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So Paul, we are a group of doctors, lawyers, physicians, scientists, physicists, troublemakers,
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0:00:09 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]s, all orchestrated by Stephen and friends of Stephen.
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0:00:15 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ephen can relax while he does the work during the week.
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And we're happy to listen to you for 40 minutes, 50 minutes, or [privacy contact redaction]ions.
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Yeah, I mean, I would prefer it is I mean, I can talk whatever, but I think to have a discussion,
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0:00:35 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]s useful, which has been the problem with COVID is we've been censored so that you
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can't have conversations. And I think a conversation, you know, science is based on people talking and
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exchanging ideas. And, you know, I learn stuff all the time just by talking to people.
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So would you like, if you gave us a 10, five minute story about your background,
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0:01:08 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ions, we'll do it. We'll try it. We'll try this verbally.
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So we'll have a conversation as you request, and people put their hand up, and we'll take them in
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Sure, I can do anything. I mean, if you want to, I can do a singing and dance routine.
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Paul, what would be really great is, I think, having viewed what the evidence you gave to
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Senator Johnson, I think that you would be really good to explain the practice of medicine to
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0:01:42 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]e on the call, because I don't think a lot of people who are doctors,
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0:01:47 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]and what it's about. So I was saying to my own family, for example, the governments were
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saying around the world, follow the science, and I was saying, no, follow the medicine.
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And I was thinking, where are the doctors? What's happened to them? Yes. So that would be very
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useful, I think, because they've heard some of it from me. But I'm sure you, a professor in the
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medical school, and a medical doctor, would have very good grasp of how medicine should be,
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and how it's been corrupted since March 2020, how totally corrupted it's been.
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Yeah, I mean, it's so perplexing what's going on. And, you know, for me, the biggest tragedy is
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0:02:31 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] their eyes shut and their ears closed, and have just no idea. I mean,
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it's, you know, you just look what's going on around, and you just can't be blind. And yet,
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yet the public are so brainwashed, doctors are brainwashed. And then, you know, you just dare to
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0:02:54 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ion the narrative, then you're an anti-facts, misinformation, trouble shooting person.
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But, you know, I've come to believe that this is a very, this is not just a,
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0:03:10 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] a COVID thing. There's a very big agenda at that's going on. That's very sinister.
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0:03:20 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ly it is, I don't know. I don't like to think about it. And, you know, my thoughts have
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evolved, you know, from time to time, you know, each time I thought it was some kind of conspiracy,
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0:03:32 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ually turns out to be true. And so I don't know what the truth is anymore.
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You know, I'm reading stuff on HIV, it seems like HIV doesn't cause AIDS. I mean, this is such a
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remarkable concept, is that there are these massive misinformation, propaganda agendas that
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don't allow people to, you know, exchange ideas and to talk and to
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raise alternative hypotheses. I mean, the concept to me, that AIDS is not caused by HIV is just so
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bizarre, that it's difficult to get your head around. You know, I was reading about dinosaurs,
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maybe dinosaurs didn't happen. I was reading that maybe the moon landing was all staged.
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So, you know what, I don't know what's true and what's not true anymore. Certainly, 9-11
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0:04:33 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ory we were told was not the true story. And actually, I was in Dallas recently, and I
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0:04:42 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ory we told is certainly not the true story. So, you know,
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if there's a plot to kill the president, and clearly there was, you know, where's the limit?
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I don't know. So I'm having personally, I'm struggling with dealing with what's real and
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what's not real. I think we all are. Yes, as Paul, as they say in the classics, the difference
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between a conspiracy and a conspiracy theory is six months, rapidly reducing to one month.
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Yeah, I mean, that seems to be, you know, when, you know, the idea came out that this was a manmade
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virus, you know, people thought this was a conspiracy, they wrote it was a conspiracy.
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But I mean, I think the overwhelming majority of data, you know, this, this, this is manmade.
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And then there was idea that this was an accidental leak, you know, it seems like it was a,
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this is all by design. And so there are lots of very disturbing things about this whole story.
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So I don't know, whenever you're ready, I can start talking.
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0:05:58 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]arted, may I say something, Stephen?
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Sure.
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If you, you have just said that you're confused, we're all confused, just like Stephen said,
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can you imagine how the general public feels?
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0:06:14 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ly. That's what I've been thinking.
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0:06:16 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] imagine when we can't even sort through it, who are working with this every
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0:06:23 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] two and almost half years now, you can imagine how the
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public feels. But I do want to say something to you. Paul, I want to say this. My husband
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0:06:37 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]hma, and he was in the hospital with COVID. He was in the hospital for 222 days.
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And he was on the ventilator for six and a half weeks. I want to thank you personally.
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I've already thanked Dr. Pierre Corey, because I demanded the math protocol.
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My husband is alive today because of that protocol. And I want to thank you.
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Thank you. So it's stories like yours that keep me going.
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Because I've lost a lot. But you know what, we have to continue. Sorry.
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No, that's fine. I see your tears. I see your genuine concern.
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But that is not what the public has seen from other dogs.
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Yeah. Unfortunately, the propaganda is such a mean they've hired public relations companies,
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they've spent billions and billions of dollars on propaganda. This is nothing more than propaganda
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and misinformation. And it's deliberate and by design to fulfill their agenda.
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And that's the tragedy. Because you know, you try speak to normal people, they think you've got
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on TV, what they read, what social media, it's such a brilliantly coordinated public relations
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campaign that, you know, what we're trying to say, what we're talking seems so preposterous,
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because it's either their reality. And I mean, if doctors are confused, you can see why the
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public are confused, because they've been fed all of this misinformation.
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Yes, that's the tragedy.
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0:08:45 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, can you make me a co host, please?
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Sorry.
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Carla Dean, thank you for that most moving message to Paul, just to, you know, put him,
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throw him off his confidence and put tears in his eyes. Well done.
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Wait a minute, is that a compliment or not?
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It's a big compliment. Yes, of course.
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Thank you.
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Paul, over to you.
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I've done it, Charles.
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So, you know what, maybe I'll just start with my story. And if you have any questions, you can just
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back in or whatever.
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0:09:25 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, could you repeat again what you would like Paul
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Well, yes, but he maybe hasn't prepared for it. So I don't want to push it too hard. So, Paul,
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0:09:38 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]e would be for you to outline some of what we learned at
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0:09:44 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]and in a medical situation, you let doctors get on with it.
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You don't come along with a bunch of scientists with data or lawyers with evidence, which is
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provable beyond reasonable doubts or beyond the bounds of probability or whatever.
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So, doctors sort out medical situations and it was astonishing to me that they lay down before
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their governments and their governments had not a clue what was going on because they were advised
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0:10:17 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]e. The government was probably corrupt as well. So, if you could wind in your
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0:10:26 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]anding of what we both know was taught to us at medical school, including particularly the
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medical ethics, the Nuremberg Code, informed consent, if you know about those things, if it's
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on your tongue, and human medical experimentation, which is what the Nuremberg Code is about. And
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my view, which is what I said in the email to you, but you haven't seen it clearly, was that all
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the measures taken in the name of this single coronavirus were not medically justifiable.
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0:11:02 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]ituted medical human medical experimentation in violation of the Nuremberg Code.
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That's my personal opinion. I don't mean. Yeah, so I agree with you. So, you know, I think
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medicine, medical science has been corrupt for a while. I think the control that Big Pharma
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has on medicine, the medical curriculum, medical schools, journals has been there for a long time.
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You know, if you just look at NIH funding of medical schools, 55% of NIH grant goes to the
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medical school, just as a bonus. So medical schools are really funded by the NIH, and they don't want
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0:11:47 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] the NIH. And they obviously have different agendas. You know, when I look at
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nutrition, you know, one of my interests is nutrition. I think medical students spend an
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hour in the entire curriculum, you know, on nutrition. The rest is on, you know, pharmacology
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0:12:08 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]ugs. You get very little tuition on lifestyle and health style choices get lit,
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0:12:16 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction] no tuition on medical ethics. So it's a and, you know, I think COVID has brought this out
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right to the front because it's made it really extreme. But I think, you know, I was fortunate
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0:12:36 --> 0:12:[privacy contact redaction]udent and medical student, and I was brought up in a bizarre country.
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But you know what we were taught to think, maybe because we were in such a bizarre situation,
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and to some degree, we had this, you know, guilt complex. So we were super sensitive to
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doing the right thing, being morally and ethically correct. And, you know, doing the right thing.
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So maybe that's that was part of my genes, which makes it difficult to operate in the US.
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So, you know, my story is I'm an intensivist. I've practiced critical care for 35 years.
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I've always had an interest outside, you know, the biggest scope of medicine.
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You know, I'm board certified in nutrition support. I was interested in alternative medicine.
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I love the ICU because it's a place where you could practice medicine, you could see physiology,
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you could manipulate physiology. And that's where my love was. COVID, you know, changed things.
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So, you know, how this really started was in March of 2020. You know, once COVID came to New York,
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if you remember, there was no specific guidance on the treatment of this disease in New York.
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You know, if you're on a ventilator, [privacy contact redaction]e were dying.
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And the WHO said the treatment was supportive. Now, I mean, any physician would say that's absurd.
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This is a disease that has a high mortality. How can you do nothing? You at least have to try
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0:14:19 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]s taught, you know, you've got to leave no stone unturned. So it was at
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0:14:25 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]arted, I started with the, what was then the EVMS protocol for the treatment
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0:14:31 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]eroids. And this is really based on our bedside observation,
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0:14:38 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]anding of the disease input from Dr. Maduri. And we were ridiculed. The WHO, the NIH,
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0:14:46 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction] the use of steroids. But you know what, we were at the bedside,
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we could see this was an inflammatory disease and we saw it worked. And so our protocol has
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evolved with time. And really it's based on the best science, because I think that's what we should
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follow. And obviously it's a dynamic process, because I think we understand a lot more now
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0:15:11 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ill got a lot to learn. And I exchanged information with colleagues across
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the world. And it's amazing how useful that is to speak to like-minded people who treat this disease.
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And that was really, you know, very helpful because, you know, they would come up with ideas I
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never thought of. And so that's how a protocol evolved. My medical school embraced me. Really,
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I was like the local hero until about May of 221, when then I became the villain, because,
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you know, we had suggested using ivermectin as part of the protocol, not as the entire protocol
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0:15:52 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ober. And nobody seemed to mind. But suddenly, you know, when the NIH and the WHO and
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the FDA went on this propaganda campaign, you know, you're not a horse, you're not a cow, stop it. And
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0:16:07 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ually sent out letters to every health, you know, state health agency saying that this is
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toxic horse deworming medicine. You know, ivermectin became undesirable and I became
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undesirable. I was an undesirable person. But what I did is, you know, I treat patients, you know,
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0:16:31 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] I can. I think guidelines are fine. But they're guidelines.
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They never a mandate, they never a law because no two patients are ever the same. They're never
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the same. And the clinician has to use his clinical judgment. So up until October, I was using our
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0:16:53 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]us protocol, which I think was based on really good science, randomized control trials,
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you know, using flu voxamine and do test to ride and finesse to ride and vitamin C.
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And I was having really good results, but I wasn't using remdesivir because as we know,
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it failed in Ebola. It's a toxic drug. It increases the risk of renal failure 20 fold.
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And the data shows that it doesn't decrease mortality on the converse, it increases it.
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And it's, you know, what I've come to understand is you can't trust the data from big pharma.
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0:17:32 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] and manipulate data because they're not interested
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in human lives or humanity. They're interested in profits. So I refuse to use remdesivir.
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And I use the medicines that I thought helped my patients the best. I was doing what doctors do
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is they look at their patients, they come up with a treatment plan and they do what's best for their
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0:18:01 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]ugs. It's not like I was using experimental therapies.
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And then the hospital banned me using these drugs. At first, I didn't quite understand why I was being
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banned, but I think I was going against the narrative. I was going against the narrative,
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which is being promulgated by the NIH, the CDC, the federal government, all these agencies.
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If you look at the NIH guidelines, remdesivir and dexamethasone. So I was going strictly against
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this and I was having better outcomes. And that was not acceptable. It was not acceptable to go
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0:18:40 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] the narrative. And that's what it really was all about, is that I did what I, what doctors
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should do. And I refused. So they prevented me treating my patients the way I wanted to.
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I did it for a week, which was one of the most difficult weeks of my career because I basically
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0:19:06 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]rung. There was nothing I could do. And I had a 31-year-old woman, a 42-year-old
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man. I had seven patients with COVID that all died. All of them died. And you know what? They
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0:19:21 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] died despite what I did, but at least give the doctor the opportunity to do what doctors do,
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0:19:28 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] their patient's life. I was prevented from doing that. And I was
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0:19:34 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] the narrative. And I've realized now that there are very strong
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incentives why you follow the narrative. They want you to follow the narrative for treatment,
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0:19:48 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction] importantly, they've instilled fear into the public into being vaccinated. There's this myth
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0:19:57 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ive, safe and effective. And the only way out of this is
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vaccination. So there are a number of narratives that are being driven by big pharma, but probably
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0:20:10 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ry, large financial institutions, governments. So this was going against the
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narrative, and that's not acceptable. And that's kind of what led to my losing my job is that it's
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not acceptable. Human life is absolutely irrelevant. It's about this agenda they have.
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So that's kind of my opening story. I've become more enthused with what's actually going on.
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0:20:56 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]arted this. We thought we'd come up with a protocol,
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0:21:01 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]e accept the protocol, we treat people and COVID would go away. They did not want COVID to
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0:21:07 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]ay. They wanted to instill fear so that people could so-called get
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vaccinated. That's part of their agenda. And I'm not sure what these things are. They're not really
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vaccines. They're basically experimental gene therapy. So that's kind of my story.
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I've actually managed patients. I've looked after hundreds of patients with COVID. So I think I
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0:21:44 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]and COVID. I've communicated with hundreds of doctors who are interested in discussing how
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to treat COVID. And unfortunately, every day I get terrible emails, much like Carol Dean's story
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0:22:03 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]uck in hospital begging for help. And it's heartbreaking. It's heartbreaking when
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it's a 42-year-old man with two or three kids that's going to die from COVID who should not have died.
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And obviously, you know, you look at the consent form for the vaccine. It's not a consent form.
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0:22:23 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] the risks, the complications, alternative therapy. It's forced inoculation
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0:22:32 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]e's will. People get remdesivir in the hospital without informed consent. They just
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give it. They're not told the risks and benefits. So, you know, you talk about patients, basically
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in hospitals in the U.S., patients are prisoners. They are imprisoned. They have no rights. They have
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0:22:53 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] no one speaking for them. Their family's not allowed in the hospital.
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The hospitals do what they want to do without really discussing the risks. They don't want to
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discuss it with the patient or the family. So COVID has unfortunately made a bad situation
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infinitely worse. You know, I'm a critical care doctor, and I have to say that hospitals are
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0:23:25 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]e these days. Patients have no rights. They have no advocates.
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And they are basically prisoners of the system.
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All right, Paul, thank you for this. Now, tradition here, I'll be reading questions out to you.
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They're in the chat, and then we'll go to chat, verbal chat after that. But first, tradition is
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0:23:53 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]ions of you. Sure. It won't be hard, Paul. You said you were
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0:24:02 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]icing medicine as you had... You didn't use those words, but I think that's what
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0:24:07 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] wondered, so how you learned medicine at medical school and then in your
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training and then your experience, obviously, as you progressed to professor, how did they
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0:24:24 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]icing medicine as you wished? What would they have done if you had
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continued doing what you wanted to? Because you were a big noise in that medical school,
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0:24:38 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]and it, and in the hospital. You know, I mean, you ask a good question. I mean,
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you know, part of looking after patients, you always think about a differential diagnosis.
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The differential diagnosis is so fundamental to medicine, and then you consider what the different
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therapeutic treatments are, and that's regardless of any kind of financial interest. And then you
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do what you think's in the patient's best interest, which is the way I was trained to practice medicine,
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is that you should do what's in the patient's best interest. You should treat the patient
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as if the patient was your mother or father or you would want them to get that treatment.
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0:25:19 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction] and you don't discriminate. You know, if they're an alcoholic,
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0:25:24 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ug abuser, if they're off the street or they're a millionaire, there's equity. You don't
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0:25:31 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]e by their status in life. I mean, you know, if they're a smoker,
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you're going to treat them differently. You know, if they're vaccinated, you're going to
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treat them. You treat them like they were your own family. That's the way I was taught.
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What's happened with COVID is we've been told by the NIH how to treat people. And at first,
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I thought maybe this was a guideline. No, this is a mandate. This is what you have to do. This is
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how you treat them, which goes against the whole fabric of medicine. And basically what happened,
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0:26:11 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ually told the pharmacy not to dispense the medicines that I was prescribing.
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They banned them. I was banned from using FDA approved medications, including vitamin C.
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I was, the pharmacy would not dispense them. So, I mean, the hospital was practicing medicine.
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0:26:35 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ors how to practice medicine. The state was telling doctors how to
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0:26:41 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]ice medicine. So, you know, that's why our slogan is let doctors be doctors. We should let
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them decide. So I'm not telling you or anybody else how to practice medicine. The doctor should
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decide for himself, but we should not have outside entities who have profound financial
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0:27:02 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]s determining how we manage patients. And, you know, in your hospital and in your
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medical school, who exactly were the opposition? Who? So, you know, it's a really good question
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who they are because they're faceless. And I mean, so basically the chief quality officer put out
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0:27:28 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]atement, which was directed at me personally, but was sent throughout the whole healthcare system
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0:27:34 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]s of 18 hospitals. They sent around this memo from the
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so-called chief quality officer, basically saying that these drugs will no longer be dispensed by
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the pharmacy. Where that came from, I don't know. I don't think it came from him alone. I think he
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was pressurized. Was he pressurized by the CEO of the hospital? Was the CEO of the hospital pressurized?
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So nobody will really tell me who. So, you know, basically I became a, from being a hero,
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I became an undesirable. Nobody wanted to talk to me because I think it became clear
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0:28:19 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]atus quo. I was questioning the safety of vaccines. And you
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know what? Medicine is based on asking questions. In fact, I had tenure and, you know, the origins
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0:28:33 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] scientists from being, you know, giving them academic freedom
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to say and do what they want to do, because it was felt it's in the best interest of society
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if you raise controversial issues to discuss. But even though I was tenured, I was essentially
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0:28:56 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ice medicine. But how, how, how did they think that
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they wouldn't get any criticism? I mean, who was the guy who actually sent out the letter? Who signed
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the letter? It was signed by the chief quality officer, a guy by the name of Bundy. We call him
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Ted Bundy because I think he fits into that category. It was signed by him. And what were his
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qualifications? So he hadn't seen a patient for six or seven years. I think he was a nephrologist
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previously, probably not a good one, because who goes into hospital administration is people who,
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who don't do well as doctors. So here this, this hospital administrator is telling, you know,
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0:29:49 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]ice medicine. Exactly. Ridiculous. But you know, unfortunately,
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0:29:57 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]emic problem in this country, and probably abroad is if you go against the
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0:30:03 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ion is, is, is they don't want you to question what they're telling you.
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So there's a very smart woman in Maine by the name of Meryl Ness. She's a very smart woman.
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Yes. So she was she got she would got reported to the Board of Medicine because she had suggested
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0:30:23 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine, or either make them for COVID. She had a medical license
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rescinded, they took away her license. But what they even did further is they referred her for
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0:30:35 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ing, basically accusing her of being so mentally disabled, or, or disturbed
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0:30:43 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]er these medications. So they wanted to make an example of her
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to basically say, I mean, this is, this is like the Holocaust. This is like,
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why did she go along with that narrative? If she did, she had no option, her license was removed.
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They removed they, they removed her medical license. But you don't have to submit to a
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neuropsychiatric examination when you suspect that there are malign reasons for that examination.
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Yes. So she is fine. She writes, she's a very smart woman. She does have a legal background. So she is
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fighting this, this mandate or this requirement that she does go neuropsychiatric testing,
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0:31:29 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction], clearly punitive, clearly unacceptable. So she is fighting it.
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But unfortunately, they removed a medical license. So that prohibits her from practicing.
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And this is unfortunately the power that these agencies have. If you go against the narrative.
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0:31:52 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ors. No, but there's a new narrative. The new narrative is safe and
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0:31:58 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ive, safe and effective. You don't question it. And you follow the NIH protocol. That's the
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narrative. And it's absurd. It's that's, that's what it is. You, you, you, these are laws that
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come from higher powers, the NIH, and you follow the NIH guideline to a letter. If you even question
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it, you're not following the narratives. It's truly astonishing. And now we know that the NIH,
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from what I can see of Robert Kennedy's book, is completely corrupt, as is Fauci.
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Yes. So I mean, you know, yes, the FDA, the NIH, the CDC are controlled by big pharma. You know,
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that's who they work for. They work for big pharma. They're not working for the tax paying
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American public. They work for big pharma. They're controlled by big pharma. Many of the NIH
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0:33:00 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction], the members have profound financial ties to big pharma. Big pharma
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controls, I mean, they, they're the biggest sponsors of Congress people. They give money to
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Republicans and Democrats alike, because they don't care. They want to control the narrative. They
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want to control Congress. And with very few exceptions, maybe two or three, almost every
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other congressman and senator accepts money from big pharma. Big pharma controls the press.
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Big pharma controls the media. Big pharma controls social media. Big pharma controls
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the Congress. Big pharma controls the FDA, the NIH, the CDC. It's just the way it is.
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0:33:51 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]e knew this, they would reckon that these agencies are not serving the best interests
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of Americans or the public or the world. It's all self-serving. I mean, you want to look at this new
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drug, the new antiviral, not Paxlo, the other one. My mind has just gone blank. The Merck drug.
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Ed, can you remember?
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Malponever. So Malponever is a mutagenic drug. It's mutagenic. The randomized control trial showed
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0:34:33 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]bo, patients who got placebo did better than those who got the active
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drug. And yet it was approved by the FDA and the federal government bought billions of dollars of
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0:34:46 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]ug. If that doesn't speak corruption, I don't know what does. So it's the
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narrative, it's corruption, it's lies, it's disinformation. And that's the story. Unfortunately,
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0:35:01 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]e like me say the things I'm saying, you get labeled as a misinformationist and
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anti-vaccination and anti-scientist and you need to be discarded.
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But you're right, Paul, and they're wrong.
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Yes. So you know what? You have to go by your heart. And I know I'm right. And that's why I
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can't let them defeat me. And the truth will eventually emerge. You can't hide it forever.
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0:35:31 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ly. That's what they don't know. You cannot hide the truth forever. It will come out.
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And then there's going to be a lot of accounting to be done, you know, to explain exactly what's
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0:35:44 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] hospitals in America been deciding over doctors?
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So, you know, I think this is a COVID thing. You know, before we had guidelines, and the NIH would
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0:36:03 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction] obnoxious one is the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines,
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which is not based on science, but on politics. And basically, they were thinking of making this
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link to reimbursement and finance, but couldn't sway it. But they do look at it if you're
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0:36:26 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]iant. But it was a guideline. You weren't forced to do it. COVID has changed that. This is
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0:36:34 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction] that I know of that hospitals dictate unequivocally how doctors treat patients.
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So if you're hospitalized, you get remdesivir and dexamethasone. So the truth is 95% of patients
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are hospitalized in this country, get five days of remdesivir and six milligrams of dexamethasone.
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Somehow, it's translated into the law. It's a mandate. It comes from some higher power.
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And so this is what's made COVID so unprecedented, because I think this has not happened before.
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Yes, exactly. So can I just, I'm nearly finished. So remdesivir is a deadly drug, as I understand it.
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And yet it's the, it was at one time the only drug, you will know this, but my understanding
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0:37:29 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ates, it was the only drug that you could give
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0:37:35 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]e who'd been diagnosed with COVID-19. And so Brian Ardis, who's been on with us,
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he told us about maybe four months ago now that there were 800,000 deaths from remdesivir in the
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0:37:53 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ates alone due to the mandated use of that drug. What is your understanding of this?
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What is your view on that? And he also says that it's murder, mass murder.
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Yeah, no. So the question is, why would a doctor give a patient a drug which is known to be toxic
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and is known not to improve outcome? In fact, it's harmful. So that's immoral. It's a violation of
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patients' rights. It goes against the Hippocratic oath. It's murder. And I agree. The problem is,
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it's difficult to quantify its toxicity because there are very few control groups. It's like
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the vaccine. What they did is there was a placebo control trial, but at six months, the placebo group
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0:38:52 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] a placebo group to follow up. The problem in the US is
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0:38:59 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] every hospitalized patient gets remdesivir. The hospital mortality is high. So it's very
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difficult to know what percentage of deaths are directly due to remdesivir. The WHO's own data
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shows that it increases the risk of kidney failure by 20 fold. And we know that kidney
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failure is a potent cause of adverse outcomes and death. So it's very difficult to actually
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0:39:28 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ly due to remdesivir. But it should be a drug which is banned.
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I mean, there's no reason to use it. The reason they use it is because it costs $3,000. And what
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you may not know is the federal government gives hospitals a 20% bonus on the entire hospital bill.
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The federal government gives the hospital a 20% bonus on the entire hospital bill for
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Medicare recipients if they get remdesivir. I mean, how much more evil and sinister does it get?
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Sure. Well, so Brian Ardis is prepared to give evidence in a court of law under oath
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0:40:13 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] died from remdesivir now. But worse than that,
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0:40:19 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]e who are dying of remdesivir were then put down as COVID deaths. And then they used the
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death figures to psychologically torture the populations around the world. I mean, it's just
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0:40:32 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction], thank you for answering those questions. You know what? I don't know what to
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say anymore. You know, it's so disheartening because this isn't the medicine that I went into.
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This is not why we went into medicine. And, you know, the hard part is where's the rest of the
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world? Why aren't they shouting? You know, why are they so quiet and submissive? These protocols are
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killing patients. You know, we could have solved this COVID pandemic months and months and months
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ago if we did the right thing, but they didn't want us to do that. Yeah. And I think that doctors,
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0:41:16 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ors, I think now who realized that they were suckered into whatever was going
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0:41:23 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ually giving it much thought. And now they're ashamed of what they've done.
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0:41:29 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] from me when I mentioned the Nuremberg code, literally. So yes, the other
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0:41:36 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] go along with this because, you know, they don't have to. So
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either they're ignorant, either they don't care, or they're so scared, or as you say, that they
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now recognize they've made a mistake and don't know what to do. But at least, you know, they should
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0:41:59 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction] some kind of humanity to say, hey, this is just wrong. People
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are dying. And that's exactly what Peter McCullough said in the middle of his speech to the American
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Association of Physicians and Surgeons. He was talking about his father, and he broke down as he
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0:42:18 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ory. And he said, he could hardly get his words out. It's the only time I've
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0:42:23 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]s. He said one by one, this is wrong. Exactly. So Peter McCullough
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doesn't have to be right about everything. You know, but at least he's looked like a doctor.
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And that's true of many of the doctors who've been working with him. So Peter gets criticized
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because he doesn't quite get the PCR test or doesn't want, I don't know. But the thing is that
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we're all working together, and we have to welcome those who want to work with us. I really want to
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0:43:00 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]icit in these great crimes against humanity to account.
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0:43:08 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] bury it and forget about it. And so I would be very happy
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to work with you, Paul, and with others you feel are very determined to hold these people to account,
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because I think there's a real risk that they'll get away. And they think that they are getting
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away at the moment. Yeah, that is the tragedy. So you know, what you say is that, you know,
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there are lots of Peter McCullough, Richard also, lots of people who are similar minded,
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we may think slightly differently. And that's fine, because you know, that's what science is
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based on. You know, and, you know, the more we discuss things, the closer we actually become
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aligned together. It's truly astonishing. But what happens is we allow to have discussion.
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0:44:00 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]opped a sense of discussion. Every single one of my
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YouTubes gets taken down for promoting medical misinformation. It's the same with Facebook.
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It's the same with all the social media. The newspapers just don't want to speak the truth.
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And so that's the problem we're facing. Paul, don't you think that we as doctors,
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we should emphasize clinical judgment, clinical acumen, you did mention clinical judgments earlier
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on, and also ethics, medical ethics. And those are the trump cards, in my opinion.
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Come on, we've got questions. We've got questions. We've got questions. Paul's got answers. I point
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out, Paul, that in Australia, US, Canada, UK, at least 60% of voters are happy with what's happening,
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because their lives are comfortable. Now, Stephen, before we go to the questions, we've got a lot of
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them in writing, and then we've got hands up. I point out, we've got Vera Sharav on the call,
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Stephen, who's a Holocaust survivor. Welcome, Vera. And so say hello to Vera. And we discussed,
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we say hello, and we discussed Vera with Jessica Rose on Sunday night. So Vera, she's here. We can,
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we'd like to say a couple of words, Vera, before we go to questions.
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If you unmute yourself. You muted Vera.
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Vera, you're still muted. Okay, okay. Can you hear me now? Yes. Okay. I just want to comment
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that the preparation for what's happening in United States hospitals was done already in Obamacare,
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and the author of the protocols that are being used, the murderous protocols that are being used
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is Ezekiel Emanuel. He is and was pretty much the most powerful bioethicist. Okay, so it's bioethics
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that prepared the so-called ethical justification for what's happened. This isn't very much known,
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but that's where the protocol emanated from. I forgot the name of it. He wrote a infamous
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article in The Lancet in which he expressed the opinion that anybody over 75
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is really dispensable, should not be treated, should not be getting medical care as someone
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in their 40s. All right, so eugenics is very much part and parcel and the groundwork
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for what's happening. A value is being placed on human beings' lives. In this case, his protocol
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0:47:08 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]e are young adolescents and young adults. At the end
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of the scale are infants and the elderly. They're pretty much useless idiots. There we go. Well,
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that's not true, is it Vera? Vera, if everybody had listened to you, this wouldn't have happened.
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So it's not true that we can dispense with the elderly. We need people to teach the young people,
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otherwise they'll be clueless. Yeah, but in other words, what I'm trying to point out simply is that
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0:47:45 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] think how insidious this whole thing is. This was before COVID. Sure. This was preparing
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the groundwork for what would happen with COVID or any other virus or whatever they want to launch
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on us. But the point is they had it all prepared and that protocol is currently being used as well.
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And there is also an age issue there too as to who gets treated in hospitals or not. And the
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0:48:14 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] that both in March and April of 2020 and right now, according to this protocol,
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not only family not allowed to see their loved ones, they can't even use, they can't communicate
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0:48:30 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]ronically. So clearly, what does this have to do with? Nothing about health, nothing about
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you know, transferring viruses or anything like that. This is about, this is a machinery that
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has gone in force and it's very much like the T4 during the Nazis, which affected the Germans,
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not the Jews. Vera, don't you think that the decision, they wanted to separate the relatives
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from their sick loved ones? So, and that's in my view, and also combined with the lack of post
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mortems, the planned lack of post mortems, that is concealment of crime in my view, until proved
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otherwise. Well, you know, I really think that although the medical establishment is exactly
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0:49:22 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] as they did under the Nazis, there are thousands, really, tens of thousands
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0:49:28 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ors who are saying no. The problem is that really all doctors should be leaving the hospitals,
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0:49:35 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction] saying we've had it, that's it. I absolutely agree. Do something on your own, get the garbage
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0:49:41 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ly. You know, it's in a way the way, you know, the truckers
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have tried to do and, you know, pilots. We've got to have really a doctor, well, doctors actually
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have not been really versed in medical ethics. This is... So Vera, to interrupt you, I think part
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0:50:06 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ors are scared. So they know if they go against the current narrative against
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the hospital, they'll lose their job. And having a job is a very powerful incentive for people to
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keep quiet. And so, you know, I lost my job because I dared to speak out. I don't really care because
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0:50:29 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction], they have these people under control. Not if 25 walk
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out in one hospital. Sure, I agree with you, Vera. Yeah. So, you know, what we're doing is we're
428
0:50:45 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ate legislatures to, you know, get the state legislatures to prevent
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this happening because it is an outrage. But it will take time. But, you know, what we need is
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0:51:00 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]e to be aware of what's happening. Unfortunately, most of the time, like you guys,
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0:51:06 --> 0:51:13
it's preaching to the choir. It's those people, you know, the 60% of people who think everything
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is fine. They're the ones that need their eyes opened up because everything isn't fine.
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Absolutely. But they will be caught out, unfortunately, because they'll be on the
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0:51:24 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ory and they'll find themselves in Nuremberg type trials.
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Yeah. And they'll also get caught out when a loved one gets sick. Then the reality will hit home.
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Then they'll figure out what exactly is happening. Can't trust the doctors. Yeah, exactly.
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All right, Vera. Thank you for that, Paul. Let's get into these written questions. And then we get
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conversation going. Vera, thank you for that. And please stick around. Adarya, who is a retired
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0:51:53 --> 0:52:00
neurosurgeon, Paul, she's lost her voice. She's at the Wellness Parenting Expo. She's got a written
440
0:52:00 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ion. Sarah asks, what should we know about the new variant showing up in Miami and other
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0:52:05 --> 0:52:21
countries and the new treatment tweaks? Yeah. So, you know, I was watching this podcast or thing
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0:52:21 --> 0:52:28
by the federal government saying these variants don't matter, but they actually do. The Delta
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0:52:28 --> 0:52:34
variant was a highly virulent variant, which killed off a lot of people, was much less
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susceptible to therapy. Omicron is highly infectious, but it seems to be less, less,
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0:52:45 --> 0:52:51
its mortality is lower. But you know what? These things are going to keep mutating. That's what
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0:52:51 --> 0:52:58
viruses do. You know, it only has one single RNA strand, but it seems to be a lot smarter than humans
447
0:52:58 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] 23 chromosomes. So this thing will keep on mutating. That's what it does. And the more it
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0:53:05 --> 0:53:11
spreads, the more it's going to mutate. If we had stopped this disease, which we could have last year,
449
0:53:11 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] prevented all of these, you know, this widespread disease. But I think the more it
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spreads, the more mutations we're going to have, and it's going to keep on mutating. Thank you.
451
0:53:26 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]ion, Paul, we should welcome Stephen. Roger Hodkinson has been doing
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0:53:32 --> 0:53:40
great work in Canada, Sam, Kat with her presentations, Paul, all the people who have been
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0:53:40 --> 0:53:45
putting themselves on the line. So we often say nice things about you, Roger, even though you're
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0:53:45 --> 0:53:52
not here all the time, but well done on your work in Canada and others. Okay. So they're on this call,
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0:53:52 --> 0:53:59
Paul. Yeah, that's what great because I think we are an expanding group of people. You know, at
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0:53:59 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] one or two, but I think we banded together and it's really wonderful, you know,
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0:54:05 --> 0:54:12
communicating with like-minded people. They are brothers and sisters because we're in this together.
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0:54:12 --> 0:54:17
And I think we are much, we are growing community and we just need to get more and more people to
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0:54:18 --> 0:54:26
to see the light. Yep. As Bobby Kennedy says, no one's going from our side to their side, Paul.
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Everyone's moved. The only movement is from their side to our side. So that's at least promising. So
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0:54:30 --> 0:54:37
Tom Rodman asks, he understands these tests, D-dimer, troponin level may detect jab side effects.
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0:54:37 --> 0:54:43
He found a brother of his is in hospital for heart issues. He seemed fine a year ago. What other tests
463
0:54:43 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] or rule out jab side effects? What other tests? And Kat put some stuff
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into the chat as well, but what do you suggest? Yeah. So, you know, that's such a difficult question
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0:54:58 --> 0:55:04
because, you know, they've hidden, so they've hidden this data by design.
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0:55:05 --> 0:55:12
The point to remember is that, you know, the virus goes for ACE2 receptors where they're limited
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0:55:12 --> 0:55:20
amount. These vaccines are in a nanoparticle. This nanoparticle goes to every single organ in the body,
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0:55:20 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]es, the ovary, the adrenal gland, the brain. So it causes a systemic
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0:55:27 --> 0:55:37
spike inflammatory disease. We don't have really good tests to determine vaccine-induced injury.
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0:55:38 --> 0:55:44
There are, you know, you can look for spike protein in the monocytes. You can look for spike
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0:55:44 --> 0:55:52
protein in the skin. You know, the D-dimer is an indicator of activation of clotting.
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0:55:55 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]range kind of clot, which is high in amyloid. The bottom line is,
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0:56:02 --> 0:56:11
though, is we really don't have a good test for COVID-induced or vaccine-induced injury.
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0:56:13 --> 0:56:21
Okay. And then Dolores Kale was talking about, I think, Dolores, of clots in the iris as a test also.
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0:56:22 --> 0:56:27
Miniscule as Ryan Cole is talking about clots showing in the iris.
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0:56:28 --> 0:56:35
So what it does is it causes microclots and macroclots. So certainly you can look in the
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0:56:35 --> 0:56:43
iris for, you know, the back of the retina for clots. It's difficult. You know, I think the
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0:56:43 --> 0:56:48
bottom line is don't get vaccinated. Then you don't have this issue. You know, people say,
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0:56:48 --> 0:56:55
you know, how do you detoxify from the spike? Well, don't get the spike in the first place.
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0:56:55 --> 0:57:00
If you can avoid it, you know, once you've been injected with spike protein,
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0:57:01 --> 0:57:06
I don't think there's a very good way of getting rid of it. But I must tell you, I read a fascinating
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0:57:06 --> 0:57:15
paper two days ago, which looked at the use of probiotics. And it seems that if you take probiotics,
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0:57:15 --> 0:57:23
which probiotics, it caused basically inflammatory mediators, that it tends to attenuate the
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0:57:23 --> 0:57:30
vaccine injury. So, you know, if you are forced to get the vaccine, I think there are a few counter
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0:57:30 --> 0:57:37
measures that you could consider. You know, one of them being, you know, probiotics with
486
0:57:37 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]eria, which change the fatty acids produced in the gut. You know, the other thing
487
0:57:43 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]in, which binds the spike protein. But obviously, if you can avoid getting
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0:57:49 --> 0:57:57
it, you know, don't get it. It's a toxic protein. Next question. Thank you, Paul. Do you think Big
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0:57:57 --> 0:58:01
Pharma might be trying to get rid of as many doctors? This is from John Goss, might be trying
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0:58:01 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ors as possible to usher in diagnosis by computer so they can
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0:58:05 --> 0:58:10
experiment at leisure. It's quite clear from the vaccine agenda, they have no morals and no concerns
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0:58:10 --> 0:58:19
for individuals. Yeah, so the the agenda seems to be, you know, getting rid of the spike protein,
493
0:58:19 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ors, minimize the role doctors have. They would much prefer that patients get
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0:58:25 --> 0:58:33
married, get managed by algorithms and protocols generated by computers. So in fact, it's making the
495
0:58:34 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ors less important, exactly, because then they can follow their agenda.
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0:58:40 --> 0:58:47
They don't want people to think, because then you will question their protocols. So they would
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0:58:47 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction], you know, medical assistants and computers manage patients, that that would be
498
0:58:56 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ive. Thank you, Daria points, she was at that parenting conference yesterday. And
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0:59:05 --> 0:59:13
Del Bigtree was there, Judy Mikovits. Del comes from highwire.com, of course. Daria calls them the
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0:59:13 --> 0:59:18
Red Pill Expos. I like that everybody for that description, because I think town hall meetings,
501
0:59:18 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]e coming together at Red Pill Expos, we can use that as a term of art, everybody.
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0:59:24 --> 0:59:30
But, you know, Daria points out many parents of vaccine injured children are becoming better
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0:59:30 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ors to their families because of this process. So families are starting to start take
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0:59:36 --> 0:59:42
responsibility, because they know they can't rely upon the medical, you know, the system.
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0:59:43 --> 0:59:49
I mean, absolutely, because the medical system does not recognize that vaccine injury is a
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0:59:49 --> 0:59:55
medical entity. They're not prepared to study it, they're not prepared to quantify it or figure out
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0:59:55 --> 1:00:02
how to treat it. So unfortunately, it's family members that are carrying the burden of looking
508
1:00:02 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]e. And let me tell you, it's a real thing. I think, you know,
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1:00:10 --> 1:00:18
there was a lot of speculation, but we now have a really good idea of why young people drop dead
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1:00:18 --> 1:00:24
48 hours after the vaccine. They get this myocarditis, which seems to be a stress-induced
511
1:00:24 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]itis from catecholamine release. So, you know, there's a good pathophysiological explanation.
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1:00:32 --> 1:00:39
It's usually in, you know, young men who reasonably fit, they get the vaccine and die in 48 hours.
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1:00:42 --> 1:00:51
Yeah, all those athletes. Matilda Lisdero asks, do you think this disease is really a new one,
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1:00:51 --> 1:00:56
or could it be the normal flu enhanced by fear and bad treatments that made the symptoms?
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1:00:57 --> 1:01:04
Yeah, so this virus was manufactured in a lab. It was perfectly designed to be toxic to humans.
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1:01:04 --> 1:01:10
There's no question that certain of the genetic material that was placed in the vaccine was
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1:01:12 --> 1:01:20
placed there by design to be a highly virulent virus. In fact, there's some proteins from the
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1:01:21 --> 1:01:29
HIV virus that were put into this virus. There's no question of doubt this was a man-made virus.
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1:01:29 --> 1:01:35
This did not come from some kind of natural reservoir. This was a man-made virus. There's
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1:01:35 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ion of doubt, and we know where it came from. We know they were working on gain-of-function
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1:01:42 --> 1:01:50
coronaviruses. So it's pretty clear what this actually is. It's a highly toxic virus that just
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1:01:50 --> 1:01:58
man-made. Thank you. Kelly Burke asks, regarding your pre-COVID work, can you talk about your
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1:01:58 --> 1:02:03
vitamin C protocols for sepsis? Did you encounter resistance for this approach?
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1:02:04 --> 1:02:11
Oh, yes. So, you know, I'm not new to this. You know, I've been called a snake oil doctor
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1:02:11 --> 1:02:18
and all kinds of names. And you know, what's most outrageous in medicine is people will design
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1:02:18 --> 1:02:24
studies to fail so that you can disprove something that works. And probably the best is
527
1:02:24 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine. So I'm not sure if you know this, but there were studies done in South America
528
1:02:31 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine. The normal dose is 200 twice a day. So what they
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1:02:37 --> 1:02:45
did is they used in high-risk patients 3,[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine. And obviously,
530
1:02:45 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e. And then they said hydroxychloroquine doesn't work. So this study was
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1:02:50 --> 1:02:57
specifically designed to fail and to kill people. So happens the attorney general in Brazil is
532
1:02:57 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]s with manslaughter because what they did was manslaughter.
533
1:03:04 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]udies to fail. And similarly, many of the vitamin C studies were designed to fail
534
1:03:12 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]y does not want vitamin C to be a viable treatment option.
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1:03:19 --> 1:03:26
It's cheap, it's safe and effective. And you look at the vitamin study in Australia,
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1:03:26 --> 1:03:32
you know, I was hoping this would be a positive study. They started the treatment on, we don't
537
1:03:32 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ly, but at least 18 or 24 hours after the patient was admitted to hospital.
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1:03:38 --> 1:03:45
Why would you do such a thing? So they do studies designed to fail because they do not like cheap
539
1:03:45 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ugs. Essentially, this is big farmers war on cheap and repurposed drugs
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1:03:53 --> 1:04:03
which threatens their livelihood. Thank you. Bernie Ryan from Canberra sends you God's blessing as a
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1:04:03 --> 1:04:07
former ICU and critical care social worker. He's many friends and former colleagues who are
542
1:04:07 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]s. If you could look them all in the eye, what would you say to them?
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1:04:12 --> 1:04:17
Yeah, I would say to every intensivist, open your eyes, just look at the literature,
544
1:04:17 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] do the right thing. Don't be a sheep or a lambing, do the right thing. You undertook
545
1:04:24 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] for your patients and that's what your duty is. Do the right thing.
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1:04:33 --> 1:04:42
Daria asks you, Paul, did you take legal action against the hospital for your dismissal when you
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1:04:42 --> 1:04:50
were tenured? So you know what I tried, but the hospital owns the legal system. The hospital lied
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1:04:50 --> 1:04:58
under oath. The hospital lawyers and their so-called witnesses lied under oath. Let me say that again,
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1:04:58 --> 1:05:04
they lied under oath. So we filed an emergency injunction which we lost.
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1:05:06 --> 1:05:12
So you know what, I could pursue it further, but it's been such an emotional thing for me and
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1:05:14 --> 1:05:23
the reality is that they control, the hospital controls the legal system, they control the press.
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1:05:23 --> 1:05:31
So it's fighting a massive Goliath and I just don't have the energy anymore to do this.
553
1:05:32 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction] of public opinion.
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1:05:37 --> 1:05:43
Thank you and yes, the hospitals lie under, if they're willing to kill people, then of course
555
1:05:43 --> 1:05:52
lying under oath is no big deal. That's an easy game to play. I used to be a lawyer, I'm a legal
556
1:05:52 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction] now Paul and a professional speaker, but the work that Stephen's doing and the evidence
557
1:05:59 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]e that are available, there will be an accounting. I have no doubt.
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1:06:05 --> 1:06:11
So you know that's what gives me peace because I know in the end the truth will prevail that we
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1:06:11 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] and that there will be a lot of accounting that will have to be done
560
1:06:17 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] there'll be hundreds of lawsuits, I don't know, but there's no question
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1:06:25 --> 1:06:28
we're on the right side of history. There's no question of doubt.
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1:06:29 --> 1:06:34
Yep, so Sarah asked the Florida Duval County Medical Society leaders are still pushing
563
1:06:34 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]en. Why do they do this in your opinion and how can we pressure
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1:06:40 --> 1:06:46
them to change them? I think Paul you've answered that and how can we pressure, we're talking about
565
1:06:46 --> 1:06:53
that's what this conversation is about. Next one, variance not so much that.
566
1:06:54 --> 1:06:59
My friend's Tom asked my friend's husband 60 years old a fit regular swimmer suffered dizzy
567
1:06:59 --> 1:07:04
spells recently he's been jabbed two, possibly three times like Shane Warren, Paul Merrick,
568
1:07:04 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ed a pacemaker without any hesitation within a week or so got
569
1:07:09 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]alled. Can the jabs cause symptoms like this? So we're talking fit regular swimmer
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1:07:15 --> 1:07:21
suffering dizzy spells. Yes, so you know what the spike protein goes throughout the body,
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1:07:21 --> 1:07:24
it goes to the heart, it goes to the heart muscle, it goes to the brain.
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1:07:25 --> 1:07:31
So unless the patient's having overt arrhythmias, which doesn't sound like it, I mean I don't know,
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1:07:31 --> 1:07:36
it's possible the patient has a heart block, so I don't know, but certainly it's not going to get
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1:07:36 --> 1:07:43
rid of the spike protein. So I think what the person needs to do is, you know, there's no simple
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1:07:43 --> 1:07:49
way of getting rid of spike protein, but I think if you improve your immune system, vitamin D,
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1:07:49 --> 1:07:57
vitamin C, the jealous sativa, probiotics, you want to get the body to get rid of the spike.
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1:07:57 --> 1:08:02
That's what you want to do. There's no magic elixir that can suck out the spike.
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1:08:03 --> 1:08:09
If the patient truly had some kind of a heart block, then maybe he would benefit from a pacemaker,
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1:08:09 --> 1:08:14
but a pacemaker is certainly not going to deal with the spike. The patient's developing problems
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1:08:14 --> 1:08:25
because he has spike protein and he's got to do whatever he can to get his body to break down
581
1:08:25 --> 1:08:33
the spike protein. Thank you. Jody Dickerson points out the AMA, the American Medical Association,
582
1:08:33 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ralia, is not a legislative body. They cannot make law or
583
1:08:38 --> 1:08:43
enforce it. Therefore, is the action that we should pursue getting hospitals and doctors to
584
1:08:43 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]en to the AMA, they are allowed to give these mandates because we voluntarily obey
585
1:08:48 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] the AMA taken down or the people could all agree to ignore AMA and form a
586
1:08:53 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] What's your view around these sorts of professional body influences? Yeah, so, you know,
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1:09:01 --> 1:09:07
it's not just the AMA, which actually doesn't hold much power in the US. What has power is the
588
1:09:07 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] the power to take away doctors' licenses or to threaten them.
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1:09:14 --> 1:09:21
But, you know, all of these bureaucracies which are all linked together, we need to take them all
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1:09:21 --> 1:09:27
down. You know, the FDA, the NIH, the CDC, the state medical boards, they're all in cahoots.
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1:09:28 --> 1:09:34
And so, you know, ultimately, we need an alternative health care system because this one has failed.
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1:09:34 --> 1:09:44
And that's a pretty big undertaking because by design and these, all these agencies step in line
593
1:09:44 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] Bregan, do you think that the state medical boards were being given guidance
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1:09:53 --> 1:09:59
that was not good in following that guidance or do you think that they are actually corrupt?
595
1:10:00 --> 1:10:08
So, that's a good question. I think both. So, I think they've been given guidance on what to do.
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1:10:08 --> 1:10:13
I don't think that these people practice medicine. So, you know, if you practice,
597
1:10:14 --> 1:10:18
if you can't practice medicine, you become a hospital bureaucrat. If you can't be a hospital
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1:10:18 --> 1:10:24
bureaucrat, you then go to the state medical boards. So, these people are failures. They do
599
1:10:24 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]and medicine. So, you know, they have no insight into the medical problem. So, I think
600
1:10:30 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]e who don't understand medicine. I think they're corrupt
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1:10:36 --> 1:10:41
and I think they're influenced by, you know, state agencies. It's a complete mess.
602
1:10:41 --> 1:10:48
All right. Thank you, Jodie. Next, Daria makes the comment, Paul, that I think is a beautiful
603
1:10:48 --> 1:10:54
metaphor. Truth is like a fully inflated beach ball that will slip out from under the corrupt
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1:10:54 --> 1:10:59
hands, forcing it below the surface of the water. It will shoot straight up and be seen by all.
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1:10:59 --> 1:11:06
Isn't it a beautiful picture? Yes. Yes. Yes. I'm just waiting for that to happen.
606
1:11:06 --> 1:11:11
You know, I'm waiting because you can't stop the truth. You can try as hard as you can.
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1:11:11 --> 1:11:17
It will eventually surface above the water. And Paul, the good thing about this, not only do we
608
1:11:17 --> 1:11:23
have the truth, but we have all these people. Everybody in the world is a victim of what's gone
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1:11:23 --> 1:11:30
on. Yeah. So, you know, although, you know, people said 60% are happy, the reality is that this
610
1:11:30 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]e and a lot of people are unhappy by what's happening. So,
611
1:11:39 --> 1:11:45
there will be change. Yes. There will be change. I don't believe that figure of 60% are happy.
612
1:11:46 --> 1:11:50
That can't be right because they've lost their doctors. They've lost their friends. They've lost
613
1:11:50 --> 1:11:58
their family. How can they possibly be happy? Not only that, because, because, Steven, over 30%
614
1:11:58 --> 1:12:03
of the workforce in the UK, Canada, Australia, US are public servants.
615
1:12:03 --> 1:12:11
Yes, they're still victims. They're still victims. Of course they are, but they don't
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1:12:11 --> 1:12:15
really, as Paul said earlier, when their children start dying, then they'll wake up.
617
1:12:16 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]ly. Paul, Gary, Gary F, our man with an F-I-N asks, have you considered practicing in Florida?
618
1:12:25 --> 1:12:32
Yeah. You know, I have considered practicing in other states. The problem is, I think,
619
1:12:32 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]em. So, if I was to go to another state, I think it would be Florida.
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1:12:38 --> 1:12:43
You know, at the moment, I'm just so disillusioned with medicine and hospital medicine.
621
1:12:43 --> 1:12:49
You know, I've decided that for my own sanity, I'm just going to, you know, keep on doing what
622
1:12:49 --> 1:12:55
I'm doing, try and speak the truth. And, you know, what will be, will be. Practicing medicine
623
1:12:56 --> 1:13:03
in hospitals at this time is a really difficult thing. And doctors, to a large degree, have become
624
1:13:03 --> 1:13:09
powerless. You know, there are these big healthcare systems which dictate how doctors practice medicine.
625
1:13:12 --> 1:13:15
So, you know, I will just keep an open mind and see what happens.
626
1:13:15 --> 1:13:22
Yes. Paul, in my opinion, you made the right decision to get out of the practice of medicine
627
1:13:22 --> 1:13:30
at the present time. I was going to go back into medicine, but when I saw this nonsense going on,
628
1:13:30 --> 1:13:35
I thought, no, not while this is going on. And now I think the whole medical profession
629
1:13:35 --> 1:13:41
needs to be retrained. Yeah, I mean, I agree with you. I can probably do more out of medicine than
630
1:13:42 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] we train medical students is appalling in this country.
631
1:13:48 --> 1:13:55
We need to, you know, critically look how we train these doctors, because these are people who cannot
632
1:13:55 --> 1:14:02
think. They've lost the ability to think. They told what to do. They cannot think. I think,
633
1:14:02 --> 1:14:08
I don't know if they have cortical atrophy or what their problem is, but they lack the ability
634
1:14:08 --> 1:14:12
to think. And when I was in medical school, I was always taught, what do you think? What do
635
1:14:12 --> 1:14:18
you think about this? What do you think about this? You know, they're not taught that. They
636
1:14:18 --> 1:14:24
spoon-fed and they answer multiple choice questions. And all the dean is interested in
637
1:14:24 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]e choice exam. That's all they're interested in.
638
1:14:31 --> 1:14:38
The UMSLE part one is all they're interested in. If the question's not going to be in UMSLE one,
639
1:14:38 --> 1:14:49
nobody cares. Wow. Okay. So, Warner Mendenhall, a US attorney, Paul, points out that nurses at
640
1:14:50 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]anding together. 11,[privacy contact redaction] when Ohio
641
1:14:56 --> 1:15:02
Health backed down from their JAB mandates. And secondly, in South Australia, the South
642
1:15:02 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ralian government revoked JAB mandates for police as a consequence of freedom of information
643
1:15:13 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ralian government had no scientific basis for the
644
1:15:16 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]opped the mandates when they were, after finally getting those produced.
645
1:15:22 --> 1:15:26
That's why everybody, we've got to keep pushing the FLI, freedom of information,
646
1:15:26 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ications, even though they keep being resisted, they are effective.
647
1:15:32 --> 1:15:39
Yes. So I think, you know, the vaccine mandate is cracking because these are toxic. These aren't
648
1:15:39 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]e are dying. And I think that people are recognizing this. So, you know, the
649
1:15:47 --> 1:15:53
states are slowly changing. There are some that have dug their heels in because they can't admit
650
1:15:53 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]e in this who just can't admit defeat. You know, we all make
651
1:16:00 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] be big enough and old enough and responsible and say, okay, we made a mistake,
652
1:16:04 --> 1:16:09
but they don't want to do that. So there are some states that are digging their heels in,
653
1:16:09 --> 1:16:17
but it seems like, you know, slowly this narrative of safe and effective is being disputed.
654
1:16:18 --> 1:16:23
All right. So as I keep scrolling through the questions, let's go Sam. Time for you to have
655
1:16:23 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ion from Sam Dubay in Ottawa. Paul. Hey, Paul. Thanks so much for joining us. And a shout
656
1:16:30 --> 1:16:36
out to Vera and Roger Hodgson too. Roger is like a force of nature. Never underestimate him. Hi,
657
1:16:36 --> 1:16:46
Roger. Paul, I was the physician who interviewed Pierre Corrie in December 2020 after the Senate
658
1:16:46 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ess. And I remember calling Joyce, his secretary, and requesting an interview. And she
659
1:16:52 --> 1:16:58
said, Sam, nobody in the world but you and Senator Johnson want to talk to us right now.
660
1:16:58 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ed what you said, how you guys were like totally like lepers, you know, basically.
661
1:17:04 --> 1:17:13
Well, that's not a good analogy, but you know, nobody wanted to come close to us because we had
662
1:17:13 --> 1:17:20
this bad thing about us. Yeah. And I can only imagine what you guys went through. And I remember
663
1:17:20 --> 1:17:25
we went for about an hour and a half in that interview and he asked to let the team watch the
664
1:17:25 --> 1:17:29
interview and you were the head of that team actually. And he came back and he said, there's
665
1:17:29 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction] one thing I don't think they're ready for yet because we need to be careful how we approach
666
1:17:35 --> 1:17:42
us. And I'd asked the questions, can Ivermectin replace the vaccines? And you might remember that
667
1:17:42 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]icking point. And he said, can you kind of just remove that for now because
668
1:17:46 --> 1:17:51
we want to make sure. So you guys were literally walking a tightrope, right? Like, and even then
669
1:17:52 --> 1:17:58
you got totally shafted. Like even trying to be careful. Can you talk to that just a little bit?
670
1:18:00 --> 1:18:07
Yeah, absolutely. So, you know, at the beginning, we decided that it would not be in our best
671
1:18:07 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]s if we came across as being any vaccination, because that's a bad label.
672
1:18:13 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] month or two, we actually completely avoided the subject. You know,
673
1:18:19 --> 1:18:27
we said we had to, you know, we were politically correct. Vaccination is an alternative or part of
674
1:18:27 --> 1:18:34
the treatment algorithm, the other approaches. So we try to be more politically correct. But I think
675
1:18:34 --> 1:18:41
we can't take that stance anymore because certainly Ivermectin is better than the vaccine.
676
1:18:41 --> 1:18:50
I think Coca-Cola is safer than the vaccine. And I think you have to be completely insane to
677
1:18:50 --> 1:18:56
support the notion that they're safe and effective. Unfortunately, if you get labeled
678
1:18:56 --> 1:19:02
anti vaccination, you've been an anti government terrorist. That's what it's come down to.
679
1:19:03 --> 1:19:09
So I think, you know, you're right. In the beginning, we had to walk a very fine tightrope
680
1:19:09 --> 1:19:16
because we couldn't appear to be anti vaccination. And we had to put these ridiculous disclaimers on
681
1:19:16 --> 1:19:23
the website that, you know, we weren't anti vaccination. But I think, you know, it's clear now
682
1:19:24 --> 1:19:29
the data speaks for itself. So, you know, we have to speak the truth. And obviously,
683
1:19:29 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ion now, yes, Ivermectin is a thousand times preferable to vaccination
684
1:19:38 --> 1:19:45
in preventing SARS-CoV-2. Absolutely. But you know what? I mean, it's a really good question,
685
1:19:45 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] year, we couldn't say that.
686
1:19:51 --> 1:19:56
Yeah, yeah, exactly. And, you know, you're such a compassionate man, Paul. I want to thank you so
687
1:19:56 --> 1:20:02
much for taking this fight. And, you know, Pierre speaks so highly of you. He always has, he always
688
1:20:02 --> 1:20:11
defers to you. Tell him I said hi, by the way, Sam in Canada. And so, you know, my response is
689
1:20:11 --> 1:20:19
we all in this together because, you know, our voices together is a lot louder than single voices.
690
1:20:19 --> 1:20:24
And I think that's what's changing is that they're more and more like-minded people who are willing
691
1:20:24 --> 1:20:31
to speak out. And that's what we need. And you have an interesting connection here to Canada.
692
1:20:31 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]er's son, Ryan Penn, I just got off the phone with him. He's the founder of Take Action
693
1:20:36 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] said, tell Paul I said hi. Yeah. So tell Ryan hi. I'm sorry I haven't
694
1:20:43 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ed him. You know, my life is a bit chaotic. So I'll tell him that too. It's okay. My sister
695
1:20:49 --> 1:20:55
lives in Toronto. Bless his soul. I went, I studied critical care in Toronto. I mean, in London,
696
1:20:55 --> 1:21:04
Ontario. I used to think of Canada as a wonderful country, actually, which it is until somewhat more
697
1:21:04 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] changed a bit. Paul, we're sitting on a powder keg up here. My
698
1:21:11 --> 1:21:16
colleagues, Roger and Ray Strom up here in Canada and Ken McKenzie and a few others, Kathleen will
699
1:21:16 --> 1:21:21
tell you, we don't know what's going to happen next. And Lex sitting here, I'm looking at Lex too,
700
1:21:21 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction] no idea what's going to happen next. And it's quite frightening, actually. You
701
1:21:26 --> 1:21:31
know, I'm keeping an eye on my bank account daily, making sure it's got a negative balance.
702
1:21:31 --> 1:21:37
So, you know, I mean, I've said, you know, for the last three or four months, the world has gone
703
1:21:37 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]etely mad. I do not like living on this planet. And I'm looking to go live on a different
704
1:21:42 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]etely messed up. Thank you, Liam, for your comment in the chat.
705
1:21:50 --> 1:21:55
Paul, if there's no medical leadership in what was always presented to the public as a medical
706
1:21:55 --> 1:22:00
problem, then of course, malign forces are going to take control. And that's exactly what's
707
1:22:00 --> 1:22:10
happened. So the medical leadership has gone. The public has lost its doctors. And given the fact
708
1:22:10 --> 1:22:15
that we were talking earlier that we can't make sense of this. So how on earth can the patients
709
1:22:15 --> 1:22:20
make sense of it? And then they suddenly realized, not only do we not know what's going on, but our
710
1:22:20 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] tell you that I think Anthony Fauci is one of the bad
711
1:22:25 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ory. He wields enormous control. And I think he's guilty of crimes against humanity.
712
1:22:33 --> 1:22:40
And why he's put on a pedestal is beyond me, because I think he controls the narrative. And
713
1:22:42 --> 1:22:48
you know what? He's a bad guy. He's a bad guy. He's a bad guy. He's a bad guy. He's a bad guy.
714
1:22:49 --> 1:22:55
You know what? He's a bad man. He's an evil man. He's done really bad things. And yet, when you say
715
1:22:55 --> 1:23:02
that, people look at gas at you because he's considered a hero. Well, not by Robert Kennedy,
716
1:23:02 --> 1:23:09
isn't it? Yes. And so you know what? I don't know why his book didn't get more attention in the
717
1:23:09 --> 1:23:16
general public. It's a brilliant book. He talks the truth. It's a very well written book. I think
718
1:23:16 --> 1:23:22
every American should read the book and take heart of the book. It's a difficult book to read.
719
1:23:22 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] an obligation to understand where we've come from and where we are. And maybe
720
1:23:28 --> 1:23:37
it will then open some eyes. You know, I don't know what to say. It sold plenty of books and
721
1:23:37 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]ream media ignored it all beautifully. Thank you, Sam, for that question.
722
1:23:42 --> 1:23:46
Thank you, Paul. God bless you. God bless you. We're sending you strength.
723
1:23:46 --> 1:23:51
Thank you, Sam. Thank you, my friend. Charles, could I ask them Charles, very quickly,
724
1:23:51 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] ask you whether we could ask Vera while she's here, whether she would like to speak
725
1:23:56 --> 1:24:05
to us sometime? Sorry. Very well done, Stephen. You don't have to decide now, Vera.
726
1:24:06 --> 1:24:11
Okay, we'll see what you'd like me to talk about. I think partly, you know,
727
1:24:11 --> 1:24:16
medical political alliances, alliances, medical political.
728
1:24:20 --> 1:24:27
It's parallels to what happened in Germany. Can I suggest Stephen? I'm just being born in
729
1:24:27 --> 1:24:32
bits and pieces right now for everybody wants me to, you know, to be interviewed. And the only reason
730
1:24:32 --> 1:24:40
for that is because nobody else either dares or still stands up after they've butchered them.
731
1:24:40 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] to do that, you know, to all these various groups, whether it's South Africa or
732
1:24:46 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ralia or lots of times, Italy, they love me there. And Germany, of course. So, you know,
733
1:24:53 --> 1:25:00
that's I feel that I have to do that. I haven't even posted on our website because I don't have
734
1:25:00 --> 1:25:06
the time. So I don't want to make commitments. But, you know, if you really want me sometime,
735
1:25:06 --> 1:25:15
I hope so. And Vera, I must tell you, I mean, I lost lost half of my grandmother's family in Germany.
736
1:25:16 --> 1:25:22
So this is a sensitive thing to me. But I consider this a global Holocaust. And when I,
737
1:25:22 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]er, she shakes her head. But I think the forces of evil are so powerful.
738
1:25:29 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] Yes, absolutely. It's worse. There won't be any rescuers.
739
1:25:36 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] keep that in mind. No, yes. Yes. That's a good point. Yes. We're the ones that can maybe
740
1:25:45 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]op this. If Montagne before he died, Vera Montagne, you know, the one who won the Nobel
741
1:25:52 --> 1:26:03
Prize in 2008 for medicine. He said the unvaccinated will save humanity. And that maybe was why he died
742
1:26:03 --> 1:26:13
when he did. Oh, you know, okay, that's, that's in one way, hopefully, but in the other way,
743
1:26:13 --> 1:26:19
it's wishful thinking, because, you know, how we've got to get more into our troops.
744
1:26:19 --> 1:26:26
Sure. And not be terrified. It's very, very really, you know, just as doctors pretty much march in line,
745
1:26:26 --> 1:26:33
you know, what's what's different now also is that artists, performing artists, the culture is all
746
1:26:33 --> 1:26:41
marching to the tune. I hear from opera singers, I just heard from a piano, a concert pianist.
747
1:26:41 --> 1:26:47
I mean, they, they're just a few who aren't vaccinated, and so they can't work.
748
1:26:47 --> 1:26:54
Yeah, so you're right. I don't know why, you know, these people who have enormous influence, you know,
749
1:26:54 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ars, celebrities who people look up to aren't more vocal. My understanding, and this is a Canadian
750
1:27:01 --> 1:27:11
thing, is Celine Dion is suffering from neurological issues after the vaccine. And her contract
751
1:27:11 --> 1:27:18
prohibits her from disclosing this. But from my understanding, she's suffering some severe neurological
752
1:27:18 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]and up and say something, screw her contract. You know what,
753
1:27:25 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ory will need to look well on you. She needs to speak the truth.
754
1:27:34 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ly, Paul. You know, there won't be history if we don't win.
755
1:27:41 --> 1:27:49
We will win. We will win. Okay, I mean, yes, we will. And the only place to go is the place
756
1:27:49 --> 1:27:53
that Paul mentioned, which is another planet. And so that's a little bit inconvenient.
757
1:27:55 --> 1:28:00
I think they were there already. Didn't we hear that Musk has something like 42 satellites or
758
1:28:00 --> 1:28:08
whatever? I mean, they're trying to go absolutely everywhere. But hopefully, hopefully something
759
1:28:08 --> 1:28:14
will. But Vera, going to another planet is unrealistic because the nearest solar system
760
1:28:14 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]ling at the speed of light, which is 186,000 miles a second,
761
1:28:20 --> 1:28:25
it would take you four years to get there. So you must have a pretty fast craft to get there.
762
1:28:27 --> 1:28:30
At my age, I don't think that's a realistic thing at all.
763
1:28:32 --> 1:28:37
Tell everybody it's up to us. Gary, your question, thank you for your support for Vera. And Vera,
764
1:28:37 --> 1:28:42
that'd be lovely if you consider doing a conversation with us if you're not under
765
1:28:42 --> 1:28:48
too much pressure. Gary, over to you for asking Paul. Yeah. So Mike, the question that I can
766
1:28:48 --> 1:28:54
remember dates back to a little bit very early in the conversation. The thing that made me suspicious
767
1:28:55 --> 1:29:03
that forces were conspiring, I found it very odd when back in March of 2020, right at the start of
768
1:29:03 --> 1:29:12
the pandemic, the NHS prohibited doctors in the UK from prescribing hydroxychloroquine to treat
769
1:29:13 --> 1:29:20
COVID. Why would they do that? Well, how would they know at that stage to prohibit it if there
770
1:29:20 --> 1:29:27
wasn't an agenda? And given that the vaccine has been made in a laboratory, you know, Dr. Shetty's
771
1:29:27 --> 1:29:32
probably right. This is a virus that was made for a vaccine, not a vaccine that was made for a virus.
772
1:29:33 --> 1:29:41
Paul, would you agree with that? Yeah. So I think, I mean, this was a plandemic, as hard as it is for
773
1:29:41 --> 1:29:47
me to admit, this was a plandemic. This whole thing was planned from the beginning. They didn't want
774
1:29:47 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ive alternative therapy. If there was effective alternative therapy, the EUA for all
775
1:29:53 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] been null and void. So this is all planned out, all planned out ahead of
776
1:30:00 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] did not want a safe, effective therapy for SARS-CoV-2 because then the vaccines
777
1:30:07 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] been, you know, they would have lost the EUA. And can I add that at the start of the
778
1:30:16 --> 1:30:21
pandemic, they did, you know, they knew about hydroxychloroquine as a possibility because it
779
1:30:21 --> 1:30:27
worked for SARS-CoV-1 and the Chinese had been using it. But they didn't know that either
780
1:30:27 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ive and for greater parts of the course of the disease.
781
1:30:32 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction], but then they, you know, and I was hoping that when the
782
1:30:37 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ion was over, the attitude would change. But no, the position hardened even against either
783
1:30:43 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]in and Trump had nothing to do with either mectin, it wasn't political at all. It was because
784
1:30:49 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ead of either mectin. Yes, absolutely. I don't think
785
1:30:54 --> 1:31:02
there's any question of doubt that that was what their modus operandi was, to squash any
786
1:31:02 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ion the necessity for the vaccine. And then the other thing I just
787
1:31:12 --> 1:31:16
want to say is that, you know, earlier on in the pandemic, I was working with a group of Brazilian
788
1:31:16 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine confiscated and we were gathering data from
789
1:31:21 --> 1:31:28
Didier Raoul in Marseille and he was under enormous pressure. But you know, the data was on
790
1:31:28 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ics to the recovery trial Oxford University statistics,
791
1:31:35 --> 1:31:41
it was how could you even, or the rest of France's statistics, how could you even criticize him?
792
1:31:42 --> 1:31:48
So, you know, the truth comes out because the truth is the truth.
793
1:31:49 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] a comment. I don't know if it's correct, but anecdotal
794
1:31:54 --> 1:31:59
observation today was on the London Underground. There are announcements going on, you have to wear
795
1:31:59 --> 1:32:04
masks when you're on the Underground, it's there for everybody. Announcements going on, the
796
1:32:04 --> 1:32:09
Underground's full and I would say less than one in ten people were wearing a mask. The public in
797
1:32:09 --> 1:32:16
this part of the world are suspicious, they're not listening, they don't care. That's about masks,
798
1:32:17 --> 1:32:23
about their personal comfort and everything else, but the fear factor is gone, which is a big step
799
1:32:23 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] Yeah, I think you're right. I think people have realized that this whole thing was a hoax.
800
1:32:29 --> 1:32:35
Masking, social distancing, lockdowns, vaccinations. I think people who've got their
801
1:32:36 --> 1:32:42
eyes and ears open realize this is a big hoax and basically they're rebellion. And you know,
802
1:32:42 --> 1:32:48
I think mask usage has gone down because it's absurdity. So I think people to some degree are
803
1:32:48 --> 1:32:56
getting it. Yeah. So, everybody, could you please put into the chat? Could I ask you,
804
1:32:56 --> 1:33:02
could I ask you to take Roger next? Hang on. So if people could put into the chat,
805
1:33:02 --> 1:33:08
because it's a useful record for everybody of when mandates of any description have stopped, Gary,
806
1:33:08 --> 1:33:13
that's an excellent point that you make. And just keep adding it so that we've got that chat
807
1:33:13 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] so that when you're talking to other people, you say, oh, of course, all these other
808
1:33:16 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]opped it. So thank you for all that input. And also, if the mandates haven't
809
1:33:23 --> 1:33:28
been taken off, no one's wearing them. That's also relevant information for us. Thank you,
810
1:33:28 --> 1:33:32
Gary, for that. Simon. You're welcome. Simon from Australia via Belgium,
811
1:33:32 --> 1:33:38
Paul. Don't hold that against him. Steven, sorry, are you going to say something, Steven,
812
1:33:38 --> 1:33:43
before Simon? I was just going to say whether Roger could have a go because I'm sure he's got
813
1:33:43 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ions. You know, we've got Cathy and Glenn and Roger. We'll get to Roger.
814
1:33:48 --> 1:33:54
You're okay for a few more minutes, Paul? Yep. He's going to get a job, Steven. He's got plenty of time.
815
1:33:54 --> 1:33:55
Yeah.
816
1:33:57 --> 1:34:05
Sorry for Roger or? Well, okay. Yeah. One thing I liked, I was talking to a group of Belgians that
817
1:34:05 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]em of about 10,[privacy contact redaction] wake up the
818
1:34:11 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]e, but they really try to see how they can get patients to take responsibility for their health,
819
1:34:16 --> 1:34:20
because that's the biggest problem. They all say, I'm not a doctor. So I don't know, but how can we
820
1:34:20 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ually take responsibility for their own health? But related to your remarks
821
1:34:26 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]oxychloroquine and also Garry's, I'm wondering, we are battling against or for regaining
822
1:34:34 --> 1:34:40
of our health and our freedom, but how do we battle for regaining our science objectivity? And
823
1:34:40 --> 1:34:45
seeing that, for example, these papers you talk about, there were only like a few scientists
824
1:34:45 --> 1:34:51
signed that, but is there a way we can use the numbers to actually give a more objective way of
825
1:34:51 --> 1:34:58
saying these papers are acceptable or not acceptable? How do we gain our science? Basically,
826
1:34:58 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ion. Any other ideas on that? Yeah. So that's a really good question because the
827
1:35:04 --> 1:35:10
major medical journals are owned by big pharma. They've publicly admitted it. Lanceton New England
828
1:35:10 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] publicly admitted they're influenced to publish bad papers by big pharma.
829
1:35:16 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] a look at JAMA and New England Journal and Lancet, when it comes to
830
1:35:22 --> 1:35:28
other medicine, they only publish negative papers. They will not publish positive papers. So I think
831
1:35:31 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ured, the big journals are captured. And I'm not sure what
832
1:35:37 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] to recognize that New England Journal is controlled by big
833
1:35:46 --> 1:35:52
pharma. I mean, they published a ridiculous paper showing that vaccination is safe in pregnancy of
834
1:35:52 --> 1:35:59
all kinds of things. They are evil. They evil like the agencies. And I think they need to be called
835
1:35:59 --> 1:36:07
out as much as the agencies. They are propagating misinformation because they're controlled by big
836
1:36:07 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]em where we take conflicts of interest out of medical publications.
837
1:36:16 --> 1:36:20
Both the authors and the publishers should have no conflict of interest.
838
1:36:20 --> 1:36:30
Thank you, Simon. Kathy, from what part of the US are you in?
839
1:36:30 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]on area.
840
1:36:32 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]in, Texas. Beautiful.
841
1:36:35 --> 1:36:36
No, Boston, Massachusetts.
842
1:36:36 --> 1:36:38
Okay, East Coast. Gotcha.
843
1:36:38 --> 1:36:45
That's a bad place. I'm originally from Utah, though. And in Utah, they had a super low death
844
1:36:46 --> 1:36:51
rate, one of the lowest in the US because they were always using hydroxychloroquine during the whole
845
1:36:51 --> 1:36:57
pandemic. You could go to any outpatient clinic and get it. And so they didn't close schools
846
1:36:57 --> 1:37:04
except for a few months in spring 2020. And, you know, everything was fine until the vaccination
847
1:37:04 --> 1:37:09
started. It's a good state to be in. I think they let doctors practice medicine there.
848
1:37:10 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ion is, I was contacted by email from a woman who was visiting her sister in Greece,
849
1:37:20 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ors would not treat sepsis with vitamin C, refused. And so I was wondering if
850
1:37:30 --> 1:37:39
you could put your protocol for sepsis in the chat, like a link to it, because I couldn't find it
851
1:37:39 --> 1:37:44
for some reason, but I would really like to, you know, have more knowledge.
852
1:37:44 --> 1:37:51
Yeah, so maybe what I... So you asked a good question, and we were gonna... I have kind of
853
1:37:51 --> 1:37:59
updated my protocol, which we're going to put on our website, but maybe I can email it to you.
854
1:38:00 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ephen, and then he can forward it to the group, or whoever's interested.
855
1:38:06 --> 1:38:08
Sure. Yes.
856
1:38:08 --> 1:38:16
That would be great. I would really appreciate that, because I don't know if her sister even
857
1:38:16 --> 1:38:23
made it at this point. Let's see, I had another quick question. Oh, what did the hospital lie
858
1:38:23 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ate are you in?
859
1:38:28 --> 1:38:37
So I'm in Norfolk, Virginia. So the expert witness said that hydroxychloroquine, ivermectin,
860
1:38:38 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ugs that had never undergone randomized control trials,
861
1:38:45 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]e, and that remdesivir was a safe and effective drug.
862
1:38:52 --> 1:38:54
Under oath. Under oath.
863
1:38:56 --> 1:38:59
Under oath. Wow. Paul, what is your website?
864
1:39:00 --> 1:39:08
So it's FLCCC.net. It's the website Pierre and I developed, so it's FLCCC.net.
865
1:39:10 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction] quickly, I'm going to shoot you my email address, if you wouldn't mind sending it to me.
866
1:39:15 --> 1:39:19
Okay, well, let me give you my email address, which is easier probably.
867
1:39:19 --> 1:39:20
Okay.
868
1:39:20 --> 1:39:30
It's Pmarick, P-M-A-R-I-K, at FLCCC, FLCCC, that's three C's dot net.
869
1:39:30 --> 1:39:32
Okay. Okay, great. Thank you.
870
1:39:33 --> 1:39:40
That's it. Thank you, Cathy. Thank you. Professor Ian Brighthope has been doing a lot of work in
871
1:39:40 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ralia on vitamin C protocols. Paul, I'm sure you know Ian Brighthope over the journey.
872
1:39:46 --> 1:39:47
Yep.
873
1:39:48 --> 1:39:54
Next, we have Glenn the Macco. Glenn. And then Roger.
874
1:39:57 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ion, a number of us within this group have been trying to organize and to work as a group on
875
1:40:04 --> 1:40:12
things that we could help propel by doing them in a more professional, refined, and scalable way.
876
1:40:13 --> 1:40:20
One of the things that comes up all the time is that there's a vast element of people that
877
1:40:20 --> 1:40:28
have been psychologically trapped in their circumstances, whether in both professions and
878
1:40:28 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]e that you would advise us to try to contact that might be
879
1:40:35 --> 1:40:43
especially good trainers that we could be using and try to gear up in a way that we could reach
880
1:40:45 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of people in individual group sessions
881
1:40:51 --> 1:40:59
that either they can be giving their message to a large set of people or training a number of people
882
1:40:59 --> 1:41:05
to train the trainers, to train the teaching assistants to go out and speak to the public?
883
1:41:07 --> 1:41:12
Yeah, so you asked a really good question because really what we need is a network of people
884
1:41:12 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] different expertise who can, you know, because this is a complex issue. We need lawyers,
885
1:41:18 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]s, we need therapists, we need pediatricians. So we're trying to put together a
886
1:41:24 --> 1:41:30
network. So although we can't, FLCC can't do all of this, we're trying to put together a network of
887
1:41:30 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] any ideas, you can email me. We're trying to develop this work we call our
888
1:41:37 --> 1:41:44
HOPE network. So while we can't, you know, do all of these elements, at least we can lead people in
889
1:41:44 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ion. Because I think there's just so much, you know, you just think of the kids and
890
1:41:49 --> 1:41:54
how they've been harmed. You know, I think of the poor kids, I think the psychological
891
1:41:55 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] been overwhelming. And I think they're the ones that need, you know,
892
1:42:00 --> 1:42:10
lots of re-education and re-socialization. You mentioned earlier around people waking up when
893
1:42:10 --> 1:42:16
it happens to one of their relatives. But in many cases, that's not even enough. They still don't
894
1:42:16 --> 1:42:22
recognize it. Or they feel ashamed enough. They don't dare whisper it. Yeah. But you know, I think
895
1:42:22 --> 1:42:29
parents who've had kids can see the impact it's had on kids because kids just haven't been kids.
896
1:42:29 --> 1:42:35
They've been denied the right to do what children generally do. And, you know, wearing masks at
897
1:42:35 --> 1:42:43
school. And I mean, I saw kids playing soccer outdoors with masks on. You've got to be kidding
898
1:42:43 --> 1:42:50
me. So I think the psychological trauma to kids has been overwhelming. And, you know, wearing a mask
899
1:42:50 --> 1:42:56
interferes with facial recognition, which is just so important. So I think we need a lot of counseling
900
1:42:56 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]en. Absolutely. Thank you. For the adults too. Thank you, Glen. Before we get
901
1:43:03 --> 1:43:09
Roger on here, Paul, since we had Cathy from close to Cape Cod. And I've taught Roger this limerick.
902
1:43:09 --> 1:43:15
I bet he can't remember it. But you see, this limerick goes like this. There once was a girl
903
1:43:15 --> 1:43:21
from Cape Cod who thought that all things came from God. But it wasn't the Almighty that lifted
904
1:43:21 --> 1:43:32
her nightie. It was Roger the Lodger the sod. There you go. Over to you, Roger. I'm from Manchester,
905
1:43:32 --> 1:43:40
and it's impossible to insult me. Unless your name is, we won't go into that.
906
1:43:41 --> 1:43:47
Well, you come from Manchester. That's bad enough. That's right. That's right. Okay.
907
1:43:48 --> 1:43:54
The time is going on and I'll keep my comments brief. First a comment, then a question for you,
908
1:43:54 --> 1:44:01
Paul, because I'm a pathologist, as you probably know, not a clinician. My comment is this.
909
1:44:01 --> 1:44:07
Coming to the chase of all these conspiracy theories that are out there, the big one,
910
1:44:07 --> 1:44:14
of course, is that this was some malicious release intended to kill people. I believe that you don't
911
1:44:14 --> 1:44:20
have to look any further than Occam's razor to find an explanation for what happened. The simplest,
912
1:44:20 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] likely one. And that is, simply put, political stupidity.
913
1:44:26 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] organizations make decisions, whether it's publicly traded,
914
1:44:36 --> 1:44:41
or government, or whatever. Most decisions are made now internationally for a very simple reason.
915
1:44:42 --> 1:44:47
Everyone else is doing it. No one has the time or the expertise to assess these things,
916
1:44:47 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] became this dogma that we're all fully aware of.
917
1:44:54 --> 1:44:59
So I don't believe for a second that everyone that's been instituting this has got some malicious
918
1:44:59 --> 1:45:04
intent. I don't think Fauci had malicious intent, although he is the most vile man walking without
919
1:45:04 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ion. I don't think Gates had malicious intent. What I do believe is that this thing
920
1:45:11 --> 1:45:16
escaped from a lab that was never intended to escape. I've run big labs, you can never make
921
1:45:16 --> 1:45:21
them hermetically sealed. It's utterly impossible. This thing escaped and created a pandemic.
922
1:45:21 --> 1:45:29
Yes, it was genetically engineered, obviously. But then a wonderful opportunity dropped in the
923
1:45:29 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]opped in the laps of the Dumbo-crats in the States to exploit
924
1:45:35 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]s. And it was incredibly efficient and very successful.
925
1:45:40 --> 1:45:47
So I think that's how we got here, simply because of stupidity on the most gigantic scale.
926
1:45:48 --> 1:45:54
Wokeism cubed, everyone following everyone else, everyone deathly afraid of being different from
927
1:45:54 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] That's my opinion on how we got here. But my question, Paul, is very different, very
928
1:46:03 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] the general mechanism, there are others, but the biggest mechanism of the
929
1:46:11 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] pathogenesis is the clot shot, the thrombosis, whether it's disseminated in capillaries
930
1:46:18 --> 1:46:25
or whether it's focal, it doesn't matter. If in fact post vaccination, that is the biggest risk.
931
1:46:26 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction], I'm not speaking as a clinician now, I'm speaking as a pathologist,
932
1:46:33 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] of baby aspirin being routinely prescribed post vaccination for
933
1:46:42 --> 1:46:48
everyone? Yeah, I mean, that makes so much sense. And that would then be an admission that the
934
1:46:48 --> 1:46:55
vaccine causes clotting. I agree with you 100%. It's such a simple thing to do. I think that
935
1:46:55 --> 1:47:01
the countermeasures you can take, aspirin being one of them, and the most simple is because we know
936
1:47:01 --> 1:47:08
you get clotting. But I think it would then be an admission that these vaccines cause clotting.
937
1:47:10 --> 1:47:15
But we're not even seeing Peter McCullers, we're not even seeing anyone on our side of the equation
938
1:47:15 --> 1:47:24
recommending that. Yes, I don't know why. It's a good thing. So, you know, I recommend that there's
939
1:47:24 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ing papers on probiotics, which change your flora, which is simple. Take your
940
1:47:29 --> 1:47:36
probiotic, take your aspirin. That's the simplest thing to do, because that costs nothing and is
941
1:47:36 --> 1:47:43
readily available. The other makes it a little bit more tricky, but certainly aspirin and probiotics
942
1:47:44 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]e things to do. And also the, you know, what seemed initially like quackery,
943
1:47:51 --> 1:47:56
the whole, you know, McCullers been promoting it very effectively, and Paul Alexander, the,
944
1:47:56 --> 1:48:05
you know, the nasal iodine, hydrogen peroxide routine. I mean, that really needs to be,
945
1:48:05 --> 1:48:11
it sounds odd, it sounds suspicious, I know, but it's not being promoted very widely,
946
1:48:11 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction] like vitamin D. So, you know, the other thing is turmeric actually has very powerful,
947
1:48:17 --> 1:48:22
any coagulant, any platelets from the lytic effect. So, you know, I think because of course
948
1:48:22 --> 1:48:28
there's so much clotting, these natural seals are really cheap, inexpensive and may play a role.
949
1:48:30 --> 1:48:34
Thank you. Yeah, that's a good point. I think I need to add that to our protocol.
950
1:48:37 --> 1:48:44
Excellent. Thank you. Thank you, Roger. Now, you live in Canada now, Roger, or US?
951
1:48:45 --> 1:48:48
I'm sorry? Are you in Canada or US do you live?
952
1:48:49 --> 1:48:51
Alberta, Canada. Right, thank you.
953
1:48:53 --> 1:48:59
Unfortunately, I consider myself an American, but I'm a prisoner of income.
954
1:49:01 --> 1:49:08
Roger, can I ask you whether you've got any ideas how we hold people responsible for and complicit in
955
1:49:08 --> 1:49:15
these great crimes to account? I don't think the courts are going to be the answer. They're slow
956
1:49:15 --> 1:49:21
and they're mealy-mouthed and they're stacked against us anyway. I think the only hope for
957
1:49:21 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]e thing, of course, is wokeism, which has infiltrated over
958
1:49:26 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]itution internationally, but principally universities and junior faculty
959
1:49:33 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]s. If there's going to be any hope for redirecting society and saving
960
1:49:39 --> 1:49:49
democracy, in my opinion, the solution has to be politics because politicians have incredible power
961
1:49:50 --> 1:49:57
over organizations that they fund. It's called turning off the spigot and introducing legislation
962
1:49:57 --> 1:50:03
that controls governance. Governance is the principal issue here to try and change these
963
1:50:03 --> 1:50:09
organizations around. Yeah, so I must agree with Roger. So in the US, I think we've lost
964
1:50:09 --> 1:50:16
the federal government, but the state legislatures seem very effective and very receptive to what we
965
1:50:16 --> 1:50:23
saying. So I think that's where we're going to see the turn in the tide. And I think this upcoming
966
1:50:23 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ions this year is going to be somewhat of a surprise. So I agree. I think there are a lot of
967
1:50:30 --> 1:50:36
state legislators that are hearing from their constituents and they do not like what's going
968
1:50:36 --> 1:50:42
on. So I think that's that's where we're going to see change. I would add to that, Paul, that
969
1:50:43 --> 1:50:50
when I mean, I know Alex Berenson sometimes is full of it, but nonetheless, when investigative
970
1:50:50 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]s like Berenson and Dellingpole in Britain write what I call the definitive autopsy
971
1:50:55 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction] two years, the sheer scale of it, the detailed description of all
972
1:51:03 --> 1:51:08
the terrible consequences, not the least of which are deaths of children, when that starts
973
1:51:08 --> 1:51:14
getting public, you know, Martin Luther discovered you can't stop the basement printing press.
974
1:51:15 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]art thin booklets, bullet format, lay language, when people start becoming
975
1:51:21 --> 1:51:27
aware of the scale of which they've been lied to with the personal consequences for people that
976
1:51:27 --> 1:51:35
they know. I think the degree of revulsion that generates is going to be something we're just not
977
1:51:35 --> 1:51:42
prepared for. I think that will set the scene. Frankly, I'm quite optimistic about things because
978
1:51:42 --> 1:51:49
COVID and the truckers convoy in particular have been the point of the spear, which has made people
979
1:51:49 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction] control of our freedoms over a long period of time. And when that start
980
1:51:57 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]op, I think it's a wonderful new day for a new politics, a Trump style politics,
981
1:52:05 --> 1:52:13
left and right merging tradition, values, culture, etc. Family. I think this is an incredible
982
1:52:13 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]y for a new politics because of COVID. Thank God for COVID, I say. Yes, tragically people
983
1:52:20 --> 1:52:26
died, but thank God for COVID because it gave us something to react to. Without something to react
984
1:52:26 --> 1:52:31
to, you can whine all you want about loss of a freedom here, loss of a freedom there. It doesn't
985
1:52:31 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]ion for the general population, but now we have something to react to. And frankly, I'm very
986
1:52:38 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]ic that there will be major changes in governance of all these institutions directed by
987
1:52:45 --> 1:52:52
political change. But if you're going to get political change, Roger, that means that people
988
1:52:52 --> 1:52:58
have got to take responsibility. And that means that people like us have to get involved in
989
1:52:58 --> 1:53:06
politics. And are we prepared to do that? Because we're the ideologue. Well, we're, yes, we're the
990
1:53:06 --> 1:53:13
romantics, if you like. We're not the type of people who go into politics. And also, we're very
991
1:53:13 --> 1:53:21
uncompromising as a group. We're asking huge questions. Let me just point out the ideologues,
992
1:53:21 --> 1:53:29
the creatives in Hungary and a number of European countries, the people held in the highest esteem
993
1:53:29 --> 1:53:38
are the poets. Okay, now just contemplate that, you know, that country's directions are guided by
994
1:53:38 --> 1:53:45
imagination, by soul, by spirit, you know, as Roger said, by values, not by the dollar. So it's very,
995
1:53:46 --> 1:53:52
you know, it's quite possible. Very excellent, excellent questions. We'll keep moving.
996
1:53:54 --> 1:53:59
I'll leave you with one final comment, because I'd like this phrase to be popularised.
997
1:54:00 --> 1:54:07
The scale of what has happened is unprecedented, certainly in medical history, if not
998
1:54:07 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]ory. And I, I capsulise that in this statement. It's been nothing more than the rape
999
1:54:17 --> 1:54:26
of our soul. It's on that scale of assault. It's been physical, it's been universal,
1000
1:54:26 --> 1:54:34
it's been catastrophic. And that describes rape, the rape of our very soul. That's what's been
1001
1:54:34 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] to be used, because it gets through to people,
1002
1:54:39 --> 1:54:44
the scale of what's happened, cutting to the very essence of our humanity.
1003
1:54:46 --> 1:54:51
Thank you, Roger. Thank you, Roger. Before we go to John Stone, who's a journalist,
1004
1:54:52 --> 1:54:59
Paul, Sarah asked a simple question, but it's a simple answer. You agree that the natural
1005
1:54:59 --> 1:55:05
silica in Fiji water can work to clear a spike out of the brain if you drink it exclusively for
1006
1:55:05 --> 1:55:15
a few months? So I'm sceptical about all of these detoxifying things. They're, you know, heavy
1007
1:55:15 --> 1:55:26
metal chelators, they're bleaches that have been giving IV. I'm not sure, you know, once the spike
1008
1:55:26 --> 1:55:34
protein is in the cell, it's a protein, it has to be taken up by a phagosome and broken down by
1009
1:55:35 --> 1:55:42
enzymes. I'm not sure that any of these detoxifiers work. You have to get the
1010
1:55:42 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]em to ubiquinate the protein, take it into lysosomes and break it down. That's
1011
1:55:49 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] natural defense mechanism. So I think the only way to get rid of spike is to
1012
1:55:56 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]em with vitamin D, vitamin C, quercetin, whatever you can,
1013
1:56:05 --> 1:56:10
I don't think there's any other magical way of getting rid of the spike, unless somebody else
1014
1:56:10 --> 1:56:16
has some thoughts. Very good. But Paul, it's not just the spike, is it?
1015
1:56:19 --> 1:56:25
Well, the vaccine has all kinds of things, many of which we don't know what actually it is.
1016
1:56:26 --> 1:56:33
I mean, the nanoparticle has phospholipids and all kinds of things in the surface.
1017
1:56:33 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ly. We're not sure what's actually inside the nanoparticle. There may be other stuff that
1018
1:56:40 --> 1:56:48
we don't know about. We certainly know, I've come to learn that the hepatitis B vaccine used to
1019
1:56:48 --> 1:56:53
contain mercury and mercury is toxic. It's been shown to be toxic. So
1020
1:56:54 --> 1:57:01
we don't know what's in these nanoparticles. Paul, there's a question that I missed earlier
1021
1:57:01 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] in alternative medicine and the growing research
1022
1:57:06 --> 1:57:11
on probiotics and the microbiome, do you think there needs to be a stronger affiliation with
1023
1:57:11 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]itioners or alternative practitioners or non strictly medical practitioners?
1024
1:57:20 --> 1:57:25
Yeah, absolutely. I think if you stick to the science, you know, I think I'm not a great
1025
1:57:25 --> 1:57:29
believer in alternative science. I think it's something with sort of medicine, if it works,
1026
1:57:29 --> 1:57:36
it's medicine. So, you know, I don't think the use of probiotics is in the realm of alternative
1027
1:57:36 --> 1:57:41
medicine. It's medicine. But I think these practitioners who have a more holistic approach
1028
1:57:42 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction] a role. And the data on probiotics is actually quite astonishing.
1029
1:57:49 --> 1:57:58
And it's such a simple thing to do. So we all need to get together and find a unified way of
1030
1:57:58 --> 1:58:03
dealing with this disease. Because we all bring different skills to the table.
1031
1:58:04 --> 1:58:09
Beautiful. And that Paul, that brings me to Kat Lindley from Texas, who wants to comment on the
1032
1:58:09 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]ion, because she does a paper to work there. Kat, are you there?
1033
1:58:14 --> 1:58:21
Yeah, I agree with Paul there. In my opinion, you cannot detox against spike at this time. I think
1034
1:58:21 --> 1:58:27
the technology needs to be invented for that medication or whatever. The best thing to do is
1035
1:58:27 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]em because your immune system is going to clear it eventually and mitigate
1036
1:58:33 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] to do that is probiotics, vitamin D, vitamin C. You can actually
1037
1:58:41 --> 1:58:49
measure that clinically and in lab. If you have someone and you monitor your CD4 and CD8 cells,
1038
1:58:49 --> 1:58:56
you can see over time they're recovering. And they see works really well in something like that,
1039
1:58:56 --> 1:59:04
quercetin, black seed oil. So there is a lot that we know. But in my opinion, and I think a lot of
1040
1:59:04 --> 1:59:09
physicians feel the same, none of us feel that you can get rid of the spike protein.
1041
1:59:11 --> 1:59:16
Yeah. So I think what Kat says is really important because unfortunately, there are people who will
1042
1:59:16 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction]e and will sell them all kinds of concoctions that don't work.
1043
1:59:25 --> 1:59:34
So unfortunately, there are these heavy metal chelators which are being used to treat the spike
1044
1:59:34 --> 1:59:40
protein, which is completely absurd. So I agree with Kat completely.
1045
1:59:42 --> 1:59:48
Thank you. All right. Thank you, Kat. John Stone, who's a resident journalist, Paul, in the UK.
1046
1:59:48 --> 2:00:00
Hi there. Yeah, I just want to, first of all, of course, we've got another problem with the command
1047
2:00:00 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]ure. They're just going to try and kick it up a notch and give the WHO overall responsibility
1048
2:00:11 --> 2:00:18
for future pandemics. So everybody, every government in the world will have to defer
1049
2:00:19 --> 2:00:26
to the WHO and there are treaties being negotiated over this. So in fact,
1050
2:00:28 --> 2:00:36
while the thing is, the story is collapsing around us, they're already building the next stage.
1051
2:00:38 --> 2:00:45
And this is very troubling. And of course, also, it's been very difficult to see
1052
2:00:45 --> 2:00:51
as the narrative collapsed, they switched it suddenly to Ukraine.
1053
2:00:53 --> 2:01:02
So that nobody, everybody wasn't, nobody was really focused on what was happening. And even now,
1054
2:01:03 --> 2:01:10
all the things that we've learned in the past few weeks are simply not reported in newspapers.
1055
2:01:10 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ing thing, which is non-medical, which has happened, is that, which is going to make
1056
2:01:19 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]e sit up, is that suddenly their fuel bills have doubled. And this is going to put incredible
1057
2:01:33 --> 2:01:36
pressure on politicians. Whose side are they really on?
1058
2:01:36 --> 2:01:43
Because they've all connived at this. We all saw the pantomime in October, November last year with
1059
2:01:43 --> 2:01:53
all the private jets descending on Rome and then Glasgow. And the result is that nobody is going
1060
2:01:53 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] to heat their homes anymore. And this is very much,
1061
2:02:02 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]s of people. So this is something,
1062
2:02:08 --> 2:02:14
you know, we're dealing with the fact that they, while they're doing very bad things,
1063
2:02:14 --> 2:02:18
they are beginning to create levels of friction which people can't stand.
1064
2:02:22 --> 2:02:27
Paul, that was more comment, but more comment than that.
1065
2:02:27 --> 2:02:31
Paul, that was more comment, but more comment than thank you.
1066
2:02:31 --> 2:02:32
And you've got a question, John.
1067
2:02:33 --> 2:02:36
I wasn't specifically a question, it was a remark.
1068
2:02:38 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] been said.
1069
2:02:40 --> 2:02:42
Yep, thank you very much.
1070
2:02:43 --> 2:02:49
Something that we need to bear in mind, that I don't know how we campaign against this WHO thing.
1071
2:02:49 --> 2:02:56
I don't know how seriously one takes it because even national parliaments may think, well,
1072
2:02:56 --> 2:03:04
we can't actually sort of give up that much sovereignty, but maybe they will.
1073
2:03:05 --> 2:03:07
Could I comment on that, Charles?
1074
2:03:09 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] is that they can sign whatever goddamn covenants they want.
1075
2:03:17 --> 2:03:20
They can be trashed the very next day with a new government.
1076
2:03:21 --> 2:03:27
If Trump comes in, Paris, the climate change will be trashed immediately.
1077
2:03:29 --> 2:03:34
The answer to all these attempts at wokeism and the great reset,
1078
2:03:35 --> 2:03:39
they are going to be utterly demolished by the new politics.
1079
2:03:40 --> 2:03:46
Once that gets organised and leaders emerge, we now have got great confidence in leaders
1080
2:03:46 --> 2:03:49
emerging at the right moment, just like Churchill did.
1081
2:03:50 --> 2:03:57
My other comment is, you can, bear with me when I say this, you can draw a straight line between
1082
2:03:57 --> 2:04:03
Fauci and the Ukraine and it goes like this. Fauci, gain of function, escape, pandemic,
1083
2:04:04 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction], lying through his teeth about the vaccine, the vaccine, et cetera, fails.
1084
2:04:10 --> 2:04:20
But the point is, the Democrats exploited that reality of the so-called danger of the COVID
1085
2:04:21 --> 2:04:24
to engineer absentee ballots that they knew they could milk.
1086
2:04:25 --> 2:04:32
Net result, Biden got elected. Biden would not have been elected had COVID not escaped.
1087
2:04:33 --> 2:04:39
Therefore, we now have a weak president being exploited internationally by the countries of
1088
2:04:39 --> 2:04:45
the world that we're all fully aware of, namely Russia, China, Iran, North Korea.
1089
2:04:45 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]raight line between Fauci and Ukraine. If this vaccine,
1090
2:04:53 --> 2:05:00
this thing had not escaped, Trump would now be president and Ukraine would not be happening.
1091
2:05:01 --> 2:05:08
Thank you. Thank you, Roger. Excellent food for thought and similar stuff happens on Sky News,
1092
2:05:08 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ralia in relation to some of those matters, but not on the mainstream media.
1093
2:05:15 --> 2:05:18
Thank you. Thank you. John Ariana is next.
1094
2:05:21 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] turned, whoops. Can you guys hear me? Oh, okay. I turned my camera on,
1095
2:05:31 --> 2:05:35
but oh, whoops, it's not plugged in. Okay. Hold on.
1096
2:05:35 --> 2:05:43
Here we go. Hi, everybody. Okay. So, okay. A few things. There are three
1097
2:05:46 --> 2:05:52
medicines, natural medicines that have been able to successfully detoxify vaccinated people.
1098
2:05:53 --> 2:05:57
There is a point of no return though, and that comes in with the boosters,
1099
2:05:57 --> 2:06:00
where, I mean, that's when there's just so much toxicity in the body.
1100
2:06:01 --> 2:06:08
It's like people's blood turns black and weird things start happening. But anyway,
1101
2:06:09 --> 2:06:19
I've been able to detoxify people up to two jabs and very fast. So the CDS is one thing that Dr.
1102
2:06:19 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]eas Kalker says that it takes about three to six months, but he's been able to detoxify
1103
2:06:24 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]e from the vaccines. Then there's a Dr. Perry Chin in Malaysia who's using hydrogen,
1104
2:06:33 --> 2:06:38
and he says it takes about three to six months. So they've had success as well.
1105
2:06:39 --> 2:06:48
And then I've been able to detoxify people in about three to six weeks using my protocol.
1106
2:06:48 --> 2:06:51
And the main thing in my protocol are the redox signaling molecules,
1107
2:06:52 --> 2:06:59
because it's like it works with the body's natural operating system, like on a cellular
1108
2:06:59 --> 2:07:06
level and on a nanoscale, although it's completely native to the body. So these are the results that
1109
2:07:06 --> 2:07:13
I've gotten, and this is what I'm aware of that works. And then there are other things you can add.
1110
2:07:14 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ually create different kinds of protocols, but there's some other substances
1111
2:07:20 --> 2:07:25
that are very good and useful, like the black seed oil or blue-green algae.
1112
2:07:27 --> 2:07:32
It's the most nutrient-dense food known to man, and it naturally chelates the blood.
1113
2:07:33 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ing methods. You have to know which harvesting methods retain the
1114
2:07:38 --> 2:07:45
maximum nutrition, but it's very effective. And then super antioxidants like blueberry powder or
1115
2:07:46 --> 2:07:52
resveratrol is also very good. Okay. Then when it comes to Ukraine,
1116
2:07:55 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] deep diving in research, and I'm going to do a broadcast in a couple of days.
1117
2:08:01 --> 2:08:09
So I found there is evidence of the bio weapons that were developed in Ukraine
1118
2:08:09 --> 2:08:16
were being exported out of Ukraine, smuggled out of Ukraine and used in the vaccines,
1119
2:08:17 --> 2:08:27
the COVID-19 vaccines. They're not vaccines, but the same material that was being developed in
1120
2:08:27 --> 2:08:38
Ukraine has been used in, is the same pathogens, chimeric pathogens being used in these shots,
1121
2:08:38 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] in the Johnson and Johnson and Moderna and Sinovac. I've been able to identify those.
1122
2:08:46 --> 2:08:51
I don't think it's so much that Ukraine is being used as a diversion. I think it's like
1123
2:08:53 --> 2:09:04
the Russians are shutting down this threat on their border. In order to keep the balance of
1124
2:09:04 --> 2:09:08
power, that's kind of how I see it, protecting Russia's interests, but at the same time,
1125
2:09:11 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] valuable information on these bio labs.
1126
2:09:19 --> 2:09:23
Living in Finland, you might have a better feeling for the politics of living near Russia.
1127
2:09:27 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]e don't like Russia, and they got scared into joining NATO.
1128
2:09:33 --> 2:09:37
Now Finland has joined NATO, and this is the worst thing.
1129
2:09:40 --> 2:09:45
Could you put your website in? There's a request in the chat. I want questions to Paul first.
1130
2:09:45 --> 2:09:52
All these are very relevant issues, because Paul, we're going to have to let you go at some point.
1131
2:09:52 --> 2:09:56
You've been here for two and a quarter hours answering questions, which is magnificent.
1132
2:09:56 --> 2:10:01
Arianna, those are wonderfully important questions, as we all know, in terms of what
1133
2:10:01 --> 2:10:07
this game is about. Let's ask questions of Paul first, and then we can let him go. Paul,
1134
2:10:07 --> 2:10:11
we don't want you to go, just so that you don't feel that you're bound to be here.
1135
2:10:12 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ion in terms of managing is, when do you need to go?
1136
2:10:17 --> 2:10:20
Give me 10 more minutes or so, because then I've got stuff to do.
1137
2:10:21 --> 2:10:27
Okay, 10 minutes, done. All right, so Arianna, we'll come back to that. Liam, question for Paul.
1138
2:10:28 --> 2:10:35
Yes, hello Dr. Narek. Thank you so much for everything you've done. I volunteer with the
1139
2:10:35 --> 2:10:44
Canadian Code Care Alliance, and your work has been fundamental to everything that I've learned,
1140
2:10:44 --> 2:10:49
has basically sourced back to the work that you and Dr. Corey have done. First of all, thank you
1141
2:10:49 --> 2:10:56
so much. Second of all, I know I'm well dressed today, I apologize, but it's very comfortable.
1142
2:10:58 --> 2:11:02
I wanted to get your thoughts on, and I apologize if you've already addressed this,
1143
2:11:02 --> 2:11:08
I did come in a little late. We talk about how the narrative has fallen. We've moved on to whether,
1144
2:11:09 --> 2:11:15
you know, at face value, what we're seeing in Russia and Ukraine is true or not, as a distraction.
1145
2:11:15 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] been seeing this new, this variant being discussed in China, in Hong Kong,
1146
2:11:24 --> 2:11:32
seeing this huge spike in deaths being attributed to the sub-Omicron, Delta-Omicron variant.
1147
2:11:33 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] couple days as a distraction. And now they're talking
1148
2:11:39 --> 2:11:45
about Delta-Cron. So again, I apologize if you've already referenced this, but the thing is,
1149
2:11:46 --> 2:11:50
could you share your thoughts on both the Delta-Cron and this stealth Omicron?
1150
2:11:50 --> 2:11:57
Yeah. So, you know, I think these are, this is to be expected. This virus mutates so quickly,
1151
2:11:58 --> 2:12:05
and particularly when it reaches such high viral loads. So the fact that Omicron and Delta have
1152
2:12:05 --> 2:12:13
genetically combined is no surprise. And I think this is going to be the story. I'm not sure
1153
2:12:13 --> 2:12:22
we know where it ends, but I think we're going to see recombination of viruses for a long time.
1154
2:12:24 --> 2:12:29
I don't know. I mean, yes, I think this is an issue. I think that they are going to combine
1155
2:12:32 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction]y. So if natural immunity to Omicron gives you
1156
2:12:39 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] this new variant remains to be determined. My understanding was that Omicron gave
1157
2:12:47 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] Delta. So there's the possibility if you've had Omicron,
1158
2:12:53 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] you. You know, I don't know. I think this, you know, I don't know where this is
1159
2:13:00 --> 2:13:06
going, but I think that the more we vaccinate, the more we're going to put selective pressure on
1160
2:13:06 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] going to keep on mutating. Thank you. But it's a good
1161
2:13:14 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ion. I think we're going to have to wait and see. Thank you, Dr. Ware. Thank you. Cordelia,
1162
2:13:22 --> 2:13:31
who's a pathologist, Paul in the UK. Yeah, just back to the aspirin issue. Small proportion of
1163
2:13:31 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]e will get thrombocytopenia after vaccination, and that can be so severe that they develop a
1164
2:13:38 --> 2:13:46
brain hemorrhage or other hemorrhages. And so if we give everybody an aspirin after the vaccination,
1165
2:13:46 --> 2:13:50
there will be a small proportion where it actually will make things worse.
1166
2:13:51 --> 2:13:57
So it might not be a good idea to give everybody aspirin. It might be a good idea to check the
1167
2:13:58 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] a comment, because I do know two people just in this town who had a
1168
2:14:06 --> 2:14:14
brain hemorrhage after the vaccine. And so if they have low platelets and take an aspirin and have a
1169
2:14:14 --> 2:14:22
brain hemorrhage, it can be fatal. In fact, the two I know in just this town, one died and the
1170
2:14:22 --> 2:14:28
other one I don't dare to ask. Yeah, so you raise a really important question. So
1171
2:14:29 --> 2:14:39
ITP has been well described after the vaccination. So it's a good question. You know, the problem is,
1172
2:14:39 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]ic point, I suppose you're right that post vaccination, you should have a
1173
2:14:46 --> 2:14:53
CRP done and a CBC done and see what it looks like. Because there's a small group of people
1174
2:14:53 --> 2:15:01
that will develop ITP. Yeah, I mean, ideally not vaccinated at all. But I'm just saying if you if
1175
2:15:01 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] give everybody an aspirin saying they say that that is probably misleading. Yeah, I agree
1176
2:15:08 --> 2:15:15
with you. Yes, it's a good point. Thank you, Cordelia. All right, Steven, would you last
1177
2:15:15 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ions to you and to thank Paul for being with us? Yeah, I was just trying to formulate
1178
2:15:20 --> 2:15:28
something. So I was thinking about so Paul and Cordelia. So Cordelia is a pathologist,
1179
2:15:28 --> 2:15:37
Paul. So she's a medical doctor, obviously. And so I remember we wrote to the European Medicine
1180
2:15:37 --> 2:15:45
Agency about clotting. So when I say we, Sukrit Bhakdi and I worked on letters. And one of the
1181
2:15:45 --> 2:15:53
concerns he had early on that I'm talking about, February, January, February of 2021,
1182
2:15:54 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ed the clotting, which eventually the European Medicines Agency came up
1183
2:15:59 --> 2:16:05
with. And he told me that the thing about the clotting was that you got micro clotting and
1184
2:16:05 --> 2:16:11
macro clotting, if you like. And in a way, it was better to know about the macro clotting,
1185
2:16:11 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ed that there was lots of micro clotting going on, which wasn't being detected
1186
2:16:19 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ors, even if they were looking for it. So but he also said, and I remember this, that you
1187
2:16:25 --> 2:16:33
get, I think he said paradoxical hemorrhage after all the clotting, because all the clotting factors
1188
2:16:33 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]elia, I don't know whether you've thought of that. I just wonder
1189
2:16:41 --> 2:16:44
what you think about it. And also Paul, because you're a professor of medicine. So
1190
2:16:47 --> 2:16:54
so yeah, I must confess, I wish I knew everything I don't profess to know. So I don't know. It's a
1191
2:16:54 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ion. But you know, when you have a question, you go look for the answers. So I will
1192
2:16:59 --> 2:17:05
try and look for an answer. So I think, Sukrit, I don't want to misrepresent him, but I think he
1193
2:17:05 --> 2:17:14
was talking about paradoxical hemorrhage after the clotting caused by the spiked protein.
1194
2:17:16 --> 2:17:20
And he told he was also talking at that time about cerebral venous,
1195
2:17:22 --> 2:17:29
cerebral venous sinus thrombosis. And of course, pulmonary embolism and all that kind of the deep
1196
2:17:29 --> 2:17:35
venous thrombosis which leads in the legs, which leads or leg usually, which leads to the
1197
2:17:37 --> 2:17:41
pulmonary embolism. So Paul, I just wonder,
1198
2:17:44 --> 2:17:50
do you agree with me that as far as you know, looking at things as a doctor now, so you know,
1199
2:17:50 --> 2:17:57
your clinical, your opinion as a doctor, an experienced doctor, do you agree with me that
1200
2:17:57 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]ification for any of the measures in this so-called emergency,
1201
2:18:05 --> 2:18:09
which was not emergency. And the measures include social distancing,
1202
2:18:11 --> 2:18:16
masks, and of course, the so-called vaccine, which wasn't a vaccine,
1203
2:18:18 --> 2:18:25
which was okayed by the FDA in the emergency use authorization when there wasn't an emergency.
1204
2:18:25 --> 2:18:34
And so the whole thing was medically unnecessary. And indeed, actually, that means that this was
1205
2:18:34 --> 2:18:40
medical, human medical experimentation subject to the Nuremberg code. We were taught about that in
1206
2:18:40 --> 2:18:46
medical school. Yeah, I mean, I agree with you. Every single one of these interventions is a
1207
2:18:46 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]ete failure and is not based on good science and has been harmful across the board. Yes,
1208
2:18:53 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]ion. And so, so we're medical doctors. So, and also I was saying to my own family,
1209
2:19:02 --> 2:19:06
the government are talking, saying, follow the science, which is rigid, of course,
1210
2:19:06 --> 2:19:13
it's rigid compared with medicine. I remember Peter McCullers saying in the same lecture to
1211
2:19:13 --> 2:19:21
the American Association for Physicians and Surgeons, that practicing cardiology in the
1212
2:19:21 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]iology, only 6% of the time were they following protocols and guidelines.
1213
2:19:29 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]s, they were relying on their clinical acumen. And in your field in emergency,
1214
2:19:36 --> 2:19:41
sorry, critical care, you really have to be thinking on your feet as doctors, don't you?
1215
2:19:42 --> 2:19:48
You can't slavishly follow protocols. As you say, every situation is different, every patient's
1216
2:19:48 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] to say about that. So should the politicians have been
1217
2:19:54 --> 2:19:57
saying follow the medicine rather than follow, but they didn't want to say that, of course,
1218
2:19:57 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ors and medical profession. My final question is, do you
1219
2:20:02 --> 2:20:09
think it's possible that there was an intent to undermine the medical profession and medical
1220
2:20:09 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ually set up by these criminals? Yes, yes, and yes. And I think
1221
2:20:17 --> 2:20:23
this idea of following the science is not the science is following the false narrative.
1222
2:20:23 --> 2:20:29
If we had followed the science and allowed doctors to be doctors, we wouldn't be where we are,
1223
2:20:29 --> 2:20:36
because medicine basically is the art of applying science at the bedside. You use your clinical
1224
2:20:36 --> 2:20:42
skills, plus the art of interpreting the science and applying it to your patient.
1225
2:20:42 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]n't been following the science. We've been following the lies and the false propaganda.
1226
2:20:49 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ors, let them do follow the science and use their
1227
2:20:56 --> 2:21:03
clinical judgment. But do you think that's our best line of attack, Paul, to to accuse governments of
1228
2:21:03 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]ice medicine when they have proper training? Yes, there's no question there.
1229
2:21:09 --> 2:21:16
The NIH and the FDA, who are advisory boards, are practicing medicine. There's no question.
1230
2:21:16 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]icing medicine. They do not have the authority to do so. Exactly, and they haven't been
1231
2:21:22 --> 2:21:26
trained to do it either, and they haven't got the experience. Yes, but they are practicing, indeed,
1232
2:21:26 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]icing medicine. Yes, so they're charlatans. Yes. So that would might be our best
1233
2:21:33 --> 2:21:41
line of attack. Yes, exactly. I mean, the FDA puts out these guidelines in treating medicine.
1234
2:21:41 --> 2:21:48
They do not treat, they approve medications. They don't treat patients. Exactly. Very good. All right,
1235
2:21:48 --> 2:21:56
Stephen, enough. We're letting Paul, we're letting Paul go. He's, he's two and a half hours, Paul.
1236
2:21:56 --> 2:22:03
Great effort, everybody. Big, big round of thanks in the traditional way. Thank you, Hank. Hey,
1237
2:22:04 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ion, Stephen, are you, did you record this? Yes. Okay, so because there are some people
1238
2:22:12 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ening to this Long Mammoth show. If you could send me the link.
1239
2:22:19 --> 2:22:25
Yes, I will do. Yeah, would you, do we have permission to, to publish it?
1240
2:22:26 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] my permission. You can publish it anywhere. If you want to send it to CNN, that would be great.
1241
2:22:35 --> 2:22:45
To who? Who did you say? CNN or ABC. Oh, sorry. Yes, yes. Yes, we'll send it to CNN. I'll send it
1242
2:22:45 --> 2:22:51
to Laura Ingraham at Fox News as well. Yes, I'm sure they've been, I'm sure they've been really
1243
2:22:51 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ay this. Yes. Well, Laura Ingraham is one of our supporters, I think. So, okay.
1244
2:23:01 --> 2:23:07
Thanks a lot, Eib. Is there anyone else you could, you could recommend to speak to us sometime? Is
1245
2:23:07 --> 2:23:12
there anyone in your group or is there anyone in another group that would enjoy speaking to us
1246
2:23:12 --> 2:23:19
sometime? Talking to us, discussing potential solutions, that sort of thing? Have you, you've
1247
2:23:19 --> 2:23:25
obviously spoken with Pierre? Yes, yes. I don't think we've had him as a, a, a guest though, have we?
1248
2:23:26 --> 2:23:31
No, I don't think we've had him as a guest. Actually, we should do that. Yeah, could you put it in a word for us, Paul?
1249
2:23:31 --> 2:23:35
Yeah, sure. So, I'll tell you what, you send me the link and then I can send it to him and then
1250
2:23:35 --> 2:23:43
he can see what a nice format this is. He's been on our, he's been on our call a couple times before
1251
2:23:43 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]s call him and bug him or something, but yeah. Okay. Thank you,
1252
2:23:48 --> 2:23:55
Paul. Godspeed. God bless you. Thank you, Paul. Thanks, E. Yes. Bye-bye.