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Charles, where is your green jacket today?
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Yes.
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Look, I'll do better than that.
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I'll show you.
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OK, one thing that's been very missing from the American media, I don't know.
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I don't know if people want to know.
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Charles, as low as I am to admit it, but they actually suit you.
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You know, like, what is that?
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That's hash, isn't it?
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That's marijuana.
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Cannabis, the hemp plant.
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Sorry, yeah, sorry.
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So, yes.
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All right, let's get this show on the road where I'm wearing my St.
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Patrick's Day cannabis glasses.
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0:00:43 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] say, having read a recent summary of the life of St.
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Patrick, around 400 AD, what an extraordinary man, what an extraordinary story.
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0:00:56 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]arting point was that he was an Englishman who was captured by an Irish king in 400,
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0:01:03 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] traders, and taken to Ireland and was a slave for six years.
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0:01:08 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ory.
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0:01:10 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ors for COVID Ethics International.
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And today's discussion, this group was founded by Dr.
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0:01:18 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] four years ago, almost four years ago, with the desire to pursue truth,
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ethics, justice, freedom and health.
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0:01:25 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] government and power over the years and has been a whistleblower
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0:01:29 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction], his medical specialty is radiology.
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At this time, we remember Rainer Fulmick and ask you to and urge you to see what you can
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do to shine a light on his unlawful incarceration by the German government, his show trial.
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Contrary to the law imposed by the German judicial system.
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I'm Charles Covess, the moderator of this group.
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0:01:54 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]iced law for 20 years before changing career 31 years ago.
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0:01:58 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] 14 years, I've helped parents and lawyers to strategize remedies for vaccine
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damage and damage from bad medical advice.
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Bad medical advice is now the number one killer of people in America ahead of cancer, heart
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attacks and diabetes.
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I'm also the CEO of an industrial hemp company.
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On the issue of health, someone sent through a link to me from last week's meeting about
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Morgan Spurlock, who did the movies Super Size Me and Super Size Me 2, who died suddenly
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at the age of 53, who was a great advocate for the COVID jabs, everybody.
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So it's clear what he died from.
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We comprise lots of professions here and we're from all around the world.
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Many of us thought that vaccines were okay.
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Many of us proudly say, yes, we are passionate anti-vaxxers.
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I am a passionate anti-vaxxer over the last 14 years from what I've learned.
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I urge you to check out the educational material available at informme.org, an Australian site
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0:03:00 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]en's vaccines.
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0:03:06 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]udy the work of Aaron Sirian, Shining a Light on Dr. Stanley Plotkin,
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0:03:13 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]en's vaccines in America, who has acknowledged that no vaccine
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0:03:17 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ory of humankind has ever been properly tested for safety and efficacy.
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And indeed, the front page of The Weekend Australian, a Murdoch newspaper who sometimes
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0:03:29 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]uff, but the front page of The Weekend Australian two days ago said what a concern
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it was that there was vaccine hesitancy for children's vaccines caused by the anti-vax
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movement.
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Isn't that a good thing?
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Isn't that a wonderful thing?
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And you've never seen such a puff piece on the front page of a Murdoch paper in your
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life.
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0:03:52 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] time here, welcome and feel free to introduce yourself in the
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chat as you publish a newsletter or a podcast.
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0:04:00 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] put the links into the chat so we can follow you, promote you and find you.
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0:04:06 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]and we're in the middle of World War III and the medical science battle
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is only one of twelve battle fronts of this latest world war.
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The spiritual battle front is another such battle front.
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There's no time to be tired.
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I assess we're five years into a seven year war, so stay healthy and get ready for the
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0:04:28 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]and the development of science and that the science is never settled.
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The meeting runs for two and a half hours after which for those with the time, Tom Rodman
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runs a video telegram meeting.
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Tom puts the links into the chat if you're able to join.
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We'll listen to our guest presenter today, Dr. Melina Sharma from the UK.
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For as long as Melina wishes to speak.
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This is a free speech environment with appropriate moderating.
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Free speech is crucially important in our fight to preserve our human freedoms.
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If you're offended by anything, be offended.
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0:05:06 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ed.
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0:05:08 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ry that requires nobody to say anything that may offend another.
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Don't you dare say something that may trigger another.
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0:05:18 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]rategies are attacks on free speech.
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However, we come with an attitude and perspective of love, not fear.
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And Melina, it's interesting to see the topic of your presentation today.
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So it ties in beautifully with that.
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Fear is the opposite of love.
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0:05:36 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]s you.
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Love on the other hand expands you and liberates you.
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0:05:42 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction] talkfests.
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0:05:45 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ions and initiatives have been generated from linkages made by
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attendees in these meetings.
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We're waiting for the next marriage announcement from linkages made in these meetings.
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We hope to be the equivalent of RSVP in this group.
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So if any of you fall in love with anybody else in this group, let us know and we'll
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details into the chat, the meeting is recorded and is uploaded onto the Rumble channel.
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0:06:19 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] presenter, Dr. Melina Sharma.
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And we thank you, Melina, for giving us your time and sharing your wisdom and insights.
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0:06:27 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ing and those who didn't get the invitation, let me
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do a short, give you a bit of a bio about Melina.
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0:06:39 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] at the UK NHS hospital and specialist skin cancer
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0:06:45 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]inary team lead at your hospital.
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Melina has a dual role of consultant, clinician and teaching.
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She is the academic lead and clinical associate professor at the University of Nottingham
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School of Medicine.
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She's a founder of the Royal College of Physicians.
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She's been a lead author in the Cochrane Skin Group for systematic reviews as a member of
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Centre of Evidence-based Dermatology.
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Melina achieved a PhD in medical education from the University of Nottingham, exploring
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the barriers and facilitators of specialty curriculum implementation across UK medical
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schools.
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She's published widely as associate editor of the Journal of Clinical and Experimental
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Dermatology and has co-authored the National UK Undergraduate Curriculum for Dermatology.
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She's the chair of the British Association of Dermatologists, Teachers of Undergraduate
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0:07:33 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ors Working Party Group.
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0:07:37 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ed a senior fellowship at the British College of Dermatology for her
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achievements in research and a contribution towards training of UK resident doctors.
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So wonderful background, Melina.
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Congratulations on you.
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Unmute yourself and we're in your hands.
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And as you know, you can share your screen.
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So, Charles, I just I'm sure that Melina won't mind me saying that she was a little bit nervous
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about doing this.
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So I said that we would try to support her.
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All of us try to support her.
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I think she's very important because she's much more reasonable than I am or even you,
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Charles.
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And so I think she's exactly the kind of person who will take the public along with her if
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she can get a message right.
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Thank you so much.
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Thank you so much, Charles.
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0:08:23 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, can you hear me?
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Very well.
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Thank you so much for inviting me.
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Yes, I am.
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I was a bit apprehensive when coming on to this chat.
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And of course, I've listened to many, many of your presentations here.
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And so I don't think I need to teach anybody out here, you know, what I know.
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I think everybody is very much aware.
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But I will share my screen.
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And the idea today is not to kind of go through all these stats and the graphs and the
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know, my kind of background and an insight of this whole time that we've had the last
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five years. So let me try and share my screen.
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Was it coming on?
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Not yet.
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It happened beautifully before it'll happen.
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There it is coming up.
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Beautiful.
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And.
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Yeah, we can see it.
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OK, so the title of my talk is Love Conquers Fear.
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And this is my kind of personal observation and insights over the last five years.
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0:10:04 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ion of my personal observations, opinions and experience
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0:10:11 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] the views of my employer or the university.
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And I'm mindful of the General Medical Council's guidance on social media.
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0:10:20 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] and adhere to that.
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So I'll share with you a bit about myself, my background, my journey, my medical career,
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and then personal observations and experience during Covid.
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As a quiz, I might start asking people as to what these buildings are, and particularly
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I'll come to the end. I might ask people if they know this.
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0:10:51 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ure on the top is the Indian Delhi, New Delhi Parliament building.
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0:10:58 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]on University.
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And then I'll come back to that last picture at the end.
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0:11:09 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]udied in India and I did my schooling in New Delhi.
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As you can see, as a kid, I was quite a geek in my class coming first and always in my books.
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And I grew up in a joint family with my brother, cousins, uncles, aunts, all close by celebrating
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My mother was from Kerala. She's passed away, sadly, some time ago, but she's a qualified nurse.
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And my father was from Punjab and he was a qualified surgeon.
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0:11:50 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction], she did her nursing and then actually went on to Boston University to
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pursue her PhD in education.
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And that was back in the 1960s. And she had wonderful friends at Boston University and at Harvard.
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And at that time, John F. Kennedy was the president.
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So, you know, it's such a small world and time lapses come to an end.
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And time lapses come together so nicely now that as kids, we used to listen to JFK speeches in Delhi
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0:12:26 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]s, which mom had kept.
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0:12:31 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]on University in education and returned back to the All India
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0:12:37 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]itute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi to establish the first BSc nursing college at Ames
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in New Delhi.
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And she was a huge, huge achiever.
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0:12:49 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]er Indira Gandhi coming for nursing convocations and
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graduation ceremonies.
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So that's my mom on the right.
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And of course, you can see Prime Minister Indira Gandhi there and my dad alongside my mom.
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0:13:07 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]e who are not familiar with Ames, Delhi, just to let you know that it is a premier
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0:13:13 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]itute of India.
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And during my formative years, we used to have well, there used to be only 50 medical school
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seats for the entire country.
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0:13:23 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]y and go through a competitive exam and it still remains one of the premier
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0:13:28 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]itutes of India.
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0:13:28 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction] now created under the Modi government, you know, more Ames in different sites.
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0:13:34 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]itute of India.
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And, you know, I grew up on this campus.
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Because my father was a surgeon here, my mom was head of nursing here.
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And, you know, I had a very privileged childhood, I would say, you know, with medical students,
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0:13:53 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]-grad students, you know, nursing students, everybody coming, you know, coming for dinners
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and lunches and me going and giving my dad lunch at in the hospital.
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So and I noticed, you know, there was a very, very strong work ethic, which was embedded
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I don't know if people know, but nurses from Kerala are world famous and they have they
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are very much part of the National Health Service in the UK as well.
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And, you know, students from this institute, you know, they have a huge, huge amount of
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knowledge and, you know, fantastic skills and Ames is actually known to drive the health
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policy of India.
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Coming to my dad, he did his post-graduate surgical training from Ames in India and then
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he went on to Ottawa to pursue his further training in surgery in the 60s.
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So my father and mother were in Ottawa and Boston respectively, and had a Canada US romance,
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I think.
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He went on to do a fellowship in Glasgow and then he rejoined Ames in the UK.
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And then he rejoined Ames and became the head of surgery at Ames.
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He also was a huge achiever.
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I mean, he's retired and obviously in Delhi, but he was surgeon to the president of India.
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Of course, growing up in changing times was hard.
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As a child, I remember he was the chief surgeon where at the time when Prime Minister Indira
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Gandhi was assassinated and Ames is the centre that all the dignitaries and head of states
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come for their treatments.
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And a few years later, he was again the chief surgeon when her son and ex-prime minister,
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Rajiv Gandhi, was assassinated.
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And the reason I say all this is because it just kind of builds from where I come from and my kind
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of background of medicine or surgery and the skills of what being a doctor or a nurse would be.
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So my medical school primary degree was from India.
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And then finally, after completing my primary medical degree, I actually moved to the UK.
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My uncle was a GP in the UK and we used to visit during school holidays and join school here
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in the UK as my aunt was a teacher.
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0:16:29 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] my professional exams and I came to the UK back in 2000.
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0:16:35 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]graduate medical education was, you know, initially through medicine as an acute
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0:16:42 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]rar and being working in the intensive care unit.
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I then moved into dermatology research and I worked as a co-investigator for clinical trials.
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Now, this was interesting because the clinical trials involved, you know,
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use of biologics for psoriasis, for example.
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And at that time as a research trainee, the consent process was very elaborate.
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You know, you had to go through everything, took about almost an hour to do.
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And you had to sign everything, get the patient to sign everything.
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And then for follow-up, you had to do a full systemic examination before moving on.
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0:17:27 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] every slight, you know, side effect or presumed side effect or,
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you know, anything that the patient reported onto the record.
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I'm still involved in clinical trial work and at this time as well.
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0:17:44 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ill need quite a bit of time to consent patients.
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They receive their information leaflets beforehand to the research nurse and then they come in and
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have their consent process done. And that again takes about half an hour
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because they've got to sign everything and I've got to make sure everything is okay.
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I've been, you know, pursuing research, partly in medical education and also we have done a
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0:18:11 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ematic review. But I've always enjoyed teaching
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and I've been a full-time NHS medic for almost 25 years.
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0:18:19 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] managed to survive this long in the NHS.
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So I'm still waiting for that, maybe probably August of this year.
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So over 18 years of teaching experience, I've been a mentor, education supervisor for,
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you know, and I have still got medical students from Nottingham.
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So it's an amazing, amazing opportunity that I have got.
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And I've been very privileged to be part of the BAD and have an actual role with them as well.
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And throughout my medical training, I have to say, you know, I had a really good experience
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with everybody around me, all my seniors around me, and everybody having a very patient-centred
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0:19:00 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]icit, and there has been, implicit trust within the medical fraternity.
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So if guidelines were produced or are produced, we followed them because we trusted our colleagues
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because they'd spent all the time and effort and looking at the evidence
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when they were producing the guidelines or conducting any of the reviews.
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Things of course changed, which was a shock surprise for me back in 2019,
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you know, when COVID hit. There was a lot of confusion. I was quite fearful. I was going into
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hospital operating with limited PPE on skin cancer patients with, you know, being very close to their
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face and scalp operating on them, being in close proximity. You were hearing about medics and
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nurses kind of dying. I was really quite fearful for my family and friends all over the world.
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You know, my husband who was with me, he's a non-medic, but he's an engineer,
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and my relatives and friends in the UK, my dad's relative friends in India,
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my in-laws in Italy, my brother in Australia, my cousins and family in Canada. So hence, I had,
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you know, family everywhere, well, across the world, and which made me kind of look into what
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was happening across the world. So everyone was asked to isolate at home, which made me think,
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well, how would people know, you know, what condition they may be suffering from,
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you know, if they've been told you have to stay at home? What would happen? Do we not think that
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other diagnosis may be missed? So people with breathlessness could not just have a viral
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0:20:57 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]ion, could be a bacterial infection, it could be a heart attack, could be a pulmonary
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embolism. Are we going to be not looking at those diagnoses? There were no tools to identify at the
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time, you know, COVID. And then when PCR testing arrived, the swabs had to be inserted deep into
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the nasal cavity to find this highly infectious agent, which I again found a bit bizarre and
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surprising. Essential services continued. So we carried on with, you know, seeing skin cancer
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patients and emergencies, and we carried on operating on skin cancer patients. And teaching
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and training had to evolve at a rapid pace. And that meant, you know, getting online resources,
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etc., which I received national recognition for changing things for our trainings.
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0:21:48 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]arted to notice new things on the media. So having had the intensive care experience,
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0:21:55 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]s, but as an acute medic, you know, there was news articles showing
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patients in ITU with the endotracheal tube in their mouth and talking. That was very strange.
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I've never seen that, you know, because usually you're sedated and you've got the endotracheal
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tube in your mouth and you're asleep, you know, you're in a coma, you know, you're in a coma,
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you're asleep, you know, you can't be talking. Then this talked about asymptomatic spread.
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Again, which was a little bit strange to me. Yes, you can have some conditions where you think
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patient may be asymptomatic. But if, if in my normal practice, if somebody is asymptomatic,
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I'm thinking, well, they're all right. They're healthy. They're not ill.
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Then there were reports of deaths from COVID, deaths with COVID. If somebody had a road traffic
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accident, but tested positive, they still died of COVID. If they got stabbed in the street and
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0:22:52 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ed positive with COVID, for COVID, they were still diagnosed, diagnosed with COVID.
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And it was COVID, COVID, COVID every day, 24-7, so much so that I had to stop my radio going into
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work because it was terrifying me. You know, every time I was going in the wrong direction,
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0:23:12 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]aying at home while I'm going into the hospital. And then I realized that,
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you know, I needed to have maybe some more information. And so I joined Twitter and
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0:23:23 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]e who thought the same in the sense of, well, this all doesn't
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make sense to me. And I did find some people. And, you know, realized that this was also strange,
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0:23:39 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]e who were, you know, asking questions, you know, making suggestions,
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saying, well, maybe we could do it another way, or maybe we could think differently. But for the
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0:23:52 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] time, I was seeing that they were all being silenced. And now, of course, recently,
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Mark Zuckerberg has come out to say Facebook was silencing people. You know, my husband was being,
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I think, or friends who were trying to say things on Twitter were also silenced. So it was, again,
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something quite new and bizarre for me, because, you know, in medicine, you would expect people
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would be talking to each other, trying to find some, you know, solutions, especially if you
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think something is novel that's come out. And then, of course, there were attempts at treating COVID,
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you know, in the UK, you know, we start with the basic measures of stay at home isolation. But what
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were other countries doing? Now, because of my link with Ames, I was just looking at what these
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guys were up to. And so they came up with a protocol. I mean, this is the one that I've put
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up here is a more kind of up to date one. And I can't find the first protocol that came out.
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And that basically was, you know, suggesting vitamin C, D, zinc, hydroxychloroquine. Government
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of India, one of the state governments where my dad is currently in Uttar Pradesh, they started to
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0:25:07 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ribute free vitamin D, C, zinc to all, you know, because, you know, as you know, India is not
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0:25:12 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]e, you know, have to do daily wages, etc. And then immunomodulants
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0:25:19 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine seem to be quite, you know, look to be attractive options.
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And then we had news that President Trump had COVID and then he had hydroxychloroquine.
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And that was immediately followed by a journal paper stating that the drug was very dangerous.
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And now it's been retracted, which again, to me was strange because for us in dermatology,
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0:25:44 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine quite routinely. And, you know, it was safe to use. So again, that was
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0:25:53 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]range for me. I felt love was stronger than fear, because
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0:26:02 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] about Italy being so badly affected. My husband was very, very concerned about his
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parents. So he said, I'm going to Italy, I don't care. You have to come, you come. And I was like,
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no, no, I'm going to follow you. And we visited Italy. And actually, when we went to Sicily,
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0:26:19 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]e were, I didn't, we didn't see anybody, you know, as, as what we were being
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shown on TV. It may be that on different areas. But again, strange occurrences. People were being
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fined for walking alone without a mask on the beach. There were huge restrictions without the
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COVID pass. So you couldn't enter the bank, you couldn't go to the post office. You couldn't enter
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0:26:48 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]aurant. And we had a similar, you know, experience when we went to India, because I was
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worried about my father. And so I was like, I have to go home, I have to go home, and I have to go
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and see my dad. And we visited India. And that was again strange. So there's lots of testing and
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tracing. But in all the time that I would visit India, and I was there, you know, we've had so
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many communicable diseases. We never had such a level of, of, you know, testing, tracing,
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phone calls, text messages, etc. In Delhi, you will find if you didn't wear a mask,
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even if you were alone in your car. So that again didn't make sense to me.
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0:27:36 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]arted. So some more interesting events were being noticed by
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0:27:43 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] was created in less than six months. Normally,
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0:27:48 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] a vaccine to take years as you know, vaccines are given to healthy people, not,
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0:27:54 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]e. So you want to make sure that safety is paramount. The clinical trials were cut
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short, and the control group was unblinded and treated. So there was no comparison to the placebo.
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And that kind of meant we couldn't really find out what was happening for long term safety data.
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In Sicily, again, you know, people were being jabbed by personnel in mobile vans carrying,
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0:28:22 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ions in ice boxes. And when actually the recommendation was to preserve and
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transport them at minus 80 degrees. So I mean, what you're doing with ice boxes in 40 degrees.
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Bizarre. And then finally, you know, people were considered unvaccinated for the first two weeks of
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receiving the job. So again, that made me think, you know, if I was to give somebody penicillin,
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0:28:49 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ion, and had an anaphylaxis or had a really bad skin reaction,
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could I turn around and say, well, actually, you didn't have the penicillin, if it was with
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within two weeks of having the penicillin. Again, it was, it was bizarre.
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0:29:13 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]arted to get anecdotal reports from people around me of, of, you know, hairdressers,
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0:29:20 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]rs, people who were just talking, cleaning lady, shopkeepers telling me about,
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you know, sudden deaths, heart attacks, strokes, cancer amongst family members,
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you know, with brain tumors, lymphomas or breast cancer. And then of course, the mandates arrived,
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and that was across the world. So I was watching everywhere. I was looking Australia, because my
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brother and family lived there. I was looking at Canada, because my cousins lived there.
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And of course, the UK, you know, where care home workers and then NHS workers were
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0:29:55 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ed. Of course, care home workers were affected. And so was most a lot of
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NHS workers. And eventually this was withdrawn. So if I saw somebody who was vaccine injured,
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you know, or the there was a temporary relationship amongst my patients or, or anyone,
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really, I was completing yellow cards to try and raise the concern about it. And then sharing
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0:30:20 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]e in India, because you may not be aware, but AstraZeneca version
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was being given to Indian population, which is called Covishield. And they had their own
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different version, a traditional method version that was co vaccine. So when AstraZeneca was
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0:30:41 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]awn in the UK and elsewhere, India was still carrying on with Covishield. So it was
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0:30:48 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ually, we should be looking carefully about this,
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and perhaps looking to discontinue this.
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And in India, you know, two weeks after the injection started, I have a lovely group of
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school friends whom I've known from nursery standards. So in India, you carry on being
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together from nursery till high school. And now, you know, we're all at that age where we've known
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0:31:18 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]us years. And it was just so distressing that that WhatsApp group,
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every morning because of the time difference from UK and India of five and a half hours,
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I would wake up and there would be a report of someone, someone's parents, somebody's aunt,
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somebody's, you know, sibling having passed away. You know, classmate sister, she died suddenly.
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She was in her late 40s, her classmates, friends, father died. And during the funeral,
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the brother died. Our family friend, who's my dad's friend, he died between the first and the
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second dose. Another family friend got multiple Kremlin of paralysis. And then he wanted to travel
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to Singapore because his family was there. And I just was like, I think you need to be a bit more
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0:32:12 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ayed for ovarian cancer and died within weeks of diagnosis.
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0:32:21 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] cancer. She was in remission and everything returned and then she
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0:32:29 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] Another friend's daughter, they're upset, severe herpes zoster. And I couldn't
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0:32:37 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ain why this all was going on. Within my own family, you know, one of them got heart failure,
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0:32:45 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]roke in the middle of the road and then eventually passed away.
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My father developed new onset diabetes at his, you know, elderly age and developed
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diabetic ketoacidosis and sepsis and was rushed into hospital with multi-organ failure.
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0:33:06 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]aff and they were incredible having looked after him.
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And we noticed similar things happening in Italy, you know, an uncle developing an autoimmune disease
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with sudden blindness in one eye, another uncle going in for angioplasties, somebody else having
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DVTs. My father-in-law, he, you know, he was in a care home and then he passed away. And my mother-in-law
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told me that the care home closed because all the residents passed away. So it was a really, really
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0:33:42 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]ressing and horrible time leaving, you know, one to think, gosh, what is going on all around me?
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I'm grateful that things have now changed and things have calmed down in the last, you know,
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0:33:59 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] five years now, I think. And I noticed that, you know, people that I was watching
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being censored on the main are now back on the main stage. And Australia had given a hard time
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0:34:12 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] now he's back to playing again and is less restricted.
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So, you know, in my final kind of slide, I would want to say that, you know, I think love conquers
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fear because I've noticed that for me, my love for my father made me go back to India and see what
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was going on. Our love for my in-laws made us go to Italy and see what was going on. My love for my
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patients, you know, wanted to make sure that they were safe, you know, and trying to do whatever we
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could. And same thing for my trainings was really, really important. And I think I have to say that
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my husband has been an incredible force for me to have even had the courage to even come today,
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0:35:00 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]e, but even to be going through this process for all these years, it's been an
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0:35:06 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] journey. And I don't think anything of any of this would have been possible without
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God in our lives. So I'm going to end this by asking, who is this person, this marble statue,
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and where do you think we are? Thank you.
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Yes. Well, Molina, thank you. Who knows where that statue is? Put your hand up if you think you know.
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Well, it's very familiar, but I honestly can't think. Do you know, Charles? No.
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Okay, I'll tell you. It's Santa Rosalia in Palermo in Sicily, and she's a saint of miracles and
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0:35:48 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]mas to just see what's going on. And I think that's
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a very special feeling. And we try and go every Christmas to just try and heal ourselves and
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heal the world. Thank you. So what's all the gold, Molina?
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Well, she's been adorned with all the gold, I guess. It's in a sealed kind of enclosure,
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so nobody's going to steal it. But you can see me with my broken foot there and my husband.
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But behind me is again Santa Rosalia, and people will ask for miracles. And when things happen,
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they'll come and leave things here. So you might see some little crutches or baby clothes and
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0:36:38 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]e are asking for a miracle to happen. She does help. Thank you.
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How did you break your foot, Molina? Oh, I just went down the stairs.
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0:36:51 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]op the share now, Molina, and thank you so much for telling your story.
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It's terrific. I know a number of people in your situation in India. I say to people,
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India, there's no such place as India. There are 800 languages spoken in India.
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There's 26 official languages in India. I look on India as [privacy contact redaction]e on
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average. And I've got friends, Molina in Australia, who on your journey, and it's a fascinating
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0:37:33 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]or and your mother in medicine and then you. And I was
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thinking, why aren't you a surgeon, but I suppose you are as a dermatologist in India?
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Oh, no, I didn't want to be. I didn't see my father. He was always in theater. So I don't have much
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0:37:57 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ion of him as a child because he was constantly just operating. But I do have very
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0:38:03 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]udents who are now, you know, head of departments, and they still have so
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0:38:10 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] for him. And I think that's probably what saved him because they just looked after him
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like their own, which is incredible. Plus you've got to stand for a very long hours as a surgeon.
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We've had the comment made in previous meetings that you really need to be a psychopath to be a
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surgeon, to be able to keep cutting people in bits. So that was an interesting comment that other
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0:38:37 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ors made. I didn't make. So the question I thought, and I really will have a conversation
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0:38:44 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ephen goes with the questions first, but I thought you told us that last year
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you didn't get the jabs. Did you? Is that correct? Or you had to get the jabs? No, that is correct.
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So well done. Well, you know, the question for you then is which is correct, Mollina?
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You didn't take the jabs? No, I didn't. And why did, how did you know not to take them?
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0:39:14 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]opped you going along with what everyone else was doing or nearly everyone else?
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Yeah, because of what, because of the data that was coming out, because of the side effects that
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0:39:29 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]e were reporting. And because I was looking or rather my husband as well, looking at the
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Italian data as well and looking at looking at things from a kind of bird's eye perspective,
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which made me think something is not right here. Very close to the time people were already
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reporting to me that they were witnessing, you know, their own loved ones, you know, either dying
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0:40:00 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]roke or a heart attack, which with close kind of temporal
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relationship, you couldn't prove it, but it was all kind of bizarre. And it just made me wary.
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And hence I said, well, let's just wait for the safety and efficacy data to come out.
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And so I waited. And the more I waited, the more I thought, right, I think I better stay away.
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Sure. So, Stephen, the next 15 minutes are yours. I've got a stack of questions and others will have
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as well, but over to you, Stephen. Thanks, Charles. So, the clinical trials, you're working with
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clinical trials early on in your career, weren't you? So you understood about clinical trials,
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but at the time you decided not to get these injections, did you realize that there were no
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clinical trials, at least worth the name? To me, it was, you know, it was unusual because,
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you know, when I was working with clinical being a co-investigator clinical trials,
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you'd spent so much time going through every bit of the paperwork and also making sure that the
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0:41:14 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ood the do's and don'ts of whatever drug you were going to give them,
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0:41:19 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]aw at any time. And the consent process was quite elaborate.
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And the follow up was equally elaborate, you know, especially for, for example,
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using biologics for psoriasis. Currently, I'm involved in a clinical trial, and I'm a clinical
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currently I'm involved in a clinical trial, you know, looking at vulva-like
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sclerosis because I also do vulva dermatosis and dermatology. And, and that involves, you know,
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0:41:48 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] to think before you get yourself into, you know, getting into doing clinical research,
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because you've got to take the time to actually speak with patients. And the clinical research
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0:41:57 --> 0:42:06
nurse goes through everything prior to having the consent signed. So, I don't know what was
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0:42:06 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]y, because obviously I'm hospital based as to whether any consent
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process was happening. I'm not sure. Did you notice, um, well, you know, that the coronavirus act
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had specific measures outlined, and this was a document I can't remember exactly now, but it
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0:42:24 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]eds of pages. So the British government kind of led people to believe, but maybe didn't
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actually say that this was produced in a rush, you know, since the pandemic came about. So like
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three weeks to, there's no way they did it in three weeks. So, but they had, they had all the laws
467
0:42:46 --> 0:42:54
and regulations, if you like, for coroners and post-mortems. So the coroners suddenly lost their
468
0:42:54 --> 0:43:00
power to do anything. And they weren't interested in what people were dying of for the first time
469
0:43:00 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]ed Kingdom. So as far as I could understand anyway, and post-mortems weren't being
470
0:43:05 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]ed. I'm thinking, whoa, in addition, so early on I realized that everybody was lying.
471
0:43:14 --> 0:43:19
And there was a global coup d'etat. And I think I have to thank my whistleblowing case for that,
472
0:43:19 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]antly in that case, the M.O.D. in particular, and the military.
473
0:43:27 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]e were lying to me and I knew I was being lied to over COVID
474
0:43:34 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] And I don't think I would have understood that had I not gone through that
475
0:43:38 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]leblowing case over five and a half years, by the way. So.
476
0:43:45 --> 0:43:50
I think you're right. I think you're right, Steven. I think there are, there are aspects of your life
477
0:43:50 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]ion or the other. And if you've had some experiences,
478
0:43:56 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction] kind of marred you or scarred you, you are wary of things that have happened.
479
0:44:05 --> 0:44:10
And therefore, you don't necessarily believe everything that is told to you in the first
480
0:44:10 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ance. So yeah, you're right. I think I have reflected as to why my response was perhaps
481
0:44:16 --> 0:44:24
different from others, you know. And I think it's probably because, A, my upbringing was quite
482
0:44:25 --> 0:44:35
unconventional in India, in Delhi. B, having had the experience of, you know, having done a cock
483
0:44:35 --> 0:44:43
crane, looking at clinical trial data and RCTs and things, and also then also actually participating
484
0:44:44 --> 0:44:49
and being a co-investigator in clinical trials. And then also having some acute medical experience.
485
0:44:49 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction] kind of, you know, it all kind of came together and it didn't make
486
0:44:54 --> 0:45:00
sense to me at the time. So hence, I think, and also when, you know, after traveling and realizing
487
0:45:00 --> 0:45:06
actually, we didn't see, because my, I remember my mother-in-law ringing us in Italy, in India,
488
0:45:08 --> 0:45:13
really panicking, thinking that people were all on the streets and they were all, you know,
489
0:45:13 --> 0:45:18
that's what that was being shown on TV. So it may be that, yes, it was happening elsewhere,
490
0:45:18 --> 0:45:24
but we certainly didn't encounter it. So our lived experience was different from what was being shown.
491
0:45:26 --> 0:45:32
Yeah. So generally, Maulina, you're a medical doctor, so am I. So we need to have opinions
492
0:45:32 --> 0:45:38
about this kind of thing, or, you know, so guessing, if you like, or hypothesizing on behalf of our
493
0:45:38 --> 0:45:47
patients. So do you think when we are going through great traumas in our lives, you know,
494
0:45:47 --> 0:45:54
not necessarily COVID, but, you know, from childhood, for example, that all of us manage.
495
0:45:54 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ually, you don't realize through that you've been through a trauma until you're actually
496
0:45:59 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]and me? Yeah. And you might not realize then without help. So
497
0:46:07 --> 0:46:15
I feel now, looking back over this last five years, that there is a distinct possibility that
498
0:46:15 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]e were absolutely terrified by the whole narrative, you know, what you're describing about
499
0:46:22 --> 0:46:30
the radio and the television, I think you mentioned. And so it seemed that all of a sudden,
500
0:46:31 --> 0:46:36
the primary aim of all the governments around the world was to scare their populations. And that was
501
0:46:36 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]abilizing to human beings, I think. But everybody managed, well, some less well than others.
502
0:46:46 --> 0:46:50
But we thought that we were managing better because we understood it to some extent, but I
503
0:46:50 --> 0:46:54
don't think we did understand it any more than any human being could understand what was going on in
504
0:46:54 --> 0:47:04
2020. So I now think that we've all been damaged to a greater or lesser extent by what's happened
505
0:47:04 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] five years. And it's going to be very difficult for many people to recover. What do you
506
0:47:09 --> 0:47:16
think? So what they did, in my opinion, which was unforgivable was they isolated human beings.
507
0:47:16 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] known that that was wrong. And they didn't understand.
508
0:47:22 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction], I didn't understand either. I couldn't bear to see the masks.
509
0:47:27 --> 0:47:32
So I created my own little world. I kind of thought, well, I'll stop going out and I won't
510
0:47:32 --> 0:47:38
see the masks then. But of course, that meant I wasn't seeing people as often as I normally would.
511
0:47:38 --> 0:47:42
So I was isolating myself. So that wasn't great. And it took me a long time to realize
512
0:47:42 --> 0:47:48
I needed to get the hell out of the house a lot more than I was at the time I was creating my own
513
0:47:48 --> 0:48:00
world. And I think it was very traumatic. You know, for me as well, it was I felt I was very scared,
514
0:48:00 --> 0:48:07
you know, going in, being in close proximity and, you know, operating, which was it all went well.
515
0:48:07 --> 0:48:14
I mean, thank God nothing happened really. I was perfectly okay. And, you know, everybody was so
516
0:48:14 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]aff members and patients, everybody have been really, really kind.
517
0:48:20 --> 0:48:26
But it was isolating. I agree. And I think people were afraid of people who are going into hospitals.
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0:48:26 --> 0:48:32
So, you know, just on just in my in my street, you know, people would avoid coming near me,
519
0:48:32 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]ious or infected. So it's, and I think, again,
520
0:48:39 --> 0:48:45
at that time, you feel hurt because people are avoiding you or, or they don't understand or,
521
0:48:45 --> 0:48:50
or whatever. But you one has to be forgiving and one has to understand that people will
522
0:48:50 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] differently. When one is fearful, and you don't necessarily respond and react in the in a
523
0:48:58 --> 0:49:04
normal, logical fashion when one is terrified. So when you've got a world, Malina, where
524
0:49:06 --> 0:49:10
everybody's being asked to say, think that it's normal to take down whole countries,
525
0:49:11 --> 0:49:16
and small businesses and medium sized businesses, you know, that it's normal, all to protect granny.
526
0:49:17 --> 0:49:24
You know, this was massively, this was a massive lie. And they still continue and they are continuing
527
0:49:24 --> 0:49:30
with this nonsense of saying, in the UK, for example, the official inquiry has completely
528
0:49:30 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] credit. Well, it never had any credibility, never had any chance of being credible. But
529
0:49:35 --> 0:49:40
what they're saying is, essentially, we need to learn from the so called pandemic, which might,
530
0:49:40 --> 0:49:47
in my opinion, never occurred. And next time, we need to make sure that we do better than we did,
531
0:49:47 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]s, lockdown better and earlier. Absolutely outrageous. And they don't understand.
532
0:49:53 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]and how human beings work, you know, how they work when
533
0:50:01 --> 0:50:07
there's severely under stress. And some people did understand this, I think, and they deliberately
534
0:50:07 --> 0:50:12
did what they did. So I do think that the people responsible for this need to be held to account.
535
0:50:13 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]er to get that to that situation, where we can get people to hold these people to account,
536
0:50:20 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]and what's happened to them. And they don't understand.
537
0:50:23 --> 0:50:28
And I don't know how to do it. But I'd be very grateful if you can work out.
538
0:50:28 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] not. I can't comment on this, because I frankly have not been
539
0:50:34 --> 0:50:40
really following the COVID inquiry, just because I've been so inundated with work and, you know,
540
0:50:40 --> 0:50:48
clinical commitments. So I can't really comment what has been going on. It's beyond my expertise,
541
0:50:48 --> 0:50:55
frankly. And I think I'm sure people are actually looking into it. And things, you know,
542
0:50:55 --> 0:51:04
sometimes things evolve in time. And time is a great healer. And time does reveal everything, I think.
543
0:51:05 --> 0:51:12
Yeah. Marlena, as a medical doctor in the UK, do you feel that the diagnosis of COVID,
544
0:51:12 --> 0:51:16
the alleged diagnosis, the reported diagnosis of COVID was safe?
545
0:51:18 --> 0:51:26
I can't comment on this, Stephen. I'm not the expert on this. So, you know, I think, yeah,
546
0:51:26 --> 0:51:32
I would, I can't comment on it. Yeah. So I don't think it was safe. And they,
547
0:51:32 --> 0:51:36
but they needed that diagnosis to create the deaths, to create the fear, to give the illusion
548
0:51:36 --> 0:51:41
of a pandemic. And there was no pandemic. That's my opinion. And I don't expect you to comment. But
549
0:51:41 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction], Charles, go ahead with it. Okay. Oh, I think Jerry had his hand up, but he's down now.
550
0:51:47 --> 0:51:54
Yes, Jerry's hand is down. I don't know where he's gone. He's maybe he's take, he's taken his advice
551
0:51:54 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] Patrick's Day, according to Australian time. Marlena,
552
0:52:02 --> 0:52:12
I'm very interested in tip of the spear actions before we go to Mark. And the question that,
553
0:52:12 --> 0:52:21
you know, your part, you're working within the NHS, but there must be whistleblowers
554
0:52:23 --> 0:52:30
within the NHS who know the crap that's gone on. Or secondly, there must be retired doctors who
555
0:52:30 --> 0:52:36
know the crap that's gone on. And what I would urge you to do is perhaps with Stephen off, offline,
556
0:52:36 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ors to give guidance to people on shining a light on the
557
0:52:47 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ices within the medical system, because I don't see anything, I don't see anybody
558
0:52:55 --> 0:52:59
saying any good things about the NHS. And something needs to be done over the last five years,
559
0:53:00 --> 0:53:07
but also for what's masquerading as good health advice. And Ahmad Malik, I'm sure you've heard
560
0:53:07 --> 0:53:14
Ahmad here, and I hope you're a subscriber to Ahmad's work. And he, you know, he is scathing
561
0:53:14 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]ice of medicine in the UK. So that's the thought I have, I don't want you to,
562
0:53:20 --> 0:53:26
because you're working in the system. And I would love to discuss that with you off think,
563
0:53:27 --> 0:53:35
offline, because we need to really go for the jugular. And yesterday on Sky, on the Outsiders
564
0:53:35 --> 0:53:43
Program, Tony Nickolick, a colleague lawyer here in Australia, came out hard, it was an excellent
565
0:53:43 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]s to account. Just like Senator Malcolm Roberts last week,
566
0:53:49 --> 0:53:58
Stephen, said, we won't forget, and we're coming after you. And I urge all of us to keep putting
567
0:53:58 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]s, putting repeating those messages, and retired politicians and every one of them who
568
0:54:04 --> 0:54:12
supported what happened this, this series of behaviors that you so eloquently showed in,
569
0:54:13 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ory, we cannot let this pass. We simply can't let it pass.
570
0:54:19 --> 0:54:24
So that's my comment to you. I don't expect you to say anything because of the position you're in.
571
0:54:24 --> 0:54:28
But you know, you've this is cellular stuff for you,
572
0:54:28 --> 0:54:34
Molina. And I look at, you know, how your mom and dad would have been treating patients,
573
0:54:35 --> 0:54:41
the proper treatment of patients. And by the way, I'm just scathing about the legal profession.
574
0:54:41 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] me. So food for thought for you. Okay. And talk to Stephen offline.
575
0:54:48 --> 0:54:55
Charles, he said, we are coming for you. Malcolm Roberts, those are his exact words. I remember
576
0:54:55 --> 0:55:01
them. You said we are coming after you, I think we are coming. And we have to come for them.
577
0:55:02 --> 0:55:09
Even when they're retired. I've said this before, we must. Every time any of these retired
578
0:55:09 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]d badly, as distinct from obviously incompetently, but who behave badly,
579
0:55:17 --> 0:55:22
like the Matt Hancock's of this world, we have to make their life miserable whenever they dare to
580
0:55:22 --> 0:55:30
show their face in public, number one, and number two, we need to shine a light on their wealth
581
0:55:30 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] accumulated during their political career. And so all of us any, any, any display of
582
0:55:38 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]igated. And that's what I'm doing in Australia. I urge all of
583
0:55:45 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]s who got money in politics, like the Nancy Pelosi's
584
0:55:52 --> 0:56:00
of this world, never get to properly enjoy never get to enjoy the ill gotten, unlawfully gotten,
585
0:56:00 --> 0:56:10
criminally gotten resources. All right, Mark. Thank you, Melina. You mentioned that you
586
0:56:11 --> 0:56:18
with informed consent, you didn't have a knowledge of what the informed consent was outside
587
0:56:18 --> 0:56:28
of the NHS. So I'd like to give you a brief insight. My hairdresser was in fact a vaccinator.
588
0:56:28 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]e would do is they would go in and see the doctor or nurse,
589
0:56:36 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction] a small chat with them. And then she would chat them. And she did this for the first
590
0:56:43 --> 0:56:48
chat and the second. And after the second, she didn't give any more because she heard some of
591
0:56:48 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]aining that they had had an adverse reaction. And they'd asked, could it be from the
592
0:56:57 --> 0:57:02
previous job? And they were dismissed, it was just dismissed out of hand, no, can't be anything
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0:57:02 --> 0:57:11
to do with it. These are safe. And that's what was going on. Then I tackled my local surgery
594
0:57:12 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]ually able to get informed consent. When the leaflet that was given
595
0:57:20 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]s, it would take an average adult 12 minutes to read. So they can't have read it.
596
0:57:30 --> 0:57:34
And if they had read it, they wouldn't have understood it because of a lot of technical
597
0:57:34 --> 0:57:43
jargon in it. And then within that document, there was adverse reactions. And
598
0:57:43 --> 0:57:57
the government lied. Under lymph endopathy, it said it was uncommon, but they put an asterisk
599
0:57:58 --> 0:58:09
at the end, which actually made it common. The percentage from the trial had gone from 0.4%
600
0:58:10 --> 0:58:19
to 5.2%. So a 13 fold increase. And the MHRA did nothing. They should have acted on that immediately
601
0:58:19 --> 0:58:24
and said, we have a problem here. We need to find out why has it gone up? But they did nothing.
602
0:58:26 --> 0:58:34
I then tried to find out about informed consent locally by asking members of the public who are
603
0:58:34 --> 0:58:41
waiting to get jabbed if they knew about the yellow card system, the adverse events. And these
604
0:58:41 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]e were having shot number six and seven. They've never heard about the yellow card.
605
0:58:47 --> 0:58:55
They didn't hear about any adverse events. And the pharmacist later came out and asked me to remove
606
0:58:55 --> 0:59:01
myself. And I asked, how are you giving informed consent? How do you get it? And she said, we're
607
0:59:01 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ed the conversation that was had. And it was, are you Mr. Dyer? Yes.
608
0:59:10 --> 0:59:17
Are you here for your jab? Yes. Did you have any reaction last time? No. Which arm? Those were the
609
0:59:17 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ions. That is not informed consent. So I just wanted to inform you that that is actually
610
0:59:26 --> 0:59:32
what was going on in public. Thank you, Mark.
611
0:59:35 --> 0:59:40
Yes, it's an interesting question, this informed consent. And last week, Glenn Floyd reinforced the
612
0:59:40 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ion between informed consent by the patient and valid consent from the doctor's
613
0:59:46 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ive. Because any informed consent, which can be, I know I'm informed that there's no
614
0:59:52 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ing, but I want this jab, say, well, the doctor says, well, are
615
0:59:58 --> 1:00:03
you here under coercion? Yes. Well, then it's not valid consent. And certainly in Australian law,
616
1:00:03 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]or cannot then or nobody can inject that person, Mark. So just those two terms, informed
617
1:00:10 --> 1:00:17
consent by the patient, valid consent required before a doctor can inject a person. That's why
618
1:00:18 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ors don't inject, but their nurses inject or hairdressers inject.
619
1:00:22 --> 1:00:32
No, Charles, the thing that worried me most is that there were eight people there, and they thought
620
1:00:32 --> 1:00:40
that it was up to them to do their own research. You couldn't make it up. They thought it was up
621
1:00:40 --> 1:00:47
to them to find out how safe this jab was. And there were two people there that said, well,
622
1:00:48 --> 1:00:52
it's very rare, but if it happens, it happens. It's to safeguard the majority.
623
1:00:55 --> 1:01:03
Somehow. Well, the government has put this across to people, right? That's why they believe it,
624
1:01:03 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]e into believing those things which are untrue.
625
1:01:09 --> 1:01:17
And did you were you doing a kind of were you presenting yourself for vaccination
626
1:01:17 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]awing or did you actually get injured?
627
1:01:22 --> 1:01:29
No, no, no, I was representing the patient participation group. I told them who I was.
628
1:01:29 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] and, you know, the patient participation group. And I told them that
629
1:01:36 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] asked them, why are you here? And they said, we're here for a jab. And I asked them
630
1:01:41 --> 1:01:47
which jabs flew. Some of them were having flu and covid at the same time. And I just asked them
631
1:01:48 --> 1:01:54
if they knew, you know, about risks and things like that. I didn't tell them the risks. I just
632
1:01:54 --> 1:02:00
asked them if they knew about them. Yeah. Yeah. Mark, I personally think that the
633
1:02:01 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e that created that kind of stoked the fear, if you like,
634
1:02:07 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e for taking a vaccination which wasn't a vaccination which was likely to
635
1:02:15 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]s, I think the primary. So a lot of people are fixed on the
636
1:02:20 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ion, but I think we need to start thinking about the creation of the fear and the isolation,
637
1:02:26 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]oked it up, you know. So and that's what they do in prison, of course,
638
1:02:30 --> 1:02:34
you know, when they want to come on, Steven, we got hands up. We got hands up.
639
1:02:36 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]or.
640
1:02:42 --> 1:02:50
I call you Molina. You may call me Carrie. That's fine. I was wondering, I have two questions and
641
1:02:50 --> 1:02:59
one is, I was of the impression that NHS mandated that everybody have a shot in order to keep your
642
1:02:59 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction] to file some sort of a religious exemption or something like
643
1:03:04 --> 1:03:11
that. But I might be wrong. For some Americans. So yeah, so they did mandate it. But then they
644
1:03:12 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction], I think, two weeks before it came into force. So
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1:03:20 --> 1:03:28
so Molina, I hope you that the NHS mandated it for their staff. They never had the authority or the,
646
1:03:28 --> 1:03:34
you know, even the purported power to tell the public what to do. So but they did mandate it
647
1:03:34 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]aff and eat really badly. In my opinion, they withdrew the mandate the day before
648
1:03:42 --> 1:03:46
it was due to expire, by which time, of course, most people had had the injection
649
1:03:47 --> 1:03:50
who were going to get it. And that was really evil. Anyway, go ahead, Carrie. Sorry.
650
1:03:52 --> 1:03:59
Well, that was a blessing because my sister had three and I but you have to admire the fact that
651
1:03:59 --> 1:04:04
and I admire you too, that you didn't abandon your patience and you didn't abandon your work.
652
1:04:04 --> 1:04:11
And, you know, so you can feel good about that. I mean, it was very difficult time. And I just I
653
1:04:11 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] want you to feel admiration because, you know, and inspiration that you're giving me.
654
1:04:19 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]er. I tried everything to keep her from getting the third one.
655
1:04:25 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] it. She works in the Baylor system. Unfortunately, you know,
656
1:04:30 --> 1:04:38
Hotez, you probably know about that little guy. Unfortunately. At any rate, the second question
657
1:04:38 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] Yeah, sorry, go on. No, no, you go ahead. I was going to say, Carrie, thank you. Yeah, I,
658
1:04:43 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] to keep the patients at the center of everything.
659
1:04:50 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]udents and the trainees because everybody was frightened, you know, and they
660
1:04:55 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]e at senior levels to kind of guide them. And also, you know, when we switched
661
1:05:03 --> 1:05:11
to, for example, online teaching training, that meant having patients coming online. So instead
662
1:05:11 --> 1:05:17
of coming face to face, we normally I would set up volunteer patients coming in and students having
663
1:05:17 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]y to examine them and take a history, etc. But we could no longer bring those patients
664
1:05:22 --> 1:05:28
in because it was unethical to bring patients for just for teaching purposes. So into the hospital.
665
1:05:28 --> 1:05:36
So so we we we got them online. And I think we made a difference for them as well, because they
666
1:05:36 --> 1:05:44
were isolated and they were frightened. And it was it was a there were there were people who had
667
1:05:44 --> 1:05:49
not spoken to anybody. And they would wait for that weekly teaching session to happen.
668
1:05:50 --> 1:05:57
You know, or if they had a query, they had the opportunity to speak with me, whilst I was there
669
1:05:57 --> 1:06:06
facilitating the session. So I think in that way, I tried, I tried my hardest to try and support
670
1:06:06 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] myself feeling like I was going to collapse, you know,
671
1:06:14 --> 1:06:16
on some points. But thank you.
672
1:06:17 --> 1:06:20
Okay, we all appreciate and love you. Okay.
673
1:06:23 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]ion. Okay, good. Okay. The other question I have, I have a friend that I
674
1:06:29 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]ory, but I used to work as a pharmacy tech before I got my Florida
675
1:06:35 --> 1:06:43
license. And while I was waiting for it, and she's a pharmacist, and she so she did give some shots,
676
1:06:43 --> 1:06:49
I mean, I know she did. And she feels so guilty. She won't look me in the eye when I talked to her
677
1:06:49 --> 1:06:55
about it. And I keep apologizing to her for not getting them stopped yet in the pharmacy,
678
1:06:55 --> 1:07:00
you know, and I keep telling everybody, don't take them and don't advertise them. And I have a plan
679
1:07:00 --> 1:07:08
and I'm working on it. Okay. But I guess my feeling is that we need to be more forgiving.
680
1:07:08 --> 1:07:15
Like, like you said, love, we need to realize how much the whole world was duped. Okay, some of us
681
1:07:15 --> 1:07:22
saw it. And and and we were the fortunate ones, actually, maybe we lost jobs, licenses, or whatever
682
1:07:22 --> 1:07:30
else, but we were still the fortunate ones. But so many people were blackmailed with jobs, families,
683
1:07:30 --> 1:07:39
whatever, lied to. And so I know we all feel a little bit of survivor guilt, I certainly do.
684
1:07:40 --> 1:07:48
And I wonder if you feel that. And then I'm trying to figure out a way to help my pharmacist friend,
685
1:07:48 --> 1:07:53
she's a Christian, and she feels deeply about this. And I know she feels horrific guilt.
686
1:07:54 --> 1:08:02
And so I told her, you know, we were all duped, we need to move on, you need to forgive yourself.
687
1:08:02 --> 1:08:07
You know, that that was, and I'm going to stop this, we're gonna stop this, you know,
688
1:08:07 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]op this. So I just wondered if you have thoughts about survivor guilt
689
1:08:13 --> 1:08:19
and how to help those who were giving the shots, you know, I was taken out early 2016, actually,
690
1:08:19 --> 1:08:26
well, 2018. But long story, it's not about me. So I wondered if you had any insight about helping
691
1:08:26 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] the survivor guilt, get past the guilt of having given somebody shots. And
692
1:08:32 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ly think that anybody who feels remorse and turns around, even at this late stage,
693
1:08:39 --> 1:08:42
should be welcomed with open arms and forgiven. But that's me.
694
1:08:44 --> 1:08:51
Love you. Thank you, Carrie. I don't have an answer for this. It's very difficult. I think
695
1:08:51 --> 1:08:57
this is a personal journey for everybody, whether they, you know, whether they received one,
696
1:08:57 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] one, whether they didn't have one, you know, these things have evolved over time.
697
1:09:04 --> 1:09:14
And I don't think one can fix things just by kind of offloading. I think people have to think about
698
1:09:14 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ion and self reflection. And then the rest you leave to God.
699
1:09:22 --> 1:09:28
And I think that's my, I'm a big believer in God. I mean, for me, God is one, whether I'm a Hindu,
700
1:09:28 --> 1:09:35
but my husband's Catholic. It doesn't matter for me. God is one. And I think for me,
701
1:09:35 --> 1:09:43
through this journey, God guided me. You know, so, and I believe in karma as well. So, you know,
702
1:09:43 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ion may then be repealed at some other point, at some other,
703
1:09:53 --> 1:09:58
some other journey. So I think, I think you, you know, you, you're trying to help your,
704
1:09:58 --> 1:10:04
your colleague and your friends. And that's what you can do as an individual, as a person,
705
1:10:04 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] to just follow in time. I don't think one can fix this
706
1:10:11 --> 1:10:12
quickly or easily.
707
1:10:16 --> 1:10:16
Thank you.
708
1:10:17 --> 1:10:24
So one of the things I've known, would say about Maulina is I'm very struck by, look, you know,
709
1:10:24 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]ors in the last five years and the way they let so many
710
1:10:29 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]e down, I think Maulina can have a clear conscience. She's absolutely the doctor that
711
1:10:35 --> 1:10:37
everybody would want if they were ill.
712
1:10:39 --> 1:10:42
I'm not so sure about that, Stephen. But okay.
713
1:10:42 --> 1:10:43
No, I think you are.
714
1:10:43 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] You need a surgeon or intensivist.
715
1:10:47 --> 1:10:53
Yeah. But I mean, with the intent, Maulina, I don't think you're capable of telling a lie.
716
1:10:54 --> 1:10:58
I think, I mean, I've, I've tried to practice medicine and I tell my students and trainees
717
1:10:58 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e like your own, i.e. your own mother, brother, father,
718
1:11:05 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]er, child, you are not going to go far wrong because you will do what it takes.
719
1:11:11 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ly.
720
1:11:12 --> 1:11:14
Get it right for them.
721
1:11:14 --> 1:11:15
Yes.
722
1:11:15 --> 1:11:21
And that's something that was ingrained, I think, just watching my own parents and watching the,
723
1:11:21 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]aff, the medical students and the post grads in at Ames and in Delhi, you know,
724
1:11:26 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ete dedication. And I think I grew up on that and that just has kind of perhaps
725
1:11:34 --> 1:11:35
framed me, you know.
726
1:11:35 --> 1:11:45
Yeah. Very good, Maulina. So we'll go on to Karen, who is feisty and in Scotland.
727
1:11:46 --> 1:11:47
Hi, Karen.
728
1:11:49 --> 1:11:53
She lives in a magnificent home in Scotland. As you can see, it's behind us.
729
1:11:53 --> 1:11:54
It's amazing.
730
1:11:54 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]ually Glasgow City Chambers. I was on the VIP guest list for Chinese New Year
731
1:12:03 --> 1:12:08
celebrations recently, a few weeks ago. So it was a beautiful building. If you come to Glasgow,
732
1:12:08 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] visit.
733
1:12:11 --> 1:12:14
I'm Glaswegian, by the way. I was born there.
734
1:12:14 --> 1:12:19
Lovely. Lovely. Oh, you know, Glasgow City Chambers where it is in George Square. Lovely.
735
1:12:19 --> 1:12:22
Hi there, Maulina. Thank you for your lovely presentation.
736
1:12:23 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]ice traditional Chinese medicine. I'm now in my 34th year of practice,
737
1:12:30 --> 1:12:35
but I did come across a very unusual case that I've never seen before. I don't really treat a lot
738
1:12:35 --> 1:12:43
of skin conditions, but this lady presented. She was waiting to see a dermatologist and she
739
1:12:43 --> 1:12:49
was in so much pain she came to see me for some help. So basically, I think it was after the sixth
740
1:12:49 --> 1:12:57
vaccine, within two days, she had burning literally from the neck down all over her entire body.
741
1:12:58 --> 1:13:04
And she felt a wee bit better with the acupuncture. On the first day that she came,
742
1:13:04 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] in case there was any shingles eruptions or anything I could see.
743
1:13:09 --> 1:13:15
But within a month, the shingles did break out. And then she managed to get her
744
1:13:16 --> 1:13:21
a weighted appointment with the dermatologist. So I had never seen anything like that before.
745
1:13:22 --> 1:13:29
And then later on, I came across a YouTube video where there was a lady in America who was,
746
1:13:29 --> 1:13:39
she had been on the clinical trial. I think it was for Pfizer. And after her first injection,
747
1:13:39 --> 1:13:45
she had this burning pain all over her body and she described it like she had been rolled in cactus.
748
1:13:45 --> 1:13:51
And I went, oh my goodness, my patient here in Scotland has described this burning. And obviously,
749
1:13:51 --> 1:13:56
she doesn't live in America, so she wouldn't use the word cactus. So that's how much pain she was
750
1:13:56 --> 1:14:03
in all over the body. Now, partly she was actually removed from the clinical trial and all that data
751
1:14:03 --> 1:14:13
on her was removed. So they knew about these side effects. And I'm just wondering, in your practice
752
1:14:13 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction], Malina, have you seen anything unusual, skin conditions that you know
753
1:14:24 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]s of any of the vaccinations that the people have taken for
754
1:14:30 --> 1:14:38
COVID? Thank you, Karen. I mean, there have certainly been cases where patients have
755
1:14:38 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]s and there are reports on this. And there are other
756
1:14:44 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] occurred post-JAB and we tend to yellow card those as well.
757
1:14:51 --> 1:14:55
I'm not familiar with the one which is pain all over. I'm not familiar with that one,
758
1:14:55 --> 1:15:01
but I'm sure there will be other experts who may well be able to comment on it. So definitely,
759
1:15:01 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] been many, many, many case reports which are related to the JAB.
760
1:15:08 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] had some exacerbation of skin condition or a new skin condition.
761
1:15:18 --> 1:15:28
Thank you. Very good. Gary Hawkins. Gary, I can't quite remember. Are you a psychologist?
762
1:15:30 --> 1:15:33
No, I'm getting mixed up. Researcher.
763
1:15:33 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction], aren't you? No, I study people. I'm not. Sorry about that. Just an
764
1:15:45 --> 1:15:53
independent researcher, data guy. I did. Malina, you're probably familiar with the bears. I did a
765
1:15:53 --> 1:16:02
lot of work in that. Since you're from India, one of my questions is in the chat. Which company
766
1:16:03 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] prevalent in India? Was it AstraZeneca or maybe Pfizer?
767
1:16:11 --> 1:16:19
So Pfizer was not allowed in India because I think the Indian government asked for 500
768
1:16:22 --> 1:16:30
doses to be used as a small clinical trial from what I understand. And Pfizer did not want to go
769
1:16:30 --> 1:16:37
ahead with that. And so therefore, Pfizer was not allowed into India. So they had the AstraZeneca
770
1:16:37 --> 1:16:42
version, which is called Covishield. And then they had a traditional one, which is called Covaxin.
771
1:16:43 --> 1:16:53
So those are the two major or main JABs that they were having. I don't know for sure which one was
772
1:16:53 --> 1:16:59
being given more than others. But of course, amongst the Indian community, it was an Oxford
773
1:16:59 --> 1:17:11
JAB. There was a little bit of poshness about having an Oxford injection as opposed to a local one.
774
1:17:13 --> 1:17:15
Were the protocols the same between those two?
775
1:17:18 --> 1:17:20
I'm not familiar. I don't know. I'm not sure.
776
1:17:21 --> 1:17:25
So Moderna and Pfizer were two shots.
777
1:17:25 --> 1:17:31
Yeah, I don't think Moderna was the only ones I knew of were Covishield and Covaxin.
778
1:17:32 --> 1:17:38
So if you weren't hearing about the two shots a couple, three weeks apart,
779
1:17:38 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ers every six months to a year, then it would have been the single
780
1:17:43 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ion initially, which is what I understand AstraZeneca and J&J, Johnson & Johnson were.
781
1:17:50 --> 1:17:58
So I wanted to ask you about population. India surpassed China in total population,
782
1:17:58 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]e are in the fertile areas of India in the north, right?
783
1:18:08 --> 1:18:09
Yes, I would think so.
784
1:18:11 --> 1:18:15
Were you aware that you guys exceeded China in population?
785
1:18:16 --> 1:18:17
I think so, yes.
786
1:18:20 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] of like numbers for India of supposed COVID deaths?
787
1:18:32 --> 1:18:38
No, no, I don't. I'm not even sure how they're recording this,
788
1:18:39 --> 1:18:44
because that was the other thing that people were looking for and they couldn't find.
789
1:18:44 --> 1:18:52
So I don't think they've got a very robust way to record side effects and also deaths.
790
1:18:52 --> 1:18:55
And how do you link the two? That's the other thing, you see. So
791
1:18:58 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] to say that this person had the adverse event
792
1:19:03 --> 1:19:10
at this particular clinic. And as you know, India is so massive, and if you're mass jabbing,
793
1:19:11 --> 1:19:15
it's impossible to go back and try and do this. And who's going to be recording it?
794
1:19:15 --> 1:19:22
So I think things were quite difficult and challenging for people to actually get some
795
1:19:22 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]e I've met on Twitter, there's a couple who sadly lost their
796
1:19:31 --> 1:19:39
18 year old, who was, I think, was asked to have her the injections because she was going to go for
797
1:19:39 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] reached out and asked questions for me. And I've tried to give
798
1:19:46 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction], whatever data that I have, they send. But I think like everywhere else,
799
1:19:53 --> 1:20:02
it's a very long drawn out process of trying to find and trying to redress this. I think UK is the
800
1:20:02 --> 1:20:06
same and India is the same. I think they're five years on. I think they've now managed to reach
801
1:20:06 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] So everybody here knows that I've been focused on the fertility aspect of the
802
1:20:17 --> 1:20:30
jabs. You're an oncologist. But have you heard of lots of stillbirths and so forth?
803
1:20:30 --> 1:20:36
No, no, I mean, I don't do any obstetrics work. So I'm not familiar. No.
804
1:20:38 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] took a look at the World Bank, World Population Statistics again, and
805
1:20:46 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]opped updating in 2023. I can't find information for the United States in the last
806
1:20:52 --> 1:20:58
few years. It seems that they're hiding something. There was some chart that came out for Australia
807
1:20:58 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] down in Australia. So I just was wondering whether you
808
1:21:03 --> 1:21:11
had a sense like in the news or something about. No, I think again, I think that would be something
809
1:21:11 --> 1:21:18
that would not be as apparent in India, especially. It probably again will take time for it to come
810
1:21:18 --> 1:21:25
out. Thank you. Hey, thanks for being here. Thank you. Yeah. Which state are you in, Gary? Can you
811
1:21:25 --> 1:21:32
remind me? Is it Oregon? I'm in Seattle, Washington, Washington state. OK, we're Microsoft.
812
1:21:32 --> 1:21:40
I was at Microsoft for eight years. Yeah. Email Bill Gates a couple of times and he did not reply,
813
1:21:40 --> 1:21:48
surprisingly. What's wrong with him? Thank you, Gary. So next question is from Jim, who's a
814
1:21:49 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]or in America and he is a radiologist, actually, like I am. And
815
1:21:57 --> 1:22:05
in addition, he has links to US intelligence. Hi, thanks for a great presentation. And I
816
1:22:06 --> 1:22:13
don't know about links to intelligence, but I used to work in the military. And I'm wondering,
817
1:22:14 --> 1:22:19
are you aware that this is some kind of biological weapon or is that your understanding
818
1:22:20 --> 1:22:26
of the covid and the lockdowns and all this stuff that this is a Department of Defense
819
1:22:28 --> 1:22:30
intra, I'll call it six eyes
820
1:22:33 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ions about your practice and how we might stop the
821
1:22:38 --> 1:22:45
next pandemic, which is coming possibly in the near future. No, I'm afraid I can't comment on
822
1:22:45 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] no I don't have any understanding of this and I don't want to say things that
823
1:22:50 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]rued. And yeah, and it's very and as a as a major academic teacher,
824
1:22:59 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] to be very careful about what you do say and what you can acknowledge.
825
1:23:03 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]and that. And it's it's hard to even stay in the system when
826
1:23:08 --> 1:23:17
you know so much. So I'm a hats off to you for for being able to do so. But so have you followed any
827
1:23:18 --> 1:23:26
any CD4 CD8 or CD3 cell counts in your patients after the covid before the jab or even the
828
1:23:26 --> 1:23:35
unvaccinated and seen particularly CD8 counts dropping? No, no. So I'm primarily a clinician.
829
1:23:35 --> 1:23:41
We don't tend to do this at this end. Unless we're suspecting something like lymphoma or something
830
1:23:41 --> 1:23:45
like that. We won't necessarily be looking at these and that's not readily available.
831
1:23:47 --> 1:23:52
Dermatology at this end is quite different, perhaps practice compared to America maybe,
832
1:23:53 --> 1:23:58
it's very much clinical. We don't tend to be looking for these unless there's something
833
1:23:58 --> 1:24:05
there's a high suspicion for something. OK, and you make you make clinical diagnosis and then you
834
1:24:05 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction], like for instance, say we're saying you have to do the covid
835
1:24:10 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction], but you could technically clinically diagnose these diseases and then treat them.
836
1:24:18 --> 1:24:23
Yeah, I mean you wouldn't necessarily look for a covid test, you know, so
837
1:24:24 --> 1:24:28
and then patients, I mean at this stage, patients, I mean if they're infectious,
838
1:24:28 --> 1:24:35
they wouldn't be coming to dermatology anyway. So hence, you know, it wouldn't necessarily be
839
1:24:35 --> 1:24:41
happening. But we may get some information from the general practitioners, the primary care
840
1:24:41 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]atus. Sometimes we do, sometimes we don't. But sometimes
841
1:24:47 --> 1:24:52
if patients give a temporal relationship that something has happened and following that they've
842
1:24:52 --> 1:24:57
developed a rash, then you kind of make that diagnosis based on that clinical history and
843
1:24:57 --> 1:25:06
examination. Thank you. And did you, many of the many people in the United States, as you pointed
844
1:25:06 --> 1:25:12
out, Trump took hydroxychloroquine. We found that the half-life of hydroxychloroquine was 22 days,
845
1:25:12 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine [privacy contact redaction]ella Emanuel,
846
1:25:18 --> 1:25:24
Dr. Emanuel called it the Sunday Sunday medicine. Ivermectin, all the dogs and cats and things are
847
1:25:24 --> 1:25:31
dewormed once a month. That's kind of how we've, some people have been using ivermectin as once a
848
1:25:31 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] any, had you been using any of these medic, these anti-parasitics as antivirals?
849
1:25:40 --> 1:25:49
No, no, because I mean we, I had little to do with COVID in our practice. So people, you know,
850
1:25:49 --> 1:25:55
unless they had a dermatology condition that was related to a jab or something that might be
851
1:25:55 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction], then yes, you would you would look into that, but otherwise not really, no.
852
1:26:01 --> 1:26:08
And then the, what kind of dermatology problems have you seen associated with the SARS-CoV-2
853
1:26:08 --> 1:26:14
spike protein? You mentioned herp, zoster, have you been seeing anything else?
854
1:26:16 --> 1:26:22
Again, it's very difficult to make that temporal relationship because we don't sometimes get the
855
1:26:22 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]itioner's notes or they may not be available or they may not be recorded,
856
1:26:28 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]ually telling us that this might be related or
857
1:26:32 --> 1:26:36
there might be a temporal relationship, we may not be actually looking for those. So
858
1:26:36 --> 1:26:43
there are times that you may see a new autoimmune condition, may see lupus for example,
859
1:26:45 --> 1:26:50
that you know you would say yes, actually this might be related to drug-induced lupus for example.
860
1:26:51 --> 1:26:59
I see, and then we've been, or some people have been finding that T cell damage is in the vaxxed
861
1:27:00 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] keep that in mind as you go through your travel,
862
1:27:06 --> 1:27:16
this might be a self-propagating thing as we go through, and I've been talking about a medication
863
1:27:16 --> 1:27:24
called nitaxoxanide, and I don't know if you've ever heard about, heard of a medication, but it
864
1:27:25 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ed in Wikipedia as a broad spectrum antiviral. So just thank you very
865
1:27:33 --> 1:27:41
much for your insights and your... Jimmy, are you in Florida? No, I'm in the Philadelphia area.
866
1:27:42 --> 1:27:47
All right, so because the sky looks pretty gray there for Florida. Yes, and this is,
867
1:27:47 --> 1:27:57
this is the weather is, the winds are terrible, and as you know I attribute a lot of this stuff
868
1:27:57 --> 1:28:03
to our intelligence agencies, and the U.S. Air Force put out a paper in 1996, I think it was,
869
1:28:03 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]ete control of the weather by 2025. Sure. So welcome to 2025.
870
1:28:12 --> 1:28:18
And thank you, so thank you very much for the conversation, really, really excellent.
871
1:28:19 --> 1:28:26
So I think Jim's a medical doctor in America, a radiologist, but he's at the opposite end of this,
872
1:28:26 --> 1:28:33
so he likes to kind of think laterally, shall we say, and well I'm sure you do when it comes
873
1:28:33 --> 1:28:40
to dermatology, Malmina, but you know you're very conservative with your views, whereas Jim
874
1:28:40 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction], but I'm not saying he's wrong, he may be right. Well, and one thing about India's
875
1:28:47 --> 1:28:51
response, you notice how they gave out hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin
876
1:28:52 --> 1:28:59
during the pandemic, as well as they gave packets of hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin,
877
1:28:59 --> 1:29:04
and that was very important because friends of ours were connected with the health minister,
878
1:29:04 --> 1:29:11
and so we told them early on, and India actually supplied hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine to
879
1:29:11 --> 1:29:17
many countries, shipped it out, and that's how we found out the hydroxychloroquine may be the
880
1:29:17 --> 1:29:26
treatment, because we saw that China had bought up a whole stockload of it, and so anyway, so there
881
1:29:26 --> 1:29:34
are lots of little clues that point to intelligence for knowledge of this, and I encourage people to
882
1:29:34 --> 1:29:41
look at what MERS, MERS, might hold, and how that nitrizoxinide that we've been talking about
883
1:29:41 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ication of MERS, Ebola, and many other viruses, the only broad
884
1:29:49 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ed in Wikipedia, nitrizoxinide, so keep that in mind everybody.
885
1:29:55 --> 1:30:01
And I seem to remember Jim that France was buying up some drug, was it hydroxychloroquine?
886
1:30:01 --> 1:30:11
Yes, that was Didier Raoult, a researcher in France, and he actually, he was very famous because
887
1:30:12 --> 1:30:22
he put together the treatment for a problem called Q fever, query fever,
888
1:30:23 --> 1:30:29
and it had similar symptoms to COVID, and it was treated with hydroxychloroquine and doxycycline,
889
1:30:30 --> 1:30:36
and many of these, if you were, my view is if you're an intelligence guy and you're going to
890
1:30:36 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]e, you may want to make sure that your guys have the antidote
891
1:30:42 --> 1:30:47
and are allowed to take it, and so that's why we have to kind of prepare ourselves for the next
892
1:30:47 --> 1:30:52
thing and make sure that we can know the antidotes have taken in small amounts early
893
1:30:53 --> 1:31:00
that might benefit us as we go through the next phase of this, what seems to be a take down of
894
1:31:00 --> 1:31:08
the world. Yes, very good, thank you Jim. Thank you. Yep, thank you. So Cordelia, who's a
895
1:31:09 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]or and she's a pathologist.
896
1:31:11 --> 1:31:20
Hi, Cordelia. Hi, just trying to see myself,
897
1:31:25 --> 1:31:30
but it doesn't matter anyway. I was a bit late for this because my wi-fi is not working or
898
1:31:30 --> 1:31:37
intermittently, so I don't know whether Montgomery consent was mentioned.
899
1:31:38 --> 1:31:45
I don't think it was tonight, you mean Cordelia? Pardon? I don't think it was tonight, I'm not sure,
900
1:31:45 --> 1:31:53
was it, Molina? Because there's been this case in the past with Montgomery versus Lanarkshire and
901
1:31:54 --> 1:32:03
the outcome of that was that consent has to spell out all side effects and rare side effects,
902
1:32:03 --> 1:32:10
and you can't just expect the patient to do their own research. So it's all there.
903
1:32:12 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]esses clearly is against the Montgomery-Lanarkshire ruling.
904
1:32:22 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] Does that make sense?
905
1:32:34 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]elia, you're breaking up a little bit. I'm wrong. The child was disabled because the child
906
1:32:46 --> 1:32:54
was oxygen-starved and she said in court, well, had I known that a small pelvis is a risk factor,
907
1:32:54 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ion. So she was not explained that and the ruling was clearly
908
1:33:01 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]etrician should have explained all the side effects. So you cannot just
909
1:33:08 --> 1:33:17
give a patient a consent form that says for side effects go to the MRHA website. That's against
910
1:33:17 --> 1:33:22
the Montgomery ruling. So in Britain, all of these vaccinations without consent are illegal.
911
1:33:25 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] can quote the Montgomery versus Lanarkshire ruling.
912
1:33:32 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ug be given without a prescription?
913
1:33:40 --> 1:33:44
Because normally, normally vaccinations, they have to have a prescription, don't they?
914
1:33:44 --> 1:33:48
So I don't know whether anybody in the group who can explain that to me,
915
1:33:48 --> 1:33:54
why these were given out like smarties without prescription.
916
1:33:55 --> 1:33:56
Can you, Marlene?
917
1:33:56 --> 1:33:57
No.
918
1:34:00 --> 1:34:04
So I know a little bit about that, Cordelia. So recently, I think last week, it came out that the
919
1:34:04 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ors were responsible for what happened regarding these
920
1:34:13 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ors were responsible because they had the ability, they had to be,
921
1:34:21 --> 1:34:29
they had to be, just as you say, they had to be prescription. And so, and that meant that the
922
1:34:29 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ors were uniquely responsible. It didn't matter what anybody else in society said,
923
1:34:36 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]or in the end had to put his signature on a prescription, his or her signature on a
924
1:34:44 --> 1:34:52
prescription. And that clearly is very important because it could have enormous repercussions,
925
1:34:52 --> 1:34:56
of course, but I don't know the European Court of Justice. It depends, you know,
926
1:34:57 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] Did you know about that, Cordelia?
927
1:35:04 --> 1:35:07
I did, but does that include the UK after Brexit?
928
1:35:09 --> 1:35:11
Yes, any country in the world, I think.
929
1:35:12 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ice.
930
1:35:16 --> 1:35:21
So for EU, obviously, if you mean, yes, okay. Yes. But obviously, you know,
931
1:35:23 --> 1:35:29
I think that if you were running a case in the UK, you'd be able to cite that ruling.
932
1:35:31 --> 1:35:35
I'm not sure, I'm not a lawyer, but Charles is, but he's not, he's on the...
933
1:35:36 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]essers, did they actually, could they bypass the whole prescription procedure?
934
1:35:43 --> 1:35:47
How did they, how were they able to access these drugs?
935
1:35:48 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ly, I don't know, and neither do I know anybody who does know. So it's just unbelievable.
936
1:35:55 --> 1:35:58
Nobody seems to know what's in the in the so-called injections.
937
1:35:59 --> 1:36:05
Stephen, I know exactly because it's my hairdresser, right? So my hairdresser,
938
1:36:06 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ion, which had been laid by, filled up, you know, by a nurse.
939
1:36:14 --> 1:36:20
And the person had had a very brief conversation with the medical staff,
940
1:36:20 --> 1:36:27
and then she jabbed the person. That's all she did. So she never had a conversation with the
941
1:36:27 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]uck the needle in. She didn't aspirate. She didn't get talked about aspiration
942
1:36:33 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] put the needle in and that was it. Okay. So what was your question?
943
1:36:41 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] before Mark started to talk Cordelia? Well, the specific
944
1:36:47 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ion was, where are the prescriptions? Because normally it's a prescription only thing, isn't it?
945
1:36:54 --> 1:36:58
Well, yes, but Mark hasn't answered your question then. Wait, so Mark, do you know where the
946
1:36:58 --> 1:37:08
prescriptions are? Or were? No, no, Stephen, Cordelia asked two questions. She asked, how did the
947
1:37:09 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]esser get permission? So how did the hairdresser get permission?
948
1:37:18 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] authorized her to do this job. Well, she clearly didn't have permission, did she?
949
1:37:25 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ors didn't know what was in the injections. Anywhere in the world did they know
950
1:37:30 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]n't met anybody who actually knows for certain, as far as I'm concerned,
951
1:37:37 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ions. There are lots of people who talk about the mRNA and the spike
952
1:37:41 --> 1:37:51
protein and the lipid nanoprotein nanoparticle and, but I'm not satisfied that
953
1:37:52 --> 1:37:58
they're working from first principles, if you understand me. And I've challenged people about
954
1:37:58 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]n't been provided with the evidence. So that tells me, Cordelia, that it was
955
1:38:05 --> 1:38:09
never possible to obtain informed consent because the doctors themselves didn't know.
956
1:38:09 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] had a document saying you are now authorized to do this
957
1:38:16 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] signed a letter. So it would be very interesting to see.
958
1:38:20 --> 1:38:27
No, Cordelia, you might need such a letter, but the hairdresser wouldn't know to even ask for it.
959
1:38:28 --> 1:38:34
Yes, she would just say, you know, she'd do a job and she'd just jab the person.
960
1:38:34 --> 1:38:35
Wouldn't get back in thought.
961
1:38:36 --> 1:38:42
Stephen, I can ask my hairdresser if she has such a document and if she does,
962
1:38:42 --> 1:38:44
I'll get a copy of it. That will be interesting.
963
1:38:45 --> 1:38:52
Well, yeah. Well, she might be disinclined to kind of incriminate herself, I suppose.
964
1:38:54 --> 1:38:57
Oh, I suppose if she had a document, then that would take her off the hook. But anyway,
965
1:38:58 --> 1:39:01
yes, interesting questions, Cordelia. Yeah, thank you.
966
1:39:02 --> 1:39:07
Yes. Did you ever find out, Cordelia, why post mortems weren't
967
1:39:09 --> 1:39:13
being done in 2020, just when they should have been done?
968
1:39:14 --> 1:39:16
Well, they were done. They were done. But.
969
1:39:17 --> 1:39:18
Well, not many.
970
1:39:19 --> 1:39:25
But I think the problem is, pathologists not being provided with vaccination history.
971
1:39:28 --> 1:39:30
Well, yes, that's another problem.
972
1:39:31 --> 1:39:36
But I think you told us that you were doing one or two post mortems a week as a pathologist.
973
1:39:36 --> 1:39:44
I'm not sure about that. Before 2020, when 2020 came around, you were also saying that
974
1:39:44 --> 1:39:48
they were being done. But when I asked you specifically, you said, oh, I did about six
975
1:39:48 --> 1:39:50
in 2020, I think you said.
976
1:39:50 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction] Sharma said that she has to leave. I wonder if we can.
977
1:39:56 --> 1:39:57
I'm sorry.
978
1:39:58 --> 1:39:58
Yeah, thank you.
979
1:39:59 --> 1:39:59
I didn't know.
980
1:40:01 --> 1:40:06
Thank you, Stephen. Sorry. Yeah, thank you. If it's OK, I'd like to take a leave now.
981
1:40:07 --> 1:40:08
All right.
982
1:40:08 --> 1:40:10
We've got a full day tomorrow. Is that OK?
983
1:40:10 --> 1:40:12
Yes, that's absolutely fine.
984
1:40:12 --> 1:40:17
Thank you so much, Charles, Stephen and everybody on the talk for just giving me the option to share
985
1:40:17 --> 1:40:20
my insights and observations. Thank you. Bye.
986
1:40:21 --> 1:40:23
Maureen, did you write in the chat then? I didn't see the chat.
987
1:40:23 --> 1:40:26
Yeah, no worries. No worries. Don't worry, Stephen. That's fine.
988
1:40:26 --> 1:40:26
I didn't. Thank you.
989
1:40:26 --> 1:40:31
Thank you. Thank you for speaking to us.
990
1:40:32 --> 1:40:33
Bye bye bye.
991
1:40:33 --> 1:40:35
Bye bye.