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So everybody, welcome to Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics International and to today's
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0:00:10 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] speaker, guest presenter, guest question answerer, Christine Anderson.
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0:00:19 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ephen Frost over three years ago with a desire to pursue
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truth, ethics, justice, freedom, and health.
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0:00:28 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] government and power over the years and has been a whistleblower
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His medical specialty is radiology.
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At this time I also note Reiner Fulmick in jail in Germany, Christine Anderson's country
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where he's undergoing a show trial.
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I shine a light on his case.
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It is outrageous what the German government is doing to Reiner and he is, Reiner is a
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fighter for truth, ethics, justice, freedom, and health.
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Anything that you can do, I can put an address in the post, address in the chat where you
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0:01:00 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction], but please do what you can to spread the word about what's happening
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0:01:06 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]em.
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I'm Charles Kovest, the moderator of this group.
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I'm Australasia's passion provocateur and we love passionate people in these meetings.
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0:01:16 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction], I mention Reiner because he has presented twice to this group.
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0:01:22 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]iced law for 20 years before changing career [privacy contact redaction] 13 years
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I've helped parents and lawyers to strategize remedies for vaccine damage and damage from
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bad medical advice.
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I'm also the CEO of an industrial hemp company.
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We comprise lots of professions here and we're from all around the world.
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Many of us thought that vaccines were okay.
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Now many of us proudly say yes, we are passionate anti-vaxxers.
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And again, I note the work of the recent article of Dr. Stanley Plotkin, known as the godfather
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of childhood vaccines, who has now admitted that no vaccines ever in history were properly
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0:02:03 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]ed for safety and efficacy.
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0:02:05 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]otkin, and he published this article acknowledging that fact directly as a consequence
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0:02:12 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]i for nine hours orchestrated by Dale Bigtree's
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ICANN network and the high wire.
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And so all of us should be supporting the high wire.
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But that is so important.
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0:02:28 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]ed are lying to you or ignorant or more or worse.
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0:02:38 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] time here, welcome and feel free to introduce yourself in the chat
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and where you're from.
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0:02:42 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] or you have a radio or TV show or you've written
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a book, put the links into the chat so we can follow you, promote you and find you.
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0:02:50 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]and we're in the middle of World War Three and the medical science
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battle is only one of [privacy contact redaction] war.
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There's no time to be tired.
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I assess we're four years into a seven year war.
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0:03:04 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] your loins, get energized, do whatever you can to be in fantastic health.
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So you're up for the fight.
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0:03:12 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]and the development of science and that the science is never settled.
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Some of us believe that viruses are a hoax.
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Some of us are on the fence and some of us consider that having a debate around the virus
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is nowhere near as important as having lots of other debates.
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And then we get attacked for being ignorant about viruses because if we had this debate
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and proved that viruses didn't exist then all of this would go away.
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So there you are.
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This meeting runs for two and a half hours after which for those with the time Tom Rodman
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runs a video telegram meeting.
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Tom puts the links into the chat if you're able to join.
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0:03:50 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ine Anderson, our guest for as long as Christine wishes to speak.
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0:03:54 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ine loves questions and I used to be a lawyer.
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0:03:59 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ions as well.
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0:04:00 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ions that's let us know how long you speak to and
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0:04:04 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]e will throw their hands up so that they have it in order.
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I've got lots of questions for you as well.
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0:04:10 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction], I'll be patient.
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0:04:13 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction], however, by long established tradition asks the first questions for 15
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minutes.
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Is the free speech environment with appropriate moderating?
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If you're offended by anything, be offended.
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0:04:25 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ed.
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0:04:27 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ry that requires nobody to say anything that may offend another.
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0:04:31 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ry.
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Don't you dare say anything that might trigger somebody.
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0:04:37 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ry.
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0:04:41 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ive of love, not fear.
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Fear is the opposite of love.
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Fear squashes you, enslaves you.
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Love on the other hand expands you, liberates you.
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0:04:52 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] talkfests.
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0:04:54 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ions and initiatives have been generated from linkages made by
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attendees in these meetings.
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0:05:00 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction] or links or resources that will help people put the
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details into the chat, if you're not having enough vitamin C, then you will not be well.
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Pump vitamin C into your body as well as vitamin D as well as zinc.
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0:05:17 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]oaded on the Rumble channel.
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0:05:22 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ine Anderson, our guest.
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We thank you so much, Christine, for giving us your time.
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0:05:27 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ine has spoken to us on two or three occasions previously.
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She is a member of the European Parliament and a great contributor in the fight for freedom.
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0:05:41 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction] you here.
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Stephen, say hello to Christine and then we'll listen to Christine for as long or a little
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as she wants and then we'll have you start with questions.
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Stephen?
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Hello, Christine.
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Sorry, I was a little bit late.
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But I'm here now.
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So over to you, Christine.
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Well, I'm doing just fine.
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0:06:01 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] of all, I would like to apologize for my rather casual appearance tonight.
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But since I'm on my summer break, which Stephen saw fit to drag me out of to join you tonight,
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That's who I am.
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So deal with it.
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OK?
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And I think it's like the fourth or fifth time I'm on this call.
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0:06:35 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction], it's always been really educating for me as well because I get to meet so many
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brilliant experts in various fields.
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0:06:47 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ephen knows, I mean, we have phone conversations.
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And it's like, you know, just to clarify a single question.
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And usually they end up being a conversation of like, what, an hour, hour and a half?
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Because, you know, we get we go on and on and on and on and we cover areas that, you know,
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0:07:08 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] of the time I didn't even know that that should be covered.
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0:07:13 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, thank you so much for I mean, you are an inspiration even, you know, to me
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0:07:20 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] light up my mind as well.
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So thank you for that.
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So, yeah, I'm on here today, not really knowing what to talk about, to be quite frank.
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But whenever I try to prepare something, you know, and it's like what a couple of days ahead
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of that particular event, eventually I, you know, end up throwing everything out because
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something happened on that day.
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Let's say I'm off to an event, I've prepared speech or whatever.
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I'm not doing that anymore, by the way, because nine times out of ten, I do end up throwing it out
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because there's something on the way I think about or something I hear or I get to,
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I usually get to events rather early because I want to interact with people.
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0:08:12 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]e that came there, you know.
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So and somebody might say something to me that just kind of really, you know, gets me
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off somehow, you know, in an interesting way.
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So I end up throwing out my speech and, you know, do something entirely different.
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And this is one of those nights tonight.
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0:08:36 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ine, I wonder whether you could speak about, you know, the essential points of
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totalitarianism because you're an expert on that.
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Because I think you said you're from East Germany, is that correct?
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Originally, or your parents?
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My parents are.
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So I'm not originally from East Germany.
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My parents were born there in their 20s, by the way.
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So my dad did serve in World War Two.
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0:09:00 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]afted when he was 16.
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And once he came back to home, you know, after having been released as a prisoner of war,
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which he made sure he was good if he was going to end up as a POW,
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it was going to be with Americans rather than the Russians.
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So he succeeded in that, at least.
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So he was released like the end of 46.
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0:09:24 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] to find out that he was now sitting in communism,
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which did not sit well with him at all.
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0:09:33 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]s and, you know, questioned the narrative and, you know,
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did all of that, which eventually landed him in jail.
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So he was sentenced in [privacy contact redaction] labor.
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So 25 years as a 22-year-old.
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So you can imagine, you know, how old he must have been, you know,
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by the time he was going to be released.
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Luckily, he only had to serve five years of the sentence.
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Then he was released.
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Early surprisingly, actually.
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0:10:15 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ill wouldn't shut up and he would continue speaking out against this,
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this totalitarian regime of communism.
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And in 59, he was supposed to get arrested a second time.
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But that time he had been warned.
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So he had the chance of fleeing GR, which he did on Easter Saturday in 59.
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0:10:44 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ern Germany.
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0:10:48 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ern Germany with, you know, the Western values of free speech
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and, you know, the whole shebang.
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0:10:56 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] to say until I would say like the 80s.
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Yeah, we lived in a democracy in the Western world.
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I mean, looking back at, you know, the media back then,
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I mean, the newspapers back then, they pretty much covered all of the same issues, right?
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But they had different angles.
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And the different newspapers highlighted different aspects
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of that, you know, news, whatever they were reporting.
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0:11:29 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]uralism in the aspects you were presented.
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So you had a chance of, you know, making up your own mind.
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But nowadays it's like you can open any old paper.
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It's the same story down to the word.
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So, you know, the pluralism no longer exists.
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So like I said, up until the 80s, I would say, yeah,
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I had a feeling I lived in a democracy and that drastically changed.
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And I would say that it happened in like the mid 90s.
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And the reason or, yeah, the reason I think why that might have happened
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didn't occur to me at the time, obviously, but I think I know now what happened.
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Well, the Iron Curtain fell.
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0:12:24 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ern Bloc was pretty much it no longer existed.
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So up until the reunification of Germany and the Eastern Bloc pretty much,
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you know, having failed for everyone to see, and they were, you know, pretty much dissolving.
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Up until that point, you had like this competition going
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And it was like, you know, the West so desperately needed to try to prove to everyone,
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we are the better deal.
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We are the ones about freedom, democracy and the rule of law.
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0:13:07 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction] world is all about oppression, totalitarianism and all of that.
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So as long as that competition was going,
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which we are seeing now what they're doing, which is to erect a totalitarian regime as well.
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0:13:32 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]ed, they could not show their colors.
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0:13:39 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]ically changed after reunification and after the communist world
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pretty much with a blip obliterated.
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0:13:50 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction] thing we had was about, I would say, with the EU forming
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0:14:00 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]ed even more powers.
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0:14:06 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]ion of the euro.
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And then turns out that Germany, of all people, of all countries, I'm sorry, of all countries,
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turned out to be the problem in this because we had too high wages.
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We were so competitive and we were competitive, but in a positive way.
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But we were, as you recall, we were supposed or we were labeled the sick country of the West.
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So what happened was with the euro coming, the countries no longer had the authority
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over their own currency.
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0:14:52 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction] you could fix a problem when you were too competitive
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and you had too high wages, you could no longer sell your goods.
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0:15:03 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction] in your currency.
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And that's what happened throughout the European nations pretty much,
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or the ones that belong to the EU.
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And that set off like a vicious cycle of twindling down wages
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0:15:27 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ing your currency within your country,
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which kind of fixed the problem in the past, but you no longer could do that
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because you were bound within that common currency.
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So it went on and on.
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And the next thing we saw is now we needed to save that currency, right?
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0:15:56 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] to tell you, a currency that needs saving is no longer a currency.
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0:16:01 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] be abolished, point blank.
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Here we are now.
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So next thing we're seeing, the powers that accumulate within the EU,
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specifically with the EU commission, they get larger and larger.
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They accumulate ever more power.
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0:16:24 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]e, the peoples within the EU Union, they just go with it.
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And it's all under the pretense of promoting fairness, of promoting kindness,
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And now we are in this position that the sovereignty of the peoples within the EU,
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in a democracy, a people is seen or should be seen as reasonable decision-makers.
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They don't need nannies.
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They don't need anyone to tell them what they should want or what they should vote for.
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But that's what we're seeing now, is that the peoples in the various EU member states,
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they're being seen as little naughty kids that need to be educated, that need to be taught,
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that need to be told what to do and need to be told what to think even.
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And that's where we're at right now.
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So...
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0:17:47 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ine, so observing America, it seems obvious to me, more obvious in America than
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in Europe, but then I'm in Europe.
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Well, I'm not in Europe, I'm in the United Kingdom.
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0:18:01 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] wonder, what are they trying to push on to America?
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Is it communism or is it totalitarianism or are they pushing communism to achieve totalitarianism?
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And what are they doing in Europe too?
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But it seems to be more obvious in America where things are kind of black and white and
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0:18:21 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]y divided.
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But having said that, people are divided in the UK these days, especially with the crazy
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You know what, Stephen, that's actually a difficult question.
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What are they trying to do?
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0:18:36 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ep?
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0:18:39 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ablish totalitarianism or is it totalitarianism?
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And quite frankly, it doesn't matter because in the end, any communist system will turn
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totalitarian.
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That's the point, you know.
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So they might usher in totalitarianism via communism.
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I mean, truth be told, the whole concept of communism, oh my gosh, that is so nice, isn't
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it?
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Everyone is the same.
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Everyone has the same thing.
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Equality, no, no, it's actually no longer equality.
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It's equity, which is a totally different ballgame because equality means people have
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equal chances of succeeding.
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Equity, however, means to have equal outcomes.
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And as Kamala Harris never tires to say in order to explain what equity means is equal
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chances.
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Well, not everyone starts out in the same place.
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So they need a little more.
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But essentially, everyone should have or should end up in the same place.
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So it's equity.
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0:20:02 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] everyone ending up in the same place.
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0:20:08 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] everyone ending up in the same place, what do you have?
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So if everyone in the entire world ends up to be the president of the United States,
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because that's what it essentially means.
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0:20:27 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] everyone in the freaking world to end up as the president of the United
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States.
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0:20:35 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] everyone in the world end up as a professor at a renowned university.
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It is impossible.
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0:20:45 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] the whole people, maybe of the entire planet, ending
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up in misery, ending up in the slumps.
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That's what you will get if you strive for equity, meaning everyone ending up in the
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So that's the flaw.
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But they don't tell anyone about that because they don't want you to figure it out.
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0:21:16 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction], no, communism is pretty much just the pretext.
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You know, it sounds nice.
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Of course, you know, we don't want anyone to suffer and anyone to be poor.
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It's all great.
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But no, the point is this.
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Humanity or humans, what drives them is to make a better world first and foremost for
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themselves.
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Of course it is.
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And then they want to provide a better world for their children, for their offspring.
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0:22:03 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]y wired into our genes, if you want, into our brains.
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0:22:11 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]riving to better yourself?
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That's the motivation that drives people.
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0:22:20 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction], if everyone is going to end up in the same place, what is
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0:22:25 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] you?
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Nothing.
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Nothing.
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And we've seen that in the communist countries.
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0:22:33 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] country has failed, utterly failed.
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The only reason that China hasn't failed yet is because they were capable of perfecting
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their totalitarian control over everything to an extent they are failing, but no one
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is noticing it because they all live in misery and utter control.
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0:23:05 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]em.
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I mean, this is, gosh, the example of par excellence, how you would control people.
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Yeah, you would establish a social credit system.
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And that's, by the way, what they're trying to do in the Western democracies as well.
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And now it ties back in to the whole COVID madness that we experienced when they ushered
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in these digital COVID certificates, the green certificates, the backs, passports.
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0:23:38 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ep into that social credit system.
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0:23:43 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ep into digital identity.
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0:23:46 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]e used to having to show something wherever they went, whether it was
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0:23:52 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]aurant or whatever it was.
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I mean, even we as MEPs were required to provide some proof of vaccination, which I never could
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because I didn't take that stupid stuff.
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So it was kind of a problem.
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But that's where we're going now.
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0:24:16 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]ually what they're trying to do in all of the Western democracies.
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Excuse me.
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0:24:25 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] got a frog my throat.
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So, but they're literally trying to obliterate our free societies that were built on individualism,
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on free individuals, on free speech, on free social justice, on free social justice.
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Free speech.
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So these are the hallmarks of every free and liberal democracy.
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And that's what they used COVID for to attack.
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They didn't have to do that in China anymore because China already is a totalitarian regime.
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0:25:17 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ern democracies.
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And that's what they did.
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And that is only the whole COVID map is only one aspect of it.
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That's only to kind of get people used to, no, no, no, no, no.
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Fundamental rights are no longer fundamental rights that are guaranteed to you.
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0:25:38 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ually some kind of a privilege that the government can grant to you
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And how, depending on your willingness to do what the government is telling you to do.
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That's what this was all about.
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So what we're seeing, and we've just seen that with the last Olympic games in Paris,
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this whole transgender madness, which is actually a transgender industry.
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They're making billions and billions and billions of dollars of people.
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0:26:25 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] successfully gaslighted and manipulated into thinking they were born in the wrong body.
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0:26:34 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]e now need gender affirming care.
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I wonder what's affirming about it.
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I wonder what is care.
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There is nothing affirming about this.
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It certainly is not care.
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But it's a billion dollar industry.
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And what they produce is life long patients that need surgeries.
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Not only the initial surgery of this gender reassignment surgery or whatever they call it.
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0:27:15 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction], like I said, life long patients that need reoccurring surgeries to fix the problem
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0:27:24 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] them.
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So that's what we're seeing there.
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0:27:32 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] kind of gets me thinking is, okay, what is this all about?
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I mean, I remember for decades, ever since humanity existed, actually,
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0:27:46 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ern world and these past decades, it was always the task and the job
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of parents and society to reaffirm, reassure our kids and adolescents
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0:28:07 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] they were.
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And to be quite frank, there isn't a teenager alive on this planet who is ever satisfied with this body.
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You know, especially girls.
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I mean, there's always something, you know, nose too big, boobs too small, you know, butt is not right.
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0:28:27 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s something.
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0:28:29 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s our job to reassure them, no, you are perfect just the way you are.
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What are we doing now?
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We're telling these kids and telling these adolescents, oh, well, you're like your boobs.
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Well, maybe you're a boy and you're, you know, trapped in the wrong body.
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So yeah, let's do something about that.
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So, you know, let's just chop them off.
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Why don't we?
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Right.
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So this general mutilation, bodily mutilation, what is going on now is a permanent process.
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Now it's supposed to be a gender affirming care.
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Yeah, well, I don't think so.
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But when you go back, and that's when it ties once again back into communism,
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think about Mao's cultural revolution.
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What did he do?
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He tried to obliterate gender or sex.
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What he did was he pretty much said, we want gender equality.
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We want equality of the sexes, meaning women are just the same as men.
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And what did he do?
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0:29:51 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ess in these unisex outfits.
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They're all more short hair, if not shaved.
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But what he was doing, he was obliterating femininity.
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He was obliterating and erasing women.
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That is what he did.
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And we all know where the Mao's cultural revolution ended up.
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So, and that ties back in to once again, the Olympic Games.
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I mean, we've seen it.
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There were chromosomically proven biological men beating the hell out of women
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0:30:45 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]age.
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0:30:47 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]auded for it, they hung medals around their neck.
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And this really gets me off.
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It's like this whole transgender ideology, this transgender madness.
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They're targeting women, especially women.
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And then once again, I have to ask the question, why are they targeting women?
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And I'm sitting here, I'm sitting in a room, I'm sitting in a room,
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and I'm sitting here, I'm trying to come up with a reasonable explanation as to why they would do that.
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So I was thinking, okay, yes, one reason might be that women are the easier target, if you want to overturn
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that whole cultural thing of how society is made up.
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I mean, you know, women are, we are the ones, the women are the ones we birth every single generation
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0:32:02 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]t.
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Why are they targeting us?
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And one reason might be is they're literally weaponizing women's general tendency to be loving, nurturing
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their intent to make everyone feel welcome.
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So you target women, and they tell them, hey, look, we have, you know, this populace here,
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and they might be men, but they're really feeling like women.
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So why would you exclude them?
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So if you really were so nurturing, and so understanding, and so kind,
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0:32:54 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] include them in your private spaces, in locker rooms, in your sports.
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You can't exclude them. That goes against your nature.
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So they're weaponizing this, like I said, general tendency of women to exclude every,
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to include everyone and be nurturing and loving and all of that.
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But that can be the whole ball game.
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0:33:19 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] be another reason for why they would target women and try to erase women.
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I mean, they don't even call us women anymore.
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0:33:33 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]rs, uterus havers, or menstruators, as the New York Times one did.
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I mean, why are they erasing women? What is this all about?
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And that's pretty much a question I would like to ask you.
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But to me, this whole transgenderism, this whole madness is
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among all of these other issues we're seeing, just another attempt to usher in a totalitarian regime
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in which we are no longer seen as humans, actually, but just a part of some male mass
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I hope I made sense.
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Yep. Lots of sense. Huge sense. Absolutely, Christine.
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Stephen, while you're waiting for your next question, I wanted to bring to Christine's
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attention, but to all of us, Stephen, this big article in The Weekend Australian,
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0:34:47 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]och paper published from the Wall Street Journal, talking about the Nord Stream pipeline
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and the headline, total BS. Look at this, the size of this big article.
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0:34:58 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]inks and boom, you know, it says only a small amount of explosive was
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required to blow up. There's a couple of drunk Ukrainians who came together to blow up the Nord
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Stream pipeline. So I will send this to Hans Benjamin. But Christine, it's been remarkable,
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you know, with Hans Benjamin, who's presented, I'm sure Stephen's spoken to you about
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his evidence of a nuclear device. This is a pipeline that doesn't blow up easily.
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This is a pipeline that doesn't blow up easily. So, you know, I can share this article. It was
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0:35:31 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] Journal. Tom Rodman, you might find it make it easy. I've
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0:35:35 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ures of this. I'll send it to Hans Benjamin. What's your thought on this?
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If I could, yeah. Okay. That's very interesting. So they blew up a critical infrastructure
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0:35:50 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ied Germany with energy, you know, and as an industrial nation, you do depend on energy.
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0:35:58 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction] attack. Right. Right. So anyway, but the very interesting point
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about that is when that happened, the German government, it was like, yeah, well, fine.
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You know, well, it's gone now, I guess, you know, so well, we don't have to, you know,
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get that dirty Russian gas anymore. So no big deal. You know, whatever. But it was like,
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seriously? I mean, infrastructure, critical infrastructure sabotaged, and you guys don't
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freaking even care about that. And it was like, it occurred to me, it was like, seriously. So they
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0:36:49 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ions. It was like, you know, once again, the conspiracy theorists, right, that said,
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well, what is going on here? But once again, it ties in to the way they handled the whole COVID
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madness, you know, and all of the things we're seeing now, like the birthrate drop, you know,
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in pretty much every single country that administered these despicable mRNA shots.
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0:37:22 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]op in birthrate. And yeah, I understand it is a correlation. I get that.
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0:37:32 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ed in trying to find out whether or not this correlation
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0:37:42 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ually a causation and linked to the mRNA shots? Because that's the thing, the drop in
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0:37:50 --> 0:38:01
birthrate occurred in what, mid 2021. And guess what, like nine months before they started rolling
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out, you know, these safe and effective vaccines, no one is interested. The same thing with the
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0:38:12 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ream. No one was interested in asking questions and getting to the bottom of
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0:38:20 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] for their disinterest to finding out what's going on
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is this. They don't need to find out because they already know. Yes. They know the answer.
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Yes. The mRNA shots are responsible for the drop in birthrate. And yes, Nord Stream 2 was sabotaged
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0:38:47 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ed States. They already know. So they no longer need
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0:38:57 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] so choose not to inform us of their knowledge. That's the explanation I have.
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0:39:06 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ine, thanks so much for speaking to us. I mean, they're just so much. So Tross,
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Tross, she, while she was in power, during the three weeks she was in Prime Minister of the UK,
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0:39:21 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] as far as I can gather because
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it was reported somewhere I saw with my own eyes, but I can't remember where. Tross said,
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we've done it. Meaning the UK had done it on behalf of the US as far as I could understand.
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And then, but Hans Benjamin Braun, who's a theoretical physicist trained in the famous
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place in Zurich, he proved in, I think he said seven different ways initially,
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that, and then it's, I think it's 11 now, but nobody was interested. He sent all his reports
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and his research to the UN and various countries and nobody was interested that he said it was a
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0:40:14 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]osion which blew up. It was much, much bigger than the alleged size of the
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the bomb or whatever which blew it up. So I'm talking about like 100 to a thousand times bigger
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0:40:35 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]osion. He's proved it. Nobody was interested. Nobody countered him.
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Nobody said you're wrong. They just didn't respond. And I think it's very probable that I now thought,
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no, sorry, I did think at the time, why do they bring trust into the Prime Minister of the UK for
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three weeks? Why on earth would they put someone as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and then
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within three weeks they're getting rid of her? Surely whatever was wrong with her during the
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three weeks, which included the Nord Stream pipeline explosion, should have been known before
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before she achieved power. So they should have stopped her before, not make fools of themselves
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by bringing her in and then three weeks later getting rid of her because that and nobody
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commented about that. Nobody thought it was strange. They were all kind of caught up in the
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prior announcement of the energy prices going up mysteriously. And then allegedly in the UK, BBC
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0:41:44 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]e that the prices of energy had to go up because of Ukraine.
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0:41:55 --> 0:42:01
But I looked it up on the internet. It was only so Ukraine only supply, sorry, Russia.
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0:42:02 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ied only 2% of Britain's gas. So why on earth was gas going up in the UK? Gas price,
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0:42:11 --> 0:42:15
energy prices, they talked about energy, never talked about energy prices before. It was always
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0:42:15 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ricity, gas, oil, but all of a sudden it was all banded together. It was like, and I think that
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0:42:25 --> 0:42:33
it was like, and I think that they brought in trust to do whatever she needed to do and then got rid of
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her. You know what, that might be true. I cannot speak intelligently about that. And to be quite
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frank, I mean, who knows what's going on in the UK anymore? I mean, you guys go through prime
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0:42:49 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]e go through the underwear, right? I mean, you exchange them
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0:42:59 --> 0:43:07
on a frequency. It's ridiculous. And if you were to ask me who was the prime minister of the UK
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right now, it's like, yeah, it's some new guy. Oh yeah, it's the steered Kermor, isn't it?
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Something like that. But it's like, seriously, I mean, you guys have like what, seven
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0:43:25 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] five or six years. Is that about right? So it's like, I mean, you guys
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0:43:32 --> 0:43:43
have Italian, something Italian going on, where you constantly have someone else in charge. So
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it's quite difficult. But whatever the job was, I don't know.
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I really don't. In the world of politics, does it ever happen that you replace a leader of a country,
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especially a country like the UK, which is, you know, it's not powerful, but it's influential
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for all the wrong reasons, in my opinion. But anyway, that they put someone in power who's
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removed three weeks later. So why? And was it something to do with Nord Stream pipeline?
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I know. But you know, I don't know how you guys feel about that. But, you know, thinking back
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at the times when Maggie Thatcher was prime minister, oh my God, you know, she was a prime
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0:44:33 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ood up, you know. And I really wish, you know, the UK all the
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0:44:43 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction] And I truly hope you guys will be able to get another Maggie Thatcher, seriously.
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0:44:52 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ers, anybody can correct me. So I'll just try maybe Jackie. Jackie's very
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0:45:00 --> 0:45:08
knowledgeable. So David Cameron, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss, Rishi Sunak, Keir Starmer. That's five,
501
0:45:08 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction] get the feeling there were a couple of others, but I can't remember them. They're so
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insignificant. Oh, this Sunique Rishi or whatever his name was? Yeah, Rishi Sunak. Yeah. Yeah. So he
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was one of the five, but if anybody can think of any others, just crazy. It is. Yeah. So anyway,
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0:45:30 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction] was in power during and during those three weeks. She that she did say
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apparently, I don't know where, so it may be wrong. She did say we've done it. She didn't say what
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they'd done. But, you know, at the time, that was the big event, you know. But what was really
507
0:45:51 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ing about what Hans Benjamin said was that nobody, as you say, nobody made any noise
508
0:46:00 --> 0:46:07
about it, but the nuclear explosion was pointed at Kaliningrad, which is in White Russia, which is
509
0:46:07 --> 0:46:18
south of the three, what are they called? Baltic States. Yeah. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
510
0:46:19 --> 0:46:26
So White Russia is south of there, and there's a place called Kaliningrad in White Russia, and the
511
0:46:27 --> 0:46:28
the bottom of the Baltic Sea,
512
0:46:31 --> 0:46:39
off Bornholm, I think the Danish island, which is where they attacked the launching pipeline,
513
0:46:40 --> 0:46:45
was of such a shape that they funneled it was a funnel. So Hans Benjamin brilliantly explains
514
0:46:45 --> 0:46:50
this. I can put you in touch with him if you like, Christine, because he could actually provide you
515
0:46:50 --> 0:46:57
with the information which he has sent around the world. Nobody's reacted. You could start harassing
516
0:46:57 --> 0:47:05
them in the European Parliament. Oh, I will. Trust me. Yeah. And if you could put me in touch with him,
517
0:47:05 --> 0:47:09
that would be greatly appreciated. Yeah. You haven't heard about this then, Christine?
518
0:47:10 --> 0:47:15
Well, you know, there's been so much things going on right now. And like I said, I am on summer break.
519
0:47:15 --> 0:47:22
I'm trying to kind of, you know, have a way, which is the first time for three years.
520
0:47:22 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ine, I wasn't criticizing you, but I thought so when Hans Benjamin was on, I was going
521
0:47:29 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] with you. And then he got forgotten. So this time I won't forget and I'll
522
0:47:33 --> 0:47:41
make a note now and I'll introduce you to him. Excellent. Yes. Thank you so much. So Stephen,
523
0:47:41 --> 0:47:45
that's why we're here, you know, because we all learn from each other. That's the joy.
524
0:47:46 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] want, so Charles, if you can encourage, because you're a great,
525
0:47:52 --> 0:47:56
I've got a series of questions. Can you encourage people to ask some questions
526
0:47:56 --> 0:48:01
because the meeting's only as good as the questions. Yeah. We've got, who is Hadidj?
527
0:48:01 --> 0:48:07
What's your real name? Hadidj? Oh, it's Martin. This is my name, Martin. That's better. Correct.
528
0:48:07 --> 0:48:13
Hello, Martin. Long time no see. That's why, sorry, I couldn't remember. No problem. No problem.
529
0:48:14 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] of all, I would like to thank Ms. Anderson for this brilliant presentation. I know, I still
530
0:48:20 --> 0:48:28
can recall our meeting in the parliament, in the European parliament, where you gave us an interview
531
0:48:28 --> 0:48:36
for our documentary on the WHO. So thank you very much again. Just some brief comments.
532
0:48:37 --> 0:48:46
I mean, in terms of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, I think it's quite clear if you accept the sources
533
0:48:46 --> 0:48:52
which are reliable. And I would like really to point out Seymour Hirsch, who is a journalist,
534
0:48:52 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]igations on the Vietnam War, on Afghanistan and these things. And if you
535
0:49:03 --> 0:49:13
take this for granted, I think, well, at least it's to be considered. He states, it's clear who
536
0:49:13 --> 0:49:20
met because the names are clear. It's clear where they met. It was a hotel. It was on the top roof
537
0:49:20 --> 0:49:27
of a hotel close to the White House, where people gathered to plan the attack on Nord Stream 2. And
538
0:49:28 --> 0:49:34
if you can recall, there was even Biden saying in January, we won't let it happen that Russia
539
0:49:34 --> 0:49:45
puts gas into Germany. So this was already quite known. Then there was this big event with
540
0:49:45 --> 0:49:51
those warships and everything going on in May of 22. And in this horrific scenario,
541
0:49:52 --> 0:49:59
there were special divers, which were US, which were British, who went down and who planted mini
542
0:49:59 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ream. Because with what they call this C4, this ordinary blowing up shit, you can't
543
0:50:12 --> 0:50:19
damage a pipeline like that, which has a wall of four centimeters of steel. So you need something
544
0:50:19 --> 0:50:28
very special to do that. And this very special is not in the hands of some Ukraine divers going
545
0:50:28 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] which is one of the most covered areas of the Eastern Sea, because
546
0:50:36 --> 0:50:43
it's a very, very distinct place where everybody has his eyes on it, because it's very, very critical,
547
0:50:43 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ure there. So if you go there with your sailing boat, you won't stand
548
0:50:49 --> 0:50:55
any five minutes, because then you will be surrounded by warships asking you, what are
549
0:50:55 --> 0:51:03
you doing here? I mean, so they simply cannot get there. Then they waited for three months.
550
0:51:04 --> 0:51:11
In fall of this year, there was a Norwegian airplane that dropped a special device,
551
0:51:12 --> 0:51:19
because it was blown up by sonar and not by common waves, because you could have registered
552
0:51:19 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]s, but sonar you cannot register. So they had some sonar going down there, and then
553
0:51:25 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] been some mini nukes, because as already Stephen pointed out,
554
0:51:33 --> 0:51:42
there were some special things which only happen if you blow up some mini nukes, which means
555
0:51:44 --> 0:51:50
there was gas from water released into the air, which is quite typical for it. Then you had this
556
0:51:50 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] going out to Kaliningrad, where it was almost a catastrophe. By the way, Kaliningrad
557
0:52:00 --> 0:52:05
belongs to Russia, not to White Russia, but to Russia. Oh, sorry, I went wrong. No problem.
558
0:52:07 --> 0:52:12
But it belongs to White Russia. It's part of White Russia, but you have something like a track
559
0:52:13 --> 0:52:19
going through White Russia to Kaliningrad. And this is something, it's a very narrow space, but
560
0:52:19 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ed heavily. There was some rise of atomic energy measured in Poland,
561
0:52:32 --> 0:52:38
as well as in Switzerland. So it went up, radioactivity went up. So this is also
562
0:52:38 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] been a mini nuke. And I just learned, that's not my special field,
563
0:52:45 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] learned that each and every big bomb you drop has a very special curve when you measure
564
0:52:54 --> 0:53:02
it. It's called indication if you take it. And this is very special for common bombs, as well as
565
0:53:02 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]osion had the curve of an atomic bomb. So there are so many
566
0:53:11 --> 0:53:19
points that indicate how it happened, who was involved and so on. So I think it's quite clear
567
0:53:19 --> 0:53:26
how it was done. But of course, at the moment, people tend to ignore it. And you're absolutely
568
0:53:26 --> 0:53:35
right. You don't have to investigate what you already knew. And this is the reason why there is
569
0:53:35 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] maybe one last comment on your question, why do they especially
570
0:53:43 --> 0:53:51
attack women? I think it's very simple. The women are the center of the families. If you destroy the
571
0:53:51 --> 0:53:59
women, you destroy the families. If you destroy the families, you destroy the society. And then
572
0:53:59 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ates that care for the generations, because nobody else could
573
0:54:06 --> 0:54:13
fill in this gap, which is provoked by destroying women. So my heart beats for women. So
574
0:54:14 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] to all of you. I know. If I just can comment on your last remark there,
575
0:54:21 --> 0:54:27
I mean, there might be another explanation as to why they target women to such an extent as they
576
0:54:27 --> 0:54:40
are doing right now is if you think about this, it is actually warfare. We are at war. They are
577
0:54:40 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ern democracies that we ever held dear, our freedom, our democracy,
578
0:54:48 --> 0:55:00
the rule of law, our tradition, culture, the way our society is made up. And if there is one common
579
0:55:00 --> 0:55:11
thing about warfare, about war, it's always this. Once the conqueror enters your country and
580
0:55:11 --> 0:55:22
conquers you, they take it out on the women by means of raping them or degrading them,
581
0:55:22 --> 0:55:35
whatever they're doing. And this is kind of like somewhat of a means to establishing their power
582
0:55:36 --> 0:55:45
over that country, over that culture by saying or by showing, look, we have conquered you.
583
0:55:46 --> 0:55:54
We are violating your women. And there isn't a damn thing that you as men who are supposed to be the
584
0:55:54 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]ors of these women can do anything about that. So that occurred to me. It was like that
585
0:56:02 --> 0:56:10
might be a reason why they are targeting women. And what we're seeing is with having men being
586
0:56:10 --> 0:56:20
emasculated for like what decades now, there is a few that stand up and then rise up and say, well,
587
0:56:20 --> 0:56:28
we won't have this. But the majority of men, they just stand there and say, well, we're not going to
588
0:56:28 --> 0:56:33
do anything about it because we don't want to be called racist. We don't want to be called transphobes.
589
0:56:33 --> 0:56:41
We don't want to be called whatever. There's a part of men saying that. But on the other hand,
590
0:56:41 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction] another group of men. They're kind of like they sort of experience what you would call
591
0:56:51 --> 0:57:00
schadenfreude. The women brought it on themselves because they wanted to be feminists. They wanted
592
0:57:00 --> 0:57:08
to be equal to men. Well, there you have it. Stand up for your own. But speaking about feminism,
593
0:57:09 --> 0:57:18
I'm by no means a feminist, at least not what the term has come to in our day and age.
594
0:57:19 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]arted out with very valid reasons. Of course, women need to have the right to vote.
595
0:57:29 --> 0:57:37
Of course, in a liberal society, you cannot have men dictating to women whether or not they can
596
0:57:37 --> 0:57:45
have a job. And I mean, up until 1977, even in Germany, if a woman wanted to take a job,
597
0:57:46 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction] I mean, this is not right. I get that. But we were at that
598
0:57:58 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]etely went off the rails with this. And that is, I think,
599
0:58:10 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] men now think of feminism and feminists. It's just completely blown out of proportion.
600
0:58:21 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]and when they say, well, you know, you wanted this, now deal with it.
601
0:58:29 --> 0:58:38
You know, you wanted to be a man, now protect yourself. I get that sentiment. But society or
602
0:58:38 --> 0:58:46
family or, you know, it works, men and women working together. When you look at a family,
603
0:58:48 --> 0:58:55
there is things that men can do that I can't. I mean, you know, lifting heavy stuff. Sorry,
604
0:58:56 --> 0:59:04
I can't do that, because I don't have the strength of a man. But there is things that I can do
605
0:59:05 --> 0:59:14
that a man couldn't. Like being this loving and nurturing, this bond to the child you have given
606
0:59:14 --> 0:59:22
birth to. You know, I mean, there is great fathers out there, no doubt about it. But they will never
607
0:59:22 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction], I'm sorry, you know, and if this offends men, I do apologize.
608
0:59:32 --> 0:59:39
But to me, they will never have that. But it's different. It's a different connection.
609
0:59:39 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]en as mothers are just in a different way. But the way
610
0:59:50 --> 1:00:01
biology or nature for us was to, you know, get together and make the best of it. So
611
1:00:02 --> 1:00:12
yeah, as a team, an intact family is unbeatable. I mean, there is no better entity in the world
612
1:00:12 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] family. And that's, and I agree with the comments that were brought forth.
613
1:00:20 --> 1:00:26
Yeah, they have to attack the family. And why do they have to do that? Because as they say,
614
1:00:26 --> 1:00:35
blood runs thicker than water. And family, blood relation is the strongest bond you could ever have
615
1:00:35 --> 1:00:44
in any environment. And that's what they need to attack and to obliterate. So the government
616
1:00:44 --> 1:00:53
or whoever who wants to assert control over you can step in, but they need to sever this bond
617
1:00:53 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] a family they can rely on, no manipulation,
618
1:01:00 --> 1:01:08
no totalitarianism could get a hold of you. That's why they need to destroy family. And that's why
619
1:01:08 --> 1:01:17
communism, by the way, the first thing they do is they attack the family, dissolve it, get women
620
1:01:17 --> 1:01:24
working so they can get a hold of the kids in daycare so they can indoctrinate the kids.
621
1:01:25 --> 1:01:34
Absolutely. And that's what Nick Rockefeller told Aaron Russo. And he told, and now I can't quite
622
1:01:34 --> 1:01:40
remember, I think it was Alex Jones on a YouTube video. It's still there, I think. And he told,
623
1:01:41 --> 1:01:52
Aaron, so Aaron Russo said that Nick Rockefeller told him he was boasting, he, we created feminism,
624
1:01:53 --> 1:02:00
we created women's liberation, that's it. We created, we wanted to get control of the children.
625
1:02:01 --> 1:02:07
So I've been saying this for a couple of decades, at least now, because I saw with my own eyes what
626
1:02:07 --> 1:02:14
was going on in Sweden. And that's why I moved, made the decision to move. We had two children
627
1:02:14 --> 1:02:19
at the time and then we got, then a third arrived when we came to the UK. Why I had to get the hell
628
1:02:19 --> 1:02:27
out of Sweden. I could see what was going to happen. I was going to be taken away from my children
629
1:02:27 --> 1:02:36
by Swedish society where men were under attack. And so, and I really felt it. And so that's why
630
1:02:36 --> 1:02:42
we came here to the UK. But the UK has got its own problems. But Sweden, people say to me,
631
1:02:42 --> 1:02:47
oh, Sweden didn't need a lockdown. And I say, they didn't need a lockdown. They already trust the
632
1:02:47 --> 1:02:54
government. Right. But you know what, Stephen, the question is this. So I mean, I've heard about that,
633
1:02:54 --> 1:02:59
that, you know, feminism was an invention by, you know, the globalitarian misanthropists.
634
1:02:59 --> 1:03:09
And I think you mentioned Rockefeller. Okay, the question is this. When, you know, in the 19,
635
1:03:09 --> 1:03:19
I don't know what, 1916, 1917, the suffragists in the United States, you know, rallied to have
636
1:03:19 --> 1:03:28
the right to vote. Was that a grassroots movement? Or was that it even back then,
637
1:03:29 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]igated by Rockefeller? So I think they were always trying to-
638
1:03:36 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction] time believing that the women back then, you know, that it was not a movement,
639
1:03:46 --> 1:03:54
they- it was not a grassroots movement, but it was like a political move, you know, by one of the
640
1:03:54 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]s. So that's- I have a hard time accepting that as it went on, you know,
641
1:04:03 --> 1:04:10
later, maybe in the 40s or 50s. Oh, yeah, no doubt about it. Yeah, it was the globalitarian
642
1:04:10 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]s, you know, maybe they may have latched onto that, you know, and maybe they saw
643
1:04:17 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction], well, we can exploit this movement, you know, to further our agenda. So that's a question
644
1:04:25 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]ually ask you. What do you think of that? Well, I think it's quite clear as a medical
645
1:04:32 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]or, I can see without having to prove it, that men and women need each other now, as they've
646
1:04:39 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]s needed each other, and you only have to look at a happy family. All happy families are
647
1:04:44 --> 1:04:53
the same, but all unhappy families are different. So, you know, you need a father and you need a
648
1:04:53 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]ease, James, please don't interrupt me. My son is butting in from outside. Just-
649
1:05:01 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction], Stephen, as he interrupts, we can't hear his interruption at all. Interesting. No,
650
1:05:06 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction], you know, I can't have that going on in the background, when my own son is
651
1:05:13 --> 1:05:17
disagreeing with me in the background, when I'm trying to talk to Christine.
652
1:05:20 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction], I wanted to say about the Nord Stream pipeline explosion, Christine, do you think that
653
1:05:27 --> 1:05:33
the silence from Germany, in particular Germany, but also Sweden, and the UK, all the countries,
654
1:05:33 --> 1:05:38
nobody wanted to know who'd done it, nobody interested in whether it was a thermonuclear
655
1:05:38 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]osion or not, and clearly, in my mind, it probably was, just listening to Martin Haddish.
656
1:05:46 --> 1:05:51
So, do you think that- I forgot, it's too long a question, I've forgotten. I'm just going to say it
657
1:05:51 --> 1:05:56
and come back to me in a second. Charles, go ahead. Okay, so we've got Jessica with her hand up,
658
1:05:56 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]opping in and out, so, Glenn, you'll be after Jessica.
659
1:06:00 --> 1:06:05
Hi, Christine. Thanks, Charles. Thanks so much for being here. It's been fantastic.
660
1:06:06 --> 1:06:11
I've got a couple of things, a couple of questions. Forgive me if you've answered them in these
661
1:06:11 --> 1:06:18
meetings before, but I wasn't around then. Real Prime Ministers, just before that as well,
662
1:06:18 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]alled, TRUS and Sunak, and they were installed without a single vote
663
1:06:23 --> 1:06:30
from any member of the public in the UK, so that's probably why we get so many Prime Ministers,
664
1:06:30 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]alling them, sticks up bottoms, you might say. So, what I wanted to ask you,
665
1:06:38 --> 1:06:43
if you don't mind, is about the European Parliament and how you are in there, because we see
666
1:06:45 --> 1:06:51
videos and things from there, and I would like to know if you wouldn't mind more about the
667
1:06:51 --> 1:06:58
general energy that's going on in there in the atmosphere. Do you have many others who agree with
668
1:06:58 --> 1:07:07
you but won't speak out, those who will speak out? What is the general view of the UK, and are they
669
1:07:07 --> 1:07:15
trying to get us back in? Now they've got Starmer to help them do that, and how did you get away,
670
1:07:15 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction] with not having the jabs to be able to get back into the European Parliament?
671
1:07:22 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]uff that we don't hear on the outside, what is that like from the inside,
672
1:07:26 --> 1:07:33
if you wouldn't mind, please? Of course I don't mind. So, first of all, on the question of do I
673
1:07:33 --> 1:07:41
have many supporters, no I don't, to be quite frank. Okay, so the EU Parliament now consists of 720 MEPs,
674
1:07:42 --> 1:07:52
and if I had to classify them, then I mean we have grown in numbers as far as the the side is
675
1:07:52 --> 1:08:04
concerned that is truly about freedom, democracy, and the rule of law, and that is about
676
1:08:04 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] the say in this and should not be dictated to, and now we're talking
677
1:08:11 --> 1:08:20
about national sovereignty and all of that. So that side has grown in numbers, but we are by no
678
1:08:20 --> 1:08:29
far a majority in the House, and that's the problem. So when I look at the last legislature,
679
1:08:31 --> 1:08:39
I would say if it came down to a vote on any particular issue where you could kind of tell,
680
1:08:40 --> 1:08:47
okay, you know, that kind of makes it out who is on what side, the most we could hope for,
681
1:08:47 --> 1:08:56
and things really went well for us, the most we could hope for was like 150 votes out of 705
682
1:08:56 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] legislature. So what the voting is now, I can't tell because we haven't had, you know,
683
1:09:04 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]enary sessions in the new legislature, but there wasn't like any specific issue where
684
1:09:11 --> 1:09:21
you could really tell, you know, okay, that's where it's going. So but I would think by now
685
1:09:21 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] we could hope for is maybe 200 votes out of 720, right? So as far as the support is concerned,
686
1:09:31 --> 1:09:42
there is colleagues that are willing to speak up, meaning, yeah, they will hang their face in a
687
1:09:42 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction], you know, say how things are. Then you have colleagues that are in support of us.
688
1:09:53 --> 1:09:59
They, you know, will not hang their face in the camera and, you know, just spat out of these things,
689
1:09:59 --> 1:10:06
but they will contribute initiatives, for example, you know, plenary, like a oral question or, you
690
1:10:06 --> 1:10:14
know, some major place, something like that, right? And they will speak out in committees, right?
691
1:10:16 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] colleagues supporting our side behind the scenes. They're with us 100%.
692
1:10:25 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] to become, to go public with that, because they are depending on the fact
693
1:10:34 --> 1:10:43
that they will be once again put up for reelection by their party. And as soon as they violate,
694
1:10:43 --> 1:10:51
violate, you know, the party's line, and they're becoming too obnoxious about their opinions,
695
1:10:51 --> 1:10:57
and too outspoken about their opinions, they run the risk of their party not putting them up again.
696
1:10:58 --> 1:11:05
So, but they were supporting behind the scenes. And then you have people in parliament,
697
1:11:07 --> 1:11:15
they know damn well that what they're doing really isn't right. It's not in the best interest of
698
1:11:15 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e. It's not advocating for, you know, the interest of the people. But man, they finally made it.
699
1:11:25 --> 1:11:32
They are part of the club right now, you know, they get inside invited to, you know, golf parties and,
700
1:11:32 --> 1:11:40
you know, go to this buffet in this party and da da da da da da da. So they're so proud of the fact
701
1:11:40 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction], and they will not do ever anything to jeopardize that.
702
1:11:47 --> 1:11:56
But they kind of know it's not okay what they're doing. So, and then you have a proportion of
703
1:11:56 --> 1:12:05
members of the parliament, they really believe this crap. They really do. I mean, it's, you know,
704
1:12:05 --> 1:12:13
I mean, it's, it's, you know, it's insane. But they really think if you shut down
705
1:12:13 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] some windmills, because the sun and the wind, they don't post,
706
1:12:20 --> 1:12:26
you know, any bills, it's all going to be good. Are we going to save the planet? All right.
707
1:12:27 --> 1:12:36
They really believe the crap. Okay, so that's just to give you an insight as to how the parliament is
708
1:12:36 --> 1:12:42
comprised or what the parliament is comprised of. And now I kind of lost your second question.
709
1:12:43 --> 1:12:50
Well, the second question was, what is the attitude towards the UK? And then the third question was,
710
1:12:50 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] with not having jobs when they were obviously mandating them?
711
1:12:56 --> 1:13:06
Okay, so how do you how does EU Parliament see the okay. Okay, first of all, you have to understand,
712
1:13:07 --> 1:13:16
they did whatever they could to prevent UK from leaving. And that to them was, I mean, that was
713
1:13:16 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] important thing you can think of. Because with the UK leaving, I mean, that was the first
714
1:13:24 --> 1:13:34
breakout wall, right? Yeah. So I mean, they needed to not have that happen. And here we are, it didn't
715
1:13:34 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]an B, to make it impossible for UK to leave. So you guys voted
716
1:13:45 --> 1:13:53
on leaving. And they were like, well, no, we will make it impossible for them to leave. So and they
717
1:13:53 --> 1:14:00
tried whatever they could. And once that failed, it was like, well, we'll make we will make it as
718
1:14:00 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] There was plan C. Well, that kind of failed too. Right. So and all
719
1:14:09 --> 1:14:17
they're left with now is spreading the narrative that UK is so bad off now. And you know, they're,
720
1:14:17 --> 1:14:24
they're failing economically. I mean, literally, I mean, they're, you know, on the verge of just,
721
1:14:24 --> 1:14:32
you know, sinking deep down in the ocean. And, you know, there they are. Right. And I remember,
722
1:14:32 --> 1:14:43
I was invited to, to be or to join the the Brexit on January 31 of 2020, I think it was,
723
1:14:43 --> 1:14:51
I was in London, I was in Parliament Square, right. And from what I've been told, and from the
724
1:14:51 --> 1:14:57
German media, right, I mean, they're all you're mourning and, you know, deep depression. And,
725
1:14:57 --> 1:15:04
you know, they are going to leave now. So I arrived in London, and, you know, I arrived a day early,
726
1:15:04 --> 1:15:09
because I wanted to spend time, you know, just walking the streets and speaking to people and,
727
1:15:09 --> 1:15:14
you know, just going shopping and, you know, getting people into conversations and all of that.
728
1:15:14 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] to tell you, I mean, there was no depression. Not that I've seen any. You know,
729
1:15:22 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]e and they were like, Yeah, well, it's gonna be really bad for us,
730
1:15:26 --> 1:15:32
so blah, blah, blah. And I was like, but why? But they really couldn't give me a reason as to why
731
1:15:32 --> 1:15:37
it was going to be bad. Right. So I was like, okay, this is, you know, a victim of propaganda.
732
1:15:38 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ood on Parliament Square, you know, and I was like, Oh, my God, I mean, I still get
733
1:15:44 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] thinking about that. Right. I mean, there I saw people, you know, just celebrating
734
1:15:52 --> 1:16:01
their sovereignty, just celebrating, you know, for being Great Britain. And I'm like, Oh, my God,
735
1:16:01 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] once I wish to see this in Germany, Germans just celebrating that they are Germans.
736
1:16:11 --> 1:16:18
That was like, that was really, truly amazing experience. But like I said, they tried to do
737
1:16:18 --> 1:16:25
whatever they could to not make this happen. So now, when they're trying or now that they're
738
1:16:25 --> 1:16:34
trying, possibly trying to lure the UK back in, well, yeah, they need money. Hello.
739
1:16:35 --> 1:16:42
I mean, they have all these programs. And the UK was a net payer. Right. Which, by the way,
740
1:16:42 --> 1:16:49
Germany picked up your tap, you know, for the most part, and the German was happy to do so,
741
1:16:49 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] Right. So but it's like, they need they need money. For God sakes. I mean,
742
1:16:55 --> 1:17:01
all of these programs, all of these, you know, whatever saving the planet kind of ideology and
743
1:17:01 --> 1:17:06
blah, blah, blah. They need a heck of a lot of money. They would love to have you back.
744
1:17:06 --> 1:17:16
And I hope that the UK will not rejoin EU. You should be happy and lucky that you're out of
745
1:17:16 --> 1:17:26
this hellhole. Right. Okay. So coming to the question, how did we pull it off to have access
746
1:17:26 --> 1:17:33
to EU Parliament? I mean, I can tell you, yeah, they tried to put us through the shit to get in
747
1:17:33 --> 1:17:40
there. And I used to walk in there every morning. And, you know, and the thing is, it was the
748
1:17:40 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]s who had to deal with this. Right. I mean, the guys that, you know,
749
1:17:46 --> 1:17:53
were being paid to make sure that, you know, the safe that the place is safe. And they're putting
750
1:17:53 --> 1:18:02
them up front, you know, and how can you imagine a security guard that's being paid to ensure that
751
1:18:02 --> 1:18:12
I'm safe as an MVP. And now he has to pretty much tell me, you know, I can't let you in.
752
1:18:14 --> 1:18:19
Yeah, that is how despicable they were. So I used to walk in there every morning and was like,
753
1:18:19 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] me jump through today to get to my office? Right. So first,
754
1:18:25 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]s. So we filed a court suit that was unreasonable
755
1:18:35 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction], you know, have a PCR test, which by the way, take 24 hours to get a result,
756
1:18:43 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] been able to do my job for 24 hours because the freaking
757
1:18:49 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] wasn't back yet. So we filed a court order and we got it. So it was like this rapid test kind
758
1:19:00 --> 1:19:07
of thing. Right. So I went in there the first morning and was like, well, we need a test.
759
1:19:07 --> 1:19:14
I was like, well, yeah, it was like, I understand. I'll do a rapid test right here. And they were
760
1:19:14 --> 1:19:19
like, well, did you bring one? No, I didn't. You have to provide that. No, we don't. I was like,
761
1:19:19 --> 1:19:26
yeah, it's in the court or you do. So they got a test. And, you know, I really have to admit,
762
1:19:28 --> 1:19:34
I really had fun with them because they were doing the test. Right. Or it was by the way,
763
1:19:34 --> 1:19:41
saliva, not poking nose. So it was like, you know, when you looked at it, it was like, oh,
764
1:19:41 --> 1:19:46
yeah, it seems a lot of good. It was like, no, no, no, no, no, no. It says [privacy contact redaction] to
765
1:19:46 --> 1:19:52
wait 15 minutes for the result. Right. So I met them, sit down there. I got on my phone. You're
766
1:19:52 --> 1:20:01
never like, I really tried. I have to admit, I tried to make it as hard on them as possible
767
1:20:01 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] on me as I as they possibly could. So, but what I did in the first
768
1:20:07 --> 1:20:14
two weeks is I came up with my own COVID certificate kind of tests, test results,
769
1:20:14 --> 1:20:21
and it was really creative. It created a form and it kind of looked like, you know, the forms you
770
1:20:21 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ation or whatever. And, but the thing is, I, you know, noted my name and
771
1:20:28 --> 1:20:34
blah, blah, blah date and even had the little dots, you know, tested positive or negative, blah, blah,
772
1:20:35 --> 1:20:44
and, but I myself signed it. They never caught onto that. Right. And I issued that to all of my
773
1:20:44 --> 1:20:50
staff and they, you know, managed to get in with that for like two weeks and then the president
774
1:20:50 --> 1:20:55
caught onto it. And he called me out and having faked COVID certificates, which I never did.
775
1:20:56 --> 1:21:02
Nover did it say that it was a COVID certificate, but yeah, they find me for like, well, I don't
776
1:21:02 --> 1:21:08
know. I didn't get my daily allowance for like five days, whatever, you know, but I kind of,
777
1:21:08 --> 1:21:17
you know, got by, but it was like, yeah, it was not right because they were denying
778
1:21:17 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ed representative off the people, by the way. They denied me entrance
779
1:21:26 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] of work so I could do my job and represent the people.
780
1:21:31 --> 1:21:37
But here we are. They didn't get rid of me and well, there you go.
781
1:21:37 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ine, that's a wonderful story. Jessica, great questions. Now, before we go to Glenn,
782
1:21:42 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ine, I sent an email to Hans Benjamin Braun. Benjamin, show your face. We call him Benjamin,
783
1:21:51 --> 1:21:57
the author so that we can introduce the two of you because Benjamin has done great work.
784
1:21:57 --> 1:22:01
Benjamin, meet Christine, who has not been aware of your great work on Nord Stream.
785
1:22:02 --> 1:22:09
Excellent, Charles. Well done. Hello. Hello. Can you hear me? Yes. Okay. Okay. Okay.
786
1:22:10 --> 1:22:19
Yes. I don't know what has been discussed before. So just... Well, I was telling Christine,
787
1:22:19 --> 1:22:26
who as you know, is a German MEP. Yes. Yes. Yes. I was telling her about your incredibly important
788
1:22:26 --> 1:22:33
research, in my view important, and suggesting that Liz Truss was maybe brought in to be Prime
789
1:22:33 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]er of the UK for that, for three weeks only. Just for that. That was the real reason
790
1:22:42 --> 1:22:49
that she was brought in and then got rid of, if you understand me. So they said that she had to go
791
1:22:49 --> 1:22:54
after two weeks, you know, or even after a week of being Prime Minister. It seems to me that
792
1:22:54 --> 1:22:58
whatever they found out after a week or two weeks, they should have known before,
793
1:22:58 --> 1:23:05
if she was that bad, that she had to go in three weeks. And she was the one who said, in a text,
794
1:23:05 --> 1:23:12
I was reminded by one of the contributors in the chat, the text said, it's done. And Russia...
795
1:23:13 --> 1:23:22
So one of the contributors in the chat said that Russia was asking about that text, you know,
796
1:23:22 --> 1:23:28
asking the UK. It was never answered, of course, the question. But Russia is suspicious because
797
1:23:28 --> 1:23:35
Russia as well, as we talked Hans Benjamin, were very quiet about taking, you know, letting people
798
1:23:35 --> 1:23:40
know that they knew it was a thermonuclear explosion, which I think they did. And so did
799
1:23:40 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] of them. Sweden was the one, the country which detected Chernobyl,
800
1:23:46 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] wanted to introduce you to Christine. I was going to do it by email,
801
1:23:51 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ually thinking of emailing you. And so you could tell Christine
802
1:24:00 --> 1:24:06
yourself what we concluded that what happened in Germany, sorry, in the Nord Stream pipeline,
803
1:24:06 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ion in Germany in particular, but all European countries was treason. And we thought
804
1:24:13 --> 1:24:18
at the time we were trying to analyse it, we thought that it was about NATO, pushing NATO,
805
1:24:19 --> 1:24:24
and getting Sweden and Finland into NATO. And I believe that both those countries are now in,
806
1:24:24 --> 1:24:27
but Sweden took some time to get in, if you remember, because of Turkey.
807
1:24:28 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] I... Charles, I can't stay. I have some things I want to answer for Christine.
808
1:24:36 --> 1:24:40
Yes, Glenn, you go, then we'll come back to Benjamin. Yes, Glenn?
809
1:24:41 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ine, you asked a bunch of questions that you said, I don't understand why. And so for
810
1:24:47 --> 1:24:52
a variety of them, I think I can give you at least partial answers. So I've been linked with
811
1:24:52 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] level of the Department of Defence, Intel, for the past nine months. They came to me
812
1:24:59 --> 1:25:05
and said, we want you to join us so that because they can't go on camera or be on voice, they do
813
1:25:05 --> 1:25:10
a lot of writing, but they can't do either camera or voice. So I became the civilian front and the
814
1:25:10 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] of the show. And we've put out over 60 shows since Thanksgiving and covered a large number of
815
1:25:19 --> 1:25:25
these areas. And areas before they brought me in, I had no idea on a number of these. So I now have
816
1:25:25 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]ephen was absolutely correct about the issue with the Rockefellers
817
1:25:31 --> 1:25:37
initiating the women's lib. But he only got half the story. So half the story is they wanted control
818
1:25:37 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]en, the same way has happened with Hitler, that he wanted to control the children.
819
1:25:41 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] the mothers working during the day, and therefore,
820
1:25:46 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]itutions could take over the children and indoctrinate them. The other half of it is,
821
1:25:55 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]s looking to steal and to tax as much as they can. And so they wanted
822
1:26:05 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] to do that is to double up the amount of income from
823
1:26:10 --> 1:26:17
families. So not only was the husband having a job, but now the female was having a job and her
824
1:26:17 --> 1:26:23
income could also be taxed. So then they could steal more of it and increase their penetration
825
1:26:23 --> 1:26:29
level. Now, I'm going to stay with the women's issue. You asked specifically about the voting.
826
1:26:30 --> 1:26:37
That was not part of ours. And I don't think the voting movement was driven by Rockefellers. However,
827
1:26:37 --> 1:26:43
there was another women's movement in the US that was, and that was the suffrage movement around
828
1:26:43 --> 1:26:49
getting rid of alcohol as a beverage. And the reason for that was-
829
1:26:49 --> 1:26:49
You mean prohibition?
830
1:26:50 --> 1:26:57
I'm sorry. Yes, prohibition. Thank you. The reason for that was they were running all of the
831
1:26:58 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]em. And ethanol from being done from corn or other vegetables was a competitive
832
1:27:05 --> 1:27:11
threat to them. So they had to get rid of it. And they did that by outlawing all alcohol
833
1:27:11 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ion. And that allowed them to maintain the monopoly of all the energy being driven
834
1:27:18 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]em, which they owned all the petroleum mechanisms across the world.
835
1:27:24 --> 1:27:30
Now, a lot of people think they had to give that up as part of the antitrust that was all a fake out.
836
1:27:30 --> 1:27:36
They got $[privacy contact redaction] payout, and then they went out and impenetrated all the other buy
837
1:27:36 --> 1:27:42
out mechanisms. So they continue to control right to this day, well over 50% of all energy levels
838
1:27:42 --> 1:27:47
throughout the world, including the Middle East. I don't want to fill you in on that.
839
1:27:47 --> 1:27:48
There you go.
840
1:27:50 --> 1:27:57
Another element around the communism, clearly all the way back to pre-World War II, there was a lot
841
1:27:57 --> 1:28:02
of communism in Hollywood, and that continued. And that was another place where they could use
842
1:28:02 --> 1:28:09
mind control techniques to overwhelm the public with whatever approach they were looking to occur.
843
1:28:11 --> 1:28:17
Again, from the women's side, they've always wanted to do away with that close bond of women
844
1:28:17 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]en. And this is across mammals, and it's because not only is there that nurturing when
845
1:28:23 --> 1:28:28
they're young, but there's that existence of them growing inside the mammal's body. And that's all
846
1:28:28 --> 1:28:34
mammals, including humans. And that level of bond is supreme, and they needed to break that off
847
1:28:34 --> 1:28:44
at any chance they had. So breaking into the core family, paying women with welfare when the male
848
1:28:44 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] of breaking up the family. So there's a whole range of things they're doing.
849
1:28:50 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] with religion. All moral religions are opposed to
850
1:28:57 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]en and of poisoning anyone with drugs. This was part of their main business.
851
1:29:07 --> 1:29:14
They had to undo that, and so they've been trying to eliminate both Christian and Jewish religions
852
1:29:14 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]er to put in some kind of neutral religion that it's okay for pedophilia to be adopted and
853
1:29:21 --> 1:29:27
to be routine. So that's a range of the things going on that I think apply to questions you
854
1:29:27 --> 1:29:35
were posing. Every part of this that you see as weird, it's not by accident, it's by direct plan
855
1:29:35 --> 1:29:40
of the Rockefellers and George Soros and then a whole tier of people underneath them, including
856
1:29:40 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]s in Germany that are in that second tier. They're not in the top tier,
857
1:29:45 --> 1:29:53
but that are linked either through intel agencies or through bribery or blackmail,
858
1:29:53 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] got involved in the sex trade clubs and have gotten proof against
859
1:30:01 --> 1:30:06
them, so they feel they're stuck. And that's how they've maintained the syndicate up to now.
860
1:30:07 --> 1:30:11
They know they're in trouble, so much of the professional world is opposed to them and ready
861
1:30:11 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction], they are going double or nothing to complete the slave state. Exactly as we see in
862
1:30:17 --> 1:30:28
the Matrix movie, if Trump is allowed to come back and reasonable legislatures are allowed to occur
863
1:30:28 --> 1:30:36
and reasonable rule of law is allowed to come back, they're done with. They cannot allow Trump
864
1:30:36 --> 1:30:41
to become president again. Excellent analysis, Glenn. Thank you so much. Well said. Good points.
865
1:30:42 --> 1:30:49
All right, Benjamin, just quickly, then we go to Mascha, because Christian, I really want to get
866
1:30:49 --> 1:30:54
you to get from Benjamin's own words, this great work that he has done.
867
1:30:57 --> 1:31:05
Benjamin, green screen, I love it. Yeah, I see it. I cannot change it. Maybe it's a bandwidth
868
1:31:05 --> 1:31:13
issue because I'm wrestling with the bandwidth. So can you hear me? Yep. I would have to restart
869
1:31:13 --> 1:31:22
the whole thing. So I don't know what the camera is on. So can you hear me? But yeah. Benjamin,
870
1:31:22 --> 1:31:28
could you possibly in five minutes give a summary to Christina of your findings? So as I remember,
871
1:31:28 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]s, it was a thermo. Oh, yeah, well, it's way more. So
872
1:31:36 --> 1:31:46
the summary, actually, already seven issues I summarized at the end of 2022. I sent it to
873
1:31:46 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ually 25th of January, I sent it to MIT to a person who actually
874
1:31:56 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] with Seymour Hersh, because that individual is actually mentioned in Seymour
875
1:32:02 --> 1:32:08
Hersh's articles. So actually, my analysis preceded what Seymour Hersh wrote. So that's
876
1:32:08 --> 1:32:17
not entirely insignificant. And then I, it's so yeah, but what is the proof? It's essentially,
877
1:32:17 --> 1:32:25
I analyzed the seismic signals. And I realized that there was some, as you would expect from
878
1:32:25 --> 1:32:33
other incidences as Corona, there was simply, you know, no evidence whatsoever for the estimates
879
1:32:33 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] been used. What actually has been going around is 500 kilograms TNT. And
880
1:32:40 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ually analyzed the seismic signals, you come to the conclusions that it's at least 200
881
1:32:47 --> 1:32:55
tons, if not one, two, three kilotons explosive, which corresponds to the seismic signal. And that's
882
1:32:55 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] that a conventional explosive could have been used. So
883
1:33:02 --> 1:33:09
that's the first important thing. So in that sense, Seymour Hersh's story was a deflection from what
884
1:33:09 --> 1:33:14
really happened, because he could not say, and in addition, what I found out from the location
885
1:33:15 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]osive, it was actually placed in such a way that it will trigger a shockwave towards
886
1:33:22 --> 1:33:29
Kaliningrad, because the seismic response there was really high. So there was no way that the
887
1:33:29 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] been responsible for that. So it was clearly a Western nation. And it was
888
1:33:37 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ually, that that proof I then enhanced afterwards. So last December, so I
889
1:33:43 --> 1:33:51
stumbled across that because there were no less than [privacy contact redaction]ed
890
1:33:51 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ually before 2014. It's in 2013 during a NATO ball tops exercise,
891
1:34:01 --> 1:34:11
the same ball tops exercise that somehow Seymour Hersh emphasized. So and that actually then brings
892
1:34:11 --> 1:34:19
me to, and then there are other evidences. So the seismics, that's the most quantitative really.
893
1:34:19 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] been observed by a captain who arrived there 10 minutes
894
1:34:23 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ly like that after a nuclear underwater explosion. There is no
895
1:34:29 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] conventional explosive. Also with conventional explosive,
896
1:34:35 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] had dead fish, ironically. People said, oh, there were no dead fish. The issue is,
897
1:34:41 --> 1:34:46
actually, when you have a nuclear explosion, you don't have dead fish directly because you,
898
1:34:46 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]asma, right? So there is no dead fish recognizable anymore. And so what's
899
1:34:53 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]e layer on the water surface, you know, of mixture of whatever
900
1:35:00 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ually, you know, has been decomposed. So the very fact, and that I may add, the fish,
901
1:35:09 --> 1:35:18
there was, how do you say, a fishery association in Bornholm. And they closed down this spring
902
1:35:18 --> 1:35:26
after 150 years of operation, because they have no longer fish. And those fish which they have,
903
1:35:26 --> 1:35:32
they are deformed and, you know, not proper. And of course, nobody reports about that. But there is,
904
1:35:33 --> 1:35:40
there are reports in Danish newspaper, I can identify those. So, and that again,
905
1:35:40 --> 1:35:46
that's inconsistent with a normal explosion. Why would you have, you know, such a impact on
906
1:35:46 --> 1:35:53
wildlife and marine life with a conventional explosion? So now to Sweden and Finland.
907
1:35:53 --> 1:36:00
So how did they get into NATO? Well, these preparatory events, which are mentioned,
908
1:36:00 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]osions between 2013 and 2023 in the Bornholm Basin. They were also on Swedish territory.
909
1:36:14 --> 1:36:22
Incidentally, there was also an explosion before at the end of 2021 on December 17th. And if you
910
1:36:22 --> 1:36:31
remember December 17th, that was the day when Russia insisted that Ukraine would not join NATO.
911
1:36:32 --> 1:36:41
The same afternoon, two hours later, there was an explosion in the Bornholm Basin, and actually more
912
1:36:41 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ually the other one. And also the Nord Stream explosion,
913
1:36:46 --> 1:36:54
when was the date? It was exactly the date of the referendum in Ukraine. It was actually the date,
914
1:36:54 --> 1:37:02
the 26th of September was the date when they openly voted, you know, in Donetsk and Lugansk.
915
1:37:03 --> 1:37:13
So you see a correlation between, you know, political events and these obvious geophysical
916
1:37:13 --> 1:37:21
events. Now, Finland, in short, I can tell you in Finland, if you remember, I think that was the
917
1:37:21 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] time we, you know, we conversed with each other because that was last October, I think you
918
1:37:28 --> 1:37:34
were on this, you gave a talk then. And there was just this issue about Baltic Connector,
919
1:37:35 --> 1:37:45
you know, this pipeline between Estonia and Finland. It was October 8th, local time, October 7th, UTC.
920
1:37:45 --> 1:37:54
It was around midnight, obviously. So the pipeline between Estonia and Finland was destroyed.
921
1:37:55 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ually at precursor events, seismic precursor events.
922
1:38:01 --> 1:38:11
There were five or six of them in the second half of 2021, before the Ukraine conflict started.
923
1:38:12 --> 1:38:18
And I remember there was a New Year's speech of Nini Stö, the Finnish president.
924
1:38:19 --> 1:38:29
2021-22, when he argued half of his New Year's speech, he argued that Finland should join NATO.
925
1:38:30 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] yet in Ukraine. And so you see, so then Finland joined NATO in spring 2023.
926
1:38:39 --> 1:38:46
Actually, I sent my analysis to Stoltenberg, to the Finnish president, to the Swedish president,
927
1:38:46 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] actually a confirmation of receipt of the
928
1:38:51 --> 1:39:01
Finnish president. And so it was clear. So they were under pressure to join NATO. And then,
929
1:39:01 --> 1:39:07
of course, joining NATO didn't help against this aggression, which didn't really exist,
930
1:39:07 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction] So and that's in a nutshell is sort of the
931
1:39:15 --> 1:39:22
geophysical context of my work and the geopolitical context, both.
932
1:39:23 --> 1:39:28
So I'm happy to send you the manuscript, which I sent at the beginning. There was a talk,
933
1:39:29 --> 1:39:34
well, in German, you understand it, of last December. And I will have a talk, which will
934
1:39:34 --> 1:39:40
be online the next few days, which I had in Germany actually a couple of weeks ago.
935
1:39:41 --> 1:39:43
Wow.
936
1:39:43 --> 1:39:48
So there you are, Christine. It's, yeah, Benjamin's done great work. And so, and so we'll link the two
937
1:39:48 --> 1:39:58
of you. So, Benjamin, the thing is this. So my group in EU Parliament, we're planning, and I just
938
1:39:58 --> 1:40:06
proposed today to my group, that we should have discussion about, you know, new insights into,
939
1:40:06 --> 1:40:14
you know, the blowing up of Nord Stream 2. So would it be, I mean, there is no guarantee that,
940
1:40:14 --> 1:40:18
you know, there will actually be a debate, because whatever is proposed for my group,
941
1:40:18 --> 1:40:24
as you can imagine, we will not have a majority in a house to actually have that, you know,
942
1:40:24 --> 1:40:33
put on the agenda. But, you know, it's a try anyway. But as we are proposing it, we will have
943
1:40:33 --> 1:40:43
60 seconds to pretty much, you know, make our case. Okay. The house adopt that point on the agenda.
944
1:40:43 --> 1:40:49
So what you've just been, you know, what you've just told us, you know, to be quite frank, you
945
1:40:49 --> 1:40:55
blew my mind, because I'm not into all of, you know, the specifics of that. What I did,
946
1:40:55 --> 1:41:14
you know, I did catch up on was, so there were like, 1.2 megatons, I think you said.
947
1:41:16 --> 1:41:22
But it has to be careful, just sorry that I'm interrupting. So, you know, this issue,
948
1:41:22 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]e say that's the I'm making this point, because people react irrational. And when you
949
1:41:27 --> 1:41:36
say this, some nuclear weapons can come in so called mini nukes. And the mini nuke was,
950
1:41:36 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ually were introduced by the US Congress, were officially approved, I think, 2003 or 2004,
951
1:41:44 --> 1:41:52
something like that. And they are defined as devices with a explosive force of less than
952
1:41:52 --> 1:42:01
five kilotons. So 5000 tons, right? Whereas the most powerful thermonuclear weapons, they are in
953
1:42:01 --> 1:42:08
the range of megatons, you're right. So but there is this whole range of a factor of 1000, an
954
1:42:08 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]osive force. And that's why one needs to be really careful, you know, when stating that,
955
1:42:13 --> 1:42:20
otherwise, you get the counter reaction, which is irrational. Yeah, this one is at the lower end,
956
1:42:20 --> 1:42:24
you know, this one which was used is at the lower end of the spectrum of so.
957
1:42:25 --> 1:42:30
So Benjamin, there's still nuclear, are they? That's the point. Yeah, yeah, yeah, of course,
958
1:42:30 --> 1:42:35
of course. It's still it's it's thermonuclear. Yeah. So there are even there are even warheads,
959
1:42:35 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ed between sub kiloton and 150 kiloton, one of the same weapon,
960
1:42:41 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] dial essentially. So could I could I ask you that you would provide me with, you know,
961
1:42:49 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] that no, it could not have been, you know, some diver from somewhere,
962
1:42:58 --> 1:43:03
you know, you know, going down there and, you know, just putting in there some some fire,
963
1:43:03 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ually quite so much pretty much. So could you could you send to me information on,
964
1:43:12 --> 1:43:21
you know, the seismic graph that you're talking about, right? That it had to be a detonation
965
1:43:21 --> 1:43:27
far beyond, you know, any firework crackers, anything like that. So it could not have been
966
1:43:27 --> 1:43:36
a lone diver and anything else that would really stir up some shit, you know,
967
1:43:37 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction], you know, some people might come to think of the fact, well, you know, the
968
1:43:44 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ory they were telling us, it might not be the story, how it actually happened. But if you
969
1:43:51 --> 1:44:00
could provide me with, you know, some real facts on that, you know, and mind, we have like 60 seconds
970
1:44:00 --> 1:44:08
to make our case. Can it be a graphics as well? Can it be a graphics as well? I'm sorry? Can it be
971
1:44:08 --> 1:44:14
a graphics, you know, an illustration, a figure, or does it need to be? Yeah, if it helps me to
972
1:44:14 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]and what you're talking about, of course. Yes. But you know, just provide if you could provide
973
1:44:20 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]s, you know, this is where we found the seismographic, whatever, you know, it had to be
974
1:44:27 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] to debunk the narrative, there was, you know, some lonely guy, you know,
975
1:44:35 --> 1:44:40
one day, you've kind of figured I'm gonna dive down there and blow the whole thing up, you know,
976
1:44:41 --> 1:44:48
so that would be really appreciated. And like I said, we have 60 seconds to make our case.
977
1:44:49 --> 1:44:55
In the end, the House is not going to vote for it and vote on it. So but we have the 60 seconds,
978
1:44:56 --> 1:45:03
you know, to really get I mean, that's pretty much all we're doing in the EU Parliament, right?
979
1:45:04 --> 1:45:12
Yes. To speak to the world to speak to the US citizens, right? Actually, I can tell you,
980
1:45:12 --> 1:45:20
it was a longer thing. It was presented to the US UN UN Security Council a year ago on the
981
1:45:20 --> 1:45:40
anniversary of the
982
1:45:43 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction] to, you know, use whatever platform we have. And Parliament is just an
983
1:45:53 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]atform, right? To get the to get the story out there. And so that's kind of like,
984
1:46:02 --> 1:46:07
what we're pretty much I'm looking at, right? We need to get the story across. Because
985
1:46:08 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]? Have you heard about all of this? What you've been telling us on, you know,
986
1:46:13 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]ream media in Germany, mainstream media on France, mainstream media in Poland, or the UK,
987
1:46:19 --> 1:46:25
or anywhere else in the world, for that matter? No, you haven't. They don't report on that. So
988
1:46:25 --> 1:46:32
we need to really, you know, whatever platform we have, whether it's social media, EU Parliament,
989
1:46:32 --> 1:46:40
or, you know, whatever, we need to use all of this. All of this. Okay. All right. So Benjamin,
990
1:46:40 --> 1:46:48
is it time? What is your timeline? Just that I know. Okay, so next plenary session will be,
991
1:46:48 --> 1:46:56
let me check in. It's not going to be until September. Okay, it's going to be the week from
992
1:46:56 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction] to propose or to table that request, let's say,
993
1:47:06 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction] 20, right? So if I have this, you know, in the first week of
994
1:47:16 --> 1:47:24
September, it would be all good. It would be fine. Okay. Okay. Very good. All right. Great work,
995
1:47:24 --> 1:47:32
Benjamin. We will make that happen. And I think Christine. Oh, Benjamin. Yes. Have you got my
996
1:47:32 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ess? Can you can you link? Yeah, Charles maybe link us. Yeah. I'm gonna put it in the chat.
997
1:47:43 --> 1:47:52
Okay. Okay. Okay. Good. All right. On we go. Benjamin, I will provide two email addresses,
998
1:47:52 --> 1:47:58
please. I made it to both of them. Okay. To increase the chances that I'll actually take note
999
1:47:58 --> 1:48:08
of it. Okay. Okay. Otherwise, I use it again. Yeah. Okay. And Steven and I will make sure that it
1000
1:48:08 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]even will harass you, Christine. That's good. Thank you. Well done,
1001
1:48:14 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]ine, would you like Hans Benjamin before that time when you've got 60 seconds
1002
1:48:22 --> 1:48:28
to brief the group? Or would you like the elements of surprise? The danger? Well, it's not
1003
1:48:28 --> 1:48:35
necessary to brief the group because like I said, I've already got the approval to table that request
1004
1:48:35 --> 1:48:41
because I'm chief whip of my group now. So I got the approval of the group to table their request.
1005
1:48:42 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction] need the information to, like I said, make our case, right? It's not quite clear who is
1006
1:48:50 --> 1:48:57
going to do that. It might be me. It might be our head of group, the president of our group. But
1007
1:48:59 --> 1:49:06
yeah, it's fine. Yeah. Okay. Hans Benjamin, if you need any help in formulating it or advice,
1008
1:49:07 --> 1:49:12
I'll try and help if I can. Okay. Thank you, Steven. Thank you. Thank you. Thanks, Benjamin.
1009
1:49:12 --> 1:49:18
All right. We've got Marsha, Hayden and Martin and we're on good track. Christine, we're finishing in
1010
1:49:18 --> 1:49:24
35 minutes. I hope you're okay for that. Marsha. Hi, Christine. Thank you for everything.
1011
1:49:25 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ine, I'm reading about a long-term study by Dr. Yang-Mi Lee and Daniel Brody. It is about the
1012
1:49:35 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]s to EMF fields and dischanging humanity in a serious way,
1013
1:49:43 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]romagnetic fields. So from my point of view on top, the wireless networks
1014
1:49:50 --> 1:49:58
are also crucial to the digitization intentions. And so my question is, how is the EU
1015
1:49:58 --> 1:50:05
parliament dealing with 5G? Is the resistance there too? And the same question related to
1016
1:50:06 --> 1:50:13
geoengineering. Thank you. Okay. I'm sorry. You have to repeat the question. How is the EU parliament
1017
1:50:14 --> 1:50:20
dealing with the topic of 5G? Because... 5G are good. Sorry?
1018
1:50:22 --> 1:50:34
Wireless radiation, 5G, 4G. Okay. Okay. And the same about geoengineering because we have
1019
1:50:34 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction] of all, I have to admit,
1020
1:50:41 --> 1:50:47
this is going to be an issue that will be dealt with in the committee I'm on now,
1021
1:50:48 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]n't been on the committee in the last legislature. So I really couldn't provide an
1022
1:50:54 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction] no clue. I really don't know. So you have to understand that
1023
1:51:02 --> 1:51:10
there are so many issues being dealt with in the EU parliament. And I'm really kind of... I know
1024
1:51:10 --> 1:51:16
what's going on in my committees, but since we just started in the legislature and the issues
1025
1:51:16 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction] raised, like I said, it's going to be an issue in the committee I'm on right now, but I'm
1026
1:51:22 --> 1:51:29
new to that committee. So I really wouldn't even begin... I don't know where to even start.
1027
1:51:30 --> 1:51:42
Right? So what I do now is that they're trying to do whatever they can to bring in new technology,
1028
1:51:45 --> 1:51:52
whether it's 5G or whatever. From what I know is like, it's supposed to be a blessing
1029
1:51:52 --> 1:51:59
to humanity because internet is going to be so much quicker. And from what I've been told
1030
1:52:00 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] surgeons from the other end of the world via internet, guide another surgeon
1031
1:52:09 --> 1:52:15
through surgery, that type of thing. But like I said, I'm really not equipped to intelligently
1032
1:52:15 --> 1:52:23
talk about this right now because I really have no clue about this. Unless you can specify in some
1033
1:52:23 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] or provide more details. So at this point, I don't know.
1034
1:52:31 --> 1:52:37
I would be happy to do so via email, but I also think that this topic is quite promising because
1035
1:52:37 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]upid or they are really alien because they are victims of
1036
1:52:46 --> 1:52:53
all of these technologies too. Right. Well, the two options you just provided,
1037
1:52:53 --> 1:53:00
I don't think it's the first one. They're not entirely stupid. They aren't. So it must be the
1038
1:53:00 --> 1:53:08
other option. Right. So they're not alien. They're stupid. Okay. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
1039
1:53:08 --> 1:53:14
Thank you. Masha. We'll take some steps. I'll assist you on that. Hayden, what's going on with
1040
1:53:14 --> 1:53:21
euthanasia? Hello. Hello. Can you hear me? All clear. Yes. Wonderful. Thank you so much, Christine,
1041
1:53:21 --> 1:53:28
for being here and for everything you do. I'm here with Jackie Devoe. She's unable to put her
1042
1:53:28 --> 1:53:33
hand up right now, but perhaps we can split my time in half and maybe give her the opportunity
1043
1:53:33 --> 1:53:41
to speak too because she's very much a specialist in this area. What I really wanted to ask about
1044
1:53:41 --> 1:53:49
was a topic that when it comes to COVID corruption, you know, very much isn't discussed as much. It's
1045
1:53:49 --> 1:53:56
seen more through the conspiracy lens, et cetera. And with all the work you've done, Christine,
1046
1:53:56 --> 1:54:03
you know, on, you know, speaking about the jabs, the lockdowns, everything, I wanted to know if
1047
1:54:03 --> 1:54:13
you're aware at all of the euthanasia, non-voluntary euthanasia that's been taking place around the UK,
1048
1:54:13 --> 1:54:18
globally, quite frankly. I'm sure Jackie can touch on it more where essentially, I mean,
1049
1:54:18 --> 1:54:30
here it was, it was labeled a protocol named NG163 before being renamed to NG191. And then
1050
1:54:30 --> 1:54:36
they essentially, November last year, I believe, took the recommendation down mysteriously.
1051
1:54:37 --> 1:54:44
And it's essentially where government advised through protocols that quote unquote, well,
1052
1:54:44 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] COVID patients, any patients are treated with midazolam and morphine. And again,
1053
1:54:51 --> 1:54:58
the specifics can be discussed more by Jackie, but this essentially suppresses them and so on
1054
1:54:58 --> 1:55:03
and so forth ends up killing them through harsh treatment as well, through abandonment. I mean,
1055
1:55:03 --> 1:55:10
there's so many factors to it. And ultimately, I see this and I think so many of us see it. We're
1056
1:55:10 --> 1:55:15
in a support group, we run a support group and it's the one thing, I mean, the quote unquote
1057
1:55:15 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]arting to discuss, you know, jabs more, maybe a little bit, you know, trickling
1058
1:55:21 --> 1:55:27
things out. But it's the one kind of thing they're totally unwilling to touch is the euthanasia
1059
1:55:27 --> 1:55:34
that's been taking place. It's like a silent scandal, I suppose. And so perhaps we could
1060
1:55:34 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]y to touch on it too before we get further and move on.
1061
1:55:42 --> 1:55:47
Absolutely. Jackie has presented to us as well, Stephen, remember?
1062
1:55:50 --> 1:55:55
Jackie from memory was a former, she was working for the BBC at one stage. Is that right, Jackie?
1063
1:55:55 --> 1:56:00
Oh, sorry. Mainstream anyway. You're muted, Jackie.
1064
1:56:05 --> 1:56:12
No, maybe accidentally at some point in the last 40 years, I did write something for the BBC,
1065
1:56:13 --> 1:56:19
teen website or something, but no, I've never worked for the BBC. No. So who told you that?
1066
1:56:21 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] who was mainstream journalist then maybe.
1067
1:56:26 --> 1:56:36
Yeah, that's me. Anyway, never mind that. Christine, I'm so honored and so feel so
1068
1:56:36 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ine on a screen. And I have messaged you a few times, Christine,
1069
1:56:44 --> 1:56:49
because I wanted you to come on my show. I've done a show for the last two years for Unity News
1070
1:56:49 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction], we're all busy. You know, we miss messages. But anyway, I know that we have got
1071
1:56:58 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction], so back in 2020, a man contacted me, told me that his
1072
1:57:07 --> 1:57:14
relative, shall we say, had been murdered in an NHS facility. And I don't know if you know this
1073
1:57:14 --> 1:57:22
story, Christine, but I then looked into that. I'm an investigative journalist. I've been doing
1074
1:57:22 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]s say three decades, but it's actually 39 years. And looked into this and
1075
1:57:31 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]ories, very similar stories to this one man, that their loved
1076
1:57:38 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]ered in hospitals and care homes and hospices across the UK. So as a journalist
1077
1:57:49 --> 1:57:56
of a long time, I thought, well, I'm going to look into this. And I did. And then I approached all
1078
1:57:56 --> 1:58:05
the editors of all the national newspapers in the UK. And I managed to secure two meetings with
1079
1:58:05 --> 1:58:16
the news editor of the Daily Mail and the medical editor of the Mail on Sunday. And we had these
1080
1:58:16 --> 1:58:22
meetings and I brought the original guy along with me. He had incontrovertible evidence
1081
1:58:23 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] that his relative had been murdered in an NHS facility, NHS in the UK. And so these
1082
1:58:35 --> 1:58:40
editors were like gobsmacked. Their jaws were on the floor. They were like, this is the biggest
1083
1:58:40 --> 1:58:47
story we've ever heard. Oh, God, I'd love a puff of your cigarette, Christine. Anyway, so
1084
1:58:50 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] said, this is the biggest story of decades, you know, with this front page news.
1085
1:58:56 --> 1:59:06
And so I kind of persevered with this. And they kind of went quiet like they do.
1086
1:59:07 --> 1:59:15
And I was a bit tired. This is early 2021. And then I decided, well, I didn't decide, but
1087
1:59:15 --> 1:59:21
a media company, Iconic Media came to me and said, do you want to make this into a documentary? So
1088
1:59:21 --> 1:59:27
I did. We made a documentary. So by the end of 2021, we made a documentary called A Good Death.
1089
1:59:29 --> 1:59:35
And it's on iconicmedia.com. And it's been seen by, I think, probably hundreds of thousands of
1090
1:59:35 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]e by now, because it's three years old. And I'm very proud of it. And then the next thing I did,
1091
1:59:44 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]aying God, which was released in April this year. Don't
1092
1:59:49 --> 1:59:54
know if you've seen it. It was platformed on Children's Health Defense, CHD, Robert Kennedy,
1093
1:59:54 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]atformed on UK column, or the UK. It was about medical democide in the UK
1094
2:00:04 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] 50 years. And I did message you about it, but I know you're incredibly busy.
1095
2:00:10 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]n't seen my messages. Also, I really love you, like really love you. Massive
1096
2:00:17 --> 2:00:23
girl crush. And I messaged you many times, not being creepy or weird, but just saying that. I
1097
2:00:23 --> 2:00:31
think you're great. And I also, for the last two years, I've done a Friday night chat show where
1098
2:00:31 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]ink and be laid back. I thought you would be fantastic for that. But anyway,
1099
2:00:36 --> 2:00:43
that's stopped now. But I'm going to do a new show in the new year with the amazing Hayden Appleby,
1100
2:00:43 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] speak. He's only 18 years old. He's like some old soul, you know. Wow,
1101
2:00:50 --> 2:00:59
that's amazing. We don't allow 18 year olds here, Jackie. When I first had him on my show,
1102
2:00:59 --> 2:01:06
he was 17. He was barely legal, but we have a connection. And we just thought we need to
1103
2:01:07 --> 2:01:14
work together because you need to also watch Hayden's podcast on Twitter, Utter Truth. Is
1104
2:01:14 --> 2:01:21
that right, Hayden? Yes. Yeah. And it's amazing. I mean, he's 18 years old. He looks 50, but you
1105
2:01:21 --> 2:01:29
know, ignore that. He's not vain. He doesn't. I'm old enough to be his great grandmother, but yeah,
1106
2:01:29 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ion. He's an amazing new young journalist. And I'm very keen on getting all these
1107
2:01:35 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction] because I've got four adult children and they're amazing as well.
1108
2:01:43 --> 2:01:51
But you know, I hate him to do something like he's doing. It's pretty special, you know. And I think
1109
2:01:51 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction], I've gone slightly off the ball there because I'm just so
1110
2:01:58 --> 2:02:05
having a bit of a moment. Jackie, you can arrange for him to come on this platform if you like.
1111
2:02:05 --> 2:02:15
If you wish. Well, never mind him. I'm focused on Christine now because I can't believe I'm in
1112
2:02:15 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ine Anderson sitting next to me because I just think
1113
2:02:20 --> 2:02:25
she's amazing. I'm not going to go too girly crushy on her because that is going to come across as a
1114
2:02:25 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction], I think I've said pretty much, I'm writing a book at the moment. It's
1115
2:02:33 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ate and it's a kind of follow on from the two documentaries. But Christine,
1116
2:02:38 --> 2:02:44
if you, I don't know where, well I've got your email address now. So if you're interested,
1117
2:02:44 --> 2:02:50
I will send you the two films and the link to the book. And they're brilliant films, Christine.
1118
2:02:50 --> 2:03:00
Yeah. Okay. So Jackie, first of all, sorry for not having, I truly don't remember having got
1119
2:03:00 --> 2:03:08
any messages from you. But I mean, you have to understand the email. I have an EU Parliament
1120
2:03:09 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ess. And on this email address, everything shows up,
1121
2:03:15 --> 2:03:23
whether it's official business from EU Parliament or whatever, or citizens writing to us. So
1122
2:03:23 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] me, I get like what, a thousand emails every single day and there is no way to sift
1123
2:03:31 --> 2:03:41
through all of that. So I'm truly sorry. I truly missed it. You have my email address now once again.
1124
2:03:41 --> 2:03:48
I do you want better. I send you a PN right now with my personal phone number. So you just conduct
1125
2:03:48 --> 2:03:54
business in the future with me personally. And even there is no guarantee. I'll see it,
1126
2:03:54 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] not in some kind of a timely fashion, but I will see it eventually. So, but I would love to
1127
2:04:03 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] or seriously. So having said that, yes, I am aware of the fact of
1128
2:04:13 --> 2:04:17
what's been going on, especially in the UK with a, what do you call it? The
1129
2:04:18 --> 2:04:26
Madazelon, right? That was like a big scandal. And it's not, it didn't only happen in the UK.
1130
2:04:26 --> 2:04:33
It happened pretty much everywhere. And that's just, I mean, just, you know, thinking
1131
2:04:33 --> 2:04:42
how we treated, you know, our elderlies in their homes, you know, being totally secluded from
1132
2:04:42 --> 2:04:54
everyone being shut off from everything. And just to think of how many people died, lonely, if not
1133
2:04:54 --> 2:05:03
to say from loneliness, because I mean, from all I've known is, you know, old people,
1134
2:05:04 --> 2:05:10
when they're on the last days, you know, they're not concerned about dying. They're, they already
1135
2:05:10 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] that they are dying. What they really want is to see their loved ones and to have
1136
2:05:18 --> 2:05:24
having, I mean, our society imposed on them having to die lonely.
1137
2:05:25 --> 2:05:32
Terrible. Like I said, if not, you know, from loneliness. And I'm really,
1138
2:05:32 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] to say that I truly feel blessed that my parents, my mom died at the age of 91,
1139
2:05:41 --> 2:05:50
my dad at 94, but it happened before this COVID madness. And I can tell you, I probably would have
1140
2:05:50 --> 2:05:59
ended up in jail, because had anyone tried to keep me from my dying parents in the hospital,
1141
2:06:00 --> 2:06:06
I don't know what I would have done. But I can guarantee you it would have landed me in jail.
1142
2:06:06 --> 2:06:14
How do I know that? So it's, I'm tearing up right now, actually, just, you know, to think about this.
1143
2:06:14 --> 2:06:24
So but it's, it's, it's utterly, it's so dehumanizing. And I actually like the words right now.
1144
2:06:25 --> 2:06:31
But like I said, I will PN you with my personal phone number. So please contact me.
1145
2:06:32 --> 2:06:40
And let's connect. And, you know, like I said, I'd love to come on your show. Absolutely. Absolutely.
1146
2:06:41 --> 2:06:50
Wonderful. Great. Jackie, can I just say my mother was killed by the NHS, the NHS in 2016.
1147
2:06:50 --> 2:06:56
How do I interrupt here? Can you hear me? Yeah. I just want to say very briefly that Christine,
1148
2:06:56 --> 2:07:02
it wasn't just people who were terminally ill, it wasn't just elderly people who were murdered
1149
2:07:02 --> 2:07:07
in their beds, in their beds at home, in hospices, in hospitals and care homes,
1150
2:07:07 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]e. In my group of [privacy contact redaction]e, I have at least [privacy contact redaction]e who were killed,
1151
2:07:14 --> 2:07:20
they were euthanized involuntarily under the age of 60. So it wasn't just and they were they
1152
2:07:20 --> 2:07:27
weren't disabled people, they weren't vulnerable. It's so random, it's bizarre. Hayden is my friend,
1153
2:07:27 --> 2:07:32
his grandmother was euthanized, my mother and my father were euthanized. That wasn't the reason I
1154
2:07:32 --> 2:07:40
made the film. I only realized that as I was making the film, A Good Death in 2021. Oh my God,
1155
2:07:40 --> 2:07:47
that happened to my mother in 2009. And while I was editing the film, A Good Death, my father was
1156
2:07:47 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ered in his bed at home by paramedics. It's a disgusting, horrible, awful story. I haven't even
1157
2:07:55 --> 2:08:02
processed it myself at this point because I'm busy doing other stuff and I'm about to do another
1158
2:08:02 --> 2:08:08
documentary as well. But it's absolutely horrendous. And a lot of people say like you said, Christine,
1159
2:08:08 --> 2:08:15
oh yeah, old people, terminally ill people. No, in my group, 99% of the people in my group,
1160
2:08:16 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]e who had been murdered. They've been involuntarily euthanized, which is
1161
2:08:21 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]er. They weren't old, they weren't elderly, they weren't terminally ill. They went into hospital
1162
2:08:29 --> 2:08:34
for one reason or other, they'd fallen over, they'd got dizzy, they had a cold. And then they were put
1163
2:08:34 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction], which was in 2020 called NG163, later labeled NG191. And they were
1164
2:08:45 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ered in their beds, in their hospital beds, in their care home beds, and in their
1165
2:08:52 --> 2:09:00
beds at home. And it's the most despicable, horrible scandal that you've ever heard. It's the worst
1166
2:09:00 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] humanity, nevermind the jabs. I'm not saying nevermind them, but beyond the jabs,
1167
2:09:06 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] office scandal, beyond the poison blood scandal, this is the worst crime against
1168
2:09:12 --> 2:09:19
humanity, the worst Holocaust, and it's still going on. I've got people coming talking to me
1169
2:09:19 --> 2:09:26
every day, it's still happening. Christine, thank you for listening. And I love you. Big girl crush.
1170
2:09:26 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, for some reason I can't figure out an European,
1171
2:09:31 --> 2:09:35
Jackie, so could you provide to her my phone number?
1172
2:09:35 --> 2:09:35
Sure.
1173
2:09:38 --> 2:09:40
Oh yes, I've got your phone number. Yes, I can do that.
1174
2:09:41 --> 2:09:45
Jackie, am I, I have your email address. I'm not sure.
1175
2:09:47 --> 2:09:53
Sorry? Yes, you have. Yeah. If you could email me your phone number. Are you on WhatsApp? I can
1176
2:09:53 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ine, we'll fix it. We'll fix it. Okay. All right. We've got three hands up
1177
2:10:00 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, final questions. Thank you, Hayden. Good to meet you. Martin, then Bernie,
1178
2:10:06 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]rick, and then Stephen, and then we're finishing it at the two and a half hour mark. Go,
1179
2:10:10 --> 2:10:18
Martin. Yeah, thank you very much. Miss Anderson, I just would. Christine, please. Christine. Okay.
1180
2:10:19 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ine, I would just maybe suggest, you see, if you're doing your job in the EU Parliament,
1181
2:10:26 --> 2:10:34
and if you want to prove that it was a special kind of bond that was used in this, in Nord Stream
1182
2:10:34 --> 2:10:42
2, maybe it could also be worth to invalidate the other hypothesis with the divers. So maybe you
1183
2:10:42 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] for your knowledge. You see, if you're diving down to 80
1184
2:10:48 --> 2:10:55
meters, you need a very special composition of the gas you're breathing. And this very special
1185
2:10:55 --> 2:11:03
composition means if you're going down with natural air compression, oxygen will become toxic.
1186
2:11:03 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] to change your bottles at the level of about 40 meters to another gas formulation.
1187
2:11:11 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] some, you see, even if there are special divers, even if there are diving instructors or
1188
2:11:17 --> 2:11:26
whatever, they cannot trick out physiology and physics. So they have to adhere to that.
1189
2:11:26 --> 2:11:35
Yeah. And so you need some tanks down at [privacy contact redaction] to switch them to go further
1190
2:11:35 --> 2:11:41
deep. And when you go up again, you have to re-switch because the oxygen when you're going down
1191
2:11:41 --> 2:11:46
is so low that if you're coming to the surface, you would be killed. So you have to switch
1192
2:11:46 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] down and back on the way up. And these very special gases, I just checked it
1193
2:11:53 --> 2:12:00
for Germany in the region of Berlin. There are only two units who are able to produce this kind
1194
2:12:00 --> 2:12:08
of composition of the gas. So this is not everywhere available and you cannot produce it yourself
1195
2:12:09 --> 2:12:16
on a sailing boat. This is also important to know. So you have to get it somewhere and you see to
1196
2:12:16 --> 2:12:23
prepare for that. This is a military operation. So you need to go down. You have to place those
1197
2:12:23 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] a bottom time of, I think, something like seven minutes,
1198
2:12:30 --> 2:12:36
where you're down at 80 meters, you have to have your decompression stops when you're going up,
1199
2:12:36 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] to keep a surface time of several hours before you can go
1200
2:12:43 --> 2:12:50
down again, which means you cannot plant there some units within, I would say, six hours or eight
1201
2:12:50 --> 2:12:57
hours, but you need days, days to do that if you do it with the divers. So it could really make sense
1202
2:12:57 --> 2:13:03
that you're asking an expert on that because then you could invalidate this hypothesis that some
1203
2:13:03 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] down there and planted the bombs there. Thank you so much for
1204
2:13:10 --> 2:13:17
that input. That is really important. The thing is just like I said, we have like 60 seconds
1205
2:13:17 --> 2:13:26
to make our case. So this is good information, background information. I might be able to stick
1206
2:13:26 --> 2:13:35
it in, you know, in like three words or something like that. So could you write up what you just
1207
2:13:35 --> 2:13:43
told me? Because I'm totally unaware of that because I'm not a diver, sorry. No, seriously,
1208
2:13:43 --> 2:13:56
I'm not. But you know, we need to make the case, like I said, [privacy contact redaction]
1209
2:13:56 --> 2:14:03
It needs to be so, you know, the information needs to really hit home. And it needs to be presented
1210
2:14:03 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] that every regular citizen understands what we're talking about. You know what I'm saying?
1211
2:14:14 --> 2:14:22
Yeah, of course. Yeah. But I didn't find your email address. I checked for it because
1212
2:14:22 --> 2:14:27
I could provide some data, but these are just basic. You see, I'm no specialist in diving.
1213
2:14:27 --> 2:14:33
I'm diving myself. I'm giving some basic lectures on diving medicine, but not on the expert level.
1214
2:14:33 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]e by far better than myself, but I could provide you some basic items.
1215
2:14:39 --> 2:14:46
Based on that, you could just have [privacy contact redaction]s like due to physics, it's not possible to go down
1216
2:14:46 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]y in this amount of time. Okay, I just put in my email address once again in the chat.
1217
2:14:53 --> 2:14:58
No, it didn't come. So Martin, I think that Hans Benjamin would appreciate being able to discuss
1218
2:14:58 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] a lot of knowledge about various things and you are a professor and
1219
2:15:03 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ria, I believe. Actually, I'm in Germany now. I'm commuting in between
1220
2:15:10 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ria and Germany. Yeah. Can someone check the chat? I just put in my email. Is it in the chat?
1221
2:15:20 --> 2:15:25
It's not in there. So click on on chat. Click on the down arrow so you see.
1222
2:15:26 --> 2:15:34
Okay, I see it. All right. Now it's a being. So, yeah. Martin, maybe you could email me and I'll
1223
2:15:34 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ine and Hans Benjamin or whatever. Let's get moving.
1224
2:15:43 --> 2:15:48
Martin, could I ask you, think about it. You don't have to answer now, but would you
1225
2:15:48 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] of ours? Of course. I mean, it's just a very limited time. I'm so happy to be
1226
2:15:59 --> 2:16:04
in here today because I cancelled something else this evening because I wanted to meet Christine.
1227
2:16:04 --> 2:16:12
So this was my desire and therefore I cancelled the other thing, but it's not always possible
1228
2:16:12 --> 2:16:22
to cancel. I would love to join you, but you see, I don't want to give the illusion that I'm expert
1229
2:16:22 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]e better. My knowledge is just basics. Yeah. And I think the
1230
2:16:29 --> 2:16:34
group here would deserve an expert. This was Martin, I wasn't thinking about so much about
1231
2:16:34 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ream. I was thinking more of the medical doctor, your observations from Austria
1232
2:16:38 --> 2:16:44
on what's happened in the last four plus years. Well, there's just maybe...
1233
2:16:48 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction] give you a brief idea of what's going on in Austria now,
1234
2:16:53 --> 2:16:57
because this might be concerning the whole group. We haven't got time, Martin. We've got to go.
1235
2:16:57 --> 2:17:04
We've got Bernie's hand up. We've got Maverick, but it would be great to have you. Bernie,
1236
2:17:04 --> 2:17:10
you had your hand up. Yeah. Can you hear me? Yes, we can. Charles, first of all,
1237
2:17:10 --> 2:17:15
love following your show, love being on TNT. You get interviewed by Rick and mine occasionally.
1238
2:17:15 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]ine, we met at the... Nice to see you again. We met at the Westminster event with the Heart
1239
2:17:22 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]inks and a few cigarettes in the pub afterwards. Lovely to see
1240
2:17:28 --> 2:17:33
you again and delighted for the work you're doing. I just wanted to draw your attention to... You
1241
2:17:33 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction], but in the context of these deaths, there's quite a lot of it on
1242
2:17:40 --> 2:17:51
the Corona-Ausschuss that was led by... What was his name? The doctor who's currently in jail in
1243
2:17:51 --> 2:17:58
Germany. Rainer Thülmich. Rainer Thülmich. He's not a doctor, though. He did quite a lot very early on,
1244
2:17:59 --> 2:18:04
both on what was happening in New York and in Germany where there were enforced injections
1245
2:18:05 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]e in hospitals and also the use of midazol and various other things to kill them
1246
2:18:10 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]ory is around Europe, but if you go back in... I'm sure your
1247
2:18:19 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]e can find it. If not, we can find it for you. There's a lot of programs. There's a big,
1248
2:18:24 --> 2:18:31
long program he did about... I want to say about two years ago on those events happening in German
1249
2:18:31 --> 2:18:39
hospitals, which he did a program on. I think he's still in prison, so I'm not quite sure that...
1250
2:18:39 --> 2:18:44
I don't know in what context mentioning his name is of use in terms of that because there's
1251
2:18:44 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]ion mark over why he's in prison, but it sounds like lawfare rather than something genuine.
1252
2:18:51 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] wanted to highlight that, so if you need that information, I can probably find it.
1253
2:18:57 --> 2:19:04
Now, Bernie, we've been talking about Rainer for some meetings. Thank you for that. It is a show
1254
2:19:04 --> 2:19:12
trial, and he released a statement today on the ICIC website, everybody. We haven't got time to
1255
2:19:12 --> 2:19:20
play it, but he's thinking that there might be some positive movements, but he's been in jail
1256
2:19:20 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]ober the 30th, and it is outrageous what's happening, Bernie, but thank you for
1257
2:19:25 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] enough to tell us about your drinking and smoking habits.
1258
2:19:35 --> 2:19:44
All right, Maverick. And mine, by the way. I was being polite to our guests. Okay, Maverick, go for it.
1259
2:19:44 --> 2:19:48
Hey, hello, Christine. How are you doing?
1260
2:19:49 --> 2:19:49
Good, how are you?
1261
2:19:50 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] hanging in there. I have found the emails because I was like, did I
1262
2:19:58 --> 2:20:06
miss something or did it never arrive? We met through the Zoom chat here a year and a half ago
1263
2:20:06 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction] one, these famous documents that fell off the truck
1264
2:20:12 --> 2:20:18
that you wanted. So I wanted to know if you ever received them because I never got a reply to you.
1265
2:20:18 --> 2:20:30
I sent you one, two, three, four documents, and it was 2022-1026. If you can just write this date
1266
2:20:30 --> 2:20:41
down, you might actually find them. Say again? Directly. 2022-1026. Well, this Canadian version,
1267
2:20:41 --> 2:20:46
so it would be the 26th of the 10th month in 2022. Yeah. Okay.
1268
2:20:50 --> 2:20:59
Yes. Eventually later on, you mentioned in a previous Zoom meeting that, well, you're not the
1269
2:20:59 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction] access to this email. And then I thought, ah, am I dumb? Now everybody can see this
1270
2:21:07 --> 2:21:14
and you may not be aware of who is really amongst the people that actually look into this email.
1271
2:21:14 --> 2:21:17
Did they really transfer this to you? So is there another way to contact you?
1272
2:21:19 --> 2:21:26
Yeah, there is actually. Let me put in my other email address once again.
1273
2:21:28 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]n't seen it in the chat at all. Oh, you haven't?
1274
2:21:37 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]ess. Yes, that was come through. Yep. Yes, this one I see. Okay.
1275
2:21:44 --> 2:21:47
Yep. Good. Okay. And you put another one in there too.
1276
2:21:51 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ine.Anderson at Europa with an L.Europa.EU. Right. That's the
1277
2:22:01 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] That's the address from your parliament. And then I just provided another one
1278
2:22:08 --> 2:22:18
that is, yeah, it's not very much. It's another email address. Just emailing me at both again
1279
2:22:19 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ually seeing it. Yes. Yes. The last email was a request for a 15
1280
2:22:27 --> 2:22:32
minutes interview because I'm working since now a year. The reason being it's so long, it's that
1281
2:22:33 --> 2:22:39
I've dealt with my own stuff here. So I work time to time on that thing and I add some
1282
2:22:39 --> 2:22:44
little interviews that I've made in this mini movie that I'm planning to make.
1283
2:22:47 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]e had asked me about the, well, yeah, go ahead. We've got to go. So
1284
2:22:53 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ine. We're tight on time. Okay. So that's good. Okay. No
1285
2:22:57 --> 2:23:02
problem. Bring it to the top. Yeah. Very good. Thank you, ma'am. Paul and then Stephen. Thank
1286
2:23:02 --> 2:23:10
you, Charles. Thanks, ma'am. Thank you. A 32nd question, Christine. Paul Amaldi, Act for Your
1287
2:23:10 --> 2:23:21
Freedom. We are preparing a small group to go and take part, so to speak, to the G8 in Sicily,
1288
2:23:21 --> 2:23:28
because this year in Sicily, the G8 will be about agriculture. And I have done some research and you
1289
2:23:28 --> 2:23:33
might know that Sicily in particular has been suffering for years for drought. And of course,
1290
2:23:33 --> 2:23:40
that is killing agriculture in Sicily. And during my research, I came across some hints that there
1291
2:23:40 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] water pipes and put them sensors to monitor citizens' consumption. And
1292
2:23:48 --> 2:23:52
it's a long shot. This question, I know it's a long shot. And I just wondered whether you,
1293
2:23:52 --> 2:23:57
and I've seen, because I am, I sort of travel around Europe, I've seen a few places,
1294
2:23:57 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]s in Europe work, including the UK, where I am a permanent citizen of, work to replace
1295
2:24:05 --> 2:24:11
water pipe. And I was wondering whether it's ever come to your ear, this idea of replacing water
1296
2:24:11 --> 2:24:18
pipes and to put sensors to monitor citizens' consumer consumption. It's a long shot.
1297
2:24:20 --> 2:24:33
No, I'm not aware of they're putting sensors in there to track consumption. What I am aware of
1298
2:24:33 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] is that they're putting sensors in there to monitor human waste in terms of trying to
1299
2:24:43 --> 2:24:49
identify whether there's an infection going. So is that what you were talking about?
1300
2:24:51 --> 2:24:57
No, actually, no, I heard water, but it could be on the same line. That is, I noticed that in many
1301
2:24:57 --> 2:25:05
places in Europe, they are replacing pipes. And it just sounds a bit odd to me that this is happening.
1302
2:25:06 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] pipes?
1303
2:25:10 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] their old pipes and they put new pipes,
1304
2:25:14 --> 2:25:20
water pipes, they say, generically speaking. And I just smell a rat, so to speak. What is this
1305
2:25:20 --> 2:25:27
work going on in small villages in Italy, in France, in the UK? What is this? So I was just
1306
2:25:27 --> 2:25:40
and I read somewhere about this. Frank, I don't know. I mean, what's the point of replacing water
1307
2:25:40 --> 2:25:49
pipes, whatever pipes, the pipes we are having right now is sewage pipes and water pipes.
1308
2:25:49 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] water pipes to track the consumption of the people? It doesn't make any
1309
2:25:56 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]er to track the consumption. I mean, if that was impossible, you would have to do it
1310
2:26:04 --> 2:26:12
via the sewage pipes, maybe freshwater pipes are going to give any insight into what happened
1311
2:26:12 --> 2:26:20
consuming. It wouldn't give you any insight into what infection is going on right now. So you would
1312
2:26:20 --> 2:26:28
have to target the sewage pipes. So at this point, it doesn't make any sense to me what you're saying,
1313
2:26:29 --> 2:26:35
but I took it down. I'll try to make sense of it, look into it.
1314
2:26:35 --> 2:26:40
No, no, but maybe that's what you say. They tell us it's water pipe and in fact the sewage pipe
1315
2:26:40 --> 2:26:44
and they don't tell us the whole story. I just noticed that they replaced pipes.
1316
2:26:44 --> 2:26:52
Okay. So if there's no clarification on what pipes you thought they were talking about,
1317
2:26:52 --> 2:27:00
so yeah, they are tracking the sewage pipes or whatever sewage is coming through those pipes
1318
2:27:02 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ions. And they came up with that with this whole COVID. I mean, they were
1319
2:27:09 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]s and blah, blah, blah, but people weren't really into the whole thing of
1320
2:27:15 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]abbed like every two days, whatever. So now they're actually tracking the
1321
2:27:23 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction] human feces, analyze human feces to detect infections. And lo and behold,
1322
2:27:36 --> 2:27:42
they now figure out that there is a monkeypox epidemic apparently going on
1323
2:27:43 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ed that through the sewage. But that's the new thing of doing things apparently.
1324
2:27:53 --> 2:28:00
And this monkeypox, we will see, no, it's no longer called monkeypox because that would be
1325
2:28:00 --> 2:28:06
yeah, somehow not right. So it's not empox is what they call it.
1326
2:28:08 --> 2:28:15
Yeah. Yeah. And so there was like what a few cases in Berlin and in Sweden,
1327
2:28:15 --> 2:28:22
you know, something popped up. And the point is this, I mean, this epidemic apparently is
1328
2:28:22 --> 2:28:30
going on in Africa. Why don't they fucking close the borders for God's sakes? Seriously. Sorry.
1329
2:28:32 --> 2:28:36
Well said. Thank you, Charles. Thank you, Balda. Thank you. Steven, last couple of questions,
1330
2:28:36 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ine, and then you can go back on your holiday. Isn't he a mean man?
1331
2:28:43 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ion, Christine, from you, I think that they want to take our
1332
2:28:49 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction] from us. This is really important. They do it through attacking the family,
1333
2:28:56 --> 2:29:02
which of course undermines society. But they do it in many other ways too. They're trying to
1334
2:29:02 --> 2:29:09
take our identity from us. And of course, mobile phones and social media play the addiction to
1335
2:29:09 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]ays into this. So that young people these days in the United Kingdom can't
1336
2:29:15 --> 2:29:19
talk to each other. And if they do talk to each other, they find it so unpleasant. They want to
1337
2:29:19 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]raight back to their mobile phones where everybody agrees with them and the social media.
1338
2:29:27 --> 2:29:35
And so this is really, really dangerous stuff. So Jason Christoph says that the only settled science,
1339
2:29:35 --> 2:29:42
I think he's right as well. The only settled science is mind control. And if we don't solve
1340
2:29:42 --> 2:29:48
what's going on with the mind control, then you could argue that no conversations of ours or
1341
2:29:48 --> 2:29:52
anybody else worth having because we're never going to solve the problem because they're always one
1342
2:29:52 --> 2:30:00
step ahead with the mind control. And so the people are seeing everything through the lens,
1343
2:30:00 --> 2:30:07
if you like, of mind control. And so everything. And the other thing is a lot of people have been
1344
2:30:07 --> 2:30:12
saying that things don't make sense. You know, that why would they do this? You know, why would
1345
2:30:12 --> 2:30:19
they attack women? Why the Olympics? The whole. So if you want to destabilise human beings, you need to
1346
2:30:22 --> 2:30:30
create confusion. You need everything not to make sense. And I think that they have,
1347
2:30:30 --> 2:30:36
they are trying to do this in many, many different ways. Nothing makes sense anymore.
1348
2:30:36 --> 2:30:41
I think someone was saying that, you know, like three decades ago, there was some,
1349
2:30:41 --> 2:30:47
maybe it was you, Christine, there was some kind of debate going on between the mainstream media.
1350
2:30:47 --> 2:30:52
And now these days, everything's all settled, you know, everything's kind of, and nothing's ever
1351
2:30:52 --> 2:31:02
discussed. And there's one narrative. But and. So I think that, you know, mind control and this
1352
2:31:02 --> 2:31:09
desire to. So they did in China, as you correctly pointed out, they wanted everybody to wear the
1353
2:31:09 --> 2:31:16
same clothes, Mao Zedong. And what's that about? That's about taking your individuality away from
1354
2:31:16 --> 2:31:23
you, your very identity. Why would you sacrifice your individuality to the group? Because
1355
2:31:25 --> 2:31:29
that's always going to lead to tyranny and misery. Because
1356
2:31:31 --> 2:31:37
that means if you give up your individuality, you're always telling lies. You're always lying
1357
2:31:37 --> 2:31:43
about yourself. So you're living a lie. You have no self-respect. You cannot be happy. These things
1358
2:31:43 --> 2:31:48
need to be discussed in school. They need to be. Well, I don't know how you teach this, but, you
1359
2:31:48 --> 2:31:55
know, the parents these days, they're terrified of any responsibility. Everybody is terrified of
1360
2:31:55 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction] from it. We don't in this group. We try not to anyway. And I think that
1361
2:32:02 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction] opposite. So everything that they're pushing, like, you know, trying to
1362
2:32:11 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]en and parents and their grandparents. This is evil.
1363
2:32:19 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]ion of the. So I don't I have a difficulty in believing
1364
2:32:26 --> 2:32:35
that's a God, but I do realize that the universe is absolutely so complicated that human beings
1365
2:32:35 --> 2:32:42
can't even come close to to realizing how big it is, never mind explaining everything, the
1366
2:32:42 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]exity. And so one thing I noticed, Christine, is that people are so certain of everything.
1367
2:32:50 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction]e are so arrogant. Human beings generally are so incredibly arrogant. And they think they know
1368
2:33:00 --> 2:33:06
when clearly they don't know. They don't even know how far it is to the sun. Well, I think I know,
1369
2:33:06 --> 2:33:13
but I'm not sure because I never actually measured it myself, but 93 million miles and 250,000 miles
1370
2:33:13 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction]n't got a clue, you know, how far it is to the moon or to the sun
1371
2:33:20 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction]ralia, for example, 12,000 miles. And so and then when it comes to history, nothing.
1372
2:33:29 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction] it. I'm not saying that we can't get it back,
1373
2:33:35 --> 2:33:41
but we need to identify what the problems are. Stop going down rabbit holes and try to work out,
1374
2:33:42 --> 2:33:49
try to put all the dots that we've identified and more that we haven't even identified
1375
2:33:50 --> 2:33:56
together because without some view of the world, you know, whole view as a whole,
1376
2:33:56 --> 2:34:02
as a human being, and we need to trust our instincts as well. We do in this group. And
1377
2:34:02 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]s hoping that someone would prove me wrong. I knew something was wrong
1378
2:34:08 --> 2:34:15
back in 2010, even 2019. I was arguing with people I didn't understand why. And now I understand.
1379
2:34:17 --> 2:34:24
So I wish I'd. You know, I mean, you said so many things right now. I could jump on every single
1380
2:34:24 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]art with this. Yeah. You know, basic knowledge. People no longer
1381
2:34:32 --> 2:34:38
have basic knowledge. And as you pointed out, you know, they have no clue how far the sun is away
1382
2:34:38 --> 2:34:47
from us or the moon or, you know, any of that. To make my point, there is I mean, there are several
1383
2:34:47 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]ag that they have no fucking clue. They are excuse my language.
1384
2:34:56 --> 2:35:02
They are in the Green Party. And there was this one, you know, high profile politician.
1385
2:35:03 --> 2:35:08
And, you know, she was moaning about the fact that, you know, this climate change that is,
1386
2:35:08 --> 2:35:15
you know, being afflicted upon, you know, people and people are dying. And she was imploring the
1387
2:35:15 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction] to take care of people that live hundreds of thousands kilometers away
1388
2:35:26 --> 2:35:33
from us because they're dying in floods. I mean, hundreds of thousands of kilometers
1389
2:35:33 --> 2:35:41
away from Germany. Seriously, where would they put you in space considering that, you know,
1390
2:35:41 --> 2:35:48
it's like what forty two thousand kilometers? Seriously, these people have no freaking clue
1391
2:35:48 --> 2:35:54
about what they're even talking about. So next point is you rightly pointed out
1392
2:35:55 --> 2:36:05
it is an attack on our identity. And it's not only, you know, our cultural identity or national
1393
2:36:05 --> 2:36:15
identity. Now it's also our our sexual identity. So what they're trying to do is to literally
1394
2:36:15 --> 2:36:25
obliterate us as human beings. And, you know, what is more fundamental about our identity than our
1395
2:36:26 --> 2:36:32
sexual identity? And if you take that away and if you say, well, you can be anything, you know,
1396
2:36:32 --> 2:36:40
at any given point in time. And there is, I mean, you know, I'm not I'm not nuts here. There is
1397
2:36:40 --> 2:36:49
legislation now, the self ID laws, right. But the self ID laws or the way it started out, it was like,
1398
2:36:49 --> 2:36:57
well, these people are born this way. You know, they're born in the wrong body. So we should allow
1399
2:36:57 --> 2:37:03
them to ID themselves. So now they can just go, you know, walk down to to City Hall or whatever
1400
2:37:03 --> 2:37:11
and claim their, you know, man or woman or whatever. And their birth certificate will be,
1401
2:37:11 --> 2:37:22
you know, corrected appropriately. So but this the whole thing about being born this way,
1402
2:37:23 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction]etely like overturn that by making the provision. Well, you can choose once a year. So
1403
2:37:32 --> 2:37:39
every 12 months, you can go there. So well, you know, last year, I was wrong. So I wasn't really
1404
2:37:39 --> 2:37:46
met. I was a woman now. And you know, I want to be this is insane. But this is what's going on.
1405
2:37:46 --> 2:37:54
And the point is this. Yes, it is an attack on our on our identity, on our individuality,
1406
2:37:54 --> 2:37:59
which you also pointed out, Steven, because the point is this, if you can be anything,
1407
2:38:00 --> 2:38:07
at any given point in time, and can change that to whatever, you know, and maybe next week,
1408
2:38:07 --> 2:38:16
it's a refrigerator, you identify as, or, you know, God only knows what. So what are you going to be
1409
2:38:16 --> 2:38:26
in the end? And nothing exactly going to be an empty shell, with no soul, with no identity,
1410
2:38:26 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]ly. And then it can be filled with whatever the globalitarian misanthropists
1411
2:38:33 --> 2:38:43
want you to be filled with. Yeah, that's the whole point. They're stealing our very existence.
1412
2:38:43 --> 2:38:49
They're stealing our humanity. So what makes us special as human beings, they attack everything
1413
2:38:49 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]ly. So what that is, is going towards is, you know, individuality.
1414
2:38:58 --> 2:39:08
And, you know, the enlightenment, pretty much stirred us away from, you know, we have to serve
1415
2:39:09 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction]ors that fell, you know, have to pay for them. So they won't burn in hell. You know,
1416
2:39:17 --> 2:39:24
some kind of like, no, you do not, you do not take any, don't have to bear the responsibility
1417
2:39:24 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction]ors did, the ones that died, you are an individual, you are here, right, and now,
1418
2:39:31 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction] a right. That is individuality, and enlightenment actually took us to that place,
1419
2:39:40 --> 2:39:48
you know, the individual is what is important. Yeah. So the other part is collectivism. Yeah,
1420
2:39:48 --> 2:39:55
sure. And that's what we're driving at once again. You saw during COVID, you know, you have to
1421
2:39:55 --> 2:40:03
sacrifice your freedom, you know, your well-being, your bodily autonomy for the greater good.
1422
2:40:03 --> 2:40:09
For the group. For the greater good. All right, come on, we're turning three quarters. All right,
1423
2:40:09 --> 2:40:15
I could go on and on for that, but fine. Come again, we'll have you again. We've got a lot
1424
2:40:15 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction]ine, one final sentence. So I think to me, it's mind
1425
2:40:22 --> 2:40:30
control. But then Shakespeare wrote many years ago, all the world's a stage. And I can't remember
1426
2:40:30 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction]s, and we're mere players. And we have our entrances and exits. Yeah. Well, but the
1427
2:40:37 --> 2:40:46
thing is, yeah, we are a player on the world stage. But it's your decision if you are a mere pawn
1428
2:40:47 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction]age, or if you're a badass. Absolutely. Yeah. Well said. Very good, Christine.
1429
2:40:54 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, well done for organizing. Christine, round of applause, everybody.
1430
2:41:00 --> 2:41:[privacy contact redaction] say, Christine, you've got a remarkable ability to connect with people.
1431
2:41:04 --> 2:41:09
Because every time you come on, we have great meetings. But when you come on,
1432
2:41:09 --> 2:41:13
after about an hour and a half, it really develops a life of its own.
1433
2:41:17 --> 2:41:21
Well done. Thank you. Thanks, everybody. Thanks for having me again. Thank you.