🎬Dr Meryl Nass Q & A — R34DM3: Transcript Archives without the Noose
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Dr Meryl Nass Q & A.srt
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from you, up to you.
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Yes, thank you, Meryl. That was brilliant.
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I really liked it and it just demonstrated to me
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that this seems to be a government racket more than any,
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oh, sorry, a global government racket,
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because this is going on in most of the countries of the world.
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And it's not just Covid-19, and it seems,
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and I'm just stunned because when we get through this,
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we've got to start looking at all these vaccinations,
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because this looks like a, how should I say,
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the whole thing has been constructed.
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I mean, it's not about medicine.
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It's all about crime, as far as I can see, and deception
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and definitions, and there don't seem to be any doctors
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at the FDA or at the CDC who know what they're doing.
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And who have ethics.
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And that has to be corrected in the future,
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despite what people say about medical doctors at the moment.
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But I just wondered what your thoughts are.
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Do you view this as a big global government racket?
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Well, yeah, I mean, since I started paying attention
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to these bioterrorism vaccines, yes, I thought it was a big racket.
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But of course, now I think people are trying to take over the world
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and that this is just one piece of it.
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Unfortunately, our governments and even possibly subnational
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organizations have access to all these agents
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that can cause medical problems.
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And the public is just not aware enough of what's going on.
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What are the real risks to them?
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You know, they're in a state of fear from the Covid
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and they can't assess things.
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And the pharmaceutical industry has already managed to sort of.
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Gain control of the narrative that no matter what the illness is,
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you need a vaccine for it, for example, chickenpox, which is a,
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you know, mild childhood illness, but everyone has to be vaccinated
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for chickenpox.
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Well, chickenpox is kind of like monkeypox.
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So if you need a vaccine for chickenpox, well, of course,
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we need a vaccine for monkeypox.
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And nobody tells them, yeah, you might get myocarditis,
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you know, you might die of the vaccine.
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And because CDC is not sharing what data it has on the risks
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and benefits, if, you know, if any benefits from the vaccines,
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people can be easily fooled.
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And I'm not sure how to put the feet to the fire of these agencies.
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How do you go to CDC and say, hey, I just found your
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your clinical trial of the JYNNEOS vaccine in the Congo
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for the last five and a half years.
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What the hell, you know, did you find if you vaccinated
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1600 Congolese, you know, health care workers?
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How do we do that?
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Good question.
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So, yeah, so just as a matter of interest, Meryl,
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have you actually written down your top 10 names of people
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who need to be hold to account after all this?
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I mean, OK, I think the list was between 50 and 100.
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Yes, exactly. Yes.
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But so you have got a list.
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I do have a list. Right.
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So perhaps everybody on the call,
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if they have strong views about who should be on their list,
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they need to write them down now because they're, you know,
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there are people from very many different professions and specialties.
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And so they might have different ideas about who should be on lists.
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But I'd love to see your list, Meryl, but I wouldn't.
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I'm not sharing it.
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I understand. Yeah.
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Well, I think that's if I ask any more questions
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and I'll detract from what I said earlier, I think this is crime.
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It's serious crime.
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And you said the EUA
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protects these people from any mistakes or whatever.
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But I've I've understood that if crime is involved, it doesn't.
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They are culpable.
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So all I can do is answer this to the best of my knowledge, not being a lawyer.
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It's my understanding.
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And I have followed the the EUA's and the
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the
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Prep Act and and Project BioShield,
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because I was involved with those cases with anthrax vaccine going way back,
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that nobody has litigated that.
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So there are big, big legal questions about whether the Prep Act is even
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constitutional because it does not provide due process.
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So, you know, there's nowhere to you are only given an administrative procedure
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if you're injured by a an EUA vaccine.
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You can go to HHS and ask them to pay you for your for your missed
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work and your medical expenses.
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That's all you can collect for.
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And if they say no, you get nothing.
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So there's no judge. There's no trial.
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There's no lawyers.
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And guess what?
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Nobody has been given any money for a covid vaccine injury in the United States.
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I know that's not true in every other country. But so anyway, so.
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So there are serious.
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I mean, the lawyers I work with would love to litigate the Prep Act,
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but they're waiting for the right time and the right situation.
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We don't want to do it in such a way that you get a decision
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that will push you in the wrong direction later.
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So all the lawyers looking at that now.
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Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.
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It's a huge it's a huge thing for them.
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They'd love to overturn it.
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As I say, they're waiting for an opportunity, but it hasn't been really litigated.
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The legality of that law, the prep.
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I mean, it's a congressional law.
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So you have to take it to probably the Supreme Court to litigate.
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And, you know, you've got to get the right people on the Supreme Court.
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These things are not simple.
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And we've had a lot of decision legal decisions that did not go in our favor
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during this covid period.
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Do you know if Todd Callender knows this?
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He probably does, but.
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He's not one of my best friends.
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Oh, right.
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Yeah. So, Charles, let's give the others.
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So we will go to the next questions in a moment.
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Meryl, I put it to you and to everybody.
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I believe.
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That.
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There is no indemnity for crime, full stop.
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And I think it doesn't matter that the government gives indemnities.
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There is no indemnity for crime.
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And Meryl, this is a very important point.
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That's that's why exiting presidents have the power to pardon certain people.
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Nowhere in the common law world is there indemnity for crime.
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And I say, and I'm a lawyer, a legal strategist,
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that the behavior of these companies amounts to criminal negligence.
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And that will come out eventually.
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Yes, they are where everybody civil negligence, you can get an indemnity.
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Criminal, you cannot.
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And so, please, just remember, you're beautifully put.
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We have to find the right case.
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But remember, in the States, I don't know of any executive of a big
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pharmaceutical company that has been had proceedings issued.
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And that's why they keep doing it, because it's part of the cartel.
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We know that.
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And then if you want to run criminal proceedings against the pharma execs,
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then the sheriffs and the DA, district attorneys and the attorneys general,
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they don't take the steps.
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But no one is above the law.
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Hammer that into our brains, everybody.
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Full stop.
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Otherwise, politicians would have been giving themselves indemnity for crimes.
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Don't you get it, John Lukacs?
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Your comments are excellent in the chat.
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No indemnity for crime.
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So, Anna, over to you.
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Could I just say to Meryl,
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so my impression, just listening to you, you know,
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without paying that much attention to the detail,
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just listening to the the general thrust of what you were saying, Meryl,
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was that governments don't care about the people.
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This is all about making money.
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And that would that would tie in with my feeling as a doctor.
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And you're a medical doctor, too, that actually this is not to do with medicine.
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You don't you don't worry only about diseases
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and vaccines, you know, infectious diseases.
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Those are the only ones they they're worried about.
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Come on, it's nonsense.
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It's just a way of making money.
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And in this case, as you said, I think, I can't remember who said it now.
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It's being used for other means to to kind of whatever,
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you know, these crazy people from the W.E.F. or wherever they're from.
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But it's very effective.
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It's like a lot of what else happened in the Covid time,
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is it allows the politicians to immunize themselves
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from the claim that they didn't do anything worse.
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But Meryl, the test is, would they actually
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employ the United Nations to go to war on their behalf?
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No, they wouldn't.
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Clearly they wouldn't.
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But yet they use a UN agency, the WHO, which I think it is in the UN
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to sort out these medical.
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So clearly they're giving responsibility to a worldwide organization
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who doesn't care.
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The the thing is totally unregulated, it seems to me.
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Right. Exactly.
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I mean, if they cared about this vaccine, if they cared about monkey pucks,
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they would have moved the doses over.
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They would have gotten them bottled.
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You know, they already spent almost two billion dollars
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on this damn genious vaccine.
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They would have had everything ready to go.
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But it wasn't about that.
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And the same true of anthrax.
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At the same time, we have apparently a legal droctrine in the United States
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or in some states, the government contractor defense,
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which is that if the government contractor is not producing
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a good product and it does not meet the specifications in the contract,
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but the government knew that and allowed them to go ahead anyway
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and bought the product knowingly, then you can't sue them.
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So that that's another bar to get.
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Yes, Meryl, they would never send the UN to war, you know, proper war
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on the nation's behalf.
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So why do they why is it this big thing about pandemics, you know?
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Right. Crazy.
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It's not about medicine.
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All right, Anna, over to you.
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By the way, what's that picture behind you?
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It looks I can't work out whether it's Mount Everest or a string of molecules.
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It's DNA, but Daria was ahead of me.
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Daria, you're still here.
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OK, well, I must screen Daria.
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Secretary Daria, if you'd like to go first, go first.
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OK, yeah, thank you, Meryl.
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That was awesome. I really appreciate it.
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Yeah, I agree with you.
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And you just laid out the evidence so clearly here
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that it's obvious, I think, to everyone on this call
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that this is an exploitative money grabbing
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syndicate that has been very successful and somehow has skirted the law.
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Mainly, I think, and again, people have better evidence than I do,
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but it seems like everybody's been bought off and they're complicit in
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executing this, you know, through societies.
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And that means people in government, these NGOs
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and things like that. So.
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How do you literally this is like, how do you fight city hall?
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We're not even fighting city hall.
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We're like fighting the entire power system that's also
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creating money out of thin air to empower themselves to further
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exploit the average person.
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That's I'm just trying to figure out how do we get out of this?
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Besides just continuing to say, no,
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we're not going to take your shitty shot.
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Excuse my French.
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Thank you. Yeah, I mean, that's the sixty four thousand dollar question,
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which nobody knows the answer to. How do you wake people up?
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Because obviously, if we got the mass of people who would speak out,
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this would be over. And then and
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and are there legal ways?
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Are there other ways to do this?
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And, you know, I don't I don't know the answer.
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I'm worried that they will try and lock us down more.
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Ed Dowd suggested that monkeypox will be used to try to cancel the elections
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or force everybody to do mail in ballots.
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You know, we have a lot of work to do.
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I don't know how to do it.
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I'm I'm sort of doing my piece because this is the one I'm able to do.
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I encourage I encourage everybody with a sense of humor
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to start making jokes, you know, satire,
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because the other side will listen to jokes and satire.
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We need, you know, a George Carlin for our side,
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because if he's that good, he'll actually get on television.
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So that and I work with lawyers and they are scratching their heads, too.
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You know, I I work with a variety of very good lawyers.
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And I've been involved with two cases against the FDA
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that Children's Health Defense has brought, you know,
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and I thought they were slam dunks.
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I mean, I thought we had all the evidence and we'd been thrown out of court
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on both of them and they're on appeal.
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So I don't have the answers.
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Yes, it's a good it's a good example.
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What Meryl just shared with us that there are legal principles,
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but you might have the wrong evidence.
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You might have the wrong plaintiff.
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You might have the wrong missing smoking gun document.
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And and my my metaphor is that it's like golf.
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You know, it's a mystery how to hit a golf ball correctly.
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And it's a mystery how to get a winning court case.
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But we keep trying.
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And I remind you all that Warner Mendenhall has published a number.
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There's over 16000 cases in the US court system against Covid.
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16000 Meryl.
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So don't despair, everybody, where we're doing lots of practicing of golf.
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You know, the 10,000 hour rule for Michael Jordan and 10,000 shots.
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Sorry. And then the then gold, Daniel Goldman,
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you know, 10,000 hours before you become good at anything.
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So we just have to keep finding that next nuance in the legal system.
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Anna, next. Thank you, Daria.
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Thank you so much for this excellent presentation.
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My question is, we know that the Covid shots cause myocarditis,
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and we also know now that monkeypox shots cause myocarditis.
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And in the table simulation of monkeypox,
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there was one point three million deaths projected till early 2023.
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Do you think that if you give a monkeypox vaccine to somebody
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who already got Covid shots, that the my that they're just going to start
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accelerating the death toll?
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That's the first question.
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The second question, if I may ask, is,
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did you resolve everything with the medical board?
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And if that's offline, I OK.
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So let me see.
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The first question is, there's no data.
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And of course, it makes sense that if you've already gotten one, you know,
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the one thing about the Covid shots is they almost always cause myocarditis
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within about four days of a shot.
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So for whatever the mechanism is, it's not as long duration
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as some of the other side effects from the Covid shots.
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So if we're luck, fingers crossed, it might go away.
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But obviously, it makes you wonder how many other vaccines
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also might cause myocarditis that we missed in the past.
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But these are huge numbers.
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So the number from ACAM2000 is more than 10 times higher
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than the highest number ever reported for the Covid vaccines.
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So that was for Covid.
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It was one in 2000 for boys 17 to 24 in one Kaiser study.
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That was the highest rate, one in 2000.
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This is one in 175. So it's unbelievable.
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And there was a military study that looked at I think it does.
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It's very cagey.
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It doesn't specify whether it used ACAM2000 or or dry Vax or a mixture.
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But the military study found one in 220 had frank myocarditis.
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And that so they had chest pain and they had rise in troponin
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or cardiac MRI or EKG changes.
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You know, they met a case definition.
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But one in 30 had subclinical myocarditis.
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They had at least an elevation of troponin, at least twice
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the upper limit of normal.
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So that's that's old.
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That's from 2015 paper.
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As far as my medical license, I have a hearing that starts in October
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and we'll go we don't know how long.
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Two days in October, probably two days in November, maybe sometime in December.
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So I'm not allowed to practice medicine at this point.
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And my case is totally political.
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And we'll wait and see what happens.
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Godspeed to you. Thank you so much.
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0:18:47
Thank you. Thank you, Anna.
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Craig. Good evening.
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I it's good to be here.
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I am just want to ask many of the things that Merrill said
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indicate pre-planning of the monkeypox pandemic.
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And I wanted to ask
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regarding the elements that indicate pre-planning,
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you mentioned the license in 2019 given to rebranding a smallpox vaccine,
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the tabletop exercise in 2021 in March,
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the CDC Congo study, which actually was due to end in August 2022,
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which is conveniently when this outbreak is about to happen.
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The manufacturing plant, which was in 2021 and the supply of
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the stockpile of vaccines prior to the pandemic.
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And most of these seem very distinct in terms of them being
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having full knowledge of the monkeypox pandemic.
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But the stockpile is that.
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Can I add two more?
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Yes. Two more.
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0:20:11
OK, one is the fact that there were 39 years in Nigeria without any reported cases.
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And then suddenly they started getting a bunch of cases in 2017,
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opening the possibility that it was seeded in Nigeria first
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to make it appear that it came from Nigeria.
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It was going to come from Nigeria later.
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Possibility. And what was the other one?
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Oh, I've forgotten now. Sorry.
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I'll remember it later.
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Oh, yes. The number of the number of mutations.
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0:20:39
So the number of mutations was too high for a supposedly for a natural
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monkeypox strain to have mutated that much in these few years.
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So that's another question.
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It's a question for the virologists and not for me.
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0:20:55
So with regarding the stockpiling, would you say that
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they were stockpiling for a disease which hadn't yet posed,
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didn't really pose any serious risk before 2020?
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0:21:08
Well, I think that's a good question.
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0:21:12
Well, the claim is that it was stockpiled for smallpox vaccine.
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0:21:18
However, why why add a monkeypox indication?
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0:21:21
You know, why was it licensed for monkeypox?
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0:21:25
That's curious.
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0:21:31
It was, you know, the company applied first just to have it licensed for smallpox.
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0:21:34
And then during the process, monkeypox was added.
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0:21:39
Hmm. Finally, I'd just like to ask if it's possible.
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0:21:49
I'm planning to create a leaflet to be to go out about this on the How Bad is My Batch website.
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And I'd like to remain in communication with you.
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0:22:00
If I need to clarify any points on the leaflet, it's going to be a really
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0:22:03
a summary, very much of a summary leaflet.
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0:22:10
But I'd like to make sure that I'm not missing out anything important.
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0:22:15
When it goes out, it should reach about 100,000 people a day.
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0:22:22
So that it would I feel it's important to get the, for example, the adverse reactions regarding this
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regarding the vaccine monkeypox vaccines.
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0:22:31
It's really important that I get that out really quickly to the.
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0:22:39
I agree. You know, and that's why I make the slides and give you the links and overload you with minutia
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0:22:47
so that somebody like you who may want to go back can do so and look at this and know where to go for the evidence.
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0:22:52
Great. So is it possible that we can communicate by email?
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0:23:02
Yes, I'll write it in the chat.
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0:23:06
Great. You can email me if you if you don't see the chat or whatever.
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0:23:11
You'll probably see it in the group emails about the chat about these.
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0:23:17
Great email. If you haven't got a reliable way, then email me and I'll put you in touch with Meryl.
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0:23:25
Great. And final thing is, is there a PCR test that they've developed already for this monkeypox?
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Well, of course there is, but I don't know what it is.
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0:23:33
And I haven't I haven't seen maybe someone else has seen whether anything's been published on it,
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0:23:37
whether it's real, you know, how likely are the cases to be real cases?
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0:23:45
Don't know that we know that they faked a lot of the media photos, you know, that were of smallpox or of shingles
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0:23:48
and other things at the beginning of the outbreak.
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0:23:52
And we don't know whether that's, you know, been clarified, cleaned up or not.
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0:23:54
Thank you very much.
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0:24:00
Meryl, did they use pictures of molluscum contagion as well?
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0:24:02
That I don't know.
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0:24:09
OK, I think I've heard that, but I'm not sure that would really confuse the public, of course.
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0:24:12
Well, it seems to be really good at scaring people.
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0:24:15
Yeah, we need to get rid of the WHO.
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0:24:17
I think that's the key thing.
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0:24:20
Rima said that.
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0:24:22
And and humor overcomes fear.
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0:24:24
You know, it's a fear game plan, isn't it?
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0:24:27
Yeah.
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0:24:30
Leo, thank you very much for the talk, Meryl.
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0:24:34
I'd love to get a copy of your slides for me and I'll drop you an email after this.
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0:24:42
Hang on, Leo.
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0:24:44
Meryl, I can put that into the chat.
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0:24:47
You're happy to put your slide deck into the chat for everybody?
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0:24:53
I'm going to think about that because there's an article coming out.
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0:24:55
So I'm not sure.
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0:24:57
I'll have to check with my co-author.
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0:24:58
0:24:59
Yep. OK, good.
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0:24:59
0:25:04
So, Leo, if you communicate with Meryl on that for certain elements,
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0:25:07
but at the moment we're not sharing it with everybody.
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0:25:07
0:25:08
Yes. OK, so Leo to you.
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0:25:12
Leo, email me and then it won't get missed.
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0:25:13
No problem. I will do.
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0:25:15
Meryl, I did also wonder.
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0:25:19
So on the origin of it in Copenhagen, which struck me as odd in your presentation
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0:25:22
that that's where the viruses, the vaccines were stockpiled.
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0:25:27
But in 1958, it was discovered in Copenhagen in some test monkeys
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0:25:30
that had actually been at the laboratory for about 60 days,
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0:25:34
which kind of debunks the incubation period of monkeypox.
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0:25:37
And also the monkeys that had tested positive or where they said
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0:25:42
they'd identified this monkeypox had also been given experimental polio injections.
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0:25:44
So you're already aware of that.
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0:25:48
And they showed transmission without touching on, you know, the virus issue
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0:25:53
by injecting inoculants of postules into mice brains
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0:25:55
to show that this thing was transmissible.
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0:25:59
The science, the outset of discovery of this just looks shockingly off.
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0:26:09
So I can't I agree with you that there are many odd things that some of which I did not mention,
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0:26:17
but they require you to have access to documents and samples that none of us have access to.
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0:26:25
It was said that those monkeys that in 1958 were being used for polio research.
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0:26:28
Well, we know that monkeys were being used because their kidneys
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0:26:34
the basis for all live polio vaccines, I think still in the world today.
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0:26:40
And, you know, at Hooper made it very clear in the river
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0:26:43
that there's a lot of extraneous viruses in monkey kidneys.
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0:26:44
0:26:53
So, yeah, I don't believe that I am saying that the PCRs or any of the means of diagnosis are
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0:26:57
accurate at the beginning of this in the United States.
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0:26:57
0:27:01
So it's so monkeypox is an ortho pox virus.
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0:27:01
0:27:06
And so apparently there were tests available in general for ortho pox viruses,
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0:27:08
and labs could do that.
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0:27:08
0:27:13
But CDC was the only lab in the United States that could confirm it was positive.
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0:27:15
And so they had to confirm it was monkeypox.
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0:27:16
0:27:22
Then about a month ago, they shipped out their new PCR, I guess, to a bunch of labs.
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0:27:22
0:27:27
So now throughout the United States, labs can conduct a test looking to see whether specifically
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0:27:28
this is monkeypox.
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0:27:29
0:27:34
But like the COVID tests, we have no idea how did they develop that test?
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0:27:35
Is it accurate?
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0:27:38
You know, what's the specificity and sensitivity?
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0:27:41
We have no if it's even real, you know, we just don't know.
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0:27:46
There's always we've learned from COVID to be very wary.
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0:27:53
But I've given my talk as if, you know, these the diagnoses are accurate,
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0:27:58
because I don't know how else to explore this issue.
446
0:27:59
0:28:00
Thank you very much.
447
0:28:00
0:28:08
Yeah. So in the pet wholesale facility, it's spread around to various animals.
448
0:28:08
0:28:13
So nobody knew which of the rodents from Ghana it actually came in on.
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0:28:19
And nobody knows what the natural host is.
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0:28:23
The primary host in nature is not thought to be a monkey.
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0:28:27
It's thought to be some kind of rodent or squirrel, but we don't know what.
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0:28:32
And I guess I guess that's all I can say.
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0:28:34
I mean, we're taking a lot on faith.
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0:28:40
But it does seem like there is an outbreak and it's acting very different than the other outbreaks.
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0:28:46
But then again, you know, knowing what happens during sexual intercourse,
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0:28:50
it's certainly possible that that it's transmitting the way described.
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0:28:53
Okay, thank you very much.
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0:28:59
So, Meryl, can we go to the question of doctors being attacked?
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0:29:03
Because one of the this whole group, the fundamental basis for criticism,
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0:29:08
the basis for creation of this group was Stephen's view that,
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0:29:11
and the view of many people on this call,
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0:29:16
that if significant numbers of doctors had pushed back against this pandemic,
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0:29:18
it would never have got anywhere.
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0:29:23
But you are a good example of doctors being attacked for daring to speak up.
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0:29:28
Sam White from the UK is another and numerous doctors in Australia.
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0:29:31
Now, what I want you everyone to know is that in Australia,
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0:29:38
everybody who has fought back against the regulators is being reinstated as
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0:29:41
doctors.
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0:29:44
In other words, their suspensions are being set aside
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0:29:48
because they are unlawful, illegal, unwarranted.
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0:29:56
My question for you in the US from your understanding of the structure
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0:30:03
is everyone who pushes back, because remember,
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0:30:08
the whole of the medical profession never pushed back against the regulators.
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0:30:14
Stephen in the GMC, against APRA in Australia, that was not done.
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0:30:17
Just get off my back so I can go keep earning money.
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0:30:24
My question to you is that likely that you're not so much your case,
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0:30:28
but generally doctors who speak up against the narrative,
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0:30:32
are they specifically able to be suspended?
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0:30:34
Is that valid or not?
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0:30:40
In the United States, every state has a medical board or more than one,
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0:30:51
and they have wide ability to determine what they can take your license away for.
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0:30:57
Now, in my own case, they did something that was fairly unprecedented,
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0:31:01
which was to call me an immediate risk to the public,
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0:31:05
such that they had to suspend me before ever hearing me say one word,
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0:31:11
or actually reading my CV, or knowing really anything about me.
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0:31:17
And that was particularly stunning because there had been no patient complaints
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0:31:20
and no other complaints that I'd injured anyone.
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0:31:20
0:31:27
It was purely political, and the day after I was suspended,
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0:31:32
the Associated Press had articles all over the United States about me,
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0:31:36
and Newsweek, and it was on the radio.
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0:31:37
It was a big deal.
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0:31:41
I was part of a campaign to frighten doctors around the country.
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0:31:46
And earlier today at a status conference,
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0:31:52
we were having my side is using a witness to discuss the First Amendment,
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0:31:55
which is freedom of speech, the press, et cetera.
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0:32:01
And the other attorney, the assistant attorney general on the other side,
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0:32:06
was trying to prevent that witness from being able to speak.
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0:32:10
So they are certainly fearful.
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0:32:11
They know there is a First Amendment.
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0:32:13
They know they've overstepped.
501
0:32:13
0:32:19
What they're doing in most cases are trying to find some piddly thing to go out.
502
0:32:19
0:32:23
So for me, now what they're saying is, well, your records weren't good enough.
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0:32:23
0:32:29
Your telemedicine visits didn't have a formal informed consent in the chart.
504
0:32:29
0:32:31
It's like they're calling me.
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0:32:31
0:32:34
Why do I need an informed consent to telemedicine?
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0:32:34
0:32:36
They could have come to my office.
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0:32:36
0:32:38
I didn't ask them to do telemedicine.
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0:32:42
They chose it, but I'm supposed to get them to somehow say they are consenting.
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0:32:44
0:32:45
It's that kind of craziness.
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0:32:46
0:32:50
So they know they are on a slippery slope, but it's totally political.
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0:32:53
I mean, if our current governor remains in office,
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0:32:55
I will probably lose my license forever.
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0:32:56
0:32:59
And if the former governor who's running against her wins,
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0:33:03
he's already said he's going to pardon me and every other health care professional
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0:33:06
that's lost their jobs during COVID and give it back to them.
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0:33:08
0:33:10
So that's political in Merrill.
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0:33:10
0:33:11
It's totally political.
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0:33:11
0:33:13
Yeah. Can't be otherwise.
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0:33:15
0:33:19
So that's the similar, Merrill, in Australia, that's the similar rule
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0:33:25
where numerous doctors have been suspended and then no suspensions set aside
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0:33:32
because it is claimed that what they said publicly is an immediate threat to public health.
522
0:33:32
0:33:32
Yes, exactly.
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0:33:33
Which is a total lie.
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0:33:34
0:33:36
But the same words are used in Australia.
525
0:33:36
0:33:42
Australia has copied the US model.
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0:33:43
0:33:43
Right.
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0:33:45
0:33:49
And so that threat, I mean, we saw Peter McCulloch got a case.
528
0:33:49
0:33:52
I don't know if anyone's got an update on Peter's case, Merrill, you?
529
0:33:52
0:33:54
Yeah, I think his is with the...
530
0:33:55
0:33:59
So what happened is, we don't know where it started,
531
0:33:59
0:34:05
but a lot of non-profit organizations went along and they all have contracts
532
0:34:06
0:34:09
all that I know of, have contracts with the US government.
533
0:34:09
0:34:10
And so they pushed this.
534
0:34:10
0:34:13
So with him, the American Board of Internal Medicine said
535
0:34:13
0:34:15
they were going to take away his board certification,
536
0:34:15
0:34:17
but they didn't go after his license.
537
0:34:18
0:34:23
Robert Malone's board went after him, but he sent them a letter.
538
0:34:23
0:34:29
And had I sent them a threatening letter with a lawyer when they first went after me,
539
0:34:30
0:34:33
chances are good they would have been backing off,
540
0:34:33
0:34:39
but I sort of rolled over and showed my belly to them and challenged them
541
0:34:39
0:34:46
and asked them what was their statutory authority that they could even monitor free speech
542
0:34:46
0:34:49
and how did they define misinformation.
543
0:34:49
0:34:51
And I asked for trouble.
544
0:34:52
0:34:54
So they went after me.
545
0:34:55
0:34:59
It was an ego thing as well, and I'm sure they were directed to do so.
546
0:34:59
0:35:08
So some states have the attorney general and in some states the legislature
547
0:35:09
0:35:15
have chosen to specify to the medical boards that they can't go after doctors
548
0:35:15
0:35:20
for this sort of thing, that they're free to prescribe ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine,
549
0:35:21
0:35:25
but it's been all states that are under Republican rule
550
0:35:25
0:35:28
and the states that are under Dem rule are not doing that.
551
0:35:29
0:35:33
Robert Malone Okay, okay.
552
0:35:35
0:35:37
Now, now, now, now.
553
0:35:39
0:35:42
Are there, there are, Stephen, do you have a question?
554
0:35:42
0:35:46
I just want to do one other thing, but what I am very interested in everybody,
555
0:35:46
0:35:52
now that we've got a moment, I'm just checking an email,
556
0:35:52
0:35:58
but the question that I have for all of you and are really interested in your views,
557
0:35:59
0:36:04
because this is an opportunity, what would you like to see happening?
558
0:36:05
0:36:11
So there is stuff happening, we know stuff is happening, you know, with the information
559
0:36:11
0:36:17
that Meryl has shared with us and Stephen says, hey, what action should we be taking?
560
0:36:17
0:36:22
There are 16,000 court cases happening in the states, there are many cases happening
561
0:36:22
0:36:25
in Australia, I'm not so sure in the UK.
562
0:36:25
0:36:28
What would you like to see happening?
563
0:36:28
0:36:30
What are your suggestions?
564
0:36:30
0:36:35
I either put them in the chat, I've, Richard Fleming has published,
565
0:36:35
0:36:38
I'm sure you've seen the letters, he wants to swamp the attorney,
566
0:36:39
0:36:43
attorneys general and district attorneys with complaints.
567
0:36:44
0:36:49
You know, that's, that's, that's a strategy that he's using.
568
0:36:49
0:36:56
And remember, we've also talked about unifying people, there's no doubt the globalists are small
569
0:36:56
0:36:59
in number, and there are 8 billion of us against them.
570
0:37:00
0:37:03
So the question is, how do we unify?
571
0:37:03
0:37:06
I'm, I'm working on a strategy to do that.
572
0:37:06
0:37:13
Jerry Brady is working on a strategy and Jerry, I'm wondering if you can share that.
573
0:37:13
0:37:18
Jerry's working on uniting the people who have suffered adverse events.
574
0:37:19
0:37:22
And, and so they've got a cause.
575
0:37:22
0:37:30
So how do we unify the people so that we stop complying, because that's what has to happen.
576
0:37:31
0:37:36
And if enough of us don't comply, it will stop.
577
0:37:37
0:37:39
But Charles, what should be our aim?
578
0:37:39
0:37:42
So I'm beginning to think that Rima is up right.
579
0:37:43
0:37:45
Hang on, just a second.
580
0:37:45
0:37:45
Sorry.
581
0:37:45
0:37:51
I just asked the question, what do people, what would they like to see happening, Stephen?
582
0:37:51
0:37:56
Just, you know, in terms of a brainstorm, because people on this call have all got ideas of what
583
0:37:56
0:37:59
should be happening.
584
0:37:59
0:38:06
You know, let's not get so much into the strategic, because I've, we've agreed at this call that if
585
0:38:06
0:38:11
we unify the people against the globalists, the globalists will lose.
586
0:38:12
0:38:14
And there's no doubt that's what history shows.
587
0:38:16
0:38:19
So I'm just, that's what I'm calling for.
588
0:38:19
0:38:22
And then we might deal, Stephen, with your question.
589
0:38:22
0:38:25
In fact, that's a different question.
590
0:38:25
0:38:27
What's the end outcome?
591
0:38:28
0:38:30
What, so Stephen, was that the two questions?
592
0:38:30
0:38:32
What do you want to see happening?
593
0:38:32
0:38:34
And what should be the end outcome?
594
0:38:34
0:38:39
So Craig has got his hand up to two issues, two suggestions.
595
0:38:39
0:38:43
And Jerry, why don't you come online and share what you're trying to establish?
596
0:38:43
0:38:44
But anyway, Craig.
597
0:38:45
0:38:46
Yeah, okay.
598
0:38:46
0:38:51
I was going to say that in my opinion, that we have to get rid of the WHO, because that's a means
599
0:38:51
0:38:54
of committing treason for all these countries.
600
0:38:54
0:39:01
So the people who want to undermine sovereign countries, they just have to support the WHO,
601
0:39:01
0:39:04
because they've got this instrument and it's clearly inappropriate.
602
0:39:04
0:39:06
It needs to be removed.
603
0:39:06
0:39:11
It's like sending the United Nations to war in Afghanistan, for example, or Iraq.
604
0:39:12
0:39:13
And it's just nonsense.
605
0:39:13
0:39:14
The whole thing is nonsense.
606
0:39:14
0:39:16
Always has been nonsense.
607
0:39:16
0:39:18
And it will be nonsense in two years time.
608
0:39:19
0:39:23
And we can discuss as much as we like, but we need to get rid of the WHO.
609
0:39:23
0:39:25
So Trump was right on target.
610
0:39:27
0:39:27
Yep.
611
0:39:27
0:39:30
Well, and what Jerry has put in the chat, because he can't talk to them,
612
0:39:30
0:39:37
we're trying to establish a global alliance of compassionate, non-profit organizations.
613
0:39:38
0:39:42
Millions of people can ally and defeat.
614
0:39:42
0:39:45
World Economic Forum, WHO and Gates.
615
0:39:45
0:39:46
Okay.
616
0:39:46
0:39:48
That's what Jerry's working on.
617
0:39:48
0:39:48
Craig?
618
0:39:51
0:39:57
Besides top-down solutions, such as trying to change the governing bodies like the WHO,
619
0:39:58
0:39:58
I think-
620
0:39:58
0:40:00
Don't get rid of them, Craig.
621
0:40:00
0:40:01
We're not going to change them.
622
0:40:03
0:40:09
Yeah, I agree with you, but it's a top-down solution, which it's kind of trying to change
623
0:40:09
0:40:10
things from the top down.
624
0:40:10
0:40:17
Well, no, it's actually what we've realized is that the WHO is the instrument
625
0:40:17
0:40:20
of committing treason in these countries.
626
0:40:20
0:40:24
So everybody can agree that we don't like treason.
627
0:40:24
0:40:26
We don't like traitors.
628
0:40:26
0:40:28
So that's my opinion.
629
0:40:28
0:40:28
Sorry.
630
0:40:29
0:40:38
Anyway, from the COVID pandemic, I think we've done really well to get the people
631
0:40:38
0:40:45
coming over to our side with 75% apparently refusing further vaccination
632
0:40:45
0:40:47
and 25% still completely unvaccinated.
633
0:40:48
0:40:53
But it would be good if we can reach the doctors' community
634
0:40:54
0:40:58
because the doctors are the ones that are going to be pushing the vaccine for this.
635
0:40:59
0:41:06
And somehow having a strong outreach to the doctors' community with the information that
636
0:41:06
0:41:12
we know we can gather for the monkeypox so that the doctors are no longer
637
0:41:16
0:41:17
just complete.
638
0:41:17
0:41:22
If we can get to the doctors first before the government narrative can get to them,
639
0:41:22
0:41:24
I think it would really help to-
640
0:41:25
0:41:27
Because we were very slow taking off with COVID.
641
0:41:27
0:41:32
There was a lot of confusion about it initially, and there wasn't
642
0:41:33
0:41:40
a kind of such a body of resistance formed until maybe many months later.
643
0:41:40
0:41:43
Whereas now with monkeypox, we've got a head start.
644
0:41:43
0:41:51
We can actually pump the information to the doctors' communities so that they can understand
645
0:41:51
0:41:57
before the government's really had a chance to blast people with propaganda.
646
0:41:58
0:42:05
And if we can get the doctors on our side by just inoculating them with the truth,
647
0:42:06
0:42:13
then they will be resistant to the virus of propaganda.
648
0:42:14
0:42:18
They'll be resistant to it because they would have been inoculated by us with
649
0:42:19
0:42:23
information prior to that.
650
0:42:23
0:42:30
And to expose them to the truth would be good to get in there early.
651
0:42:30
0:42:38
So I just think we've got an opportunity to get more doctors on our side this time,
652
0:42:38
0:42:43
because we're starting very, very early before the pandemic's really hardly begun.
653
0:42:43
0:42:45
So it would be good to-
654
0:42:46
0:42:47
There is no pandemic, Craig.
655
0:42:47
0:42:52
Yeah, I know that. I'm just using that as to describe the situation.
656
0:42:52
0:42:53
That's all.
657
0:42:53
0:42:53
I realise, yeah.
658
0:42:56
0:43:03
So that's what I'm thinking we should reach the doctors, because there would be no
659
0:43:03
0:43:12
opportunity for the government to apply this agenda if the doctors were not compliant,
660
0:43:12
0:43:14
because they're going to want them to push the vaccine.
661
0:43:14
0:43:18
So yeah, that's what my point was.
662
0:43:19
0:43:22
That's one of my solutions I'm proposing.
663
0:43:22
0:43:29
Yes, Craig. It's a very interesting suggestion that if the doctors withdraw their services,
664
0:43:29
0:43:33
then the game plan of depopulation is proceeding at a pace, isn't it?
665
0:43:33
0:43:35
Because doctors say, we're not going to play your game.
666
0:43:37
0:43:44
And yet, if more doctors speak up, because you're not going to be able to get the vaccine,
667
0:43:44
0:43:49
generally speaking, they're respected in the community, then that has a big effect on the
668
0:43:49
0:43:52
credibility of anything from government if enough doctors spoke up.
669
0:43:52
0:43:55
So there's your suggestion, and I've taken a note of that.
670
0:43:56
0:44:01
And it's very, very relevant.
671
0:44:01
0:44:04
You know, the view many times expressed here is enough.
672
0:44:04
0:44:06
If enough doctors push back, it'll stop.
673
0:44:08
0:44:09
All right, Craig, thank you for that suggestion.
674
0:44:10
0:44:11
Meryl, you've got your hand up.
675
0:44:11
0:44:13
And the question I put also to you is,
676
0:44:13
0:44:17
William Houston sent you a question by email.
677
0:44:17
0:44:22
It's up to you whether you wish to address it or you can read it and then come back later.
678
0:44:23
0:44:27
But he sent it some time ago, so he didn't send it in the last few minutes.
679
0:44:27
0:44:28
But anyway, you had your hand up, Meryl.
680
0:44:28
0:44:31
So ask your thing, put your suggestion first.
681
0:44:35
0:44:36
You muted, Meryl.
682
0:44:36
0:44:37
You muted.
683
0:44:38
0:44:42
Could he send the question again, because it's hard to find them amongst all of these
684
0:44:43
0:44:44
different comments.
685
0:44:44
0:44:46
Yes, William, would you?
686
0:44:46
0:44:52
I put a pledge in the chat, which I have been working on with several other groups.
687
0:44:54
0:45:02
The idea is to get people to sign this pledge and then put it in front of candidates for
688
0:45:03
0:45:07
elected office and force them to look at it.
689
0:45:07
0:45:10
That's why it has to be short and say yes or no.
690
0:45:10
0:45:12
And of course, they'll all say, I don't have time.
691
0:45:13
0:45:17
And then you say, OK, you're a no until you tell us that you're a yes.
692
0:45:18
0:45:24
And we have a website and we put all the candidates' responses on it.
693
0:45:24
0:45:27
And if enough people take this seriously, enough people sign it,
694
0:45:27
0:45:31
and the candidates know they're going to be facing this at their campaign stops,
695
0:45:31
0:45:37
and we have posters that say, have you signed the pledge, etc.,
696
0:45:37
0:45:44
that this could potentially put their feet to the fire in a way that nothing else we've
697
0:45:44
0:45:46
done so far has accomplished.
698
0:45:47
0:45:52
Of course, it requires a lot of people to be on board, but I have about four organizations
699
0:45:52
0:45:54
already that are anxious to do it.
700
0:45:54
0:45:57
And I hope you'll all read the pledge.
701
0:45:58
0:46:02
There's also a cover letter, which I don't have space to put in here.
702
0:46:03
0:46:04
There are some footnotes also.
703
0:46:04
0:46:08
But anyway, you ask for a solution.
704
0:46:09
0:46:11
It's just another tool in the toolbox.
705
0:46:11
0:46:13
We're trying so many things.
706
0:46:15
0:46:16
Excellent.
707
0:46:16
0:46:17
Excellent.
708
0:46:17
0:46:18
Thank you, Meryl.
709
0:46:19
0:46:21
Jerry totally approves.
710
0:46:21
0:46:21
Randall.
711
0:46:22
0:46:23
Hi.
712
0:46:24
0:46:27
Meryl Andress, the doctor's here.
713
0:46:27
0:46:34
Last November, I was successful in getting Dr. Peter McCulloch to come into San Diego
714
0:46:34
0:46:38
to address the reopen San Diego activist group.
715
0:46:39
0:46:43
They were fighting the COVID lockdown in all of San Diego County.
716
0:46:44
0:46:52
Dr. McCulloch gave an excellent presentation, and it did increase the zealousness of that
717
0:46:52
0:46:53
group of people.
718
0:46:54
0:46:57
Lately, they have been trying to fight back.
719
0:46:58
0:47:06
Both the city mayor and the county supervisors are still continuing the emergency declaration.
720
0:47:07
0:47:14
Peggy Hall up in Orange County has been suing California Superior Court to get that emergency
721
0:47:14
0:47:15
declaration stopped.
722
0:47:16
0:47:22
The reopened San Diego people are going to have to file federal lawsuit to do the same
723
0:47:23
0:47:23
thing.
724
0:47:24
0:47:33
My wish is somehow, I wish that the doctors on our side could have better connection with
725
0:47:33
0:47:39
the activist group when they're needed to testify in front of the city council or the
726
0:47:39
0:47:41
county commissioners meeting.
727
0:47:42
0:47:47
They would counter the bad advice that the city relies on.
728
0:47:47
0:47:56
San Diego chief health officer still adamantly insists that there is an emergency situation
729
0:47:56
0:47:57
in San Diego County.
730
0:47:57
0:48:03
And that gives them tremendous latitude to continue to enforce this.
731
0:48:03
0:48:06
I hate to say this, almost a false agenda.
732
0:48:10
0:48:11
I'm throwing it out here.
733
0:48:11
0:48:15
At least I got Peggy in touch with the San Diego people.
734
0:48:15
0:48:20
I would like to see more networking of the doctors with these groups of people who are
735
0:48:20
0:48:22
starting to push back.
736
0:48:22
0:48:23
Thank you.
737
0:48:25
0:48:26
Thank you, Randall.
738
0:48:26
0:48:32
All I can say is, I think, you know, Paul Merrick went up to New Hampshire and probably
739
0:48:32
0:48:36
convinced the legislature to vote in favor of making ivermectin an over-the-counter drug,
740
0:48:37
0:48:38
which was amazing.
741
0:48:38
0:48:40
And then the governor wouldn't sign it.
742
0:48:41
0:48:47
But they did pass a secondary bill that allowed doctors to freely prescribe it.
743
0:48:47
0:48:51
So although patients couldn't get it over the counter, doctors could not be pursued
744
0:48:51
0:48:53
by the medical board for giving it.
745
0:48:53
0:48:56
And so he made a big difference there.
746
0:48:57
0:49:02
Now, I've never turned down an opportunity to testify, you know, and usually it's on
747
0:49:02
0:49:03
Zoom.
748
0:49:03
0:49:07
But, you know, McCullough and Malone are really, really busy.
749
0:49:07
0:49:09
There are other doctors.
750
0:49:09
0:49:15
There was a Southern California orthopedist who testified at one of the county hearings.
751
0:49:16
0:49:21
So I think, you know, we're doing the best we can.
752
0:49:21
0:49:26
And it's up to the activist groups to connect with us, I think.
753
0:49:29
0:49:30
Very good.
754
0:49:30
0:49:38
Meryl and Randall, your question or your comment is relevant to some steps that were taken in
755
0:49:38
0:49:46
Western Australia by a large number of citizens who went to their local municipal councillors
756
0:49:46
0:49:46
meeting.
757
0:49:47
0:49:54
So, you know, each municipality, there are 590 local governments in Australia, similar
758
0:49:54
0:49:55
system to most countries.
759
0:49:56
0:50:03
And they got it organised and a large number of citizens went to express their concerns
760
0:50:03
0:50:04
to the councillors.
761
0:50:04
0:50:08
And it was remarkable how ill-informed the councillors were.
762
0:50:10
0:50:11
And there's real benefit.
763
0:50:11
0:50:16
We had one of our speakers a couple of weeks ago, Stephen, I wonder if you can remember,
764
0:50:17
0:50:20
who said, perform your civic duties.
765
0:50:21
0:50:26
You know, Randall, the comment that you make, and Meryl, you know, this going to council
766
0:50:26
0:50:32
meetings and saying, why do you, for example, insist on your staff wearing masks?
767
0:50:32
0:50:34
Don't you know that this is madness?
768
0:50:36
0:50:41
And by turning up and putting the heat on councillors, that's part of our civic duty.
769
0:50:41
0:50:43
It is an ability that we have.
770
0:50:43
0:50:50
If every local government or local municipality in the US had citizen activists turning up
771
0:50:50
0:50:53
at their meetings, it would get the message through.
772
0:50:54
0:50:58
And it's not difficult to, you know, it's not difficult to organise because we've got
773
0:50:58
0:50:59
people right through.
774
0:50:59
0:51:02
We've got millions of people in the US on our side.
775
0:51:03
0:51:11
So please look in your own, you know, in your own country, whether that's possible and for
776
0:51:11
0:51:18
this opportunity to question the crazy mandates that these local authorities impose.
777
0:51:21
0:51:23
Now, Stephen, come to Stephen's question.
778
0:51:24
0:51:26
What outcomes do we want?
779
0:51:26
0:51:31
So any other suggestions on outcomes?
780
0:51:31
0:51:35
So, you know, that's what Rima was saying.
781
0:51:35
0:51:39
Hey, let's get rid of the World Holocaust Organisation.
782
0:51:40
0:51:40
She called it.
783
0:51:40
0:51:42
That's what Rima calls it.
784
0:51:42
0:51:43
I love it.
785
0:51:43
0:51:44
There was another description of it.
786
0:51:44
0:51:45
I took a note of it.
787
0:51:46
0:51:47
I'll come to you, Glenn, in a moment.
788
0:51:48
0:51:53
She called also, James Rogusky called it, whatever.
789
0:51:53
0:51:58
And I remind all of you as well to share your thoughts with James.
790
0:51:58
0:52:05
He's invited all of you to send him an email, telephone him about your thinking about what
791
0:52:05
0:52:06
should be happening.
792
0:52:07
0:52:12
And Gerry Brady has put in the chat, go to cmnnews.org every day.
793
0:52:13
0:52:15
What outcomes do you want to see?
794
0:52:15
0:52:15
Glenn.
795
0:52:19
0:52:21
The World Stealth Organisation.
796
0:52:21
0:52:21
I like it.
797
0:52:21
0:52:22
John Stone.
798
0:52:23
0:52:24
Glenn.
799
0:52:25
0:52:32
The topic I'm going to bring up is something I've been evolving to, especially recently.
800
0:52:32
0:52:35
And I call it training partnership teams.
801
0:52:36
0:52:43
We know that if we try to amass in any kind of size, that we can be attacked by infiltrators.
802
0:52:44
0:52:49
However, if you think of a partnership team as being somewhere between two and five or
803
0:52:49
0:52:55
six people that know each other well, are supportive of each other, and can take action.
804
0:52:55
0:52:57
And there's various kinds of action.
805
0:52:57
0:53:03
But almost all of them have to do with managing the situation where they are confronted with
806
0:53:03
0:53:10
the bluffs, with illegal actions, and they can resist.
807
0:53:11
0:53:18
Let's take the Board of Ed topic and the warnings or the theme that somehow that is
808
0:53:18
0:53:21
a domestic terrorist action.
809
0:53:22
0:53:29
If people are careful and they go into a Board of Ed, they can directly quote the First Amendment
810
0:53:30
0:53:41
as directly enabling them to petition any government group for a grievance with redress.
811
0:53:41
0:53:45
It's right there in the 45 words of the First Amendment.
812
0:53:46
0:53:53
If they go in and they specifically say, I'm here to object to a range of things that have
813
0:53:53
0:53:58
occurred, here are my grievances, and here is my action set for redress.
814
0:53:59
0:54:07
And then if some first responders come near you and say, gee, we're going to take you from
815
0:54:07
0:54:11
this podium, you can tell them, you need to read the First Amendment.
816
0:54:12
0:54:13
I'm supportive.
817
0:54:13
0:54:16
You're supposed to be supporting our country's laws.
819
0:54:19
0:54:25
And you talk down those other participants that are being forced into executing the
820
0:54:25
0:54:26
illegal actions.
821
0:54:27
0:54:34
You look to share that knowledge with as much as the public and those people that can help
822
0:54:34
0:54:35
support you.
823
0:54:36
0:54:39
And as I say, you are fully protected.
824
0:54:39
0:54:40
I'll give a couple other examples.
825
0:54:42
0:54:46
If someone felt they needed to get their prescription, that they do fully went through
826
0:54:48
0:54:56
a COVID treating doctor or a telemed and got a prescription, we know that many pharmacists are
827
0:54:56
0:54:57
refusing to fill it.
828
0:54:58
0:54:59
That's illegal.
829
0:55:00
0:55:04
They are not allowed to override a doctor's prescription.
830
0:55:04
0:55:10
Their only role is to monitor what is being done and to check if there happened to be any error.
831
0:55:11
0:55:13
There aren't errors going on here.
832
0:55:13
0:55:16
They don't have a right to refuse the prescription.
833
0:55:16
0:55:24
Now, in general, there can be reasons where they decide they don't want to fill it.
834
0:55:25
0:55:31
And in most states, the law requires them to find another pharmacy that will fill it.
835
0:55:32
0:55:37
Now, the way to be successful in this is that you're not going in on your own.
836
0:55:37
0:55:40
You're going in with what I'm calling the partnership team.
837
0:55:40
0:55:46
As a minimum, you have someone there with a mobile phone that's recording the entire session.
838
0:55:46
0:55:54
You may want even a third person that is coming along and watching it and making sure that no one
839
0:55:54
0:56:00
is disturbing either the speaker or the person videoing and maybe even have some extra materials,
840
0:56:00
0:56:05
printed materials in case the speaker felt they needed something extra.
841
0:56:05
0:56:11
But just think of it that a team of three like that can be extremely effective, can capture
842
0:56:11
0:56:19
everything on tape, can talk down the illegal acts and are prepared to defend themselves in case
843
0:56:19
0:56:27
there is any action taken by local law enforcement and basically talk down the law enforcement too
844
0:56:27
0:56:28
on what their role is.
845
0:56:29
0:56:35
I'll give one other example, and that's around challenging those that are trying to kill
846
0:56:36
0:56:39
your friends or relatives in a hospital setting.
847
0:56:41
0:56:50
Many people know of Ernesto Ramirez and the fact that his teenage son died of the vaccine.
848
0:56:51
0:56:55
And he did everything he could as follow-up to try to get retribution.
849
0:56:55
0:57:04
But after the fact, it didn't help because at every stage, our opponents have ganged up
850
0:57:04
0:57:07
and prevented action against their supporters.
851
0:57:08
0:57:12
But he was a case where he was very familiar with the background.
852
0:57:12
0:57:24
He knew about all the conditions of Bram Dezavir and ventilators as contributing to the situation.
853
0:57:26
0:57:32
And his aunt was in the hospital and his cousin was there and called Ernesto for help.
854
0:57:32
0:57:39
Ernesto got on the phone, demanded when the doctors were present, demanded to speak and
855
0:57:39
0:57:41
tell them that what they were doing was wrong.
856
0:57:41
0:57:47
If they attempted to proceed, not only would he be looking to sue the hospital, he would
857
0:57:47
0:57:50
be suing every individual that was participating with that patient.
858
0:57:50
0:57:57
That doctor, the set of nurses, and that he had the backing of a variety of experts, medical
859
0:57:57
0:58:05
directors, medical doctors like Dr. Cole and Dr. McCullough, and that they were not going
860
0:58:05
0:58:06
to be able to survive.
861
0:58:06
0:58:14
See, this is basically knowing your rights, marking your presence to them, and if others
862
0:58:14
0:58:18
attempt to intervene, being able to know your rights there.
863
0:58:18
0:58:29
This is a case where his cousin was right there having the medical power of attorney
864
0:58:29
0:58:32
and seeking the help of Ernesto.
865
0:58:32
0:58:43
And as a team, they talked the hospital staff from doing that and within two days she was
866
0:58:43
0:58:44
released and fine.
867
0:58:44
0:58:53
And in almost every case like this, there is the ability to say, make sure you're prepared,
868
0:58:53
0:58:57
make sure you're working with a small team, make sure you're videoing it, make sure you
869
0:58:57
0:59:04
can tell any law enforcement about the law so that they aren't violating their oath also.
870
0:59:05
0:59:06
Thank you.
871
0:59:07
0:59:08
Glenn, excellent.
872
0:59:09
0:59:09
Just a quick question.
873
0:59:11
0:59:18
Glenn, sorry, Glenn, I was going to say, that's excellent information, brilliant, love it,
874
0:59:18
0:59:22
and there's some good examples online of precisely what you're saying.
875
0:59:22
0:59:25
So did you say you are training partnership teams or is that?
876
0:59:26
0:59:35
I'm saying this is a concept that my group is reviewing right now and looking to develop
877
0:59:35
0:59:36
training materials.
878
0:59:37
0:59:41
It's very, I don't know to what degree you watched some of the things that Todd
879
0:59:41
0:59:50
Callender has been doing, but he also has been training people on how to try to fight for their
880
0:59:50
0:59:55
rights at the point of, as they're occurring, rather than waiting to have to sue them in court.
881
0:59:57
1:00:02
If you can state those rights up front, challenge the players, including the
882
1:00:06
1:00:15
law enforcement in small teams, you can be powerful, especially if you plan it ahead,
883
1:00:15
1:00:21
that you have your verbiage down, that you have someone recording it, that you tell them you're
884
1:00:21
1:00:30
going to spread the word from the results. In the same way as they bluff us with garbage,
885
1:00:31
1:00:32
we can bluff them back with truth.
886
1:00:32
1:00:35
Excellent.
887
1:00:35
1:00:42
And sometimes untruths maybe. Glenn, do you know of people in the United States who are taking on
888
1:00:42
1:00:52
Harvard, Massachusetts General Hospital, they are still mandating these injections, and not just
889
1:00:52
1:00:59
Harvard, many, many of the universities in America are continuing with pushing these
890
1:00:59
1:01:08
injections onto young adults, 18 years old to 21 or whatever. It's absolutely crazy,
891
1:01:08
1:01:13
and they think they can get away with it, these universities. It's terrible what's happening.
892
1:01:15
1:01:21
It's unfortunate that they have a lot more leverage in the colleges than almost every other space.
893
1:01:22
1:01:28
In the space of employment, you can talk down the employer of go ahead and fire me, because you know
894
1:01:28
1:01:33
what? I'm going to sue you. You're going to end up paying all the cost. You're going to pay me all
895
1:01:33
1:01:40
the back pay, and you're going to be embarrassed in the press. So what happens if they, most of
896
1:01:40
1:01:45
the time they back off in the employment area. Sometimes they will sue you, and then what do they
897
1:01:45
1:01:50
do? They contact you in a few days and say, well, we don't really want the suit around. How about if
898
1:01:50
1:01:58
we hire you back as a contractor and boost your pay by 30%? So in employment space, there's
899
1:01:58
1:02:04
clear direction in the grade school, K through 12. Glenn, if the students... Hold on, let me finish.
900
1:02:04
1:02:11
Let me finish. There's clear ways to protest. In the colleges, you're bound up. There is an approach
901
1:02:11
1:02:16
that I think can work. I'm not sure anyone's doing it in any scale, and that's where a large
902
1:02:16
1:02:22
number of the students say, hell no. We're not going to show you any of the evidence around
903
1:02:23
1:02:30
vaccine cards. In fact, just think of it if college students start to gather and say, okay,
904
1:02:31
1:02:38
let's do a vaccine card burning, because that's not something anyone else needs to know about.
905
1:02:38
1:02:46
That's our right to do and to be our information, not the university's. And if enough protested to
906
1:02:46
1:02:54
the universities, they will back down. But you need a big number that truly scares them that
907
1:02:54
1:02:59
suddenly their enrollment is going to disappear or they're going to become the laughing stock of
908
1:03:00
1:03:09
the country for taking on an illegal... Yes, but Glenn, the reality is this, that students have been
909
1:03:09
1:03:13
and still are the most vulnerable, arguably, apart from children, obviously.
910
1:03:18
1:03:23
They have nobody supporting them. Everybody's turning a blind eye to the fact that all these
911
1:03:23
1:03:30
young people are being forced to take injections to carry on studying whatever they want to study
912
1:03:30
1:03:38
at Harvard, Yale, wherever, Washington State University. We're not supporting them. Nobody
913
1:03:38
1:03:44
is supporting them. The lawyers aren't supporting them. Nobody's even looking at it. It's almost as
914
1:03:44
1:03:49
if it's not. That's certainly not true. There are people looking at it. There are a variety of lawyers
915
1:03:49
1:03:58
involved. It is the most difficult case because universities have a very strange kind of leverage.
916
1:03:58
1:04:03
There is no risk to these students. It's not the most difficult case. It's the most difficult case
917
1:04:03
1:04:10
because the lawyers say it's the most difficult case. No, I don't accept it. I believe you're wrong
918
1:04:10
1:04:16
and it's because of the influence they have where they can say you can't come here and there isn't
919
1:04:16
1:04:25
any wages that are at risk. It's wrong. It's wrong. It's wrong. And it's wrong again. And it will be
920
1:04:25
1:04:31
wrong next year and in two years time and forever more. So why aren't you doing it? I agree. It's
921
1:04:31
1:04:37
completely wrong. I'm simply saying that is the most difficult case of all the kind of cases we
922
1:04:37
1:04:43
have. That's the one that's most complicated. Why? Why is it because there's not a direct way
923
1:04:43
1:04:49
that you private universities have no authority from any government mechanism. So you can't use
924
1:04:49
1:04:58
Sertibond. There's no standard way of getting a university to pay back damages. How many damage
925
1:04:59
1:05:02
suits do you think have ever been paid off by a university? Virtually none.
926
1:05:02
1:05:06
That's not the point. It's just not a body. That's not the point. They're putting their
927
1:05:06
1:05:17
students at risk and their staff. I agree. I agree. Steven, Glenn agrees with you. He's just saying
928
1:05:17
1:05:21
it's legally a difficult case to run but you're both agreeing that it's wrong. Nobody's tried
929
1:05:21
1:05:27
those Charles. Nobody's tried as far as I know. Well, I'm telling you I'm describing to you
930
1:05:27
1:05:33
a way of training small teams. That's not going to work in the university setting. You need a big
931
1:05:33
1:05:38
team. You can't go in there with three or four people and have success whereas almost every other
932
1:05:38
1:05:43
area I've mentioned you can. Three or four people can have a huge success. So of course you can beat it
933
1:05:43
1:05:50
if there's a will but there is no will. No, it's not just that you need will and you need a mountain of people
934
1:05:50
1:05:53
to organize and soon as you collect a mountain of people you're going to get attacked
935
1:05:54
1:05:58
and you're going to be infiltrated by the other side. So it's right then. It's okay for the
936
1:05:58
1:06:03
university. I didn't say that. I said it's the most difficult case. Can you tell me a case that's more
937
1:06:03
1:06:09
difficult than the university one? A situation for any. I don't accept it's difficult. It shouldn't
938
1:06:09
1:06:19
be difficult. At least someone should be trying. Nobody's trying. Charles is going to try. Warner Mendenhall is trying. He's actually
939
1:06:19
1:06:26
got five cases currently running in Ohio. One he actually completely won already and
940
1:06:27
1:06:33
four of them are currently up for appeal. Very good, Catherine. Thank you. Leslie Manoukian is also trying and
941
1:06:33
1:06:38
she's had a variety of successes including I believe it's the University of Chicago completely
942
1:06:38
1:06:46
backed down. Who's that then? Leslie Manoukian. She's the same one that got the
943
1:06:46
1:06:55
the mask mandates lifted for all domestic air flights in the USA. So that was on behalf of
944
1:06:56
1:07:03
who was that now? Richard Fleming? No. Someone. It's her group. It's her health defense group.
945
1:07:04
1:07:12
Yeah, health defense fund. Right. Well one of the lawyers on this call has actually said that he was
946
1:07:12
1:07:21
responsible for that being lifted. Yes, the mask requirements on flights. Well the person
947
1:07:21
1:07:26
that was responsible for that is Leslie Manoukian. There's been some other chatter
948
1:07:26
1:07:30
that is not completely accurate. Do you have her email address, Glenn?
949
1:07:32
1:07:35
I do but I'm not in a position to share it. Well can you ask her?
950
1:07:36
1:07:42
Ask her which? Well could you email her and ask her whether you're able to pass it to me?
951
1:07:44
1:07:55
Yes. Thanks. Glenn, well done on that strategy. Craig, Scottie and Catherine, I point out that
952
1:07:55
1:08:04
in Australia this issue of dealing with the doctors is being addressed by a newly formed
953
1:08:04
1:08:12
a newly formed medical association, Ampsie, Australia Medical Practitioners Society, is now
954
1:08:14
1:08:21
writing to, influencing, sending the science to all of the medical colleges in Australia.
955
1:08:22
1:08:29
In other words, rather than going to the doctors, there are some 50 colleges of medicine in Australia
956
1:08:29
1:08:34
and what they're doing is putting those colleges on notice with the science.
957
1:08:36
1:08:42
And they've got all of the data that we know and they're attacking the colleges, not the
958
1:08:42
1:08:45
universities or the students. So I think that's an excellent strategy. Craig,
959
1:08:45
1:08:54
do you have your hand up and then Catherine? Firstly, I'd like to say that I like Glenn's idea
960
1:08:54
1:09:03
about small groups and I can see how the small groups would be more immune to infiltration.
961
1:09:03
1:09:13
And as a suggestion, I don't know, I used to run a website called Meet My Street, which basically
962
1:09:13
1:09:19
enabled users to enter their location and then they would be able to
963
1:09:19
1:09:27
link up with people in their local neighbourhood. And it was a simple thing, it utilised Google Maps
964
1:09:27
1:09:34
and plotted everyone's icon on a map and then people could see if there were people in their
965
1:09:34
1:09:42
streets, hence the name Meet My Street. But in the same way, I can create something similar for
966
1:09:42
1:09:48
uniting people into small local groups, Glenn. I'm not sure if local is what you had in mind,
967
1:09:48
1:09:54
but I assume that because people are meeting physically, then they would be more or less local
968
1:09:54
1:10:02
unless you did it when they convened during an event. But I totally can see how having a small
969
1:10:02
1:10:11
group of people meeting would provide a form of organisation which was immune to infiltration
970
1:10:11
1:10:20
and also provide a kind of family unit almost, which would be quite supportive of people in their
971
1:10:20
1:10:27
efforts. Because people, even in a large group, people lose their lives, they lose their lives,
972
1:10:27
1:10:31
and you can feel ineffective because you're always assuming that someone else in the large group is
973
1:10:31
1:10:37
going to do the job and therefore there's no delegation of responsibility to the individual.
974
1:10:38
1:10:42
Whereas in a small group, people would feel much more motivated, so I can see that.
975
1:10:43
1:10:50
And I'd also like to say that I'll try and create a Meet My Street,
976
1:10:50
1:10:58
but it would be for the formation of small groups. I was going to say cells, but these cells,
977
1:10:58
1:11:03
that's probably the wrong word because that sort of implies it's got connotations.
978
1:11:03
1:11:10
So I'll just stick with the partnership groups, teams. But the other thing I really liked about
980
1:11:19
1:11:24
the other thing I really liked was Meryl's idea of the pledge, because basically having
981
1:11:27
1:11:39
publishing the names of candidates who have pledged to go against mandates and such,
982
1:11:39
1:11:42
it sounds like a brilliant idea, especially with the elections coming up.
983
1:11:43
1:11:49
So I think that's really good. But I was going to ask her what the pledge would contain, so I guess
984
1:11:50
1:11:54
it would be interesting to know what the pledge would have in it.
985
1:11:59
1:12:03
Craig, just let me respond to the naming convention. Absolutely,
986
1:12:03
1:12:10
cell is the wrong way to go because there's a lot of other connotations to it. The nature of
987
1:12:10
1:12:16
partnership I think is really powerful because it basically says it starts with two.
988
1:12:17
1:12:23
And then it can be incremental, but small to whatever size you think you can have the most
989
1:12:23
1:12:32
influence. And as a word, I think it's a friendly word to be using, partnerships. Thank you.
990
1:12:33
1:12:34
What about Alliance?
991
1:12:34
1:12:48
Alliance can be massive in size, so it doesn't help define it. Using words that people can
992
1:12:48
1:12:56
get meaning from, from just the title, is always better than others that are less precise.
993
1:12:57
1:13:02
But our enemies use the word partner and partnerships.
994
1:13:07
1:13:11
Yeah, I think partnerships is okay, Stephen, the fact that they use it. Our enemies use the internet.
995
1:13:11
1:13:15
That's why they haven't brought it down. But I don't understand what's wrong with Alliance.
996
1:13:17
1:13:26
Partnership is closer than an alliance. Right. Is it? Yep. Yeah, yeah, much closer.
997
1:13:26
1:13:31
Alliance is just a, you know, we're going to alliance here in this meeting, but a partnership
998
1:13:31
1:13:37
is a close connection. I like that idea of training partnership teams. That's nice.
999
1:13:37
1:13:43
Cell is more, anyway, anyway, as Rima said, you know, everybody wake up. It's not time to be nice.
1000
1:13:43
1:13:49
So, Catherine, we've got 10 minutes to go. Catherine, and then Meryl, Stephen's going to,
1001
1:13:49
1:13:54
he gets the last question, as you know, for you before we leave at the, in the 10-minute mark.
1002
1:13:54
1:14:00
Catherine, over to you. Hi, unfortunately, I got here pretty late today. So, I just heard this
1003
1:14:00
1:14:07
business about the universities. And I just wanted to clarify a little bit more there about, yes,
1004
1:14:07
1:14:15
there are suits going on in the university space. Like I said before, Warner Mendenhall has
1005
1:14:15
1:14:22
sued five universities here in Ohio. And I do know that there's groups like No College Mandates.
1006
1:14:22
1:14:28
That's a group of, I don't know how many parents, it's hundreds, thousands of parents of students
1007
1:14:28
1:14:35
across the country. And there are organizing groups. And I can say locally here in Ohio,
1008
1:14:38
1:14:43
the pushback is getting stronger right now. One of the schools that Warner is suing is
1009
1:14:43
1:14:51
Ohio University, who just reinstituted mask mandates. And I'm hearing from the parents there
1010
1:14:51
1:14:56
and some of the students there as well that they are, more and more of the students and parents
1011
1:14:56
1:15:03
are starting to fight back and push back. So, it is not without hope. It is just extremely slow.
1012
1:15:03
1:15:08
And the other big thing about it is it's extremely expensive. Each one of these cases
1013
1:15:08
1:15:14
costs tens of thousands of dollars. So, if you really want to, if you really want to help and,
1014
1:15:14
1:15:18
and fight back against these mandates, once, once a few of them start to fall,
1015
1:15:19
1:15:26
it should hopefully spread further from individual universities and colleges.
1016
1:15:27
1:15:30
But it's, it's just expensive and they have to take it all the way through to the end in order
1017
1:15:30
1:15:36
to help others. So, if you want to, if you want to help with it, they need money. All of these groups
1018
1:15:36
1:15:40
need money. So, that's all I wanted to say. Thanks. Catherine, could you put, could you
1019
1:15:41
1:15:47
send an email to me with your email address so I can... Yeah, what is your email address?
1020
1:15:47
1:15:53
So, it's Stephen with a PH dot frost. Stephen, put your, Stephen, put your email address into
1021
1:15:53
1:16:02
the chat. Okay. That's the easiest, safest. Catherine, excellent, excellent point, you know,
1022
1:16:02
1:16:07
and the, and the law, and you know, the lawyers need some money. And I say to doctors who are
1023
1:16:07
1:16:13
in Australia, I go, well, you know, if you agree there's a depopulation agenda, why,
1024
1:16:14
1:16:21
why would you try and save your money, sell your house and fund these cases? Because otherwise
1025
1:16:21
1:16:29
we're all lost. We're all doomed. So, a lot of people are certainly doing that. And our job
1026
1:16:29
1:16:34
is to keep educating people from our work that we're doing here so that they give money. Those
1027
1:16:34
1:16:40
who can give money easily should be giving it in large amounts. And there's a lot of cash sloshing
1028
1:16:40
1:16:47
around and there's a lot of people with money on our side, but we have to ask them. So, Catherine,
1029
1:16:47
1:16:55
well said. Stephen, last questions to you of Beryl. And Tom Rodman has put the link in the chat for
1030
1:16:55
1:17:02
the Telegram group. We'll be finishing in a few minutes here if you wish to continue the discussion.
1031
1:17:03
1:17:09
So, Stephen, over to you. Yeah. So, first, Catherine, I put my, oh, sorry, I haven't pressed
1032
1:17:10
1:17:17
enter though. I have now. Beautiful. Well done. Can you see that? Yep. Thank you. Very good. Thank
1033
1:17:17
1:17:26
you. If you could email me, Catherine, I'd be really grateful to you. I will do that. Thank you.
1034
1:17:27
1:17:35
So, Beryl, I thought your presentation was outstanding. So, I used an adjective in my
1035
1:17:35
1:17:42
introduction in the invitations, which I think was appropriate. I won't repeat it here because
1036
1:17:42
1:17:50
I don't want to embarrass you, but I just wondered. So, you presented it in a very neutral way
1037
1:17:50
1:18:00
and maybe you don't want to say what you really think. And that wouldn't be surprising with this
1038
1:18:00
1:18:10
case you've got coming up in October. But maybe you do want to say what your views are on
1039
1:18:12
1:18:23
what you were talking about. And it's, in my view, one can't defend it at any point. The whole thing
1040
1:18:23
1:18:28
is just, it seems to me that the whole thing was designed to make money and now it's being used
1041
1:18:29
1:18:39
as a mechanism of control. And maybe that was the original intention. What do you see? Because I
1042
1:18:39
1:18:48
noticed there are four films that come up and I put the link to one of those films in the invitation.
1043
1:18:48
1:18:56
I don't know whether you noticed that. Your name, when you search it, there are four films. I think
1044
1:18:56
1:19:02
it says filmography or something. But you appear in them, I think, but you're not the director,
1045
1:19:02
1:19:12
or you may be, I don't know. But you've been very active at least since 2007, I think.
1046
1:19:13
1:19:15
So you've worked with Andrew Wakefield, correct?
1047
1:19:18
1:19:25
I haven't worked directly with Andrew, no. But I certainly know of him and I work with people who
1048
1:19:25
1:19:30
work with him and all that. As a matter of interest, do you know how to contact him?
1049
1:19:33
1:19:41
Well, he lives in Texas and near Polly Tommy, I think. And at least he did live in Texas. So
1050
1:19:41
1:19:49
I know Polly. Polly would know how to contact him. I have his email address. Sorry? I have his email
1051
1:19:49
1:19:55
address. Oh, very good, John. Could you send it to me? John?
1052
1:19:57
1:20:04
Yes, of course. Yeah. With his permission, obviously. Yes. Thank you so much. So Meryl,
1053
1:20:05
1:20:11
do you want to say what you think about what you presented today or not? Your take on it?
1054
1:20:12
1:20:19
Well, I think I already did, Stephen. I told you that I think people are trying to take over the
1055
1:20:19
1:20:30
world, impoverish us and weaken us under the guise of medical pandemics. And monkeypox may be the
1056
1:20:30
1:20:41
next one. Certainly, there are many fishy aspects of this pandemic. I've actually been in this kind
1057
1:20:41
1:20:49
of medical activist role for over 30 years. I identified the first offensive use of biological
1058
1:20:49
1:20:55
warfare, which happened during the Rhodesian Civil War and involved anthrax. And I published that
1059
1:20:55
1:21:05
30 years ago. So I think my position is well known. And what I try to do in all my writings is
1060
1:21:05
1:21:10
just present the facts that I find to people because I think they tell a story. And I'd like
1061
1:21:10
1:21:16
the reader or the person listening to be able to make up their own mind because that's more powerful.
1062
1:21:17
1:21:24
Sure. And if I've missed facts, because, you know, we're all selective in some way, I'm
1063
1:21:25
1:21:28
happy to be apprised of what I've missed if I don't have the story right.
1064
1:21:30
1:21:36
So do you think the stockpiling of vaccines, not just so the monkeypox, but there are others,
1065
1:21:36
1:21:41
presumably, do you think they're doing that because they care about the populations they serve?
1066
1:21:41
1:21:48
These governments? Well, OK, so now you're asking for opinion with where I have no facts to
1067
1:21:49
1:21:57
say what the intent is, but certainly the expense, the incredible expense of the preparations for
1068
1:21:57
1:22:05
pandemics and biological warfare, which are probably about $150 billion in the last 21 years
1069
1:22:05
1:22:14
in the US. That's extraordinary, probably at least that much. And my guess, if you look at
1070
1:22:14
1:22:20
the companies that got big chunks of that money without good evidence of an effective product,
1071
1:22:20
1:22:27
you will find that they often were politically connected. So for instance, the company
1072
1:22:27
1:22:33
that is selling this product, T-Pox, which is the main drug for monkeypox now,
1073
1:22:34
1:22:43
T-Pox was their primary investor was Ronald Perelman, who was a big Democrat donor.
1074
1:22:44
1:22:48
And when the government first tried to buy half a billion dollars worth of this drug,
1075
1:22:49
1:22:58
10 years ago or more, during the Obama administration, Congress was having a fit.
1076
1:22:59
1:23:05
And so they just waited 18 months and then they bought a larger amount of T-Pox from the company.
1077
1:23:07
1:23:11
So yeah, I think there's a tremendous amount of corruption involved when there's this much
1078
1:23:11
1:23:17
money sloshing around and you don't need to prove that your product works before the government
1079
1:23:17
1:23:24
buys it. I mean, you're asking for trouble. But as I said, I think this is only a relatively small
1080
1:23:24
1:23:36
piece of a larger program that is trying to gain hegemony over people using medical threats.
1081
1:23:36
1:23:44
And I think that whole issue of expecting the government to help us out with a pandemic,
1082
1:23:44
1:23:48
well, maybe we shouldn't. Maybe we should distress the government and maybe it's going to be every
1083
1:23:48
1:23:57
man for himself. On the other hand, were a real smallpox pandemic to arise with a 30% mortality
1084
1:23:57
1:24:03
rate, which is then maybe people would want the vaccine. On the other hand, it seems that drugs
1085
1:24:03
1:24:09
that treat viral infections have been suppressed. Who knew? I didn't know at the beginning of COVID
1086
1:24:09
1:24:15
that the chloroquine drugs, which I'd worked with for many years, that they were effective antivirals,
1087
1:24:15
1:24:22
not every virus, but a number of viruses can be killed in vitro with chloroquine drugs.
1088
1:24:23
1:24:32
And it turns out that federal agencies knew that as well. So I think for those of us who are aware,
1089
1:24:32
1:24:40
requires a whole new way of thinking about how we deal with medical emergencies, how we determine
1090
1:24:40
1:24:46
whether there are emergencies, who do we trust, et cetera. We can't stop the government from
1091
1:24:46
1:24:54
wasting money, but we can at this point, we might lose our job, we might lose the ability to go to
1092
1:24:54
1:25:02
a school, but we can say, you're not going to inject me. And we could lose that freedom soon
1093
1:25:03
1:25:09
if people aren't very clear about protecting the autonomy of their own bodies.
1094
1:25:10
1:25:17
And that's the final frontier, right? Is our body. The line stops at my skin.
1095
1:25:18
1:25:23
And we haven't gotten that message out, but I think it's a compelling one.
1096
1:25:24
1:25:31
And maybe we'll learn how to do it better. That's a brilliant summary, Merrill. Absolutely great.
1097
1:25:32
1:25:41
And have you got any ideas about what is your, can you see any solutions, the best solutions
1098
1:25:41
1:25:47
that you can see or? Well, as I said, you know, I've created this pledge with the help of a lot
1099
1:25:47
1:25:55
of people. And if groups, I have several groups already that are anxious to get it started.
1100
1:25:56
1:26:05
So if groups come together and they have their own constituency, we can push it and it'll make
1101
1:26:05
1:26:10
a difference. And if people don't, it won't. So I hope to get it out there in its final form
1102
1:26:10
1:26:16
within the next few days. I've been playing with it for two and a half weeks and it's long enough.
1103
1:26:17
1:26:22
Have you got much support, Merrill? Yeah, everyone who's seen it has been
1104
1:26:23
1:26:30
very taken with it. Just about. I should say, I mean, people have come to me and asked if their
1105
1:26:30
1:26:40
group could join. Yeah, very good. It's in the chat. And I hope people will come to me and ask
1106
1:26:40
1:26:45
to join and I will sign them up. Great. Or if they want to discuss the language, you know,
1107
1:26:45
1:26:49
we've got maybe a few more days to do that. Thank you. Thank you.
1108
1:26:49
1:26:56
All right, Merrill, the request was to put it in the chat again, because I think some people,
1109
1:26:56
1:27:00
because the chat goes quite long and well done, everybody, for the information that you have put
1110
1:27:00
1:27:10
into the chat and shared with us. It's so valuable. And then Cathy Dopp asks to put your substrack link
1111
1:27:11
1:27:14
in, although that's quite findable, I would have thought, under your name.
1112
1:27:14
1:27:19
Anyway, put the chat in there, we'll keep it open. All right.
1113
1:27:19
1:27:23
Charles, I just noticed that Jerry Brady has summed it up. Well, if you want to live in a
1114
1:27:23
1:27:31
concentration camp, do nothing. That's it. Jerry Brady is a medical doctor in Australia.
1115
1:27:31
1:27:37
But Stephen is so comfortable to be asleep. I love being asleep.
1116
1:27:37
1:27:40
Yeah, I know. I know the feeling, Charles, but you've got to fight.
1117
1:27:40
1:27:50
Oh, I'm going to sleep. There's a word in Welsh called Bechod. Poor baby. I think something like
1118
1:27:50
1:27:56
that. I'm a poor baby. That's correct. Yeah. All right. Tom Rodman has put the link in for the
1119
1:27:56
1:28:04
Telegram chat for those who wish to continue. Thank you, Merrill, everybody. Please thank
1120
1:28:04
1:28:08
Merrill in the usual way with... Brilliant, Merrill. Very good.
1121
1:28:08
1:28:14
Wonderful. Well done on your courage over the last 30 years, Merrill. Yes. It's a great credit to you.
1122
1:28:15
1:28:20
Please save the chat, everybody. Stephen, I will send you the chat. Thank you.
1123
1:28:22
1:28:26
And Merrill, thank you for putting those links in there. Thank you, everyone, for being here.
1124
1:28:26
1:28:29
And Stephen, I think you know who's going to be on Sunday, don't you?
1125
1:28:29
1:28:44
Yeah, it's Richard Fleming, yeah. And he is appealing for help with indictments yesterday,
1126
1:28:44
1:28:52
actually, and at present. So he's really going for that. I don't quite know who's in his sights,
1127
1:28:52
1:28:55
but that's what we'll ask on Sunday. Very good.
1128
1:28:55
1:28:58
Merrill, you can join us if you like. Thank you.
1129
1:29:00
1:29:05
All right, everybody. Thank you. Have a wonderful Tuesday night, Wednesday,
1130
1:29:05
1:29:12
and we'll be with you again Sunday night or Monday for We Poor Australians. Anyway,
1131
1:29:12
1:29:18
we can cope with lack of sleep. Just put the chat in there. Thank you, Merrill, for adding those bits.
1132
1:29:18
1:29:26
All right. Thanks for being here. Bye, everybody.
1133
1:29:26
1:29:34
Bye bye.
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