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All right, so welcome on the it must be the 31st of July for many of you and the 1st of August for
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0:00:08 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] you. What does it feel like, Josh? It's a whole new month. Yeah,
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yeah thank you guys. I see some very familiar names. Sasha, Josh, thank you guys for showing
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0:00:27 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ne, thank you so much for showing up. You guys give me the fuel to to carry on, to fight
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the good fight. I appreciate it. Indeed, that's very good Albert and we give fuel to each other.
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0:00:43 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ion of fuel, of vitamins for the mind and the soul. So well done
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for being here. Thank you. All right, Albert, get into it. Okay, okay. So we'll have Q&A at the end
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and when Albert gets close then go to the reactions and we'll handle Q&A in the normal way
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0:01:10 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]er. So Albert, over to you. Okay, thank you so much. So the first half of this conversation
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0:01:16 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]s to FOIA philosophy and strategies and I was just discussing earlier
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and what an impeccable timing Del Bigtree and Aaron Seary have regarding this last FOIA on Thursday.
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But I might get into that a little bit later but this first FOIA of this, this bears, this child,
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this two-year-old Alaskan child who died supposedly six hours after the vaccination bleeding from
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the ears, nose, and mouth and died within six hours of the vaccination per that report. And that
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0:01:58 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] few minutes in the downloadable files. And what happened was
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0:02:08 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction], and this was during Thanksgiving of last year, 2021, on the first day back from
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vacation, so they must have had their holiday crew in there screwing things up for them. They released
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all these reports ahead of time, actually released like 15,[privacy contact redaction]ory was that this one
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particular report was never published. Me and my, I call him my Yoda, Wayne of BearsAnalysis.com.
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We worked together, he helped me, he's very professional. He said, hey, don't shout,
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don't make a video about it. Let's wait till next week and see if they, see how many of these 15,000
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reports they publish again. So sure enough, they published exactly all of them minus the
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one child, two-year-old Alaskan baby. So Aaron Seary, we got that information to Aaron Seary.
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He saw the value of that. He filed a FOIA and got the response back saying no records. Well,
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lo and behold, unbeknownst to me, Mr. Surya, who I'm going to introduce here from France,
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as it turns out, has done a bunch of FOIAs and did a FOIA on this particular one where he actually
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0:03:35 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ually an email thread from John Su and whatever his last
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name is, Shimaburuku, saying that, you know, acknowledging that this VAERS ID number existed
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and whether it was, that they believed it was fake and they were going to get their subordinates to
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vet it. But that's not the point, whether it was fake or not, because the point was that
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it was never published yet it already had a VAERS ID number. So that just points to shed some light
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onto the other 25,[privacy contact redaction] never been published. You know, the VAERS ID
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numbers are very easy to follow because they're sequential by increments of one, but co-mingled
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altogether with all the various VAX types. Anyways, takes a little work, but I follow
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that like an eagle. And so I know that there's 25,000 unpublished reports. But with that,
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0:04:44 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]rategy involved. Surya reached out to me like out of the blue and he told me about this.
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Well, we turned around and of course we got this to Aaron Ceres firm to say, hey, you know,
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0:05:01 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]s, I'm going, this is Mr. Surya from France. We're going to begin
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to talk about how he was successful, where in this case, Aaron Sury wasn't this time.
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And he had, and I was listening to Surya's philosophy and ideology and his email,
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he's cobbled together like the internal emails of like everybody at the CDC based on previous
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FOIAs that he's done. And he uses that and he's very specific, like show me the email communications
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between this email and that email. So I don't want to get ahead of myself, but Mr. Surya,
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if you can enlighten us, please. Sure. I hope everybody can hear me.
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Yes. Okay, great. So I will introduce myself briefly. My name is Surya Arbi. I'm a French guy
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who tries to, I try to harass your American federal agencies with FOIA. And sometimes I can get
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0:06:10 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] share my screen in order to make everybody to be able to see my slide?
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Yes. Hang on. Hi, everyone.
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Okay. You're on Surya. Sure. That's great.
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It's done. It should appear in a few seconds. Just let me know when it's okay. Yes. All good.
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0:06:42 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] [privacy contact redaction]er. So all the presentation, it's [privacy contact redaction]
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to go to bed because I'm completely tired and I have to wake up early tomorrow. So let's start.
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I will discuss only the methodology I've used and not the results because the results,
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0:07:05 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] lead to nowhere, but sometimes you can get successful. I've been denied,
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0:07:14 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] been denied in the end, but I could find a trick in order to
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0:07:19 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ems and I will explain how I did it. Just to for the introduction,
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I'm not only doing FOIAs in targeting US agencies. I'm doing FOIAs nearly everywhere in Europe,
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in France at the European Medicine Agency. I'm targeting the English regulator. I have
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good results with the TGA, the drug agency based in Australia.
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So let's start. Quickly, you probably all know about the surveillance systems which are used
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to monitor vaccine safety on a global scale. The passive monitoring is based on VIAs,
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0:08:03 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]em in the US, EUDRA Vigilance in Europe. It's globally the same.
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It's passive monitoring with underreporting and some of the data has poor quality inside the
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0:08:16 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ems. On the other side, you have active surveillance based on larger linked databases
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0:08:22 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ronic health records. In the US, it's mostly based on
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the vaccine safety data link managed by the CDC and several HMOs. Under the authority of the FDA,
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0:08:34 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ems, BEST, Biologics Effectiveness and Safety, and there is another
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0:08:40 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]em named PRISM, Post-License Rapid Immunization Safety Monitoring. So let's talk a little bit about
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0:08:46 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] before. You all know that the VIAs database is publicly available,
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but sometimes they manipulate the data and they delete some stuff. So as Albert explained just a
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few minutes before, it could identify a specific VIAs ID, the team led by Aaron Searifide for your
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0:09:06 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] and the CDC ended up with a no record found. I know this sentence by heart because I guess
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0:09:13 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]e of this sentence. No, the CDC could not locate any responsive record
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0:09:20 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] So I decided to use another strategy as in the PDF file showing this report,
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we add the ID appearing. So I grabbed the ID and I filed a FOIA request and I explicitly stated
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that I wanted to retrieve any email containing this specific string of character
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in any part of the email, either or body. And I could grab some responsive records because we
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had a PDF file in some attachments of an internal discussion inside the CDC between Tom Shimabukuro,
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the head of the COVID-19 Vaccine Safety Task Force, John Su, the guy who is responsible for the VIAs,
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and Kevin Malone who is, I don't even know his exact position, but he is on the judicial side.
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So sometimes when you try to look for very specific things, just try to look for specific
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0:10:25 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ers embedded in the email and the file of your request
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0:10:31 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ating that you want to query the body or the header of the mail. And it will work
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great, not only for VIAs IDs, also for other stuff I will show later. So Albert gave me a bunch of
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0:10:50 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] currently another FOIA request which is still
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in process to see if they are discussing of those several VIAs IDs in their internal discussions.
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But I'm not sure because you know all the VIAs management is outsourced. There is an external
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0:11:12 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]or and I'm not sure I will be able to grab a lot of interesting things in their emails.
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0:11:19 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]s about what's going on in the EU. We have something close to the VSD but much larger.
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An NGO has been created, it's named VAC4EU. There is a huge project named Access. It's a consolidated
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0:11:34 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]e. It's some kind of a very very big VSD. In Europe we have
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something called the ENCEPP, European Network for Centres of Pharmacoepidemiology and Pharmacovigilance.
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It's fully under the control of the European medicine agencies. They've posted some protocols
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so I know what they are supposed to do. And they have a website, there is a searching tool
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and you will be able to see many many many many studies which are registered in this registry.
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And what is fun, I just put in my slide some kind of extract. I will be able to share the
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PDF if you want it. And what is a little bit strange is that I could see that there are some
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0:12:26 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]udies which I suppose are required by the FDA. The FDA has probably required those study
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0:12:34 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]urers. You can see on the bottom,
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on this slide, the next one. Yeah on the top the first one, post-marketing safety of SARS-CoV-2,
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mRNA vaccine in the US, active surveillance, SCRI. So this has been required by the FDA. It's probably
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done only in the US but I don't know what it has been registered in the European registry.
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But I'm pretty sure that the FDA knows about the existence of this study.
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There is another one on the bottom, post-emergency use active safety surveillance study among
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individuals in the Veterans Affairs Health System receiving TRIZO-BioNTech. So I'm pretty sure that
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the FDA is supposed to retrieve all the preliminary reports and the reports related to the study. And
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there is the same with COVID-19 vaccine in the US health care workers. I don't know if anyone
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0:13:46 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]uff but at least it's supposed to exist. It has been registered in a
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0:13:52 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]ry. I don't know why. Maybe it's part of the submission because in Europe,
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in the US, you have the EU emergency use authorization. In Europe, it's not called EUA,
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it's called conditional marketing authorization. But on a global scale, it's the same. And as the
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clinical trials are not finished, the manufacturers are supposed to put in their submission projects
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0:14:16 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]udies, observational studies to be completed to assess vaccine safety and vaccine
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0:14:21 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]iveness. In the US, I love this slide. I love this picture. I grabbed this from a presentation
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0:14:30 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction] year or maybe in 2020. It has been shown at a meeting
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organized by the ACIP and it's a global overview of all the surveillance systems they have.
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So you already know about the vaccine safety data link. There is a database on Medicare
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0:14:55 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ration. I don't think the FDA has a direct link with the DMED but there are also
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0:15:04 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ems and the FDA is supposed to have full visibility on that.
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0:15:12 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]s for that. Most of them ended up to be denied. I faced the usual
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exemptions B3, B4, B5, you know, and they raised a confidentiality agreement between the CDC and
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several HMOs. Maybe you've heard about the very first study which has been published on the vaccine
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safety. In the US, the immunization campaign began with the elderly and the genesis health care system.
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0:15:46 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction] to retrieve all emails between the investigators located at the Brown
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University and the NIH and I also filed another unrelated FOIA request to the CDC and I could see
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0:16:00 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] that there were some discussions between Tom Shimabukuro
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because the CDC co-founded with the NIH this study and I could see that there were some
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discussions between some Tom Shimabukuro, all the investigators based at the Brown University and
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0:16:20 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]oyee of the NIH. So I filed a FOIA request at the NIH to retrieve all emails between
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0:16:28 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]oyee, Tom Shimabukuro and all the investigators as far as I know of. It's still
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in process but it's very long. I guess someone in the hierarchy is probably blocking the release
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of the documents. Okay about all the surveillance systems, there are many. To me the most interesting
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is the VSD because there is a specific project, VSD project 1342. It's called RCA, Rapid Cycle Analysis
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0:16:58 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ical analysis of a pre-specified set of adverse
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0:17:05 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] every week and sometimes they kept some safety signals
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in their own slides shown at the ACIP. They say that it's not statistically significant.
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Actually when you do the math it's highly statistically significant. We could see at
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the beginning of March in [privacy contact redaction]rokes and pulmonary embolism
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and even VTE, venous thromboembolism. There is another project done on the VSD. It's some kind
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of self-control studies but they will test all possible time windows at risk. I could retrieve
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all the protocols. There is something that has gone completely unnoticed even Brian Hooker and
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Mary Oland from CHD missed that but the FDA released a press release on the 12th July 2021
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0:18:08 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ate that they had an observed number of events which is greater than the expected
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ones for four adverse events of specific interest especially with the Pfizer vaccine
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in those who are older than 65 years old in the Medicare database. So they do not provide any
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0:18:32 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] say that they have the signal. They wrote specific protocols
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so they've designed some self-controlled studies. The methodology is named SCCS,
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self-controlled case series and the four adverse events of specific interest are acute myocardial
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0:18:53 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ion, pulmonary embolism, autoimmune thrombocytopenia and DIC disseminated intravascular
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coagulation. So they wrote the protocol. I'm sure the study has been done. For the moment they've
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not been published in the literature while the FDA on the other side published the one on the
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0:19:10 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]ialitis. So I'm pretty sure, 99% sure, that they found the problem and
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they probably won't be published as this study in the literature because in this study
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0:19:26 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] two time windows at risk, one at [privacy contact redaction] vaccination and the
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0:19:32 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] vaccinations. So there are other systems, BEST and PRISM. I talked about
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those a few minutes ago quickly. There are a lot of problems with the DOD and the DMED database.
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I filed many, many, many FOIA requests as a defense, health agency and so on, Medicare, HHS and
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0:19:57 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] results I could get the agencies which are the most
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responsive to me are the CDC and the NIH. I filed tens of FOIA requests to the FDA and it led to
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0:20:09 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ed a lot of protocols on their own websites so I decided to
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make a table because on the protocols sometimes there are project numbers and as you can see there
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0:20:24 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] numbers which are missing. Some missing numbers are 1344, 1347 and 1349.
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0:20:35 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] to the CDC and you want to be successful, for example if
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0:20:40 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ing for example the full list of the projects they've done on the
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0:20:45 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] file a FOIA request like that they will just reply with a
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0:20:51 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] of publication and that's it. Obviously I don't care about their
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0:20:58 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] of the projects they've done but I mean the internal
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0:21:03 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] So the right methodology to query the system is to identify a record you don't have
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0:21:13 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] For example in my FOIA request I've requested the
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title descriptions and protocols of VSD projects 1344, 1447 and 1449. This is my point of entry
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0:21:29 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] there is another request embedded in it. I've requested
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0:21:37 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] of the project done on the vaccine safety data link
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since the inception of the database and they replied. They acknowledged to give me the full
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0:21:50 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]s they've done since the beginning of the 90s and they gave me an excel
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0:21:55 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] the status of each project if it has been completed,
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ongoing, inactive and so on. As you can imagine many amongst those projects have never been
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0:22:12 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] by reading the description you see that they identified some
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0:22:18 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ly with leukemia, post immunization leukemias for example.
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So targeting the agencies is a good thing but don't forget all industry funded studies because
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those reports are being sent to the agencies and sometimes you can grab some interesting
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0:22:42 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ry funded studies have a weak credibility but sometimes you can grab
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0:22:50 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ing things. Some other things which I've noticed
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it's about the clinical trial started by the NIH on allergic reactions and I'm not sure if anyone
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could hear about that but there is a press release on the NIH website talking about that.
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0:23:11 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]rual issues, you know it's huge, a lot of women are being armed by that.
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0:23:19 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] asked by email to the press department of the NIH the grant numbers and the names of
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0:23:27 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] me everything. Sometimes it's just dropping an email to the
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right department. A lot of things which can be interesting to retrieve also are all the
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0:23:43 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] is under development you have the DSER,
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development safety updates report when it's gone into post marketing it's called PSER,
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periodic safety updates report. I know that in Europe I'm not sure if it's the case in the US
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but when the PSER pharmacophagence report is submitted by a manufacturer to the agency
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0:24:02 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] in Europe the agency designates a rapporteur and is supposed to write a report
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0:24:08 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]igator brochures I gave that to Peter Doshi,
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CSR and experts reports related to that. What I like to request is all the minutes and meeting
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notes of pharmacovigilance technical committees. I could grab in Australia I could retrieve
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an expert panel review, it's a full report of a pharmacovigilance investigation done on Gardasil
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and so on. I will provide some details about how I file my FOIA request and the methodology I use.
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0:24:49 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] to ask is what do you want to investigate? Do you want to investigate
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0:24:54 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]igate a scientific study? If you want to investigate a scientific
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0:24:58 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] I file is about asking the protocol. When I have the
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0:25:05 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] all the deadlines and I have the list of all the documents and reports which
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0:25:12 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]anned to be submitted. Then when I have the protocol I just read it and if there are some
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0:25:18 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] Usually I request all preliminary reports, all reports, all
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correspondencies, all emails, all numerical statistical tables and usually the job is done.
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0:25:31 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]e, if you don't know what's going on, just ask for emails.
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Sometimes asking for emails is not enough so you have to ask for correspondencies on a global scale
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including emails. Now at the CDC they've been busted 20 years ago by Mary Holland and Lynn Redwood.
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I'm not sure if everybody knows that but Mary could grab hundreds of pages of
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0:26:00 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]raten and Frank DiStefano and now as they have been
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0:26:07 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ed twice with that they tend to avoid writing too much and their mailbox is nearly empty.
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You won't find anything hot in their mailboxes so my next step is to ask for, I will find
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0:26:23 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]s exist but a chat log of the internal collaboration
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tools. I know that for the VSD all the results are discussed through Zoom meetings which occurred,
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they are supposed to occur every week so I will file a FOIA request just to ask for the recordings
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and transcripts. Maybe, okay my request will be denied but if my requests are denied I will
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0:26:52 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] If they just reply no record found okay it's just that
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0:26:59 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ings are not are not backed up. So for my FOIA request I've tried
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0:27:06 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]s and narrow requests. If you file a FOIA request which is too large
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usually the CDC or the agency will get back to you and they say oh your request is
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0:27:21 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] to narrow it. For example I've been in touch with Elisabeth Bram from
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from our own series office and I've asked her if she already filed a FOIA request to look into the
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internal emails of the CDC for her own name just to see if internally they discuss about all those
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FOIA litigations about our own series and so on. So she asked me to file a FOIA request for that,
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I did it and the CDC get back to me and they said hey there are too many emails please narrow
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0:27:52 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] I said okay okay okay let's start my search in 2019. Then the CDC got back to me again
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and they said hey there are too many emails please narrow your request again. So I still narrowed my
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0:28:04 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] and I'm still waiting for the results is still in process, is still stuck in the in-process
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0:28:11 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s usually you can file a FOIA request and request
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0:28:17 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s, all reports, all records related to blah blah blah blah. If you want to
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0:28:25 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s which are very specific for example for emails the best strategy I found
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I followed Brian Hooker's advice about that. Specify your time frame for example for the time period
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0:28:37 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] December 2020. For those specific mailboxes please provide
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0:28:45 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s and it worked for the missing VARs ID we've shown
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a few minutes ago. If you target an individual or list of individuals the best you can do is to
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0:29:04 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] some specific emails related to specific mailboxes.
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So if you're blind and you don't know what's going on try to query emails and keywords,
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0:29:14 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]s into those emails. If you're completely blind I tried something which was
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extremely successful. I've identified some specific individual of specific interest for me as a CDC
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0:29:28 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ing all headers for all emails sent and received by those
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0:29:35 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ually it was in February or March of 2021
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0:29:43 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] me an excel sheet with more than 700 lines which is huge.
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0:29:51 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ed but this is through this excel sheet that I could see that
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0:29:59 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]udies done on the elderly funded by the NIH. I could see a line where I saw that
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0:30:09 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]igators based at the Brown University were talking with Tom Shimabukuro and I could
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0:30:16 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction] of recipients. There is a specific trick. Elizabeth Bram told me that the
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agency can refuse to release some documents if they are considered to be drafted. So it seems that
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0:30:33 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]udy is published the underlying data cannot be considered to be drafted anymore
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and in the file I could retrieve about the full list of the project done on the vaccine safety
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0:30:46 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]atus. So when a project is labeled as completed it's not a draft
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anymore. So to me it's doable to file FOIA requests maybe doing a filing appeal after that
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and going to the litigation. Maybe the agency will lose in the end.
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0:31:08 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ained before if you want to retrieve some broad information and you
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don't want to be kicked out by the FOIA guys the best strategy I've used is to query
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a document or an information you are sure that it does exist and then in the same FOIA request
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0:31:30 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] related to something bigger. This is exactly the strategy I
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0:31:38 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] of the project done on the VSD. I've identified
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very specific numbers. I knew that those projects do exist and in the same request
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0:31:51 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ed everything else in the database and I was successful.
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0:31:59 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] some successes. Yes even if 90% of my FOIA requests lead to nowhere sometimes
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0:32:09 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ralia I filed many FOIA requests. For one of them I
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could grab all the vaccination reporting cards used in the clinical trials. To me the most
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0:32:27 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] I filed before I requested all pharmacovigilance reports
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0:32:34 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]igation done by the TGA which is the Australian Drug Agency and among all the documents
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0:32:41 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] me this expert report of their pharmacovigilance investigations.
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It's a huge document it's more than 100 pages long.
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And I'm done. I just discussed the methodology I've used. Feel free to ask any question. I've
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not discussed too much the results because actually the results I could get sometimes
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0:33:09 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] of my FOIA requests have led to nowhere but it's not the most
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0:33:14 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] important is how you can file FOIA requests correctly
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0:33:22 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]er to avoid the horrible sentences they copy paste every day. We could not locate any
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0:33:29 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] I've read this sentence so many times I'm fed up with that.
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But right now I found some tricks to try to enter the system and I'm quite proud about the
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results I could get. That's it. So I'm over now and if you have any question feel free to ask.
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0:33:52 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]op share? Sure sure sure. Done. So Albert do you want because Surya has to go to bed
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0:34:01 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ions before you continue? Absolutely absolutely ask Surya
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0:34:07 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ions. Josh over to you.
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0:34:11 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ions or should we go to Josh?
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Okay Josh you go. Thank you Surya this is you. Hi sorry Josh just two seconds could I ask Surya
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0:34:28 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] equivalents to FOIA in you know and getting this information from
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0:34:38 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ralia as a matter of interest Surya do you have that possibility in France or
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not? Yes we have an equivalent of FOIA but it sucks. You have an equivalent? Yes yes we have an
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equivalent of FOIA but it's extremely difficult and in most cases they never reply and it takes
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more than one year to retrieve some documents and it's extremely boring and annoying.
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I don't want to file in France because I've tried for many years and to me
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the equivalent of the French FOIA it's a waste of time. How do you find it in the UK
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0:35:28 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]? Oh I filed some FOIA requests to the MHRA the drug agency.
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I had good results at the beginning but I guess now they are completely overloaded
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0:35:44 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]s at the end of the last year maybe November or December and
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0:35:50 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ied. Maybe I should try to file again. Yes so which countries so you've got the
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0:35:59 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ralia you mentioned are those the only two countries worth doing these FOIA requests?
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Those are the two countries where I got the best results in terms of responsiveness of the agencies.
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Have you tried New Zealand? Yes I tried to file a FOIA request at the University of Auckland I guess
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0:36:27 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ied but it was a load of bullshit. Yeah I was just wondering whether
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0:36:37 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]leblowers? Okay. So do you ever get the
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0:36:43 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]e you're communicating with at these agencies are actually whistleblowers
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0:36:52 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]s which they say to you?
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0:36:57 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]and me? Yes but I'm not sure I would be able to provide a response.
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You can't prove it but do you ever get the feeling that the people you're communicating with are
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telling you more than they need to? To be honest you can't be sure sometimes they forget to redact
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0:37:20 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]uff but you can't be sure if this is a mistake or if they just want to drop some
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0:37:28 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] I don't know. Yeah but so it's impossible to know.
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So because of the huge bureaucracy in the NIH and the CDC you think that America is the best
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0:37:42 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ralia? To me the most interesting information is based in the US.
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Right that's interesting isn't it? Yeah because all the civilian systems are out there.
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I'm 100% sure that they see everything related to the
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virus. Everybody knows that those COVID-19 shots are pure crap. There are vaccine injuries
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everywhere and I know that the CDC sees everything. How do I know that? Because in
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their own publication sometimes they keep some safety signals. They don't talk about that.
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0:38:31 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] by looking at the figures provided in the article for example there is
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a recent publication about the risk of Guillain-Barriss-Andreau and they acknowledge the risk with
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the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and they say that there is no issue with the mRNA vaccines but they
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use a 21 days time window at risk. I know because it's written in their own protocol that they use
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another time window at risk of [privacy contact redaction] to look at the figures
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published in the article that there is a huge problem with the mRNA vaccines and GBS into the
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42 days time window at risk. So if I see it they do. Yeah so just as a matter of interest
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I don't understand it in America because so Professor Philippe Sanz who's a professor
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of law at University College London, he wrote a book called A Torture Team and it was about the
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lawyers who were responsible for the change in the law in the US regarding torture and he said
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I think in a video I saw, no maybe not somewhere else, but he was astonished how many, so when he
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was writing his book they knew he was writing a book about torture and all the people who were
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0:39:52 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] responsible for what had happened were very happy to be interviewed by him and he was
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astonished by their openness. So I don't understand how on the one hand all kinds of
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terrible things are going on in the US but decent people even when they're in the firing line are
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0:40:11 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]e like Professor Philippe Sanz. He duly wrote a book by the way which
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I highly recommend called Torture Team. Okay I didn't know that. I'm sure that at the CDC to me
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0:40:26 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] some things are explained just by corruption and by the most incredible
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thing to me it's when I've learned that Frank Di Stefano's son he has autism. The guy has cheated
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0:40:42 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]uff related to vaccine safety and especially autism and his own
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son has autism. It's just incredible. I didn't know that Brian O'Cut wrote me this information
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into an email and I don't understand why, to be honest I don't understand why they are doing that.
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0:41:01 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]e in the call here know about the story of William Thompson and the
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MMR autism paper published in pediatrics in 2004. Now I don't know what they are doing, what they do
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0:41:15 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ion Stephen, well done. Now to you Josh.
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So before we let Surya go to bed he doesn't need sleep. You don't need sleep.
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0:41:32 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] hope that my English was not too horrible. Your English is fantastic
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and it's better every time I speak with you. Okay. Surya, sorry I think I have a question that many
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0:41:53 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction] all these amazing FOIA data. Is there a place where people you
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0:42:00 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction] you tried to make it publicly available? Is there a place where people can go?
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0:42:05 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]op box into which I put some documents but if it's required to be honest the amount of
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0:42:13 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]uff is quite limited but I can share without any problem. No problem I will
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0:42:21 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]op box public link and I will share to anyone who is interested.
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That's great. I will say that both Google documents and drop box can be,
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the links can be cut. I'll try to find another solution. Yeah all right excellent. Thank you
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for everything you do. Great. Thank you. Thank you Josh. Sasha.
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0:42:52 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ually I had the same question so some way of sharing this information
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I'm working with also a number of law firms and people who have filed FOIAs and we need some
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0:43:04 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]e. So maybe some expertise on that is very important because for
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0:43:11 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]e there is very little that has been made available for Moderna and you know so that's one
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0:43:20 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]uring information so module three from the licensing
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0:43:29 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]ication, DLA application, standard application. So module three for any of them. I know it's
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0:43:35 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] difficult thing to get but that's critically important to take them all down.
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So that's that was kind of my request and yeah I'd like to see what you have so that we avoid
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0:43:47 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]ication of efforts. Sure. Very good and Sasha's point is very relevant everybody for all these court
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cases the government takes every single dirty trick it can and so that need to get the
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incontrovertible evidence is so important and the digging that needs to be done and Gail McCray in
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the chat has been talking about that we're working with David Martin all of that work
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0:44:14 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction] accept there's a lot of work to get past the dirty tricks of government. Glenn.
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0:44:20 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ions is around the ability to cross reference things
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since you've come up with so many different topics and had them associated with various kinds of
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0:44:34 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]s. I use the term cross reference because I think it's a very important
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different topics and had them associated with various kinds of titles and keywords.
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Are you aware of the of the regulations that gov system that records all of the public comment
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submissions under regulations that gov and that entire database is keyword driven.
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So it's very easy to go into it and it's three different cycles there was the five to eleven
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0:45:11 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ober there was the six months to five year olds in February and then that got
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repeated again in June. So when one goes into that system and does things like just does a search on
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death or on a search on heart you get you get thousands of entries and so there may be some
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0:45:33 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]e were angry about and knew about and posted them there but did otherwise
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didn't make them public and because you can submit anonymously there's also you know maybe
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0:45:44 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ies there to cross match things of high interest. Okay I was not aware about that.
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0:45:51 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ober had over 130 000, February had over 50 000,
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0:45:59 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ed over [privacy contact redaction]ed zero before the meeting
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so that's a whole nother cover-up issue. So they ended up posting around 40 000 but that was
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0:46:13 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction] all of the meetings and decision points but so they are there they just didn't show
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0:46:20 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ion I had is and to Sasha also as we see more and more of this kind
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of cover-up is is there any thinking process around having a uniform way of reporting it
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0:46:34 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]e that start pouring through the different materials.
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Sasha recently did a report on Moderna relative to the the six-month to five-year-olds that I
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0:46:47 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]acular detail of you know in an excellent way of highlighting things
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0:46:55 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]illed into to you know she went past all the the noise and then found both items that were
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intentionally absent or intentionally lied about. So the more we the public could start seeing
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cover-up reporting in a consistent way I think that could be powerful.
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Very good Glenn.
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0:47:20 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ephen before we let Surya go to bed or Albert do you have any questions of
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0:47:26 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ephen and then Albert Surya you can go to bed and Albert will continue.
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0:47:32 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] wonder Surya are you in contact with lawyers in the UK, US, Australia?
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Only Elizabeth from our own series office but I guess they are completely overloaded
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now. Elizabeth Brown. She asked me a lot with my very first fire request.
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0:47:56 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] you got evidence in your opinion which would be useful to lawyers?
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Read the criminal fraud whatever you want to call it.
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For the moment no I don't think so.
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For the moment no I don't think so.
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Concealment of crime?
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Some good evidence on that.
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No I'm not sure to have any single event for something to be used by lawyers.
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What about regulatory failure?
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0:48:36 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]range feeling all the things that happen just like if the law
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didn't count anymore. This is where you know a few years ago when someone would break the law
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0:48:54 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]urers they would be punished in the end and a huge fine would be applied but
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now it's I'm not sure if it's correct but it's a lawless world.
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Surya it's important to lodge the evidence there so that when the time is up.
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Yeah sure sure sure. If I grab anything interesting I will keep it but for the
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moment I don't have any single event for that. Okay well Albert has stuff which is interesting.
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0:49:29 --> 0:49:33
Are you sure that if Albert were to look at your stuff that he wouldn't find something
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0:49:33 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ing for the lawyers? Yeah I forgot one thing. I've asked my friends in Netherlands
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to query all the mailboxes between Miriam Sturkenboom who is one of the greatest experts
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in the world in pharmacoepidemiology and she has contracts with the EMA. Yeah I will tell you the
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anecdote because I forgot about that but it's fun. I filed a FOIA request to the EMA requesting
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0:50:01 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]urkenboom these great experts and several individuals at the EMA and
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0:50:08 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] individuals a few weeks after my request the EMA got back to me and they said
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0:50:14 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] no emails for those individuals. Okay but the last one if you don't say that you have
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no emails it means that the emails do exist and a few months after that the EMA contacted me because
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0:50:30 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] from an academic partner related to me and actually it was a
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0:50:39 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]urkenboom about me about my own request and it seems that she didn't
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like at all that a guy like me would be able to dig into her own mailbox at least about her own
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conversations between a guy named Xavier Kurtz at the EMA and her. So I asked some friends in the
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0:51:03 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ly to our university UMC Utrecht and to retrieve all
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emails between her mailbox based at this university and the EMA and I guess they also
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0:51:20 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] to retrieve all emails between her and all manufacturers
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Pfizer, Moderna and so on. Maybe we will be able to find some odd stuff in it.
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Sorry you mentioned disseminated intravascular coagulation. Absolutely we all
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all those hematological events I guess there are problems everywhere. It's not only pulmonary
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embolism and thrombotron deep venous thrombosis it's all kind of blood clots. So in the disseminated
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0:51:53 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] you seen any mention of paradoxical hemorrhage? No I don't think so.
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0:52:00 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] can say about that that there is a very recent publication from a team based in
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Scandinavia. They don't talk too much about it in the paper but it has been published in
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the journal named Java Network Open in June and they found many statistically significant issues
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with Pfizer and Moderna especially about blood clots and cardiovascular events.
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0:52:31 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] you got any numbers for these like deep venous thrombosis pulmonary embolism
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0:52:41 --> 0:52:50
or not? You haven't got any numbers for them no? In which way? From the stuff you've got from the
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0:52:50 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] to show you something just give me one minute
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AC I will share my screen if I can do.
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Yes you can so yeah. Yeah and I wanted to ask you so have you this is just a very interesting
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point that I'm interested in have you heard any mention of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis?
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0:53:17 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]udy I've investigated done in Scotland and there is a huge issue the
437
0:53:27 --> 0:53:33
team doesn't discuss about that because they acknowledge the problem with the AstraZeneca
438
0:53:33 --> 0:53:39
shot but not the Pfizer shot but if you look into the tables the numerical tables they give
439
0:53:40 --> 0:53:47
they add three cases with the Pfizer vaccine within the 28 days window and
440
0:53:48 --> 0:53:54
there are three cases of what? Cervical venous sinus? Yes yes CVT and there is zero case in the
441
0:53:54 --> 0:54:01
in the control window. Right well. I filed FOIA request about that they gave me 250 pages of
442
0:54:01 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] to retrieve all the stuff they were supposed to do
443
0:54:07 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ually they told me that they could not provide anything to me because
444
0:54:13 --> 0:54:18
when they computed the confidence intervals they were too wide so they did not publish about that
445
0:54:18 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ical model is wrong if you if you use a model based on a
446
0:54:23 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ribution it's highly statistically significant. So Surya would you be interested in
447
0:54:30 --> 0:54:36
an exchange of emails that I had together with Sukrit Bhakdi and others from the kind of
448
0:54:36 --> 0:54:42
predecessor to this group. Sure. It's called Doctors for Covid Ethics and in the beginning of
449
0:54:42 --> 0:54:52
2021 we wrote three times to the European Medicines Agency. Did you reply? Yes okay not
450
0:54:52 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]orily and cerebral venous sinus thrombosis was actually mentioned there
451
0:54:59 --> 0:55:05
and the importance of anybody with headache was a potential victim of cerebral venous sinus
452
0:55:05 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]etely. They had the email to me it's full cover up and full lockdown.
453
0:55:17 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]ill exist and I think are important evidence because
454
0:55:24 --> 0:55:30
they were warned about what's going on. So that was why I was asking about cerebral venous sinus
455
0:55:30 --> 0:55:35
thrombosis. It sounds like a really rare thing but the point is that any headache
456
0:55:36 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]ed and it should have been ruled out. Yeah it could be a CVT or stroke
457
0:55:42 --> 0:55:50
or even yeah and cerebral venous sinus thrombosis as well. I'm sure there is a problem with
458
0:55:50 --> 0:55:56
demyelination not only gbs but central demyelination. I've heard about transverse
459
0:55:56 --> 0:56:03
mellitus and MS. I hope that everybody can see my slide. This slide has been shown by Tom
460
0:56:03 --> 0:56:11
Shimabukuro in March 2021 and it's as you can see it's preliminary results of the VSD sequential
461
0:56:11 --> 0:56:16
vaccinated concurrent comparator. For those who don't know what it is they use two different
462
0:56:16 --> 0:56:22
methodologies. They compare the number of observed cases in vaccinated and it's compared to hysterical
463
0:56:22 --> 0:56:29
comparator. It's some kind of a common observed to expected and they compare vaccinated individuals
464
0:56:29 --> 0:56:35
to themselves but over two different time windows. On this slide they've used a primary
465
0:56:37 --> 0:56:44
time window set to 21 days so it means that those individuals within the risk interval
466
0:56:45 --> 0:56:51
are compared to the individuals in the control intervals meaning those individuals,
467
0:56:51 --> 0:57:01
vaccinees who are between 22 and 41 days after the vaccination. And you can see that on this
468
0:57:01 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction] two observed cases versus zero expected. For stroke hemorrhagic
469
0:57:10 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction] seven observed cases versus zero expected and for pulmonary embolism we have 19
470
0:57:19 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]ed. And for all those three lines they say that it's not statistically
471
0:57:26 --> 0:57:33
significant. It's absolutely impossible to fail to reach statistical significance when you have 19
472
0:57:33 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]ed. You can use a Poisson distribution you can't put zero as expected so
473
0:57:40 --> 0:57:45
you can put 0.1 and you will see that it's absolutely impossible. So just on this slide
474
0:57:45 --> 0:57:51
the data log point is set at mid-13th February 2021. It has been shown in March
475
0:57:52 --> 0:58:00
so it was clear in their own slides that for at least the three adverse events of specific
476
0:58:00 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] that they saw the problems. The myocarditis could be detected in February
477
0:58:07 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]rokes and the biggest safety signal it's a blood clot pulmonary
478
0:58:15 --> 0:58:21
embolism. It has been embedded in venous thromboembolism just on the top. You can see that
479
0:58:21 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] in the VSD [privacy contact redaction]ed. If you use a Poisson distribution
480
0:58:29 --> 0:58:35
you can see that it's also highly statistically significant. So they just lie when they say that
481
0:58:36 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ical signal has not been triggered.
482
0:58:45 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ribution are they using? I don't know I would be curious to know their statistical
483
0:58:51 --> 0:58:57
model. I'm sure it's wrong. Well it must be the same one they use in the JAMA paper they published
484
0:58:57 --> 0:59:08
in September. To me the JAMA paper I could say it's fun because I filed a comment on the JAMA
485
0:59:08 --> 0:59:14
and I've been censored within [privacy contact redaction]ing the comments because they only show the
486
0:59:14 --> 0:59:22
data with a 21 days time window at risk. In their own papers they state that they have
487
0:59:23 --> 0:59:29
other analysis which are not presented. So I just posted a comment stating that it would be great
488
0:59:29 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction] the other round of analysis they've done and described in the protocols and I've been rejected.
489
0:59:38 --> 0:59:45
I'm surprised. Peter Doshi I filed my comment on the advice of Peter Doshi
490
0:59:45 --> 0:59:51
and when I told him that I've been immediately censored he told me that I was not the first
491
0:59:51 --> 0:59:58
one to report this kind of behaviour. Okay Stephen are you down because Shima's got his
492
0:59:58 --> 1:00:07
hand up as well. Yes yeah go ahead. So Surya stop your share. Sure oh yes immediately.
493
1:00:10 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ening and one question please. Sure. There is this particular
494
1:00:19 --> 1:00:26
famous document in Japanese about the bio distribution of the Pfizer shot.
495
1:00:27 --> 1:00:33
I was wondering was it obtained as a result of a FOIA request in Japan or in the US?
496
1:00:33 --> 1:00:38
As far as I know of yes I guess it's Peter Doshi who filed the FOIA request in Japan and he got the
497
1:00:38 --> 1:00:44
document. Thank you I thought it was very interesting this FOIA request in Japan.
498
1:00:45 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] a similar document that somebody got through a FOIA request in Australia.
499
1:00:54 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ralia they tend to over-redact everything.
500
1:01:02 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ephen so can we let Surya go to bed before we get back to the comments. That's great thank
501
1:01:08 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ephen okay. Can you form a new French resistance?
502
1:01:19 --> 1:01:24
Oh I'm afraid about all this FOIA stuff I'm afraid that I'm quite alone.
503
1:01:26 --> 1:01:33
You're afraid what? That I'm quite alone. Quite alone yeah. Yeah all right let him go to bed.
504
1:01:34 --> 1:01:37
No one in France knows about you. No one in France knows about you.
505
1:01:37 --> 1:01:42
I tend to be quite I don't want to be exposed too much.
506
1:01:44 --> 1:01:50
I'm the same yeah Charles the same. All right that's that's the way.
507
1:01:54 --> 1:02:00
Hang out for a little bit Surya until you go to bed to turn this on in your pillow while you're
508
1:02:00 --> 1:02:07
laying on your pillow. But thank you Surya so much. You know and just like you know just like
509
1:02:07 --> 1:02:14
myself when Surya and I talk we you know we need help. We need angel money to keep us afloat.
510
1:02:14 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ay working. So I know Surya didn't mention any of that but yeah he
511
1:02:21 --> 1:02:28
I mean what a resource. When he reached out to me and I found him and I realized oh my god
512
1:02:28 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ory there. I hear I'm just staying in my lane with
513
1:02:34 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ually put together and submitted some VAERS ID numbers
514
1:02:42 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] any old VAERS ID numbers. These particular VAERS ID numbers were
515
1:02:50 --> 1:02:57
there's about 10 or 10 to 12 of them and they were either written by a contactable physician
516
1:02:58 --> 1:03:04
which would be highly probable that they are authentic and not a false report because it says
517
1:03:04 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]able physician and or the death that was deleted
518
1:03:14 --> 1:03:21
was not there wasn't another another person that fit that description assuming that it was like
519
1:03:21 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]icate because that those are the two premises that they can delete reports. So assuming that
520
1:03:29 --> 1:03:36
it's a it's a duplicate I go look for the twin duplicate and I couldn't even find like a 31
521
1:03:36 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction] in May on you know in in January at all of two that you know
522
1:03:43 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction] him some very specific ones and that's what Surya made
523
1:03:50 --> 1:03:57
mention to that we he's got a few in in the works of that but he said you know he doesn't have high
524
1:03:57 --> 1:04:04
hopes that he's going to be successful but point being Surya's in his outfit he's not he's not like
525
1:04:04 --> 1:04:12
a lone ranger and he's not completely unknown because Brian Hooker knows about him and you know
526
1:04:12 --> 1:04:17
Josh knows about him so I mean he gets gets around a little bit you know in the down low but yeah what
527
1:04:17 --> 1:04:23
a resource I think if you guys can reach out to your attorney friends and let them know that this
528
1:04:23 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]s in France and and start start connecting the dots and we could all
529
1:04:29 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]ion that would be helpful. So Albert so you think that Surya is
530
1:04:37 --> 1:04:42
sitting on evidence which would be useful to lawyers do you? I do. Well he doesn't think that so
531
1:04:43 --> 1:04:49
yeah but I think you're right. I think he has got a lot of evidence you know to the right person I
532
1:04:49 --> 1:04:57
guess to the right person it's valuable you know I think that one that that that has my name on it
533
1:04:57 --> 1:05:04
and there's analysis name on it about the the Alaskan death and you know that bears one is
534
1:05:05 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]s yeah thank you thank you Surya thank you to the group.
535
1:05:13 --> 1:05:21
So I'm ready to I'm ready to kick off my my half my portion I'll be fast if I can share my screen
536
1:05:21 --> 1:05:31
I'm just gonna jump right in and get going oh yes I need I'm disabled. Yeah um is Charles there
537
1:05:32 --> 1:05:38
because I don't think I can let's have a look. Uh oh maybe he went to the bathroom.
538
1:05:39 --> 1:05:45
Um let's just see whether I can do it nope I'm still on this yeah we'll have to wait
539
1:05:45 --> 1:05:50
till he comes back Albert. Okay well no worries I was I was just gonna run through a PowerPoint
540
1:05:50 --> 1:05:58
presentation of about uh [privacy contact redaction] wanted to get them on screen just for
541
1:05:58 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]ay purposes um somebody asked if Tom Renz uh really be helped by getting info on what questions
542
1:06:06 --> 1:06:12
how to ask. Yeah you know I um I've spoken to Tom Renz personally on the phone a couple of times
543
1:06:12 --> 1:06:19
um a while back in the beginning and um I actually told him about the fire the um the bears report
544
1:06:19 --> 1:06:26
that I submitted myself on behalf of my uncle who stroked he's still alive but he stroked on his uh
545
1:06:26 --> 1:06:32
30 days after his second Moderna shot and I videotaped the whole thing like a how-to that's
546
1:06:32 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]arted you know how to submit uh a uh a bears report and uh so I went through
547
1:06:39 --> 1:06:47
the whole process I didn't realize that you have to send an additional email to info.gov to cdc at
548
1:06:47 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] your finalized uh record and um you know so I realized oh my
549
1:06:58 --> 1:07:03
gosh there's so many people that file reports that do not do that and then therefore they don't know
550
1:07:04 --> 1:07:11
which one is their report and I think that people on the other side they know which ID numbers are
551
1:07:11 --> 1:07:17
in process that nobody's requested for a finalized ID number that's a part of the secret sauce I
552
1:07:17 --> 1:07:22
think right there for them they know which ones that they can pluck off and never publish at all
553
1:07:23 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]s the the second part and the more important part of that story is that when I
554
1:07:28 --> 1:07:35
got the report back they they omitted uh words and phrases out of my first-hand account write-up
555
1:07:36 --> 1:07:43
and they also invented symptoms and smqs basically diagnoses that my uncle did not have
556
1:07:43 --> 1:07:48
he wasn't psychosis he didn't have no psychosis anyway didn't have Parkinson's
557
1:07:48 --> 1:07:55
yet that appeared in the report and they invented that stuff and I will testify under oath
558
1:07:55 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] that that is not true my uncle is was was as fit as a as a horse um
559
1:08:05 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]s I told Tom Renz about that one and everybody you know everybody gets excited about
560
1:08:10 --> 1:08:17
that but nobody follows up with me but I'm here I'm no I haven't heard of anybody wanting to
561
1:08:17 --> 1:08:25
uh making a case like that I believe that that VAERS themselves filed a false claim a false
562
1:08:25 --> 1:08:29
report on my behalf on the patient's behalf you invented stuff I wonder how much I wonder how
563
1:08:29 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] but anyways I digress I'm just trying to use up time before
564
1:08:37 --> 1:08:42
yeah is Charles here I wonder uh Charles are you there oh yeah I'm here I'm here I'm trying to
565
1:08:42 --> 1:08:51
trying to get my screen to share my screen good sorry Albert I uh I have to go to you know that
566
1:08:51 --> 1:08:59
well-known place talk to a man about a horse correct okay you can now share your screen
567
1:08:59 --> 1:09:04
Albert okay got it here I go I'm just jumping in jumping in here
568
1:09:09 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] let me put it in presentation mode
569
1:09:15 --> 1:09:21
this presentation mode okay so I'm just going to run down um this is this is hot off the press
570
1:09:21 --> 1:09:27
this is the the um this week's data including this week's drop on Friday from VAERS this is
571
1:09:27 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]em and uh immediately I draw your eye to the very bottom of the screen this
572
1:09:33 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] 900,000 reports that they consider that that is actually
573
1:09:41 --> 1:09:47
classified as none of the above and I know that there's a lot of new faces in the zoom so I'll
574
1:09:47 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ain this quickly again but when these reports are filed and and health care workers or the
575
1:09:55 --> 1:10:01
patients themselves they don't check the boxes off they give very detailed information like yeah I
576
1:10:01 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] blood clots in my calves and blah blah blah all that stuff but they
577
1:10:07 --> 1:10:12
forget to check off the boxes of what you know did they land in the ER did they get hospitalized
578
1:10:13 --> 1:10:20
is it a permanent disability I mean my uncle who didn't die he I checked off like four boxes for
579
1:10:20 --> 1:10:26
him because he landed in the ER then was admitted to the hospital it was life-threatening and he's
580
1:10:26 --> 1:10:32
not the same so he's got permanent disability so he had like four different different boxes checked
581
1:10:32 --> 1:10:41
off which is the reason why down at the bottom the 111 percent there's way more you know there's 1.5
582
1:10:41 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] the official 1.3 million unique patients because uh basically 11
583
1:10:52 --> 1:11:00
percent of these uh patients these unique ID numbers are checked off more than one and so
584
1:11:00 --> 1:11:08
checked off more than once in these boxes so um this is just a summary I took the bottom
585
1:11:09 --> 1:11:16
um I said show me all the reports but by territory so you know Wyoming is the last on the list and
586
1:11:16 --> 1:11:21
then I put here as you can see our American what we consider our American territories
587
1:11:21 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] by events so from here we can't tell how many deaths but uh you see the foreign
588
1:11:27 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]itutes the foreign now over 500,[privacy contact redaction]rating
589
1:11:35 --> 1:11:42
um you know 100 115,000 reports that we don't know where in the continental United States
590
1:11:42 --> 1:11:48
um that you know they're from the patients from uh the you know the male female gender thing
591
1:11:49 --> 1:12:00
um you know however many that says uh three three percent and let me go to the next one
592
1:12:00 --> 1:12:07
okay so here's the money shot here this one is pretty incredible so the same report now by age
593
1:12:07 --> 1:12:17
for COVID-[privacy contact redaction]aw your eye to the bottom there's 400,000 reports 29 call that 30
594
1:12:17 --> 1:12:26
we'll speak in round numbers 30 400,[privacy contact redaction] an unknown age um I did some quick
595
1:12:26 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] the kids 17 and under that's 52,000 reports and this is a snapshot from my
596
1:12:35 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] where you could see that I've I basically for those that don't know many times a lot of times
597
1:12:43 --> 1:12:50
uh the age is is clearly documented in the in the write-up of the of the actual report
598
1:12:51 --> 1:12:58
but the but the age field is left empty is blank um they don't you know bears doesn't help us out
599
1:12:58 --> 1:13:07
and and and populate you know make a supervisory decision and populate the age field with with age
600
1:13:07 --> 1:13:13
because it's clearly written in the document no they they let it go um leaving us all you know
601
1:13:13 --> 1:13:20
needing uh analytics experts to figure out you know something like this to say well I have found
602
1:13:20 --> 1:13:28
over 200 and I don't know what that what the difference is uh from 122,000 to 400,000 I mean
603
1:13:29 --> 1:13:36
over 250,[privacy contact redaction]s where I've actually been able to see the age and then populate the
604
1:13:36 --> 1:13:45
age field um let me move this thing out of the way um so what I'm saying here and that I have
605
1:13:45 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]ual report doesn't tell me the specific age but they tell me that this is a
606
1:13:54 --> 1:14:01
neonate this is an infant this is a fetus this is a child this is an adolescent this is a teenager
607
1:14:01 --> 1:14:08
something like that so so I can't put the actual number age in there but I just type it in this is
608
1:14:08 --> 1:14:19
a child this is a baby so 579 so so for kids [privacy contact redaction]us the
609
1:14:19 --> 1:14:32
579 I got I got 64,500 kids to to their 52,[privacy contact redaction] 12,000 additional kids
610
1:14:32 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] pulled out of this unknown this unknown age bucket and you know that that makes a
611
1:14:40 --> 1:14:49
big difference uh when you're when you're doing analysis based on age stratified uh data um
612
1:14:51 --> 1:15:00
so also with that there is a very big problem of under I call it undercoding Greg part of
613
1:15:00 --> 1:15:07
cooper might call it under counting but we know that there are very serious adverse events in that
614
1:15:07 --> 1:15:15
now approaching 900 reports of none of the above you can see that I have so in my dashboard I have
615
1:15:15 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ured and reclassified in my dashboard I've upcoded them so I've upcoded
616
1:15:22 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]e here my color code says I've upcoded them to emergency so I've found
617
1:15:29 --> 1:15:35
them in none of the above uh or office visit and I've classified all the chest pains or this many
618
1:15:36 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] pains to to um emergency there's there's death in none of the above I mean just for starters
619
1:15:44 --> 1:15:53
there's cardiac arrests um thrombo cytopenia is the myocarditis in none of the above there's a ton
620
1:15:53 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] pain and they classify it as none of the above not serious so there's there's
621
1:16:00 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]arter kit 56 000 and I think I could squeeze out another another 40 000 and make it 100 000
622
1:16:08 --> 1:16:14
that's that's part of my part of my work there and um now on to the right side manufacturer
623
1:16:14 --> 1:16:25
and lot mismatches this this goes to the um to you know to the toxic lot um analysis plenty of
624
1:16:26 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]urer is moderna but then they give us a Pfizer lot
625
1:16:31 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] it by you know I color I have it color coded that I could say well you know I have
626
1:16:37 --> 1:16:42
so many reports that I've actually changed and some of these were permanent disabilities you know
627
1:16:42 --> 1:16:48
of course a lot of them were office visit none of the above but they're serious we got to re
628
1:16:48 --> 1:16:55
read the code re-upcode some of these but there's my list right there and so I have right now I
629
1:16:55 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction] a little more than this I probably have [privacy contact redaction] 6 000 reports that
630
1:17:00 --> 1:17:07
I can each and every one of them I I can't lose it in my dashboard I can look at every single one
631
1:17:07 --> 1:17:14
and say I change this to that I change that to that and that's what my that's what my that's the
632
1:17:14 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction] now I hope I invited Jessica Rose um I had the the distinct
633
1:17:23 --> 1:17:30
honor of of um talking to her over this zoom meeting at the blackout this was the pan data stuff
634
1:17:30 --> 1:17:36
earlier this week um excellent report and I you know I love to take her analysis and then try to
635
1:17:36 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]icate it and find the same thing and and I asked her a question and I hope she doesn't mind
636
1:17:45 --> 1:17:51
but I asked her I said what do you do to cleanse your data for the age stratified stuff you know
637
1:17:51 --> 1:17:58
do you is there some kind of uh you know in between or how does it work or do how many do
638
1:17:58 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] to exclude from this from this because you know we just saw that what was it almost 30
639
1:18:05 --> 1:18:13
30 percent of the entire database is unknown age what do you do well she she told me that she
640
1:18:13 --> 1:18:19
doesn't she doesn't cleanse at all she has to she has to omit those omit a third of the database
641
1:18:20 --> 1:18:25
and that's where I want to be a supplement to to her and to people like her all around the world
642
1:18:25 --> 1:18:33
who's doing this who can use the dashboard but more importantly for people like Jessica um
643
1:18:33 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]er file and get that jump start so we don't have to duplicate our efforts
644
1:18:41 --> 1:18:51
so wow [privacy contact redaction] a snapshot a cover of my um of my dashboard and
645
1:18:51 --> 1:19:00
right here um I'm just showing this is my entire [privacy contact redaction] unknown
646
1:19:00 --> 1:19:07
vax types this is another big issue you can see right here that um on based on the historical data
647
1:19:07 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ed claims a year historically and then all of a sudden
648
1:19:17 --> 1:19:25
when the when the vax when the jab rollout started in [privacy contact redaction]ogram bar here for 2020
649
1:19:26 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] half of december so that most of that is um you know is is probably
650
1:19:34 --> 1:19:41
covet 19 even though you know you may not I may not be able to prove all of that but I've definitely
651
1:19:41 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]e of thousand reports already that where it says in the write-up or if
652
1:19:48 --> 1:19:55
not the write-up it gives like a moderna lot number or a pfizer lot number so you can see
653
1:19:55 --> 1:20:04
unknown vax type we got to we got to focus our laser beam light on the unknown vax type and get
654
1:20:04 --> 1:20:11
to these ones because you know if the clue doesn't tell us it chances are it's probably um a covet a
655
1:20:11 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]orical data but uh you know I just I just point that out
656
1:20:17 --> 1:20:25
um mass deletions is a big thing they've been mass deleting uh claims um everybody it seems
657
1:20:25 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]e know now that they're doing that uh they've got a total of over 22,000 total
658
1:20:31 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] 16 weeks they've deleted 15,000 reports um you know I've done an analysis
659
1:20:39 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]em and here is the uh the blurb right here that you find every
660
1:20:45 --> 1:20:51
time you go to download uh every week to download their data you'll see that it's that this blurb
661
1:20:51 --> 1:20:59
right here de-identified bears data are available four to six weeks after reports is received so that
662
1:20:59 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] up to up to four to six weeks because they definitely receive reports and then
663
1:21:06 --> 1:21:12
turn around and publish them like real quick within eight days they don't they don't hold
664
1:21:12 --> 1:21:18
on to everything for four to six weeks and then and then um and then publish it but then again
665
1:21:18 --> 1:21:26
there's a ton of reports that they take well over six weeks matter of fact this last drop there was
666
1:21:26 --> 1:21:33
over 80 there was like about 80 reports that were basically held in their possession of the
667
1:21:33 --> 1:21:39
emergencies I'm sorry it was 68 emergencies that's that's what it was 68 emergency reports
668
1:21:39 --> 1:21:47
that were brought up this Friday that were held in their possession over six months 198 days before
669
1:21:47 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ually published it and we the people actually saw it that my friends is called
670
1:21:53 --> 1:22:00
throttling they that's what they do um apart from apart from mass deletions um
671
1:22:03 --> 1:22:11
here's just a snapshot from my Microsoft Excel uh reports deletion deletion reports so I keep track
672
1:22:11 --> 1:22:16
on the Excel spreadsheet as well as my Tableau dashboard and I try to duplicate everything I
673
1:22:16 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]icate it in Tableau but you can see right here um you know the
674
1:22:22 --> 1:22:28
frequency here they they've came down a little bit but I kind of feel like the frog in the pot
675
1:22:28 --> 1:22:33
of water where I'm saying now oh they've only deleted 300 reports this week which was like
676
1:22:33 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]rage but even that is too much you know 300 reports a week that's
677
1:22:39 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] four to six weeks to to rigorously authenticate a claim you know
678
1:22:47 --> 1:22:53
make the sausage and determine is this a false report or is this a duplicate okay it it looks
679
1:22:53 --> 1:23:00
it looks authentic let's publish it therefore they don't have to delete uh reports and if they do at
680
1:23:00 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]e know that that report once existed and now they deleted it and um you
681
1:23:08 --> 1:23:14
know we should be able to find the twin duplicate but no I you know I've said this a bunch of times
682
1:23:14 --> 1:23:21
before I could find maybe only 10 percent I've spot checked about 2 000 reports and I could only
683
1:23:21 --> 1:23:25
find maybe [privacy contact redaction]icate
684
1:23:27 --> 1:23:33
so jumping over to foreign there's so much foreign data there's that 500 000
685
1:23:35 --> 1:23:42
reports and there is a two-digit country code embedded in one of those columns of data it's
686
1:23:42 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]s it you know with that I'm off to the races I can determine
687
1:23:48 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] what country they came from so you know the international community that's watching this
688
1:23:53 --> 1:24:01
video um there's plenty of data in there and you can you know use the dashboard to walk it down
689
1:24:01 --> 1:24:08
and see you know what what's going on by country and you know you can click on this worldometer
690
1:24:09 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ure right here and it'll launch you launch you to the worldometer so you can see um you know
691
1:24:17 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ion right here where you can get the the population of the countries and here's a little
692
1:24:23 --> 1:24:29
blurb that says the foreign countries like why do we get foreign data I've been you know I've been
693
1:24:29 --> 1:24:34
trying to figure this out for for months a year now and I've had this I mean
694
1:24:35 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]urers that were reported to their foreign subsidiaries so you know I think all the
695
1:24:42 --> 1:24:49
governments are the subsidiary of big pharma that's how I read that uh but it says under FDA
696
1:24:49 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]urer is notified of a foreign case report that describes an event that
697
1:24:56 --> 1:25:02
is both so I get I take it that it's both serious and unexpected it has to be both of those things
698
1:25:03 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]s does not appear in the product labeling like uh sure okay well you know
699
1:25:09 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]ion why are you giving us all this low level stuff then all this none of the above
700
1:25:14 --> 1:25:20
in office visits if it's supposed to be serious and unexpected that's another question for later
701
1:25:20 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]ain why the foreign lots look a lot more kind of toxic
702
1:25:28 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]ic lots and there are there are lots that go both domestically and international
703
1:25:36 --> 1:25:42
um you know they kind of cross over like that unexplainable but even with that said
704
1:25:42 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]s think of Simon when I see this one because he was the one who told me like
705
1:25:47 --> 1:25:55
Belgian look at Belgian and their permanent disabilities the size of Belgian uh you know
706
1:25:55 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]e and they're giving us in the system uh 6400 permanent disabilities you know
707
1:26:03 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] ours the USA we got 13 000 permanent disabilities but look how much bigger we are
708
1:26:10 --> 1:26:16
than Belgium is so you know in this blurb here I'm thinking hey you know what I think the foreign
709
1:26:16 --> 1:26:23
data is probably more truthful than our American data we got too many barriers over here um but
710
1:26:23 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]s that's what this that's what this one was about um I'm gonna eventually do an analysis and
711
1:26:29 --> 1:26:36
use the matrix the percentages of of these this foreign data and apply it to the domestic data
712
1:26:36 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]ic of what's going on as far as uh the the reports
713
1:26:43 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]s throw this one out this this slide out follow-up reports do not appear people
714
1:26:51 --> 1:27:01
no follow-up reports and that wasn't always the case um they did they did um append append the
715
1:27:01 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] with follow-up data um in [privacy contact redaction] to the end of 2010 and it says
716
1:27:10 --> 1:27:16
it in the CDC's blurb itself but here is the report here is the blurb the official blurb that
717
1:27:16 --> 1:27:21
says that follow-up reports do not appear and they say it five times five different ways they
718
1:27:21 --> 1:27:28
don't they don't they don't delete reports and put a report back on there although they do it but not
719
1:27:28 --> 1:27:33
for not because the patient died so now they're going to delete the original one and repost
720
1:27:34 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]n't really seen that at all um but you know they continue to
721
1:27:40 --> 1:27:47
receive uh continuous updates including revisions new reports and proceed for preceding time
722
1:27:47 --> 1:27:53
periods yeah but they don't make it public follow-up reports do not appear so you know
723
1:27:53 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]e the 12 000 this this number is a little higher now but the 12 000 underage kids
724
1:27:59 --> 1:28:04
um that are in there is none of the above they're just they're just recorded as an
725
1:28:04 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]ration error because they were underage my god underage if it you know they develop
726
1:28:12 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] we're not going to know about it I mean that's that's one way man
727
1:28:18 --> 1:28:25
that's one way to stack the deck in their favor um so here's the here's the series here's the
728
1:28:25 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] thing this on Thursday this came out um you know the FOIA and everybody's uh you know
729
1:28:32 --> 1:28:39
including myself Craig Particooper Sasha's in there of course we are um looking at the data
730
1:28:39 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] gave us and um trying you know we're trying to see how
731
1:28:45 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] they gave us the sizes of the lot and I was telling somebody
732
1:28:53 --> 1:28:58
and I want to verify this with Sasha and Craig Particooper am I seeing this right or am I
733
1:28:58 --> 1:29:03
doing the formulas right because it's looking like you know we we we you know I've heard it say that
734
1:29:03 --> 1:29:10
doses and this is doses of shipped not in not administered into arms but just shipped I guess
735
1:29:10 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ured that um you know the the lot sizes were anything from
736
1:29:18 --> 1:29:27
like 700 000 to a million to a million and a half doses per lot um these numbers are are much higher
737
1:29:27 --> 1:29:36
so I don't know if my math is right but you know the total I got 425 million doses which
738
1:29:37 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ained to a close friend you know how much how much does this constitute did how many how
739
1:29:42 --> 1:29:50
many lots did they not give us and um you know over here my my uh my heat map each column this
740
1:29:50 --> 1:29:57
is kind of looking like how bad is your batch right um but each column has its own color condition
741
1:29:57 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]aring at this that something like a two a third of the
742
1:30:07 --> 1:30:17
way down this this um lot en6202 uh the relative toxicity now I got my own formula for that it's
743
1:30:17 --> 1:30:25
pretty pretty awesome I think I'm pretty good with that relative toxicity but this one relatively
744
1:30:25 --> 1:30:33
speaking is is toxic is pretty toxic but it only has 2,[privacy contact redaction] that it has
745
1:30:33 --> 1:30:39
106 deaths it's proportionate amount of permanent disability so that's how the the whole color you
746
1:30:39 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]are at it for a while for the colors to kind of make sense to you but um that's what
747
1:30:45 --> 1:30:50
that's what that was about that's what I was doing since Thursday um
748
1:30:51 --> 1:30:59
and this is a this is a shot from my from my dashboard um and it's just just an example I
749
1:30:59 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] Moderna with expiration dates by uh for the month of March
750
1:31:06 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]art to see it like like this and you can scooch from left to right so you can really
751
1:31:12 --> 1:31:19
get creative and view and pivot on this data a thousand different ways that's why I like
752
1:31:19 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] isn't enough for me I gotta keep I gotta make it turn
753
1:31:26 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ures um but that's just a sample um I was hoping uh
754
1:31:34 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ill awake but this was the this was the this is the smoking gun right here this was
755
1:31:40 --> 1:31:48
the two-year-old Alaskan kid death that um you know Highwire and Aaron Ciri uh reported on
756
1:31:49 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]i is a Highwire's attorney it was my work I caught that lightning in a bottle
757
1:31:56 --> 1:32:06
that day and then of course uh my my yoda my my master yoda uh Wayne from various analysis dot
758
1:32:06 --> 1:32:11
info you know help help me in the sense that like he vetted it he goes yep he asked me questions
759
1:32:11 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]e do you know shoot me off these other some of these other
760
1:32:17 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]e like oh I don't know I didn't get that I didn't get that well you weren't the you weren't
761
1:32:22 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] one I did download it in the first few minutes you must have downloaded like five
762
1:32:27 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]opped I downloaded it in the first minute that's how
763
1:32:31 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]i got no records found got a response back from from
764
1:32:40 --> 1:32:46
um CDC or HHS technically it was HHS that said no records found
765
1:32:48 --> 1:32:55
Mr. Suria in his infinite wisdom and the way he filed his this report here is the smoking gun
766
1:32:55 --> 1:33:03
where John Sue sends an email out to all his cronies heavily redacted and there's more pages
767
1:33:03 --> 1:33:10
there this was a 16 page uh report all of it's basically redacted but here is the number here is
768
1:33:10 --> 1:33:16
the ID number where they you know they were saying I guess it's a different uh the next page
769
1:33:16 --> 1:33:22
that says ah we think it's fake but the way John to me the way John Sue asked his cronies like hey
770
1:33:22 --> 1:33:28
I think this is fake can you look into it just by saying it that way that is a tip off to his
771
1:33:28 --> 1:33:37
cronies how he wants his cronies to respond back to him that's what I get but anyways the point is
772
1:33:37 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] 1887456 it it never it was never officially published to be
773
1:33:46 --> 1:33:53
deleted even it never made it it was alive it was visible for for three minutes and then disappeared
774
1:33:53 --> 1:33:58
hoping that nobody would know the difference and then they tell Aaron Ciri no records on it
775
1:33:58 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]e right here
776
1:34:00 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] to show you that this isn't my first rodeo and I bring up
777
1:34:10 --> 1:34:17
uh brook jackson and uh uh robert barnes barnes law and uh warner mendenhall if he's involved
778
1:34:17 --> 1:34:24
with the brook jackson case but my old boss uh chris rydell here in cambell california who
779
1:34:24 --> 1:34:31
owned hunter laboratories where I worked for 10 years this is my baby daughter she's not such a
780
1:34:31 --> 1:34:39
baby anymore she's [privacy contact redaction]s I ran his billing operation at hunter labs for 10 years
781
1:34:40 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] came out with this book he won he's the biggest I bring him up because he's the biggest
782
1:34:47 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]leblower in America single person whistleblower and when if and when uh brook
783
1:34:54 --> 1:34:59
jackson wins god bless her heart I hope she wins it makes billions of dollars she's going to
784
1:34:59 --> 1:35:06
dethrone my my old boss here chris rydell you can see you can see this and he puts down here in his
785
1:35:06 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ober november of 2021 one man's bare-knuckle fight to
786
1:35:13 --> 1:35:19
tech taxpayers for medical fraud got camilla harris's name on there but I'll forgive him for
787
1:35:19 --> 1:35:28
that but he one man's bare-knuckle fight I like to think I like to think I was one of those knuckles
788
1:35:28 --> 1:35:35
in that bare-knuckle fight just to let you guys know and uh thank you guys that's a quick one I
789
1:35:35 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] this here I wanted to jump in now if I could to um
790
1:35:42 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] two minutes to show you the uh the dashboard my own dashboard just just poke around and move
791
1:35:51 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] refresh that for a second just so you can actually see
792
1:35:59 --> 1:36:05
it move I didn't even show you this the symptom search on this thing I'll give it a second here
793
1:36:05 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]urer so I didn't even talk about uh the monkey pox and the nova vax that
794
1:36:11 --> 1:36:19
has it has appeared but then it has the color schema you can see um you know how that works
795
1:36:19 --> 1:36:24
kind of the darker the color is basically the more severe the event and then the foreign
796
1:36:24 --> 1:36:31
the color scheme is the same as the color scheme so you can see the color scheme is the same as the
797
1:36:31 --> 1:36:38
more severe the event and then the foreign so this is all of our foreign and then I got it um
798
1:36:38 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ates and our unknown domestic continental united states and
799
1:36:46 --> 1:36:54
the territories um the male and female pie right here a lot more females than males but then in the
800
1:36:54 --> 1:37:03
deaths it's more males than females um the lots that you can uh you know so this is true so many
801
1:37:03 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] blank don't have a lot number at all the other the the next biggest are are ones
802
1:37:09 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] unknown it says unavailable uh request from the pharmacy a truncated lot you just can't
803
1:37:16 --> 1:37:22
make sense of it and then so that's why it makes the rest of it so so flat so black you know you
804
1:37:22 --> 1:37:30
can't see any of the numbers there my relative a lot toxicity uh data that I won't bother to
805
1:37:30 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] of time but you know any one of these things that you click on
806
1:37:36 --> 1:37:42
it'll move all these all these graphs all at one time by age year look at that in specific
807
1:37:43 --> 1:37:51
age if you want to you know look at it by specific age just 33 year olds in texas or something female
808
1:37:51 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]range reason you want to dissect it but that's that's how this is now this is by
809
1:37:56 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] graph but one is by a with uh stacked by event level and then the other one
810
1:38:04 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ate and you can see the foreign that's why the foreign jumps out
811
1:38:09 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]uff is broken into red states and blue states and if you could see like
812
1:38:17 --> 1:38:26
puerto rico might pop up here as a green that's the our territories um but i'm almost done two
813
1:38:26 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] wanted to show you this uh symptom search right here and i just made some
814
1:38:31 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ied the symptom search in here and what this is telling me is that
815
1:38:37 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]s generates over five million total symptoms and then um you know so
816
1:38:47 --> 1:38:56
what you can do here is you can do something like this actually search for uh like myocarditis as an
817
1:38:56 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]e since uh craig did a did an excellent uh review on this um myocarditis let me get it
818
1:39:03 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ion let that one come in for a second it'll start to
819
1:39:10 --> 1:39:15
there it pops up and not to gild the lily here but let me just go down and pick out because i
820
1:39:15 --> 1:39:21
didn't realize there was so there was a few flavors of myocarditis so there's the regular
821
1:39:21 --> 1:39:30
there's bacterial infectious uh good enough just to just to drive home the point that now
822
1:39:31 --> 1:39:37
you can use this and i can see wait a minute you're telling me that in myocarditis on mine i have
823
1:39:37 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]itis that are office visits
824
1:39:45 --> 1:39:52
and and then an additional 86 that's none of the above is that true is that true let me show you
825
1:39:52 --> 1:39:57
how i've connected it to um i'm going to take off all the heavy all the heavy stuff
826
1:39:59 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] look at the low level the low hanging fruit none of the above office visits
827
1:40:07 --> 1:40:13
and and none of the above oh and take off the birth defects see i see a little purple in there
828
1:40:13 --> 1:40:18
so i'm going to take off birth defect and now i'm going to jump over to meta alerts how i
829
1:40:18 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ed it to meta alerts and has [privacy contact redaction]s is that could that be true let's vet let's authenticate
830
1:40:26 --> 1:40:36
because i am sincere i am without wax i am genuine and so is my dashboard so here you go ending in
831
1:40:36 --> 1:40:45
630 uh this one flies on the flytrap unknown location of course myocarditis there's the
832
1:40:45 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]itis and you can see the report nothing is checked no life threatening no office visit no er
833
1:40:54 --> 1:41:00
you know so this one to the casual observer to the rest of the world this is none of the above
834
1:41:00 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ive look how look how safe and effective this uh this experiment
835
1:41:07 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] 900 000 reports are none of the above uh this is the age here's a night here's a
836
1:41:15 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]e of 19 year olds right here right in this little section right here let's take a look at them
837
1:41:21 --> 1:41:28
foreign no age oh look at look at this one has a no age how do i know that it's actually 19 years old
838
1:41:28 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]itis that they actually came from germany that's the two digit
839
1:41:34 --> 1:41:39
country code right there uh and that they're 19 years old how do i know that well because
840
1:41:39 --> 1:41:47
it's clearly written right here [privacy contact redaction]itis this to the casual observer to the
841
1:41:47 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] of the world that's none of the above not serious safe and effective that's the problem
842
1:41:52 --> 1:41:56
with this that's the problem with this database it just needs to be cleaned up it just needs to be
843
1:41:56 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]e entrusted to maintain it do not give it any love
844
1:42:03 --> 1:42:09
and then when we go do our analysis for toxic lots then we shoot ourselves in the foot so to
845
1:42:09 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] off the low level none of the above or we shave off because
846
1:42:16 --> 1:42:22
we don't populate the age so there is so much stuff here where that's where i want to be a
847
1:42:22 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ement to to not only the analytical people um so that they can you know use the dashboard
848
1:42:30 --> 1:42:36
themselves to know where to go look that that's how i use my dashboard to go find which ones with
849
1:42:36 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]itis i need to up up code to uh depend depending on the report and that's you know segwaying
850
1:42:44 --> 1:42:52
into working with uh my buddy my new friend uh hawk gary hawk who i think is in the audience
851
1:42:52 --> 1:43:00
so appropriate that he's the hawk and i'm the eagle but we're doing um automated automated data
852
1:43:00 --> 1:43:07
cleansing using python language python probability tools and so that's some heavy that's some cool
853
1:43:07 --> 1:43:13
stuff right there that we're going to basically what i've been doing manually by hand faithfully
854
1:43:15 --> 1:43:21
giving my you know giving giving my life up for this because nobody's doing it quite quite like
855
1:43:21 --> 1:43:28
i'm doing it and i just want to help i just want to be a supplement um look at this acute myocardial
856
1:43:28 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] messing around uh how old is this person we don't know eagle says he's 62
857
1:43:36 --> 1:43:42
um and is none of the above look at that none of the above not serious and who submitted that report
858
1:43:43 --> 1:43:52
what's that who submitted the report who submitted the report well it could have been the patient or
859
1:43:52 --> 1:44:00
a or a hospital i seem to think i seem to feel based on thousands of these reports that i read
860
1:44:00 --> 1:44:07
when it's a myocardial infarction especially that they landed in the hospital and possibly it was
861
1:44:07 --> 1:44:13
the hospital who who did this because a patient so that category is stripped away from the report
862
1:44:14 --> 1:44:19
what's that the category of submitter is stripped away from the stored report that's never it's
863
1:44:19 --> 1:44:25
never really in in the report sometimes it may say in here in the write-up that's that's the
864
1:44:25 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] it's going to say there's not a dedicated field that says who submitted um
865
1:44:31 --> 1:44:35
um you know bring up the two-year-old for the last good two-year-old hang on
866
1:44:35 --> 1:44:40
albert albert this two minutes has become 12 minutes now okay okay well let me let me wrap
867
1:44:40 --> 1:44:47
it up let me wrap it up that's that was sorry about that that was uh just how the um me unshare my
868
1:44:47 --> 1:44:56
screen that was basically how that oh am i off no hold on
869
1:44:59 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]op screen
870
1:45:04 --> 1:45:12
there we go sorry i you know that um you know basically the bottom line is i've had a lot of
871
1:45:12 --> 1:45:18
help to get me here um i've i've sharpened iron with a lot of good people i've tried to sharpen
872
1:45:18 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]e i want to be a supplement um i need help i need i you know i
873
1:45:24 --> 1:45:31
need i need um i need financial help so i'm gonna start i'm gonna start this um website one way or
874
1:45:31 --> 1:45:37
another but i need a uh angel consulting i i don't want i want to be i don't want to be censored i
875
1:45:37 --> 1:45:43
don't want amazon to shut me down uh you know or some web hosting to shut me down because they
876
1:45:43 --> 1:45:48
don't they don't like what i'm what i'm doing so i need kind of like technical help and web
877
1:45:48 --> 1:45:55
design or who to go with and that type of stuff but but you can see you can see there that that
878
1:45:55 --> 1:46:03
um the world without knowing without saying it explicitly the world is hungry for an intuitive
879
1:46:04 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] which is which is what i got going and this is the stuff i've been doing
880
1:46:11 --> 1:46:17
for ceos um in my journeys they keep me in the basement making them making them executive level
881
1:46:17 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] saw and um you know i uh it's going to happen one way or another
882
1:46:26 --> 1:46:32
all right you've made it clear albert what what do you need so thank you um glenn glenn your question
883
1:46:32 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] before we get to that question rima has an interesting strategy
884
1:46:38 --> 1:46:44
very relevant to what we're talking about in this group so rima wants a couple of minutes to share
885
1:46:44 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] and then put your hand up for questions glenn put your hand up for the
886
1:46:48 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]ion to albert and rima would you like me to share that document or you want me to share
887
1:46:56 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction] shared the document it's called strategic framework um i appreciate even a couple
888
1:47:05 --> 1:47:12
of minutes to share this uh there's a lot to it but basically my strategic analysis of the situation
889
1:47:12 --> 1:47:23
that we're facing globally is that the uh the war machine that is coming towards us and destroying
890
1:47:23 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]roying national sovereignty and personal sovereignty uh is the who in its uh
891
1:47:34 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ed nations and we've talked a lot about that and so on so
892
1:47:40 --> 1:47:47
we can't negotiate with the terrorists this is a terrorist criminal organization uh collaboration
893
1:47:47 --> 1:47:55
with many other pieces to it um so my thought was okay let's kill it and uh in order to do that
894
1:47:56 --> 1:48:04
we need to remove the pseudo legitimacy which it has granted to itself or which the uh the nation
895
1:48:04 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction] granted to it by entering into treaties and agreements treaties and agreements can be
896
1:48:13 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]awn from but the only way that that will happen given how
897
1:48:19 --> 1:48:26
incredibly well funded and organized and so on this particular terrorist organization is
898
1:48:26 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]imate is if there is a global popular uprising uh based around
899
1:48:34 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]s don't you dare um and so i have created i've been meeting with a group of people uh in
900
1:48:42 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]s and professionals in eight countries i'm talking to people in the
901
1:48:50 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]an is for local regional and um uh organizational diversity
902
1:49:02 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] you want to do it that way do it that way all focused on
903
1:49:07 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ive which is kill who and then hashtag kill who space before who kills
904
1:49:18 --> 1:49:27
you it's not polite it's not um uh courteous to say that sort of thing and that's precisely
905
1:49:27 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]eous is insufficient to deal with the threat and
906
1:49:34 --> 1:49:42
we all know how massive and deadly the threat is so i'm going to put my email in the chat
907
1:49:42 --> 1:49:51
and i'm going to ask you to reach out to me and uh join the discussion uh and see if this is
908
1:49:51 --> 1:49:59
meaningful for you your organization your region uh and so on i believe that this is a difficult
909
1:49:59 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ive and frankly from my point of view my understanding is if we don't do this
910
1:50:06 --> 1:50:14
we die so uh i'll put my email and my phone number if you can put the email in and also put the
911
1:50:14 --> 1:50:19
document in again because it was early in the chat that you put it up i i just put it in a little
912
1:50:19 --> 1:50:26
while ago but i will certainly put it in again uh and thank you so much and i i have to leave in
913
1:50:26 --> 1:50:32
in a minute or two but i will do this i'll put the document in and my email and phone number
914
1:50:33 --> 1:50:39
excellent thank you thank you rima for sharing your thinking please have a read of that strategic
915
1:50:39 --> 1:50:55
plan glen it's coming one moment beautiful there it is is it did that pop up did it populate
916
1:50:56 --> 1:51:09
one second no no yeah oh okay so i'll put my now i'll put my uh my data in thank you no it's not
917
1:51:09 --> 1:51:16
yet not yet there no well then i'll do it again do it again all right while you're doing that well
918
1:51:16 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ease take on board think about the strategic plan we've got
919
1:51:22 --> 1:51:29
world war three here this is part of this is one of the battles um so glen questions that are new
920
1:51:29 --> 1:51:37
keep going with that element because i got river on before before three three p.m go comment to you
921
1:51:37 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ory and your skill set is around roll-ups and statistical
922
1:51:42 --> 1:51:47
patterns uh i want to encourage you to you there are times you need to do drill downs
923
1:51:47 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ories now you pointed out some with conditions and
924
1:51:52 --> 1:51:57
in ages but you didn't really dig into some of the individual ones so right now could you pull
925
1:51:57 --> 1:52:04
up the uh the the two-year-old and sort of walk us through what was said in the report and and
926
1:52:04 --> 1:52:11
and what can be inferred from the kind of things that were said um actually i i i included in my
927
1:52:11 --> 1:52:17
i can include the download a 32 page document this is from there's the story the backstory is
928
1:52:17 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]nes bears analysis dot info and the actual report itself um so i can i can do that
929
1:52:26 --> 1:52:32
um i don't have access well i do have access to the pdf i don't know do i have time or
930
1:52:33 --> 1:52:40
if there's a specific place that it is detailed just put that in the chat yeah definitely right
931
1:52:40 --> 1:52:45
yeah i will right right here that's what i was thank you that's right coming right i want to
932
1:52:45 --> 1:52:49
comment i mean you opened up a few of them but you kind of jumped it up and down it you didn't even
933
1:52:49 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] us time to sort of read some of the details yeah i'm so sorry it's all text that's jammed
934
1:52:55 --> 1:53:00
together it's it's not paragraphs and things if there's times when you could go down and highlight
935
1:53:00 --> 1:53:07
things so it's more readable it stands out and and and a personal story sticks in people's brain
936
1:53:07 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]and mr mako i i have 400 videos of weekly audits for now a year
937
1:53:15 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ly that where i'm reading reports but you know for for this for this audience
938
1:53:22 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction] to show you the capabilities of this dashboard and and
939
1:53:28 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction] can be authenticated one report at a time against uh against the med alerts
940
1:53:36 --> 1:53:46
data so uh but thank you i'll take that i'll do a better job next time thank you thanks so the
941
1:53:46 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ion that albert raises which is a an interesting one is who can albert
942
1:53:55 --> 1:54:01
get funding from and there are many organizations of it so that you've put that out here but there
943
1:54:02 --> 1:54:08
are groups so clearly there's truth for health has funding for court cases there are lawyers
944
1:54:08 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] cases your data is relevant for court cases and the question is
945
1:54:14 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]ions as to where albert there are which organizations he should approach
946
1:54:21 --> 1:54:29
for funding and surya for funding uh because there are people with money who realize the
947
1:54:29 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] to be asked yeah if i can if i can mention i wanted to bring up uh
948
1:54:38 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] uh now a dear friend and she's she's local i can go to her and shake her hand
949
1:54:44 --> 1:54:52
and say thank you she's in sacramento i'm in san jose which uh um yeah i'm wanting to you know if
950
1:54:52 --> 1:55:00
i get with any uh non-profit so to speak i want it to be i want it to be su su frost's non-profit
951
1:55:00 --> 1:55:06
guerrilla learning um but you know apart from that i don't know if she has a minute a minute
952
1:55:06 --> 1:55:12
to speak about that one but before that i just wanted to i just wanted to give a couple of
953
1:55:12 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] quickly uh raiman obams when dr raiman obams bombs away um uh who's
954
1:55:21 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] is not with us brandy vaughn of uh uh learn the risk dot org um the late brandy vaughn
955
1:55:29 --> 1:55:36
her website on learn the risk dot org has probably the best um dashboard bears dashboard i've seen so
956
1:55:36 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]ill i'm gonna make mine better but that one is pretty darn good but it's but it's made out
957
1:55:43 --> 1:55:51
of uh microsoft power power bi so it's made up so it's made in microsoft unfortunately um dr robert
958
1:55:51 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] on robert fulmick my god he's one of my favorites if you get the chance to see
959
1:55:57 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] jerry waters what what what what a man of integrity he actually
960
1:56:06 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ually went out and and supported me and and made a made a comfortable a sizable
961
1:56:12 --> 1:56:18
a donation to my to my cause god bless you dr waters i just wanted to mention that okay
962
1:56:18 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ions but on the issue of brandy vaughn who clearly was murdered
963
1:56:28 --> 1:56:38
and she forewarned her death um and the regulatory authority said nothing to see here does anybody
964
1:56:38 --> 1:56:45
know if any if anything further is going on with her murder because clearly she was healthy and fit
965
1:56:46 --> 1:56:53
and she did a video says if i die it's not because i had an accident or because i got sick does anyone
966
1:56:53 --> 1:56:56
know
967
1:56:58 --> 1:57:03
okay we don't so just keep your eyes peeled for that that was about two years ago i reckon
968
1:57:03 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] courageous former big pharma employee he's realized the fraud and so
969
1:57:11 --> 1:57:19
the the link is in the chat for learn the risk.org now there are people here um there are people
970
1:57:20 --> 1:57:29
we finished this at 8 30 tom rodman has put a call in sorry put a link into the video chat on
971
1:57:29 --> 1:57:39
telegram after we finish the formalities here so that's that's follow the link through there now
972
1:57:39 --> 1:57:45
one other announcement i want to remind you of that i made last week because we've got such a
973
1:57:45 --> 1:57:57
moving population um warner mendenhall advises over 16 000 legal cases going on in the us at the
974
1:57:57 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]s of covid so so bobby ann cox addressed us last week but 16 100 everybody
975
1:58:08 --> 1:58:14
i think you should be excited by that there's a lot of stuff going on and then elbert if you make
976
1:58:14 --> 1:58:21
your services available as daria put into the chat that is an expert witness you can be paid
977
1:58:21 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] specific data for specific specific cases so if you contact warner
978
1:58:30 --> 1:58:38
then make though your expert advice expert advice available for those court cases okay
979
1:58:39 --> 1:58:44
and you get paid by the hour for doing so well and thank you god bless you i mean more than anything
980
1:58:44 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] available to the poorest people around the world with the cell
981
1:58:50 --> 1:58:58
phone that can see the data and make the decision for themselves to not get the shot i mean and help
982
1:58:58 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]e and help the attorneys but the people i want to help first and foremost
983
1:59:03 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction] to see the data god bless you that's well one of the
984
1:59:10 --> 1:59:20
things your your data and what you derive from it i suggest you share that with leave lead on truth
985
1:59:20 --> 1:59:25
for health you've also got vax choice you've got children's health defense just keep sharing
986
1:59:25 --> 1:59:32
insights because then they will share that insight and vax choice for example if if you if any of you
987
1:59:32 --> 1:59:40
don't go to vax choice i'll put the link in va x choice.com it is a wonderful daily newsletter
988
1:59:40 --> 1:59:49
with three or four magnificent memes and elbert if you've got a crucial piece of data or suria's got
989
1:59:49 --> 1:59:56
a crucial piece of data share it with vax choice they'll put it on and and get it out because
990
1:59:56 --> 2:00:03
your the huge amount of data the person in the street cannot cope with it but a meme
991
2:00:03 --> 2:00:10
a funny meme an outrageous meme they can that's what i would recommend here's sue frost well done
992
2:00:10 --> 2:00:18
on your support of elbert thank you sue i just wanted to say albert thank you so much for your
993
2:00:18 --> 2:00:26
work and and i i love your mission of making it easier for the average person to understand
994
2:00:26 --> 2:00:31
what's in the various database but what you're doing goes so far beyond that because
995
2:00:32 --> 2:00:43
like there you're creating a way for us to quantify what's actually happening and to actually
996
2:00:43 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]orial format and you know i've been going back i know you've been helping
997
2:00:50 --> 2:00:57
me with some research to go back and look at the hr 5546 which is the national childhood vaccine
998
2:00:57 --> 2:01:08
act of 1986 and i'm trying to identify the the the exact wording of what does what is cdc or fda
999
2:01:08 --> 2:01:17
do what is their charge and are they doing it because there's a lot of confusion at the state
1000
2:01:17 --> 2:01:24
and local level if if i as a county supervisor ask my public health officer and i have several times
1001
2:01:24 --> 2:01:31
you know what is um why aren't we looking at theirs what about all you know the all these people
1002
2:01:31 --> 2:01:37
that are being injured and i've gone through all the injuries and what they basically say is we don't
1003
2:01:37 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction] some databases that we're managing in at the california level but
1004
2:01:44 --> 2:01:52
the cdc is the one who manages bears and i said so do they report to you you know what they're
1005
2:01:52 --> 2:01:57
seeing there and she said yes but no it's like divide and conquer it's like there's so many
1006
2:01:57 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]s that someone can report they're not all reporting to one system and no one's looking
1007
2:02:04 --> 2:02:11
at bears because they're delegitimizing it and so if there is a charge in that law on what the
1008
2:02:11 --> 2:02:19
you know cdc or fda was supposed to do i think we need to in on the legal side hold them to that
1009
2:02:19 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] for for us to better monitor and record adverse reactions so that we
1010
2:02:30 --> 2:02:37
can you know there's accountability so you're bringing that and you you know i'll do anything
1011
2:02:37 --> 2:02:43
i don't think there's time to really go into you know guerrilla learning but you know just i'll just
1012
2:02:43 --> 2:02:50
quickly say guerrilla i'm here to support in any way i can we have a a non-profit um in california
1013
2:02:50 --> 2:02:58
that was born out of covid we our initial protest was to bring um news to the world that there are
1014
2:02:58 --> 2:03:05
treatments and we brought jay bodhicharya and george farid and joe ladapo and steve kursh to
1015
2:03:05 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ed thousand dollars and we really thought at that time in january
1016
2:03:10 --> 2:03:14
21 that that was going to be the open it to the world and then everyone would know there's
1017
2:03:14 --> 2:03:22
treatments and it was amazing is the amount of um censorship that we received and um fast forward
1018
2:03:23 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]itutional sheriff and peace officers association to bring
1019
2:03:29 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]itutional studies in every california county so we have an
1020
2:03:36 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ure that we're building and i think um albert is considering doing uh the re we offer
1021
2:03:43 --> 2:03:49
a re-grant program whereby a committee or or anyone can operate under our non-profit with their
1022
2:03:50 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] some board members who attend this call regularly
1023
2:03:54 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] i don't know if she's here today and um also deborah caprazo who's
1024
2:04:01 --> 2:04:07
intricately involved in our company and so this is something i do on the side because i can't
1025
2:04:08 --> 2:04:14
fix everything at the public level we're doing everything we can and i'm super excited about
1026
2:04:14 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] so we'll see where this goes but we're gonna this is this is we're
1027
2:04:23 --> 2:04:29
hitting a tipping point they can't hold the news back anymore people are talking about it everywhere
1028
2:04:30 --> 2:04:38
and so thank you albert for the presentation today thank you sue and two of you are quite
1029
2:04:38 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]us cases more and more judges are not are not assuming that
1030
2:04:46 --> 2:04:55
anybody who's questioning the cvc or the fda is a nutcase anti-vaxxer and so it's becoming easier
1031
2:04:56 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]s and and bobby and cox's story last week is very relevant that that companies
1032
2:05:04 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ates pass and bureaucrats pass regulations that are simply unlawful but it takes time to get
1033
2:05:11 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]s all right anyone have thank you for that sir anyone have any suggestions
1034
2:05:20 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ions that they would like that they would like
1035
2:05:25 --> 2:05:34
so my feeling albert about your evidence is that you need so you're a data expert as i understand
1036
2:05:34 --> 2:05:42
it and um and you don't necessarily see the importance of the things you uncover so you
1037
2:05:42 --> 2:05:48
kind of think oh that's interesting um but i'm a little bit worried that a lot of the stuff that
1038
2:05:49 --> 2:05:53
i'm a little bit worried that a lot of the stuff that you are capable of turning up
1039
2:05:54 --> 2:06:00
is not going anywhere uh because my feeling is that you maybe need some help to
1040
2:06:02 --> 2:06:09
to uh you need to tell a friend or someone you're working with what your thoughts are about
1041
2:06:10 --> 2:06:16
what you're uncovering and that person needs to be intelligent enough or well informed enough to
1042
2:06:16 --> 2:06:22
pick up uh the importance of what you're saying for lawyers for example uh both now and in the
1043
2:06:22 --> 2:06:29
future so one of the things i think that would be and i haven't heard you mention this i don't think
1044
2:06:29 --> 2:06:36
so i i think it'd be really helpful if you were to go into theirs what what it was
1045
2:06:37 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]ory of it you know and um and also what is expected of them by americans and the rest of
1046
2:06:45 --> 2:06:52
the world because it's not just americans who report to theirs um um so i don't know whether
1047
2:06:52 --> 2:07:00
that makes sense but no yeah i uh yeah just uh you know i understand people's selective perception
1048
2:07:01 --> 2:07:08
um and everybody has one i could tell you that there's been a dozen nights that i've cried by
1049
2:07:08 --> 2:07:19
myself not for me for the kids for this depopulation um you know so much so that i
1050
2:07:19 --> 2:07:24
i'm just a medical biller but i do not want to participate in the medical industry any longer
1051
2:07:24 --> 2:07:32
and i and i walked out and so yeah you know yeah i mean now i'm in stealth mode like charles says
1052
2:07:32 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]raight up spiritual warfare and i'm in like stealth mode and although
1053
2:07:40 --> 2:07:47
i you know i i i wear my heart on my sleeve when i have to but the other times i know i'm kind of
1054
2:07:48 --> 2:07:52
i don't know what the word is crass or i don't know like oh look at this person look at this
1055
2:07:52 --> 2:08:01
child with the heart attack oh my god it kills me it kills me so so so deeply um yes but you would
1056
2:08:01 --> 2:08:07
want you presumably would want to nail these people responsible for this so and that means
1057
2:08:07 --> 2:08:14
that we need someone to help you to to realize what's important about what you're talking about
1058
2:08:14 --> 2:08:20
i don't know what charles would say yeah no i know that's that's right steven that's the point that
1059
2:08:20 --> 2:08:27
with the 16 000 cases they need different bits of evidence and what the lawyers need to know is
1060
2:08:27 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]e on this call and and jeff pilatt is another example dr claire craig there are
1061
2:08:34 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]s who can help lawyers understand the relevance of the numbers that's
1062
2:08:39 --> 2:08:46
what they need you elbert your job our job is to be aware of it so we can share with lawyers but
1063
2:08:46 --> 2:08:52
your job is to tell the lawyers tell warner give send warner an email and he'll spread the message
1064
2:08:52 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] his covert lawyer network but probably i don't think i don't think albert is possibly the
1065
2:09:01 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] person to decide what the lawyers want he he doesn't know no no that's that's albert makes
1066
2:09:06 --> 2:09:13
himself available the lawyers then go what i need is this piece of evidence well the way we can help
1067
2:09:13 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]e like you charles the legal advisor can tell the lawyers you need to listen to albert
1068
2:09:18 --> 2:09:26
because although he may miss the mark um you know uh [privacy contact redaction] time he hits something
1069
2:09:26 --> 2:09:32
that the lawyers want to know about and sasha has offered her the services and jeff pilatt has
1070
2:09:32 --> 2:09:37
offered so and elbert's skills are different to sasha and and you're steven you're quite right
1071
2:09:37 --> 2:09:42
it's literally it's literally finding that smoking gun that's what elbert's talking about that's what
1072
2:09:42 --> 2:09:46
we're always talking about remember the tobacco case everybody said i've always said i'm waiting
1073
2:09:46 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]e to catch up i've i've always i've said it i've said it a few times that i have a thousand
1074
2:09:52 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] not been asked yet but when i give the answer ahead of the
1075
2:09:58 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]e are scratching their head going huh what do you what do you mean you you don't say
1076
2:10:02 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]art talking about so it's like i i feel like a caged eagle i really do like i'm
1077
2:10:08 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]e to catch up and go ah i get it now yeah but you know that's just me good
1078
2:10:15 --> 2:10:21
but that's my point you have to i'm happy to help you articulate your offering to the legal
1079
2:10:21 --> 2:10:29
fraternity globally okay thank you because the danger is that um the danger is that the lawyers
1080
2:10:29 --> 2:10:38
dismiss albert because um maybe it's the hat not because it's not competent but because you know
1081
2:10:38 --> 2:10:43
what lawyers are like they want to go on to the next thing no no one just put a tie on i'll put
1082
2:10:43 --> 2:10:50
a suit and tie on when when i'm going to do it it's time yes no look steven steven that's that's the
1083
2:10:50 --> 2:10:59
articulation of albert's offering to the legal lawyers steven and then the the lawyers have to be
1084
2:11:00 --> 2:11:05
provoked so that when they come back to elbert what have you got elbert your your answer elbert
1085
2:11:05 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ake in my in my speaking career everybody i'm a i'm a professional speaker
1086
2:11:11 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]opped being a lawyer and people would say like just imagine this
1087
2:11:17 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ors you go to the doctor and the first thing the doctor says
1088
2:11:24 --> 2:11:30
let me go through my qualifications let me go through my experience let me go through my
1089
2:11:30 --> 2:11:37
philosophy no the patient couldn't give for rats the doctor the wise doctor steven as you know says
1090
2:11:38 --> 2:11:46
elbert you know sorry to the patient what's up the doctor doesn't talk about his qualifications
1091
2:11:46 --> 2:11:52
similarly elbert when somebody says to you how can you help your answer is never don't go blah
1092
2:11:53 --> 2:12:01
your answer is what do you need that's the point because steven says you've got a you've got a
1093
2:12:01 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]ions but the lawyers have to articulate in these 16,000 cases
1094
2:12:08 --> 2:12:14
what crucial piece of evidence can you dig out and then appear in court to support that because
1095
2:12:14 --> 2:12:20
that's the other thing that lawyers need not just information but your ability to be an expert
1096
2:12:20 --> 2:12:29
witness but um so albert we're listening to your last presentation that was um extremely interesting
1097
2:12:29 --> 2:12:37
from a lawyer's point of view because you are turning up all kinds of um evidence of uh
1098
2:12:37 --> 2:12:40
concealment of crime in my view in the present context
1099
2:12:42 --> 2:12:47
thank you albert yep absolutely and albert the question is how can someone get hold of you for
1100
2:12:47 --> 2:12:57
an interview albert's email address is in the in the chat he's put that yeah in there so save the
1101
2:12:57 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]even good point all right so that's what we're going to do with albert we
1102
2:13:04 --> 2:13:09
will articulate and we'll get it to the lawyers running cases all around the world and we've got
1103
2:13:09 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] started to uh to you know that you've started so i've got
1104
2:13:15 --> 2:13:23
a lot of lawyers we can send that to albert next question anyone got a question or a problem we've
1105
2:13:23 --> 2:13:33
got another 10 minutes excellent we don't have to keep going um yes your hands are good i wonder
1106
2:13:33 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ill on the call if she could um give a little commercial on her efforts legal
1107
2:13:42 --> 2:13:52
efforts um i will check gail mccrae is a uh nurse who was fired she's not here no she's not here
1108
2:13:52 --> 2:13:57
oh all right but rima rima what you could do quite frankly is come back to stop the who
1109
2:13:57 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]rategic thinking on this issue of every people in every country
1110
2:14:05 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]anding the threat that is who and now the money pox game that's coming along and i've seen
1111
2:14:10 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] week that you know that who is already wanting to claim
1112
2:14:17 --> 2:14:23
sovereignty over each of our countries yes could you just give us a did you just articulate what
1113
2:14:23 --> 2:14:28
that threat is as you presently see it with what they're trying to do with their regulations
1114
2:14:31 --> 2:14:34
dreamer i've tried to email you a few times asking you whether you'd like to
1115
2:14:35 --> 2:14:38
present to us but i think you might be a bit behind with your emails um
1116
2:14:38 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] going to ask you now but you don't need to answer if you don't want to
1117
2:14:44 --> 2:14:51
if you'd like to present to us next sunday then there's a free slot then yes i'd be very happy to
1118
2:14:52 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ess do you use dreamer um i'll give you the uh yes
1119
2:15:01 --> 2:15:06
you can maybe write to me um because i i think i may have the wrong email address for you
1120
2:15:07 --> 2:15:14
uh you asked me to present and i wrote to you and said yes i'd love to and uh didn't hear back so
1121
2:15:14 --> 2:15:21
it's probable i mean it's i think i did reply to that one i remember you saying that yeah i think
1122
2:15:21 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ly i'm sorry if i missed it but i don't i think i saw that one where
1123
2:15:28 --> 2:15:36
you said yes i'd love but i think reema you saw the email late that could be yes could be so
1124
2:15:37 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] thing i see a question i see a question in the past a few times but it
1125
2:15:43 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ion about um ethnicity in the bears data and um how do we get that or
1126
2:15:53 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ion is the answer is um no it's not it's not published
1127
2:16:01 --> 2:16:09
to the public the the um ethnic or ethnicity data um however i i went back to my video because i
1128
2:16:09 --> 2:16:15
wasn't sure if i filled that if that question asked you know what's your nationality or whatever
1129
2:16:15 --> 2:16:21
however they call it and it is there i saw it i have proof that that it is there on my on my video
1130
2:16:21 --> 2:16:27
that that's one of the questions they ask you know you know white black hispanic all that stuff
1131
2:16:27 --> 2:16:33
but yet they don't they don't publish that on the on the bears data so um i guess the question is
1132
2:16:33 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction] no idea but it's not it's not in the published bears data at all but that
1133
2:16:39 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ing to okay so the question is the question is asked but it's not published
1134
2:16:45 --> 2:16:54
it's not published yeah all right uh jim's got his hand up so albert if they ask a question if
1135
2:16:54 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ion and they get an answer are they required to publish it
1136
2:17:02 --> 2:17:06
i don't think they're required to do anything i mean i don't know i really don't know
1137
2:17:07 --> 2:17:15
but albert the original idea behind bears was there any requirement or were they just set up
1138
2:17:15 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]ate and yeah i mean i first of all i i thought i read
1139
2:17:23 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction] somewhere before that the original original although i'm reading what
1140
2:17:28 --> 2:17:36
i read in the national vaccine information center by by the founder herself barbara lo fischer
1141
2:17:36 --> 2:17:44
says that she was a part of the very beginning [privacy contact redaction] but i thought that that bears
1142
2:17:44 --> 2:17:52
wasn't like the initial wasn't initially in there that it had to come later that she her and people
1143
2:17:52 --> 2:17:59
like her had to claw and kick and scream to actually get them to to to go okay a part of this
1144
2:18:00 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] we're going to um publish the the adverse events but even then reading the history on that
1145
2:18:08 --> 2:18:14
it didn't it didn't come out i mean they just they just regurgitated a bunch of a bunch of code a
1146
2:18:14 --> 2:18:20
bunch of data and it took a it took many years before stephen rubin came along and actually
1147
2:18:20 --> 2:18:28
created meta alerts that made it um and it wasn't until after he created meta alerts that cdc created
1148
2:18:28 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]em to make it more somewhat user-friendly okay so why don't you employ the
1149
2:18:35 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]ic which surya told us about that he starts off when he's blind or or doesn't know
1150
2:18:42 --> 2:18:49
what the answer is he asks them what are your protocols or whatever it was he said um and that
1151
2:18:49 --> 2:18:55
way you could so you could write to them on an foia or get surya to write them even better and
1152
2:18:55 --> 2:19:02
um and nail them on what they're required to do and then you you go back at them and say well why
1153
2:19:02 --> 2:19:07
haven't you done this and why haven't you done that and and stephen sue frost has put in there
1154
2:19:07 --> 2:19:15
that she's digging out the law from congress library on this issue so there's chatting there
1155
2:19:15 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]epping absolutely on the right side with that albert's helping me with that yeah one of one of
1156
2:19:21 --> 2:19:28
the rules that's that's clearly written in the um the uh sops and the sops standard operating
1157
2:19:28 --> 2:19:34
procedures there that i've seen myself um it says uh like one of the things that stood out is that
1158
2:19:34 --> 2:19:41
the the physician or health care worker or hospital is obligated to file a bears report
1159
2:19:41 --> 2:19:48
if the patient goes moves from transitions from emergency to inpatient hospital so they get admitted
1160
2:19:48 --> 2:19:53
they're obligated right there at that point to file a bears report but that's great in the standard
1161
2:19:53 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]hand with my uncle that nobody in the hospital asked
1162
2:20:00 --> 2:20:05
what was it were you involved you know what was your vax history it's like they they don't ask
1163
2:20:05 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ion so that they don't have to know because if they do know then they'll be obligated
1164
2:20:11 --> 2:20:18
to file a report so then therefore they don't ask and then you know uh electronic medical records
1165
2:20:18 --> 2:20:26
like epic that has the university hospital market cornered you know it doesn't even set it up in
1166
2:20:26 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]em to you know to these are all just followers right you know they just plug in whatever
1167
2:20:32 --> 2:20:39
is there but you know so so it's not even that's not a that's not a failure of of theirs or the
1168
2:20:39 --> 2:20:47
cdc that's a failure that's an ethical failure that's a a doctor failing to get a proper history
1169
2:20:47 --> 2:20:53
from his patient or her patient yeah that's not not something that should concern you because um
1170
2:20:54 --> 2:21:00
you're concerned with what what bears as i understand it with what with what bears does with
1171
2:21:00 --> 2:21:06
the information provided to them and what are the requirements at the moment it seems that we don't
1172
2:21:06 --> 2:21:12
have any idea what they're required to do which is a not very good is it we need to find out what
1173
2:21:12 --> 2:21:16
they're going to find out okay we've got two we've got one hand up and then we're going to finish in
1174
2:21:16 --> 2:21:22
three minutes so and then we can go back to tom rodman has put the telegram video on this is a
1175
2:21:22 --> 2:21:29
two and a half hour session um and jim put your hand up rima i will email you i think it's dr rima
1176
2:21:30 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]ess yes yes i'm going to put both my emails in the chat and invite anyone
1177
2:21:36 --> 2:21:45
to use both on any email thank you so much thank you and and then look at the kill at the kill who
1178
2:21:45 --> 2:21:52
strategy jim thank you very much great presentation thank you jim the uh issue of racial specificity is
1179
2:21:52 --> 2:21:59
a very important topic and it's being anything that's being hidden we cdc knows is important
1180
2:21:59 --> 2:22:02
fda knows is important anything that's left off the database is very important and that's where
1181
2:22:02 --> 2:22:08
you come in to figure out what is left off the data database what they're hiding and specifically
1182
2:22:08 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] race but ace 2 receptor the ace 2 receptor is the entry site for how they get into that how
1183
2:22:13 --> 2:22:18
it gets into the back into the cells and that ace 2 is racially specific and so if we can get that
1184
2:22:18 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]e are okay to take this vaccine virus spike protein whereas
1185
2:22:24 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]e are not and that's going to be the critical issue of this and that may tie everything
1186
2:22:28 --> 2:22:33
together in terms of the of the world economic forum plow swab and everybody into it maybe
1187
2:22:33 --> 2:22:38
that's safe for them maybe it's not safe for others and that's the secret to the data the other the
1188
2:22:39 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]e who are looking for this who are actively being sued
1189
2:22:46 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]e are being actively sued and those people not only can use
1190
2:22:53 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] discovery requests they can use so you may be able to
1191
2:22:57 --> 2:23:04
tell them how you and uh and uh the guy who spoke before may be able to hone their requests in on to
1192
2:23:04 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] as expert witness because if you can find things that they
1193
2:23:10 --> 2:23:15
that they don't turn over then you get paid under some kind of good your verse agar case
1194
2:23:15 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] they had to employ you so you get uh paid and and i think
1195
2:23:21 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] and uh and charles went over that pretty well with you um great job thank you very
1196
2:23:26 --> 2:23:30
much that race data you can get any of that race data that would be really critical and i need it
1197
2:23:30 --> 2:23:36
next two days thanks well done well done jim all right everybody we're gonna go
1198
2:23:36 --> 2:23:40
tom rodman has put the link in there two and a half hours
1199
2:23:41 --> 2:23:48
elbert well done on your digging and well done on your passion we love passionate people steven
1200
2:23:48 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]even anything you want to say before we formally end well thank you to um
1201
2:24:00 --> 2:24:07
to you um uh albert and uh and to your accomplices and um and uh
1202
2:24:08 --> 2:24:13
reema i will send an email to you if you could look out for your emails that would be good
1203
2:24:13 --> 2:24:19
or mine so thank you so much thank you very much everybody for showing up thank you so much it was
1204
2:24:20 --> 2:24:26
an honor surreal well done albert thank you big thank you with where we do the thank you's everybody
1205
2:24:26 --> 2:24:32
see you on tuesday night wednesday tuesday afternoon tuesday night wednesday morning have a
1206
2:24:33 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] the chat get over save the chat yes save the chat and
1207
2:24:42 --> 2:24:50
get over to the telegram chat if you've got time to keep talking well done albert thank you thank
1208
2:24:50 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] waters yeah well done jerry for your support there thank you albert god bless thank you
1209
2:24:57 --> 2:25:06
thank you