Calgary
Tickets still available for Wednesday’s Battle of Alberta Hot Stove & After Party

The Edmonton Oilers and the Calgary Flames have been hacking away at each other for decades. But the teams are calling a truce. In just a few days some of the biggest names in the history of the Flames and Oilers are coming to Red Deer to hack away at the Golf and Country Club. The Battle of Alberta is a friendly competition to raise money for the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre.
Check out these names! Grant Fuhr, Glen Anderson, Glen Sather, Marty Mcsorley, Dave Hunter, Kris Russell, Mike Krushelniski, Georges Larouque, Ron Low, Dave Manson, Ethan Moreau, Matt Benning – and that’s just from the Oilers.
Then there’s the likes of Jamie Macoun, Curtis Glencross, Lanny MacDonald, Mike Commodore, Dana Murzyn, Theo Fluery, Brian McGratten, Colin Patterson, Mike Smith, Troy Brouwer, Mike Stone, Ric Nattress from the Flames.
Once the Golf tournament wraps up on Wednesday, there’s a “hot stove” and after party at the Sheraton. This really takes us back to a time when our provincial hockey rivalry was at its very best. It’s a great chance to meet some hockey greats and listen to some of their tales of glory.
The Hot Stove is hosted by Edmonton Oilers Radio Analyst and Host of “Oilers Now ” Bob Stauffer, Calgary Flames Sportsnet Analyst Eric Francis, and neutral third party broadcaster Cam Moon from the Red Deer Rebels. The evening includes a live auction of 10 exclusive items by everybody’s favourite celebrity auctioneer, Danny Hooper, as well as a large silent auction. Also enjoy the music of West of the Fifth.
If you’re a sports fan.. especially if you’re a hockey fan.. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity. Click here for tickets to the Hot Stove.
The series of events next week are all about raising money and awareness for the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre, something near and dear to Sheldon Kennedy. Sheldon’s tireless support for changes in how we deal with child abuse led to the creation of the Sheldon Kennedy Child Advocacy Centre in Calgary. He’s been integral to the development of Red Deer’s centre, even dancing in the Sheraton Celebrity Dance Off in 2017 to help raise money for the centre.
About the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre:
The Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre is a not for profit organization that works in an integrative partnership with the Central Region Child Services, Alberta Health Services, Alberta Justice, Alberta Education and the RCMP to better service children, youth and families impacted by sexual abuse and the most serious/complex cases of physical abuse and neglect.
Working collaboratively in a culturally relevant and trauma-informed system, we achieve greater results than any partner could on their own. It blends investigation, treatment, prevention, education and research with expertise to provide an integrated practice approach wrapping around children and always working in the best interests of the child.
Alberta
Canadian pizzeria owner planning civil suit against gov’t officials over tyrannical COVID mandates
Alberta
All charges dropped against Canadian pizzeria owner who defied COVID vaccine passport mandates

Jesse Johnson – Without Papers Pizza, Calgary
From LifeSiteNews
Jesse Johnson, who owned Without Papers Pizza, claimed a ‘bittersweet’ victory in a prolonged legal battle against the City of Calgary
All charges have been dropped against the owner of a popular Canadian pizzeria who kept his restaurant open in direct defiance of COVID-19 health rules and refused to ask customers for vaccine passports so that he could serve “everyone.”
Outside a Calgary courthouse yesterday, Jesse Johnson, who owned Without Papers Pizza, claimed victory in a prolonged legal battle against the City of Calgary after a court dismissed all his COVID-related violation charges.
“Yes, it is a bittersweet irony what happened here today. My restaurant was shut unadjudicated, I was deemed guilty without going to a court of law,” he said when speaking with independent media reporter Mocha Bezirgan outside Calgary’s main courthouse Wednesday.
The Democracy Fund (TDF), which funded lawyers Martin Rejman and Chad Williamson in defense of Johnson, noted in a press release that the once-popular pizzeria was charged in October 2021 with “breaching multiple bylaws after its business license was suspended for not complying with public health orders and after undercover inspectors were permitted to purchase pizza and remain in the restaurant without providing proof of vaccination.”
“Among other things, the allegations against the pizzeria were that it permitted persons to enter and remain on the premises without proof of vaccination and that it did not display prescribed signage, all of which was contrary to bylaws passed by the City of Calgary,” the TDF noted.
Johnson did not hold back his disdain for Calgary officials who targeted his restaurant with COVID fines.
“They tried to break me mentally and they tried to break me spiritually. And they almost came close. If it wasn’t for the good people that joined me here today, the many who I fought with on the streets of Calgary,” he said.
Without Papers Pizza was forced into insolvency due to government COVID dictates.
Johnson said, however, that people need to learn how to “forgive” their oppressors as “Christ” commanded.
“We need to pray to Jesus Christ to offer us forgiveness and to give us the light to fight further into the future,” he said.
The TDF said that Johnson’s lawyers had argued in their constitutional application that the city bylaws in question “were implementing public health orders that were found to be invalid by judges of the Court of King’s Bench.”
“More specifically, the impugned health orders were held to be ultra vires the Public Health Act as they were made by the provincial cabinet as opposed to the Chief Medical Officer of Health, which is what the law required,” the TDF stated.
Johnson’s charges being dropped came in the wake of a recent court ruling that declared certain public health orders effectively null.
At the end of July, Justice Barbara Romaine from Alberta’s Court of Kings Bench ruled that politicians violated the province’s health act by making decisions regarding COVID mandates without authorization.
The decision put into doubt all cases involving those facing non-criminal COVID-related charges in the province.
As a result of July’s court ruling, Alberta Crown Prosecutions Service (ACPS) said Albertans currently facing COVID-related charges will likely not face conviction but will instead have their charges stayed.
Danielle Smith took over from Jason Kenney as leader of the United Conservative Party (UCP) on October 11, 2022, after winning the leadership of the party. Kenney was ousted due to low approval ratings and for reneging on promises not to lock Alberta down, as well as enacting a vaccine passport.
Under Kenney, thousands of nurses, doctors, and other healthcare and government workers lost their jobs for choosing to not get the jabs, leading Smith to say – only minutes after being sworn in – that over the past year the “unvaccinated” were the “most discriminated against” group of people in her lifetime.
Smith made headlines last October after promising she would look at pardoning Christian pastors who were jailed for violating so-called COVID policies while Kenney was premier.
Unlike her predecessor, Kenney – who imposed vaccine passports, mandates, and lockdowns during COVID – Smith did vow she was not going to “create a segregated society on the basis of a medical choice.”
Thus far, in addition to Johnson, café owner Chris Scott, and Alberta pastors James Coates, Tim Stephens, and Artur Pawlowski, who were all jailed for keeping their churches open under the leadership of Kenney, have had the COVID charges against them dropped due to the court ruling.
Countless others have had smaller charges against them for going against COVID mandates dropped as well. However, there are still some facing charges relating to border blockade protests.
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