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That's the way that it goes.
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All right, so everybody, welcome to Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics International.
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This group was founded by and for those of you who have heard this introduction, please listen again for two reasons.
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One, because what you hear today is not what you heard yesterday.
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And two, because there are new visitors, new attendees to the group, including our speaker.
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So it's also relevant to you.
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Dr. Lawrence Pilewski will call you Larry for the purposes of our friendly group.
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0:00:39 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ephen Frost of Wales in mid [privacy contact redaction] days of the COVID
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scam responses with a desire to pursue truth, ethics, justice, freedom and health.
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0:00:56 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] government and power over the years and has been a whistleblower and activist.
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His medical specialty is radiology.
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Sadly, the need for this group is increasing, not decreasing.
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The forces of evil globally are not disappearing.
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I'm Charles Coviss, the moderator of this group.
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I'm Australasia's passion provocateur.
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And my jacket is red because red is the color of passion.
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I've practiced law for 20 years before changing career 30 years ago.
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0:01:35 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] 11 years, I've helped parents and lawyers to strategize remedies for vaccine damage and damage from bad
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medical advice. I'm also chief executive officer of an industrial hemp company based here in Australia.
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0:01:50 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]e who attend this group are indeed passionate about the aims of this group.
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We comprise lots of professions, doctors, lawyers, naturopaths, homeopaths, healers,
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0:02:03 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]s, engineers, writers, researchers, scientists, filmmakers, dentists, nurses, investors,
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financiers, patent experts, professors and educators, primate experts, thinkers, peacemakers,
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philosophers and troublemakers. Larry, there's plenty of troublemakers here.
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The world needs troublemakers. And we're from the UK, USA, Australia, Canada, Argentina, Sweden, Norway,
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Borneo, New Zealand, South Africa, Czech Republic, Germany, Austria and from other places.
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If you are from another country, please put it in the chat. If this is your first time here, welcome
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and feel free to introduce yourself in the chat. We ask that you show your name on the screen so we
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know who you are. If you publish a newsletter or a podcast or you have a radio or TV show or you have
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written a book, put the links into the chat so we can follow you, promote you and find you.
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0:03:05 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] twice weekly in a true spirit of exploration and discovery to increase
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0:03:10 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]anding of what's going on and how to more effectively preserve and fight for truth,
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ethics, justice, freedom and health. Most of us understand that we're in the middle of World War
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Three and that there are various battle lines as part of this war. Some of us believe we are in a
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continuation of World War Two or this might even be the 5G war. Most of us understand the development
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of science. As Carl Sagan wrote, science requires an almost complete openness to all ideas. On the
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other hand, it requires the most rigorous and uncompromising scepticism. The meeting runs for
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two and a half hours, after which for those with the time, Tom Rodman runs a video telegram
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meeting. Tom puts the links into the chat if you're able to join. We will listen to Larry
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Pelewski, our guest presenter, for as long as you wish to speak, Larry, and then we have Q&A.
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0:04:13 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ion, raise your hand using the reactions tab on the bottom
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0:04:18 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction], via long established tradition, will be asking the first set of
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0:04:24 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ions. There is no censorship. It's a free speech environment, but we have proper, efficient
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0:04:31 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ive moderation. Be patient with the process of the meeting. Different people have
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totally different views about what is important, what is relevant and what is nonsense in the
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0:04:43 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ances in which we find ourselves. Free speech is crucially important in our fight to
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preserve our human freedoms. And for those who have not been exposed to communism, my parents
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were refugees from communism from Hungary. And the communist strategy is always to start with
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the liberation of free speech. The tragedy these days is that a majority of people would
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choose security ahead of freedom and then end up with neither. This group can help you to identify
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your beliefs and perhaps help you change those that no longer serve you. This group can help you
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raise your self-awareness. If you find yourself upset by anything that's said, look inside yourself.
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That's where your upset originates. If you're offended by anything, be offended. We are genuinely
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0:05:37 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction] the offence industry that requires nobody to say anything that may
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0:05:44 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]andard responses to someone who claims to be offended
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by something that I said. If you want a copy of the nine standard responses, I'm happy to share it.
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I urge you never to apologise to someone who claims to be offended. Decide to have an open
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mind. It's the fastest way to learn. We come with an attitude and perspective of love, not fear.
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0:06:12 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] speaker, Larry, is certainly loves children. He must love children if he's a
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paediatrician. Fear is the opposite of love. Fear squashes you, suppresses you, depresses you. That's
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where depression comes from. Love, on the other hand, expands you, emerges, energises you, enhances
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you. Loving those with different views to your own is a challenge and we encourage you to embrace
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0:06:39 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] a solution or a product that will help people, put the details into the
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0:06:45 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] links and resources that will be helpful, put them into the chat also. The meeting
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0:06:51 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]e of days onto the Rumble channel. I will put the link
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into the chat. Now, welcome to Dr. Lawrence Pilewski. Larry, who we thank you so much for
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giving us your time and wisdom and insights. We've been having some drama. Sorry for the late notice,
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everybody, but I'm pleased to see that we've got [privacy contact redaction]e here. Well done, Stephen Frost,
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for running around. Thank you, Stephen, for creating this group, for organising, Larry.
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0:07:24 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, before we get to Larry, would you like to say anything?
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Well, thanks to Shasta for helping me and to Curtis Cost as well, he helped and various other
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0:07:37 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction], Larry, I'm sorry I got your name wrong. I've obviously been reading too much
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about Pavlov and I managed to get a V. Very good. It's seductive, isn't it, to put the V
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before the L. Pavlevsky, it sounds even better than Pilevsky, Larry, on the... So you might wish to
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change your name, but anyway, thank you so much for coming on at short notice. Very brave of you.
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And thank... Well, actually, we're a pretty nice crowd, so I don't think you'll find it stressful.
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And Larry, do you want to... You just got to talk or do you want to share your screen? I can make you
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a co-host if you wish. No, no, I'm happy to start talking and... Beautiful. I will talk for a shorter
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time than you're allotting me because I much prefer a back and forth conversation than me just
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0:08:30 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]y. I'm glad I was able to accommodate for this
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0:08:38 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]y. And thank you, Curtis and Shasta, for reaching out to me. What an introduction, Charles.
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That was quite... I was very taken by what you read and I appreciate it. So for people who are
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not familiar with me and my work, I'm a licensed pediatrician in New York State in the United
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States and I graduated NYU School of Medicine in 1987 and did a pediatric residency at Mount Sinai
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Hospital from 1987 to 1990. And after that, I did a one-year fellowship in the outpatient department
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at NYU School of Medicine at Bellevue Hospital where I also worked in the emergency room.
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0:09:21 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] nine years after finishing medical school and residency and fellowship,
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I worked in a pediatric emergency room in the Bronx in New York. I covered a private practice
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0:09:34 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] Side of Manhattan. I ran a pediatric intensive care unit at a hospital
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in Manhattan. I covered the newborn nursery, the neonatal ICU, high-risk deliveries. I covered the
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0:09:50 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] I taught residents and medical students. I worked in the emergency room
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at the same hospital and then eventually I worked in an outpatient clinic at that same hospital.
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And so over those nine years, I did what I was taught to do in medical school. I
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critically thought. And over the nine years, I saw that there was an apparent presentation of things
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in my experience that didn't match what it was that I was told should happen in the world of medicine
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0:10:26 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] trying to fit what I was seeing into the model of what I was
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told, I started to be really curious about what I was seeing that was different from what I was told.
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And lo and behold, I started to move into directions that many of my colleagues in
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my allopathic training were unable to hold space for, one of which was nutrition as a
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field of medicine. And then of course, the big subject of vaccines. And that started in about
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1998. But if I go back even further, I realized that [privacy contact redaction]ioned
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vaccines without realizing that I was questioning vaccines when the hepatitis B vaccine was mandated
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for every newborn. And I thought, wait a second, there's never been a disease that we vaccinated
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for that didn't affect the population that were vaccinating. And so it just seemed strange to me
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that were we given a vaccine. And it wasn't until about 1998 when I realized from a mother who came
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up to me and said, Dr. Larry, did you know there's mercury in vaccines that I actually started
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0:11:43 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] to 2020. When I first heard about the illness called
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COVID, I was very taken aback by what was reported and how the diagnosis was made.
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And then when I got COVID myself in March, April of 2020, and felt the symptoms,
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I knew right then and there that this was a poisoning of epic proportions. And that poisoning
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was very common with the same symptoms of people who were presenting all around New York that my
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and can't do for well over 10 years. And I knew that this could not be a viral illness.
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0:12:42 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction] that the symptoms were presenting, I knew that we were not doing what's
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called a differential diagnosis. I knew that we were not looking at all of the things that could
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be causing the kind of serious symptoms we were seeing, which did not look like flu-like symptoms
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at all. Flu-like symptoms, whether you call it a virus or not, even though it's not a viral
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0:13:09 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]ess, flu-like symptoms almost always look like material coming out of the body. There's
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mucus coming out of the nose. There's mucus coming out of the chest. There's cough that's productive.
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There's fever. There's vomiting. There's diarrhea. There's rashes. Things are moving out of the body.
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0:13:26 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]ess had very few of those common symptoms. In fact, it was a presentation of symptoms that
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looked like something was going in the body. And the dry cough and the inability to maintain
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0:13:43 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]ill having adequate carbon dioxide levels made this more of a blood disorder.
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And so many of us in New York who were seeing this for the first time said, this is a blood
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0:13:56 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]er. This isn't a respiratory disorder. And we were silenced. We were censored. And many of
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0:14:04 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]ors were moved from certain positions in their hospitals to other positions. And then
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0:14:11 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]ors around the world who were saying, this is a blood disorder, were then censored. And then
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sometime late in 2020, the article came out. I don't remember exactly which journal it was
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that said COVID-[privacy contact redaction]er, not a respiratory disorder. And so from the very beginning,
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it was very clear to many of us who were doing a differential diagnosis that these symptoms were
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not typical of a flu and were much more like a poison. And all of that conversation was squelched.
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And for a scientific method, that was dangerous. And we realized that as doctors and other
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we realized that they were getting censored as well, which meant that somebody was trying to make
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a certain narrative happen and somebody was trying to make another narrative disappear.
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And so it became very clear to those of us who do differentials, who critically think,
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who are willing to be wrong, but at least have a discussion, a debate or a dialogue,
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we're all being pushed away. And you saw people who were getting better with the protocols that
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was squelched. And we knew that it was being squelched because the EUA couldn't be used
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0:15:56 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ion if there was an adequate solution for improving people's symptoms.
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0:16:05 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] a layer of lies and difficulties trying to get the truth out
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0:16:11 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]e sick. And then you had another layer of lies about how practitioners
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0:16:19 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]e better. And that was being squelched. And of course, there's issues around
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the mask and lockdowns and whoever quarantines healthy people and the whole idea that a mask
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actually might make you sicker rather than make you healthier. But when those of us
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who were looking at the ingredients of this shot that we were getting some information about,
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we were looking at it at the end of 2020. I did a podcast for Canada in October, November 2020.
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And after researching the information, I made a statement that this shot was a murder weapon.
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And lo and behold, it appears that that's the case. And so how could you have a vaccine,
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0:17:10 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] vaccine in italics, how can you have a vaccine for an illness that's not caused
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0:17:16 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ion? How can you have a vaccine for an illness that isn't infectious? And so if it's not
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0:17:27 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ess, and of course, we can talk about spread and how it seems to spread around
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0:17:33 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]e in a similar environment, which may have nothing to do with contagion and have something
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0:17:39 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] something to do with the environment completely. But how could you have a vaccine
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that's not for an illness that's caused by an infectious agent? And so the question must be
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raised, if there's no infection, what is this injection? And lo and behold, what many of us
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have seen, and I do a podcast every Thursday evening, 7pm Eastern time in New York, called
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0:18:07 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] P, where Dr. Sherry Tenpenny and I go through topics of the
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day and critically think through things, and we're going to talk about the different ways that
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critically think through things. And once a month, we do a five docs podcast with the two of us and
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0:18:26 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]iane Northrup, Dr. Lee Merritt, and Dr. Carrie Madde. And it was April 22nd of 2021,
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0:18:36 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] five docs, where we talked about the flood of stories we were hearing
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0:18:43 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]rual cycles were being changed. And those Facebook posts were being
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0:18:53 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]e who were reporting injury were being removed. And again, more of the
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censorship and the flood of reports that doctors were seeing regarding increases in cancer rates,
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0:19:09 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]rual cycle difficulties, increasing in infertility, increasing in
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miscarriages, and then soon to see increases in heart attacks, myocarditis, strokes, cancers,
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neurological problems, autoimmune diseases, fetal demise. I mean, there are nurses who are now
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nurses who are now reporting in great numbers the increase in fetal demises in OBGYN and OB suites,
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and how that information is being squelched, and how many people in hospitals who went in for a
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motor vehicle accident were labeled COVID death, even though their death was from something
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unrelated to COVID. And that was happening all over the world and how the intervention
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0:20:00 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ually an inappropriate intervention for taking care of someone who was
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hypoxic with different difficulty breathing, having nothing to do with a respiratory disorder,
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0:20:12 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]er that in due time created lung pathology because of the
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0:20:18 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ed the lungs in addition to every other part of the body.
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And so we're seeing neurological problems, autoimmune problems, etc. And the question that
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0:20:33 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]s raise is why would that be censored? Why would people who legitimately
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0:20:40 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]raight in front of them be told that their experience is wrong
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0:20:47 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]en to them? And why would they be censored unless there's another agenda
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and so it's not a world of freedom, it's a world of tyranny where open discussion and debate is
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no longer accepted. And that should raise an alert even to people who are unaware that there's a
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and saying, what would be going on that would allow for the censorship of public discussion
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0:21:27 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]ed in talking through a problem? And I think, you know,
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again, as I was saying before we started the recording, most people in my experience don't
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know things because we tell them things. They know things because they either have their own
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experiment and their own experience in their own backyard or because someone close to them has
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0:21:55 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]s them. But to just hand people the news that says, yeah, people are dying
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0:22:02 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] numbers of heart attacks and cardiac arrest and myocarditis and yeah, there are hundreds
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if not thousands of young professional and amateur athletes who are just collapsing all over the place.
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0:22:19 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]er for them to believe it, sometimes they really need to know someone or have the experience
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themselves for that wake up to happen. And I think one of the things that I've seen, at least in the
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states, that is encouraging is that parents and others who are not parents who never thought to
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0:22:43 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ion the vaccine schedule are now not only questioning the truthfulness of this COVID injection,
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but they're questioning the entire childhood and adult vaccine schedule. And I commend those people,
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0:22:59 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] suffered at the hands of one or more of the childhood and adult shots or
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0:23:06 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] a lot of recovery to do going forward as we come out from
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under a rock and as we un-numb and un-dumb the society that we're living in as a whole.
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And we realize that it is a dark, sinister agenda that is at play here.
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And it's not as if there hasn't been this agenda for centuries. And I think when you tell people
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that there is a dark agenda going on, their first response is, no, that could never happen. Our
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government wouldn't hurt us. That's not possible. How could that possibly happen? They have our best
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0:24:01 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] at heart. And you see, we have a rear view mirror that's blocked. There's a towel over it,
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or there's masking tape over it, or it broke or it fell off. Because we forget that history does
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repeat itself. And the cleverness, and I use that word in italics, of the people behind the agenda
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is that they know, they know that people have retrograde amnesia. They know it happened in the
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sort of cognitive dissonance. And that's one of the ways in which those who are in charge of
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0:24:49 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]er agenda get their agenda through with their propaganda and with their lies.
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0:24:56 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]e are desperate for an authority outside of them to whom they can
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offer their worship and their idolization. And I think it's the book Brothers Karamazov by Dostoevsky,
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where he said, I'm paraphrasing, so long as people are free, they're going to incessantly and
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needingly look for someone or something to worship. And this is very true, that we have
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had centuries worth of an outsourcing of our knowledge base, an outsourcing of our worship
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0:25:45 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]er to feel like we are okay. And that freedom, that sovereignty has been surrendered
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through centuries. It's an issue of shifting of consciousness. And I think we are at a time in
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the world where we are shifting the consciousness. We are realizing on a huge global level that we
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can no longer allow a source outside of ourselves to tell us what's true. And that we must go inside.
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0:26:17 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]e worship the God, a God, spirit, soul, Buddha, or even atheists, we realize that the
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0:26:30 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] important thing is for us to go inside and check how we know things. And I've often taught
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0:26:38 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]s, that there are three ways to know things.
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One is intuition, where you hear things, you see things, you think of things, you know things,
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and you look at things and you say to yourself, let me check in. Let me see if on a body scale,
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0:26:57 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]em scale, what I'm considering could be true. The second way is that
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0:27:08 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] experiences. We experience, we experiment, we trial and error, we go over and over and over
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things, we research, we have experiments, and we come to know things because we've actually gone
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through the mud and we've come to know things. And if anybody knows kids, has kids, studies kids,
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that's how kids learn. That's how kids learn. They learn by being curious and being okay with
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uncertainty and unknown. And they go forth doing things to have experiences so that they then can
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incorporate that knowledge and that wisdom into themselves. And then the third thing, the way we
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know things is because we are told. And unfortunately, over the number of years that I've been alive,
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especially since I've been in college from 40 plus years ago, I have watched a slow drain
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0:28:19 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s of gaining knowledge and a massive amplification of knowledge based on
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what they say. And I think we are at a tremendous crossroads. And if we are going to truly shift
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the consciousness in our world, I think it's going to start with parents. And the way I believe it's
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0:28:44 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]op giving kids the answers to everything that we want them
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0:28:52 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]op doing things for them. We stop making it easier for them. And we allow kids
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0:29:01 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]art to figure things out for themselves. Because I have watched over the last 30 plus years
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a growing set of parents that is bringing up kids who have to rely on an outsourcing of knowledge.
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Because the parents are being so over loving that they're doing it for their kids
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0:29:29 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] to feel what it's like to learn something through
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0:29:35 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] don't want their kids to feel uncomfortable anymore.
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And so if we're going to change the next set of our generation, I feel and strongly that there's a
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different kind of parenting that's required where we go back to guiding children to learn things
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and not giving them the answers. So that when they try something and then they look up and they say,
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give me the answer, you say, yeah, I'd love to give you the answer, but I want you to find it
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yourself. You know, it's that video I once saw of a kid, maybe four years of age, who was
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0:30:22 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ool to try to make it happen. And he must have fallen about four, five, six times.
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Sometimes he fell flat on his face. And the person who was videotaping him, which I think was his dad,
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0:30:37 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ood there and watched. And then as the kid kept doing it, he got closer and closer and closer
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0:30:43 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ool and he stood up there in a victory, screamed like this, yes.
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And you knew that this kid had learned something. You knew that this kid had developed
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a sense of confidence, a sense of ability to try even though failure was happening.
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0:31:11 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ill in his curiosity do more. And we have lost that kind of
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parenting in our society because the comments that I've heard over the last 30 years from,
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I don't know how many hundreds if not thousands of parents, is, well, I don't want my kid to feel bad.
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0:31:36 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] half of life when you take away the discomfort because we who are older
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0:31:44 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]y to go through a trial and error and the depth of pain
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and loss and sorrow that's required in order to come up with something new and something wow.
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0:32:01 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]arts when an infant becomes a toddler because the infant becoming a toddler is
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unbelievably full of curiosity. And if we watch what's happening in our world,
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there's no longer any curiosity. There's just this swallowing of an outside comment
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0:32:23 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] be true because they said it. And so if they said it, why would I have any reason to
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0:32:33 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ion it? And for those of us who have done our homework, we know that the agenda is to stop
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0:32:41 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]e from thinking. We know that the agenda is to stop people from using their critical mind
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because otherwise if you used your critical mind, you might actually see what's underneath that rock.
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0:32:59 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] in medicine, not just in science,
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0:33:05 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] in media, not just in government, but we're at a crossroads in consciousness.
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0:33:11 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]ually really required to go further inside and ask ourselves what's true
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and where do we get that truth from and how do we arrive at our thought process and our knowledge
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and our wisdom. And it's not going to come from an internet source. It's not going to come from a
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video game. It's not going to come from a cell phone and it's not going to come from a computer.
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It's going to come from us really allowing ourselves to toil and experiment and explore
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and engage in trial and error so that our knowledge can never be taken away from us
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because it's our experience. So no one can tell me that my experience is wrong.
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No matter how much they try, I know that if I saw a kid get a shot and die
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because it happened in front of me, I know no one can take that away from me. And if we watch
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the whole concept of gaslighting and we watch what's happened over decades of parents who have been
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0:34:32 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] gone to the pediatrician or the family doc for their
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pediatric routine visits and the kids were never the same after their shots and the parents would
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0:34:46 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]or would privately say, yeah, it was probably the shots,
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but never write it in the chart or never agree to speaking about it in public. We've been seeing
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that for decades. So what's happening now with the COVID injection is the same playbook. It's just
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0:35:10 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ified on a much larger scale. And so with the CDC recommending this murder weapon to children
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0:35:19 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]er for get into school, and we know that state governments in the United
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States and departments of health are very apt to simply accept that if the CDC made the
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recommendation, it must be a good one and will implement it even though the injection is only
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authorized and not licensed for or approved for use in the pediatric schedule. We know that there's
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0:35:51 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]s where parents are either their parents are going to be faced
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0:35:58 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction] or another, either take your kid out of school or allow the state to tell you
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what's best for your kid, which has been going on for a long time now is now amplified in so many
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ways, especially regarding the curriculum and the transgender movement and the clinics and the whole
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lot. And we're going to need parents to decide, do I take my kid out of school and save my kid
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from a harmful intervention or do I send my kid to the wolves, to the state and worry whether or
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not I'm going to get my kid back, worry whether or not my kid's going to ever walk again, worry
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whether or not my kid's heart is going to work, worry whether or not my kids are ever going to be
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0:36:51 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]en so that I can be a grandparent. And that's really where we are in the United
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States and it's a race. It's truly a race to see whose voices are louder and who's going to comply
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and who's not going to comply. And so all the information in the world, all the publication of
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data in the world, I don't know is sufficient. I think and I've experienced that most of what
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moves the needle is the experience that people are going to have to go through. And in my experience,
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the only thing that moves the needle in the world is your purchasing power. And if you stop buying a
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0:37:38 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction], if you stop buying a product, then whoever's in authority will eventually listen.
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But as long as you're buying the product, you are complying to their agenda and you will succumb
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to the consequences if you can even identify what the consequences are from the choices that you make.
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So I'm going to take a breath and stop right there.
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Wonderful. Larry, wonderful. I'll show, I want to share a screen just very relevant
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0:38:16 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] talked about. Here it is. Here's the hypnotizing of the masses.
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So it's just a beautiful depiction of let's distract people. Let's stop them thinking. Now
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the other, the before we get to Stephen, you talked about the,
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you talked about the need to worship and you quoted Dostoevsky and
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that need to worship is where we get celebrity worship, it appears, you know, we just love
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celebrities and so we're putting them on a pedestal. John Rappaport beautifully, I've been
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a fan of his for 15 years. He says that he articulates it very well. He says our system
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0:39:05 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]anning, through the planning that you're talking about Larry has made the doctor royalty.
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And so it is inconceivable that our king could do harm to us and so that's the other challenge
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that we face. We've had a century of honoring and in Australia the government honours system,
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0:39:30 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ing of honours to anyone to do with the medical profession is
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0:39:35 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]inary and so the whole game is everyone's got these badges on them that they've got an
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0:39:40 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] be, so the system supports that.
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Charles, I remember when I was a kid, I remember observing that because the United States doesn't
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have a royal family, I remember having discussions with people and hearing people talk about
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0:39:59 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] that we allow our royalty to be Hollywood and we allow our royalty to be government
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governmental politicians and we allow our royalty to be medical doctors and don't think that's
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a coincidence. You know and the propaganda, I mean you go way back to many of our grandparents
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0:40:26 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]or said it therefore it's true and that has passed itself
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down over generations and I remember you know speaking to mothers along the way
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0:40:42 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]arting to learn the side effects of the childhood injections in their kids,
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0:40:49 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ors would get extremely, extremely offended that the mothers would actually question
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0:41:00 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]arted to become pediatricians some of that started to
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0:41:07 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ed like the men like how dare you I'm the authority but
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0:41:14 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]arted to shift when women were becoming pediatricians and they started to have
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0:41:20 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]en but yeah we definitely have this need to idolize that which is outside of us
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because you know it somehow gives us a sense of comfort that we can identify, we can know ourselves
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you know and you know go back to child development, how does a baby know him or herself
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through the eyes of the mother? Yeah and so who knows if that's really happening
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0:41:54 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]age is missed then of course there's going to be a need to know
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0:42:02 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ead of knowing thyself through thine own eyes.
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0:42:08 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]e know themselves these days. Yeah hence the challenge that's what
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0:42:14 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ephen as we know this is an opportunity for self-awareness to know ourselves
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0:42:19 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ephen. Charles the important point is that many people think
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0:42:25 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]n't got a clue. Well you don't know that that's the other point.
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I'm willing to say that I do actually because they're not effective members of society.
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Yeah well I'm willing to say I'm learning myself. Sure because they're all trying yes. Yeah the last
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0:42:43 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ephen's questions it's you talked about the need
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and we've talked about it in this group Larry and his twice weekly meetings that the move the needle
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through purchasing power and then why don't we move the needle through purchasing power and the
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answer is because of convenience. Right. I don't you know it's convenient now then look at the genius
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0:43:12 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]iving us because coming back to what you said parents are trying to make
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life easy for their kids. So of course kids have grown up oh gosh life is meant to be easy and
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therefore why would I not choose the convenient way. That's our mental challenge to to do the
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0:43:31 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] So again this is again about outsourcing our comfort and so how many people
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in the world I don't know I can't tell you but how many people in the world got a shot because
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they had to go on that cruise or got a shot because they otherwise wouldn't be able to go to the
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wedding or got a shot because they couldn't go to the theater or the movie or the doctor gave the
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shot because he had his mortgage to pay. Right so yeah so my concern is where are we deciding
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about what's in our best interest versus what we like or what we want or this idea that my life
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will die if I don't go to the wedding my life will die if I don't go on the cruise and that's
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where we get back into those primal fearful hindbrain you know reptilian brain experiences.
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So Lawrence so the shallowness of contemporary life is remarkable it's really when you really
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think about what's going on and this going to weddings and funerals of people they never even
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like you know especially funerals and so people at both weddings unfortunately and funerals who
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aren't there for the right reasons in my opinion which is why I hate both
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but so that's one thing but also you're absolutely right on over these overprotective parents and
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stupid teachers in schools who are saying that they're protecting the children so people learn
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by suffering it's just nonsense we need to challenge this at every opportunity and you're
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you're a brilliant communicator Larry you so I think your biggest strength is that people when
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0:45:31 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction] this authenticity about you as a human being not only as a
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pediatrician but of course you know about children well not all pediatricians know about children but
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you do and any good mother will sense that so you have a very good platform to speak from and people
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will believe you I mean I believe you you know I can hear from the way you talk what you say
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I'm talking
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0:46:03 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction] um sorry Larry that's okay
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so um I wonder so um you were talking about uh that so essentially I think you were you were
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0:46:21 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction] interfered with our consciousness and in particular in my opinion
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they target they've deliberately targeted children because why bother with people who've lived 50,
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60, 40 years you know it's too difficult maybe to change them so start with the children let's
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0:46:41 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]en and target them with this nonsense at school you know we
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need to charge it if I had school-aged children now I definitely wouldn't allow them to go to
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school and anybody on this call uh needs to listen to someone like you who clearly has thought about
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0:47:00 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]y and you speak with massive authenticity I think both as a doctor
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and as a human being wow thank you very much Stephen that's very sweet thank you um I want
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0:47:15 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] said and and go down a rabbit hole because um I'm I'm okay saying
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that it's always been about getting the children it's never been about just taking down the
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population it's there's a there's in my research and in my understanding of what's going on in the
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0:47:41 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]s been about child sacrifice child killing sex trafficking rape
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pillage and this satanic if I might say uh uh custom of using the child as the greatest sacrifice
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to their god Baal or whoever it was and so the idea from my perspective and watching my you know
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in my research over the decades of shots and seeing what is in the shots and understanding
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what is in the shots and the absolute inability of the medical profession to read the science
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about what's in the shots for that cognitive dissonance and really understanding that if you
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read the chemical nature of the shots you will clearly see that it is meant to destroy the brain
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0:48:49 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]em I mean there's there's no doubt I mean anyone who has a simple understanding
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0:48:55 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] look at the ingredients look up to toxicology and understand that there's a
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0:49:03 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] correlation but in my experience it's always been about taking down the children
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and so they went and end around when it came to giving this shot to children even though there
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0:49:19 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ess in the pediatric population and they they've captured
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it and they are they are glorified for them they're like salivating that they have the the the
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0:49:37 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]en because that's been their goal the whole time yeah yes it's capturing it's
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0:49:46 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]en and the global the global organization for anti-trafficking I know the former
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0:49:55 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]en trafficked each year globally is a minimum of 10 million so Larry we've
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got a big we've got a big challenge before us of of doing what you're saying protecting you know
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so here's this dilemma isn't it we want to protect the children but we have to make life tough for
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them otherwise they're not going to be able to do anything so we've got some questions Stephen are
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0:50:20 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ions we've got Winston and Jeremy with questions but but we but Larry
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0:50:25 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] set of questions yeah I'm just so um Lawrence I'd be
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0:50:32 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ed to hear your views on um how we attack schools and the education system for the
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nonsense that they're feeding children at the moment and you know maybe it was bad
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when I was at primary school but it's [privacy contact redaction]ually get and also
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0:50:58 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]op and I agree we should stop uh
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0:51:07 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]op buying things you know how do we get everyone to understand the importance
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0:51:13 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]upid desires you know to buy things that they convinced themselves
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0:51:20 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] they don't need them at all they just want them right and a week later
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a week later they've forgotten all about it it was all about buying and impressing whomever I don't
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know pressing themselves um they don't even know why they bought it after they've forgotten they
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bought it a week later how do we educate people around this kind of nonsense you know so so um
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I mean I don't think I have the the answer but I have an answer um and I'm curious to hear people's
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response to it um I don't believe in attacking the school system at all I think that's a waste of
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time and the reason I think that's a waste of time is because you're asking daddy to be good to
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you now and not abuse you and not hurt you anymore you're going to the abuser you're going to the
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0:52:24 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ease don't hurt me anymore instead I wouldn't think you Larry I wasn't
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0:52:32 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ease don't do that I was thinking of telling them to do their damn
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0:52:37 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]en I think it's a waste of time and here's why they're not going to listen
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because they don't have to because people keep sending their kids there people are still going
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right so you know it's like in in New York there's a basketball team called the New York Knicks
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and they've been horrible for years and the owner is not well liked at all but every night
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0:53:07 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]en in New York is sold out so why does he have to worry about public opinion
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of him or the Knicks right and I think that's similar to what I'm saying is you're trying to
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ask something that is immovable be different instead of saying I'm going to create something new
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in an environment that it works for me and works for others so I'm not even going to ask you to be
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different it's like it's like let's say there's one supermarket in a town and it has the worst produce
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0:53:51 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] meats and and and animal products but it's the only thing that people have
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and they keep going to the person and saying we want better stuff and it never changes so what
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0:54:06 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]e get together and through classic economics market economy they put the money up
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to open a new supermarket and they work with the farmers and they work with the distributors
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0:54:24 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]s what's going to happen to the old market
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0:54:29 --> 0:54:38
no one's going to go and that market will close that's always been the way societies change
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0:54:39 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]e are and how averse they are to taking responsibility for
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0:54:46 --> 0:54:53
their own lives right how on earth are we going to convince enough people for long enough to create
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the uh the cooperative supermarket for lack of a better word the the thing is is that
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0:55:00 --> 0:55:10
you know very early on in my career um I was told um I try to convince people all the time
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0:55:10 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]e I try to persuade people and what I realized was that that was the paradigm
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0:55:19 --> 0:55:28
that we were suffering from I'm the doctor listen to me I know better and what I'm now realizing
448
0:55:28 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] been for years is that that's not the way people move they move because they see something
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0:55:37 --> 0:55:43
different happening and in a conversation they say oh yeah you know I buy my stuff at this
450
0:55:43 --> 0:55:49
supermarket oh yeah I don't go anymore oh really why don't you go anymore yeah because I'm actually
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0:55:49 --> 0:55:55
part of a group that now shops here oh really you shop over there now hum that's interesting give me
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0:55:55 --> 0:56:05
the name of it where is it sure and I feel that it always starts from the bottom up not from
453
0:56:06 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]itutions don't have to change they never have to change
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0:56:15 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]e who who decide to shop at the new place they're not doing it for the best
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0:56:22 --> 0:56:27
of motives you know they may be doing it because they like they respect that person they want to
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0:56:27 --> 0:56:34
be like that person you know so but it doesn't really matter I suppose how we how we achieve it
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0:56:34 --> 0:56:41
the idea that I'm trying to put forth is you know our Buckminster Fuller to me said it best and I'm
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0:56:41 --> 0:56:49
going to paraphrase it uh if you want to affect change you don't try to change what's there
459
0:56:49 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]em that makes the old one obsolete absolutely and actually when I think
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0:56:56 --> 0:57:01
about it Larry that's what we did with this group we just formed something different I didn't even
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0:57:01 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction] knew that it was probably best to create something in my own
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0:57:07 --> 0:57:13
vision as opposed to the previous incarnation of this group which was taken over by scientists
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0:57:13 --> 0:57:21
right and Larry Larry I hope Larry I hope you can I hope you can see
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0:57:21 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]er Fuller's Dimexian map behind my head I can't see it but thanks
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0:57:28 --> 0:57:38
see my passion my passion hasn't been to make daddy listen to me no there's no reason to
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0:57:39 --> 0:57:46
daddy continues to abuse me why do we keep going back asking daddy to make it better for us
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0:57:46 --> 0:57:53
but the problem is uh Lawrence that um many people most people in fact seem to like being abused
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0:57:53 --> 0:58:01
how do we deal with us that's okay because because we are not going to change everyone's minds
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0:58:02 --> 0:58:09
we're going to it you know be the change you want to see in the world is much more
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0:58:09 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]e over the head with the truth but Larry you talked about parents
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0:58:16 --> 0:58:23
I absolutely agree with you the parents over protect their children and so do the grandparents
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0:58:23 --> 0:58:29
they're all thinking about how can we entertain the children oh let's take them to to um what's
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0:58:29 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] in Paris you know and Florida they've got another one uh you know the places Disney
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0:58:35 --> 0:58:43
World or whatever it is and they're all trying to gain the popularity of their children they
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0:58:43 --> 0:58:48
haven't got any courage with their own children for god's sake so they they call you know they
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0:58:48 --> 0:58:53
can't risk being unpopular with their own children they don't seem to realize that as parents and as
477
0:58:53 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ead of doting on their children they damn well need to show the children what life
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0:58:59 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]art but very few parents read to their children so sorry
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0:59:06 --> 0:59:15
I'm so oh no no I I think we're saying the same thing um similar things anyway but I'm of the
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0:59:15 --> 0:59:23
belief as I said in my presentation that we must start with parenting and child education
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0:59:24 --> 0:59:31
and teaching parents how the brain develops how children develop how we need to move in a different
482
0:59:31 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ion but I also don't feel that banging people over the head with the truth ever works
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0:59:42 --> 0:59:52
and I truly believe that what moves the needle is people having an experience with you
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0:59:53 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ed in what you now believe or what you're now interested in I don't want to
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1:00:00 --> 1:00:07
judge these parents for going to Disney but I would say oh that's nice and this is what happens
486
1:00:08 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ice there are parents who say oh that's nice but I don't do that with my kids
487
1:00:15 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] and that gives the other family an opportunity to open a conversation that says
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1:00:21 --> 1:00:30
huh why is that right if we say to parents you shouldn't take your kids to those places
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1:00:30 --> 1:00:36
no I wasn't suggesting that I wasn't I know you're not but I'm just saying because we're so
490
1:00:37 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]e and get people over to our side I think the best way to get
491
1:00:42 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]e to our side is to be the side it because people will take interest when they start looking
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1:00:51 --> 1:00:57
over and going but how come you're going over there like what is it like how many families in
493
1:00:57 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] kids who are miles and miles and miles advanced in their development over
494
1:01:06 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ayground and some parents actually lean in and say how come and then the
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1:01:14 --> 1:01:20
parents can say well we don't give shots to our kids you know what Larry Larry I think that um
496
1:01:21 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]an Peterson I don't really know him the clinical psychologist Canadian he's
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1:01:25 --> 1:01:32
absolutely brilliant he's got a reading list on his website and I for one am very interested in
498
1:01:32 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] and I think others are too I think someone like you a very respected um
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1:01:39 --> 1:01:47
pediatrician um and with this authenticity which I talked about before you know you could do that
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1:01:47 --> 1:01:53
you could put you could let it be known that you've got a list of books a hundred books
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1:01:54 --> 1:02:00
on your website you know advice so that people actually have got something to turn to and think
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1:02:00 --> 1:02:06
some will think I'm going to read every single one of those books because I've thought that about
503
1:02:06 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]an Peterson's books I haven't had time to look at them recently but I keep meaning to look um
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1:02:12 --> 1:02:22
so I'm sorry I want to tell you a funny story sure um a mother emailed me about three or four years
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1:02:22 --> 1:02:32
ago and uh she reminded me that I saw her son in 1999 now I wasn't even 40 years old yet
506
1:02:33 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] Pilevsky I've been following your work and I just want to let you know that when I
507
1:02:40 --> 1:02:48
when you saw my child in 1999 I asked you what book I should read to help bring up my child
508
1:02:49 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]opped for a second you turned to my son you pointed to him and you said
509
1:02:57 --> 1:03:05
read that book that's the book to read and she said she said I said to her read that book
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1:03:05 --> 1:03:13
when I was pointing to her child and she said that was the most salient and brilliant information
511
1:03:13 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]or because the problem is and I'm not saying that books aren't
512
1:03:19 --> 1:03:27
helpful the problem is that we try to go here to get answers when the issue is right in front of us
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1:03:27 --> 1:03:36
right in front of us and she got it and she said that it helped her take care of her child
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1:03:37 --> 1:03:45
so much differently because she was connected to the child instead of flipping through books
515
1:03:45 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]aying over there and so I'm not saying books aren't important but what I'm saying
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1:03:53 --> 1:04:02
is that we are in need of returning parents to connecting to their child in a way that we haven't
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1:04:02 --> 1:04:08
done and I'm happy to lay that out because I've been talking about it and lecturing about it
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1:04:08 --> 1:04:13
and teaching it for a while but now's not the the the form but Larry I think it's very important
519
1:04:13 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]e like you and me for that matter and all the people on this group there are many
520
1:04:18 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]e on this group that they realize how important they are in their children's eyes
521
1:04:26 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]en think and try to guide them in this crazy world we're in
522
1:04:33 --> 1:04:39
one of the things I wanted to mention was that I meet people all the time so [privacy contact redaction] from
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1:04:39 --> 1:04:45
where I'm sitting now Bertrand Russell you know the famous British philosopher lived
524
1:04:46 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]s and he died I can't quite remember when but I was always very sad after he died that I
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1:04:53 --> 1:05:02
hadn't actually gone to knock on his door so I was only a child but even so I wished I had done that
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1:05:02 --> 1:05:07
because I could see that you know bearing in mind what I understand the importance of what you're
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1:05:07 --> 1:05:13
saying but you know talking to someone like Bertrand Russell would have been an incredible
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1:05:13 --> 1:05:19
experience which I think would possibly life-changing but so I wanted to ask you
529
1:05:19 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]e all the time here in North Wales who they have the opportunity to meet
530
1:05:28 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ing and they can't make the time to do it they they're having an interesting
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1:05:35 --> 1:05:40
conversation with someone this is another example and they haven't got time to finish the conversation
532
1:05:40 --> 1:05:46
because they've got to do some inane task you know it's more important than finishing the
533
1:05:46 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]e don't seem to understand the value of wisdom and if they have a chance
534
1:05:54 --> 1:06:00
to hear some wisdom they don't want to listen to it and my feeling is that they are convinced
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1:06:00 --> 1:06:07
that they will never ever need to be wise so why do they need to try to become wise
536
1:06:08 --> 1:06:13
they don't even know what the word wisdom is so what I'm trying to say is they're not suffering
537
1:06:13 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]ly what you were describing earlier they're not suffering enough there's no
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1:06:19 --> 1:06:25
incentive for them and now I say to them well you better wake up because the government the
539
1:06:25 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] smile
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1:06:28 --> 1:06:41
Well yeah I don't feel like it's my job as a human being to do anything more than
541
1:06:41 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] compassion for them and just remember that
542
1:06:48 --> 1:06:54
but Larry you could influence them in a very positive way only if they're open to it and only
543
1:06:54 --> 1:07:00
if they're interested in my experience and I know that when you plant a seed Stephen
544
1:07:01 --> 1:07:09
the flower takes a while to bloom it doesn't happen overnight and my experience I have had
545
1:07:09 --> 1:07:18
so many families over the years who I didn't see for five ten years almost 20 years say to me
546
1:07:18 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction] want you to know that it changed my life and these are the
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1:07:27 --> 1:07:34
things that we're responsible for we're responsible for planting seeds sharing our experience and
548
1:07:34 --> 1:07:41
and having a conversation that doesn't judge that just allows for the differing of opinions
549
1:07:41 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]and you feel that way but I just want to let you know that
550
1:07:47 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ant that seed by sharing a different experience
551
1:07:54 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] from my perspective you need to know this because that didn't work
552
1:08:00 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]or in fact it was offensive from my perspective and what came
553
1:08:08 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] in which we share experiences the way in which we talk to
554
1:08:16 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]e is part of the shift in consciousness in addition to parenting our kids different sure
555
1:08:22 --> 1:08:29
I think I think we agree on many things most things I would say but I haven't got your patience and I
556
1:08:29 --> 1:08:33
know that and I'm sorry I'm sorry to all those people on the call who think that I go on too
557
1:08:33 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ions but I'm trying to I'm trying to give you a chance to show who you
558
1:08:41 --> 1:08:47
really are to the group but so my intentions are good but they don't always come off no I
559
1:08:48 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ioning okay I grew up in New York I grew up in New York Stephen yeah you're very
560
1:08:55 --> 1:09:03
generous you're very generous that's it all right so excellent excellent let's get on to the other
561
1:09:03 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]art putting your hands up because Stephen Larry you must know that
562
1:09:09 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ions for the next two hours as could each one of us you know so it's
563
1:09:14 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ephen's going I want to ask this question but there are other people so anyway
564
1:09:20 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ephen gets the last set of questions Larry so Stephen just be patient
565
1:09:25 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]s finishes this is a point of course um because I'm not doing it
566
1:09:31 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] for my sake I'm trying to I'm trying to show off the guest in a
567
1:09:38 --> 1:09:44
good light because we've invited the guests and they've been good enough to come on for no money
568
1:09:44 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]n't paid Larry money what no we haven't paid him we'd like to
569
1:09:51 --> 1:09:57
pay you Larry but are you worth it but we can't we haven't got any money ourselves that's it oh
570
1:09:57 --> 1:10:03
and that's another thing Larry people bemoan the fact that they haven't got money all right come on
571
1:10:03 --> 1:10:08
stay with us David we're going to another another channel here come on Winston our favorite ex
572
1:10:08 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] or you're still practicing psychiatry Winston no no no no I am just
573
1:10:14 --> 1:10:20
I know I know but thank you for the opportunity thank you Dr. Polevsky I think I got that
574
1:10:20 --> 1:10:30
pronunciation right and for a thought-provoking discussion um I will attempt to look at some of
575
1:10:30 --> 1:10:36
the things myself in my own life that you have suggested however you've confused me
576
1:10:38 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]and that there has been some sort of uh dilemma
577
1:10:46 --> 1:10:55
uh differences in opinion between whether COVID whatever that really is COVID-19 now 23 and ongoing
578
1:10:56 --> 1:11:07
is uh respiratory disease or a blood disease now from my readings which have been quite has been
579
1:11:07 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] communicated with uh two professors uh Bagby and um Yidin
580
1:11:17 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]en to McCulloch who talks about the providing nasal rinse and so
581
1:11:24 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] to ask it is in my impression that COVID whatever it is really is a respiratory
582
1:11:33 --> 1:11:40
disease that lodges itself in our nasal passages forget anatomically what those are called which
583
1:11:40 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]s we rinse with 10% pylori and other solutions as well um so and that's
584
1:11:49 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ed there is CD4 CD8 cells that nobody talks about it talk about antibodies
585
1:11:58 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]s anatomy and
586
1:12:04 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]udies we know that the blood and the air do not mix apart
587
1:12:13 --> 1:12:21
from the the diffusion gradients with respect to the air carbon dioxide and so on so my question
588
1:12:21 --> 1:12:37
to you is so if um COVID is primarily a blood-borne illness how does how does
589
1:12:39 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] of all the organism get into the bloodstream bearing in mind it does not mix and I don't think
590
1:12:47 --> 1:12:57
it could pass by air and then secondly how does it affect the lung and it has been my impression
591
1:12:57 --> 1:13:04
that that one of the that the issue is in terms of the blood is that the injection whatever is
592
1:13:04 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]e causes the harm in the blood um and so um so I'd like you to clarify
593
1:13:16 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] Winston um okay I'm going to take a deep breath
594
1:13:24 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]ow into this so um we currently live in a world where everything that happens regarding
595
1:13:38 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]ion everything at least in the pediatric world anytime someone gets
596
1:13:49 --> 1:13:57
sick there's a bug going around anytime someone is sick you have an infection you need a medication
597
1:13:59 --> 1:14:07
there's a virus going around and we have never questioned that we have never taken the time
598
1:14:08 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ually delve into some of the deeper sciences to understand whether the reason people get sick
599
1:14:17 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ious agent and so there's a huge controversy in the world right now
600
1:14:28 --> 1:14:37
and it is volatile and it is very difficult to navigate because of its volatility and that issue
601
1:14:37 --> 1:14:47
is around viruses and I remember learning in medical school that viruses are inert that they're
602
1:14:47 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] no ability to self-replicate and that all a virus is is
603
1:14:58 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ions DNA or RNA that in and of itself have no capacity to do anything
604
1:15:11 --> 1:15:18
unless these pieces of genetic materials were embedded inside a cellular mechanism
605
1:15:19 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ant an animal or bacteria
606
1:15:26 --> 1:15:32
and so even from medical school [privacy contact redaction]udied science
607
1:15:33 --> 1:15:43
we were taught that viruses in and of themselves cannot be infectious because they can only replicate
608
1:15:43 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] and so somehow we forgot that
609
1:15:54 --> 1:16:01
but then over the years as the idea of viruses was continuously thrown at us
610
1:16:03 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]arted to realize that there is no such thing as an isolated virus
611
1:16:11 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ually no one has ever seen a viral particle we have created a pictorial of a viral
612
1:16:19 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] never truly seen a virus or ever seen a virus in action and so when we take
613
1:16:35 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ep back and hear that you know we go what is that I mean I had a public discussion with Dr.
614
1:16:42 --> 1:16:51
McCullough about this whole idea of viruses not viruses and he looked at me on a panel and he
615
1:16:51 --> 1:17:00
said if you're right Larry the whole system of western medicine will collapse and sort of I left
616
1:17:01 --> 1:17:09
it there I didn't respond to him because in fact there are some brilliant scientists and medical
617
1:17:09 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ors who are more and more showing that we've never seen a virus and if you tell me that we have
618
1:17:19 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ron microscope I can paint a black and white dot on a black and white picture
619
1:17:26 --> 1:17:35
and tell you it's anything if you'll believe it because that's not evidence of a virus and so
620
1:17:35 --> 1:17:42
let's go back to what the medical school books say about viruses before we get to the fact that
621
1:17:42 --> 1:17:49
viruses don't exist let's go back to what we're told viruses cannot replicate themselves again
622
1:17:49 --> 1:17:55
there's no such thing but let's just stay with what we know what we think we know viruses can't
623
1:17:55 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] to do it they're a millionth of an inch long
624
1:18:03 --> 1:18:13
and we've never seen a virus enter or exit a cell we can't see it and therefore we haven't been
625
1:18:13 --> 1:18:24
able to even isolate it because it's so tiny and so if we take another step into this subject
626
1:18:25 --> 1:18:34
we realize that the human body contains genetic material in our chromosomes most of which is
627
1:18:34 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] only one and a half percent of our dna codes for the physical
628
1:18:45 --> 1:18:54
body now if i'm to trust the human genome project they found that almost 50 percent of the material
629
1:18:54 --> 1:19:04
in there codes for what they call viral particles but that's not infectious those are pieces of
630
1:19:04 --> 1:19:14
genetic material that are inbred inborn part of our own genetic code that actually participates
631
1:19:14 --> 1:19:23
in cellular metabolism and then we realize that we have over [privacy contact redaction]eria lining our bodies
632
1:19:24 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]eria are multiple multiple copies of what's considered or thought
633
1:19:33 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ious at all and then when we realize that the cells of the body
634
1:19:42 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] thousands of mitochondria which were bacteria and those
635
1:19:50 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]eria contain dna or rna of what's known to be viral particles we realize that even from
636
1:20:02 --> 1:20:10
the possibility that viral dna and rna does exist in our body we're infested
637
1:20:10 --> 1:20:16
we're never not exposed to genetic material that's non-human
638
1:20:18 --> 1:20:27
we're constantly circulating genetic material that is extricated from our genome that's extricated
639
1:20:27 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ia and that's extricated from the bacteria that line our body and so if you put
640
1:20:35 --> 1:20:43
a nasal swab into your nose and you put a nasal swab into or a swab into the airway
641
1:20:44 --> 1:20:54
how do you know that the genetic material that you're classifying isn't part of your own cells
642
1:20:55 --> 1:21:01
how do you know that the genetic material that you're isolating isn't part of the bacteria that
643
1:21:01 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]oding in the linings of your body how do you know that the genetic material that you're
644
1:21:08 --> 1:21:17
isolating isn't from something that you breathe in and how do you know that it's causing the
645
1:21:17 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] and so these are questions that even virologists are looking at because we
646
1:21:28 --> 1:21:40
know that what we've classified as a virus may not be what we think it is and so taking that
647
1:21:40 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] we exclude the possibility that anything else could be giving
648
1:21:53 --> 1:22:00
you the symptoms you're getting so we exclude air that you're breathing in that can make you sick
649
1:22:00 --> 1:22:07
we exclude food that we're eating that can make you sick we exclude injected material that we
650
1:22:07 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] that can make you sick we exclude skin care products that you can be putting on your skin
651
1:22:13 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]romagnetic radiation that you could be exposed to that make
652
1:22:20 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ress that you could be exposed to that could all of these
653
1:22:27 --> 1:22:35
things create inflammation in your body we exclude poisons toxins and we even exclude the possibility
654
1:22:35 --> 1:22:43
that we were poisoned as the reason we could have gotten sick and that's why i said very early on
655
1:22:43 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] not done the proper differential diagnosis when people get sick and the first
656
1:22:53 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]e who are getting sick presented with dry cough headache hypertension
657
1:23:03 --> 1:23:15
difficulty breathing and when examined had low po2s low oxygen levels and normal carbon dioxide
658
1:23:15 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] and i know a differential when you're hypoxic you must do a
659
1:23:24 --> 1:23:32
differential and the differential is hypoxia what's your pco2 what's your blood gas
660
1:23:34 --> 1:23:42
what's your acidosis or alkalosis and the very first set of patients including the continued
661
1:23:42 --> 1:23:50
set of patients were patients who had as a differential for hypoxia not a respiratory
662
1:23:50 --> 1:24:02
etiology but a blood etiology and so for those of us who are convinced pretty strongly
663
1:24:04 --> 1:24:13
that we were being poisoned with nanoparticle materials that would truly explain how the blood
664
1:24:13 --> 1:24:21
was no longer able to bind to oxygen including the possibility that electromagnetic waves
665
1:24:22 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ing the binding of oxygen to red blood cells and it's only later on that the lungs would
666
1:24:30 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ed because of the hypoxia from the oxygen dislodging from the red blood cells
667
1:24:38 --> 1:24:48
the red blood cells and so we never did a differential diagnosis we myopically said oh
668
1:24:48 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]anding what a virus is and what a virus isn't or what
669
1:24:57 --> 1:25:07
a virus can do what a virus can't do and we extracted pieces of dna that were actually
670
1:25:07 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]erized from a computerized program that then gave us the genome of the virus
671
1:25:15 --> 1:25:24
so the genome of the virus was made known because of a computerized estimation of what the infectious
672
1:25:24 --> 1:25:33
agent is now all you're getting is a strand of genetic material that doesn't tell you
673
1:25:34 --> 1:25:45
that it's infectious and in fact even the pcr even the pcr doesn't tell you that you have a virus
674
1:25:46 --> 1:25:53
all it tells you is that you've amplified the presence of genetic material but you can't
675
1:25:53 --> 1:25:59
attribute that to a foreign matter because you have genetic material that you're extricating from
676
1:25:59 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] genetic material that you're extricating from microorganisms that are
677
1:26:06 --> 1:26:18
lining your body and so we can never know by doing a swab of a surface lining where that genetic
678
1:26:18 --> 1:26:25
material is coming from because genetic material comes out of our cells from our genome comes out
679
1:26:25 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]ia comes out of the bacteria that are lining our body
680
1:26:30 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]s been and will always be until we shift this consciousness
681
1:26:37 --> 1:26:44
that you don't get sick unless some organism gets into your body when in fact the human body
682
1:26:45 --> 1:26:51
is so filled with genetic materials that we have never ever identified
683
1:26:55 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] thank you for that
684
1:27:00 --> 1:27:06
one lengthy lengthy thorough but wonderful answer which I'm indeed grateful so it seems to me that
685
1:27:06 --> 1:27:12
what you're saying then um without belaboring the point is that first of all the nasal swabs
686
1:27:12 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]e of time and secondly what is it we're not sure what is injected into people and why what
687
1:27:19 --> 1:27:24
if any benefit there is or whether the opportunity was just taken to poison people the injections
688
1:27:25 --> 1:27:32
I think you said it really really well doctor okay well I'm sorry
689
1:27:34 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ill adopt yeah yeah he's both yeah yeah no I was I was kind of um yes
690
1:27:45 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ands things we don't well that's why I went into the medical because I knew he was a
691
1:27:51 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]or so I went a little advanced for those of you that's that's very good for people to think
692
1:27:57 --> 1:28:05
about that [privacy contact redaction]ease you know go back that was at the at the
693
1:28:05 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] at the [privacy contact redaction]on are we done with you before we get to
694
1:28:11 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]on
695
1:28:17 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]on you muted I think we're done okay yeah yeah so I just want to say I thoroughly enjoyed
696
1:28:26 --> 1:28:31
what you said and appreciated your discourse your monologue thank you very much appreciate it
697
1:28:32 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]on jeremy jeremy the forbes yes sir thank you charles um first I'd like to thank you
698
1:28:40 --> 1:28:47
dr polewski for certainly a fascinating and insightful presentation particularly as it
699
1:28:47 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]s germ theory versus terrain which I guess is what it was um I have more of a comment
700
1:28:56 --> 1:29:03
about the discussion of how to get through to people uh have some thoughts on that um
701
1:29:04 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] let me say uh I particularly agree with your comments about uh the futility of trying to
702
1:29:12 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]itutions I think the solution just as you suggested is to stop patronizing them whether
703
1:29:20 --> 1:29:26
they're particularly the schools you clearly cannot send your kids to these institutions that
704
1:29:26 --> 1:29:36
are filling kids heads with mush and worse um so going back to the uh how to get through to people
705
1:29:37 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]e obviously and the message that comes out at us
706
1:29:46 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ive I really believe that it's very difficult
707
1:29:53 --> 1:29:58
to challenge the safe side of things not from our point of view because we have all the evidence
708
1:29:58 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]essing a lay person who has no idea about medicine
709
1:30:04 --> 1:30:10
convincing him that the vaccine that he's taking is not safe and may kill him is it
710
1:30:11 --> 1:30:18
well that's met with rejection pretty quickly on the other hand the effective side can be challenged
711
1:30:18 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]y uh going back you know going back to the authority what do the authorities say to us
712
1:30:27 --> 1:30:35
the authorities will never admit uh to the lack of safety however they have recently admitted
713
1:30:36 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] you from becoming infected with covid nor do they prevent
714
1:30:42 --> 1:30:51
you from transmitting it to others should you have coded whatever that is so to me that begs
715
1:30:51 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ion even in the lay person as to well then why am I getting vaccinated right and I think
716
1:30:58 --> 1:31:08
if you can hit them with that logic um just those two things alone the fact that you are not protected
717
1:31:09 --> 1:31:14
and you're not protecting your family or your friends or your neighbors should you get coded
718
1:31:15 --> 1:31:22
it should end the argument right there why then are you submitting to this coercive instruction
719
1:31:22 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]antly your thoughts please so thank you thank you for
720
1:31:28 --> 1:31:35
bringing that up because it it opens up the door for many possible conversations so I'll address
721
1:31:35 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]e one is um I would never use the language you're using because to me it's not a
722
1:31:41 --> 1:31:49
vaccine so I'm not so so I would never approach it that way but I understand using that approach
723
1:31:50 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] you ever taken a north pole of a magnet and then another north pole of
724
1:31:56 --> 1:32:04
a magnet and tried to bring them together yes because that way to me is two north poles of
725
1:32:04 --> 1:32:10
magnets coming together because you're trying to take information
726
1:32:13 --> 1:32:20
and bringing it to other information and to me it's butting heads it's two north poles of magnets
727
1:32:21 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]e know things like that person you're speaking to doesn't know his
728
1:32:28 --> 1:32:35
or her information because he or she has researched it or experienced it he or she knows it because
729
1:32:35 --> 1:32:43
they've been told and now someone else comes along and tells them something else and so you're
730
1:32:43 --> 1:32:49
bringing north pole with north pole well I don't see it that way because I think they're more likely
731
1:32:49 --> 1:32:57
to be exposed to the recent information from Walensky and company even on mainstream media
732
1:32:57 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] admitted that it doesn't stop transmission and they've heard that message I agree with you
733
1:33:05 --> 1:33:13
but in my experience I will tell you that bringing more information to someone who's already accepted
734
1:33:13 --> 1:33:21
information from someone else isn't as effective so what I find effective is a different approach
735
1:33:21 --> 1:33:27
so sort of how do you bring a south pole of a magnet to their north pole of a magnet and so
736
1:33:28 --> 1:33:35
my approach has been the following if you say to me well I believe it's safe
737
1:33:36 --> 1:33:44
and I go and I say to you well I don't believe it's safe we have a problem
738
1:33:45 --> 1:33:52
if you come to me and say you know I was told it's safe and I say to you really how do you know that
739
1:33:54 --> 1:34:00
you've started a very different conversation because you have welcomed that other person
740
1:34:00 --> 1:34:08
that other person into your heart right you have actually allowed that other person to show his or
741
1:34:08 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]art to realize very gently and compassionately
742
1:34:15 --> 1:34:23
is it's a house of cards and so once you do see that you then say to them huh well you know
743
1:34:23 --> 1:34:31
that's really interesting I just want you to know that in my research and in my experience I found
744
1:34:31 --> 1:34:39
this and so you're not coming to them with information you're coming to them with your
745
1:34:39 --> 1:34:46
heart and you're actually welcoming their head their being to drop from their head
746
1:34:47 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ually lean in and say huh because are you going to say
747
1:34:55 --> 1:35:02
well your research and your experience is wrong you can or are you going to say huh how come you
748
1:35:02 --> 1:35:11
found something so different than what I found and you just opening the possibility of a what I feel
749
1:35:11 --> 1:35:18
is a more relational dialogue than a head-to-head dialogue which in my experience
750
1:35:18 --> 1:35:25
doesn't work it just again because I've been teaching parents for over two decades the
751
1:35:26 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] found that if I tell them information that's different from their
752
1:35:35 --> 1:35:41
information I get very little but if I share with them hey you know I just want to let you know
753
1:35:41 --> 1:35:48
this is what I've researched this is what I've seen this is how I understand it what do you think
754
1:35:50 --> 1:35:56
they're more likely to lean in because it's not attacking because when you when you bring
755
1:35:56 --> 1:36:04
information to somebody whose house of cards is only known to you and they realize that they're
756
1:36:04 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]en to someone outside of them it doesn't work it just doesn't
757
1:36:11 --> 1:36:20
work it crashes because no matter how much logic you bring I have found it's less effective that
758
1:36:20 --> 1:36:27
doesn't mean you won't be able to plant a seed and get somewhere but I have found in the trials and
759
1:36:27 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]e and failing and insulting people and going at it head to head
760
1:36:35 --> 1:36:41
because you're smart now I'm smart now you're smart now I'm smart it hasn't been as effective
761
1:36:42 --> 1:36:48
all I'm doing is sharing with you another way that I do it that I have found really works
762
1:36:48 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] bringing information I try to welcome them in if someone says Dr. Larry you're
763
1:36:57 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ain to me how that's true for you that's a very different
764
1:37:07 --> 1:37:15
response then no I'm not you don't know what you're talking about so we've done the information
765
1:37:15 --> 1:37:20
done the information information and it's failed because otherwise we would have succeeded already
766
1:37:23 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]uff great conversation and all of us learn
767
1:37:29 --> 1:37:35
we've had many conversations here Larry about how do we get how do we get through and that's part
768
1:37:35 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ion if someone says Jeremy I'm offended by what you said
769
1:37:40 --> 1:37:46
and one of the nine responses is that's interesting how do you mean and just shut up
770
1:37:47 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]e who say they're offended their mouths will go like this and nothing will come
771
1:37:51 --> 1:37:56
out because they they're so used to people apologizing and genuinely say how do you mean
772
1:37:57 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]and how to resolve conflict conflict resolution was not a part
773
1:38:05 --> 1:38:14
of my growth as a kid but it had to become part of my growth as an adult so I had to learn you know
774
1:38:14 --> 1:38:21
how do I hear somebody who has a differing opinion than I do if I say you're wrong or you don't know
775
1:38:21 --> 1:38:28
what you're talking about I lose and I was good at that I was really good at that but if I say
776
1:38:29 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] want to let you know that this is my experience of what you did this is my
777
1:38:33 --> 1:38:40
experience of what you said this is how I feel in response to what you are doing it allows for a
778
1:38:40 --> 1:38:49
greater leaning in than if I said you made me mad which is never true you don't make me mad I chose
779
1:38:49 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] in response to what you did or said and these are things that none of us most
780
1:38:57 --> 1:39:03
of us don't grow up with but we think that if we can drive home more information we're going to
781
1:39:03 --> 1:39:13
win that hasn't worked so I don't disagree with you particularly with that comment I was looking
782
1:39:13 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]e when it comes to the messaging of safe and effective how to break
783
1:39:20 --> 1:39:26
that down you're not going to do it as you say with information concerning safety even though
784
1:39:26 --> 1:39:32
it's all around them they still won't pay attention to it but the message that these vaccines
785
1:39:33 --> 1:39:39
don't protect you against transmission or getting COVID-[privacy contact redaction]e and easy
786
1:39:39 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]and and they're being voiced and admitted to by their own authorities so-called
787
1:39:45 --> 1:39:54
authorities maybe as a compromise between what your your views and mine are or maybe to ask people
788
1:39:54 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]or next time you see him and he's asking you to get the next
789
1:40:00 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] me from getting COVID-19 or transmitting it to my friends
790
1:40:11 --> 1:40:19
so so I appreciate that because what I feel you're suggesting is asking the person to go back into the
791
1:40:19 --> 1:40:25
lion's den no just next time they're in no that's the lion's den because the doctor is not going to
792
1:40:25 --> 1:40:30
say it's not safe or effective they're not going to open he's going to be out of line
793
1:40:31 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ream media comments but that's that's the that's the thing we've been seeing for decades
794
1:40:40 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]or has been repeating the party line but if someone said to me well I feel that that my
795
1:40:48 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]or said the the shot is safe again I would open with tell me what that means I'm curious
796
1:40:57 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]anding of safety and then when the opening is there I say well I just want to
797
1:41:05 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] a different approach to it and I actually have found in my research that
798
1:41:13 --> 1:41:19
it's not safe all right we gotta we gotta move we're gonna move on we're gonna run out of time
799
1:41:19 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] 10 minutes because I gotta go somewhere okay this will be
800
1:41:25 --> 1:41:33
quick good all right Alex Alex Craner Shasta and then Stephen three more Alex Shasta and Stephen
801
1:41:33 --> 1:41:34
thank you Jeremy
802
1:41:38 --> 1:41:39
Alex you you muted
803
1:41:44 --> 1:41:50
you're talking to me no okay apologies there he is I I I couldn't see my unmute button
804
1:41:51 --> 1:41:57
Dr. Polerski thank you for the for the wonderful presentation I do have an important question for
805
1:41:57 --> 1:42:04
you but before I wanted to share something with you and the group relevant to the origin and causes
806
1:42:04 --> 1:42:10
of of the pandemic which I you know like I picked up in the in the early days of the pandemic
807
1:42:11 --> 1:42:16
and I think you might find find it of interest namely I'll give you two data points
808
1:42:17 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ened to to an interview with Dr. Alek Racic he's a he's a Serbian doctor
809
1:42:25 --> 1:42:33
he's a fairly high caliber in Serbia manager of of one of the hospitals president of the you know
810
1:42:34 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]or blah blah whatever and he was saying that you know I've been I've been
811
1:42:40 --> 1:42:46
seeing patients coming into this hospital during the respiratory infection seasons for 30 years
812
1:42:47 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] I've seen so many and he said that when the when the pandemic started
813
1:42:53 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]etely different and said that these people would come in with the with the symptoms
814
1:42:58 --> 1:43:04
that their condition would deteriorate very rapidly and that he has never seen anything
815
1:43:04 --> 1:43:10
of the sort in his entire career and he said when he looked at the at the at the x-rays of the
816
1:43:10 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]e's lungs he said like there is no way that the coronavirus can do this to people's lungs
817
1:43:18 --> 1:43:27
but they were forbidden from doing any autopsies and then he said some of my colleagues in Germany
818
1:43:27 --> 1:43:35
actually do autopsies and they found not only where there was the lung severely damaged
819
1:43:38 --> 1:43:48
there is no virus known to man at all for women that can do this this simply isn't known to medicine
820
1:43:48 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ing part that I found he said the only pathogen that I know
821
1:43:54 --> 1:44:04
of that can do this kind of damage to human tissue is sarin gas second data point I was
822
1:44:05 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]ening to a radio program in Croatia where a doctor a retired doctor an old
823
1:44:13 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]ained her experience at one of the two hospitals in oh sorry I'm
824
1:44:22 --> 1:44:31
laughing at this tessalina's comment so she said that she was admitted to a hospital in zagreb with
825
1:44:31 --> 1:44:38
covid symptoms now two hospitals in zagreb one had mortality rate for people admitted with covid
826
1:44:38 --> 1:44:47
symptoms of 80 80 one of them had a 15 okay she was admitted to the one with 80 and she was a
827
1:44:47 --> 1:44:55
retired physician so she knew a little bit about how things went she was admitted in the hospital
828
1:44:55 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]raight to the covid department where only certain doctors and certain nurses had
829
1:45:03 --> 1:45:08
access but it was with a key and she said these doctors didn't know what they were doing she said
830
1:45:08 --> 1:45:15
it was very suspicious they didn't seem to really be doctors or nurses and she said they tried to
831
1:45:15 --> 1:45:22
sedate me and put me on a ventilator and she's a doctor so she said look I do not have hypoxia
832
1:45:22 --> 1:45:27
it's wrong for you to put me on a ventilator don't put me on a ventilator and then a doctor and two
833
1:45:27 --> 1:45:35
nurses tried to forcibly put her on a ventilator so there was a struggle and she managed to tear
834
1:45:35 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction] and escape onto the balcony and call for help thankfully her son was underneath in the
835
1:45:41 --> 1:45:48
parking lot in the beneath the hospital and he was able to come and rescue her or take her out
836
1:45:48 --> 1:45:53
of the hospital well here's an interesting part that she said she said that while as they were
837
1:45:53 --> 1:46:02
struggling that this oxygen went on her face and that it was stinky oxygen and she said that where
838
1:46:02 --> 1:46:10
it went on her skin it burned her skin okay so that's the two uh so i don't know could it could
839
1:46:10 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] been tampering with oxygen tanks to produce the panic and the mortality statistics
840
1:46:17 --> 1:46:22
and so on also very unusual that one hospital would have 80 percent mortality and one of them
841
1:46:22 --> 1:46:29
15 percent mortality obviously then a virus was a virus wouldn't have been the only variable there's
842
1:46:29 --> 1:46:34
something else going on but nobody's you know nobody's talking about this particular part
843
1:46:34 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]igating it uh alex thank you that that speaks as examples of what many many doctors
844
1:46:43 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] been experiencing i put a link in the chat of a doctor from israel
845
1:46:53 --> 1:47:00
who had an experience similar to what you're describing and if anyone there are two parts
846
1:47:00 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ease get it um and and listen to it um uh it's very very important
847
1:47:10 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction] thing i'm going to say there was a concerted effort to
848
1:47:15 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]e that's the hardest thing for humans to fathom but we have been experiencing that for
849
1:47:27 --> 1:47:39
centuries this is not new the desire to kill people lower the population has been a desire
850
1:47:39 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]e who are involved in this pandemic whose family lineages have been
851
1:47:50 --> 1:48:00
doing this for centuries this is the culmination of an attempt so when you see medical doctors
852
1:48:01 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]e on ventilators because they knew that if they put people on ventilators
853
1:48:09 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]ors were ignoring clinical applications of what they were
854
1:48:18 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]ead following protocols and algorithms like you're describing people died
855
1:48:26 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]e who were in the hospital were labeled with covid who were put
856
1:48:35 --> 1:48:42
on ventilators because they were labeled as covid and given medications that sedated them
857
1:48:43 --> 1:48:54
and that put them into renal failure kidney failure and killed them and that is so difficult
858
1:48:54 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]and that this has been going on in hospitals all over the world why
859
1:49:02 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]e dying from this pandemic were insufficient
860
1:49:08 --> 1:49:15
whatever they were poisoning us with didn't work fast enough it didn't kill us fast enough
861
1:49:16 --> 1:49:25
so they were now inappropriately making diagnoses for people with covid who weren't suffering covid
862
1:49:25 --> 1:49:32
symptoms and putting them on ventilators and leaving them isolated for days and there are
863
1:49:33 --> 1:49:39
and there are reports if you watch the link that i just showed you there were reports where doctors
864
1:49:39 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] patients for hours in certain areas of the hospital without attending to them
865
1:49:46 --> 1:49:48
them.
866
1:49:49 --> 1:50:04
So there was a top-down agenda to reduce populations and the monies that hospitals were given
867
1:50:05 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]e with covid and for putting people on ventilators
868
1:50:13 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ors received bonuses so hospitals received bonuses and doctors received
869
1:50:23 --> 1:50:34
bonuses. I mean this is this is as I mean dark as you can go we were not as a medical profession
870
1:50:34 --> 1:50:43
following clinical courses we weren't okay the patient has this then this is the appropriate
871
1:50:43 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ors had to follow a protocol that they were given by the
872
1:50:51 --> 1:50:56
hospital to take care of that patient even if it was unwarranted.
873
1:50:57 --> 1:51:04
Beautiful, come on we gotta wait Larry you gotta go we got two more we got Shasta and then Stephen
874
1:51:04 --> 1:51:09
there's one more I gotta go I gotta go I gotta go I know I know but Shasta has to ask you one question
875
1:51:09 --> 1:51:15
Alex brilliant thank you thanks Alex I just wanted to say thank you I really appreciate
876
1:51:15 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ors inquiring into differential diagnosis and um and using your discernment to
877
1:51:27 --> 1:51:32
make your medicine safe and I really appreciate what you all are doing thank you very much I'm
878
1:51:32 --> 1:51:37
gonna head over I'm gonna hand it over to Stephen well done Shasta well said Shasta Alex
879
1:51:40 --> 1:51:45
I think what Alex said is very important to consider so Alex if you could stay on and we can
880
1:51:45 --> 1:51:52
have a talk about that when unfortunately Larry has to leave so um which is a pity because uh you
881
1:51:53 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] wanted to think can someone on the call research um wasn't there an attack on the
882
1:52:00 --> 1:52:06
London underground a sarin attack do you remember does anybody remember that yes the Tokyo Tokyo I
883
1:52:06 --> 1:52:13
think no oh Tokyo yes we need to yeah so we need to research that what on earth was printed at the
884
1:52:13 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]igation and if there was an investigation was a report
885
1:52:18 --> 1:52:25
produced by the Japanese government I don't know we need to find out because what so Alex are you
886
1:52:25 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]ing that those two pieces of data as you put it were connected but anyway let me just uh so
887
1:52:32 --> 1:52:38
Larry do you want to go you've got to go over here yeah I do okay so thank you very much for coming
888
1:52:38 --> 1:52:46
on we're very grateful to you and thank you very insightful and um I hope we can work together um
889
1:52:47 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]n't got your email address I've got your assistant's email address I think but
890
1:52:52 --> 1:52:59
that's fine that's good for now all right yes very good okay so so I just want to say um thank you
891
1:53:00 --> 1:53:07
um I tend to live in a bubble in my own little world and uh to offer these perspectives
892
1:53:08 --> 1:53:14
in a safe space is rare in the world in which we live today and I just want to thank you for holding
893
1:53:14 --> 1:53:23
the space uh I'm happy if you disagree um it's all right uh I hope I didn't offend anybody
894
1:53:23 --> 1:53:33
but I don't think I hope you did uh you know and if I did you know I did um but I I appreciate an
895
1:53:33 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]y on such a large scale to to air some things that may be new to people or maybe you know
896
1:53:44 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]e or whatever so they recognize that I think you have wonderful
897
1:53:49 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]e can articulate such insights never mind notice them
898
1:53:56 --> 1:54:02
um and when but when they do hear them they recognize them and so I think that's the power
899
1:54:02 --> 1:54:08
of what you're saying so maybe so hopefully um people around the world will notice you uh
900
1:54:08 --> 1:54:11
Larry as a result of you coming on and helping us
901
1:54:12 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]ay well stay well thank you Larry bye
902
1:54:21 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]ion no well this this is all important stuff and we'll go on the recording
903
1:54:28 --> 1:54:36
let's go back to Alex Stephen and just to stay there so this is this question Alex remember
904
1:54:36 --> 1:54:42
Charles is the is the writer who wrote the brilliant book which ended up getting banned
905
1:54:42 --> 1:54:50
not once but twice I remember who Alex is yeah worry about that but actually actually
906
1:54:50 --> 1:54:54
Stephen that's a good point I might remember but many in the audience won't so Alex give us a bit
907
1:54:54 --> 1:55:02
of background on your book because Alex has as you've presented to us as well Alex it was a great
908
1:55:02 --> 1:55:08
story yes thank you well no I what I was presenting here was a story about Theranos which
909
1:55:08 --> 1:55:15
which is not part of my book my my book was called Grand Deception that's one of the three books I
910
1:55:15 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] but the one that got banned first was um by the by the
911
1:55:23 --> 1:55:29
by the intervention of one of the advisors to John Kerry in the US State Department and the book is
912
1:55:29 --> 1:55:37
about it's a geopolitical treaties about the the relationship between Russia and the western world
913
1:55:37 --> 1:55:42
I published it in [privacy contact redaction]ed that there would be war between the two sides
914
1:55:43 --> 1:55:51
and my whole point was to try to unmask the you know the the group of the the the occult
915
1:55:51 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]agging us into into World War Three so uh that's that's the that's
916
1:55:58 --> 1:56:04
the banned book and then later everything else got cancelled as well so with the benefits of um
917
1:56:05 --> 1:56:11
the hindsight of what's happened in the last few months you know the Ukraine War what do you think
918
1:56:11 --> 1:56:20
is the reason for this war which doesn't seem to have you know I can see why Putin is feels
919
1:56:20 --> 1:56:27
threatened and why he feels he has no alternative but do you think that so the but having said that
920
1:56:27 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] seems to be in a cult behind Ukraine and I just don't and it's the idea to
921
1:56:36 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]e on every front so the food crisis the energy crisis the uh cost of living crisis
922
1:56:45 --> 1:56:51
ridiculous name um which the government don't seem to have any responsibility to solve
923
1:56:52 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] wonder Alex you're a great geopolitical analyst what do you think
924
1:56:58 --> 1:57:03
is going on with all these different agendas nothing makes sense any longer is that the idea
925
1:57:03 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]abilize us by arbitrariness well I think there's all kinds of everything mixed in there but
926
1:57:11 --> 1:57:17
the the the underlying cause of the conflict in Ukraine is not so complicated to understand
927
1:57:17 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] of all uh you know there's there's the empire which is you know the it's a reincarnation
928
1:57:25 --> 1:57:35
of the British Empire which has you know just kind of shifted its its its um balance of power
929
1:57:35 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]ates the empires for more than 200 years now the empire's overarching
930
1:57:41 --> 1:57:47
imperative has been to maintain uh hegemony over the Eurasian landmass
931
1:57:49 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]e that's where most of the resources are uh 70 percent of the earth's
932
1:57:57 --> 1:58:05
energy reserves uh more than 70 percent of the global GDP two-thirds of the world population
933
1:58:05 --> 1:58:15
and so on and so forth now uh the uh oh thank you Abby um the the neither the neither Great Britain
934
1:58:16 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] the military might to police and control this all militarily
935
1:58:26 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] 200 years has been divide and conquer so you always wanted to make
936
1:58:34 --> 1:58:43
sure to divide uh the the geography into small weak political entities that are constantly
937
1:58:44 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] and then you use your own intelligence service services and secret diplomacy
938
1:58:53 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] the other to fund them when they want to go to war to arm them
939
1:59:00 --> 1:59:08
and to make sure that they're that they're dependent on you and that um nobody emerges
940
1:59:09 --> 1:59:18
strong enough to be your rival for dominance over this landmass and so this this strategy has been
941
1:59:18 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]icitly formulated already uh at the beginning of the 20th century by um by Halford Mackinder
942
1:59:28 --> 1:59:35
but it's been then reformulated and restated practically verbatim by people like Zbigniew
943
1:59:35 --> 1:59:45
Brzezinski who was you know Henry Kissinger's protege and most recently by uh by undersecretary
944
1:59:45 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]ate department named Wes Mitchell and basically he said it explicitly that the
945
1:59:53 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]ration the administration top priority was to maintain
946
1:59:59 --> 2:00:07
uh US dominance over the Eurasian landmass and to prevent a rival from emerging especially to prevent
947
2:00:08 --> 2:00:17
two or more rivals who could together dislodge the empire from the Eurasian landmass. This was
948
2:00:17 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]ly what has happened. Now the purpose of the war in Ukraine
949
2:00:24 --> 2:00:31
was to try to cut Russia down to size namely you know Russia has emerged as a as a strong power
950
2:00:31 --> 2:00:37
on the on the continent that can say no they can they can you know resist the dictate of the empire
951
2:00:37 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]ag Russia into a conflict hoping that it would become you know
952
2:00:46 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]an a quagmire where Russia would end up weakened and then eventually they were able
953
2:00:55 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]abilize it and regime change it and ultimately to divide it into five or more
954
2:01:02 --> 2:01:10
smaller political entities. So that's the that's why the west has been so consistently
955
2:01:12 --> 2:01:17
escalating rather than de-escalating and then another dimension to the whole thing is that
956
2:01:17 --> 2:01:24
they thought that they would crush Russia with economic sanctions but that didn't happen except
957
2:01:24 --> 2:01:32
it boomeranged and now it has created a devastating crisis in the west energy crisis food crisis and so
958
2:01:32 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ually making it worse deliberately. I can't imagine why because if you
959
2:01:40 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]rategies even at them being sinister if you try to deconstruct them to
960
2:01:49 --> 2:01:58
some logical end they make sense in a unipolar world you know going for renewable energy makes
961
2:01:58 --> 2:02:07
sense if the whole world has to adopt it going for vaccine certificates makes sense if the whole
962
2:02:07 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]etely on a different standard and uses fossil fuels and has
963
2:02:15 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ion and so forth then they just have an advantage but the fact that
964
2:02:21 --> 2:02:25
they're persisting and continuing with these with these same plans and same agendas that they
965
2:02:25 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] I think they're delusional they can't accept that their
966
2:02:36 --> 2:02:43
gambit has failed and so you know ultimately what always happens in these situations is that the
967
2:02:43 --> 2:02:53
small man pays the price or woman. And who is the small man Ukraine? Oh no all of us all of us.
968
2:02:53 --> 2:02:57
Right okay well you know there's going to be there's inflation there's going to be more inflation
969
2:02:58 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ronger because what happened hasn't it? Yes yes absolutely.
970
2:03:07 --> 2:03:16
So not only did they fail but they they doubly failed. Yes they doubly failed and not only
971
2:03:16 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ronger but because you know China understands that they're next
972
2:03:23 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] that the the western powers have been able to
973
2:03:29 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] from Russia and turn it into an enemy and then make Ukrainian military might
974
2:03:38 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]rike at Russia they if they if they manage to defeat Russia and take
975
2:03:44 --> 2:03:51
it over they could do the same with Russia against China. Sure. You know they could turn Russia's
976
2:03:51 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] China so it is absolutely essential for China to have Russia's back and to
977
2:03:59 --> 2:04:05
see through the see Russia through the victory and so now they've achieved not only strengthening
978
2:04:05 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]ential alliance between these two powers. I see and so there was
979
2:04:14 --> 2:04:21
a time Alex when you spoke to us I think that you weren't sure where China was in this but now
980
2:04:21 --> 2:04:29
you're saying that China has realized they need to get with Russia is that right? We we weren't
981
2:04:29 --> 2:04:35
you weren't sure last time we spoke or you spoke? No I think I was referring to an earlier time
982
2:04:35 --> 2:04:40
when I where I wasn't you know because you know one thing that empires always do and I
983
2:04:40 --> 2:04:46
I'd like to just define the empire because you know like the way we study history almost
984
2:04:46 --> 2:04:52
invariably the empires are conflated with nations you know like we had British Empire and American
985
2:04:52 --> 2:04:58
Empire and Spanish Empire and French Empire and Dutch Empire and so forth but the the empires
986
2:04:58 --> 2:05:05
are not national by their nature you're always looking at at an oligarchy at a at a at a network
987
2:05:05 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]s that has to use the nation for its political and for its military muscle
988
2:05:13 --> 2:05:18
but the empire is defined by the oligarchy that benefits the most from it and it's never the
989
2:05:18 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]s end up disenfranchised and impoverished at the end of it so the empire needs
990
2:05:24 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] it switches the way the same way that when they exhausted Great
991
2:05:32 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]y switched to the United States co-opted its you know military political
992
2:05:38 --> 2:05:47
economic power to continue building the empire and they planned to move next to China and if you look
993
2:05:47 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]atements by you know Brzezinski and Kissinger and Soros they fully expected that
994
2:05:55 --> 2:06:04
their next global cup and I until until a few years ago I didn't quite understand whether China
995
2:06:04 --> 2:06:11
actually accepted this role and was going to be their next global cup or if China was playing them
996
2:06:11 --> 2:06:17
and now I'm certain that China was playing them and that they drew them in but not to serve them
997
2:06:17 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]er to behead them. Alex, people are asking for your books. Tom Rodman has put a link
998
2:06:27 --> 2:06:31
in there for The Grand Deception. How do people get hold of your writings?
999
2:06:33 --> 2:06:41
My book Grand Deception is available on pages of Red Pill Press but I'm for people who don't mind
1000
2:06:41 --> 2:06:49
reading in PDF. I'm very happy to share the PDF free of charge so I don't know how I could
1001
2:06:50 --> 2:06:57
transmit them. You can send it to me and I can put it there or else you can put it in the chat now
1002
2:06:57 --> 2:07:01
but no you're on your phone you can't do it if you send it to me we'll put it on the chat for
1003
2:07:01 --> 2:07:08
our next meeting. Okay yeah yeah yeah with pleasure. Alex, can you update us on what's happening in the
1004
2:07:08 --> 2:07:16
financial world because you are a former hedge fund manager I think you told me. Yes yes correct.
1005
2:07:16 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]e who don't know the financial world don't realize that who yes they don't realize
1006
2:07:23 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] charge of a lot of money as a hedge fund manager and you need to make good decisions
1007
2:07:30 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] the possibility to lose a lot of money for those people who trust you to and that
1008
2:07:38 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] to do a lot of research you have to dig down and I just wonder how things are going
1009
2:07:43 --> 2:07:49
and what do you think about the power of the United States has that declined in your view
1010
2:07:50 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ions and the infiltration of how should I say treasonous
1011
2:07:59 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ates government and in the military do you think that the the power of the
1012
2:08:06 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ates has declined and yeah so the financial world and the United States military
1013
2:08:12 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] before but it seems to dissipated yes so
1014
2:08:24 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ates power has definitely is definitely in decline and it's in terminal
1015
2:08:29 --> 2:08:34
decline but I don't know how long it might take but these things never happen overnight
1016
2:08:37 --> 2:08:45
and is that a lack of will or is it you know so what what what was that why why it's
1017
2:08:46 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]s leads to the fact that we have a fraudulent monetary system it's a
1018
2:08:51 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]able only for for as long as it grows as soon as it stopped
1019
2:08:58 --> 2:09:02
growing there's a mathematical certainty that you're going to have a certain
1020
2:09:03 --> 2:09:08
percentage of participants in the game who are going to go be going bankrupt and now what you
1021
2:09:08 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]e in in Europe is that bankruptcies are at the highest levels on record and this is
1022
2:09:16 --> 2:09:21
this is all because they're trying to you know like they're trying to prevent inflation from
1023
2:09:21 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]roying the currency by quantitative tightening and raising interest rates but when you're raising
1024
2:09:28 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] rates and already you know nearly [privacy contact redaction]ed on on on New
1025
2:09:35 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]ock Exchange are not making any profit and more than 20 percent of them are zombies meaning
1026
2:09:41 --> 2:09:47
that they cannot even service their the interest on their debts from their free cash flows and now
1027
2:09:47 --> 2:09:51
if you're raising interest rate you're going to push a lot of them into bankruptcy and when you
1028
2:09:51 --> 2:09:57
push a lot of them into bankruptcy you're going to pull banks into bankruptcy because they're going
1029
2:09:57 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] all these this bad debt on on their books and so the only way out of this is either you
1030
2:10:05 --> 2:10:14
let it happen you you let bank run bank runs happen or you're going to have to backstop them by
1031
2:10:14 --> 2:10:22
printing money and providing all the money to the banks to cover the bad debts or you know
1032
2:10:22 --> 2:10:30
to be more accurate they're going to be buying corporate bonds so that the corporations have
1033
2:10:32 --> 2:10:37
the liquidity to pay back their debts even though they're not profitable they're not efficient
1034
2:10:37 --> 2:10:44
they're not they're zombies so the result the ultimate result of this is inflation so we're
1035
2:10:44 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] a lot more inflation and so somebody somebody asked in the chat how to protect yourself
1036
2:10:51 --> 2:10:58
i spent eight years of my life managing something called an inflation hedging fund
1037
2:10:59 --> 2:11:04
so i you know over those eight years i think if if an article or book had the word inflation
1038
2:11:04 --> 2:11:13
in it i i probably read it there are two there are two effective ways to to hedge against inflation
1039
2:11:13 --> 2:11:19
one of them is farmland the other one is commodity futures exposure to commodity futures because as
1040
2:11:20 --> 2:11:26
the price of companies sorry as the as the purchasing power of the currency
1041
2:11:28 --> 2:11:34
erodes the prices of commodities go up because it's it's it's it's real stuff you know oil
1042
2:11:34 --> 2:11:40
copper gold coffee wheat prices of all of that goes up so that's how you would offset now i
1043
2:11:40 --> 2:11:46
wouldn't i wouldn't advise anybody to try to trade commodities on their own but there is
1044
2:11:46 --> 2:11:54
um i no longer manage money so i'm not i'm not selling um i'm not selling a service here but
1045
2:11:55 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]a hedge funds cta stands for commodities trading advisor
1046
2:12:03 --> 2:12:10
and somebody said here that hedge funds always lose clients money which which is partly true
1047
2:12:10 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] had you shouldn't laugh but we are no i know i know but it's you
1048
2:12:18 --> 2:12:23
know like there's some truth to it there is some truth to it but you know usually investors investors
1049
2:12:24 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]s chase after performance you know they see they see a
1050
2:12:28 --> 2:12:32
fund performing well and then they go in and then when they have two or three months of drawdowns
1051
2:12:32 --> 2:12:38
then they pull out and they make a loss and maybe the fund itself is a good fund but the investors
1052
2:12:38 --> 2:12:43
jump in for wrong reasons and they jump up for the wrong reasons so anyway you know like if you
1053
2:12:43 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]as commodities trading advisors they have had stellar performance the good ones
1054
2:12:49 --> 2:13:00
for decades like literally going back four decades five decades even and they particularly do well
1055
2:13:01 --> 2:13:07
if commodities are going up because they they always they always trade commodities inside of
1056
2:13:07 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] an opportunity i was i would encourage you to do that do that i
1057
2:13:13 --> 2:13:20
i don't do that anymore so uh i couldn't i couldn't offer to help but you know the
1058
2:13:21 --> 2:13:28
that would be alex would you be would would you be willing to come on again and uh because i
1059
2:13:29 --> 2:13:35
i've always thought you're really brilliant uh and talk about empires i think people would be very
1060
2:13:35 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ed in the in the rise and fall of empires and the history your history of the rise and fall
1061
2:13:42 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ing oh yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah with pleasure with great pleasure
1062
2:13:46 --> 2:13:54
absolutely how long did it take you to prepare for that though alex i mean we don't expect a
1063
2:13:54 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] to kind of talk to us uh on a level which is above ours you know
1064
2:14:03 --> 2:14:10
uh well i would say two weeks is that is that fair and we couldn't yes okay right now very good
1065
2:14:10 --> 2:14:16
okay we got we got five minutes ago i want to share a chart with you alex sorry everyone sorry i have
1066
2:14:16 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] to jump in because there's a misconception real estate is
1067
2:14:25 --> 2:14:31
not a good inflation hedge empirically it's an empirical fact and what happens is that you already
1068
2:14:31 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]ate prices pumped up to i think something like 200 year highs in in in in
1069
2:14:39 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]e generally lose purchasing power they cannot keep up
1070
2:14:44 --> 2:14:50
so you'll see uh the real estate not keeping up with inflation it's not necessarily that
1071
2:14:50 --> 2:14:55
prices are going to go down in nominal terms but they don't keep up with inflation and
1072
2:14:55 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]ration of what happened at the end of the
1073
2:15:01 --> 2:15:08
weimar inflation 100 years ago in germany is that by the time the whole crisis unraveled
1074
2:15:09 --> 2:15:14
you could buy a six-bedroom house in nice neighborhoods of berlin
1075
2:15:17 --> 2:15:23
for 100 okay a six-bedroom house on the outskirts of berlin for 100 dollars
1076
2:15:25 --> 2:15:32
alex when was that 19 december 1922 wow because the money became worthless and people had no
1077
2:15:32 --> 2:15:37
money no purchasing power whatsoever they lost everything and so they you know like they had
1078
2:15:37 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ments and they they they needed you know like they needed to
1079
2:15:40 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ure their lives they were like give me 100 bucks i'll take the house because there were all
1080
2:15:45 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]s over invest into real estate explanation what i mean by farmland
1081
2:15:51 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ot of land that you can use or that somebody can use for you
1082
2:16:01 --> 2:16:10
very good okay so i want to share this chart that wasn't prepared by us it it was shared last week
1083
2:16:12 --> 2:16:18
and this reinforces what alex has been sharing with us it's a useful chart to understand so
1084
2:16:18 --> 2:16:26
you no longer are confused and this shows who the policymakers are in this whole game of russia
1085
2:16:26 --> 2:16:33
ukraine now jerry brady and others and i agree these five circles here should be above the bank
1086
2:16:33 --> 2:16:40
of international settlements and central banks these players here they make the policy then we've
1087
2:16:40 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ed nations and all these entities distributing the policy national governments
1088
2:16:45 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction] level down everybody they do as they're told and then we've got the mainstream media as
1089
2:16:52 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]s and then there's us and let me just read the words beside you and i on
1090
2:17:00 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]s of the policies that cascade down as alex just said the
1091
2:17:06 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]e that cascade down through the g3p system the global public private
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2:17:13 --> 2:17:19
partnership these are funded via tax and public borrowing which benefits the bis of the banks
1093
2:17:20 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]em is designed to exploit us but we are an increasingly
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2:17:27 --> 2:17:33
unnecessary component as the g3p seeks to transform the global economy based upon the
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2:17:33 --> 2:17:43
financialization of nature and hence and hence larry palevsky's point of the depopulation we are
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or as we offer here we're the useless eaters and so and so that's the game plan be no longer confused
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2:17:51 --> 2:17:56
thank you alex beautiful we've got jeremy and then steven we've got three four five more minutes
1098
2:17:56 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]evens they're well done on organizing that jeremy
1099
2:18:00 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]ion alex is quite obviously we're facing bailouts which are going to be paid
1100
2:18:09 --> 2:18:16
as usual by the taxpayer through inflation and printing of money what about bail ins
1101
2:18:16 --> 2:18:24
do you see a potential for bail ins whereby the banks or whoever's left standing seizes
1102
2:18:25 --> 2:18:27
the assets of the depositors
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2:18:29 --> 2:18:40
um am i muted no okay um uh no i um jeremy i i don't think that's very likely i could be wrong
1104
2:18:40 --> 2:18:46
but i don't think it's very likely because i think that the uh the amount of debts and the amount of
1105
2:18:46 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]em uh eclipse the the depositors so if you if you even if you
1106
2:18:56 --> 2:19:03
bailed in everybody and basically confiscated everybody's assets you wouldn't plug up the
1107
2:19:03 --> 2:19:11
holes and but you know like what would what would happen is that suddenly everybody would instantly
1108
2:19:11 --> 2:19:17
from one day to the next lose all their purchasing power so uh economy would grind grind to a halt
1109
2:19:17 --> 2:19:23
and all of the all of the corporations that their credit that they that they own bonds in uh would
1110
2:19:24 --> 2:19:29
have no business so it would be it would practically be a collective suicide of the
1111
2:19:29 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]em i think so you know even though after after the financial crisis of 2008 they created the
1112
2:19:38 --> 2:19:44
legal framework to be able to bail in the depositors i don't think they're gonna they're
1113
2:19:44 --> 2:19:51
gonna do it it would be like a poison pill uh but you know they'll do what they always do
1114
2:19:51 --> 2:19:58
and that is print money and they will print money until the currency goes you know to very close to
1115
2:19:58 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ion because i have a friend my best friend in the world is croatian
1116
2:20:05 --> 2:20:17
and he uh he lived in bosnia and uh in varash near sari evo and he he has told me stories about
1117
2:20:17 --> 2:20:24
what happened to his parents when money was seized from their bank accounts uh way back when i don't
1118
2:20:24 --> 2:20:29
know the details but sound to me like a bail in but that was a communist regime of course
1119
2:20:30 --> 2:20:39
uh well what what period was he talking about um i'm guessing this would have been in the 50s and
1120
2:20:39 --> 2:20:45
60s 60s okay i that's before my time well you know like i remember the 70s and the 80s and you
1121
2:20:45 --> 2:20:52
know like we had for as long as i could remember we had uh economy was crap it was stagflation
1122
2:20:52 --> 2:21:02
uh all the time but we never had bank failures uh and we never had bank runs and so you know that
1123
2:21:02 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]y tells you that they that the central bank printed up all the money that they needed to
1124
2:21:07 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]op all the bank losses and corporate losses and you know what you get instead is uh you know
1125
2:21:16 --> 2:21:24
the the merry-go-round goes round but the currency eventually fails
1126
2:21:26 --> 2:21:33
thank you okay so um so jerry brady has put the link in for boom finance and economics everybody
1127
2:21:33 --> 2:21:42
so go on that link you can subscribe to that it's a weekly newsletter i recommend it you know jerry
1128
2:21:42 --> 2:21:49
is read by many central bank decision makers so the links are there from the chat uh alex thank
1129
2:21:49 --> 2:21:55
you for sharing your experience knowledge thank you everybody for being here it's there two and
1130
2:21:55 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] if i if i manage it i will just now try to upload my book to the chat if i find
1131
2:22:02 --> 2:22:09
the book so if i if i manage it will appear okay we'll okay we'll wait we'll go for two or three
1132
2:22:09 --> 2:22:17
minutes and give you a bit of time okay thank you do you know how to do it alex uh i'm i'm
1133
2:22:17 --> 2:22:23
working on it i'm working on it right now i'm very good all right so while we're waiting
1134
2:22:23 --> 2:22:30
while we're waiting for alex well well so you so there are some people here who can help you to do
1135
2:22:30 --> 2:22:35
it if you don't know if you can do it steven if he's a bond trader he can organize an upload of a
1136
2:22:35 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]even it's it's only no it's only a question whether i have the book on my phone
1137
2:22:40 --> 2:22:48
that's that's that's the only thing i'm not yeah i understand yeah yeah so it wasn't what you thought
1138
2:22:48 --> 2:22:53
charles he knows how to he knows that's right if he's got it on his phone that's the question
1139
2:22:54 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]e here on their on their phones um all right so the it's now wednesday
1140
2:23:03 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]even have you got someone for sunday
1141
2:23:11 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]ease shasta um dr steven and charles um yesterday
1142
2:23:19 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]e down um a few people are interested um there's this um
1143
2:23:26 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]ian northwip and and a lady named tiffany and they're interested
1144
2:23:33 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] tiffany's interested in being on to share about that um dr tom cohen is interested
1145
2:23:40 --> 2:23:48
in being on your show and there's and dr and dr amanda bulmer very much wants to she just needs
1146
2:23:48 --> 2:23:54
a head she needs to be invited ahead of time to get babysitting very good but she she wants to do
1147
2:23:54 --> 2:24:00
it and then there's this brad who is a retired lieutenant colonel who quit nine months before
1148
2:24:00 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] been able to retire because he he felt it was the right thing to do
1149
2:24:05 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] contacts for you that are interested are you guys okay with
1150
2:24:11 --> 2:24:16
all four of those with me communicating sharing them with you yes if you can share those with
1151
2:24:16 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]a um what about your dad your father you've mentioned him that
1152
2:24:23 --> 2:24:31
i don't know where he's what he's up to right now with any of this but i could but if you if you want
1153
2:24:31 --> 2:24:40
a if you want a um phd in botany um and a doctor of herbology and holistic medicine doctor i have
1154
2:24:40 --> 2:24:47
another one i can think of very good but i i feel like you're wanting more mds since this is a medical
1155
2:24:48 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]or and you guys are out to figure out as well as we want priests and archbishops i've got a lot
1156
2:24:55 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]ic health people if if you want me to bring them on
1157
2:25:00 --> 2:25:09
you did mention someone someone at the church um pastor mike i'm going to go talk to him on sunday
1158
2:25:09 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]ood up to the tyranny so those are five five people so i'm going to talk to
1159
2:25:14 --> 2:25:19
dr tom cohen today and if it's okay with you i'll tell him you guys are interested
1160
2:25:19 --> 2:25:26
in having him because he would like how much did that church uh rack up in fines almost a three
1161
2:25:26 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]ill right now that he that that church is fighting and he just never he only
1162
2:25:31 --> 2:25:37
was closed for two months and that was it and he said forget it okay yeah and that's the main thing
1163
2:25:38 --> 2:25:45
so he's still smiling justa yeah he's still smiling oh good alex you found it no no sorry
1164
2:25:45 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]ease ignore it i wanted to check what the document was and instead i uh
1165
2:25:55 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction] you put a secret document there
1166
2:26:02 --> 2:26:10
no you can ignore it it's a it's a journal it's a it's an article but i very good no it looks like
1167
2:26:10 --> 2:26:17
i don't have it on my phone i'm sorry but then next time i will alex were you going to upload
1168
2:26:17 --> 2:26:23
the grand deception yeah that's what i was going to do it's already the link to the pdf has already
1169
2:26:23 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]e of times oh okay yes but yeah but that doesn't mean to say people can find it
1170
2:26:32 --> 2:26:40
okay so alex if you email it to me or charles or both uh we'll get it we'll distribute it or we put
1171
2:26:40 --> 2:26:48
it on the next chat okay yes i'll do that thank you all right everybody um we'll be back thank you
1172
2:26:48 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ing