‘I used to love going up there, but the woke s*** hit so hard’
Warning: Graphic language
Justin Trudeau has already announced his stepping down as Canada’s prime minister. But for Joe Rogan, his exit can’t come quick enough.
In a recent episode of his Joe Rogan Experience podcast that featured outdoorsman Steven Rinella, Rogan, 57, called the outgoing prime minister every foul name under the sun.
“They want to educate him on what he talks about on social media if he wants to keep his clinical license to practice as a psychotherapist,” Rogan said.
“I used to love Canada … but the woke s*** there hit so hard because they don’t have freedom of speech … Their ability to express themselves on the Internet has been severely limited. It’s real weird, man, and it’s happening,” he said.
Rogan warned that what’s occurring in Canada could happen elsewhere in the world “if you don’t have the right laws.”
During the podcast, he used a couple of nasty expletives to negatively describe Trudeau, before adding, “I genuinely despise people like that.
“But I think it’s good to say it publicly because people need to understand what these people are doing. These people are leading down a road to legitimate communism. Like, he’s leading that country on a road to legitimate communism. It’s very dangerous and I think most Canadians are fed up with it at this point.” .
Rogan continued, saying that the Liberal Party exudes “so much control” over Canadians.
“He’s been forced to resign. He’s got to step down,” Rogan said. “Hopefully they don’t get some new slick talker to con them into the same old bulls***.”
“I think Mr. Rogan has a good assessment of our situation,” another critic swiped.
After Trudeau announced his resignation earlier this month, Rogan branded the unpopular leader a “communist.”
“I liked him better when he was black,” Von joked, referring to Trudeau’s 2019 “blackface” scandal.
Last October, Rogan revealed that he flirted with moving to Canada. “I used to want to live in Canada … until Trudeau,” Rogan said in a conversation with Shane Smith on an episode of TJRE,. “I thought about living in Vancouver. I was like, ‘I could go live in Vancouver if s*** hits the fan in the United States. I always felt Canadians are amazing people.”