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So everybody, welcome to Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics International and today's meeting.
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It's now the 19th of October in the UK and the 20th of October in Melbourne, Australia.
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This group was founded over four years ago by Stephen Frost, a British trained medical
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0:00:29 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]or with a passion for truth. As a seasoned whistleblower and activist, Stephen founded
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this group to champion truth, ethics, justice, freedom and health in the face of global challenges.
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At this time, we remember Rainer Fullmich, German US lawyer in jail following a show
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trial by the German government. We call on his immediate release. We remember Arnaud
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Van Kessel, a Belgian lawyer fighting for his clients who's also in jail in the Netherlands
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following political interference. And we also remember Buttonheart, a bear that is fighting
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0:01:11 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]en forever from child trafficking for sex and slavery. I'm Charles Kerbis, your
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0:01:23 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ralasian passion provocateur. I wear my red jacket because red is the colour
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of passion. So you've got to be passionate here and our speaker today, Jerry Brady, is certainly
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passionate. I spent 20 years as a lawyer. I shifted gears 32 years ago to become a professional
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0:01:40 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] 14 years, I've guided parents and lawyers in addressing vaccine
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injuries and medical failures. Medical failures are now the number one cause of death in the
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0:01:50 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ates ahead of heart attacks and cancer, according to the research of John Rappapour.
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I'm also chief executive of an industrial hemp company. An industrial hemp is going to play a
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crucial role in preserving humanity for the future. This group is a blend of voices from
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all sorts of professions and from all around the world. Many of us once viewed vaccines as benign,
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now many wear the badge of passionate anti-vaxxers.
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We're in the thick of a global struggle we call it World War III and medical and scientific battles
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among 12 battlefronts. Another one is the financial battlefront and the health battlefront. And so
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there are 12 battlefronts. Another one is the spiritual battlefront.
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We're five and a half years into this fight with more to come. So there's no room to be tired.
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We've got another two, three years of solid work ahead of us everybody. So be up for it. Stay strong,
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stay healthy. Science we know is never done. It thrives on challenge and inquiry. Some here
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believe in viruses, others see them as fiction and many are still exploring. All views fuel our
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dialogue. And it's wonderful having the globalists cause us to have debates around viruses that you
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0:03:12 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ly see. And in the meantime, so we end up arguing with each other instead of uniting
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0:03:18 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]s. It's a fantastic distraction. It's very good. We'll hear from our guest
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0:03:24 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] Jerry Brady today. This is the third time that he will be speaking to us.
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And then that'll be followed by a Q&A. Per tradition Stephen Frost will open the questioning for the
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0:03:36 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] [privacy contact redaction]n appropriately moderated to keep ideas flowing.
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0:03:44 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] human liberties. If something offends you, oh no,
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we don't buy into the offence industry or the triggering industry. Those are steps to silence
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truth. However, we choose love over fear. Fear binds and sickens and depresses. Love liberates,
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heals, inspires. These twice weekly gatherings are far from mere talk. They have birthed many
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0:04:14 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ions and alliances. A key tactic in our fight is exposing medical crimes on social
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media, rallying behind the demand crafted by John Rappaport that we've adopted of medical truth now.
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Jerry Brady does a lot of work on fighting for medical truth now. This call can unite humanity
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in a search for accountability. So we're thrilled again to welcome Jerry Brady. Jerry, we value your
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0:04:44 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ephen for founding this group. And before you get going, I will
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give a short intro about you and your nefarious behaviours. No, not nefarious, outrageous
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behaviours. No, not outrageous. Here's Jerry. And Jerry's going to be talking to us about,
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he'll tell you what he's talking about, a number of topics that were in the invitation to you. But
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0:05:11 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]or of Medicine from the University of Queensland, 30 years,
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patient focused clinical experience, is the founder of COVID under question cross-party
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0:05:22 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ralian Senate and Federal Parliament in 2022, is the founder of your
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COVID daily newspaper, cmnnews.substack.com. Jerry, put that in the chat please. He's also the founder
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of Boom Finance and Economics. That was in 2015 and COVID daily newspaper was founded in 2021.
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He put that, Jerry will put that sub stack in as well. He's the co-founder of Biopharmaceutical
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Research and Development Company in 1990, is the co-founder of Internet Mapping Company in 2000,
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0:05:57 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]esses to a geographic location. And his publications are the
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COVID daily newspaper, Boom newspaper, the Boom blog, and his special interests are risk assessment,
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critical thinking, ethics, decision making, global macroeconomics, global geopolitics,
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0:06:15 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ems, global finance, high tech, currencies, investment, financial markets,
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artificial intelligence. And I'm deeply depressed that there's no reference there to
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helping you to improve your sex life. So Jerry, I think you need another area of activity.
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Over to you. Thank you for joining us. You can share your screen whenever you wish.
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Thanks, Charles. Sorry, I just thought I was muted, but I'm okay. I will share my screen
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right from the get go. We've got quite a bit to cover today and I would like people to concentrate
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on what I'm saying, make some notes as we go so you could ask questions afterwards.
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So I'll share the screen now. I hope this all works properly.
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Yep, it's coming up now. Slowly coming in. You got it. Yep, you can see that.
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Okay, can you see that the great resist? Yep. Is the great resist on the screen, Charles?
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Yes, it is. Good. Yeah. Okay, so I'll just have to move.
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How do I move this zoom thing? I'll put it down the bottom here somewhere. Okay.
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Yeah, I've got it set up now. Just to introduce myself, Charles has done that.
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I've done a lot of things in my life. They're all contribute to me understanding what's going
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on in the world today. Suffice to say that I waited 15 years for the SARS-CoV-2
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0:08:09 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ing it for that long. So it was no surprise to me
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0:08:16 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]arted in 2020. Now, I won't go into why I knew that, but I did know it and nothing has
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surprised me since 2020. Everything has happened as I expected and is still happening as I expected.
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I've spoken a lot in the last four years, five years, four to five years, to many, many community
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groups about what's going on. In the early days, I had to talk to people and explain
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what might come, what might happen. Slowly but surely, we've transitioned now to what is happening.
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0:09:02 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction], today, I'll be talking about what has happened. So a lot of the facts I present today
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0:09:07 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] That then begs a consideration about what the future is going to be.
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So I'll get started. Firstly, the first thing I've got on the screen is CNN News. It's the latest
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edition of CNN News. I think it's the second-latest one. But I particularly like this cartoon here.
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They will own nobody and they will be unhappy. I think this is a wonderful twist
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0:09:40 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ans. So that's on one of my CNN News substacks and I encourage you all to read
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0:09:49 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ack.com. I publish it usually once or twice a week. The archive contains thousands of
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articles concerning health and the COVID phenomenon, and many, many other subjects as well.
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I'll switch over to my other substack, which is Boom Finance and Economics.
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You should see that on your screen now. And this is the archive of Boom Finance and Economics.
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Again, there's many, many. I write an editorial every Sunday. It's published on Sunday morning,
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0:10:30 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ralia. So it depends upon where you are in the world that you receive an email
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you receive an email if you're a subscriber. The readership for this is not the general public.
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The readership is very much aimed at the top level of economics and finance. And I have a lot of
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readers from the central bankers of the world and their chief economists and their deputy chief
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0:10:54 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]s. So that's what I set out to do when I started this to achieve that audience. I have done
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zero marketing. So they market this between themselves. And I've been surprised at my
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0:11:13 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] It's quite extraordinary. And I think I do have some sort of impact on the world
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of finance and economics now on a weekly basis. Now, today, we're going to just start by looking
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0:11:27 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] edition of Boom, which is this one here. I'll switch to it now. And I'm particularly
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proud of this edition of Boom this week. I think it covers a lot of things that are very, very
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important. So we're going to go through a lot of that firstly today. And then I'll branch off into
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0:11:46 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] thing I've got up here is the military strategy that works every time.
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It's referring to the photograph, the healing ship, which is China's peace arc. And I've got below
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that, please tell Donald Trump and Pete Hegseth, if they want a really effective military strategy,
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they should copy China in the peace arc. In fact, I would suggest that they have dozens of peace
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0:12:13 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ling the world, giving free health care to poverty stricken places. And that would be
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0:12:23 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]rategy rather than threatening people with military action. I'll talk more about
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that later. Let's move down. The first thing we're going to talk about is the disability
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0:12:36 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ates. We've now got [privacy contact redaction]ates,
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the American population, who are now disabled. This is the number that's registered by the US
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0:12:50 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ics. You can see that in the bottom of the chart there. And this is
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published by FRED, which is the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. So it's a very reliable source.
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And you can see what's happening here. We have the disability growing in a straight uptrend
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0:13:12 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]s. Now on this chart, you can see the time span is 2015 to 2025. We've got a 10 year
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time span here. So five years before COVID turned up, the COVID phenomenon, we have pretty much a
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straight line. It's not really going anywhere. Disability numbers are going up and down. But
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come 2021, and it just starts climbing and goes up. And it's going up in a pretty steady trend.
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It's now up 20% since the beginning of this uptrend. That's a huge increase in five years.
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That's based on a whole population basis. But if we look at the working age men and women,
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it gets more concerning because working age men and women should be healthy, relatively healthy.
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0:14:05 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]art looking at the working age population, it becomes very concerning because,
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as I say, this should be healthy people. But what do we see? We see the same sort of phenomenon.
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Here are the years preceding. This flat curve going on for all these years of women disabled
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in the civilian workforce. And then it just rockets off after 2021. And it's now up 63%
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since 2021. This is very, very disturbing. Then we can look at the men. Well, the men are the same.
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We've got the same pattern. But it's up only 46% since 2021. I did a big zoom call on Saturday
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with a big church group around the world. And they asked me, why is there a difference between
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men and women? It's a very complex question. We can deal with it later if anybody wants to know.
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0:14:58 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ed more than men in terms of getting disabled. There's little doubt
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about that. And the trends don't appear to be weakening. In fact, you can see that last
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arrow I put on the men's workforce trend seems almost like it's accelerating at the moment.
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So from a financial viewpoint, the first thing I think of is, well, what's going on in the
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0:15:22 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ry? Because most of these people in America are receiving private insurance benefits
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when they're disabled. A certain percentage are getting public social security support,
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0:15:37 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ually on private insurance. It comes with their employment contract.
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0:15:43 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]art looking at the insurance industry and wonder what's going on there. Well,
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this chart here is called the index of the insurance industry on NASDAQ, which is one of
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0:15:53 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ock markets in America. And this is 12 months of data. And you can see the insurance
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0:15:59 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]s to down, and then they just fall off a shelf at the end
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here. So there's something terribly wrong in the insurance industry. Because during this period,
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0:16:12 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] been rising very, very strongly in one of the strongest bull markets
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ever. So there's something terribly wrong with the insurance industry. Now, that is not the whole
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0:16:26 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ry. It's actually the health aspect of insurance and the disability aspect.
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We'll see that in a minute. This is another general index of insurance industry companies on the
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S&P 500. And it's just the same pattern is going away and then starting to collapse at the end.
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Now, we can look at specific companies that deal with the disability sector.
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And this company called Yunom Group, UNUM, is the biggest disability insurer in the United States.
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0:16:58 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] [privacy contact redaction]ion. And you can see it's literally going nowhere. It's
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the same pattern as the indexes. This is the second largest disability insurer. It's called
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Prudential Financial. And you can see the downtrend over the last 12 months, which is accelerating.
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Then there's this one called Aflac, again, going nowhere. These are not participating in the bull
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0:17:23 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ocks. Then we can look at the general health insurance market.
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The general health insurance market is led by United Health Group. This is the biggest
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0:17:40 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]t. It's got a 16.73%. You can see that there
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of the market. And it's, can you hear me now, Charles?
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Yes. Yeah, just a little bit of things.
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Yep. Okay. I'm hanging off. Okay. I'm hanging off my phone. It said that my
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0:18:01 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] lagged a bit. So this is the largest company in the health insurance sector
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in America. That's the last 12 months of their shares. Now, their shares are very, very concerning.
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0:18:13 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ually collapsed. The share price here in April of this year was $600. It's now
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0:18:21 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] down to $250. It's made a little rally lately, but looks a bit like it's
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rolling over again. This is a terrible outcome in a bull market. Something is terribly wrong
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with that company. I can tell you. This is the five year chart for that company. And you can see
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it's participating in the bull market to some degree initially, and then it goes sideways.
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And then you can see the collapse of 2025. There's something terribly wrong in the insurance market.
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There's no doubt about it. And it's mainly in the health insurance market.
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This is Elevance Health, another company. It's the second largest health insurer.
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And we're looking at exactly the same pattern. A rise followed by collapse. The next one is
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Centine Corporation. It's the third largest health insurer in the United States. And you can see the
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0:19:15 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] five years. It's just fallen off a cliff in 2025. And it looks very concerning.
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There's something terribly wrong going on here. The investors have voted. They voted with their
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feet. They're leaving. The next largest company in the United States in health insurance is called
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Humana. Humana, you're looking at exactly the same pattern of investor disinterest. The investors
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have waken up and they're leaving town. This could be very concerning ultimately,
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because if it continues, these companies will struggle to raise capital if they need capital.
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So these are very alarming share price charts during a bull market.
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Now, just to show you the bull market, this is the S&P [privacy contact redaction]ates.
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0:20:09 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] opposite pattern for the whole market. The market as a whole
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has been going up since late 2022. And that's exactly when Boom Finance told people
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I announced in Boom in 2022 that the peak of CPI inflation was behind us. This is what's happened.
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And it's just a very strong uptrend. This collapse here early this year is the Trump tariff war,
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0:20:40 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction] accelerating rapidly away from that event.
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It's the exact opposite of what's happening in the health insurance and disability insurance market.
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Now, what else is happening in America? Well, apart from getting sick and disabled and unable
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to work, we have increasing suicides. And American suicides are now at record levels.
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They're committing suicide on a scale that's very alarming. There's a suicide every 11 minutes
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in America. There's 50,[privacy contact redaction] rate of suicide per 100,000 population.
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Since 1941, which was the previous peak in the middle of the Second World War,
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you got the previous peak of suicide. Now, it's alarming that we're back to that peak.
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0:21:32 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] that peak will be broken soon and the suicide numbers will continue to increase.
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This chart here shows you the social security recipients in America. The numbers just rising,
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rising, rising. America is a socialist state. It's not a capitalist state. It's pretty much
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0:21:52 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ate. The US federal government spends $7 trillion a year into that economy.
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And that's a very large expenditure from one party. So we're looking at a socialist state here,
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and these are the social security recipients over time. The blue line at the top, that is the
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0:22:13 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]e who are disabled and their dependents. Now, it's not as big as the previous number,
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0:22:20 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]e in America are on private disability insurance.
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So we've got something terribly, terribly wrong happening in the United States in regard to
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sickness and inability to work. And the worrying thing that's happening in the working age
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population, that will have eventually, if it continues, and I think it will continue,
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0:22:43 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] economic consequences that Donald Trump can't even imagine. The economy will just
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0:22:49 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]y grind lower and lower. It can't succeed with growing disabled people. Now, that'll be
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a slow process, but I think it'll just slowly, slowly happen over time. We're going to look at
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Singapore now and what's happening in Singapore. In Singapore, they already have digital identity.
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It's called SingPass, and everybody on the island has to, if they're living there,
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if they're a resident, they have to have a SingPass. This is the government digital ID system.
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0:23:21 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] things that you do. You can't open a bank account in Singapore without one,
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0:23:27 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]s and all the taxes you've paid. This is essential for
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anyone who wants to live in Singapore. So Singapore is clearly a totalitarian,
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0:23:38 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ate. There's no doubt about it. And again, you know, it's rare to find nations now
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0:23:47 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] I love the way in the ad that they say,
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you're trusted digital identity. Don't use any others, use ours. We're going to look at death
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and disease in Singapore, and it's very, very alarming because we've got six million people
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on the island who we can track very, very well. We know that they are all almost all COVID vaccinated.
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Although remember, this is not a vaccine. It does not prevent disease. It does not prevent you from
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spreading the disease. Therefore, it is not a vaccine. It is definitely not a vaccine. However,
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we will continue to refer to it as a vaccine. Now in Singapore, 92% have certainly received
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the COVID vaccines, and most of them have received multiple COVID vaccines. So this is a petri dish,
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a little pot we can watch to see what happens. Now, you can look at excess death in Singapore
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0:24:47 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction], and this chart is alarming. This is all produced by another Australian. The guy, he calls
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himself Ozzy 17. Ozzy [privacy contact redaction] pharmaceutical companies of the world
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in his career in the sales area. So he really understands the pharmaceutical industry.
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You can see this graph is excess mortality. It's cumulative death. So you get the numbers are
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0:25:10 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] in time. And you can see he's done this beautiful graphic here.
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0:25:17 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ion is the COVID area. And you can see the excess death numbers compared to
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previous death numbers of previous years is relatively flat. It's not going anywhere.
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During the horrible deadly epidemic that supposedly was killing millions of people around
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the world, there was no excess death occurring in Singapore. And the graph just rumbles along the
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baseline here. And then come 2021, September 2021 again, it just takes off. And these excess deaths
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0:25:48 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] continue to climb. This graph only goes to 2023, because our world and data has stopped
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0:25:54 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ing this graph on its website. I think it's just become too embarrassing to update it. But
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0:26:03 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ory. Something terribly bad has happened to this nation somewhere around
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September 2021. And I would say that represents a poison being delivered to the population.
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That's my argument. And I think that's what you'd expect to see. Now, this chap Ozzy 17 and his
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0:26:23 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]arts to look at a specific neurodegenerative disease called ALS, amyotrophic
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lateral sclerosis. It's a form of neurodegenerative disease mainly affecting the spinal cord.
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And it's basically what happens is you get a muscle wasting phenomenon, weakness and then twitching
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0:26:47 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ing and difficulty using the muscles of the body, and then eventually difficulty
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swallowing and breathing. The disease is always fatal. There's no real cure for it, none at all,
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0:26:59 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] a miracle on hand. And it's a rare disease. It's not a common disease at all.
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0:27:05 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]iced medicine, I did not see a single case of ALS in my medical practice. And I had a
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0:27:13 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ice specializing mainly in adult medicine. This is a rare disease. And we're
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seeing a 300% increase in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis treatments in Singapore. So Ozzy 17 has
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0:27:27 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ug which is used in the modification of the disease. It doesn't
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cure the disease, but it buys people more time on earth, up to a year or so or two years of extra time
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0:27:43 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ug is called Riluzol. And you can see this chart here.
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0:27:51 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ual box numbers that are being distributed in Singapore
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during this period. And he's labeled the chart pre-COVID, COVID in the middle, and then post-vaccination
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with Pfizer and Moderna. Now, pre-COVID, you can see a steady demand for the drug, which is what
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you'd expect. But during COVID, somehow it reduces, which is very unusual. And you would
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0:28:22 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]e died off during the COVID event. But then again, in 2021, off it
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goes. You can see that the green arrows I've placed on the chart are showing you where this is going.
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This is very concerning because this is a rare neurodegenerative disease. And this is the tip
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of a very big disease iceberg. For me to see this, I'm shocked to see these increases in this drug.
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It's one of the scariest charts I think I've seen so far in the last five years.
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So we can scroll down and think about Singapore being a very vaccinated nation. And we can look at
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0:29:10 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]iant and very vaccinated population. So he's gone to look
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at Japan to see, is this increase in this disease happening there? And he's looked at the same data
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0:29:27 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] He didn't have the box numbers for the drug. In Japan, he's only got the
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dollar sales and numbers. But what he saw shocked him. There's a sixfold increase in the sales of
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reusable. And that occurred in only one year from 2021 to 2022. He didn't have data going on from 2022.
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0:29:58 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ug. I'll just wait while the internet stabilises. You can see the drug in
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this pre-COVID period is rolling along. The yellow section is generic drugs. The green section is
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0:30:10 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]opped during the COVID period. Again, the suspicion there is that
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these patients were dying. They were fragile. You'd expect them to die off during COVID.
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But then in 2021, the demand for the drug just literally explodes. It goes up sixfold
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in one year. This is absolutely screaming at you as a terrible, terrible health event occurring.
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It's almost like an atom bomb going off in Hiroshima again.
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And then, excuse me, so being an Australian, he looks at the Australian sales for the drug.
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And we're seeing a similar pattern. You can see the pre-COVID pattern, the post-COVID pattern,
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0:30:59 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]osion, which is occurring this year. Now, I'm not too sure why that pattern's a
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little bit different. But that's what's happening as far as these box numbers reveal. So, Aussie 17,
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you can go and read the article. I think it's an excellent article. And that's just available at
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0:31:19 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ack. And there's a link on there that takes people to that. Now, I'm going to branch away here
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0:31:27 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]s involved here. The first thing I'm going to show you,
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I've switched tabs here. You should now see, Charles, you should see. Okay. This is a website
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0:31:41 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]rain.org. Now, this website is where people register the genomes, the genomic sequences
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of viruses when they do the gene sequencing on viral particles around the world. If I scroll up,
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it's a wonderful website, and I've been using it ever since 2020. You can see these dots here on
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the screen. You can hover your mouse over the dot, and it gives you every instance of scientific
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reporting of a viral particle. It tells you where it is. This one particular was discovered and
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0:32:21 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]an. It tells you who discovered it. It tells you what date they've registered it.
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So, this is happening all over the world. And so, this is registering the progress of a viral
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0:32:36 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] And you can look at all viruses. But we're particularly interested
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in the COVID virus. And as you come down here to this section, this is called the frequencies
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coloured by clade. So, clade is another word or scientific word for variant. You've heard the word
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variant. And you can see here all these different colours. And this goes back to 2020, the beginning
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of the phenomenon. And I'll just take my mouse forward like this. And you can see all of the
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clades or the variants changing as time passes. Old clades die away and disappear, replacing by
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new clades. And this happens again and again and again and again and again. And we're down the road
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here literally dozens and dozens of different variants of this virus. This virus that we're
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dealing with today is nothing like the virus back here in 2020. It's a totally different variant.
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And it's the rapid rapidity of change that tells us that these viruses, coronaviruses, are very,
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0:33:44 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]able. They mutate very, very rapidly. And by the way, I knew this when this all started.
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And I was taught in medical school, you can never create a vaccine against coronaviruses. They
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mutate far too rapidly. So, anyone who set out to build any vaccine here was just ignoring
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biological reality. It's impossible to form an effective vaccine against these viruses.
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0:34:10 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] change and change and change. And they're not terribly dangerous. So, there's no point
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0:34:15 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] them. But that is a dramatic chart. And I want people to take note of
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it. That's over the last five years. You can see multiple changes to variant and clade. I'll switch
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0:34:29 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] six months. And here's the last six months. And you can see that even,
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you can see how rapidly the variant ratios change over time. So, even over six months,
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0:34:45 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]rations of the various clades that we're dealing with today.
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So, what about death? We've talked a lot about disability. We've talked a lot. We're now talked
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about suicide. We've talked about variant variability and instability of the coronavirus
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family. And we've got to say, well, what's happening in the death area? So, these charts here
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are excess mortality again, for other nations. This is the cumulative deaths again. Again,
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and this is deaths added up over time from a certain point in time. And it's compared to
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the deaths that occurred in the previous five years, 2015 to 2019. And you can see that this
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0:35:34 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ates. And you can see by the end of 2023, when the Will and Data stopped producing
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the chart, there's 1.35 million excess deaths, deaths that you would not have expected
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compared to what was happening in previous years, previous to the COVID phenomenon.
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0:35:57 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]e, a lot of deaths. And this is excess deaths. There's a lot more deaths
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than this going on in America. But these are the excess deaths that have accumulated over time
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from 2020 on. So, let's just go on to look at Australia, which is of particular interest to
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0:36:16 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]e living here. And the chart is very interesting. So, in Australia, we had virtually
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no excess deaths during the whole deadly, horrible virus that was supposedly killing
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0:36:28 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]e when it wasn't. And our excess death numbers went into decline. They were below
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0:36:35 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ed numbers, projected numbers. But then again, in September 2021, there's that
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date again, it turns the corner and it starts to grow. And this chart says that 37,600
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0:36:49 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ered by December 2023. Now, that number is higher than that now.
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And I think it's easily arguable that it's close to 100,[privacy contact redaction]ralia. Now,
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I've looked at these figures quite a lot. And the disability to death ratio is basically 20 to 1.
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0:37:11 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction], it's 10 to 1, but it's probably 20 to 1. So, that means that if 100,[privacy contact redaction]
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died that you wouldn't have expected to die since 2021, then probably [privacy contact redaction] got some
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0:37:26 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] four years. That's a staggering number. That means every family
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in this country of 26 million has probably got a disabled family member or a dead family member,
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but more specifically a disabled family member. So, it's all very concerning. Now, this is a video
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on Twitter, x.com. I won't play it. It's William Makus. This is a Canadian oncologist. He's well
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known around the world for being a sort of rebel oncologist. But in this video, he talks about
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0:38:08 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ors to get treatment for turbo cancers. They don't like to be public about it,
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but he said they're coming to him. And his statement here is thousands of doctors are getting sick
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from the COVID shots. They're having heart attacks, strokes, blood clots, turbo cancers,
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because 99% of them took the shots. This is in Canada. And it's a very alarming video.
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He's very clear about this. And he's clearly seeing these doctors. So, we're losing our health care
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staff. They're becoming disabled. They're becoming sick. And he talks about them retiring now from
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0:38:48 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ors never usually retire in their 40s. Most can't afford to.
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But now he's seeing doctors retiring because of disability in their 40s. It's a very alarming
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video. And it's exactly what I predicted. I predicted that the health care sector,
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0:39:09 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]art to become ill, and the hospitals would come under enormous
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strain. And he's there just stating blatantly that's what's going on. We've got another thing
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0:39:23 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] few weeks, which is also very alarming. And this is the fact that
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we've only got one case of this. But Kevin McKernan, who's a very famous
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gene sequencing expert, he has identified genetic material inside the cancer tissue
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of a woman who died within 30 days of diagnosis. She had an aggressive bowel cancer. I'm pretty
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sure it was a woman. And she died within 30 days. That's an unknown event in medicine to die within
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30 days of a bowel cancer. Bowel cancers these days are readily treated and they shouldn't be
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dying in 30 days. Now, Kevin McKernan sent some of the tissue of the cancerous material. And he
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analysed that looking at the genetic material. And he discovered massive amounts of Pfizer's
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vaccine sequence. He means the genetic material inside the tissue. So this should never be there.
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And this shows that although it's only one case, this indicates that the turbo cancers
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we're seeing are related to these so-called vaccines.
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Next thing I'll do is just look at the deaths in Europe. This is a website called EuroMomo.
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0:40:50 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]ers all of the deaths in about 40 nations. It used to be 40. It's actually,
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0:40:57 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] threw it in. It's [privacy contact redaction]er the deaths from all causes every week.
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And this is updated every week. So you can actually watch the progress over time.
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Now, these peaks of death you can see occurring in a cyclical fashion. Every year is the normal
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pattern of death in Europe and in every country around the world. These peaks tend to occur in
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winter. And the disease that causes these peaks of death is usually influenza. And it's usually our
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0:41:30 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]e dying off during the winter months due to influenza.
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Now, you can see this last peak here was 2024, 2025 winter, which we've just
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come out of in the Northern Hemisphere. And the deaths drop back into the normal range pretty
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readily by May. And these little dotted lines here, they're the normal range for deaths of all causes
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in the Northern Hemisphere. So this phenomenon is repeatable. It goes on year after year after year.
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This chart goes back to 2020. So this includes the whole phenomenon of COVID. Now, according to the
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0:42:13 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ing to the politicians, COVID was killing people all over the world all that time.
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Okay, all that time. It wasn't doing that. There was a little spike of death here in early 2020,
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which collapsed within eight weeks. And the whole epidemic of COVID was over within eight weeks.
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And the death numbers were back to normal range. You can see clearly, I knew by here that this was
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all over. And yet the politicians didn't want to let it die. They wanted to keep scaring the people.
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0:42:44 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ir the pot. And everybody around the world went into panic mode, thinking
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that they were going to die from this epidemic here, which is all over by eight weeks. There was no
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pandemic. It's impossible when you look at the death numbers. And the death numbers during this
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0:43:03 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]ly the same as what you'd expect in a normal influenza
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epidemic. And then we had another peak in the middle of winter in 2021, and then in 2022,
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then 2023. You can see my mouse going up and down. And every winter, that is just completely
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normal numbers. There was no pandemic. All you need to do is look at that graph. There's no argument
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here. There's no point of even using the word pandemic. It did not happen. There's no such thing
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as a pandemic of COVID. And this chart proves it beyond all doubt. And it proves beyond all doubt
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0:43:49 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]esses. They are self-limiting. They get better and they disappear
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0:43:56 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]y comes in. And the virus literally has nowhere to go and it dies
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off. And so you don't have to do anything for viral illnesses. They all collapse. And if it's
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a genetically engineered virus, if it's a bio weapon, guess what? They're more fragile. They're
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even more fragile than natural influenza viruses or coronaviruses. So they actually die off quicker.
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You won't see an extended epidemic of those viruses. In other words, there was no pandemic.
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It is there's no point having a discussion about it. There's no point arguing. It's impossible.
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So then we'll quickly go back. I want to move on to a question and answer as soon as possible.
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We'll quickly go back to my website on Boom and show you the next section. I'll just wait for the
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internet here. It's a little bit unstable. There we are. Is that okay, Charles? Are you hearing me
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now? Yep. Yeah. All clear. Okay, good. So the next section of Boom this week is dealing with
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the military threat. So the military threat is growing globally. I'm very concerned about it.
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0:45:25 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction] a American government now that is calling its Department of Defense, the Department of War,
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and Pete Hegseth is the Secretary of War. He's the Secretary of War. And they are,
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what they're doing is becoming a little disturbing, in particular in regard to Venezuela.
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However, there's all sorts of other possible military targets that they're talking about.
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Iran, China, Russia, Ukraine, Panama, Greenland, Mexico, Canada, Israel, Syria, Lebanon, Central
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America, Yemen, Qatar, anyone, anywhere I say there, because really, they want to threaten the whole
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world at this point. This is the sign of a hegemonic power in its death throes. It's like
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0:46:12 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction] days or entering its last days. And it's no surprise to
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me, because if you examine the history of the United States, it's endless warfare. And it's very
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sad to see, but this nation has been at war pretty much ever since it was founded. Okay, so the
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um oops, that's gone back. Oh, sorry. I'll just, there we go. Sorry, I'll just go ahead again.
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Sorry, I'll just have to, I hit the wrong button. So the United States is a very warlike nation.
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They worship weapons. They love weapons. They love their military. It's very, very similar to Rome.
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I've stood in Washington DC at the Tomb of the Unknown Warrior, and I've watched a very big
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0:47:07 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ood there, I felt very much that I was in modern Rome. In fact,
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some of the military parades that came past that day had Roman standards being held aloft as the
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0:47:24 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction], which didn't surprise me. And they were what we call the fascists of Rome.
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0:47:34 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] comes from. The fascists of Rome were used by the military.
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So it's very concerning that this nation sees it. It can't seem to get away from its addiction to
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military power. And that's really worrying. And I think Trump at the moment is our only defense
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0:47:57 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] this. I think he's relatively benign in this. He does indulge himself in the military
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as a typical American, but I think he's got a good sense that America needs to turn towards peace.
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And so I hope that he continues to survive as the president of the United States. I'm very worried
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0:48:19 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]e that surround him who may be not as moderate in their goals as Trump is. So I'm happy
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to see Trump there and the president. I'm a very critical of him, by the way, in many respects,
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0:48:36 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] to his lack of knowledge about economics and finance. But overall,
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he's better than anybody else when he is a moderating force at the moment.
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However, he's doing some things that are a little concerning. Last week, he announced that he had
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0:48:56 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] covert action on the land in Venezuela. And he didn't
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rule out invading Venezuela. This is very, very disturbing. And their excuse at the moment is that
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it's all to do with what they called, you know, narco terrorism is the term they use. But look,
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there's lots of drugs coming from lots of places. Why are they threatening Venezuela? It seems very
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unusual to me. So this is really, this is real. It's happening. We've got a president announcing
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0:49:32 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ing covert operation in a nation that has never happened in the history of the United
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0:49:38 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] a president making such an announcement. So it is very concerning.
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And I'm very worried about this. I think it's a bad trend. And I hope that Trump
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can get some moderating influences around him about this. In the editorial, I discuss
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0:49:57 --> 0:50:04
why America, the rationales why America is interested in this obsession with military action.
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0:50:06 --> 0:50:13
And then I talk about a company, which has been founded in the last 10 years or so. And it's
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0:50:13 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] of Palantir. It's essentially a company that makes
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0:50:19 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]s, software that spies on people and tracks what people do. And Palantir
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founded by Peter Thiel and Alex Karp is a company that reflects this obsession with warfare and
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0:50:37 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]s. And but in particular, covert surveillance, it's all about
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0:50:43 --> 0:50:50
covert surveillance. This is arguably a war on the people of America, in my opinion.
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Now you can see the Palantir share price, what's happening here. And during this bull market,
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0:50:57 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction], if you had bought Palantir shares a year or so ago,
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0:51:03 --> 0:51:12
at 10 or $20, it's gone up 10 fold. They're up to $180, $190. This makes Bitcoin look like a
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0:51:13 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]inary phenomenon. It makes the gold price rise look ridiculously anemic. So we've got this
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0:51:22 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] in the shares of Palantir. And this company is dedicated to surveillance
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0:51:34 --> 0:51:41
of civilians, both inside America and outside of America. This is again a very concerning
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0:51:42 --> 0:51:48
development in my opinion. Now, what else has happened lately? Well, last week, you'll see in
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0:51:48 --> 0:51:54
the headline of my editorial, the head of the US Southern Command has resigned. His name is Alvin
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0:51:54 --> 0:52:04
Hulsley. And he is the man in charge of all of the military for South America, South of the United
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0:52:04 --> 0:52:12
States. So this is a very important command in the United States. They see South America as their
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0:52:12 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] And it's extraordinary that the leading officer of the Southern Command has resigned.
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0:52:19 --> 0:52:26
And I've written there, I said that no reason is given for his departure from such a critical
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0:52:26 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] lead to speculation that Admiral Hulsley was intolerant of waging war
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0:52:33 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] civilians in a foreign nation. And I think that is the only reason I suspect why he
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0:52:40 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] resigned because he's sick and ill. I don't know why he's resigned. But
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0:52:47 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] that he's resigned because he's very uncomfortable with the military waging war against
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0:52:53 --> 0:53:02
civilians in a foreign nation. If I was in his position, I would resign as well. You cannot
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0:53:03 --> 0:53:10
provide any legal or moral rationale for attacking civilians in a foreign nation with
451
0:53:10 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]ion. It is war. And you can't really call it anything else.
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0:53:17 --> 0:53:23
Now, the size and scope of the US military buildup in the Caribbean region is fairly
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0:53:24 --> 0:53:30
significant. And I'll show you what the Wall Street Journal just published last week about it.
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0:53:30 --> 0:53:36
They had an article called What's Been Deployed. And you can see this large list here, guided
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0:53:36 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]royers, jet fighters, Reaper drones, Navy ships, eight ships, operation ships,
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0:53:44 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]s, special operations aviation regiment, B-52 bombers,
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0:53:51 --> 0:53:59
and 10,000 troops. Now, that list is very scary. That constitutes an invasion force, I think.
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0:54:00 --> 0:54:05
And it's very worrying to me personally. So then I decided to look at, well, what are the Chinese
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0:54:05 --> 0:54:11
doing while America's mounting all this military force to threaten South America and Venezuela in
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0:54:11 --> 0:54:20
particular? And I was aware of this Chinese military action. It's a very effective military
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0:54:20 --> 0:54:27
action. And they've been running this action since 2010. So this is now the 15th year of the
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0:54:27 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ling around the world, delivering free health care to people in impoverished nations.
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0:54:34 --> 0:54:40
And you can track the ship, where it's going. It has operating theaters on board. It's very
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0:54:40 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]inated with the local population. They turn up in a country and they deliver
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0:54:45 --> 0:54:52
free health care. And they can see 700 patients a day. And they can do operations. They have
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0:54:52 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]e on board to assist, 300 beds, 20 intensive care beds,
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0:55:00 --> 0:55:08
operating theaters, clinical departments, and a rescue helicopter. So this is the Chinese military.
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0:55:08 --> 0:55:14
And it's turning up in countries all over the world and delivering this, like what I would call
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0:55:14 --> 0:55:21
cooperative peace. And I think cooperative peace is a radical idea. It just might catch on, you know.
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0:55:21 --> 0:55:27
So the hospital ship is a great initiative of the Chinese military traveling around the world. And
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0:55:27 --> 0:55:33
in the article I've put year by year with all the nations they've visited. And you can see they've
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0:55:33 --> 0:55:40
gone to nations like Djibouti, Kenya, Tanzania, the Seychelles, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia,
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0:55:40 --> 0:55:49
Myanmar, India, Pakistan, Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea. The list goes on and on. By the way,
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0:55:49 --> 0:55:54
they've actually visited the United States and Australia. Okay, because there's a lot of people
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0:55:54 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]ralia who can't get health care. So just in the numbers are staggering
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0:56:01 --> 0:56:10
when you look at them. Like in 2018, they visited 11 countries. In 2024, 13 countries. And it says
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0:56:10 --> 0:56:17
that overall they've served 45 countries and regions. And they've provided medical services
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0:56:17 --> 0:56:25
to 290,[privacy contact redaction]e and they've performed more than 1,[privacy contact redaction]ion.
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0:56:25 --> 0:56:29
In my opinion, the United States should have 20 of these ships roaming the world.
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0:56:31 --> 0:56:37
But they don't. So I've asked people to please, please tell Donald Trump and Pete Hegdezeth.
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0:56:37 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]rategy. And I've just finished this
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0:56:44 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]ion on Argentina because people have been fed lies about
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0:56:53 --> 0:56:58
the new Argentinian government and this guy called Yavi Emile, who's their president.
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0:56:59 --> 0:57:06
This nation is heading into worse and worse situations under his control. In particular,
485
0:57:07 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]arvation and the homelessness is just getting worse and worse. And just in the last few weeks,
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0:57:18 --> 0:57:25
Malay has gone to Washington DC begging for US dollars. And they threw 20 billion at him in a
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0:57:25 --> 0:57:32
currency swap and a few more billion at the peso, the Argentine peso. It's like throwing 20 billions.
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0:57:32 --> 0:57:38
It's like throwing a coin into the Pacific Ocean. It's not going to do much.
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0:57:40 --> 0:57:46
But he's got no other choice but to beg now. He's begging for US dollars to help him save the people
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0:57:46 --> 0:57:52
of Argentina. It's not going to work. The people of Argentina are now starving. Okay, nearly a third
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0:57:52 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]en are facing food insecurity. They're seeing scurvy in the schools, scurvy,
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0:57:59 --> 0:58:04
vitamin C deficiency, where the children's teeth and gums start bleeding, their teeth start falling
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0:58:04 --> 0:58:12
out. They're literally suffering from lack of vegetables and fruit. Worse than that, they're
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0:58:12 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]en suffering from lack of vitamin B12, which can only come from meat, animal products.
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0:58:21 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ry. And yet the children are turning up with vitamin B12
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0:58:30 --> 0:58:35
deficiency and vitamin A deficiency. This is disturbing in a country that's got a very big
497
0:58:35 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ry. So it's economic failure that's happening here. Now it started a long time ago.
498
0:58:41 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] religious dependency upon the ideology of socialism, which began at
499
0:58:51 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] 60 to 70 years ago, if not more. But Malay hasn't helped it. It's getting worse under him.
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0:58:59 --> 0:59:07
And this chart here shows you the poverty pattern since 2015 for Argentina. And it's rocketed up
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0:59:07 --> 0:59:12
since Malay has taken power. There's real problems there. I've lived in Argentina,
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0:59:13 --> 0:59:18
only for a very short period. I went there for a month just to witness what was going on
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0:59:19 --> 0:59:26
about probably 12, [privacy contact redaction]urbed what was happening then.
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0:59:26 --> 0:59:35
And this nation's in dire straits. So I just ended with that. So that's the end of the talk.
505
0:59:35 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ions, Charles, if that's okay. I've run through a lot of things.
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0:59:40 --> 0:59:47
But there's a lot happening. And everything is happening just as I expected.
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0:59:49 --> 0:59:56
And we need to talk about the urgency of the matter. Things aren't getting better. Things,
508
0:59:56 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction], may get worse. And as each individual nation has to come to the realization of what is
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1:00:05 --> 1:00:16
happening to their nation, the people have to rise up and throw off the dystopian authoritarian
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1:00:16 --> 1:00:24
position that governments are now taking in behest of the criminal gang that is running
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1:00:24 --> 1:00:32
this whole show. So I'd open it up to questions. It's becoming more concerning. So it's a matter
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1:00:32 --> 1:00:38
of urgency that we begin a discussion in every nation about what's happening here.
513
1:00:40 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]opped your sharing, Jerry?
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1:00:43 --> 1:00:44
Oh, yes. Sorry.
515
1:00:47 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ions, but I won't go there. Stephen, do you want to ask questions?
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1:00:56 --> 1:00:58
As usual, how's your voice?
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1:01:02 --> 1:01:03
Unless he's fallen asleep.
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1:01:05 --> 1:01:06
Was it that boring?
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1:01:07 --> 1:01:13
No, it was excellent. But Stephen's been recovering from his illness. One question that I have for
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1:01:13 --> 1:01:19
you, Jerry, is Venezuela. I was going to talk to you about data on funeral directors in Australia.
521
1:01:19 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]n't shown us the share price of listed funeral directors anywhere.
522
1:01:24 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ralia that was in that section. I was watching it. Its share price
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1:01:32 --> 1:01:37
was rapidly, rapidly going up. And then it was taken over by a larger company. So we can't track
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1:01:37 --> 1:01:43
it anymore. I'm not aware of I haven't really looked at funeral directing companies elsewhere.
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1:01:44 --> 1:01:50
So the issue of Venezuela in terms of being concerned and, you know, in terms of what
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1:01:51 --> 1:01:58
countries should do, here's my question for you. I know numerous people in Australia who left
527
1:01:58 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] five years because it's fucked. Yes, it is.
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1:02:03 --> 1:02:16
Technical term. Now, I then look at Ukraine. So America goes in helping Ukraine. Now, I also
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1:02:16 --> 1:02:27
think back to the 1956 Hungarian uprising, where the Hungarians, when Russia came in with its tanks,
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1:02:28 --> 1:02:37
asked the US to help. And I look at how I look at the Venezuelan situation.
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1:02:38 --> 1:02:44
I look at North Korea. I look at Taiwan. We're talking about, hey, China invades Taiwan. Why
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1:02:44 --> 1:02:51
should America get involved? And all these geopolitical issues, Jerry, you know, and the
533
1:02:51 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e of Venezuela, the president Maduro is clearly in there through fraud. And the interesting
534
1:02:58 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ion is, where what's the communication? We don't know the communication from the people on
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1:03:03 --> 1:03:09
the ground in Venezuela. And we talked about the hollowing out of the middle class, you know, and
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1:03:09 --> 1:03:16
then, and Trump says, well, you Maduro, you shouldn't be the president, the people didn't vote
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1:03:17 --> 1:03:20
for you. What was the other guy's name who lost Bolsonaro?
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1:03:22 --> 1:03:28
Oh, well, that's in he was in Brazil, Bolsonaro. Guaido was the previous I don't know who was the
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1:03:30 --> 1:03:36
So as you were talking, I'm thinking, yeah, that should America just sit in within its borders and
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1:03:36 --> 1:03:44
not help, you know, the dictators, the people who that's an interesting question that you made me
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1:03:44 --> 1:03:51
made me think of, you know? Well, that's the problem. That's the question that I put that
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1:03:51 --> 1:03:56
Venezuela used to be such a wealthy nation, it's clearly been socialized and communized,
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1:03:56 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] strategy. Sure, sure. Look, the disease,
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1:04:06 --> 1:04:13
the ideological disease behind all governments now in the world, not, not just the obvious
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1:04:13 --> 1:04:19
the obvious ones, the disease is utopian socialism. The dreams of utopian socialism
546
1:04:21 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]eams exist in every nation now in the world. And hidden behind
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1:04:31 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]eams of utopian socialism is a gang of criminal psychopaths who I think are using this
548
1:04:37 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]t. Right? So you can't just say, oh, it's just
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1:04:44 --> 1:04:49
communism. Well, it isn't. I mean, if you look at, say, a nation like the United States, which
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1:04:49 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction], it's supposedly democratic. And by the way, democracy is the
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1:04:54 --> 1:05:00
tyranny of the 51%, or even the 35%, depending upon your voting system. But if you look at the
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1:05:00 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ates, I think it's pretty much a socialist nation where the the government is now spending
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1:05:07 --> 1:05:13
$7 trillion a year. It can do that, by the way, it's not going bankrupt, it's all rubbish. You
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1:05:13 --> 1:05:18
know, there's, there's no financial crisis in the US government debt situation. But, but it means
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1:05:18 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]e in America are now dependent upon the government for their welfare. And so to
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1:05:25 --> 1:05:31
claim that it's somehow capitalist and not socialist is just ridiculous. This disease is everywhere.
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1:05:31 --> 1:05:39
And the diseases of ideology are what psychopaths use to gain power. And I think this is deliberate.
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1:05:40 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ates is not what's the word, it's not. It's not any different really,
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1:05:50 --> 1:05:59
to any other nation. So, you know, it's a big nation, it's a powerful nation, but it's got this
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1:05:59 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]y embedded, as well as, as just as not as much as Venezuela, for instance, but pretty
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1:06:04 --> 1:06:13
heavily involved. So in South America, the whole continent has fallen in love over time with
562
1:06:13 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] example. It's just disastrous what is happening in Argentina
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1:06:20 --> 1:06:25
and what has happened from an economic viewpoint and a financial viewpoint. They did when I was
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1:06:25 --> 1:06:32
there, they were doing crazy things. I used to go down to the supermarket every night to buy some
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1:06:32 --> 1:06:38
wine, we'd have dinner in our apartment. And as you walked into the supermarket, there was a giant
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1:06:38 --> 1:06:47
sign saying 30% discount if you use a credit card. Now, I witnessed that, I wish I'd taken a
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1:06:47 --> 1:06:54
photograph of it. What they were doing there was discouraging the use of cash. And they didn't want
568
1:06:54 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]e that we don't want you to use cash. But you had to have
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1:06:59 --> 1:07:07
cash to do everything like to buy a coffee, to pay the taxi, to pay the bus, bus fare. So everyone
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1:07:07 --> 1:07:13
carried around a bag, a Hessian bag of coins, because they were making cash scarce. So they were
571
1:07:13 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ing their cash to pay for their daily activities. It was bizarre. And they were
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1:07:19 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]s, giving a 30% discount in supermarkets. This is insanity. This
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1:07:26 --> 1:07:32
is economic insanity. And at the same time as they were doing that, they were encouraging the
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1:07:33 --> 1:07:40
circulation of US dollars inside Argentina. In fact, you could not buy an apartment in Argentina
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1:07:40 --> 1:07:45
without US dollars. And as you walk down the street, every real estate agent had all their
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1:07:45 --> 1:07:51
apartments up and every price was in US dollars, not in Argentine pesos. So they were committing the
577
1:07:52 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]inal mortal sins of economics and finance in that nation all at the same time.
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1:08:00 --> 1:08:05
I witnessed it. I thought this is insane. You're going to get hyperinflation, you're going to get
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1:08:05 --> 1:08:09
economic collapse, these people will be starving in the streets. And I told my wife that and that
580
1:08:09 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] rolled forward as I expected. If a nation does that,
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1:08:17 --> 1:08:24
there's no doubt that the political class is 100% corrupt and is being paid off by some foreign
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1:08:24 --> 1:08:30
entity to do those to put those policies in place. So they did two big things. Number one,
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1:08:30 --> 1:08:35
they adopted socialism. Number two, they committed the three mortal sins of finance.
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1:08:36 --> 1:08:40
There was no hope for this country when I visited it 15 years ago, and there's no hope for it now.
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1:08:41 --> 1:08:48
This chap, Javier Millay, has come into power and started cutting all government services.
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1:08:48 --> 1:08:54
Now you've got children who were dependent upon soup kitchens, starving to death and dying.
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1:08:55 --> 1:08:59
It's just going from bad to worse. And it's not going to turn around with this man in power.
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1:09:00 --> 1:09:06
It's a horrendous situation. And that's repeated all over the world. The disease of utopian
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1:09:06 --> 1:09:11
socialism is everywhere. And it's being used by psychopathic criminal elements to control the
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1:09:11 --> 1:09:17
planet. There's no doubt in my mind about that. We can talk about that. Okay, that's okay. We've got
591
1:09:18 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ions. But what I did want to remind people, I will put the link into the New World Order book
592
1:09:24 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ill. We've talked about it, which is the whole utopian socialism movement and worth
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1:09:30 --> 1:09:35
reading this book. It's wonderful. It goes back 3000 years of what we are now witnessing. So
594
1:09:36 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ion is whether there's wakey-wakey time, but into what? So let's go to questions. Thank you,
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1:09:41 --> 1:09:47
Gerry, for presenting to us, for sharing a wonderful overview of perspectives. And
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1:09:48 --> 1:09:55
it's provocative thinking. I'm a passionate provocateur and you're a thinking provocateur.
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1:09:56 --> 1:10:03
One of the things I also urge all of you is to live with uncertainty. Stop seeking certainty.
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1:10:03 --> 1:10:08
It doesn't exist. Just live with this uncertainty and go, right, that's what we've got to do. And
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1:10:08 --> 1:10:14
each one of us has to make this decision of in a collapse environment, what are your visible and
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1:10:14 --> 1:10:19
invisible means of support? So be ready to set them up. All right, here's a man with some
601
1:10:19 --> 1:10:27
visible means of support, Glenn Macco. Gerry? Hey, Gerry. Hi, Glenn. As part of the, I'm going to
602
1:10:27 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]ion that I'd like you to give an answer back to another doctor. Dr. Kevin Stillwagon
603
1:10:33 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]illwagon, can you raise your hand just so it puts you up at the top of the
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1:10:38 --> 1:10:46
screen? So, Gerry, I'm going to characterize, I think, the biggest piece of data you gave us,
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1:10:46 --> 1:10:54
and that's the working age explosion of disability. How can you have a functioning
606
1:10:55 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e producing things are becoming disabled? And not only are they becoming
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1:11:02 --> 1:11:08
disabled, but the other working capable parts of their family are now responsible for
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1:11:09 --> 1:11:17
caregiving to them. So we're starting to collapse it even faster. And with that, I'm going to call
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1:11:17 --> 1:11:27
what you described in Singapore, slow release deaths, that the nature of the COVID vaccines
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1:11:27 --> 1:11:35
are designed around collapsing the birth rate with mothers and fathers with sperm and eggs,
611
1:11:39 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e, but only with a delayed, in many cases several years,
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1:11:46 --> 1:11:54
of turbo-cancer or other kind of disease. And that what you gave with the ALS is basically a
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1:11:54 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] a sensitive group that has a condition and they're maintaining
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1:12:02 --> 1:12:08
it, but suddenly something comes along and pushes them over their edge, and now they're dying fast.
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1:12:09 --> 1:12:16
And so that's the indicator, gee, we're in trouble. And who out there is saying this in the
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1:12:17 --> 1:12:32
media? Even Secretary Kennedy, he's concentrating on dyes and Tylenol. He's not focusing on this
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1:12:32 --> 1:12:42
enormous slow release death going on with the COVID vaccine. And so before you, having an answer on
618
1:12:42 --> 1:12:48
that is important, but the first thing is Dr. Stillwagen is trying to find a mechanism to
619
1:12:48 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]e can have an idea of how much trouble they're in.
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1:12:58 --> 1:13:04
Do you see anything coming along from a diagnostic viewpoint of being able to measure
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1:13:04 --> 1:13:10
actual mRNA, either from the shot or from shedding?
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1:13:14 --> 1:13:21
Thanks, Glenn. Excellent. All great observations and you made a lot of great questions there.
623
1:13:21 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]ly, you talked about the economic impact of the working age population becoming disabled.
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1:13:28 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] economic impact. Now, at the moment, those people
625
1:13:36 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]d to some degree by the migration into Western economies.
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1:13:41 --> 1:13:49
The migration is part of the whole pattern of attack on Western civilization. And so as you
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1:13:50 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]e disabled in total in America, that's not the number that's
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1:14:00 --> 1:14:05
in the working age population. It's much lower numbers. So it's easily replaced by migration.
629
1:14:06 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]s, but it's relatively marginal at this point because the
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1:14:13 --> 1:14:17
migration is covering up that problem in the working age population. The people coming in
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1:14:18 --> 1:14:24
in illegal immigration are in the working age population. So they can easily take those jobs,
632
1:14:24 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] of those jobs pretty readily. And so you don't see the economic impact as being dramatic.
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1:14:32 --> 1:14:38
However, if you read BOOM on a regular basis, I document that the US economy is slowly but surely
634
1:14:38 --> 1:14:46
grinding to a halt, not to collapse, but to a point where it's just not really got any growth
635
1:14:46 --> 1:14:54
inside it, any growth other than US government expenditure growth. So US government continues
636
1:14:54 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]er. The Doge thing, Elon Musk's attempts to reduce
637
1:15:02 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] had zero effect. The Tariff War has been a complete failure and will
638
1:15:09 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction], I think it's going to be a very big negative to
639
1:15:14 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] So these two initiatives have made zero difference
640
1:15:19 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]atus of the US economy at this point. In fact, they're both potentially
641
1:15:25 --> 1:15:35
dangerous things to do. So the economic situation is very complex and not obvious. Yes, under the
642
1:15:35 --> 1:15:39
hood, there's lots of bad things happening in Western economies, particularly in Europe,
643
1:15:39 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ates. And I'm very concerned. Please don't spend too much time on
644
1:15:45 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ion with the MRA? Yeah, well, I'll deal with ALS first,
645
1:15:52 --> 1:16:00
though, because you mentioned ALS. ALS is a signal disease because it's a neurodegenerative disease.
646
1:16:00 --> 1:16:06
Now, right from the very get go, the virus attacked the brain and the central nervous system and the
647
1:16:06 --> 1:16:12
bio weapons did the same. So we've seen an increase in neurodegenerative diseases and
648
1:16:12 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] five years. But the ALS is particularly worrying because it's
649
1:16:17 --> 1:16:23
terminal. I mean, everyone dies with ALS. So therefore, within two to five years, that whole
650
1:16:23 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]d. Now, if we continue to see it being replaced all the time
651
1:16:28 --> 1:16:33
at higher and higher levels, then we've got a nation basically dying from neurodegenerative
652
1:16:33 --> 1:16:40
disease. Now, I was involved in a science group that mapped what was going on inside the so-called
653
1:16:40 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] of the white clots. Well, they're not blood clots. They are
654
1:16:46 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ures comprised of what we call fibrinogen beta chains, beta alpha, beta and gamma
655
1:16:54 --> 1:17:00
chains in a very unusual ratio, combined with a lot of strange metals and other proteins.
656
1:17:01 --> 1:17:06
And now that worries us because the other thing we've discovered about these
657
1:17:06 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ures that are occurring inside dead bodies is that they are amyloidogenic and they appear to
658
1:17:12 --> 1:17:22
be prionic. So amyloid and prions attack the brain. So we're very worried about the brain
659
1:17:22 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction] diseases because of that. So that sort of reflects what we've learned about
660
1:17:27 --> 1:17:34
the so-called white clots from a biological analysis viewpoint. ALS is very rare. It's very
661
1:17:34 --> 1:17:41
small numbers, but it's a signal disease. And if that starts going up and continues to go up,
662
1:17:41 --> 1:17:47
that is, I would say, a very, very scary phenomenon. Going on to mRNA, can you detect whether or not
663
1:17:47 --> 1:17:56
you've got mRNA in your body? Well, the first thing I'll say is this. We don't know what five
664
1:17:56 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ed with. We suspect and we are told that they have been given
665
1:18:03 --> 1:18:11
mRNA technology, but we have no independent audit of those five billion people's injections.
666
1:18:11 --> 1:18:18
We've been able to independently analyse a handful of vials. I mean, Kevin McKernan, I think,
667
1:18:19 --> 1:18:26
has analysed about 32 vials. David Spiker has analysed a similar number. Other labs around the
668
1:18:26 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] analysed very small numbers of vials. But out there is five billion injected individuals
669
1:18:35 --> 1:18:42
with 13 billion vials. There's no independent audit of what they've been given. We're just
670
1:18:42 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] that they've been given mRNA technology. Now, that might be the case, but we
671
1:18:49 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] don't know. So we don't know what they've been injected with. For five years, I've been telling
672
1:18:55 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]asmids contained in these products. And I had molecular biologists
673
1:19:01 --> 1:19:06
tell me, oh, no, no, that'll be purified. What are you talking about? But now Kevin McKernan examined
674
1:19:07 --> 1:19:14
his vials for DNA contamination. He found lots of DNA plasmids. He found SV40 promoters.
675
1:19:15 --> 1:19:22
And these are not mRNA technology. These are circles of DNA inside the products. And those
676
1:19:22 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ive and create harm inside the cells of bodies. So this is a genetic
677
1:19:31 --> 1:19:37
weapon. I think it's fair to call it a weapon. Because it's not a vaccine. It's not preventing
678
1:19:37 --> 1:19:42
disease. It's not preventing transmission. Therefore, it can't be a vaccine. So what is it? It's a genetic
679
1:19:43 --> 1:19:48
weapon, as far as I'm concerned, delivered to every cell in the body, including all the germ
680
1:19:48 --> 1:19:55
cells of the body, which are the ovaries in particular in the female population, but also
681
1:19:55 --> 1:20:02
in the sperm of men. And so this could cause infertility or disease epidemics in the future
682
1:20:02 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] been jabbed. We just don't know. It's very scary.
683
1:20:09 --> 1:20:18
So as to what can we pick up mRNA, well, we can look for spike protein. But if we don't
684
1:20:19 --> 1:20:24
find spike protein, it really doesn't get us off the hook. Because as I say, we don't really know
685
1:20:24 --> 1:20:30
that everybody's been given mRNA and that everybody will get spike protein in their body.
686
1:20:30 --> 1:20:37
We don't know what they've been given. This is an absolute disaster. It's just a lack of knowledge.
687
1:20:37 --> 1:20:44
And no government, no government anywhere has decided, oh, we better start doing massive
688
1:20:44 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]art looking at these white cloths. We had better start looking for spike
689
1:20:50 --> 1:20:57
protein in the population. No government. And that's the obvious thing you would be doing.
690
1:20:57 --> 1:21:01
And you know that, Glenn, you're not a doctor, you're not a head of a public health department,
691
1:21:01 --> 1:21:07
and yet you know what we should be doing. But no government is doing this. Therefore, while nobody
692
1:21:07 --> 1:21:13
is doing it, there is no hope at all of us discovering the extent of the health impact
693
1:21:13 --> 1:21:19
of what's happened. We have no hope at all. So we're not even beginning the independent
694
1:21:19 --> 1:21:25
analysis of what's happened yet. We're not even beginning. It must come, but it'll only come through
695
1:21:25 --> 1:21:33
public pressure. Kevin, would you like to say anything on this conversation? Thank you, Glenn,
696
1:21:33 --> 1:21:38
for raising these issues. And Kevin, I think you did some work on the pilots as well, did you not?
697
1:21:38 --> 1:21:44
Yeah, I did. And everything that Jerry mentioned aligns perfectly with what happened to the pilots.
698
1:21:44 --> 1:21:50
There was definitely a 40% increase in early deaths that occurred right after the shot rolled
699
1:21:50 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ing in pilots going on on long-term disabilities. And you know, you talked
700
1:21:56 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]enished with migrants. I mean, that's possible, but not with pilots,
701
1:22:01 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ors. This is going to hurt the economy. It's deliberate. I noticed you didn't
702
1:22:08 --> 1:22:26
mention lawyers, Kevin. There's a satanic level to this that people aren't getting.
703
1:22:28 --> 1:22:38
It's a major deception. People have been tricked into believing that if you inject a product
704
1:22:38 --> 1:22:45
into your body, it's going to make an antibody and that will protect you. Well, the science says
705
1:22:45 --> 1:22:51
that, yeah, you will get an antibody, but you've got to look at the process of what happens when
706
1:22:51 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]atform of mRNA is particularly dangerous because anytime you
707
1:23:02 --> 1:23:07
induce cells of the body to make a foreign protein, I don't care what the protein is. You know,
708
1:23:07 --> 1:23:13
everybody's wound up around the spike protein. It really doesn't matter. When the body starts
709
1:23:13 --> 1:23:20
making foreign proteins, you will have an immediate attack on those cells. They are going to be
710
1:23:20 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]royed. And you know, the problem is we've injected hundreds of billions of these lipid
711
1:23:27 --> 1:23:34
nanoparticles, each one supposedly containing mRNA. And that was a really good point you brought up,
712
1:23:34 --> 1:23:42
Jerry, because we really don't know. We know for sure that there's plasmids in there, DNA plasmids.
713
1:23:43 --> 1:23:50
And you know, as you said, that's particularly dangerous because they can easily get integrated
714
1:23:50 --> 1:23:56
into the human genome. All it takes is a little tiny piece of DNA from that plasmid,
715
1:23:57 --> 1:24:04
you know, 20 nucleotides or less. And if they closely match the human genome, they will integrate.
716
1:24:04 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]e seem to forget that our cells are dividing all the time.
717
1:24:12 --> 1:24:17
It's mitosis. It's how we grow. It's how we replenish cells. And when that happens, the nuclear
718
1:24:18 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] DNA in a plasmon form that's just kind of floating around
719
1:24:26 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]asm, it can easily get integrated into that genome of that cell. And it will stay
720
1:24:34 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] of that cell line's life until that person dies. And so if it starts,
721
1:24:43 --> 1:24:51
you know, disrupting genomic activity that makes normal proteins, now you've got yourself set up
722
1:24:51 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] of your life that just kind of showed up out of nowhere. So,
723
1:24:57 --> 1:25:03
yeah, this is all really, really dangerous. It's satanic. We have to educate people on what this
724
1:25:03 --> 1:25:11
really is. They've been deceived. They've got to, you know, just stop doing this to themselves.
725
1:25:11 --> 1:25:17
I mean, injecting something to make an antibody is bad enough, but when you inject the message
726
1:25:18 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]uff, that's where the real damage starts. And that's why I was questioning
727
1:25:25 --> 1:25:37
about the mRNA, Jerry, is because if we can find vaccine-specific mRNA in a person that was not
728
1:25:38 --> 1:25:46
vaccinated, that's scary. Because what does that mean? That means that there really is shedding
729
1:25:47 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]e are being injured by this, whether they got the shot or not.
730
1:25:53 --> 1:25:59
That's extremely concerning. So we've got to develop protocols, Jerry, on how to get this crap
731
1:25:59 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]e, whether they've been vaccinated or not. It's got to happen or we're in big trouble.
732
1:26:06 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction], I'm sorry I hijacked the show again. No, no, Jerry, Kevin, excellent. Well said. Jerry,
733
1:26:12 --> 1:26:16
a comment, sorry, Jerry, a comment, anything else? Then we'll go to Anders.
734
1:26:17 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] want to make a comment. I agree with everything that Kevin said, with one exception.
735
1:26:24 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]ake. He said there were billions of, he suggested billions of, he said,
736
1:26:31 --> 1:26:38
mRNA, but he said billions of mRNA are delivered by this chap. That's wrong. There are trillions,
737
1:26:38 --> 1:26:45
trillions of lipid nanoparticles delivered, trillions. The estimate is 40 to 100 trillion
738
1:26:46 --> 1:26:52
lipid nanoparticles. Now the lipid nanoparticles contain PEG, polyethylene glycol, which is a
739
1:26:52 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] the envelope is enough. You don't have to deliver mRNA, just deliver the poison
740
1:27:00 --> 1:27:06
in the lipid nanoparticle. And you can deliver that to potentially every cell in the body
741
1:27:07 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] with the poison. You don't have to worry about mRNA and spike
742
1:27:11 --> 1:27:20
protein delivery. But it's a small criticism. Kevin is very much aware of everything that's
743
1:27:20 --> 1:27:25
going on and I agree with everything he said. Thank you, Kevin. Glenn?
744
1:27:26 --> 1:27:31
Yeah, small follow up. I'll just mention, sorry, I'll just mention the pilots. As you know,
745
1:27:31 --> 1:27:35
Charles, I was involved in helping the pilots of Australia a lot, you and I, both of us.
746
1:27:35 --> 1:27:43
But I'm very worried about the pilots. If we go to single piloted planes, I'd be really worried. But
747
1:27:43 --> 1:27:50
luckily we've still got two pilots in the planes. But yes, I'm very concerned about the pilots.
748
1:27:50 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] said about the number of disabilities occurring and deaths in
749
1:27:54 --> 1:28:03
pilots, this should be on the front page of every newspaper. Yep. The follow up I wanted to give was
750
1:28:03 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] an issue around this poison in that it's subclinical and routinely not showing
751
1:28:12 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] some kind of attack. It turns into an avalanche and you're
752
1:28:18 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] of, well, something will come up. That'll be an
753
1:28:25 --> 1:28:30
indicator you're sick and you have to have something done. Sorry, by the time we actually
754
1:28:30 --> 1:28:35
see something like that, it's too late. So that's why it's so critical to be having some
755
1:28:35 --> 1:28:43
kind of mechanism like being able to measure mRNA amounts in your body to say, okay, how dangerous
756
1:28:43 --> 1:28:50
a ticking time bomb are you? And therefore it's absolutely critical that you start doing things
757
1:28:50 --> 1:28:57
like having good natural foods, not buying anything out of a box. Very good, very good,
758
1:28:58 --> 1:29:04
very good. And to tap into what you're saying, having a testing mechanism,
759
1:29:05 --> 1:29:13
to monitor Glenn and everybody. That's going to be the benefit of AI in terms of, as Ian Brighthope
760
1:29:13 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] week, there are dangers with AI, but there are wonderful benefits of it. And
761
1:29:19 --> 1:29:24
you monitoring, Ian Brighthope said again, you are personally responsible for your health. And I say
762
1:29:24 --> 1:29:30
I've been saying it all the time, but you cannot rely on the system. So perhaps we'll get a
763
1:29:30 --> 1:29:36
presenter here, Kevin, you might know someone, or Glenn, you might know somebody with measuring
764
1:29:36 --> 1:29:43
techniques, cytokine measurements have come. Most doctors are starting to understand cytokines
765
1:29:43 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]atus. And so perhaps someone has made up, so someone, Jerry,
766
1:29:49 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] to measure the potential harm that Glenn is talking about. Jerry, are you
767
1:29:55 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ing that could be indicative for people to see what's happening with their bodies?
768
1:30:03 --> 1:30:09
Yes, I am. There's people working on this problem, and they're in touch with me. I don't have time to
769
1:30:09 --> 1:30:16
help all those different groups. But at the moment there are tests available for spike antibodies,
770
1:30:16 --> 1:30:21
as far as I'm aware. But that doesn't really tell you much, because the antibodies may come and go
771
1:30:21 --> 1:30:28
and may disappear. And the spike protein may still be present, or a prion of the spike protein,
772
1:30:28 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]s, a misfolded protein could be still present in the body. So we just, and prions, by
773
1:30:35 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction], are self-amplifying. So a prion can create another prion. So it's like a cascade of
774
1:30:40 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ivity. So your antibody level can come and go, but if the prion activity is still going
775
1:30:47 --> 1:30:51
on, it only has to be relatively small. But if it's in the brain, then you've got a big problem.
776
1:30:52 --> 1:30:59
So measuring spike protein antibodies is not going to really help. Measuring mRNA is difficult,
777
1:30:59 --> 1:31:04
because to measure mRNA you've got to do a gene sequence test on tissue sample. And that's what
778
1:31:04 --> 1:31:10
I showed before, is Kevin McCannan just did that tissue sample analysis on the woman with the
779
1:31:10 --> 1:31:14
turbo cancer. But to do that you've got to have tissue sample, and then you've got to have a
780
1:31:14 --> 1:31:21
genomic sequence done, looking for specific things. So that's very high tech and not so readily
781
1:31:21 --> 1:31:28
available. And who wants to do it or pay for it? No government wants to do it. Cytokine analysis
782
1:31:28 --> 1:31:35
is a better idea. I think cytokines could be used as a screening procedure for the population.
783
1:31:36 --> 1:31:43
And at the moment, governments really don't like doctors testing for cytokine levels. But I do think,
784
1:31:43 --> 1:31:49
Charles, it's an excellent suggestion. And that is the way forward, I think, to doing a population
785
1:31:49 --> 1:31:57
wide screening, who have got problems with their inflammation cascade. Cytokines go up when the
786
1:31:57 --> 1:32:05
cytokine cascade develops, the waterfall or the landslide. Cytokine storm.
787
1:32:05 --> 1:32:10
Storm, that's right. So I think that's an excellent idea. So that's probably the best bet
788
1:32:11 --> 1:32:14
for some sort of screening procedure, would be cytokine analysis.
789
1:32:14 --> 1:32:19
And I think that's going to be the benefit of AI everybody. So we'll get moving. We have a lot of
790
1:32:19 --> 1:32:24
hands up. But thank you, Kevin. Glenn, thank you. Good thinking. And be careful what you put into
791
1:32:24 --> 1:32:31
your body, correct, Glenn? Absolutely. All right. So Anders is going to talk to us about
792
1:32:31 --> 1:32:39
stuff hitting our body. Come on, Anders. Yes. So I just want to ask a couple of questions. So
793
1:32:41 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ually, there has been peer reviewed scientific peer reviewed report
794
1:32:49 --> 1:33:00
about six or seven types of COVID vaccines. It is done by de Blasie et al 2024, validated by
795
1:33:00 --> 1:33:15
Maria Chrysler 2025. They found [privacy contact redaction]ances, non declared in the JABs. So we have
796
1:33:15 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction], including graphene, carbon nanotubes, magnetic materials,
797
1:33:23 --> 1:33:31
lanthanides, which are, let's say, magnetic and electric in that respect that they are
798
1:33:33 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ifying 5G, 4G antennas. So we do know something about these vaccines.
799
1:33:43 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ion is, if you have been looking into those scientific reports and validation,
800
1:33:52 --> 1:34:01
there are many others. David Nixon, I think is in Australia. He's one of those. And we know
801
1:34:01 --> 1:34:08
Anna-Mika Shea and others, Baxas. Okay, but that's number one. Number two, let's say, you know,
802
1:34:08 --> 1:34:14
let me answer that. Let me answer that question. Let me answer that question. Yes, I'm fully aware
803
1:34:14 --> 1:34:20
of all of this. I can send you 3500 review peer reviewed papers on the whole COVID phenomenon,
804
1:34:20 --> 1:34:24
if you would like to read them. And yes, I'm aware of all of those people. I'm aware of all
805
1:34:24 --> 1:34:30
of their work. Okay, a lot of them communicate with me directly. But they're still looking at
806
1:34:30 --> 1:34:38
a tiny, tiny, tiny sample of [privacy contact redaction]e, 13 billion vials. They're looking at a
807
1:34:38 --> 1:34:44
handful that we don't really know. There's no auditing of the whole process scientifically.
808
1:34:44 --> 1:34:51
So yes, these are very concerning. Yes, I agree. I know all of those results. But quite frankly,
809
1:34:51 --> 1:34:57
we don't know what [privacy contact redaction] been given. We really don't. We assume, we assume they've
810
1:34:57 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]s, but we don't know. And we do know that there's the process one,
811
1:35:03 --> 1:35:08
process two argument. We know that process one, the vaccines that were created for their so-called
812
1:35:08 --> 1:35:14
clinical trials were created in laboratory for a very small number of people. But when they went
813
1:35:14 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ion of billions of vials, they use process two. And process two is totally different
814
1:35:19 --> 1:35:28
to process one. So process two is mass scale up of these products. And I know a lot about mass
815
1:35:28 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ion, because that was my biotech company was involved in doing 30 years
816
1:35:33 --> 1:35:41
ago. This is old technology. But there's a lot of problems when you scale up. So look, yes, I'm aware
817
1:35:41 --> 1:35:46
of all of these things. But it doesn't get us much further down the line. They're just poisons. They
818
1:35:46 --> 1:35:51
should be avoided. And they're potentially described best as weapons. And they're not just a
819
1:35:51 --> 1:35:57
single weapon. They've got multiple weapon systems inside. I have been telling this group, this
820
1:35:58 --> 1:36:02
message for four years, the multiple weapons. There's no point talking about one weapon.
821
1:36:03 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] the lipid nanoparticle itself is a weapon. So the fact that it can penetrate into the germ cells
822
1:36:13 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]em. So that means you've got to have transfection. The transfection
823
1:36:20 --> 1:36:27
mechanism into the germ cell is a weapon. That goes back to the methyl pseudo-uridine insertion.
824
1:36:27 --> 1:36:32
There's all sorts of things in this that should never be given to a human being. And they're
825
1:36:32 --> 1:36:38
being given for a disease which doesn't really kill people. It kills fragile people. But it's
826
1:36:38 --> 1:36:46
no different to flu. There's no rationale to give this to anybody. None at all. And when you look at
827
1:36:46 --> 1:36:55
the variant mutation going on, it's pointless trying to even develop a vaccine. It is ridiculous
828
1:36:55 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]es basis. So there's no point getting down to the nitty-gritty of arguing about
829
1:37:02 --> 1:37:10
weapon A versus weapon B. The whole thing is a weapon system randomly distributed in a war-like
830
1:37:10 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] the population of Earth. That's what's happening. So arguing about all these
831
1:37:17 --> 1:37:21
little nitty-gritty, this weapon's more important than that weapon. It's not going to get us anywhere.
832
1:37:22 --> 1:37:28
We've just got to go away from that. Is there a virus? Isn't there a virus? What a ridiculous
833
1:37:28 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ion from the whole thing. If you go to a child care center and look at children below
834
1:37:33 --> 1:37:38
the age of five, you'll witness viral infections. They're everywhere. You go and tell a young mother
835
1:37:38 --> 1:37:45
that viruses don't exist. It's ridiculous. Go and talk to anyone running a child care center.
836
1:37:45 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] And guess what? They're self-limiting. They're self-limiting diseases.
837
1:37:50 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]or, I would see an outbreak of chickenpox in my suburb.
838
1:37:54 --> 1:37:58
And you'd ring up the doctor on the other side of the city. In my city, it might be 100 kilometers
839
1:37:58 --> 1:38:02
away, but it might be [privacy contact redaction] And I'll say, are you seeing chickenpox at the moment?
840
1:38:02 --> 1:38:07
And he'll say no. In other words, you can have an epidemic of chickenpox in one little
841
1:38:08 --> 1:38:12
region in a city that doesn't affect the whole city. And then it's self-limiting. It just
842
1:38:12 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]or was concerned about those things. We can get sidetracked into
843
1:38:20 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ion arguments. They're pointless. They're wasting time. We've got to
844
1:38:24 --> 1:38:30
get on with the general problem. Thank you, Jerry. Anders, your next question.
845
1:38:32 --> 1:38:41
So I've gone into quite a lot of data collections and analysis and let's say the
846
1:38:41 --> 1:38:53
development of excess mortality and excess or reduction in fertility started way before 2021.
847
1:38:54 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]arted in 2013-14 with 4G and it went on massively with a fertility fall, started,
848
1:39:02 --> 1:39:13
let's say, about 2017-18-19. So there is an EMR component to this, which is
849
1:39:14 --> 1:39:21
easily to validate by looking at a city and rural, urban rural data.
850
1:39:22 --> 1:39:29
So, and this is connected to the toxicity in vaccines, including aluminum and other matters,
851
1:39:29 --> 1:39:38
which access antennas. So all of these is scientifically validated. So we cannot just
852
1:39:38 --> 1:39:46
say that there is virus or there is no 5G. I mean, we're not saying that. I just said that
853
1:39:46 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ion. I said arguing about this little tiny weapon versus that big weapon,
854
1:39:53 --> 1:40:01
or it's just pointless. Second question. Have you gone into Mark Bailey's and fully read his thesis
855
1:40:01 --> 1:40:09
on his... I'm not going to discuss. No, this is a distraction. It's a distraction generated by the
856
1:40:09 --> 1:40:16
criminal cabal. I'm not going to discuss that. Is there a virus distraction? Please. Okay. Next
857
1:40:16 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ion. So I was coming to Poland and I was seeing the deputy finance minister back
858
1:40:23 --> 1:40:33
in March 1990. Poland was going from a communist socialist economy in 1989. And it was Leszek
859
1:40:33 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]er at the time for some years. And let's say the Polish
860
1:40:43 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]e has proven that Poland is now the most successful economy in Europe the last 35 years.
861
1:40:50 --> 1:40:58
They went from communism to a kind of market economy. And I would say there is a parallel
862
1:40:58 --> 1:41:05
to Argentina. And I believe that Argentina can do as well or better than Poland. They have a lot of
863
1:41:05 --> 1:41:17
energy resources. So I think your criticism of what happened in Argentina is proven incorrect by
864
1:41:17 --> 1:41:23
what has happened in Poland. Well, we can have that discussion. Nation by nation, everything is
865
1:41:23 --> 1:41:28
different because they're all culturally different. I would suggest to you to go to Argentina tomorrow,
866
1:41:28 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] It's a free world. Go and fly to Argentina and look at what's happening. It's a
867
1:41:34 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]er. It's much, much, much worse than what happened in post USSR nations. Now Poland, I'm
868
1:41:42 --> 1:41:47
very aware of, I followed the Polish economy very closely. It is a good success story. That's great.
869
1:41:47 --> 1:41:53
They've got a very cohesive nation. They've got a nation that's cohesive in a lot of ways. And
870
1:41:53 --> 1:41:58
they've been able to rescue their economy. But this is very difficult to achieve in Argentina.
871
1:41:58 --> 1:42:03
Very, very difficult. It's a much worse situation. But we don't need to talk about that today.
872
1:42:03 --> 1:42:10
From IMF, etc. So they needed that. Russia did not get that. It's been on top there.
873
1:42:10 --> 1:42:14
Now it's 20 billion dollars, etc. for Argentina. We don't need to discuss it.
874
1:42:15 --> 1:42:21
Discussing the Polish economy on this call here today is not going to change the world. I'm sorry,
875
1:42:21 --> 1:42:27
I don't wish to discuss it. But it's a parallel discussion to Argentina. That's what I'm saying.
876
1:42:27 --> 1:42:31
All right. Fine. Good point. But we don't need to discuss it today. There's bigger issues to discuss.
877
1:42:32 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ion, please.
878
1:42:37 --> 1:42:43
Thanks, Andrews. I finished there. Great. Thank you, Andrews. Daria.
879
1:42:43 --> 1:42:47
Hello, Jerry. How are you? Hi, Daria. Good to see you.
880
1:42:48 --> 1:42:53
Thank you so much for this great information. I really appreciate it. You rang a bell with me
881
1:42:53 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]arted talking about disability claim increases.
882
1:42:58 --> 1:43:05
And what it harkened back to for me was when I was in practice and Obamacare clicked on March 23,
883
1:43:05 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]op in the USA of people having commercial insurance.
884
1:43:12 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]oyers or they were forced to try and buy it on their own and they
885
1:43:16 --> 1:43:23
couldn't afford the premiums. And even the marketplace itself was trying to funnel people
886
1:43:23 --> 1:43:31
into Medicaid and Social Security disability. And I don't know if that was on your radar back then
887
1:43:31 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ics. But that's why I was kind of curious because this uptick in disability
888
1:43:37 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ague and the vaccines is most likely at this point in time not related to
889
1:43:47 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]or of tinkering with the insurance market but is actual organic disease
890
1:43:53 --> 1:43:58
that's taking place from the toxicities. So, but yeah, people were bumping along. They had their
891
1:43:58 --> 1:44:02
job. They had their insurance to pay for their chronic back pain. And that's kind of where I
892
1:44:02 --> 1:44:07
was evaluating patients and treating them. And then all of a sudden a lot of people were coming
893
1:44:07 --> 1:44:14
in going, I need a form so I can get disability because my employer's dropping my insurance or
894
1:44:15 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]e got canceled from their jobs for some superficial reason but it was because
895
1:44:20 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]s. So, yeah, I was just curious if you'd ever look back on that because
896
1:44:26 --> 1:44:32
it'd be interesting to see those two upticks and to see what percentage was market manipulation
897
1:44:32 --> 1:44:40
back in [privacy contact redaction]ual physical maladies of various types related
898
1:44:40 --> 1:44:50
to COVID and the vaccine toxicities. And in 2020 we probably saw a lot of social diseases
899
1:44:50 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]ugs and alcohol because people were locked out of their jobs and their
900
1:44:54 --> 1:44:58
spirituality and everything else. So, but yeah, that's what I was curious about. Thank you so much.
901
1:45:00 --> 1:45:06
What a great, great comments. Thank you for that. I haven't looked at the American insurance
902
1:45:07 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ory you're talking about, you know, what happened in the past. And so that's getting down
903
1:45:12 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]n't really looked at. I have a friend though who does look at that,
904
1:45:16 --> 1:45:23
an economics friend, but that would be worth doing. I mean, you've got to just, it's very,
905
1:45:23 --> 1:45:28
we don't know what these people are becoming disabled from. We're just seeing the numbers rise
906
1:45:28 --> 1:45:34
and we're seeing it rise in young people relatively. So we've got a major health problem
907
1:45:35 --> 1:45:40
that's manifesting in the insurance industry. There's no doubt the industry as a whole is not
908
1:45:40 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction] insurance is home insurance, car insurance, all this other stuff that really is
909
1:45:46 --> 1:45:50
not involved. That's why you've got to look at the health insurance and the disability insurance
910
1:45:50 --> 1:45:56
companies, what's happening in there. So, and a good friend of mine is, does analyze those companies
911
1:45:56 --> 1:46:03
as individual companies as well, but I'm not involved in that level of granularity. I'm much
912
1:46:03 --> 1:46:10
more globally focused in my work. I do spend a lot of time on the US economy. The reason is because
913
1:46:10 --> 1:46:20
the US economy is relatively easy to watch. And it's the largest single national, national economy.
914
1:46:20 --> 1:46:26
I mean, the European economy is arguably bigger than the US economy, but it's fractured across
915
1:46:26 --> 1:46:34
many, many, many nations. And the European Union is heavily, heavily corrupt. And I really don't
916
1:46:34 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] anything coming out of the European Union at all. So that's why I study the United States
917
1:46:39 --> 1:46:46
a lot more because it's a big economy, [privacy contact redaction]e. It's one nation under one government
918
1:46:48 --> 1:46:56
that's supposedly democratic. But I'm more focused globally. I know I do look at a lot
919
1:46:56 --> 1:47:01
write a lot about the US economy, but I don't go down into the granularity too much. I'm sorry.
920
1:47:03 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ion. You're a neurosurgeon, an ex neurosurgeon. I think you would be
921
1:47:07 --> 1:47:13
horrified to see those increases in ALS happening in Singapore.
922
1:47:13 --> 1:47:20
Yeah, it's terrifying. I mean, one of my first, I had my older brother dropped dead suddenly.
923
1:47:20 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]opped dead suddenly. And then my first cousin's eldest sister died of brain rot.
924
1:47:26 --> 1:47:29
And she was already behind the eight ball at Parkinson's. And after each booster shot,
925
1:47:29 --> 1:47:34
she got more ALS type symptoms until the point where she couldn't walk. She couldn't eat,
926
1:47:34 --> 1:47:36
couldn't swallow and died. So yeah, I'm kind of pissed off.
927
1:47:38 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction] a cerebellar stroke. He was supremely fit. He played a grade
928
1:47:45 --> 1:47:51
rugby. He was a semi-professional boxer at extreme levels of fitness and a triathlon
929
1:47:52 --> 1:47:58
champion. At the age of 35, he had a cerebellar stroke and they discovered a hole in his heart
930
1:47:58 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]ralian [privacy contact redaction] have occurred
931
1:48:07 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction] short period of time because there's no way that he could perform at those athletic
932
1:48:14 --> 1:48:21
levels with a hole in the heart that big. And it was shocking to hear what happened. He was so
933
1:48:21 --> 1:48:26
lucky to survive. He's still alive, but he's struggling to recover. I'm convinced that that
934
1:48:26 --> 1:48:33
hole in the heart is due to endothelitis in the septum and that that septum just fell apart.
935
1:48:34 --> 1:48:38
As you would know, the structure of the heart. And then he got a clot and the clot went up and
936
1:48:39 --> 1:48:44
hit the cerebellum, of course. So he had a small clot in the cerebellum, but once you've got your
937
1:48:44 --> 1:48:50
cerebellar damage, it's extremely difficult to recover from cerebellar damage because your
938
1:48:50 --> 1:48:56
balance mechanism is not there. Your spatial awareness is not there. And he's now still
939
1:48:56 --> 1:49:02
struggling after six months to do one day of work. And that completely exhausts him. He can't do
940
1:49:02 --> 1:49:09
any more. He was previously running a large company in the oil and gas industry with well
941
1:49:09 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]oyees. It's a very big company, but he can't even work for one day now. He's 35.
942
1:49:16 --> 1:49:26
It's he's in our family. I'm very disturbed about it. But what can you do? The damage is done. I'm
943
1:49:26 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] heard of so many cases have come to me about a disease,
944
1:49:32 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ories. Your family is no different to many others.
945
1:49:38 --> 1:49:42
Yeah. And then, you know, that as far as that septal defect preexisting,
946
1:49:43 --> 1:49:48
not even taking into account the limitation of athletic performance that would have occurred
947
1:49:48 --> 1:49:54
because of that. But certainly throughout his life as an athlete, he had gotten sports
948
1:49:54 --> 1:49:59
physicals and sports physicians are trained specifically to check for those kind of heart
949
1:49:59 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]en for. So absolutely, you're right. That had to have been a hole that got
950
1:50:05 --> 1:50:10
punched through there from inflammation or possibly even ischemia, destroying the septal tissue,
951
1:50:11 --> 1:50:17
you know, from spike protein circulatory damage. Absolutely. I think he played he played a grade
952
1:50:17 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ralia for I think eight years. You can't do that with a hole in the heart. You just
953
1:50:23 --> 1:50:29
can't do it. You know, it's impossible. And then he was a semi professional boxer. He had, he
954
1:50:29 --> 1:50:37
describes his level of fitness as extreme. He said I was extremely fit, not not just fit.
955
1:50:38 --> 1:50:44
I was extremely fit. You can't do that aerobic activity with a hole in the heart. Now that's an
956
1:50:44 --> 1:50:51
acute event, acute event in his heart that precipitated his cerebellar brain damage.
957
1:50:52 --> 1:51:01
All right. We'll better move on. Julie? We've got 30. Thanks, Dario. We've got 35 minutes. Well done,
958
1:51:01 --> 1:51:07
Jerry. You're doing well. So now we've got Julie then Paula from Italy. Julie. Hi, Jerry. How are
959
1:51:07 --> 1:51:14
you? So I am good. Great presentation. I swear. I love being part of everybody's presentation since
960
1:51:14 --> 1:51:18
I'm disabled by the shots. My mom's a murder from the shots. I'm like looking at your chart going,
961
1:51:18 --> 1:51:24
there I am. There's mom, you know, kind of thing. I know your story, Julie. Sometimes it's unnerving.
962
1:51:24 --> 1:51:28
You know, I'm like listening to this going, God, I'm like the poster child here. But no, I appreciate
963
1:51:28 --> 1:51:33
all of you greatly. And, you know, I think those disability numbers are probably even under reported.
964
1:51:33 --> 1:51:38
I speak with vaccine injured every night and they are not getting their disability, right? They're
965
1:51:38 --> 1:51:42
having to push this, that and the other. So like everything else, it's even probably worse. But
966
1:51:44 --> 1:51:49
and I'm working as hard as I can here locally. And it's the testing. You hit the nail on the head.
967
1:51:49 --> 1:51:53
You know, I went and got this blood transfusion in August and now I've got these spike antibody
968
1:51:53 --> 1:51:57
levels through the roof. And again, people are like, well, maybe it doesn't. I'm like, you know
969
1:51:57 --> 1:52:04
how do I get six bags of blood transfused? And now 30 days later, I've got 16,664 spike antibody
970
1:52:04 --> 1:52:10
dilution levels and now it's increased to 18,000. So it's just, it's crazy. But hopefully there's
971
1:52:10 --> 1:52:18
some work being done on that. I am and I think that, you know, my biggest concern is this nanotech,
972
1:52:18 --> 1:52:22
right? So the bots, the semiconductors, the wires, and there's a guy that, you know, we're going to
973
1:52:22 --> 1:52:27
go down to Sacramento to meet that does RF testing. So run the RF testing over my body,
974
1:52:27 --> 1:52:31
see if there's any of these crazy weird metals and things. And, you know, maybe if there's enough of
975
1:52:31 --> 1:52:36
them. But you know, we've assaulted our military with this stuff. So I don't know why. I guess
976
1:52:36 --> 1:52:42
here's my question. I swear I'm all over the place. But President Trump, how do you feel about him
977
1:52:42 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]er shot and a flu shot? Do you believe it? And then, you know, for me, it's so
978
1:52:48 --> 1:52:53
unnerving because either he didn't get it and he's bold-faced lying, which is a problem, or
979
1:52:53 --> 1:53:00
he took it and now somebody's basically taking a shot at our president who could drop dead tomorrow
980
1:53:00 --> 1:53:05
and has all this now tracking device all rolling through his body. And shouldn't we go arrest the
981
1:53:05 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]or that did this to him? So I put a copy of the letter from that White House doctor that did
982
1:53:09 --> 1:53:14
that. So what is your view on the Trump situation with those shots? Thank you.
983
1:53:14 --> 1:53:20
Okay. Thanks for those comments, Julie. I'm very aware of what happened to you because I
984
1:53:21 --> 1:53:27
know what happened. And I'm very worried. But nonetheless, we can't turn the clock back. We've
985
1:53:27 --> 1:53:34
got to deal with what we've got now. I'm very worried about the blood bank situation and whether
986
1:53:34 --> 1:53:42
the blood banks are contaminated. And my guess is they are. And so unless you desperately need it,
987
1:53:42 --> 1:53:48
I wouldn't personally have a blood transfusion unless I desperately need it. Now, in your case,
988
1:53:48 --> 1:53:52
you did desperately need it. You probably would have died if you didn't have it. So you needed
989
1:53:52 --> 1:53:57
red cells to carry the oxygen, otherwise you would have just succumbed. So you had no choice. You knew
990
1:53:57 --> 1:54:02
that because you're a nurse and you knew exactly where you were faced. Your spike antibodies are
991
1:54:02 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] measuring antibodies to the spike and they can go up and go down. And you can still be left
992
1:54:07 --> 1:54:13
with the prionic abnormal spike protein molecules in your body. And they can collect in a part of
993
1:54:13 --> 1:54:20
your body. So you're not out of the woods even if your antibody level goes down. And as I said,
994
1:54:20 --> 1:54:25
I'd be looking more at your cytokine levels there to monitor your clinical progress. So that's just
995
1:54:25 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]s, well, I could talk about that. And it certainly is a worry.
996
1:54:33 --> 1:54:39
But I don't think we need to get involved in that too much. The Trump booster is really a concern.
997
1:54:41 --> 1:54:49
He's obviously poorly advised about lots of things. I mean, he's economically very, very weak. The
998
1:54:49 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]ete joke in the economic world. I mean, there's just no way you can rescue the
999
1:54:54 --> 1:55:01
economy of America with tariffs. It's ridiculous. So he's demonstrated his lack of knowledge in the
1000
1:55:01 --> 1:55:07
world of economics. And he's clearly now demonstrated his lack of knowledge in regard
1001
1:55:07 --> 1:55:14
to these COVID shots. He's in denial probably because he did Operation Warp Speed and he thinks
1002
1:55:14 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] thing on earth when it actually wasn't. But I am equally concerned,
1003
1:55:20 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]erday about my concern that this could be a
1004
1:55:24 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]er shot, because we do not know what he's really been
1005
1:55:32 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]or, he said, what was in that shot? He wouldn't know. I'm sure he
1006
1:55:36 --> 1:55:43
wouldn't know. And that's a concern because as I said earlier, right at the get go, I said,
1007
1:55:43 --> 1:55:49
for all of his faults, which are many, I mean, Trump has so many faults, it's ridiculous, but
1008
1:55:49 --> 1:55:55
he is a moderating influence in the US government at the moment. And that's a good thing. So I don't
1009
1:55:55 --> 1:56:04
want to see the demise of Donald Trump. It would be bad for the United States. So I want to see him
1010
1:56:04 --> 1:56:11
survive and continue to be the president. I don't think he's perfect in any shape or form. In fact,
1011
1:56:11 --> 1:56:20
I endlessly criticise what he's doing on my economic analyses. But look, if this is another
1012
1:56:20 --> 1:56:25
assassination attempt, I would be very worried. Now, you can't, I want to bring up what's happened
1013
1:56:25 --> 1:56:31
to Joe Biden since he left office. Now, I've read a report that he's now got disseminated
1014
1:56:32 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]atic cancer in his bones and spread throughout his body. And yet, in the last
1015
1:56:38 --> 1:56:44
six months of his presidency, I think he had a medical examination and was given the,
1016
1:56:44 --> 1:56:49
oh, he's perfect. He's fine. He's, you know, nothing wrong with Joe Biden. How does a doctor
1017
1:56:49 --> 1:56:55
do that in a man of that age and not do a PSA reading? You must do a blood test PSA of men
1018
1:56:55 --> 1:56:59
of that age if you're going to do a medical examination. So we don't know what his PSA
1019
1:56:59 --> 1:57:04
reading was when he was president. It may have been normal. If it was normal, then he's suffering
1020
1:57:04 --> 1:57:11
from a turbo cancer. Right. I've lost you there, Julie. You're still there? She's there. She's
1021
1:57:11 --> 1:57:19
there. Okay. So if his PSA was normal a year ago, then he's got a turbo cancer and his days are
1022
1:57:19 --> 1:57:24
numbered. If however, he had an elevated PSA last year, I want to know why the people of America
1023
1:57:24 --> 1:57:30
weren't told about that. And if they didn't do a PSA reading on him, then I want to know who was
1024
1:57:30 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]or involved in looking after the president of America. And I'm equally concerned
1025
1:57:36 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]or looking after Donald Trump, because I think that most doctors are now
1026
1:57:41 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]rong critic of my profession now. I've been out of it for 18 years,
1027
1:57:47 --> 1:57:51
but I cannot believe what's happened to the profession of medicine. It's disgraceful,
1028
1:57:52 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] five years. So look, I'm very worried now because Donald Trump has been
1029
1:57:57 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]ed. We don't know what he's been given. And we don't know what could happen. So, and if we lose
1030
1:58:04 --> 1:58:09
him, we've lost a moderating influence in the US government. And that would be a tragic situation.
1031
1:58:10 --> 1:58:14
Thank you, sir. Thank you, Charles. Thank you, Stephen. Thank you, Julie. Now, before we go to
1032
1:58:14 --> 1:58:22
powder, Jerry, I'll make the observation that that Trump knows nothing about the economy. And yet the
1033
1:58:22 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]ock market in the US is booming. Those two statements
1034
1:58:28 --> 1:58:35
don't sit. No, the stock market has nothing to do with economic health, Charles, nothing at all.
1035
1:58:35 --> 1:58:42
No. What? No, it's just speculative madness in financial assets. That's all it is. It's got
1036
1:58:42 --> 1:58:47
nothing to do with the economy. You can look at the stock market in Venezuela, it's skyrocketing up.
1037
1:58:47 --> 1:58:51
It's the best in the world. You can look at the stock market. But you've given us these charts on the stock
1038
1:58:51 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]aw conclusions from. No, no, no, that's being playful here because there's,
1039
1:58:57 --> 1:59:04
you know, you're getting very subtle here that that is the money thought US was stuffed, it wouldn't be
1040
1:59:04 --> 1:59:11
ploughing it perhaps. No, no, no. Okay, let me reconcile that. The price of financial assets
1041
1:59:12 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]ratospherically while the economy is suffering. Even in the case of Venezuela and
1042
1:59:18 --> 1:59:23
Argentina, their stock markets have been rocketing up. Oh, you ought to see them. They're fantastic.
1043
1:59:24 --> 1:59:28
Going up, up, up, up, up. You know why? Because people are desperate to invest in something.
1044
1:59:28 --> 1:59:34
They don't trust their banking system, so they buy stocks. But no, that's not a signal of economic
1045
1:59:34 --> 1:59:40
harm at all. So there's no real correlation between stock markets going up and the health of the
1046
1:59:40 --> 1:59:46
economy. And the health of the economy. You can do a topic on that list. I think you bogged down
1047
1:59:46 --> 1:59:52
on that because I'd love to see that. It's well recognized in the world of both finance and
1048
1:59:52 --> 1:59:56
economics, Giles, to be honest. So it's not really. Well, I've been following the market since the mid
1049
1:59:56 --> 2:00:04
1970s. And that's a new concept to me. But we'll talk about it. All right, we go on. It's Paula.
1050
2:00:04 --> 2:00:08
What's happening with the Italian? Here you are. You're going to talk about Italy,
1051
2:00:08 --> 2:00:12
Gerry, in terms of Georgia, Maloney. But anyway, Paula will bring it to our attention.
1052
2:00:13 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] of all, thank you very much. Very informative. I'm in between France,
1053
2:00:19 --> 2:00:24
United Kingdom, where I lived for 25 years and worked. And then, but then, of course,
1054
2:00:24 --> 2:00:29
I'm also Italian. It was very interesting to hear your key sentence, Europe is too corrupted.
1055
2:00:29 --> 2:00:33
So I don't look at you, Sarah, I don't look at the economy going on there because it's just too
1056
2:00:33 --> 2:00:40
corrupted. And to me, that is a sign that is really in, we are in a huge decline in Europe.
1057
2:00:40 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] to get ready for the worst, so to speak. And so, so thank you for that sort of
1058
2:00:46 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]ion about your example of the China ship. So anyway,
1059
2:00:55 --> 2:01:01
I apologize because I'm getting a bit off topic, maybe given that, you know, been discussing very
1060
2:01:01 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ing issues on both on the genetic therapies, I call them genetic therapies,
1061
2:01:08 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ion is whether you intended that as a sort of metaphor,
1062
2:01:17 --> 2:01:26
because taking China as a model, I have a bit of a cognitive dissonance. You know how, I mean,
1063
2:01:26 --> 2:01:32
have you forgotten Tiananmen? Do we know what happened during what I call the sanitary
1064
2:01:32 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]atorship? I know people have been literally locked down in places. I know personal people who
1065
2:01:39 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction] told me, oh, this week, everything is going fine, an ex-student of mine told me at the time.
1066
2:01:45 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction] time they got the wrong delivery that was in Shanghai where they couldn't really
1067
2:01:51 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction] They delivered toilet paper instead of food, but that's fine because obviously
1068
2:01:57 --> 2:02:04
she couldn't say anything. So I was wondering whether this Chinese, whether this ship was more
1069
2:02:04 --> 2:02:13
of a metaphor. And the other comment is, we talk about Trump, and I fully agree with your vision
1070
2:02:14 --> 2:02:24
about Trump. And incidentally, I suspect that if we were president on the second round, I wonder
1071
2:02:24 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] gotten the shot because we know that normally the FAA would
1072
2:02:32 --> 2:02:39
never give pilots a medication that hasn't been approved. Normally, a medication has to be on the
1073
2:02:39 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] a year for them to be given to pilots. I wonder whether Trump would have
1074
2:02:43 --> 2:02:49
authorized that. So maybe that's why it was not allowed to stay in, so to speak, in spite of the
1075
2:02:49 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ion. So now that brings me to the second point. We talk about these
1076
2:02:56 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] really autonomy in making big decisions. We were talking about
1077
2:03:01 --> 2:03:08
foreign policy, but we forgot that they are not free. I mean, as long as the state could say
1078
2:03:08 --> 2:03:13
many things about that. But as long as the state as a nation doesn't own a bank, and the federal
1079
2:03:13 --> 2:03:17
bank is not a federal, no reserve, federal reserve bank is neither federal nor reserve.
1080
2:03:17 --> 2:03:23
And there is no country in the world, I would say, or maybe I'm happy to be told that I'm wrong,
1081
2:03:23 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ate does not own, they control the printing of the currency.
1082
2:03:31 --> 2:03:36
It's not sovereign. And so the leaders are not sovereign leaders. Okay. Thank you again.
1083
2:03:37 --> 2:03:37
Okay.
1084
2:03:39 --> 2:03:42
Grazie, Paola. Grazie.
1085
2:03:45 --> 2:03:50
Okay, quick things on what you raised. The peace arc is a metaphor. You're right. It's not going
1086
2:03:50 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] But it's great PR for China. And America should launch 100 peace arc ships,
1087
2:03:59 --> 2:04:06
right? I would tell Trump to do that tomorrow. If he picked up the phone to get some good advice,
1088
2:04:06 --> 2:04:11
launch 100 peace arcs tomorrow, right? Or announce the launch. You don't only announce it.
1089
2:04:12 --> 2:04:17
You'll win the world back if you do that. Right. So it's just a metaphor. You're right. I'm not a
1090
2:04:18 --> 2:04:25
supporter of communism, because communism is just part of utopian socialism. The Chinese situation
1091
2:04:25 --> 2:04:34
from a command and control is clearly communist. It's clearly totalitarian. But guess what? They
1092
2:04:34 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]em. It's what we call a pretend capitalist system. Let's call it
1093
2:04:46 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] excellent control of their economy. Excellent control. I follow the Chinese
1094
2:04:53 --> 2:04:59
economy very, very closely. They are the best managers of an economy on this planet. There is
1095
2:04:59 --> 2:05:04
no doubt about it. They really know what they're doing. They understand money. They understand
1096
2:05:04 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]and their finance system. They are not dependent upon borrower demand.
1097
2:05:12 --> 2:05:19
Now, borrower demand is what drives capitalist systems. You mentioned banks at the end.
1098
2:05:20 --> 2:05:26
The American Federal Reserve is privately owned, but it is one of the few privately owned central
1099
2:05:26 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] central banks in the world are owned by the governments. And central
1100
2:05:31 --> 2:05:38
banks, by the way, do not create money most of the time. The only time they create money is when
1101
2:05:38 --> 2:05:44
they do a QE program, which is very rare. Most of the money that's created in a capitalist economy
1102
2:05:44 --> 2:05:50
is created when a bank loan is made by a commercial bank, not the central bank. The central bank sets
1103
2:05:50 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] of money, the interest rate, but only at the short end of the curve. It's only overnight.
1104
2:05:56 --> 2:06:03
But the creation of money, of fresh new money, occurs when a new bank loan is created by a
1105
2:06:03 --> 2:06:08
commercial bank. Now, a bank can do that because, number one, it has a banking license, and number
1106
2:06:08 --> 2:06:11
two, it has a willing borrower. You've got to have the willing borrower. You can't create money without
1107
2:06:11 --> 2:06:18
a willing borrower. 98% of the fresh new money in our economies is created as a bank loan. So,
1108
2:06:19 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]ern economies are totally dependent upon borrower demand. And if borrower demand
1109
2:06:25 --> 2:06:30
declines, then it's difficult to rescue your economy. You can lower the interest rates
1110
2:06:31 --> 2:06:38
dramatically, down to almost zero, and that will hopefully rescue it. But in China, they're not
1111
2:06:38 --> 2:06:47
dependent upon borrower demand because they run a capital supply system, not a capital demand system.
1112
2:06:47 --> 2:06:52
They can force money into their banking system. I won't get into the nitty gritty of that, but
1113
2:06:52 --> 2:06:58
I've addressed with you that, yes, it's communist. Yes, it's totalitarian. I'm not in favour of that.
1114
2:06:58 --> 2:07:02
But equally, America is not a pure democracy. There is no pure democracy on Earth.
1115
2:07:02 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] as tyrannies of the 51%, or in some countries, it's as low as 35%. So,
1116
2:07:09 --> 2:07:15
tyranny is the norm. Don't get too carried away against this communist versus non-communist.
1117
2:07:15 --> 2:07:20
They're all tyrannies, basically, as far as I'm concerned. So, I think I've addressed your
1118
2:07:21 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] comment about the pilots. Yes, the pilots are a great concern. They can't
1119
2:07:26 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]d, as Kevin said. I'm very worried about them, and they're an important indicator
1120
2:07:34 --> 2:07:40
of what could happen. So, I think I've addressed all of your questions, and I agree that the EU is
1121
2:07:40 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]raits. It's completely controlled. The European Union is controlled by the most evil
1122
2:07:46 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]t, and they're just damaging the European Union.
1123
2:07:53 --> 2:08:00
They're damaging all the nations of the EU. Okay. Thank you, Paula and Grazia.
1124
2:08:01 --> 2:08:08
I got a message on Friday, Joey, that Italy and Hungary were leaving the EU, but I haven't seen
1125
2:08:08 --> 2:08:12
that reported anywhere else. But someone smart tell me that, number one. Number two, we've got
1126
2:08:12 --> 2:08:21
Bruce here who has presented to us, former FAA, Paula. Bruce says that the FAA aerospace
1127
2:08:21 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]etely corrupted and at least complicit. So, the FAA couldn't give us
1128
2:08:27 --> 2:08:34
shit about pilot health because of that corruption. So, Bruce, thank you for that very useful insight.
1129
2:08:34 --> 2:08:38
Thanks, Gerry. All right, we've got three to go, maybe four. We're finishing in 18 minutes.
1130
2:08:39 --> 2:08:46
Jeremy, our favorite dentist, as you know, Gerry from the Channel Islands, our only dentist in
1131
2:08:46 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] Okay. Thank you, Gerry. I mean, the questions have been great this evening. They've
1132
2:08:51 --> 2:08:56
sort of asked a lot of things I wanted to raise. So, I just wondered, Gerry, whether you had time
1133
2:08:56 --> 2:09:02
with your comment tonight or maybe in another boom finance one. One is, if Trump goes into
1134
2:09:02 --> 2:09:08
Venezuela, are you expecting an oil shock? And what, you know, do you think we all get that?
1135
2:09:08 --> 2:09:14
Because oil is so low at the moment. Two, are you thinking about, do you think we're going to get
1136
2:09:14 --> 2:09:20
capital controls coming in in the EU? Because they seem to be setting up for that with their
1137
2:09:20 --> 2:09:26
CBCDs and digital currencies. And now they want us to reveal our bank accounts if we travel into the
1138
2:09:26 --> 2:09:32
EU, which is just unbelievable. And whether you'd like to say anything about anything more about
1139
2:09:32 --> 2:09:39
Palantir and Peter Thiel and the large big tech companies which seem to be surrounding Trump
1140
2:09:40 --> 2:09:46
and JD Vance. And they seemed, yeah, any comments on that? And what do you see?
1141
2:09:46 --> 2:09:48
And I wonder what you think they might be up to.
1142
2:09:48 --> 2:09:58
Okay, quickly on Venezuela, Jeremy. I think Trump will not invade Venezuela. I think it would be
1143
2:09:58 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]er for the United States. So I don't think he will do that.
1144
2:10:06 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ay low and go lower in the United States. They think, they mistakenly
1145
2:10:12 --> 2:10:20
think this will harm Russia. Russia does not have to sell any oil at all to anybody. Okay,
1146
2:10:20 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] They have three of the most important elements in their economy.
1147
2:10:26 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] abundant food. They're a food exporter. They grow a lot of food. They have abundant energy.
1148
2:10:33 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] abundant water. Okay, and they have a big manufacturing factory. It's next door. It's
1149
2:10:38 --> 2:10:45
called China. They don't need to sell oil to anybody. Okay, so this idea that by lowering
1150
2:10:45 --> 2:10:52
the oil price, they'll harm the Russian economy and this is just ridiculous. Okay, it's not going
1151
2:10:52 --> 2:10:57
to happen. So that's, I think we've dealt with that. The capital controls in the UK. Yes,
1152
2:10:57 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] evil Prime Minister you've ever had. And that's by the way,
1153
2:11:01 --> 2:11:06
that's making a big statement because I think Boris Johnson was up there with all of them.
1154
2:11:07 --> 2:11:13
Yeah. And you've got a whole string of terrible Prime Ministers. So the UK is in a terrible,
1155
2:11:13 --> 2:11:20
terrible situation. I think it's controlled by the criminal cabal, the global criminal cabal.
1156
2:11:20 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ory as the worst Prime Minister ever. And I've been very
1157
2:11:26 --> 2:11:31
worried about the UK for a long time. I think it's just going to be, it's on the slippery slope.
1158
2:11:32 --> 2:11:38
Yeah. If you're living inside the UK, I would advise people to leave if they can.
1159
2:11:39 --> 2:11:44
But look, it's a terrible situation. I've been, I've lived inside the UK. I've visited many,
1160
2:11:44 --> 2:11:50
many, many times and nothing is getting better in the UK. Nothing. So that's very bad. And what was
1161
2:11:50 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ion? Just about sort of big tech cabal that seemed to be surrounding Trump. Yes,
1162
2:11:57 --> 2:12:04
yes. Yes, yes. And you know, I'm very concerned. This is what we call technocracy, the technocratic
1163
2:12:05 --> 2:12:10
influence on the US government at the moment. These people think that technology can solve all
1164
2:12:10 --> 2:12:16
of mankind's problems, that all you have to do is, it's a religion. You just worship technology
1165
2:12:16 --> 2:12:22
and you spend trillions of dollars on technology to solve all of mankind's problems. This is a false
1166
2:12:23 --> 2:12:30
religion. Okay. And it's being driven by these technocrats who are surrounding Trump,
1167
2:12:30 --> 2:12:35
unfortunately, which is why I don't want Trump to demise, going to demise. So they are very
1168
2:12:35 --> 2:12:40
dangerous, these people, very, very dangerous. And a lot of them don't even know how dangerous
1169
2:12:40 --> 2:12:47
they are because they're unwilling, what they called, they call useful idiots. Okay. They're
1170
2:12:47 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] had money rained upon them when they've got no great skill or
1171
2:12:54 --> 2:12:58
ability. Right? Billions of dollars have been rained upon them. And they think that they've
1172
2:12:58 --> 2:13:05
got some answers to the world's problems, but they haven't. Technocracy is not the way forward.
1173
2:13:05 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]e are very, very dangerous. And their influence has to be muted and stopped. And
1174
2:13:11 --> 2:13:17
Trump is a moderating influence, I think, on that to some degree. I could speak for a long time,
1175
2:13:18 --> 2:13:24
Musk and Thiel and what they did as boys and what families they came from and where they got to
1176
2:13:24 --> 2:13:29
where they are. And I'll just say one thing about Elon Musk. His first company was purchased for
1177
2:13:29 --> 2:13:34
$300 million when it barely, I don't think he was making any profit at all. So who purchased it?
1178
2:13:34 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] Computer. What did they do with it? They closed it down. Why was he, why did he have $300
1179
2:13:39 --> 2:13:48
million rained upon him at the age of, I think he was 26, 27? It's very obvious if you know why.
1180
2:13:49 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]e are having money rained upon them to act in the interests of others. And they often
1181
2:13:56 --> 2:14:03
don't know. They're unknowing. They think they're geniuses because, oh, well, I'm a genius. I've had
1182
2:14:03 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] be a genius. Therefore, I should have influence on the
1183
2:14:07 --> 2:14:14
world. But quite frankly, they've been carefully selected, often as boys or as teenagers or young
1184
2:14:14 --> 2:14:18
adults. And they've had money rained upon them. They've been carefully selected. They've been
1185
2:14:18 --> 2:14:23
carefully promoted into positions of great power and influence. And a lot of them don't even know
1186
2:14:23 --> 2:14:28
what they're doing. Some do. And I think the ones who do know what they're doing, they're the
1187
2:14:28 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] a conversation about that on another day. I hope that's the answer to
1188
2:14:33 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]ion. It's a big issue. Thanks, Jeremy. Thank you, Jeremy. And on technocracy, I just put in the
1189
2:14:41 --> 2:14:48
chat the link to Patrick Wood's presentation to this group. And Patrick is the expert on technocracy
1190
2:14:49 --> 2:14:54
in my view, and maybe Jerry's. But I'll put the link in there. You can watch him again of the
1191
2:14:54 --> 2:14:59
evils of the technocratic game, where the technocrats say, leave it all to them, Jerry.
1192
2:14:59 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] no idea. All right, Carla Dean is a mere human.
1193
2:15:08 --> 2:15:15
Hello. Thank you. Hi. I would like for you to comment a little bit about
1194
2:15:16 --> 2:15:27
this new self-amplifying injection that's coming about with the M DNA, the next, and they call it
1195
2:15:27 --> 2:15:36
next spike. And of course, next in Latin, meaning violent death. I wanted to know what your just
1196
2:15:36 --> 2:15:43
comment on that for us, please. And thank you. Thanks, Carla. This is very worrying self
1197
2:15:43 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ifying. It's, it's what I said before the term I used for prionic disease,
1198
2:15:50 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ifying. So one prion, which is an abnormal protein molecule can create
1199
2:15:56 --> 2:16:04
another one. So it has some sort of triggering effect to create prion cascades prion. They're
1200
2:16:04 --> 2:16:12
like, you know, the snowfall that develops into a, you know, a dramatic collapse of a of an ice
1201
2:16:12 --> 2:16:18
shelf or a snow shelf. So once it gets going, it gets a momentum of itself. That's what I'm trying
1202
2:16:18 --> 2:16:25
to get across. So, so prion activity is self amplifying by itself, we've already got a
1203
2:16:25 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ifying situation. If, if we're dealing with prionic disease being injected into people's
1204
2:16:33 --> 2:16:38
bodies, which already self amplifying, and it's thought that prion disease is infectious.
1205
2:16:39 --> 2:16:46
So therefore you can spread a prion from one person to the next. And the most, the most obvious
1206
2:16:46 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]e of that is the mad cow disease where they slaughtered thousands of cattle in the UK,
1207
2:16:53 --> 2:16:58
I think because they were a risk that people should not eat meat. Now the reason they were
1208
2:16:58 --> 2:17:02
worried there is because of the transmission of prions, because Kreuzfeldt-Chakhov disease,
1209
2:17:02 --> 2:17:10
the mad cow disease is a prionic disease. We've already got self amplification. Okay. And if you
1210
2:17:10 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]ification technology, you're just boosting that. It's
1211
2:17:16 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]er, Carladean, extremely sinister. We are heading, I think, steadily and slowly
1212
2:17:25 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]ed either in death, premature death, or premature disability
1213
2:17:34 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]t billions. This won't happen overnight. It'll happen slowly. But it seems
1214
2:17:41 --> 2:17:48
that we're going down that road. So yes, it's a worrying development, but I would say it's already
1215
2:17:48 --> 2:17:56
we've already got it. We've already, if, if prionic activity is present, and it appears that we've got
1216
2:17:56 --> 2:18:01
some evidence that that's true, then we've already got self amplification. We've already got in,
1217
2:18:01 --> 2:18:08
we've already got shedding. Okay. Because prions can shed. So, and the shedding of a prion could be
1218
2:18:08 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]e breathing, just close proximity to people. So I avoid large social
1219
2:18:16 --> 2:18:21
settings as much as I can now. But I, you can't avoid them completely. You can't cut yourself off
1220
2:18:21 --> 2:18:26
from society. I've got to go to two big social events in the next few weeks. And I know I have
1221
2:18:26 --> 2:18:33
to go. So, and I'm invited to speak at meetings. So, you know, you can't cut yourself off. We are
1222
2:18:33 --> 2:18:39
all part of this. We can't escape the threat. It's real for everybody on the planet, including our
1223
2:18:39 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]en, our grandchildren, and their future children. This is the greatest crime ever committed.
1224
2:18:46 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]alin look like schoolboy beginners. This is, this is a really, really scary
1225
2:18:55 --> 2:19:01
situation. Thank you. I hope that answered that question. Thanks. Thanks, Carl. Great question.
1226
2:19:01 --> 2:19:06
Thank you, Jerry. Two questions to go. And so, Marv and then Tom, and then we'll let you go,
1227
2:19:06 --> 2:19:13
Jerry. And Charles, I would like to speak as well, just briefly. Okay. Yep. No worries, Stephen.
1228
2:19:14 --> 2:19:24
Hey, what's this? The human species is the most adaptable species ever on this planet.
1229
2:19:25 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction], do you think we can adapt to a peaceful society? Do you think that's possible
1230
2:19:36 --> 2:19:40
that we could live in peace? Do you think the human species can do that? Thank you.
1231
2:19:41 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction], we must become a peaceful society. There's no, can we do it?
1232
2:19:48 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]s that goal today and tomorrow and the day after,
1233
2:19:55 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]anding that we can achieve it, we'll never get there.
1234
2:20:01 --> 2:20:08
There's, it's imperative, Marv. It's not, can we do it? It's, we must do it. And I think we can,
1235
2:20:08 --> 2:20:14
I think we can evolve. And I think it basically boils down to this. I think we have to understand
1236
2:20:14 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ory and the role of psychopaths in our leadership.
1237
2:20:20 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ed to military power and to political power. They are interested in power
1238
2:20:26 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ory of mankind, it's about psychopathic behaviour over and over
1239
2:20:33 --> 2:20:41
and over again. The Romans crucified 11,000 men on one day. That's the biggest number they did.
1240
2:20:41 --> 2:20:47
Right? Psychopathic behaviour is the norm in our planet and we have to evolve
1241
2:20:48 --> 2:20:55
beyond that as a society. All of the politicians that I witness, almost, there are some exceptions,
1242
2:20:55 --> 2:21:02
they're rare, but nearly all of the politicians we witness on a daily basis clearly have psychopathic
1243
2:21:02 --> 2:21:08
qualities. There's just no doubt. They're very much interested and addicted to power. They want
1244
2:21:08 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]e. You've got senators in your country that have been there for 40 years and more.
1245
2:21:15 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]ill be there? They're addicted to power. That's obvious. Addicted. So as a society,
1246
2:21:23 --> 2:21:29
yeah, sorry. Yeah. So as a society, what I want to encourage is a discussion about
1247
2:21:30 --> 2:21:37
psychopaths and what they do to our society, because the tribe, the tribe has to start to
1248
2:21:37 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]art to send a very strong tribal message to psychopaths that
1249
2:21:45 --> 2:21:51
we will not tolerate their behaviour anymore, that we will not give them power, that we will
1250
2:21:51 --> 2:21:59
exclude them from power. Okay? We must rise up as a large tribe of people in each nation
1251
2:21:59 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]atement to our psychopaths and I think the psychopaths are at least 10% of the
1252
2:22:05 --> 2:22:12
human population. Under the Milgram experiments, you'd be familiar with the Milgram experiments,
1253
2:22:12 --> 2:22:21
up to 65% gave the maximum voltage to the victims. 65% when they're instructed by an authority figure.
1254
2:22:23 --> 2:22:29
That means that my 10% might be even higher than that and I think it is, but I think I say 10%. I
1255
2:22:29 --> 2:22:34
think psychopathic behaviour is contained easily within 10%. So we've got to have this discussion
1256
2:22:34 --> 2:22:42
about what psychopaths do, what their qualities are and we have to develop societal intolerance
1257
2:22:42 --> 2:22:49
of psychopathic endeavours in companies, in clubs, in political parties, in governments.
1258
2:22:50 --> 2:22:57
And until we do that, we can't evolve where you want us to evolve to. So we've got to have that
1259
2:22:57 --> 2:23:03
discussion. It's very, very important and remember this, what happens when psychopaths get control
1260
2:23:03 --> 2:23:09
of a nation? They can capture the nation and create a hostage situation. You're basically
1261
2:23:09 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]age to your government, right? You're captured and when you're a hostage, you're at risk of
1262
2:23:15 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]ome. That's when some of the people will fall in love with their captors.
1263
2:23:22 --> 2:23:28
Okay? So this is when people love their dictators and love their authoritarian governments
1264
2:23:29 --> 2:23:35
and they've got Stockholm syndrome. So all of these dynamics have to be discussed as a whole
1265
2:23:35 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] to elevate this whole knowledge about psychopathic behaviour and we have to
1266
2:23:42 --> 2:23:47
inhibit it through tribal pressure. Does that answer your question, Marv?
1267
2:23:48 --> 2:23:54
Yeah, yeah, that's a great discussion. I've wondered about this for decades, but I think
1268
2:23:54 --> 2:24:02
the psychopathy follows the power. Power is the addictive substance and once the addictive process
1269
2:24:03 --> 2:24:09
begins, then you have, you know, you can look at the Trump administration and it's very easy
1270
2:24:09 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]ive disorders. You know, that's what encourages me about RFK.
1271
2:24:15 --> 2:24:21
He has been clean and sober for 40 years. Yes, yeah, but I think that's a really good comment.
1272
2:24:21 --> 2:24:27
You know, under the Milgram experiments, everybody should read about the Milgram
1273
2:24:27 --> 2:24:36
experiments because 65% of the people who were giving the shocks would give an almost fatal shock
1274
2:24:37 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]ions of an authority figure. That's a very big slice, 65%. All of the details
1275
2:24:45 --> 2:24:50
surrounding the Milgram experiments need to be examined by everybody. I would encourage everybody
1276
2:24:50 --> 2:24:56
to go and do that. I can provide a website that shows all of that. We've got to have this discussion
1277
2:24:56 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction], one of the ways we can exclude psychopathic behaviour is to
1278
2:25:03 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]ing our representatives and not voting. So sortition is
1279
2:25:10 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] lottery systems like they did in ancient Greece,
1280
2:25:16 --> 2:25:21
you block the psychopaths. They can't manipulate lotteries. So we have to have a very heavy
1281
2:25:21 --> 2:25:28
discussion about running our representative elections on lotteries. And the point is,
1282
2:25:28 --> 2:25:34
and the point, Marv, is, Jerry, just to expand on that sortition, that the people who go into
1283
2:25:34 --> 2:25:38
the lottery are those who want to be the leaders. That is not correct. It's not picked from the
1284
2:25:38 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] you nominate for leadership and then sortition.
1285
2:25:43 --> 2:25:47
Well, no, you can have a general population, but you've got to exclude some people from the
1286
2:25:47 --> 2:25:51
population. You wouldn't have a sortition about people who don't want to be the leader,
1287
2:25:52 --> 2:26:01
surely? Yes, you would. No, you have huge incompetence. We've already got huge incompetence.
1288
2:26:01 --> 2:26:09
It can't get any worse. That's good. All right, we've got to move quickly because we've got Tom
1289
2:26:09 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ephen to finish. Thank you, Marv. Good question. Okay, yeah, Jerry, you're inspiring.
1290
2:26:15 --> 2:26:22
Thank you for your work. And I really, I follow your sub-stacks and I think that I've lost,
1291
2:26:22 --> 2:26:28
I mean, they're in a different folder now. I have to go back and make sure I keep looking at Boom
1292
2:26:28 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction] one other one. Well, about COVID, I think focused on COVID.
1293
2:26:36 --> 2:26:45
So, yeah, I just helped tabulate an election and there's all kinds of conflict and everyone
1294
2:26:45 --> 2:26:50
fighting about the rules and so forth. And we use rank choice voting, but they wanted, they
1295
2:26:50 --> 2:26:58
wanted disapproval voting and then they also wanted to be able to abstain. So just a real mess.
1296
2:26:59 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ions. You probably are not going to answer all of them. The first one's
1297
2:27:03 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction] on point. You had looked at blood work. You had showed us early on
1298
2:27:12 --> 2:27:16
that both the vaccinated and unvaccinated had issues and you were getting the lab
1299
2:27:17 --> 2:27:26
reports. And I noticed the indigenous Canadian, you know, the Indians in Canada got together and
1300
2:27:26 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]atement saying that they were calling for an end to the vaccines. And they had in their
1301
2:27:32 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]e they had, Anna Mahalshia. And she's one of these, right away,
1302
2:27:41 --> 2:27:45
I thought I'm not going to share this because, so that's like, what do you, you know, what do
1303
2:27:45 --> 2:27:51
you think about the self-assembly stuff and, you know, blinking lights? I'll quickly deal. I can
1304
2:27:51 --> 2:27:57
quickly deal with this, Tom. Okay, let me quickly deal with this issue about the, what is, what is
1305
2:27:57 --> 2:28:04
nanotechnology, all right? Let's just think about that word. I can assure you, I can assure you
1306
2:28:05 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction] certainly got nanotechnology in them. And the reason for that,
1307
2:28:12 --> 2:28:21
that I can say that is lipid nanoparticles are used as their transfection mechanism.
1308
2:28:21 --> 2:28:29
I'll say it again, lipid nanoparticles. And when you are injected, you get 40 to 100 trillion
1309
2:28:30 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ed. Now you can't see nanoparticles with a standard microscope.
1310
2:28:36 --> 2:28:42
You've got to do an electron microscopy, right? You can't see them. You can't get someone look
1311
2:28:42 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction] microscope and say, oh, there's nanotechnology. You can't do that.
1312
2:28:49 --> 2:28:56
In the world of biology and in the world of physics, everything is nano, everything.
1313
2:28:57 --> 2:29:04
Atoms are nano, molecules are nano, right? Everything is nano. Well, we know the lipids,
1314
2:29:04 --> 2:29:12
they vibrate, those are self-assembling nano structures. So my point is, my point is I don't
1315
2:29:12 --> 2:29:18
have to do any laboratory analysis. I can just point out that just the transfection mechanism
1316
2:29:18 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]ion. If someone says there's no nanotechnology in these products,
1317
2:29:23 --> 2:29:29
you're a nutter. You just say, yes, there is. There's lipid nanoparticles, right? So you don't
1318
2:29:29 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction] the argument. I'm referring to the electronic transmitters and the
1319
2:29:38 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]esses and the radio transmitters. Anything and everything is possible, Tom.
1320
2:29:43 --> 2:29:51
We're dealing with psychopathic evil criminals who are seeking to harm and murder millions and
1321
2:29:51 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]e. Do you think they'll go, oh, well, maybe we won't give them this weapon. Maybe
1322
2:29:57 --> 2:30:04
we'll leave that weapon out. No, these people have a pathway. They're following a well-known path.
1323
2:30:04 --> 2:30:09
We can argue about all the weapons. There's not much point arguing about the weapons.
1324
2:30:09 --> 2:30:12
So what do you think of Anna Mahal's show?
1325
2:30:14 --> 2:30:17
I don't wish to give a personal opinion on a program like this. There's no point.
1326
2:30:19 --> 2:30:24
You're arguing about this weapon versus that weapon, this person versus that. I'm not interested
1327
2:30:24 --> 2:30:33
in that. There's abundant evidence. What about wealth and equality? I know you refer to Fourier,
1328
2:30:34 --> 2:30:41
I believe, and utopia and socialism. And certainly, like in the Marxism comes out of that.
1329
2:30:41 --> 2:30:48
I'm around people that are Marxists and also egalitarians that believe that there's this
1330
2:30:48 --> 2:30:53
ridiculous wealth inequality. You talked about the psychopaths. There's also sociopaths, right?
1331
2:30:55 --> 2:31:01
How are we going to, I mean, well, we naturally, if we can have a peaceful world, can we have a
1332
2:31:01 --> 2:31:11
world with less wealth equality? And how can that be done? Okay. Well, that's a very big question.
1333
2:31:11 --> 2:31:16
Look, psychopaths and sociopaths are just words that are the same thing. Don't get hung up on
1334
2:31:16 --> 2:31:20
any difference. There's no difference. People think psychopathy is people going around murdering
1335
2:31:20 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction]e. It's not. Psychopathy and sociopathy is at least 10% of the population. That's just a
1336
2:31:28 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction]ering people. And so, so psychopathy and sociopathy is
1337
2:31:34 --> 2:31:41
common. It's the norm. Don't be surprised by it. I think we can evolve beyond that, but we've got to
1338
2:31:41 --> 2:31:48
have the discussion. We've got to have the tribal discussion about what it is about the history of
1339
2:31:48 --> 2:31:56
mankind and make a tribal population wide decision to identify psychopathic behavior,
1340
2:31:56 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction] a conversation about it and to eliminate it in our institutions. And until we begin that
1341
2:32:02 --> 2:32:09
process, we can't succeed. So we've got to begin the process. I'm trying to get that process rolling.
1342
2:32:09 --> 2:32:14
And so that's my answer. We've just got to get going. We can't argue on the details. We've got
1343
2:32:14 --> 2:32:21
to talk about this issue, psychopathology and sociopathology. And we've got to, we've got to
1344
2:32:21 --> 2:32:30
exclude them through shaming. We've got to shame them out of their tendencies. Okay.
1345
2:32:31 --> 2:32:35
Okay. And then on the financial side, a fun thing, and then I'll go,
1346
2:32:37 --> 2:32:44
if I earn cash out on the market, but I have a house loan and I earn this cash and I'm not getting
1347
2:32:44 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]ion to my bank and I pay off my loan entirely with cash, I make this
1348
2:32:49 --> 2:32:58
huge windfall payment. The asset for the loan goes away, but they end up with this cash
1349
2:32:59 --> 2:33:05
and they can put that cash into the federal reserve. So they're better off at the end.
1350
2:33:07 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction]icated discussion about the origination of money and the death
1351
2:33:12 --> 2:33:17
of money and what happens to the money supply over time. I don't have really time to discuss it,
1352
2:33:18 --> 2:33:23
Tom. I will go back to what you said before about can we get a better wealth distribution?
1353
2:33:23 --> 2:33:31
That's more important. I think we can do that by changing our financial sector. We need a lot more
1354
2:33:31 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction]ate-owned banks. We have become too dependent upon shareholder-owned
1355
2:33:38 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction] a lot of ideas about how to fix the financial system, but I have to go into a lot of
1356
2:33:44 --> 2:33:48
long discussion about that in terms of the money supply, which you're talking about here. It is
1357
2:33:48 --> 2:33:54
very, very complex what you're talking about there. Only 2% of our money supply is cash,
1358
2:33:54 --> 2:33:59
98% is credit. We'll never pay off 98%. Would you agree with me that that bank benefited more
1359
2:33:59 --> 2:34:08
than if I had used it? It doesn't matter, Tom, because 98% of your money supply is credit
1360
2:34:08 --> 2:34:16
and 2% is cash. If you used all of the cash in circulation to pay off the loan,
1361
2:34:16 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction] no difference. It's not really material. It doesn't have a sufficient
1362
2:34:22 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]ion. They attempted to have a debate between Warren Mosler, who's MMT,
1363
2:34:32 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction] Schweitzer, who represents the Just Money Sovereign Money Movement. It never happened,
1364
2:34:39 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]e don't believe in fractional reserve banking.
1365
2:34:45 --> 2:34:50
I don't know. You're not an MMT. You're not a Just Money. Where do you stand in that?
1366
2:34:51 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]ination, and that's a communist monetary system where the
1367
2:34:57 --> 2:35:04
central bank controls everything. MMT is a pathway to communist monetary system. Under communism,
1368
2:35:04 --> 2:35:10
there's only one real bank, and the USSR only had one bank. It was the central bank. MMT is
1369
2:35:10 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction] to that. You mentioned fractional reserve banking. It doesn't exist. There's no such
1370
2:35:15 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction]ional reserve banking. I can go into that in detail if you wish.
1371
2:35:20 --> 2:35:24
Well, zero reserve banking then, right?
1372
2:35:24 --> 2:35:29
Yes. We've already got that. I can explain that in terms of money volume, money supply,
1373
2:35:29 --> 2:35:33
but it's too complicated. Then sound money, you mentioned that. I'm not a sound money man.
1374
2:35:33 --> 2:35:38
There's no such thing as sound money. If you want to back money with an asset such as gold,
1375
2:35:38 --> 2:35:43
you've got to keep digging gold out of the ground to expand your money supply, or you've got to
1376
2:35:43 --> 2:35:46
increase the price of gold to expand your money supply.
1377
2:35:46 --> 2:35:50
No, this wouldn't be sound money. This would be sovereign money where the government just
1378
2:35:50 --> 2:35:55
issues fiat money. Yes. If the government can issue that already, it's called cash.
1379
2:35:56 --> 2:36:01
The government can issue cash. The treasury can issue large amounts of cash. The government could
1380
2:36:01 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]oyee with a cash packet every Friday afternoon, tomorrow. You could do it-
1381
2:36:08 --> 2:36:09
Without debt.
1382
2:36:09 --> 2:36:10
Without debt.
1383
2:36:10 --> 2:36:12
No debt at all. The treasury-
1384
2:36:12 --> 2:36:14
So you're okay with that? You're okay with that?
1385
2:36:14 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction], we can get into that, but yes. I'll just quickly say-
1386
2:36:19 --> 2:36:20
Thank you very much.
1387
2:36:20 --> 2:36:26
The treasury can issue cash. It's not debt. No debt. By the way, debt is not a problem.
1388
2:36:27 --> 2:36:28
Next, Stephen.
1389
2:36:28 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]ephen?
1390
2:36:33 --> 2:36:38
Jerry, I'm trying to save my voice at the moment. I hope you'll forgive me. I would like to say that
1391
2:36:38 --> 2:36:43
you made some great presentations to us previously, but I think this was the best.
1392
2:36:43 --> 2:36:49
I think you're really in control of the questions and you keep the focus on what you want to
1393
2:36:50 --> 2:36:56
say and that's what good presenters should do and not be deviated by people asking questions,
1394
2:36:56 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction]ually take them away from the main points.
1395
2:37:00 --> 2:37:05
So I think you've done remarkably well. I think I accurately described you as a polymath.
1396
2:37:06 --> 2:37:10
Would you agree? And I have a further question, a very important question.
1397
2:37:13 --> 2:37:14
Are you a polymath?
1398
2:37:14 --> 2:37:20
I don't like to say I am. I'm a humble person.
1399
2:37:20 --> 2:37:21
Okay.
1400
2:37:22 --> 2:37:25
But I think that's enough. Yes.
1401
2:37:27 --> 2:37:28
I think I am.
1402
2:37:28 --> 2:37:33
So I want to ask you a very important question. You're a doctor, as you know, in Australia,
1403
2:37:33 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction]or, but nonetheless, you said a very important thing to me some time ago.
1404
2:37:38 --> 2:37:42
You said one thing I can do, Stephen, is talk to patients.
1405
2:37:43 --> 2:37:51
And of course, I'm very, very disappointed with the medical profession and they're getting worse.
1406
2:37:53 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction] don't know how to save them. So they think now that practice in medicine consists of
1407
2:37:59 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]ually talking to the patient. And, you know, I've heard a few mentions
1408
2:38:07 --> 2:38:13
by non-doctors on this call that, you know, the answer could be tests. No, that's what they're
1409
2:38:13 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]ream media. It's all a lie. That's not how you practice medicine.
1410
2:38:18 --> 2:38:22
So one of the things I would like to say to you as a medical doctor, to you,
1411
2:38:23 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]ralia, and we've always been pretty close. We agreed on cults very early
1412
2:38:28 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction] of the Rings, I don't know whether you remember that.
1413
2:38:34 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction] of the Rings and the moment in the Golding's book, the brilliant moment when
1414
2:38:43 --> 2:38:49
he said, and so when the Navy officer, British Naval officer appeared on the island where the
1415
2:38:49 --> 2:38:56
where these savages, these boys had become savages in tribes, it said, Golding said,
1416
2:38:57 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction]ories to the naval officer. This was who represented order,
1417
2:39:04 --> 2:39:09
of course, to them. That wasn't in the book. And some of the boys began to cry. And I made
1418
2:39:09 --> 2:39:16
the observation to you that that was the end of the cult, you know, of the boys fighting each other
1419
2:39:16 --> 2:39:22
in tribes. They formed these cults and they were destroying each other. So I think that's the
1420
2:39:22 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction]ate of human beings. That's, you know, how human beings work. They gather together and
1421
2:39:29 --> 2:39:36
they kind of try to convince other human beings to join their cult. But there's one thing that I'm
1422
2:39:36 --> 2:39:41
really concerned about, Jerry, because I think we as doctors should be able to make diagnoses.
1423
2:39:42 --> 2:39:49
And particularly, we should be able to, a good doctor should be able to hypothesize, and we
1424
2:39:49 --> 2:39:56
should be allowed to hypothesize. I think you did mention it. I think that we, most doctors have
1425
2:39:56 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction]etely talked about this for some time now. I just don't seem to be able to make any headway,
1426
2:40:01 --> 2:40:06
but we're not going to make any headway as human beings until we recognize that huge numbers of
1427
2:40:06 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction] been damaged by psychological torture by their own governments and gaslighting. And it's
1428
2:40:15 --> 2:40:22
blatant. And this is continuing in the UK, but other countries as well. I think that it's inevitable
1429
2:40:22 --> 2:40:27
when you've got that kind of psychological torture going on, inflicted by their own governments,
1430
2:40:28 --> 2:40:35
that there's going to be PTSD, high levels of anxiety, depression, destabilization of huge
1431
2:40:35 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction]ockholm syndrome. And you will never ever solve the problems, in my
1432
2:40:42 --> 2:40:49
opinion, until we have a diagnosis of Stockholm syndrome, until proved otherwise, after the
1433
2:40:49 --> 2:40:58
outrages of 2020, 2021, [privacy contact redaction] want, I would like your views on that as a medical
1434
2:40:58 --> 2:41:[privacy contact redaction]or. Are you there, Jerry? You're frozen, Jerry.
1435
2:41:11 --> 2:41:16
You're frozen, Jerry, or have I frozen? No, you're still here.
1436
2:41:18 --> 2:41:21
Jerry's frozen. You've frozen him into inactivity, Stephen.
1437
2:41:23 --> 2:41:27
Yeah, well, he'll come back. I'd just like the answer to that question, even if it's one word.
1438
2:41:34 --> 2:41:39
Sorry, Jerry, we lost you then. What do you say? Yeah, hurry. Hold on. Hold on.
1439
2:41:41 --> 2:41:50
Hello, can you hear me? We can now, yeah. Oh, good. Okay. Now, my wife made a phone call. We're hanging
1440
2:41:50 --> 2:41:57
off her phone at the moment. Sorry, I'll, yes, I can remember the discussions you and I had,
1441
2:41:57 --> 2:42:02
I think now going on three, four years ago, where we discussed Lord of the Flies, where you said I
1442
2:42:02 --> 2:42:07
was the commander turning up at the beach. Yes. Where we discussed Stockholm, where I brought up
1443
2:42:07 --> 2:42:[privacy contact redaction]ome. We had that discussion. There's nothing has changed. You're
1444
2:42:12 --> 2:42:[privacy contact redaction]ly what's going on. And I talked about it earlier. I don't know
1445
2:42:17 --> 2:42:22
if you've been listening to everything, but Stockholm syndrome is clearly happening. And
1446
2:42:22 --> 2:42:28
we've been captured by the psychopathic criminals that control our governments. I don't think that
1447
2:42:28 --> 2:42:34
we're our governments are in control of themselves or their nations anymore. So we're captured. We're
1448
2:42:34 --> 2:42:[privacy contact redaction]ages. And because of that, you'll get certain people suffering from Stockholm syndrome and
1449
2:42:40 --> 2:42:[privacy contact redaction]ors. They support their captors. They believe their captors are doing
1450
2:42:46 --> 2:42:51
the right thing. So a conversation about Stockholm syndrome must be part of this. I agree.
1451
2:42:52 --> 2:42:[privacy contact redaction] to the medical profession, I read a report the other day. I don't know how accurate
1452
2:42:58 --> 2:43:05
it is. It said that prior to COVID in America, the trust in doctors was at 75%. And that it's
1453
2:43:05 --> 2:43:12
now reduced to 40%. That's a very good thing in lots of ways, because people are realising that
1454
2:43:12 --> 2:43:21
the medical profession misled them, misled them into a very dark future. So first thing we have
1455
2:43:21 --> 2:43:28
to do is rescue the medical profession. We must rescue the medical profession. So we've got to
1456
2:43:28 --> 2:43:[privacy contact redaction]rategy to do that. We've got to explain to them what they've done. We've got to get them
1457
2:43:33 --> 2:43:38
to admit to what they've done. And we've got to get reform in the medical profession. So
1458
2:43:38 --> 2:43:45
all of your comments, I agree with, they're all absolutely accurate about what's going on.
1459
2:43:45 --> 2:43:51
So this again boils down to the societal conversation about what's happened and
1460
2:43:52 --> 2:43:57
how we ended up in this situation. We are no different, no different at all to people who've
1461
2:43:57 --> 2:44:[privacy contact redaction]ured in totalitarian situations in the past, such as the Romans, such as the people under
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Genghis Khan, the people under Stalin, the people under Hitler. We're in the same position now.
1463
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We're all in the Nazi. I tell people we're all living now in a Nazi concentration camp.
1464
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Every one of us is living in a Nazi concentration camp. The Nazis are in control. We have to,
1465
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as a group, realise our situation. And as a tribal group, we have to shame, shame these people into
1466
2:44:34 --> 2:44:41
leaving their positions of power and rendering society peaceful again. So we have a very
1467
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difficult task now because a lot of the inmates have got Stockholm syndrome. They think the guards
1468
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have done a good job. Absolutely. I think huge numbers of people are suffering from Stockholm
1469
2:44:53 --> 2:45:[privacy contact redaction]ome. So I watch them very carefully every day and I see that they're very, very passive.
1470
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They're waiting for the next order. And I'm able to observe large numbers of human beings,
1471
2:45:08 --> 2:45:14
if you like, on the beach where I live. And it's a perfect place to observe them because they sit,
1472
2:45:14 --> 2:45:[privacy contact redaction]are at the sea. But guess what? You wouldn't approach any of them for help
1473
2:45:21 --> 2:45:29
because they look, their whole body language is so meek, meek and waiting for the next order.
1474
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It looks like that to me, rather like the picture of the Jews standing in the mile long queue,
1475
2:45:37 --> 2:45:42
I think, to be shot in the back of the head. And you just think, why would you do that? You know,
1476
2:45:42 --> 2:45:45
why wouldn't you just take your chance and run at one of the guards in the hope that you could take
1477
2:45:45 --> 2:45:[privacy contact redaction] from him and then shoot a few of them before they shot you? That's right. Stephen,
1478
2:45:51 --> 2:45:54
I want to, you said something very interesting then, and I want to show you something. I'll
1479
2:45:54 --> 2:46:00
share the screen and show you that humans break up into two groups. I want to show it to you
1480
2:46:00 --> 2:46:06
so everybody can see this. And this is a summary of the Milgram experiment I mentioned before.
1481
2:46:08 --> 2:46:14
Can you see that on the screen? Not at the moment, no, but it'll come. It's saying,
1482
2:46:14 --> 2:46:20
oh, yes, now I can. Yes. Okay. This website is called psychotrix.com Milgram experiment.
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2:46:21 --> 2:46:28
I'll put it in the chat. Under the Milgram experiment conditions, Milgram eventually
1484
2:46:28 --> 2:46:33
came up with this idea that human beings divide up into these two states. One is, sorry?
1485
2:46:34 --> 2:46:37
Very well. I'm just on a meeting and I called you back in about half an hour.
1486
2:46:38 --> 2:46:44
Terrific. So it, it, people divide up into an autonomous state, autonomous state,
1487
2:46:45 --> 2:46:[privacy contact redaction]ate. In the, I'll read it, in the autonomous state, individuals perceive themselves
1488
2:46:51 --> 2:46:[privacy contact redaction]ions and they act accordingly to their principles and their values.
1489
2:46:59 --> 2:47:[privacy contact redaction] a sense of personal control and accountability. And the agentic state,
1490
2:47:05 --> 2:47:12
under the Milgram experiment, Milgram suggested that in certain situations of individual shift
1491
2:47:12 --> 2:47:[privacy contact redaction]ate. Here they see themselves as merely agents or instruments carrying out the
1492
2:47:20 --> 2:47:27
wishes of an authority figure. Responsibility for their actions is transferred to the authority,
1493
2:47:27 --> 2:47:[privacy contact redaction]rain. The focus shifts, the focus shifts from the morality of the
1494
2:47:34 --> 2:47:[privacy contact redaction]ers. This, Stanley Milgram wrote these words a long time ago,
1495
2:47:44 --> 2:47:[privacy contact redaction]e into great positions of stress where they're essentially
1496
2:47:50 --> 2:47:[privacy contact redaction]ages, which the people were under the Milgram experiment. And they divide up into
1497
2:47:56 --> 2:48:[privacy contact redaction]aw attention to his state called the agentic state. The term
1498
2:48:04 --> 2:48:13
analogy is very, very important because what they're talking about now is agentic artificial
1499
2:48:13 --> 2:48:[privacy contact redaction]n't heard that term before, go and look it up. Agentic artificial
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2:48:23 --> 2:48:32
intelligence. They're using this term deliberately. They are clearly on a pathway to controlling
1501
2:48:32 --> 2:48:[privacy contact redaction]ate where they will simply follow orders by an authority figure.
1502
2:48:40 --> 2:48:[privacy contact redaction] all cases, they're turning us into robots, right? Human robots. So this summary,
1503
2:48:51 --> 2:48:58
I'll put this summary of the Milgram experiment in the chat. And the other thing I think everybody
1504
2:48:58 --> 2:49:10
should look at is what Yuri Besmanov had to tell the world when he made his statements.
1505
2:49:10 --> 2:49:19
And hang on, I'll just put this in the chat. Milgram experiment summary. And Yuri Besmanov,
1506
2:49:19 --> 2:49:32
I'll get that. He made a lecture on what was happening way back in 1984, 83, 84. And I'll put
1507
2:49:32 --> 2:49:38
this in the chat. Give me one second. Everybody should read these two, which should read the
1508
2:49:38 --> 2:49:45
Milgram experiment summary. And they should watch Yuri Besmanov's lecture because Yuri Besmanov tells
1509
2:49:45 --> 2:49:52
the world what's coming. And he told the world in 1983, it's a beautiful, beautiful lecture.
1510
2:49:52 --> 2:49:57
You've got to concentrate. You've got to take notes. You've got to go back and listen to what
1511
2:49:57 --> 2:50:06
he's saying. It's a brilliant, a brilliant lesson for everybody to learn. So yes, yes, yes,
1512
2:50:06 --> 2:50:[privacy contact redaction]ured. We are living in a Nazi concentration camp.
1513
2:50:12 --> 2:50:16
We've got to learn what the Milgram experiment lessons are. And we've got to learn about Yuri
1514
2:50:16 --> 2:50:25
Besmanov. And we've got to understand this term, the agentic state and the role, the coming role of
1515
2:50:25 --> 2:50:33
agentic artificial intelligence. Okay. So I won't say any more about that. Thank you.
1516
2:50:34 --> 2:50:41
One more sentence, Charles, to Jerry. So, Jerry, I think the artificial intelligence,
1517
2:50:41 --> 2:50:48
which is being relentlessly pushed by the BBC, so it's clearly bad, that that should be pushed
1518
2:50:48 --> 2:50:[privacy contact redaction]e really don't know, even the people who think that artificial intelligence is the
1519
2:50:54 --> 2:51:00
answer to everything, really don't know what the effects on human beings will be in the context
1520
2:51:00 --> 2:51:06
of what we know now about the damage that's been done to human beings all over the world
1521
2:51:06 --> 2:51:13
by social media, by these damned mobile phones and computers. Computers have ruined our lives.
1522
2:51:13 --> 2:51:19
And now they want to take over us with artificial intelligence and get us to submit to artificial.
1523
2:51:19 --> 2:51:26
What do you think about that? Very quickly. Yes, you're correct. You're correct. I would
1524
2:51:26 --> 2:51:30
encourage everybody to read about the Milgram experiment summary I put up, please, please.
1525
2:51:30 --> 2:51:36
Get that link. Get going. Read what you read. Listen to what Yuri Besmanov had to say and
1526
2:51:36 --> 2:51:[privacy contact redaction]and that there is already a big discussion about agentic artificial intelligence. Look up
1527
2:51:44 --> 2:51:49
all about it. They are literally telling you what they're going to do. They are going to turn
1528
2:51:50 --> 2:51:[privacy contact redaction]e into robots. They know they can do it with at least 65% of the population,
1529
2:51:56 --> 2:52:03
right? Because the Milgram experiment tells them that. So the agentic AI is the ultimate threat.
1530
2:52:04 --> 2:52:10
They're not using this word by happenstance. They know the word. They know why they're using it.
1531
2:52:11 --> 2:52:17
It's from the Milgram experiment. Everybody must learn and tell everybody they know about
1532
2:52:17 --> 2:52:22
the Milgram experiment. Yeah, excellent. Thank you so much for talking to us.
1533
2:52:22 --> 2:52:28
Charles, why are you interrupting me relentlessly and no one else? Okay.
1534
2:52:31 --> 2:52:37
Thank you, Jerry, for your brilliant presentation. Thanks for listening to me. Everybody,
1535
2:52:37 --> 2:52:[privacy contact redaction]ening to me. Thank you, Jerry. Thank you, Stephen. Thank you, everybody,
1536
2:52:41 --> 2:52:47
for the comments. Ciao, ciao for now. Save the chat, everybody. Ciao. Ciao, ciao.
1537
2:52:47 --> 2:52:49
Thank you, Jerry. Thank you.
1538
2:52:49 --> 2:52:[privacy contact redaction]ion for Tom Rodman, the group, if you've got time.