🎬Christine Anderson Oct 2022 — R34DM3: Transcript Archives without the Noose
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Ray, we're going to stop. Good evening. Christine is here. Christine, hello. We're all waving
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to you. You're the star of the show and we know how much in demand you are. So we want
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to respect your time, even though we love talking amongst ourselves, as you know. And
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it's great to have you back here again. I think this is your third time with us. So
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that's wonderful. Wait, still connecting. Connecting to audio, you are.
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Mouse problem, she says. I can't connect. Okay, we'll wait. That's okay.
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Don't worry, Christine. So we can see you, Christine, but we can't hear you.
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Tom, she's got some mouse problem. There's a rep running around in her mouse.
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We'll lip read. We'll lip read. That's it. We'll lip read.
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You can write on the screen. A little person doing sign language down beside her, you know.
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Christine, if you try again, maybe go out and come back in.
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Yes. So welcome, everybody. We'll do the formal start as soon as we get Christine back in with
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us. I want to bring to your attention the Steve Kirsch newsletter called Sanity Check. And one of
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the challenges that we all have is the fire hose of information that we're all getting.
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It's a little bit like being a politician. Even the lowest level politician in Australia gets
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bombarded by thousands of constituents. And most politicians, as Stephen has found, don't respond
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to their constituents anyway. Here's Christine back. Can she get a little bit of information
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she gets? Permute working. You want to try it on your phone, Christine?
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The other, so the Steve Kirsch newsletter, I want to show that to you just to bring it to your
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attention. It is masterful. And it's an excellent summary for all of you to share, all of you to
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have almost printed out. So he said he did this as a sanity check to see where we're at. Are we
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opposing the narrative sane? And Steve says, here's a list of data points that suggest that I'm sane
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in no particular order. And he goes through one, three, four, CDC hides from the facts. Five,
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the FDA's Peter Marks public is he'd do anything to reduce vaccine hesitancy.
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There are no debates. Number seven, that's a big issue. The VAERS analysis is ignored. The large
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number of black swan events, you know, hacking, so it's safe and effective. The messages from the
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grave from high profile people, the Doug Brignol test. Remember that? The super fit guy, Brignol
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challenged the vaccine and said, if he didn't die, people like me should apologize. He died
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shortly after getting his latest vaccine. The died suddenly Facebook group had over 300,000 members
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and was growing at 20,000 new people a day. Polling done through independent polling companies.
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The only the book turtles all the way down. Embarmer statistics, insurance company data,
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the McCullough assumption. This is important, everybody. If a healthy person suddenly dies
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and there's no antecedent disease, it's the vaccine until proven otherwise. That's the rule.
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Ignoring doctors who point out troubling safety statistics, extreme anecdotes, stories like six
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stents, Wayne Roo's wedding. The fires of Ace Tree trial had more deaths in the vaccine group,
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independent validation, Naomi Wolf's team. The people in charge keeping it wrong.
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Prominent people who once promoted the vaccine are safe and effective are now realizing their
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original based on trust. So I've seen Mel Hotchell, we've talked about him. Other countries are
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admitting their mistakes. Top doctors are calling for an end to booster mandates in published papers.
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A recent poll in Australia, my country showed huge dissatisfaction. I hear all the stories all the
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time about doctors who privately tell people that they're very worried by what they're seeing but
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keeping quiet to save their jobs. Okay. So what I'm saying is there are 30, 30 elements of sanity
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checks. It's on the Steve Kirsch newsletter. It's a wonderful resource. All you have to do is print
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that out, carry it in your pocket and when somebody says A or B, you just show them that.
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So I would recommend using it. If you're not ready for the conversation, then you lose the
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conversation when somebody says to you, oh, you're a nutcase. And so that's, that's what we have to do.
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That's what we have to be ready for the conversation. If we want to fight for
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truth, for justice, for freedom, which is why we're here. So useful resource.
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All right. Now, have we got Christine back yet?
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Visually, we have this. I'm not sure about the microphone.
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So Christine, there you are. Okay. So welcome. You got two minutes. Okay. She'll be here with us
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in two minutes. So has any, so the other thing to the other thing that this twice weekly meeting
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gives us is tools each time again, tools and people come up with ideas. So, so each one of us
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has to do what we see needs to be done in the way that we do locally. And then globally, we are
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mixing meeting globally and the leaflets strategy, Mark Dyer has taken some steps. I've been delayed
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by two weeks, but the leaflets strategy is being implemented so that we get the message out to
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people who may be woken up and physical leaflets work. So Charles, it's Charles, it's my wife,
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Hemmings, big push to get me to, to do it. She's, she's, she's the big push. Yeah. And look, if
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there's 10% opposing this evil narrative, 10% of humanity, let's say there's 4 billion adults on
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the planet. If 10% of people are on our side, that's 400 million people, which are very comfortable.
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We have got 400 million people on our side. And particularly when you look at the low vaccine,
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the low bio weapon take up in Africa, 400 million people just imagine.
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So just imagine if, if 10% of that 10%, if 1% of humanity, that's 40 million people handed out
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100 leaflets each physical leaflets work. And we just have to give those people on our side,
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something to do. That's what this meeting helps us to do. Christine has you, I see where, so,
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so my point is locally, you do what you see needs to be done. Everyone does, every one of us does it
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locally. And then globally, we have consistent messages going out. And as, as brother Alexis
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said on Sunday night, we're winning. They never expected this much pushback. Now, the fact that
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we're in the middle of a war, don't despair our job. And that's why we come to these twice weekly
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meetings. Our job is to maintain our own passion. Hence the red jacket read is the color of passion.
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You are passionate for truth and freedom and justice and ethics. That's why Stephen started
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this group. So, so there's no, it's all too hard. No bullshit. What about just think back to World
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War Two, just think back to World War One, they were every one of those wars, you know, the soldier
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on the fields was fighting for freedom. England didn't want to be taken over by Germany. Simple
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as that. So Christine, are you ready? No. Don't worry, Christine. What about you?
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That's all right, Christine will work it out. She's got, she's got, Lisa's wearing her red clogs.
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So the other element that we have, we've got, we need some fundraising while we're waiting.
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Shimon Yanovitz, we need just $3,000 more. Dan Craft has got some, has got a used piece of,
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a used microscope that he can get for about $3,000 to pay the customs and the like for Shimon
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Yanovitz. I bring it to your attention. I, the easiest way to do this is to send an email to
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Daniel Craft. I'll put his email address. If, if 20 of us put in a hundred dollars each,
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there's $2,000 or $150. Shimon, so if you are interested, send an email, I'll post
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Daniel's email address, please. We need, we need that last piece. That's something practical that
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we can do to help his work. Now, the other thing that, the other thing that I'm, that
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this group gives us an opportunity to explore is what other ideas have you had
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that people can be doing? And as a, you know, each one of us taking the steps has an impact.
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What would you like to see happening? And I suppose I wonder if there's anyone here from Alberta.
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I would love to see happening in Australia. What's happening in Alberta is, can anybody report on
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the premier of Alberta, Ray, you know, the, and the, and the rebel news request to the new
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premier of Alberta, who said that she promised if she gets into power, she will do certain things.
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Ray? Yes, that's actually very exciting. What's happened even over the weekend.
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Our premier, our new premier, Daniel Smith, and I just did a quick post in the chat there,
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has now told Alberta Health Services, who have been linked with World Economic Forum,
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that they will be disconnected. And she's essentially told the WEF to get lost.
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Pretty amazing. She is undertaking some other major endeavours to reform
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Alberta Health Services, collapse down the extremely bloated middle management system
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that has existed there, which has just really hindered our end product in terms of health
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services here. She is an absolute warrior. And she will become, I think, a really bright light
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in the Western world. We're currently in the stage of promoting her wildly. I will put it that way.
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Over the weekend, the United Conservative Party, which is currently the ruling party,
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elected nine board members to its board. There are 17 board positions. Nine of those were open
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for reelection for two-year terms. We took all nine of them. It was actually extremely amazing.
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I'm currently positioned as the vice president of policy and governance, which will deal with a lot
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of issues in terms of recommendations that go to government. We have a direct line with our premier,
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which is just exceptional. And basically, that's the amazing good news from Alberta.
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Great. Can I insert something here? Christine is showing up twice on my screen. One of them
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looks like it's working. I just want to make sure she doesn't get lost. Okay, we got it.
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Okay, keep an eye on her. Keep an eye on her. Yeah. So Christine had audio for a moment. She's
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working on it. She'll speak up when she's able. Christine, can you speak? I can hear you, at least.
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Can you hear me? Yeah, we can. Okay. We've got you twice, but that works okay. Christine.
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Yeah, I'm using the phone for audio and basically the laptop for video. Yeah. Good. Christine,
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thank you. Can I just ask Ray Charles? Ray, is Danielle Smith, the premier of Alberta,
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the new premier of Alberta? She apologised for what had happened to the,
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she apologised to the unvaccinated, I believe, and to the people who've been injured,
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as I understood it. But is she the Danielle Smith who was in our group? That is correct. A year ago?
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Wow. Yeah, I invited her to be part of this group. She readily accepted and, you know,
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we correspond back and forth quite frequently. And so, you know, here's an example of our group
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having a major impact on political positioning. Christine has been an amazing example as well.
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I can't tell you how exciting it is to have someone like Christine
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standing up in the European Parliament and presenting an exceptionally good logical case.
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Premier Smith is doing the very same thing here in Alberta. We're just absolutely overjoyed with
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what's happening. Ray, what's her background? Was she a journalist or a lawyer? I don't remember.
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She was a journalist. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Wow. Very good. Well, I'm glad to hear Ray.
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So watch for her over the next week. We're trying to get her position to appear on a major, major
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media outlet here shortly. And so Rebel News said, you promised to apologise when you got into power.
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You're in power. Will you apologise? And Danielle said, yes, we apologise. And Ray, as you see,
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I just bring that to everyone's attention. Everybody who lost their jobs in the health
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in any government position in Alberta is invited to come back and have their jobs back unjabbed.
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Okay. That's correct. And we're also looking for compensation for lost revenues for those
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individuals as well. Many of them were devastated by what happened. Yeah, that's true. And I just
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heard that the Supreme Court of New York, they just issued an order today that all employees that got
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laid off because they were unvaccinated have to be reinstated. And there will also be granted back
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pay. Wow. What was that, Christine? New York. Oh, yes. That's right. I read that too. Yeah. Yeah.
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Yeah. So it's starting. It's beginning. We're just good. Yep. It's just sad to say. All right, Christine.
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So let's get this show on the road. This wonderful show, the Stevens. See that as Ray says,
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we are dropping seeds. And as the Bible says, some seeds will sprout and some seeds won't,
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but there are many that are sprouting. There are so many pushbacks happening. So welcome everybody,
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particularly first timers. If this is your first time, if this is your virginal visit, please
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insert, please tell us about yourself. You're most welcome to share information about you.
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Put your name, put your name up on the screen. So we know we'll have Chris, listen to Christine
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as to what she's up to. This is a place of free speech, no censorship. And indeed,
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Piers Morgan last night, Christine was interviewing Yay, formerly Kanye West,
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and, you know, asking the question, well, what's the limits on free speech? And Yay says, what do
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you mean? Free speech is free speech. And we're going to have someone else deciding what you can
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say, what you can't say. This environment is a free speech environment with proper moderation.
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That's how, that's how Stephen and I run it. And we, and we make sure we lovingly brutal here.
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We come from love and not fear. And that's what this twice weekly meeting is about. Reinspiring
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you to not be fearful and to fight for what you believe as Bobby Kennedy says,
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what hill are you willing to die on? And there's another beautiful quote that said,
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you know, I'd rather die standing than live kneeling. You know, I like that idea. So
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Christine, you are a true warrior. Thank you for joining us. These meetings, everybody goes for
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two and a half hours. Tom Rodman has set up another telegram video group for those who have more time.
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And then Christine, we, as you know, we have Q&A after Christine's presentation. You can make your
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presentation as long as you like, and I'm sure we'll have a healthy discussion. Thank you again,
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Christine, for joining us and over to you. Yeah. Well, so first of all, I do appreciate,
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of course, this space of free speech, because as I always say, or as it has been said before,
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you can either talk about free speech or you have free speech. And as soon as you start talking about
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free speech, then you no longer have it. It's as simple as that. Yeah. Well, so I really cannot tell
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you any things, particular or spectacular news. The news I have, I've already put out in my videos.
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I'm pretty sure you're aware of it. So it was, of course, that Pfizer did admit they never even
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tested on transmission, which this entire lie was based on. So, and I did look into the
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plan, the action plan of the EU commission. And there are some things that are rather concerning,
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especially when they're talking about, it's all coming back. It's all in the plan for
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fall, winter 2023. So it's all coming back like the non-pharmaceutical measures, like lockdowns,
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wearing masks, mandates of masks, social distancing. They do want to avoid school closures,
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because they did kind of realize by now that that was a really bad idea, since students are really,
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yeah, they lost so much. There is discrepancy in their learning effort. So they do want to avoid
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that, but everything else will still be on. They will continue to make a real hard effort to get
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everyone vaccinated, starting by the ones who haven't even begun yet. They call them the
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hard to reach groups. And they want to come up with special kind of communication strategies
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and tactics to get these people in line as well. And of course, they're already coming out with the
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new narrative as to what to label these people. So the ones that are not vaccinated or hesitant
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about getting vaccinated, now even hesitant about getting the shot, the boosters or the updates,
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how they call it now, that of course is linked to narratives about being anti-Western, anti-EU.
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And of course, they dropped in the pro-Russian thing in there too. So if you don't get in line,
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and if you don't do what your government tells you in terms of getting your boosters for as
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many as they would tell you, then you are sure pro-Russian or anti-Western, whatever.
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So that's still all going on. And then of course, what they do have in there. Oh yeah, the three
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months, the German, Seck of Health, that was like a few months back, he was talking about,
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it was no longer fully vaxxed, it was then freshly vaxxed. And the definition of being
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freshly vaxxed is the last shot is no longer than three months back. So that idiot didn't come up
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with that himself. It says it in the commission proposal of the EU as well. So we are talking
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about now getting shots every three months, if that's their idea. And then of course, they do
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want to systematically vaccinate pregnant women. And they include them in the so-called
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risk groups among people over 60 years of age, or people with underlying conditions. So pregnant
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women are now a risk group for COVID. So that's why they should get or have priority with this
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new vaccine that's apparently coming out. I shouldn't call it a vaccine, it's really an injection.
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So yeah, that's what they're doing. That's what they're planning.
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As far as I know, there has been a WHO summit last week in Berlin.
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I have received some information, but the information is, I haven't been able to review
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the information yet. So I would not be able to speak on that in depth. But I could say
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they will continue to push with everything. And what they're doing now is they're talking about
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all these other kinds of pandemics that are going to hit us. So polio apparently is coming along
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again. And they kind of blame that on the fact that the vaccine hesitancy has now spread
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throughout the world. People don't trust the pharma anymore, don't trust the governments anymore.
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Yeah, well, guess why. But they will continue to push that. And that of course means that
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the authority that the WHO is supposed to get, which did not happen in July, it was luckily,
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didn't go through then, but they will continue to push for it. And their narrative or argument now is
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the reason that they weren't able to deal with COVID in a timely manner,
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and kind of contemplating the fact that it's been going on for two and a half years now.
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And the reason for that is, was the WHO simply did not have enough authority to address it in a
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proper way. And then of course, the nasty national states, all demanding their sovereignty and
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whatever. So that's what they will do next. And to get the governments all in line, to just endorse
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the WHO to be equipped with more authority. So in future pandemics, the WHO can just take over,
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and pretty much what they had planned on doing in the first place, they will continue to push that
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now. This is cooking on a rather large flame, a small flame for now, because they did realize,
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of course, they may have gone too far, may have been too pushy, may have taken it too far,
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too hasty about it. So they will scale it down just a bit. But in the background, everything is
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still continuing. And they will continue to do whatever they need to do to get everyone in line,
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and to push their sick agenda. That's pretty much what I can say for now.
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And Christine, can I ask you about the committee that started this latest
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series of events for you and Christian Therese? I watched that, and I could barely do it, but it
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was absolutely astonishing to me, the nonsense that they were talking about. And then you came
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up and said, I demand that you declare yourselves incompetent. And I thought, great!
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But she deliberately disobeyed the rules of the EU, as far as I could see.
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Yes, she did. Even though, of course, this doesn't go any further than this group.
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The point of order I raised, the article I based it on, I did kind of stretch it there too,
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I have to admit that. I just needed to find, I mean, this specific article pretty much only
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deals with competency issues among different committees. But, I mean, you know, they're doing
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whatever they want. So I figured, well, that's what it says in the article. So I can base my point of
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order on that. And my point really was to point out how ridiculous it all was, which it actually is.
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And to get a way of getting my colleagues to understand that we cannot do anything in this
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special committee, since we lack the authority to do anything, we cannot compel anyone to come in
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there. We ask questions, if they choose to answer, they do, if not, they don't. So it's really a
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ridiculous committee. And it was my way of pushing for a formal inquiry committee. And that's what
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we will continue to do. And we, if we get it all done, meet all the requirements, we should be able
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to get a vote on that in the December plenary, because the plenary will have to vote on it,
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to actually form such a committee. So, like I said, we might be able to get that vote in
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by December, the December plenary, and then we'll just take it from there. What we will also do in
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that committee is to push to CEO, Pfizer, Pfizer CEO will be invited again. So this time, I reckon
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the invitation to appear in this committee will be a little more sternly than the last time.
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What we try to do also is to get Ursula von der Leyen in front of that committee.
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That was debated today in an office meeting, you would call it behind the scenes.
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And that that did not find a majority yet. But we will keep pushing so that she will have to
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appear there too. So we can ask her some questions too. Christine, could you maybe explain for the
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people who don't know about the text messages? She refused to release and also Albert Bollow,
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Pfizer refused to release. But there were questions that Christine, I can't remember where I saw these.
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Why can't you push to have... So instead of pushing Pfizer to release the contracts,
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why on earth are the contracts not published by the EU? Yeah, that's just the thing.
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They kind of like say it's trade secrets and they don't want to release their pricing
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and all of that, which is a bunch of bogusness. I'm sorry, this is crap. I mean, we are elected
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representatives and we cannot do our job because our job is to basically justify whatever was
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decided here to our constituents and we can't do this if we don't have any information as to
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what they actually agreed upon. So they kind of still hide behind that. We will continue to push
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for that too. But about the text messages, that is really an interesting story. So the EU Commission
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is obligated to release all relevant documentation or whatever deals they're striking with whoever.
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And once they were asked to release those text messages, they simply said, well, no, they do not
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fall under the regulation of having to be provided because they are not... How do they call it? Oh,
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it's only short-lived documentation. So it's not really a document that they need to keep
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and need to provide to the public, which of course is bogus. So the point is these text messages were
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exchanged, that much is clear, prior to the actual negotiations of the contracts. God only knows
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what CEO Borla and Funderlion hatched up together there. And plus considering that her husband
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is part of a pharmaceutical company, I think they made like what, $3.5 billion on that deal,
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if not more than $35 billion. I don't remember. So this is something really fishy going on here,
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but she refuses to release those text messages since they, by her definition, do not
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fall under the regulation of having to be provided. And so our idea was to get Borla in
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because he was the other part of that text message conversation. So we wanted to ask him,
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but he had agreed to appear and last minute he kind of pulled out because I guess they thought
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where we were going with this. So he just dropped out and sent someone else.
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But Borla Funderlion, she's been known in Germany too. She was a member of government there too,
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in various positions. And this is not the first time that something like this is happening. The
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last time it was involving emails, which when she was supposed to supply them or provide them,
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they suddenly got deleted by accident, of course.
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Just so you know, you can never delete emails. They're always available for a,
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maybe difficult to get, but they can always be recovered.
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Yeah, I know. I know. Well, like I said, that's just Ursula Funderlion, but on that text messaging,
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we will get her because what has happened, the EU state attorney, they opened an investigation
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into these matters now. They're investigating the EU commission and investigating Ursula Funderlion.
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The Ombudspom, she is responsible for complaints from citizens about how the EU conducts their
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affairs. And she complained and raised an issue with that. And also the agency that is
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making sure that all the finances are correct. They also made an issue of this.
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So it's getting kind of tight for Ursula Funderlion by now.
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Yeah. So can I just ask you, Christine, so it's just been in the chat, well, I don't know,
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so I think it's Michelle, is it? So she says that nothing can be deleted on the internet,
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is actually deleted. Yeah. So you could push to get those emails published.
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Well, that's kind of milked out. Yeah, that's still milked. That's done with.
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Are there any emails between Funderlion and Brülo?
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And I would think so. And they were probably provided as requested.
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Okay. And there's nothing in those, of course. I haven't seen them, but the agencies that have
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seen them, had there been anything in there, they would have raised the alarm on that.
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Would they? So I think that the really important stuff is in those text messages,
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knowing fully well that she would not release those. Correct. Yeah. So how do you know the
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agencies would actually flag it up if they found something? Good question. But that's the agency
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that it's their job, basically, to check that everything has been done correctly.
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Yeah. Are they paid by the EU, Christine? Well, it's kind of like they are in charge of controlling
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EU commission. So they would say something. They would. Is this the audit part of the EU?
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Yeah, exactly. The seventh institution. Yeah. Yeah. So who is Dr Haas, by the way?
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He was on the committee. Dr Haas? I don't know. No clue. He was the guy in front of you,
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and you were concentrated on the chair, I think. But Dr Haas was to the right as you looked at them.
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Oh, yeah. He was. He was in EU case, but he was pathetic. Yeah. Yeah. To be honest,
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I don't remember. I really don't remember. You know, you just sit there, and there's so
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many information dropping on you, you know, and it's like, at the end, I really will have to
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recap what happened, you know, with the documentation I have from the committee.
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But things are happening so fast, so quickly. It's really sometimes hard to remember. But yeah,
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there was a guy that was just, you know, sitting there, and I was actually, I was getting ready
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to ask him a question, but then it wasn't my turn even anymore. There was no time left for whatever
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reason. So that sometimes happens whenever it's my time to ask a question. We suddenly had run out
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of time. That happens too. So, yeah, but... What struck me listening to all that nonsense
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was that there was so many damned regulations which he kept quoting. I know. And in addition
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to that, all the different languages and people complaining they hadn't got it in, what was it,
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Latvian? I can't remember which language, Slovakian? But it would be, oh no, Croatian it was actually.
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And so the possibility for mix-ups was huge. Was it designed like that? Why didn't they have one
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language like French or English, you know, instead of all the different languages of the...
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Well, that's, I mean, that's the huge problem with the EU. We do not have a common language,
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but yet they just, you know, think, yeah, well, but we rule them anyway. So when working here,
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every member of every state has the right to have these committee meetings and
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plenary meetings conducted in his language. And if that's not the case, then they will provide
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translation for it. But it is a huge problem. But it doesn't work, does it? I'm sorry? It doesn't work.
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So it's a multiple deniability then? Exactly. And, you know, even if you could translate a word
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literally, it will mean different things in different languages, depending on how it evolves,
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you know, the cultural context of it, whatever. So yes, it is a huge issue. I always call it,
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you know, the Babylonian confusion. That's what it is. Yeah. But they're banking on that. That's
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what they're banking on. They don't want people to understand them anymore. And people are not
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supposed to voice their political will, you know, which we are supposed to implement here.
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They aren't supposed to be able to communicate that to us anymore, because they don't care about
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people. That's the problem. They do not care. It was total confusion to an onlooker.
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So I was shocked at the level. And you were brilliant. And so was Christian Therese.
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And Ivan Sinčić as well. You three were the ones who made the best speeches, all on our side.
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And I just, whoa. So, yes, who was the chair of the committee? She was totally incompetent as well.
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Oh, she is. She has a push over though. She really is. I mean, you know, we kind of figure it out by
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now. If we say something and she interrupts or whatever, you know, we just blow her over.
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And she usually just sits there and does nothing. And at one time it was like she reprimanded
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Christian Therese for having spoken 20 seconds longer or 30 seconds longer than it was supposed
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to. And then she was going on and telling him, well, the next time I will deduct 40 seconds from
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your next speaking time. And then he went on for another three minutes telling her off how she is
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not supposed to do this and how she cannot do this. So she's a complete pushover. Yeah, she is.
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Is she Dutch? I'm sorry? Is she Dutch? Yeah, she is. Yeah, sorry, Belgian.
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Belgian, yeah, Flemish Belgian. Yeah. Who is Mrs Small? Was that clarified?
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Mrs Who? Small, the Pfizer executive. Oh, yeah, she was, she was, I think, the vice president of Pfizer.
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Wow. Who was sentenced, who, Borla sent instead of coming himself. She was terrible. She was trying
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to cozy up to the chair. I know. And the chair was allowing it.
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I know. See, that's what I keep saying. I mentioned it somewhere before. The chair
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considered to run or thought she should run this committee to protect them from our questions,
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which is not her job. She is supposed to conduct a proper meeting. But, you know, she's always kind
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of like, in the first couple of meetings. Oh, thank you so much for coming. She's saying.
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I know. It's like, yeah, but she's like, in the beginning, when she didn't realize she was
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basically outnumbered in that committee, because we all pushed to get on that committee.
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She was like, really, you know, constantly looking at how she, how she can cut us off
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when we're speaking. So it's like, yeah, she was, she was really annoyed by our presence.
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And she was really nervous whenever one of us, she would have to give the floor to one of us,
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because she knew, oh, this isn't going to go well.
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Exactly. I'm terrified when you started to speak. Christine, she looked terrified when you started
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to speak. I know. Yeah, she is terrified of me by now, because she knows she cannot shut me up.
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She tries to, but she cannot shut me up. Good. But Mrs. Small, I noticed, was Welsh.
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And I don't know what the qualifications were to be vice president of Pfizer, but she was just a
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useful idiot, as far as I could see. Yeah. Yeah. I'm giving a giving a speech to the EU
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about the importance of Pfizer in the last two and a half years. It was like a,
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it was like an advertisement. I know. I know. I recommend everybody on this call watches it.
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Yeah. But that's what that committee was supposed to be. It wasn't supposed to be a committee to
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get answers for the people. It was a committee to find out at what, what did they do wrong
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when failing to get people what they wanted them to do. That's what they were trying to find out.
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How could they become better in dictating to people what to do? You know, that was,
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was their objective. But we flew into hell. I don't usually comment on physical appearance,
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but what a specimen the Welsh lady was. Looked as though she drank too much C2H5,
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C2H5 OH to me. Sorin would like to speak. He said, can I speak?
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Keep going, stay with your questions. And then we'll do the questions in the normal force.
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Don't worry about that. So we think that Mrs Small is vice president of Pfizer of a section,
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because if you remember, Mike Eden is a vice president, was a vice president too,
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of the respiratory section, I think. So I just wonder whether she's just one of the vice
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presidents, but I wonder how many vice presidents they've got. I can, I can chime in. There's
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probably about 70. I had to write a lot of recommendations for a person to be promoted
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to vice president. It can't be that high a position. No. Well, I think that lady would
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have struggled to get a university degree, but maybe I'm harsh. Charles? Okay. Well, I haven't
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finished, but never finished. Well, if you've got another couple, you've got a couple of questions.
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If you've got a question, ask because we do the normal way. It's your privilege to ask the first
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questions and then it's my privilege to ask the next question. And then we'll go to Peter Hooger
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from Wales. I'm okay for the moment. Okay. Good. So, so Christine, what's your sense of your
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colleagues, you know, in terms of earlier this year, there weren't many of you and, you know,
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then we have stories like Alberta, we have the Australian government report from a very high
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level bureaucrat about the amazing failings of state and federal governments in Australia
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in the response. So, so what's, you know, with your EU colleagues, are the numbers on your side
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increasing? That's the essence of what I'd like to understand. Yeah. Okay. It's in the beginning,
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it was just really a very small minority. You know, you spoke to colleagues on the hallway
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when you met them, but no one really wanted to say anything about it. So, and this whole thing
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started with four, four of us, four MEPs, we started out. So there was Christian Turhasch,
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that was Ivan Sinčić, that was myself and that was Francesca Donato. And yeah, it was just the
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four of us. And then it just took off from there. And in the first few months, there wasn't
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really much happening. They did take note of the fact that we, yeah, basically,
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plow in all records on our social media, staff throughout the house, they contacted us.
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And suddenly, you know, we walked through the building. I mean, there were people left and
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right just acknowledging us, giving us thumbs up. And it was many staff though. And yeah, well,
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then things started shifting. And we got these colleagues asking us about, you know,
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what made us do it? And, you know, how do we get started? And what can they do to help us?
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So we started expanding. So by now, we are 12 MEPs who are willing to show their face
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in public and speak up about it. And but in the background, there is a lot more MEPs, but they're
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not yet willing to speak up about it. They have concerns that their parties will not like them
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anymore. They won't get reelected on the list. And you know, that whole thing. So this is happening.
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But in this committee, this is actually rather unique, because usually, in the committees,
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we are completely outnumbered. So you have like 38 committee members, and we're sitting there with
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three or four people max. So on this committee, it's different, though. I wouldn't say that they
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don't even have the majority anymore. They are way outnumbered. And it's now even MEPs from the
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Greens and from the left that are critical too. But like I said, they face some repercussions
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in their within their parties. They are doing a good job on the on the committee right now.
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But behind the scenes, at least we've been told they have to answer to their party to their group
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what they the kind of questions they ask in this committee meeting. But like I said,
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the situation is not as desperate in this committee. And things are, in fact, changing.
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And you kind of can see that because now when we walk through the building, we do not only get
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recognition from staff who suffer probably the most from all of this madness, but from other MEPs as
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well. So things are changing. Luckily, they do. I would have hoped to have this process starting
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a little sooner. But it's better late than never, I guess. Thank you. That's wonderful. That's
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wonderful news. And it's a beautiful example to all of us, just like Danielle Smith, that we just
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keep at it. We keep at it. We get exactly. Now, one other one other issue that Peter Huger,
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before we go to him, and he's a lawyer, Anna de Buisere has got her hand up, we'll get to her.
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0:49:11
0:49:18
Christine, on this issue of of Pfizer contracts not being disclosed is relevant to all of us on
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0:49:18
0:49:25
this call for our respective countries. And I urge all of you to be aware that under constitutional
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0:49:25
0:49:31
law, there may well be some angles to take, because government says it's commercial in confidence.
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0:49:31
0:49:37
This bullshit, it's total bullshit. Because if you're spending if you want government money,
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0:49:37
0:49:41
nothing that none of your contracts should be commercial, it should be in confidence,
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0:49:41
0:49:48
except a particular patent. And even if it's a patent, the patent is published. So as a matter
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0:49:48
0:49:54
of constitutional law, all of us should do the exploration. I don't expect you, Christine, to
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0:49:54
0:50:00
comment on that. But I really urge you to find lawyers who can attack that angle. I'm pushing
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0:50:00
0:50:06
that angle here in Australia as well. Right. So so they cannot say, Oh, you're you as a taxpayer,
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0:50:06
0:50:12
are not in charge to have that information. I know. I mean, we are we are pushing for that.
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0:50:12
0:50:18
We are working on that. And the thing is, up until now, like I said, it's changing now,
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0:50:18
0:50:27
but up until now, it was it was really difficult, because public opinion was not on our side on that.
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0:50:27
0:50:34
So if we, you know, criticize that we hadn't been provided with the with the contents of the of the
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0:50:34
0:50:41
contracts yet. And, you know, people were immediately labeling you as a covid yet.
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0:50:41
0:50:49
And, you know, you're just trying to kill people. It just last week, we had a rally, a protest,
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0:50:49
0:50:54
really. And there was a guy who was running around accusing all of us we had killed thousands and
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0:50:54
0:51:02
thousands of people, you know. So it really was difficult. And as long as public opinion
421
0:51:03
0:51:08
is behind government, you can raise whatever issue you want. You can, you know,
422
0:51:09
0:51:17
ask them whatever they will not do it. They will start moving once public opinion pushes them to.
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0:51:17
0:51:23
And that, you know, it's a long process. But I think we are getting there and we're seeing
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0:51:23
0:51:29
first results. Excellent. Excellent point, Christine. Hence the leaflet strategy, everybody.
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0:51:29
0:51:35
OK, Peter Hogan, next question, then Sorin. Brilliant. Thank you, Charles. And once again,
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0:51:35
0:51:39
Christine, lovely to speak to you and thank you for everything you do. You don't realize how much
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0:51:40
0:51:46
you lift our hearts and you give us hope because we are the little people that are being harmed.
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0:51:46
0:51:51
And you are a big person that is representing us. Unfortunately, the people in our country, apart from
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0:51:52
0:51:56
in Ray Strom's case at the moment, he's got somebody in high office
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0:51:56
0:52:03
looking good and hopefully they'll help us, you know. But at the moment, we've got a problem.
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0:52:03
0:52:10
And I think that in the absence of a military paramilitary or even a police coup, because our
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0:52:12
0:52:19
government and parliament is inert, I feel that the very medium that is frustrating us,
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0:52:20
0:52:26
mainstream media, the news, social media, Facebook, etc., with all their controlling
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0:52:26
0:52:32
and their lies, but they are key in this war. We all know that they are controlled.
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0:52:33
0:52:39
So, Christine, I'll give you an example. Sky News reported today that they've recognized the
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0:52:39
0:52:46
Sir Christopher Chope MP. I'm sure you know him. His all-party parliamentary group, which convened
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0:52:46
0:52:54
last week and it reconvened. It convened on the day that Liz Truss fell on her sword or was thrown
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0:52:54
0:53:02
onto her sword. And that just covered the all-party parliamentary group hearing completely.
439
0:53:02
0:53:07
And then they had another one yesterday. I've heard nothing much from them.
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0:53:07
0:53:12
Apart from today, Sky News reporting that the UK government will not open an inquiry into the
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0:53:12
0:53:18
vaccine damage. I posted the link earlier. Now, the Daily Mail, however, they covered
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0:53:18
0:53:25
Sir Christopher Chope's APPG, all-party parliamentary group, hearing his demands for
443
0:53:25
0:53:33
vaccine injury clinics to be held at hospitals, etc., the same as vaccine injection clinics.
444
0:53:33
0:53:42
So they are reporting a lot more at the moment. The truth, if you like, our side. So my question,
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0:53:42
0:53:48
how can we, and I mean you and your people, and the more powerful people like the PM of Alberta,
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0:53:48
0:53:55
how can they get more earth-shattering mainstream media coverage to wake more people up to the truth?
447
0:53:58
0:54:02
Ah, that's a good question. If I knew the answer to that, we didn't have any problems.
448
0:54:03
0:54:10
Is there any way, apart from I feel that the newspapers are moving slowly.
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0:54:10
0:54:10
Yes, they are.
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0:54:10
0:54:16
They have a very cultural saying in Britain called covering your ass. I think they're doing
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0:54:16
0:54:25
that a little bit at the moment because they believe that public opinion is moving. So how
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0:54:25
0:54:28
can we give it a kick up that ass, Christine?
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0:54:28
0:54:36
Well, like I said, I mean, we've pretty much done all we could. So now it's really up. We need to
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0:54:36
0:54:44
keep pushing, obviously. And we will do that. We will do that in the committee. On social media,
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0:54:44
0:54:52
I mean, YouTube just deleted another video of mine. I got a lawyer involved and he wrote the
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0:54:52
0:54:56
letter. And then the two videos they had deleted before, they just unblocked again. And now they
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0:54:56
0:55:04
deleted the third one. So anyway, it's like, yeah, they're trying to do whatever they can to kind of
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0:55:06
0:55:15
prevent from what's going to happen anyway, or to prolong it even. But the corporate
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0:55:15
0:55:20
media, like the newspapers and TV stations and so on, I mean, they rely on people wanting to watch
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0:55:20
0:55:29
them and wanting to read them. And I do notice a shift in there too. They are starting to report
461
0:55:29
0:55:36
on vaccine injuries and pretty much questioning what's going to happen. And I think that's
462
0:55:36
0:55:45
they are starting to report on vaccine injuries and pretty much questioning the measures,
463
0:55:45
0:55:53
the restrictions and all of that. They're starting now. We see the beginning of it.
464
0:55:55
0:56:03
My biggest fear only is that by the time that all of this will be out in the open and will be on
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0:56:03
0:56:11
broad daylight, by that time, people will have completely other problems. And that's kind of
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0:56:11
0:56:17
like what the governments are banking on now too, I think, with fall coming, not knowing how to pay
467
0:56:18
0:56:25
the energy prices, inflation, not knowing where to get food from. I was shopping last Saturday.
468
0:56:26
0:56:32
Usually I don't shop anymore. My daughter does something was missing. And I was just shocked to
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0:56:32
0:56:41
see these stores. I mean, the shelves were emptied. They simply don't have stuff anymore to put on
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0:56:41
0:56:50
the shelves. So in a few weeks, people will have other problems and they will no longer care
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0:56:50
0:56:57
what the government did the past two and a half years. And by the time this next crisis is over,
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0:56:58
0:57:04
people have forgotten. I mean, it's not the first time that something like this happens. People
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0:57:04
0:57:14
forget. They always forget. And it's beyond me how anyone could forget anything like that.
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0:57:15
0:57:22
I don't get it, but it will happen again. Yep. Well, when their children have died and their
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0:57:22
0:57:29
grandchildren have died, they won't forget. And I bring to everyone's attention that the legal
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0:57:29
0:57:35
system, whilst corrupted to a large degree with judges influenced by government and public opinion,
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0:57:36
0:57:43
when the grandchildren of judges start dying, the judges will change their behaviour as well.
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0:57:44
0:57:52
So, you know, and it is my view that every case, the lawyer for our side should be number one,
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0:57:52
0:58:00
asking the judge to recuse themselves if they've taken the jabs. They should, and the argument
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0:58:00
0:58:07
should be put. Doesn't matter if it loses. It should be put. Number two, lawyers on our side
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0:58:07
0:58:14
must speak the truth. And Brother Alexis Buñolo on Sunday pointed out to us that what the Bible
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0:58:14
0:58:21
says, the truth is a sword, but you have to pick it up. And if you don't speak truth in court,
483
0:58:21
0:58:28
you won't get the impact. And that truth is that counsel for our side has to point out to the judge,
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0:58:28
0:58:32
Your Honour, the evidence shows that your grandchildren will die if they have this
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0:58:32
0:58:39
bio weapon injected. And it doesn't matter if the judge says you are in contempt, doesn't matter.
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0:58:39
0:58:46
And so each one of us doing these steps, just like Christine is showing us, helps the process. And
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0:58:46
0:58:51
when more judges turn, because Christine, you're right, in Alberta, I wonder how the judges will
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0:58:51
0:58:57
behave because of this shift of Danielle. You watch what that ripple effect is. Okay, on we go.
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0:58:57
0:59:01
Sorin, welcome. This is your first time asking a live question. Is that correct?
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0:59:03
0:59:06
Yes, it is correct. I've been here from the initial group,
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0:59:07
0:59:14
doctors for COVID ethics. I think it was last year. And lately, I've been diluting my
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0:59:14
0:59:22
participation due to other activities. Now, I'm from Israel, and I'm one of the founders of
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0:59:22
0:59:31
a professional front for ethics. And one of our members is disclosed and then
494
0:59:33
0:59:39
showed the cover up of the Israeli Ministry of Health about the
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0:59:40
0:59:49
side effects, severe side effects of the jab. And my question is, Christine, if you would like some
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0:59:49
0:59:57
cooperation from her because she has a lot of information about the material of Pfizer and
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0:59:58
1:00:05
some documents from the FDA and so on. And I know you have an ongoing investigation where there is
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1:00:06
1:00:16
this lady from Romania, Laura Condruza, if I'm right. And maybe there's a place for some
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1:00:17
1:00:23
cooperation between those two ladies. And then another question is,
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1:00:24
1:00:34
beside the group of MEPs like you that are non-aligning with the narrative,
501
1:00:34
1:00:44
are there any governments at all that are trying to break out of this kind of siege?
502
1:00:46
1:00:56
And last question first, not that I know of. I mean, even thinking about governments that would,
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1:00:56
1:01:06
you know, be rather more along my side of the political scale than others. And it would be
504
1:01:07
1:01:20
probably the Polish government, Hungary, Viktor Orban. But no, I couldn't say that they
505
1:01:21
1:01:30
said anything along the lines that whatever was done was not correct. So I don't, unfortunately,
506
1:01:30
1:01:37
I don't see any signs as far as European governments are concerned that they would
507
1:01:38
1:01:46
shift their opinion on that. I don't see any governments. Sorry. Yeah, about the documentation
508
1:01:46
1:01:53
or that contact you may have about having the FDA and Pfizer documentation. That would be great
509
1:01:53
1:02:02
if you could forward this to me. I will review it or have my colleagues do it,
510
1:02:03
1:02:11
you know, if it's above, basically above my pay grade even. So yeah, absolutely. I would appreciate
511
1:02:11
1:02:21
that. Can you leave me a contact? If you put your email address into the chat, sorry, and we'll make
512
1:02:21
1:02:26
sure that Christine gets it. Well, okay. If you could email me, sorry, and then it doesn't get
513
1:02:26
1:02:35
forgotten. Yeah. Okay. So in the chat or to send it to you? Just email me and remind me that you
514
1:02:35
1:02:43
want to speak to Christine and I'll just. Okay. Okay. Very good. Okay. Thanks. Bye bye. Very good.
515
1:02:43
1:02:50
And, and sorry, just before you do go, a question to you is being put to us that, you know, Israel
516
1:02:50
1:02:56
is being, is being, has been so overjabbed. It's being, you know, it's, it's the example to the,
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1:02:56
1:03:00
to the globalist of how to wipe out a population. Is that true or what?
518
1:03:02
1:03:10
Well, it used to be true. It's not true anymore because the, the, a hesitancy has increased.
519
1:03:11
1:03:22
And if we had something like a 4.8 million individuals being vaccinated with the first
520
1:03:22
1:03:34
and second dose, a so-called vaccine, it's not a vaccine by, by far. Now it, even, even though it
521
1:03:34
1:03:46
was approved for children, six months to five years old, it is less, it is less than half a mil.
522
1:03:48
1:03:54
And really it's, it's, it's dropping, it's dropping and they don't really know how to do,
523
1:03:54
1:04:02
what to do. And now they're trying to combine it with a, with a flu shot to have a dual, dual,
524
1:04:02
1:04:12
so-called vaccine and about, and about the polio that was mentioned here before in Christine's
525
1:04:13
1:04:23
presentation. We had a short spike of polio eruption here, but it happened
526
1:04:23
1:04:34
it happened just after they, they had some, some, you know, see the oral, the stock,
527
1:04:34
1:04:42
the oral vaccine, they use it. So they had a short period of use and shortly after there was a burst
528
1:04:42
1:04:51
of, of cases. And then it was stopped again. It was the, the weakened virus. It wasn't the,
529
1:04:52
1:05:04
the dead, dead virus. So they're trying all kinds of tricks to lure people into getting the, the
530
1:05:04
1:05:11
jobs. It doesn't work. It doesn't work anymore. And next week we're going to have an election.
531
1:05:11
1:05:17
So we'll see all that is wonderful. Soren, that is wonderful news. Everybody.
532
1:05:17
1:05:23
That is wonderful news that just please note that huge jab hesitancy in Israel. Soren,
533
1:05:23
1:05:31
thank you for sharing that. Yeah. Also, but I also urge Christine to use, to use this information and
534
1:05:33
1:05:40
try to put this in, in, in the mainstream media, especially this, this candle that came out
535
1:05:41
1:05:46
when, when the ministry of health was exposed, was exposed by trying to cover up the
536
1:05:47
1:05:54
severe side adverse effects. Because we've been trying, Aaron's theory already mentioned it and
537
1:05:55
1:06:02
but he's in the United States. I guess you need some support in, in, in Europe. Well about the,
538
1:06:02
1:06:12
the adverse side effects. I have been commenting on that for, oh gosh, I don't know even how long,
539
1:06:12
1:06:18
because you can, you can actually see it in the data. When you look at EMA, there is,
540
1:06:19
1:06:27
you look just the first seven months of the, the mRNA rollout, you had 20 times more severe
541
1:06:27
1:06:36
side effects and 23 more, 23 times more death than all other vaccines combined over the last
542
1:06:36
1:06:44
20 years. But you can immerse it down to people's ears. It does not resonate. They don't get it.
543
1:06:44
1:06:50
It's being dismissed as fake news. It's da da da, whatever. And I mean, I've been saying this for so
544
1:06:50
1:06:56
long in committee. I don't know how many times I've mentioned. No, no, but Christine, what I meant is
545
1:06:56
1:07:03
we exposed, there was a zoom meeting, a secret, not secret, but it was supposed to be confidential
546
1:07:03
1:07:13
zoom meeting of the Ministry of Health seniors and somebody leaked it out. And it's leaked to us.
547
1:07:14
1:07:19
Okay. Okay. So we can, you can use this one. Okay. To show, to show
548
1:07:19
1:07:28
Okay. Yeah. This is something to, this, this we are trying to resonate because, you know,
549
1:07:28
1:07:36
it's the rumble, all the, the small media. Okay. But we need to resonate it and to bring it at
550
1:07:36
1:07:44
least to one or two mainstream media channels. Yeah. If you could get me that, then I will get
551
1:07:44
1:07:50
I will, I will, I will try and because it's in Hebrew and I'll try to see if there is something
552
1:07:50
1:07:56
with the, with the English subtitles. Okay. Okay. Excellent. Okay. I'll, I'll send, I'll send the
553
1:07:56
1:08:04
Stephen Frost my email address and forward it to you. Actually, you know what? I could just put my
554
1:08:04
1:08:11
email address in the chat right here. Okay. Christine, if you're happy to do that. Yeah.
555
1:08:13
1:08:17
Okay. So that's right, Christine, if you put your email in the chat, Christine,
556
1:08:17
1:08:22
that's the easiest of people can send that. Soren, wonderful news. Well done. Great to have you here.
557
1:08:24
1:08:29
Thank you. So James Gorgusky, another warrior. We're all warriors on this call.
558
1:08:30
1:08:34
Um, Christine, it's an honor to meet you here. I'm going to dive right in. Everything you've done has
559
1:08:34
1:08:40
been fantastic. And we're on the same team. I would like to bring you some evidence. I'm going to put
560
1:08:40
1:08:46
my information in the chat and hopefully you'll be able to save it. And I obviously now have your
561
1:08:46
1:08:52
email, you have mine. Hopefully the communication will continue. There's, it's highly unlikely that
562
1:08:52
1:08:57
it's highly unlikely that you're aware of what I'm about to say. If you are, that's wonderful.
563
1:08:58
1:09:07
The WHO actually Tedros just recently created a review committee essentially to take over the
564
1:09:07
1:09:13
negotiations that are supposed to be done by the delegates through the working group for amendments
565
1:09:13
1:09:19
to the international health regulations. This week, as we speak, they're having quote unquote,
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1:09:19
1:09:29
private meetings to discuss 12, I'm sorry, 14 nations proposed amendments to the international
567
1:09:29
1:09:38
health regulations. Um, it's very clear that those documents are being kept hidden at the moment. Um,
568
1:09:39
1:09:48
one of the folks that I know in the UK just this morning got a FOIA request response saying,
569
1:09:48
1:09:51
yes, we have those documents. They do exist, but you can't have them.
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1:09:52
1:10:00
And the most important aspect of it for you, I believe, is that the Czech Republic submitted
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1:10:00
1:10:09
amendments on behalf of the EU. And so my request to you, if you would be so kind is to see if you
572
1:10:09
1:10:17
could obtain the documents that the WHO is obligated. And I have evidence that they clearly have
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1:10:18
1:10:27
taken the 14 proposals from the 14 nations and shared it with all 194 member nations. So,
574
1:10:27
1:10:35
you know, every nation in Europe, it's not that the EU votes in the WHO, but yet the Czech Republic
575
1:10:35
1:10:42
spoke on behalf of the EU nations. And it's like, well, you know, where were those secret negotiations
576
1:10:42
1:10:49
giving the Czech Republic the okay to speak on behalf of all of Europe? Um, those documents
577
1:10:49
1:10:59
are currently being, um, discussed in private by a appointed review committee that arguably
578
1:11:00
1:11:06
Tedros has stuck into the middle of the negotiating process to try to control it,
579
1:11:06
1:11:12
where it's supposed to be a technical advisory committee that after all of the negotiations
580
1:11:12
1:11:19
have happened, then the review committee would advise on the dotting of the I's and the crossing
581
1:11:19
1:11:26
of the T's and all that sort of stuff. It appears that there may be some conflict amongst the 14
582
1:11:26
1:11:33
nations, North versus South, you know, colonialistic behavior via, you know, they're all fighting for
583
1:11:33
1:11:38
equity. And so my simple request, and, you know, I'm at your service, you've got my contact
584
1:11:38
1:11:45
information, if there's anything I can do to help you. Yeah, absolutely. One of the contact people
585
1:11:45
1:11:52
was at, I know someone very well who was at the Global Health Summit, so she can give you a report
586
1:11:52
1:12:02
or your staff report on all of that. The amendments proposed by 14 nations should be publicly available.
587
1:12:02
1:12:07
And if you could help make them public, that would be spectacular. Okay. And Christine, can I ask you,
588
1:12:08
1:12:15
Christine, can it possibly be constitutional or whatever it's called for the EU, for the, for the
589
1:12:15
1:12:26
Czech Republic to be secretly dealing with this on behalf of the EU? Did you know that? No, I didn't
590
1:12:26
1:12:31
know that. That's what I was just going to come back to. So if I understood that correctly.
591
1:12:33
1:12:41
The Czech Republic submitted these amendments on behalf of all EU member states or on behalf of
592
1:12:41
1:12:50
only 14 member states? No, there were 14 countries from around the world, the Czech Republic,
593
1:12:50
1:12:55
and all of the documents are in what I sent you. And if anybody has any questions, by all means,
594
1:12:55
1:12:58
anybody can call me anytime. I'd be happy to explain it and clarify and give them a briefing,
595
1:12:58
1:13:09
all that stuff. Four of the 14 submitted on behalf of a group of nations. The Czech Republic
596
1:13:09
1:13:13
submitted on behalf of, I'm not blaming the Czech Republic for doing anything bad. It's just that,
597
1:13:13
1:13:21
you know, they're speaking for a group of nations. Yes. James, I am from the Czech Republic. Maybe I
598
1:13:21
1:13:27
can explain. It's because the Czech Republic is presiding the European Union at the moment.
599
1:13:27
1:13:32
That may very well be why they chose. Yeah, they have the presidency for six months.
600
1:13:33
1:13:39
So one would think that there was some discussion. That doesn't give us the opportunity to secret.
601
1:13:39
1:13:45
Well, I don't know whether it's in secret. Okay. But that's what I'm sorry. I think the point is
602
1:13:45
1:13:55
this. 14 amendments. That's what you said were being proposed for 14 proposals from 14 nations
603
1:13:55
1:14:02
with multiple articles probably being amended in each. Right. Okay. So maybe the number 14 is
604
1:14:02
1:14:13
coincidental. So what was happening in July with the world, the WHO World Summit, they were going
605
1:14:13
1:14:22
to discuss 14 amendments to the WHO treaties, but it failed because due to public pressure,
606
1:14:22
1:14:32
because I've been all over that WHO renegotiation of the treaties, the United States withdrew 12.
607
1:14:33
1:14:36
No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I've been, I was the person who revealed all that.
608
1:14:36
1:14:41
Please understand. This is not about the treaty at all. It's got nothing to do with the treaty.
609
1:14:41
1:14:47
Oh, okay. There are amendments, nothing to do with the treaty. That's a decoy in many ways. Okay.
610
1:14:47
1:14:51
And I was actually the person who dug up the stuff about the Biden amendments. That was 13.
611
1:14:52
1:15:00
Okay. These are amendments that are now being discussed this week by a secret newly formed
612
1:15:00
1:15:06
committee that stepped into the negotiating process in front of the working group for
613
1:15:06
1:15:11
amendments to the international health regulations, which are scheduled to meet in mid November.
614
1:15:11
1:15:15
I don't want to bore everybody with all the details. By all means, reach out to me at any
615
1:15:15
1:15:23
point in time. Yeah. Those documents absolutely exist. They have been shared by
616
1:15:23
1:15:30
Tedros and the WHO with all 194 member nations, and they will not make them public.
617
1:15:32
1:15:39
Okay. And as a member of parliament, if the Czech Republic, the EU parliament,
618
1:15:39
1:15:44
if the Czech Republic is speaking for the EU, I would have have to imagine that they didn't tell
619
1:15:44
1:15:53
you. Okay. I will definitely be in contact with you about this one. Thank you. Thank you. It's
620
1:15:53
1:15:58
an honor. Appreciate it. Yeah. That's what I need to get on. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Charles,
621
1:15:58
1:16:03
for the time. Appreciate it. Well done, James, on all the work that you're doing. James is a
622
1:16:03
1:16:08
wonderful resource for you, Christine. And like previous meetings, James, Christine, you know that
623
1:16:08
1:16:14
we are here. If you need something, please send an email to Steve and we'll get the message out.
624
1:16:14
1:16:20
Okay. So we're all here to, because you get swamped the same way that we do with that fire
625
1:16:20
1:16:26
hose of information. Yeah. If you need help on stuff, please ask. Christine, if you need experts,
626
1:16:27
1:16:31
just ask me and I'll tell you whether we've got anybody in the particular field you're looking for,
627
1:16:31
1:16:37
experts, or maybe you just want to be put in touch with maybe 10 people. I could do that as well.
628
1:16:38
1:16:43
Okay. 10 people of my choosing. And then I could just see whether you like the ones I
629
1:16:44
1:16:50
have. So I think I put you in touch with the Garnet inside. So that's it. That's good.
630
1:16:50
1:16:56
Do you get that email, Christine? I might have. I haven't reviewed it yet though.
631
1:16:57
1:17:02
Okay. I've introduced you to artificial Garnet, I think, but hopefully it's come to you.
632
1:17:03
1:17:10
Okay. And so Christine, James Rogusky is an absolute go-to person for your staff and you
633
1:17:10
1:17:18
on who matters. Okay. And the 12 of you. So he's depth of knowledge on who strategies is excellent.
634
1:17:18
1:17:23
I'm here to serve. So don't be afraid to reach out. Okay. Excellent. Thank you.
635
1:17:25
1:17:28
All right. Jeff Pilot from the UK. He's not a pilot.
636
1:17:30
1:17:36
Thanks, Charles. Thanks. I'm not a pilot, but I am a scientist in the UK. So that's a by way
637
1:17:36
1:17:42
of introduction, Christine. And like everyone else has said, great work that you're doing in
638
1:17:42
1:17:50
the European Parliament. So I'm currently deep, had my head quite deep in a lot of data
639
1:17:50
1:17:57
regarding the vaccine. I'll take your lead and we'll call it an injection because I'm going to,
640
1:17:57
1:18:04
we'll be in court in the foreseeable future, trying to prevent my kids having the second dose
641
1:18:04
1:18:11
of the Pfizer jab as the ex-wife wants them to be vaccinated. So that'll be quite interesting to see
642
1:18:11
1:18:18
how it goes. And, you know, it will be not just fighting for this, the second dose of the Pfizer
643
1:18:18
1:18:25
jab, but also any subsequent jabs. And I'll take your advice, Charles, that you gave, you know,
644
1:18:25
1:18:29
to ask the church to accuse themselves if they've been vaccinated. I don't know how
645
1:18:30
1:18:38
that will go, but it's a good point. Christine, I'm just stunned, you know, with the data.
646
1:18:39
1:18:48
And there is, you know, I just have to ask a question direct. Do you believe this is just
647
1:18:48
1:18:53
a case of corruption and power and control, or do you think there's a darker depopulation of gender
648
1:18:53
1:18:59
replay? Because the number of deaths, side effects, it's just horrifying.
649
1:19:01
1:19:07
Yeah, I know. To be honest, I do not have an answer for that question.
650
1:19:10
1:19:17
It seems as though, I mean, it's kind of like, you know, the pharma industry, like I told that,
651
1:19:18
1:19:25
that from, what was her name? I don't remember. I don't consider them to be stupid, you know,
652
1:19:25
1:19:34
so they must have known that this stuff is not working. And it might possibly even be harmful.
653
1:19:34
1:19:41
But at least they should have known that it's not doing anything, at least not what they promised
654
1:19:41
1:19:47
it would do. So as far as their motive is concerned, yeah, they just wanted to make
655
1:19:47
1:19:55
money, obviously. So but the point is, did the governments know? And they are not stupid either.
656
1:19:55
1:20:00
So they must have known something. I mean, and considering how close apparently,
657
1:20:01
1:20:07
from the line is with Borla. I really don't see how she could not have known.
658
1:20:08
1:20:13
And there is going to be other government members, they must have known something.
659
1:20:14
1:20:21
So I don't know if it's just limited to them being corrupted, and just wanting, you know,
660
1:20:21
1:20:28
to make money of or if there is a really, really devious and evil agenda behind this.
661
1:20:29
1:20:37
And some extent, it must be an evil agenda, because just deceiving the people, you know,
662
1:20:38
1:20:45
wasting all of his taxpayers monies, putting their life at risk, that is that is evil in and of itself.
663
1:20:47
1:20:53
But is it truly a depopulation agenda? I don't know. I really don't know.
664
1:20:54
1:20:59
Me too. And I talked to, you know, friends, and I say, I hate to even think that. I really hope
665
1:20:59
1:21:05
it's not. Because I myself, I work in, you know, the pharmaceutical industry, I design clinical
666
1:21:05
1:21:12
trials. And I know how robustly we do it. And the standards we have to meet. And then when I read
667
1:21:12
1:21:19
that Pfizer gets approval following, you know, a few, I don't know what you call it, kitchen
668
1:21:19
1:21:26
experiments on a rice mice or rats, you know, it's, I know, stunning to see what goes through the FDA
669
1:21:26
1:21:36
for these injections. Yeah. Yeah. But I mean, they're so intertwined, you know, just to see that
670
1:21:36
1:21:43
that EMER, the European medicine, the medicines agency is what funded 86% of their budget is funded
671
1:21:43
1:21:50
by pharmaceutical companies. Hello? That's never been allowed. I know, of course not.
672
1:21:51
1:21:58
I mean, they're basically funding the agency that approved that approves their vaccines.
673
1:21:59
1:22:05
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, as it turned a long time ago in the pharmaceutical industry, they,
674
1:22:05
1:22:11
I think the word is self policing, you know, the FDA, MHRA relied on the pharmaceutical companies
675
1:22:11
1:22:17
and self policing. And that's, that's great. If you've got reputable people doing that,
676
1:22:17
1:22:22
so listen, and the scientists do, but then when that data goes into the hands of the marketeers,
677
1:22:22
1:22:26
or, you know, a statistician that's asked to spin it in a certain way,
678
1:22:27
1:22:34
that self policing can easily be prompted. You already see that they, they, they have something
679
1:22:34
1:22:40
to hide. And you can tell just from them sitting in the committee, the way they answer the question,
680
1:22:41
1:22:47
the way they they swirl around the way, you know, they really feel really uncomfortable
681
1:22:47
1:22:52
having to answer those questions. And they're so concerned about, you know, choosing the right
682
1:22:52
1:22:58
words and not saying too much. And, you know, you can tell they are hiding something.
683
1:22:59
1:23:07
I agree Christine. Yeah. She was that Mrs. Small was absolutely terrified of the questions which
684
1:23:07
1:23:16
were coming, although she was trying to look calm. I know. There was this other, what company was
685
1:23:16
1:23:23
she from? Gosh, I forgot. That was the one I asked who lied that the pharmaceutical companies lie to
686
1:23:23
1:23:27
the government or the governments knew the truth and they lied to the people. I mean, the way she
687
1:23:27
1:23:37
answered my question, gosh, it hurt. It really hurt. She was stammering and stirring and you know,
688
1:23:37
1:23:44
who was that Christine? Was that small? No, no, that wasn't small. That was the committee before
689
1:23:44
1:23:52
Alexa Smith Klein. No, I've, what was the, what was the other pharmaceutical companies?
690
1:23:52
1:24:01
Oh, AstraZeneca you mean? Yeah. Her it was AstraZeneca. Right. Yeah. Well, if you get a chance,
691
1:24:01
1:24:09
just look at my videos. Yeah, it's terrible. Yeah. You're right. Because one of my good friends,
692
1:24:11
1:24:15
he has dinner quite a lot with one of the directors at Pfizer. I think she's a legal lady or something.
693
1:24:16
1:24:22
And he, you know, he asked her, he said, do you feel embarrassed? Yeah. And she said, yeah, you
694
1:24:22
1:24:28
know, a lot of us do. And I can't remember the age figure she put on it. But it was something like,
695
1:24:29
1:24:34
we don't believe anyone under the age of 30 or 40, I think it was 30, should be having this vaccine.
696
1:24:35
1:24:41
Yeah. Wow. Was that in evidence? No, no, no. This was around the dinner table.
697
1:24:42
1:24:49
He has her over for dinner quite a bit. You know, and he's. So why isn't she writing to her MP then?
698
1:24:52
1:24:57
I don't, I mean, you know, I think people want to protect their lives, you know, I think
699
1:24:58
1:25:02
people have got lives they want to. What is the point of protecting your life when everybody
700
1:25:02
1:25:09
around you is dying? I just don't get it. Honestly, I really don't. Neither do I. I don't know how these
701
1:25:09
1:25:14
people can look in the mirror. You know, it's not as if, you know, the side effect is, I don't know,
702
1:25:14
1:25:20
like a bad batch of coffee at Starbucks. No side effect. Yeah. People got any self-respect.
703
1:25:21
1:25:26
How on earth can you be happy if you have no self-respect? And if you don't,
704
1:25:27
1:25:35
but there's also the delusion factor. So I'm sorry, two things, two things, Jeff,
705
1:25:35
1:25:40
that's wonderful information. Everybody please remember Jeff has offered and Christine Jeff is
706
1:25:40
1:25:46
also a resource for you as is Craig Pardacouper, who will be asking a question shortly. But Jeff
707
1:25:46
1:25:52
and both Jeff and Craig have both offered their respective services to help you put data together
708
1:25:52
1:25:58
because these guys are great on data. Craig Pardacouper is a genius, Christine.
709
1:25:58
1:26:02
Yeah, but Jeff's pretty, Jeff's excellent too. Thanks Charles.
710
1:26:05
1:26:10
Jeff and Craig have both made that offer. Okay. So if you've got a case, you need data or Christine,
711
1:26:10
1:26:15
you want to do a presentation. These guys, you really get your staff to talk to them. So hey,
712
1:26:15
1:26:21
how do we present the information so it has an impact? That's number one. Number two, what Jeff
713
1:26:21
1:26:29
reminds me talking about videos, we've all seen the promos on the real Anthony Fauci movie made by
714
1:26:29
1:26:36
Jeff Hayes. Please everybody, it is worth, particularly this group, I watched it on the
715
1:26:36
1:26:43
weekend. It is a wonderful review of how all this came about and it will take you right back tonight
716
1:26:43
1:26:51
to 2020. And it's important. It's only an hour and 40 minutes. It will help. It just reminds us
717
1:26:51
1:26:57
of the journey that we've been on. And it will remind you of information that you know, it'll
718
1:26:57
1:27:02
bring it to the forefront and go, gosh, that's true. And I urge all of us to watch that movie.
719
1:27:02
1:27:08
It doesn't matter. I think, I don't know, it's probably going to cost $20 after the free viewing
720
1:27:08
1:27:15
to buy a copy. Well worth buying a copy and sharing it. Which one is it, Charles? Which one
721
1:27:15
1:27:20
are you talking about? It's the movie called the real Anthony Fauci movie. Oh yes, okay, based on
722
1:27:20
1:27:30
the book. Yes, very good. Yeah, it's very, very good. And it reminded me how I'm so into this
723
1:27:30
1:27:35
stuff that I had forgotten. That's the value of watching this one and a half hour movie while
724
1:27:35
1:27:39
you're having a glass of wine, Christine, and all of us. Jeff, can I ask you, are you in touch
725
1:27:39
1:27:49
with Sasha Latopova? No. Oh, you should be because she's got a hispy in the pharmaceutical
726
1:27:49
1:27:54
industry too, but she's absolutely brilliant. She works with Craig Bartekuper who's on the call.
727
1:27:56
1:28:03
Okay. So if you email me, Jeff, I'll put you in touch with Sasha. Okay, thank you. All right.
728
1:28:03
1:28:09
Thank you. Thank you, Jeff. Anna, our favourite lawyer from the UK, Christine. You've met before.
729
1:28:14
1:28:15
Anna, you're muted.
730
1:28:17
1:28:21
Sorry, yeah, my favourite's playing up there. That's why I haven't got the
731
1:28:21
1:28:28
picture on. First of all, Christine, thank you. I echo others. You're my absolute heroine.
732
1:28:28
1:28:35
I admire your work so much and your tenacity and your strength and courage, and I truly
733
1:28:35
1:28:42
appreciate it. So thank you. But the next question is, going back to what you were saying about this
734
1:28:42
1:28:49
commission proposals about 2023 and the fact they're going to reintroduce lockdowns and masking and
735
1:28:49
1:28:57
social distancing and the fact that they want to, you know, get everybody injected. How many of
736
1:28:57
1:29:08
these people are qualified lawyers who are in these meetings? You mean the COVID committee right
737
1:29:08
1:29:14
now? Yeah. When they're coming up with proposals, how many of them are qualified lawyers sitting in
738
1:29:14
1:29:22
those meetings? That was not done in the committee. This is a proposal, I was talking about an action
739
1:29:22
1:29:29
plan that was put out by the EU commission. Right. So same question. How many qualified
740
1:29:29
1:29:34
lawyers are in these meetings? I don't know. I have no idea. One of the things I'm finding,
741
1:29:34
1:29:42
Christine, is this basically. I'm sure this is the same for most EU countries.
742
1:29:43
1:29:48
Nobody in the UK has been taught law for generations at school. When they go into their job,
743
1:29:48
1:29:55
they're taught minuscule amounts of bits of law here and there. And it seems to me that the average
744
1:29:55
1:30:01
person doesn't take it upon themselves to educate themselves about the law. So in other words,
745
1:30:01
1:30:07
you've got all these people meeting and coming up with all these proposals and policies absolutely
746
1:30:07
1:30:13
clueless about the governing law. And so when they're there saying, oh, you know, we've got to
747
1:30:13
1:30:19
mandate, you know, forcibly injecting everyone, essentially, they don't seem to understand that
748
1:30:19
1:30:26
that amounts to a prohibited act of unlawful warfare, which invokes the right to self-defense
749
1:30:27
1:30:34
using reasonable force under the warfare conventions. So essentially, it seems to me that
750
1:30:34
1:30:40
what you've got is a bunch of non-lawyers coming up with these things that actually is a declaration
751
1:30:40
1:30:47
of war, which the people are hearing loud and clear as such, those of us who are awake,
752
1:30:47
1:30:55
to the extent that they are talking about civil war. Because if you come for someone
753
1:30:55
1:31:02
with a weapon in your hand, be it an injection, a knife or anything else, you absolutely have the
754
1:31:02
1:31:09
right to fight back. And if they're talking about entering into people's homes to get them injected,
755
1:31:09
1:31:14
the number of people I've heard who have said, if anyone even thinks about coming into my home,
756
1:31:14
1:31:21
they will be taken out. They will be killed. Right. Right. Now social media is full of
757
1:31:22
1:31:29
images and guillotines, ropes, you know, people are baying for justice and baying for blood.
758
1:31:29
1:31:35
And I think, well, this is this all could be sorted. If you actually had a bunch of lawyers
759
1:31:35
1:31:42
who knew the actual law, discussing these ideas and proposals and saying to the politicians or
760
1:31:42
1:31:47
the public health officials, don't you even think about doing that? It's a complete breach of the
761
1:31:47
1:31:55
law. That's kind of like what didn't happen now, did it? They were just talking about it. And I
762
1:31:55
1:32:02
mean, I remember, you know, the media, they were full of what they threatened to do to unvaccinated
763
1:32:02
1:32:11
people. You will not get treated in hospital. We'll kick you out of the healthcare system.
764
1:32:11
1:32:16
So if you should catch COVID, then you have to pay, you know, for it by yourself. I mean,
765
1:32:16
1:32:22
these were all threats. And yes, there were some talk about, you know, then we will force vaccinate
766
1:32:22
1:32:28
people. Yeah, there should be house visits and all. It was talk. It was just, but that's-
767
1:32:28
1:32:35
Sorry, Christine, it wasn't. In this country, it happened. People did go into their homes and,
768
1:32:35
1:32:40
you know, inject the vulnerable. And, you know, under the Coronavirus Act,
769
1:32:40
1:32:46
schedule 21 of it, they have the right to come into your home and take samples from you and etc.
770
1:32:46
1:32:53
Now, that act is unlawful. It's ultra-violet. They don't have the power to follow through on it.
771
1:32:53
1:32:59
So in that sense, it's a threat, but they've reportedly made it into law. And the thing is
772
1:32:59
1:33:05
that this is what they're trying to do. These people who are complete non-lawyers, total disregard
773
1:33:05
1:33:10
and disrespect and ignorance of the law and making up all this stuff. And because everyone else is
774
1:33:10
1:33:17
also clueless and lawless, they're getting away with it. Yeah, I know. But for us lawyers on the
775
1:33:17
1:33:24
sidelines, it is infuriating because, Christine, I'll say this one more thing. I'm on a bit of a
776
1:33:24
1:33:32
rant, sorry, but I have not yet met a single lawyer or a single doctor or a single soldier
777
1:33:32
1:33:39
who has actually read any of the Nuremberg judgments. Not a single one. Now, I have,
778
1:33:40
1:33:44
I've studied them extensively. I gave a presentation to this group, I think it was last week,
779
1:33:44
1:33:52
on the medical cases judgment. Because as you may know, I'm an army officer as well. So I have a
780
1:33:52
1:33:58
duty to uphold the law of armed conflict and to make sure everyone else is doing so. But when you
781
1:33:59
1:34:06
read those judgments, they absolutely govern what's been going on. But unless you've read
782
1:34:06
1:34:13
those judgments, you wouldn't understand the law and ethics that applied then and continues to apply
783
1:34:13
1:34:21
now, but has just been expanded on. Yeah, so that's where I cannot understand how, you know,
784
1:34:21
1:34:27
we the citizens are being made to suffer because whoever are making these decisions aren't, in fact,
785
1:34:27
1:34:32
lawyers. Where are the lawyers? Who's advising Ursula van der Leyen when she says we're going
786
1:34:32
1:34:38
to mandate vaccines? Who's told her that it's okay to say that? But Anna, the lawyers have been
787
1:34:38
1:34:44
pathetic in the UK too, and all over Europe and all over the world. In fact, you are the exception.
788
1:34:45
1:34:52
Well, I'm, I, the point is, the point is Ursula van der Leyen, for example, must have a lawyer
789
1:34:52
1:34:58
who is advising her on some of her statements, surely. So before she went out and said-
790
1:34:58
1:35:04
The lawyers in the EU, I think I'm right in saying Christine, they are anonymous and they have the
791
1:35:04
1:35:11
right to be anonymous. I don't know, is that right? They certainly were with the Data Protection Act,
792
1:35:11
1:35:18
which was, what was that, 2018, that law. What was it called? The data protection.
793
1:35:20
1:35:27
They had to change the whole internet, because of it. So those lawyers who drafted those laws,
794
1:35:27
1:35:33
that law, or whatever it's called, they were protected, their anonymity was protected.
795
1:35:34
1:35:38
GDPR. GDPR, yes, thank you very much. 2018, yes.
796
1:35:40
1:35:45
So the point is, Christine, we don't know, in other words, we don't know who the lawyers are
797
1:35:45
1:35:52
that are advising the likes of Ursula or the EU Commission. No, no. How do we find out? How do I,
798
1:35:52
1:35:58
for example, as a UK lawyer, get to speak to one of those lawyers about what the hell's going on?
799
1:35:58
1:36:03
You know what, I don't think you would be able to get that information, because they're not acting
800
1:36:03
1:36:13
as lawyers per se, they're staff. Yeah. You know, they were hired in their capacity to know the law,
801
1:36:14
1:36:18
but they are not acting as lawyers, so I don't think you have any,
802
1:36:19
1:36:23
you wouldn't get that information. In-house lawyers, I think they are, and they're like the
803
1:36:23
1:36:30
government's legal department. They used to be. Yeah, exactly. But it is like, yeah,
804
1:36:30
1:36:39
they work there, they're staff, you know. Sure. Thank you, Christine. I'm afraid the longer I do
805
1:36:39
1:36:45
my due diligence on this, the more despair I have, because I've met so many people in their
806
1:36:46
1:36:50
business. Anna, why don't you connect up with Christine as well? Yeah. Yes, we'd love to. I'd
807
1:36:50
1:36:56
love to. Sure, because we've seen the same thing in Germany. You know, there were a couple of
808
1:36:57
1:37:05
lawsuits against the mask mandates and all of that, or when they tried to forbid protests and
809
1:37:05
1:37:13
all of this. I mean, the judges, they basically, they did not do their job. Yeah. They completely
810
1:37:14
1:37:21
screwed up the very foundation on which they should pass judgment on. It's like, you know,
811
1:37:22
1:37:32
now the sheer possibility of something or someone getting possibly infected is enough to shut down
812
1:37:32
1:37:39
an entire protest. Yeah. It's ridiculous. It is ridiculous, but it happens. But I will say this,
813
1:37:39
1:37:44
though, that I'm getting increasingly frustrated and annoyed with people when they sort of say,
814
1:37:44
1:37:50
oh, well, you know, everyone else should be sorting this out. When in fact, if everyone actually just
815
1:37:50
1:37:54
read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the European Convention on Human Rights, they
816
1:37:54
1:37:59
actually read it, that none of this would be happening, because each citizen would be perfectly
817
1:37:59
1:38:05
capable of citing and upholding their human rights, rather than expecting one judge to make a decision,
818
1:38:05
1:38:11
which nobody reads anyway. Nobody reads the judgments. Yeah, but see what they're doing.
819
1:38:11
1:38:17
They're redefining everything. So, you know, fundamental rights are now privileges.
820
1:38:18
1:38:21
And people just- But they can't do that because each human rights-
821
1:38:21
1:38:24
No, of course they can do this. But each member state has actually given an
822
1:38:24
1:38:30
undertaking in those human rights instruments to promote respect and uphold. So they can't
823
1:38:30
1:38:35
derogate from those and then diminish it to a privilege. Who the hell do these people think
824
1:38:35
1:38:42
they are? I know, but once again, once you've told people often enough that it's the government
825
1:38:42
1:38:47
that decides what fundamental rights you can exercise at this moment, then-
826
1:38:47
1:38:51
No, that's not true, though. But that's not true, you see. But that's because they're ignorant of
827
1:38:51
1:38:55
the law. And this is one of the problems. You know, that people are telling each other all
828
1:38:55
1:39:01
these nonsense statements. Exactly. But the people started to believe it.
829
1:39:02
1:39:08
So now they're on the mindset is, well, if the government tells me I can't leave my house because
830
1:39:08
1:39:14
I'm a threat for public health, then yeah, they no longer consider leaving their house as their
831
1:39:14
1:39:19
fundamental right. That's the problem. Well, what I'm doing here, Christine, is I've been
832
1:39:19
1:39:23
helping people understand their fundamental rights. So I just gave a talk last day, which
833
1:39:23
1:39:27
I'll share with the group, where I go through the history of our rights here in the UK,
834
1:39:27
1:39:33
which was many jurisdictions derive their fundamental rights from our jurisdiction.
835
1:39:33
1:39:38
And people realize that you don't get a group of bureaucrats at one point in time,
836
1:39:38
1:39:43
you can give or take rights. I'm 100%.
837
1:39:45
1:39:52
So George Orwell was talking about words and that you can't have a conversation
838
1:39:52
1:39:57
if you haven't got the words to express the ideas. And exactly the same thing. I've just thought of
839
1:39:57
1:40:04
it now, actually, if you've got people who've got no idea what the law is, including the legislators,
840
1:40:05
1:40:10
then they have conversations which you might as well not have. And actually, you could argue,
841
1:40:10
1:40:16
make things 10 times worse with total confusion with everybody thinking that they can put forward
842
1:40:16
1:40:21
their point of view and nobody knows what the hell they're talking about. Exactly. Exactly.
843
1:40:21
1:40:27
Which is why I bang on about the law, because the law hasn't been written by any of us. It's
844
1:40:27
1:40:34
not our opinion. It says what it says. But if you haven't actually read what it actually says,
845
1:40:34
1:40:40
then everybody's just expressing an opinion. It's not what the law actually says.
846
1:40:41
1:40:50
Yeah. Even if you have read it, then arguably people wouldn't be able to remember 10% of what
847
1:40:50
1:40:55
they've read. Yeah. But the thing is that the human rights instruments are dead easy to read.
848
1:40:55
1:41:00
They're written in plain English. They're not in complicated legalese. They're in very short
849
1:41:00
1:41:05
paragraphs. Most people have got a printer or they can access a printer. So I've said to people,
850
1:41:05
1:41:11
look, print off the key relevant articles, right? And put them in your handbag or pocket and cite
851
1:41:11
1:41:15
them from that. You don't even have to remember them. You know, the Magna Carta, when it was first
852
1:41:16
1:41:22
published, had to be published everywhere, right? So that people could actually cite it. They
853
1:41:22
1:41:27
didn't have to remember it. Well, even better than that, Anna, we can buy you a
854
1:41:28
1:41:34
20 t-shirts, say, with those points on them and you can walk around London.
855
1:41:34
1:41:38
Yeah, that's another idea. Leaflets, leaflets with all the links.
856
1:41:39
1:41:48
Great. Yeah. All right. All right. On we go. Now, sometimes people make the comment,
857
1:41:49
1:41:55
well, you know, what are we achieving? Well, that's like saying to a soldier who shoots in a war in
858
1:41:55
1:42:01
World War II, one soldier shoots another and says, well, what did that achieve? You know, and so each
859
1:42:01
1:42:08
step that we take matters. That's the point. Each time Christine speaks, it matters. Each time Anna
860
1:42:08
1:42:14
speaks, it matters. And none of us know the precise impact of what each one of us is doing.
861
1:42:14
1:42:20
That's why we have to keep doing what we're doing. You just don't know. Yeah, absolutely.
862
1:42:22
1:42:27
All right. Maverick, who lives in Canada, who's gone back home to France and is in France today,
863
1:42:27
1:42:35
Christine? Mrs Anderson, everybody. Nice to see you all again. I arrived in one piece,
864
1:42:36
1:42:42
in case you were wondering. And my father is out of trouble for those who knew. Mrs Anderson,
865
1:42:42
1:42:50
I noticed you a couple of times now. I've seen footage of you over the internet and a couple of
866
1:42:50
1:42:57
other deputies. And I'm pretty, pretty proud of you to see that we actually have some people still
867
1:42:57
1:43:03
in the government that are able to put their integrity before their careers. And that means
868
1:43:03
1:43:09
a lot to me, including, if I can mention him, Christian Therese, who, by the way, is doing a
869
1:43:09
1:43:14
great job, as you do, of releasing videos in English. So I have three little questions,
870
1:43:14
1:43:20
which one you already answered partially. So I'm just going to go very quickly through with it.
871
1:43:21
1:43:28
I've noticed that down. So yeah, you've been from Germany, representing Germany.
872
1:43:29
1:43:36
Are you, you happen to be aware of any police investigation on Ursula von der Leyen and Albert
873
1:43:36
1:43:44
Buller by the, over there, it's called the Bundespolizei, which is federal police. And if so,
874
1:43:44
1:43:50
I mean, maybe, maybe you know about it. That was my first question.
875
1:43:52
1:43:57
No, I'm not aware of any investigation, investigation from the Bundespolizei on
876
1:43:58
1:44:10
von der Leyen and Buller. All I know is about the EU state district attorney. She, or they open an
877
1:44:10
1:44:19
investigation on von der Leyen on the EU commission. Thank you. My second point,
878
1:44:21
1:44:26
where at this point, where the damage is done already, pretty much all across the world,
879
1:44:26
1:44:34
if you had any wishes, any wish would be granted to you. What is it that you will be awaiting
880
1:44:34
1:44:42
from the people in Europe? From the people in Europe? Yeah, European population.
881
1:44:45
1:44:53
I would just wish they'd wake up and they would stop trusting their governments. And they would
882
1:44:53
1:45:00
pretty much become what I always thought to be, you know, what democratic or citizens
883
1:45:01
1:45:09
democracies do, question their government and be critical of things going around them and not just,
884
1:45:09
1:45:21
you know, I don't know, follow and do whatever they're told. And yeah, what I, I guess what I
885
1:45:22
1:45:32
hope most for is that people would not start ratting out their neighbors and pretty much denounce
886
1:45:32
1:45:38
them and yeah, check up on them. Because there is, you know, some deadly virus going around,
887
1:45:38
1:45:46
you aren't supposed to invite guests to your house and stuff like that. So yeah, basically pretty much
888
1:45:47
1:45:56
things that are going on and are known to dictatorships. I really wish people would stop
889
1:45:56
1:46:05
doing that. Okay. Thank you. And if I, if I may say the, unfortunately, the history of both of
890
1:46:05
1:46:14
our countries has left many marks as far as rattling people out in that regard. And that's
891
1:46:14
1:46:22
unfortunate. Our government, even when I was part of the forces, and I've seen it firsthand under
892
1:46:22
1:46:31
the uniform, we did a great job at keeping the population divided and telling on one another.
893
1:46:32
1:46:37
My last and third point, I've reached out personally a couple of times to Christian
894
1:46:37
1:46:44
Teres without success. I know he's very busy, so no hard feelings there. You can tell Maverick said
895
1:46:44
1:46:51
hi. You answered this question and this point partially because I already have your contact.
896
1:46:51
1:47:00
And I have a document here that may actually interest you. Christian Teres mentioned recently
897
1:47:01
1:47:12
that the agreements started in 2017 between Moderna, Therapeutics and I don't know if he was
898
1:47:12
1:47:17
talking about the European Commission or the US government. However, I have here a document,
899
1:47:17
1:47:25
which is a confidential disclosure agreement from 2015. Would you like to hear what it is about?
900
1:47:25
1:47:33
Yes. In five lines. Yeah. Confidentially information disclosed under this agreement
901
1:47:33
1:47:41
is described as for the NIAID, which is National Institutes of Allergy and Infection
902
1:47:41
1:47:53
Diseases or DISEs, depending on which side you're on. For the NIAIDs, proprietary information and
903
1:47:53
1:48:04
data relating to the development of vaccine for HIV, influenza, Ebola, MERS and development of
904
1:48:04
1:48:14
broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies for preventative and therapeutic use. I said neutralizing.
905
1:48:15
1:48:22
Collaborator Moderna's proprietary and confidential information related to design and manufacture of
906
1:48:22
1:48:30
a messenger RNA platform and messenger RNA construct for treatment and prevention of disease.
907
1:48:30
1:48:41
And this is not 2017. It is 2050. There's about 166 pages. It took me four hours during my flight
908
1:48:41
1:48:47
from Toronto to here France to read it. If you're interested, you're more than welcome to have it.
909
1:48:47
1:48:54
It fell off a truck somewhere. I fell off a truck somewhere. Oh gosh. I love documents falling off trucks.
910
1:48:55
1:49:02
Yeah. The last one that I may send you as well. I think you have it. It's also confidential.
911
1:49:02
1:49:11
It's cumulative analysis of post-authorization adverse event report of PF07302048 BNT, which is
912
1:49:11
1:49:19
Standforce BioNTech 162B2 received throughout February 2021. So the pages that everybody was
913
1:49:19
1:49:23
looking at on the internet with the nine pages a side effect, that's all nice and dandy.
914
1:49:24
1:49:31
I like to see the first part of the document, including their, what they call a conclusion,
915
1:49:33
1:49:39
which is nothing about a conclusion for me. So if you want that as well, which explains the nine
916
1:49:39
1:49:47
pages of, excuse me, bullshit that is at the end, you can have it as well. And I think you
917
1:49:47
1:49:55
should show this to Christian Therese because the last ones that he received were redacted.
918
1:49:55
1:50:05
I have them not redacted. Okay. Excellent. Yeah. If you could send them to me, that would be really
919
1:50:05
1:50:12
great. I don't know what's going on with Christian Therese. I've been trying to get a hold of him
920
1:50:12
1:50:21
since last night to trying to get him on here. But I phoned his staff and even they didn't know
921
1:50:21
1:50:26
where he was and how to reach him. So I don't know what's going on with him. But that's all good. I
922
1:50:26
1:50:32
consider that you represent him since you guys are on the same team. Right. Yeah. But yeah,
923
1:50:32
1:50:35
I really appreciate if you could send that to me. Thank you. Yes, I will. Definitely.
924
1:50:36
1:50:42
Thank you so much. Thank you, Christina. Great work Maverick. Thank you. Thank you. Wonderful.
925
1:50:43
1:50:54
All right. Craig Pardigupa. You muted Craig. Craig's in Africa somewhere. We don't know his
926
1:50:54
1:51:02
country. I'm in a good country at the moment. Is Tanzania. Very good.
927
1:51:07
1:51:13
It was mentioned a bit earlier about Israel, the studies coming out of Israel regarding the
928
1:51:13
1:51:20
commission that was set up by the Israeli government to investigate the side effects
929
1:51:20
1:51:29
of the vaccines. And they found that 50% of the reported side effects lasted longer than six months.
930
1:51:30
1:51:38
So that means that the side effects were surprisingly persistent, which means in a takeaway
931
1:51:38
1:51:43
for the public that when people consider the vaccine, they've been told that they only last
932
1:51:43
1:51:53
maybe a few days. And they're not told that a large percentage of the side effects last more
933
1:51:53
1:52:00
than six months, which would obviously lead to people choosing not to have the vaccines,
934
1:52:00
1:52:04
because they'd realize that they would lose their job if you're sick for six months.
935
1:52:05
1:52:09
And no, there's no employer that could tolerate that because it would destroy their business.
936
1:52:10
1:52:17
So by emphasizing it's a new angle, because everyone's heard of side effects, but people are
937
1:52:17
1:52:24
just unaware of how long they last. So effectively, by pushing the persistence of adverse effects,
938
1:52:28
1:52:35
it would be a really good sound bite to give the message to people that taking the vaccine is not
939
1:52:36
1:52:44
a way to keep your job. It's a way to lose your job. It's not a case of no jab, no job. It's a
940
1:52:44
1:52:51
case of jab, no job. So I think it's a really interesting thing. And I've put a link in the
941
1:52:51
1:53:01
chat to the study, which I summarized in a PDF. So it's very bullet pointed, so you'd find it
942
1:53:01
1:53:12
easy to consume. And that was for Israel. You may not be aware of the...
943
1:53:14
1:53:22
I did a similar report for Belgium. Belgium, it's really interesting, the adverse effects in Belgium.
944
1:53:24
1:53:30
A huge percentage of the reports are disabilities. Comparing it to the UK, for example,
945
1:53:31
1:53:41
in the UK, 21% of the reports resulted in a disability. Whereas in Belgium,
946
1:53:42
1:53:48
93%, it was like an extreme number of disabilities in one country.
947
1:53:49
1:53:58
And it could again be used as a way of waking people up. So I can send you a link on that too.
948
1:53:58
1:54:09
So just so you know, Christine, Craig founded the famous website, How Bad Is My Batch?
949
1:54:10
1:54:18
So he's been looking at batches all over the world. And from his findings, we learned months ago
950
1:54:18
1:54:25
that there was... I think Ryan Offormik still holds up view that there's... and
951
1:54:25
1:54:30
Mike Eden, do they still hold up view, Craig, that you had proved intent to commit
952
1:54:31
1:54:38
crime? Well, intent to commit was fairly obvious since about February, because
953
1:54:40
1:54:46
the information about adverse effects was pretty obvious. I think by February,
954
1:54:48
1:54:53
more than a thousand people had died. And there were something like 42,000
955
1:54:56
1:55:03
adverse effects. And they knew that the vaccines were bad then, but they still didn't stop.
956
1:55:03
1:55:08
So then after that point, they knew. And anything after that was intentional.
957
1:55:13
1:55:20
Yeah, I mean, the batches do vary in toxicity.
958
1:55:20
1:55:23
The other thing I'd like to mention,
959
1:55:25
1:55:29
I would like to ask you, Christine, if people are waking up more in Europe.
960
1:55:29
1:55:37
In England, we have 50% of the population now rejecting the third vaccine, the third dose.
961
1:55:37
1:55:46
I think it was something like 70% took the first and second doses, but it's gone down another 20%.
962
1:55:46
1:55:51
So it's 50% now. So it's a 50-50 split in the population. And would you say that applies
963
1:55:51
1:56:01
through Europe? For Europe, I can't say. For Germany, I can say, though. In Germany,
964
1:56:01
1:56:06
there is... out of 83 million, there is still 18 million people completely unvaccinated.
965
1:56:07
1:56:12
And from all I can say, they will remain unvaccinated.
966
1:56:13
1:56:19
And yes, the uptake of now we're up to the fourth booster, I think,
967
1:56:20
1:56:27
that had dropped dramatically. At the third, that was still way up there in the 60s, I would say,
968
1:56:27
1:56:37
60%, a little more maybe. The fourth booster, now people were not taking it. It dropped like
969
1:56:38
1:56:45
way to 30% maybe. And now they're talking about a fifth one. And well, there is a
970
1:56:47
1:56:52
small percentage, they still believe in the whole shebang and they will get the sixth and the seventh.
971
1:56:52
1:57:00
They get the hundredth booster they have already. But no, the uptake here is very limited to now.
972
1:57:00
1:57:07
Now the uptake here is very limited to now. And I basically see the same thing happening
973
1:57:07
1:57:19
as you did in England. Thank you. Can I just... if Anna de Bruyce is still online, I'd just like to say
974
1:57:20
1:57:28
that regarding the need to educate about the law, which would produce greater
975
1:57:30
1:57:35
give people greater confidence in standing up for themselves, I would like to create...
976
1:57:37
1:57:49
to put the laws onto my website in a clear and distinct format so people can know what the laws
977
1:57:49
1:57:59
are. And currently, I get about 100,000 visitors a day. So that means that the laws will be
978
1:58:00
1:58:08
more well known, which would then strengthen people's ability to resist the infringement of
979
1:58:08
1:58:17
their rights. So I'll be happy to work with Anna de Bruyce to do that. And it would be like a
980
1:58:18
1:58:25
large section on the website devoted to clearly and distinctly laying out the principles of law
981
1:58:25
1:58:32
so that people can claim those rights and know how to act on them. Because one of the things
982
1:58:32
1:58:40
Anna was saying was that people just cave in and submit to whatever the government mandates based
983
1:58:40
1:58:46
on authority. But when they know the law, they'll no longer need authority because they'll be experts
984
1:58:46
1:58:54
in their own rights. And also the idea that people are intimidated by force. And when they see loads
985
1:58:54
1:59:02
of police charging into protests, they think that that is an exercise of law. But in fact,
986
1:59:03
1:59:09
being arrested, once you end up in a court of law, I would imagine that you'd have quite strong
987
1:59:09
1:59:25
a case to just have your cause, have the charges dismissed if you, for example,
988
1:59:25
1:59:30
had your right, knew your rights. So I think basically the real arena of the law is the court
989
1:59:31
1:59:38
rather than the street. And whilst the police might try to enforce the law, the most they can do is
990
1:59:39
1:59:45
put you into court when you'd win. So I think it's like a really good thing. I'd like to work with
991
1:59:45
1:59:57
Anna to do that because I think the laws can be made really crystal clear. It can be simplified
992
1:59:57
2:00:03
and made so clear and powerful. I think that's what I'd like to do. One of those that.
993
2:00:04
2:00:09
Well, I'd love to do that with Craig. And that's music to my ears. And thank you so much because
994
2:00:09
2:00:15
I've been deplatformed. And so, you know, I've only got a few thousand followers on my telegram
995
2:00:15
2:00:21
channel now because I've had to come off Twitter and Facebook, et cetera. And so, yes, as much
996
2:00:21
2:00:27
exposure as possible, because, you know, when I do teach people the laws in these sort of conferences
997
2:00:27
2:00:34
and workshops and stuff, I literally see them grow in front of me, you know, in confidence and
998
2:00:34
2:00:40
height and demeanor. And they say it's so empowering and has been incredibly helpful. You know,
999
2:00:41
2:00:47
I've had phone calls from people in the Caribbean, for example, who have said they couldn't access a
1000
2:00:47
2:00:56
lawyer, but they use my material to win their employment battles. So, you know, if my hope is
1001
2:00:57
2:01:01
to make the law as accessible for everyone as possible, because the vast majority of people
1002
2:01:01
2:01:07
can't afford to pay a lawyer to explain the law to them. So it's an access to justice issue.
1003
2:01:07
2:01:12
And it's in all our interests that, you know, as many of us as possible know how to uphold the law.
1004
2:01:12
2:01:17
So we minimize the harm that we're causing to each other. Wonderful. Wonderful. Craig,
1005
2:01:17
2:01:22
can you put your website? Can I just comment on that? Because I just thought of something,
1006
2:01:22
2:01:25
you know, when you're speaking about the law, we had this happening in Germany
1007
2:01:27
2:01:34
during various protests. And the people, they were literally not doing anything but standing there
1008
2:01:34
2:01:41
and holding a copy of the German Kundgesetz, the German Constitution. That's all they were doing.
1009
2:01:42
2:01:45
But you know what happened? They got arrested by the police.
1010
2:01:45
2:01:48
Because the police aren't lawyers either.
1011
2:01:49
2:01:58
I know. But the point is, that's what the people see. And that's intimidation, pure intimidation.
1012
2:01:59
2:02:06
It is not about the law at this point. It is intimidation. It is showing the masses,
1013
2:02:07
2:02:12
oh, if you stand there and you flash your Kundgesetz in my face, that's what's going to
1014
2:02:12
2:02:17
happen to you. And the next time around, you know, it's going to be only what, not five people,
1015
2:02:17
2:02:24
only two standing there with the Constitution, but thousands of people see it yet again. And these
1016
2:02:24
2:02:29
pictures are being flashed all over the news. And you know, the next time there isn't going to be
1017
2:02:29
2:02:34
10,000s of people protesting, it's only going to be five and then it's going to be 2000. And that's
1018
2:02:34
2:02:41
how they do this. So I fully appreciate, you know, yes, we do have to educate people on the law.
1019
2:02:41
2:02:50
But as long as we do not find any mechanism to break the official narrative, and yeah,
1020
2:02:51
2:02:56
break the cycle of intimidation, which is really totalitarian, what they're doing,
1021
2:02:58
2:03:05
we won't stand a chance. I agree. But what Craig was just saying, I think it was Craig,
1022
2:03:06
2:03:10
about the fact that, you know, so you get arrested, you get intimidated, you get arrested,
1023
2:03:10
2:03:15
you get roughed up a bit, and ultimately you end up in court winning. So what have the police
1024
2:03:15
2:03:21
officers done, right? So people need to put on their big man pants and realise that, you know,
1025
2:03:21
2:03:27
these people in uniform acting as the bullies in the playground, that's all they are. That's all
1026
2:03:27
2:03:30
they are. They're not going to go around killing everyone. They're not even going to go around
1027
2:03:30
2:03:34
seriously beating up everyone. So all they're going to do is shout and get in your face and
1028
2:03:34
2:03:41
maybe rough handle you. I mean, is that really the worst? Is that the worst? And if that is the worst,
1029
2:03:41
2:03:46
then really can't people stand up to that? And I think, you know, what we've done in the UK is we
1030
2:03:46
2:03:52
veterans have gone out to the local communities and we've supported them in going to confront the
1031
2:03:52
2:03:58
police and going to the hospitals and going etc. to show the civilians how you hold the line against
1032
2:03:58
2:04:05
an armed person, but don't get stood down. And if that means being arrested, then fine,
1033
2:04:05
2:04:09
go through the process. Once you're in the court, once you're in the police cells,
1034
2:04:09
2:04:14
you can chew their ears off. And what we found was that the vets who were brave enough to go through
1035
2:04:14
2:04:19
that whole process had an amazing time in the police station, because a lot of the people were
1036
2:04:19
2:04:23
saying, you know, well done, and you know, we need more of you to sign up. And we're in a difficult
1037
2:04:23
2:04:29
position because unless more of you stand up, you know, there's not a lot we can do. Right?
1038
2:04:29
2:04:37
Right. I totally agree. Like I said, the point is just, you know, you will always only have
1039
2:04:37
2:04:44
a very small minority of people that will stand up no matter what. And even if they get arrested,
1040
2:04:44
2:04:51
you know, I'm kind of like that. So what let them? But the vast majority, however, unfortunately,
1041
2:04:51
2:04:57
they just want to get by somehow. And they don't realize. I agree. I agree. But also the feedback
1042
2:04:57
2:05:05
I get is that a lot of people want to do more, but they don't know how. They're avidly watching the
1043
2:05:05
2:05:10
people who are on the front line doing these things. And then they're getting the courage up
1044
2:05:10
2:05:16
and the protocols and the templates, get a gang together and they do it as well. So it's a ripple
1045
2:05:16
2:05:23
effect. Right. So we don't need everybody. We only need a core group of people to show how everyone
1046
2:05:23
2:05:29
else how to do it, how to stay calm, which I can't always do, I have to confess. But you know, how
1047
2:05:29
2:05:34
to cite the law correctly, how to stand your ground if they do put you in a police wagon,
1048
2:05:34
2:05:39
how to make the most of being then able to chew the ears off of the police and get as many of them
1049
2:05:39
2:05:44
onside, etc. So you see it as a great big game of chess, and it's no longer something to be scared
1050
2:05:44
2:05:53
of. Yeah, that's how we need to get people to think, I think, personally. Yeah, I totally agree
1051
2:05:53
2:06:01
with you on that. When I look at the situation in law, I can see that obviously there's employment
1052
2:06:01
2:06:08
rights which are being infringed. There are doctors rules and regulations such as do no harm to being
1053
2:06:08
2:06:14
infringed. Probably also there's quite a few doctors regulations that are being infringed.
1054
2:06:14
2:06:23
There's GDPR being infringed because people's, you know, they're bio biometrically taking people's
1055
2:06:23
2:06:28
details and putting them into databases so that they can control payments. And the civil rights
1056
2:06:28
2:06:34
being infringed. There's so many. It's interesting that on each of these levels, Anna, we could
1057
2:06:34
2:06:43
formulate an approach which would then be be a tool for people to use in different situations,
1058
2:06:43
2:06:49
like whether it's GDPR, employment, dealing with doctors who want to vaccinate you,
1059
2:06:50
2:06:57
you know, children's rights. Each of these things is like has a body of simple principles associated
1060
2:06:57
2:07:02
with it and giving people those tools would make them very much stronger in each of those situations.
1061
2:07:03
2:07:07
Exactly my aim. And what I've done, sorry to interject because I'm getting really excited
1062
2:07:07
2:07:14
at your enthusiasm and your willingness to collaborate, is that I've done what I've called
1063
2:07:14
2:07:20
the applicable legal framework to the COVID-19 pandemic for want of a better title. And essentially
1064
2:07:20
2:07:26
I've set out obviously its UK perspective. So, you know, that we'd have to get a team of international
1065
2:07:26
2:07:32
lawyers to put together their country's stuff. But, you know, from the UK's perspective, currently
1066
2:07:32
2:07:38
it runs to about 400 pages thus far. And it sets out all the laws that I've been able to identify
1067
2:07:38
2:07:45
covering exactly all those different areas. Right. Now the idea of that document, whilst it's vast,
1068
2:07:45
2:07:49
is that people can cherry pick the bits of law out of that that apply to their situation.
1069
2:07:49
2:07:56
So it's a compendium, if you like. It needs more work and an index and, you know, links, etc. So
1070
2:07:56
2:08:01
I'd be very grateful for some help on it because I've been trying to find people who can help on it.
1071
2:08:01
2:08:05
But I've also, I'm in the middle of drafting because we hope to present it to the police this
1072
2:08:05
2:08:14
weekend, a formal request for an investigation into the crimes that I'm alleging. Now the war
1073
2:08:14
2:08:22
crimes team of the Metropolitan Police, the SO15 team, should be investigating these crimes, right,
1074
2:08:22
2:08:30
because they include genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity. But I've listed around 35 crimes
1075
2:08:30
2:08:36
and breaches of human rights violations. And what I've done is I've made the allegation of,
1076
2:08:36
2:08:41
you know, which crime it is. So conspiracy to commit murder, for example, gross negligence,
1077
2:08:41
2:08:48
manslaughter. Then I've cited the governing statute. I'm also doing the case law and any common law
1078
2:08:48
2:08:54
that applies and any international law that applies. Again, so that anyone could take that
1079
2:08:54
2:09:02
to their local police or to, you know, whoever with the right law being cited. Because when you
1080
2:09:02
2:09:08
watch so many people going into the police station, onto the vaccine clinics, it's so frustrating
1081
2:09:08
2:09:14
because you've got people, you know, the truth is, citing the law incorrectly and, you know,
1082
2:09:14
2:09:20
halfheartedly and unable to follow through with proper submissions. And then you've got these
1083
2:09:20
2:09:25
police who I now know only spend 16 weeks at policing college and goodness knows how little
1084
2:09:25
2:09:32
of that is devoted to the law, also arguing points of law that they are also clearly clueless about.
1085
2:09:32
2:09:35
And of course, the public are watching that thinking, well, some of these people must be
1086
2:09:35
2:09:42
citing the law correctly. And none of them are. And so everyone's absolutely hopelessly clueless
1087
2:09:42
2:09:47
about what really is going on with the law. And that includes the police and the military as well,
1088
2:09:47
2:09:54
and the air force, because these people are being literally ordered to take vaccines which are
1089
2:09:54
2:10:03
crippling them. And if we can bring the military and the other forces onto our side by protecting
1090
2:10:03
2:10:09
them through giving them the principles of law, which actually defend them, then we've all,
1091
2:10:10
2:10:16
we'll win their hearts and they will defend us when the time comes instead of trampling us.
1092
2:10:16
2:10:22
So I think it's really important to give all these groups, especially in a sense,
1093
2:10:22
2:10:29
the military and the police and the air force, the actual real laws to defend them.
1094
2:10:29
2:10:33
Yeah, exactly that. And I'm working with a great team of veterans. And in fact,
1095
2:10:33
2:10:37
last night at one o'clock in the morning, we were finalizing our conversation about next steps,
1096
2:10:38
2:10:44
which was precisely that, that, you know, as a team of veterans who are recognizing these acts
1097
2:10:44
2:10:49
as prohibited acts of unlawful warfare, we have a duty to uphold the law of warfare.
1098
2:10:50
2:10:55
And so we must, you know, collaborate. We've been collaborating, obviously, all this time,
1099
2:10:55
2:10:59
but, you know, people are finally now really wanting to do something because their loved
1100
2:10:59
2:11:03
ones being affected, you know, it's been a lot of talk and not enough action.
1101
2:11:04
2:11:06
They're all stuck in a cult. That's why.
1102
2:11:06
2:11:10
Well, most of these people are retired and thankfully they're senior,
1103
2:11:10
2:11:12
you know, so these are people in their 50s.
1104
2:11:12
2:11:13
They're in a cult too.
1105
2:11:13
2:11:17
No, no, no. But I mean, they've left the military for some of them for quite some time,
1106
2:11:17
2:11:20
some of them for most of their lives, you know, they were in it when they were much younger.
1107
2:11:21
2:11:26
So they've been a lot of them are being out for quite a long time.
1108
2:11:26
2:11:33
All right, we're gonna move on. We've got only 15, 17 minutes. Craig, can you put your website,
1109
2:11:33
2:11:37
please? Anna and Craig will liaise, Craig, your website so that we can all get the benefit of
1110
2:11:37
2:11:40
sharing that as well. And well done.
1111
2:11:40
2:11:43
Well done, Anna and Craig. I'll pass the email to Christine.
1112
2:11:45
2:11:49
Excellent. Well done, Anna and Craig. James, and then Janet.
1113
2:11:51
2:11:56
I'll be as brief as I can. When I raised my hand, I was going to ask a question or say some stuff
1114
2:11:56
2:12:01
about the previous topic. But since Craig and Anna had that conversation, I just put all my
1115
2:12:01
2:12:07
information again in the chat. Please reach out to me. Absolutely want to work with you on that,
1116
2:12:07
2:12:13
as well as taking back the language. So thanks for that conversation. Please get in touch with me.
1117
2:12:15
2:12:21
Christine, the news coming out of Europe for the last maybe two weeks or however long it's been
1118
2:12:21
2:12:27
about this whole thing with Pfizer, and oh my goodness, you know, transmission and all that.
1119
2:12:28
2:12:33
Probably many of the people here are already going to know what I'm about to say, but I'm
1120
2:12:33
2:12:40
going to try to condense it so that it is something that the average person could repeat.
1121
2:12:43
2:12:52
Anybody who actually read the publicly available Pfizer clinical trial documents
1122
2:12:53
2:13:03
that were used by the FDA would have known in December of 2020 that the clinical trial
1123
2:13:03
2:13:10
endpoints did not study death, did not study severe disease, did not study hospitalization,
1124
2:13:10
2:13:17
did not study transmission. Anybody who spoke of those things afterwards was committing fraud.
1125
2:13:18
2:13:26
The study didn't study those things, and that's not like FOIA requested document. This is publicly
1126
2:13:26
2:13:34
available stuff that the FDA abused to approve things. The thing that everybody really seems to
1127
2:13:34
2:13:45
just skip over is that the endpoints that they did study were simply diagnosis of COVID, which was an
1128
2:13:45
2:13:56
abomination to begin with. It was a positive PCR test with no defined cycle threshold and no recorded
1129
2:13:56
2:14:05
threshold, along with one other symptom, a cough, a fever, what have you. The key thing that
1130
2:14:05
2:14:12
everybody just, you know, many people here probably know, but nobody's talking about, is the fraud was
1131
2:14:12
2:14:20
self-evident in that if in the United States, if you got a jab and then you waited 30 days,
1132
2:14:20
2:14:28
got a second jab and waited 13 days or 14 days, when they cut the line, if anything bad happened
1133
2:14:28
2:14:37
to those people, they were counted in the unvaccinated category. That's just blatant fraud
1134
2:14:37
2:14:47
on its face. The fact that the FDA approved that fraud, and it's been so maddening now,
1135
2:14:47
2:14:57
oh my God, nobody knew. Everyone knew. I know. The fraud is prima facie. All you had to do is
1136
2:14:57
2:15:03
look at the study. Yeah, they never claimed to reduce death, to reduce hospitalization,
1137
2:15:03
2:15:10
to reduce transmission. And yeah, some of the Pfizer people mistakenly got into the media
1138
2:15:10
2:15:17
and said those things. Okay. They said what they said in the study, and the FDA approved it
1139
2:15:17
2:15:23
fraudulently. And then everybody in the media said whatever it is they said with absolutely no
1140
2:15:23
2:15:33
scientific back. Yeah, I know all of that. And we knew all of that. The ones that from the
1141
2:15:34
2:15:45
very beginning, if you will, started questioning the whole narrative. So yeah, I knew this vaccine
1142
2:15:45
2:15:51
isn't going to stop transmission. This vaccine isn't going to stop you getting infected. I knew
1143
2:15:51
2:15:57
all of that. The point is- They make it sound like Pfizer revealed something last week or two weeks
1144
2:15:57
2:16:01
ago or whatever. Yeah, exactly. That's what I was just trying to get at. You just had eyes to see and
1145
2:16:01
2:16:07
ears to hear. Right. No, the thing is, we knew that. Anyway, so that's all I really wanted to
1146
2:16:07
2:16:14
say. Yeah, no, we knew that. But we had no way of getting it out to the people. I mean, we talked
1147
2:16:14
2:16:22
about it for a long time. People would not listen to it. It was fake news, and we were killing people
1148
2:16:22
2:16:32
by spreading this information. So we were not getting through. And the point is, we now had a
1149
2:16:32
2:16:41
representative of Pfizer, and she in committee said, no, we never even tested that. So that is
1150
2:16:41
2:16:48
getting through to people finally, because here is someone from Pfizer. It's not these nerds. It's
1151
2:16:48
2:16:55
not these Nazis like me spreading fake news. Representative of Pfizer, and she answered the
1152
2:16:55
2:17:03
question in such a way. That actually, we were capable of transporting to the people. And that
1153
2:17:03
2:17:10
created huge shockwaves throughout the world. I don't know why they would not have listened to us
1154
2:17:10
2:17:17
before. We had all the documentation. We had all the information. We knew all of that. We knew they
1155
2:17:17
2:17:25
committed fraud the entire time. But once again, people would not listen to us. It's as simple as
1156
2:17:25
2:17:32
that. And that's what I meant. And that's why stress, it's so important. We need to get through
1157
2:17:32
2:17:40
to people. If one's public opinion starts shifting, then it's a whole other ballgame. But as long as
1158
2:17:40
2:17:46
they control the narrative, and as long as they are capable of shutting you down, deplatforming
1159
2:17:46
2:17:54
you, deleting your videos, doing whatever, for as long, they will have the upper hand. So you need
1160
2:17:54
2:17:59
something which seems to be completely insignificant, as far as we are concerned,
1161
2:17:59
2:18:08
because we knew all along. But we knew she said that I was am nailed it. I knew this was gonna
1162
2:18:08
2:18:15
break it. That's the next nail in the coffin. You know, it's kind of like it's difficult.
1163
2:18:15
2:18:19
And she laughed at the same time, Christine. She laughed at the same time.
1164
2:18:21
2:18:28
Say again? She laughed at the same time. Yeah, I know. But you know, we didn't know that. No,
1165
2:18:28
2:18:35
or whatever she said. Yes. Yeah, yeah. It's a no. Yeah, some really, but we knew I mean, she said,
1166
2:18:35
2:18:41
I saw her. And I was like, damn, that was it. And we're gonna make something out of that one.
1167
2:18:41
2:18:48
So, you know, that's kind of like the work we kind of have to do. You know, to pull it, it's like
1168
2:18:48
2:18:55
picking their noses for, you know, a shred of information. But once we do get some, and she may
1169
2:18:55
2:19:01
not even realize what you were saying at that point, to be quite honest. But I knew that that's it.
1170
2:19:02
2:19:09
That is gonna gonna, you know, change the entire narrative now. And it did. It did.
1171
2:19:09
2:19:14
Yeah, but it frustrated. I get that. And we're moving at the speed of science, aren't we?
1172
2:19:14
2:19:23
No. What is that even the speed of science? Speed of light. I think. I know the speed of light. I know that.
1173
2:19:23
2:19:31
186,000 miles a second. It's ridiculous. It's just crazy.
1174
2:19:32
2:19:41
Yeah. All right. So, Janet, Janet, then Rh, who I presume is Russ, but Janet, you next,
1175
2:19:41
2:19:48
Rh, then Stephen for final questions. I will give you a fair warning. I will leave at 11.30.
1176
2:19:48
2:19:55
Well, it's gonna be. Yeah, we're finishing at 11.30. Yes. So go Janet. Great.
1177
2:19:56
2:20:04
It's a very quick question for Anna, please. I think you said that in a war setting,
1178
2:20:05
2:20:12
there was a right to self-defense. Now, here in Wales in the UK, the local police have been telling
1179
2:20:12
2:20:18
people that there is no longer a right to self-defense in UK law. And I was wondering
1180
2:20:18
2:20:26
if that is correct. Oh, the police love to make up whatever comes into their head.
1181
2:20:27
2:20:32
That's absolute nonsense. So people have a right to self-defense in any situation.
1182
2:20:33
2:20:40
Okay. In a war situation, right? It's a fundamental human right to protect yourself
1183
2:20:40
2:20:47
from someone trying to hurt you. Right. Thank you. That clarifies. So what the law says is that you
1184
2:20:47
2:20:54
can use a reasonable force to defend yourself. So if someone comes at you with a fist, you're
1185
2:20:54
2:20:59
entitled to use your fist back at them. If they've got a knife, you're entitled to pick up a knife.
1186
2:20:59
2:21:05
If they come at you with a fist, you can't pick up a knife. Right. But you have absolute right to
1187
2:21:05
2:21:10
self-defense. And for the police to say that is absolute nonsense. And of course, you know,
1188
2:21:12
2:21:16
they've seen people turning up and saying, we're going to arrest you. And I think they're beginning
1189
2:21:16
2:21:22
to panic because, you know, the fact is there's more and more people realize that these are
1190
2:21:22
2:21:27
bioweapons being deployed against them. You know, those are weapons being deployed. So they've got
1191
2:21:27
2:21:37
the right to pick up a weapon. Yes. Do you have the right to self-defense if a police officer
1192
2:21:37
2:21:44
attacks you without provocation? Absolutely, you do. And I've ended up in a fight with a policeman.
1193
2:21:44
2:21:49
I can't remember who threw the first punch, but the two of us ended up on the floor fighting and
1194
2:21:49
2:21:57
he called in three vans for backup. And absolutely. I know you should have called in the army.
1195
2:21:59
2:22:06
I was the army. But it was one on one, right. And I, you know, he and I said to him, I absolutely
1196
2:22:06
2:22:10
have the right to self-defense. But you know, the fact is he was bigger than me. And so he won.
1197
2:22:11
2:22:15
But you know, you have the right to defend yourself if someone attacks you. It doesn't
1198
2:22:15
2:22:19
matter who they are. Thank you. That's great. Thank you.
1199
2:22:21
2:22:24
Thanks. Thanks, Janet. Russ from Canada.
1200
2:22:26
2:22:30
Yes. Hi there. Thanks, Charles. And thank you, Christine, for raising awareness. Your
1201
2:22:30
2:22:36
efforts have been extremely effective in breaking through the mainstream narrative. And for that,
1202
2:22:37
2:22:42
I congratulate you. As some background, I spent 12 years in the Canadian Parliament and I've been
1203
2:22:42
2:22:47
to the European Parliament a number of times. I just have some questions related to the process
1204
2:22:47
2:22:52
that you used to set up this committee. Is it a standing committee or an ad hoc committee would
1205
2:22:52
2:22:56
be my first question. The COVID committee is a special committee.
1206
2:22:57
2:23:03
Okay. And is it, is there all party representation or is it just the members that we see at the news
1207
2:23:03
2:23:11
conferences? No, it's an all party representation. It's by the groups, you know, the de Hont
1208
2:23:12
2:23:21
procedure. So my group has three regular seats and we have three substitute seats. And ECR,
1209
2:23:21
2:23:28
that would be where Christine Cherhasch is in and Rob Ross. They also have, I think, three regular
1210
2:23:28
2:23:36
seats and three substitute seats. But we all decided we are all going to be there. So all six
1211
2:23:36
2:23:45
of us are generally there. So, and yeah. But it's all our party representation. Yes.
1212
2:23:45
2:23:51
Okay. And what reaction have you received from your colleagues, the other MEPs, as you've gone
1213
2:23:51
2:23:56
down this path? I would imagine initially there was probably a lot of skepticism, but do you see
1214
2:23:56
2:24:05
them persuaded or supporting your calls for action? Okay, I kind of want to split that up
1215
2:24:06
2:24:15
between the reactions from members of my group, respectively my party. Within my party, there was
1216
2:24:15
2:24:22
not an issue with that at all. They kind of saw it like that. They just thought I went a little
1217
2:24:22
2:24:31
overboard with some of my statements. But now they've come to realize it was exactly the
1218
2:24:31
2:24:41
right thing for me to do. And as you mentioned, I was capable of breaking our bubble, if you will.
1219
2:24:42
2:24:49
I reached people that we would have never thought of reaching with those kind of messages.
1220
2:24:49
2:24:57
So in my group, there is a few people, especially Italians. They had this nasty
1221
2:24:57
2:25:06
Bergamo thing, which by the way, I will be going next week. So they were kind of hesitant. Well,
1222
2:25:06
2:25:11
COVID is really bad and it's a terrible virus and we need to constrain it and we need to do
1223
2:25:11
2:25:19
whatever we can. But in the other groups, especially the left and the green,
1224
2:25:19
2:25:28
initially, they hate me anyway because I'm so outspoken and I usually trash their sick ideologies.
1225
2:25:29
2:25:35
So they just looked at me the way they always did and now it was even worse because I was
1226
2:25:36
2:25:44
somewhat making way and being successful. So they hated that even more. But it started,
1227
2:25:44
2:25:49
like I said, shifting. And as I said earlier, in the beginning, it was really just staffed
1228
2:25:49
2:25:57
in the building that saluted us and applauded us and were basically with us. But it's starting
1229
2:25:57
2:26:04
to shift. Like I said, when I go through the building right now, there is a lot of MEPs from
1230
2:26:04
2:26:09
other groups that don't particularly like me, but they respect me for what I've done.
1231
2:26:10
2:26:16
And they kind of realize, maybe it's because they realized they would have never had the guts
1232
2:26:16
2:26:23
to do that, just stand up and basically risk everything, being even ostracized in parliament.
1233
2:26:24
2:26:34
So yes, I think it's a mixture of respect that I did do that. And now, of course,
1234
2:26:34
2:26:40
I come to realize that, yeah, well, she kind of was right after all. So, oh well, we kind of
1235
2:26:40
2:26:47
have to see how we get on her side or at least let her know that she wasn't completely wrong with that.
1236
2:26:49
2:26:53
Where can you take it from here? Is there an opportunity to bring about legislative change?
1237
2:26:53
2:26:57
Do you feel that you're approaching a majority in the chamber?
1238
2:26:59
2:27:07
That's completely out of the question. Because, I mean, if you look at the House, there are 705
1239
2:27:07
2:27:16
MEPs. And if things are going really well for us, really well, we have 120 votes in the House.
1240
2:27:17
2:27:24
So on that particular issue now with COVID, depending on what is regarding, maybe with
1241
2:27:24
2:27:30
the contracts, if there was ever a vote or something like that, we might reach possibly
1242
2:27:30
2:27:41
180, maybe 200. That's it. Because then all the other MEPs, they want to be reelected,
1243
2:27:41
2:27:49
and they will not upset their party lines, and they will not upset their groups. So they would
1244
2:27:49
2:27:55
never vote against whatever Ursula von der Leyen said, or you know what I'm saying?
1245
2:27:57
2:28:05
The party discipline takes over once again. So if I really had to put a number on it,
1246
2:28:05
2:28:15
I would say 200 max. So there is no legislation. I mean, the new Parliament doesn't even have the
1247
2:28:15
2:28:21
competence to propose legislation. Remember, we're the castrated circus here.
1248
2:28:21
2:28:30
Right. So really, the best you can do is to use this to amplify the message, to communicate broadly,
1249
2:28:31
2:28:35
and try to persuade as many. But there will be no legislative or even...
1250
2:28:35
2:28:47
No, no. So what we can do is, like you said, raise awareness, wake people up, and hopefully
1251
2:28:47
2:28:53
that will have enough effects into the member states, especially the ones that are critical
1252
2:28:53
2:29:00
of government to begin with, like the Eastern European countries. They're generally more
1253
2:29:00
2:29:10
skeptical of governments. So the effects will have to unfold there. That's pretty much the only thing
1254
2:29:10
2:29:19
we can do. And of course, what we also do is we disturb their circles. They want to live in this
1255
2:29:20
2:29:29
brilliant bubble here, champagne and whatever sandwiches. They don't like being disturbed,
1256
2:29:29
2:29:35
and they don't like being exposed. And that's what we do. And what we will also push for is,
1257
2:29:35
2:29:43
I mean, I keep telling people they should look at who voted for what in this place, especially when
1258
2:29:43
2:29:50
it came to COVID and the digital green certificate, the COVID certificate, and all of that. They should
1259
2:29:50
2:29:58
take note of who voted for that crap. And they should never ever vote for any MEP that was in
1260
2:29:58
2:30:06
support of that ever again. So we're trying to build up pressure on the MEPs to stay within
1261
2:30:06
2:30:14
their party lines, to increase the pressure on them. And if they don't change their position
1262
2:30:14
2:30:23
because of conviction, well, at least let them do it. So they are in fear of being reelected.
1263
2:30:23
2:30:30
Thank you so much for taking the time for this group and answering all these questions. I came
1264
2:30:30
2:30:35
late, so hopefully it'll be recorded and I'll be able to catch the first part. I did send a private
1265
2:30:35
2:30:39
message if you'd like to continue this conversation offline. We're hoping to do something similar.
1266
2:30:39
2:30:44
Russ, if you'd like to be putting contact with Christine, just email me and I'll pass it on.
1267
2:30:45
2:30:55
Okay, before I forget, could either Steve, could you copy the content of the chat and send it to me?
1268
2:30:55
2:31:00
Because for some reason, I mean, this seems to be a wrapping device.
1269
2:31:00
2:31:03
You can't save it on a tablet. That's good. All right, just quickly.
1270
2:31:03
2:31:09
Christine, there'll be a video and maybe you'd like to submit the video to, I'm not sure what
1271
2:31:09
2:31:17
I think of this guy, but he's got a massive audience on YouTube. So the events in European
1272
2:31:17
2:31:24
Parliament, he did a, so John Campbell, his name is, he's a nurse. He called himself a doctor.
1273
2:31:24
2:31:30
He is a doctor. I think he's a PhD. And a lot of people think he's a doctor. But anyway, so he's
1274
2:31:31
2:31:34
kind of, he was promoting the vaccine and then he changed and the, you know,
1275
2:31:35
2:31:39
he's trying to stay on YouTube. So it's very difficult to know where he is,
1276
2:31:39
2:31:46
but he's got a massive audience. And so within three days of those,
1277
2:31:47
2:31:53
him doing his, there were a million views and it was all about Christian Therese and you and
1278
2:31:54
2:32:04
Ivan Sincic and more. So yeah, so there'll be a video of this and we need to
1279
2:32:04
2:32:12
get the video of this to him because hopefully he'll do another video, which will attract another
1280
2:32:12
2:32:21
couple of million this time, maybe. Oh, 31,000 comments on YouTube about this video.
1281
2:32:22
2:32:28
Okay. And you need to read them because you know, some people on here are very
1282
2:32:28
2:32:35
exercised by what's going on. But if you read those comments, you'll see 31,000 in three days.
1283
2:32:36
2:32:43
Say the name again. It's John Campbell, Dr. John Campbell. As I say, I'm not sure what his position
1284
2:32:43
2:32:51
is. Okay. But anyway, people seem to like him and now he's publishing what you've been doing in
1285
2:32:51
2:32:58
European Parliament. Excellent. Yeah. Okay. So quickly, because we're tight. Thank you, Russ.
1286
2:32:59
2:33:03
We'll get the chat to you and chat to Christine Craig quick because we've got to go.
1287
2:33:07
2:33:13
Craig, you're muted, I think. Just want to say, I really love your idea of who voted for this crap
1288
2:33:13
2:33:20
because basically that exposes the politicians who are making bad political voting. And by
1289
2:33:20
2:33:26
threatening their voters base because they realize that by being exposed in that way,
1290
2:33:26
2:33:32
people won't vote for them. So I think it's a brilliant idea to have a database or something
1291
2:33:32
2:33:39
whereby people can see who voted for what crap, basically. And then they can, people can say,
1292
2:33:39
2:33:45
my God, they voted for that. They're obviously useless. It's brilliant idea. I don't know how
1293
2:33:45
2:33:50
legal it is for me to do it with GDPR, but I think it's really worth looking into to try and...
1294
2:33:52
2:34:01
The voting records are open. So you're able to retrieve them from the EU Parliament. I know
1295
2:34:01
2:34:07
they put it out. If you drop me a note, I'll get some of my assistants to assist you with that,
1296
2:34:07
2:34:14
to find that. But that's public record. You can retrieve that. That's no problem at all.
1297
2:34:15
2:34:20
I think I'm a great believer in exposing individuals in this thing, because most of
1298
2:34:20
2:34:25
the bad actors are hiding behind labels and literally hiding behind masks. So it's kind of
1299
2:34:25
2:34:30
it when you take away the mask, they didn't, they just, they just freak and it's like brilliant
1300
2:34:30
2:34:38
strategy. Yeah. So great. Yeah, definitely. Are you going to... And the other thing, and so Christine's
1301
2:34:38
2:34:43
staff will help you on that. The other thing to note, there may well be somebody who has already
1302
2:34:43
2:34:48
done that work. If you have a search of someone might, amongst this group, might know that there
1303
2:34:48
2:34:54
have been people who have been analysing who's voting for what. So maybe that work's already
1304
2:34:54
2:35:00
been done. Christine, I've got three quick questions, Charles, very quickly. Christine,
1305
2:35:00
2:35:07
would you like to give evidence to the UK inquiry into how the COVID-19 pandemic was handled by the
1306
2:35:07
2:35:17
British government? Do I need evidence for that? I don't think so. You're a legislator in the EU
1307
2:35:17
2:35:23
Parliament. I think, you know, you can give evidence to the British inquiry. So I don't know how it
1308
2:35:23
2:35:29
works, but presumably you could, I could suggest that you give evidence. If you're prepared to do
1309
2:35:29
2:35:38
it, that would be. But yeah, you know what? Why don't you... We should talk about this. Why don't
1310
2:35:38
2:35:45
you call me? Yeah. So the EU investigation into Von der Leyen, the way the contract... I wanted to
1311
2:35:45
2:35:51
ask you, do you normally see the contracts with big contracts that are awarded by the European
1312
2:35:51
2:35:57
Parliament? This, by the way, was the biggest contract ever awarded by the EU, I think. Yeah,
1313
2:35:58
2:36:05
might very well have been. Usually it's, yes, we are allowed to look at the contracts.
1314
2:36:06
2:36:13
There are some portions redacted, of course. Okay. But that's, you know, minor parts and
1315
2:36:13
2:36:21
really not crucial parts. But in these contracts, I mean, pretty much everything is redacted.
1316
2:36:21
2:36:27
Exactly. Has that ever happened before with any contract? Not that I know of. It just so happened
1317
2:36:27
2:36:33
it was the biggest contract ever. Exactly. I mean, they didn't as much as redacted the page
1318
2:36:33
2:36:40
numbers. So you would not be able, you know, to see, oh, there's a page missing or, you know,
1319
2:36:40
2:36:45
whatever. Or is it even all pages? I mean, seriously, yeah, they meant business this time
1320
2:36:45
2:36:51
in redacting. Yes. And one last question. Do you have any idea, it doesn't matter if you don't know,
1321
2:36:51
2:36:59
but do you have any idea how many deaths, in my opinion, that have been worldwide
1322
2:36:59
2:37:07
due to these shots? How many deaths? Yeah. I'm sorry, didn't get that. Yes, yes, due to these shots.
1323
2:37:08
2:37:18
So this is my- Due to these shots. I think you asked me that before, and I grossly underestimate
1324
2:37:18
2:37:23
it because I cannot, I cannot, for the life of it, cannot come up with reasonable numbers
1325
2:37:23
2:37:32
when it comes to estimates. I think you told me it was like, what, 20 million, something like that?
1326
2:37:32
2:37:38
It is 20 million, yeah. Yeah. Oh. And that's arrived up with the 75,000 for the four, sorry,
1327
2:37:38
2:37:44
three jurisdictions, Europe, USA, UK, combined population of 750 million.
1328
2:37:45
2:37:52
Oh, sorry, 800 million. And the population of the world is eight, approximately eight billion,
1329
2:37:52
2:37:59
called it. Right. So if we say that half of those eight billion got vaccinated, that's four billion.
1330
2:37:59
2:38:08
And we're talking about, so, and it's 75,000 times. We think it's 1% that have been reported. It was
1331
2:38:08
2:38:14
said to be one to 10%, but now people are kind of getting that down to 1%. And those are only the
1332
2:38:14
2:38:21
short-term deaths, by the way, 20 million short-term deaths. We have no idea medium term or long term.
1333
2:38:21
2:38:27
And all the people who will die younger than they would have done, have they not been shot. Yeah.
1334
2:38:27
2:38:34
Yeah, that's true. Brain injury and heart injury. All right. Come on, Stephen, you'll keep talking
1335
2:38:34
2:38:37
if I let you keep talking. Well, I think that's a pretty important point, Charles. We need to have
1336
2:38:37
2:38:44
some idea. They're all, Christine's got the number, 20 million. And one of my friends has suddenly
1337
2:38:44
2:38:48
developed cancer, of course, but he got jabbed for convenience. So we're all going to get these
1338
2:38:48
2:38:54
turbo cancer experiences, aren't we? So, so that's another medium term deaths. Well,
1339
2:38:54
2:38:59
okay. There'd be some short-term death. Most of them, there may be some long-term deaths, of course.
1340
2:38:59
2:39:06
Yeah. But the plausible possibility, the longer the interval between the injection and their death.
1341
2:39:07
2:39:13
Yeah. All right. Well, it's 11, it's 1140 for Christine. She has to go to bed. You have to go
1342
2:39:13
2:39:19
to bed. Everybody has to go to bed. Yeah. Five o'clock tomorrow morning. Oh, yes. Sorry to hear
1343
2:39:19
2:39:26
that. All right. Thank you, Christine. Everybody. Big round of applause for Christine. Great work.
1344
2:39:26
2:39:32
Christine. Thank you again. Thank you so much for having me. Give them a hard time in Brussels.
1345
2:39:32
2:39:38
Oh, I always do. You know that. With our love. With our love. That's right. Thank you so much,
1346
2:39:38
2:39:44
guys. You have a good one. Bye. Thanks. Bye. Thank you. Bye. Bye. Thank you so much.
1347
2:39:45
2:39:55
All right, everybody. That's it. Sunday. We've got Bishop Vagano, correct? Archbishop. Archbishop.
1348
2:39:56
2:40:02
Yes, archbishop. So questions, please send them to me or to Steve. If you send them to me, then I can
1349
2:40:02
2:40:08
coordinate them and send them off to the archbishop. Some, some, we've already got about 10 questions,
1350
2:40:08
2:40:14
Stephen. So please, what would you and the archbishop wants written questions so that he knows what he's
1351
2:40:14
2:40:22
going to be addressing everybody. So send the questions and we will forward them to the archbishop
1352
2:40:22
2:40:27
before he addresses us. Thank you for being here. Thank you for the wonderful chat. Stephen, I will
1353
2:40:27
2:40:34
send you the chat. Jeremy Forbes does a good job editing the chats as well. Thank you, Jeremy,
1354
2:40:34
2:40:43
for that. Thank you for all of your suggestions and comments. And Daria, yes, people keep figuring
1355
2:40:43
2:40:47
out we've got about another two days before we have to send the questions. So there's a bit of
1356
2:40:47
2:40:53
time to do your thinking about the best questions. Stephen, again, well done for organizing this group.
1357
2:40:54
2:41:01
Well done for starting this group when you did. And on we go, everybody. And there's no time for
1358
2:41:01
2:41:07
despair. We don't despair. We fight the fight. Have a wonderful Tuesday night and Wednesday.
1359
2:41:08
2:41:14
And I look forward to being with you. We all look forward to being with you all again on Sunday or
1360
2:41:14
2:41:19
Monday morning for we poor people in Australia. Excellent, Charles. Thank you for getting up so
1361
2:41:19
2:41:26
early. Yes, Charles. Twice a week. Consistently for a year, Charles. Very good.
1362
2:41:26
2:41:37
Yeah, it's been a big journey. And as Daria says, surrender is not an option. And the sword of truth
1363
2:41:37
2:41:42
is available for us, but we have to wield it. So don't just look at it, but wield it. Thanks, everybody.
1364
2:41:43
2:41:45
Bye. Thank you. Bye.
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