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This is your time.
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And yeah, all right.
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We're done.
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We're ready to go.
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Thank you for the volunteers who, if they if they get in later, I won't do the
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0:00:09 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] of time.
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0:00:11 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]andard intro, look at another recording.
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And we're delighted.
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Thank you, Stephen, for organizing Mike Yeaton to be with us and for going through
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0:00:21 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]les and Mike, we're in your hands and look forward to your
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conversation and you and a.
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Charles, can you do your normal speech so that it's the same as usual, even though
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it's a bit later than usual?
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Yes, I can.
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I'll be I'll be quick.
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So welcome to today's discussion of medical doctors for COVID ethics
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international.
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0:00:43 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] over three years ago with a desire to pursue truth, ethics, justice,
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freedom and health.
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His medical specialty is radiology.
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I'm Charles Covessa, moderator of this group on Australasia's passion provocateur.
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0:01:02 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]e in these meetings and everyone who comes here is
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passionate.
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0:01:08 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ice law for 20 years before changing career 31 years ago.
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0:01:12 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] 13 years, I've helped parents and lawyers to strategize remedies
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for vaccine damage and damage from bad medical advice.
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I'm also the CEO of the industrial hemp company.
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We comprise lots of professions here and we're from all around the world.
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Many of us thought that vaccines were OK.
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Now, many of us proudly say, yes, we are passionate anti-vaxxers.
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0:01:34 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] time here, welcome and feel free to introduce yourself in
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the chat.
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0:01:38 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] or have a radio or TV show or you've
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written a book, put the links into the chat so we can follow you, promote you
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and find you.
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0:01:48 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]and we're in the middle of World War Three and that the
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medical science battle is only one of 12 battle fronts.
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This is no time for us to be tired.
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0:01:58 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] is a seven year war.
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So we're only halfway through.
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So re-gird your loins.
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0:02:08 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]and the development of science and that the science is never
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0:02:12 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] today is a scientist.
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I'm sure he knows that.
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Some of us believe that they are a hoax and some of us are sitting on the fence.
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This meeting runs for two and a half hours, after which, for those with the
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time, Tom Rodman runs a video telegram meeting for those with the time to join.
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We'll listen to Dr.
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0:02:35 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] for as long as Mike wishes to speak.
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0:02:38 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] Q&A.
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0:02:40 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction], via long established tradition, asks the first questions for
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15 minutes.
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This is a free speech environment with appropriate moderating and no ad hominem
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attacks.
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You don't attack people.
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We discuss ideas.
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If you're offended by anything, be offended.
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0:02:57 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ed.
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0:03:00 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ry that requires nobody to say anything that may
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offend another.
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0:03:06 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ive of love, not fear.
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Fear is the opposite of love.
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Fear squashes you.
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Love on the other hand, expands you.
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As human beings, our unity is our strength.
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Being divided makes us weak.
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0:03:22 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] talk fests and extraordinary range of
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0:03:26 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] been generated from linkages made by attendees
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in these meetings.
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put the details into the chat, the meeting is recorded and is uploaded onto
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the Rumble channel.
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And they're welcome to our guest presenter, Dr.
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Mike Yead and famously renowned, we're at 100 limit on our meeting size.
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Mike, that shows the how popular you are.
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And thank you so much for giving us your time, wisdom and insights.
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And Mike's CV for those watching the recording is on the show notes on this
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0:04:02 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ing that is on the Rumble channel.
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And thank you, Stephen Frost, again, for creating this group over three years ago
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and for organizing Mike to be with us today.
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Over to you, Mike.
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Charles, thank you very much.
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0:04:15 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ion and also really good to just hear about the group and
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welcome. Welcome.
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Thank you very much, everyone, for for connecting and listening to me.
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Stephen, thank you. Thank you for the invitation to and of course, your
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companionship over the years.
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We've been speaking for a long time.
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So so I'm Dr. Mike Eden.
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I would describe myself as a career life scientist.
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0:04:42 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ry and toxicology, my first degree.
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That was an unusual training in that there were a couple of professors at
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0:04:52 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]anding how it is mechanistically at
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the molecular level.
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0:04:58 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]e can be damaged by certain environmental chemicals, insecticides and
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0:05:02 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction] given birth to a course and I was a beneficiary.
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0:05:07 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ic toxicology.
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I'm English, so I don't like bragging, but it's worth saying that the university
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It was a four year undergraduate training and I spent a year in the scientific
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civil service, half of which was at the UK's top secret
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0:05:38 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ablishment at Porton Down, which used to be and is still now,
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in my view, a biological weapons facility of some kind.
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And I did a little bit of research there whose objective was to help protect
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British and allied troops from organophosphorus nerve agents in a small way.
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Then I worked at the forensic science headquarters in Aldermaston next to the
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atomic weapons facility and I learned lots of analytical techniques from very clever
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scientific civil servants.
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And at the end of that year, I resolved not to join scientific civil service
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because they all sounded very bored and frustrated.
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0:06:24 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ied work.
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And so I decided to take a PhD in the scientific civil service.
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I did a very quick PhD.
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I was offered to be sponsored by the M.O.D., the same people who had employed me for a
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little while as an undergraduate.
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And I did a very quick PhD.
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0:06:42 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]arted, finished, rooted up and passed the VIVA in exactly 36 months.
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So I was looking at central and peripheral actions of opiates like morphine on various
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reflex. And the goal was to see whether we could separate the receptors involved in
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0:07:07 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]iorespiratory depression.
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Bad news is we couldn't.
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0:07:16 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ing technique or two, which I was able to take into into an
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0:07:21 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] importantly, it taught me the scientific method of reading into a
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answering to formulate them, convert them into experimental plans and then gain
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agreement for those and then go and do them, trying not to drop tubes on the floor and
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missing the time points and so on.
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So I did a three year course, a three year PhD and learned how to do the scientific
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the scientific method as we as we know it.
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0:07:54 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] after that, I joined I took I've taken two big jobs in so-called
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0:08:00 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] seven years I was at the Wellcome Research Labs, which were
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then acquired by Glaxo to form eventually Glaxo SmithKline.
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And I only now realized how important that was.
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And that was probably an event on the timeline of the plans, believe it or not, to the
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event we're living in now. Why do I say that?
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Well, it's because it liberated an enormous amount of capital which was used to to start
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the really to fund the Wellcome Foundation.
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And I believe the Wellcome Foundation is one of a triumvirate of bodies which have
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0:08:39 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ion of biology research in the world for the last 30 years.
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0:08:44 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction], so I left Wellcome and I was recruited, actively recruited by head of
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pharmacology there had seen me give a speech said, you know, we're going to we would
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0:08:55 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ugs research group here at Sandwich and Kent.
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We'd like you to come. And I interviewed, loved it.
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0:09:04 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ayed 17 years.
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And in addition to growing the group and working with over [privacy contact redaction]e, we produced a lot
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the entire facility.
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At the time I left, I was worldwide head of research for allergy and respiratory diseases
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for Pfizer, which at the time was the biggest research based drug company.
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So it means I didn't get to decide make all the decisions, but I was expected to have an
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opinion about everything in my area.
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And I loved it.
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It's really, really good fun.
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Having left in 2011, I worked very hard to see if I could find other people interested
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0:09:49 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ugs that were in progress that Pfizer was willing just to put in the in the skip
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0:09:54 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]er because they were liberating cash and reducing their internal research
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0:10:00 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] in parenthesis, all drug companies have realized they have no idea
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0:10:05 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ug discovery.
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It's more an art than a science that the methods you have to use to evaluate things are
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scientific. But the idea is as much art as anything else.
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0:10:22 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] the privilege of meeting Professor James Black, who invented both beta
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0:10:28 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]amines back in the day when those things were considered valuable.
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0:10:33 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]ugs might not be wonderful now, he was a pretty smart guy and I think
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0:10:38 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]e like that.
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So I tried to find new owners for the work I had been doing.
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generic company called Mylan, who on the basis of the work I had been doing, formed
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0:10:57 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] everything.
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0:11:00 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]e went across and got jobs.
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The work continued.
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I'm proud to say they launched the products.
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So I wasn't completely wrong, Mr.
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Pfizer. The bits they didn't want.
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I'll just I didn't think about doing anything with them.
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0:11:16 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] year, having left Pfizer for 2011 to 12, I just I was just very lucky
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0:11:23 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]ed me and said, we'd like you to consult if you'd like to do a day a week or
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day a month, whatever it was.
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0:11:29 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]arted building a little portfolio of consulting clients, all startups, all biotechs,
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0:11:36 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]ly in the in the US.
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And that happened probably because for 10 years at Pfizer, I did a job that nobody
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wants to do, which was to review the external environment for any in licensing or
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0:11:48 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]ies.
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Pfizer was like lots of companies, as I mentioned earlier, was realizing they could
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0:11:55 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ugs internally at the rate required to feed the machine and all the implied
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0:12:01 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction] wants to hear.
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So it's like, what are we going to do?
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It's like, OK, get these scientists if they can't invent stuff to run the radar on
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everybody else's smaller companies and and so on.
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And so there were two or three deals I did that and I think 10 billion in revenue.
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0:12:19 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ent.
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0:12:21 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ence right up to the board level.
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0:12:24 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]e was Pfizer formed a relationship with Berlinger-Ingelheim for a
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drug called Sporiva, which at the time of identification was in early phase two
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trials. So I thought that that's a good drug.
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0:12:38 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction], I proved influential.
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0:12:42 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ent really.
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So and it's because I kept reviewing things.
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0:12:49 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ies, 97 of which we declined.
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So not it's not fun.
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But what I did and I didn't realize it at the time is I was getting a live teaching on how not to
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do biotech and when it worked, how to do it.
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So when I left Pfizer, I got invited back to consult to some of these folks who'd started
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another company saying, you know, you were helpful.
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0:13:15 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]e of them over coffee said, what are you going to do with all the stuff that's going to get
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0:13:18 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]? And I said, no idea.
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And they said, well, you should spin those assets out.
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probably do something with those compounds.
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So I got together a small team, went to see someone, senior advisor, say, so I said, if I run if I
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raise some private capital, will you at least in principle agree to negotiate to assign those
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patents to me? And they said, yeah.
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18 months later, I came back with a six million seed of investment from San Francisco.
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It's an answer there. And ZRCO was born.
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0:13:55 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]aff, raised about 40 million US dollars, ran a
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clinical trial, which was unbelievably positive.
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0:14:05 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]ug that was intended for asthma to a drug that could be used in atopic
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dermatitis, a disease of inflammation and itch in the skin for which there were no oral
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treatment. So this isn't once a day oral treatment.
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And within a few months, Novartis, the big Swiss drug company, acquired my little company
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for an obscene amount of money.
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I only had a little shareholding at that time, but it was enough to retire.
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And I did. That was 2017.
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So I was enjoying early retirement when what I call the Covid era began.
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And I think quite early on, I thought I was very frightened, like most people.
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You were intended to be.
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But I noticed this is very important.
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I noticed significant public figures on the television that I knew because I've been
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around so long that, for example, Sir Patrick Vallance was a former colleague at
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Wellcome over 30 years earlier.
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0:15:05 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]e and I noticed that he wasn't telling the truth.
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So sometimes I spotted him saying things I knew were not true and I knew he knew them
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because we had trained in the same university ecosystem at the same time.
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So I thought, why are you lying?
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Once you spot someone's telling a lie, you pay a lot of attention.
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And then there was talk of lockdowns.
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And I kind of knew this was nonsense.
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I'll put it to people that for it not to be nonsense, you have to believe that people
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without symptoms, that is well people, can give a disease they haven't got to other
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0:15:42 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]e. Now, that isn't very likely, and it didn't happen.
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But when you and of course, and then the other thing to say is it's quite complicated
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that I did used to believe in the germ theory model of acute respiratory diseases.
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So I don't anymore. But at the time I did.
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And so I thought, well, this is crazy.
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0:16:08 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]e who were ill are already at home or in hospital.
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0:16:11 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]e can't infect other people.
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0:16:13 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]upid.
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0:16:15 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]arted reading the pandemic preparation plans of all the countries I could find,
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starting with UK and then Germany and then France and America.
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None of them mentioned lockdown.
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And it was illogical.
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And so I said to my wife, something horrible is happening.
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So what do you mean? I said, there are all the countries are talking about making a
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And she looked very concerned.
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I said, I'm really, really concerned.
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0:16:43 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]er Boris Johnson said, I sorry to have to tell you,
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0:16:48 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ay at home.
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Apparently, I was racing up and down the stairs all evening, muttering, we are in so
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much trouble. And I knew we were.
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I didn't know what the hell was happening.
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But I knew that something serious was happening.
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And let me put it to you, ladies and gentlemen, the only way all the countries of the
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0:17:08 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]upid thing that I knew was hopeless and
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0:17:15 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ans would be if there was a supranational plan, supranational
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force above those countries.
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You know, that I knew that that evening, I had no idea who they were.
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And that's true. They didn't decide to do it on their own.
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Someone told me to do it.
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There's no way that could have independently all decided to do a stupid thing that was
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0:17:37 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ans that had been put together by, I think, sincere, careful
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0:17:42 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]e. So I knew already in March something was happening.
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I didn't know what at the time, as I've said, I thought that acute respiratory
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diseases were caused by sub microscopic infectious particles called viruses.
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I no longer believe that.
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And what will come to the chase?
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All I believe that a I believe that a fake emergency has been strung up sprung upon
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us. I didn't think that early on, but probably in 2021, I encountered Professor
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0:18:16 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction], and he had done a week by week analysis of all
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cause mortality separately in each of the [privacy contact redaction]ates.
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And he'd been doing it for some time before the pandemic.
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0:18:34 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]arted publishing in the summer of [privacy contact redaction]ate, looking
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0:18:41 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]e dying in terms of sex, age and date of death.
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0:18:46 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ot, he said, I see no there's no sign of anything happening.
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Up until the moment when a pandemic was declared, whereupon the world went mad.
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And around so I didn't know, but I now know there was there was nothing happening prior
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to the declaration of a pandemic.
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And I think that means there wasn't one.
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So it doesn't matter to me if there was a virus or not a virus.
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There wasn't any public health emergency.
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I think that's the thing to focus on.
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And yet the world went crazy.
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We were locked down.
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0:19:22 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] wear masks, wash our hands, keep social distance, close most businesses
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unless they were essential, not do international travel.
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In some countries, closed schools and universities.
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Everything went remote.
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It's like that is so destructive on two fronts.
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It's actually so destructive.
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On two fronts, it's I'm enough of an economist to know that if you do that, every country
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that does it will go bankrupt.
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You can't you can't fund an economy by borrowings for months to years and not have
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unbelievably serious consequences.
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Seriously, I personally think all the countries of the world are technically bankrupt and
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have been kept going by agreement with the central banks over led by the Bank of International
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Settlement in Switzerland.
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So I think they've agreed you're all broke, but we'll keep it going.
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So financial damage was one.
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There were individuals at the national level in damage in currency.
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Also, individuals were bankrupted.
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And then, of course, the third main factor was social dislocation.
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You know, people whose whose lives were only kept meaningful because they were interacting
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0:20:42 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]e who mattered to them became depressed.
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And I'm sure many of them died.
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Humans don't like isolation anymore than if you put a dog on it, turn the candle and leave
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it for a few months, it'll probably be dead, even if you feed it every day.
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And humans aren't very different.
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So I believe there was not a public health emergency.
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One was faked using lies, propaganda and this wretched PCR test, whether or not the
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virus was a virus is irrelevant because there wasn't a public health emergency.
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And then there were economic damage, which at a country level, individual level and a
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0:21:17 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]ion level.
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But where I really come in and where I I think I stand alone, which is very shocking,
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what I'm going to tell you, but we know what I'm going to tell you that it is in my
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opinion, the other another of the objectives of this fake pandemic was to incentivise over
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0:21:37 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]t to roll their sleeves up to receive an injection of a
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material that was designed intentionally to to injure, kill and reduce fertility.
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Now, a lot of people have got upset to me with me when I've said this.
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I point out my entire career has been in the business of rational drug design, working
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with colleagues. I put it to you that with the exception of natural products that can
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be purified from a source, every synthetic drug, everything that's in a tablet or a
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bottle or a spray or cream, every atom in there is in there because someone decided to
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put it in there. And you only put things in there because they serve a function.
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And coming right down to the level of the design of a of a molecule, it could be a
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0:22:25 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]eroid or this macromolecule we're told called modified mRNA,
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that every single part of it is there for a reason.
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And so in a sense, I can virtually lean over the shoulder of the designer, look at the
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0:22:39 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ure and think, what were you what were you up to?
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And and I can I can name and I will at least three features of these molecules, which as a
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0:22:52 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ry, I am certain would not have gone forward if this was like
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0:22:59 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ug I was involved in. And I know of other people who have identified two further
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mechanisms. So what I'm saying, I'm going to justify that there are multiple independent
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0:23:13 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ions.
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And before I describe them, I will say that with Dr. Wolfgang Vodarg, I wrote an open
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letter to the European Medicines Agency before any of these products have, quote,
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authorization. So we couldn't know what the profile was.
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But I detailed not all of them, but I detailed the ones I thought of the tie at the time,
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saying, for goodness sake, you know, desist if you inject millions of people with this.
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This is these are the kind of things I anticipate will happen.
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Well, they have all happened.
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0:23:52 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] all happened and more.
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I we didn't I hadn't thought about cancer.
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So I'm going to describe three things that are blindingly obvious.
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And then I think what I'll do is I'll stop and take questions on the whole thing.
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I recently wrote an open letter to the Metropolitan Police and it's on my sub stack.
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Mike Eden, sub stack is the only article there.
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A friend of mine said I should put it out there.
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And in that letter, I more or less laid out what I just what I've just said so far, who I am,
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0:24:31 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]op and the awful allegations.
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So the three things I'm going to pick out and there are many more, but these I think are so I think I
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think you can't deny these.
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So number one, if you express, if you force a human body to to manufacture something that doesn't
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belong in the human body, it will be non self or foreign.
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And that's what these products do.
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0:25:01 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ion, messenger RNA.
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It says, please glide into these cells and tell the cells to do what instruction is, which is to make
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whatever is encoded.
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If you do that, I believe based on simple immunological principles that have been known for at
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0:25:20 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] 60 or 70 years, that every cell that does that will mark itself now as foreign.
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0:25:28 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ays nice with itself most of the time unless you're ill because your immune
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0:25:35 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ling around your body, T cells and so on, sniffing and sniffing and
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sniffing. And it keeps spotting.
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Yep, that's my. Yep, that's my. Yep, that's my.
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What's that? And if it finds a cell that no longer is displaying the sort of I'm one of you symbols,
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0:25:52 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]em goes to war, attacks it and kills it.
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0:25:57 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]s.
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0:25:59 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ion and no matter what kind your immune system will notice something is
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0:26:06 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] you from it by launching a lethal attack on the cells and tissues,
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doing that non-self thing.
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So what I'm saying is it's axiomatic.
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0:26:18 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] follow.
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0:26:20 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] someone with mRNA encoding anything other than a protein that belongs in you, you
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will trigger autoimmune attack.
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0:26:31 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ribution and how long the stuff persists, you could get
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mild symptoms or it could kill you.
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But it will not be good and it will happen every time with everybody.
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It's just a question of whether it would be seriously bad or not.
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And that will depend on, as I say, dose distribution and your luck.
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So that's the first thing. It's the wrong.
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It's the wrong approach.
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What do I mean by that? If you wanted to make a vaccine, I'm really now not happy with with
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vaccineology at all.
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0:27:04 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] go along with the original narrative, if you wanted to do that, you wouldn't
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0:27:10 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] You would do anything else.
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0:27:13 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] the pathogen and whatever.
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0:27:17 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]em.
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I know that doesn't work, but that would have been at least what people expected.
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0:27:24 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] at all?
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Dr. Robert Malone, I think, had patents for its invention.
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0:27:29 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]?
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Well, originally, I think people just wanted to know if you could do it.
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And perhaps that's where Dr. Malone's PhD research or postdoc research came in.
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But I remember hearing about it 15 or 20 years ago in Pfizer.
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0:27:44 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ly sound rationale, which I'm just going to
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0:27:48 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ain.
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It was the idea was that you could use the destructive power of your immune system to
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kill tumours that you couldn't get to with surgery, so-called non-receptible tumours.
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So like a certain brain tumours.
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0:28:06 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] unique markers on their surface.
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They are deranged, but they identify themselves with a different postcode on their
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0:28:14 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] an mRNA sequence to that postcode and inject it, it
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0:28:23 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ly go to that tumour and your immune system will then kill it.
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I don't know whether it works, but the idea is rather beautiful.
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0:28:31 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ug discoverer, I thought, that's pretty clever.
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And it's called immuno-oncology.
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0:28:36 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ug companies.
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0:28:39 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]uff.
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0:28:42 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] a potential use.
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0:28:46 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]e and you force them to express something that
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doesn't belong in their body, it cannot help them.
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It's hopelessly inappropriate.
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It's definitely designed to injure you.
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That's number one. Number two.
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I've only got three. Number two.
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It's not just making your body make something that doesn't belong in you.
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0:29:08 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ion is, what did they choose to ask to make your body manufacture?
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0:29:14 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] picked anything from this so-called virus, the so-called SARS-CoV-2,
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0:29:21 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] the sequence.
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0:29:23 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] had the messenger RNA encode and make your body make any of the
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bits of that. So I put it to you.
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The rule of thumb would be, don't make your body make something you know is dangerous.
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The only known dangerous protein in this material, I don't know whether the virus is
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real or not, but I know the sequence exists.
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And if you convert that sequence into protein, the only bit that we know is poisonous is
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the so-called spike protein.
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It is of a nature for which there was much literature, published literature in the peer
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review journals to show that these were kind of venom-like proteins that would activate
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0:30:08 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]atelets, almost certainly would stimulate blood coagulation.
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0:30:12 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]iac muscle and they altered damaged neuronal transmission.
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0:30:18 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction] a technology that forces your body to make something foreign,
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and I told you and no one has told me I'm wrong, that that will make your immune system
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think it's invaded and attack your own tissue and destroy it.
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It's the only way your body can save you from that perceived infection or tumor.
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As I say, tumors are the other things that causes this derangement and your body probably
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saves you from a tumor every other day that you never knew you had from like a solar, a
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gamma ray went through you, damaged your DNA.
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0:30:50 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]em noticed a deranged cell and killed it.
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Good job. But not only did these materials force your body to make non-celled proteins,
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which will lead to this autoimmune attack, but your body is now making something which I
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knew and I can point to the literature.
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It makes it makes something analogous to things already proven as toxins.
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0:31:13 --> 0:31:17
Well, guess what? My guess is, you know, depending on where it went in your body after
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0:31:17 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ion, how well it was taken up, how efficiently it was converted to protein and
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how long that went on, which frankly is a crap shoot, a lottery for every single individual.
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You could get blood clots, you could get heart injury, you could get neurological
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conditions and you got all of those, didn't we, folks?
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0:31:37 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]able because they follow from the design choice.
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0:31:41 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] one I'm going to mention, there are many more, but I think three is powerful
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because they're different and so obvious.
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0:31:48 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] one, the mRNA products, Moderna and the Pfizer BioNTech, were formulated.
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What does that mean? Usually the drug substance, the actual active is tiny, often so
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small you can't see it.
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It might be milligrams or even micrograms.
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0:32:07 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] to bind it up with with fillers and, you know, things to bulk it up so you can
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make a tablet or a spray or an ointment or an injection.
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0:32:17 --> 0:32:19
And that whole process is called formulation.
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0:32:20 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ance, the thing you've invented, and then clever people in
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0:32:25 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]abilise this molecule, how to make sure it's
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pure, that it's stable, that it'll be released when it needs to be and so on and so
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forth. It's very, very complicated, not my skill area.
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But I learned quite a lot about formulations in the respiratory side.
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So when I looked at this formulation, the formulation is lipid nanoparticles.
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So it's a kind of grease, but it's a particular kind of grease formulated in a
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0:32:53 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction] And so I thought, well, yeah, I can see why you would protect this
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0:32:58 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]erable genetic material in this blob of lipid when you inject it.
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0:33:03 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] slide through the wall of a cell, straight through the
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wall of a...it'll go all around the body.
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It's what it's designed to do.
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0:33:10 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]umbled upon a 2012 paper and I read it with mounting
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horror because lipid nanoparticles is one of a category of sort of macromolecule.
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That means large molecule carriers, transporters, vehicles.
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So they've been in use for quite a while.
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0:33:32 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]e in the pharmaceutical science, the formulation end
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that these particular macromolecules, lipid nanoparticles, have a propensity that
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is are inclined to accumulate in the ovaries of every species tested to date.
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And so I thought, well, I'm a toxicologist.
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I can tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that if you have an observation in your
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0:33:57 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]udies, you're not allowed to ignore it.
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0:34:01 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] to assume that that's what's going to happen in humans unless you've got
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data to show it doesn't.
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So I am now faced with a formulation of horrible material, which I think is going
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0:34:12 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]y and a direct toxicity that's going to accumulate
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in their ovaries.
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Then some enterprising person wrote to the Japanese regulator and under their
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0:34:24 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] was able to obtain studies, distribution studies of
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And we translated it from the Japanese.
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0:34:36 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ion and distribution, I think, is either in rats
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or mice.
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0:34:41 --> 0:34:42
And guess what?
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0:34:42 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ed from the literature.
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So these are not accidental.
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The choice of mRNA is dangerous to healthy people.
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Its original use was immunoncology for people who are beyond saving by chemo or
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surgery.
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0:35:02 --> 0:35:05
I've got second thoughts about a lot of this stuff.
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But then the spike protein, it's analogous to materials known to be toxic to human
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cells and the maline cells.
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And they made your body make it.
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Finally, for now, they formulated a material already known by people in the
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0:35:18 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ry to lead to accumulation of the payload in the ovaries where it will do
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0:35:25 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] mentioned.
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So I'll tell you a couple of other things.
523
0:35:31 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ugs fail in development, two most common reasons.
524
0:35:36 --> 0:35:37
One is they don't work.
525
0:35:37 --> 0:35:39
Medical hypothesis was wrong.
526
0:35:39 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]e with itchy red skin and you put it in the vehicle group and
527
0:35:45 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] group and it's blinded and so on.
528
0:35:47 --> 0:35:48
It's all done properly.
529
0:35:48 --> 0:35:51
That was the single experiment we did in my biotech.
530
0:35:51 --> 0:35:54
You break the blind and damn it, both the groups are the same.
531
0:35:55 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ug hasn't done anything.
532
0:35:56 --> 0:35:59
So that's why it was so miraculous when ours did work.
533
0:35:59 --> 0:36:00
But that's the most common outcome.
534
0:36:00 --> 0:36:01
You're wrong.
535
0:36:01 --> 0:36:04
We're not clever enough to work out what's going to happen.
536
0:36:05 --> 0:36:08
And that's one of the reasons why the industry is not just failing.
537
0:36:08 --> 0:36:09
It's failed.
538
0:36:09 --> 0:36:10
It can no longer.
539
0:36:11 --> 0:36:12
It can't make profit anymore.
540
0:36:12 --> 0:36:14
It's a dead industry.
541
0:36:15 --> 0:36:18
I don't think there's been any significant new products that I personally would have
542
0:36:18 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction] got behind.
543
0:36:21 --> 0:36:26
They're like one million pound a patient, cancer, biologicals, which I've looked at
544
0:36:27 --> 0:36:30
the data and they might give you a month.
545
0:36:31 --> 0:36:33
I don't even trust the clinical data now.
546
0:36:33 --> 0:36:34
I think they cheat.
547
0:36:35 --> 0:36:39
So I think they're now at a point where they've got enormous financial resources and they
548
0:36:39 --> 0:36:42
can't make money in the normal way and whatever.
549
0:36:42 --> 0:36:45
And I think this is one of the motivations.
550
0:36:45 --> 0:36:49
What's happened is it's provided enormous income for the pharma companies.
551
0:36:49 --> 0:36:53
But as I say, those I was going to say that that's one of the two main reasons why we
552
0:36:53 --> 0:36:54
fail.
553
0:36:54 --> 0:36:57
One is we're wrong in the medical hypothesis and the drug simply doesn't work.
554
0:36:58 --> 0:37:03
Now, sometimes you get a chance, another chance, because a different hypothesis comes up
555
0:37:03 --> 0:37:04
and you find a use.
556
0:37:04 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]e is Viagra.
557
0:37:07 --> 0:37:12
Its original use had been to relieve angina by relaxing blood vessels in the heart.
558
0:37:12 --> 0:37:13
And it didn't do that.
559
0:37:13 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]e did not report improvements.
560
0:37:15 --> 0:37:20
But the famous use that eventually was discovered was it dilates blood vessels in the
561
0:37:20 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ions and billions of dollars were made out of it.
562
0:37:27 --> 0:37:28
So you were wrong.
563
0:37:28 --> 0:37:29
They were wrong in the medical hypothesis.
564
0:37:29 --> 0:37:33
But another medical hypothesis was able to make use of the drug because it wasn't
565
0:37:34 --> 0:37:35
obviously unsafe.
566
0:37:36 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ugs fail is because they're toxic either in people or in multi-dose
567
0:37:42 --> 0:37:45
studies in rats, dogs, monkeys, whatever is required.
568
0:37:45 --> 0:37:50
So I'm very sorry if there are people who are philosophically set against vivisection.
569
0:37:50 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]and that.
570
0:37:52 --> 0:37:55
I grew less and less comfortable with that as I got older.
571
0:37:55 --> 0:38:00
Nevertheless, someone has to be, as it were, the guinea pig and I don't want it to be
572
0:38:00 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]e.
573
0:38:01 --> 0:38:05
So the main reason, the second main reason, and it's extremely common, unfortunately,
574
0:38:05 --> 0:38:12
is that for reasons we were not able to anticipate the drug when taking the required dose for
575
0:38:12 --> 0:38:18
long periods of time, if it was a chronic drug, produced unacceptable side effects.
576
0:38:19 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] one, medical hypothesis being wrong, my God, you would be grilled.
577
0:38:25 --> 0:38:27
It's like you need to explain your medical hypothesis.
578
0:38:27 --> 0:38:29
What's the evidence supporting that?
579
0:38:29 --> 0:38:31
Is the counter evidence?
580
0:38:31 --> 0:38:32
What were your peers doing?
581
0:38:33 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] the hypothesis?
582
0:38:34 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]e all over it and rightly so.
583
0:38:38 --> 0:38:41
The second one, everyone got a shot at it.
584
0:38:41 --> 0:38:41
What do I mean?
585
0:38:43 --> 0:38:48
Before you nominated a compound, we literally would have all hands meetings.
586
0:38:48 --> 0:38:53
And your job was, if you've been in the industry, you may have an opinion.
587
0:38:53 --> 0:38:57
You may spot something about the design of that molecule that triggers a thought where
588
0:38:57 --> 0:39:03
you think, I've seen that before and it led to kidney toxicity in 1978 or something.
589
0:39:03 --> 0:39:05
So we would go over these damn things.
590
0:39:06 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ural alerts meeting or something like that.
591
0:39:09 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] its own process.
592
0:39:12 --> 0:39:17
Because what you don't want to do is five years down the road after $50 million has
593
0:39:17 --> 0:39:20
been spent to find it fails for toxicity.
594
0:39:20 --> 0:39:22
And someone goes, oh, yeah, I thought it would do that.
595
0:39:22 --> 0:39:24
So seriously, that's what used to happen.
596
0:39:25 --> 0:39:30
So I'm saying these products, if they were proper, would have gone through like a structural
597
0:39:30 --> 0:39:33
alert review or a TOCS cross-specs review.
598
0:39:34 --> 0:39:41
And anyone like me or anyone who'd been hired by me would have looked at this and thought,
599
0:39:42 --> 0:39:43
no, you can't meet non-self.
600
0:39:43 --> 0:39:45
It'll cause autoimmune reactions.
601
0:39:45 --> 0:39:50
No, you damn well better not meet their bodies make that funny spike protein because that's
602
0:39:50 --> 0:39:52
analogous to lots of venoms.
603
0:39:52 --> 0:39:57
What the hell are you doing using this macromolecule lipid nanoparticles?
604
0:39:57 --> 0:39:59
Do you not know it's going to accumulate in the ovaries?
605
0:39:59 --> 0:40:03
So I'm promising you this would not have got out of the door.
606
0:40:04 --> 0:40:05
So I'm going to take a long pause.
607
0:40:05 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] two other independent mechanisms of toxicity built into
608
0:40:13 --> 0:40:14
these molecules.
609
0:40:14 --> 0:40:18
I can't name them because I'm not a molecular biologist, but they are apparently.
610
0:40:18 --> 0:40:24
There's a nuclear localization signal in the sequence, which means it's going to traffic
611
0:40:24 --> 0:40:26
to your nucleus, which it doesn't need to be in.
612
0:40:27 --> 0:40:28
And what was the other one?
613
0:40:28 --> 0:40:32
Is that there is something called I think it's a partial SV40 promoter.
614
0:40:32 --> 0:40:37
I think that has something that might be bad for oncological reasons.
615
0:40:37 --> 0:40:41
And apparently you would not tolerate either of these two things in the product.
616
0:40:41 --> 0:40:41
So that's fine.
617
0:40:42 --> 0:40:49
So I'm going to ask you on the call, having heard me describe my history in training,
618
0:40:50 --> 0:40:55
the processes we use, the most common reason for failure and what we tried to do to avoid it,
619
0:40:55 --> 0:41:02
and my description of what I thought would cause harms and the fact that we wrote them down
620
0:41:03 --> 0:41:06
before they were launched and then those things happen.
621
0:41:07 --> 0:41:12
I'm going to ask you, is there anyone on the call, horrified though you may be,
622
0:41:13 --> 0:41:19
that doesn't think as I do that these were designed intentionally to injure, kill,
623
0:41:19 --> 0:41:20
and reduce fertility?
624
0:41:20 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]op.
625
0:41:21 --> 0:41:25
Mike, thank you so much.
626
0:41:25 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ing who didn't get the note, Mike chooses not to have his video
627
0:41:31 --> 0:41:35
showing at the moment because he's in holiday mode.
628
0:41:35 --> 0:41:38
So thank you so much for articulating so beautifully.
629
0:41:38 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]e of years ago and I've kept your notes.
630
0:41:42 --> 0:41:45
And again, you articulate so well.
631
0:41:45 --> 0:41:50
And many of us know that someone who truly understands their craft can articulate complex
632
0:41:50 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]s that non-experts can understand.
633
0:41:53 --> 0:41:58
So I'm very grateful to the way that you have done that.
634
0:41:58 --> 0:42:03
So Mike, Stephen Frost gets the first 15 minutes and then we've got lots of hands up,
635
0:42:03 --> 0:42:04
which is wonderful.
636
0:42:05 --> 0:42:10
So, and Stephen, Stephen will have far more than 15 minutes, but anyway,
637
0:42:10 --> 0:42:12
Stephen, are you ready to go?
638
0:42:15 --> 0:42:19
Yeah, so, yeah, Charles, I'm sorry.
639
0:42:20 --> 0:42:25
I want to say sorry for losing my cool a little before the meeting.
640
0:42:26 --> 0:42:29
I didn't mean to be sharp with people who were trying to help me,
641
0:42:30 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction] trying to concentrate on what I thought I knew was the correct thing to do
642
0:42:36 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction] of the time, at least.
643
0:42:40 --> 0:42:46
So I didn't mean ill towards whoever I snapped at, but I was really under pressure in my mind.
644
0:42:47 --> 0:42:48
Sorry.
645
0:42:50 --> 0:42:57
And as far as your presentation, Mike, it was just brilliant.
646
0:42:57 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]e born for this crisis, I think you are one of them.
647
0:43:04 --> 0:43:05
Oh, three, maybe.
648
0:43:06 --> 0:43:11
Sukhru Bhakti is another and Archbishop Vigano is another.
649
0:43:12 --> 0:43:17
So I agree with you on everything you've said.
650
0:43:20 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] you're so, how shall I say, precise in your use of English.
651
0:43:26 --> 0:43:28
You may be shy, but you're incredibly articulate.
652
0:43:29 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] of all, what impresses me is you get your thoughts in order
653
0:43:33 --> 0:43:35
and you're always logical in your thoughts.
654
0:43:35 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]e, of course, including me now, think that what we need to solve this nonsense,
655
0:43:42 --> 0:43:47
these Trojan horses, totalitarianism is a spiritual element,
656
0:43:47 --> 0:43:51
and that doesn't always involve logic, as I'm told.
657
0:43:52 --> 0:43:53
I agree.
658
0:43:53 --> 0:43:54
I absolutely agree.
659
0:43:54 --> 0:43:59
And I used to be embarrassed in saying what I'm going to say
660
0:43:59 --> 0:44:01
because I'm a scientist and this isn't science.
661
0:44:03 --> 0:44:10
But in the summer of 2021, I had an encounter.
662
0:44:10 --> 0:44:16
And I think I took from this encounter an instruction to do what I'm doing.
663
0:44:17 --> 0:44:18
That was it.
664
0:44:18 --> 0:44:19
No promises.
665
0:44:19 --> 0:44:21
It was like, you have to do this.
666
0:44:21 --> 0:44:21
Good for you.
667
0:44:21 --> 0:44:27
I mean, I was already committed, but it was a and also it had been a terrible time.
668
0:44:27 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]arted to discover what I've described to you,
669
0:44:31 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]n't been too cool about, I fell apart because I'd been a normie.
670
0:44:37 --> 0:44:42
I fell apart because I'd been a normie until 2020.
671
0:44:42 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ened to the BBC for 41 years.
672
0:44:45 --> 0:44:48
I got the Sunday Times every Sunday for about 25 years.
673
0:44:48 --> 0:44:52
I kind of believe roughly what I was being told, bit sceptical every now and again.
674
0:44:53 --> 0:45:01
So to follow the data as I did, so my head was following and my soul was screaming.
675
0:45:02 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ash.
676
0:45:05 --> 0:45:07
I think I had a mini I probably had a mini breakdown by the end of the year.
677
0:45:08 --> 0:45:13
And I was climbing out of it again, past very, very dark thoughts.
678
0:45:13 --> 0:45:18
And then one night, something appeared and it was like more or less,
679
0:45:19 --> 0:45:21
here's a handful of courage and just get on with it.
680
0:45:21 --> 0:45:23
And I've never felt frightened since that moment.
681
0:45:24 --> 0:45:25
And that was that was God.
682
0:45:26 --> 0:45:26
That was God.
683
0:45:27 --> 0:45:28
Good for you, Mike.
684
0:45:29 --> 0:45:33
I don't know whether you can remember because at the time I now realise you were
685
0:45:34 --> 0:45:37
really psychologically tortured into a corner.
686
0:45:37 --> 0:45:38
And so was I.
687
0:45:38 --> 0:45:39
And I didn't.
688
0:45:39 --> 0:45:42
I thought we were immune from this psychological torture.
689
0:45:42 --> 0:45:46
And I happen to think, Mike, and I think you should know this because you're British as well.
690
0:45:46 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]s to account.
691
0:45:49 --> 0:45:53
And I am also giving information to the police.
692
0:45:53 --> 0:45:53
I wrote to the police.
693
0:45:53 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]n't published it.
694
0:45:55 --> 0:45:55
Maybe I should.
695
0:45:55 --> 0:46:00
But I kept it very, very tight so they couldn't gainsay what I'd said to them.
696
0:46:01 --> 0:46:04
But I think, you know, your letter is absolutely brilliant.
697
0:46:04 --> 0:46:10
Someone was saying to me the other day, trying to draw my attention even more to your letter.
698
0:46:11 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction] a look at it again.
699
0:46:13 --> 0:46:21
But so, Mike, the terrible thing in the United Kingdom is that actually it appeared to be better
700
0:46:22 --> 0:46:29
than in France and other countries, you know, which had hard measures, should we say,
701
0:46:29 --> 0:46:33
in inverted commas, which were never just because there was never any pandemic.
702
0:46:33 --> 0:46:36
There wasn't even a disease called Covid-19, in my opinion.
703
0:46:36 --> 0:46:38
It wasn't properly diagnosed.
704
0:46:39 --> 0:46:45
And that's one of my strong points to the police because I am a medical doctor.
705
0:46:45 --> 0:46:50
And even if no one in the world agrees with me, I have a right to a medical opinion.
706
0:46:50 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]or.
707
0:46:51 --> 0:46:51
You do.
708
0:46:51 --> 0:46:52
Yeah.
709
0:46:53 --> 0:46:56
And I don't want to prove it beyond reasonable doubt or beyond the
710
0:46:56 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction] of law.
711
0:46:59 --> 0:47:05
And I don't have to, as a scientist, do enormous numbers of randomized control trials,
712
0:47:05 --> 0:47:07
double-blinded or whatever.
713
0:47:08 --> 0:47:14
But I'm trained as a doctor and my duty is to diagnose for the patient in the best way
714
0:47:14 --> 0:47:21
possible using all my experience and all my, hopefully, good training.
715
0:47:22 --> 0:47:25
And somehow or other, I think I did get a good training because when I was training,
716
0:47:26 --> 0:47:31
we were told that even if you believe in viruses, which I'm not sure I do now,
717
0:47:32 --> 0:47:40
I'm pretty sure I don't, a deadly virus cannot cause a pandemic.
718
0:47:40 --> 0:47:44
And I was fascinated by that.
719
0:47:44 --> 0:47:48
So I can't remember the name of the professor who taught us this,
720
0:47:50 --> 0:47:51
but I remembered it.
721
0:47:51 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]mas is a time for me writing an email to all the people I
722
0:47:57 --> 0:47:59
qualified with and challenging them.
723
0:47:59 --> 0:48:00
And guess what, Mike?
724
0:48:00 --> 0:48:07
I can't get a single person I qualified at Liverpool University with to engage with me,
725
0:48:08 --> 0:48:13
even privately, even people I shared flats with.
726
0:48:14 --> 0:48:15
They're that terrified of me.
727
0:48:16 --> 0:48:19
That's the thing that I have to say that's made me,
728
0:48:21 --> 0:48:27
so I think I've recorded something like 250 interviews, something like that.
729
0:48:27 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] comment, actually, it's important for me to mention in case anyone's
730
0:48:30 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] time, it's no use Googling Dr. Mike Yead.
731
0:48:37 --> 0:48:41
Please don't use Safari, Google, whatever they are.
732
0:48:41 --> 0:48:45
Don't use the mainstream search engines, or at least don't only use them.
733
0:48:46 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction], I invite people, there's a very interesting experiment,
734
0:48:50 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]ay, so it's still valid.
735
0:48:53 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]e, including me, I thought that browsers or search engines were pretty much
736
0:48:58 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ion.
737
0:49:01 --> 0:49:04
You type in what you want to find, and they find it for you.
738
0:49:05 --> 0:49:08
I didn't understand how it did it, but they're all about the same, right?
739
0:49:08 --> 0:49:09
Well, they're not.
740
0:49:09 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] Mike Yead into Google, and then just have a look at the first two or
741
0:49:15 --> 0:49:20
three pages, you'll find that I'm a very famous anti-vax conspiracy theorist.
742
0:49:21 --> 0:49:26
And you'll find articles from Reuters saying how wrong I am about all sorts of things.
743
0:49:27 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] Mike Yead into minority search engines, of which there are dozens,
744
0:49:32 --> 0:49:40
like something called Mojeek, M-O-J-E-E-K, or Yandex, Y-A-N-D-E-X.
745
0:49:40 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] Mike Yead in any of the small ones, you get hit with about 50 of my presentations.
746
0:49:46 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ing.
747
0:49:47 --> 0:49:55
Now, that can't happen unless someone has decided to filter the search results,
748
0:49:55 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]e will get, because most people, most of the time, will use mainstream browsers.
749
0:50:01 --> 0:50:04
And what you find is lies about me.
750
0:50:06 --> 0:50:12
Why would someone go to the effort of lying about me and hiding things I have actually done?
751
0:50:12 --> 0:50:14
And I think the answer is obvious.
752
0:50:14 --> 0:50:15
They don't want you to hear from me.
753
0:50:15 --> 0:50:17
Why would they not want you to hear from me?
754
0:50:18 --> 0:50:19
Is it because I'm telling the truth?
755
0:50:21 --> 0:50:26
It seems to me an elaborate piece of work that they would do that.
756
0:50:27 --> 0:50:30
And of course, they may get rid of it now, I pointed it out, but
757
0:50:31 --> 0:50:34
I would say that's the sort of thing that's quite useful.
758
0:50:34 --> 0:50:39
You can show someone on their own phone and you ask them beforehand what would they expect to happen.
759
0:50:39 --> 0:50:41
It's like it should be roughly the same, right?
760
0:50:42 --> 0:50:44
Because if it's not, what use is a browser?
761
0:50:44 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] going to get random garbage?
762
0:50:46 --> 0:50:47
So it should be roughly the same.
763
0:50:48 --> 0:50:49
It's not even roughly the same.
764
0:50:51 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction], so one of the reasons people have said to me,
765
0:50:55 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ralia who thinks I'm a conspiracy theorist,
766
0:50:59 --> 0:51:04
the other day said, well, if any of the stuff you've said is true, Mike, why haven't they killed you?
767
0:51:04 --> 0:51:06
I've got a perfectly good answer.
768
0:51:06 --> 0:51:08
They don't need to do this medieval stuff.
769
0:51:08 --> 0:51:12
If the person lives in the modern technological world,
770
0:51:12 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] IT tools that serve the same purpose.
771
0:51:16 --> 0:51:19
They can censor and smear you easily.
772
0:51:20 --> 0:51:22
And there's very little you can do about it.
773
0:51:22 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ening, I can't, I don't,
774
0:51:26 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] done.
775
0:51:31 --> 0:51:32
It's not de Vietist.
776
0:51:33 --> 0:51:34
Every now and again, we travel.
777
0:51:34 --> 0:51:40
So we'll be in say Heathrow or St Pancras station or somewhere in a busy area of London.
778
0:51:40 --> 0:51:42
And I'm routinely recognized once.
779
0:51:43 --> 0:51:47
And I've kind of done like counting the size of crowds.
780
0:51:48 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]imate is that I'm recognized by less than one in a thousand people.
781
0:51:53 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ingly, that number is the same whether I'm in
782
0:51:56 --> 0:52:01
Mexico, Florida, Arizona, France, Spain, London.
783
0:52:01 --> 0:52:04
So the message has kind of got out there, but to less than 0.1%.
784
0:52:05 --> 0:52:07
It's not a different number.
785
0:52:07 --> 0:52:09
I'm not recognized more often now than two years ago.
786
0:52:11 --> 0:52:13
And that's hard data, folks.
787
0:52:13 --> 0:52:15
That tells me that I've worked and worked and worked
788
0:52:15 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]e than I was two years ago.
789
0:52:18 --> 0:52:20
And I think the reason's obvious.
790
0:52:21 --> 0:52:23
The alternative to interning me or killing me
791
0:52:24 --> 0:52:27
is to turn the tourniquet on censorship.
792
0:52:27 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]e.
793
0:52:29 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]e on this call, for example, the people in your circle, your family,
794
0:52:33 --> 0:52:37
your workmates, your friends who perhaps think you're a bit nuts,
795
0:52:37 --> 0:52:39
I'm never going to reach them.
796
0:52:39 --> 0:52:41
You could wait 10 years and they'll never hear from me
797
0:52:41 --> 0:52:42
because they're not looking for me.
798
0:52:43 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ream media will never tell them the truth.
799
0:52:47 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] to say to you is,
800
0:52:50 --> 0:52:50
it's you.
801
0:52:50 --> 0:52:54
If you do not manage to persuade them, we will lose
802
0:52:55 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]e willing and able to do what I'm doing
803
0:52:59 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]ively.
804
0:53:02 --> 0:53:03
And I can see why they've done it.
805
0:53:04 --> 0:53:06
And frankly, I'd prefer they did this than the alternative
806
0:53:06 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] otherwise killed me.
807
0:53:09 --> 0:53:16
And so I'm optimistic, but I have to keep asking people that you have to do it, please.
808
0:53:16 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] to do it, please.
809
0:53:18 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] already.
810
0:53:22 --> 0:53:25
My own empirical evidence says I am not.
811
0:53:25 --> 0:53:28
And as a consequence, I don't really want to do a lot more interviews.
812
0:53:28 --> 0:53:31
It's a waste of my life and I can't justify it to my family.
813
0:53:32 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] on me.
814
0:53:34 --> 0:53:35
And it's not useful.
815
0:53:36 --> 0:53:37
I'm not reaching more people.
816
0:53:38 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]e bottle any part of what you've heard and think,
817
0:53:43 --> 0:53:45
right, I understand that bit.
818
0:53:45 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] with it.
819
0:53:49 --> 0:53:50
That's the way we'll beat them.
820
0:53:50 --> 0:53:51
That's the way we'll beat them.
821
0:53:53 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] ourselves if we work together.
822
0:53:56 --> 0:53:57
Yeah, sure.
823
0:53:57 --> 0:54:01
So there are many others, Mike, who are less brilliant than you,
824
0:54:01 --> 0:54:05
who can gain comfort from hearing your words
825
0:54:06 --> 0:54:10
and be emboldened and do your work for you.
826
0:54:10 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ion.
827
0:54:12 --> 0:54:15
So talking to this group, it may not appear many,
828
0:54:15 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]e who view the videos afterwards.
829
0:54:18 --> 0:54:21
And I'm going to send a copy of this video to my MP
830
0:54:21 --> 0:54:24
and also to the Metropolitan Police Commissioner,
831
0:54:25 --> 0:54:30
accompanied by another letter to ask why I haven't had even an acknowledgement from the...
832
0:54:30 --> 0:54:34
I copied in the Commissioner, but I sent it to the PC.
833
0:54:34 --> 0:54:36
I think you did as well, Mike.
834
0:54:36 --> 0:54:38
And I also copied in my MP.
835
0:54:38 --> 0:54:43
So I've learned these tactics because the bastard state in the UK
836
0:54:43 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] from me by text with no explanation,
837
0:54:50 --> 0:54:52
because I highlighted...
838
0:54:52 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]leblower, except I didn't know what whistleblowing was.
839
0:54:56 --> 0:54:59
I highlighted criminality in the military,
840
0:54:59 --> 0:55:04
of the British military with Class A controlled drugs.
841
0:55:04 --> 0:55:05
And they were trying to cover it up.
842
0:55:05 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] they could cover it up,
843
0:55:08 --> 0:55:12
that they needed to tell the police and that the police needed to investigate.
844
0:55:12 --> 0:55:15
I was rather naive, but it was the truth.
845
0:55:15 --> 0:55:18
And they're terrified of people who tell the truth, Mike.
846
0:55:18 --> 0:55:23
But you do fulfill a purpose because you encourage other whistleblowers to speak out
847
0:55:23 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]leblowers are absolutely key.
848
0:55:27 --> 0:55:32
And especially the ones like you and me who survive the onslaught.
849
0:55:33 --> 0:55:37
Sure, no, I do think what I'm doing is important,
850
0:55:37 --> 0:55:40
but it won't be enough is what I'm saying.
851
0:55:41 --> 0:55:44
And I've made this little speech 50 times.
852
0:55:46 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]e do do something.
853
0:55:48 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] you can with what you've got where you are.
854
0:55:54 --> 0:55:56
And keep doing it every day.
855
0:55:58 --> 0:56:01
I wish I didn't, but I probably do 16 hours a day, seven days a week.
856
0:56:01 --> 0:56:05
I can't stop, but I can't do anymore.
857
0:56:05 --> 0:56:09
If you know what I mean, I can't make this be more effective,
858
0:56:09 --> 0:56:10
but I can't stop either.
859
0:56:10 --> 0:56:14
And so I'm begging you, everyone, if you're not doing 20 hours a week,
860
0:56:14 --> 0:56:15
you're not helping.
861
0:56:16 --> 0:56:18
Everyone can spare 20 hours a week.
862
0:56:19 --> 0:56:23
Seriously, even if you're working, use your evenings to be active.
863
0:56:23 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]s over.
864
0:56:25 --> 0:56:28
If you do that, if you don't, we will lose.
865
0:56:29 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction] say, let me just say that the people who have planned this,
866
0:56:33 --> 0:56:36
and I never would believe I would be saying this,
867
0:56:36 --> 0:56:41
but if you don't know of a lady called Katherine Watt,
868
0:56:41 --> 0:56:46
she's an American paralegal, and she has researched going backwards
869
0:56:47 --> 0:56:54
and found 60 years, evidence receipts of 60 years of patient,
870
0:56:55 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]ed amendments to public health legislation in the US.
871
0:56:59 --> 0:57:02
And she and I believe that that has happened everywhere in the world.
872
0:57:02 --> 0:57:06
60 years, that's like three generations of politicians
873
0:57:08 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]antly edited public health laws to allow what happened to happen in 2020.
874
0:57:15 --> 0:57:18
Because I won't describe it because I'm not clever enough,
875
0:57:18 --> 0:57:21
but it's nothing like you think, and it's all legal.
876
0:57:21 --> 0:57:24
What they've done is what she calls legal on paper.
877
0:57:24 --> 0:57:27
It's obviously legal, but it's legal on paper.
878
0:57:28 --> 0:57:34
And so she has found 10 major amendments to public health law,
879
0:57:34 --> 0:57:39
which eventually allow this, that if the Health and Human Services Secretary
880
0:57:39 --> 0:57:42
or the President says there is a public health emergency,
881
0:57:42 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]s, then a whole bunch of things are then allowed.
882
0:57:48 --> 0:57:51
The military can impose what are called countermeasures
883
0:57:51 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]ions are not vaccines, they're not even medical products.
884
0:57:55 --> 0:57:57
They're not medical products.
885
0:57:58 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ion with the FDA is a pantomime.
886
0:58:02 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ered by the military
887
0:58:05 --> 0:58:08
under public health emergency as countermeasures.
888
0:58:08 --> 0:58:12
They do not require informed consent any more than they need to give you
889
0:58:12 --> 0:58:15
informed consent before they put down a barrier and push you off an area,
890
0:58:17 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]igation, seriously.
891
0:58:19 --> 0:58:24
So they are legally countermeasures and they are treated no different than
892
0:58:24 --> 0:58:25
grime tape.
893
0:58:25 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]
894
0:58:27 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] you.
895
0:58:28 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] to do anything.
896
0:58:29 --> 0:58:35
And as long as every person is following the then prevailing law
897
0:58:35 --> 0:58:38
of this medical emergency, of a public health emergency,
898
0:58:38 --> 0:58:41
they can't even be prosecuted, even if they kill you.
899
0:58:41 --> 0:58:44
Because the law says you may do all these things
900
0:58:44 --> 0:58:48
at discretion of the Health and Human Services Secretary or and or President
901
0:58:48 --> 0:58:50
in the event of a public health emergency.
902
0:58:51 --> 0:58:53
So that's unbelievable.
903
0:58:53 --> 0:58:54
But that's not the only one.
904
0:58:54 --> 0:58:58
So that's Catherine Watt with a K, W-A-W-T.
905
0:58:58 --> 0:58:59
Please let me finish.
906
0:59:00 --> 0:59:03
Catherine Watt, K with a Catherine and then W-A-W-T, set substack.
907
0:59:05 --> 0:59:11
Sasha Latipova, she's an American of Ukrainian extraction, very clever lady.
908
0:59:11 --> 0:59:14
And she has pieced together how the public health law was used.
909
0:59:14 --> 0:59:17
So she would combine my skills with Catherine's.
910
0:59:17 --> 0:59:21
And if you read no one else, Sasha Latipova will combine the thing.
911
0:59:21 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction] person I would mention
912
0:59:25 --> 0:59:31
is a retired financier called David Rogers Webb, now living in Sweden.
913
0:59:31 --> 0:59:37
And he has discovered 60 years of subversion of private property rights law
914
0:59:37 --> 0:59:40
in every country around the world, every country.
915
0:59:40 --> 0:59:42
There are no exceptions.
916
0:59:43 --> 0:59:46
What has happened is that things that you and I think we own
917
0:59:46 --> 0:59:49
as owners, we're no longer the owners.
918
0:59:49 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ual right called beneficial ownership.
919
0:59:53 --> 0:59:54
They've invented the term.
920
0:59:54 --> 0:59:58
It's all completely, you know, anyway, you don't own things anymore.
921
0:59:58 --> 0:59:59
You are the beneficial owners.
922
0:59:59 --> 1:00:00
What does that mean?
923
1:00:00 --> 1:00:04
It means if there is a default, which there will be,
924
1:00:04 --> 1:00:06
that's why they've broken the economy on purpose
925
1:00:06 --> 1:00:08
and printed enormous amounts of currency.
926
1:00:08 --> 1:00:10
They can announce that things are bankrupt.
927
1:00:10 --> 1:00:14
They can announce that currency is no good for international trade.
928
1:00:15 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]op trade.
929
1:00:17 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]itute a made up currency
930
1:00:20 --> 1:00:22
called central bank digital currency.
931
1:00:22 --> 1:00:24
I'm sure they have already prepared.
932
1:00:24 --> 1:00:27
And you will hear in every country, every central bank
933
1:00:27 --> 1:00:29
has been experimenting with this.
934
1:00:29 --> 1:00:31
So it's not a conspiracy theory.
935
1:00:31 --> 1:00:34
It's a conspiracy and there's nothing theoretical about it.
936
1:00:34 --> 1:00:38
David Rogers Webb has identified the changes in the law
937
1:00:38 --> 1:00:42
that means that you and I, everyone on the call,
938
1:00:43 --> 1:00:46
will be deprived of what we think is our lawful property
939
1:00:46 --> 1:00:48
if there's a big enough default.
940
1:00:49 --> 1:00:53
And the beneficiaries are the senior creditors
941
1:00:53 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]e who run everything in the world.
942
1:00:56 --> 1:00:57
You don't need to name them.
943
1:00:59 --> 1:01:00
So that's what will happen.
944
1:01:00 --> 1:01:03
Your houses, your cars, your bank account, your pension,
945
1:01:03 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ment portfolio will all vanish.
946
1:01:07 --> 1:01:08
The computer will go off.
947
1:01:09 --> 1:01:12
And even if it comes back on, they will have disappeared.
948
1:01:12 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ical.
949
1:01:15 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]en to David Rogers Webb.
950
1:01:18 --> 1:01:19
That's what's going to happen.
951
1:01:19 --> 1:01:24
So public health law, private property rights law,
952
1:01:25 --> 1:01:27
and then there are numerous others.
953
1:01:27 --> 1:01:31
I think we're all as wise to the global warming scam.
954
1:01:31 --> 1:01:33
About 60 years, funnily enough.
955
1:01:33 --> 1:01:36
It's about 60 years of propaganda and lies
956
1:01:36 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] bent the public science
957
1:01:40 --> 1:01:42
to a particular narrative.
958
1:01:42 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] it loses their position,
959
1:01:44 --> 1:01:47
doesn't get grants, can't get published, is crushed.
960
1:01:47 --> 1:01:49
So that's a lie too.
961
1:01:49 --> 1:01:52
I personally, this is slightly more controversial.
962
1:01:52 --> 1:01:57
I think there's 60 years of propaganda about overpopulation.
963
1:01:57 --> 1:01:59
I personally don't think that's happened.
964
1:01:59 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e talking in those terms,
965
1:02:02 --> 1:02:05
it's the most anti-human argument I've ever heard.
966
1:02:05 --> 1:02:08
It's like, who do you think should go then
967
1:02:08 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e?
968
1:02:09 --> 1:02:10
Who is it you're going to kill?
969
1:02:11 --> 1:02:16
Because I think they are absolutely determined,
970
1:02:16 --> 1:02:19
organized, and it's irrational.
971
1:02:19 --> 1:02:21
I think we're not overpopulated.
972
1:02:21 --> 1:02:22
We're not damaging.
973
1:02:22 --> 1:02:24
We're not committing global warming.
974
1:02:24 --> 1:02:29
So why are they trapping us and beginning to kill us?
975
1:02:29 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]anation.
976
1:02:31 --> 1:02:35
There's no rational reason for them to do what they're doing.
977
1:02:35 --> 1:02:37
And so I'm looking for an irrational one.
978
1:02:37 --> 1:02:41
And I think in the end, it comes down to dark forces.
979
1:02:41 --> 1:02:43
I've run out of explanations.
980
1:02:45 --> 1:02:48
But it looks to me they are diabolical, literally.
981
1:02:49 --> 1:02:49
Yeah.
982
1:02:50 --> 1:02:51
They're in a deadly couple.
983
1:02:51 --> 1:02:52
I think this is good and evil.
984
1:02:52 --> 1:02:53
It's good and evil.
985
1:02:53 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e, Mike, we've had all three of those.
986
1:02:57 --> 1:02:59
Catherine Watts, Sasha Latapova, David Rogers Webb,
987
1:03:00 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]s, and I'm a friend of that.
988
1:03:02 --> 1:03:03
It's fantastic.
989
1:03:03 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ic.
990
1:03:04 --> 1:03:05
Yeah, that's great.
991
1:03:05 --> 1:03:08
Well, then it means you can glue them together.
992
1:03:09 --> 1:03:12
And although it will be shocking, find a way to explain to people.
993
1:03:12 --> 1:03:15
So you can't just go in and tell them all this stuff.
994
1:03:15 --> 1:03:20
But my wife tells me, and she is right, she says, you can't lecture people.
995
1:03:20 --> 1:03:21
They are repelled.
996
1:03:22 --> 1:03:23
Not because you're not believable.
997
1:03:23 --> 1:03:25
You were very believable.
998
1:03:25 --> 1:03:27
But because you were believable, it's horrifying.
999
1:03:27 --> 1:03:34
She said, I've watched you talk to people and they go pale and they shrink and they move away.
1000
1:03:34 --> 1:03:37
And it's like they're frightened of what you're telling them.
1001
1:03:37 --> 1:03:38
She said, you can't do it.
1002
1:03:38 --> 1:03:40
She said, you can't do it that you can do it with a professional
1003
1:03:40 --> 1:03:44
who's trying to help because they kind of they will steal themselves.
1004
1:03:44 --> 1:03:48
You know, they're used to dealing with difficult things like police and army and
1005
1:03:48 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ors and so on.
1006
1:03:49 --> 1:03:51
They're used to dealing with bad news.
1007
1:03:51 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]rage member of the public is not.
1008
1:03:54 --> 1:03:57
And she said, if you come up to them like that, they would just run away.
1009
1:03:57 --> 1:03:59
She said, you've got to ask them rhetorical questions.
1010
1:03:59 --> 1:04:01
Well, I'm no good at that, ladies and gentlemen.
1011
1:04:01 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]ease go and do that because I'm not good at that.
1012
1:04:05 --> 1:04:09
I'm I get on my soapbox and I lecture and it repels people.
1013
1:04:09 --> 1:04:11
But you can do a better job with other people.
1014
1:04:11 --> 1:04:12
Thank you.
1015
1:04:12 --> 1:04:19
And the problem, Mike, is this and maybe you've noticed it and that when you talk to people
1016
1:04:19 --> 1:04:23
and you frighten them, unfortunately, they even know you're a good person and you're telling
1017
1:04:23 --> 1:04:29
the truth and a bit of them doesn't like the person they're hearing the truth from.
1018
1:04:29 --> 1:04:30
Absolutely.
1019
1:04:30 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]er, who used to say she loves me and how are you, little brother?
1020
1:04:34 --> 1:04:36
She says you've lost your mind.
1021
1:04:36 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]
1022
1:04:37 --> 1:04:39
You've been captured.
1023
1:04:39 --> 1:04:40
Don't ever speak to me again.
1024
1:04:42 --> 1:04:47
And that was that was very upsetting because she was she was my bloody hero when I was a kid.
1025
1:04:47 --> 1:04:48
She's five years older than me.
1026
1:04:48 --> 1:04:51
She has a PhD in fungal genetics.
1027
1:04:51 --> 1:04:54
She's a clever lady, but she thinks I'm crazy.
1028
1:04:55 --> 1:04:56
And I'm stopped.
1029
1:04:56 --> 1:04:59
I've stopped trying because she lives in Australia.
1030
1:04:59 --> 1:05:01
If I could go and speak to her, it might be different.
1031
1:05:02 --> 1:05:05
All my family in the UK are absolutely onside and they always were.
1032
1:05:06 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]er, my kids, their kids work.
1033
1:05:09 --> 1:05:10
Sorry.
1034
1:05:10 --> 1:05:11
Which city is she in?
1035
1:05:11 --> 1:05:12
She's in Adelaide.
1036
1:05:12 --> 1:05:13
All right.
1037
1:05:14 --> 1:05:16
I was thinking if she was in Melbourne, maybe Charleston.
1038
1:05:17 --> 1:05:18
Yeah, yeah.
1039
1:05:18 --> 1:05:19
I think so.
1040
1:05:19 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction] tried on my behalf and she really didn't like it.
1041
1:05:23 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]and that she thought I was stalking her.
1042
1:05:27 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]andable.
1043
1:05:28 --> 1:05:29
It didn't go well.
1044
1:05:30 --> 1:05:32
So I'm not I won't try.
1045
1:05:32 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction] her, you know, but.
1046
1:05:33 --> 1:05:34
Yeah, I understand.
1047
1:05:34 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction], Charles, can I just say this?
1048
1:05:37 --> 1:05:38
There's one thing I want to say.
1049
1:05:38 --> 1:05:39
Yeah.
1050
1:05:39 --> 1:05:46
So, Mike, as a medical doctor, I've observed that in particular in the United Kingdom,
1051
1:05:46 --> 1:05:52
our country where everything was rather soft, but these people like Boris Johnson were saying,
1052
1:05:52 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction] say at home, they must have known they must have known
1053
1:05:58 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] known that we're highly social animals, human beings.
1054
1:06:04 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]e down, lock human beings down, they must have known was pure evil.
1055
1:06:12 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]ed Kingdom, we had to endure this bloody a nudge unit,
1056
1:06:17 --> 1:06:18
you know, whatever it's called.
1057
1:06:18 --> 1:06:19
I can't remember.
1058
1:06:19 --> 1:06:20
Behavioral insights team.
1059
1:06:20 --> 1:06:21
Yeah, yeah.
1060
1:06:21 --> 1:06:26
And that was the final, final nail for me.
1061
1:06:26 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] observed it.
1062
1:06:27 --> 1:06:31
I thought I was immune to the psychological torture that was going on in every country
1063
1:06:31 --> 1:06:34
in the world, but particularly in the United Kingdom.
1064
1:06:34 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] hold our bastard government to account for this.
1065
1:06:40 --> 1:06:43
They did, which they must have known.
1066
1:06:43 --> 1:06:47
And if they didn't, they should have known was evil.
1067
1:06:47 --> 1:06:48
And why was it evil?
1068
1:06:48 --> 1:06:49
Because it was anti-human.
1069
1:06:50 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]e down.
1070
1:06:53 --> 1:06:55
We're highly social animals.
1071
1:06:56 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] been shouting like from the rooftops like I know.
1072
1:06:59 --> 1:07:01
And that's that's very depressing.
1073
1:07:01 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]e get very angry with our politicians.
1074
1:07:05 --> 1:07:07
And I do too.
1075
1:07:07 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ed politicians were in charge.
1076
1:07:13 --> 1:07:18
Even when I was a normie and I believe things, I thought you remember Blair used to think
1077
1:07:18 --> 1:07:19
about Blair's style.
1078
1:07:19 --> 1:07:22
I think it was called so for government.
1079
1:07:22 --> 1:07:26
And I think it really meant government by informal conversation.
1080
1:07:27 --> 1:07:33
And I'd watched enough of the British political comedy called Yes, Minister and its successor,
1081
1:07:33 --> 1:07:39
Yes, Prime Minister to to understand that white whitehall has run a significant part
1082
1:07:39 --> 1:07:42
of the world for, I think, four or five hundred years.
1083
1:07:43 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction] any lessons.
1084
1:07:45 --> 1:07:52
I imagine every lesson learned on the effectiveness of controlling people's behavior.
1085
1:07:52 --> 1:07:57
Incentivizing them to do things, incentivizing them not to do things.
1086
1:07:57 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] been learned and bottled and reused and amplified
1087
1:08:05 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]er.
1088
1:08:07 --> 1:08:15
You know, and so I don't think the [privacy contact redaction] any significant power where it comes
1089
1:08:15 --> 1:08:16
to things like this.
1090
1:08:16 --> 1:08:22
They may be able to get a campaign going in their constituency for some particular thing.
1091
1:08:22 --> 1:08:27
But I don't I don't think the government's even faintly interested in what any or all
1092
1:08:27 --> 1:08:28
of the MPs say.
1093
1:08:28 --> 1:08:32
And I don't think that they are particularly well briefed.
1094
1:08:32 --> 1:08:34
They're not selected because they're clever and knowledgeable.
1095
1:08:35 --> 1:08:41
So but of course, what they act as, there was a bloody barrier between me through my
1096
1:08:42 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ituent, CMP Rosie Duffield, who's stupid.
1097
1:08:47 --> 1:08:49
I mean, I've written to and had many conversations with her office.
1098
1:08:49 --> 1:08:52
But they don't they're not interested.
1099
1:08:52 --> 1:08:54
That's not their job.
1100
1:08:54 --> 1:08:59
And you won't get people in Whitehall, you know, closest I've got is a couple of visits
1101
1:08:59 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ew Bridgen, you know, and he's not he's not in charge either.
1102
1:09:05 --> 1:09:08
I don't I doubt I doubt the prime minister.
1103
1:09:08 --> 1:09:11
I don't think Boris Johnson had anything to do with this.
1104
1:09:11 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]anning.
1105
1:09:13 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] he was told about it at some point.
1106
1:09:17 --> 1:09:20
And his job was to be the puppet that went out and told people what to do.
1107
1:09:21 --> 1:09:22
That's my guess.
1108
1:09:22 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]e who my my instincts tell me were centrally involved.
1109
1:09:28 --> 1:09:31
I think I think Blair is centrally involved.
1110
1:09:31 --> 1:09:38
I think he's been a major criminal and people who run the Wellcome Trust, you know,
1111
1:09:38 --> 1:09:39
Sir Jeremy Farrar and his successors.
1112
1:09:39 --> 1:09:43
I'm pretty sure I've written this down, by the way, in the past.
1113
1:09:43 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction], in the past and usually what happens when you sound to people is you get
1114
1:09:48 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ed or prosecuted and it's not happened.
1115
1:09:52 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] that the Wellcome Trust, the National Institute of Health under
1116
1:09:58 --> 1:10:05
Fauci and the Bill and Linda Gates Foundation under Christopher Elias, who's the science
1117
1:10:05 --> 1:10:13
guy for Gates, those three people for Fauci and Elias were known to have met on an offer,
1118
1:10:13 --> 1:10:19
I think 30 years and between them, they controlled roughly two thirds of the private biomedical
1119
1:10:20 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]ug companies.
1120
1:10:23 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] been able to shape the entire environment in human biology
1121
1:10:28 --> 1:10:29
for up to 30 years.
1122
1:10:29 --> 1:10:34
And so the literature says what they decided it to say, because if you're a professor or
1123
1:10:34 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]y for a grant, you'll get one if you're a tier to whatever
1124
1:10:39 --> 1:10:45
the lines to take are and you'll know that from your provost and then from the minister
1125
1:10:45 --> 1:10:51
in Whitehall and your research needs to conclude with manuscripts that say this kind of thing or
1126
1:10:51 --> 1:10:54
it won't get published or only in a low impact journal.
1127
1:10:54 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] keep repeating the process over decades and the literature says what the
1128
1:11:00 --> 1:11:01
controllers wanted to say.
1129
1:11:01 --> 1:11:02
It's as simple as that.
1130
1:11:02 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]s knew I hated academia.
1131
1:11:05 --> 1:11:08
Now I know why I hated academia because it's got worse and worse.
1132
1:11:08 --> 1:11:11
And everyone I know professors of immunology and they say, oh, it's terrible.
1133
1:11:12 --> 1:11:16
I say, well, how can you tolerate being in this environment where you're not even really
1134
1:11:16 --> 1:11:16
doing research?
1135
1:11:16 --> 1:11:21
You're you're helping to shape an agenda and an environment that other people have created
1136
1:11:21 --> 1:11:22
for you.
1137
1:11:22 --> 1:11:23
And it's like they shrug.
1138
1:11:23 --> 1:11:26
It's like you have to get a company car, get full pension two years.
1139
1:11:26 --> 1:11:28
It's like, oh, yeah.
1140
1:11:28 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e, if you're frightened of what will happen, if you speak out,
1141
1:11:35 --> 1:11:37
imagine what's going to happen if you don't speak out.
1142
1:11:38 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e are going to go away having done what they've done?
1143
1:11:43 --> 1:11:44
Do you think this is over?
1144
1:11:45 --> 1:11:51
No, they will do either other things or this kind of thing again.
1145
1:11:51 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] very briefly, given you've heard from Katherine Walsh,
1146
1:11:55 --> 1:12:00
Sassilisipova and David Rogers Webb and me, I think the four things that are going to occur,
1147
1:12:00 --> 1:12:01
we don't stop them.
1148
1:12:01 --> 1:12:03
Let me tell you what I think will happen.
1149
1:12:03 --> 1:12:08
I think number one, a new event will trigger obligatory digital ID.
1150
1:12:08 --> 1:12:12
And at some point, you'll have to have it, for example, to get rations.
1151
1:12:12 --> 1:12:13
They'll make you have it.
1152
1:12:14 --> 1:12:20
Second, if the triggering event for this digital ID isn't a financial crisis,
1153
1:12:21 --> 1:12:25
then there'll be a financial crisis, as I described earlier.
1154
1:12:25 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]roy all sovereign currencies and steal all private wealth.
1155
1:12:29 --> 1:12:31
Then you'll have total dependence on the state.
1156
1:12:31 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]n't got your own resources and they will introduce central bank digital currencies,
1157
1:12:37 --> 1:12:42
then the media will continue to lie about things like waves of pandemics.
1158
1:12:43 --> 1:12:44
There'll be a…
1159
1:12:44 --> 1:12:46
The WHO will tell you there's a pandemic.
1160
1:12:46 --> 1:12:50
Far more will pretend to make mRNA, quote, vaccines.
1161
1:12:50 --> 1:12:53
Governments will mandate them if the WHO hasn't already done so.
1162
1:12:54 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]ep one you're made to take will depend…
1163
1:12:59 --> 1:13:01
Its validity will depend on you being jabbed.
1164
1:13:02 --> 1:13:03
No jab, no food.
1165
1:13:03 --> 1:13:04
No jab, no money.
1166
1:13:04 --> 1:13:05
No jab, no job.
1167
1:13:05 --> 1:13:06
No jab, no travel.
1168
1:13:07 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]y not work.
1169
1:13:10 --> 1:13:13
And then four, rinse and repeat until the population reaches the desired levels.
1170
1:13:14 --> 1:13:17
I think they're going to empty whole countries.
1171
1:13:17 --> 1:13:17
That's what I would do.
1172
1:13:18 --> 1:13:25
So what I'm saying is we have to stop at the step of obligatory digital ID.
1173
1:13:25 --> 1:13:29
I think that's the last thing they need us to choose to do.
1174
1:13:30 --> 1:13:34
If they make us successfully adopt digital ID,
1175
1:13:34 --> 1:13:37
they don't need our consent for any of the other steps I mentioned.
1176
1:13:38 --> 1:13:39
Right?
1177
1:13:39 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] a digital ID in order to enter or leave a facility,
1178
1:13:46 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]ion, buy food, get on a plane, fill your car.
1179
1:13:50 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]e, they can do the things I've just said.
1180
1:13:54 --> 1:13:55
And they will do those things.
1181
1:13:55 --> 1:13:56
Of course they will.
1182
1:13:57 --> 1:13:58
I would.
1183
1:13:58 --> 1:14:02
If I was as diabolical as them, that's what I would do.
1184
1:14:02 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]e on this call,
1185
1:14:06 --> 1:14:08
my wife and I are not going to take a digital ID.
1186
1:14:09 --> 1:14:13
If it means we lose all our money, we will lose all our money.
1187
1:14:13 --> 1:14:15
We're not fucking taking a digital ID.
1188
1:14:16 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] as an analog man than take digital ID.
1189
1:14:21 --> 1:14:25
Because if you gain a digital ID, you don't gain a digital ID.
1190
1:14:25 --> 1:14:28
You lose your humanity and you become a QR code.
1191
1:14:29 --> 1:14:31
And you're controlled like a…
1192
1:14:31 --> 1:14:36
You become an avatar and you will be controlled and you will be taken to your death.
1193
1:14:37 --> 1:14:38
So don't take it.
1194
1:14:38 --> 1:14:40
You don't need digital ID.
1195
1:14:40 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]er to control you.
1196
1:14:43 --> 1:14:44
So don't concede it.
1197
1:14:44 --> 1:14:48
And the worse the punishment that they threaten you with for not taking it,
1198
1:14:48 --> 1:14:49
the more you'll know I'm right.
1199
1:14:50 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ease say to each other, say to other people, tell your boss.
1200
1:14:56 --> 1:14:57
I think it's like giving up smoking.
1201
1:14:57 --> 1:14:59
Tell everybody what you're going to do.
1202
1:15:00 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]op them and tell people digital ID will provide total control.
1203
1:15:08 --> 1:15:10
If not now, if you think, no, they wouldn't do that.
1204
1:15:10 --> 1:15:12
Well, what about in the future?
1205
1:15:12 --> 1:15:14
You're so sure that at no point in the future,
1206
1:15:15 --> 1:15:18
anyone ever wants to control you because they will be able to.
1207
1:15:18 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ions like the mark in Revelation,
1208
1:15:24 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] don't take it.
1209
1:15:25 --> 1:15:26
That's about the most…
1210
1:15:28 --> 1:15:31
As I'm saying this to you, I'm feeling my power grow.
1211
1:15:31 --> 1:15:34
I'm not taking it no matter the consequences.
1212
1:15:35 --> 1:15:36
Good for you, Mike.
1213
1:15:36 --> 1:15:39
So, Mike, if you want to rest from all your work,
1214
1:15:40 --> 1:15:43
we live by the sea and you're welcome here anytime with your family.
1215
1:15:44 --> 1:15:45
Lovely.
1216
1:15:45 --> 1:15:46
We definitely should meet.
1217
1:15:46 --> 1:15:47
Are you in England?
1218
1:15:47 --> 1:15:48
Yes.
1219
1:15:48 --> 1:15:49
Wales, actually.
1220
1:15:49 --> 1:15:50
Depends whether you…
1221
1:15:50 --> 1:15:51
Oh, yeah, yeah.
1222
1:15:51 --> 1:15:52
Of course, yes.
1223
1:15:52 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ed Kingdom, yeah.
1224
1:15:53 --> 1:15:54
In the UK.
1225
1:15:55 --> 1:15:56
Thank you, Stephen.
1226
1:15:57 --> 1:15:57
Thank you.
1227
1:15:57 --> 1:15:58
It's lovely to speak to you.
1228
1:15:58 --> 1:15:59
Brilliant, Michael.
1229
1:15:59 --> 1:16:00
Thank you so much.
1230
1:16:00 --> 1:16:01
Thank you very much.
1231
1:16:01 --> 1:16:02
Is there any other…
1232
1:16:03 --> 1:16:05
Is there like a really important…
1233
1:16:05 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]e with their hands up.
1234
1:16:08 --> 1:16:09
Yeah, [privacy contact redaction]e with their hands up.
1235
1:16:09 --> 1:16:11
Mike, are you on your phone, Mike?
1236
1:16:12 --> 1:16:14
No, I'm on a laptop.
1237
1:16:14 --> 1:16:17
Yeah, so maybe if you strike the screen,
1238
1:16:17 --> 1:16:18
you'll see there's 11 hands up,
1239
1:16:18 --> 1:16:19
so we've got lots of questions for you.
1240
1:16:19 --> 1:16:22
So the speed with which you get through them
1241
1:16:22 --> 1:16:23
will depend on the speed of your answers.
1242
1:16:23 --> 1:16:24
So there you are.
1243
1:16:24 --> 1:16:26
But wonderful, wonderful material.
1244
1:16:26 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, you didn't take more time
1245
1:16:29 --> 1:16:32
because Mike was speaking, so I absolutely get that.
1246
1:16:33 --> 1:16:34
Yeah.
1247
1:16:34 --> 1:16:38
So, Charles, I think that Mike doesn't maybe know
1248
1:16:38 --> 1:16:40
how to get the view up so he can see the gallery, you know?
1249
1:16:40 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]e who are posing.
1250
1:16:43 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ain…
1251
1:16:44 --> 1:16:44
I can now.
1252
1:16:44 --> 1:16:45
Yeah, I can.
1253
1:16:46 --> 1:16:47
So you know how to do it, do you, Mike?
1254
1:16:48 --> 1:16:49
I can see that.
1255
1:16:49 --> 1:16:51
Yes, I can see a whole fluster of…
1256
1:16:51 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ars,
1257
1:16:53 --> 1:16:55
but yeah, that's because my glasses aren't very good.
1258
1:16:56 --> 1:16:56
They're hands.
1259
1:16:56 --> 1:16:57
I see they are hands.
1260
1:16:57 --> 1:17:00
Okay, well, let's get through them.
1261
1:17:00 --> 1:17:01
Let's get through them, Mike,
1262
1:17:01 --> 1:17:03
because we've only got [privacy contact redaction] to go.
1263
1:17:04 --> 1:17:06
So, Theresa, you were first.
1264
1:17:06 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]op out accidentally or deliberately?
1265
1:17:10 --> 1:17:12
No, mate, I lost my signal.
1266
1:17:13 --> 1:17:13
Okay, go for it.
1267
1:17:13 --> 1:17:14
Well, I don't know.
1268
1:17:14 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction], and…
1269
1:17:15 --> 1:17:15
All right.
1270
1:17:17 --> 1:17:18
Okay, thank you.
1271
1:17:18 --> 1:17:18
Thank you.
1272
1:17:19 --> 1:17:21
It's just a quick one, Mike.
1273
1:17:24 --> 1:17:28
In 2021 and 2022 and 2023,
1274
1:17:28 --> 1:17:30
I've been saying to the various medical groups
1275
1:17:30 --> 1:17:32
that I'm a hanger on to,
1276
1:17:33 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction] to write a kind of sucker punch letter
1277
1:17:37 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction] to one police chief constable in the UK,
1278
1:17:42 --> 1:17:44
but to all of them.
1279
1:17:45 --> 1:17:46
The same letter.
1280
1:17:46 --> 1:17:48
On balance of probabilities,
1281
1:17:48 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ables in the UK.
1282
1:17:51 --> 1:17:53
On balance of probabilities,
1283
1:17:53 --> 1:17:55
you'll probably have five chief constables
1284
1:17:55 --> 1:17:56
that are not vaccinated
1285
1:17:57 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] serious doubts about what's going on.
1286
1:18:01 --> 1:18:04
There are 32, or they were the last time I looked,
1287
1:18:04 --> 1:18:05
full-time coroners
1288
1:18:06 --> 1:18:09
and part-time coroners that supplement their work.
1289
1:18:09 --> 1:18:13
On balance of probability, you might have three coroners.
1290
1:18:13 --> 1:18:19
Now, it's no good writing to one, like the Metropolitan Police,
1291
1:18:20 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]and up
1292
1:18:23 --> 1:18:27
when there's [privacy contact redaction]ables who aren't.
1293
1:18:27 --> 1:18:29
But if we approach all of them at the same time,
1294
1:18:29 --> 1:18:30
I agree.
1295
1:18:30 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]e the ones that…
1296
1:18:34 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ables is a coalition.
1297
1:18:36 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ables can do anything, Mike.
1298
1:18:39 --> 1:18:40
Yeah, no, I agree with you.
1299
1:18:40 --> 1:18:41
I think that's great.
1300
1:18:42 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]e,
1301
1:18:46 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]uff.
1302
1:18:48 --> 1:18:51
I'll tell you what has happened over the last four years
1303
1:18:51 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ions of more work for me to do,
1304
1:18:54 --> 1:18:55
and I'm knackered.
1305
1:18:56 --> 1:18:56
Right?
1306
1:18:56 --> 1:18:59
So I want someone to say,
1307
1:18:59 --> 1:19:02
I'm going to take your letter and put [privacy contact redaction]esses on it,
1308
1:19:02 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] check it.
1309
1:19:03 --> 1:19:05
So, okay, and then I will send it.
1310
1:19:05 --> 1:19:06
That would be a great idea.
1311
1:19:06 --> 1:19:10
Because the idea that I will do it is that I just won't get to do it.
1312
1:19:10 --> 1:19:11
I'm just so…
1313
1:19:12 --> 1:19:14
I'm at a point where I recognise clinical depression.
1314
1:19:15 --> 1:19:15
Right?
1315
1:19:15 --> 1:19:19
I sometimes can't do anything, and I analyse why I can't do it,
1316
1:19:19 --> 1:19:21
and I've got to the conclusion it's like,
1317
1:19:21 --> 1:19:24
you're probably suffering from either trauma or depression.
1318
1:19:25 --> 1:19:28
So I'm sure there are lots of great ideas.
1319
1:19:28 --> 1:19:30
I'm telling you, I'm a wounded soldier.
1320
1:19:30 --> 1:19:31
So use me.
1321
1:19:32 --> 1:19:34
Please don't expect me to do more now.
1322
1:19:36 --> 1:19:40
Well, with the help of a couple of the doctors in the group,
1323
1:19:40 --> 1:19:42
and by cribbing from Ryan Cole's notes,
1324
1:19:42 --> 1:19:43
I hope you're still on the call line.
1325
1:19:43 --> 1:19:45
Yeah, it's a great suggestion.
1326
1:19:45 --> 1:19:47
I think it's a really, really good, really important idea.
1327
1:19:47 --> 1:19:51
I'm happy for somebody to take the idea of a letter
1328
1:19:51 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction], you know, whittle it down to two pages,
1329
1:19:54 --> 1:19:55
send it to all of them.
1330
1:19:55 --> 1:19:55
Please.
1331
1:19:55 --> 1:19:58
I think really it's like the arrangement
1332
1:19:59 --> 1:20:01
at the top of the letter, as it were.
1333
1:20:01 --> 1:20:03
It's like, who the hell are we writing to?
1334
1:20:03 --> 1:20:05
If that was made clear, that would be,
1335
1:20:05 --> 1:20:08
that's the thing that would probably take a little bit of research,
1336
1:20:08 --> 1:20:10
but it's a really good project.
1337
1:20:10 --> 1:20:11
Basically, it's like saying,
1338
1:20:11 --> 1:20:14
I am writing to all of these named individuals.
1339
1:20:14 --> 1:20:17
So it's like a page, and then we can bung.
1340
1:20:17 --> 1:20:21
My letter's the easy bit, but I think it's a great,
1341
1:20:21 --> 1:20:22
I think it's a really important idea,
1342
1:20:22 --> 1:20:25
and we should bloody well do it within the next few weeks.
1343
1:20:25 --> 1:20:30
And to take it further, Theresa, to the DPPs, okay?
1344
1:20:30 --> 1:20:31
So the police, yes?
1345
1:20:31 --> 1:20:31
Yeah, yeah.
1346
1:20:33 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] think that if you can, in confidence,
1347
1:20:36 --> 1:20:41
go to each of them and say, look, you're not alone.
1348
1:20:41 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]e you in confidence.
1349
1:20:44 --> 1:20:46
We will help you form a coalition.
1350
1:20:47 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]able,
1351
1:20:49 --> 1:20:51
but they can't take down five or six.
1352
1:20:51 --> 1:20:52
Yeah, I agree.
1353
1:20:52 --> 1:20:53
Yeah, not all at once.
1354
1:20:54 --> 1:20:57
Basically, I think what you're saying,
1355
1:20:57 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] thought of this, I've thought,
1356
1:20:58 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ive, we'll force them to change tack.
1357
1:21:02 --> 1:21:05
It won't be easy for them.
1358
1:21:05 --> 1:21:06
I don't know that they'd be able to stop,
1359
1:21:06 --> 1:21:09
but they will be forced to change tack.
1360
1:21:09 --> 1:21:11
And I think if they're forced to change tack,
1361
1:21:11 --> 1:21:13
it'll wake a lot more people up.
1362
1:21:13 --> 1:21:15
So I think that's the catalyst.
1363
1:21:16 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] do something to put them off their stroke, really.
1364
1:21:19 --> 1:21:23
Otherwise, they'll just keep going,
1365
1:21:23 --> 1:21:24
and they may well be on track.
1366
1:21:24 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] no idea.
1367
1:21:25 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]n't got a copy of the script.
1368
1:21:27 --> 1:21:29
I think it's a great idea, Theresa, really.
1369
1:21:29 --> 1:21:30
Thanks, Mike.
1370
1:21:30 --> 1:21:31
Okay, well done.
1371
1:21:31 --> 1:21:32
Excellent.
1372
1:21:32 --> 1:21:32
Yeah.
1373
1:21:33 --> 1:21:34
Thank you, Theresa.
1374
1:21:34 --> 1:21:34
Daria.
1375
1:21:36 --> 1:21:37
Mike, hi.
1376
1:21:37 --> 1:21:38
My name is Daria Schuller.
1377
1:21:38 --> 1:21:40
I'm a retired neurosurgeon and pharmacist,
1378
1:21:40 --> 1:21:42
and I've worked in the pharmaceutical industry
1379
1:21:42 --> 1:21:44
when I was moonlighting during college.
1380
1:21:45 --> 1:21:47
And I'm still involved with the United States Pharmacopeia
1381
1:21:47 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]ate of Indiana level as a delegate.
1382
1:21:50 --> 1:21:55
So I did share one handout in the chat.
1383
1:21:55 --> 1:21:57
So hopefully, if you need it, I can get it to you
1384
1:21:57 --> 1:21:58
if you're interested.
1385
1:21:58 --> 1:22:00
But they're not stopping.
1386
1:22:00 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]eam ahead.
1387
1:22:04 --> 1:22:06
And that's probably the most important message
1388
1:22:06 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] to get to everybody here today,
1389
1:22:08 --> 1:22:14
that in the hopper is something close to over [privacy contact redaction]s,
1390
1:22:14 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] majority of which are vaccines, okay?
1391
1:22:17 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ugs
1392
1:22:20 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ers and cancer.
1393
1:22:22 --> 1:22:23
So this isn't stopping.
1394
1:22:24 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]e say no.
1395
1:22:26 --> 1:22:30
And say if they hear mRNA, they should run screaming.
1396
1:22:31 --> 1:22:33
This is not a good technology for cancer.
1397
1:22:33 --> 1:22:35
I was dealing with this when I was at the Cleveland Clinic
1398
1:22:35 --> 1:22:38
and after with my patients that had malignant brain tumors
1399
1:22:38 --> 1:22:41
and the early neuroimmuno therapies that were tried.
1400
1:22:41 --> 1:22:44
I remember referring a patient back to the Cleveland Clinic
1401
1:22:44 --> 1:22:46
and didn't do well at all.
1402
1:22:46 --> 1:22:47
Didn't do well at all.
1403
1:22:47 --> 1:22:51
It's just like didn't even come close to stopping this disease.
1404
1:22:51 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ruck me,
1405
1:22:53 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] resonance
1406
1:22:55 --> 1:22:58
because it resonates back to us now that you're still here
1407
1:22:58 --> 1:23:01
and the things you said four years ago,
1408
1:23:01 --> 1:23:03
three years ago, you're still saying now.
1409
1:23:03 --> 1:23:05
And that rings a really loud bell
1410
1:23:05 --> 1:23:08
because you've been consistent the entire time.
1411
1:23:08 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]and that pharmaceutical side of it
1412
1:23:11 --> 1:23:14
and that's why I was very concerned about mRNA as well.
1413
1:23:15 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] hit pieces on me,
1414
1:23:18 --> 1:23:20
I think in March of 2021.
1415
1:23:20 --> 1:23:22
But I remember hearing an interview with you
1416
1:23:23 --> 1:23:25
and I can't remember who the host was,
1417
1:23:25 --> 1:23:28
but you were talking about, and I think Dr. Bender's,
1418
1:23:29 --> 1:23:31
I've seen this on his Twitter as well,
1419
1:23:31 --> 1:23:35
how you don't go vaccinating people during a pandemic
1420
1:23:35 --> 1:23:37
because if there's active infection
1421
1:23:37 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]ed antigen
1422
1:23:43 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]rophic, which it was.
1423
1:23:46 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] wondered if you recall making that comment.
1424
1:23:51 --> 1:23:55
I think it was, I can't remember his name,
1425
1:23:55 --> 1:23:58
but there's a guy, others will remember,
1426
1:23:58 --> 1:24:01
but yeah, that may or may not be true.
1427
1:24:01 --> 1:24:03
Personally, I don't think there was a pandemic.
1428
1:24:03 --> 1:24:05
I'm not even sure pandemics are possible.
1429
1:24:07 --> 1:24:10
The Spanish flu, for example, this is not my research.
1430
1:24:10 --> 1:24:13
Unbelievable, there are a couple of descendants
1431
1:24:13 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]
1432
1:24:16 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]
1433
1:24:18 --> 1:24:20
And they are unbelievable.
1434
1:24:20 --> 1:24:26
These guys do family tree research going back to 1700s.
1435
1:24:26 --> 1:24:29
I'm sorry, the people who are doing this,
1436
1:24:30 --> 1:24:33
their descendants go back to that sort of period.
1437
1:24:33 --> 1:24:35
I mean, in fact, they may go back much further,
1438
1:24:35 --> 1:24:39
but we can find the receipts of all the influences
1439
1:24:39 --> 1:24:41
definitely back to there.
1440
1:24:42 --> 1:24:45
I've forgotten the train of thinking there,
1441
1:24:45 --> 1:24:48
but yeah, the pandemic stuff.
1442
1:24:48 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]uff is there wasn't a pandemic then.
1443
1:24:53 --> 1:24:55
It was nothing like what we've been told.
1444
1:24:55 --> 1:24:58
Something happened, I don't know what the something was,
1445
1:24:58 --> 1:25:00
and then they inserted information
1446
1:25:00 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]s,
1447
1:25:02 --> 1:25:04
which makes it look like there was a pandemic.
1448
1:25:04 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]s, I am saying there's at least
1449
1:25:07 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]ed years of rehearsal.
1450
1:25:09 --> 1:25:11
Now, people who understand formation
1451
1:25:11 --> 1:25:14
around the Federal Reserve are not surprised.
1452
1:25:14 --> 1:25:15
They go, well, we knew that.
1453
1:25:15 --> 1:25:16
I think it goes back.
1454
1:25:17 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]ly, it goes back further than we can imagine.
1455
1:25:20 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]e who think it goes back to ancient Egypt,
1456
1:25:23 --> 1:25:27
but it definitely goes back to more than a hundred years.
1457
1:25:28 --> 1:25:29
So you're absolutely right.
1458
1:25:29 --> 1:25:31
Now, I personally don't,
1459
1:25:31 --> 1:25:33
the reason I wanted to intervene is
1460
1:25:33 --> 1:25:35
I don't think there are pandemics.
1461
1:25:35 --> 1:25:37
I think they're immunologically implausible.
1462
1:25:37 --> 1:25:40
I also think if they were possible,
1463
1:25:40 --> 1:25:44
we'd probably have gone from the planet repeatedly,
1464
1:25:44 --> 1:25:46
as would other species,
1465
1:25:46 --> 1:25:48
because wouldn't it also follow
1466
1:25:48 --> 1:25:50
that they could suffer from pandemics?
1467
1:25:50 --> 1:25:51
And yet they don't.
1468
1:25:53 --> 1:25:55
That's something that's not really provable, I don't think.
1469
1:25:55 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] is there's so much fakery around it,
1470
1:26:00 --> 1:26:03
it makes me think, well, if it was real,
1471
1:26:03 --> 1:26:04
why wouldn't you just bloody do it?
1472
1:26:05 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]s to me that it isn't real.
1473
1:26:09 --> 1:26:10
But what is real is the fear
1474
1:26:11 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]e believe it, then they're frightened.
1475
1:26:13 --> 1:26:16
Yeah, you need the fake science to prop up the fake news.
1476
1:26:16 --> 1:26:18
Absolutely, you do.
1477
1:26:18 --> 1:26:19
You need the fake science to go with the fake news.
1478
1:26:19 --> 1:26:23
So believing in pandemics, believing in contagion,
1479
1:26:24 --> 1:26:27
believing in bloody vaccines, you need all of this stuff.
1480
1:26:27 --> 1:26:29
And here's the thing, I think partly,
1481
1:26:31 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]awn out lies about climate change,
1482
1:26:34 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]awn out emphasis about the world's overpopulated
1483
1:26:38 --> 1:26:41
beyond its carrying capacity, I don't think that's true.
1484
1:26:41 --> 1:26:42
I think I've got an answer to that,
1485
1:26:42 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction] written to me, you know,
1486
1:26:46 --> 1:26:50
all by hand, you know, they've said something,
1487
1:26:50 --> 1:26:54
they all said something like, I think you're right,
1488
1:26:54 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]and why they are doing it.
1489
1:26:57 --> 1:27:01
It's like, we're destroying the world and we've deserved it.
1490
1:27:01 --> 1:27:04
So I've been written to by three people, they're not happy.
1491
1:27:04 --> 1:27:07
They're saying, this is what I've come to the conclusion,
1492
1:27:07 --> 1:27:09
that we've destroyed this world
1493
1:27:09 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] it.
1494
1:27:12 --> 1:27:16
Well, it's not true, folks, we are not warming our climate.
1495
1:27:16 --> 1:27:20
We're not overpopulated and so on.
1496
1:27:20 --> 1:27:22
And so why are they doing it?
1497
1:27:27 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]e give in because they think we deserve it.
1498
1:27:33 --> 1:27:34
Isn't that a terrible thing?
1499
1:27:35 --> 1:27:39
I've heard people say, well, dirty job, someone's got to do it.
1500
1:27:39 --> 1:27:42
When they finally got to realising, I'm probably right,
1501
1:27:42 --> 1:27:43
they've literally shrugged and said,
1502
1:27:43 --> 1:27:46
well, we brought it upon ourselves, folks.
1503
1:27:46 --> 1:27:49
I think it's diabolical, it's not true.
1504
1:27:49 --> 1:27:54
But I think it was designed years ago to bring about capitulation.
1505
1:27:55 --> 1:27:57
So don't give way on these other lies either.
1506
1:27:57 --> 1:28:00
I mean, I'm not an expert in those, I don't claim to be.
1507
1:28:00 --> 1:28:07
So Mike, absolutely, you and I have come to the same conclusion
1508
1:28:07 --> 1:28:11
that no pandemic has ever occurred, no pandemic can occur
1509
1:28:11 --> 1:28:14
and no pandemic will occur in the future.
1510
1:28:14 --> 1:28:17
We therefore don't need the WHO, even though we're bastards,
1511
1:28:18 --> 1:28:19
we don't need them.
1512
1:28:21 --> 1:28:24
So we need to get rid of the WHO because, not because it's evil,
1513
1:28:24 --> 1:28:27
because it is evil, but because we don't need them.
1514
1:28:27 --> 1:28:29
And that would be the ultimate humiliation.
1515
1:28:29 --> 1:28:32
I think the whole of virology and evidence-based medicine
1516
1:28:32 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] to allow what's happened in 2020.
1517
1:28:36 --> 1:28:37
Yeah, I agree.
1518
1:28:37 --> 1:28:38
All right.
1519
1:28:38 --> 1:28:42
So we've come to it by different means without influencing each other.
1520
1:28:42 --> 1:28:45
So very good, both united in that conclusion.
1521
1:28:45 --> 1:28:49
And Mike, I just point out that Vera Sharov is here,
1522
1:28:49 --> 1:28:50
she's presented to us on the Spanish Flu.
1523
1:28:50 --> 1:28:54
So if you speed up the answers to your questions, Vera,
1524
1:28:54 --> 1:28:58
I'm sure we'll touch on her wonderful research on the alleged Spanish Flu.
1525
1:28:59 --> 1:29:02
So let's be quick, everybody, with the questions rather than too many,
1526
1:29:02 --> 1:29:05
because we've only got 45, 40 minutes left
1527
1:29:05 --> 1:29:06
and there's 12 hands up.
1528
1:29:06 --> 1:29:06
Go, Glenn.
1529
1:29:07 --> 1:29:09
Charles, no statements, questions, please.
1530
1:29:12 --> 1:29:13
Hey, Mike.
1531
1:29:13 --> 1:29:15
So glad to be speaking with you again.
1532
1:29:16 --> 1:29:19
In the call from God, I think that's tremendous,
1533
1:29:19 --> 1:29:21
and I'm in the same place with you there.
1534
1:29:21 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] ourselves,
1535
1:29:24 --> 1:29:27
but I think it's a lot bigger count of people
1536
1:29:27 --> 1:29:28
that we need to be participating in,
1537
1:29:28 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] into the tens of millions
1538
1:29:31 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]eds of millions to be participating.
1539
1:29:35 --> 1:29:39
Now, you've done an excellent crime scene investigation
1540
1:29:39 --> 1:29:43
of going through the what's and the hows,
1541
1:29:43 --> 1:29:46
namely the what being a eugenics foundation theme
1542
1:29:46 --> 1:29:48
of we need to cull the earth.
1543
1:29:48 --> 1:29:52
And that goes back to the early 1900s, even the late 1800s,
1544
1:29:52 --> 1:29:55
when there was a formal international body that was pushing that.
1545
1:29:56 --> 1:30:00
And with that, we're now seeing the outcome of murder and infertility.
1546
1:30:01 --> 1:30:07
You're seeing the how by using poison and mental disease despair
1547
1:30:07 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] of eliminating the population.
1548
1:30:11 --> 1:30:15
What I'd like to call out is that too often we have a tendency
1549
1:30:15 --> 1:30:19
to say this is a big mob out there, and it's a giant syndicate,
1550
1:30:19 --> 1:30:24
but it's being driven at the very top by a very small number of elites.
1551
1:30:24 --> 1:30:29
Those elites do not include the WF, the WHO, the farmer CEOs,
1552
1:30:29 --> 1:30:32
the head of Hamas or the Rothschild family.
1553
1:30:32 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ayers in much lower tiers
1554
1:30:35 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ually involved to any degree.
1555
1:30:38 --> 1:30:40
This is all being done at the top.
1556
1:30:41 --> 1:30:46
The team I'm working with has been spending an enormous amount of time
1557
1:30:46 --> 1:30:47
of documenting that.
1558
1:30:47 --> 1:30:50
And if you look under my, you'll see the rumble.
1559
1:30:51 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] a channel, L4ATV1.
1560
1:30:53 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] produced two to four hour videos for the last 15 weeks
1561
1:30:59 --> 1:31:01
to document all of this.
1562
1:31:02 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]n't been doing much marketing because we've been spending
1563
1:31:05 --> 1:31:07
all the time of getting information.
1564
1:31:10 --> 1:31:14
As part of partnering, I want to make sure that you're aware
1565
1:31:15 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]n't been aware that you are,
1566
1:31:17 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] out right now beyond David Rockefeller,
1567
1:31:23 --> 1:31:27
Alex Rockefeller, George Soros, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg,
1568
1:31:27 --> 1:31:35
Joe Biden is a key element of their attempt to attack and eliminate people.
1569
1:31:35 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] that he has entered into with George Soros
1570
1:31:40 --> 1:31:43
and the Rockefellers to be paid.
1571
1:31:43 --> 1:31:48
This is President Biden to be paid $100 million per year
1572
1:31:48 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ers and allowing all of the international effects
1573
1:31:53 --> 1:31:56
to happen in the US at their will.
1574
1:31:57 --> 1:32:03
So I'm simply saying that your theme around joining together
1575
1:32:03 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] and doing that locally,
1576
1:32:06 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] other ideas of how we could form that group,
1577
1:32:10 --> 1:32:15
how we could manage that team and do it on a regular basis at least once a week?
1578
1:32:16 --> 1:32:17
Okay. So thank you, Glenn.
1579
1:32:18 --> 1:32:19
That was a comment.
1580
1:32:19 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ed in comments, questions.
1581
1:32:20 --> 1:32:21
We're tight for time.
1582
1:32:21 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ion around organizing a response effort.
1583
1:32:25 --> 1:32:26
Please let him answer.
1584
1:32:26 --> 1:32:26
Come on.
1585
1:32:26 --> 1:32:27
You took time.
1586
1:32:28 --> 1:32:30
I'm going to shout it up.
1587
1:32:30 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ions, Albert.
1588
1:32:31 --> 1:32:32
All right.
1589
1:32:32 --> 1:32:35
No, Charles, he did ask a question at the end.
1590
1:32:35 --> 1:32:35
Okay.
1591
1:32:36 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ly, I'm sure you're right.
1592
1:32:38 --> 1:32:42
I'm well aware that very few people are involved.
1593
1:32:42 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] asked me, well, if what you're saying is true,
1594
1:32:45 --> 1:32:47
half the prize or we don't know about it.
1595
1:32:47 --> 1:32:51
I've said, I think at minimum, you'd only have to have two people involved,
1596
1:32:51 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ual person who did the designing of the mRNA
1597
1:32:54 --> 1:32:56
and probably the CEO or head of R&D.
1598
1:32:56 --> 1:32:57
You don't need anybody else.
1599
1:32:58 --> 1:33:01
So I'm sure most people in Pfizer think they've done great work and have saved the world,
1600
1:33:02 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]e who are following me.
1601
1:33:05 --> 1:33:10
Unfortunately, I haven't been contacted by large numbers of former colleagues,
1602
1:33:11 --> 1:33:12
which is disappointing.
1603
1:33:13 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] year, I was written to by 30 colleagues
1604
1:33:16 --> 1:33:17
who said, can you more or less shut up?
1605
1:33:18 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] very briefly, because it's quite funny.
1606
1:33:22 --> 1:33:24
And I thought for a day or two, and I turned their letter over
1607
1:33:24 --> 1:33:26
because they'd sent me a physical letter and it all signed it.
1608
1:33:27 --> 1:33:33
And I wrote back and I said, I thought I had hired cleverer people with stiffer spines.
1609
1:33:33 --> 1:33:36
You're sincerely, Dr. Mike Heaton sent it back.
1610
1:33:37 --> 1:33:39
So, and no one has contacted me since.
1611
1:33:39 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ually one guy, one guy I worked with in the biotech after leaving Pfizer contacted me to say,
1612
1:33:45 --> 1:33:46
oh shit, you're absolutely right.
1613
1:33:47 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] no idea, Glenn.
1614
1:33:49 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] no skills or resources to train me to do any of such things.
1615
1:33:56 --> 1:33:58
We'd be better off getting people who are ex-forces.
1616
1:33:59 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]e.
1617
1:34:00 --> 1:34:01
I can't do this stuff.
1618
1:34:03 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]e, but I can't do this stuff.
1619
1:34:06 --> 1:34:07
All right.
1620
1:34:07 --> 1:34:09
So it's easy to do the things I can do.
1621
1:34:10 --> 1:34:15
But because I've had the opinion that it doesn't much matter who the who is.
1622
1:34:15 --> 1:34:17
Sorry, it doesn't matter who the perpetrators are.
1623
1:34:17 --> 1:34:21
Because am I going to do something different if I learn it is or isn't person X?
1624
1:34:21 --> 1:34:27
And the answer is no, I can't do anything to the QANT family if they're involved.
1625
1:34:27 --> 1:34:28
And I hope they aren't.
1626
1:34:28 --> 1:34:31
But if they are, I can't do anything different.
1627
1:34:31 --> 1:34:33
I don't know anyone who could do anything different.
1628
1:34:33 --> 1:34:37
If I tried to do anything that would even smack of doing something different,
1629
1:34:37 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ed.
1630
1:34:39 --> 1:34:43
So I don't really know what to do with the information you provided me with.
1631
1:34:44 --> 1:34:47
I'm not the person who can do anything with that.
1632
1:34:47 --> 1:34:52
I'm a retired, broken, bladded scientist, you know, partly living in England and Spain.
1633
1:34:52 --> 1:34:54
What can I do on that front?
1634
1:34:54 --> 1:34:55
Someone else can.
1635
1:34:55 --> 1:35:01
I think there'd be a different group of fairly gritty elderly guys who probably could do
1636
1:35:01 --> 1:35:02
something, but I'm not it.
1637
1:35:03 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]e at the right time.
1638
1:35:06 --> 1:35:07
Okay, that's the answer.
1639
1:35:07 --> 1:35:09
To be next witness, you mean, Mike.
1640
1:35:09 --> 1:35:10
Albert?
1641
1:35:12 --> 1:35:12
Yeah.
1642
1:35:12 --> 1:35:13
Hi, Mike.
1643
1:35:14 --> 1:35:16
Big fan, tremendous honor.
1644
1:35:16 --> 1:35:16
Nice to meet you.
1645
1:35:18 --> 1:35:24
I was wondering what your thoughts were on this monoclonal quasi vaccine that they're
1646
1:35:24 --> 1:35:29
pushing on the newborns, the Bay Fortis.
1647
1:35:29 --> 1:35:32
It's a monoclonal called Nersivimab.
1648
1:35:33 --> 1:35:35
And since you're a respiratory guy, have you ever?
1649
1:35:35 --> 1:35:36
I've never heard.
1650
1:35:36 --> 1:35:38
Yeah, I've never heard of it.
1651
1:35:38 --> 1:35:41
And before, without even looking at it, the answer is no.
1652
1:35:43 --> 1:35:43
That's my answer.
1653
1:35:45 --> 1:35:45
Awesome.
1654
1:35:45 --> 1:35:47
Hey, God bless you, Mike.
1655
1:35:48 --> 1:35:49
And you, Albert.
1656
1:35:49 --> 1:35:49
Thank you.
1657
1:35:51 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ion can continue on you.
1658
1:35:53 --> 1:35:54
Thank you so much.
1659
1:35:54 --> 1:35:55
God bless you.
1660
1:35:55 --> 1:35:55
Great.
1661
1:35:55 --> 1:35:56
Thank you, too.
1662
1:35:57 --> 1:35:59
Albert is an expert on theirs.
1663
1:35:59 --> 1:36:00
I know.
1664
1:36:00 --> 1:36:01
I've seen you.
1665
1:36:02 --> 1:36:02
Thank you.
1666
1:36:02 --> 1:36:03
Thank you, Albert.
1667
1:36:03 --> 1:36:04
Anders?
1668
1:36:04 --> 1:36:05
Keep it short.
1669
1:36:05 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]atements.
1670
1:36:06 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ion.
1671
1:36:08 --> 1:36:09
Hello, Mike.
1672
1:36:09 --> 1:36:10
Nice to talk to you.
1673
1:36:13 --> 1:36:14
Can you hear me?
1674
1:36:14 --> 1:36:15
Yes, I can.
1675
1:36:15 --> 1:36:16
Yes, thank you, Anders.
1676
1:36:16 --> 1:36:17
Very well.
1677
1:36:17 --> 1:36:18
Nice to talk to you.
1678
1:36:18 --> 1:36:21
So I don't want to say a lot.
1679
1:36:21 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] say that in my research, as you know, we have been in contact.
1680
1:36:26 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] been all deceived to believe that this mRNA
1681
1:36:35 --> 1:36:41
and this lipid nanoparticle is what they say it is.
1682
1:36:41 --> 1:36:42
And I'm not saying it is not.
1683
1:36:42 --> 1:36:46
But there is something magnetic in these jabs.
1684
1:36:46 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] found that there is graphene metals.
1685
1:36:51 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ogel.
1686
1:36:56 --> 1:36:59
And these kind of go together and they crystallize.
1687
1:36:59 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] antennas.
1688
1:37:01 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] an EMF event in the body.
1689
1:37:05 --> 1:37:06
And I don't need to preach on that.
1690
1:37:06 --> 1:37:10
But let's say I will just say you are most likely aware of Dr. Ana
1691
1:37:11 --> 1:37:19
Mihalcea, who has been doing good blood analysis to confirm that this is the case.
1692
1:37:20 --> 1:37:23
So I think it would be great.
1693
1:37:25 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] say I don't know anything about the sort of EMF side.
1694
1:37:30 --> 1:37:33
And I'm not going to dismiss it.
1695
1:37:33 --> 1:37:38
But I'm going to tell you right now, I don't even have school level knowledge
1696
1:37:38 --> 1:37:41
of the kind of physics involved.
1697
1:37:41 --> 1:37:44
So I'm not going to be the right person to work through.
1698
1:37:44 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]
1699
1:37:46 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]erwood said?
1700
1:37:49 --> 1:37:51
Man's got to know his limitations.
1701
1:37:51 --> 1:37:51
Right?
1702
1:37:51 --> 1:37:53
I'm not against you.
1703
1:37:53 --> 1:37:54
I don't know anything about it.
1704
1:37:54 --> 1:37:59
And there's no chance that I'm going to become sufficiently knowledgeable to be an advocate.
1705
1:38:00 --> 1:38:01
So I'm not your enemy.
1706
1:38:01 --> 1:38:03
I cannot be an advocate.
1707
1:38:03 --> 1:38:04
I'm just way off the pace.
1708
1:38:05 --> 1:38:07
That's my honest opinion of myself.
1709
1:38:08 --> 1:38:09
Okay.
1710
1:38:09 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]and your position.
1711
1:38:11 --> 1:38:13
So I'm not saying anything against it.
1712
1:38:13 --> 1:38:15
No, I'm not saying anything against it.
1713
1:38:15 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] know so little.
1714
1:38:19 --> 1:38:20
I'm just massively off the pace.
1715
1:38:22 --> 1:38:24
I'm very narrow.
1716
1:38:24 --> 1:38:27
I know all about a spider's behind, but nothing about butterflies.
1717
1:38:29 --> 1:38:29
That's my problem.
1718
1:38:31 --> 1:38:32
Okay.
1719
1:38:32 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] say that it would be very good for all of you to see the research of Dr.
1720
1:38:40 --> 1:38:45
Ana Maria Mijacea because she has really found something outside the box.
1721
1:38:45 --> 1:38:47
And that will reveal something.
1722
1:38:48 --> 1:38:52
So I don't need to ask questions because my questions are about 5V.
1723
1:38:52 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]op it there.
1724
1:38:54 --> 1:38:55
Thank you, Anders.
1725
1:38:55 --> 1:38:58
And Anna Mijacea has presented to this group as well, Anders.
1726
1:38:58 --> 1:38:58
Jim.
1727
1:38:58 --> 1:38:59
Thank you very much.
1728
1:38:59 --> 1:39:00
Great presentation.
1729
1:39:03 --> 1:39:08
Plausible deniability, making sure that these bad actors don't have plausible deniability.
1730
1:39:09 --> 1:39:15
We brought this information about the SARS-CoV-2 or our medications being made in China to our
1731
1:39:15 --> 1:39:17
Department of Defense.
1732
1:39:17 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ed in June of 2019.
1733
1:39:21 --> 1:39:28
In January of 2020 and March of 2020, when we told them the antidote might be hydroxychloroquine
1734
1:39:28 --> 1:39:31
or chloroquine, they may not have been as interested.
1735
1:39:31 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction] documentation that shows that we brought this to as high a level as the joint
1736
1:39:37 --> 1:39:42
chiefs, notifying them that it was likely that hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine would
1737
1:39:42 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]y because it would prevent the initial binding of the virus.
1738
1:39:49 --> 1:39:51
Because it would prevent the initial binding of the ACE2 receptor.
1739
1:39:54 --> 1:40:01
There has now been a movie called Broken Truth or Epidemic of Fraud has put out showing that
1740
1:40:01 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine was meaningfully withheld not only this year, but not only in this
1741
1:40:08 --> 1:40:11
pandemic, but since 1600 as a weapon of war.
1742
1:40:13 --> 1:40:18
Can you provide, and I'll give you that evidence if you haven't already
1743
1:40:18 --> 1:40:23
seen Epidemic of Fraud, Didier Raoult is promoting the movie now.
1744
1:40:24 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] evidence that shows that if we had all been able to get hydroxychloroquine as a
1745
1:40:30 --> 1:40:38
preventative before, or low dose, before this pandemic was started like in 2020 or 2019,
1746
1:40:38 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] all developed T cell immunity and not had this immunocompromise and immunogenicity
1747
1:40:45 --> 1:40:50
of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, whether it be an original virus form or vaccine form?
1748
1:40:50 --> 1:40:50
Thank you.
1749
1:40:51 --> 1:40:57
So Jim, yes, there definitely was manipulation of availability of certain drugs.
1750
1:40:58 --> 1:41:05
Early in 2020, I thought, as most people did, that the authorities were doing their best to
1751
1:41:05 --> 1:41:10
make sure that there were not alternatives to the vaccines.
1752
1:41:11 --> 1:41:16
Now, personally, you've heard Stephen Frost and I had an exchange.
1753
1:41:16 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] been, I don't think it was a virus, but I don't want to die in a ditch over
1754
1:41:21 --> 1:41:28
it. There wasn't a public health emergency. There was not a pandemic. So in a sense, I don't think
1755
1:41:28 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ion because I don't think there was a pandemic.
1756
1:41:30 --> 1:41:32
Was there a spike protein?
1757
1:41:32 --> 1:41:39
I don't know. I don't think it's necessary that there was something, but
1758
1:41:39 --> 1:41:46
I know some of my colleagues think there was a locally released poison of some kind.
1759
1:41:46 --> 1:41:49
The problem with these things is that they're not provable or forcibable.
1760
1:41:50 --> 1:41:56
That is, you reach a position where you realize that you dig and dig and dig and you can't reach
1761
1:41:56 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] to say, folks, if you get to that position where logically you can't get
1762
1:42:03 --> 1:42:07
to a defensive position, please stop. You're just going to wear yourself out.
1763
1:42:07 --> 1:42:12
Or, for example, if people on either side of a debate don't agree the terms of the debate,
1764
1:42:12 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]op because you're just going to bash each other to death whilst allowing the
1765
1:42:17 --> 1:42:24
perpetrators to win. So, Jim, I don't think there was a pandemic. They definitely did
1766
1:42:24 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] been in use for a long period of time, and I think that was
1767
1:42:29 --> 1:42:35
bad. I don't know how meaningful that was in terms of people's illness, but it definitely was
1768
1:42:35 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]rong permissive force in terms of bringing out these, I think, intentional poisons, the
1769
1:42:41 --> 1:42:49
so-called vaccine. So, for whatever reason they did it, whether it was because it would have allowed
1770
1:42:49 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] to create their fear, I don't know. And they did do it.
1771
1:42:57 --> 1:43:02
So what I'm saying, I don't think there's a solution to say, if we could have had this,
1772
1:43:02 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] all been no problem because I think if we hadn't done any bloody testing,
1773
1:43:05 --> 1:43:11
there wouldn't have been a pandemic. So I don't think there was one. I think it was lies, propaganda,
1774
1:43:11 --> 1:43:17
and a rotten piece, a useless, a bad use of carromelosis technique to make people think
1775
1:43:17 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ions where there weren't. That's my opinion. I can't prove it. And that's
1776
1:43:22 --> 1:43:26
why I didn't talk about it. I said there wasn't a public health emergency and people have been
1777
1:43:26 --> 1:43:32
jabbed with things that are definitely designed to injure and kill. Then I don't need to be in
1778
1:43:32 --> 1:43:36
dispute with anybody, I don't think. Anyway, so I probably didn't give you a great answer,
1779
1:43:36 --> 1:43:39
but it's because I've got a slightly different perspective on what happened.
1780
1:43:39 --> 1:43:44
S2 Okay. Thank you very much. And can you tell what people were dying of in the hospitals? Or
1781
1:43:44 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] a regular smooth like that? S1 Oh, yeah. No, they've been, I think they're
1782
1:43:48 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ly. Oh, just in just in one minute. In hospitals, there were internationally
1783
1:43:57 --> 1:44:03
a change in medical procedure, you do not ventilate people. You do not say sedate, intubate and
1784
1:44:03 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] that's not obstructed. And they do not have an injured chest
1785
1:44:09 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction], Stephen? Why would you do that? These people can ventilate on their own. If they
1786
1:44:13 --> 1:44:19
needed oxygen, you give them an oxygen mask, you do not stay intubate and ventilate. That's a that's
1787
1:44:19 --> 1:44:24
a great procedure. If you can't breathe. It's a terrible procedure. If you were a vulnerable person,
1788
1:44:25 --> 1:44:30
that will lead rapidly to death. I do know a lot about that is something we did in my form of
1789
1:44:30 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]ered in hospital, Jim. And then people were given remdesivir. They were now
1790
1:44:36 --> 1:44:41
sedated, they were not given treatments, and they just died. They were murdered by bloody doctors
1791
1:44:41 --> 1:44:47
and hospitals. In the care homes, they were given my dazzle am and morphine designed to help them
1792
1:44:47 --> 1:44:53
pass without suffering. Those are two components of the lethal injection used in some US states.
1793
1:44:53 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction] of opiates on respiratory reflexes. Opiates depressed the respiratory drive,
1794
1:45:02 --> 1:45:08
as does my dazzle. I mean, in fact, they are synergistic. So in care homes, in my country,
1795
1:45:08 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]er on people were invited and some did pick up syringes
1796
1:45:15 --> 1:45:22
and jab to their elderly charges with high doses of my dazzle am and morphine and came back later
1797
1:45:22 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ered on mass, Jim. And in the community, doctors like my
1798
1:45:31 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]or, I want to say rude words at this point. She was she was told, oh, we were
1799
1:45:37 --> 1:45:42
told this is a virus and not to prescribe antibiotics. Huge numbers of people died in
1800
1:45:42 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]y, even young people of bacterial pneumonia or whatever that was. So they were
1801
1:45:49 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ered, Jim. You don't need to, there wasn't a new disease. They were just murdered in hospitals,
1802
1:45:55 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]s I've just described. That's not in dispute. That was solved
1803
1:46:01 --> 1:46:07
in 2020. That's horrifying. If you didn't know that, you're probably absolutely horrified. I
1804
1:46:07 --> 1:46:14
met my wife's family doctor in the supermarket just before Christmas. And I veered away from
1805
1:46:14 --> 1:46:19
her. My wife says, Come on, have a word. I said, I don't dare speak to her. Anyway, I spoke to
1806
1:46:19 --> 1:46:25
him. She said, she said to me, Oh, my I've been following your work. I nearly bloody strangled her.
1807
1:46:25 --> 1:46:30
And I've said, Are you still injecting people with that stuff? She said, I'm only one of five
1808
1:46:30 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]ice. My voice doesn't count for anything. I said, You are murdering people.
1809
1:46:35 --> 1:46:40
And she kind of looked winsome and walked off and got in her brand new German car. It's like,
1810
1:46:41 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]y who are as bad as the good Germans in Germany. I just met one.
1811
1:46:47 --> 1:46:52
Well, that's what happened, Jim. There wasn't an illness. There was not a new illness. In my,
1812
1:46:52 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]e in New York and Bergamo. I'm not even persuaded of that.
1813
1:46:57 --> 1:47:01
But if that's true, then it's true. But anywhere, everywhere else, nothing happened except
1814
1:47:01 --> 1:47:09
propaganda, lies, rotten tests, and then murderous procedures. That's what happened. That's a pandemic.
1815
1:47:10 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ered our colleagues and our parents, and they're still doing it.
1816
1:47:18 --> 1:47:23
Beautifully said. Thank you. Thank you, Jim. They're still doing it. They are. Okay, you're
1817
1:47:23 --> 1:47:27
doing very well, Mike. We've got four hands up and then Stephen, last couple of questions.
1818
1:47:27 --> 1:47:29
We've got 20 minutes to go. You okay for 20 minutes, Mike?
1819
1:47:30 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction] do it. I'm starting to get in pain. Yeah, good. Okay, we'll be quick.
1820
1:47:35 --> 1:47:37
Okay, everyone, questions and Mike's answers. Janet.
1821
1:47:43 --> 1:47:45
Janet is trying to unmute, I hope.
1822
1:47:47 --> 1:47:52
We'll come back to Janet. Don't keep you waiting. Emmanuel, who presented to us last week,
1823
1:47:52 --> 1:48:03
Mike. I found myself. Okay, come on. Okay, yeah, just a couple of fairly short questions.
1824
1:48:04 --> 1:48:11
Going back to toxicology, I understand that the toxicity of remdesivir was already known before
1825
1:48:11 --> 1:48:18
COVID, yet it was still recommended. Yes. So my question is, what is the mechanism of its toxicity?
1826
1:48:18 --> 1:48:24
And was it also deliberately used to damage people? My second question is about the
1827
1:48:24 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]raZeneca vaccine was stopped from being used. Is that
1828
1:48:31 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]? And why did that happen? Yeah. So remdesivir, my understanding is that it lowers
1829
1:48:38 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]ion. I don't actually know how it does that. I haven't looked, to be honest,
1830
1:48:43 --> 1:48:50
it might be known. And so here's my ghastly thought. And this came to mind after John O'Looney,
1831
1:48:54 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]or in England. And he told me that he was receiving the deceased from hospital.
1832
1:49:01 --> 1:49:07
And they were in body bags. And he said, when I opened the body bags, it's full of fluid. And
1833
1:49:07 --> 1:49:12
I've never seen this before. And I said, what about people from care homes? He said, no.
1834
1:49:12 --> 1:49:18
And so here's my thought. They were given remdesivir intravenously in hospital or equivalent
1835
1:49:18 --> 1:49:25
drugs, which lowered their ability to clear fluid from their body because it reduced glomerular
1836
1:49:25 --> 1:49:31
filtration rate. And they maintained them on drips. And they just died from hypervolemic shock.
1837
1:49:32 --> 1:49:39
And then remember, they were already sedated and ventilated. So if I was murderous Fauci,
1838
1:49:39 --> 1:49:46
that's all I would need. I'd give them a drug. I'd get them in hospital. They're sedated and
1839
1:49:46 --> 1:49:51
ventilated. They'd be on a drip. OK, what do I need to do is knock them out of kilter. It's like
1840
1:49:51 --> 1:49:56
reduce GFR. That'll do. Stick them on remdesivir. They'll be dead in a week.
1841
1:49:57 --> 1:50:02
So I think that's what they did. Yes, it was known. There might be other toxicities. It looks a
1842
1:50:02 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ug, to be honest. The AstraZeneca drug, I always thought, even before it was approved,
1843
1:50:09 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction] that it was a sacrificial offering along with the J&J. I have a reason for
1844
1:50:16 --> 1:50:22
that. But I think they were particularly nasty. These are allegedly DNA vaccines that were not
1845
1:50:22 --> 1:50:28
delivered in lipid nanoparticles. And I don't know. I probably could think of it, but I can't think
1846
1:50:28 --> 1:50:33
of it right now. But I remember saying to my wife then, those things are so horrible that they're
1847
1:50:33 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]awn. And it's going to create an open field for the mRNA products, which in my
1848
1:50:40 --> 1:50:49
opinion are all Pfizer. I think Pfizer, BioNTech, Moderna, I think they're all funded by military,
1849
1:50:49 --> 1:50:58
basically DARPA, which I think is like CIA, Black Ops money, DARPA, the Defense Project Research,
1850
1:50:58 --> 1:51:04
whatever it is. I vaguely began to wear during my 10 years of consulting, most of which was in
1851
1:51:04 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction] concentration of private biomedical funding. So venture
1852
1:51:10 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]e who turn up and pitch a good story. I got most of my next round of
1853
1:51:18 --> 1:51:23
funding from there. But there's loads of funny looking biotechs just set back from the road.
1854
1:51:23 --> 1:51:27
You write the names down and do some Googling, you nearly always find out that their principal
1855
1:51:27 --> 1:51:33
funder is DARPA. And I think they're, I think they are CIA labs. I think that's what they are.
1856
1:51:35 --> 1:51:44
And so I think this, I think the drug companies are clearly, they're clearly guilty as hell.
1857
1:51:44 --> 1:51:49
I think their main role in this crime has been to white label products made by other people.
1858
1:51:50 --> 1:51:57
I think they've probably been made in deep state labs, and then they've been rubber stamped by a
1859
1:51:57 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]raZeneca and J&J were used as, I think they were used to provide
1860
1:52:04 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] me. They've said, the regulators are very good, you know,
1861
1:52:09 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]s, right? The AstraZeneca was withdrawn. That shows they're able
1862
1:52:15 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]s. It's like, yeah, but I knew they were going to do that, because it
1863
1:52:19 --> 1:52:26
was obviously more toxic. The other reason I thought that is the stupid woman that was allegedly its
1864
1:52:26 --> 1:52:33
inventor who got a damehood and was given a round of applause at Wimbledon in 2021. I did a bit of
1865
1:52:33 --> 1:52:39
research on her and she's a really stupid person. And everyone hates her. She never hires clever
1866
1:52:39 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]e because she's so insecure. Anyway, so I reckon I thought it was a sacrificial product,
1867
1:52:45 --> 1:52:52
and then it went. With J&J, I don't know how it came about. But by amazing coincidence, the person
1868
1:52:52 --> 1:52:58
who was notionally in charge of it was a man I had worked with 10 years previously. And when his
1869
1:52:58 --> 1:53:05
company Johnson Johnson launched the product, I wrote to him to say, Matai, Matai Naman, you are
1870
1:53:05 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction] that's going to kill people. And we had a conversation by email. And
1871
1:53:12 --> 1:53:18
then he then he went dark and about three months later resigned with no reason given. No one ever
1872
1:53:18 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]s an executive vice president position from a big drug company without reason, because most of
1873
1:53:25 --> 1:53:30
their payment, most of their compensation is deferred, stock options, restricted stock units
1874
1:53:30 --> 1:53:38
and cash. And I think he left $10 million behind. And I think he left because I drew his attention
1875
1:53:38 --> 1:53:44
to something he did not realize. And that drug was withdrawn from the market. Both of the DNA
1876
1:53:44 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction], I don't know, I can't prove any of this stuff. And it doesn't
1877
1:53:50 --> 1:53:58
matter if I'm right or not. The design of them is to injure and kill. But I come to believe that
1878
1:53:58 --> 1:54:05
they've just been shopfronts for stuff that was going on in the background. So I because they're
1879
1:54:05 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]e, you know, they've those those enterprises, you know, that the money, if you've got guns,
1880
1:54:11 --> 1:54:17
money, intelligence, it's just the most powerful force which you've used for bad, which it is,
1881
1:54:18 --> 1:54:26
it creates this, this nexus which is which is foul. There's no need to, you don't need to widen the
1882
1:54:26 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]ors in for drug companies, you know, you just need them to
1883
1:54:32 --> 1:54:35
put their labels on it and shut up. I think that's probably what they've done.
1884
1:54:36 --> 1:54:38
Mike, what was the name of the man and what was the name of the woman?
1885
1:54:40 --> 1:54:45
I can't, I will be able to find it because she got a damehood. And she said she's the AstraZeneca
1886
1:54:45 --> 1:54:50
woman. I know someone who knows her and she's not very clever. But that doesn't really matter. I
1887
1:54:50 --> 1:54:55
don't think I don't think I don't think her product was ever intended to be important. And I don't
1888
1:54:55 --> 1:55:00
think it has been. I think if you look at the if you look at the five, I think it's 5.4 billion
1889
1:55:00 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]ed. I think all the gene based vaccines because I've no idea really what's
1890
1:55:08 --> 1:55:12
happening in the other parts of the world. I don't really know anything. Remember, they're lying to
1891
1:55:12 --> 1:55:18
us. Everything is unknown. Everything's untrustworthy unless you can verify it. But I think the vast
1892
1:55:18 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]ed with the mRNA product. And I think that was always the intention.
1893
1:55:23 --> 1:55:26
That's what and furthermore, when you look around the world now,
1894
1:55:27 --> 1:55:33
you find announcement after announcement in country after country of Pfizer and Moderna
1895
1:55:33 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]ories to make mRNA vaccines, they say. Well, I've just told you that all of them will
1896
1:55:43 --> 1:55:50
be automatically toxic because they will induce autoimmune response to your body making non self
1897
1:55:50 --> 1:55:56
non human protein. Why are all these countries doing it? Because they're all part of that they
1898
1:55:56 --> 1:56:00
they probably don't know what they're doing most of them. But I'm saying that the
1899
1:56:00 --> 1:56:06
whoever is forcing this is now what what do you think is going to happen to all the vaccines that
1900
1:56:06 --> 1:56:11
they're making is my question. And so they're going to be put into people's arms if we don't stop them.
1901
1:56:12 --> 1:56:17
They're going to be put into people's arms if we don't stop them. And if you have multiple doses,
1902
1:56:17 --> 1:56:25
you will die. Okay, and so that's what I think. So we need to stop them. We do. Thank you, Janet.
1903
1:56:25 --> 1:56:30
We've got three questions to go then Stephen to finish Emmanuel who spoke to us last week, Mike.
1904
1:56:31 --> 1:56:37
Okay. Yeah, thank you. Thank you, Dr. Yaden for a superb presentation. It's really a privilege to
1905
1:56:37 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ions. One, how dependent was the Pfizer jab on being kept at sub freezing
1906
1:56:46 --> 1:56:53
temperatures to be dangerous? And then second, you know, there was an agreement between Pfizer
1907
1:56:53 --> 1:56:57
and New Zealand, which was one of the most difficult countries to be in during the
1908
1:56:58 --> 1:57:07
COVID operation, the lockdowns, etc. And yet, and the government will not release that agreement made
1909
1:57:07 --> 1:57:16
with Pfizer. Do you think there's anything in that agreement that would help to galvanize the normies
1910
1:57:16 --> 1:57:24
as it were, who can't really contend with this tremendous? So yeah, so the second part first,
1911
1:57:26 --> 1:57:31
I can't remember who it is. There were so many people, right? But I know some people have got
1912
1:57:31 --> 1:57:38
hold of oh, yes, it's my friend, retired policeman from England, Mark Sexton. I think he now has,
1913
1:57:38 --> 1:57:48
I think he's got three country contracts between country X, Y and Z and Pfizer, I think. And he
1914
1:57:48 --> 1:57:52
said, he's not an illegal scholar, but he said reading them, they look fundamentally the same.
1915
1:57:54 --> 1:57:58
So, you know, I don't know is the answer. By definition, I don't know what's in what we
1916
1:57:58 --> 1:58:06
haven't seen. But they're definitely abusive contracts. I mean, I did have nothing to do with
1917
1:58:06 --> 1:58:12
selling vaccines. But I know what a Pfizer, what boilerplate language, boilerplate means standard,
1918
1:58:12 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] contracts. You know, they're pretty aggressive. And for
1919
1:58:19 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]e, you would always have what's called an entire agreement clause, which means any agreement
1920
1:58:25 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]ing between the parties written or verbal is hereby, you know, voided and replaced by this
1921
1:58:31 --> 1:58:36
one, you'll always find an entire agreement phrase, Pfizer always puts it in there. In case anyone
1922
1:58:36 --> 1:58:42
ever claims our well, we had to scream. So I know certain are, you know, the sort of anatomy of
1923
1:58:42 --> 1:58:51
these things. But I think it's so difficult, it'd be like 150 pages, probably. Imagine trying to
1924
1:58:51 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] to a normie, they won't get it. They're not, most of us are not
1925
1:58:58 --> 1:59:03
lawyers. And I'm not. And I but I learned a little bit because I was very interested when we were
1926
1:59:03 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction] And I'm like that. I just I love working with people who are
1927
1:59:09 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]ions, and they keep speaking. So I picked up a little,
1928
1:59:13 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction] a little knowledge to be dangerous. I think if we saw the contract, we would, we would know
1929
1:59:19 --> 1:59:24
these bloody things were abusive. I'm not sure that we would find it particularly helpful.
1930
1:59:24 --> 1:59:30
You know, if we explain that in subsection five two, it says, you know, the party, you know,
1931
1:59:30 --> 1:59:37
purchaser agrees to hold Pfizer harmless, it'll probably say that. It'll probably say Pfizer,
1932
1:59:37 --> 1:59:42
you know, part purchaser agrees to hold Pfizer harmless. That's normal. If you're selling
1933
1:59:42 --> 1:59:48
something, you always write the contract to say if you agree to buy from me, then provided we've done
1934
1:59:48 --> 1:59:53
all the things we said we should do, you will hold me legally harmless, you won't, you can't sue me
1935
1:59:53 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction] So you'd have to find I've done something not in the
1936
1:59:58 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] That's just the way legal agreements are. So they'll it'll look horrifying. But I
1937
2:00:04 --> 2:00:08
don't know. I don't know that I would almost be able to persuade the man in the pub to get excited
1938
2:00:08 --> 2:00:14
about it. Even if I found a clause like that, it says purchaser agrees to hold Pfizer harmless.
1939
2:00:14 --> 2:00:18
Because I would say yeah, but I probably would have expected him to say that. They did in the
1940
2:00:18 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] I looked at. Seriously, they all look all these contracts look abusive and both parties
1941
2:00:24 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]s and they get something they can both agree. In fact, the only reason you
1942
2:00:28 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] is not when you're friendly, when you're friendly, you don't need to contract,
1943
2:00:34 --> 2:00:39
you know, you supply they give you the money or whatever it is you supply they inject people,
1944
2:00:39 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction] when you fall out. That's the only time you need it. And so
1945
2:00:45 --> 2:00:49
this lawyer told me only time you're ever going to be looking at this again is when we're facing
1946
2:00:49 --> 2:00:54
court. So don't don't give them an inch. Because the time you'll be opening this page again,
1947
2:00:54 --> 2:00:59
is when they're suing us breach. So we have to write it in such a way that we'll win.
1948
2:00:59 --> 2:01:06
And I realized I thought I'd hate to be a lawyer. I'm glad he's my lawyer. So I've got a long way
1949
2:01:06 --> 2:01:14
around the house. I don't know. It's possible. But legal contracts, I think will be a difficult
1950
2:01:14 --> 2:01:20
thing to use, because they're nasty, even when they're normal. And then what else I need to
1951
2:01:20 --> 2:01:28
say something else? Yes. Just just an honesty thing here. This this bit about freezing and
1952
2:01:28 --> 2:01:33
then not freezing. You know, initially, we were told they had to be at minus 80. Minus 80 is as
1953
2:01:33 --> 2:01:39
cold as you can commercially reasonably get. So they're research grades with research grade
1954
2:01:40 --> 2:01:46
freezers that you don't get them in the supermarket or even in a wholesaler. You'll get
1955
2:01:46 --> 2:01:51
them in research labs in hospitals and universities. They're difficult things. And I know I remember
1956
2:01:51 --> 2:01:56
thinking when they said, Oh, you don't need to put them in the minus 80. You can just keep them in
1957
2:01:56 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ic freezer. So I don't know is the answer. But the one possible explanation would be this is
1958
2:02:03 --> 2:02:07
pretending that they've made a real product because they haven't. They say they really haven't. It's
1959
2:02:07 --> 2:02:13
all pantomime. But if I pretend for a moment they made a real product, it would be something like
1960
2:02:13 --> 2:02:18
this, that they were so rushed on doing what's called the forced instability testing. That is,
1961
2:02:19 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]er to work out what its shelf life is. You could do two things.
1962
2:02:25 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]orage condition and come back in a year and see if it's
1963
2:02:31 --> 2:02:35
still all right. And if it is, you come back in three years and see if it's still all right.
1964
2:02:35 --> 2:02:41
Now, I think I'm only half joking. You can see that's not a good way of getting a shelf life in
1965
2:02:41 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] It's a very good way for one that you've been producing for 10 years, because you've
1966
2:02:46 --> 2:02:52
got the in life data. But with a new product, you still need to provide the pharmacy wholesalers with
1967
2:02:52 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]orage half life, you know. And so what you do is you do something called forced
1968
2:02:57 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]ress the products and see. I could talk for ages on this. And it
1969
2:03:04 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]arted using a rigorous condition. And then as they got the results of
1970
2:03:09 --> 2:03:14
their forced degradation data, they said you don't need to keep it at minus 80. So it could be
1971
2:03:15 --> 2:03:20
innocent. Now, I don't think it's innocent, but they could they would be able to come back.
1972
2:03:20 --> 2:03:24
They would be able to come back with an answer. I'm not I'm not batting for these people,
1973
2:03:25 --> 2:03:30
but I think I could come up with a half decent answer, which would mean people that we were
1974
2:03:30 --> 2:03:35
talking to would get an air. That's that's not relevant. But I have to admit something at this
1975
2:03:35 --> 2:03:43
point. My friend Sasha Latipova is not convinced that people are even being injected with much mRNA.
1976
2:03:47 --> 2:03:53
She says, I'm not convinced that they've actually made what they have told us they've made. And this
1977
2:03:53 --> 2:03:58
is back to Anders point. That's why I'm not his enemy. I don't know enough to know if he's right.
1978
2:03:58 --> 2:04:04
But so Sasha says there's been analyses done, and they do find some mRNA in the vial,
1979
2:04:05 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]ly broken fragments. And I think, see, I cannot distinguish now at this point
1980
2:04:13 --> 2:04:20
between whole thing is a faint, which is what Anders I think is saying, or if these are just
1981
2:04:20 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]s of because all we've ever got is used vials. They could have been like left out
1982
2:04:26 --> 2:04:31
in a desk for an hour, because by the time the vials empty, no one needs to take care of it
1983
2:04:31 --> 2:04:37
anymore. It's going in the bin. So you can see the problem here, we've got so little information,
1984
2:04:38 --> 2:04:43
and we're probably not going to get better information. So that's where I am. As I said
1985
2:04:43 --> 2:04:49
earlier, when I reach when I realize my shovel is not going to go into productive earth, I stop
1986
2:04:50 --> 2:04:55
because it's just going to wear me out. Follow the follow the trail where the where the evidence
1987
2:04:56 --> 2:05:01
said even if it's not true, you see the mRNA stuff, they've told us that's what they're doing.
1988
2:05:01 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] matter expert, I've described how that's definitely intentionally dangerous. So
1989
2:05:08 --> 2:05:13
even if that's not what they're doing, they can't get out of it. I'll modify my story if I get enough
1990
2:05:13 --> 2:05:19
data. Meanwhile, they said this, I'm telling you that's dangerous. No question. All right,
1991
2:05:19 --> 2:05:24
I will take it. The nose on the Bible, I filed multiple affidavits saying exactly what I've said
1992
2:05:24 --> 2:05:29
today. Okay, thanks. Yeah, thanks, Emmanuel. Celia, we're not gonna have time for you because
1993
2:05:29 --> 2:05:34
we're tight for time. Sadly, put it in the chat. We'll pass it on to Mike. We've got Peter Vera
1994
2:05:34 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ephen. We need to hear Celia. We need to hear what her question is. But anyway, she's last.
1995
2:05:41 --> 2:05:42
All right, go, Peter.
1996
2:05:44 --> 2:05:51
Hi, thank you very much for having me. And thanks a lot, Michael, for your presentation. It's always
1997
2:05:51 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ing. I've been following you for the last four years and I fully agree with you.
1998
2:05:57 --> 2:06:03
I'm not a doctor. I'm an economist and I've had the privilege, if you want, to work for at least
1999
2:06:03 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction] seen a little bit how this organization, which is not really,
2000
2:06:10 --> 2:06:19
as you know, probably a UN agency, how it works. And what is now going on, you know, with the
2001
2:06:19 --> 2:06:24
pandemic treating and the international health regulation modification is just horrifying.
2002
2:06:25 --> 2:06:30
And what I was wondering is whether you know anything about it and you know whether this may
2003
2:06:30 --> 2:06:39
have a chance to go through or not. No, I only know what, there's a guy who's made it his life's work.
2004
2:06:39 --> 2:06:45
Everybody will tell me what his name is. Every day somebody puts out international health
2005
2:06:45 --> 2:06:51
regulations and WHO pandemic treaty related. James Roguski. James Roguski, you know,
2006
2:06:52 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]ly, you can only follow a small number of things at a time.
2007
2:06:59 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]s share it on my channel, but I have not had time to look
2008
2:07:06 --> 2:07:12
at it. But what I would say is, and I think Stephen said, these bloody things, pandemics are
2009
2:07:12 --> 2:07:17
not possible. They're immunologically implausible. Everyone knows, even if it's not true,
2010
2:07:17 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ood the model to be that very infectious things aren't very dangerous and very
2011
2:07:22 --> 2:07:28
dangerous things, you know, don't travel very well. Because if that wasn't true, as soon as something
2012
2:07:28 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]y that was both highly transmissible and lethal arrived in the world, everyone, you know,
2013
2:07:35 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]e out or it would knock the population back, you know, 90%. And that isn't
2014
2:07:40 --> 2:07:46
what seems to happen, at least not in the last millennium. So I don't I think it's just,
2015
2:07:47 --> 2:07:54
I think it's illogical. And here's the other thing, just very quickly, I can explain why even in their
2016
2:07:54 --> 2:08:01
own terms, it's mad. And that's why you can tell the person in the pub. WHO wants to take to itself
2017
2:08:02 --> 2:08:08
the power to call public health emergencies of international concern, and then, as it were,
2018
2:08:08 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]rate the response, including giving instructions to countries in lockdown here,
2019
2:08:13 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ion, get the principle of just the practice. Something new has arrived,
2020
2:08:21 --> 2:08:29
some new emergency we're allegedly has arisen in the world. WHO doesn't know what the best thing
2021
2:08:29 --> 2:08:36
to do is. I don't know what the best thing to do is, neither do you or anyone else on this call.
2022
2:08:36 --> 2:08:42
But I tell you what, we probably all have very good ideas. Humans are brilliant at solving this
2023
2:08:42 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] we do the best we can in our local area and communicate with
2024
2:08:49 --> 2:08:55
each other. That gives you autonomy. No one's doing it to you. It allows you experimentally
2025
2:08:55 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] thing to do rapidly, then you can share that information. It also,
2026
2:09:01 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction], fits with the idea of autonomy of countries. If you take that power to the centre,
2027
2:09:08 --> 2:09:16
they won't know what to do. That's the problem. If a new situation arrived, arose, by definition,
2028
2:09:17 --> 2:09:23
they don't know what to do. How can they possibly give the best instructions? How will we know that
2029
2:09:23 --> 2:09:30
that was the right thing to do? How will we learn from the normal diversity of responses that will
2030
2:09:30 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]s particular courses of action? So straight away, it will fail. Even
2031
2:09:37 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]e, it will go wrong the first time you use it for the reasons I've explained,
2032
2:09:43 --> 2:09:50
and I'm not wrong. So and of course, they are nasty people and they plan to kill us, like I keep
2033
2:09:50 --> 2:09:56
saying. But you can see that you don't need to be a lawyer. You don't need to be a scientist. You just
2034
2:09:56 --> 2:10:02
need to think logically for two minutes and you realise that it's a novel situation. Why would
2035
2:10:02 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] one guy in Switzerland who doesn't know the best thing to do to tell 192 countries what to
2036
2:10:08 --> 2:10:14
do? And how will you ever know it was the right thing to do if you don't have quite a lot of
2037
2:10:14 --> 2:10:18
autonomy and variation and good communication, which is what humans have done since the dawn of
2038
2:10:18 --> 2:10:24
time? So, you know, by the way, then wanting to draw the powers to the centre are highly consistent
2039
2:10:24 --> 2:10:30
with mine and others concerns that they want to take away your freedom and compel you to receive
2040
2:10:30 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ions that are dangerous. That's what they're going to do with it. So there you go. All right.
2041
2:10:35 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction], that's that move. I think we should move on. Moving. Thank you, Vera, Celia,
2042
2:10:41 --> 2:10:49
Hoodie, quick announcement. Let's go. First of all, thank you, Michael. I have a question to you,
2043
2:10:49 --> 2:10:54
but that's you know what the question is and you know what the answer is actually.
2044
2:10:54 --> 2:11:00
But in terms of this, one of the things that I've observed right from the beginning is that local
2045
2:11:00 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]e, ordinary people, not lawyers, not doctors, not scientists, many more of them have gotten it
2046
2:11:10 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] us. It's not a stampede. God damn, I wish it was. And
2047
2:11:17 --> 2:11:24
don't say that, you know, you're tired. I know you are, but you are being heard. And sometimes
2048
2:11:24 --> 2:11:33
even a portion of what you say gets into people, you know, to get you more out there, not just
2049
2:11:33 --> 2:11:40
talking to the ones that you are, which of course is one of the projects of my book. Books get to
2050
2:11:40 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]e and the book that I'm working on, which Mike is part of, and so are Sasha and David
2051
2:11:46 --> 2:11:53
Webb and a whole lot. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Everybody's in. I don't disagree. I just,
2052
2:11:53 --> 2:12:00
we, it's not, that's not enough is what I'm saying. Absolutely should do it. But if people think,
2053
2:12:00 --> 2:12:05
oh, that's great. They've got it. That will be a minute. That will be a fatal error. We, you know,
2054
2:12:05 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]e pick up the bloody baton and run as well. Absolutely. That's why I say,
2055
2:12:11 --> 2:12:17
yeah. Look, and my floor, I've got a neurologist at Columbia University. Do you know that he's still
2056
2:12:17 --> 2:12:27
in masks? Now that is a real crime. We're talking neurology. He never picked up a real, anything.
2057
2:12:27 --> 2:12:34
Yeah, it's very depressing. I know, I know a doctor who, who's met specialists when he was still
2058
2:12:34 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]ice. He's a foot surgeon and the person would say, oh, I'm really busy. And he
2059
2:12:39 --> 2:12:43
would say, my friend would say, well, you're busy. And he said, yeah, I've got really unusual,
2060
2:12:43 --> 2:12:47
whole bunch of neurological conditions. And he would say, do you know why that's happening?
2061
2:12:47 --> 2:12:52
The guy will like look at him slightly and say, well, obviously the vaccines. And then my friend
2062
2:12:52 --> 2:12:59
said, you couldn't say anything about it. He went, no. Right. They're good Germans. And you know what
2063
2:12:59 --> 2:13:05
I mean? They're really good Germans. Oh, yeah. They're all over the place. But I take your point
2064
2:13:06 --> 2:13:14
in England. The self-employed, we call them white fan man. They often drive around and
2065
2:13:14 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]uff. They fix electrics. They put fix your plumbing. They mend
2066
2:13:20 --> 2:13:27
your car, do your drive. Those people, when most of them were never fooled. I don't know why it is.
2067
2:13:27 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]anation, but I went for it. So I agree with you. I think what
2068
2:13:32 --> 2:13:38
they don't know is they don't know how bad this is. They know that they're being lied to, but they're
2069
2:13:38 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] told me we're always lied to, Mike. I'm used to it. So they never tell.
2070
2:13:46 --> 2:13:50
Yeah, they don't trust. They don't trust authority. They don't trust authority.
2071
2:13:51 --> 2:13:59
But so how to get them beyond the point of not trusting the man. And I'll just give you one tiny
2072
2:13:59 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]e. In London, the mayor, Sadiq Khan, has greatly restricted the flow of ordinary people
2073
2:14:10 --> 2:14:15
driving their cars in London by imposing what's called the ultra low emission zone and then
2074
2:14:15 --> 2:14:20
expanding it, which is what they'll do. Eventually stop you moving around in your own private
2075
2:14:20 --> 2:14:29
powered car. That's what they will do. And the system operates on a series of automatic number
2076
2:14:29 --> 2:14:35
plate recognition, ANPR cameras, and they've been put up on hundreds of poles around
2077
2:14:37 --> 2:14:43
expanded London. At night, what I think are probably working class men in vans,
2078
2:14:44 --> 2:14:51
go out, put on a balaclava, get out their battery powered angle grinder, take the bloody things down.
2079
2:14:52 --> 2:14:56
And therefore, blade runners, these people, and they have taken down hundreds and hundreds and
2080
2:14:56 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]eds. So that's good news, right? That's good news. These people know they've got to do something.
2081
2:15:03 --> 2:15:08
This wasn't me, but I was on March in London a few months ago with someone who understood what we
2082
2:15:08 --> 2:15:15
were talking about, these concerns. That person reached out to the head of the blade runners
2083
2:15:16 --> 2:15:19
because we thought, wouldn't it be good if we could combine them together? And unfortunately,
2084
2:15:19 --> 2:15:24
their disappointing answer was, we're not marching with a bunch of lunatic anti-vaxxers.
2085
2:15:25 --> 2:15:30
So I'll just give you this information. So the working class guys who are taking down the
2086
2:15:30 --> 2:15:36
Ulysses cameras think I'm mad. They're not about to be my, I want them to be my allies, but at the
2087
2:15:36 --> 2:15:41
moment, they're just concerned about car regulation. They're not interested in Jabs and
2088
2:15:41 --> 2:15:47
WHO and Bill Gates. Sorry to say that at the end, but that's the reality. We have to...
2089
2:15:48 --> 2:15:54
All right, Mike, we're going to keep moving. Vera addressed us two years ago this month,
2090
2:15:54 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ing and the Q&A into the chat. It was a masterful presentation on the
2091
2:16:00 --> 2:16:04
Spanish Flu, Mike. So if you ever want some entertainment, what's a beautiful presentation.
2092
2:16:04 --> 2:16:09
I'd love to. Yeah, I'd love to. That'd be great. Thank you, Vera. Okay, Celia, then Hootie's going
2093
2:16:09 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ephen will say a quick farewell. Come on Celia. We're a big
2094
2:16:14 --> 2:16:25
fan of Celia, everybody here. Unmute yourself. Mike, tremendous presentation. Thank you. I'm a
2095
2:16:25 --> 2:16:31
big admirer of yours, and I especially appreciate your clarity of language. So important for
2096
2:16:32 --> 2:16:38
breaking the spells. I wanted to go to something you said in the beginning. I wrote down your
2097
2:16:38 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]s, the supra-natural... Did you say force? Supra-national force.
2098
2:16:46 --> 2:16:53
Yeah. Sorry, supra-national force that had all the countries marching in lockstep, which was so
2099
2:16:53 --> 2:16:59
shocking and terrifying. Now, I'm half Swedish, grew up in Sweden, but one doesn't have to be half
2100
2:16:59 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction] watched with great interest what Anders Tegnell did in Sweden. He did his own thing,
2101
2:17:05 --> 2:17:12
and then there was Maka Fuli in Tanzania. It did not end well for him. So one did see at least two
2102
2:17:12 --> 2:17:17
countries, maybe there were a few more step aside. I don't want to really take time to try to figure
2103
2:17:17 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction] done that, but what I do want to ask you is this. Given that there was this
2104
2:17:25 --> 2:17:32
supra-national near perfect coordination of nations in the beginning, doesn't that
2105
2:17:32 --> 2:17:39
indicate that the WHO pandemic treaty that we are all dreading, May 24th, was already in force?
2106
2:17:39 --> 2:17:48
And if so, what do you think about that? And lastly, in other words, are they about to kick
2107
2:17:48 --> 2:17:55
in with yet another degree of supra-national force, or has it already been in place?
2108
2:17:55 --> 2:18:00
No, you make a very good point. That's a very, very good point. I think you're saying, just to
2109
2:18:00 --> 2:18:08
summarize back, there already seemed to be the levers of power, the networks of influence,
2110
2:18:08 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] them followed, that was already in place.
2111
2:18:12 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction], I think you're saying, to what extent would it really make any difference if
2112
2:18:17 --> 2:18:20
there was or wasn't this treaty in place? I think that's one thing. That's right.
2113
2:18:21 --> 2:18:28
That's right. That's a good point. Do we have a fighting chance?
2114
2:18:30 --> 2:18:37
Well, we definitely always have a chance. Yeah, you know that. It's not over until it's over,
2115
2:18:37 --> 2:18:44
that's for sure. My first line in the sand will be when they try and make us have digital ID,
2116
2:18:44 --> 2:18:49
and I'm not having it. I know there will be very bad consequences. But I'm just saying,
2117
2:18:52 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]e on this call to rehearse in front of the mirror,
2118
2:18:58 --> 2:19:03
that they're not going to take it. Because if 89 of you take it, think, well, I won't do the next
2119
2:19:03 --> 2:19:08
step. It's like, you've stepped into the killing machine. Sorry, Vera, to use that particular
2120
2:19:08 --> 2:19:14
phrase is very deliberate. Because what people need to hear right now is,
2121
2:19:15 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] they failed? Where have the wheels come off? Where is their Achilles heel?
2122
2:19:21 --> 2:19:25
You mean as an individual? No, I mean, the big apparatus.
2123
2:19:25 --> 2:19:30
Oh, right. No, the perpetrators. Yeah, no, it's a great point. That's a very good point. I mean,
2124
2:19:30 --> 2:19:37
I think that if you're able, lots of people have been able to suss that things were wrong
2125
2:19:37 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]e, I'm a massive fan of a singer called Ian Brown. He was
2126
2:19:44 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]one Roses and then had a long solo career. And in the summer of 2020,
2127
2:19:50 --> 2:19:55
he wrote a song called Little Seed, Big Tree. And when you read the lyrics, it's like,
2128
2:19:56 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]uff I've told you. And because of the time it takes you to
2129
2:20:04 --> 2:20:09
arrange, rehearse, get recordings and so on, he probably had written those lyrics in the spring
2130
2:20:09 --> 2:20:17
of 2020. Now, how did an uneducated man from Manchester work it out? I don't know, but he did.
2131
2:20:17 --> 2:20:23
If you look at the lyrics of Little Seed, Big Tree, tell yourself that the author didn't know
2132
2:20:23 --> 2:20:27
what was happening. And I promise you the explanation isn't because he's one of the
2133
2:20:27 --> 2:20:33
perpetrators. He's someone whose career was badly restricted because I think he turned down
2134
2:20:33 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]e took. So yeah, so they've made look what I'm in brief,
2135
2:20:41 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]e spotted that it was mad and fraudulent. And I think it's a great question.
2136
2:20:47 --> 2:20:53
It's a really good prompt to us to think about what's the sharpest thing for each of us that
2137
2:20:53 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction] you're on this call, you didn't drift here, you came here. So I think
2138
2:21:00 --> 2:21:05
that's worth building on Celia. Thank you. Yeah, thank you. And enough. And many people
2139
2:21:05 --> 2:21:10
from different angles, Mike, well said and important question. All right, Hootie, quick
2140
2:21:10 --> 2:21:14
announcement by you, Mike will be interested in this as well. Hootie presented to us in January,
2141
2:21:14 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]ing into the chat. Graham, you go. What is it? Say what he is, Charles. So he's a
2142
2:21:21 --> 2:21:27
landline pilot. He's a sect, Pontus pilot who refused to be jabbed. And Hootie, he's recording
2143
2:21:27 --> 2:21:31
or putting the check go, go Hootie, give us a quick Senate. He resigned, actually, Charles, he resigned.
2144
2:21:33 --> 2:21:39
Good man. I've heard of him from a friend in Australia already as a great man. So thank you.
2145
2:21:39 --> 2:21:45
Let's know on his head from me. If he's here. He's here. Speak up, unmute yourself.
2146
2:21:49 --> 2:21:57
He's not on my on my panel. He's here. He should be, Mike. He's there. Okay. Well, first of all,
2147
2:21:57 --> 2:22:03
thank you for allowing me to speak up at the last minute. And Dr. Michael, you, I have great
2148
2:22:03 --> 2:22:07
admiration for you. And our mutual friend is trying to tee something up. And when you're ready,
2149
2:22:08 --> 2:22:11
if you're prepared, I understand you're tired because I'm exhausted as well.
2150
2:22:12 --> 2:22:17
Look, I just want to touch quickly on what happened in the Senate Royal Commission hearings in
2151
2:22:17 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] Wednesday, John Larder, the SAC paramedic and I attended to give evidence
2152
2:22:24 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]s the structure of the Royal Commission.
2153
2:22:30 --> 2:22:36
And what before I went in there, I had nothing really prepared, but I sat in the car and I prayed,
2154
2:22:37 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] to take this. Now, what I've realized in the last three
2155
2:22:42 --> 2:22:47
or four years, as you would have Michael as well, is that a lot of a lot of people involved in
2156
2:22:47 --> 2:22:53
handing down these mandates and rules and regulations, they're corrupted, but they're
2157
2:22:53 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] corrupted from a financial perspective, they're intellectually corrupted. A lot of them,
2158
2:22:59 --> 2:23:03
a lot of them really can't string a solid argument together. And sadly, some of those
2159
2:23:03 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] to look at them from a different angle.
2160
2:23:08 --> 2:23:14
In my life as an airline pilot, I was also a human factors facilitator or instructor. I used to teach
2161
2:23:14 --> 2:23:21
cabin crew, crew, how to solve a problem that a critical problem by critical thinking and teamwork.
2162
2:23:21 --> 2:23:26
Now this came about after an accident in the Everglades in Florida back in the 70s,
2163
2:23:26 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]ed Airlines DC team crashed into the Everglades because all the pilots and the
2164
2:23:31 --> 2:23:36
flight engineer were concentrating on changing a light bulb in the landing gear. I remember,
2165
2:23:36 --> 2:23:43
I remember reading it. Yeah, I remember reading. As a result of accidents like that, human factors
2166
2:23:43 --> 2:23:50
was a genre that was formed to make airline flying safer. And in that capacity, I also taught
2167
2:23:50 --> 2:23:55
medical surgical teams and Air Force crews that were sent to us on a subcontract basis to
2168
2:23:55 --> 2:24:01
participate in our course. What I realized in the in all of this was before I went into the
2169
2:24:01 --> 2:24:07
Senate hearing, I have to appeal to those people who don't have the common sense to listen to
2170
2:24:07 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] want to follow a narrative that's been pre prepared for them.
2171
2:24:12 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]e believe in the Apollo missions are not irrelevant.
2172
2:24:18 --> 2:24:25
But the scenario is this. There was an accident on the spacecraft on the way to the moon. And
2173
2:24:25 --> 2:24:30
as a result, Houston, we have a problem. And as a result of that call, a whole lot of people got
2174
2:24:30 --> 2:24:35
together to work out some solutions to get those astronauts home. Now, according to the story,
2175
2:24:35 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] basically to get a square peg to fit into a round hole and they got
2176
2:24:40 --> 2:24:47
them home. When I spoke to the Senate, I said that we're in a similar situation. When this so-called
2177
2:24:47 --> 2:24:53
pandemic was released upon the world, a whole bunch of people in the scientific arena race defined a
2178
2:24:53 --> 2:25:01
solution which was a vaccine. And while they were all in mass, racing defined some kind of a solution.
2179
2:25:01 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]e like you, Mike Yeaton and Dr. Peter McCullough and Pierre Corey and
2180
2:25:06 --> 2:25:11
others were saying, all right, they're looking after this that far ahead of a solution. What have
2181
2:25:11 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] that we can use now to save lives while we're developing that? And so a whole
2182
2:25:17 --> 2:25:22
bunch of you got together and you said, hey, Dr. Tess Laurie looked at Ivermectin and all these other
2183
2:25:22 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]e came together with a whole bunch of solutions. And they went back to the authorities
2184
2:25:28 --> 2:25:33
and said, hey, while you're working on a vaccine, we've got solutions for you. Let's implement these.
2185
2:25:33 --> 2:25:40
Now in the Apollo 13 scenario, the mission controller said, yep, that's great. Let's do that.
2186
2:25:40 --> 2:25:45
But when it came to this COVID madness, not only were the doctors who were working on what we had
2187
2:25:45 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] that was already available censored, so were their solutions. And that
2188
2:25:51 --> 2:25:58
led me to say in the Senate that we are at the pointy end of the worst human factors disaster
2189
2:25:58 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ory because the solutions that are readily available now have been cancelled.
2190
2:26:04 --> 2:26:08
And my urgency message to the Senate was government, you must listen.
2191
2:26:09 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]s, if ever there was an emergency situation I was involved in
2192
2:26:14 --> 2:26:18
and I wasn't ticking all the boxes to get the airplane on the ground like the crew did in the
2193
2:26:18 --> 2:26:24
Everglades, I was trained to respond to a message from my copilot, captain, you must listen.
2194
2:26:25 --> 2:26:30
And that's what I went to the Senate. And there were two senators in the chamber, but several on
2195
2:26:30 --> 2:26:36
the call that weren't available to be there and to present those people, none of them asked a
2196
2:26:36 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ion after that. They couldn't argue with it. Now, if we go in with the science and all the
2197
2:26:42 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]uff, they would argue, they would come out and ridicule them, whatever. They could not
2198
2:26:47 --> 2:26:51
get over that because that's the real truth of what's going on. There are solutions readily
2199
2:26:51 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction] been ignored and those who were proposing them through pragmatism and reason
2200
2:26:57 --> 2:27:03
have been cancelled like yourself. And we have to appeal to these intellectually handicapped
2201
2:27:03 --> 2:27:09
politicians and bureaucrats that there are solutions and the people who have those solutions
2202
2:27:09 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction] and into the light where they can participate in the debate
2203
2:27:14 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]e well and get our countries back on their feet again. And I can honestly say that the
2204
2:27:19 --> 2:27:25
video of that presentation to the Senate is going viral. And I believe we need to look at different
2205
2:27:25 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]e up. And I believe that's one way of doing it. We have to stop saying people
2206
2:27:32 --> 2:27:37
have got to go to jail, people have got a hand. We've got to look to the intellectually handicapped,
2207
2:27:37 --> 2:27:41
stop running down rabbit holes in different directions and focus on the target. And I think
2208
2:27:41 --> 2:27:47
we can do it. And Michael Yeaton, you have done so much work and I congratulate you for that.
2209
2:27:47 --> 2:27:52
And I'm really concerned about you personally because you've done much more than most other
2210
2:27:52 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]e and I thank you for it. So thank you. Thank you for saying that. And I think we're all doing
2211
2:27:59 --> 2:28:05
what we are, as it were, dropped into this moment in space to do, including, you know, your thing
2212
2:28:05 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction] said there, that there's such powerful work. It's like, Captain, you must listen.
2213
2:28:11 --> 2:28:19
That's great. I mean, because, yeah, I'm sure that that has saved lives repeatedly in a crisis.
2214
2:28:19 --> 2:28:22
So, yeah, maybe it's, you know, Mike, you must listen or whoever it is.
2215
2:28:24 --> 2:28:31
I think you're talking about, can we find ways to get additional or can we find ways to get allies?
2216
2:28:31 --> 2:28:38
At the moment, in the past, I've tried to inform them. And I think they don't really know what's
2217
2:28:38 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ed members of parliament in Westminster, I think most of them do not know
2218
2:28:43 --> 2:28:51
what's going on. I don't think they've all been, you know, shown the script and told, you know,
2219
2:28:51 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction] if you go. I don't think they know what's going on. I think they're not
2220
2:28:56 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]ed to really participate, but to turn up, I think they call them lobby for that. You're
2221
2:29:02 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]ed to turn up and go through the bloody lobby. If you're told to go through the iLobby
2222
2:29:05 --> 2:29:11
or the noLobby, that's what you do. And certain people get selected to get, you know, government
2223
2:29:11 --> 2:29:15
positions, and then they get more senior government positions. And so they're willing to be very
2224
2:29:15 --> 2:29:23
accommodating of their party. And so if someone like me points out your government, your party
2225
2:29:23 --> 2:29:29
is doing the wrong thing. It's just, you know, I know they know before they even hear me that if
2226
2:29:29 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction] their party, it doesn't matter what I tell them, they're not going to do it.
2227
2:29:35 --> 2:29:41
Right. That's, but they are, and I think they also deselect people like you and me.
2228
2:29:42 --> 2:29:46
So we, people like you and me never get elected. Even if we wanted to stand,
2229
2:29:46 --> 2:29:50
they'd have removed us because it's like that hoodie guy sounds like he's going to be clever
2230
2:29:50 --> 2:29:57
and trouble. And so we've ended up with a whole bunch of bloody drones. I've noticed in your
2231
2:29:57 --> 2:30:03
Senate, you seem to have at least two people who have got their head screwed on and are brave enough
2232
2:30:03 --> 2:30:09
to speak about it. Antic is one of them and there's another guy. So I'm not looking at,
2233
2:30:09 --> 2:30:17
I'm not looking at politics. So. Renick and Malcolm, Michael Roberts, sorry, what's the name?
2234
2:30:17 --> 2:30:26
Malcolm Roberts, you've got some very well informed people who won't shut up and they are being heard.
2235
2:30:26 --> 2:30:32
I'm not looking at politics. I don't watch any mainstream media. I've seen them. So that whatever
2236
2:30:32 --> 2:30:37
they've managed to get around the world. And that's, so that's good. All right. We're 20 minutes over.
2237
2:30:37 --> 2:30:44
Woody, I know we're way over. But there's something that all. Steven, you must listen.
2238
2:30:45 --> 2:30:[privacy contact redaction] momentarily. Very good. I think seriously, I think what, something about what Celia said,
2239
2:30:51 --> 2:30:56
you know, there's already some vulnerabilities that, you know, rather than what me worrying about,
2240
2:30:56 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction] got awesome power. And if we're not bloody lucky and determined, they will roll us over.
2241
2:31:01 --> 2:31:07
But not over. And that's why I'm thinking there's probably they've made some mistakes,
2242
2:31:07 --> 2:31:13
which we need to capitalize on. And I think Graham has hit on some points, which is in every
2243
2:31:13 --> 2:31:18
legislature, there's a handful of people who are brave and clever. Imagine if we could get
2244
2:31:18 --> 2:31:24
them all together and let's say we had three from every one of 192 countries who are articulate
2245
2:31:24 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction]ugged in. You'd have whatever that would be. You probably have a thousand people.
2246
2:31:31 --> 2:31:37
I don't know. Can we do something? I don't want to form a one world team. One that's ever so
2247
2:31:37 --> 2:31:41
macabre and frightening. And also we provide an opportunity for us all to be wiped out at one time.
2248
2:31:41 --> 2:31:48
But there seem to be too small a number in any one country to get a breakthrough in any one country.
2249
2:31:48 --> 2:31:53
There's no point in us getting the bronze medal in every country. We've got to get gold somewhere.
2250
2:31:54 --> 2:31:57
I don't know how to do it, but I feel we've got to get gold somewhere.
2251
2:31:59 --> 2:32:06
Charles, you must listen. We can't let Michael go without a 22nd prayer. Please don't let us do that.
2252
2:32:06 --> 2:32:07
Okay.
2253
2:32:07 --> 2:32:08
Rana, who do you want to do it?
2254
2:32:09 --> 2:32:16
Braym is a wonderful communicator. He's an airline captain or was and I think he was
2255
2:32:16 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]ralia at the time he resigned. I don't know whether that's true,
2256
2:32:20 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction], the point is that he's a wonderful communicator. He's incredibly trustworthy. He's
2257
2:32:26 --> 2:32:32
very sensible. And I think he's exactly the kind of guy who is able to put these messages out to
2258
2:32:32 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]and because he needed to do it when he was an airline
2259
2:32:36 --> 2:32:43
pilot. Thank you, Stephen. Okay, Hoody, go for your 20 seconds. Charles, can we have a question?
2260
2:32:43 --> 2:32:46
Stephen, we'll do it. We'll do the prayer and then your last question, Stephen. Okay, so
2261
2:32:47 --> 2:32:51
Hoody. Thomas Binder as well. He had his hand up before and he lost it because of people.
2262
2:32:51 --> 2:32:58
Yeah, we're way out of time. Thomas, quick question. Go. I haven't got people leaving,
2263
2:32:58 --> 2:33:04
Stephen. Come on, Thomas, go. Stephen asked me whether I wanted to say something so I rose my
2264
2:33:04 --> 2:33:10
hand. Hi, Mike. Great to hear you. Hi, Thomas. It's our time to meet you in person once. I hope we
2265
2:33:10 --> 2:33:19
can do this. I fully agree with everything you said. I think the most important things we have to
2266
2:33:19 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction], there was no pandemic of a killer virus. There was mainly,
2267
2:33:26 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction]etely, an RT-PCR testing pandemic. Second, the whole mRNA vaccine platform is
2268
2:33:35 --> 2:33:43
basically flawed, so it must be banned. And the third is refused to accept anything that contains
2269
2:33:44 --> 2:33:51
digital in its name. Yeah, these are my two cents. Yeah, I absolutely, wholeheartedly endorse all
2270
2:33:51 --> 2:33:56
three of those things. Thank you. Thank you, Thomas. Thank you, Stephen. Okay, Stephen,
2271
2:33:56 --> 2:33:[privacy contact redaction]ion because then we'll have a closing prayer from Hoody and then we're going to go.
2272
2:34:02 --> 2:34:08
So, Mike, I noticed that you say that there was no pandemic, but you also say the formulation was
2273
2:34:08 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction]ually you know that it was a complete fraud. They used three different methods to kill
2274
2:34:14 --> 2:34:[privacy contact redaction], I think you went on to say there were two more, which you had limited
2275
2:34:19 --> 2:34:26
knowledge of. I think it's extremely important from you to the people around the world hear
2276
2:34:26 --> 2:34:33
that message, that distillation, if you like. And then if they want to know more, you can provide
2277
2:34:33 --> 2:34:40
all the evidence. I am right now in a process where someone reached out to me to say,
2278
2:34:41 --> 2:34:46
we need to get what you've said down in writing. You need to speak to me and I will write the
2279
2:34:46 --> 2:34:51
bloody article. So I've actually had someone do exactly what I needed. They threw me the life
2280
2:34:51 --> 2:34:56
raft to say, grab hold of that. I'll pull you to the shore and then I'll record you speaking. I
2281
2:34:56 --> 2:35:02
will write the article. So it'll be me and the author. So we are going to do this in the next
2282
2:35:02 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction]smiths and we need people like Celia Farber, who's a brilliant,
2283
2:35:08 --> 2:35:14
insightful author, expert on the AIDS virus. And she was thrown into that at a very tender age.
2284
2:35:16 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction]rengths. And so I'm talking from a medical
2285
2:35:20 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction]or's point of view. In my view, there was not only no pandemic, but there was no disease
2286
2:35:27 --> 2:35:34
called COVID-19. It was a fake disease. The PCR test we know was fraudulent. You wrote with William
2287
2:35:34 --> 2:35:39
Wolfgang Wood, I'll go think about that to the European Meds Foundation. So you understand that.
2288
2:35:39 --> 2:35:[privacy contact redaction]or and all doctors in the world should have understood that
2289
2:35:43 --> 2:35:50
it wasn't properly diagnosed this so-called disease. So the whole thing was a fraud. It was
2290
2:35:50 --> 2:35:57
a fake. And so there was no, and why was it so when, so they tried to say, oh, but you know,
2291
2:35:57 --> 2:36:03
so it wasn't even clinically possible. It wasn't possible to diagnose it clinically. That's the
2292
2:36:03 --> 2:36:09
point. So there was nothing that a medical doctor could hang his hat on and say that's COVID-19.
2293
2:36:09 --> 2:36:14
They tried to say, oh, loss of taste, loss of smell and all this nonsense. And seems everybody
2294
2:36:14 --> 2:36:18
in the world seemed to forget that when they had a cold previously, they lost their sense of taste
2295
2:36:18 --> 2:36:24
and smell and the same with, and then they say, oh, it was, it lasted longer with COVID. No, sorry.
2296
2:36:24 --> 2:36:33
There was no symptom that was pathognomonic for COVID-19. So the whole thing was a fraud.
2297
2:36:33 --> 2:36:38
And it's been done before. They did it with the swine flu. And Wolfgang Wood, they hear the
2298
2:36:38 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]igation at the European, at the Council of Europe, which is a
2299
2:36:47 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]ituent part of the European Union. And the investigation is on the, the report of that
2300
2:36:53 --> 2:36:[privacy contact redaction]igation is on the internet. It was a fraud. They did the same thing in 2020 and we're still
2301
2:36:59 --> 2:37:05
living through that nonsense. We need to expose these. Come on. But how many trials? No, we're
2302
2:37:05 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction]e are leaving in droves, Stephen. You don't care. I do. I don't care about
2303
2:37:11 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction], they shouldn't have left. Come on. Come on.
2304
2:37:16 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction] nearly finished, Charles. So there was no COVID-19. There was no pandemic. There never was
2305
2:37:23 --> 2:37:28
a pandemic. Pandemics are not possible in the future. And no fear is necessary because they
2306
2:37:28 --> 2:37:[privacy contact redaction] all the populations around the world to promote this nonsense. This
2307
2:37:34 --> 2:37:40
Trojan horse for totalitarianism. We need to expose them. Okay. Thank you, Stephen.
2308
2:37:40 --> 2:37:46
Hoodie, closing prayer, please, for Mike and the group. Dear Lord, Father in heaven, we just call
2309
2:37:46 --> 2:37:52
on your Holy Spirit, Father God, to nurture the heart of Michael Yeaton, a man who has given so
2310
2:37:52 --> 2:37:58
much to bring so much truth at such great cost. Father, we know this is taking a toll on him and
2311
2:37:58 --> 2:38:03
we're all paying a price, but he is paying a very, very high price. Lord, we need to be
2312
2:38:03 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction]s to penetrate the truth into the houses that make the differences.
2313
2:38:09 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction], as we proceed further, we ask you to guide our every step. But most of all,
2314
2:38:14 --> 2:38:18
our prayer at this moment is that you would surround Michael Yeaton with angel swords drawn
2315
2:38:18 --> 2:38:[privacy contact redaction] him, to watch over him and to cover him. And this is our prayer in Jesus name. Amen.
2316
2:38:25 --> 2:38:32
Amen. Well said. Thank you, Graham. Beautiful. So for those with the time, Tom Rodman has put
2317
2:38:32 --> 2:38:36
the link into the video group for those who have endless amounts of time to do that. Well done.
2318
2:38:36 --> 2:38:42
If you do, there's the link. Mike, thank you so much for being with us, Stephen. Thank you
2319
2:38:42 --> 2:38:49
for organizing, Mike, to be with us. And some very important information. Please watch the recording
2320
2:38:49 --> 2:38:56
for those of you who are live and we will see you again on Sunday night, Monday. Big round of
2321
2:38:56 --> 2:39:[privacy contact redaction]ause to Mike. Hopefully you can see us, Mike, that we're all clapping. Yeah, okay. Thank you very
2322
2:39:01 --> 2:39:06
much for inviting me and then putting up with me because as you can tell, I can not only talk for
2323
2:39:06 --> 2:39:12
England, but I can talk for anybody and not stop. But thank you very much. I've enjoyed the interaction.
2324
2:39:14 --> 2:39:17
Thank you, Mike. Thank you. Wonderful. Thank you, Mike. Enjoy the rest of your vacation.
2325
2:39:17 --> 2:39:23
Thank you. Thank you. Bye bye then. Thank you. Bye bye. Thank you so much.
2326
2:39:29 --> 2:39:35
Thanks, Charles. Thank you, Stephen. Great job. We got there. Woody, say your name.
2327
2:39:35 --> 2:39:40
I'm sorry. I just felt that it was such an important presentation. Yeah, yeah, no, it's okay.
2328
2:39:40 --> 2:39:44
And we wouldn't get another, well, we would get another chance, but you know, you can't
2329
2:39:44 --> 2:39:50
recreate the atmosphere of this evening and I think that we should all feel that that was
2330
2:39:50 --> 2:39:55
well spent. That was time well spent. Yeah, it was. Thanks for having me in there, guys. Thank you.
2331
2:39:55 --> 2:39:59
Bye bye. Bye bye, buddy. Thanks. Thank you so much to you as well for that prayer. Thank you.
2332
2:40:00 --> 2:40:04
All right. Bye, everybody. And to everybody who asked questions. Thank you.