正在加载视频...

视频加载失败

🚨The Alberta independence movement is growing I interviewed two dozen people at the petition signing event at the old Bearspaw historic school this afternoon. This video is a small sample of the comments. Here's a few take aways from the 2 hours I spent there. Everyone I spoke to...

39,705 次观看 • 5 个月前 •via X (Twitter)

0 条评论

暂无评论

原始帖子的评论将显示在这里

相关视频

Something is changing in Alberta… and you can feel it. Drone shots of a convoy rolling into Mirror. Trucks and cars lined up. Horns blaring. Alberta flags waving in the wind. An anthem playing over top that captures exactly what this moment feels like. Pride. Unity. Momentum. This wasn’t just a group of people showing up. These were volunteers and canvassers who had just spent an entire day traveling town to town, knocking on doors, reaching communities with no permanent signing locations, and collecting hundreds of signatures for Alberta independence. And then they came together to celebrate. Young and old. Rural and urban. All united by one idea: 👉 Alberta can stand on its own 👉 Alberta deserves a future built by Albertans 👉 Alberta is waking up I’m proud to have been part of it. And here’s the truth… If you’re watching this and thinking “I wish I was there” — you can be part of the next one. We are just getting warmed up. There are going to be more convoys, more rallies, and bigger gatherings all summer long. So here’s what you do: Get yourself a big blue beautiful Alberta flag Grab a few friends Show up next time Be part of something that actually matters. 🚨 HOW TO SIGN THE PETITION If you haven’t signed yet, this is critical: • You must sign in person • Look for an official Elections Alberta canvasser (badge required) • There are pop-up signing locations happening all over Alberta • There are permanent signing locations listed at • And there are canvassers going door-to-door right now This is how we turn momentum into real action. This isn’t just about a petition. It’s about the future of this province. And from what I saw in Mirror… Alberta is ready.

Jon Alberta Patriot

56,334 次观看 • 3 个月前

Angelina Jolie Has Finally Woken Up To The Fact The United Nations & Governments Are Run By Heartless Criminals There’s No Accountability For Crimes “If There’s A Business Interest Involved” “That is the biggest that is the most disheartening thing of I think we we or I thought at least even 20 years ago when I started to work internationally that there was this I in my head, some weird idea of good guys. You know? Some idea of those whether it be certain countries or certain people's maybe it was this holdover from World War 2 and this thought that this was, like so that the lines were clear and that there was going to be these human rights goals laid out and that there would be things stood up for, and that if these things weren't done, there would be pushback, and these were the and I really thought that's what it was. I even thought that's what the United Nations was… And I thought, okay. There's a there's some lines in the sand. There's some understanding. We're gonna grow and fight for improvements in these areas. And and to watch to watch and understand more and more how it's just simply that's not what it is. That's not the world. The world is not these are human rights. It is these are human rights sometimes for these people, maybe sometimes for these people, never for these people. Yeah. It's food aid, 6% for these people, 50% for these people, it's justice for these people, but not these people. Accountability for this crime, but not that crime if there's business interest. And this is truly the ugly state of of so much of the world that we are just becoming more and more aware of for just about every I mean, I don't know any countries that are are clean of it and, um, and willing to hold a line really consistently hand on behalf of the of human rights and laws”

Wall Street Apes

658,682 次观看 • 2 年前

Fort Saskatchewan shows up for Alberta independence petition despite deep freeze 🍁 Despite claims from mainstream media that independence supporters are 'fringe,' the crowd was anything but. Families, seniors and young people filled the hall. Lines stretched past 50 people at a time, in temperatures below -20 C. Rebel News was in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, where organizers hosted a town hall and petition signing aimed at triggering a referendum on Alberta independence and locals turned out in force. Under Alberta law, citizens can force a referendum by collecting 177,000 valid signatures within 120 days. Just three weeks in, organizers have already held dozens of town halls and signing events across the province. This one hit close to home. Fort Saskatchewan is an agricultural, oilfield, and refining community — three sectors battered by more than a decade of federal Liberal policies. Residents didn’t mince words about why they showed up. “I started working under Pierre Trudeau before the NEP,” said one signer. “I’ve seen nothing but destruction for this province since equalization was entrenched. It’s only gotten worse.” Others compared Canada’s treatment of Alberta to a bad marriage. “I’m tired of giving my money away. Alberta makes the money, and Ottawa takes it,” one woman said. Despite media claims that independence supporters are “fringe,” the crowd was anything but. Families, seniors, and young people filled the hall. Lines stretched past 50 people at a time, in temperatures below -20 C. About 350 people packed the town hall to hear speakers Mitch Sylvestre and Dr. Dennis Modry explain the petition process and the case for independence. Organizers say turnouts like this are happening across the province. Rebel News will continue covering petition events in both small towns and major cities to give a voice to Albertans the mainstream media ignores, or worse, willfully misrepresents. Sheila Gunn Reid

Rebel News

23,325 次观看 • 5 个月前

Journalist Nick Bryant, who published Jeffrey Epstein's infamous "Black Book": "This email [see tweet 2] seems to suggest that Epstein ran some kind of black market for babies...[and] the extreme Abuse survey... had all kinds of categories of extreme abuse. And breeders was one of them... [and] a number of the women [who responded said they] had been breeders." This clip of Bryant (Nick Bryant) is taken from a discussion with Shaun Attwood (Shaun Attwood) posted to YouTube on February 8, 2026. ---------------Partial transcription of clip---------------- "Through the years, and I didn't hear this in [the] Franklin [scandal], but I heard it in other people, from other people who I talked to that there was a black market for babies, that there were women who were just known as breeders. And this blackmail, this email seems to suggest that, that Epstein ran some kind of black market for babies... "[And] I have heard so many dark stories, I would suggest that your audience check out the extreme Abuse survey. It was conducted by two Germans and, and two Americans, I believe the three of them had PhDs. And one of them is Carol Rutz, who is a mind control survivor who wrote a book about it called A Nation Betrayed. And they had all kinds of categories of extreme abuse. And breeders was one of them. And there were, there were like 1,400 people that answered this survey. And a number of the people that answered it said that they, a number of the women had been breeders. "You know, it's one of those things with the Extreme Abuse Survey. You've got numbers. You got like 100 or 200 people saying that I did this or I was part of this, and you just kind of want to go, whoa. And then you come across this email from Epstein, and then it essentially corroborates what these women have told me. "And this stuff is so dark that it causes cognitive dissonance. For sure, we do not want to believe it that our fellow humans can be this evil, but unfortunately they are, and a lot of them are running the world."
2:30

Sensitive content

Journalist Nick Bryant, who published Jeffrey Epstein's infamous "Black Book": "This email [see tweet 2] seems to suggest that Epstein ran some kind of black market for babies...[and] the extreme Abuse survey... had all kinds of categories of extreme abuse. And breeders was one of them... [and] a number of the women [who responded said they] had been breeders." This clip of Bryant (Nick Bryant) is taken from a discussion with Shaun Attwood (Shaun Attwood) posted to YouTube on February 8, 2026. ---------------Partial transcription of clip---------------- "Through the years, and I didn't hear this in [the] Franklin [scandal], but I heard it in other people, from other people who I talked to that there was a black market for babies, that there were women who were just known as breeders. And this blackmail, this email seems to suggest that, that Epstein ran some kind of black market for babies... "[And] I have heard so many dark stories, I would suggest that your audience check out the extreme Abuse survey. It was conducted by two Germans and, and two Americans, I believe the three of them had PhDs. And one of them is Carol Rutz, who is a mind control survivor who wrote a book about it called A Nation Betrayed. And they had all kinds of categories of extreme abuse. And breeders was one of them. And there were, there were like 1,400 people that answered this survey. And a number of the people that answered it said that they, a number of the women had been breeders. "You know, it's one of those things with the Extreme Abuse Survey. You've got numbers. You got like 100 or 200 people saying that I did this or I was part of this, and you just kind of want to go, whoa. And then you come across this email from Epstein, and then it essentially corroborates what these women have told me. "And this stuff is so dark that it causes cognitive dissonance. For sure, we do not want to believe it that our fellow humans can be this evil, but unfortunately they are, and a lot of them are running the world."

Sense Receptor

38,142 次观看 • 5 个月前

This is the harrowing reality of what detransitioners face, says Chloe Cole ⭐️: “The moment that I detransitioned, I was human garbage to them. I was subhuman even. … They told me: ‘This is all your fault. Don't put this on us. You were the one who said yes, you were the one who wanted this. You were a complete idiot for not knowing that you weren't truly transgender. So don't come crying to us. And you should shut up about this because you might scare somebody out of getting the care that they really need. And you are a waste of resources. You are a waste of the love and support of your family. You didn't deserve the support of your doctors. You didn't deserve any of this. So stay quiet and stop being a problem.’ …There were people who were trying to compel me to retransition, people who were trying to tell me to kill myself, even just for the fact that I was going against the dogma. And I stayed low for a little bit. I apologized to the same people who were abusing me because I was a freshly traumatized 16 year old girl. I had been bullied in school before, but nobody had ever treated me this horribly over such a painful part of my life. But after a while of being painfully isolated. I started to really think the way that they are treating me is not deserved. I'm speaking to nothing but my experience, to the way that I feel and to reality. I'm going to speak up, regardless of whether they want me to or not. And I just knew that there had to be other detransitioners out there. And very quickly, I learned that they were in the thousands. And I'm sure that it's doubled, tripled, quadrupled over the years, the amount of us who are out there. We are never going to know the real numbers. …And some of the harassment, the hatred I faced over the years has gotten worse. I've been doxxed. I have had people assaulting me, chasing after me in government buildings, who have tried to hurt me, who have wished death upon me.”

Jan Jekielek

695,139 次观看 • 6 个月前

One of the most encouraging conversations I had in Red Deer was with the Alberta snowbirds from Yuma. These are Albertans who spend part of the winter in places like Arizona, and instead of checking out politically while they were away, they helped turn Yuma into one of the most unexpectedly inspiring little hubs of the independence movement. In this conversation, they explain that their Yuma team held six pop-up signing events, and at one of the bigger turnouts they saw roughly 350 people show up, with only a handful of canvassers trying to keep up. That is not a gimmick. That is real support showing up in the middle of another country because Albertans abroad still care deeply about what happens back home. That is why this matters. A lot of people saw the Yuma story as a funny social media moment. But it is actually much more than that. It is a sign that this movement has reached a level of mainstream visibility where ordinary Albertans are no longer waiting for permission, no longer hiding their support, and no longer treating independence as some fringe theory that only gets discussed in private. They are carrying it with them wherever they go. Arizona, Mexico, Hawaii, even farther afield. That tells you something important: this idea is alive in people now. It travels with them. It is becoming part of their identity. The Yuma team also makes another point that matters. They were not calling themselves heroes. They said they were just tough Albertans who were not going to put up with any more nonsense. That is exactly the spirit behind a lot of this movement. Not celebrity. Not performance. Not paid activism. Just regular Albertans deciding to do something real because they believe this can actually happen. And in the conversation I say exactly that: the reason so many people are out there, whether in Arizona heat or Alberta wind, is because we genuinely believe this can happen. That is a big part of why the Yuma story hit so hard online. It gave people a visible example of momentum. It showed that support is not confined to one town, one rally, or one demographic. It showed that even when Albertans are temporarily outside the province, they are still emotionally and politically invested enough to organize, collect signatures, and encourage others. That kind of behavior only happens when a movement starts to feel real. People do not go to that kind of effort for something they think is doomed. And yes, a few naysayers tried to mock it or imply there was something improper about collecting signatures outside Canada. But that criticism mostly reveals how weak and short-sighted the opposition is. An Albertan with Alberta identification is still an Albertan wherever he or she happens to be standing. There is nothing absurd about that. In fact, it would be absurd to suggest that Albertans somehow lose their political rights the moment they cross a border for a holiday. The mockery never really landed because it was rooted more in reflexive sneering than in serious thought. What the Yuma story really symbolizes is critical mass. When people start setting up pop-up canvassing events not just in Alberta but around the world, it means the movement is no longer surviving on theory alone. It means people feel momentum. It means they want to be part of it. It means they can picture success. And that encouragement matters, because political movements grow when ordinary people start seeing visible signs that victory is possible. That is why this was such an important little segment. It was not just about Yuma. It was about proof that Alberta independence is spreading, normalizing, and becoming something more and more people believe can actually be done.

Jon Alberta Patriot

16,854 次观看 • 3 个月前