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And I told the RCMP that
I wasn't going to give up names and they said "Well, you're
a traitor to our country," well I said "I would rather be
a traitor to our country than a traitor to my friends" and I never divulged
a single name and when I finished
I said "Fuck you very much."
I wasn't going to give up names and they said "Well, you're
a traitor to our country," well I said "I would rather be
a traitor to our country than a traitor to my friends" and I never divulged
a single name and when I finished
I said "Fuck you very much."
Full Transcript
00:00:01.000 --> 00:00:05.905
And I told the RCMP that
I wasn't going to give up names
00:00:05.972 --> 00:00:09.999
and they said "Well, you're
a traitor to our country,"
00:00:09.142 --> 00:00:12.045
well I said "I would rather be
a traitor to our country
00:00:12.112 --> 00:00:14.013
than a traitor to my friends"
00:00:14.008 --> 00:00:16.095
and I never divulged
a single name
00:00:17.998 --> 00:00:19.886
and when I finished
I said "Fuck you very much."
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Movie Summary
Some softened by age and sadness, others loud and angry, the voices of the survivors of Canada’s public service homosexual purge are now united, and determined. They are torqued by decades of silence, years of being ignored. They demand justice, and they want to be heard. Theirs is a story of betrayal that is both national and deeply personal. Men and women who dedicated their lives to public service, some signing oaths of allegiance and servitude; casualties of a political tapestry woven in the fibers of acute security measures that somehow became normalized.