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0:00:00 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]art about that. I'll see if I can find it while you guys are talking here.
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0:00:07 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ephen here yet? It's five past. We'll get this show on the road.
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He will be. Yes, we will get this show on the road. As I said, Carlene, thank you for organizing
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Jerome. So everybody welcome to Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics International. In today's
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discussion, this group was founded by Dr. Stephen Frost during the darkest days of the COVID scam
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responses with a desire to pursue truth, ethics, justice, freedom, and health. Stephen has stood
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0:00:47 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] government and power over the years and has been a whistleblower and activist. His
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medical specialty is radiology. I'm Charles Covess, the moderator of this group. I'm
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0:00:56 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ralasia's passion provocateur. I practiced law for 20 years before changing career 30 years ago.
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0:01:03 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] 12 years, I've helped parents and lawyers to strategize remedies for vaccine
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damage and damage from bad medical advice. Bad medical advice, I think is now was number three
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0:01:15 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] cause of death in America. I think it's become number one on the
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0:01:20 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] data that I've seen. I'm also the CEO of an industrial hemp company and hemp is going to be
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a core element in our fight for freedom. We comprise lots of professions, including doctors,
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lawyers, homeopaths, journalists, scientists, filmmakers, professors, peacemakers, troublemakers,
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and we're from all around the world. Many of us thought that vaccines were okay. Now many of us
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proudly say, yes, we're passionate anti-vaxxers. If this is your first time here, welcome and feel
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free to introduce yourself in the chat and where you're from. If you publish a newsletter or podcast,
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0:01:54 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] a radio or TV show, or you've written a book, put the links into the chat so we can
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follow you, promote you and find you. Most of us understand we're in the middle of World War Three
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and there are various battle lines as part of this war. And as we were talking earlier,
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when you're in war, you have to be willing to do the work to suffer, to fight for what you believe
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0:02:15 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]and the development of science and that the science is never settled.
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Some of us believe in viruses, some of us do not believe in viruses, some are on the fence.
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This meeting runs for two and a half hours after which, for those with the time, Tom Rodman runs
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a video telegram meeting. Tom puts the links into the chat if you're able to join. We will listen to
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0:02:39 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] presenter, Dr. Jerome Corsi, PhD. Or Jerome Corsi, that's a good question. Is it Dr.
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Jerome Corsi, PhD or Jerome Corsi, PhD? Anyway, nice question. You can have both. We'll listen to
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Jerome Corsi for as long as Jerome wishes to speak and then we have Q&A. Stephen Frost,
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0:02:58 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ablished Tradition asks the first questions for 15 minutes. There's no censorship,
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it's a free speech environment with appropriate moderating. The accusations of anti-Semitism for
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0:03:09 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ivities of anyone who's Jewish keep coming loud and clear. I assure you
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it's not anti-Semitic to ask about anybody what they're doing, but that's the danger of free
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speech. I don't say anything that might offend somebody. If you are offended by anything, be
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0:03:27 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ed. We reject the offense industry that requires nobody
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to say anything that may offend another. Jerome Corsi has written books on stuff that will offend
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0:03:38 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]e, including the climate emergency hoax. Jerome, I'm sure you're used to facing the
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accusation of being offensive. However, we come with an attitude and perspective of love, not fear.
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Fear is the opposite of love. Fear squashes you. Love, on the other hand, expands you.
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0:03:59 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ian message is to love your enemies. It's pretty easy to love
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0:04:04 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]e who are all nice to each other. How do you love someone who's not nice to you?
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These twice-weekly meetings are not just talkfests. An extraordinary range of actions and initiatives
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have been generated from linkages made by attendees in these meetings. And many of our presenters
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have made wonderful links and used resources that have been offered to them from participants in
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0:04:24 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] a solution or a product or links or resources that will help
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0:04:28 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]e, put the details into the chat. If you here have any recommendations for people you want to
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0:04:34 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction], please send me an email. I'll happily do that. The meeting is recorded
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0:04:39 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]oaded onto the Rumble channel. And by the way, if any of you want to say anything that
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you don't want on the recording, you're okay to say, listen, I want to say something. I don't want
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0:04:53 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] it. It's easy enough to pause the recording while you might want to say something
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privately and then we'll go back to the recording. And now welcome to Jerome Corsi, our guest
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presenter. We thank you, Jerome, for giving us your time, wisdom and insights. We thank you,
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Carla Dean-Graves, for organizing Jerome to be with us and enabling Jerome to be with us. And thank
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you, Steve and Frost again for creating this group and for organizing Jerome to be here. Hello,
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Stephen. Your hair is beautifully brushed. Good to see you. Thank you. Thanks. So, Jerome,
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Jerome's bio, we've circulated to everybody. Your latest book came out. I just want to share that
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because it's very apposite, just so the people on the recording get it. So here is the book synopsis.
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This is Jerome's latest book, The Truth About Neo-Marxism, Cultural Maoism and Anarchy Exposing
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Woke Insanity in an Age of Disinformation. And this is the second of Jerome's trilogy.
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0:06:03 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] ideology has evolved into its present-day woke madness
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that began with Immanuel Kant and Hegel continued through Gramsci. Yes, we've been talking about him,
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The Frankfurt School and the cover copy, this is volume two of the Great Awakening trilogy,
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0:06:22 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]rates that today's anti-racist critical theory is a neo-Marxist ideology that seeks power
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0:06:29 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] cultural revolution. Jerome exposes the intellectual bankruptcy of the
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0:06:34 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ic, drawing extensively on original texts and over 3,000 footnotes, everybody.
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It's extraordinary. Jerome reframes the social justice argument from the realm of magical
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0:06:45 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ical politics. And Jerome has published over 30 books, everybody.
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30, gosh, I've only done four on economics, history and politics, including six New York Times
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0:06:58 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]sellers. The book is available. Jerome will tell us where and have a look. There's the website,
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thetruthcentral.com. I've been listening to a number of Jerome's podcasts, wonderful. And
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Jerome has ventured into telemedicine developing Habla con un men, and offering Spanish-speaking
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0:07:20 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ronic consultation with a Spanish-speaking physician licensed in
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0:07:26 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ate. GetLongivityMeds.com for those interested in medical consultations aimed at
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living longer and better. And Jerome, that's me, I want to live longer and better. Over to you.
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Thank you so much for being with us, and you have full ability to share your screen as you wish.
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Well, thank you very much. It is a great honor to be with you. And it's hard to know where to begin.
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I'm going to begin with the current book. And it's available on Amazon. All my books are available
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on Amazon. And that's what it looks like. That's the cover right there. And it is part of the
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0:08:05 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] book I wrote in this series was on the energy. It is the truth about,
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you can see the truth about energy, global warming, and climate change,
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and it's exposing climate lies and an age of disinformation. So this book, first of all,
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says that the left lies. And the second book says why they lie. They live in an entirely different
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psychological reality, an entire different phenomenology. The left is constructed through
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a series of iterations from Marx and Hegel. And I go through the political philosophy in great
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detail in showing how the neo-modernism has combined to create the subjective reality.
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Now, let me start with the climate change for a minute. Because the fundamental science,
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0:09:00 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]anding that global warming is not caused by carbon dioxide,
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reveals the fundamental insanity of the left, and that the science is not anywhere near justified.
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So we begin with carbon dioxide. It's a trace molecule in the atmosphere, 0.04% approximately.
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0:09:25 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] powerful greenhouse gas is water vapor. Water vapor is 70% of all greenhouse gases.
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The earth 600 million years ago had much more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere than we've
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had today. We've had ice ages in that period of time. The most powerful force that affects
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the earth's temperature is the sun. And the global warming crowd wants to ignore the sun's impact,
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minimize it. It's really pretty ridiculous. I mean, I point out often in broadcasts and interviews
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that at night time it's dark. That's because the sun isn't in the sky. We call that night.
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And it's colder. And then the sun comes into the sky, we call that day, and it's warmer,
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because the sun's in the sky. And the fundamental aspect of the earth is the rotation, which these
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0:10:20 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] not taught in school anymore. I mean, it's amazing how little is being taught
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0:10:24 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] greenhouse gases, the irrigation that the earth absorbs
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during the day would evaporate out into outer space at night. This place would be too cold to live.
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0:10:40 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]er to trap some of the heat at night on the earth.
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0:10:48 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] with the sun, the sun burns a little bit hotter. We have a warming period,
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like the medieval warming period. When there's fewer sunspots and it burns cooler, we have a
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little ice age as we had in the Napoleonic era. Michael Mann's hockey stick, which argues that
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the earth's temperature was copacetic through entire earth history until the industrial age
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0:11:13 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]ocarbon fuels. And then the earth's temperature shot up in extreme
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is nonsense. And the Clonic [privacy contact redaction] Anglia demonstrate how Michael
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Mann, who created this hockey stick graph and the others, falsified the data. And I explained that
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in great detail. The earth has 4.6 billion years of earth's history. 80% of the earth's history
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pre-Cambrian. There was nothing living on the surface of the earth. Last 20% of earth's history
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we're talking about. Weather is a natural function of the earth. The sun hits at the equator and
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0:11:57 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ribute the heat from the equator to the upper atmosphere into the poles.
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There are very extreme forces involved in this. Earth, the currents in the oceans, we have El Nino
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right now coming up in the Pacific Ocean. It's going to have massive changes in the coming winter.
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These forces are enormous. Every 100,000 years when the earth gets farther from the sun, the
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Milankovitch cycles, which are complex, we have an ice age. And it's not going to matter how much
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carbon dioxide there is on earth. In the earth history, there were five extinctions before human
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beings ever got here. The earth is not a stable place. It has had massive cataclysmic change,
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as well as gradual change in its combination. But the cataclysmic changes like the asteroid that hit
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in the Yucatan 65 million years ago and contributed to the wiping out of the dinosaurs
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are the kinds of massive changes that the earth has experienced. And these again have nothing to
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do with carbon dioxide. So I went back to the original writings in the post-war period,
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where various thinkers were beginning to develop this whole idea of global warming.
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And I found that some of the early thinkers were talking about resource limitations. They were
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concerned that we were running out of resources. There were too many human beings. And as such,
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we needed to limit the population. Harrison Brown, who was a nuclear scientist and worked on the
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0:13:42 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction] developing the atomic bomb in World War II, in 1954, wrote a book called
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The Challenge of Man's Future. And then he fundamentally framed the argument that we needed
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0:13:55 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]er to preserve the world's resources. It was a Malthusian idea.
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And he proposed world government to end overpopulation, restriction of sexual
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incourse, abortion, sterilization, fertilization control. And he said we're running out of fossil
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fuels. Well, then you had Paul Ehrlich coming along, who also in the population bomb was on
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the same theme, until he met John Holdren, another nuclear scientist, who combined with Ehrlich and
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0:14:30 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction], Ehrlich's specialty was he was an etymologist. He studied butterflies.
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He never said there were too many butterflies. He said there were too many people.
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0:14:40 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]en said if we're going to really limit capitalism, which was their aim, and shrink
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the population, we have to have an existential threat. And so Holdren concocted this idea of
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carbon dioxide being a greenhouse gas and that the industrial age was going to produce too much of
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0:15:01 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction], they thought there might be an ice age. But then they quickly changed it to be global
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warming. And that's what stuck. But it evolved eventually. By the time it got to AOC and the
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Green New Deal, it was out and out a neo-Marxist movement. And so the environmentalists,
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0:15:21 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]art in depopulation, end up being a neo-Marxist movement aimed at eliminating
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capitalism. If we eliminated the use of hydrocarbon fuels, we would very quickly be in a
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0:15:34 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]rial society would not function. So that's the fundamental basis here
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0:15:43 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ing these ideas did so to be destructive. They intended to destroy
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0:15:50 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ate by depriving us of hydrocarbon fuels. They knew this would limit
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0:15:57 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]arve many in the third world. And they did not care because their goal
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was to limit population. They were depopulationists. By the way, no fossil ever created any fuel.
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Fossil fuels, as they're called, hydrocarbon fuels, are a natural ongoing product of the Earth.
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The Fischer-Tropsch equations, which were developed by German chemists in the interregnum
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between the two wars, Germany had a lot of coal, but it did not have oil. And so going into World
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War II, the German chemists were tasked with figuring out how to synthesize oil. They came
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up with a process in which coal could be converted into various petroleum products. In doing so,
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they came up with the equations that show how the Earth manufactures hydrocarbon fuels.
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Fundamentally, a combination of taking something that's hydrogen, something that has carbon,
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and under extreme heat and temperature and pressure, with the presence of a catalyst like
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iron oxide, hydrocarbon straight line, hydrocarbon chains are formed. And this process got to be very
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0:17:11 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction], China today still runs the largest Fischer-Tropsch plants on the
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Earth. We tried it after World War II when we got the German science with our scientists going in
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0:17:26 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]uring the German documents. We did try to build them, but they were not economically
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feasible given the abundance and cheapness of hydrocarbon fuels. So there's a lot of lying
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in this that goes on, and it becomes really a secular religion. And what the second book shows
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0:17:44 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]arts out with Kant saying that all of our perceptions are
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0:17:53 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] the basis of how we perceive our reality. Kant did have an
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a priori and categorical imperatives. He felt that there was still, it wasn't unlimited
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0:18:07 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ive interpretation. There was an objective reality, and that we had an intuitive knowledge
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of this, which he felt in the perfection of pure reason would produce categorical imperatives or
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moral rules by which everyone could live and no one could disagree with. Hegel took Kant and he
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essentially eliminated much of the deity that's in Kant to say that this was a mechanical process,
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0:18:36 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ic, such that history was designed to evolve into higher and higher forms of civilization
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through these world-significant figures like Napoleon. He was very much believing that the
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0:18:51 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]e would be the ultimate survivors in a world that would be advanced through this dialectic.
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It's almost magical thinking. There's a mystical element in Kant that there is a force that is
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0:19:05 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]ined to evolve into superhuman. And by the time Marx got a hold of that, Marx was, by the way,
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0:19:13 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] He hated God. He resented that, you know, God was in charge of the fundamental
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0:19:22 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]en of Eden. He embraces the idea that Satan says God does not want you to
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have this secret of the fruit because you could improve this place. God wants it to be ruined.
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And so therefore, if you'll partake with me, we'll make this place perfect. And there is an element
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in Marx in which God is marginalized. Of course, classical Marxism failed. We did not get a cultural,
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we did not get a, in 1848 when the European revolutions were occurring, we did not have
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workers of the world arise. By the time the labor unions were created, communists were realizing
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all through the world that communism is a fundamental doctrine failed. It began to be adopted and
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changed by Gramsci, who was an Italian communist before World War II with these prison notebooks,
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and he focused on let's destroy the culture of capitalism. And capitalism is ugly. It makes
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0:20:23 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]e work. Their labor is taken advantage of by the capitalists. And if we just destroy the
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culture. So Gramsci hit on that we need to get rid of God, we need to get rid of family, we need to
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0:20:37 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ate, we need to fundamentally change the culture. And as this
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evolved, I think the next big development was really the Frankfurt School, which grabbed onto
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another modification of Marxism in which the Frankfurt School, largely coming to the United
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States after escaping Nazism, started combining Freud with Gramsci and saying that essentially
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0:21:05 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]-Oedipal world in which sexual liberation, the fundamental
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0:21:12 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]ed was that civilization requires inhibition of
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human sexual impulses. And by the time Marcuse got a hold of it, he wanted uninhibited sex
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and began getting the idea of sex, drugs, and rock and roll as being the cultural divisive factor
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0:21:31 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]roy capitalism. As it merged with postmodernism, and now I'm talking about people
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0:21:37 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction], and my favorite is Baudrillard. These people began to say all perception is
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0:21:45 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] who wrote simulacra and simulations said everything is a language
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game, everything is a narrative. There is no subjective reality, it's how we construct it.
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0:21:59 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] the perfect reality if we want to. And we just have to
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0:22:06 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ive reality that we try to define is just simply another narrative.
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He was picked up by the Matrix movies which begin with the Baudrillard book, but he rejected the
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said there is no perception of reality other than subjective. He was an nihilist. But it evolved into
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essentially a schizophrenia. There were some of the actually embracing the idea that whatever
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identity you imagined, whatever identity you could create for yourself was equally valid,
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value relativism. And so therefore it had to be respected. And then you had others like Habermas
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that came up with discourse narratives that put together a consensus of values that were
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superior. And it's like John Lennon, you know, imagine a world without God, imagine a world
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without boundaries. We are the believers, there are many of us, won't you join us?
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Well, I prefer to imagine there was a world without John Lennon because these are very
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0:23:21 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ive ideas. And what's happened is they become totalitarian. The left has always been
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0:23:28 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] on no discourse, they insist on no confrontation, no debate.
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They don't really want to teach the fundamental science. And we're developing two generations in
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0:23:40 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] been taught to hate America, which is an extremely dangerous situation.
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0:23:45 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] book will be about transhumanism, artificial intelligence, perpetual life extinction.
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I think as usual, this neo-Marxist cultural Maoism movement, and we're going through a cultural
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0:23:59 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]ates right now, are only the useful idiots, the real powers to be,
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the World Economic Forum. There's always been an elitist group that think they can control all the
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power, they can have the resources of the earth for themselves. They and their machines will
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merge together to form a higher intelligence. They will extend life and they will have
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0:24:27 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]ivity, which will be abundant, and they don't need the billions of people who are here.
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So therefore, the underlying idea is that the first to go when the World Economic Forum gets
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control will be the woke, because they won't want any more disruption. And the oligarchy which takes
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hold is really an old idea. I mean, Hitler would have been happy to have a small group of
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0:24:54 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]s in charge together with the multinational corporations,
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and genocide to him was an acceptable idea. It was not just the Jews who would have been happy to
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exterminate the Poles and a number of other people would be considered inferior, to create living
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space for the Germans. And even there, there would have been a hierarchy of the select.
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These are old ideas. These are ancient ideas where the king and the serfdom.
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0:25:28 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] is the earth is abundant. I follow Julian Simon, who was a resource economist,
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who came to a fundamentally different position and said, we're not going to run out of oil.
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We're not going to run out of oil. By the time we run out of oil, we'll have another fuel we'll be
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using. We'll find our technology improves, we can get oil. It was harder to get more cheaply.
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We will begin to find that it was more abundant than we thought it was. And by the time we're
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really utilizing coal, we'll be on the oil. By the time we're on the oil, Julian Simon said we
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should be on the nuclear and whatever is beyond nuclear. That the ultimate resource for Julian
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Simon was human intelligence. So for his concern was how many Mozarts and Beethovens and
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0:26:15 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]? And the human beings can populate the earth in greater
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numbers. If we had the vision that human beings are creations of God, shouldn't be chopped up in
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the womb. We get very satanic ideas that merge in these movements. And so when it came to the
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pandemic, I began to see again the and I started studying the, I started reading the medical
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0:26:46 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] Zelenko and realized that hydroxychloroquine had been recognized
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for a long time as a isophor, which would open up the cells such that zinc would protect the cells
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0:27:02 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ication of the virus within the cells. And COVID was a very strange,
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again, this question of virus and bacteria is a murky line, I think, because Dr. Zelenko had
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0:27:18 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine, zinc and azithromycin. You wouldn't usually use an
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0:27:24 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]erial agent together to combat a virus, but yet COVID seemed to get into the receptor that
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was ACE2 receptor that got into the heart and lungs. And once the disease got into the heart
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and lungs, you had this massive cladocomix storm, this huge reaction of the immune system to try to
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0:27:52 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]e died from the treatments they were receiving on these respirators,
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0:27:59 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine could have done much to cure people. So in that
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period of time, I was working with Dr. Graves, who was also involved, we were trying to
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0:28:12 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine. And this was nonsense that even Fauci had written
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0:28:18 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine being effective against these kinds of SARS
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viruses. And it was relatively cheap. So I got invited to participate with the group
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in telemedicine. I got an email one day from a gentleman who said, why don't you help us
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with telemedicine? We will find doctors to do the hydroxychloroquine, Zelenko's protocol,
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0:28:45 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]in. And I did that. And we did extremely well during the pandemic with
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0:28:56 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]e, helped thousands of people. And we became the go-to site.
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And of course, I came under a congressional investigation for doing it. I'll return to
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that theme in a minute. But that led me into also going into telemedicine, because I want to
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decentralize the government's control of medicine. I want to break this chain of big pharmacy,
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creating diseases to produce vaccines that don't work, that ultimately go along with their
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0:29:30 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction], since 1974, depopulation has been the official policy of
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0:29:38 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ates government. Kissinger and National Security Memorandum 200 wrote a
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0:29:45 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ive saying that the goal of the United States government was depopulation.
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And that has never been rescinded. So I've created two or three websites now. I decided I worked for
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two years with a Google partnership team, Trillo, which is a company headquartered in California,
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it's owned by Indians, Hindu from India. And the programers are Muslim from Pakistan. And they
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0:30:19 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]rative software for Oblicon and MD, speak with an MD in Spanish. I
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0:30:26 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]e, regardless of documentation, to be able to talk with Spanish
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0:30:35 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ors. And I've created a program, Oblicon and MD, which is now being unrolled.
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I've got the support of the, here's one of the, you know, we can see that very well, but it's a
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0:30:47 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction] which shows, you know, a Spanish speaking doctor is in your telephone. That's the thing.
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You don't have to go to the emergency room. You don't have to go to a doctor who won't understand
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what you're saying. And then we, National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference,
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40,000 churches is endorsing this as well as the National Hispanic Pastors Alliance. So we have a
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0:31:10 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ors. And I'm saying this puts the congregation in your phone.
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And you can change this. You can change your messages. You can have donations
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and links to Oblicon and MD through QRs. Okay, now I want to cover a couple more things.
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And then I'm going to open it to questions. I don't want to monopolize the time. I'd rather
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0:31:35 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] lay out the basis of the framework of who I am and what I'm doing.
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I'm [privacy contact redaction]arted getting, I've had a massive career in banking. I've had three
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careers. I've had a career in academics. I left academics. I felt academics was too restrictive
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on increasingly becoming liberal. And I felt it was not what I had hoped it would be. I got my PhD
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0:32:05 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] in political science when I was 25. And at that time, I thought we could make impacts
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by doing academic work. And I came to realize how politicized the universities were even in the 1970s.
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I did some major work for the National Science Foundation. I did a project in New Mexico for
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four years, a randomized field experiment that showed you could use telephone technology
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0:32:30 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]oyment insurance and welfare hearings. It was fairly revolutionary at the time.
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But it informed me later that you could use the telephone to do medical practice. And I've always
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0:32:41 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ood how the technology extends our ability to reach people and needs can be used in this in
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0:32:47 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]e rather than in the attempt to control people.
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And my career in politics began in 2004. During the Vietnam War, I had known John O'Neill.
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0:33:07 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] each other. I went to Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio,
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0:33:11 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] And John was in Annapolis. And he went on to Vietnam. And he took
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over the command of Carrie's boat, Swift Boat Book, John Carrie. I'd had eczema. I wouldn't take me
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in the military. So I worked at civil violence research centers at Case Western Reserve. And
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0:33:31 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction], I worked at the civil violence research center under John
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0:33:37 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] dog Carrie and the Vietnam veterans against the war. So when
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John O'Neill was going to, when John Carrie was running for president in 2004, and I had seen
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John Carrie debate John O'Neill and the Dick Cavichow in the 1970s, I wondered if I should call
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John and help him. And I had a sense not yet. It wasn't the time. But 2004, I called John O'Neill
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and said, John, Jerry Corsi, I apologized for neglecting the friendship for 37 years.
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They said, that's okay. The phones work both ways. When I realized he was going to do something with
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the Vietnam veterans, Swift Boat veterans go against John Carrie. I said, well, John, you've
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0:34:19 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ory. I've got you've got Vietnam. I wasn't there. I've got what he did in the Vietnam
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0:34:25 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]er and verse. So let's combine. And we did. And we wrote unfit
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for command and became a number one New York Times bestseller. I followed that in 2008 with
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0:34:38 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]seller, The Obama Nation, which showed that Barack Obama was not
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who he said he was. But he was a committed Marxist had been trained by Frank Marshall Davis
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as a child, and had a history that seemed like he his life was a CIA legend. Because the pieces
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didn't put together and you couldn't document any part of it. So that launched me on writing
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0:35:03 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] been controversial. 2016. I've known Donald Trump for 40 years when I had a
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career in banking. I've had a very diverse career. And for a number of years, I was working to
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get banks into insurance and security sales when the banks were prohibited by Glass Stegall from
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0:35:26 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]s to do it. A Walter Wriston, one of the prominent bankers in New York
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said to me one day said, I want to be in these other businesses. He was with Citibank at the time.
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I said, well, Mr. Wriston, the law prevents it. He says, of course, you don't understand.
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0:35:44 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] in banking, first, we change the business. Then the regulations change, or we change the
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regulators. Well, that was a fundamental lesson for me. And I began to realize how change could
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0:35:58 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]ed. And I think one of the key themes of my life is that it's the truth that you've got to
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0:36:06 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]e in a way they can understand it. But when they see that,
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you know, the truth is, you know, banking, deregulated banking can offer more services
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and get more competition. When they see that deregulating energy, which I'm also involved
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in right now, gets third party energy to be sold. Are we are you saying something I didn't hear?
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No, no, no, okay. Well, I'll just continue for a few more minutes. I in 2016,
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I got together, I supported Donald Trump for president. And we've known each other for a long
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time. As I said, when I was doing this banking, I was a VIP guest in the Plaza Hotel when he owned
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0:36:51 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]aff and we got to know each other. I mean, it was not that we
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weren't having dinner together or anything of that nature. But I was a VIP guest and he was very
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gracious. And he did know who I was and had followed me subsequently. And would call me from
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time to time. And I was working with Roger Stone. And Roger, of course, was working very closely
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with Donald Trump. When it came to the Mueller investigation on Russian collusion,
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0:37:20 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] with Julian Assange. And the linchpin of the Mueller
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0:37:28 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ole the emails from Hillary Clinton and gave them the same
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0:37:35 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] them to Assange. And that Assange coordinated with Donald Trump
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to time the release of these emails so as to do the most harm to Hillary Clinton's campaign.
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0:37:50 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] batch of emails that had gotten released by the time the Democratic National
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0:37:54 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]arted in 2016. And Assange released a group of emails that showed that Debbie Wasserman
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0:38:00 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]inated with Hillary to make sure Bernie Sanders could not win the
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primaries. And Debbie Wasserman Schultz resigned the day the Democratic National Committee opened.
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Assange said he had a second batch of emails. What happened was that in a flight to Italy,
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and I was in, I was at 25th wedding anniversary to a woman who's by the way now divorcing me
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after 32 years, she got tired of all the politics. That's going on now. But at any rate,
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I figured out on that trip that Assange had Podesta's emails. And no one told me,
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I've known John Podesta and I figured, I didn't think that the Russians had stolen the emails,
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I figured it was an inside job because I had excellent intelligence in how the
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0:38:50 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ems together. And I understood that the transfers of data
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0:38:56 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ed it had to have been an inside job. And that the groups that were
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0:39:04 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ole it were Democratic operatives that Hillary influenced.
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0:39:10 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]arted writing about all that. And I told Roger Stone from Italy that that put that Assange
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0:39:18 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]a's emails, I described what was going to be in the emails without having seen them.
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I made it sound like I had a source because I didn't think he'd believe me otherwise.
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Well, the FBI knocked on my door on August in 2018, just before my birthday,
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and wanted me to come to the grand jury. I spent 40 hours with them. I handed over all my devices,
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my cell phones, my laptop, everything, and went in to tell the truth. They first asked me a couple
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0:39:47 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ions. Did I want to go see Julian Assange? I forgot a few emails. You get picked up by the FBI.
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0:39:53 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] you to an unmarked FBI building in southeast Washington, DC. You have to turn on
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all your cell phones, all your electronic equipment at the door. They bring you up to a room with no
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windows. They put you in there. And you can't leave until they say you can leave. And we'll go on for
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hours and hours and hours. Well, then you've got about eight or nine FBI and three special
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prosecutors from Mueller's team, and me and my lawyer, David Gray, who is my local lawyer here
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in New Jersey. I did not hire a Washington firm. Washington firms work closely with the bureaucracy
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0:40:32 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] and go to the Washington law firms. They all work together.
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It's cozy. They make deals behind your back that are not to your favor. At any rate,
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when they all walked out of the room, because I forgot a few emails, they came back in.
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I basically said to them, I thought you guys were good at profiling. I came here to help you.
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And I'd recommend you not behave like this. I forgot. They let me go back. I amended the
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0:40:57 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]imony and the emails. I had indicated early on that if somebody wanted me to go see Julian
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Assange, I would have done it. I just thought it was a fool's errand because he wasn't going to
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tell me what he had. He was going to keep it for himself. And I'd figured it out.
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So at the end of all this 40 hours, it took two months with the FBI. They said,
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you're lying. You have a source. You won't tell us. We're going to indict you for lying.
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0:41:23 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] made their case because they could say they couldn't find out my source,
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but they knew I had one because I admitted I was lying.
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Well, as I thought about it, I couldn't imagine standing before a judge and God and
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0:41:36 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ay out of prison. So right after Thanksgiving 2018, on that Monday, I went
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into New York and got on One American News and I announced to the nation that I was not taking
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0:41:48 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ea deal. They were the ones who were lying and I went public with it. And I was not indicted.
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0:41:55 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction], I closed the Mueller investigation closed because I hadn't broken. They had no link
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between Assange and Trump. They could not make their case. And so they did not indict me. They
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said they were going to put me in front of a jury in Washington, D.C. that would hate me and I would
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0:42:15 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction] of my life. I said, if you want to do that, go ahead. I'll spend the rest of
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my life in jail, but I will not lie before God to save myself from jail. So I fought them. And then
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when we did the covid, we had all the hydroxychloroquine, Clyburn was heading the
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0:42:35 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]igation of covid wanted to bring me forward and investigate me for selling this drug
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0:42:43 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ug that the FDA had not approved for covid. And I said,
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well, it's off label and doctors are free to prescribe any off label medication for any disease
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they want. And I'm in favor of that. And the Clyburn typically got things wrong, just like the FBI
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did. And I nailed him on the lies they told. They said I would ran the program. I didn't
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I created the program. I didn't I had a contract to market the program. I wasn't in charge.
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At any rate, that stopped. And so now I'm with the truth central, I'm recreating telemedicine,
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I'm working in third party energy. I'm writing books. And at 77, I'm probably more active. My
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take on my wife deciding to divorce me is that God decided to take her out of my life. She wanted me
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to quit doing all this. She didn't want the FBI knocking at the door, traumatized her. And she
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didn't want to go forward with it. So she got herself out of the marriage with an affair and
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it's long story, which I'm not going to bore you with. But the point is, I'm now probably more
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0:43:53 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]ly what I wanted. I don't have an other to have to take her concerns
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into mind about our future. So that's, that's about all I want to say is a prelude. And it kind of
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covers a lot of the ground points that are most important to me right now. And I look forward to
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0:44:14 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ioning. Jerome, wonderful, wonderful. And trust me, as Stephen will assure you,
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we're great at asking questions. And so it is, and I've been a professional speaker for 30 years,
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and it's great having, it's great having questions. You are an academic, sometimes I remind everybody
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of the definition of an academic. An academic is a bloke who knows how to make love in 100 different
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ways, but doesn't have a girlfriend. That's good. I mean, I may borrow that if you don't mind.
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You may reuse that. So, so the, while Stephen's getting his questions organized, one thing I want
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to, I haven't heard of Julie and Simon, but I'm a big, big fan and student of Buckminster Fuller.
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And I'm wondering whether in your journey, you came across Buckminster Fuller and, and you know,
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I do a lot of work on his number one principle that, that you raise GDP population comes down.
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I'm sure you've done the statistics. Oh, yeah. So the solution to, we don't need to kill people,
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depopulate. All we need to do is improve living standards and pop, and birth rates come down
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automatically. So Jerome, your experience with Bucky? Well, yes. In fact, on the Get Longevity
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Meds, I am working with a group that does carbon 60. In fact, they work with the original scientists
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that about 40 years ago discovered carbon 60. It's a remarkable molecule of 60 or more carbon
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atoms around the nucleus. And it turns out to have longevity principles. It's structured, the carbon
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0:45:55 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]er geodesic dome. In fact, these carbon,
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0:46:04 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ures, they come in nanotubes, they come in very many structures.
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They are graphene, they conduct electricity as well as having longevity principles. They're
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called fullerenes. And so in this book, we want you to talk all about the discovery of carbon 60.
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0:46:22 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]er Fuller. Julian Simon is not particularly well known,
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but he's known to those in the United States who really get deeply into, he studied a lot of
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0:46:38 --> 0:46:47
demographics. And his major theme was that immigration revitalizes a country. And we should
424
0:46:47 --> 0:46:52
encourage immigration, although controlled. I mean, not as we're doing it in the United States
425
0:46:52 --> 0:47:01
right now. And that's another whole theme I can get into. But I caught HSBC money laundering in 2011.
426
0:47:01 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]iving around semi trailers full of $100 bills,
427
0:47:09 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] to get the money in the banking system. So the US Treasury and the CIA run the drug
428
0:47:14 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] since the OSS was in the drug business before World War Two,
429
0:47:22 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]arted. Wonderful. We run the drug business. We are the drug cartels.
430
0:47:28 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] before, Steve is going to go to the next 15 minutes, but just
431
0:47:32 --> 0:47:36
do that link again that you learned so that the bank has told you in early 80,
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0:47:37 --> 0:47:43
that we change, we ignore the regulations and then the regulations change or we change the
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0:47:43 --> 0:47:51
regulators. Is that the cycle? That's a cycle. Excellent. And we've talked previously.
434
0:47:52 --> 0:47:57
How's it just like the MHRA? So June Rains, who's the medical doctor in the UK,
435
0:47:58 --> 0:48:05
said our role is not so much to regulate any longer, it's to enable. That's right. Once we
436
0:48:05 --> 0:48:12
change the reality of medicine, then the regulations have to change. If the regulations don't
437
0:48:13 --> 0:48:19
change, the regulators change or we get rid of them altogether. And the issue is change the
438
0:48:19 --> 0:48:24
business. Don't worry about the regulations, change the business and figure out a way within
439
0:48:24 --> 0:48:30
their rules in which they can't stop you, even though it's not what they want you to do.
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0:48:31 --> 0:48:34
And they come after you point out to them that you're following their rules,
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0:48:35 --> 0:48:42
confound them and tell them that if they go public, you'll go public. And it has always worked.
442
0:48:43 --> 0:48:51
I'm in the UK and I'd really appreciate your magnificent mind to help me write a letter to the
443
0:48:51 --> 0:48:56
MHRA, which absolutely nails them so they've got no wriggle room.
444
0:48:56 --> 0:49:00
Okay, I'll be happy to do it. And June Rains in particular.
445
0:49:00 --> 0:49:06
Oh, that's the kind of thing I like doing. Oh, so Jerome, what we'll do now, the next 15 minutes
446
0:49:06 --> 0:49:10
is yours, Stephen. We have a lot of hands up and lots of questions. So Stephen, over to you now. So
447
0:49:11 --> 0:49:13
thank you, Jerome. Wonderful presentation. Stephen.
448
0:49:15 --> 0:49:22
Yeah. So I'm just amazed about all the things you've told us about. I rang a couple of people
449
0:49:22 --> 0:49:29
who I thought would appreciate the call to ask them to join. They did. I think Matt Palsbeek and
450
0:49:29 --> 0:49:36
Lars Johansson, they know you. But you were talking and so I described this guy who you,
451
0:49:37 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ay I unfortunately hadn't heard of you, Jerome. But anyway, I do I know about you now.
452
0:49:43 --> 0:49:49
And I said he's just destroyed the climate change nonsense and Marxism in 10 minutes.
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0:49:49 --> 0:49:56
So that was that got them on the call, I think. But anyway, so we've got I think it's 1700 members
454
0:49:56 --> 0:50:03
in this group. But unfortunately, a lot of them are too busy to come on the calls. We have a
455
0:50:03 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]s who they come to regard, they think it's normal to have these
456
0:50:10 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]e talking to them twice weekly. So having said that people watch afterwards, and we don't
457
0:50:20 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]n't even got a website, Jerome. So we don't but that means that they can't
458
0:50:26 --> 0:50:29
attack us because they don't know what we're doing. They know what you're doing, but it's
459
0:50:29 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] a website. You think it's a good strategy not to have a website?
460
0:50:35 --> 0:50:41
Yes, I think it's a good strategy. Yes, exactly. Don't make it easy. Don't make it easy for them.
461
0:50:41 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] no rules. So that will confuse them. They can't quote our rules back to
462
0:50:47 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction], I just wanted to ask you, so I think it's really important, especially with your
463
0:50:52 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ion with Trump, who he obviously respects you, but he you're not big friends, and you've
464
0:51:00 --> 0:51:06
known each other for 40 years. I wonder whether you could get the message. In my opinion, I don't
465
0:51:06 --> 0:51:17
know who advised Trump in the COVID area, but it's just mystifying to me how many doctors have gone
466
0:51:17 --> 0:51:23
along, you know, they go along with a gain of function narrative even. And I think that at
467
0:51:23 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] a possibility and a probability in my mind that the gain of function narrative is, I don't
468
0:51:30 --> 0:51:35
know how to, a double bluff, a kind of limited hangout, you know. So it gets people to go,
469
0:51:36 --> 0:51:43
who should know better, to go along with the narrative. When one of our guests called JJ
470
0:51:43 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] happened to mention one day that on this meeting, he said that he thought that it was
471
0:51:52 --> 0:51:59
possible, at least, that they couldn't actually do what they said they were doing. And I thought then,
472
0:52:00 --> 0:52:06
ah, that's interesting, because I'm a doctor. JJ Cooey is a biologist, so he's not a medical doctor.
473
0:52:07 --> 0:52:12
And I said, I thought a couple of weeks later, I went back to him and said, do you think it's
474
0:52:12 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ually none of what they're putting about is possible, technically? And
475
0:52:19 --> 0:52:24
actually, they're doing, maybe doing something completely different, but they're not actually
476
0:52:24 --> 0:52:31
doing what they say they're doing. And what they're doing, of course, is creating in the public's mind
477
0:52:31 --> 0:52:39
a perception that they are at huge risk from endless deadly viral pandemics in the future.
478
0:52:40 --> 0:52:45
And we know why they're doing that, of course. But the point is that a deadly viral pandemic,
479
0:52:45 --> 0:52:50
it got me thinking about it, what he said, it was just a kind of, he mentioned it. And it just
480
0:52:51 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] thinking with on your own and never actually talking to
481
0:52:58 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]e, because they can trigger your thoughts. And together, we kind of worked it out, that
482
0:53:06 --> 0:53:12
we didn't think that anything that they said they were doing, they were actually capable of doing.
483
0:53:13 --> 0:53:19
So if you've got a deadly viral pandemic, if you believe in viruses, that is,
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0:53:20 --> 0:53:25
which I'm not sure I do any longer, I haven't really had time to think about that,
485
0:53:25 --> 0:53:32
or look into it properly. And also, I don't think we need to know. But this is very important,
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0:53:32 --> 0:53:40
endless deadly viral pandemics, deadly and pandemic cannot coexist in the same senses.
487
0:53:40 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]ually learned that in medical school, in my medical school. And everybody who heard those
488
0:53:46 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]s at my medical school forgot, it seems, because I am in touch with the with the they're
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0:53:53 --> 0:53:59
having a reunion and and I wrote to them all and called them out and set expected at least a few
490
0:53:59 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ied to me, even privately. And I was a pretty popular.
491
0:54:07 --> 0:54:12
Well, I wasn't I didn't go out of my way to be popular at medical school, but I certainly wasn't
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0:54:13 --> 0:54:19
unpopular. And so it's very strange that none of those people. And also, I called out the medical
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0:54:19 --> 0:54:25
ethics. I said, What are you all doing? What are your views on this? I write to them every Christmas
494
0:54:25 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction], what do you think about deadly viral pandemics? So a deadly virus
495
0:54:31 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] And by definition, that means any virus, even if it's not deadly and just dangerous,
496
0:54:39 --> 0:54:43
it has great difficulty in spreading sufficiently well to become a pandemic.
497
0:54:44 --> 0:54:48
Yes, well, I think, first of all, the you're making very many good points.
498
0:54:49 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] is that my definition of a deadly disease is, you know, the plague in the Middle
499
0:54:56 --> 0:55:02
Ages where you get it one day and you're dead the next. You know, as I read the accounts and
500
0:55:02 --> 0:55:08
the acidities or the various accounts of real plagues that have hit, you know, as soon as the,
501
0:55:09 --> 0:55:14
you know, the red death hit a city, they all went wild, had a celebration because half of them were
502
0:55:14 --> 0:55:19
going to die or great number of them were going to die the next day. And there was no remedy.
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0:55:19 --> 0:55:27
The acidity says the same thing. What we had with COVID was a bad flu. It behaved like a flu.
504
0:55:28 --> 0:55:33
I don't the distinction between virus and bacteria has always been intellectually
505
0:55:33 --> 0:55:39
troubling to me. And I think it's an artificial dichotomy that is drawn in the medical
506
0:55:39 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]udy them, I don't see the act I see the actions of being comparable
507
0:55:44 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction], another point I want to make, what you're talking about is how this,
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0:55:51 --> 0:55:56
the intelligence agencies right now today control much of the constructed reality we are experiencing.
509
0:55:57 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]ed reality, constructed to be destructive. I don't know why the intelligence
510
0:56:04 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction] decided to be evil and do be acting against human beings unless they just want to
511
0:56:09 --> 0:56:14
control power. And there's a great deal of power loss that goes into this World Economic Forum
512
0:56:14 --> 0:56:23
thinking on denial of God, which is fundamental. But the idea that we're going to have a sequence
513
0:56:23 --> 0:56:30
of deadly diseases, it's like what they do with the transgenders in the kindergarten,
514
0:56:30 --> 0:56:36
they're grooming, they're preparing people to accept an idea. They are preparing us,
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0:56:36 --> 0:56:39
the programming, it's a psychological warfare technique.
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0:56:40 --> 0:56:46
That's exactly what I mean, Jerome. So they're actually preparing people to expect these
517
0:56:46 --> 0:56:54
deadly viruses and create the fear which of course is very necessary to them to get the control.
518
0:56:55 --> 0:57:00
That's correct. That's exactly what's at work. And you made another good point, which was that
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0:57:01 --> 0:57:05
what they're talking about having been able to do to create this virus in a laboratory
520
0:57:06 --> 0:57:13
is beyond their capability. I was writing some things about what they could do next. I took a
521
0:57:13 --> 0:57:20
look at the patents that are held by scientists in the NIH. I realized they could go after other
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0:57:20 --> 0:57:24
receptors in the body. They go after receptors in the intestines and make this thing more deadly.
523
0:57:24 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]aying with these forces, thinking they're God,
524
0:57:29 --> 0:57:36
and then something goes wrong. Next month I'll have a book on JFK assassination. I worked with
525
0:57:38 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]or, Dr. David Mantick, who's my co-author, who is both a physicist, PhD physicist and MD
526
0:57:48 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction] He's done optical density measurements of the Kennedy, 3X in Kennedy skull
527
0:57:56 --> 0:58:02
X-rays. Kennedy was shot twice from the front. The three extant X-rays are all forged and the
528
0:58:02 --> 0:58:09
optical density measurements show it. Now the key in understanding the Kennedy assassination
529
0:58:09 --> 0:58:13
is that the government decided they were going to kill Kennedy and the CIA was at the center of it
530
0:58:14 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ly in these big elaborate government projects, everything goes
531
0:58:20 --> 0:58:24
wrong and something gets out that is equally destructive that they couldn't control.
532
0:58:25 --> 0:58:31
And so somehow or other, and messing around with these viruses, I'm sure some got out
533
0:58:32 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ually beyond their control. They just made it look like they did it.
534
0:58:37 --> 0:58:42
And then they used that for grooming and for conditioning. As they reconstruct the reality,
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0:58:42 --> 0:58:47
the CIA and other intelligence agencies, especially in control of the mainstream media,
536
0:58:47 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ed realities. This is why the postmodernism of people like
537
0:58:52 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction], who wrote a book during the Iraq war, said the Iraq war did not happen.
538
0:58:58 --> 0:59:03
Now he knew it happened. What he meant was that the narrative they were talking about was not
539
0:59:03 --> 0:59:09
happening. That narrative was a false narrative. It was designed to make you think that we were
540
0:59:09 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ing the oil in Kuwait. He said at the end of this war nothing changed. That Amnesty was still
541
0:59:14 --> 0:59:21
there. We had a big celebration that we won the Iraqi war in 1991 and we went home.
542
0:59:22 --> 0:59:29
Nothing fundamentally changed. So he said that the narrative is the reality.
543
0:59:30 --> 0:59:35
That's what the intelligence agencies have learned. I think there is objective reality. I think there
544
0:59:35 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ive truth. You can't say I'm going to jump off a building and fly and succeed at it
545
0:59:40 --> 0:59:46
because the laws of physics don't permit it. You can't flap your arms and fly. So there are
546
0:59:46 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction] But the point is you've got to look at when all these
547
0:59:54 --> 1:00:03
major themes that were being given are we've got to stop using hydrocarbon fuels because we're going
548
1:00:03 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] global warming and the young are made to fear their future is at risk. It's all an elaborate
549
1:00:11 --> 1:00:19
lie that was known to be an elaborate lie and was concocted in order to produce an effect
550
1:00:20 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]rial states to run, the modern industrial state.
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1:00:27 --> 1:00:34
We see the same thing going on over and over and over again. Trump was confrontative to them
552
1:00:34 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ive president. As you say, I'm not terribly close
553
1:00:41 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ener and Trump is not well advised because he won't take advice.
554
1:00:49 --> 1:00:56
And so Trump is great as a spokesman, as an articulator. I encouraged him to play a role
555
1:00:56 --> 1:01:02
like Churchill when Atlee took over after World War II. He became a senior spokesman. He'd been
556
1:01:02 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ead of creating all this chaos again, he could have spent his time articulating themes
557
1:01:08 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] resonated with the American people. And Churchill did come back into the
558
1:01:13 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ry after a period of time. But Churchill understood after World War II that his
559
1:01:20 --> 1:01:28
role now had changed and he accepted it. And we need the combating, this control of the narrative
560
1:01:29 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]modern world, control of the narrative is the key to power. And these narratives
561
1:01:36 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ed and they're brilliantly constructed. And then the media is an echo
562
1:01:40 --> 1:01:44
chamber to reinforce them. They all say the same thing over and over and over again. And if you
563
1:01:44 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction], you're marginalized as a conspiracy theorist. So I've been writing books that have said,
564
1:01:50 --> 1:01:55
here's the truth, and the government's lying, which is what I told the Mueller people. I didn't have a
565
1:01:55 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] with Assange, even Julian Assange said I didn't. It was the government that was lying.
566
1:02:00 --> 1:02:06
Russia didn't steal the emails. Probably Seth Rich did. Somebody from the inside did. And
567
1:02:06 --> 1:02:13
that was discernible. I don't have the resources of the CIA, but I had sources. I knew exactly how
568
1:02:13 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]em. And those emails came out of a server that was an email
569
1:02:19 --> 1:02:25
server that was accessible by those who were maintaining the server inside the campaign.
570
1:02:26 --> 1:02:32
It was not these other servers that they said had campaign data on them and other data. And they
571
1:02:32 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]inguishable by where they came from. I could distinguish where the email came from
572
1:02:37 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]em in the Democratic Party apparatus. And I knew that Russia didn't
573
1:02:42 --> 1:02:48
steal them. And when I told that to the Mueller prosecutors and the FBI, they said, Dr. Corsi,
574
1:02:48 --> 1:02:52
we're not interested in your theories. Well, they should have been because I was right and
575
1:02:52 --> 1:02:58
they were wrong. But that doesn't mean anything to them. One more point. When they say there's a
576
1:02:58 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ocarbon fuels, I refuse to call them fossil fuels, cause global
577
1:03:06 --> 1:03:13
warming, they do not mean that all scientists agree. They mean that all scientists who have elevated
578
1:03:13 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]-Marxist cultural Maoist view of the future are in ideological consensus
579
1:03:21 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ocarbon fuels. That's the consensus. It's an ideological consensus.
580
1:03:28 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction], I mean, thousands of scientists signed petitions saying
581
1:03:33 --> 1:03:38
this is nonsense. And it's obvious that not all scientists, some of the best.
582
1:03:38 --> 1:03:44
And I've got excellent endorsements of my books from professors emeritus at Harvard and Princeton,
583
1:03:44 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]s, who were climate scientists, meteorologists, because the climate science
584
1:03:53 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]amatically different. The science is nonlinear. I mean, the mathematics of climate
585
1:03:59 --> 1:04:04
are nonlinear. You can't say that if we have this much more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere,
586
1:04:04 --> 1:04:09
it's going to produce this much global warming. The mathematics don't work that way. And so
587
1:04:09 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]em, you're not going to get determined results. The variables
588
1:04:14 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]s that change the results in unpredictable fashions. And in fact, the weather
589
1:04:19 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]able. The models, the climate models that we are utilizing are heavily biased climate
590
1:04:26 --> 1:04:32
models. Lorenz proved that when he showed and demonstrated that small differences in measurement
591
1:04:32 --> 1:04:38
yield massive differences in outcome. And that's characteristic to any set of differential equations
592
1:04:38 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] to solve. And this is a, the climate is a set of interactive differential equations
593
1:04:46 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] impossible to measure precisely, which means that both because you can't get
594
1:04:52 --> 1:04:58
precise measurements, you know, God does not need decimals. God does not need to know that pi
595
1:04:58 --> 1:05:04
is infinitely decimal points. Well, that's going to change the outcome. So any irrational number
596
1:05:04 --> 1:05:09
that you're utilizing in climate science automatically means God can calculate the weather
597
1:05:09 --> 1:05:14
better than you can. And you're not going to do it because you can't get precise measurements,
598
1:05:14 --> 1:05:19
let alone that the mathematics are not determinative. Now try to explain these ideas to people.
599
1:05:20 --> 1:05:26
And again, I try in this book to make it so that the average person with some effort
600
1:05:27 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]and. And then I try to get it down when I'm doing my presentations to very simple ideas
601
1:05:33 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]e's minds and make those points, you know, that I ridicule the left about
602
1:05:41 --> 1:05:46
the sun. I say, you know, that that big yellow thing up in the sky is not a tree ornament.
603
1:05:46 --> 1:05:53
It's why we're here. And explain its importance in terms of the physical qualities of the, you know,
604
1:05:54 --> 1:05:58
climate science is extremely difficult. You've got cosmic rays that affect the formation of clouds
605
1:05:59 --> 1:06:07
that was proven by the Swedish geoscientists who actually did some experiments and realized
606
1:06:07 --> 1:06:15
that the ionization caused by cosmic ray bombardment causes the aerosol to form
607
1:06:15 --> 1:06:22
clouds. And so the, how we pass through the Milky Way, depending upon whether we're passing
608
1:06:22 --> 1:06:27
through an arm or passing through an open space, in part determines how many cosmic rays hit us.
609
1:06:27 --> 1:06:34
There's factors here that are beyond human control. And the forces involved are enormous.
610
1:06:35 --> 1:06:40
So the idea that, you know, carbon dioxide is controlling earth temperature, we need to stop
611
1:06:40 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]e of your idea where they know they can't control climate
612
1:06:45 --> 1:06:51
science, but they can control the narrative. And the narrative can be controlled to create fear
613
1:06:51 --> 1:06:54
and to produce the behavioral result that they want.
614
1:06:56 --> 1:07:03
Yeah, very good, Durham. Why would key people in the USA betray their country and for that matter,
615
1:07:04 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ern civilization? How have they got so many US citizens to work from within against
616
1:07:12 --> 1:07:13
their own country? It's treason.
617
1:07:15 --> 1:07:20
Well, it's obvious. And, you know, the problem is the universities, I left the universities in the
618
1:07:20 --> 1:07:27
1970s, and 1981, I think was my first, after I finished that project with the National Science
619
1:07:27 --> 1:07:34
Foundation, I left, I could see the indoctrination of the left was getting control of the universities.
620
1:07:35 --> 1:07:41
I went back to Bella Dodd's testimony in 1950s to the House on American Activities Committee.
621
1:07:41 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction] who saw through it and made it clear that one of their ambitions, not only to
622
1:07:47 --> 1:07:54
eliminate God, but to get control of the educational system. And they had realized in the 1950s that
623
1:07:54 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]or, and they were going to demonize the United States as a racist country
624
1:08:01 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ry. And the Constitution was formed to allow that to
625
1:08:08 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]anted ideas of us being an evil country. And it was very, this has
626
1:08:15 --> 1:08:22
been, this has been worked on for decades. When I was much younger, I was a very, very, very
627
1:08:22 --> 1:08:29
much younger, I got to know Edward Bernays quite well, who is the creator of public relations.
628
1:08:29 --> 1:08:34
And he wrote a book in 1933 on propaganda that Garibald was using. I got to spend a lot of time
629
1:08:34 --> 1:08:41
with him. And I would ask him things like, why did you write this book? I mean, the Nazis would
630
1:08:41 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] him as a Jew come over and explain to them how to use this book. And he said,
631
1:08:47 --> 1:08:53
well, you know, it is these, I understood the mechanics of how ideas are formulated and
632
1:08:53 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ain that now it could be used for good or evil.
633
1:08:58 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ain it. And now that you understand the principles, maybe you can
634
1:09:03 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ain to others, you know, what, how they can be manipulated.
635
1:09:09 --> 1:09:15
So I had those conversations with him in my 20s. And had him when an undergraduate.
636
1:09:16 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ood what he was talking about, didn't I? I got it.
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1:09:23 --> 1:09:28
And so I resolved that that would be something I would try to do. But he was a very brilliant guy.
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1:09:28 --> 1:09:35
I've had the benefit of having interacted with many, many brilliant people. I was a true and from
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1:09:35 --> 1:09:42
school. My mother brought me to kindergarten. I left. I refused to go to school. And she was a
640
1:09:42 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ed that I do it. They go to school. But the more I went to
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1:09:48 --> 1:09:55
school, the less I attended. By the time I was at Harvard, they delayed me. James Q. Wilson brought
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1:09:55 --> 1:09:59
me into his office as chairman. He said, Mr. Corsi, you're not going to get a PhD at the end of a year.
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1:09:59 --> 1:10:05
I said, why not? I'd written my dissertation. Took all the coursework. He said, well, it took me six.
644
1:10:05 --> 1:10:10
Well, how am I going to take you to take you for? And they were paying me. I had a National Science
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1:10:10 --> 1:10:16
Foundation grant. So I said, all I wanted to be able to do is go from here and MIT and talk to the
646
1:10:16 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]e I want to talk to. And you tell them I'm OK and that you endorse me being there. And they
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1:10:21 --> 1:10:26
don't have to pay tuition or anything. So I spent four years, three years more, auditing everything
648
1:10:26 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]e and learning what they, you know, having,
649
1:10:33 --> 1:10:35
if you want to know something, I've tried to find the best to teach it to me.
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1:10:36 --> 1:10:45
And let me see it through their eyes. And so over the years, I've learned techniques
651
1:10:46 --> 1:10:51
to expose these things. And what was said at the beginning is I don't, I've been demonized.
652
1:10:51 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] read my Wikipedia pages. I've been, and I've also been more famous than I ever wanted
653
1:10:56 --> 1:11:03
to be. I never aspired to be famous. I don't consider myself famous now. It doesn't, it's not
654
1:11:03 --> 1:11:11
relevant to me. What's relevant to me is I want to oppose this evil, which is now at a point
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1:11:11 --> 1:11:19
where we are at a tipping point of going into totalitarianism or having another potential for
656
1:11:20 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] to expose these ideas as evil and show how they are
657
1:11:27 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e constructing the ideas know what they're doing. It's not
658
1:11:32 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] inflation. It's not accidental we're spending the money
659
1:11:37 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]y, the United States into no value by printing money. These people know what they're doing
660
1:11:44 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ive. And I view it as fundamentally, you know, I see the world,
661
1:11:51 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]rong faith and I see the world in terms of good and evil. And I see these ideas.
662
1:11:58 --> 1:12:04
It's not surprising to me that many on the left have combined with Satanism, which they have.
663
1:12:05 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]ed States right now today better than you can put
664
1:12:09 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] a lot since the 1950s with this whole
665
1:12:19 --> 1:12:25
communism, neo-Marxist, Gramsci, Frankfurt School indoctrination,
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1:12:25 --> 1:12:28
which has now taken over the universities. And to answer your question, they are
667
1:12:28 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] not taught the fundamental skills of thinking or science or math
668
1:12:36 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]ual capabilities of knowing that they're being fed ideological lies,
669
1:12:44 --> 1:12:53
that they take on for their emotional power and proceed to behave in ways that the intelligence
670
1:12:53 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]ed that they behave in order to destroy a great potential
671
1:13:00 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]em that had produced more wealth in the history of the world than had ever
672
1:13:04 --> 1:13:11
happened before. In an interglacial warming period, we had more green than the earth has ever had.
673
1:13:11 --> 1:13:18
We exhale carbon dioxide, of course trees absorb it. We have more green in the earth.
674
1:13:19 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]oponics in the desert. We could grow enough food to have many more people in the
675
1:13:26 --> 1:13:32
world. And as has been pointed out, the natural dynamics of population are as populations get
676
1:13:32 --> 1:13:39
successful, as the GDP increases, people naturally have fewer children. You don't have to have rules
677
1:13:39 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] it do it. Populations do not endlessly increase in a geometric way.
678
1:13:45 --> 1:13:48
They don't behave that way. Julian Simon proved that point.
679
1:13:57 --> 1:14:02
So it's one thing that they hate their country and talking about the United States now and in the UK,
680
1:14:03 --> 1:14:08
same thing and I'm mystified as to why they should hate their country to this extent.
681
1:14:09 --> 1:14:14
Why would they want totalitarianism? I just don't, apart from the control,
682
1:14:14 --> 1:14:17
but they're going to be controlled too. So what's the point?
683
1:14:19 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] of all, they're not subtle enough in their critical thinking abilities to realize that.
684
1:14:24 --> 1:14:31
Markoosi wrote a very short essay on repressive tolerance in which he argued
685
1:14:32 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ionary ideas to be expressed because they might influence
686
1:14:40 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ructive. So since they were wrong, they had to be quashed
687
1:14:46 --> 1:14:52
as you wouldn't let someone express a dangerous idea. Now, of course, that was an ideological
688
1:14:53 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]s been totalitarian. If you go to the extreme right,
689
1:14:59 --> 1:15:04
the extreme right wants no government or little government. It isn't totalitarian.
690
1:15:04 --> 1:15:11
The Nazis weren't on the right. The Nazis were opposed to the communists. The communists wanted
691
1:15:11 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] no private property. They wanted to have collectivism, collective ownership of all property.
692
1:15:19 --> 1:15:25
You know, you own nothing but you'll like it. Where Hitler wanted oligarchy to be in charge,
693
1:15:25 --> 1:15:30
working with the multinational corporations and interlocking directorates. Wall Street funded
694
1:15:30 --> 1:15:38
Hitler in the 30s because they believed his insight would put together U.S. steel and crop
695
1:15:38 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]orates. Prescott Bush was involved in that.
696
1:15:44 --> 1:15:49
Harriman brothers, Brown brothers, Harriman, there's a long history on that. So the left is
697
1:15:49 --> 1:15:58
totalitarian and the left is by nature anti-free speech, anti-debate and wanting to control. The
698
1:15:58 --> 1:16:06
right in the extreme wants limited government, wants open debate, wants, it doesn't matter if
699
1:16:06 --> 1:16:13
your feelings are hurt. If you take a look at the Supreme Court decisions like Whitney v California,
700
1:16:13 --> 1:16:21
which was a 1920s decision. Judge Brandeis wrote the majority opinion. Holmes was on the court.
701
1:16:21 --> 1:16:26
He said, you know, let's not talk about shouting fire in a crowded theater, which was Holmes'
702
1:16:26 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]um. He said, we got a judge's speech only if it's really dangerous. By really dangerous,
703
1:16:30 --> 1:16:36
he meant something was said like publishing troop movements in the newspaper that could actually
704
1:16:36 --> 1:16:43
had an imminent chance of harm and real damage. Could you that we prosecuted Eugene V. Debs
705
1:16:43 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] in 1917 at Dayton, Ohio, in which he opposed World War I. And they said he was
706
1:16:50 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] conscription into the army. Well, Debs had a right to give that speech. Debs
707
1:16:56 --> 1:17:05
ran from prison for president, I believe in [privacy contact redaction]andard
708
1:17:06 --> 1:17:12
of what should be repressed is this Pentagon. I wrote my dissertation on it, Pentagon Papers.
709
1:17:13 --> 1:17:20
You know, again, there was no imminent harm. These were, but it did expose the lies that
710
1:17:20 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ate Department and the Defense Department since the beginning of
711
1:17:25 --> 1:17:31
the Vietnam War. And it was disruptive and dangerous, but that needed to be done. We should not
712
1:17:31 --> 1:17:36
have classified documents. We shouldn't have government secrets. We shouldn't have these
713
1:17:36 --> 1:17:44
bureaus that maintain their fiefdoms and grow in power and make regulations that we are not in
714
1:17:44 --> 1:17:50
agreement. They're their own views, their own ideological views. I believe in free markets.
715
1:17:50 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]e to disagree with me. I want to be argued and contested
716
1:17:57 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] to figure out what are the arguments that, you know,
717
1:18:03 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]y said so that an average person could. Abraham Lincoln used to
718
1:18:09 --> 1:18:15
say he thought ideas down like coals in a fire down to the cinders. And when he got to the cinders,
719
1:18:15 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ood the idea. And his speeches reflect that. I always admired that.
720
1:18:22 --> 1:18:28
All right. Thank you so much, Leon. I just want to say I'm very sorry to hear that your wife is
721
1:18:28 --> 1:18:35
betraying you for the reasons that you've given. Well, thank you. But you know, God's will be done.
722
1:18:35 --> 1:18:42
Charles, let the natural. Sorry, what did you want to say? I said God's will be done. If God
723
1:18:42 --> 1:18:48
put her in my life and she did serve a very good purpose, one of the key moments in the Mueller
724
1:18:48 --> 1:18:53
decision, she sat up in bed one day when I was trying to decide to take this plea deal.
725
1:18:54 --> 1:18:59
And she didn't say, I was just set right up. She said I would rather visit you in prison the
726
1:18:59 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] you not be the man I married. Now that woman was put in my life at that
727
1:19:04 --> 1:19:10
moment for a reason. She's also taken out of my life for a reason. So I look at all these things
728
1:19:10 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] of God. Very good. OK, thank you, Stephen. That's Julie.
729
1:19:17 --> 1:19:22
Hey there. Very nice to meet you, sir. It's Julie. I'm in Butte County, California,
730
1:19:22 --> 1:19:28
and I'm a health freedom fighter right now. And I've got two questions, one on each of the topics
731
1:19:28 --> 1:19:32
you covered. And again, very nice that Charles and you and Stephen to bring this gentleman on.
732
1:19:32 --> 1:19:37
So and again, your stories about Trump are fascinating to me and I'm a political junkie.
733
1:19:37 --> 1:19:43
So I knew early on Peter Navarro, he ordered enough hydroxychloroquine for like every person
734
1:19:43 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ockpile. And then I think they got overrun by whether it's Bill Gates
735
1:19:48 --> 1:19:55
or the White House task force. I put the org chart to Operation Warp Speed into the chat. It's
736
1:19:55 --> 1:19:59
massive. You know, the DOD, I mean, I'm not sure he had much of a chance, to be honest, with the
737
1:19:59 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ions and all of that. But what a shame. I mean, seriously, they had Dr. Zelenko's protocol
738
1:20:04 --> 1:20:09
ready to go. It's just such a tragedy. But you know, the socialist Marxist totalitarian stuff,
739
1:20:09 --> 1:20:14
where does their obsession with big pharma come from? I mean, seriously, here I'm in Chico
740
1:20:14 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]onewall Alliance, they want every kid to be on hormones and gender reassignment surgery and
741
1:20:20 --> 1:20:25
SSRIs. And they want monkey pox shots given out all over the place here in the town square during
742
1:20:25 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]en is okay. Where does that fit into the Marxist socialist
743
1:20:32 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ory of things? It drives me crazy. Well, you've got to remember these are depopulationists.
744
1:20:39 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]e. Now, we've figured out that by health and by the narrative that this
745
1:20:47 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] take, and if you don't take, you're going to infect others because you're going to be
746
1:20:52 --> 1:20:58
the cause of them being sick. It's a very powerful narrative. And certainly, a lot of social
747
1:20:58 --> 1:21:03
psychology that had been done going back to Milgram, who did an experiment showing how much
748
1:21:03 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] pain on others by ordering them, by creating the narratives.
749
1:21:11 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ry, they have two goals, make money, kill people. They are not out to save
750
1:21:18 --> 1:21:24
lives. They are not out to, you know, they don't want to kill you immediately. They want to keep
751
1:21:24 --> 1:21:30
you alive, keep you on the medications. But it's not many of these medications. All the vaccines
752
1:21:30 --> 1:21:37
that were issued on COVID were experimental. The research was not done to prove that they were safe.
753
1:21:37 --> 1:21:42
And when data came in that they weren't safe, it was suppressed. It was suppressed because they
754
1:21:42 --> 1:21:47
had an enormous amount of money they could make and they could kill people. But they get everybody
755
1:21:47 --> 1:21:55
to take this vaccine, they could affect everybody's cardiac system and put into play something that
756
1:21:55 --> 1:22:01
would cause early deaths that we're seeing in different population segments. And they knew that
757
1:22:01 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] They did it because of that. These mRNA vaccines, I'm not
758
1:22:08 --> 1:22:13
sure should be used at all. And they certainly have not done the experimental work that would
759
1:22:13 --> 1:22:18
validate them. The experimental work is now starting to be published that hydroxychloroquine
760
1:22:18 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] Zelenko was right. And there was a large body of literature that showed that.
761
1:22:25 --> 1:22:29
But you can go through many areas of medicine, many different areas of medicine and
762
1:22:29 --> 1:22:34
telemedicine I'm creating is going to allow the doctors to prescribe off-label all kinds of
763
1:22:34 --> 1:22:43
medications. And I'm very much in favor of supplements. I'm in favor of people who want to
764
1:22:43 --> 1:22:49
have natural treatments, naturopathy. I do not believe that everything can be solved with a drug.
765
1:22:49 --> 1:22:55
And I don't trust the scientists who are doing it to do it with a spirit of advancing society. How
766
1:22:55 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]e participate in these gain of function research when they know it's inherently evil?
767
1:23:03 --> 1:23:08
We do not need to be creating bio weapons. No, I agree with you. It's just fascinating.
768
1:23:09 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]ion on climate change, and again, I'm in Butte County in the center of California.
769
1:23:13 --> 1:23:19
I've been working with Dane Wiggington of the geoengineering group because I watch the planes
770
1:23:19 --> 1:23:23
that are spraying the chemicals and I record them and I track them. And there's two airlines in
771
1:23:23 --> 1:23:28
particular that are the culprits. What is your position on this whole chemtrails and this
772
1:23:28 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]t? And don't these totalitarians know that they're also going
773
1:23:32 --> 1:23:37
to get sprayed too? And again, thank you for your time. Well, I mean, these geoengineering plans come
774
1:23:37 --> 1:23:44
out all the time. Biden was considering populating the upper atmosphere with certain kinds of
775
1:23:44 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] the sun. I mean, John Holdren, when he was the science czar for Obama,
776
1:23:50 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]y, had many different geoengineering schemes, some of which were
777
1:23:55 --> 1:24:00
published in Foreign Affairs. He wanted to do these ships that would have these clouds
778
1:24:00 --> 1:24:07
formulate and block the sun. I mean, they want to block the sun. There's an evil streak in all these
779
1:24:07 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]e. Depopulationism is a... it's like these things are malware of that brain. Once these
780
1:24:17 --> 1:24:24
programs get inside of a person, the ability to think correctly ends and the ability to reason
781
1:24:24 --> 1:24:29
with the person ends because it's malware. You're dealing with a computer that's not functioning
782
1:24:29 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ly. And so it's endless to debate with these people because they're just going to start
783
1:24:35 --> 1:24:43
screaming at you because they can't tolerate the fact that they're being challenged. So I ignore
784
1:24:43 --> 1:24:50
all the abuse that I get and I try to speak to a group of people who yet have common sense
785
1:24:51 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ained simply. I illustrate that by pointing out the importance
786
1:24:57 --> 1:25:03
of the sun. If it isn't a tree ornament in the sky and if we didn't have it, we probably wouldn't
787
1:25:03 --> 1:25:08
be here. It'd be dark. It's not good at dark. Say ice ages aren't fun. Why don't we want it to be warmer?
788
1:25:08 --> 1:25:14
We don't do well in ice ages. It's no fun to be in the winter all the time. Endless winter is no fun.
789
1:25:15 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]e can get these ideas, but the indoctrination is very powerful and the chemtrails
790
1:25:22 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]s. All of these have one thing in common. They have in common
791
1:25:28 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]e who think that they don't need God and that they can perfect things for themselves.
792
1:25:34 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] the resources of the earth for themselves. They don't need all these people.
793
1:25:38 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] need to be fed and they're messy. They grow old. They have to be taken care
794
1:25:43 --> 1:25:49
of. They're not productive. You know, so they don't want the people. And it's fundamentally
795
1:25:49 --> 1:25:55
evil in the sense that we exhale carbon dioxide. How can you demonize something that is inherent
796
1:25:56 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]em? You know, it's almost a suicidal type idea and many of these ideas
797
1:26:03 --> 1:26:12
are suicidal that they propagate. Very good. Very good, Jerome. Brilliant. Love it. So
798
1:26:13 --> 1:26:17
we've got to get out there and propagate everybody. That's the message.
799
1:26:17 --> 1:26:25
That's the message. Get out there. Make love, not war. It was Timothy Leary, wasn't it, in the 67?
800
1:26:25 --> 1:26:31
Timothy Leary, yeah. By the way, Jerome, and those on the call have heard this, I'm 71.
801
1:26:32 --> 1:26:37
So I'm only six years behind you and my game plan is to be around until I'm at least 120. And so
802
1:26:37 --> 1:26:46
your book, so Buckminster Fullerene Molecule, the C60 Molecule, I keep hearing messages and I'm,
803
1:26:46 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]e are just, I just, I wonder if there's an expert here on C60.
804
1:26:52 --> 1:26:56
I've heard the reference. I haven't started taking it despite hearing it for so long. So
805
1:26:57 --> 1:27:01
I'll get your book. I'm taking it for four years, taking it for four or five years. It works.
806
1:27:01 --> 1:27:07
Yeah. So good. I'll go, I'll expand my thinking to 130 by getting some more C60 into me. Thank you,
807
1:27:07 --> 1:27:13
Jerome. Thank you, Julie. Julie, I need to put you in touch with Nicky Florio on geoengineering
808
1:27:13 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]y evil. Simon DeWolf, who's in Belgium and coming back home to Australia
809
1:27:21 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction], you've just had the Melbourne Cup, haven't you?
810
1:27:25 --> 1:27:31
Oh yes. I meant to, thank you, Jerome. Yes, Jerome was in Melbourne in 99 for the Melbourne Cup. We
811
1:27:31 --> 1:27:38
were talking on the phone. It was a horse called Without a Fight that won. It was the third
812
1:27:38 --> 1:27:44
favourite out of 23 horses. There were 85,[privacy contact redaction]e at the course, 30 degrees centigrade,
813
1:27:44 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]acular day. And for any of you worried about horse racing,
814
1:27:51 --> 1:27:56
the sole purpose of thoroughbred horse racing is to use the horses as an excuse for a party.
815
1:27:56 --> 1:28:00
And it was a big party in Melbourne and it was a public holiday in Melbourne.
816
1:28:01 --> 1:28:07
30 degrees is, I think you'll find it's not what you said, at 95.
817
1:28:07 --> 1:28:11
No, it's not. It's 90, isn't it? I think it's 90.
818
1:28:12 --> 1:28:16
It's all right. It was warm. No, it's 86. It's 86.
819
1:28:16 --> 1:28:22
It was warm. It was beautiful. Beautiful day and a great race and a big celebration.
820
1:28:25 --> 1:28:26
Go ahead, Simon.
821
1:28:27 --> 1:28:31
Please, if you wanted to, Jerome. Oh, I was just going to say, I also,
822
1:28:32 --> 1:28:37
I didn't get to go to the proms this year, but in London, I did get to listen to a lot of them.
823
1:28:37 --> 1:28:43
On the BBC with a VPN. So, the proms were spectacular this year. I wish I'd been there.
824
1:28:46 --> 1:28:51
Go ahead, Simon. Who's your favorite composer, Jerome?
825
1:28:52 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] many favorite composers. I guess,
826
1:28:57 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ivated me in recent years. Yeah.
827
1:29:00 --> 1:29:07
I find Mahler. Mahler, Wagner, of course, and less of the Germanic operas. I mean, I'm more
828
1:29:07 --> 1:29:16
Beethoven. I'm more Mozart. But Vivaldi's really captured my interest in the last few years and I've
829
1:29:16 --> 1:29:25
studied it extensively and consider him to have been a really dynamic and game-changing composer.
830
1:29:25 --> 1:29:28
So, I'd say at the moment, he's my favorite.
831
1:29:30 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]en to the Schubert piano sonatas if you...
832
1:29:32 --> 1:29:37
Oh, yes. Schubert, there's so many. That's why I say all of them. I mean, I love Schubert.
833
1:29:39 --> 1:29:44
There's so many of them. Haydn, I mean, Vivaldi. I mean, that just goes on and on.
834
1:29:46 --> 1:29:53
So, Stephen's very good. I've got a client who's almost finished the musical on Beethoven. There's
835
1:29:53 --> 1:29:56
never been a musical done on Ludwig. That's good.
836
1:29:56 --> 1:30:01
That's been produced here in Melbourne. So, we need some investors, everybody. Invest in the
837
1:30:01 --> 1:30:06
Beethoven musical. Good idea. Simon, over to you.
838
1:30:08 --> 1:30:12
Thank you very much, Jerome. Very much enjoyed your talk, especially in the scripted reality you're
839
1:30:12 --> 1:30:17
talking about where I remember from university where, you know, if you found five professors
840
1:30:17 --> 1:30:22
thinking the same, you'd have a group of same subjectives. You sit in the middle and you're in
841
1:30:22 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ive environment, but it's not more than the fish know he's wet kind of thing.
842
1:30:27 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction], my last 25 years, I've been busy with working on creative thinking and critical
843
1:30:32 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] sources we're using is the patent database. We have one of the
844
1:30:37 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] patent databases online and we use that for saying, if you have a problem, whatever area,
845
1:30:42 --> 1:30:46
find if somebody in the world already solved your problem. It could be in a very different
846
1:30:46 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ry, but it's very quick to actually then get inspiration from one domain to the other.
847
1:30:50 --> 1:30:56
That's a great idea. Works well. But now more and more, we, you know, we do it with text analysis
848
1:30:56 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] our problem and find out, you know, if you try to cut some part of rubber,
849
1:31:01 --> 1:31:07
maybe you could find it in a cheese cutting machine or something like that. But now we're going to AI
850
1:31:07 --> 1:31:12
and more and more we're adding some of the IT tools, which are less transparent on what they do.
851
1:31:13 --> 1:31:19
80% of it is right. I don't know what 80% but the patents can kind of give you that.
852
1:31:19 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]art to be biased. They become very available. They kind of almost push you to start
853
1:31:25 --> 1:31:29
using them in older companies. And there's something that feels a bit wrong in this whole part.
854
1:31:29 --> 1:31:38
And I was wondering, what is your opinion on the push of AI now, all over companies and decision
855
1:31:38 --> 1:31:45
making and even the medical areas and the legal areas, as it is very much pushed also from WUF,
856
1:31:45 --> 1:31:52
where they did some experiments, I think in New Zealand on why not having a trial from AI or medical
857
1:31:53 --> 1:31:57
advice from AI? What's your take on that, if I may?
858
1:31:57 --> 1:32:05
Well, AI is, I think, a complicated subject. Clearly, there are benefits from it. This neural
859
1:32:05 --> 1:32:11
learning and other benefits does work to a certain extent. You have to be careful that you don't
860
1:32:11 --> 1:32:16
introduce biases into it. It's very easy to introduce a bias into it and have that become
861
1:32:16 --> 1:32:23
determinative. That gets reinforced as the algorithms mature. So I think there's
862
1:32:23 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ications for AI. I'm also in favor of quantum computing, which I think is a real breakthrough.
863
1:32:32 --> 1:32:37
And I think in the next 50 to 100 years, we're going to learn to see the world as more of a
864
1:32:37 --> 1:32:44
quantum world. The world appears to us to be material right now, because that's how our senses
865
1:32:44 --> 1:32:53
perceive it. But if you get down into fractals and begin measuring the size of a beachfront,
866
1:32:53 --> 1:32:57
depending on the deeper you go into, the more infinite the measurement becomes.
867
1:32:57 --> 1:33:01
And if you go down far enough, you get into string theory and you've got energy.
868
1:33:01 --> 1:33:09
Well, those dimensions coexist. And the way they connect, connect across distances,
869
1:33:10 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ed in a spiritual or a quantum sense or in a matrix sense that is not spatially
870
1:33:18 --> 1:33:25
determined. Space and time are dimensions that work because of how we're made as human beings.
871
1:33:25 --> 1:33:31
And we experience this particular realm, but it isn't the way it is. It's just the way it is
872
1:33:31 --> 1:33:36
because of how we're constructed. A cat sees it differently. A dog sees it differently. And we
873
1:33:36 --> 1:33:43
will see it differently once we began to understand why Einstein was wrong to say that strange,
874
1:33:43 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ance can't happen. It can happen. It does happen. The universe is
875
1:33:49 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]s we don't understand. I think artificial intelligence is overrated
876
1:33:56 --> 1:34:01
in thinking that we're going to solve all the problems of the world with AI. AI is like
877
1:34:01 --> 1:34:07
everything else. It'll be a tool. Human beings are capable of causing problems and we'll probably
878
1:34:07 --> 1:34:15
never be, we'll never be fixed. But the problem, the challenge in human beings is to block the evil.
879
1:34:15 --> 1:34:22
And that doesn't seem to ever go away. That's got to be a constant mission. And the educating of the
880
1:34:22 --> 1:34:29
young, the worrying about what set of principles and they become moral principles. I agree with
881
1:34:29 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]itution. You cannot have free people if they are not given a moral education,
882
1:34:34 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] to be taught the rules. I mean, the Ten Commandments, very simple ideas.
883
1:34:39 --> 1:34:44
Don't kill, don't have sex with your neighbor's wife, don't steal. I mean, you really have to
884
1:34:44 --> 1:34:49
teach human beings this. These ideas should be obvious. If they're not obvious, we're dealing
885
1:34:49 --> 1:34:56
with a species that is not that advanced morally. And that's fundamental. Giving more powerful tools
886
1:34:56 --> 1:35:02
to a species that is not advanced morally is problematic and the tools can be easily misused.
887
1:35:02 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ay. We've got to figure out what it does just like everything else.
888
1:35:10 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] like the narratives that the CIA creates, we've got to be able to recognize when it's going
889
1:35:15 --> 1:35:20
wrong and being used for evil purposes and stop it. We've got to apply the principles that will
890
1:35:20 --> 1:35:28
contribute to life and contribute to health in a way that is truly to the benefit of human beings.
891
1:35:28 --> 1:35:33
And that has to be decentralized. You cannot have governments or central planners in charge.
892
1:35:34 --> 1:35:40
My solution to the federal government is to move the entire U.S. bureaucracy to Death Valley
893
1:35:40 --> 1:35:44
and give them all the solar and wind they want in their Quonset huts and let them be happy out
894
1:35:44 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] of them will quit. You cannot solve these bureaucratic problems once they build
895
1:35:50 --> 1:35:56
to the point they're at because they become control mongers and then the evil forces take
896
1:35:56 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]e. That's what we're dealing with right now. But again, I have a very
897
1:36:02 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ence and I do believe that God is in control. God created this place.
898
1:36:10 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ug it anytime He wants. And I don't believe God created the human race to fail.
899
1:36:16 --> 1:36:20
So fundamentally, I think that's why I'm calling this series The Great Awakening.
900
1:36:20 --> 1:36:26
I think when you see the results of these people, the fruit of the trees, you know, you have to use
901
1:36:26 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ric vehicles. You can't have a stove. You know, we're going to have 15-minute cities.
902
1:36:31 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]? If this is what they want to do, we don't want these people.
903
1:36:36 --> 1:36:40
You know, do we really want somebody in the White House who appears to be demented?
904
1:36:41 --> 1:36:48
You know, what are we doing? Fostering wars? Why don't we, instead of sending more weapons to
905
1:36:48 --> 1:36:52
Ukraine, why don't we figure out legitimate grievances that Russia may have and legitimate
906
1:36:52 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] and send in some peacemakers? We don't think that way. And so
907
1:36:58 --> 1:37:04
therefore, you get the pharmaceutical industry and it gets its payday and it designs drugs that
908
1:37:04 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]e will heal them to kill them. We get a war going that's politically motivated.
909
1:37:10 --> 1:37:14
So now we've got the payday for the arms manufacturers and the arms dealers, and we
910
1:37:14 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]e that this is for freedom. You know, and again, it's just money, power, and
911
1:37:22 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] no care whatsoever about advancing human freedom or human dignity
912
1:37:29 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]e. They want to advance their own personal wealth and their own personal goals
913
1:37:34 --> 1:37:40
and their own power goals. And I believe like Cincinnati's, we ought to demand that our
914
1:37:40 --> 1:37:49
politicians only be in office for a while. Very good. Thank you. Thank you. Just a very small
915
1:37:49 --> 1:37:54
point on the part that you said about revealing also what's going on. I mean,
916
1:37:54 --> 1:37:59
patents can also be a very good source, not only to show, say that there's 4,000, there was 4,000
917
1:37:59 --> 1:38:03
patents, I think, about natural treatments for COVID before they started vaccinating,
918
1:38:03 --> 1:38:12
as well as there is many patents talking about how to create a hurricane owned by US government or
919
1:38:12 --> 1:38:19
how to control weather, geoengineering, it's all in there. So it's also a source in which we can
920
1:38:19 --> 1:38:22
reveal a lot of the things that are happening. Well, I think that's that I agree with that. I
921
1:38:22 --> 1:38:27
think that's great. I think that's important information. And these people that want to
922
1:38:27 --> 1:38:33
control the weather want to be God, I think are very dangerous. Thank you. Thank you. I mean,
923
1:38:33 --> 1:38:38
I can put you in touch with sorry, Jerome, I can put you in touch with Simon. Great. That'd be
924
1:38:38 --> 1:38:46
terrific. All right. Thank you. Thank you, Simon. And Carla Dean, thank you so much for organizing
925
1:38:46 --> 1:38:55
Jerome to be with us. Your next, Carla Dean. Thank you. I just wanted Dr. Corsi to say a few
926
1:38:55 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]s about how he had to or how he tried to warn President Trump about the oncoming loss of the
927
1:39:04 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ion in 2020, his own cabinet, and even his own vice president, if he doesn't mind saying a
928
1:39:13 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ed an outline for President Trump, which he was able
929
1:39:23 --> 1:39:34
to get to President Trump and the outcome and why Trump would not listen to Dr. Corsi's presentation.
930
1:39:34 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction] Corsi, if you don't mind just making a few comments on that. Well, Carla Dean was very
931
1:39:40 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]s and I worked together. I had great insight and I had a number
932
1:39:50 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]e. When I've gotten into trouble, not a lot for the state of Israel,
933
1:39:55 --> 1:40:00
and Israel often sends someone around to help me in times of difficulty, then they disappear.
934
1:40:01 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ed was I saw what was going on in [privacy contact redaction]ed
935
1:40:13 --> 1:40:22
reality events that were going to dethrone Trump. They were sequenced. The Black Lives Matter,
936
1:40:22 --> 1:40:29
George Floyd, they found a Black person killed by a cop and they had that narrative all prepared.
937
1:40:29 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ion. And Black Lives Matter destroying the cities and a whole series of these
938
1:40:38 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ed a reality of chaos and made it so and then they were going to try to get
939
1:40:45 --> 1:40:52
Pence to agree to go along with the 25th Amendment, remove Donald Trump because he was mentally
940
1:40:52 --> 1:41:00
incompetent. They had other schemes to, on and on and on, all these different plots they had.
941
1:41:00 --> 1:41:06
And so finally, I wrote two books that was giving away his e-books at the time. One was
942
1:41:06 --> 1:41:12
The Next Disease They Would Try to Create. And I took the patents that Fauci and others had and I
943
1:41:12 --> 1:41:18
showed how they could go after the receptor that would put the disease in the form of HIV into the
944
1:41:18 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ines. And I got confirmation they were trying to do that. Of course, they don't have
945
1:41:22 --> 1:41:28
the capability to do it, but it could be done. That would be a very lethal disease because it
946
1:41:28 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]em while it was attacking both the lungs and the heart. And it
947
1:41:34 --> 1:41:40
would come in through a different receptor, which they had patents on and they knew how to take these
948
1:41:40 --> 1:41:46
HIV diseases and make it come in through that receptor. So I wrote that up. And I also wrote
949
1:41:46 --> 1:41:51
up all these different attacks on Trump and how he was going to be one attack after another.
950
1:41:52 --> 1:41:57
And I wanted to get it into being read by him. We had various people. I did get confirmation
951
1:41:58 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction], I was told he probably read that document longer than he read anything
952
1:42:03 --> 1:42:08
else in his presidency. Trump is not a great reader or student. He's not a great administrator.
953
1:42:09 --> 1:42:14
And he did not follow the advice. I was telling him to do things that would have, I was telling
954
1:42:14 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ion. I told him precisely how they were going to do it.
955
1:42:19 --> 1:42:23
They were going to hold up the results in the battleground states. They were going to
956
1:42:23 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ate, not through the state legislature, but through
957
1:42:28 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ion where they would have ballot harvesting. They would
958
1:42:34 --> 1:42:40
get COVID to do a lockdown. So it would justify balloting by mail. They would harvest the ballots.
959
1:42:40 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] buying ballots, voter fraud, just by money. And that they would stop the count until
960
1:42:48 --> 1:42:56
they could bring in enough fake ballots to put the curve of Biden above Trump and carry it to
961
1:42:56 --> 1:43:02
success, which is exactly what they did. And I warned Trump about this. It said he basically had to
962
1:43:03 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]itution in order to get back to the state legislature's
963
1:43:10 --> 1:43:17
determining how the rules of the presidential election would be done. So I was predicting
964
1:43:17 --> 1:43:24
things and telling him how it was going to be done. And Trump did listen. But Carl Dean knows
965
1:43:24 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] we fought over that to get that into the White House and in his hands. But the problem was
966
1:43:30 --> 1:43:38
Trump was getting advice. He could not pick, everybody Trump picked to advise him, starting
967
1:43:38 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]aff. I've known Renz Prevost for a long time. And I
968
1:43:44 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] for him whatsoever. He is complete sellout. These people will come in and tell Trump
969
1:43:50 --> 1:43:55
that they were going to support him. Barr did the same thing as attorney general, and then they turn
970
1:43:55 --> 1:44:02
on him. I told Trump that if anybody comes to talk to you in Washington, first of all, you've got to
971
1:44:02 --> 1:44:07
assume they're lying. The only question is why are they lying? What do they want? Why are they lying?
972
1:44:08 --> 1:44:11
And secondly, when the doctors came in and told them there were going to be all these
973
1:44:11 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]e would die, I said, look at the mathematical models. These things are being
974
1:44:16 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]etely unrealistic and how they've constructed the
975
1:44:21 --> 1:44:26
models. It's impossible for the disease to have propagated the way they're predicting it.
976
1:44:26 --> 1:44:31
And the early on in the disease, we were telling him these bodies stacked up and all this propaganda
977
1:44:31 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]e in the hospitals. A lot of this is staged. Try to convince him that the treatments
978
1:44:37 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]e in the hospitals were killing them, not helping them. And we did
979
1:44:42 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction], when Trump got COVID, we actually had somebody fly
980
1:44:50 --> 1:44:54
into Washington to hand it to someone who would bring it into the hospital for him.
981
1:44:55 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]in as well. And Trump was at risk because he went into the hospital
982
1:45:02 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ened to Fauci and to these doctors. If they'd come into
983
1:45:08 --> 1:45:14
me, I just said to them, show me your proof. I listened to them and I brought in others.
984
1:45:14 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ions, but they scared Trump. If you don't do this,
985
1:45:18 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]e are going to die and it's going to be your fault.
986
1:45:21 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction] the background to understand that they were lying and why they were lying. He
987
1:45:27 --> 1:45:34
didn't understand the NIH or the CDC. He didn't understand the bureaucracy. I've had lots of
988
1:45:34 --> 1:45:39
experience with the bureaucracy. I was first in Washington about 1954 with my father, who was a
989
1:45:39 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction] unions. And I learned a lot from him growing up about how
990
1:45:48 --> 1:45:57
Washington worked. And Trump knew New York, but he did not know Washington. And the people he had
991
1:45:57 --> 1:46:04
around him ran the Trump Organization. I've been many times in Trump's organization and saw how it
992
1:46:04 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] different people who could run different things and they
993
1:46:09 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] run it and tell them about it. They'd listen to them and do what they knew worked.
994
1:46:14 --> 1:46:19
And Trump would make a speech. I can tell you many stories about Trump. But the point was that
995
1:46:21 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]and or to accept the reality of what was being constructed for him.
996
1:46:29 --> 1:46:35
And he did not take seriously the warnings he was given. And so therefore his own advisors
997
1:46:35 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]ed for him the reality that he could not combat it successfully. And they did not help him.
998
1:46:44 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] him. And they had done that from the beginning of the administration.
999
1:46:50 --> 1:46:56
So Carl Adina's right. We tried. And that's one of the reasons I encouraged Trump to,
1000
1:46:57 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ually wrote an editorial in the Washington Times trying to encourage Trump
1001
1:47:03 --> 1:47:14
to not run again. And I think he's going to have a massive fight because they're still doing it to
1002
1:47:14 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ments. This is a concerted plan, lawfare attack that's being done
1003
1:47:20 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]e. When I was at Harvard, I knew Larry Tribe. Larry Tribe wanted
1004
1:47:25 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]itutional lawyer. He was one of the prime movers behind lawfare.
1005
1:47:30 --> 1:47:39
And it is a, these actions that happen that you see, there's no coincidences in politics,
1006
1:47:39 --> 1:47:45
and things do not happen accidentally. When things happen, you've got to say, who benefited?
1007
1:47:46 --> 1:47:52
Who benefited? Why was it done? And what's really going on here?
1008
1:47:53 --> 1:47:58
And Ukraine is being supported because it's corrupt. And because the money we're sending to it is still
1009
1:47:58 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]olen. And because the arms dealers are getting their payday. And so therefore,
1010
1:48:06 --> 1:48:12
this is a war that should not be being fought. And Israel's in a desperate situation right now
1011
1:48:12 --> 1:48:19
because there's been enough neo-Marxism around the world that Hamas has supported. I've studied
1012
1:48:19 --> 1:48:24
Hamas. I've been to Israel. I've advised the government many times, going back to about 2005
1013
1:48:24 --> 1:48:30
when I wrote Atomic Iran. I was worried about this problem in 2005. I wrote a book on it that no one
1014
1:48:30 --> 1:48:40
wanted to read at that time. But Hamas was created to destroy Israel. The Palestinians
1015
1:48:41 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction] They are neo-Marxist revolutionaries. They were thrown out of Egypt.
1016
1:48:46 --> 1:48:51
They were thrown out of Lebanon. They end up in Palestine. Yasser Arafat was born in Egypt.
1017
1:48:52 --> 1:49:00
He was Muslim Brotherhood. He was not a Palestinian. He was not PLO. He has no roots in Israel.
1018
1:49:02 --> 1:49:08
And the situation with Harry Truman deciding to take over the country, he was not a Palestinian.
1019
1:49:09 --> 1:49:16
In Israel, and the situation with Harry Truman deciding to partition
1020
1:49:18 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ate of Israel in 1948, he had to oppose the State Department. He opposed
1021
1:49:25 --> 1:49:32
the CIA. George Marshall came and told him if Harry Truman partitioned Palestine to create Israel,
1022
1:49:32 --> 1:49:37
he would never vote for another Democrat. George Marshall owned his career to Franklin
1023
1:49:37 --> 1:49:47
Delano Roosevelt. Harry Truman did it anyway. He thought he had a biblical purpose. He created
1024
1:49:47 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]ate of Israel because he could. That night, they woke up Ben Gurion and let them know that
1025
1:49:53 --> 1:49:59
Nasser had attacked from Egypt. They were in the 1948 war. That night, Israel was created.
1026
1:50:00 --> 1:50:05
I don't know that there's a good solution here because if one side will not accept the
1027
1:50:05 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ence of Israel, this will become an existential war either today or in the future.
1028
1:50:14 --> 1:50:20
But having talked to the Jewish leadership of Israel, Israel understands the game. They
1029
1:50:20 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]and the consequences. And Israel will defend Israel regardless of the consequences
1030
1:50:25 --> 1:50:29
if it comes down to it, which means they would not hesitate to use nuclear weapons first.
1031
1:50:31 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ate is a foolish attempt when the Jews would work
1032
1:50:38 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction] prosperity in the region if everyone would
1033
1:50:41 --> 1:50:47
decide that this is an insoluble problem and certainly it cannot be solved except for
1034
1:50:47 --> 1:50:50
peacemakers. And there aren't very many.
1035
1:50:50 --> 1:50:56
Jerome, thank you. Thank you, Carladean, for that. And, Jerome, we've got 35 minutes to go now.
1036
1:50:57 --> 1:51:01
Okay, as a matter of health, if you want to live longer and better, you better go and have a toilet
1037
1:51:01 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]e of minutes for the- No, I'm fine.
1038
1:51:03 --> 1:51:08
Are you okay? That's a bad- You're not drinking enough water, but that's okay. Good.
1039
1:51:08 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ink lots of water. I went to my semi-annual physical yesterday and my blood
1040
1:51:13 --> 1:51:18
pressure was 20 over 70, so I don't think I'm going anywhere soon.
1041
1:51:18 --> 1:51:21
Good. All right. Well, if you're okay, we're okay for another half hour. Carladean, thank you so
1042
1:51:21 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ion and, Jerome, thank you for that. Your story is most-
1043
1:51:31 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction] really making my brain go pop, pop, pop. Lars, you're next.
1044
1:51:39 --> 1:51:45
Thank you. So, Mr. Corsi, I understand that you are
1045
1:51:45 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ed in party politics in the US, but it seems to me that there is now a process to
1046
1:51:54 --> 1:52:01
consolidate power, certainly in some issues at the WHO, and to have a coup,
1047
1:52:02 --> 1:52:11
yet another coup in the US and in all our countries. How many in the leadership
1048
1:52:12 --> 1:52:17
in the US and Congress do you think understand that this is going on right now?
1049
1:52:18 --> 1:52:25
Well, I think that it's understood, but the group opposing it is small, because you've got
1050
1:52:26 --> 1:52:32
really only a small group of true conservatives in the House of Representatives, maybe 30,
1051
1:52:32 --> 1:52:38
that are in the conservative caucus, who do understand the threat of the WHO wanting to take over
1052
1:52:39 --> 1:52:44
the ability to declare international emergencies on health and lockdown or whatever they decide
1053
1:52:44 --> 1:52:55
they want to do, force people to be inoculated or put them in isolation camps. Unfortunately,
1054
1:52:55 --> 1:53:02
the power and money of the pharmaceutical industry, I believe that there's not enough will in the US
1055
1:53:02 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]e will support this and even give up sovereignty. I've been fighting this battle
1056
1:53:09 --> 1:53:14
back to when George W. Bush wanted to do the security-prosperity partnership of North America
1057
1:53:14 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ates, Mexico and Canada into a North American union. I've been opposed to the
1058
1:53:20 --> 1:53:30
formation of the EU since John Monet and studied John Monet, so I think that it's important that
1059
1:53:30 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]udy John Monet, study how the EU went through the
1060
1:53:35 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]eel agreement saying that this was not going to be a regional government.
1061
1:53:39 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]s intended to be a regional government. It was done incrementally.
1062
1:53:42 --> 1:53:47
There's been some brilliant work on that. I think the EU itself is fundamentally flawed,
1063
1:53:48 --> 1:53:53
both economically and these countries are so disparate, they're tough to put into one currency
1064
1:53:53 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]em. Greece and other countries have demonstrated that repeatedly. And secondly,
1065
1:53:59 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]s of these countries override the type of globalist determinations.
1066
1:54:07 --> 1:54:11
The EU has become a massive bureaucracy. The European Central Bank now, I think,
1067
1:54:11 --> 1:54:19
has got a 50% ratio to GDP with its reserves, federal reserves at 30%. These are dangerous
1068
1:54:19 --> 1:54:25
ratios for a central bank to be at. The EU is going through a recession. Germany is
1069
1:54:26 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] nuclear plant, will not reopen coal,
1070
1:54:34 --> 1:54:40
are cutting off cheap sources of energy. You're seeing companies leave Germany. The central
1071
1:54:40 --> 1:54:46
planners are raising taxes and Europe is going to go through a massive recession.
1072
1:54:47 --> 1:54:54
And I don't think that the economics of the world, we're going to have a massive crash,
1073
1:54:54 --> 1:54:59
in my opinion. I think it's building. It will happen almost inevitably. The
1074
1:55:01 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]ates, commercial real estate is going to tank because of the vacancies.
1075
1:55:07 --> 1:55:14
Europe is already in a recession. And the fundamental idea of these international
1076
1:55:14 --> 1:55:20
organizations is to create chaos and then to step in and say, well, our solution is the World Health
1077
1:55:20 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] make everything okay. So people are forced out of fear to rely on central
1078
1:55:26 --> 1:55:33
government or global government. And certainly that's within the plan of the WHO. The pandemic
1079
1:55:33 --> 1:55:38
is so frightening that we will give power to the World Health Organization to make rules
1080
1:55:38 --> 1:55:43
internationally. Well, that's a bad idea when the WHO is controlled by China.
1081
1:55:43 --> 1:55:51
And so I think it should be opposed. I'm not convinced. And a lot of people are working to
1082
1:55:51 --> 1:55:59
oppose this, including Carl Edin, Dr. Graves and others. And I think it's going to be difficult to
1083
1:55:59 --> 1:56:05
stop. But it's another idea that won't work. Like many of these ideas that are being pushed upon
1084
1:56:05 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]e, they are destructive. And this is a destructive idea.
1085
1:56:08 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ion. I mean, it's obvious that the US military has been deeply
1086
1:56:16 --> 1:56:23
involved in financing through DARPA, the injections that are spreading around the world, killing people.
1087
1:56:24 --> 1:56:29
And is there any opposition at all in the US against what the military is doing?
1088
1:56:29 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]e.
1089
1:56:32 --> 1:56:41
Well, again, our military is pervasively woke. Obama started firing all the generals who wanted
1090
1:56:41 --> 1:56:49
to fight wars, and many of them left. The military now you've got Milley during the...
1091
1:56:50 --> 1:56:56
There's another thing I told Trump. I told Trump that Milley... Trump could invoke this national
1092
1:56:56 --> 1:57:00
security provision where he's declared an emergency and can send in the military.
1093
1:57:01 --> 1:57:07
It's a law that goes back to the times of US grant. And Milley said he would not send in the
1094
1:57:07 --> 1:57:15
military. And Epsi, who is the Secretary of Defense, agreed with Milley. And they had a
1095
1:57:15 --> 1:57:20
concerted effort to say that the military... That was in subordination. I told Trump that that day
1096
1:57:20 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] fired Milley, court-martialed him, for insubordination. The US Constitution and that
1097
1:57:26 --> 1:57:31
law gives the president commander-in-chief authority, and no military commander can tell
1098
1:57:31 --> 1:57:36
the commander-in-chief, I don't want to do what you want me to do. Milley did that. Epsi supported
1099
1:57:36 --> 1:57:41
him. The military was not invoked when Antifa was destroying Portland, Oregon, and Seattle.
1100
1:57:42 --> 1:57:46
They were allowed to burn things down. The Justice Department took a blind eye.
1101
1:57:47 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]ice Department is going after Donald Trump. They're not going after Biden. And by the way,
1102
1:57:52 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] I found HSBC, it was involved in money laundering, was I had a branch manager in
1103
1:58:00 --> 1:58:03
Long Island who was desperately trying to get somebody to listen to him. He said,
1104
1:58:03 --> 1:58:08
I've got all these records. The bank is opening up accounts in people's legitimate
1105
1:58:09 --> 1:58:12
social security numbers, and they're running millions of dollars through the account.
1106
1:58:12 --> 1:58:17
Then they close the account. He said, bring me the records. I called one gentleman in
1107
1:58:18 --> 1:58:21
Manhattan, and I said, this is going to be an unusual call, sir. He said,
1108
1:58:22 --> 1:58:25
is your social security number? And I read it. He said, how did you get that?
1109
1:58:25 --> 1:58:30
I said, we'll get that in a minute. But did you run $6 million through your HSBC account under
1110
1:58:30 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] week? He said, no, I closed that account. He said, well, you
1111
1:58:35 --> 1:58:39
better give me your lawyer because I've got records to the contrary. The Department of Homeland
1112
1:58:39 --> 1:58:43
Security got involved. The Senate Permanent Investigating Committee wanted to see the records.
1113
1:58:43 --> 1:58:49
I met with them all. It turned out the HSBC was money laundering for drug cartel money and
1114
1:58:49 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] money. Treasury knew about it. CIA knew about it. They let it happen. You can't run
1115
1:58:56 --> 1:59:02
a major cartel without a bank. All the major banks launder money. None do it as well as it's
1116
1:59:02 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]ug cartels. We run the criminal enterprises, and we turn a blind eye
1117
1:59:08 --> 1:59:14
to it so that our military is in cahoots with big pharmacy to kill people with vaccines,
1118
1:59:14 --> 1:59:21
should not surprise anyone. And our military is run by so-called generals who go around and drag
1119
1:59:21 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]ites. The US military would be better running a transgender parade down Fifth Avenue in
1120
1:59:29 --> 1:59:34
New York City than they would running a war. We abandoned all this equipment in Afghanistan,
1121
1:59:34 --> 1:59:41
and we're still sending Afghanistan some 80-some million dollars a year. We funded Iran,
1122
1:59:42 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]ions and let Iran get back in the oil business. We funded this war. We funded
1123
1:59:49 --> 1:59:55
Hezbollah. We funded Hamas. We funded the rise of ISIS in Syria, and they're all opposed to go to
1124
1:59:55 --> 2:00:01
a regional war. Why we would do such a fool thing, I don't know. John Kerry has been after every bad
1125
2:00:01 --> 2:00:08
idea I can think of since I wrote unfit for command. He negotiated this Iran deal, which
1126
2:00:08 --> 2:00:12
allowed Iran to build nuclear weapons. He sent them millions of dollars in airplanes full of cash,
1127
2:00:13 --> 2:00:19
and now he's on global warming. He gave away Israeli military secrets to the Iranian government.
1128
2:00:19 --> 2:00:26
I do believe that happened. And John Kerry, no one knows anything about it. So right now,
1129
2:00:26 --> 2:00:32
you've got Israel in a situation where Israel sees this as a potential existential threat,
1130
2:00:33 --> 2:00:38
and it's extremely dangerous because if we cut off their weapons and cut off their supply,
1131
2:00:39 --> 2:00:44
they will go to the next level of weaponry. We continue to send advanced weaponry to Ukraine,
1132
2:00:44 --> 2:00:50
except I don't think Ukraine can use them. Putin would go to nuclear weapons,
1133
2:00:50 --> 2:00:58
which he has in Belarus. So the major points I'm watching is whether or not Putin does anything
1134
2:00:58 --> 2:01:05
to attack Kiev, whether the Israelis do anything to attack Tehran. These will be game-changing
1135
2:01:05 --> 2:01:12
events, and I'm praying that they don't happen. But the point to answer your question is,
1136
2:01:12 --> 2:01:18
it should not surprise you that the US military institutions are, like all our institutions,
1137
2:01:18 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]y corrupted and working for goals which have nothing to do with American freedom.
1138
2:01:25 --> 2:01:29
Thank you. Thank you, Lars. Excellent questions. Okay, we've got two more questions. Then we have
1139
2:01:29 --> 2:01:33
Stephen, and we're finishing at the two and a half hour mark. And then for those with time,
1140
2:01:34 --> 2:01:38
go to the video telegram group. So Albert Benavides,
1141
2:01:38 --> 2:01:43
Jerome, who's doing great work on analyzing the VAERS data. Albert.
1142
2:01:43 --> 2:01:54
Albert Benavides Yeah, thank you. And thank you, Jerome. I'm on my cell phone data here, mobile,
1143
2:01:54 --> 2:02:05
so and it's been a long day. No, it's bad, Albert. Bad reception.
1144
2:02:05 --> 2:02:06
Okay.
1145
2:02:11 --> 2:02:17
No, we'll put you on. We'll put you in the choppy, so I'm going to leave my camera off.
1146
2:02:17 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ion about your awesome telecommunications business there.
1147
2:02:27 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]or.
1148
2:02:35 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] or sorry, I got muted there. Are you there? Hello, Albert? Albert,
1149
2:02:53 --> 2:03:00
your reception is so bad. Try, try again. Just make it short and sweet. We've got some of it and
1150
2:03:00 --> 2:03:02
didn't get some of it. So unmute yourself and try again.
1151
2:03:04 --> 2:03:11
Okay, sorry. So as I would have already
1152
2:03:24 --> 2:03:24
Albert
1153
2:03:30 --> 2:03:33
Albert, it's crap. Albert.
1154
2:03:33 --> 2:03:39
Albert Benavides Work that I wanted to get done. I want the whole enchilada and I negotiated.
1155
2:03:39 --> 2:03:46
Albert Benavides Albert, it's crap. All right. Dari, we'll try you and then Albert might come back.
1156
2:03:46 --> 2:03:50
Dari Okay. Hi, Dr. Corsi.
1157
2:03:50 --> 2:03:52
Dr. Corsi Greetings.
1158
2:03:52 --> 2:03:57
Dari Hi, everybody. So great to see you here, because I've been following your work and I have
1159
2:03:57 --> 2:04:03
a number of your books going back as far as I think I first learned about your observations
1160
2:04:03 --> 2:04:09
in 2009. So it's quite a delight and deeply grateful that you joined us here. Thank you
1161
2:04:09 --> 2:04:13
for all your insights. I want to go back to something when you were talking, I was driving
1162
2:04:13 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] because I've been having some stuff in my neck. But I wanted to ask you,
1163
2:04:19 --> 2:04:22
the thought popped in my head, and I might have missed this, you could have already mentioned it,
1164
2:04:22 --> 2:04:31
about the concept of morphic resonance among species. I heard Mike Adams, Health Ranger,
1165
2:04:32 --> 2:04:40
talk about this at some point recently this year, how certain behavior patterns and adaptations in a
1166
2:04:40 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] area start getting picked up by the same species of animal
1167
2:04:48 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] contact. And I could see how the Holy Ghost can make something
1168
2:04:57 --> 2:05:03
like that happen. But I was wondering if you have in your experience, some other perspectives on
1169
2:05:03 --> 2:05:09
that, because I think this whole point of, you know, to take it to the human level, this sense
1170
2:05:09 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]e are having, that haven't been paying attention to this for a long time,
1171
2:05:15 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] something to do with it, because we all do put out energy. And I think that might be part
1172
2:05:22 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]s, good vibrations and bad vibrations can both be contagious. And so I was
1173
2:05:29 --> 2:05:32
wondering what you had to say about that. Well, I've studied this for a long time. I mean,
1174
2:05:33 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] been experiments done with animals who are on South Sea Islands, let's say, and the
1175
2:05:39 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction], monkeys who have no way of connecting or various animals. And they might,
1176
2:05:44 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] of getting a, you know, a shell fish out of the, and cracking the
1177
2:05:51 --> 2:05:55
shell. And within a very short time, all the monkeys in the entire chain are doing the same
1178
2:05:55 --> 2:06:01
thing. Well, they had never done it before. It's what I was talking about earlier in terms of
1179
2:06:02 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]ance. The nature of reality is not as we perceive it. We're really
1180
2:06:08 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]ed and such that ideas transfer without any obvious contact or communication
1181
2:06:17 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]e such that when an idea is born, it is born simultaneously in several different places,
1182
2:06:23 --> 2:06:31
several different minds, because that idea is shared in the common psyche that we all share.
1183
2:06:32 --> 2:06:38
We're all connected. Everything is connected. And an action in one part affects an action in another.
1184
2:06:38 --> 2:06:45
It is not spatially determined. Our ideas of space and time only work in our exact perception
1185
2:06:45 --> 2:06:50
of the world, but that's not how the world is functioning. The world is also functioning
1186
2:06:50 --> 2:06:56
at a subatomic level. It's functioning at an energy level. It is functioning at a spiritual level.
1187
2:06:56 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]y at one dimension do not apply at another dimension. And quantum
1188
2:07:03 --> 2:07:08
physics, which has fundamentally different ways of perceiving the reality of the universe,
1189
2:07:08 --> 2:07:13
and we're only at a beginning point of understanding this, will fundamentally reconfigure
1190
2:07:13 --> 2:07:18
our idea of who we are and where we are. The truth is we come into being, we don't know where we
1191
2:07:18 --> 2:07:23
came from, we don't know where we're going, we don't know where this is. And that's fundamentally
1192
2:07:23 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] And the process of discovery is one in which we're going to realize
1193
2:07:30 --> 2:07:35
that we're not individuals who can benefit ourselves to the disadvantage of someone else.
1194
2:07:36 --> 2:07:42
We are not here to gain when others lose. We are not here to benefit a nation to the
1195
2:07:42 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] to learn that, you know, God put all the races together on this planet,
1196
2:07:49 --> 2:07:54
and the fundamental idea is can they all coexist and intermix without being forced to do so.
1197
2:07:54 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction], that's possible. It's already happening. But the point is, it is not this
1198
2:08:02 --> 2:08:10
morphic resonance happens all the time. We live in it. And, you know, God communicates ideas
1199
2:08:10 --> 2:08:18
that he wants done too. When I say I get a book to write whole before I even realize I'm thinking
1200
2:08:18 --> 2:08:22
about it, I see the whole book and I can't get it out of my head unless I sit down and write it.
1201
2:08:22 --> 2:08:28
And then it often writes very quickly. Well, I don't attribute that to myself. And I've come
1202
2:08:28 --> 2:08:35
not to attribute it to myself. I don't have that great an opinion of myself. I'm not here to boost
1203
2:08:35 --> 2:08:42
my ego. I don't really particularly care. I'm not here to win awards. I don't know if I would.
1204
2:08:43 --> 2:08:50
That's not why I'm here. It's not what I'm doing. I want to pursue these ideas and get as much
1205
2:08:51 --> 2:08:57
written as I can in my lifetime and hopefully leave some things here that will
1206
2:08:58 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]e think in a more positive way. If we work together,
1207
2:09:04 --> 2:09:11
if we advance these ideas, we can have a stable, peaceful world for a thousand years.
1208
2:09:12 --> 2:09:16
It's just a different set of principles that we have to operate under. And the principles have
1209
2:09:16 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] to realize that they work. And these principles are more send in
1210
2:09:22 --> 2:09:30
the peacemakers. Don't send in the war makers. Don't let power concentrate. Don't trust governments
1211
2:09:30 --> 2:09:35
in bureaucracy. Decentralize. Human resources, human beings are the best natural resource that
1212
2:09:35 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]s. And human beings allowed to create and allowed to fail will create remarkable things.
1213
2:09:44 --> 2:09:52
But don't believe that we can ever replace God. We have to again have a world that accepts God
1214
2:09:52 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]es. And if it doesn't, we will certainly have nuclear war.
1215
2:10:01 --> 2:10:06
And we'll have it within our lifetimes if we don't reverse some of the trends that are ongoing right
1216
2:10:06 --> 2:10:12
now. Thank you. Yeah, I always say that godlessness is hell on worth.
1217
2:10:13 --> 2:10:17
And that's pretty much where we're heading. And it's already here in a lot of pockets.
1218
2:10:19 --> 2:10:26
I don't mind. Look, I did extremely well working with the Hindus who own Trillo and the
1219
2:10:28 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]an who programmed the programs. I celebrated their holidays. I said
1220
2:10:33 --> 2:10:37
it's Ramadan and talked to them about what Ramadan was. I blessed them. I said God bless
1221
2:10:37 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]e to believe in God. I don't really particularly care how they
1222
2:10:42 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] a spiritual awareness. Because if a person has
1223
2:10:47 --> 2:10:54
a spiritual awareness, they begin to contemplate that this is not about what it appears to be about.
1224
2:10:55 --> 2:11:00
None of us get out of this alive. And it's fundamentally about the only thing you draw
1225
2:11:00 --> 2:11:05
from the only thing you take from here is your experience. And there are consequences to your
1226
2:11:05 --> 2:11:10
experience, consequences to your behavior. And you can work to advance yourself and advance your
1227
2:11:10 --> 2:11:19
soul, which means moral principles. Or you can go to the dark side and I don't recommend anybody do
1228
2:11:19 --> 2:11:26
it. I think we need to make it clear again to the youth. The youth come in with an awareness of God.
1229
2:11:26 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] an awareness of God. Animals know what's right and wrong. Animals think. They know
1230
2:11:31 --> 2:11:35
what's good people, good people who are going to harm them. And so therefore,
1231
2:11:35 --> 2:11:40
that moral consciousness is built into the center of this experience and we're all interconnected.
1232
2:11:41 --> 2:11:43
All right. Thank you, Daria.
1233
2:11:43 --> 2:11:44
Beautiful. Thank you, sir.
1234
2:11:45 --> 2:11:49
Excellent. Excellent. And what you, Daria, was asking and what Simon spoke about with
1235
2:11:49 --> 2:11:56
artificial intelligence, Jerome, reminds me of a wonderful passage from Buckminster Fuller's
1236
2:11:56 --> 2:12:01
Critical Path. And I'll just, I'll just take a minute to read this before we go to Albert's
1237
2:12:01 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]ion. He said this, fortunately, page 47, a critical path. Fortunately, the unrealistic
1238
2:12:06 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] on universe and evolution, whereas realistic
1239
2:12:14 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]iveness in pure principle, realistic, comprehensively,
1240
2:12:20 --> 2:12:26
comprehensively responsible, omni-system, considerate, unselfish thinking on the part of humans.
1241
2:12:27 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]iny. If the realistic thinking can conceive of technically
1242
2:12:35 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]orily effective human fulfillment of its designed
1243
2:12:40 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]ioning as local universe information inventorying and local universe problem solving
1244
2:12:47 --> 2:12:52
in support of the integrity of eternally regenerative universe, then the accomplishment
1245
2:12:52 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]ically effective in satisfying universe that human mind
1246
2:12:58 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ishing its designed evolutionary role. So there you are, Jerome.
1247
2:13:05 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] that book on my bookshelf. I was just looking for it. I greatly admire Buckminster
1248
2:13:11 --> 2:13:17
Fuller and that idea encapsulizes and says better than I have what I was trying to express. I mean,
1249
2:13:17 --> 2:13:25
he got it. Yeah, he did. Yeah, wonderful. Page 47, check that out. All right, now quickly,
1250
2:13:25 --> 2:13:32
Albert's question, Jerome, was, Albert, let's try and get you, if you've got reception, are you there?
1251
2:13:33 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] try quickly, otherwise I'll ask the question on your behalf.
1252
2:13:36 --> 2:13:43
No, it's bad. Good. So here's the question that Albert, can Albert get, he needs to do some lab
1253
2:13:43 --> 2:13:51
work. He needs a prescription, Jerome. With your tele, he will specific lab work done. Albert is
1254
2:13:51 --> 2:13:58
doing some great work on VAERS analysis and the fraud that's being perpetrated on VAERS. He's
1255
2:13:58 --> 2:14:01
negotiated a cash pay lab fee, but he needs a prescription. Can he get that through your
1256
2:14:01 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]em? Where is he located? LA, I believe. East Coast. West Coast. Yes, he can.
1257
2:14:06 --> 2:14:11
Yes, he can. Anyway, Albert, there's your question, mate. There's the answer to your question.
1258
2:14:11 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]ly. Carladean can provide the information and we'll
1259
2:14:17 --> 2:14:23
get it done. I'll get that to you, Albert, the connection. Now, Simon had his hand up with the
1260
2:14:23 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]ions, Tom, no long questions. I'm going to ask you a quick question.
1261
2:14:27 --> 2:14:31
So, Simon, is your question answered? Yeah, sorry. I was just thinking about the
1262
2:14:32 --> 2:14:38
point you made about decentralization and going local instead of global. I think it's beautiful.
1263
2:14:38 --> 2:14:43
And trying if there's a way back to get sovereign countries rather than getting Europe where
1264
2:14:44 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]ually created to create Europe. And I think that's a great point. And I think
1265
2:14:51 --> 2:14:57
that's a great point. On the peacemaker part, I'm always a bit feeling like this peacemaker
1266
2:14:57 --> 2:15:05
thing is about, okay, let's govern more global. And it feels almost like peacemaking is ultimately
1267
2:15:05 --> 2:15:12
a one world government rather than saying let's leave them out and let's every country decide for
1268
2:15:12 --> 2:15:19
themselves. And I think that's a great point. And I think that's a great point. And I think that's a
1269
2:15:19 --> 2:15:26
great point. Is that, you know, if the people decide for themselves, how would you mean
1270
2:15:26 --> 2:15:28
peacemaking would solve the problem? Well, I don't mean peacemaking in terms of one world government.
1271
2:15:28 --> 2:15:35
That's imposing a solution upon people. I think that there are various kinds of problems. Some
1272
2:15:35 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] insoluble. I mean, if Hamas is determined to destroy Israel and it can't be
1273
2:15:42 --> 2:15:48
budged from that position, you've got a no-go solution to that issue.
1274
2:15:48 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] to be able to get to a point where people are willing to, in a sense, compromise,
1275
2:15:58 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]e's objectives, and in a sense have some fundamental rules
1276
2:16:03 --> 2:16:09
about human dignity, human existence that have to be promoted.
1277
2:16:09 --> 2:16:15
And that, to me, means allowing people to be able to make their decisions and to be
1278
2:16:15 --> 2:16:20
morally responsible for their lives without having the intervention of government dictate
1279
2:16:20 --> 2:16:22
what they may or may not do.
1280
2:16:22 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]s are particularly difficult to negotiate, but what I was impressed
1281
2:16:30 --> 2:16:36
with, for instance, is what I mean is a moment in history when Jack Kennedy and the Cuban
1282
2:16:36 --> 2:16:42
missile crisis realized that his military wanted to go to nuclear war with Russia, thought
1283
2:16:42 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]rike capacity, and that Khrushchev's military is probably
1284
2:16:46 --> 2:16:48
telling him the same thing.
1285
2:16:48 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ablished a back channel where he could speak directly to Khrushchev and his
1286
2:16:55 --> 2:17:00
speech at American University, which he gave just before he was assassinated, in which
1287
2:17:00 --> 2:17:05
he said, the fundamental reality is that none of us are going to live forever.
1288
2:17:05 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]t, and we have to do it in a way where we can live together.
1289
2:17:10 --> 2:17:15
And he was willing to reach out to Khrushchev and tell the military and the bureaucracy
1290
2:17:15 --> 2:17:21
to go park themselves, and that probably contributed to his assassination.
1291
2:17:21 --> 2:17:26
But that's the type of leadership we're going to have to have, not a leadership like John
1292
2:17:26 --> 2:17:30
Kerry who comes in with an agenda or Blinken who comes in with an agenda.
1293
2:17:30 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction] operatives of the one world government or operatives of the power structure.
1294
2:17:37 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]e to be able to communicate and understand, okay, Russia, what are your needs?
1295
2:17:43 --> 2:17:44
What are your concerns?
1296
2:17:44 --> 2:17:47
What are your concerns, Mr. Putin?
1297
2:17:47 --> 2:17:51
Well, we have to have access to the Black Sea.
1298
2:17:51 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]e in Donbass speak Russian.
1299
2:17:54 --> 2:17:55
What are we going to do?
1300
2:17:55 --> 2:18:00
You can't bring NATO to our border and have us not react as a nation state.
1301
2:18:00 --> 2:18:10
You can't have Hillary Clinton in 2013 taking money from Pinochek, an oligarch in Ukraine
1302
2:18:10 --> 2:18:14
through her Clinton Foundation while she was secretary of state running a private email
1303
2:18:14 --> 2:18:19
server so she could make money in the Clinton Foundation outside the aspices of the government,
1304
2:18:19 --> 2:18:22
taking money from an oligarch, working with the State Department in Soros to overthrow
1305
2:18:22 --> 2:18:28
Yanukovych, who was duly elected even though he supported Russia as president of the Ukraine
1306
2:18:28 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] Russia say this is all okay.
1307
2:18:33 --> 2:18:36
You can't do these kinds of things.
1308
2:18:36 --> 2:18:45
And when you allow these, you know, Curtis LeMay to be on the chief of staff of the military
1309
2:18:45 --> 2:18:52
under John Kennedy's time, he'd firebombed Japan, wanted to go to war bombing Cuba and
1310
2:18:52 --> 2:18:55
invading Cuba and go to war bombing Russia.
1311
2:18:56 --> 2:19:00
I mean, this is a guy who probably needed psychiatric care rather than being allowed
1312
2:19:00 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]ates military.
1313
2:19:02 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]e did he fry?
1314
2:19:03 --> 2:19:06
I mean, Dresden, firebombing, really, do we have to do that?
1315
2:19:06 --> 2:19:10
What was the military significance of it?
1316
2:19:10 --> 2:19:15
War, we have to prevent war, not cause wars.
1317
2:19:15 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]s that look for solutions, not for problems.
1318
2:19:19 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] to realize some problems are nearly insolvable, and those are the ones that we
1319
2:19:23 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]
1320
2:19:26 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]s and get in front of them before the people figure
1321
2:19:30 --> 2:19:33
out how to make money on them.
1322
2:19:33 --> 2:19:38
And that's again the divisiveness in human nature, the self-interest, which overrides
1323
2:19:38 --> 2:19:44
what I consider to be a goal of peace, which is fundamentally just let people live securely.
1324
2:19:44 --> 2:19:49
I mean, you have to have law enforcement, you have to have order, but let people live
1325
2:19:49 --> 2:19:50
however they want to live.
1326
2:19:50 --> 2:19:51
Let them fail.
1327
2:19:51 --> 2:19:53
They need to fail.
1328
2:19:54 --> 2:19:59
Do it with the purpose of advancing life and do it with the purpose of finding solutions
1329
2:19:59 --> 2:20:01
rather than looking for problems.
1330
2:20:01 --> 2:20:03
Thank you, Simon.
1331
2:20:03 --> 2:20:04
Thank you.
1332
2:20:04 --> 2:20:05
Thank you.
1333
2:20:05 --> 2:20:06
Thank you.
1334
2:20:06 --> 2:20:07
Tom, quick, and then we've got Stephen.
1335
2:20:07 --> 2:20:09
We're going to finish in 10 minutes.
1336
2:20:09 --> 2:20:10
Tom?
1337
2:20:10 --> 2:20:11
All right.
1338
2:20:11 --> 2:20:15
Yeah, I was told by Gary to not ask too many questions.
1339
2:20:15 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction] a little background.
1340
2:20:16 --> 2:20:22
So I've been surrounded by people on the left, and I wanted to believe that they, you know,
1341
2:20:22 --> 2:20:28
I believe that they did really care about humanity and so forth, but I've seen a real
1342
2:20:28 --> 2:20:31
change.
1343
2:20:31 --> 2:20:34
I don't entirely understand it.
1344
2:20:34 --> 2:20:41
But what gives me hope is this idea of an egalitarianism, caring about each other.
1345
2:20:41 --> 2:20:49
And then what you say, the spiritual awareness, not all of us can genuinely believe in a God.
1346
2:20:49 --> 2:20:54
So I guess I'm trying, you know, obviously, like, I'll just give you one example of this
1347
2:20:54 --> 2:20:55
lawlessness.
1348
2:20:55 --> 2:21:01
They're talking about stealing $240 billion from Russia, from all the central banks around
1349
2:21:01 --> 2:21:06
the world, and then using that to fund the rebuilding of the Ukraine and then maybe even
1350
2:21:06 --> 2:21:08
furthering the Ukraine war.
1351
2:21:08 --> 2:21:12
It's just morally wrong, in my opinion.
1352
2:21:12 --> 2:21:15
How do you, how do we transform?
1353
2:21:15 --> 2:21:17
There's so much of society that is secular.
1354
2:21:17 --> 2:21:26
How do you get them to get in touch with these moral, with some sense of spiritual awareness
1355
2:21:26 --> 2:21:27
and morality?
1356
2:21:27 --> 2:21:28
That's it.
1357
2:21:28 --> 2:21:33
Well, I'm going to give a short answer to that so we can get a couple more in.
1358
2:21:33 --> 2:21:36
But it's a very important question.
1359
2:21:36 --> 2:21:42
And God is not a matter of, God is an experience.
1360
2:21:42 --> 2:21:44
You learn to see God in everything.
1361
2:21:44 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]and that we are created with a moral awareness and that morality works and
1362
2:21:50 --> 2:21:52
immorality doesn't work.
1363
2:21:52 --> 2:21:57
As soon as you say you're an atheist, you've just given me the idea God because you've
1364
2:21:57 --> 2:21:58
negated it.
1365
2:21:58 --> 2:22:01
And atheism is negation.
1366
2:22:01 --> 2:22:04
And so therefore negation is not going to be positive.
1367
2:22:04 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]wired into a human being.
1368
2:22:06 --> 2:22:08
God's hardwired into animals.
1369
2:22:08 --> 2:22:12
God's hardwired into what we're experiencing.
1370
2:22:12 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]e don't want to accept it.
1371
2:22:14 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] to get to a point where there's a way to experience it and you have to teach
1372
2:22:19 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]e to be aware of the experience so that when it occurs they accept it.
1373
2:22:25 --> 2:22:30
And it demands, it's hard for human beings because it demands the acknowledgement that
1374
2:22:30 --> 2:22:31
we are not supreme.
1375
2:22:31 --> 2:22:33
We are not all that special.
1376
2:22:33 --> 2:22:35
We are not all that all important.
1377
2:22:35 --> 2:22:36
We're not supposed to dominate.
1378
2:22:36 --> 2:22:38
We're not supposed to be in control.
1379
2:22:38 --> 2:22:40
We are here to serve God.
1380
2:22:40 --> 2:22:43
And if you'd accept that mission and when you do accept that mission, life becomes a
1381
2:22:43 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]er.
1382
2:22:45 --> 2:22:52
And unfortunately the left is right now going through, there are a lot of progressive Jews
1383
2:22:52 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ioning why the Democratic Party, which has become a
1384
2:22:57 --> 2:23:03
neo-Marxist party, is so in support of Hamas when the progressive Jews have for decades
1385
2:23:03 --> 2:23:06
marched with the Democratic Party.
1386
2:23:06 --> 2:23:10
The Democratic Party is right now tearing itself apart in the United States over these
1387
2:23:10 --> 2:23:11
issues.
1388
2:23:11 --> 2:23:19
And what happens is the immorality, the refusal to accept God, the refusal to accept rules
1389
2:23:19 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] in a fundamental sense, using money, stealing money from Russia, the proposal
1390
2:23:25 --> 2:23:32
you advanced is inherently evil and only evil people would think of it.
1391
2:23:32 --> 2:23:33
Very good.
1392
2:23:33 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]ion, Tom, but important question.
1393
2:23:38 --> 2:23:41
We could spend two and a half hours on that, but great.
1394
2:23:41 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction], unmute, show us your face.
1395
2:23:44 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]e of minutes and the last two or three minutes,
1396
2:23:48 --> 2:23:51
Stephen, where are you?
1397
2:23:51 --> 2:23:53
There's your smiley face.
1398
2:23:53 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]n't given me much time, Charles.
1399
2:23:55 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]ions, but anyway.
1400
2:23:57 --> 2:23:58
No, no, I'll give you ten minutes.
1401
2:23:58 --> 2:24:01
If Jerome's okay for ten minutes, just the last ten minutes.
1402
2:24:01 --> 2:24:02
I'm fine.
1403
2:24:02 --> 2:24:03
I'm fine.
1404
2:24:03 --> 2:24:11
So, Jerome, is so put simply, is Trump the best that America has at the moment?
1405
2:24:11 --> 2:24:15
Who's actually got a chance of winning the next presidency?
1406
2:24:15 --> 2:24:17
And does it matter?
1407
2:24:17 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction], and I'm not sure it matters.
1408
2:24:22 --> 2:24:30
I think that I'm watching very carefully Robert Kennedy as at 17 years old, I had seen his
1409
2:24:30 --> 2:24:33
uncle and his brother many times in Washington.
1410
2:24:33 --> 2:24:35
I'd like to say I know them.
1411
2:24:35 --> 2:24:36
I didn't really know them.
1412
2:24:36 --> 2:24:37
They didn't.
1413
2:24:37 --> 2:24:40
They weren't going to pay any attention to a 17 year old kid.
1414
2:24:40 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]udy them and they had remarkable qualities.
1415
2:24:44 --> 2:24:49
I think Robert Kennedy, Robert Kennedy may have that in him, too.
1416
2:24:49 --> 2:24:53
There's no, there's no one person that can solve this.
1417
2:24:53 --> 2:24:56
And Trump is going to be divisive.
1418
2:24:56 --> 2:25:01
And he's determined to try and it will be divisive.
1419
2:25:01 --> 2:25:09
I'm not sure if its outcome is in the long run positive, but I think we're going to divisive period right now.
1420
2:25:09 --> 2:25:13
You know, we're going to have to go through almost a judgment of God.
1421
2:25:13 --> 2:25:15
I mean, we're going to have an economic crash.
1422
2:25:15 --> 2:25:17
We're going to have intensifying wars.
1423
2:25:17 --> 2:25:24
Jerome, faced with all these problems, don't we need someone who's divisive like Trump, who dares to say the unpopular thing?
1424
2:25:24 --> 2:25:27
I think we're going to get Trump anyway.
1425
2:25:27 --> 2:25:28
I mean, he's going to happen.
1426
2:25:28 --> 2:25:34
He's going to be he'll run from office for president from from jail if he has to.
1427
2:25:34 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] don't know if that then triggers the Democrats to try to steal it more.
1428
2:25:38 --> 2:25:40
I mean, this is a complex question.
1429
2:25:40 --> 2:25:43
I favor Trump a great deal.
1430
2:25:43 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]s favored Trump.
1431
2:25:45 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]rative capabilities and how I tried to coach him and help him.
1432
2:25:51 --> 2:25:54
And Carla Dean and I worked to do that.
1433
2:25:54 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]e did work to do that.
1434
2:25:56 --> 2:26:03
But we're facing a lot of entrenched evil, entrenched agencies.
1435
2:26:03 --> 2:26:06
I'm not I think it's going to take more than any one person.
1436
2:26:06 --> 2:26:10
I'd like to see I I'm in favor of Trump.
1437
2:26:10 --> 2:26:16
But I'm not willing to bet he would succeed any better the second time around.
1438
2:26:16 --> 2:26:18
I've got my questions about that.
1439
2:26:18 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ion is this, Jerome, he seems to me to be the only one with any courage in large amounts, apart from Robert Kennedy, of course.
1440
2:26:29 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction] feel that Robert Kennedy Jr. is maybe not as.
1441
2:26:37 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]
1442
2:26:40 --> 2:26:44
I mean, I share your view, but I'm looking at it from a little different perspective.
1443
2:26:44 --> 2:26:46
I'm happy to see Trump take the lead.
1444
2:26:46 --> 2:26:50
I'm happy to see Mike Pence fall down and not succeed right now.
1445
2:26:50 --> 2:26:54
I'm happy to see Matt Gates and Jim Jordan and Johnson.
1446
2:26:54 --> 2:26:58
We're getting a new group of people coming forward who said enough.
1447
2:26:58 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]e saying we see where this is going and we're saying no, and they are willing to rise and are willing to fight this.
1448
2:27:09 --> 2:27:14
We could I am I do not believe God created the human race to fail.
1449
2:27:14 --> 2:27:15
I do.
1450
2:27:15 --> 2:27:16
I do believe God will intervene.
1451
2:27:16 --> 2:27:17
I think he has intervene.
1452
2:27:17 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ogne on the exam.
1453
2:27:20 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ion of whether God did intervene.
1454
2:27:22 --> 2:27:28
And so therefore, I think positive I see light at the end of this.
1455
2:27:28 --> 2:27:30
I think we're going to go through a very difficult time.
1456
2:27:30 --> 2:27:36
But I retain hope that the human spirit will come through this stronger.
1457
2:27:36 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ion about whether we should love our enemies that we started with.
1458
2:27:41 --> 2:27:45
Jesus's perspective was you love your enemies because they make you stronger.
1459
2:27:45 --> 2:27:47
And I've experienced that.
1460
2:27:47 --> 2:27:49
So you thank your enemies.
1461
2:27:49 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ly.
1462
2:27:51 --> 2:27:53
These challenges.
1463
2:27:53 --> 2:27:54
Yeah.
1464
2:27:54 --> 2:28:08
So what you went through and to a lesser extent what I've been through, I think if you survive the onslaught, then you understand things without that challenge to your very existence.
1465
2:28:08 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]and.
1466
2:28:09 --> 2:28:10
That's correct.
1467
2:28:10 --> 2:28:12
I went through that experience myself.
1468
2:28:12 --> 2:28:15
I share that idea and I share that experience.
1469
2:28:15 --> 2:28:16
Yeah.
1470
2:28:16 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction] coming up.
1471
2:28:22 --> 2:28:23
Regular.
1472
2:28:23 --> 2:28:26
Well, no, actually, it was only mentioned a few times, actually.
1473
2:28:26 --> 2:28:34
But it seemed to be the case that Pottinger was very influential behind the scenes in the Trump White House.
1474
2:28:35 --> 2:28:44
And he was so I've only heard this from a couple of sources that he was actually proud of his role.
1475
2:28:44 --> 2:28:47
He was unseen, but he was highly influential.
1476
2:28:47 --> 2:28:48
Do you know Pottinger?
1477
2:28:48 --> 2:28:49
I don't know him.
1478
2:28:49 --> 2:28:50
No, I don't know him.
1479
2:28:50 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]e who did try.
1480
2:28:52 --> 2:28:55
I mean, there were many people who tried.
1481
2:28:55 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]ener, it would help if he were not a better listener.
1482
2:29:03 --> 2:29:11
Not so confident that he would all Trump was raised by Norman Vincent Peale, attended Norman Vincent Peale's church.
1483
2:29:11 --> 2:29:16
And that whole positive, positive thinking is fundamental to his makeup.
1484
2:29:16 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction] to think positively, but you have to assess clear mindedly, soberly what you're up against.
1485
2:29:27 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction] rely on positive thinking without realizing the degree to which you are in danger and could lose, you're not going to take the best steps.
1486
2:29:37 --> 2:29:39
And I see there are certain failings in Trump.
1487
2:29:39 --> 2:29:41
And I believe that's one.
1488
2:29:41 --> 2:29:43
But Trump's a remarkable person.
1489
2:29:43 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]s greatly admired him.
1490
2:29:47 --> 2:29:50
And but he's very divisive.
1491
2:29:50 --> 2:29:58
And I wish we didn't have to go through another divisive period of time because I think we need leaders that will call for rationality, call for unity.
1492
2:29:58 --> 2:30:08
I mean, call for ideas that would be fundamentally positive rather than rush to these ideas where we can solve things to war.
1493
2:30:08 --> 2:30:[privacy contact redaction] we fell into World War I, the way we fell into World War II incrementally and with great enthusiasm to go to war.
1494
2:30:15 --> 2:30:21
You know, I think of Aida and the great enthusiasm for Guerra at the beginning of the opera.
1495
2:30:21 --> 2:30:23
And that's always the case.
1496
2:30:23 --> 2:30:[privacy contact redaction] less enthusiasm to go to war and less enthusiasm for the war makers and those who are going to profit from the war.
1497
2:30:30 --> 2:30:33
And right now they're in the ascendancy.
1498
2:30:33 --> 2:30:36
And I go back to this depopulationism.
1499
2:30:36 --> 2:30:40
I think we've got to wake the people up to say you are at risk.
1500
2:30:40 --> 2:30:[privacy contact redaction] your leadership.
1501
2:30:45 --> 2:30:49
So, Jerome, we were talking earlier about these great composers.
1502
2:30:49 --> 2:30:51
I mean, there are great writers as well.
1503
2:30:51 --> 2:31:03
But let's just so given that these composers are absolutely brilliant, you know, Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, it's just amazing.
1504
2:31:03 --> 2:31:08
I'm really shocked at what has happened this last almost four years now.
1505
2:31:08 --> 2:31:10
Really, really shocked.
1506
2:31:10 --> 2:31:19
And I've said to people the best way I've come up with this, I say to people to get them to think I thought we were better than this.
1507
2:31:19 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction]and?
1508
2:31:21 --> 2:31:23
Yes, I understand.
1509
2:31:23 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction]s a great shock in the concentration camps that, you know, the German culture, which had produced all this brilliance, produced this horror.
1510
2:31:33 --> 2:31:35
Human beings are capable of both.
1511
2:31:35 --> 2:31:41
I believe geniuses like Mozart came in, they'd already heard everything they wrote.
1512
2:31:41 --> 2:31:43
Same with Beethoven.
1513
2:31:43 --> 2:31:45
They weren't composing.
1514
2:31:45 --> 2:31:48
They were writing down what they had already heard.
1515
2:31:48 --> 2:31:50
They came into life with that.
1516
2:31:50 --> 2:32:05
And I believe that was a spiritual element and great human genius, I believe, is gifted by God with the ideas that appear to have been self generated.
1517
2:32:05 --> 2:32:07
I've certainly.
1518
2:32:07 --> 2:32:09
When you observe.
1519
2:32:09 --> 2:32:10
Sorry.
1520
2:32:10 --> 2:32:13
I've certainly had the feeling of that with my life.
1521
2:32:13 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]an for my life that worked out like I wanted it to or thought it would.
1522
2:32:18 --> 2:32:19
I've given up trying.
1523
2:32:19 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction] go along with what comes next.
1524
2:32:21 --> 2:32:47
And I've come to experience that I'm going to be thinking about what's important to be thinking about next because that's what's going to be, you know, this great mathematician, the Indian mathematician, Rasmus John, the one who was Oxford during World War I, when he was asked where he got his brilliant mathematics, you know, probably second to Newton.
1525
2:32:47 --> 2:32:53
In terms of fundamental mathematics genius, he said his God gave it to him.
1526
2:32:53 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]ed he experienced that.
1527
2:32:58 --> 2:33:00
So, one last question.
1528
2:33:00 --> 2:33:02
I'm sure.
1529
2:33:02 --> 2:33:08
Do human beings need suffering and wars.
1530
2:33:08 --> 2:33:14
Because if they don't have that suffering and wars, they're never forced to think and they become lazy.
1531
2:33:14 --> 2:33:24
So is this a mechanism by which the species survives the suffering and the wars are the wars inevitable.
1532
2:33:24 --> 2:33:28
Well, certainly in human history, we had far more wars than we've had peace.
1533
2:33:28 --> 2:33:33
And whether human beings learn from them or not is a debatable question.
1534
2:33:33 --> 2:33:36
You know, we're redoing in Ukraine right now.
1535
2:33:36 --> 2:33:40
World War One World War One was redoing the Civil War.
1536
2:33:40 --> 2:33:57
I think there's got to be a fundamental transformation of human beings, which understands the fallen nature of human beings, understands the fact that we are capable of great evil.
1537
2:33:57 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]art with moral education, just like the communists started with the children in schools to indoctrinate them going back to the 1950s and are still doing it today.
1538
2:34:07 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]ites in classrooms talking to children about sex when they don't understand what sex is, grooming, all that.
1539
2:34:15 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction] moral education.
1540
2:34:18 --> 2:34:30
Do I think human beings, we can have a great expanse of peace and we can have a great we could have a thousand years of human history that prospered.
1541
2:34:31 --> 2:34:44
If we designed if we decided to engineer that and take the and take the lessons that we've learned from history and apply those so that we do decentralize, we do realize the corruption of power, the corruption of money.
1542
2:34:44 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]e where they are driven by moral principles of life, where, you know, we could feed the world with the genius that we've got.
1543
2:34:53 --> 2:34:57
We don't have to create totalitarianism with the machines we're creating.
1544
2:34:57 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction] a great era, but it's going to take a fundamental moral awareness for that to have a chance of happening.
1545
2:35:06 --> 2:35:11
Yes. And you were talking earlier about the human species.
1546
2:35:11 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction] the necessary morality?
1547
2:35:14 --> 2:35:18
I think I can't remember exact words. I did write it down, but I can't find it now.
1548
2:35:19 --> 2:35:20
Sorry.
1549
2:35:20 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction] as much as we do expect from the human species when we look at Beethoven and Bach and all the writers Tolstoy Dostoevsky.
1550
2:35:30 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction] as much as we do from human beings?
1551
2:35:34 --> 2:35:35
Yes.
1552
2:35:35 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction] and aim to achieve it and plan to achieve it, which begins with the fundamental principles by which you live.
1553
2:35:47 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction]es to be shared.
1554
2:35:50 --> 2:35:58
We can create a species of human beings which reject the propensity to evil.
1555
2:35:58 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction] each of us built and within us, the propensity to evil requires a decision not to be evil.
1556
2:36:06 --> 2:36:09
And that is that has to be taught.
1557
2:36:10 --> 2:36:11
Yes, exactly.
1558
2:36:11 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]ually teaching Jerome.
1559
2:36:14 --> 2:36:24
The thing about Trump that I noticed is he's the only one of the candidates who's been talking about education and he's going to change the education system.
1560
2:36:24 --> 2:36:28
Well, I think that we'll get nothing done unless we do that.
1561
2:36:28 --> 2:36:29
I agree with that.
1562
2:36:29 --> 2:36:31
I mean, there's a lot about Trump I like.
1563
2:36:31 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]and what a battle he's in for again.
1564
2:36:36 --> 2:36:39
And I'll be writing books trying to explain to him.
1565
2:36:39 --> 2:36:51
I wrote a book, Killing the Deep State, in 2019 that Orban in Hungary got translated into Hungarian and he brought it into the White House and talked to Trump about the book in the Oval Office.
1566
2:36:51 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]eased he did that.
1567
2:36:54 --> 2:37:05
And, you know, we've got to continue to do this in order to increase the awareness of people that you can reject evil.
1568
2:37:05 --> 2:37:06
All right.
1569
2:37:06 --> 2:37:07
Wait, time's up.
1570
2:37:07 --> 2:37:26
So, Jerome, I am president of the Australia Hungry Chamber of Commerce here in Melbourne and I've said to the group to a week ago that the president of Hungary was in Melbourne last week celebrating commemorating October 2356, the start of the uprising so well done on getting your book published in Hungarian.
1571
2:37:26 --> 2:37:28
Stephen, well done for organizing.
1572
2:37:28 --> 2:37:29
Carla Dean has left us.
1573
2:37:29 --> 2:37:31
Jerome, round of applause everybody.
1574
2:37:31 --> 2:37:32
Congratulations.
1575
2:37:32 --> 2:37:35
Jerome's website is thetruthcentral.com.
1576
2:37:35 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction]ease go there.
1577
2:37:36 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction]s and the like.
1578
2:37:38 --> 2:37:41
And, Jerome, you're doing great work and I look forward to being working with you for the next 50 years.
1579
2:37:41 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, if you start looking after your health better, you'll be around with us for the next 50 years as well.
1580
2:37:44 --> 2:37:47
Well, I'm honored to have been with you all today.
1581
2:37:47 --> 2:37:48
Thank you.
1582
2:37:48 --> 2:37:49
Thank you.
1583
2:37:49 --> 2:37:50
Thank you.
1584
2:37:50 --> 2:37:51
Thank you.
1585
2:37:51 --> 2:37:52
Thank you.
1586
2:37:52 --> 2:37:53
Thank you.
1587
2:37:53 --> 2:37:54
Thank you.
1588
2:37:54 --> 2:37:55
Thank you.
1589
2:37:55 --> 2:37:56
Thank you.
1590
2:37:56 --> 2:37:57
Thank you.
1591
2:37:57 --> 2:37:58
Thank you.
1592
2:37:58 --> 2:37:59
Thank you.
1593
2:37:59 --> 2:38:00
Thank you.
1594
2:38:00 --> 2:38:03
I'm honored to have been with you all today and thank you for the opportunity.
1595
2:38:03 --> 2:38:04
God bless.
1596
2:38:04 --> 2:38:05
Thank you so much.
1597
2:38:05 --> 2:38:08
How long does it take you to write a book, Jerome?
1598
2:38:08 --> 2:38:09
I'm just interested.
1599
2:38:09 --> 2:38:13
Well, I can write a book in a couple of months.
1600
2:38:13 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]ually taken me six months.
1601
2:38:16 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]
1602
2:38:17 --> 2:38:23
But I write these in about four months.
1603
2:38:23 --> 2:38:24
Wow.
1604
2:38:24 --> 2:38:25
Wow.
1605
2:38:25 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction] been published in the last 10 years?
1606
2:38:28 --> 2:38:31
They've been published since 2004.
1607
2:38:31 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]n't actually totaled how many books I've written in my life.
1608
2:38:34 --> 2:38:36
I've got to do that someday.
1609
2:38:36 --> 2:38:41
But it's going to be probably pushing 50 because I did a lot of writing in academics.
1610
2:38:41 --> 2:38:42
I did a lot of writing in business.
1611
2:38:42 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction] books when I was a junior in college and professors used to approach me.
1612
2:38:49 --> 2:38:50
I thought I'd done something wrong.
1613
2:38:50 --> 2:38:52
They want to see me after class.
1614
2:38:52 --> 2:38:56
They wanted to either publish my term papers or write a book with me.
1615
2:38:56 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]arted doing that as an undergraduate.
1616
2:38:59 --> 2:39:00
Excellent.
1617
2:39:00 --> 2:39:04
And again, these things just happened.
1618
2:39:04 --> 2:39:10
Even at the time, I was glad they did it because then I didn't have to go to class.
1619
2:39:10 --> 2:39:17
I didn't have to spend as much boring time in class listening to them because I could write a book with them.
1620
2:39:17 --> 2:39:18
It was more entertaining.
1621
2:39:18 --> 2:39:20
That's how I reacted to it.
1622
2:39:20 --> 2:39:27
Stephen, Stephen, your question is only making us all feel inadequate because remember Jerome got his PhD at 25.
1623
2:39:27 --> 2:39:30
Hello.
1624
2:39:30 --> 2:39:31
And they slowed me.
1625
2:39:31 --> 2:39:35
I'm still mad that they slowed me out.
1626
2:39:35 --> 2:39:36
Very good.
1627
2:39:36 --> 2:39:37
All right.
1628
2:39:37 --> 2:39:38
Great work, Jerome.
1629
2:39:38 --> 2:39:39
Come on.
1630
2:39:39 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction], you should know this, Jerome, if you speak to Trump again.
1631
2:39:42 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction]or, there was no disease called COVID-19.
1632
2:39:47 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction]s was reliable and you don't test for a viral disease with a test anyway.
1633
2:39:53 --> 2:39:54
And guess what?
1634
2:39:54 --> 2:39:58
There was no symptom which was pathognomonic for COVID-19.
1635
2:39:58 --> 2:40:00
So the whole thing was a lie.
1636
2:40:00 --> 2:40:01
I agree with you.
1637
2:40:01 --> 2:40:02
All right.
1638
2:40:02 --> 2:40:03
Done.
1639
2:40:03 --> 2:40:04
Thank you.
1640
2:40:04 --> 2:40:05
Thank you, Jerome.
1641
2:40:05 --> 2:40:06
Thanks, everybody.
1642
2:40:06 --> 2:40:09
I'll contact you about the letter to June Raines.
1643
2:40:09 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction] to it.
1644
2:40:10 --> 2:40:11
Thank you so much.
1645
2:40:11 --> 2:40:12
Thank you.
1646
2:40:12 --> 2:40:13
Thanks, everybody.
1647
2:40:13 --> 2:40:14
God bless.
1648
2:40:14 --> 2:40:15
Thank you.
1649
2:40:15 --> 2:40:16
Thanks, everyone.
1650
2:40:18 --> 2:40:19
Thank you so much, Jerome.
1651
2:40:19 --> 2:40:20
Brilliant.
1652
2:40:20 --> 2:40:[privacy contact redaction]easure.
1653
2:40:21 --> 2:40:22
Thank you.