Viva & Barnes - FISA 702 Clean Extension? Canadian Jab Compensation Clerk SPILLS THE BEANS? Fani Willis & MORE! Aired: 2026-04-10 Duration: 01:04:33 === Viral Fish Video Comments (09:27) === [00:00:00] Gentlemen of the interwebs, we've come to a point in humanity when even a cute video of a family catching a fish nonetheless receives the ire of the anonymous people on the interwebs. [00:00:12] I present to you a video from our weekend at the Rumble House over in Sarasota. [00:00:18] A wonderful moment caught on camera, and we shall go through some of the comments. [00:00:23] Behold! [00:00:24] She got a big one. [00:00:24] Oh! [00:00:26] Thank you! [00:00:29] Oh my goodness! [00:00:31] Woo! [00:00:32] We're eating it. [00:00:33] We're not eating that fish. [00:00:36] Do you want me to bring it up on the dock? [00:00:38] It's got a big one. [00:00:39] That's a big, big cat. [00:00:41] Okay, do you want me to do this? [00:00:46] Yes! [00:00:46] Take this. [00:00:48] Take this. [00:00:48] I got it. [00:00:49] Take this one. [00:00:49] Watch it. [00:00:50] Don't drop it. [00:00:50] Don't drop it. [00:00:51] Get him. [00:00:51] Move away. [00:00:51] I got it. [00:00:52] Back it up. [00:00:52] Okay, I'll show you how to do it. [00:00:54] Oh, it's going to be. [00:00:54] Whoa, whoa, whoa. [00:00:55] Okay, so back it up. [00:00:56] We need to get it in a sweeping motion. [00:00:58] One, two, three. [00:00:59] This is what happens when you fish without a net. [00:01:04] Watch out, watch out, watch out. [00:01:05] This is the. [00:01:06] It's cold. [00:01:07] Oh, I didn't even notice the boat honked at us. [00:01:12] I do remember. [00:01:15] We're doing it, we're doing it. [00:01:16] We're going full sin for this. [00:01:18] Okay, Lila. [00:01:19] So, watch out, watch out. [00:01:20] Okay. [00:01:20] Okay, okay. [00:01:23] This is my mother in law. [00:01:24] Okay, stop. [00:01:26] Watch out, watch out. [00:01:27] Okay, so Lila, get over here. [00:01:31] It lives in Keith. [00:01:32] Grab it from the back. [00:01:33] A long boat key. [00:01:35] Wait, wait, wait. [00:01:36] Car sale cat. [00:01:39] Don't get spiked by the thing. [00:01:41] It'll hurt. [00:01:42] And don't lose my shirt. [00:01:42] That's a very expensive shirt. [00:01:44] Okay, here we go. [00:01:45] Three, two, one. [00:01:46] Oh my gosh, that's a David. [00:01:48] Dang! [00:01:49] Dang! [00:01:49] Release it! [00:01:51] Release the demon. [00:01:52] Booyah! [00:01:53] Oh, that's the biggest one. [00:01:55] That's the biggest one. [00:01:57] She got a big one. [00:01:58] Oh! [00:01:58] Now, the question is how can anybody watch a video like that and have anything negative to say, you might ask? [00:02:02] Well, let's go through the comment section. [00:02:07] Dad gives off, oh, like, I haven't seen these. [00:02:10] Like, I'm not going to make a habit of doing this, but I was just about to go live and my wife, who's in the backdrop and she can bring herself in anytime now, she says, Dave, did you see how mean the internet is to you? [00:02:20] And I was like, yeah, you know, it's the whole thing with politics. [00:02:22] Like, no, like on our Viva family channel, I was like, oh, are people coming in there and saying nasty things about the news? [00:02:28] Like, no, they're just jerks. [00:02:30] Dad gives off, I know everyone listen to me vibes. [00:02:33] I don't know. [00:02:34] That dad needs to come and hang out with me for a few. [00:02:36] That's fine. [00:02:37] That's fine. [00:02:37] Congratulations. [00:02:38] Congrats on your mother helping you with the venomous fish. [00:02:41] Looks like an old sail cat. [00:02:42] Yep. [00:02:42] Bro acts like he caught the fish. [00:02:44] Like bro. [00:02:45] You know what you should do? [00:02:46] Fishing trip with that. [00:02:47] Okay, we can do that. [00:02:47] That's actually a good idea. [00:02:48] I have an entire new idea for bro's water. [00:02:51] We'll get there in a second. [00:02:52] As a dad fisherman, I'm embarrassed by that guy. [00:02:55] How the time has passed in Montreal. [00:02:57] That's fine. [00:02:58] I think I know who that is. [00:02:59] Dad needs to chill the F out. [00:03:00] Dude has never met me before. [00:03:02] Push the fin. [00:03:03] Oh, dude. [00:03:03] Yeah, push the fin down. [00:03:06] Live free is so. [00:03:07] Well, that's fine. [00:03:08] The dad's a. [00:03:09] Marion, this isn't so bad. [00:03:10] Are you in here? [00:03:11] Here, come on in. [00:03:12] Activate your camera. [00:03:13] I can hear you. [00:03:14] Oh, no. [00:03:15] Now we see a. [00:03:16] That's not what my wife looks like. [00:03:18] What in the hell? [00:03:20] Marion? [00:03:21] Oh, oh. [00:03:23] It's come. [00:03:24] Let me go through these comments and then we're going to peanut butter jelly save the video. [00:03:28] Why are they so panicked? [00:03:29] Grab the fish by the head, the back of its head. [00:03:31] This person doesn't know what those fish are. [00:03:32] It pains me seeing people so inexperienced with handling and releasing a fish properly, yet they truly believe they're professional. [00:03:39] SMH. [00:03:41] Not to even get into the fact that that cat has no claws. [00:03:44] That's not true. [00:03:47] Doesn't matter. [00:03:48] Oh, there she is. [00:03:48] Hey, Mayor, how are you doing? [00:03:51] No, you're muted. [00:03:52] You're muted. [00:03:52] Oh, you might have to unplug your mic or have it recognize your good mic. [00:03:56] Oh. [00:03:57] Can you hear me? [00:03:58] No. [00:03:58] I can hear you. [00:03:59] Default. [00:04:00] Yeah, stick with the default. [00:04:02] Done is better than perfect. [00:04:03] Can you hear me now? [00:04:04] I can hear you now. [00:04:05] How are you doing? [00:04:07] Good. [00:04:07] You just realized the internet's mean, Mayor? [00:04:11] I don't mind if they're mean about politics. [00:04:13] That's fine. [00:04:14] Nope. [00:04:15] But how do you. [00:04:16] I was reading those comments. [00:04:17] First of all, we don't usually get that many comments, but this one. [00:04:20] Is at 14,000 views. [00:04:22] So it hit some new people. [00:04:24] Usually we get our regulars who just say, bravo, nice job. [00:04:29] Continue the fishing. [00:04:31] But these were kind of mean. [00:04:34] Did we post it on Rumble as well? [00:04:36] I want to go see the comparative comments there. [00:04:39] Oh, I don't think I posted on a Rumble. [00:04:41] I want to. [00:04:42] No, I posted one fishing video on Rumble. [00:04:46] Comments seem to be generally very nice because we're a good crowd over on Rumble. [00:04:53] But you imagine this is going to be the parenting moment of the day. [00:04:57] Like, it's one thing for adults to hear endless negative talk like that on the interwebs. [00:05:01] And can you imagine what it feels like to be a kid when you post something on Instagram or TikTok and people come in with the same mean comments about the way you look, the way you act, and how that must negatively impact very influenceable or highly influenceable teenagers? [00:05:17] Well, that's what I was saying. [00:05:18] Like, women are sometimes known for being mean to other women. [00:05:23] I'd never really thought about it in terms of, Of men, but yeah, as a dad, all these people are telling you, Oh, you're a terrible fisherman, but I can't think of how many kids you've taught to fish. [00:05:33] And first of all, you're not a terrible fisherman, so you may make like anything you make it work. [00:05:40] But to criticize someone who's out there, there were like five kids out there learning to fish. [00:05:44] I don't know if you're listening to the video, everyone's having such a great time. [00:05:48] And then to have people say, Oh, gope, you should be, I should teach you how to fish, you can't fish. [00:05:52] Well, that's terrible. [00:05:54] It's just cheering other people on and it's having fun. [00:05:58] No, I think it's the nature of the internet. [00:06:02] I'm guilty of it myself, but I try to make sure that by the time I insult somebody on the interwebs, they've wholeheartedly deserved it. [00:06:08] But it is the nature of the internet. [00:06:10] It's just to me, it's like those things, they don't have an impact. [00:06:13] I don't break down crying. [00:06:15] It's irrelevant. [00:06:16] But then let's say you've been posting videos for 12 years. [00:06:19] Let's say someone, he's out, he's having a good time with his family, posts a phishing video. [00:06:23] You suck. [00:06:25] Okay. [00:06:26] I guess I won't try phishing again. [00:06:28] I guess it must be really bad. [00:06:30] Yeah, or I'm like, I'm not going to share anything with anybody anymore, lest they criticize. [00:06:34] That's what happens. [00:06:34] A lot of people become self conscious. [00:06:36] They don't want to share. [00:06:38] I think it's, you know, I was in that position. [00:06:41] I didn't always want to share everything. [00:06:42] But now when you see that people, you know, are inspired by videos and what you're doing, then I think it's fun to share. [00:06:50] It is. [00:06:51] Marion, you were going to come on earlier this week and talk about something that you wanted to talk about. [00:06:54] Was it getting sunlight this time or was it outdoor activity? [00:06:58] I think it was always about getting sunlight. [00:07:00] I think it was about gardening. [00:07:02] Oh, yeah. [00:07:02] It was a. [00:07:03] Okay. [00:07:04] Hold on. [00:07:05] Let me just adjust my. [00:07:06] You look much nicer, you have a nicer hue than I do, but I think I'm blowing myself out with my camera. [00:07:11] Oh, let's start with that. [00:07:12] That's because my light, I thought it was going to be bad lighting, but the light is not an LED light, it's an infrared light. [00:07:19] So you're getting some research into why we want to switch from LED lights to infrared light because they have a bigger spectrum of light. [00:07:29] And the LED lights can have a very narrow spectrum. [00:07:34] Spectrum. [00:07:34] So I've gone around and switched our light bulbs to infrared. [00:07:38] Those LED lights that you have in your office are probably not great. [00:07:43] You mean the white ones? [00:07:44] Like spotlights. [00:07:46] Yeah, they also, when I accidentally look at them, they blind me. [00:07:50] Go back to incandescent. [00:07:52] And you know what? [00:07:53] You can't even buy them. [00:07:54] So this is a whole thing I think you should cover. [00:07:56] You can't buy normal incandescent lights in your lighting section. [00:08:01] You have to go to the special appliances, and then you can get, and I think maybe they sell them online, but if you go to Home Depot or into these big box stores, You don't find them anymore. [00:08:10] You find the LED lights, and you have to go to the special section to find appliance incandescent lights. [00:08:18] And so there's a whole thing about that. [00:08:20] Yeah, well, hold on. [00:08:21] I know you talked about it briefly the last time, but I think you need to refresh everybody's memory why you want incandescent over LED. [00:08:27] I just said so. [00:08:29] The amount of light that you get from LED is very narrow in the blue light range, and an incandescent is why it gets hotter too. [00:08:36] Is you get you have infrared, or I don't know if it goes right into infrared, but you have more of the reds and the oranges and the greens and the blues, so it's a whole spectrum of light. [00:08:46] Whereas the LED light, I'm doing this, it's like a very narrow spectrum. [00:08:50] It's easier if I pull up a visual, maybe I should pull up a visual. [00:08:53] We'll see if you can. [00:08:56] Forget now, the garbage. [00:08:58] So it starts with daylight. [00:08:59] If you go out and you see the sun. [00:09:01] The sun produces a big spectrum of different types of light. [00:09:05] And so that's why you want to go out at different times of day because as the sun goes up across the horizon, you see different types of light that hit your eye. [00:09:16] And this is a signal to your brain to tell it what time of day it is and it helps set your circadian rhythm. [00:09:24] So I'm a big fan of getting natural sunlight. === Sunlight and Circadian Rhythms (07:50) === [00:09:27] Now, the gardening occurred on a morning where I was upset about everything that I'm reading on the internet, hearing the worst things said about me. [00:09:33] And you say, come outside and look at my garden, it'll help. [00:09:36] We posted that, right? [00:09:39] Are the five carrots that we got growing and the zenith flowers? [00:09:42] So, what is the physiological benefit to gardening? [00:09:47] There's a lot of physiological benefits. [00:09:49] So, one of them is just physical, just going out and being transported. [00:09:55] I've been taking soil out of the car. [00:09:57] Ethan and I have been going to Home Depot. [00:09:59] It's how we've been keeping ourselves busy lately. [00:10:02] As some of you know, we homeschool our youngest, and it's not easy to. [00:10:08] Keep a nine year old boy entertained. [00:10:10] I don't necessarily have to entertain him all day, but it's a long day. [00:10:14] And so getting into these types of activities like gardening has been good for both of us. [00:10:19] We're going to the Home Depot and putting in five or six bags of soil and then taking it out of the trunk and bringing it to the garden. [00:10:29] So, just the physical picking things up, you should be careful because they are heavy. [00:10:35] Well, I pulled my back out badly, changing the water bottle about two months, three months ago. [00:10:40] And then I was doing something in the back, lifting up one of the bags. [00:10:42] And then you heard me scream bloody murder. [00:10:45] Oh, it was water. [00:10:46] Yeah, it wasn't salt. [00:10:48] Yeah, it was. [00:10:49] And so then the other benefits of, I mean, there's so many that you go out and every day we just like, first thing in the morning to get us outside, you're so curious to see what happened. [00:11:01] So, when we went away, For a long week, and we came back, and all the little beans had sprouted up. [00:11:05] It's just like very exciting. [00:11:06] It's your slow release dopamine, the anticipation that you're growing something and you're nurturing this plant. [00:11:14] Now, it's going to be disappointing when the armadillo comes out and starts eating all of our plants. [00:11:20] And I don't expect to be eating off the land, but you know, it is a good thing to teach your kids about growing fruits and vegetables that we should be able to do it. [00:11:31] And you have to start. [00:11:32] Somewhere. [00:11:33] Well, unless we have another opossum at the front door eating the strawberries, and then we get a nice funny video out of that. [00:11:40] That was funny. [00:11:41] So, well, Ethan comes up to me. [00:11:43] It was three days ago. [00:11:44] He says, Can I dig a hole in the backyard? [00:11:46] And I was like, I was like, It was a little bit. [00:11:48] I know, I know. [00:11:49] So I started off with the default no. [00:11:51] And then yesterday, he's like, Can I dig a hole in the backyard? [00:11:53] I'm like, Okay, go dig a hole in the backyard. [00:11:55] We won't tell the HOA that, yada, yada. [00:11:58] And then talk about accidental lessons. [00:12:00] He's digging, and then he reaches like sand, and then he reaches crushed stone. [00:12:05] And then he can't get any further. [00:12:06] And he's sitting there, he broke the axe, not the axe, but the little digger thing. [00:12:09] And he says, Why is this? [00:12:10] And I said, Well, this community was built the exact same way the ones that we see down on the highway. [00:12:15] They clear everything out, they lay their thick, big rock, then their sand, then their dirt, and then they lay the grass. [00:12:22] And so he learned a little bit about landscaping and why all of this is basically built on fresh land that they made that way. [00:12:29] But you can't dig. [00:12:30] You dig a foot and then you hit this, I think it's called crushed stone, and you can't really get any further without doing serious damage to tools. [00:12:39] Which he did. [00:12:40] We need a new shot. [00:12:41] Yeah, I know he was discouraged, but he's going to have to go fix that hole in our backyard. [00:12:46] And then he throws all of the soil all over. [00:12:49] I was like, if you're doing this, make the soil so you can just push it right back in and at least have it be level. [00:12:53] He'll fix it. [00:12:54] Okay. [00:12:54] So the other thing we have is that he got really excited about, which is to see your kid getting excited about fruits and vegetables is also quite fun. [00:13:03] So we planted a mango tree last year, and the mango tree was just blooming. [00:13:08] And today I went out, and we must have. [00:13:10] I don't know, a hundred little baby mangoes everywhere. [00:13:13] So I called him and he was just so I wish I'd caught it on camera. [00:13:16] Maybe we have a side camera we can look at. [00:13:19] He was just so excited, like, wow, look at that. [00:13:22] And just to see his reaction was very beneficial for me. [00:13:28] That being said, yes, it's homeschooling. [00:13:31] And then you have to make sure that whoever the kid hangs out with is a positive influence or at least not a very negative, detrimental influence. [00:13:39] And then you got to keep the kid entertained. [00:13:41] A day is long, and then you want to say no phone, but then you realize like 12 hours without watching TV or something is taxing on everybody. [00:13:50] It'll pay off at some point in time when you have children. [00:13:52] We have sacrificed this part of our lives, at least. [00:13:55] Dedicated it, not sacrifice is the right word. [00:13:58] You don't want to be late. [00:13:59] I think someone needs to. [00:14:01] Speaking of neglecting children, on to the next adventure. [00:14:06] That was fun. [00:14:07] I'm going to, well, come down just so everybody, there's no rumors that we're living in separate buildings, and you'll say hi. [00:14:13] Through the good camera. [00:14:14] Oh, cool. [00:14:15] Yeah, I know people. [00:14:16] Because when I was at the Rumble House and I was doing the interview with Lynn, and like, why are you in different rooms? [00:14:20] And A, it's easier for connection, but I don't want the internet spreading rumors. [00:14:25] The internet can say mean things there. [00:14:27] I just saw LEDs are a great trade off for low wattage. [00:14:31] Yeah, they, that's what they do. [00:14:33] They're actually better for the, they think they say that they're probably better for the environment in the long term because they use less power, but they are not good for your health. [00:14:43] So. [00:14:43] Marion, who cares? [00:14:44] 71 says, Come on, Viva. [00:14:45] I'm trying to drive. [00:14:46] You're making me fall asleep. [00:14:49] You should be enthralled with this conversation. [00:14:51] Get a garden. [00:14:51] This is a distraction, people. [00:14:53] All right. [00:14:54] Now we're going to talk about the politics. [00:14:57] All right. [00:14:58] We'll see you in a bit. [00:14:59] Goodbye. [00:15:00] Um, yeah, oh, no, no, let's. [00:15:02] We need a break from politics. [00:15:03] You took a break from politics, I'm falling asleep. [00:15:05] Don't worry, we're gonna get back to politics. [00:15:07] Uh, good afternoon, everybody. [00:15:08] How goes the battle? [00:15:09] Viva Fry, former Montreal litigator, current Florida rumbler with my wife. [00:15:13] This is my favorite shirt now, by the way. [00:15:15] I got it at a fun run, I believe it was the 5K where I did my personal best of 21 minutes and 46 seconds. [00:15:24] And I love it, it fits well. [00:15:26] And when I schwitz when it gets hot in the house, I don't think you can see it. [00:15:30] You see it, can't really see it when you wear a white shirt. [00:15:34] Sometimes you can see the sweat or a gray shirt makes it even worse. [00:15:37] How goes the battle? [00:15:39] It's Friday. [00:15:40] If anybody missed it, I was on the Patrick Bet David, the PBD podcast this morning, and I think it was good. [00:15:46] There was a moment at about, I think it was one hour and 13 minutes, where I had an interaction with Adam on the show, which was fun because it's fun being pressed, it's fun being interrupted, it's fun having something that is not confrontational in the You know, useless confrontational sense, but it's nice being challenged and it's nice having to assert yourself. [00:16:11] And I hope I did, but go check out the episode. [00:16:13] Go check out the episode. [00:16:15] It was a good one. [00:16:16] Today, however, we're going to talk about some good stuff, some bad stuff, and some other stuff. [00:16:21] We're live on Rumble. [00:16:23] We are live on Viva Barnes Law. [00:16:25] Locals.com, where we have the bestest above average community out there, where we have a member of our community who's into certain behaviors which are legal in the state in question. [00:16:37] I'm not sure that that's a joke. [00:16:39] That might be a joke here, but speaking of holes, and that looks like a marijuana plant. [00:16:43] All right. [00:16:44] We are live on vivabarnslaw.locals.com. [00:16:48] And the week has been tumultuous. [00:16:52] We'll see what happens heading into the weekend. [00:16:53] There's some stuff I'm just, you know, we'll talk about it on Sunday, but maybe not. [00:16:57] I think everyone's getting a little fatigued talking about the Iranian stuff. [00:17:01] You know, the Trump truth posts, the fighting among people who you don't need to be allies, but you shouldn't be. [00:17:08] Fighting among yourselves, and there is a difference between disagreement and fighting. [00:17:14] But we're going to start with something that is a story coming out of Canada. === Vaccine Injury Support Program (14:35) === [00:17:17] It's a story coming out of Canada, it is shocking. [00:17:21] And what's even more shocking is what I believe is egregious censorship or algorithmic suppression on X. [00:17:33] And I don't know why it would be. [00:17:34] I just want to actually vaccine injury. [00:17:39] Support program. [00:17:39] I want to get the news of Canada, where there's been some news that is the precursor to the story here. [00:17:50] Okay. [00:17:51] Let me bring this up in the backdrop. [00:17:55] There we go. [00:17:56] All right. [00:17:57] Many of you know that out of Canada, we had this thing called the Vaccine Injury Support Program, the VISP, and it was managed by a third party corporation, a third party entity that was adjudicating claims of vaccine injuries. [00:18:11] They had a budget of, I think it was like 50 million or something. [00:18:14] And there were reports of excessive squandering of monies, inefficiencies within the Vaccine Injury Support Program, excessive delays, capricious orders being issued, and About a week ago or so, the government announced that it is taking back control directly of this vaccine injury support program. [00:18:36] And this is the news release from March 31st, which was the government of Canada is taking meaningful steps to better support Canadians with serious and permanent injury as a result of receiving a healthcare authorized vaccine. [00:18:47] Vaccination plays a fundamental role in protecting Canadians from infectious diseases. [00:18:51] Vaccines authorized for use in Canada meet high standards for safety, quality, efficacy, and are continually monitored for serious, And unexpected effects. [00:19:00] While serious adverse events from vaccines are rare, they do occur, they can have a significant impact on the individual and their family. [00:19:07] Now, it's nice of them to acknowledge that. [00:19:14] From the National Post, and this is our federal minister of health, Marjorie Michel. [00:19:21] Federal government takes over troubled vaccine injury compensation programs set up during the COVID pandemic. [00:19:26] Now, after they've told you that if they've licensed it, it's got to be safe and effective, right? [00:19:31] And they meet the highest standards of care until you hear the former liberal MP there, Anthony Housefather, explain why it was that these vaccines, these jabs, were being mass produced. [00:19:42] Why they granted hold harmless clauses to these companies, Pfizer, Moderna. [00:19:47] It was garbage in, garbage out. [00:19:49] And that included how they dealt with the injuries from their garbage in, garbage out. [00:19:52] From the article, the federal government has taken over running a controversial no fault vaccine injury compensation program launched in tandem with the COVID 19 vaccine rollout. [00:20:01] The program, designed to compensate anyone who experienced a rare but serious injury after receiving any Health Canada approved vaccine, including COVID vaccines, has seen a growing volume of negative correspondence. [00:20:13] In quotes, from claimants, families, members of parliaments in its five years of operation, officials with the Public Health Agency of Canada said at a technical briefing Tuesday. [00:20:22] After the Vaccine Injury Support Program, the VISP, was announced in December 2020 by then Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the program's management was turned over to a private consulting firm, Oxaro Inc. [00:20:34] Global news investigation revealed that at least as of last summer, $50 million in taxpayer funding, $33.7 million, Had been spent on administrative costs and $17 million, rounding up $16.9 million, given to injured claimants. [00:20:50] I want everybody to understand that. [00:20:51] You know, when you look for a charity to support, one of the things that you do is go and see what their collection ratio is, what their percentage spent on the charitable causes is, and where the other payments go. [00:21:05] And what you'll find more often than not is that these charities, or some charities, at least the less effective ones or the more corrupt ones, depending on how you want to view this, They'll take a dollar in, and sometimes 50 cents on every dollar goes to the actual charity. [00:21:20] The other 50 goes to administrative costs. [00:21:22] Fundraising is always the classic one. [00:21:25] Travel, whatever, salaries. [00:21:28] And so you have a vaccine injury support program that took in $50 million and then squandered, spent nearly 66% of that on administrative costs. [00:21:42] So you get 17 million of 50. [00:21:44] That's 34%. [00:21:46] That is going out to pay the people injured by the jab. [00:21:50] Neither the government nor Oxaro appreciated the number of vaccine injury claims VISP would receive. [00:21:55] Maybe if you were paying attention, you would have. [00:21:58] Many people complained of being given a runaround or having their applications rejected by doctors they've never spoken to or met. [00:22:04] Just remember the word by doctors, because we're going to come back to this in the undercover recording. [00:22:08] It's not undercover, because Sean Hartman's father, Dan Hartman, in his conversation with the now federal government that took control of this from Oxaro, Announced he was recording the conversation. [00:22:19] It's Canada. [00:22:20] You can record anyhow without permission, although it was already being recorded on the government's end. [00:22:25] So there's a, as far as I'm concerned, a de facto understanding it can be recorded. [00:22:30] He recorded his conversation with a clerk now with the government of Canada that's administering this vaccine impact support program. [00:22:38] I think they changed the word injury to impact. [00:22:40] And what she said accidentally is going to blow your mind. [00:22:44] But right now, just remember they've been rejected, quote, by doctors they've never spoken to or met. [00:22:50] About 225 claims that were denied by Oxaril for not meeting their stricter eligibility criteria are now under review, government officials said. [00:22:57] So this company, third party company, Spends 67%, 66% of the money given to it by the government on itself. [00:23:06] Like, understand that. [00:23:08] Administrative costs are themselves, their salaries, their offices, I don't know, whatever expenses they have. [00:23:14] They're denying based on what's being referred to as stricter eligibility criteria, and people are complaining. [00:23:21] You know, the likes of Kayla Pollack, who has yet to be compensated by the program. [00:23:26] I had her on the other day. [00:23:27] Dan Hartman, whose son passed away from the jab. [00:23:31] Who had his initial claim rejected and it's been under appeal for three years. [00:23:35] The punchline of all of this both Dan Hartman and Kayla Pollock have been told to refile their claims. [00:23:42] We'll get there. [00:23:44] Under the program, claims had to be filed within three years of the date of vaccination, death, or the injury became first apparent. [00:23:50] Some claimants faced waits of 12 to 24 months before even having a medical assessment. [00:23:54] Understand this. [00:23:56] Some of the people are injured, like Kayla, rendered quadriplegics, transverse myelitis, Guillaume Barre syndrome. [00:24:03] They're made to wait a year to two years before even getting an assessment. [00:24:07] Not before getting compensated. [00:24:09] I'll say paltry in the cynical sense of it's a maximum of a quarter of a million dollars for what is, in some cases, serious life altering injuries. [00:24:16] They're made to wait a year to two years, assuming they survive that, before they even get a medical assessment. [00:24:21] Many have still not been assessed. [00:24:23] Some people have been waiting years for an answer. [00:24:25] Government officials said as of December 1, 2025, 3,557 claims had been filed with Oxaros since 2021. [00:24:32] In response to the global news investigation, Federal Health Minister Michelle. [00:24:36] Marjorie Michel announced an audit of the program. [00:24:39] Remember this as well. [00:24:40] They've looked into it. [00:24:41] The agreement with Voxaro ended March 31st. [00:24:44] Do you know what you can reasonably, not induce, but extrapolate from that? [00:24:49] They do an audit, the agreement is terminated. [00:24:53] This is how National Post is pretty good in terms of holding the government's feet to the fire more than others. [00:24:59] But that's a pretty easy way to conclude that what they saw was niche. [00:25:05] Now, I won't tell you that we were satisfied with what Oxara was doing, Michelle said at the House of Commons meeting. [00:25:12] That's why we decided to hand the program back to the government. [00:25:15] Michelle told the committee requests are evaluated on a case by case basis and that compensation can run as high as $493,000. [00:25:22] I thought it was a quarter of a million, but if that's the max, that's the max. [00:25:25] Vaccines have saved lives during the pandemic, Michelle said. [00:25:27] Thanks to modeling, we were able to see if it weren't for the vaccines, there would have been many more deaths and many more cases. [00:25:33] Bull crap, my personal opinion. [00:25:36] It's always unfortunate when people experience negative effects from vaccines, but that can also happen with many other types of treatment. [00:25:42] It's really unfortunate. [00:25:43] Yeah, they don't get immunity in those other treatments, you dumbass. [00:25:48] Congratulations on highlighting the problem, not explaining it. [00:25:51] It does happen with other issues, you know? [00:25:53] It happens with certain medications, you get to sue. [00:25:57] It happens with certain products, you get to sue. [00:25:59] Oh no, not with the jab. [00:26:01] There you're limited. [00:26:03] More than 105, I'm counting how many doses they have. [00:26:06] Garbage, garbage. [00:26:08] Three types of lies lies, damn lies, and statistics. [00:26:11] The new program, Vaccine Impact Assistance Program, will continue to provide financial support to people vaccinated in Canada who have experienced, quote, serious or permanent injury after receiving the vaccine, yada, yada, yada. [00:26:24] PHAC, that is the Public Health Agency of Canada, will be working to address the backlog. [00:26:30] Dot, dot, dot. [00:26:30] All right. [00:26:31] That's the backdrop. [00:26:34] What happened now is that Dan Hartman, who filed a claim for his deceased son, who died 33 days after taking one Pfizer shot, he called up to see what's going on with his claim. [00:26:51] And the recording is going to blow your mind. [00:26:56] Now, I want to just, you know, I got to give you the warning, right? [00:27:01] Because when X puts a warning on a video, you don't want to shock people's senses. [00:27:05] You know, that video of the. [00:27:08] Haitian migrant who beat the woman with a hammer. [00:27:12] That came with a graphic warning. [00:27:14] Some videos don't come with a graphic warning, even when it's a horrendous murder, and then people are shocked when they see it. [00:27:21] So I got to give you the trigger warning. [00:27:23] X gave this video a graphic content warning. [00:27:29] And when that happens, by the way, what that effectively means is nobody's going to see this. [00:27:35] This is going to be effectively non existent on the interwebs, as it was. [00:27:41] Very convenient because The recording itself is highly damning. [00:27:45] Now, I don't know why it got this. [00:27:48] I don't know if there's words that were said that were picked up in whatever AI transcription that they do to supervise things. [00:27:55] I don't know if it's the result of a brigade of negative comments. [00:27:58] Maybe people just go and I don't know how you do it, report the post. [00:28:02] Maybe it has nothing to do with the content of the post, but more the politics of the week and people are angry with me. [00:28:07] I don't know. [00:28:08] It got flagged. [00:28:10] It was non existent on the internet as a result of that. [00:28:13] The entire story itself. [00:28:16] Will not be able to be viewed or heard. [00:28:19] Now, I reposted it today, and I'm glad to see that it doesn't seem to be flagged with the, what did it call it? [00:28:28] Graphic content. [00:28:29] And you'll see what happens when it doesn't get flagged with the graphic content. [00:28:32] People can actually see it, and people can actually share it, and then people can actually know what in the name of sweet holy hell went on during this call. [00:28:41] The full call is kind of long, and it's kind of irritating. [00:28:46] So I don't think we need to. [00:28:49] Okay. [00:28:50] Sorry. [00:28:50] It was, I don't need to play the whole call. [00:28:52] This is the highlight, and you have to really listen to what this person is saying. [00:28:56] Now, again, I will steel man what needs to be steel manned. [00:29:02] It's possible this woman is just some random clerk who doesn't know what she's saying. [00:29:06] She received a week of training as to how to deal with these calls coming in from people who claim to be vaccine injured, who were given the runaround under Oxaro. [00:29:15] It's possible she knows nothing and she had one week of training and she's trying to sound like she knows what she's talking about. [00:29:21] Flip side, She might actually know a little bit more than what she says, and there might be some greater weight to what she did, in fact, say here. [00:29:28] She's French Canadian, so she's got a bit of an accent in English, but listen to this. [00:29:32] So, what I would suggest you, okay, and it's I'm going to guide you to the new portal since it's the federal government, okay? [00:29:43] And she says, What I would suggest you, I'm going to guide you to the new portal because it's the federal government. [00:29:47] I think you guys can hear it, but just in case. [00:29:49] I would advise you to reapply. [00:29:54] Reapply. [00:29:56] Reapply, yes. [00:29:58] So that is Sean Hartman's father, Dan Hartman, being told after four years of waiting. [00:30:04] He's suing Pfizer, by the way. [00:30:06] He hasn't gotten an answer on his claim yet. [00:30:08] They don't want to give him an answer because he's suing Pfizer and the government, although I think the government had the case tossed as relates to them. [00:30:14] And if they confirm that his son died as a result of the jab, that might facilitate his lawsuit against Pfizer. [00:30:21] Incidentally, Kayla Pollack is suing Moderna. [00:30:23] She hasn't gotten an answer either. [00:30:24] And I suspect the reasons are probably the same. [00:30:26] Now he's being told four years later. [00:30:28] To reapply, but listen to this. [00:30:30] And it's going to be taken care of right away. [00:30:33] Hello. [00:30:33] So they can deny it like they did the first time and then make me appeal again? [00:30:37] Is that what you're saying? [00:30:39] No, that's not what I'm saying. [00:30:42] What I'm saying is it's a total new, like before it was OXERO, okay? [00:30:49] The federal. [00:30:50] It wasn't OXERO, it was OXERO. [00:30:52] That's a transcription issue. [00:30:55] Since last we took it back because there was a lot of things going on. [00:30:59] Oh, yeah. [00:31:00] Okay? [00:31:01] Because. [00:31:02] Well, I can't say what I found there, but anyway, there's a lot of things going on. [00:31:08] Pausing it, and I'm going to bring it back. [00:31:10] We took it over. [00:31:11] There were a lot of things going on with Oxaro. [00:31:14] Remember what we just read in that National Post article. [00:31:17] Jean-Bertrand Margerie Michel looks into it. [00:31:20] We didn't like what we saw. [00:31:21] We canceled the contract immediately. [00:31:24] There was a lot of things going on. [00:31:26] Well, I can't say what I found there, but anyway, there's a lot of things going on. [00:31:31] So that's why they took it back and they did all. [00:31:36] Like their procedures back and as it goes, okay. [00:31:41] And they have their own evaluator that's gonna evaluate the case. [00:31:47] Like it's real doctors that's gonna evaluate the case, okay. [00:31:51] Do you hear what you just said? === Canceling Oxaro Contract Scandal (04:57) === [00:31:53] Like it's real doctors that are gonna evaluate the case. [00:31:57] What the hell does that mean? [00:32:00] What exactly does that imply? [00:32:02] I can tell you, you don't need to have a master in linguistics. [00:32:05] Like, okay, it's going to be real doctors that are going to review this. [00:32:10] What did we have? [00:32:11] We saw, what was it, 66% went to administrative costs? [00:32:14] Were they paying fake doctors to look things over? [00:32:17] Were they not paying any doctors to look things over? [00:32:19] And they were rejecting claims based on non doctors looking it over? [00:32:23] Now it's going to be real doctors. [00:32:25] Mr. Hartman, don't worry. [00:32:27] Now, after four years of waiting, it's going to be real doctors. [00:32:30] Because we looked in, we didn't like what we saw. [00:32:32] I can't tell you what I saw. [00:32:33] But it's going to be real doctors this time. [00:32:35] Their own evaluator that's going to evaluate the case. [00:32:40] Like it's real doctors that's going to evaluate the case. [00:32:44] Okay. [00:32:44] And it's real health agency agents' case that's going to take your case. [00:32:52] And it's real health agency agents that's going to take your case. [00:32:56] What were they doing before? [00:32:58] Did they just literally pocket, what was it, $30 million? [00:33:04] Did they have any agents? [00:33:06] Did they have one who was, you know, billing for all of this, getting paid for all of this? [00:33:10] It's going to be a real doctor this time and it's going to be a real health agent agents. [00:33:14] Don't you worry, Mr. Hartman. [00:33:16] So that's how it works now. [00:33:18] Okay. [00:33:19] As of last week. [00:33:21] So what we've been told, okay, like it's if you already had applied with Xerio, just never mind that apply and do a freshly application over the Portal that the federal has for the portal application because there's going to be all kinds of questions, and at the end, it's going to ask you, Are you applying for somebody else? [00:33:50] So that way, you're going to say yes because you're applying for your son that's dead. [00:33:58] She's very helpful. [00:34:00] At the end, it's going to ask you, Are you applying for somebody else? [00:34:03] And you're going to say yes, because you're applying for your son who's dead. [00:34:10] This is going to, I think, maybe blow up into a scandal up in Canada. [00:34:15] And I do question whether or not there might have been other potential factors at play in suppressing the initial post, marking it as graphic content. [00:34:26] But appreciate what the hell is going on right now. [00:34:29] Kayla also told me she's being told to reapply. [00:34:32] The vaccine injured who have been waiting years now reapply, start from scratch. [00:34:36] They're going to have real doctors, real case agents looking over the case. [00:34:40] And what happened with the 50 million bucks in the four stolen years? [00:34:44] Who the hell knows? [00:34:45] It'll be another scandal. [00:34:46] They'll hold commission hearings in two to three years. [00:34:48] And in five years, nobody's going to give a sweet bug or all. [00:34:53] And that's what's going on. [00:34:54] And that needs to be put on blast. [00:34:56] And here is the tweet to do it. [00:34:58] And you can all share that tweet and make everybody understand what's going on up in Canada. [00:35:04] And maybe this will be the next scandal of the liberal government, much like the ArriveCan app. [00:35:12] What was the ArriveCan app? [00:35:15] How much was it? [00:35:16] I think it was supposed to cost like $600,000. [00:35:18] How much was the ArriveCan app supposed to cost? [00:35:23] I think it was supposed to cost $800,000 and it went up to $50 million. [00:35:29] Oh, sorry, I was way off by a factor of 10. [00:35:34] The ArriveCan app was initially expected to cost $80,000. [00:35:38] However, due to extensive updates and mismanagement, the Auditor General of Canada estimated the final cost to be approximately $59.5 million, with some reports highlighting a total exceeding $54 million to $64 million, as explains 177 updates. [00:35:58] It was supposed to cost $80,000. [00:35:59] It cost $60 million. [00:36:02] That was the ArriveCan. [00:36:03] That was the one that tracked your movement when you went abroad during COVID. [00:36:06] They had to know when you come back. [00:36:07] They have to know when, you know, where you were. [00:36:12] If your kid who's crossing is unvaccinated, then she has to quarantine for two weeks, even if she's a healthy kid. [00:36:17] That's what the Godforsaken Government of Canada had the balls to tell me. [00:36:22] I'm going to have to quarantine my daughter for two weeks because she's unvaccinated and came back from abroad. [00:36:29] Not symptomatic, didn't test positive. [00:36:31] Two weeks of isolation. [00:36:33] I got not enough middle fingers to tell the Government of Canada what to do. [00:36:37] That's what's going on in Canada. [00:36:42] All right. [00:36:43] Well, I think we're to come back down to the States now. [00:36:44] Let's go see what's going on over in vivabarnslaw.locals.com. === Judge Williams Misconduct Allegations (08:10) === [00:36:51] Down to the bottom. [00:36:54] Let's see. [00:36:54] We got good memes. [00:36:56] Tell me the truth. [00:36:56] I'm ready to hear it. [00:36:57] Your nose ring makes you look like a cow. [00:37:00] Okay, but that's fake. [00:37:01] That's not a real thing. [00:37:02] We got another meme. [00:37:03] Apparently, my ancestors stole this land a couple hundred years ago, but the anchor baby born seven minutes ago is entitled to it. [00:37:09] Okay, not bad. [00:37:11] And that was the tweet. [00:37:12] And we got this. [00:37:13] F. Chartrand posted something up here. [00:37:15] Let's see what this is. [00:37:21] Okay, we'll get to that one in a bit afterwards. [00:37:23] So that's what's going on in Canada. [00:37:25] Let's bring it back down to these United States of America. [00:37:29] When I was making the thumbnail for this episode, and I sent DSLR Dave, my thumbnail guy, I've known him now for years. [00:37:36] He's become a good friend, family friend, makes the best thumbnails on earth. [00:37:42] And I sent him the picture, and he said to me, What's amazing? [00:37:46] I had no idea who was involved in this story. [00:37:48] He says, I think you sent me the same picture twice. [00:37:51] And I'm like, No, no, dude. [00:37:53] They're not the same person. [00:37:54] And what is absolutely hilarious, the irony in this entire story is that corruption breeds corruption. [00:38:02] And the face of corruption, I tell you, these are two different women. [00:38:09] The one on the right is Fannie Willis. [00:38:10] And the one on the left, I forget her name now, but I'm going to get to it in a second, is the prosecutor that she just appointed in Georgia. [00:38:17] Because Fannie Willis is still the attorney general of Georgia. [00:38:22] And she just. [00:38:24] Gave a raise to somebody who is a total corrupt, incompetent nincompoop, but not just that, happens to look exactly like her. [00:38:34] And it's like, yeah, corruption breeds corruption, corruption promotes corruption, and corruption happens to also look very, very similar in a way that gives this a comedic edge that I wasn't expecting when I first found this story. [00:38:49] This is from Atlanta News First, ANF. [00:38:52] Fulton DA, did I say AG? [00:38:54] District Attorney Fannie Willis hires controversial ex judge as a prosecutor. [00:38:59] Shermila Williams was the focus of judicial misconduct investigations. [00:39:02] I love how they call it controversial ex judge. [00:39:06] Most people would say corrupt to the core ex judge. [00:39:10] But if you're reporting in Atlanta, maybe you don't want to make too many powerful enemies. [00:39:15] Atlanta, Georgia, ANF. [00:39:17] A former Fulton County Superior Court judge who was the focus of a judicial misconduct investigation has been hired as a prosecutor by the district attorney who attempted to put Donald Trump in jail. [00:39:29] Can we appreciate the irony of this? [00:39:31] This is Fannie Willis, who, the last time she appointed a special prosecutor to a case, appointed her boyfriend that she was boning on company time, gave this guy excessive salaries that was unwarranted given his lack of experience, gets busted for it after knocking boots on company dime, that is to say, taxpayer dollars. [00:39:52] He gets removed from the case, the entire case falls apart. [00:39:56] And what does she do now? [00:39:58] She hires a woman who is equally corrupt, equally controversial. [00:40:02] And listen to this. [00:40:03] I had to go back and see exactly what allegations were being made of Sharmila Williams. [00:40:06] Fulton County DA Fannis Williams' office confirmed it has hired Sharmila, Sharmila? [00:40:11] Sharmila. [00:40:12] Sharmila Williams as a prosecutor. [00:40:14] Sharmila Williams is an accomplished attorney who previously served with distinction as a prosecutor in the Fulton County District Attorney's Office. [00:40:21] A Willis spokesperson said, What are you talking about, Willis? [00:40:25] We are fortunate that she is bringing her experience and knowledge back to our office to serve our mission. [00:40:31] Of making Fulton County a safer, more just place for everyone. [00:40:35] The woman who got busted for, I would say, malicious prosecution, at the very least a corrupt prosecution that got tossed after, you know, the years of process, is talking about making Georgia a more just place by hiring a controversial Sharmila Williams. [00:40:54] Williams was first elected to the court in 2020 and mostly handled family, divorce, and child custody cases. [00:41:00] But she resigned in February 2026 while facing a judicial misconduct case. [00:41:04] Before the Georgia Judicial Qualifications Commission. [00:41:07] While she was a judge, Williams was accused of illegally detaining and jailing a young witness during a divorce custody matter without lawful authority. [00:41:15] You know, if anybody else detains someone without lawful authority, it's criminal kidnapping or sequestering, however you want to call it. [00:41:22] She was also accused of improperly trying to influence a case involving a family member. [00:41:26] She was accused of improper ex parte communications, which are communications about cases outside the presence of the other side. [00:41:33] It's called colluding with the other side, typically. [00:41:36] When you have communications without notifying the other party, letting them be present, or knowing what happened, chronic delays in issuing orders, rulings, and family law cases. [00:41:44] Williams is not Willis' most controversial hire. [00:41:47] On November 1, 2021, Willis hired Nathan Wade, a special prosecutor, in her Georgia election interference investigation, an effort that led to a historic series of indictments against Donald Trump. [00:41:56] Remember, it was a novel legal theory and a dozen of his GOP allies. [00:41:59] The crux of Willis' indictments. [00:42:01] Oh, we don't need to go over that. [00:42:02] You all know what the crux of that was. [00:42:05] Let's get to the crux of this. [00:42:06] I'll give everybody the link. [00:42:07] You can go read that article if you're so inclined. [00:42:10] Let's go see a little bit more about Shermella Williams, shall we? [00:42:13] We shall. [00:42:14] And it's right here. [00:42:17] Judge facing misconduct allegations. [00:42:19] This is from October 6, 2025. [00:42:24] Look at such a wonderful picture. [00:42:27] What is that necklace? [00:42:29] It's a big necklace in front of a book of books. [00:42:32] So, you know, very, very studious, very photogenic. [00:42:35] Judge facing misconduct allegations presides over College Park business case. [00:42:39] Let's hear this. [00:42:40] What happens when the judge in your court case faces serious legal trouble of their own? [00:42:43] It's a question now confronting College Park business owner Roderick Rogers. [00:42:47] Well, I think she's, they no longer have to face that problem. [00:42:50] She. [00:42:51] Is no longer there, and she's going to get a raise to Fannie Willis's office to make the world a more just place. [00:42:56] Fulton County Superior Court Judge Shremella Williams, who presided over Rogers' legal dispute with the city of College Park, is facing multiple misconduct allegations brought by the Georgia Judicial Qualifications Commission. [00:43:06] The commission has recommended to the Georgia Supreme Court that Judge Williams be removed from her position. [00:43:11] Two hearings in Rogers' case, both scheduled before Judge Williams in recent months, were postponed. [00:43:18] On Monday, his attorney Aaron Coleman declined to comment directly on the allegations against Williams. [00:43:22] But said that she had not been informed whether a hearing planned for later this month would be rescheduled or assigned to another judge. [00:43:27] Coleman has argued that Rogers Repair Shop is being unfairly targeted through city issued violations and zoning enforcement. [00:43:33] She contends the business is a legally non conforming operation, grandfathered under a 1965 ordinance, and that has been wrongfully shut down for several months as Rogers awaits his next day in court. [00:43:43] Questions surrounding Williams, who was elected in 2020 and took office in 2021, who was. [00:43:49] Questions surrounding Williams. [00:43:51] Okay, yeah. [00:43:51] According to a report filed with the Georgia Supreme Court on October 2, The commission found that Judge Williams violated multiple rules of judicial conduct. [00:43:59] The findings cite dishonest testimony, illegal jailing of an individual, improper ex parte communications, and use of judicial prestige for personal interests. [00:44:10] Who else was accused of using their professional prestige for personal interests? [00:44:14] I think it was Fannie Willis. [00:44:16] I wonder if Williams also has tens of thousands of dollars of cash in her home because that's what her father taught her to do. [00:44:24] Formal charges were first filed in June 2024 with additional charges added. [00:44:28] In February 2025. [00:44:29] Hearings were held this past spring and summer, culminating in the panel's unanimous recommendation that Williams be removed from her post. [00:44:35] The report accused the judge of willful misconduct, including the illegal jailing of a court witness in October 2023, unauthorized contact with an associate at a law firm regarding a case in which she had no judicial rule. [00:44:46] The Judicial Supreme Court will now review the commissioner's recommendation and determine whether Judge Williams will remain on the bench. [00:44:51] Nope, she won't. [00:44:52] She's going to get a promotion into Fannie Willis's district attorney's office. [00:44:58] And that is Georgia Justice, folks. === Georgia Justice Promotion News (02:53) === [00:45:01] By the way, if you're still watching, like, share, and subscribe. [00:45:04] And if you're watching on the Rumble landing page, make sure to click into the video, hit the thumbs up, subscribe, turn on notifications, and download Rumble Wallet, which is the sponsor of today's show. [00:45:15] Holy crap, Apples, have I forgotten to thank the sponsor of today's show? [00:45:19] I think I did almost forget. [00:45:21] We're doing it right now, peeps. [00:45:22] I'm going to show you how this thing works, and I'm going to bring it up here. [00:45:26] It's an amazing thing what Rumble is doing. [00:45:28] For the ecosystem, for independent content creators, you already know people why everyone is moving to crypto. [00:45:35] At your own risk and peril, full disclaimer invest at your own risk and peril. [00:45:39] Here's the problem with most digital wallets you're trusting the same system that's screwing you in the first place, which is why Rumble Wallet built their Rumble wallet, a self custodial wallet, which is also non custodial. [00:45:50] Nobody else owns it. [00:45:51] Nobody controls it. [00:45:52] It lives outside the ecosystem that defends free speech, and it lives outside the ecosystem on the system, Rumble, that actually defends free speech, financial freedom. [00:46:01] No bank holding your balance, not even Rumble can touch your funds. [00:46:04] It's your money on your terms, on your keys. [00:46:06] If you're already using Bitcoin or stablecoin, Rumble Wallet gives you even more power, direct, fast tipping for creators right on Rumble without waiting weeks for payout. [00:46:16] On chain payments in assets like Bitcoin, Tether Gold, et cetera. [00:46:19] I want to show you, you all know how to do it, but let me see if I can get this here. [00:46:23] Let me see if I can get over here. [00:46:25] And now, if we refresh here, we're going to see continue. [00:46:28] Let me see where I am. [00:46:30] I can't find myself too good here. [00:46:31] We're going to go here. [00:46:32] We're going to go here. [00:46:33] Now, check this out. [00:46:34] If you want to continue, you'd click on this download Rumble wallet. [00:46:38] And if you have crypto already, this is all you have to do. [00:46:41] You can go scan the QR code and you can tip in crypto. [00:46:44] This would be Bitcoin. [00:46:46] You can also tip in XAUT, which is backed to gold, gold tethered. [00:46:50] Just scan that and proceed. [00:46:53] You can download the Rumble wallet at Rumble. [00:46:56] What is it? [00:46:56] It's wallet.rumble.com, or you can get it at the apps, download it, use it, download the Rumble app while you're at it, turn on notifications. [00:47:05] You get instant notifications when your favorite content creators go live. [00:47:07] You will never miss a thing. [00:47:09] And that is the sponsor of today's show. [00:47:12] And it is a fitting sponsor because Rumble is awesome. [00:47:14] Now, hold on one second. [00:47:15] I want to bring this one up here. [00:47:17] Ah, yes. [00:47:20] Biltong is in the house. [00:47:23] Here we go. [00:47:24] Biltong says, King of Biltong. [00:47:26] Craving a snack that's bold, authentic, packed with protein. [00:47:29] Biltong boasts over 50% protein, packed with B vitamins, creatine, iron, zinc, and more. [00:47:34] Biltongusa.com. [00:47:36] Use code VIVA for 10% off. [00:47:39] And over in our locals community, Joe Mazkew. [00:47:44] Hold on, let me see if it's going to be safe. [00:47:47] It says palate cleanser, so it should be safe, but you never know. [00:47:51] Palette cleanser here. [00:47:52] Let's see what this is. === Americans Under Surveillance Debate (15:00) === [00:47:54] Okay, this looks funny. [00:47:56] This is why RAM is so expensive and it's worth every penny. [00:47:59] Okay, we're gonna look at this. [00:48:00] This looks like AI. [00:48:02] i don't know what ram means i think it means uh the animal that has horns that is um very majestic animal [00:48:30] robocop don't I don't know what that is. [00:48:43] Oh, that might be Highlander? [00:48:46] Okay. [00:48:46] Star Wars. [00:48:56] Good, that's the uh, Sam. [00:48:57] Okay, that's pretty cool. [00:49:00] Give it an eight on ten. [00:49:01] Uh, and if that were on commie tube, that would have been copy claimed already because it has uh, thunderstruck in the back. [00:49:06] All right, well, that's what's going on there, peeps. [00:49:08] Um, we're going to talk about another story FISA. [00:49:12] So, the it's amazing. [00:49:14] Hold on, am I going to be able to find the tweet from Thomas Massey? [00:49:17] It's it's a war against Thomas Massey. [00:49:19] He says, you know, a and everyone who uh is convinced they don't like him is going to say, not a. [00:49:24] Thomas Massey has now taken a position against the clean extension. [00:49:28] Of the FISA 702, which is the exact same laws that were used to torment Donald Trump. [00:49:39] It was the exact same laws that were abused and exploited to target Carter Page. [00:49:45] Go to these secret FISA courts, Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, and you get these judicial warrants to spy on people on the basis that you're investigating non Americans on foreign soil. [00:49:58] And they have been massively abused. [00:50:01] On Trump himself. [00:50:03] And the question is now why would anyone agree to a clean extension of these very laws that is currently being contemplated? [00:50:14] This is coming out of the Hill, and I'm trying to steel man the argument as to why Trump himself at this point in time would want to support a clean extension of the very same laws that were weaponized and abused to usurp democracy in no uncertain terms. [00:50:31] We'll get there. [00:50:32] I think I can understand one of the arguments, which is now they're our tools to abuse. [00:50:35] And I'm saying that Machiavellian like, not as a criticism, maybe, but it seems wild that one would want to give an extension to these very Same provisions that were used, and I'm not even sure when they've been properly used with practical, you know, positive outcomes. [00:50:55] From The Hill, don't fall for Trump's lies. [00:51:00] FISA 702 endangers your privacy. [00:51:03] I didn't realize it was Premila Jayapal. [00:51:06] Opinion contributor. [00:51:08] That's actually kind of surprising. [00:51:09] I thought The Hill was mildly centrist, or at least more so than others. [00:51:16] Premila Jayapal is among one of the worst, but You still have to appreciate the arguments in order to try to steel man the opposition. [00:51:23] Section 702 of the Foreign Surveillance Act. [00:51:25] It's also amazing, by the way. [00:51:26] I mean, it is amazing to watch now Democrats who abused these laws back in the day to now argue why they shouldn't be extended. [00:51:33] Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act is a powerful authority to surveil Americans without a warrant, and it has a troubled history of misuse. [00:51:42] That is why a group of bipartisan members of Congress have been pushing for years to reform this authority to demand real protections and safeguards to put an end to loopholes and abuses that infringe on the privacy rights of people this year. [00:51:52] It is more important than ever that we achieve those fundamental reforms. [00:51:55] It is kind of amazing to see it happen in real time that the people who used these opaque laws and exploited them when they were in power want them not to be used when they're no longer in power. [00:52:09] Currently, the law is set to expire on April 20 unless Congress acts. [00:52:12] Trump and the White House Deputy Chief of Staff, Stephen Miller, have been pushing for a clean extension of the law with no new protections or safeguards. [00:52:18] This is a reckless move, especially dangerous given how the White House has decimated independent oversight, shut down key auditing offices, and purged the FBI, DOJ, and the office ODNI to prioritize loyalty to the president. [00:52:31] All of these arguments are terrible. [00:52:32] Can we just get to the good one? [00:52:34] Reckless. [00:52:37] This doesn't even follow, but it's also just factually incorrect. [00:52:41] The FBI has not been purged. [00:52:42] The DOJ has not been purged. [00:52:44] Maybe the ODNI has been purged, but the first two are factually incorrect. [00:52:48] Protecting Americans' constitutional rights while operating this surveillance program is only possible when key oversight and auditors within executive branch agencies are able to operate independently from the federal government and the president. [00:52:59] While this Department of Justice's actions have been particularly egregious, administrations on both sides of the aisle have routinely violated Americans' privacy rights and conducted surveillance on millions of people without any warrant or justification. [00:53:11] Or, as they did with Carter Page, they lie. [00:53:15] To a secret FISA court judge who rubber stamps the warrants and the renewals. [00:53:21] They falsify evidence that they submit, as they did Kevin Kleinsmith, to the judge who rubber stamps it. [00:53:29] This administration has made it particularly clear that there will be no independent check on the president's authority. [00:53:34] In fact, a recently published FISA court ruling shows that the FBI is already finding loopholes with agents conducting secret searches that have not been logged and audited as intended and required by law. [00:53:49] Now, President Trump is trying to sell warrantless surveillance by peddling the lie that this law doesn't affect Americans. [00:53:57] In a truth post, he framed Section 702 as a tool. [00:54:00] That will collect intelligence on foreigners and non citizens. [00:54:03] FBI Director Kash Patel on Fox News are echoing the talking point, insisting that it will only target foreigners outside of the U.S. and terrorist targets. [00:54:11] Simply not true, says Prayala. [00:54:14] Although Section 702 of the Surveillance Intelligence Surveillance Act authorizes foreigners abroad to be designated targets of this warrantless surveillance, the program sweeps up a huge amount of Americans' private communications in the process. [00:54:26] That's what we all said back when they were abusing it to go after Trump. [00:54:30] As recently as 2021, the FBI conducted 3.4 million warrantless searches of U.S. citizens' data, an increase of 1.3 million in the past. [00:54:39] But that, 2021. [00:54:41] As recently as 2021. [00:54:43] Hmm. [00:54:43] It's interesting which administration was doing that. [00:54:46] As a recent enormous outcry from civil liberties advocates and Americans of all political stripes, that number was substantially reduced in subsequent years. [00:54:53] But the intelligence community is failing to accurately report the number of Americans caught up in this warrantless mass surveillance program. [00:55:00] In fact, according to FISA court in 2024, the FBI used, quote, an advanced filter function. [00:55:05] To conduct U.S. person queries, allowing it to avoid counting and oversight requirements. [00:55:12] 2024. [00:55:15] How do people remain part of the party that they are now basically admitting was part of the problem? [00:55:20] According to the FISA court in 2024, the FBI used an advanced filter function to conduct U.S. person queries, allowing it to avoid counting and oversight requirements. [00:55:30] A Department of Justice review ordered by the FISA court was unable to determine how many such queries occurred or how many of these queries violated agency rules, shedding doubt on the numbers. [00:55:39] Provided by the FBI. [00:55:41] That same FBI, by and large, 98% still working at that same FBI. [00:55:45] There's been no purge of the FBI. [00:55:47] This is what happens when you see an argument that's raised by an ideological adversary and you can appreciate the factual basis upon which they are basing an argument that's actually factually incorrect. [00:56:00] So, this is how, presumably, Priyala, I forget her name now, is going to say it's going to be even more dangerous under this FBI because they've purged. [00:56:11] The DOJ and the FBI. [00:56:13] There's going to be no oversight when in reality, it's the exact same by and large, up to however many hundreds of employees they might have fired from the FBI of the 33,000. [00:56:22] It's the same FBI that's guilty of all of the abuses that are being observed in this very article. [00:56:29] Section 702 allows the government to target virtually anyone abroad so long as it may yield some foreign intelligence information. [00:56:35] As the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board stated before Trump fired the majority of the board, targets need not act at the behest of a foreign power. [00:56:43] They also don't have to violate US law or engage in the activities hostile to the United States. [00:56:47] They were abusing the FISA provisions beforehand. [00:56:52] The people that were supposed to be the oversight, Trump fired because they were obviously no oversight whatsoever. [00:56:57] And now they want to keep this law in place. [00:57:02] At least Trump wants to apparently pass a clean extension without any additional safeguards or even just not allowing for this extension. [00:57:10] Simply having information that might be relevant to diplomacy, international affairs, or international trade is not okay, whatever. [00:57:16] The permissive structure was the goal of the law to give the US government carte blanche for surveillance of people who are not protected from unreasonable searches and seizures under the Constitution. [00:57:25] But in reality, Americans can be surveilled too. [00:57:28] And they have been. [00:57:28] And it's been abused to conduct. [00:57:31] Judicial abuse and persecutions under the secrecy of the FISA courts. [00:57:35] Section 702 regularly incidentally collects the private emails and text messages of Americans and endangers the privacy of regular Americans who are in no way suspect of colluding with bad actors. [00:57:44] Trump's claim that the critical and common sense reforms were enacted and that these reforms are being aggressively executed at every level of the executive branch is just dishonest. [00:57:51] That's a conclusion, it's not a fact. [00:57:53] And House Speaker Mike Johnson has parroted the president. [00:57:55] Let's see what the rebuttal is to that. [00:57:58] Planned in this case could easily be interpreted as allowing Miller to continue this surveillance state with little to no oversight. [00:58:04] Compared to previous administrations. [00:58:06] The previous two examples that were given in this article were under the previous administration. [00:58:13] Moreover, almost all of the reforms enacted in the last reauthorization were window dressing that completely maintained the status quo. [00:58:20] In fact, the last Pfizer reauthorization expanded surveillance in substantial ways, including adding an expansion of the law that could force American businesses to help the government spy. [00:58:29] My bipartisan amendment to close the backdoor search loophole that allows for warrantless searches on Americans failed. [00:58:35] On a tie vote, the FBI has a long and troubling history of spying on Americans. [00:58:39] From the inception of the agency, we have seen disturbing behavior surveillance of Martin Luther King, anti war Vietnam War protesters, environmental groups. [00:58:47] Oh, we all know of this. [00:58:49] And, you know, the Joe Biden FBI, which by and large still remains employed. [00:58:54] Section 702 of FISA has been misused by administrations on both sides for too long to collect the private data, sensitive communications of Americans. [00:59:00] Congress must not authorize, reauthorize without real reforms and protections, including a warrant requirement to ensure Americans' Fourth Amendment rights to privacy are protected. [00:59:09] I can agree with that much. [00:59:10] What is the steel man argument? [00:59:12] Is it going to be that there's been some reforms or some, what they call window dressing reforms? [00:59:17] And so the protections are there to avoid the very same abuse that was rampant previously? [00:59:25] I mean, that's the. [00:59:26] I put it to Twitter. [00:59:27] I mean, in as much as we hope to be able to get any form of meaningful discourse, what is the steel man argument? [00:59:34] Let's just see how this turned out. [00:59:37] Well, let's go Viva Fry over on Twitter, FISA. [00:59:41] Yeah, forget that. [00:59:42] Okay, need a steel man. [00:59:44] Let's see what it is. [00:59:44] Let's see what it is. [00:59:45] There probably was a good argument once upon a time, but it's been so massively swamped up by the. [00:59:49] Exactly. [00:59:49] When the Patriot Act came along, Democrats warned us about the potential abuse. [00:59:52] What I didn't realize that it was them they were talking about recent attempted terror attacks, recent events and activity in the Middle East. [01:00:00] The only argument is that there are cases too sensitive to file publicly. [01:00:03] There's always the put something the people really want in the reauthorization option. [01:00:09] Well, I mean, I guess that's the argument. [01:00:12] We need you needed to spy on foreign. [01:00:15] It doesn't seem very difficult to have provisions there that just simply don't allow for the two step surveillance of American citizens. [01:00:24] But Sabin says, Congrats, Viva. [01:00:29] You moved from one socialist state to another on the way. [01:00:31] Great move. [01:00:32] It's not there yet. [01:00:33] Americans are not the same people as Canadians. [01:00:35] And in as much as I can do anything to raise the awareness and warn the people of what it looks like when it starts coming down, I will continue to do so. [01:00:45] And now, if there's a steel man argument out there, put it in the comments. [01:00:49] When this gets published, let me know what it is. [01:00:51] Above and beyond, now we really need it because we're in a state of war. [01:00:55] Hence, why you, you know, the war was never meant to be won, it was meant to be eternal. [01:00:59] George Orwell. [01:01:00] If that's the best argument, or the subsidiary argument is that there have been some improvements made, so it will not be or cannot be abused the way it was under the Biden administration, okay. [01:01:09] But it behooves me to understand why Trump would even want it, even operate on my more cynical theory. [01:01:15] Well, we want the tools of power now to abuse for our own political purposes. [01:01:21] The deep state that currently still lives and thrives within these departments will still use it. [01:01:30] And find their anti Trump operatives within that deep state to use it against Trump, lest we forget that a lot of the sabotage that occurred to Trump under his first administration occurred under his first administration. [01:01:44] So, even if the argument is that we want that power to wield right now, to abuse, to exploit whatever, there are still sufficient amounts of TDS, deep state, anti Trump elements within the DOJ, within the FBI, as far as I'm concerned, within the deep state departments. [01:02:03] That they will still be able to use it and go after Trump and his allies, especially if things go south during 2026 and 2028. [01:02:12] Now, let's go see what's going on over at Viva Barnes Law. [01:02:18] Locals.com, where we have the bestest above average community out there. [01:02:22] Bill Brown says, Viva, remember the New York City cops saying Wiener laptop would have consequences? [01:02:28] I remember people saying the Wiener laptop made people physically ill, that a number of cops met untimely demises thereafter, but. [01:02:38] F. Chartrand says they want permission to do what they are going to do, anyways. [01:02:41] One of the people says everyone who is a citizen is protected by the Constitution from searches and seizures without probable cause or a proper warrant. [01:02:47] Some people don't appreciate that if you're a legal resident, you're protected by the Constitution. [01:02:52] Legal resident. === Tyler Robinson Farm Raid (01:37) === [01:02:55] Yeah, so that's it. [01:02:57] Not reading that bill. [01:02:58] It gets nice here next week. [01:03:00] Oh, 80s, yeah. [01:03:03] What in the heck is that? [01:03:07] Bill has a farm, or at least Bill operates something that looks very much like a farm, has his own meat. [01:03:11] It's amazing stuff. [01:03:12] Oh, yes, that's right. [01:03:13] Tyler Robinson, we're going to talk about something here. [01:03:15] Where was that? [01:03:15] Eschatron. [01:03:16] Put that up in our locals community. [01:03:18] Hold up. [01:03:19] Hold up. [01:03:19] Wait a minute. [01:03:24] Yeah, well, that was our next story, actually, which we're going to do behind the. [01:03:28] Let me see. [01:03:30] Is anybody live currently on Rumble? [01:03:34] MAGA Civil War in full swing. [01:03:37] We're going to do this one at our party. [01:03:39] Go raid Tim Pool. [01:03:41] Tell him he's drinking something now. [01:03:44] Tell Pool that I say hi. [01:03:46] But before you do that, get your butts on over to locals. [01:03:49] And we're going to do two more stories, I think, at least two or one, but definitely Tyler Robinson at breaking news. [01:03:55] And then maybe Viva's just going to rant again a little bit today. [01:03:58] Now let's go raid Tim Pool. [01:04:00] Sunday night show, six o'clock, Viva and Barnes, Law for the People across all platforms. [01:04:06] And right now, we're going to do this forward slash raid. [01:04:13] Go. [01:04:14] Did I do it properly? [01:04:15] I don't think I did it properly. [01:04:17] Forward slash raid and confirm raid. [01:04:20] Boom. [01:04:21] There we go. [01:04:22] Now, everybody, if you're not coming over to Rumbles Premium and Viva Barnes Law. [01:04:26] Locals.com, I'll see you Sunday, but probably sooner with another family video where we'll take some crap about how I'm doing everything wrong.