Spending A Week In Canada's Most Dangerous City

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024

Комментарии • 973

  • @PhilipSoloTV
    @PhilipSoloTV  27 дней назад +6

    new merch run: scoopmerch.com

    • @bigdave6sic6
      @bigdave6sic6 27 дней назад

      Come to maskwacis hour south from there it's just as wild with the shooting n stabbings ...I too fell victim to it at one time or another being stabbed up haha

    • @davemonster2
      @davemonster2 27 дней назад

      Ive watched you since your 1st days, i was on the doom stream that wouldnt end. SCOOOOOOOOP!!!!!!!

    • @JoshFortj
      @JoshFortj 27 дней назад +1

      Anyone notice how his thumbnail completely ripped off Tyler Oliveira’s about London? Down to the same sign even

    • @barzdinstone3831
      @barzdinstone3831 26 дней назад +1

      Right wingers becoming gypsy caravans to "stick it" to the government is both funny and sad.

    • @Poppagee69
      @Poppagee69 22 дня назад +2

      File a ATIA request and by law they have to provide the information requested ( Canada's freedom of information act) . I live in Winnipeg and would love to learn how much disappeared into the pockets of a wealthy few at the expense of many being discarded as trash . There is laws in Canada that are a criminal offense for failing to provide the necessities of life covered in the charter and the human rights and it amazes me no law firm has filed a class action on behalf of these people

  • @ushireborn
    @ushireborn 25 дней назад +102

    that female real estate agent was high AF too lol

    • @ClayF403
      @ClayF403 23 дня назад

      Lol it's not hard to claim you're a real estate agent, any monkey can pass the test and get certified.

    • @makeyourself9110
      @makeyourself9110 22 дня назад

      She totally was, but the man in the beginning was not. This guy is a loser.

    • @user-hu7yt2ft1g
      @user-hu7yt2ft1g 20 дней назад +9

      Ex real estate agent 😞

    • @AStri-zg5xc
      @AStri-zg5xc 9 дней назад +2

      Yup.

    • @shawnp8672
      @shawnp8672 5 дней назад +4

      100% tweaking. Walked into a friggin bike rack lol

  • @sturner7929
    @sturner7929 27 дней назад +270

    100000 people in town.. 150 homeless... 273 million over 5 years... these numbers don't add up!!! We as Canadians are being scammed!!

    • @Roamingronald
      @Roamingronald 27 дней назад +22

      In every canadian city we are being scammed

    • @Destin4Life
      @Destin4Life 27 дней назад +6

      ​@@Roamingronaldtown or city everywhere its massive laundering.

    • @Roamingronald
      @Roamingronald 27 дней назад +8

      @@Destin4Life sad what canada has become

    • @Destin4Life
      @Destin4Life 27 дней назад +5

      @@Roamingronald it actually is super sad the fact there is nothing we can do about it makes it that much worse.

    • @overtonesnteatime198
      @overtonesnteatime198 27 дней назад +4

      and guess what? this is only one city,,,,,, imagine what other tows are doing... Nelson, BC..... Kelowna, BC..... Medicine Hat, AB...... Lethbridge... the list goes on and on.. its disgusting.

  • @PhilipSoloTV
    @PhilipSoloTV  24 дня назад +75

    Y’all want a Winnipeg version? I considered Surrey, Toronto and Winnipeg. Ultimately went with red deer bc the small town angle interested me and it factually has the worst crime rate as I write this

    • @Saraljinx
      @Saraljinx 24 дня назад +2

      Yeah , I’m curious about Toronto too!

    • @Misslilangel4ever
      @Misslilangel4ever 24 дня назад +7

      Should look into lethbridge ab

    • @toriamari649
      @toriamari649 24 дня назад +11

      Come to Winnipeg please please

    • @joshuathatcher8614
      @joshuathatcher8614 23 дня назад +10

      If you want the real most dangerous place in Canada go to Thompson MB

    • @bradyward6624
      @bradyward6624 22 дня назад +3

      Winnipeg is rank go there

  • @DoppaD
    @DoppaD 27 дней назад +114

    I worked in a non-profit for 10 years, and had to leave. I couldn't take the lies any longer... all of the non-profits in the area were the same. The numbers and impact of the organization were constantly altered in order to get more government funding, and that funding was undoubtedly misused by upper management. I left four years ago, and I still feel sick to my stomach when I think of that place... I feel guilt for even being a part of that organization, even though I was just a pencil pusher, and had no say in how anything was being ran.

    • @Donnyvoon
      @Donnyvoon 26 дней назад

      did they pay you well at least?

    • @chatman4998
      @chatman4998 26 дней назад +7

      @@Donnyvoonnon profits never pay employees well 😂

    • @macw4098
      @macw4098 22 дня назад +4

      Yeah, it's quite sick

    • @eyes2seeears2hear28
      @eyes2seeears2hear28 20 дней назад +1

      Did you work in Red Deer or anywhere in AB?
      If so can we chat privately?

    • @DoppaD
      @DoppaD 20 дней назад +3

      @@eyes2seeears2hear28 No, I'm out east in the Atlantic provinces

  • @corrosivesprings9526
    @corrosivesprings9526 27 дней назад +182

    Never clicked faster. Love you Philip. We all do. So happy to see you posting again lately. Keep looking for the scoop. You may never find it, but truly it’s the friends we make along the way to the scoop that make it all worth it.

    • @erikkibler3466
      @erikkibler3466 27 дней назад +9

      The friends along the way are the scoop

    • @krusher181
      @krusher181 27 дней назад

      @@erikkibler3466the scoop is the friends you make on the way to find a scoop. Beautiful

    • @kunyaco11
      @kunyaco11 27 дней назад +5

      Hell yea man
      But I think he manages to find the scoop everytime. I'm never unsatisfied by the scoop.

    • @corrosivesprings9526
      @corrosivesprings9526 26 дней назад +1

      @@kunyaco11 this is true. Schooooop.

  • @TheShakir98
    @TheShakir98 27 дней назад +27

    its crazy, about 11 years ago, when my family immigrated to Canada, they came to Red Deer and it was an ok place from what I remember very briefly, I was about 9. We stayed in a motel in Red Deer for about 2 weeks and moved to Quebec due to a job offering. Thanks to that place, we were introduced and saw little of the Canadian culture (hockey, Tims, pickup trucks, etc.) and now we are one of them.
    It's kind of sad to see that place being in that state now. I hope everyone there gets help.

  • @SuperSuperswag101
    @SuperSuperswag101 27 дней назад +14

    Every video I’m reminded why you are my favorite RUclipsr. Impressive journalism conducted here, really using your ability to vibe with anyone to good use more than ever before.

    • @makeyourself9110
      @makeyourself9110 22 дня назад

      Your favorite RUclipsr? A femboy who spreads propaganda?

  • @sebastienbolduc5654
    @sebastienbolduc5654 27 дней назад +156

    2 million per homeless person? Let me put that into perspective. If you gave each person $50k net per year you could sustain them comfortably for 40 years! Where is that money actually going?

    • @RedmilesShark
      @RedmilesShark 27 дней назад +30

      CEO pockets

    • @TheShakir98
      @TheShakir98 27 дней назад +7

      Ukraine and Isr#el

    • @zalac153
      @zalac153 27 дней назад +9

      50k a year wouldnt sustain anyone for a year in alberta, the rising fuel, food, rent, and utilities in what should be a very livable province is ridiculous

    • @710Chri
      @710Chri 27 дней назад +2

      Justin True dough

    • @hollye142
      @hollye142 27 дней назад

      Woah

  • @porkmasmmo
    @porkmasmmo 25 дней назад +22

    i'm a social worker in Southern Alberta. Your analogy of "it's a bandaid for a missing leg" is spot on. Homeless people are a "problem" to the Alberta government, and they want a "solution" which is just stashing them somewhere so it's out of sight, out of mind. These are people, human beings that are forgotten by the government. Thank you for this video.

    • @daphnedevine
      @daphnedevine 23 дня назад +1

      Hi! I'm in YYC myself and have been looking for (someone like) you! I have questions I've been searching for answers for months, almost a year tbh, still, no matter how hard I look, I CAN'T find the answers! Anyone I speak with abt it, advises me I need a civil servant. Ie: a 'social worker'. 3 weeks ago I posted in the jobs (office mngr/receptionsit) section of kijiji 'Looking for a civil/social servant' , but No replies yet! Any chance I could ask if you'd be into possibly helping out a fellow Canadian in need? I'm more than happy to $how my appreciation for your time! 😉 Thanks for your consideration. Feel free to respond to me there if you prefer. Cheerz

    • @timothythomson719
      @timothythomson719 22 дня назад +3

      Shouldn't individuals be at least somewhat responsible for their personal choices though? I'm really tired of the addicts and criminals trying to break into my building, making huge messes of garbage everywhere. It sucks. Why can't these addicts clean up their lives, even a little bit, work on building a career and stay out of trouble. No one is a saint, but at least put some effort into life.

    • @porkmasmmo
      @porkmasmmo 14 дней назад +1

      @@daphnedevine I'd be happy to help, but I'm not a registered social worker yet as I'm still seeking an education. (in my final year of my bachelors) If this is a problem then I'm sorry! If not, I'll keep in touch!

    • @derekpam7149
      @derekpam7149 9 дней назад

      Homeless or drug addict? Way different situation. You go ahead and rent your place to drug addicts but homeless is not drug addict. Drug addict is choice and are ruining every city a homeless person due to losses is never the same.

    • @dashitalker
      @dashitalker День назад

      It's not the fucking governments job to take care of people.
      Their families abandoned them.
      They abandoned themselves.

  • @Luke-tg9jy
    @Luke-tg9jy 27 дней назад +74

    Former alcoholic addict here. I can't speak for the homeless/shelters situation. But Red Deer is the new home of Canada's only long term (6-12months) addictions treatment center. I am now over 10 months sober/clean thanks to this place. Several people I meet there were homeless but it is struggle to find sober living, there isn't any in Red Deer. More of these treatment centers are being built in the country but affordable housing will be an issue across the country, as well as sober living. There is also a lack of psychiatic help in this city as well.

    • @hotdogwater9663
      @hotdogwater9663 27 дней назад +1

      stay strong brother

    • @temprary580
      @temprary580 27 дней назад +3

      There are plenty of long term residential treatment centres across Canada. Congrats on the sobriety though!

    • @yamaha893
      @yamaha893 27 дней назад +1

      keep up the good work brother

    • @eekthecat9933
      @eekthecat9933 27 дней назад

      Good job 👏

    • @D0VEWORLD
      @D0VEWORLD 23 дня назад +8

      One of the biggest psychiatric treatment centers in all of Canada is like 15 minutes outside of Red Deer in Ponoka.

  • @Dogmom1981
    @Dogmom1981 22 дня назад +13

    Couple of things you didn’t touch on, folks are being bussed in from the larger cities (Edmonton/Calgary) sometimes on a weekly basis. Strange that you would converse with the tax protestors, not sure what knowledge any of them had that was any way factual, none of them were from Red Deer. You also should have visited the shelters and kitchens and spoken with the volunteers, they would shed some much needed light on your story. Volunteers are not in it for money or applause, they would be honest and true to their thoughts on what is happening in Red Deer. Sure there were homeless people before but it’s gotten exceptionally worse since the supervised consumption service opened.

    • @Shibley212
      @Shibley212 8 дней назад +1

      Calm down dog mom lol

    • @purechilling
      @purechilling 8 дней назад +1

      You are right this guy sure does twist the story. Our city is doing alot more for the homeless but when we get bus loads dropped on us cause we are doing so much better than our bigger counter parts.

  • @bbloodyangel1
    @bbloodyangel1 27 дней назад +52

    I really thought this would be Winnipeg.

    • @travkozak1201
      @travkozak1201 27 дней назад +3

      Or Regina

    • @RealBoiJare
      @RealBoiJare 26 дней назад +3

      @@travkozak1201exactly, I thought they’d be filming my city lol

    • @joshuathatcher8614
      @joshuathatcher8614 23 дня назад

      I definitely expected Thompson. Murder rate is the same as Detroit.

    • @debbiemassey7711
      @debbiemassey7711 15 дней назад +3

      Or downtown Vancouver.

    • @justauser
      @justauser 7 дней назад

      I don't think Winnipeg is as bad as the DTES Vancouver, that's probably the epicenter of crime and chaos

  • @devandufresne9886
    @devandufresne9886 24 дня назад +13

    Watching from Red Deer. Thanks for the video, and for humanizing the less fortunate here.

  • @mitchellverigin
    @mitchellverigin 25 дней назад +19

    This is really good work Phillip. I think this is a smart direction for you to pursue. Canadians are not being informed by the legacy media and they need to have information like this to make good decisions. You are one of my favorite citizen journalists. Keep it up rockstar.

  • @meggiemegggs
    @meggiemegggs 27 дней назад +30

    *Please come to Hamilton Ontario.* It’s a zombie land here. It’s crazy. I’d be happy to meet you here to talk about what’s going on. It’s chaos

    • @dylankitchener6421
      @dylankitchener6421 23 дня назад +1

      I was homeless there when i was 16 that was 10 years ago havent been there since

    • @BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeat
      @BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeat 23 дня назад +4

      Also has cool history with Italian mobs and biker gangs

    • @dylankitchener6421
      @dylankitchener6421 23 дня назад +1

      @@BigpapamoneymanMVPtypebeatnah never got into that i was in a place called NotreDame youth shelter for a while

    • @roudyman777
      @roudyman777 13 дней назад

      All Hamilton is known for is that African dude who knowingly spread AIDS to hundreds of women and multiple of them died from it, great reputation that city has

  • @wordsretainpower6250
    @wordsretainpower6250 27 дней назад +17

    It ultimately is up to the addict if they want to get better. I'm an ex addict...
    Government intervention only means the Government will find a way to take YOUR money to profit off the problem.

  • @bigdingo8848
    @bigdingo8848 27 дней назад +67

    My wife worked in the homeless serving sector in a few roles. She had to get out when she realized just how insidious the economy of that sector is. Every organization has a financial incentive not to make genuine progress, they cherry-pick easy wins to demonstrate that they are helping people, they ignore the most needy people and they put on their bleeding-heart facades when it comes to talking about how uncontrolled addiction and mental health issues results in victimization of non-homeless folks, crime, property damage, etc.
    I genuinely believe that so many communities have allowed the issues to fester for so long and the drugs now cause so much brain damage (including all of the anoxic damage from the endless cycle of ODs and reviving someone) that there are very large populations of homeless people who can never actually 'recover'. We are now forced as a society to figure out what to do with these people we ruined.

    • @MarkusArkus5
      @MarkusArkus5 27 дней назад +1

      Well said!

    • @andrewfranquelin3184
      @andrewfranquelin3184 27 дней назад

      Same with IHSS and social security assistance programs. New ones are alright but the old institutions are busted and just sucking money while doing nothing but maintain the minimum

    • @CamStubbs
      @CamStubbs 27 дней назад

      Bless your wife ❤

    • @factsdontlie4342
      @factsdontlie4342 24 дня назад +1

      We, as a society, cannot help these people. We are being replaced and addiction is one part of it.

    • @Carponchia-z8k
      @Carponchia-z8k 13 дней назад +1

      Society has fallen so much when parents can not feed or protect their children. I saw a drug-addicted teenager who was oblivously homeless and had mental-health issues.
      😢

  • @Chinchilla2310
    @Chinchilla2310 27 дней назад +26

    We as Canadians need to prioritize ourselves, not refugees and “newcomers.” A big reason why housing is so prohibitively expensive in the cities is due to unsustainable mass immigrants policies established by Trudeau and his cabinet. These newcomers are also highly nepotistic, once an Indian gets a position as a hiring manager, there’ll never be another Canadian hired. Corporate greed also plays a huge factor here, since the newcomers will gladly fill in for a “labour shortage” for subpar pay and conditions to ensure wage suppression.

  • @Unterwelten
    @Unterwelten 22 дня назад +5

    The Consultant Industrial Complex are writing their own cheques - and solving nothing.

  • @Caarsynn
    @Caarsynn 27 дней назад +9

    from sylvan, thanks for shining light on this man 🇨🇦

  • @Vandavyr
    @Vandavyr 27 дней назад +8

    I've worked in the not-for-profit industry for nearly a decade and it's always the same thing no matter what the organization does or what the mission is, whether it's addiction, homelessness, or severe mental health issues.
    The frontline workers who interact most directly with people have very little power over the quality of programs or housing or anything that gets provided to the people in need which feels terrible, and in addition to that, they're subjected to their own types of trauma when they face people targeting them with weapons or assaulting them in other ways, or just having to be the first person to hear about somebody dying at the place you work.
    I was homeless for 6 years of my teenage life and it's what made me want to get into this industry to begin with. But the more I'm inside of it the more I can see how the gears turn and how that the people at the very top talk the talk but don't walk the walk, and as much as I'd like to blame incompetence, I can see all of the handpicked statistics when we send annual reports out to shareholders or people with stakes inside of these charities. There's really no accountability, even internally and like I'm sure many know many charities do just enough work to get funded but never enough work to solve the problem.
    I recently asked this question that the charity I was working with last, " what happens when we solve the problem? Do we make a new charity? Do we lose our jobs?"
    They didn't really have an answer for me. That was one of the directors of that organization and to me it says a lot that non-profits and charities have mission statements and visions to be sold to the government for profit. Not all of them exceed a ludicrous amount of money. I guess if you compare it to something like Goodwill and that CEO salary, but nonetheless, some of these plans are just like Phil pointed out in the video, ongoing never-ending repeat plans that aren't ever going to actually end any of the problems for people who are deeply street entrenched or struggling with addictions and have mental health challenges.
    If you're ever considering donating to a charity because you feel like you want to help or change somebody's life, just take the time to do it. Don't waste your money.

  • @carlavaneeden8383
    @carlavaneeden8383 23 дня назад +2

    from my experience, a strong majority of homeless are drug addicts/alcoholics. They don't want the responsibility of having a home so simply giving them one won't change anything. Another thing I noticed in my city, at least, is that most of the people living in tents aren't from here, have no family or connections, but when I ask them why they chose to come they never give me an answer. I don't know what that means but I'd really like to know why people from another city or provence are choosing to move to my city of all places are start up a tent city? They are given tents, tarps, sleeping bags, etc. They have hot meals delivered to them twice daily along with people who check to make sure everyone is okay. They have their own cafe across the street with computers, coffee, food, people to help with applying for more resources, doctors, a methadone clinic and more for their convience. I'd like to reiterate, all of this assistance is going to people who aren't even from this location. My city never had this problem, it just popped up seemingly overnight. Why did they choose to come here? How did they get here? Why all at the same time? I'm not asking these questions out of hate or discrimination. I've learned what I know because I have to go to that area of town about once a week and I alwayse see people asking for change, causing trouble, or just hanging around so I try to take an opportunity to have a chat with someone, whoever is willing, and give em a few bucks if I can. I have so many questions.

  • @leonardpriestley6822
    @leonardpriestley6822 27 дней назад +8

    "I've never seen water wrap around a ball, man. Wake up from your illusion, man"

  • @user-tm7ew5ik2i
    @user-tm7ew5ik2i 27 дней назад +17

    I want to personally thank you for using your platform to speak out about what is happening in Canada rn especially in BC specifically smaller communities are getting hurt the most .
    I do harm reduction in my community and other is trying to educate people on addiction and safe use. You were right when you said you were just putting a Band-Aid on a bigger issue thees people need proper treatment in a secure facility, proper mental health help ❤ and more

  • @rigamortiis3951
    @rigamortiis3951 27 дней назад +18

    I’m from Stockton California and we’re going through similar shit out here. Millions of dollars were supposed to help the homeless but it never happened. The homelessness out here is always growing too.

    • @stephengiannone5449
      @stephengiannone5449 27 дней назад

      Its called the homeless industrial complex much like the military one . Never ending problem to siphon money from tax payers while politicians and their donars pocket the money.

    • @chaddk8615
      @chaddk8615 27 дней назад

      Shitholes are world wide I suppose.

    • @Mortal209
      @Mortal209 27 дней назад

      Oh buddy, that's been a thing in Stockton for over 20 years now. They've been saying they'll end homelessness, same with Modesto and every other 209 town. Turlock is like that now, they're filled to the brim with homeless people vs 10 years ago where most of the homeless people had their own camps away from people (except for those who were hardcore tweaking).

  • @Shanto-LIVE
    @Shanto-LIVE 27 дней назад +6

    Love the ending. Edmonton construction that drags on for months if not years, and always goes overbudget. 😂
    Great video.

  • @mitchzurbrigg2403
    @mitchzurbrigg2403 22 дня назад +5

    This is what happens when you let foreign investors buy all the property for their portfolio, then let immigrants come in a buy all.the remaining houses. Canadian born citizens end up priced out and homeless with nowhere to go but down. Thanks Trudeau!

    • @stacyc5657
      @stacyc5657 12 дней назад

      It's heartbreaking 💔... I used to love Red Deer, and I used to love Canada.

  • @Big-boned_Pikachu
    @Big-boned_Pikachu 22 дня назад +3

    Phillip, I met you quite a few years ago at West Edmonton Mall. We had a quick chat about how you were making videos about the homelessness issues in the city and how you had recently helped a man get a place to stay (I kind of interrupted you while you were eating lunch, sorry!). I'm glad you're still making videos about these issues. The shame of it all is we're all affected by these issues, but not enough people realize it.
    I hope that eventually, we can reform how our government works (to prevent this kind of corruption) and get positive results for everyone living in Alberta. It might take a while, but I hope that I live long enough to see it happen.

  • @killeralltires
    @killeralltires 27 дней назад +6

    Every trilogy has its own attack of the clones. holy s*** that's f****** beautiful. Great video bucko!

  • @wyatttelford324
    @wyatttelford324 27 дней назад +17

    Best episode youve ever done. Good job bucko!

    • @407aiden7
      @407aiden7 27 дней назад

      🧢

    • @BoBosworth56
      @BoBosworth56 27 дней назад

      Very good episode but not sure why he blamed it on capitalism when it is the government making the money off of the taxpayers backs. That is socialism lol

  • @petemiller6131
    @petemiller6131 23 дня назад +3

    So glad I found your channel. I love your content man. Very well done 👏

  • @poetato18
    @poetato18 26 дней назад +2

    My dude does real journalism.

  • @dirtypatwalsh
    @dirtypatwalsh 26 дней назад +8

    Great video Philip. I’m a long time subscriber and I think this is my favorite video you’ve done 🫵😎👍 I live in Peterborough, and we have a huge homeless population. Also an even bigger addict community. 25 years ago we were a completely different city…if you spent more than $300 a month on rent, you were paying too much…folks never locked their houses, biggest threat was getting caught up in a game of frisbee after the bar shut…totally different now. It’s a violent ghost like downtown…I love my city and am not leaving but I think this is the new normal in most places now. I feel so so blessed to have a stable home. I’m no stranger to abject poverty or addiction.

  • @ImxJustxAnxEmoxKid
    @ImxJustxAnxEmoxKid 27 дней назад +2

    I love you Philip, this video was very well put together and really highlights an issue that is extremely prevalent in North America right now, and also here in Hawaii. Big respect for getting out into the nitty gritty and sharing the reality of what it's like for a lot of homeless.

  • @tripleisoffline
    @tripleisoffline 27 дней назад +6

    0:50 Unc runs the whole block

  • @ClayF403
    @ClayF403 23 дня назад +4

    Great info in the video but i think the title is a little over the top. Ive lived here since the 90s and violence is extremely rare unless you 'live that lifestyle'. For 99%+ of the population its an extremely safe city and the worst youd have to deal with is someone trying your car door handle to steal change.

  • @HammerHeadamc
    @HammerHeadamc 27 дней назад +8

    Worked for ST Vincent de Paul in Idaho and everything is so corrupt, it’s insane! Love it! You should dig way deeper into this

    • @GuineaPig91
      @GuineaPig91 27 дней назад

      Interesting. Give examples please..

  • @Unterwelten
    @Unterwelten 22 дня назад +2

    Btw, good to see you again Philip!

  • @Ravens-ft2hn
    @Ravens-ft2hn 16 дней назад +3

    A lot of the homeless money is lost in the trickle down effect....True Story.

  • @TheTempestSync
    @TheTempestSync 26 дней назад +3

    love this Video Phil! its very eye opening to how the government is pocketting money from hard working Canadians. I hope some government officials come across this video. keep up the good work.

  • @34GarageOfficial
    @34GarageOfficial 25 дней назад +2

    You are doing important work Phil. Thank you for casting a light on this absurdity and giving a voice to those affected.

  • @brokenclockfilms
    @brokenclockfilms 27 дней назад +6

    Great video man! Appreciate this. I had a friend in St Albert who discovered the same thing happening over there and St Albert ain't even like that really. It's time to actually get to the bottom of this and we need to somehow find a way to get in contact with these people whether it takes social media to do so, protest and dedication. Sad thing is politics here in Canada is tied with organized crime so the repercussions are serious if just one person gets too close.

    • @wesleyc8101
      @wesleyc8101 26 дней назад

      wtf you talking about? There’s no homeless in St. Albert and definitely low crime in St. Albert, that’s why rent and property prices are so high in St. Albert. It’s a nice place to live, everyone wants to move there.

    • @brokenclockfilms
      @brokenclockfilms 22 дня назад

      @@wesleyc8101 I've been homeless in St. Albert. I know friends there who are homeless. All you got to do is google St Albert Homeless. Not a huge task to even find out that there was a task force in St Albert that was set up to "end homelessness" hence why a friend of mine decided to do a little digging to get to the bottom of why nothing was being done where he found out that millions of funding was not being tracked as the homeless issue persists through out Alberta and went as far as to start a petition over it after failing to get any word from the government. St Albert was a part of a care package funded by tax payers money where millions of dollars... just gone and disappeared. And no one wants to talk. I know damn well wtf I'm talking about. I've lived in St Albert for over a decade, I'm fully aware how the crime is in St Albert, in fact it's where I first got into the life of crime myself before finding my way through getting the fuck out that hell hole excuse of a suburb.

    • @brokenclockfilms
      @brokenclockfilms 22 дня назад

      @@wesleyc8101 And I even said "St Albert ain't even like that really" but lets just skip that part and spaz out in the comment section for no reason, right?

    • @brokenclockfilms
      @brokenclockfilms 20 дней назад

      Back because I've received notifications... Where's my fucking initial response comment on the corruption in Alberta's humanity programs and why haven't I been notified that it's been removed? WTF!!!!

  • @3rdeyegirl83
    @3rdeyegirl83 19 дней назад +4

    You were in Red Deer?! I live here. Yes it is bad. It is very sad. Downtown is scary.

  • @EditorJord
    @EditorJord 27 дней назад +3

    Great investigative journalism once again. Homeless industry, you're right on the money with this one.

  • @brianceron4010
    @brianceron4010 24 дня назад +2

    Philip doing investigative journalism! one of the many great topics on the channel, good 1 Bucko 👌damn we are in a shitstorm

  • @wpgtransitfan0333
    @wpgtransitfan0333 27 дней назад +4

    When I saw the thumbnail, I thought it was going to be Winnipeg lol

  • @viperking299
    @viperking299 27 дней назад +4

    I wanted to move to Canada a few years ago, but every time I've clicked on one of Phillip's videos it always looks so bad. The big cities look like drug dens, the small cities are full of poverty and homelessness. What the hell happened?

  • @camerond9941
    @camerond9941 27 дней назад +6

    like where the scoops are going, keep it up

  • @Teybae
    @Teybae 26 дней назад +2

    love how real you always keep it bucko. 10/10 content

  • @nickh5195
    @nickh5195 27 дней назад +4

    Real ones remember the worst reviewed hotel (in red deer) video

  • @synthem9389
    @synthem9389 24 дня назад +1

    you're wonderful, Philip. even if you sometimes feel the opposite (as a life-long sufferer of depression, i often do), yes, you're wonderful.

  • @HardTrancid
    @HardTrancid 27 дней назад +4

    I'm sure there's more than 150 Homeless there... And if they only need 273 Million, It scares me what Edmonton would need cause.... It's way worse here. Politicians getting rich, if they really wanna clear it up, free fentanyl buffet all you can eat. Sadly most people don't want to get off the drugs, I've grown desensitized I don't even call 911 anymore.

  • @blanchae
    @blanchae 25 дней назад +1

    Just found your channel and appreciated your honest down to earth reporting. I've shared your video and subscribed. Thanks for your work.

  • @TGIRiley
    @TGIRiley 27 дней назад +3

    Big Channel 5 vibes from this video! You should do more interviews

  • @yurikaplun3612
    @yurikaplun3612 27 дней назад +1

    Man, that's some real quality journalism right here. Thank you for the amazing job, Bucko.

  • @UtubeViewer1337
    @UtubeViewer1337 27 дней назад +6

    Thanks for always giving us the scoop me bucko!

  • @beautanner8409
    @beautanner8409 15 дней назад +1

    The guy who was recovering from addiction was really inspirational. I hope more folks are able to follow his route out of the woods.

  • @devinhymers1
    @devinhymers1 24 дня назад +3

    You need to do a part two. Apparently the guy who owns the soup kitchen is a bit of a gangster. Also there is a shift work lineup of people holding signs on the sylvan lake over pass. Iv seen them pick up and drop people off in new trucks. We need answers Phillip!!!!

  • @ddiggity1234
    @ddiggity1234 27 дней назад +2

    Incredible video Phillip, you nailed it.

  • @Jakeisvibeing
    @Jakeisvibeing 23 дня назад +4

    I’ve watched your stuff on and off since I think 2019 just crazy to see how far your channel has come

  • @EseDrakeBell
    @EseDrakeBell 27 дней назад +2

    Canadas most dangerous city = americas most safest city

  • @hulkasaurus
    @hulkasaurus 27 дней назад +3

    Good job bro this is a great step forward. I know you have IT you will make a difference if you stay on this course.

  • @anettevazquez6554
    @anettevazquez6554 23 дня назад +2

    I’m from red deer, honestly it’s been a roller coaster with the crime rate when I was a kid it was a decent city then as a teenager the crime escalated and now it’s going down due to the city trying to clean up its act, I used to see at least 10 homeless people a night in downtown if I went for a drive and now I barely ever see one there still a drug problem but that’ll be hard to fix as these people are used to that life and want no help.

  • @dalezuccatto7001
    @dalezuccatto7001 22 дня назад +3

    The homeless shelter they are talking about is called the mustard seed. It is privately own and is for profit. I had a friend there and he said you can buy drugs out side the facility and also sales were also taking place in side and none of the staff said or did anything about it. He was there for almost 2 weeks before I helped him get a job

  • @martinboulay5243
    @martinboulay5243 5 дней назад

    Thanks man ! We need more people like you. I'm a vet and have been homeless at one point in my life. Keep on digging and follow the money trail as we say, there more then meets the eyes

  • @garrylarose1506
    @garrylarose1506 27 дней назад +13

    One thing that gets glossed over a lot by most people, is self responsibility. Everyone has trauma in their pasts, some worse than other of course. But taking responsibility for your own actions, or inactions is an extremely important step towards growth and healing. Blaming everyone else and anything else to avoid your own actions is not healthy or helpful. Obviously some people suffer from varying degrees of mental health problems, but a lot of those are drug induced too. Ive seen it first hand with friends and family unfortunately. Having mental health institutions be a major part of the Canadian healthcare landscape is a necessary part of ever trying to control the addictions and homeless on the streets.

    • @ctaylor8003
      @ctaylor8003 27 дней назад

      Yeah blame the kids. Those 6 year olds should have taken more personal responsibility.

    • @Bullock0099
      @Bullock0099 27 дней назад +2

      @@ctaylor8003 Get real. There are plenty of people with screwed up life situations who don't choose a life of drugs and robbery.

    • @garrylarose1506
      @garrylarose1506 26 дней назад

      @@ctaylor8003 ya good strawman argument lol

  • @elijahhedgemondakasupersai1075
    @elijahhedgemondakasupersai1075 27 дней назад +2

    I haven’t watched anything on this channel in such a long time and somehow apparently I unsubscribed, but it’s good to be back and good to see this.

  • @jamesglode7171
    @jamesglode7171 20 дней назад +3

    The hotel is literally 3-400 feet from the RD hospital up the hill and dq kitty corner to the hotel... almost everytime your downtown there is usually alot of homeless and undesirables around... you dont walk around at night if you can help it...
    I think its a liberal/ndp mindset to allow canada to be destroyed... just my opinion .... it doesnt need to be this way

  • @Ayso
    @Ayso 17 дней назад +1

    I remember that this place use to be lowkey kinda nice years ago. I haven't stayed overnight in this town but it's sad to see what has happened here.

  • @saymstuff
    @saymstuff 24 дня назад +3

    Where there is money there is corruption. You can't cure homelessness and drug addiction when the powers that be would rather you stay addicted as long as possible until you die. Most things are a business. Birth, death, war, prison, addiction...etc.

  • @Fhantasyy
    @Fhantasyy 7 дней назад

    As a person who is active in the recovery community in red deer and the surrounding area, active addiction is destroying red deer and its sad. The turn around in and out of our doors of our groups is absolutely scary.
    I want nothing more to see the problems addressed by the city and the province because I have seen it go downhill around here and it's only getting worse.
    Anybody out there struggling please remember one day at a time, and remember you are fucking worth it. ❤️

  • @CameronExplores
    @CameronExplores 27 дней назад +3

    Showing the real Canada my bucko

  • @traviswright8958
    @traviswright8958 25 дней назад +1

    Spent years in RedDeer, completed a welding apprenticeship and got out. Unfortunately my family still lives there.

  • @johnathongough7754
    @johnathongough7754 27 дней назад +5

    That "vigilante" claim is fake. These fiends burn their own tents and crap from cigarettes and propane.

  • @scottm3257
    @scottm3257 26 дней назад +1

    The guy at the beginning is a humble philosopher. He said the most with the least amount of words and didn't let pride get in the way. Straight, simple, words. Listen

  • @CnekYT
    @CnekYT 23 дня назад +6

    As a Calgary resident, Red Deer as long as I can remember has always been the butt of the joke - no one usually has anything good to say about Red Deer
    That being said when you look at smaller Canadian cities, Thompson, Manitoba is the worst for crime rates - but as a whole smaller town and city Canada tends to be a lot worse for crime than major cities in Canada. It may come as a shock to most Americans how bad many small towns and cities in Canada are for crime, with many of them such as Red Deer being worse than similar American counterparts for crime: the worst Canadian towns and cities are a lot worse than the worst American towns and cities for crime

    • @CnekYT
      @CnekYT 23 дня назад +1

      I believe the main reason why Western Canadian towns particularly struggle with this so much is mainly due to corruption. Unfortunately Red Deer is the rule and not the exception and corruption in these smaller towns and cities are rampant. The provincial governments regardless of being left or right in the 4 western provinces have a horrible track record (especially the current Alberta government which is probably the worst in all of Canada), and many of the municipal governments are even worse. Red Deer is the tip of the iceberg and places like Fort McMurray and Grande Prairie are even worse.

    • @ericdubois5750
      @ericdubois5750 20 дней назад

      Actually I've heard from many newcomers to my home town
      That they were glad to be here and happy they left where they were.
      The only problem with Red Deer is it is sandwiched between two NDP strongholds and we have a lefty mayor that's useless like the rest of his ideologues.

  • @-GRAVESITE-
    @-GRAVESITE- 24 дня назад +2

    I’m sure those “vigilantes” were NOT unprovoked.

  • @sammeyers6157
    @sammeyers6157 27 дней назад +3

    Im so glad i stopped my addiction. It ruined my life, thank goodness my family never gave up on me. They should've many times over but they believed i could stop. eventuality, i got sick of it and got on suboxine it saved my life say what you want its switching another addiction for another but it saved me. Wish more people could be helped or wanted to be helped so many of my friend's died or are terrible people shits fucking sad.

  • @XanltheCSG
    @XanltheCSG 27 дней назад +1

    It's happening in Seattle too. If there's always a homelessness crisis, there's always a need to charge the taxpayer of the money they sweat and bled for - this includes recovered addicts who pay back into the system - and it will always disappear into unseen wallets. The dark side of this in Seattle, is that people do not want to even be treated. They're not people ejected from asylums, addicts who are down on their luck, or people priced out of homes. The studies have shown that somebody on the street in this area purely for monetary lack, wind up back on their feet within 10 months. The majority of homeless in Seattle are people who uncaringly burned out the patience of every loved one in their life, and lives on the street out of pride and spite, and this was behavior that preceded addiction. That is an attitude that fundamentally cannot be cured by any program. The other case is someone so far gone in drug induced psychosis that there is no fate for them besides an eternity on lorazepam in a facility at $10,000 a day or a mercy killing. Don't you love modernity?

  • @Iam36ty5
    @Iam36ty5 27 дней назад +3

    Honestly, you should change the title to something like "Exposing City for stealing 273 Million Dollars" Might make more waves.

  • @madisonbraden
    @madisonbraden 6 дней назад

    Currently living red deer watching this. It's sad recognizing some people, thank you for shedding light on our little city that is in ruins. This morning there was a homeless raid in the forest. They usually are very rude and leave them with nothing. It's heartbreaking seeing this and it's so hard to recognize the once full of life downtown. When safe injection sites opened I knew it was going to turn bad, I'm saddened it much worse than I expected.

  • @sergwiesen8563
    @sergwiesen8563 27 дней назад +5

    i am from costa rica and that place seems so good for me. we have more scary places lol but i really enjoy the video and thanks for this high level content my bro

  • @OtipemisiwakObservation
    @OtipemisiwakObservation 5 дней назад

    Oh my god. It was local knowledge that Red Deer was balls, but you, my friend, have spread the word. That place needs some serious help!

  • @lookitsmyvideo
    @lookitsmyvideo 27 дней назад +32

    It blows my mind that people think 15 minute cities is a bad thing and a way to control people. Anything those people say can be completely ignored because they only know conspiracy

    • @skinnflint
      @skinnflint 27 дней назад +10

      Yes living close to a grocery store somehow terrible

    • @jimbo3860
      @jimbo3860 27 дней назад +2

      I think a lot of the conspiracies come from the proposal in Oxford, UK. They publicised that they wanted to allow residents to drive between 'zones' in the city a certain number of times per year for free, after which they would be charged. It was going to be enforced by licence plate cameras. I'm not sure if they are still going ahead with it.

    • @Hpencer
      @Hpencer 26 дней назад +11

      I promise you that you have so much to learn if that's what you think.

    • @Seabass1206
      @Seabass1206 25 дней назад

      and all u know is how to follow orders like a dog! lots of people have been screwed over by the government and these organizations that are pulling strings behind the scenes! your privileged buddy

    • @factsdontlie4342
      @factsdontlie4342 24 дня назад

      It blows my mind that people still believe the government after decades of lies. Grade A moron.

  • @nedved1198
    @nedved1198 21 день назад

    BUCKO, THANK you for getting Trench Coat back on Spotify!!! Just noticing this now!
    BTW, objectively probably your BEST scoop yet with this video! Thank you!

  • @MrEbbor
    @MrEbbor 27 дней назад +8

    The people need a philipsolo x andrew callaghan colab!!

  • @longtyler182
    @longtyler182 27 дней назад +1

    One thing this video taught me is that the US and Canadian governments are the exact same as one another in terms of the homeless issues in both countries. That’s so depressing…yikes.

  • @deepdivedisco4779
    @deepdivedisco4779 27 дней назад +3

    I've watched all your stuff, and I think the tangent you're going in is a good one -- bringing to attention to the public on important social matters. Everyone needs to be heard! I love you man!!

  • @morganthomas1835
    @morganthomas1835 10 дней назад +1

    For an addict you sure as fuck do not understand addiction.
    You can NOT "pull it together" locked down is a secure facility, that is someone else imposing their will on you, much like incarceration.
    You also cannot get better, or get a job if you don't have a roof over your head. Period.
    Poverty is the problem, for many the solution is a drug, history is replete with examples.

  • @reidriflemaintanence8452
    @reidriflemaintanence8452 27 дней назад +3

    Fuck yeah, Bucko. This is deadly work.
    You could do similar down in Lethbridge.

  • @mrrpenguinn
    @mrrpenguinn 27 дней назад +1

    philip. this is ur best vid yet. keep goin

  • @sacragon
    @sacragon 27 дней назад +3

    11:09 This is not capitalism at all. It's not businesses or markets doing this. It's tax dollars spent by the state.

    • @barretprivateer8768
      @barretprivateer8768 27 дней назад

      Precisely, state funded organizations are often more corrupt and less efficient than privately run ones, not sure why people don't understand this.

  • @therealraginggun
    @therealraginggun 7 дней назад +2

    dude, facts.... my sister was murdered and left behind a bus stop in Red Deer, Alberta. Happened in 2009, so this is not new news

    • @jaiichilton863
      @jaiichilton863 День назад

      Omg..behind the greyhound??i remember that.! I’m so sorry for you loss. I never heard any follow up from that case

    • @therealraginggun
      @therealraginggun День назад

      no follow up because the police didn't investigate. They did nothing.

  • @Messiisthebest724
    @Messiisthebest724 27 дней назад +11

    It reminds me of Detroit since Detroit used to be a booming automotive industry city from the late 1800s to the mid 1900s but it later on fell apart around the 1960s and hasn’t been the same since with almost all of the city being abandoned

    • @jonas189
      @jonas189 27 дней назад +1

      Huge sections of abandoned city and they are focused on Downtown Detroit instead of all the other parts that need help. It's a beautiful city full of great people that have been let down for decades.

    • @meggiemegggs
      @meggiemegggs 27 дней назад +2

      Hamilton Ontario also suffers a similar fate. Once a booming Steel town, now a crime ridden zombie land of homelessness and drug addicts with no where to go. Tents, needles, pipes at all parks in the city. Police sirens and fires everywhere. Sad.

    • @Messiisthebest724
      @Messiisthebest724 27 дней назад

      @@meggiemegggs so basically Detroit and Skid Row mixed together

    • @Messiisthebest724
      @Messiisthebest724 27 дней назад +1

      @@jonas189 I mean from what I heard parts of St Louis is abandoned as well so there is that

    • @jonas189
      @jonas189 27 дней назад

      @Messiisthebest724 True, St Louis is similar to Detroit for pretty much the same reasons.

  • @heatherz3335
    @heatherz3335 18 дней назад +1

    You know what? Ignorant. As someone who worked at amethyst house we did our absolute best and we SAVE peoples lives there. If someone chooses to use drugs alone and not alert anyone, how can we monitor that? We do not watch people die. I have helped save many lives. Resources are scarce and service workers are doing the best that they can. I know every single one of these people you interviewed that are on the street and I’ve helped save most of them. They’re not telling you that part. I love them and their lives are important - at some point these guys have to want to help themselves too.

  • @observingthegreatillusion5087
    @observingthegreatillusion5087 27 дней назад +3

    Oh snap! You prolly just uncovered a small arm of trudeau’s money laundering gig! 🤦‍♂️
    But for real, good episode Mr.Solo
    You always shine when u hit the serious nitty gritty topics, much love, much respect. 👍👍❤️🙏💯

  • @gregmadore6365
    @gregmadore6365 27 дней назад +2

    Winnipeg is a hell of a lot more dangerous than Red Deer 😂

  • @coffeewithoutice
    @coffeewithoutice 27 дней назад +5

    looks like the most Californian city in Canada

  • @lisamai3991
    @lisamai3991 14 дней назад +1

    The math ain't mathing. Who's getting rich here ? Not the average middle income person paying the most taxes in Canada.