0:00
Adam curry Jhansi Dvorak,
Sunday, December 4 2022. This is
0:05
your award winning give a nation
media assassination episode
0:07
15 109.
0:09
This is no agenda
0:12
still down but not out and
broadcasting live almost from
0:15
the heart of the Texas hill
country here in FEMA Region
0:17
number six in the morning,
everybody. I'm Adam curry,
0:20
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where we're still waiting for a
0:24
sporting event. I'm Jhansi
Dvorak skill
0:32
sumo know what sporty what is
it?
0:35
Comes back in January.
0:37
Well, here we are. John. I'm
sorry. I just wasn't quite a big
0:41
surprise.
0:42
I did. The recommendation was
just, you know, he already told
0:49
me to stop doing all this stuff.
Just go slow. Go slow. let it
0:52
heal. So there's clearly clearly
a reason why I had to do that.
0:56
But it's okay. Because
circumference was so kind to
1:02
pick up the pick up the slack
and to put together a unique
1:06
best of
1:07
Yeah, it's crazy. I never
thought of this. I didn't
1:11
think of it either. And I think
we could do more, because he
1:13
went back to I think episode
1200. So he's gone back several
1:18
years. It would take a yeoman's
effort to get them all or do we
1:23
start with we start with clips
with the day early on, do we how
1:27
do we start
1:28
the day? I know usually, there's
a timecode on the on the jingle
1:32
might be
1:32
taught this jingle has been
copied so much. Clip,
1:40
we have our creation date.
1:42
Yeah, there should be that
should be a clip of the day I
1:46
have now I go back to 2011 as
the furthest back I've got but
1:51
that's 1020 it's got to be older
than that. Don't you think? No.
2:00
I can. I don't even remember how
it was introduced.
2:03
October 26th 2011 is the
earliest one I have. Well,
2:11
there's a lot of them here for
everyone to enjoy. Because
2:13
they're they're better than you
know everything. Clip today is
2:18
always literally the best clip
as the entire show and there's
2:22
rarely more than one and most of
the time we don't even have one.
2:27
So this is a true treat. We
really appreciate our executive
2:31
producers or conference who put
this together is sit back and
2:35
enjoy. You'll remember some of
them other ones you'll just be
2:37
like what that happened. This is
best of clips of the day for no
2:41
agenda
2:48
for the day, today, I have seen
Saturday Night Live with the
2:52
audience all masked up all being
the perfect little human
2:56
resources or is there something
else going on?
2:59
Saturday Night Live is
continuing to tape with live
3:03
audiences
3:04
even though withdrawing the
pandemic. Lauren how they're
3:06
getting away with this
3:08
loophole.
3:08
They pay their audience members
they pay them 150 bucks to show
3:13
up, sit indoors as part of that
live audience it so technically
3:17
they're workers of the show. And
that's why despite all the
3:21
lockdowns in this spring and New
York Governor Cuomo threats to
3:25
shut indoor dining in New York
City at the hospitalization rate
3:28
doesn't immediately level off
Saturday Night Live continues to
3:32
film
3:33
I just paid the paid extras to
work are getting paid $150 to
3:38
risk their life. I find this
hilarious. It's unbelievable.
3:43
It's the funniest clip. I've
given you a clip of the day.
3:49
This is what it looks like when
hospitals reach a breaking
3:52
point.
3:53
For me, tonight, Central
California joining the southern
3:57
end of the state in crisis, no
open ICU beds for a region home
4:02
to more than 27 million people.
4:05
I was listening to this I want
to play this clip. This the part
4:08
I'm focusing in on this is the
two vaccines WTF clip, this is a
4:12
six second sub, the thing that
got my attention.
4:16
That means listen to this at
least more than 27 million
4:18
people don't have access to an
ICU bed, if needed.
4:25
Wow. So we've taken it to the
next level from the idea of or
4:30
percentage this up. It's up
500%.
4:33
That's the same. Is it just
another version of the you've
4:37
reversed it? Yeah, a million
people said they had no problems
4:40
with the vaccine.
4:42
It's unbelievable to me, because
the media could take the same
4:46
kind of logic and downplay this
entire COVID problem. If they if
4:52
they use that same trick the
other way about COVID itself.
4:57
Yeah, in other words, we don't
have to earn 50,000 and dead are
5:01
260 versus a 250,000 dead. We
have over 300 million people
5:07
that aren't dead.
5:09
We have we have stumbled upon
something. This is a very good
5:12
trick that I'm going to give you
a clip of the day for that. And
5:15
now this news about what they're
doing in Argentina. This is a
5:21
doozy
5:21
doc between Argentina and Pfizer
began in June 2020. In July,
5:26
President Alberto Fernandez held
a meeting with Pfizer CEO in
5:29
Argentina. Guess what followed,
Pfizer asked to be compensated
5:33
for the cost of any future
lawsuits. What does that mean?
5:36
Someone filed a civil lawsuit
against Pfizer in Argentina. And
5:40
if that person wins the case,
who pays the compensation? It
5:43
won't be Pfizer, it would be the
government of Argentina. Now
5:47
Argentina had never done this
before, but it made an
5:49
exception. It needed life saving
vaccines, and desperate times
5:53
call for desperate measures. So
Argentina's Parliament passed a
5:56
new law in October 2020. But
Pfizer was unhappy with
6:00
freezing. The law said Pfizer
needs to at least pay for
6:04
negligence for its own mistakes.
If it happens to make any
6:08
future. Pfizer rejected this, it
will won't pay for its mistakes.
6:12
Argentina had an offer to amend
the law to define negligence
6:16
more clearly to include only
vaccine distribution and
6:18
delivery under negligence.
Pfizer was still not happy. It
6:22
demanded the law be amended
through a new decree. That's
6:26
when Argentina put its foot
down. They refuse Pfizer than us
6:29
Argentina to buy an
international insurance what for
6:33
to pay for potential future
cases against the company,
6:36
Argentina agreed in December
2020. Pfizer came back with more
6:40
demands. It wanted sovereign
assets as collateral. What does
6:45
that mean? Pfizer wanted
Argentina to put and listen to
6:49
this, put its bank reserves, its
military bases, and its embassy
6:53
buildings at stake as
collateral.
6:58
This is great.
6:59
This is unbuilt, you know that
what you just played that clip,
7:03
which I'm going to give you clip
it a day for it's real, and it
7:07
and it's little technical for
the dollar techies out there,
7:11
the people are lab workers don't
think it's interesting. But the
7:13
key information is at the very
end of this clip is it's
7:17
something we should all know
about.
7:19
Now that vitamin d3 After it's
produced by the sun goes to the
7:22
liver and the 25 hydroxyl gets
put onto it. This species here,
7:27
the 25 hydroxy. Vitamin D is
what we actually measure in the
7:31
blood. Whether you get it from
diets, or whether you get it
7:35
from the sun, there's two ways
of getting it but this is how we
7:38
can measure it. And that's how
you're gonna see it measured and
7:40
reported in the rest of this
presentation is 25 hydroxy,
7:45
vitamin D. This is kind of like
the storage product in your
7:48
body, it's fat soluble, it is
stored in the fat, then when
7:52
it's needed, it can either go to
the immune system where it's
7:54
converted into 125 dihydroxy,
vitamin D, which is the active
7:59
form, or it can go to the kidney
and it can be converted there to
8:04
125 dihydroxy vitamin D. Now the
one in the kidney is usually
8:09
used for metabolism of calcium
and phosphorus and things of
8:13
that nature. But there's a whole
nother area. In fact, they found
8:15
many vitamin D receptors in the
leukocytes are the white blood
8:19
cells, your immune cells in the
body. Now the other thing that
8:22
you ought to know is that this
125 dihydroxy, vitamin D, which
8:26
is the active form can be
inactivated when they put a
8:30
hydroxyl group, they being the
24 hydroxylase enzyme can
8:34
inactivate it by hydroxylase and
24 position can also do it here
8:38
with 25 hydroxy from the kidney
as well. So this is the inactive
8:42
form. There is some evidence and
if you want more information
8:45
about this look at COVID-19
update at three in our med cram
8:50
series, and you'll see that high
fructose corn syrup actually can
8:57
accelerate this inactivation of
both the 125 dihydroxy vitamin D
9:04
and also the 25 hydroxy vitamin
D to the inactive form. So
9:10
that's not to say that other
sugars with fructose couldn't do
9:13
that, but that's what the study
showed that we presented in
9:17
Update 83. So you may be
supplementing, you may be out in
9:20
the sun, but if you have a diet
that's high in high fructose
9:24
corn syrup, and I'm not talking
about fructose from fruits and
9:27
vegetables, but actually high
fructose corn syrup, that is
9:30
something that can cause
problems.
9:33
Wow. Like every soft drink.
9:36
I just thought that that little
piece of information is so
9:40
valuable,
9:40
but resist we much says the the
Queensland chief medical officer
9:46
she didn't realize her gaffe or
was it really a gas
9:50
that went off? Oh, nice through
all of one a. It's now One day
9:54
One day are our most critical
people. So they are older
9:59
people. 70 years of age and
older we know they are just so
10:03
vulnerable to getting ill and
dying from this vaccine. It's
10:07
people under is that a doozy oh
10:18
what? That was just restraint
10:22
and I'm not sure it's a gaffe.
No,
10:25
that is a beauty.
10:28
Anyway, we now have
authorization emergency use
10:30
authorization for children. What
is it 12 to 15 I think we need
10:34
to reach out to the kids. CDC
credits all over this influenza
10:40
on tick tock it's for the kids
come on kids sing along you'll
10:43
enjoy it
10:50
we will give you plenty to
gather when it's done not shot.
10:54
We will get you to gather when
he got shot. We will get to play
11:00
to gather we will get through
play to gather we will get to
11:04
play to gather when it's done.
Shot.
11:08
How sad is it? You're muted.
Hello. Says you have muted
11:13
yourself.
11:13
Yes, I you know I didn't do
anything. Oh, when you showed up
11:17
as muted. I went to look at my
on my clean feet thing and it
11:21
was black and like you said as
it was muted, but I didn't do
11:24
it.
11:25
I'm not blaming you. It's
Gremlins to glitch.
11:29
I will say what I was trying to
say was that you get your clip
11:32
of the day for that.
11:33
And, and the hero worship of our
health professionals continues
11:39
with our new CDC director, Dr.
Rochelle walensky. And I play
11:44
this clip because it will fit in
the future pandemic movie that
11:48
will be made about this moment.
It could even fit in, in a video
11:53
game about a deadly pandemic.
It's one of those kinds of am
11:57
radio sounding things that just
makes it so real. As she throws
12:02
out the first pitch for the
Boston Red Sox.
12:07
Director of the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention,
12:10
Dr. Rochelle walensky.
12:15
Big tears. Watching Dr. walensky
pitch is Christian Vasquez.
12:22
Okay, let's see a strike.
12:30
Thank you, Dr. Rochelle
walensky, for all that you and
12:33
everyone at the CDC does to
protect our safety and security
12:37
at home and abroad.
12:39
And oh my god, this is
unbelievable. Like it I don't
12:44
know who the hell got you that
clip. But it goes for Clip of
12:47
the Day.
12:48
Yeah, well, let's see what this
is half of the United Kingdom's
12:50
population is now fully
vaccinated with AstraZeneca, a
12:54
pillar of its rollout. And last
night national cabinet decided
12:58
to make the Australian version
of the jet available to everyone
13:01
under 40. If you wish to get the
AstraZeneca vaccine, then we
13:05
would encourage you to go and
have that discussion with your
13:08
GP. And the Commonwealth will
now cover the legal costs of any
13:12
adverse effects from prescribing
any vaccine or vaccines for all
13:16
healthcare providers for all
recipients. But the mixed
13:19
messages just keep coming. There
are
13:22
some people who have been asking
to get AstraZeneca, although the
13:27
clinical advice is that they
should not.
13:30
I mean, what what was that
report even about? Wow. I really
13:36
clip as a dad, give me a clip of
the date because it's such a
13:39
crazy, stupid, lousy clip.
13:41
And someone asked you have you
have you had your vaccine yet?
13:44
And you know, damn, well, you're
not taking this thing. How do
13:49
you answer that? How do you go
through it? Well, we know
13:53
for you I've heard you have not
yet had your shot. When do you
13:57
plan to get it?
14:00
I can, I will. The only thing is
to do with the here mag is that
14:05
I don't want to have an example.
But I'm cutting the line.
14:14
in good health, I'm not working
in the front line. So my five is
14:20
not recommended to get
vaccinated.
14:21
That train left the station
dude, that we tried to pull that
14:25
stuff but there was six months
ago.
14:27
He makes you think once you
think about it, that maybe none
14:30
of this is really about COVID.
Maybe it's about social control.
14:34
So this is them playing a clip
of Tucker and they're gonna
14:36
comment on it.
14:37
This has never shown been about
following the science. It's
14:40
never been about following the
facts and the truth. It's been
14:43
about control from day one. I
14:45
mean, I don't this is the great
I think I honestly think it's
14:49
the greatest scandal of my
lifetime. I thought the Iraq war
14:52
was just seems much bigger than
that.
14:55
607,771 Americans have died. At
the Coronavirus, more than 99%
15:02
of the people dying from COVID
right now are unvaccinated.
15:06
This is what a great, I have to
give her kudos for that. She
15:10
just she just gave you the
actual percentage over the full
15:13
number, but presented it in a
way that you just go whoa.
15:18
Because this is mostly a word
for the vaccines.
15:25
I've always thought about
vaccines and I always think
15:27
about just nature and the way
everything works. And I feel
15:31
like a vaccination in a weird
way is just generally kind of
15:35
going against nature. Like I
mean, if there is some disease
15:38
out there, maybe there's just an
ebb and flow to life where
15:41
something's supposed to wipe out
a certain amount of people. And
15:44
that's just kind of the way
evolution goes. Vaccines kind of
15:47
stand in the way of that.
15:51
Oh my god. Okay, okay. I'm gonna
give you a clip.
15:59
This is from tick tock just to
create a little ditty from from
16:03
a young woman on tick tock, and
you understand what's going on
16:06
in society? Because you
16:08
get the vaccine? No. Why? Why
didn't you get it? What if you
16:13
catch COVID? The vaccine doesn't
stop you from catching COVID.
16:17
Why are you being so selfish?
What if you catch it and give it
16:19
to me? But you've been
vaccinated? Yeah, but you can
16:23
still give it to me? What's the
vaccine for then it will stop
16:27
you from getting really sick and
dying if you catch it. So if I
16:31
catch it and give it to you, but
you've already had the vaccine,
16:35
it'll stop you from getting
really sick and dying. Exactly.
16:39
That's why you should get it.
That's why I should get it. But
16:42
you got it already. But if you
catch it, you could get sick and
16:46
die. So by not getting the
vaccine, the only person I'm
16:50
putting at risk is myself of
getting sick and dying. No,
16:54
you're putting me at risk.
Didn't already get the vaccine
16:57
so you won't get sick and die
even if I gave it to you. But
17:00
you could give it to someone who
can't be vaccinated. But so
17:03
Could someone who's been
vaccinated because the vaccine
17:05
doesn't stop you from getting
COVID. Just do it. Okay. It's
17:07
the right thing.
17:10
That Wow, that's Clip of the
Day,
17:12
vaccinated people are at risk
for the new variants, and
17:18
transmitted it's proven nine
different countries. So
17:21
vaccinated people should be
watching primetime and should be
17:25
isolated from the society.
unvaccinated people. Dangerous,
17:31
vaccinated people are dangerous
on others. It's proven in Israel
17:35
now. As I'm in contact with when
a physician Israel, they have a
17:41
big problems. severe cases in
hospitals are among vaccinated
17:46
people.
17:48
And so the general idea hold on
17:51
this clip, which is hard to
hear, is really
17:55
profound. From this coming from
this guy. Yes, I agree.
17:59
Yeah, I would say this is the
most perfect ID and this should
18:01
be a clip of the day,
18:02
a clinical lab technician, Dr. I
think was trained at the Mayo
18:06
Clinic. And he's going to talk
about the T cells. And he's also
18:09
going to be talking about what
he's seen in the lab. Now that
18:13
vaccinations are pretty much
over and done with I don't think
18:17
we're going to get many more
people vaccinated. So this is
18:19
what he's seeing. But
18:20
what we're seeing in the
laboratory after people get
18:22
these shots, we're seeing a very
concerning locked in low profile
18:27
of these important killer T
cells that you want in your
18:30
body. It's almost reverse HIV
and HIV, you lose your helper T
18:34
cells, your CD four cells. In
this virus post vaccine. What
18:38
we're seeing is a drop in your
killer T cells, your CD eight
18:41
cells. And what a CD eight cells
do they keep all other viruses
18:45
in check. What am I seeing in
the laboratory, I'm seeing an
18:47
uptick of herpes family viruses.
I'm seeing herpes, I'm seeing
18:51
shingles, I'm seeing mono, I'm
seeing a huge uptick in human
18:55
papilloma virus in the cervical
biopsies in the cervical pap
18:59
smears and women. In addition to
that there's a little
19:02
infectious, no bump the kids get
called molluscum contagiosum.
19:06
What do you need to keep that in
check you need CDA killer T
19:09
cells? I am seeing a 20 times
increase in individuals over the
19:12
age of 50 have this little bump
and rash. You know that's
19:16
innocuous. But what it tells me
is the immune status of these
19:20
individuals who have gotten the
shot, we're literally weakening
19:23
the immune system of these
individuals. Now most concerning
19:26
of all, is there's a pattern of
these types of immune cells in
19:30
the body that keep cancer in
check. Well, since January one
19:34
in the laboratory, I've seen a
20 times increase of endometrial
19:39
cancers over what I see on an
annual basis, a 20 times
19:43
increase. I'm not exaggerating
at all, because I look at my
19:46
numbers year over year. Oh my
gosh, I've never seen this many
19:50
endometrial cancers before. I'm
seeing invasive melanomas in
19:53
younger patients. Normally we
catch those early in their thin
19:56
melanomas. I'm seeing thick
melanomas sky recovering in the
20:00
last month or two. I'm already
seeing the early signals. And we
20:06
are modifying the immune system
to a weakened state, great study
20:11
out of Germany that looked at
these profiles on young
20:14
individuals after the Pfizer
showing this locked in, and we
20:19
don't know how long maybe the
immune system is going to
20:21
regenerate, and those ratios
will go back up. But who's
20:24
studying it? And where are the
long term trials? Two months,
20:28
four months? How long? Is this
profile locked in? We don't
20:31
know.
20:32
Yeah, I just thought that was
kind of
20:34
a depressing Clip of the Day.
20:36
When I'm saying Do people really
know what's in stuff that they
20:39
inject in their bodies all the
time, and they're like, what
20:43
they drink? I'll stop it. Stop
it with the ignorance. And we
20:48
have to stop saying, Oh, well,
you know, you have to listen to
20:50
people. And no, you don't. These
people are being harmful to the
20:55
greater good. You don't have to
listen to a minority of people
20:58
who are being harmful to the
greater good and who are not
21:01
acting on logic, reason and
science. I had the I had an
21:05
issue I told you, Chris, when my
family was here, and they were
21:07
saying, Well, I don't know. I
just, I said, you know how you
21:10
got here to visit me in New
York. You took an airplane? What
21:12
is that? Science? Right? You
know why people live to be older
21:17
than 40 5060 years old? Days.
Science, Science medicine, Max,
21:23
no one questions that you know
why people you know, what, what
21:26
is so contradictory about it?
When people get sick, they go
21:29
into the hospital and they say,
draw it all give it to me inject
21:32
it, put it in me. And you're
going to pay a whole lot of
21:35
money. And you're going to tax
the medical system when you
21:37
could have gotten it for free.
21:42
So guys, off the rails stands
21:44
out about white vaxxers in
particular, is
21:47
it the app, please pay
attention? Okay, anti button.
21:50
Oh, he's white. He's white
stands
21:53
out about white anti vaxxers In
particular, as if they act like
21:56
their freedom has been taken,
taken from them. And they have
22:00
this weird habit of trying to do
that by CO opting the history of
22:03
actually oppressed people. Eric
Clapton is no different. He
22:06
claimed that vaccine mandates
are discrimination. The lyrics
22:09
of a song with Van Morrison
include, do you want to be a
22:12
free man or do you want to be a
slave? And as Rollingstone
22:15
points out, this is the practice
first nasty brush with matters
22:19
of race, a derogatory term to
his friend, Jimi Hendrix in
22:23
1968. Though the magazine points
out it was, quote, hipster slang
22:26
at the time.
22:27
By the way, if I could turn out
to you joy, both Jimmy and Eric
22:31
are Brits, they're racist. Come
on. This is not a surprise but
22:34
don't lay it on slavery from
America.
22:37
And then a concert in 1976 he
went on a racist rant that
22:40
included him saying stop Britain
from becoming a black colony to
22:44
Britain white. It was
particularly shocking at the
22:48
time because Clapton's music was
heavily influenced, one might
22:51
say appropriated Oh yeah, and
black musicians have its biggest
22:55
hit cover Bob Marley's I shot
the sheriff Clapton has
22:59
apologized for his racist past
blaming it on his addictions to
23:02
alcohol and drugs. But his
behavior over the past year is
23:05
also questionable and as
Rollingstone put it, Clapton
23:08
went from setting the standard
for rock guitar to making full
23:11
tilt racist rants and becoming
an outspoken vaccine skeptic
23:14
Wow. And he was always like
this. I mean, maybe he's just a
23:19
jerk.
23:21
Oh, that was really dynamite. I
have to applaud her for taking
23:25
it to Eric Clapton being a full
on evil racist.
23:30
The NPR story was to didn't
bring up the most interesting
23:34
point at all. And it it and it
just and you'll see when we get
23:39
to this play this this is the
real story.
23:42
Fireworks fill the sky as
Barbados officially swears and
23:46
Sandra Mason as its first ever
president. The island is home to
23:50
over 300,000 people.
23:51
We now turn our vessels ball
towards the New Republic,
23:57
while the island will remain a
member of the Commonwealth. This
24:00
is the first time in almost
three decades that around has
24:02
removed Queen Elizabeth as head
of state. Despite the official
24:06
celebration, British member of
parliament Tom tonight has
24:10
accused China of playing a large
role in Barbados his decision.
24:14
He said Beijing is using
investments to gain leverage and
24:17
undermine the UK status as a key
partner with Caribbean nations.
24:21
In recent years, Barbados has
reportedly embraced more than
24:24
$600 million in funding from
China for projects as part of
24:28
Beijing's Belt and Road
Initiative. Okay,
24:31
well this clip listen to this
clip and tell me if anything
24:34
sticks
24:35
out there all the UFO sightings
I'm sure you've seen a million
24:39
pictures and moving video now of
UFOs and all the rest of it. You
24:43
think the Belgian sightings were
perhaps accurate with what you
24:51
know about the drive systems?
Have you seen any other film or
24:56
stills of UFOs that that look
like the real According to you,
25:00
absolutely. Because once I
started looking into it, now, I
25:04
don't research this stuff
anymore. And I get a lot of
25:06
people asking me UFO questions.
And actually, believe it or not,
25:10
it doesn't interest me, I liked
being involved in the project.
25:13
But I don't, you know, look into
UFO stories and research this
25:17
stuff. But when I did when I
said the craft operate in two
25:22
modes, the Omicron and delta
configuration, transitioning
25:26
from Alma crime to Delta, the
way the craft flies through in
25:29
space is belly first, not flying
horizontal, like you see in a
25:33
science fiction movie. And as
the craft leaves the ground in
25:37
Omicron mode, they perform a
roll maneuver, where the craft
25:41
raises and you know, eventually
you see it at a 45 degree angle,
25:44
and then it becomes straight up
and down. 180 degrees, right,
25:48
the amplifiers come up to power,
they focus on a point and the
25:51
craft flies belly first at the
target. And you see a lot of UFO
25:58
photographs here and there with
crafts, ascending in the sky at
26:03
a 45 degree angle, but flying up
or, or sitting at odd angles in
26:07
the sky. And at least from what
I can guess from the
26:11
photographs, if they in fact are
genuine, it looks like the craft
26:15
are transitioning from one mode
to another. And so you've seen
26:18
quite a few of those. I've
probably seen three or four of
26:21
those three or four. Yeah, so
the majority of UFO photos are
26:27
by you pretty much dismissed.
But every now and then one hits
26:30
you and you say hey, look at
that. Yeah, if it has something
26:34
that click somewhere, but you
know, these days, if boy, you
26:38
just take a picture into Adobe
Photoshop, and you know that you
26:41
can make anything. I do know,
Bob, I can't thank you enough
26:45
for coming on tonight with
regard to your movie Blue Book.
26:48
So hey, do you have any idea
what the title might be? It's
26:51
real.
26:53
So Dr. McCulloh, are the
vaccines actually causing the
26:56
deaths. The epidemiological
construct that we have to go
26:59
through is called the Bradford
Hill tenants of causality. So
27:03
the first question is, is it a
large epidemiologic signal? And
27:06
I tell you, it's astronomical
all the vaccines combined in the
27:09
United States per year, it's no
more than 150 deaths not
27:12
temporally related. Here we are
over 21,000 deaths. So clearly,
27:16
it's a massive signal. Number
two, is there a dangerous
27:20
mechanism of action? The answer
is yes. We know the vaccines
27:23
have a dangerous mechanism of
actually installed production of
27:26
the spike protein. The spike
protein is what makes the
27:28
respiratory infection we thought
and it follows that in some
27:31
people, excessive production of
the spike protein in a
27:34
vulnerable person would be
lethal after a vaccine, that
27:38
third criteria. Is it internally
consistent? Are there other
27:42
conditions that are now
acknowledged that they
27:45
themselves could be fatal? And
the answer is short it with
27:48
myocarditis are FDA agrees all
the regulatory experts agree
27:52
that the vaccines cause
myocarditis? Can it be failed?
27:55
Yes. Have there been fatal cases
published? Yes. By Verma
27:58
introit. As an example, those
are publications that over 200
28:02
peer reviewed publications of
myocarditis, how about other
28:04
forms of death, vaccine induced
thrombocytopenic thrombosis,
28:08
blood clots, a stroke,
hypertension, myocardial
28:11
infarction, a variety of other
lethal syndromes, there's over
28:14
1000 Peer Reviewed papers
published on fatal and non fatal
28:18
outcomes. So that criteria is
met. So it's internally
28:20
consistent, is it externally
consistent? So it's consistent
28:23
with the yellow card system that
you dress system and the US fair
28:27
system? And finally, is it
temporarily related? Yes, it's
28:29
very tightly temporally related.
So I've just gone through the
28:32
exercise, it is beyond any
shadow of a doubt that the
28:36
vaccines are causing large
numbers of deaths. It's
28:39
unequivocal that I'm a card
carrying epidemiologist, I'm
28:42
telling you, the vaccines are
causing large numbers of
28:45
deaths, this is going to be
offered pretty soon, it's
28:48
gonna be very often you get the
EUA submission from the company,
28:51
which is 85 to 100 pages long.
And then you get the FDA review
28:54
of all those data. It really,
really is hard. I mean, it is a
28:57
very thorough review, not here,
here, it was 22 pages from the
29:01
FDA, which included a half a
page on Pfizer's data and a half
29:05
a page with Madonna's data, you
could get that from the press
29:08
release. In fact, it was no more
detailed, frankly, than the
29:11
press release. So I just
thought, the question we're
29:14
being asked, is, in the end
always is do the benefits
29:18
outweigh the risks, even though
the risks are generally small
29:20
and sometimes unknown? That's
always the question. Do the
29:23
benefits of this vaccine
outweigh the risks? I didn't see
29:26
the benefits. I was surprised,
actually, frankly, that of the
29:29
21 voting members 90 voted yes.
Because I just don't see the
29:33
evidence for that. And we'll see
how this plays out. I mean, this
29:36
was something that I think they
the that was desired by this
29:42
administration. I could be
wrong. But the way that this the
29:45
other thing that was odd about
this meeting was that we're an
29:49
advisory committee, we're being
asked for advice. So normally,
29:52
what happens is they just
present the data. Here's the
29:55
data, what's your advice, and
people can ignore our advice. I
29:58
mean, I'm in an academic
medicine people We'll ignore my
30:00
advice all the time, but to make
the best advice. So here on the
30:03
other hand, however, they had
somebody from who Contras, super
30:07
owl, who presented their their
opinion about this, and their
30:11
opinion was they thought this
was a good idea. And then you
30:14
had the FDA presenting where
they also had an opinion, that's
30:17
unusual. And then the next day,
you know, you read a public
30:22
health announcement from the a
press release from HHS, Health
30:26
and Human Services that says
that the government has decided
30:29
to purchase at least 105 million
doses from Pfizer with up to 300
30:33
million doses. It was a little
unclear from that press release.
30:35
But they mentioned that we had
just made this decision the day
30:39
before. So you just sort of felt
like the fix was in a little bit
30:42
here. And maybe that's not the
right phrase, but it was
30:44
something that they wanted. I
felt like we were being led here
30:49
and with that with with a
critical lack of information.
30:52
You're right six was in there.
All right, Doctor off get the
30:56
right words on the door tuning
data due to
31:01
the scale of the rollout now
appears 10s of 1000s of
31:04
practitioners have repeatedly
performed medical treatments,
31:07
properly termed gross medical
and or professional negligence,
31:12
with respect to patients
receiving the COVID-19
31:15
injectables, where each
practitioner has no immunity
31:19
from government whatsoever. So
these practitioners are
31:22
therefore personally and
professionally liable to actions
31:27
for medical negligence from
their patients receiving
31:29
COVID-19 injectables,
particularly those patients who
31:33
subsequently died or suffered
adverse side effects from the
31:37
COVID-19 injectables.
Additionally, due to the illegal
31:41
nature of the APRA, and national
boards joint statement, it does
31:45
also appear that the public
offices of APRA and the national
31:49
board responsible for the
creation and publication of the
31:52
nine March 2021 statement are
now legally exposed to the
31:58
action of misfeasance in public
office as the harm to COVID-19,
32:03
as the harm to COVID-19 Vaccine
Victims was foreseeable. In
32:09
terms of these still remaining
experimental gene based
32:12
therapies. These Vaccine Victims
and future victims who later
32:16
develop vaccine related injuries
and illnesses can sue the public
32:20
offices of APRA and the national
boards in their personal
32:23
capacity. A further liability in
the same public offices appears
32:28
available to those registered
practitioners who improperly
32:33
administered the COVID-19
injectables in breach of their
32:36
codes of conduct. Should those
health practitioners
32:39
subsequently be sued by their
patients, and they have to pay
32:43
damages to their patients, then
those health practitioners may
32:47
in turn, be able to sue the
public officers of APRA. And the
32:52
National Board for coercing and
threaten them to ignore their
32:56
codes of conduct. Such illegal
action, again, would be the tort
33:00
of misfeasance. In public
33:02
office. We'll see. It's the it's
the wild clip.
33:07
The truth is that DARPA, which
is the operational development
33:14
arm, basically, the CIA, fell in
love with the RNA technology
33:18
over a decade ago. And they
decided to capitalize it in
33:23
force it into the market space.
And for instance, they're the
33:27
ones that have capitalized
through into tell their
33:30
investment arm, the new RNA
manufacturing facilities up in
33:33
Canada. This is a CIA program
don't don't, you know, there's
33:37
no ambiguity here. I'm not
telling state secrets. The
33:42
technology was basically pulled
out of the trash can, because it
33:47
had been suppressed by Merck,
after I developed it over 30
33:51
years ago, and advanced very
aggressively by DARPA, DARPA
33:55
funded and basically built
Maderna they're continuing to
33:58
push all this and they're
pushing it through the
34:00
government. And what you're
seeing is the power of the the
34:06
intelligence community, and the
new bio defense industrial
34:11
complex that's developed since
the actress attacks and really
34:14
goes beyond that, in being able
to push their agenda through the
34:18
government. Okay, when you see
all these things that Paul's
34:21
documenting, all these
circumventing of normal
34:25
procedures and rules that's
happening because largely, our
34:30
intelligence community is
pushing them through the
34:33
administrative state structure.
34:35
Now, here are a couple of
caveats because there are always
34:37
a few caveats. If you've got a
recent infection or were
34:40
recently vaccinated, it's
reasonable to wait a few months.
34:44
Now, we expect millions of
people to get the shot this
34:47
month as folks get back to
school, get back to work and get
34:51
back into their regular routines
after the summer. And as the
34:56
annual flu vaccination campaign
kicks into high gear Your later
35:00
this month and into early
October. We expect millions will
35:04
choose to get their COVID-19
shot at the same time. Or over
35:08
the course of the fall when
people go in for routine
35:10
checkups. And as the annual flu
vaccination campaign kicks into
35:14
high gear later this month and
into early October, we expect
35:19
millions will choose to get
their COVID-19 shot at the same
35:21
time. Or over the course of the
fall when people go in for
35:25
routine checkups. The good news
is you can get both your flu
35:29
shot and COVID shot at the same
time. It's actually a good idea.
35:33
I really
35:33
well, he's going to tell you
he's going to tell you why. I'm
35:36
glad you stepped on it so I can
stop it. Bring your attention to
35:39
it. To explain.
35:42
The good news is you can get
both your flu shot and COVID
35:44
shot at the same time. It's
actually a good idea. I really
35:47
believe this is why God gave us
two arms one for the flu shot
35:51
and the other.
35:52
Yeah, geez. Okay, for the day,
today. Okay. Okay.
36:00
And our le we've also
36:02
found these conspiracy theories
are running rampant among some
36:05
white evangelical Christian
36:07
Republicans.
36:08
Are you gonna get the vaccine?
No, it's detrimental to your
36:11
health, starts going into
conspiracy theory type stuff,
36:16
but I do believe is Bill Gates
in them trying to kill them.
36:21
This has real consequences,
right? I mean, and it comes to
36:25
the same day that President Joe
Biden is now. Did you hear? Yes,
36:30
she did. This house real quick.
She
36:34
was so shook up by that by that
clip that she threw in an old
36:37
Biden gotta love it. Classic.
36:40
This has real consequences,
right? I mean, and it comes in
36:44
the same day that President Oh
Biden is now.
36:49
We haven't heard that mistake
for a long time. No, that's a
36:52
good one to
36:54
master. The labor unit is all
about.
36:58
gotta hear the beginning again,
what
37:00
matches the labor unit is all
about dignity, provides dignity
37:05
for people who deserve to be
treated differently.
37:09
Okay, what is the blah, blah, to
be treated differently? That's a
37:13
that's a match of the labor
union is all about,
37:16
okay, that's what the labia is
all about. What does he say?
37:19
No, no, no, that's not what he
says. He's saying. He said,
37:24
That's what the labor union here
to get
37:28
matched to the labor union is
all about dignity, provides
37:32
dignity for people who deserve
to be treated differently.
37:40
Play contradictory comment.
37:42
COVID-19 day as she recovered,
it has changed the way we spend
37:46
our time and our money. More
products are being delivered
37:49
than ever before. That's because
people have a little more
37:52
breathing room than they did
last year.
37:56
Okay, it's because he says
there's plenty of shit out there
37:59
to buy now and people are buying
shit. That's what he's saying.
38:02
It's just what he says. But they
got more breathing room. They
38:05
got to because the government
gave him less steamy checks.
38:09
Okay, well play irony and
inflation is people have more
38:12
money now. Because of the first
wave with maybe a personalized
38:16
legislation.
38:20
When he realized the irony of
it, he went haywire. Hey, wait a
38:24
minute, we're about to give him
more money quite well. I've
38:26
heard the horror. Let's hear
that again.
38:28
And the irony is people have
more money now. Because of the
38:31
first wave of major pieces of
legislation. To the tourism's
38:38
everything can see in the modern
time, people coming out of the
38:43
fields down in Charleston,
Charlotte, Virginia,
38:48
Charlottesville, Virginia,
carrying torches and Nazi
38:53
banners screechie, Louis, most
anti semitic, and anti black
38:59
rhetoric in history. Hundreds
and hundreds of them. And we'll
39:05
ask the guy read his job before
when asked what he thought about
39:09
he said, Well, there's some very
good people there, as well. Very
39:13
good people are racist or
39:16
fascists. Wow. Oh, now I see why
you want to play these clips.
39:23
You've got
39:23
to know if you think it's as
funny as I did. But I find it
39:26
highly amusing.
39:27
We stand divided
39:28
that the Prime Minister of
Belize, January Sanyo scalding
39:32
Biden who was sitting on stage
nearby, and
39:35
that is why the Summit of the
Americas should have been
39:38
inclusive. Geography, not
politics defines the America.
39:45
Argentina's President Alberto
Fernandez piled on if you need
39:49
the right man, who is your
market either otaku America's he
39:52
says he wished the summit was
different than saying the
39:54
silence of those who are absent
is calling to us. Then it was
39:58
Biden's turn
39:59
are going to You're off to a
strong start.
40:05
Someone's getting fired. Even
started out perfectly. Let me
40:09
hear the beginning was good too.
40:10
We stand divided, we stand
divided.
40:12
That's the prime minister of
Belize. John, that's
40:15
great. And then Biden
40:17
poor south to a strong start.
40:20
Poor man.
40:23
I think Jen Psaki really
believes in it, this clip of her
40:28
being super upset, and getting
everything wrong, because I've
40:32
read I've read the parental
rights bill is really nothing in
40:36
there. That is crazy out of the
ordinary. But she takes it this
40:40
way. This is
40:41
a political wedge issue, and an
attempt to win a culture war.
40:46
And they're doing that in a way
that is harsh and cruel to a
40:50
community of kids especially I'm
like gonna get I'm gonna get
40:54
emotional about this issue,
because I just, it's horrible.
40:57
But
40:59
but you know, it's like kids who
are bullied and like, all these
41:04
leaders are guard taking steps
to hurt them and hurt their
41:07
lives and hurt their families.
And you look at some of these
41:10
laws in the States, and it is
going after parents who are in
41:14
loving relationships who have
kids, it's
41:18
way it can withstand a court
challenge. You don't have an
41:21
absolute right to own private
property. In Canada, believe me,
41:24
he
41:24
says you don't have the absolute
right to own privacy.
41:28
I can argue now, you're playing
it over and over,
41:32
almost finished the clip.
41:34
In Canada. It is there are there
are steps that are taken when
41:41
expropriations happen at
whatever level of government and
41:44
we'll be sure to stay within
those boundaries.
41:47
Well, that fits right into the W
es you want to own anything
41:50
because you don't,
41:51
you'll be happy, you'll be very
happy about it. I find that I
41:54
find that that wasn't
41:56
okay. Okay. Okay, you get to
clip into the day, the door
41:59
chaining data,
42:01
set everything to do with race.
42:07
Well, it's easier to be a parent
this morning. It's easier to be
42:10
a dad, it's easier, it's easier.
What to tell your kids character
42:16
matters. It matters to tell them
the truth matters. Good person
42:21
matters. And it's easier for a
lot of people. If you're Muslim,
42:29
in this country, you don't have
to worry if the President
42:32
doesn't want you here. If you're
an immigrant, you don't have to
42:35
worry if the President's gonna
be happy to have babies snatched
42:39
away sit central gamers. Back
for a lot of people who have
42:51
really
42:51
oh my god,
42:54
you know, I can't breathe. You
know, that wasn't just George
42:59
Floyd does a lot of people felt
that couldn't breathe. Every
43:03
day, you're waking up and you're
getting these tweets, and you'd
43:06
go into the store, and people
who had been afraid to show
43:11
their racism. I would get
nastier and nastier to you and
43:14
you're worried about your kids,
and you're worried about your
43:17
sister? And can she just go to
Walmart and get back into the
43:21
heart car without somebody
saying something to her. And
43:25
you've spent so much of your
life energy, just trying to hold
43:29
it together. And this is a big
deal for us just to be able to
43:34
get some peace and have a chance
for for a reset. And the
43:38
character of the country
matters. And being a good man
43:42
matters. You know, I just want
my son's to look at this. Look
43:46
at this. You know, it's easy to
to do what the cheap way and,
43:52
and get away with stuff. But it
comes back around. It comes back
43:55
around. And it's a good day for
this country. I'm sorry for the
43:58
people who lost it for them.
It's not a good day. But for a
44:02
whole lot of people. It's a good
day.
44:04
And I think
44:06
stop them stop the presses and
give yourself Clip of the Day
44:08
right off the bat.
44:10
It is let's just listen to it
again. That's a very good point
44:14
here. Let me crank up our audio
a little bit and make sure we
44:17
can hear, see or say it
perfectly.
44:22
It has been a bad week for the
Trump legal team that actually
44:26
right now is holding a press
conference that is so bananas.
44:28
We can't even bring it to you
because it's just so full of BS.
44:33
And then over on MSNBC. Brian
Williams, of course picked up on
44:37
the most by the way. Yeah,
44:39
I'm gonna just because it's so
CNN it's almost epitomizes
44:44
everything that we've been doing
for the last 10 years. And when
44:47
it comes to this network, I'm
gonna give you a clip of the day
44:50
for that bananas flip. All you
44:51
got to do is needle drop into
the channels and you get stuff
44:55
like this
44:55
after Trump sent that initial
tweet about pens attacking
45:00
pence, White House aides,
including the White House press
45:03
secretary and other top aides
tried to convince Trump to send
45:06
out a more forceful tweet. In
fact, I'm told by sources that
45:11
there was a general consensus
behind the scenes of this is a
45:14
really bad situation. We've got
to do something about this. And
45:17
so they tried to convince Trump
to send something else out to
45:21
encourage people to be peaceful.
And he did. He did about 14
45:24
minutes later when he said,
please support our Capitol
45:26
Police, law enforcement, they
are truly on the side of our
45:29
country stay peaceful, that if
it's pointed to that tweet, but
45:32
here's the thing, Wolf, I'm told
by sources behind the scenes,
45:35
Trump did not want to add stay
peaceful at the end of that
45:38
tweet, he was very resistant to
it, the aides telling them how
45:44
bad the situation was, how we
needed to intervene. And so he
45:48
reluctantly begrudge the state
peaceful at the end of that
45:52
tweet, but he did not initially
want to and so it's worth
45:54
raising as he's already there on
the floor, tried to lay out the
45:58
argument that he was trying to
intervene and trying to create
46:03
create calm in the midst of the
violence will important point
46:07
indeed. That all the time.
46:13
The whole thing, there's no
evidence of this
46:17
important point, indeed, John
Roth,
46:20
believable oh my gosh,
46:23
can you see that Jews
46:25
and this is an idiot woman who's
sitting who doesn't even know
46:30
how people burn people different
we bury people differently in
46:33
other countries surprise lady.
That's just like, my body's
46:36
burning. It's like MIT it's like
Game of Thrones
46:39
warning kind of viewers that you
might find some of these images
46:42
disturbing.
46:47
Just in this area alone, it's
about the size of three quarters
46:52
of a football pitch there are
close to 50 pyres burning, this
46:57
crematorium believed it will
probably process about 150
47:00
bodies today there's estimated
officious about 600 people dying
47:06
every day here in New Delhi but
the truth of the matter is the
47:09
numbers must be much higher in
this crematorium. They have to
47:14
join a queue before they can be
seen
47:17
this is funny
47:19
day here in New Delhi but the
truth of the matter is the
47:22
numbers must be much higher in
this way why?
47:28
Because mostly be higher
47:29
because that's what they always
say they're like don't focus on
47:32
that focus on the funny part
coming right after that
47:35
people dying every day here in
New Delhi but the truth of the
47:38
matter is the numbers must be
much higher in this crematorium
47:42
the dead actually have to join a
queue before they can be seen
47:45
before they can
47:46
the dead have to join the queue
hey you zombie get in line
47:50
be given their last right so the
people accompany them have to
47:54
take a ticket like you weren't
going to see the doctor or
47:56
getting a bank appointment I'll
wait their turn. And then they
48:01
will be brought out to one of
these locations. P which is a
48:05
butter like oil substance poured
on them. The word piled on top
48:09
and they're given their last
right
48:11
and that's how they
48:13
Yes, I'm gonna give you a clip
of the day because that clip is
48:17
so weird thing go Boom shakalaka
so that's so they so this height
48:23
this disinflation demon is
walking us down the path to
48:26
this. So let's listen to more of
this stupid product that these
48:31
guys use IPR delivering to scare
the kids. This is
48:35
great. It's November 1923. The
economy here tanked after World
48:41
War One. Social unrest was
everywhere. But things were
48:45
about to get even worse.
48:48
So cool to want you to warm
yourself up with
48:51
fire over there.
48:53
Okay. Hey, kid Bucha. Yes, and
means that stack of paper like
48:59
them? Yes, sure. Sure. Second is
this used to be? It says 100
49:08
billion marks on it. But these
those of us was kindling then
49:12
they are as currency. What
happened after the grid for a
49:18
government began printing paper
money to pay reparations to the
49:21
countries that invaded it
printed so much money that the
49:24
price of everything goes
astronomically. Last month, the
49:29
inflation rate was almost
70,000%
49:32
the most insulting fake German
accent I've ever heard. That's
49:38
the insult. I mean, when I do it
on this show, okay, we know it's
49:42
a joke. That was just an insult.
Can you believe this? Hard to
49:48
propaganda that are trying to
feed the American liberal they
49:52
were listening to this garbage.
49:54
They actually listened to it.
Coincidence? I think not.
49:58
NPR story was didn't bring up
the most interesting point at
50:03
all. And it just and you'll see
when we get to let's play this,
50:08
this is the real story.
50:10
Fireworks fill the sky as
Barbados officially swears and
50:13
Sandra Mason as its first ever
president. The island is home to
50:17
over 300,000 people.
50:19
We now turn our vessels ball
towards the New Republic,
50:24
while the island will remain a
member of the Commonwealth. This
50:27
is the first time in almost
three decades that around has
50:30
removed Queen Elizabeth as head
of state. Despite the official
50:34
celebration, British member of
parliament Tom tonight has
50:37
accused China of playing a large
role in Barbados. His decision.
50:41
He said Beijing is using
investments to gain leverage and
50:44
undermine the UK status as a key
partner with Caribbean nations.
50:49
In recent years, Barbados has
reportedly embraced more than
50:52
$600 million dollars in funding
from China for projects as part
50:56
of Beijing's Belt and Road
Initiative.
50:58
Okay, wow. This is the producer
of the doctors very famous TV
51:02
show in America. It's I think
it's almost daily at this point.
51:06
It's always been daily, it's
always been daily. It's pretty,
51:09
pretty sure it's a daily show
that competes with Dr. Oz.
51:13
And he had the story. He had
audio tape, he had the
51:16
documents, he had the
whistleblower he had everything
51:18
good to go. And then this in the
51:21
fall of last year, I got a call
from an inside source who told
51:24
me that in two weeks, there's
going to be a whistleblower from
51:27
the CDC, who is going to come
out and say that the CDC had
51:31
committed fraud on the MMR
study, and that they knew that
51:35
vaccines were actually causing
autism. I mean, that's a huge
51:40
story. Unfortunately, it was a
story I would not be able to
51:43
tell on a medical talk show
because a lot of our funding was
51:46
coming from the pharmaceutical
industry. And we were also very
51:49
good friends with the CDC who
had appeared on our show many,
51:52
many times. But I knew that once
the story broke two weeks later,
51:58
that the mainstream news media
would pick it up Fox would be on
52:02
at CNN was would be on MSNBC,
and we're talking about the
52:04
biggest medical story in the
last decade or two at least. So
52:10
that two weeks came, I saw the
video that was posted by Andrew
52:13
Wakefield and Brian Hooker. And
I heard the words of William
52:16
Thompson and his confession.
52:19
Oh my god, I cannot believe we
did what we did. But we did.
52:26
It's all there. It's all there.
52:27
And I watched the blogosphere go
crazy tweets, Facebook, social
52:33
media, everybody talking about
it. But not one mainstream media
52:38
source went anywhere near the
story. In fact, on CNN, someone
52:43
put the story up on my report,
and CNN took it down. And in
52:48
that moment, I realized, wait a
minute, not only is my medical
52:53
talk show being produced by the
pharmaceutical industry, all of
52:57
television is
53:01
yes, yes.
53:04
Did you ever look at something
going on in the news and go you
53:07
know what the situation needs to
Brock
53:09
Obama?
53:13
I said this before I people
would ask me knowing what you
53:19
know, now, do you wish like you
had a sec, a third term? And I
53:25
used to say, you know, what, if
I could make an arrangement
53:30
where I had a I had a stand in
front man or woman and they had
53:37
an earpiece in and I was just in
my basement in my sweats,
53:40
looking through the stuff and
then I could sort of deliver the
53:44
lines but somebody else was
doing all the talking and
53:48
ceremony. I'd be fine with that.
Because I found a work
53:52
fascinating.
53:55
They do like putting it right in
their face, don't they?
53:58
You know, I never heard this
before. I want you to take take
54:01
the Clip of the Day. If you
heard about the Sackler family,
54:05
this lawsuit was happened out of
it was what came of it? Yes. I
54:09
mentioned it earlier. You
mentioned that you'd You're
54:11
right. It's disgusting.
54:13
It's this is the medical tyranny
of the biosecurity state Big
54:17
Pharma. They win. They win, they
win they win every single time.
54:22
Well, here it is.
54:23
The bankruptcy plan for the
maker of Oxycontin. Purdue
54:26
pharma cleared a major hurdle
today. If it wins final approval
54:31
from the company's creditors the
settlement could mean billions
54:34
of dollars in aid for
communities devastated by the
54:37
opioid crisis. It also would
bring members of the Sackler
54:41
family a big step closer to
their goal of winning immunity
54:44
from future opioid lawsuits for
themselves and their financial
54:48
empire. NPR addiction
correspondent Brian Mann is
54:51
here. Hey, Brian,
54:51
I want to be an NPR addiction
correspondent that sounds like a
54:55
great job. Hey, Mary Louise.
54:57
Alright. So what are the
contours of this what exactly
54:59
happened
54:59
this after And so there have
been
55:01
these incredibly high stakes
negotiations. And as you
55:03
mentioned, there are billions of
dollars at stake. So late today,
55:07
federal bankruptcy judge Robert
drain here in New York approved
55:10
the deals broad terms, allowing
it to move forward a big
55:13
milestone under this plan, the
Sacklers will give up control of
55:17
Purdue Pharma. Though members of
the family maintain they did
55:20
nothing wrong, they have agreed
to pay more than $4 billion from
55:24
their private fortunes. Now,
this isn't the final finish
55:28
line. But it's very close. And
now it will go to a vote by
55:31
hundreds of 1000s of creditors
who say they were harmed by
55:35
Oxycontin, we really could see a
final resolution of this
55:38
landmark case by this summer.
55:41
Now, what does this mean for the
hundreds of civil lawsuits that
55:46
some members of the family have
faced alleging they played a
55:48
personal role in the crisis? I
will note the Sacklers deny
55:51
those allegations. But what
happens if this deal is
55:54
finalized? What happens to those
cases?
55:56
Now this is controversial, those
lawsuits would be stopped dead
55:58
in their tracks under the deal,
the Sacklers would walk away
56:01
from the opioid crisis with a
clean slate legally. And we've
56:05
also learned from these court
documents that this immunity
56:07
would extend to literally
hundreds of other companies
56:10
trusts and consultants. None of
those entities have declared
56:14
bankruptcy. But using a rare and
again, controversial provision
56:17
of bankruptcy law. This deal
would allow all of those folks
56:21
to gain protections from
lawsuits without actually filing
56:24
for bankruptcy.
56:25
Wow. How does that work so you
can get the protection of your
56:32
supplier without without
actually filing for bankruptcy
56:36
yourself?
56:38
Yeah. This is beautiful. It's a
scam of scams, and the Sacklers
56:43
are off the hook. They should be
in jail. Yeah, they paid 4
56:47
billion in fines. And so they
have what 10 billion left, I'm
56:50
gonna give you this no big deal.
56:52
I'm gonna give you a clip of the
day for that. If only I could
56:55
hit my machine with my finger
that seems to be broken. It's
56:59
estimated that close to 3
million people in the US
57:02
identify as Russian American,
about 900,000 of whom speak
57:06
Russian at home. Many left the
country to escape the iron
57:10
fisted authoritarianism that
Putin has steadily
57:13
reestablished. Leanna Zulan was
born in the US to Russian
57:17
speaking parents, she grew up
surrounded by fellow emigres.
57:20
And that made her acutely aware
of a complicated relationship,
57:24
many of those who left maintain
with their home country,
57:27
the older generation of my
grandparents, nursed what we
57:31
thought were these idealistic
impossible hopes of returning to
57:36
what Russia post communism, that
would be free. But most of the
57:41
time, the view of the Soviet
Union was that it was a hostile
57:46
country where religion was
persecuted and that our family
57:49
was lucky to escape. But there
were definitely people who
57:53
thought that someday communism
would fall, and a certain amount
57:57
of freedom would return to
Russia, and that we could return
58:00
because this isn't isn't
attorney and international legal
58:03
specialist who has consulted for
the World Bank and others. She
58:06
lived and worked in Russia,
following the fall of the Soviet
58:09
Union
58:09
by worked on a US government
funded legal reform project,
58:13
it's important to understand
that the United States helped
58:17
support a great deal of reform
in Russia, like rewriting the
58:21
Civil Code, setting up a central
bank, setting up a Securities
58:26
and Exchange Commission. Those
were all American supported
58:30
efforts to the Yeltsin
government to help them reform
58:34
and enter the modern world
economy. And we all thought that
58:38
Russia might be a quote unquote,
normal country, as did many of
58:43
my Russian speaking colleagues
in Russia, many of whom I'm
58:47
still really good friends with,
we thought that we were part of
58:50
a process of normalizing not as
free as the United States. But
58:56
you know, the churches are open
and the economy is going well.
59:00
And for people like that this
has caused I know several people
59:03
for whom it's in total upside
down paradigm shift, they've now
59:07
realized that he's really,
really evil.
59:10
One thing that's been shocking
to some people mean in the,
59:13
frankly, is the emergence of pro
Putin defenders, in assertive
59:18
media, and even in the
Republican Party, and the former
59:22
president and chief among them,
right. And so I was wondering if
59:26
you have been seeing that in
your community, and other people
59:30
who think that what Putin is
doing is acceptable or even
59:33
right, and if so, why?
59:36
There are a few people who are
vocal about thinking that what
59:40
Putin is doing is acceptable.
There are several reasons for
59:44
that. Partly they are Trump
supporters.
59:48
Oh, man. All right. Child abuse
ABC, you know, remember it's the
59:54
Disney Corporation so these guys
know about that stuff.
59:57
A little girl lifting spirits on
a dark day or Cruz covering the
1:00:00
January 6 anniversary on Capitol
Hill met Chloe Chen. The five
1:00:04
year old spends the day handing
out candy bars to Capitol police
1:00:07
officers. Chloe says she wants
to thank the officers for saving
1:00:11
democracy
1:00:16
isn't thank you because they see
large democracy. So we really
1:00:22
appreciate that for making the
sacrifice so big that we will
1:00:27
that we want to give out candy
bars.
1:00:30
Chloe used her own allowance
money to buy the candy I think
1:00:33
she needs to raise her little
voice
1:00:35
so cute. Well next stick sick of
that clip of the day sickening
1:00:39
these people are sick, sick
1:00:41
in a clip of the day.
1:00:45
How to marginalize someone who
may actually be right about
1:00:50
something, just do the
following. So
1:00:52
pro Trump attorneys, Linwood and
Sidney Powell who constantly
1:00:57
push the most deranged
conspiracy theories because
1:01:01
there's there's a spectrum of
them
1:01:03
that mean and if you listen to
no agenda show those those cats
1:01:06
aren't anywhere ever compared to
these guys.
1:01:08
They held one of these stop this
steel rallies this week in
1:01:11
Georgia. Again, this is all
based on nonsense. And the
1:01:14
action is
1:01:15
humbly Wait a minute, wait a
minute, point of order point of
1:01:19
personal privilege. You cannot
say for weeks, baseless can't
1:01:24
claims and then say it's based
on nonsense. It's either
1:01:28
baseless or not Jake Tapper.
1:01:31
Again, this is all based on
nonsense. And they actually were
1:01:34
discouraging Georgia Republicans
from voting at all in the run
1:01:39
offs on January 5, take a
listen.
1:01:43
I think I would encourage all
Georgians to make it known that
1:01:46
you will not vote at all until
your vote is secure. They have
1:01:51
not earned your vote. Don't you
give it to them? Why would you
1:01:57
go back and vote in another
ridge of election for God's
1:02:01
sakes?
1:02:03
Again, as a factual matter, the
vote was secure and insecure by
1:02:09
all evidence, and it was not
rigged. So what they're saying
1:02:13
is not true.
1:02:17
There you go.
1:02:20
I'm gonna show my move by Jonah
to no agenda. Imagine all the
1:02:24
people who could do with us. Oh,
yeah, that'd be fun.
1:02:34
Well, that was pretty amazing.
Clap.
1:02:37
Slow clap.
1:02:40
is funny, because I mean, some
of those clips are just terrific
1:02:44
clips, we should probably use
them again.
1:02:47
This, you know, one of these
days, I'll categorize stuff. So
1:02:51
we can do that. With with Clip
of the Day, I need the full
1:02:55
list. I know he gave it to us,
we need the full list. And just
1:02:58
I wish there was a way that we
could. here's the here's a
1:03:00
thought for all of the smart
techno experts out there. Would
1:03:08
it not be possible to use your
spiffy AI ml AI ml, artificial
1:03:14
intelligence machine learning to
go through every single mp3 that
1:03:21
no agenda is produced? And have
in your AI the waveform for Clip
1:03:28
of the Day jingle? That way we
could pull them all out? It's
1:03:33
interesting comics or bloggers
1:03:35
really want to do it is the guy
who would write the AI should go
1:03:40
look at the clip, decipher it in
AI and then categorize it.
1:03:47
When's that day coming, Mr. Ai
folk,
1:03:50
I'll take I'll just take the AI
for the clips of the day just to
1:03:53
do more. Back to 2011. Let's get
back to it another about another
1:03:59
45 minutes to an hour left on
this again, thank you to
1:04:02
circumference for doing this for
us. Now we don't have a donation
1:04:05
segment at this point I
1:04:06
should mention Yes, we do have
to mention that your donations
1:04:10
are still we're not stopping the
donations. We're just pushing
1:04:13
off the credits. Right for to a
future show probably is the
1:04:17
Thursday show in fact, which
will be coming up. So you'll get
1:04:20
all your credits and buddy will
be listed and credited him and
1:04:24
we do need the donations because
this is you know, just a
1:04:27
continuous expense that we have
to do this show. So don't don't
1:04:32
think twice about that. And
we'll look forward to giving you
1:04:36
all the credit in the world on
the next show. And now
1:04:39
back to the best of the Clip of
the Day.
1:04:47
Listen to how they want and
these are celebrate ease. None
1:04:52
of whom we know not all
celebrating. He's a couple of
1:04:55
more doctors. You know it's your
typical thing. We've seen it
1:04:57
here, but this is specifically
targeted. towards UK ethnic
1:05:01
minorities Muslims. And here we
go. And the music is gray
1:05:12
Hello namaste Assalamu alaykum
this past year has been
1:05:18
challenging for us all, with
many of us losing our loved
1:05:21
ones, but we will be reunited
with our friends and family. All
1:05:26
we have to do is take the
vaccine, many in our community.
1:05:31
So just
1:05:31
so you know, there's nothing
else, hey, all you got to do is
1:05:34
just take the vaccine
1:05:36
we have to do is take the
vaccine,
1:05:40
many in our community have
suffered the most, largely due
1:05:43
to our efforts on the frontline
at the NHS, for us key workers,
1:05:46
looking after others and serving
our community is what we do.
1:05:50
It's how we've been brought up.
1:05:52
Is it interesting because it's
not just talking about Indians
1:05:54
and Pakistanis specifically,
they're very racist, like
1:05:57
they're the only doctors. That's
why we have such immense
1:06:00
pride when a family member
becomes a doctor or a nurse.
1:06:05
With so much respect for them,
they need now, more than ever,
1:06:10
today, those doctors and
scientists have found us a way
1:06:13
forward a COVID 19 vaccine that
will help save lives.
1:06:18
There is no scientific evidence
to suggest that the vaccine will
1:06:22
work differently for people from
ethnic minorities. In fact,
1:06:26
whoa,
1:06:28
this I don't understand this,
there's no sign that this will
1:06:31
work differently for ethnic
minorities. However, in the
1:06:34
United States, we always hear
that black and brown people are
1:06:38
the ones that get more are
disproportionately affected. So
1:06:41
only American black and brown
people.
1:06:44
Definitely not African black and
brown people,
1:06:48
people from ethnic minorities.
1:06:50
In fact, the scientists
1:06:52
who develop one of the most
widely used vaccines for
1:06:56
the vaccine does not include
pork, any material of animal
1:07:01
origin, the vaccine.
1:07:03
Just so you know, this is a
joke. No, this is playing a
1:07:06
parody No, and that that pill
machine was also real. No, I
1:07:10
know it sounds crazy. But this
is not a parody. And there's no
1:07:14
no pork in the vaccine us
vaccines.
1:07:18
The vaccine does not include
pork, or any material of fetal
1:07:23
animal origin.
1:07:24
The vaccine does not contain the
1:07:26
virus itself.
1:07:27
Only harmless elements from
taking the vaccine is the only
1:07:30
way to boost your immunity
against COVID for you and your
1:07:32
loved ones.
1:07:33
Okay, lie, lie outright lied
taking the COVID vaccine is the
1:07:39
only way to boost your immune
system. Are you kidding me? Now,
1:07:44
that's a lie.
1:07:46
The vaccine does not include
pork, or any material of fetal
1:07:51
or animal origin.
1:07:52
The vaccine does not contain the
virus itself, only harmless
1:07:55
elements from it. Taking the
vaccine is the only way to boost
1:07:58
your immunity against COVID. For
you and your loved one. Both
1:08:01
vaccine was available quickly
because of a global effort
1:08:04
because huge funds were made
available by governments around
1:08:07
the world. Oh, who developed
these vaccines? I mean, not that
1:08:11
I want us to take credit for it.
But please, you're telling me
1:08:14
now that we are the world did
this the World Economic Forum
1:08:17
that the World Health
Organization that they did it
1:08:21
only because we put all our
money together really, really
1:08:24
something that would normally
take years took just months?
1:08:29
It's very, very rare for
vaccines to have a long term
1:08:32
side plant.
1:08:35
Very very rare for vaccines have
long term side. Don't worry,
1:08:38
don't look over there.
1:08:40
COVID-19 long term implications
1:08:45
for COVID 19 vaccines have gone
through the same strict
1:08:48
processes and regulations as
other vaccines such as like
1:08:54
measles, mumps, rubella and TB.
1:08:57
That is just an outright lie.
It's not an approved vaccine.
1:09:01
And you're saying it's gone
through the same stringent
1:09:03
trials which would include long
term trials animal trials, these
1:09:07
people are lying there's no
1:09:09
that is an out and out lie
outright put on all the networks
1:09:13
in the UK. The UK should be
ashamed of itself for putting
1:09:16
this kind of dreck on the air.
It's unconscionable blatant lies
1:09:21
it's a lie. This is our official
government lies there it is
1:09:25
there's official government lies
right there.
1:09:27
There's the Korean Dvorak man
picking little truths to create
1:09:30
a narrative
1:09:31
notifications
1:09:33
who wrote a note and that got
your you got your got your goat?
1:09:37
No, no, no, it wasn't about us
at all, actually. But you know,
1:09:42
that's what's being that's okay
read it.
1:09:44
The COVID-19 vaccines have gone
through the same strict
1:09:47
processes and regulations as
other vaccines such as for
1:09:51
measles, mumps, rubella and TB.
There is no
1:09:55
chip or tracker in the vaccine
to keep watching where you go.
1:09:58
Your mobile phone actually
There's a much better job of
1:10:00
that.
1:10:01
I love that throwaway line from
the government. Oh, by the way,
1:10:04
we're not tracking through the
vaccine. We got it. We got it on
1:10:07
your cell phone,
1:10:08
there is no chip or tracker in
the vaccine to keep watching
1:10:11
where you go. Your mobile phone
actually does a much better job
1:10:14
with
1:10:14
pregnant women are not excluded
from the vaccine. It should
1:10:18
discuss a case with a doctor.
There's also no evidence to
1:10:22
suggest the vaccine affects
fertility. Herd immunity is not
1:10:26
an option, as many millions will
need to be affected.
1:10:30
Okay, hold on a second. Herd
immunity is not an option. Isn't
1:10:34
that the whole point of
vaccinations to achieve herd
1:10:38
immunity?
1:10:40
This is unbelievable.
1:10:41
No, it's true.
1:10:43
fertility. Herd immunity is not
an option, as many millions will
1:10:47
meet the infected causing a
disastrous number of deaths.
1:10:52
The vaccine does not change or
damage our DNA. Not taking the
1:10:56
vaccine can damage us more
1:10:57
freely. my aunties and uncles
have had the vaccine. My mom has
1:11:02
had the vaccine, my dad.
1:11:05
So then they just go into a
whole long thing about how
1:11:07
they've all they're all grew.
They've all been backs. This is
1:11:11
riddled with lies riddled with
lies.
1:11:16
But there you got a couple of
things. A couple of things. One,
1:11:20
first of all, I think there is a
long clip. And do I think you
1:11:26
should get Clip of the Day for
it?
1:11:30
I guess it's okay. And here's
the most pertinent thing The
1:11:34
doctor said about how things are
being communicated through the
1:11:37
media
1:11:37
apps where there is a trusted
news initiative, which is very
1:11:41
important for Americans to
understand this was announced
1:11:43
December 10. And this is a
coalition of all the major media
1:11:46
and government stakeholders and
vaccination, where they are not
1:11:50
going to allow any negative
information on vaccines to get
1:11:53
into the popular media, because
they're concerned about vaccine
1:11:57
hesitancy that if Americans got
any type of fair balance on
1:12:01
safety events, that they simply
wouldn't come forward
1:12:03
voluntarily and get the vaccine.
So the trusted news initiative
1:12:07
is really troublesome. Because
we're now at record numbers of
1:12:12
deaths.
1:12:13
So yeah, it's really
troublesome. It's not the only
1:12:15
thing that's going on my friend.
And now let's go to the
1:12:18
by the way, well, who is that
again?
1:12:20
Dr. Peter Mercola.
1:12:21
That's a great clip. I'm gonna
give you a clip of the day for
1:12:23
that one you have to this. It's
just like, it's like water
1:12:27
coming off of a duck. duck's
back. Listening to Chuck Todd
1:12:31
asked this question, because I
always thought the New World
1:12:36
Order was some sort of a
conspiracy or something screwy,
1:12:39
listen to this question. The way
he asks
1:12:41
it, here at Secretary Blinken
essentially say, look, sanctions
1:12:45
relief could happen. That all
depends on the behavior of
1:12:47
Russia. Can we really live in a
world where Putin slipped back
1:12:52
into the new world order?
1:12:56
Oh, my goodness. Yeah. Oh, my
goodness.
1:13:01
Coincidence? I think not. She
said it point blank to the New
1:13:05
York Times she thinks some that
house member Senator was gonna
1:13:09
get killed. And that is how
amped up the rhetoric is. We see
1:13:14
this we see what social media
companies amplify this. We know
1:13:19
the incentive structure in order
to get clicks getting our
1:13:24
attention seems to be to play to
these algorithms, which only
1:13:28
seems to feed more of this hate
and, look, everything we're
1:13:32
learning about. The Paul Pelosi
attacker seems to be somebody
1:13:37
who was very online and seem to
absorb all of these conspiracy
1:13:41
theories that we know stem from
essentially not necessarily one
1:13:47
person, but certainly one person
has helped give credibility to
1:13:52
some of these conspiracy
theories. And that's Donald
1:13:54
Trump. Oh.
1:14:02
All right, you win.
1:14:03
House Bill 1927, which says if
you're 21 years of age, you can
1:14:08
carry a gun open or concealed
carry nothing needed no
1:14:12
paperwork, no tests, no nothing.
Because you know, otherwise,
1:14:15
it's a racist policy. And this
is now being fought by this the
1:14:19
Texas Democrats with stuff like
this, that 21
1:14:23
year old count that 21 year old
pap, that 21 year old trafficker
1:14:29
who is not yet a convicted
felon, roll on into any place
1:14:33
you want bygone into this
provision of walk around in
1:14:35
whatever way you want. no
training, no understanding Wild
1:14:41
West camp style. That's what
this bill does. And then that
1:14:46
camp can roll into whatever
small businesses in your
1:14:48
community with their stable of
girls, and they can flaunt it.
1:14:53
Wild West Epstein.
1:14:54
I hope she realizes that using
the term pimp is completely
1:14:59
raised. Just
1:15:01
told she's a racist. The irony
of her complaining is not lost
1:15:07
on us. Beautiful. So okay you
know if you for everything else
1:15:12
can I let him vote vote vote
vote whoever you are. But yeah,
1:15:17
now I agree in principle that to
get these I think your gun
1:15:22
safety is important I think
people need to take some
1:15:24
training I've never found that
to be objectionable I don't see
1:15:29
any reason where they used to
teach that sort of thing in high
1:15:31
school in the United States
people forget that. Yeah, I
1:15:33
mean, half our listeners don't
know this. Used to have gun
1:15:36
clubs in high schools,
1:15:37
you bring your rifle to school.
And yes, you put it in the
1:15:42
locker imagine it was safe and
you had gun safety and you learn
1:15:45
how to use everything and know
how
1:15:47
to shoot and you learn how to
target shoot and all the rest.
1:15:50
But no, that's all been pushed
out and and to the point where
1:15:54
you know, we have some loose
situations now like
1:15:57
this.
1:15:58
That is why there is so much
fear in the country about what
1:16:02
this means for roe because it
didn't stop Texas and the idea
1:16:06
of pitting neighbors against
each other colleagues snitching
1:16:11
on each other because someone is
desperately trying to
1:16:14
potentially desperately trying
to safeguard their health in the
1:16:18
health and may perhaps the
health of their their unborn
1:16:21
child. This is just got it.
1:16:29
He went to the United Nations
Food Systems pre summit in Rome,
1:16:35
and he came back with the
following report about your food
1:16:38
and of
1:16:38
Nations Food Systems pre summit
last week in Rome recommended a
1:16:42
dietary limit of 14 grams of red
meat per person per day. That's
1:16:48
one bite. As a servant to the
people of Queensland and
1:16:51
Australia. I'm a call and I'll
explain how this is an attack on
1:16:55
our farmers and on every
Australian breed. The pre summit
1:16:59
recommended the introduction of
a worldwide environmental tax on
1:17:03
meat of $1.60 per kilo for
cattle grazing on pasture, yet
1:17:08
not for cattle raised in
intensive feedlots. That
1:17:11
distinction reflects the
influence of large multinational
1:17:14
feedlot operators, and the lack
of influence that family family
1:17:18
farms have in the UN's eyes. As
my colleague Bob Katter. rightly
1:17:22
pointed out, this UN measure
will take 2.4 billion kilos of
1:17:27
protein off the market. Starving
80 million people of protein yes
1:17:32
go the UN. third recommendation
of the food systems pre Summit
1:17:37
is to move food production
within reach of population
1:17:40
centers and produce whatever
protein and nutrition is
1:17:43
possible in that region bugs
it's called short chain food
1:17:47
supply. We did that 200 years
ago, people starved nutrition
1:17:52
was poor life expectancy was
less than half what we enjoyed
1:17:55
today. Then along came long
chain food supply, allowing
1:17:59
countries like Australia to grow
crops to feed and clothe those
1:18:02
in need. World Hunger fell to
less than 10%. The only reason
1:18:08
there are still areas of poverty
and hunger and 2021 is because
1:18:11
of war and civil unrest. You
know, the things that the United
1:18:15
Nations were supposed to solve?
World peace has eluded the UN,
1:18:19
yet cows have not. The United
Nations is proposing to
1:18:23
eliminate global food chains
that have brought good food to
1:18:26
the world for hundreds of years.
1:18:28
See, I believe they're going to
do it. I think so. You're gonna
1:18:31
Yeah, you know, I'm gonna give
you a clip of the day for this a
1:18:34
great clip. I think that sounds
pretty good. Well, let's finish
1:18:38
with that.
1:18:39
Okay, well, then I'm going to
play the jingle again. Dogs
1:18:47
chimneys started
1:18:48
with an idea. What if we could
reduce our dog's carbon paw
1:18:52
print? Not just this dog. But
all 90 million that live in the
1:18:57
US? Why not? We're making
changes for ourselves and the
1:19:01
rest of our family. It makes
sense that we want to include
1:19:05
our furry kids as we rethink how
we do things. We realized that
1:19:09
the biggest problem is the 36
billion pounds of protein that
1:19:13
our pups are eating each year.
It's coming from traditional
1:19:17
sources like cow and chicken,
not sustainable and sadly,
1:19:22
rarely humane. So at Geminis we
replace that traditional animal
1:19:27
protein with cricket protein.
1:19:30
Come on, man has got everything
in there, doesn't it? It's got
1:19:33
global warming,
1:19:35
no need that for babies for
babies paw print to carbon paw
1:19:40
prints. Oh my gosh. Can you see
that Jews
1:19:45
but listen to this as well with
Canada. This is one of the
1:19:49
European members of parliament
the de EP, I think this is the
1:19:55
only one that I really liked the
translation of based on Article
1:19:58
195 wasn't even a translation it
was, it was the real thing out
1:20:03
that
1:20:04
it would have been more
appropriate for Mr. Trudeau
1:20:06
Prime Minister of Canada to
address this house. According to
1:20:09
Article 144, an article which
was specifically designed to
1:20:15
debate violations of human
rights, democracy and the rule
1:20:19
of law, which is clearly the
case with Mr. Trudeau, Trudeau.
1:20:23
Then again, a Prime Minister who
openly admires the Chinese basic
1:20:27
dictatorship who tramples on
fundamental rights by
1:20:30
persecuting and criminalizing
his own citizens as terrorists
1:20:35
just because they dared to stand
up to his perverted concept of
1:20:39
democracy should not be allowed
to speak in this house at all.
1:20:43
Mr. Trudeau, you are a disgrace
for any democracy, please spare
1:20:49
us your presence. Thank you.
1:20:53
You got it can withstand a court
challenge. You don't have an
1:21:02
absolute right to own private
property in Canada. And believe
1:21:05
me, he
1:21:05
says you don't have the absolute
right to own private property.
1:21:09
I can argue now playing it over
and over,
1:21:13
almost finished the clip.
1:21:15
In Canada. It is there are there
are steps that are taken when
1:21:22
expropriations happen at
whatever level of government and
1:21:25
we'll be sure to stay within
those boundaries.
1:21:28
Well, that fits right into the W
E.
1:21:31
Don't and you'll be happy.
You'll be very happy about it. I
1:21:35
find that I find that that
wasn't an average.
1:21:37
Okay, okay. Okay. You get to
clip into the day.
1:21:39
Thank the gentleman for
yielding. In fact, it is a very
1:21:41
simple resolution, which the
gentleman has just mostly
1:21:44
explained. I would Mr. Speaker
like to take a moment to thank
1:21:48
Chairman Purcell and Mr.
Broomfield, Mr. Jatra and Mr. B.
1:21:52
Ryder, the chair and ranking
member of the subcommittee and
1:21:55
the members of the foreign
affairs committee for their
1:21:58
assistance in expediting
consideration of this
1:22:01
legislation. The Earth Summit
Environmental Leadership act as
1:22:05
this is known presents us with
an opportunity to follow up on
1:22:08
the important work of the Earth
Summit to develop its blueprint
1:22:12
agenda 21 for Environment Global
Environmental Action. H con res
1:22:18
353 outlines a comprehensive
national strategy for
1:22:21
sustainable development in
accordance with the principles
1:22:25
of agenda 21 to be coordinated
under the leadership of a
1:22:29
specific office and at the
direction of a high level
1:22:32
government official. The
resolution also urges the United
1:22:36
States to identify and initiate
further agreements to protect
1:22:39
the global environment and to
support the creation of a high
1:22:42
level United Nations Sustainable
Development Commission headed by
1:22:46
an Undersecretary General.
Third, and lastly, the President
1:22:51
is urged to report to Congress
on the progress made on the with
1:22:54
this action. H con res 353 is
supported by the administration.
1:22:59
I had been in contact with the
appropriate offices of the State
1:23:02
Department and have incorporated
their suggestions into the
1:23:05
resolution. The 71 co sponsors
in this of this measure include
1:23:10
one half the members of the
Foreign Affairs Committee and
1:23:12
all of the house delegates to
the Earth Summit. It is also
1:23:16
supported by the major United
States nongovernmental
1:23:19
organizations concerned with
environmental issues.
1:23:24
I did not know that there was so
much discussion about agenda
1:23:28
2020 2021 And this is the
sustainable development goals in
1:23:33
1992. Yeah, thank god Boom
shakalaka and it and they edited
1:23:39
bill right into her
announcement. She is not he is
1:23:42
on level with the president of
the EU.
1:23:47
The European Green Deal is our
blueprint for Europe to become
1:23:51
the first Climate Neutral
continent by 2015. It strives
1:23:56
for systemic change and
modernization across our
1:24:00
economy, our societies, and
industry. Of course, energy
1:24:05
transition is at its heart. And
this is why a warmly welcome the
1:24:10
opportunity to join forces with
Breakthrough Energy.
1:24:14
I am excited to announce a new
partnership between Breakthrough
1:24:18
Energy and the European
Commission. I've created
1:24:21
Breakthrough Energy catalyst,
first of its kind, innovative
1:24:25
finance vehicle designed to
rapidly commercialize critical
1:24:30
climate smart technologies. To
succeed in preventing the
1:24:33
climate crisis the world will
need a new approach to building
1:24:37
global industries. This is the
greatest opportunity for
1:24:41
innovation the world's ever
seen. The catalyst program
1:24:45
is targeting the technologies we
need for Europe to become carbon
1:24:50
neutral. We want to deploy
invest in you with the European
1:24:55
Investment Bank, and I hope
national financial partners And
1:25:00
on top, invest your allows
member states to mobilize funds.
1:25:06
For example from your programs
like next generation EU. In
1:25:12
Europe, we're lucky to have a
wealth of scientists and
1:25:16
innovators leading the way to
decarbonisation. We just need to
1:25:21
help them to bring their ideas
to the market.
1:25:26
Europe will be a strong partner
because of its early
1:25:30
inconsistent commitment to
climate,
1:25:32
we have to act bold and fast.
Together, we can achieve our
1:25:37
green goals to the benefit of
people and businesses.
1:25:43
So, all right,
1:25:44
wait, you're gonna get the piece
of shit Clip of the Day for that
1:25:48
one, but
1:25:49
resist we much. And this has got
to be my favorite story. Since
1:25:54
we talked about this a lot of
dogs. You think you've got to
1:25:58
make new problems.
1:26:01
Separation Anxiety is a problem
for over 13 million dogs in the
1:26:05
US. signs of anxiety can start
when the owner is getting ready
1:26:09
to leave home and typically
worsen after the owner has left.
1:26:14
Excessive vocalizations such as
barking, howling and whining
1:26:17
potty accidents, destruction of
property or self harm. Even
1:26:22
attempts to escape from doors or
windows are all signs of
1:26:25
separation anxiety. As the fight
or flight center the amygdala is
1:26:29
the area in the brain
responsible for producing fear
1:26:33
and emotional responses, which
express themselves as the signs
1:26:36
and symptoms of anxiety. An
anxious brain is out of balance
1:26:41
with overactive brain cells that
produce harmful substances
1:26:44
causing inflammation and cell
death in visual substances,
1:26:48
reduce inflammation and protect
the cells. Calmer canine is an
1:26:53
anxiety treatment device made by
a cc Animal Health was based on
1:26:57
FDA cleared technology used in
people working at the cellular
1:27:01
level sends targeted pulsed
electromagnetic or TP EMF
1:27:06
signals to the brain to increase
the production of nitric oxide
1:27:10
which helps to reduce
inflammation. These TP EMF
1:27:13
signals were specifically
developed by a team of
1:27:16
veterinarians and
neurobiologists to target the
1:27:19
anxiety center in the brain.
They are invisible and sensation
1:27:22
free. The signals also caused
the neural cells to produce feel
1:27:26
good substances such as
serotonin, dopamine and
1:27:30
endorphins.
1:27:33
You know, Donna Brazil who, for
a while there, she was running
1:27:37
the DNC she was on CNN. Then she
got caught smuggling the
1:27:42
questions to Hillary Clinton,
she got fired and then Fox hired
1:27:47
her. Listen to her response as
she comes back from Dana,
1:27:51
with a lot of elation for the 80
million that voted for Biden and
1:27:56
terrible distress for those who
voted for President Trump. But
1:28:00
again, the country was founded
on ideas. It was not founded on
1:28:05
one person or one man. And if we
get back to our principles, we
1:28:09
get back to those ideals.
Remember to pray together and
1:28:13
hold each other up. We'll be all
right. I like that message.
1:28:19
Thank you. Danna. Do we still
Donna for one final comment?
1:28:22
Yes. Dana, you're on here.
1:28:26
I'm here. Dana is so white. So
right we're resilient. I
1:28:32
choose wants to come out
anybody. Dana is so white. How
1:28:37
does that happen? How do you
mess up Dana so right with Dana
1:28:41
so white, you gotta be thinking
something like that.
1:28:44
Embarrassing,
1:28:45
embarrassing, so white. That's a
I'm gonna give you a clip of the
1:28:48
day for that one.
1:28:49
The programming to some degree
is working very well. And I have
1:28:52
a gaff here. 12 seconds to show
you. How incredibly powerful the
1:28:59
programming is. This is a
Republican strategist and she's
1:29:02
on CNN. Alice Stewart. Here's
what she's saying.
1:29:05
I think it has not been good for
the former president. I think
1:29:08
we've we've made a case that he
was responsible for 911 He or
1:29:13
January 16 should not have been
pushing the the election lies.
1:29:17
It works. It just
1:29:19
works. Seth Rogen is now saying
it's white supremacists are
1:29:24
responsible for the bad reviews
1:29:30
Wow, do you have a clip of that
too?
1:29:33
No, I don't have a clip of that.
But let's listen to the
1:29:35
beginning. This is the beginning
of the first episode. Just
1:29:39
listen to how long is this thing
136 136 It's short, but it is
1:29:44
just It's It's It's deplorable.
Just and again, this is not safe
1:29:50
for work. So if you don't if
yet, you might want to turn off
1:29:53
your turn the sound down or
something. Here we go.
1:29:56
All right. Good job guys. Make
sure those are stacked in order
1:29:59
of course. tenants keep the
puppies away from the kittens
1:30:02
and the kittens away from the
goldfish. And make sure the
1:30:04
reptiles sweet American Jesus
Lizard is dead. Come on guys.
1:30:10
It's Christmas. Fuck any there's
no time for amateur hour here.
1:30:14
Now get another one before
Tiffany Chang from Tallahassee
1:30:18
loses her shit.
1:30:20
Halloween, bullshit, Easter.
Fuck that stupid bunny. Mayday.
1:30:25
What the fuck is making? This is
the big one. The X Games
1:30:29
Excalibur. It's Eximus baby, and
that x is for extra, extra
1:30:34
ordinary. Santa's chose me as
the successor because I know how
1:30:38
to run this place and get the
best out of you guys. And I
1:30:40
think you guys are the best. You
come from a long line of
1:30:44
distinguished reindeer who have
performed valiantly on Christmas
1:30:47
Eve for hundreds of years.
Dasher, comment Blitzen and Jr,
1:30:55
the son of the greatest of them
all fashionably late. Let me
1:30:58
just get right up here in the
driver's seat. Who's rented the
1:31:02
smell juniors asked tonight. Now
let's get those fucking kids
1:31:08
their presence in record time
this year. The lady candy my
1:31:14
second in command, I'd be
nothing without you. You are a
1:31:18
fucking rock star. After
tonight. I insist that you go to
1:31:21
a hotel room and trash it.
1:31:23
I will do it. I will drunk
groupies I won't sit on the bed.
1:31:28
I will fuck them Baby shark and
fighters head off.
1:31:32
Ah, wow, this is good, in fact,
that my friend has deserved you
1:31:40
a covenant Clip of the Day. But
let's go do the candidate from
1:31:43
Haiti.
1:31:45
So are you talking about a
specific tweet?
1:31:49
I have the question again,
1:31:50
you want to bring down
inflation? Let's make sure the
1:31:52
wealthiest corporations pay
their fair share. Look,
1:31:55
you know, we have talked about
we have talked about this this
1:31:59
past year about making sure that
the wealthiest among us are
1:32:04
paying their fair share. And
that is important to do. And
1:32:08
that is something that the
President has been working on
1:32:13
everyday when we talk about
inflation and lowering costs.
1:32:16
And so it's very important that,
you know, as we're seeing costs
1:32:20
rise, as we're talking about how
to, you know, you know, build in
1:32:26
America that safe and that's
equal for everyone doesn't leave
1:32:29
anyone behind? That is an
important part of that as well.
1:32:32
But how does raising taxes on
corporations lower the cost of
1:32:37
gas, the cost of a used car, the
cost of food for everyday
1:32:41
Americans?
1:32:41
So look, I think we encourage
those who have done very well,
1:32:44
right, especially those who care
about climate change, to support
1:32:48
a fairer tax tax code that
doesn't change that doesn't
1:32:52
charge manufacturers, workers,
cops, builders, a higher
1:32:55
percentage of their earnings,
that the most fortunate people
1:32:59
in our nation and not let that
stand in the way of reducing
1:33:02
energy costs and fighting this
existential problem if you think
1:33:06
about that, as an example, and
to support basic collective
1:33:09
bargaining rights as well,
right. That's also important,
1:33:12
but Right. Right, right, by not
right, without having a fair tax
1:33:17
code, which is what I'm talking
about, then all manufacturing
1:33:21
workers, cops, you know, it's
not fair for them to have higher
1:33:26
tax than the folks that who are
who are who are not paying
1:33:29
taxes.
1:33:31
Inflation, the President said,
you want to bring down
1:33:33
inflation. Let's make sure the
wealthiest corporations pay
1:33:36
their fair share. Jeff Bezos
came out and tweeted about that.
1:33:39
He said the newly created
disinformation board should
1:33:43
review this tweet, would you be
okay with that?
1:33:45
Look, it's not a huge mystery.
Why one of the wealthiest
1:33:47
individuals on Earth, right,
oppose the long anomic agenda.
1:33:52
That is for the middle class
that cuts some of the biggest
1:33:55
cost families face fights
inflation for the long haul,
1:33:58
right. And that's what we're
writing about. That's why we're
1:34:00
we're talking about lowering
inflation here and adds to the
1:34:04
historic deficit reduction the
President is achieving by asking
1:34:07
the richest taxpayers and
corporations to pay their fair
1:34:11
share. That is what we're
talking about.
1:34:16
Okay, you get Tip of the day for
bringing that dumb shit on
1:34:19
board. He was reading Karl Marx,
pervert Mark Kusa and some third
1:34:26
author. These are all left wing.
Okay, okay. And he was reading
1:34:30
this material so he could hook
up with all these crazy
1:34:33
socialist women that he ran into
in college.
1:34:35
Oh, that's like so that's like,
these days you were a pussy hat.
1:34:41
Is that basically the idea?
Yeah, same exact
1:34:44
thing.
1:34:45
Fanon and Gwendolyn Brooks to
get basically to hook up with
1:34:50
women.
1:34:51
Oh, well, that's yeah, I mean,
okay, looking back,
1:34:55
it's embarrassing to recognize
the degree to which my
1:34:57
intellectual curiosity those
first two years of College
1:35:00
paralleled the interests of
various women I was attempting
1:35:10
Martin Marx and Mark Ooza. So I
had something to say to the long
1:35:14
legged socialists who lived in
my dorm, Fanon and Gwendolyn
1:35:17
Brooks for the smoothskin
sociology major who never gave
1:35:20
me a second look, Foucault and
Wolf for the ethereal bisexual
1:35:24
who more mostly black.
1:35:26
Wow. And she's lying. This is no
way. There's no way that she
1:35:32
celebrated Kwanzaa with the
elders and can in Canada Navia
1:35:35
where their Indian mother
Jamaican Dad, it's no way like
1:35:40
that. No, there's
1:35:41
no way.
1:35:42
There's no way Hold on Let's
let's listen to this, what she
1:35:44
does like the candles
1:35:46
on the carpet and the elders and
sit in chairs and, and we would
1:35:50
like the candles and of course
afterwards have a beautiful
1:35:53
meal. And of course, there was
always the discussion of the
1:35:57
seven principles. And my
favorite, I have to tell you, it
1:36:00
was always the one about self
determination. Who would you
1:36:03
tackle? Yeah. And you know,
essentially, it's about, it's
1:36:07
about beat me and do be the
person you want to be and do the
1:36:13
things you want to do and do the
things that need to be done.
1:36:17
It's about not letting anyone
write our future for us, but
1:36:21
instead going out and writing it
for ourselves. And that
1:36:25
principle motivates me today as
we seek to confront the
1:36:28
challenges facing our country,
and to build a brighter future
1:36:32
for all Americans. So to
everyone who was celebrating
1:36:37
Happy Kwanzaa from our family,
to yours.
1:36:42
So what I thought was good as
she pulled in the coochie,
1:36:45
chicken coop, gelato Jumanji
bit, which is one of the seven
1:36:48
principles. So it's number two,
which is how disgusting is this
1:36:53
self determination to define a
name ourselves? That you could
1:36:58
not get closer to cultural
appropriation to define a name
1:37:02
myself as a Kwanzaa celebrate
tour, is saying you are an
1:37:06
African American and American
descendants of slavery, as
1:37:10
that's where this all stems not
from some African religious
1:37:15
tribal ceremony where the elders
would sit on the carpet with
1:37:18
them and tell stories.
1:37:20
Lie. You lie or evil
1:37:23
liar.
1:37:24
This is unbelievable. I'm gonna
give you a clip of the day.
1:37:28
So they brought in your niche.
And you know, I think that
1:37:31
central casting did us a solid.
Some people just love her. Let
1:37:35
me see if I
1:37:36
can squeaks sneak Tommy from
Walnut Creek and Hi, Tommy.
1:37:40
Michelle center. You're my hero.
You
1:37:44
an absolute superfan and my
regular old 54 year old suburban
1:37:47
dad, daughters who I tell to
watch all the time. One of them
1:37:51
might be a photojournalist one
day. And yeah, the way you stood
1:37:55
calm in front of in front of 45
and, and kept her
1:37:59
professionalism was just
amazing. I have a T shirt that
1:38:02
has your sepia picture on it
with a true superhero, you know,
1:38:06
thing on it. And just watching
you and Judy and Lisa and Amy
1:38:11
and Tamra is just inspiring. So
yeah, we just absolutely love
1:38:15
thank you for bringing true like
trueness to, to the world of
1:38:19
media because we've just really
suffered through through some
1:38:23
times when that hasn't been it
and you're an absolute
1:38:26
Lighthouse of hope,
1:38:29
a lighthouse of hope,
1:38:31
okay, I had to get a clip of the
day for digging that crap.
1:38:35
As a consequence of mass
formation people do not get
1:38:38
egoistic at all, but rather to
the contrary, mass formation
1:38:43
focuses your attention so much
on one point that you can take
1:38:48
everything away of people their
psychological and physical well
1:38:54
being their, their material,
well being you can take it away
1:38:58
and they will even not notice
it. And that's one of the of the
1:39:02
major consequences of mass
formation. And it's exactly the
1:39:05
same as hypnosis as classical
hypnosis. When I happen when,
1:39:09
when a hypnotist when when
during hypnosis, someone's
1:39:12
attention is focused on one
point, you can you can cut in
1:39:17
his flesh, the person will not
notice it and that is what
1:39:20
happens all the time. When
hypnosis is used as a kind of an
1:39:28
anesthesia to during during a
surgical operations, rather
1:39:33
simple hypnotic procedures are
sufficient to make people
1:39:39
completely insensitive to pain.
Another consequence that is very
1:39:44
typical for totalitarian states
is that people become radically
1:39:48
intolerant for dissonant voices.
And so, if someone tells another
1:39:53
story of if someone claims that
the official story is wrong,
1:39:59
then this arson, threatens to
make the people up. And they
1:40:03
will get angry because we are
they're confronted with the
1:40:06
initial anxiety and the initial
psychological discontent. And so
1:40:12
they direct all their
aggression. And these dissonant
1:40:15
voices at the at the other
voices. And at the same time,
1:40:19
they are radically tolerant for
their leaders for the people
1:40:22
who, who pronounce the
mainstream narrative. These
1:40:27
people can actually cheat and
lie and manipulate and do
1:40:30
everything they want, they will
always be forgiven by the crowd,
1:40:35
because the crowd seems to think
that they do it for the wrong
1:40:40
sake. And that's that's, that's
also part of the mechanism of
1:40:45
mass formation.
1:40:46
This is the most interesting
thing if there is one difference
1:40:50
between mass formation and
totalitarianism because the two
1:40:53
are almost identical. On the one
hand, and classical hypnosis on
1:40:57
the other hand, then it is that
while in classical hypnosis,
1:41:01
hypnosis, the one who hypnotizes
is awake, his field of attention
1:41:08
is not narrowed down and mass
formation and then
1:41:11
totalitarianism, the field of
attention of the leaders of the
1:41:15
masses of the totalitarian
leaders is usually even narrower
1:41:19
than the field of attention of
the population. What doesn't
1:41:24
take that meaning that the
totalitarian leaders and the
1:41:28
leaders of the masses usually
really believe in the ideology,
1:41:35
according to which they try to
organize society. So they are
1:41:38
convinced, for instance, of
transhumanism they are convinced
1:41:43
of mechanistic materialism and
so on. They are convinced of the
1:41:48
ideology, they are convinced
that this ideology will bring
1:41:53
people in a kind of artificial
Paradise because that's
1:41:57
something that is common to all
kinds of totalitarianism. The
1:42:03
leaders of the masses and
totalitarian leaders, usually
1:42:06
not usually always said Mustafa
cetana aren't really deeply
1:42:12
convinced of the ideology.
1:42:15
We are asked
1:42:18
to talk more about what's at the
heart of the standoff between
1:42:20
the US and Russia. It's a
tension that's existed for
1:42:23
decades. How much influence
should the West have in Eastern
1:42:27
Europe, this tension centers on
NATO, because the powerful
1:42:30
military alliance was formed
after World War Two in part to
1:42:33
serve as protection against the
former Soviet Union?
1:42:36
very breathy. I thought that was
the only reason.
1:42:41
Yeah, pretty much but but here's
another one of these usage,
1:42:44
things I like to bitch about. It
did not form to protect the
1:42:50
Europeans against the former
Soviet Union. It formed to
1:42:55
protect them against the Soviet
Union. Say again, she said that
1:43:02
NATO in 1947, let's say we were
just about the time of his
1:43:06
formation, was formed to protect
Europe against the former Soviet
1:43:11
Union. It wasn't formed to
protect against the former
1:43:15
Soviet Union was the Soviet
Union. Yeah. Yeah. At the time,
1:43:20
it wasn't the former Soviet
Union. It was what do you do
1:43:23
when you when you use former? It
makes it sound as though it was
1:43:27
formed to protect the the
Europeans against Russia? Good.
1:43:32
It's a good thing. Good
1:43:34
catch. Good catch guys
interviewing you say, Well, what
1:43:38
is the problem here? Like, what
are you really protesting?
1:43:41
Because there's no convoy and
Well, listen to this.
1:43:45
If you're going to protest
something as nebulous as
1:43:47
freedom, then you can encroach
on other nebulous is freedom.
1:43:54
The concept of a nebulous
freedom. They don't have a
1:43:57
specific title a specific reason
for being here. They're all over
1:44:04
the place and all they're doing
is suppressing Ottawa residents,
1:44:08
Ottawa businesses, we are being
harassed and held hostage for
1:44:13
their supposing encroachments on
freedom. What does a single
1:44:18
fucking white man have to say to
anybody about a bodily autonomy?
1:44:23
Freedom?
1:44:24
I'm not sure what race was.
1:44:26
I didn't say anything about race
or the white man. Single white
1:44:32
man's shirt race.
1:44:34
I mean, what does race have to
do with it when I look at people
1:44:36
that are gathering here today,
right across the multi diverse
1:44:41
spectrum? No more comments. Oh,
okay. Well, when it says
1:44:45
conflict in the hallway to go
over a call that a convoy is the
1:44:52
convoy the chattering away
1:45:00
This, this is the best part.
1:45:02
It just means no more comments.
No more comments. More comments.
1:45:09
No more comments. No more
comments
1:45:24
this is derangement John. It's
like,
1:45:27
Reclaiming my time. Reclaiming
my time. Reclaiming my time
1:45:33
she's freaking out. Walk away
you bad. Dad, man,
1:45:50
this woman, this woman and
clipping the day to day. Thank
1:45:54
you so much
1:45:55
as a white parent, as a parent
with privilege, because all the
1:46:00
privileges and resources that
are attached to my son, go with
1:46:04
him.
1:46:05
And what are those? Wow, I think
white privilege that means you
1:46:09
have vocal fry.
1:46:14
A fool of herself a woman but
let's see what what is white
1:46:17
privilege to her because I've
been wanting to know. And what
1:46:20
are those?
1:46:21
A loud mouth mother who will
raise how someone who knows how
1:46:26
to write a letter to a
politician was someone who knows
1:46:29
how to call up an agency and ask
questions or send emails and
1:46:34
file complaints. Someone who is
home enough so that my son goes
1:46:42
to school every day well rested,
well fed and feeling loved.
1:46:47
Slave. So mom, dad, Kevin,
Carrie, Brandon, I just want you
1:46:52
to know I love you more than you
will ever know. I could not have
1:46:56
asked for a better family. What
you cannot comprehend is that we
1:46:59
have been attacked by this
weapon our entire lives, and the
1:47:02
attack against me personally is
one of the most vicious attacks
1:47:05
a human being has ever faced. I
have tolerated the most inhumane
1:47:10
torture and hopes that the FBI
and CIA would come to my defense
1:47:13
that they have failed to come to
my aid. My only hope is that you
1:47:16
come to understand what has
happened here. When the world
1:47:20
realizes what has happened,
there will be justice. But I
1:47:22
cannot sit by and be a victim
any longer. And I refuse to sit
1:47:25
by and do nothing while my
nieces and nephews and the rest
1:47:28
of my family are operated on
with mind control. Our thoughts
1:47:33
are not private. It's disgusting
and it is cruel. I will be
1:47:37
launching the first counter
attack against mind control in
1:47:40
human history. I want to be very
clear, this will not be an
1:47:44
active shooting event, I will be
executing some of the people
1:47:47
responsible for activating
shooters. If I happen to
1:47:51
survive, please visit me in
prison. If only to see the same
1:47:55
man you have always known rather
than the victim of some mental
1:47:57
disorder that does not exist.
While you may not understand
1:48:01
that, I will gladly die to
expose this. And I will gladly
1:48:04
die to help one other victim
discover the truth of what has
1:48:07
happened. If I can help another
targeted individual fight back
1:48:10
against telepathy, than the
sacrifice will be well worth it.
1:48:14
To any tip read this. Understand
that your attackers use the form
1:48:17
of ventriloquism I described in
the paper to move your thoughts.
1:48:21
But your thoughts can also move
their mouths to my friends in
1:48:24
Chicago, Lexington, Dayton and
all over the world. Get this
1:48:27
email out to everyone. You know,
the most horrific weapon ever
1:48:30
made it being used on human
beings. And if you ever learned
1:48:33
the truth, you'll understand
what I did here to protect
1:48:36
myself and my family. Get this
out to other T eyes, other voice
1:48:39
years. So the world has a chance
to fight back to my family,
1:48:44
especially my nieces and
nephews. I want you to
1:48:46
understand that what I do here I
do for your future. And
1:48:50
hopefully you can live a life
free of mind control. Wow.
1:48:54
Wow. And in my search pops up
another clip from 2015 From
1:49:00
February 2015 called arming
Ukraine. Shall we have a listen
1:49:05
just to see what it was back
then. This is
1:49:08
sure it was a pretty much what's
going on now. But let's find out
1:49:11
seven years ago
1:49:12
signature American Humvees along
with radars that can detect
1:49:17
enemy artillery and rocket fire
as well. Uncle's from Kyiv and
1:49:21
Washington to start shipping.
1:49:22
Notice they said Kyiv back then,
oops. Well, they're growing
1:49:26
louder.
1:49:28
So among those options,
obviously there's the
1:49:30
possibility of providing
defensive carry defensive
1:49:34
assistance to Ukraine.
1:49:38
I don't have the slightest doubt
about the weapons supply to
1:49:41
crane from the United States and
our other partners
1:49:44
so we will continue to provide
Ukraine with security assistance
1:49:47
Biden frankly speaking, we would
be happy to get more including
1:49:51
defensive weapon, Lethal Weapon
and so on and so forth.
1:49:56
However, European politicians
are not so keen to provide
1:50:00
weapons to Ukraine. The UK is
not going to help give with
1:50:04
lethal military assistance, oh,
France is planning to do the
1:50:08
same. sending weapons to one
side of the conflict doesn't
1:50:12
seem a very consistent step.
This is a reaction from
1:50:15
Brussels. The German defense
minister says there are already
1:50:18
too many weapons in Ukraine,
supported by her Italian and
1:50:25
German Chancellor firmly
declares that Berlin will not
1:50:28
support Ukraine with weapons.
However, the US is blaming
1:50:32
Angular Merkel for a wrong
decision.
1:50:35
Here's the problem I have with
the Chancellor's position. She
1:50:39
can't see how arming people who
are willing to fight and die for
1:50:44
their freedom makes things
better, and to now turn our back
1:50:48
on the struggling democracy. And
that's exactly what you're
1:50:52
doing. In my view, when you turn
down a reasonable request to
1:50:57
help defend oneself is not our
finest hour.
1:51:01
Yeah. Do you? Are you catching
on people? Do you see this as
1:51:05
just a rinse and repeat? It was
gooey, very gooey.
1:51:08
My concern is that I feel like
socialists are taken over,
1:51:13
they're marching through the
institutions, they're taking
1:51:15
everything over they and taking
over education. It looks like
1:51:19
they've taken over a lot of the
corporations and looks like
1:51:22
they've taken over the military.
And it's just continuing. So I'm
1:51:28
I'm deeply concerned about you
know, I'm a capitalist at heart,
1:51:36
and I'm live I believe in
liberty and capitalism. Those
1:51:39
are my my twin values. And I
feel like you know, with the way
1:51:45
freedom of speech is today, the
movement on on gun control. A
1:51:51
lot of the liberties that are
taken for granted most of my
1:51:54
life, I think are under threat.
1:52:00
News this week, let's
1:52:01
talk about Italy's move to the
far right, Georgia Maloney who I
1:52:04
like to call Mussolini, a member
of your brother's of the Italy
1:52:08
party. Why don't they have these
names? Will be Italy's first
1:52:10
female prime minister Milani has
displayed extreme points of
1:52:13
views such as saying the
following during its speech in
1:52:16
June, yesterday, natural
families no to LGBT lobby yes to
1:52:19
sexual identity noted gender
ideology, yes to culture of
1:52:22
life,
1:52:23
no to the abyss of death. She
also used the word financial
1:52:26
speculators, which Mussolini
used to love to use to refer to
1:52:29
Jewish people. She of course,
was just using it as definitely.
1:52:33
A dog whistle US politicians
such as Ted Cruz have called
1:52:36
Maloney spectacular. Anyway, go
for her.
1:52:39
What do you think? I think this
is a bigger discussion about
1:52:43
Sweden has always been there was
a women vote and we don't like
1:52:46
to talk about it because we like
to assume that everything any
1:52:48
woman does is like, you know,
the nine and noble greed. And
1:52:53
what you have here is the
weaponization of femininity, the
1:52:57
weaponization of women has
agenda and that is accidentally
1:53:02
comes out and says it's great to
see a female leader not having
1:53:04
done her homework. This is
terrible for women. Terrible. He
1:53:10
is not only anti immigrant, she
wants to deny women reproductive
1:53:14
rights she wants to fascism is
basically you endorse violence
1:53:19
against immigrants.
1:53:20
Oh, is that what Fascism is?
Professor? Thank you. What
1:53:22
do you have is, wow, her less
polish, in the interest of the
1:53:27
Great piece on this far right
counterparts. In the US
1:53:30
Congress, such as Marjorie
Taylor Greene and Lorraine
1:53:32
Gilbert, among others, they
weaponize their roles as women.
1:53:37
And they basically say that
immigrants are importing sexual
1:53:40
violence, and no one can
immediately stops the
1:53:43
conversation and scares the shit
out of everybody. And I don't
1:53:46
care if it was the kk k. There's
always been a shift for this why
1:53:51
women have always played a key
role in the advancement of these
1:53:55
terrible and it's not. We have
to we have to evaluate people
1:54:01
based on their views.
1:54:03
I tend to agree with you here,
Mr. Galloway.
1:54:06
Just because she's a woman
doesn't mean she's not hateful
1:54:09
against LGBTQ
1:54:12
immigrants and also Jewish
people apparently,
1:54:16
she wants to apparently. Right
so right, who gives a shit that
1:54:20
she's got indoor plumbing, she's
terrible for women, that she's a
1:54:24
fascist. She's a fascist so
well, people, people immediately
1:54:30
Niger can say oh, isn't a
wonderful now that we have a
1:54:33
female leader? No, it's not
wonderful. Who anyone who anyone
1:54:38
who destroys the rights of our
brothers and our sisters and
1:54:40
female immigrants is a threat.
This is very dissonant.
1:54:44
I would agree. Oh, geez. Wow,
the guy can't stop talking.
1:54:52
Well, let's see what the second
piece is here.
1:54:54
Yeah. And the difference between
you know, I think that you
1:54:57
should do an executive order
where you could do you cuz
1:55:00
I like this, Hey, you know,
we're all on your side and Joe,
1:55:03
Pres Joe, you should do an
executive order because like,
1:55:07
this is this is I imagined so
people talk to Elon, but say to
1:55:11
the president, hey, man should
do an executive order. It's so
1:55:14
cool to do those.
1:55:15
Yeah. And the difference
between, you know, I think that
1:55:18
you should do an executive order
where you could do, you can post
1:55:21
on the internet on social media,
but you have to have your your
1:55:24
name, your address and your
phone number. And then we'll see
1:55:27
if people change their tone.
1:55:29
Is there any way for the FCC or
someone to to put a rating
1:55:33
system or the equivalent of
saying, this just opinion, this
1:55:37
is actually foul, you've wanted
this for a long time, like you
1:55:40
should be able to have to hit a
certain threshold. You can't
1:55:44
just everything can't look the
same. It should have a little
1:55:47
qualifier, Twitter does it or
did it with the with the last
1:55:49
guys tweets,
1:55:51
it's a sickness, super cut time.
All Dems in the Senate Democrats
1:55:57
are going to fight like hell, to
make this a reality. I want the
1:56:01
people of Pennsylvania the
people
1:56:02
all across this country to know
that we are going to fight like
1:56:05
hell to protect your vote, to
secure your vote, and to make
1:56:09
sure that your vote is counted.
Well, I'll tell you, I'm
1:56:12
confident that we're going to
fight like hell to make sure
1:56:14
they can,
1:56:15
we are going to fight like hell
to make sure that everyone who
1:56:18
wants to vote can exercise that
right to vote.
1:56:21
This election is coming whether
the President wants it or not.
1:56:23
And we're gonna fight like hell
in Congress to make sure that
1:56:25
the mail still works. Today,
Biden's
1:56:27
VP Kamala Harris told supporters
in a fundraising note that it is
1:56:31
time to, quote, fight like hell
to protect the Supreme Court,
1:56:35
following the passing of late
Justice Ginsburg,
1:56:37
that legacy of rights needs to
be continued, I'm going to fight
1:56:41
like hell Speaking for myself,
I'm going to fight like hell,
1:56:44
and we're going to fight like
hell, then reforms. We're going
1:56:47
to fight. Like how to get those
reforms.
1:56:49
In all yet I
1:56:50
know many of the senators and
members of the House will fight
1:56:53
like hell to make sure that we
act and act as soon as
1:56:57
possible. I just have one thing
to say about the next eight
1:57:00
days, I'm going to fight like
hell, the
1:57:03
President going to the White
House, you will fight
1:57:07
my count. Wow, I was unaware of
that super cut me give you a
1:57:13
clip of the day for finding it.
The
1:57:14
graphic images that you're about
to see and he did a little super
1:57:18
cut for
1:57:19
us video we're about to show you
is incredibly graphic
1:57:22
warning tonight, the images are
graphic, and they are disturbing
1:57:25
and a warning. The images you're
about to see in this report are
1:57:28
very graphic.
1:57:29
And I've got to warn you what
you're about to see is graphic
1:57:32
and it is disturbing a warning
we're going to show you some of
1:57:34
those scenes in that graphic. I
want to warn you some of the
1:57:37
images we're about to bring you
are graphic and disturbing
1:57:39
and that a lot of these images
and we just want to warn our
1:57:42
viewers, they're particularly
graphic and brutal. So I want to
1:57:45
allow them a little time to opt
out of seeing this. So if we can
1:57:49
hold off a few seconds, guys,
but once again,
1:57:51
we want to warn all of our
viewers these images are very
1:57:54
graphic, they are very hard to
watch some of the following
1:57:58
footage
1:57:58
is graphic. It's extremely
difficult to watch, but I asked
1:58:01
you not to turn away if you can,
because this is how you bear
1:58:05
witness to the truth.
1:58:08
NASA's new Artemis one rocket is
the most powerful rocket yet.
1:58:12
And it's the culmination of
years of work for hundreds of
1:58:15
people. Let's take a look at
what's gone into the project.
1:58:17
Behind NASA's Artemis one
project are hundreds of workers.
1:58:21
Many of them are based in two
major facilities, one in
1:58:24
Mississippi and one in
Louisiana. Ha a manager says the
1:58:27
workers all live in those
regions. And so
1:58:30
when we think about the
technology and the advanced
1:58:33
technology of space travel when
large liquid rocket engines and
1:58:37
and astronauts putting it
sitting on top of these engines
1:58:42
and flying into space safely,
and that's being done by
1:58:46
Mississippians that's being done
by Louisianans.
1:58:48
Many of the workers are second
or even third generation,
1:58:52
meaning their parents or
grandparents also worked on NASA
1:58:55
space programs. And engineer
says they take pride in that
1:58:59
workforce is very important,
right? We can't do this, you
1:59:01
know, this wasn't a one or two
person job. You know, this was
1:59:04
teams of hundreds of people that
came in that different
1:59:07
backgrounds, different
experiences, that all made this
1:59:10
happen together. So this area
has that kind of talent. You
1:59:14
know, it's been routed down here
for generations. And a lot of
1:59:18
people see it as it's a badge of
honor to work here. Yeah.
1:59:23
We build rockets. We build
rockets down here, y'all.
1:59:27
I asked you because you know
that Russians also try to post
1:59:32
it as a fake, because you know,
there's a word problem. So I
1:59:36
would like to ask you, did they
provide you any proof so for?
1:59:42
No, I don't. Like I said, it's
not my role to go and
1:59:47
investigate. It's not the wall
of my office. I have an advocacy
1:59:50
mandate to provide strategic
leadership on prevention and
1:59:55
response. But when I have
engaged with the media since I
1:59:58
returned from key may have
mentioned that I have received
2:00:03
reports from survivors and
frontline service providers
2:00:08
about women and girls being
detained in basement of
2:00:13
buildings in Mariupol gangway
for days with Russian soldiers
2:00:17
having being equipped with
revive when other drugs and also
2:00:22
they share.
2:00:24
Good you did not make any
investigation about Viagra or
2:00:27
something.
2:00:28
It's not my it's not my job to
make and do not have the
2:00:31
mandate. I sit in New York in an
office in New York, and I have
2:00:36
an advocacy and I have an
advocacy mandate. My role is not
2:00:40
to investigate the investigation
is going on by the human rights
2:00:44
monitoring team and the
International Commission of
2:00:47
Inquiry. In their reports. There
is nothing about about Viagra.
2:00:55
So far in the official report,
there's nothing about Viagra. I
2:00:58
just have an advocacy role
service providers on the ground
2:01:02
tell me what to say. That's what
I do but resist
2:01:07
we much they're immediately
starting to change house rules.
2:01:10
And this little tidbit at the
end that I thought was a was a
2:01:13
while
2:01:14
House Republicans passed some
expected rule changes on
2:01:17
Thursday. Several of the rules
proposed serve to weaken the
2:01:20
power of the house speaker here
are the details.
2:01:23
On Thursday House Republicans
passed the first round of
2:01:26
several expected rule changes
the conference addressed 12 of
2:01:30
24 proposal rule changes put
forward by GOP members several
2:01:33
of the proposed rules weaken the
power of the speaker, many
2:01:36
Republicans remain lukewarm
about the prospect of Kevin
2:01:39
McCarthy as Speaker of the
House, one of the new rules
2:01:42
passed by the conference would
make it easier to remove a
2:01:44
sitting speaker, the rule allows
a majority of the GOP caucus to
2:01:48
vote to remove the speaker.
Currently, the speaker seat can
2:01:51
only be vacated following a
motion from the House Majority
2:01:53
Leader Under the new rule, any
member can put forward a motion
2:01:57
to depose the speaker, a
majority of the conference must
2:01:59
then agree to the motion before
can go to a vote. One effect of
2:02:03
that is to prevent Democrats
from placing someone in the
2:02:05
speaker seat Republicans do have
a majority in the House. But
2:02:08
Democrats could propose someone
like Liz Cheney and get enough
2:02:11
support from both sides of the
aisle to actually make her the
2:02:14
speaker Cheney was defeated in
her primary earlier this year.
2:02:17
But the Constitution does not
require that the speaker be a
2:02:20
sitting elected member of
Congress. Wow,
2:02:23
I've done information man, new
shit has come to light.
2:02:27
And so he just it was like
somebody left a coma out or they
2:02:31
didn't space the prompter
correctly.
2:02:33
That's exactly what happened.
You know, that's exactly what
2:02:36
happened. He's not coherent.
We're gonna give me something. I
2:02:41
was like you said, I thought you
were ramping up for a clip of
2:02:45
the day. But if it's if the
moments gone, the moments gone.
2:02:48
Oh, that you want it to know you
actually got clip it today
2:02:51
earlier? I do. Yeah, very early.
And then I let it pass. And then
2:02:57
now I've been reluctant to give
clip it. And then when I came
2:02:59
with my Northrop clips, which
should have gotten a clip of the
2:03:02
day here, but I had none of them
about no weapons of war. No, no,
2:03:07
stop, stop.
2:03:09
I did not snub them. I thought
you were going to do something
2:03:12
else based upon the previous
email thread. And I then then
2:03:16
you said no, no, we're on the
same page. So
2:03:19
and So what you've done is
you've put in my mind, you've
2:03:22
shoved my caregiver within about
a nanosecond and getting closer
2:03:27
to the day for that particular
clip. It was a good clip. It
2:03:31
doesn't matter but I was
restrained by my by my angst
2:03:36
over the previous screw up on my
part and then your failure to
2:03:40
recognize a good clip in the
herd wide next
2:03:42
time. We'll leave that for the
post mortem. And we can just
2:03:45
continue with the clip oh man
clips of the day.
2:04:02
We think very entertaining.
2:04:05
Back to how we have so yes, very
entertaining is right. It's kind
2:04:09
of weird. Just to listen to
those by themselves like Oh, no.
2:04:15
Great idea. Thank you, sir.
Conference. Really appreciated
2:04:19
that fun. I don't know what
we'll do for the next time. We
2:04:22
have a best we know.
2:04:23
Chris, you know, I still have to
I've started that the clips from
2:04:26
COVID From the first year. You
got to about nine months since I
2:04:30
got two more shows to do.
2:04:34
But I guess we'll do a show live
on Christmas. The 25th. Yeah.
2:04:39
Have you thought about that?
Yeah, absolutely. He said.
2:04:44
Let easy for you to say
2:04:45
let's get to Thursday show
first. I'm sure I'll be back.
2:04:48
I'm sure it'll be better. Coming
to you from the heart of the
2:04:51
Texas Hill Country. FEMA Region
number six. Looking forward to
2:04:56
the next time in the morning
everybody. I'm Adam curry
2:04:58
and from Northern Silicon
Valley. Hello, I'm John C
2:05:01
DeVore. And remember
2:05:02
us at the vortech.org/and A.
until Thursday adios mofos and a
2:05:08
hui Hui.