the specific infraction on the citation?
It's 10.1, 10.2 of the Reopening Act of Ontario.
It was gathering in a place outside of the specific number allotted people that were allowed.
It's been a while.
I used to know this off heart.
And so you go to court to contest it.
This is just a judge.
There's no jury for these types of...
Correct, yeah.
No option for that, yeah.
And what's the judge like?
Biased.
Like, it's your dirty, unclean, and wrong from coming in, and there's no way you're going to talk yourself out of this.
This reopening act was legislation passed specifically for COVID reopening.
Correct.
Reopening, which is more of just how we're going to keep it all closed.
Was it passed via the appropriate legislative process, or was this one of those health emergency orders that they just put together and pushed through without actually debating it?
Yeah, it was one of those.
For the church, it was...
Inside gathering that exceeded, I don't know, 10 people.
Like you weren't allowed to have more than 10 people inside a building.
Then it was you weren't allowed to have more than 50 or 100 people outside at a gathering.
Like I don't remember.
They kept changing the rules depending on what phase we were entering of how many people were allowed outside or inside.
But either way, I guess I kept exceeding their numbers at all these events.
Okay.
So, I mean, I'm just curious, the amount of the ticket was $12,500?
Well, it wasn't a ticket, it's a summons.
So the summons is to go to court, to go to trial, and they will determine what the fine will be.
So on the Reopening Act of Ontario, if you are deemed an organizer of any of these events, the fine could be anywhere from $10,000 up to $100,000.
Wow.
Okay.
And the judge gave you the highest end of it?
Well, no, I think the highest end could have been like $100.
He gave me what he thought was higher than the minimum.
Well, no, he gave me the minimum $10,000 and then the court costs on top of that were an extra $2,500.
Okay, wild.
And that's one ticket.
How long did that hearing take?
It was several hours.
One day.
And what were you allowed to present by way of evidence?
Or what were your arguments?
Unconstitutional?
Or was there any...
What evidence could you possibly provide?
None.
At that time, I was trying to...
If I'm being honest, I mean, it's out there.
I'm an open book on social media.
I was trying to self-represent at that time and go over all the things that people love to send me in my inbox about being a sovereign being.
So I had someone helping me and that's where it got me.
Yeah, it's not going to go over well with a judge who's, if you believe in the sovereign citizen stuff, well, he's the gatekeeper.
No, I mean, one would presume constitutionality, proportionate, or even, you know, abusiveness.
I don't know, selective prosecution.
So several hours, judge issues his order the day of, or do you have to wait for a written order?
No, it was actually the day of, yeah.
It took the, I think it was a full day, but yeah, it was a day of.
And then says, boom, $12,500.
How long do you have to pay this?
Six months.
And appeal?
I mean, I guess if you're self-represented.
Yeah, I did appeal.
We're still awaiting the decision on the appeal.
Interesting, though, because they didn't believe that I was going to pay it, probably because at the end of court I said, you can throw a homeschooling pregnant mother in jail before I pay that fine.
But in order to appeal it, they wanted the full amount.
So people were incredibly generous and helped me fundraise that money.
So I did pay that fine in order to appeal it.
Okay.
So that's one.
And then there's more.
There's more.
How many more?
And how many in the works?
Well, the other one after...
Well, so where are we at?
So then...
Well, you're with the first one for 12-5 now.
Yes, yes.
So 11 summons, traveled across Canada.
Then Canadian frontline nurses organized the national hospital protests in support of the healthcare workers that were going to be mandated the shot.
So we organized an entire orchestrated, organized rally across Canada from east to west, September 1st and September 13th of 2021.
So that got us under another investigation.
And a lot of trouble by the media and people.
That divided a lot of people because the media painted us as basically of having blood on our hands after that.
It was three specific things that they said happened all across Ontario at every location.
Interesting, you know, same script all across Canada.
That we assaulted healthcare workers, we interfered with ambulance access, and we stopped cancer treatments from happening.
That was a very specific one too.
So that happened all across Canada.
I mean, yeah, that story.
Pretty defeated at that time.
And then I think leading into that, then it was the convoy.
Then the convoy happened, and I played a very significant role there, just as much as yourself.
You were there quite a bit, I know.
But in terms of all these things, are you the only one getting these tickets?
Well, Randy Hillier got a lot.
I spoke at a lot of events with him.
I think...
Derek Sloan got some.
There was a bunch of other people got some.
I think they either got their state or thrown out or something happened.
But it's not like everyone in attendance is getting these tickets.
No, no.
Just the ones that...
Speak that they can find afterwards.
And you get them after the fact.
It's not like you even get them the moment of.
No, no one approached me the moment of.
It's ridiculous.
Yeah, sometimes it was months later.
Unreal.
Yes.
So because of the...
Yes, yes.
Oh, that's where I was going.
Why fines.
Okay, so then after the hospital protest, the media just slandered us.
It was...
That was the most hate I had received throughout the last four years was after those hospital protests.
So we went after the Canadian Nurses Association and Together News Media for slander and defamation just because we thought it was the strongest cases.
It was queer.
Oh, queer, because I'm thinking of quack quack.
Peer and quack, I combined words.
I do that often.
One of the articles that they wrote about us started off with quack, quack, quack, these nurses.
So we went after them for defamation and libel and lost because people can say whatever they want about you.
Lost and ordered to pay legal fees?
Yes, exactly.
So $320,000.
Which came down to $200,000 less.
Yeah, two of us split.
So that was one bill that's gone.
Used a home equity line of credit for that one.
And now, here we are, back into now the 2020 and 2021 summons that I received.
I received 11 in total.
Four of them went forward.
Actually, why do I know this?
Did I not have a discussion with someone at the time?
Thanks, Sarah.
You got ordered to pay $300,000 in legal fees for the defendant as a result of having lost the suit.
Yes.
Were you represented at this time?
Yes.
Okay.
And you borrowed money to pay that amount?
Yes.
And you still have that loan to pay back?
Yes.
I'm going to ask, the interest rates, do they get renegotiated as interest rates go up?
It's probably something I should look into.
I've just been kind of like, it's there.
Yeah, but it's there at whatever it is, and then it goes from whatever, 2% to 6%, and then it's...
Okay, set that aside.
Take a note.
Holy shit.
Okay, so you're getting effed by the system left, right, and center at exorbitant amounts.
In comes another ticket.
Mm-hmm.
So the tickets I've already had, it just takes so long to get to an actual trial.
Like, it is, that has been so eye-opening to be in the Canadian whatever system you want to call it.
Like, it is, you know, I saw, I hopped on briefly, I know you were talking about the Coots men, and thank, praise God, two of them are out, but it's just how long and how corrupt and how crazy it is.
So these 2020 charges finally went to trial at the end of January.
And I was, yes, found guilty for organizing the London rally.
And they thought the minimum fine was not enough because they wanted to make sure that it was a high enough fine to deter from doing it again.
And to make an example of.
So I was fined $20,000 plus court cost, victim surcharge, whatever you want to call it.
I don't know what those fees are going to be like.
It's probably another $10,000 because it was a two-day trial.
Three days of being in court.
Holy shit.
I mean, I don't even know where to go with it.
You know, the defamation lawsuit was in Ontario, right?
Yes.
I don't know what the rules are there.
It doesn't matter, but obviously the rules are loser pays.
In Quebec, unless there's a statutory provision, that doesn't happen, especially in that amount.
How long did that suit go on for that they could have racked up $300,000 in legal fees?
I think, when was it, a year and a half?
A year and a half, almost two years?
Finally, the decision came out June of 2023.
It was anti-slap.
If you look that up...
Even anti-slap, if they make the motion of the anti-slap stage, how do they rack up?
Hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Well, exactly.
It's crazy.
You think that because the CNA had insurance to pay their lawyers.
I don't know.
That's probably why they were able to bring it down by another $200,000.
Who knows?
But it's crazy.
When you look at the definition of anti-slap, the slap is supposed to be, or however you say it, I don't know, it's supposed to be on our side, the smaller people.
But it wasn't.
It just gave the right for anybody to say whatever they want about anybody.
Outrageous.
Okay.
All right.
And so the other one, it's $20,000 for organizing another protest because you're not learning from the first three.
What year?
No, this was the first one.
So they're getting too late for initial early charges.
They just keep sending summons.
Yeah.
So this was the first charge I received was November 2020.
I think it was the first one in...
Ontario that was issued at that time for organizing protests, I think.
So finally, we made it to trial, and yeah, the results were guilty, $20,000 plus court costs, which I don't know exactly what that's going to be, or victim surcharge, whatever it's called.
I won't even ask.
I'll look up the name of the judge afterwards.
Oh yeah, that's a fascinating story.
They're justice of the peace.
I'll send it to you after having it for your show notes, but it is fascinating.
I think he's an educator.
They don't go through proper legal training.
In what tribunal is this?
This is not in the Superior Court of Ontario.
No.
This is Provincial Offenses.
Oh my goodness.
And no jury either, just this Justice of the Peace, whatever they call them.
Yes.
$20,000 plus costs?
Yes.
Do you know how many more summons are in the mail from prior conduct?
I have one trial coming up at the end of this month, and then I don't know when the other one is scheduled for yet.
I'm still flabbergasted by having to borrow to pay the legal fees.
To pay the court order.
It's wild.
And so you're going to...
It's just like...
Have you succeeded in contesting any one of the summons yet?
No.
No.
But this one's new.
So we're looking into appeal options.
And the other one, we're still waiting the appeal decision.
And you have a lawyer now helping you in all of this?
Yes.
Well, holy shit.
I mean, it's...
I mean, I don't even know what to say.
Leg Day Rep says Canada is a corrupt shit show.
And I don't know.
I think the world is.
People think it's like an exaggeration to say it's turning.
This is a communist type revolution.
Everybody should learn.
Do not organize protests unless it's BLM.
Although that, you know, until that becomes disfavored.
Do not defy health orders or they will bankrupt you and ruin your life.
What are you doing now for, are you able to work now?
I resigned my nursing license.
So they wanted, they gave me a caution.
They said that I could keep my license if I did a remedial education course paid for out of pocket.
I think it was going to be $3,000 to become re-educated.
And I had to stand in front of the ICRC committee, so the disciplinary committee, to, you know, receive my spanking in front of everyone and to be told all the things I did wrong.
And I said, that is absolutely never going to happen.
And they said, okay.
Then your license will be suspended until this does happen.
And it was not a fight I wanted to enter.
I didn't want to continue to renew a license, give them money for them to come after me and prosecute me.
I'm still getting investigation letters from them.
They're still telling me about investigations that are still open against me.
I was like, I don't care.
It's a toxic environment.
It is a death cult.
There's nothing about health in the healthcare system.
Anyways, it's just a world I did not want to be a part of.
So I resigned my license knowing I was never going to go back into that industry.
I am now looking at going into the things that I am passionate about, plant medicine.
Herbs.
I have a few things out there that I'm in the middle of trying to create.
Birth.
Creating with a friend our second annual international reclaiming birth conference coming up in September.
Created a course that I'm working on launching called Warrior Mamas.
How to find an embracer in a warrior to raise healthy, free and strong children.
And so I have a few things trying to get going.
I'm going to play one thing.
Do you have another 15 minutes if we go?
Oh, exclusive on Locals.
I want to play one thing.
I don't know what it is, Chris, so I apologize in advance if it's mildly inappropriate because it's from one of our members here.
Hold on one second.
How do I bring it up?
I can bring it up like this.
Car vlog.
Here.
I don't know what this is, but it's me, CGI.
Day 31 of being a girl, and I'm freaking out a little bit.
I haven't got my period yet, okay?
I'm late, and...
I mean, I haven't kissed anyone in a while, but still, like, we know what happened to the Virgin Mary, okay?
It's possible.
In all seriousness, no, I can't get a period.
But my doctors can tell me that the estrogen I'm taking can cause me to become, like...
Kind of hormonal, emotional, like three to four days out of the month.
So watch out.
And this is going to sound shocking, but I wish I could get a period.
I wish I had those parts.
Just because I would love to be a mom one day.
But I'll just figure out a different way to do that.
And that's going to be okay.
We'll cross that bridge when we get there.
And to any woman that doesn't have a period, I'm with you.
To any human that does have a period, I'm sending you love and relief.
And I have tan blondes and I bought pads.
And I almost bought Diva Cups.
Exactly.
Okay, I love you.
That's hilarious.
Oh my gosh.
So that's AI Dylan Mulvaney.
Yes.
Okay, everybody, I'm going to give you the link to Locals one more time.
There's some tips there.
There's some questions there.
There's some comments there.
And I want to bring this over there.
Link, people.
Link to Locals.
Come.
Done.
We're going to end this on Rumble in five seconds.
Locals, and I'll be live with Jeremy at one o 'clock.
I have to take a pee break before then.
But all right, we're doing it.
Live stream ending on Rumble.
Locals, here we comes.
Now.
Okay.
Kristen, oh my god, I'm putting everything together now in retrospect.
Kristen seems to be targeted.
Can she FOIA as her discovery process any internal government communications about her from Mandelichi?
There's FOIA in Canada, but there's also personal records rights that you could ask for.
I don't know if you've thought of doing that or if you've done any of that.
No.
It's just a waste of time.
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