Space: https://x.com/i/spaces/1dRKZapbZBoxB - COVID Humanity Betrayal Memory Project

COVID-19 Humanity Betrayal ㅤ Memory Project

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    Speaker 1: Hello, and welcome to another CHBMP

    Speaker 1: space.

    Speaker 1: I am your host, Chelsea Belkadot,

    Speaker 1: and I am joined by our cohost, Miriam Belknap and soon protocol widow. Welcome, Miriam. How are you doing tonight?

    Speaker 2: I'm doing very well. How are you tonight?

    Speaker 1: Doing quite well, actually.

    Speaker 2: I, It's been,

    Speaker 1: all of these I feel like the the weeks

    Speaker 1: this year is just accelerating

    Speaker 1: right by me. But this week, I was able to,

    Speaker 1: catch a breath and get some stuff done, which always feels good.

    Speaker 2: Oh, that definitely feels good for sure.

    Speaker 2: I,

    Speaker 2: just had a pretty lazy day today, and right now I have both my sons and my dog with me. So, hopefully, no noise will will pick up here, but,

    Speaker 2: it's always good to have some family around and some downtime. So

    Speaker 1: And it's always nice to hear Bald or heavy breathing us. Nice warm welcome in the background.

    Speaker 2: Yes. He always makes his presence known. That's for sure.

    Speaker 1: Yes. Indeed. I just I wish the people in this space could see his smile because he's just got he's the happiest dog.

    Speaker 1: I'm I know there are a lot of happy dogs in the room tonight, but he's just got such a great smile.

    Speaker 2: He he really does. He just briefly joined me on the couch and then jumped off again because he's he's macking for a treat right now.

    Speaker 1: Isn't he always does he ever stop angling for treats? Oh, I said the t word.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. You did. But, you know, he's right now,

    Speaker 2: he's working his,

    Speaker 2: his dad because he's actually my grandpuppy.

    Speaker 2: And,

    Speaker 2: yeah, that that's him

    Speaker 2: begging for a treat at right at the moment. So

    Speaker 1: I'm warm. Hello. I'm.

    Speaker 2: And unless you feel sorry for him, he only had to bark once and speak once for it, so he's a little spoiled.

    Speaker 1: Just a little bit. And speaking of

    Speaker 1: spoiled pets, welcome, protocol widow. How are you doing tonight?

    Speaker 3: Should I bark or meow?

    Speaker 1: Maybe I should cluck. I don't know. I was gonna say maybe a little cluck.

    Speaker 3: We just

    Speaker 3: that's funny.

    Speaker 3: I'm I'm running around here like a crazy person because everything has to be closed up, you know, at dark, and I'm trying to get everything preset before the space starts. My daughter and son-in-law roll in or my son and daughter-in-law, excuse me. I don't even know who I'm related to.

    Speaker 3: They roll in. They wanna get eggs. And, well, I texted you. I'm like, I'm too busy to look at my phone. I don't have time for that crap.

    Speaker 3: And we were joking because the the littlest chicks are now no longer chicks. They're no longer chicken nuggets. They're now chicken tenders.

    Speaker 3: So,

    Speaker 3: we just have to get used to

    Speaker 3: the increasing size of these things.

    Speaker 3: I hope

    Speaker 3: everyone

    Speaker 3: is doing well.

    Speaker 3: I wonder if

    Speaker 3: anyone on here,

    Speaker 3: don't see anybody that I know would be prepared to make the trip, but

    Speaker 3: the memorial is tomorrow.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: I was just, you know, I thought that would be something we should recognize.

    Speaker 3: Glenn Beck was saying,

    Speaker 3: since it's just us and we've got this little teeny community going here,

    Speaker 3: Glenn Beck was saying that,

    Speaker 3: for those people who are joining the memorial who have

    Speaker 3: security

    Speaker 3: of their own,

    Speaker 3: even badged

    Speaker 3: security.

    Speaker 3: They will be allowed to come in and they'll be,

    Speaker 3: on the ground, on the what he called the floor, but, you know, I'm assuming that means ground.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: once their security has brought them to their seats, the security must retreat

    Speaker 3: to the tunnels

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: the so special, what do you call it,

    Speaker 3: secret

    Speaker 3: service takes over at that point.

    Speaker 3: And he said, when you read off

    Speaker 3: all of the dignitaries out of our government that are planning to be there,

    Speaker 3: it's almost a lone survivor moment.

    Speaker 3: I don't know if the I'm assuming they're gonna televise it.

    Speaker 3: I'm not sure I wanna watch it, but

    Speaker 3: I'm a little

    Speaker 3: concerned about some of the speakers and why they have the right to speak, but,

    Speaker 3: that's just me.

    Speaker 3: But I'd love to get other people's opinions because

    Speaker 3: I feel like a crazy person now.

    Speaker 1: Yeah. I wish I were still in Arizona. I would definitely

    Speaker 1: make a point of of going and anyone who who is

    Speaker 1: able to go should you know? I mean, I think it would be good to show up and show an outpouring of support.

    Speaker 1: I understand. However, it will be

    Speaker 1: a a very secure event when if they're using top tier

    Speaker 1: security and,

    Speaker 1: and, I mean, obviously, in the wake of what just happened,

    Speaker 1: everyone is very much on edge.

    Speaker 3: Well,

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: back when

    Speaker 3: let's see. My former life,

    Speaker 3: I was in Tennessee,

    Speaker 3: and I worked in a retail store.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: you get and sometimes when you're in even in retail, you get friendly with certain customers that come in on a regular basis, and this will tie in just shortly if everybody bears with me.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: I got friendly

    Speaker 3: with a couple, man and woman,

    Speaker 3: husband and wife,

    Speaker 3: both,

    Speaker 3: formerly in

    Speaker 3: reasonably decent positions in the government as intel

    Speaker 3: analysts,

    Speaker 3: both of them,

    Speaker 3: and this was in Trump's first term

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: I remember her saying

    Speaker 3: will you remember when such and such happened and Air Force One had to land suddenly?

    Speaker 3: And this was like she named a couple of different ones

    Speaker 3: and she said

    Speaker 3: yeah, that wasn't a mechanical problem.

    Speaker 3: That was,

    Speaker 3: that was a,

    Speaker 3: either or either depending on that there was a couple of different instances. It was either a very serious threat

    Speaker 3: or an actual attack that had been thwarted.

    Speaker 3: And so I never have forgotten that. So now every time I hear something's happened to Air Force One,

    Speaker 3: I'm like,

    Speaker 3: sure.

    Speaker 3: Let me

    Speaker 3: think about that. And that happened right after the,

    Speaker 3: right after the Butler event

    Speaker 3: when Trump's

    Speaker 3: Trump was shot.

    Speaker 3: It wasn't,

    Speaker 3: I don't think it was a full month later. He suddenly had

    Speaker 3: something fail

    Speaker 3: on his plane.

    Speaker 3: And all of his

    Speaker 3: arrangements after that were like moving from

    Speaker 3: one type of plane to another. Everything seemed to be last minute, what he was getting on and how he was,

    Speaker 3: getting to a specific location.

    Speaker 3: And just this past week,

    Speaker 3: his helicopter

    Speaker 3: had a

    Speaker 3: hydraulic failure

    Speaker 3: in England,

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: he had to they fortunately were able to land safely and switch to the backup helicopter,

    Speaker 3: which apparently travels with him as well.

    Speaker 1: I think there's a lot of stuff. Well, I hadn't I hadn't heard that.

    Speaker 3: Yep,

    Speaker 3: and I just I can't help feeling like there's a lot of stuff going on we don't know.

    Speaker 3: Maybe we don't need to know but I wish we did know.

    Speaker 3: And I sent

    Speaker 3: to a few of you

    Speaker 3: the

    Speaker 3: video from redacted

    Speaker 3: today from well, from Clayton, actually. It wasn't from the show. It was from Clayton.

    Speaker 3: And, he he this must have been posted

    Speaker 3: late day Friday,

    Speaker 3: and he was

    Speaker 3: livid, very livid.

    Speaker 3: For those of you who haven't had a chance to watch it, it's just under eight minutes

    Speaker 3: and he said that

    Speaker 3: his sources which are pretty high level

    Speaker 3: have indicated that the FBI is about to say they've wrapped up the investigation on Charlie Kirk's murder. They've got their guy and they're done.

    Speaker 3: And for anybody who spent any time

    Speaker 3: looking at potential other

    Speaker 3: theories

    Speaker 3: that should piss you off.

    Speaker 3: And I wonder

    Speaker 3: how the MAGA

    Speaker 3: family

    Speaker 3: is going to handle it if it's closed that quick.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. I think those are great questions to ask because

    Speaker 2: it

    Speaker 2: seems

    Speaker 2: to be

    Speaker 2: very rapidly

    Speaker 2: being pushed to a close. So and that always makes you question.

    Speaker 5: Well,

    Speaker 6: the,

    Speaker 3: anybody that's familiar with Calibers,

    Speaker 3: Anybody that's familiar with exit and entrance wounds?

    Speaker 3: Anybody that's familiar with

    Speaker 3: the change

    Speaker 3: of

    Speaker 3: permanent

    Speaker 3: changes

    Speaker 3: to the

    Speaker 3: site,

    Speaker 3: there would be

    Speaker 3: questions,

    Speaker 3: a lot of questions. Like why? How long ago did you plan on having that patio redone?

    Speaker 3: Was that something you planned six months ago and just got the crew in there by accident?

    Speaker 3: Or is this something you decided to do after?

    Speaker 3: If you've heard the different if you've heard

    Speaker 3: a large caliber versus a smaller caliber rifle,

    Speaker 3: doesn't sound right, especially in that

    Speaker 3: almost bowl

    Speaker 3: that he was sitting in. With all the buildings around, that should have actually enhanced it and made it much louder if it was what they say it was.

    Speaker 6: Assyrian at six too. You don't just pick it

    Speaker 6: up, fire it without wind everything changing the bullet. So him being 22 and that good of a shot, yeah, I'm guessing that.

    Speaker 3: Well, let's let's say he's a good shot because on his Facebook or or on his social media,

    Speaker 3: he's seen with a lot of different

    Speaker 3: types of rifles.

    Speaker 3: There is a gentleman who has taken the videos that came from the campus.

    Speaker 3: So in theory, they should all have the same timestamps.

    Speaker 3: And the crowd

    Speaker 3: has not reacted to the shot and he's running across the roof already.

    Speaker 3: How did that happen?

    Speaker 6: Yeah. But even I've heard many people talk that are, like,

    Speaker 6: marksman shooters,

    Speaker 6: not just hunting shooters, which I've been around a lot of guns too, but probably ain't gonna pick up a knot six and shoot 200 yards and probably hit my target that good.

    Speaker 3: You know what I mean? I'm a good shot. Alright. So, Deborah, let let's go with what you and I know about hunting.

    Speaker 3: The exit wound

    Speaker 3: from the front facing

    Speaker 3: should have been the back of his neck.

    Speaker 6: And large.

    Speaker 3: Candice has seen the videos.

    Speaker 6: I was gonna bring that up next. Thank you very much. Yep. It did did not have a rear exit wound.

    Speaker 6: Did you also see where Candice also put that he was at Dairy Queen a few minutes later? You know, not very long later and 06:38. Those things.

    Speaker 3: 06:38 in the evening. He's

    Speaker 3: in his jeans and that burgundy t shirt getting a bite to eat and not protecting

    Speaker 6: not hiding his face. And and looking as calm

    Speaker 6: as he just

    Speaker 6: got back from the beach. Yep.

    Speaker 3: Yep.

    Speaker 3: When in theory, if he's

    Speaker 3: texting his lover that he's sitting on a

    Speaker 3: in a street somewhere waiting for his the availability to go, quote, quote, go back and get his gun,

    Speaker 3: Why is he at the restaurant?

    Speaker 6: I I'm I'm sorry. But after you I don't care if he's

    Speaker 6: the the biggest

    Speaker 6: person out there that's a mass murder. Most of them ain't going to Dairy Queen after. Mm-mm. They don't want their faces on any of the cameras. That that just doesn't well, not only that, but you're you're not gonna be acting calm. Mm-mm. No.

    Speaker 6: No. Heck, honey. Honey.

    Speaker 6: You get your okay. Say I went hunting and got my deer. Believe me. I wasn't calm. No. The adrenaline is is a huge dump.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: you know,

    Speaker 3: I think that

    Speaker 3: I feel like I'm dwelling on it too much, but I feel like this is not 1963.

    Speaker 3: We are not looking at a grainy video from some apartment building.

    Speaker 6: And no, you can't just close it the way you did. No. And this is important. And and what yes. And what you're saying is the sad part is it looks exactly

    Speaker 6: like a Patsy.

    Speaker 3: Mm-mm. You know, I wouldn't be really surprised, though. There's been so much talk.

    Speaker 3: There's somebody in the crowd

    Speaker 3: who is on video taking a badge off their chest and putting it in their pocket.

    Speaker 3: There's another guy running through the crowd with a pistol in his hand.

    Speaker 3: Plenty of people should have seen, and if you haven't, I got the links.

    Speaker 3: There are at least two different people who have come up with a muzzle flash in a window

    Speaker 3: or maybe from a hallway. It's hard to tell what's behind that area, but it's on Charlie's right,

    Speaker 3: and it would be the perfect lineup.

    Speaker 3: Yeah.

    Speaker 6: And and I'm just saying, you know, you pick up,

    Speaker 6: he would you would have to be

    Speaker 6: even if he was a good shot,

    Speaker 6: if you don't shoot every day

    Speaker 6: I mean, literally go to the range every day even though I would put my money on me. But I'm just saying.

    Speaker 6: Okay? Somebody that does not John, doesn't he he shoots all the time. Right? Yep.

    Speaker 6: Because he has to. If you do not, they do that so that they can guarantee that when they make that shot, they're going

    Speaker 6: to make it. But they'll tell you too

    Speaker 6: when changes things. All these things, but they know how to

    Speaker 6: they're trained to counteract that. That kid was not trained to do that. No. And he by the way, he wasn't using the bipod.

    Speaker 6: So he was relying on That's what that's my other point. He's so you're laying down flat. I mean, the gun's flat on the roof,

    Speaker 6: so

    Speaker 6: your shot would be totally different anyway.

    Speaker 3: Yep.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: and then there's the escape, carrying your gun.

    Speaker 3: Okay? First of all, we don't see it. It's obvious that you didn't put it in your pants, like, because you're running at full speed.

    Speaker 3: Okay?

    Speaker 3: I haven't been able to discern it. Neither of the boys have been able to discern it,

    Speaker 3: being in his hand and coming off the roof with it.

    Speaker 6: I agree with you on that.

    Speaker 6: And as this is another question for John. I wish tell John to get on the space. No. He's out of work tonight, so he's sleeping until at least one. I was that was a joke anyway. I already knew John wasn't going to. But my point is,

    Speaker 6: I forgot my point, Siri.

    Speaker 3: Well, okay, Deborah. Here's another one. He can't break the gun down in that that That is my point. No. Okay. Unless

    Speaker 6: you

    Speaker 6: are pretty wealthy,

    Speaker 6: chances are you don't have an assets that you can break down. Mm-mm. No. Most guns are most

    Speaker 3: Ellen, that is that is an older gun. It's not designed to be broken down. You have to So that means it's glued in there, and it ain't coming apart. Well, even if it wasn't glued. Suppose granddad put an aftermarket stock on it, it would still have multiple screws. John,

    Speaker 6: my eldest, showed him And then he left a screwdriver on the roof. He didn't believe it again, but he left the screwdriver that he unscrewed them on. Sure. Okay. Too perfect.

    Speaker 3: My my my eldest showed his two teenage boys today why this doesn't work. Because once you disassemble that thing, the tallest backpack on the market

    Speaker 3: will not hold the two pieces without them sticking out.

    Speaker 3: The barrel for sure. Oh, no. Definitely both the barrel and the, and the stock. Yep. Yep. And you can't take the receiver off unless you've got at least two special tools.

    Speaker 6: And you wouldn't be climbing down and jumping off a roof with a gun. You know what I mean? Yep. Because he hadn't hadn't

    Speaker 6: that just he didn't even have time to take a right has anybody taken a rifle apart?

    Speaker 6: I don't know. I don't know. It takes a little are you not doing it in that that no. I even the people that I know the best that are really good with guns, they ain't taking it that back

    Speaker 6: apart that fast, putting it in a backpack and getting out of there. Nope.

    Speaker 3: Especially when you start running before the the people in the audience have decided to duck.

    Speaker 6: And then when he jumped and he hurt his little foot, you didn't see the gun should have knocked him in the head Mhmm.

    Speaker 6: Mhmm. Which might have hurt too. I just I'm having a I'm just having a hard time with all of that. I think

    Speaker 6: I think that they'll take him down, but I definitely think there's someone else.

    Speaker 3: Oh, at least one other,

    Speaker 3: if not more.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. If not more. She's wearing a red dress a red dress on a grassy knoll. That's right.

    Speaker 3: I and I Last week, we discussed,

    Speaker 1: how how a lot of the propaganda has dovetailed with the COVID propaganda.

    Speaker 1: And, I I thought it was interesting

    Speaker 1: that the the transcript

    Speaker 1: that they released

    Speaker 1: was apparently

    Speaker 1: fabricated

    Speaker 1: by,

    Speaker 1: I don't know, intelligence,

    Speaker 1: the police.

    Speaker 1: They they they admit now that that transcript that we saw that were everyone was like, that doesn't make any sense,

    Speaker 1: was,

    Speaker 1: basically just made up a full cloth.

    Speaker 3: Who admitted it? I hadn't heard that part.

    Speaker 1: It was in something I read. I'll find it for you.

    Speaker 3: Okay. Because that's I also found,

    Speaker 6: when Chelsea was saying, when he you know, the way that he turned you know,

    Speaker 6: who he told and how he told, and his dad was in the police, you know,

    Speaker 6: in the law, you know, or as a officer. How I don't you know what I'm trying to say. Mhmm.

    Speaker 6: I've had a bad day, so don't mind

    Speaker 6: me,

    Speaker 6: and be careful. That's all I can say.

    Speaker 6: Then the priest and then

    Speaker 5: no.

    Speaker 6: Mm-mm. And he didn't go home,

    Speaker 6: talk to the kid

    Speaker 6: to

    Speaker 6: do the right thing while after he got done with Dairy Queen.

    Speaker 3: I it's just He yeah. No. He had a three hour drive minimum

    Speaker 3: from

    Speaker 3: town to town.

    Speaker 3: So he didn't get home, assuming he went home that night. He did not get back to his house

    Speaker 3: for until, you know, pretty late. You know, if he was at 06:38, he was at the Dairy Queen and he still hadn't found his you know, gone back to get the gun, then, you know, what time did he arrive home?

    Speaker 3: Or did he not? Because that was you know, by that time, I think they was

    Speaker 6: it that night that they were over with the at the apartment? Well, mind you, he went in the woods and wrapped the the nice little the nice little murder weapon up in a blanket and left it the damn wood and the the gun in the wrapped little blanket,

    Speaker 6: and then hit then went home and did all the other stuff he did.

    Speaker 6: I'm gonna say this. Only I'm gonna use one little part of what I'm

    Speaker 6: all I know for a fact because I'm living kind of through a little bit of this

    Speaker 6: that you just it just don't happen, and then you're just good with it, and you're just calm. And I don't care

    Speaker 3: which side you're in. No. No. And this this and this young guy had,

    Speaker 6: you know, may had he ever hunted before? I don't know. Could have? Oh, no. They say he was you know, I don't know about the hunting part, but, you know, they said and there's plenty of,

    Speaker 6: I think,

    Speaker 6: evidence out there that he didn't know about guns.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. But that's different than shooting anything that's alive.

    Speaker 6: Particularly

    Speaker 6: my point. That's my whole point, and you're I don't care if you're

    Speaker 6: I've lived this. Okay? And I don't care if you are

    Speaker 6: you're just

    Speaker 6: not going

    Speaker 6: to be nonchalant.

    Speaker 6: Like, you nothing happened.

    Speaker 6: Mhmm. It is

    Speaker 6: it is it's

    Speaker 6: humanly impossible.

    Speaker 3: I have someone in my life who thinks that the 30 aught six

    Speaker 3: was brought up there and hidden in the bush

    Speaker 3: intact

    Speaker 3: with the co with spent cartridge already in it.

    Speaker 6: And Oh, it's and and messages no less.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. There's a guy on the Internet

    Speaker 3: who is who is offering $1,500

    Speaker 3: to anybody who can videotape

    Speaker 3: themselves,

    Speaker 3: putting all of those inscriptions

    Speaker 3: on 30 aught six cartridges

    Speaker 3: and show him the video of how they did it with the tools that most likely would be

    Speaker 3: available to a 22 year old

    Speaker 3: student,

    Speaker 3: he will give them $1,500.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. I'd love to see that. Yeah. I sent it to both my kids since it was It just doesn't even make sense. Even okay. Let's just use this. Okay. Even if the kid hated him. Okay? And we know that there's videos out there that they

    Speaker 6: I mean, Charlie, I think, was a great guy. Do not get me wrong because I think he was a great guy. I think he was doing wonderful things with the youth. I think that giving them

    Speaker 6: the they he was doing the very thing we're trying

    Speaker 6: to get done. Right.

    Speaker 6: He was And and and and succeeding.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. Which is scaring them a lot.

    Speaker 6: But allow the the he was big enough man

    Speaker 6: and tough enough skin

    Speaker 6: to listen to the crap that that he listened to

    Speaker 6: and and was calm enough to give them

    Speaker 6: the truth.

    Speaker 3: Calmly.

    Speaker 6: And that's why people started listening, but he allowed them

    Speaker 6: to state their case of why they disagreed with whatever the the subject was. Mhmm.

    Speaker 3: And that was And Yeah. I think that you're right. And that scared some segments

    Speaker 3: of somebody

    Speaker 3: because he was turning hearts.

    Speaker 6: Oh, that that because we already know this is good and evil. I mean, there there this we're already all past that point. We already know the war we're in. Mhmm.

    Speaker 6: So, yeah, let's let's move on. We already know that. And look at

    Speaker 6: I'm I'm a just bring up this fact. They said last Sunday,

    Speaker 6: the church population went up to, like, a million or something like that. It was some

    Speaker 6: I mean, I think it's wonderful. I'm not saying that.

    Speaker 3: But I bet you I bet you it rivaled

    Speaker 3: the

    Speaker 3: the first Sunday after 09:11.

    Speaker 6: Oh, you that did, but this is one one of the stats that they also brought up. When nine eleven happened, it did. It drew our country, number one. We approved it over and over and over and over and over that no matter what they throw at us, we as people

    Speaker 6: are going to come together.

    Speaker 6: Because it's happened in North Carolina. It's I mean, I can name a million places.

    Speaker 6: That the government tried to shut them down, and the people went,

    Speaker 6: you know what? You.

    Speaker 6: And I don't know why I'm being nice right now. That's not me.

    Speaker 6: I'm just saying.

    Speaker 6: Well, there you go. There's the Lord for you right there.

    Speaker 3: The miracles are occurring. Deborah is.

    Speaker 6: Proven point.

    Speaker 6: Okay.

    Speaker 6: But, anyway, my point is is that, yeah, he made a difference no matter,

    Speaker 6: which side it was.

    Speaker 6: These kids were listening.

    Speaker 6: We are in the same fight that that we can't get the people that we voted in to listen to. Thank you. You know, I I just you know, I'm I'm in a mood tonight, so you guys might wanna watch my mic. That's all I can say. Well, you know, fortunately, I think we are generally an audience of adults.

    Speaker 3: So if you slip something in there that, you know, is like colored,

    Speaker 3: you know, the the language is a little bit sparkly,

    Speaker 6: we'll get over it. I think we'll all get over it. Well, that wasn't the only thing I meant. That was just a warning

    Speaker 6: to my friends.

    Speaker 3: But, you know, I think I think that probably to Chelsea's point,

    Speaker 3: the,

    Speaker 3: the reaction

    Speaker 3: of,

    Speaker 3: I guess we'll say, the left

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: their absolutely

    Speaker 3: horrid

    Speaker 3: ability to get

    Speaker 3: into social media

    Speaker 3: and show their absolute hate.

    Speaker 3: It's really hard not it's particularly for people like us

    Speaker 3: who look at the ones who are identified

    Speaker 3: as health professionals of some kind.

    Speaker 6: But the beauty of this, Sherry,

    Speaker 6: is they're outing themselves. I know. It's just one. They're we're getting them to do what we've been trying to get for five years, four years, whatever years. Yeah. Too many years.

    Speaker 6: You know what I mean? Because people are actually getting fired. In COVID,

    Speaker 6: we're we can we have the proof that they did what they did. Mhmm.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. I mean, we don't even have to wonder. None of us have to wonder because we all have the proof. Yep. And they're out there proving something in ten minutes, but and and turn the whole world upside down

    Speaker 6: and allowing the people, the very people that did this to us, to do it again.

    Speaker 6: And they can't hide it this time because people are paying attention.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. And it's this simple. If they have no problem with

    Speaker 2: a man being killed for his words,

    Speaker 2: those same people had no problem with our loved ones being killed

    Speaker 2: for not being vaccinated

    Speaker 2: or for being,

    Speaker 2: wanting other treatments. They they had no they have no problem

    Speaker 2: with killing people

    Speaker 2: who have a different

    Speaker 2: belief,

    Speaker 2: a diff and they have the have the nerve to speak the truth. They have no problem with that. You know, over and over again, we heard, oh, no ICU bed for you. We heard, no. You deserve to die if you're unvaccinated.

    Speaker 2: I mean, this is the same culture. It's exactly the same.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. What what was that famous line with the dancing,

    Speaker 3: hypodermic?

    Speaker 6: That was yes.

    Speaker 3: You know? No vaccine?

    Speaker 3: Go go gobble horse goo, Wheezy.

    Speaker 6: Well, the best part too, did you see the one this week where they had Jimmy Kimmel on top and him on the bottom?

    Speaker 6: Yep. You know, because I think good riddance to both of them. They're both a piece of shit.

    Speaker 6: And I don't care

    Speaker 6: who's listening.

    Speaker 3: There it goes, Dimitri. And I'll

    Speaker 6: meet you and I'll meet you outside.

    Speaker 6: Just saying.

    Speaker 6: Because I'm willing to go.

    Speaker 6: Just saying.

    Speaker 6: But you know what I'm saying? So even there,

    Speaker 6: they made I mean, Kimmel said that if if we're in ICU, but if you were vaxxed, you were welcome. If you were unvaxxed,

    Speaker 3: just go die. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. You know? And

    Speaker 3: and not in any way

    Speaker 3: apologetic

    Speaker 6: at But then the ones that are vaxxed,

    Speaker 6: that are dying or, like, my husband, for instance Mhmm.

    Speaker 6: Didn't matter anyway. Right.

    Speaker 6: Exactly. So it was still about

    Speaker 3: I mean and and look at how it I know that we are,

    Speaker 3: as protocol,

    Speaker 3: victims,

    Speaker 3: whatever you wanna call us.

    Speaker 3: I think our I think our family members that got killed are the victims,

    Speaker 3: but we are victims by extension.

    Speaker 3: But

    Speaker 3: but even the the vaccine the the vaccine injured and the families

    Speaker 3: of the vaccine dead,

    Speaker 3: are

    Speaker 7: just

    Speaker 3: barely getting noticed right now as I saw that at least my Twitter

    Speaker 3: was lit up with all kinds of new studies and

    Speaker 3: reports and stuff

    Speaker 3: that have come out in the last,

    Speaker 3: I don't know, four or five days because in all honesty,

    Speaker 3: the whole Charlie Kirk thing has kind of kept me off of

    Speaker 3: social media, and,

    Speaker 3: I've been posting

    Speaker 3: long posts of my own and then walking away.

    Speaker 6: And dealing with your own life because you're dealing with it right now. Yep. Just I just wanted you to know it's not unnoticed.

    Speaker 6: I made sure it's not unnoticed because And I'm proud of you for that, Sherry, because you were I'll tell you, you I didn't even know you.

    Speaker 6: Remember? Because I still gotta see you in red glasses. Right.

    Speaker 6: You know? I mean, it's mandatory in your in our lives, and you better get on it.

    Speaker 6: With that green truck, Jean,

    Speaker 6: I

    Speaker 7: can't I

    Speaker 6: can't wait. But, anyway, but, you know, you

    Speaker 6: you're you're living with it. But before I even met you and I was reading your story when I didn't even I I don't I think it was right after I,

    Speaker 6: got in because I was how we became friends, I think. Yeah. But when I started reading how you were writing because I can't do that. But I, you know, I kinda love Jeff's through yours. You know what I mean? So I'm really I wanna thank you because you're really good at it. And,

    Speaker 6: people pay attention.

    Speaker 3: Well, that and what here's the truly sad And and Steve's my brother just so y'all know. Yeah. Steve's her brother. We've come to the conclusion there was some hanky panky back in the day because the two of them were so similar.

    Speaker 3: But,

    Speaker 6: And I sent you a picture of my brother.

    Speaker 3: So Very simple. Very, very yep. Mhmm.

    Speaker 3: Mhmm. But just so that everybody

    Speaker 3: understands, what happened

    Speaker 3: to,

    Speaker 3: Miriam's husband, my husband, Deborah's husband,

    Speaker 3: Heidi's

    Speaker 3: dad,

    Speaker 3: I

    Speaker 3: they're all

    Speaker 3: so

    Speaker 3: similar.

    Speaker 6: And

    Speaker 3: Marie's husband. Marie. I haven't I don't see Marie yet, but, yeah, Marie's husband. I'm saying I'm saying that There's a bunch of families that that, you know, sooner or later, they're gonna be on here.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: the,

    Speaker 3: COVID-nineteen

    Speaker 3: Humanity Betrayal Memory Project,

    Speaker 3: what was it, three years ago,

    Speaker 3: Chelsea,

    Speaker 3: maybe

    Speaker 3: almost four now,

    Speaker 3: the the original volunteers who were doing the interviews

    Speaker 3: came up with the 25 commonalities.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: I think that that we need to remind people,

    Speaker 3: and we need

    Speaker 3: to elaborate.

    Speaker 3: When you read the 25 commonalities,

    Speaker 3: there's a tendency

    Speaker 3: to read them and not

    Speaker 3: understand the

    Speaker 3: involved.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: because it has a tendency to be a little bit sterile.

    Speaker 3: Unlike reading a legal document, you you can even kind of fade out not just like, what did I just read?

    Speaker 3: And I think it's really important that people understand

    Speaker 3: what

    Speaker 3: what those words on that page

    Speaker 3: actually

    Speaker 3: mean

    Speaker 3: from a humanity

    Speaker 3: standpoint,

    Speaker 3: And that's really hard

    Speaker 3: to put into

    Speaker 3: a document or a web page,

    Speaker 3: probably even a book

    Speaker 3: because

    Speaker 3: there is a nuance

    Speaker 3: and a tone

    Speaker 3: that you don't hear

    Speaker 3: in your head when you're reading

    Speaker 3: off the page.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: I

    Speaker 3: I think when we have a bigger room,

    Speaker 3: maybe we should read those tonight

    Speaker 3: and,

    Speaker 3: discuss what they mean a little bit, each one. Just a real short discussion,

    Speaker 3: no long stuff. I don't wanna drag it out too much and make everybody crazy,

    Speaker 3: but there are people who don't

    Speaker 3: have

    Speaker 3: an idea, and we need you.

    Speaker 3: We need you to be part of the movement

    Speaker 3: that says,

    Speaker 3: never

    Speaker 3: freaking

    Speaker 3: again.

    Speaker 3: You will not torture

    Speaker 3: patients in hospitals

    Speaker 3: and walk away because the government says

    Speaker 3: I'm not responsible

    Speaker 3: because it's a pandemic.

    Speaker 3: Bullshit.

    Speaker 3: Never

    Speaker 3: again.

    Speaker 3: And Deborah thought she was the angry one.

    Speaker 6: Well,

    Speaker 6: your your girlfriend's aunt, we got your back,

    Speaker 6: just so you know.

    Speaker 6: Look at how many people died this week. I mean, stars.

    Speaker 6: And I I'm sure that they're all they they're all too young to just be dropping dead.

    Speaker 6: They're all stars. They all

    Speaker 6: wanted to have their concerts,

    Speaker 6: and they all are dying because of it.

    Speaker 6: Well, I've missed them. I did see One that one was in a plane crash. But Yeah. Brett Brett James crashed here in North Carolina. Yeah. What's up with North Carolina? You guys need to chill out.

    Speaker 3: I don't know. But, you know, hey. We're just like a magnet for disaster, apparently.

    Speaker 3: But who else who else? Can anybody tell me what the other names were? Because I think I've missed everything.

    Speaker 6: I can't tell you their names because I'm not starstruck, and I don't know their names. But I just know I've seen it over and over and over.

    Speaker 4: I've seen a couple of many

    Speaker 6: And and even in the last it's not even just this week. It's been in the last month. There was one week. It was several it was, like, four kids.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. I've seen of, like, 13 to 25 or something like that. It's just disgusting.

    Speaker 3: It is. It is. It's really disgusting.

    Speaker 6: I'm really pissed off. Can you tell? Because it's accepted.

    Speaker 7: Nobody says what the heck

    Speaker 6: what the heck is going on? Saying, you know, if we go back to the Charlie thing

    Speaker 6: and if it's the star thing, if that's what it takes to get freaking people's attention

    Speaker 6: you know what I mean?

    Speaker 6: You either want to know or you don't at this point.

    Speaker 3: I think that there's a lot of people who are afraid

    Speaker 3: to know

    Speaker 3: because they're the these are the people who

    Speaker 3: have a lump

    Speaker 3: somewhere on their body and are like, yeah. I'll deal with that later because it might be bad news.

    Speaker 3: You know? The ones who just can't face it. But we can give them comfort.

    Speaker 6: It doesn't matter if we got it or we didn't get it. We all have it now.

    Speaker 6: Yes. We do have it. So let's everybody get past that part.

    Speaker 3: And, I mean, we've got t bird on. She's a Oh my god. For a, my girl, from

    Speaker 6: can you make none of that? Or thank you for that beautiful message, by

    Speaker 3: but, yeah, we've

    Speaker 3: there

    Speaker 3: there are so many things

    Speaker 3: happening like it's continual. I don't know whether it's because of social media. So we know what's going on in the world all around us all the time, and it's just like an overflow of information.

    Speaker 3: And a lot of it is so bad that it just kinda overwhelms us all.

    Speaker 3: Or

    Speaker 3: are we paying more attention than we used to?

    Speaker 3: Or are they really in a they, the big they, are they really inundating us with as much crap as possible so it's a matter of look over here, not over here?

    Speaker 2: Protocol,

    Speaker 2: it's all three, a, b, and c.

    Speaker 2: Wow.

    Speaker 3: It's all three. It's a it's a multi

    Speaker 3: pronged attack, isn't it, Miriam?

    Speaker 2: Yes. It is.

    Speaker 2: And,

    Speaker 2: I I don't foresee that changing one bit because I think

    Speaker 2: I think this is a big thing to think about too.

    Speaker 2: I think what happened with Charlie

    Speaker 2: Kirk will actually accelerate the actions of our opponents

    Speaker 2: because now they

    Speaker 2: know what they've done. They know this

    Speaker 2: has

    Speaker 2: jolted

    Speaker 2: so many people awake,

    Speaker 2: and they look and they all you have to do is look on your feeds and see people going, uh-uh, not having a part of this. Nope.

    Speaker 2: Nope. Not having a part of this.

    Speaker 2: Now they are going to have to accelerate their agenda because people

    Speaker 2: the they

    Speaker 2: they overplayed their hand with with COVID, absolutely, and they're still overplaying it. But this is big,

    Speaker 2: And I think we're going to see things accelerate

    Speaker 2: because of it. Because now they are really threatened

    Speaker 2: by the movement that they see

    Speaker 2: of good,

    Speaker 2: of of people who aren't going to stand by and be silent

    Speaker 2: anymore. So I think they're they're we're going to see more plays from the other side as a result.

    Speaker 3: That's

    Speaker 3: you've kinda got me I mean, it's I thought I was being overly paranoid,

    Speaker 3: but that's

    Speaker 3: kinda what I was getting at about the memorial this weekend.

    Speaker 3: It's like, would they be ballsy enough to make a move on somebody there,

    Speaker 3: or

    Speaker 3: are we just gonna see more and more

    Speaker 3: things

    Speaker 3: happen

    Speaker 3: more frequently?

    Speaker 2: I don't know. I

    Speaker 2: I I either ballsy enough or crazy enough,

    Speaker 2: because

    Speaker 2: you do have to realize when you look

    Speaker 2: at just the hundreds and thousands of commentary,

    Speaker 2: you're not looking at well adjusted people.

    Speaker 2: Mm-mm. I mean, we're talking

    Speaker 2: serious

    Speaker 2: psychological

    Speaker 2: issues.

    Speaker 2: And the people who engineered

    Speaker 2: this,

    Speaker 2: they, yeah, they knew what they were doing, but

    Speaker 2: this is not something you put back in a box.

    Speaker 2: No. I think that they engineered

    Speaker 2: into this

    Speaker 2: frenzy, this frenzy of hatred,

    Speaker 2: you're not gonna put that back in a box.

    Speaker 3: I wonder

    Speaker 3: it makes me wonder if somebody overplayed

    Speaker 3: their hand or if

    Speaker 3: the move was made too soon or maybe they're getting desperate.

    Speaker 3: I'll tell you right now.

    Speaker 3: Nobody needs to know this, but I'm gonna say it because I'm sitting here running my mouth.

    Speaker 3: I'm not happy with a lot of stuff that Trump has done, and I'm really not happy with the stuff he tell tells us he's going to do.

    Speaker 1: And

    Speaker 1: Oh, speaking of, I'm gonna sorry.

    Speaker 3: You just Help me. Brought me to before I say something.

    Speaker 1: He just, on September 19 yesterday,

    Speaker 1: affirmed again that

    Speaker 1: operation warp speed was a wonderful success. And as evidence of this,

    Speaker 1: he said, well, look at me. I'm fine.

    Speaker 1: And I've seen You the injured saying that's just such a smack in the face. I'm gonna put the video in the pill just a second. Yes. Yeah. Put that up there. And that is a smack in the face. You're right. That is the way to put it.

    Speaker 3: I you know, this is what we have heard from all the people who wanna say, well, I took three shots, and there's nothing wrong with me, except for the fact that you're now a schizo.

    Speaker 3: What?

    Speaker 2: Yeah.

    Speaker 2: Or the fact that, like, my very good friend who said to me two days ago

    Speaker 2: and I love him to death. Nice Christian guy. His wife worked in first steps with kids,

    Speaker 2: So they demanded that he get the shots too, and he took two of them. And ever since then, the man can hardly work.

    Speaker 2: He has poor exercise tolerance. He has chest pain. His heart's racing.

    Speaker 2: I mean,

    Speaker 2: so, yeah, you look at him walking around, you see him talk, you would never know.

    Speaker 2: But then he tells me, literally, I've been sick four and five times a year with all these infections. He's got a bronchitis cough. He says, I've never been sick like that. The man works physical labor,

    Speaker 2: and he's only 52 years old.

    Speaker 2: So yeah.

    Speaker 2: You know? Oh, there's nothing wrong with me. Oh, right. Sure. You know? He recognizes it, and so many people do.

    Speaker 2: But the problem is

    Speaker 2: they're usually silent about it. That's the issue.

    Speaker 2: And

    Speaker 2: I think that's why we're gonna have a problem coming up because

    Speaker 2: what happened on the tenth, people are no longer going to be as silent.

    Speaker 2: And I think that's where

    Speaker 2: the agenda is going to be accelerated for that very reason.

    Speaker 3: Well and, you know, you're talking about

    Speaker 3: your neighbor or your friend.

    Speaker 3: And I look at there's there's something going on with Trump's health.

    Speaker 3: It's not necessarily

    Speaker 3: deadly,

    Speaker 3: and it could be related to his age.

    Speaker 3: But is he protesting

    Speaker 3: too much?

    Speaker 2: Oh, I think he is. Absolutely.

    Speaker 2: That's the that's the cognitive dissonance dissonance again and the ego of this particular person.

    Speaker 2: Absolutely.

    Speaker 9: And

    Speaker 3: we know

    Speaker 3: and this is the stuff that the left can the left will deny

    Speaker 3: that anything was wrong with that shot

    Speaker 3: unless it will get him out of office. And then all of a sudden, they'll say, look at him. He's physically or mentally

    Speaker 3: incompetent now because he took the shots.

    Speaker 7: And then we'll see that.

    Speaker 1: Lori

    Speaker 1: shared an image,

    Speaker 1: from Mary Taylee Bowden,

    Speaker 1: that I have pinned to the next. It's also Lori put it in the purple pill

    Speaker 1: where she is saying

    Speaker 1: that 14 states

    Speaker 1: are, quote, ignoring the CDC

    Speaker 1: and making their own rules about vaccines.

    Speaker 1: And I see what, you know, I see what she's doing because these states, now that now that the official public health is kind of distancing themselves from these products,

    Speaker 1: these states are like, oh, well, we're gonna make sure people can get these mRNA shots.

    Speaker 1: And they're you know, it's to the detriment of their own citizens, but also after what we just went through.

    Speaker 1: Let's not

    Speaker 1: be down on states for, quote, ignoring c ignoring the CDC

    Speaker 1: because we we should have the right to ignore the CDC when we feel they are wrong. And in the case of these shots, maybe they're finally starting to

    Speaker 1: to get warm, but they're still not

    Speaker 1: enunciating the full truth.

    Speaker 1: And we know better than to trust these agencies

    Speaker 1: henceforth, I think.

    Speaker 1: Yep.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. And look at the states that are ignoring the CDC.

    Speaker 2: Look where they are

    Speaker 2: and what their affiliations are. I mean, it's it's

    Speaker 2: abundantly

    Speaker 2: clear,

    Speaker 2: that, unfortunately,

    Speaker 2: politics are very much still wed

    Speaker 2: to the shots and the COVID agenda itself.

    Speaker 1: And we should keep in mind that the CDC

    Speaker 1: and I will find the find the post and put it in the purple pill, but the CDC

    Speaker 1: literally

    Speaker 1: put forth guidance that told pregnant women,

    Speaker 1: although they may

    Speaker 1: discuss getting the the COVID shot with their doctor, they don't need to.

    Speaker 1: They don't need to talk to a doctor before getting that experimental

    Speaker 1: shot because

    Speaker 1: experts say it's probably fine.

    Speaker 2: Absolute insanity.

    Speaker 3: I got nothing. You guys are

    Speaker 3: handling it just fine.

    Speaker 3: I'm just

    Speaker 7: I'm retweeting.

    Speaker 3: Gotta think about this so that I don't say something wrong,

    Speaker 3: although it's probably all wrong.

    Speaker 2: I mean, you

    Speaker 2: it does bother the mind, however, that, you know, people the same people who said,

    Speaker 2: oh, you know, the CDC is 100%

    Speaker 2: right.

    Speaker 2: Oh, you need to follow the experts. You need to do what the CDC says.

    Speaker 2: Now

    Speaker 2: those same people are, oh, we're going to ignore the CDC

    Speaker 2: and make our own rules at the state level.

    Speaker 2: Just mind boggling.

    Speaker 3: Who did I see? Oh, you know what?

    Speaker 3: On

    Speaker 3: Laurie's

    Speaker 3: retweet of Mary Talley Bowden's,

    Speaker 3: map,

    Speaker 3: it doesn't appear to me that Arizona

    Speaker 3: is here,

    Speaker 3: yet

    Speaker 3: Arizona governor

    Speaker 3: has said

    Speaker 3: that they will make their own rules for the state

    Speaker 3: regarding

    Speaker 3: shots.

    Speaker 1: I can just this is what it's come to for them to assert their own autonomy independent of the CDC.

    Speaker 1: I guess I'll take it,

    Speaker 1: but

    Speaker 1: they they better be providing informed consent. And we see providers now being reluctant to even

    Speaker 1: inject people with the shots without a prescription because the liability question,

    Speaker 1: it's no longer under EUA,

    Speaker 1: and nobody wants to take responsibility

    Speaker 1: for that.

    Speaker 3: Well and I've I have a hard time believing

    Speaker 3: that any of these

    Speaker 3: or the majority of these, I should be a little bit clearer, the majority of these

    Speaker 3: so called physicians

    Speaker 3: don't understand

    Speaker 3: what they've been giving.

    Speaker 3: How many of them are actually doing the due diligence to learn what's in this?

    Speaker 2: Very few.

    Speaker 2: Because, you know, they've been trained just to do what they're told. But here's the other thing.

    Speaker 2: I have a nurse practitioner friend who, the entire time, would never give it, And she had someone come into her office last week. We just had this discussion three days ago. He was saying, well, I need a prescription so I can get it because I'm in Kentucky. And CVS and Walgreens both have,

    Speaker 2: dictated to their pharmacies that, you know, you have to have a prescription.

    Speaker 2: And she looked at him and said,

    Speaker 2: no. I'm not doing that. I didn't do it beforehand. I'm not gonna do it now. And she made a point of telling him

    Speaker 2: that those institutions

    Speaker 2: are all about shifting the legal blame

    Speaker 2: onto the medical practitioners now because the EUA

    Speaker 2: no longer being enforced.

    Speaker 2: And the thing is, any person with a logical mind would go, wait a minute.

    Speaker 2: Why twenty four hours after the EUA was dropped?

    Speaker 2: Why now do I have to have a prescription? It's the same product.

    Speaker 2: Might it be a legal issue rather than the than the product being safe and effective? Because nothing changed about the product. Now did it. But she said, you know, trying to explain that to him, it just he's just sitting there and he's just going right right over his head. It it blows my mind

    Speaker 2: that people people cannot understand

    Speaker 2: that it's not about your health.

    Speaker 2: It's all about making money and making sure now that the legal

    Speaker 2: blame is shifted

    Speaker 2: to someone else other than the pharma companies and their and their little pharmaceutical company pharmacies.

    Speaker 2: They don't they don't want the legal blame. That's all it's about.

    Speaker 3: Yep.

    Speaker 3: Yep. I added the post about Arizona

    Speaker 3: to Lori's

    Speaker 3: map

    Speaker 3: so that that's all in one place.

    Speaker 3: If anybody wants to

    Speaker 3: review

    Speaker 3: what's going on.

    Speaker 2: Oh, sorry. I forgot one in critical thing. I'm sorry, protocol, but I forgot what happened to her too.

    Speaker 2: She also had no idea that this had happened

    Speaker 2: until the gentleman came into our office and asked for a prescription. I forgot to tell you that part. She was like, what do you need a prescription for? Just, you know, if you I'm not gonna give you one,

    Speaker 2: but I never have. And he's like, oh, I have to have one. She goes, no. You don't. So this tells you

    Speaker 2: that most practitioners

    Speaker 2: also have no idea about the changes that are happening either.

    Speaker 3: Well and, you know,

    Speaker 3: let's face it. This is one of the things that that we as

    Speaker 3: patients and advocates

    Speaker 3: learned during COVID

    Speaker 3: that most people don't understand.

    Speaker 3: Doctors, nurses, health professionals of all kinds

    Speaker 3: have zero idea

    Speaker 3: of what's going on.

    Speaker 3: They simply

    Speaker 3: don't know.

    Speaker 3: And so they go by what they see on the TV unless they have the time to,

    Speaker 3: you know, catch up with some medical

    Speaker 3: journal or something. Maybe they get emails from some, you know,

    Speaker 3: group that they belong to.

    Speaker 3: But in this case, it's obvious that that didn't happen.

    Speaker 2: But No. She's a private practitioner, so I can kinda see why she would not know because she Yep. Got her very own practice.

    Speaker 2: But it makes you wonder

    Speaker 2: how many

    Speaker 2: physicians and, you know, physician

    Speaker 2: like providers

    Speaker 2: knew

    Speaker 2: that were attached to the larger institutions. So, like, what kind of messaging went out.

    Speaker 2: Mhmm. And I don't have contacts because both of the physicians that I'm friends with, this nurse practitioner and the integrated physician, they both have their own private practice, so I don't have a sampling for that,

    Speaker 2: to know exactly how much messaging came out. Because you would think there would be a lot of it because there was a lot when they were pushing from the opposite side, wasn't there?

    Speaker 3: Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah.

    Speaker 3: But the,

    Speaker 3: I mean,

    Speaker 3: we've got, you know, some professionals in our in our audience right now that that could probably,

    Speaker 3: flesh this out a little bit.

    Speaker 3: But remember when we started talking about

    Speaker 3: the, vaccine?

    Speaker 3: We are now in a situation where,

    Speaker 3: maybe fifteen years ago, maybe even less.

    Speaker 3: If you were sick, you've had a cold,

    Speaker 3: you've had the flu,

    Speaker 3: you might have had an allergy, but it could have been a cold. And we're not sure, so we're not gonna give you your flu shot this week, or we're not gonna give you whatever other shot this week. We're gonna wait until you've got, you know, ten days or, you know, two weeks where you're clear, and then we'll give you your shot because we shouldn't give you a shot when you've been sick.

    Speaker 3: And now not only do we see these jackasses

    Speaker 3: giving vaccines

    Speaker 3: to people

    Speaker 3: oh, you came in

    Speaker 3: with the with COVID?

    Speaker 3: We better give you your vaccine

    Speaker 3: right now.

    Speaker 3: What kind of horseshit

    Speaker 3: is that?

    Speaker 3: And it's not and here I go on that that whole pet thing again.

    Speaker 3: It's not just doctors, and it's not just nurses and technicians.

    Speaker 3: It's also veterinarians.

    Speaker 3: The people that stood in front of me at a vet's office when I was questioning about getting something done to one of my animals because she was sick,

    Speaker 3: is she up to date on her rabies? And I said, well, I yeah, I think so. I'm not sure about the date. I'd have to pull the certificate.

    Speaker 3: And, well, we'll have to make sure she's up to date. And I'm like, she's sick. That's why I'm here to try to get

    Speaker 3: some kind of work done on her, maybe at least a diagnosis.

    Speaker 3: Okay?

    Speaker 3: See, you never give a sick animal or a child a vaccine.

    Speaker 3: I had

    Speaker 3: four,

    Speaker 3: four people in this office standing behind the counter blinking at me like I said, did you notice that the sky is green today?

    Speaker 3: It was amazing.

    Speaker 3: I'm just standing there trying to figure out how would you guys manage to have this building so long if you're this damn dumb?

    Speaker 1: And also to people with autoimmune

    Speaker 1: disorders

    Speaker 1: who already had a reaction to their first

    Speaker 1: or second

    Speaker 1: injection.

    Speaker 1: They told them to go get another one. It would probably be fine.

    Speaker 3: Probably. Don't you just love that? Oh, you'll probably be fine. It'll be okay.

    Speaker 2: We've got unicorns out back. We'll just get you some unicorn piss to drink on top of it. I tell you what. I get so frustrated hearing people say that that I wanted to go, okay. Here's the deal.

    Speaker 2: Since you just think you know what's probably gonna happen, I think you'll probably be fine if you go and stand out and rush out of traffic and you won't get hit. That's what I think. I think you'll probably be fine.

    Speaker 2: That's the kind of idiotic advice you're giving. That's what I wanted to say to them. I think you'll probably be fine. Why don't you go ahead and do it?

    Speaker 3: I'm gonna I'm gonna back down for a little bit here. I'm just gonna mute myself because I have to take care of something, but I see Kyle's got stuff to say. Hi, Kyle.

    Speaker 9: Hey, girls. How are we doing?

    Speaker 1: Good, Kyle. How are you? Good to see you.

    Speaker 9: Hey. Good. Good seeing you too.

    Speaker 9: I just wanna say, I think we're gonna need that unicorn

    Speaker 9: tomorrow in Arizona, I believe, when they're doing the,

    Speaker 9: Charlie Kirk

    Speaker 9: memorial deal.

    Speaker 9: I just wanted to have everybody keep their head on a swivel tomorrow, and we're gonna probably need a unicorn prayer

    Speaker 9: and,

    Speaker 9: just kinda hope for the best.

    Speaker 9: I've kinda already heard a lot of

    Speaker 9: chatter from, you know, all the different sources. Like, yeah, this is probably not shaping up to be,

    Speaker 9: to be very safe. I think they actually caught a gentleman

    Speaker 9: doing some nefarious stuff.

    Speaker 9: Was it today? This morning?

    Speaker 9: Already some

    Speaker 9: nefarious gentleman.

    Speaker 9: So, anyway, just wanted

    Speaker 9: to kinda put that out there. Everybody should keep their head on a swivel for tomorrow,

    Speaker 9: and, good luck to everybody that goes to that,

    Speaker 9: memorial for him.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. I don't think there's any such thing as being,

    Speaker 2: too vigilant,

    Speaker 2: these days

    Speaker 2: in any in any scenario, but definitely

    Speaker 2: tomorrow as well. Yep.

    Speaker 2: Looks like t bird has something to follow-up there. Go for it, t bird.

    Speaker 7: Of course. Of course. I have to follow-up.

    Speaker 10: My guy. My guy.

    Speaker 7: So super funny.

    Speaker 7: It's not funny. It's I'm listening. So I was I was sorry. I was with my neighbor, was just walking down the street. She's got her walker and she's got this huge Saint Bernard, and he's pulling her. She's, like, 90.

    Speaker 7: So, anyway, I was listening the whole time. I was, like, just wanting to talk so bad. Arizona, this is okay. You know where I go, and I love when protocol goes off. And you guys have me in hysterics, by the way, Miriam. Great analogy about, yeah, walk out and traffic. I'm just that's kinda

    Speaker 7: that's actually what it basically happened. We just didn't have the visualization with the explosion

    Speaker 7: of body parts. That's just we're just living with it.

    Speaker 7: Ironically, I never see my parents even though they live fairly close to me,

    Speaker 7: because of this whole

    Speaker 7: COVID debacle and the vaccine debacle and whatnot.

    Speaker 7: They're 80 and they're they got, like, eight shots

    Speaker 7: and,

    Speaker 7: you know, they both have heart conditions now. My mom's got blood clots everywhere. She said, well, but we don't know it was the shot.

    Speaker 7: And then, you know, whatever. And, you know, my

    Speaker 7: my brother-in-law,

    Speaker 7: he's 40. He's had two cardiac conversions.

    Speaker 7: The nurses in this room know what that is. We they there's no reason. He had no heart issues prior. I never had a heart issue and had two heart

    Speaker 7: attacks. Exactly to your point. That's what they did to me. You didn't want it. They threatened me. I got a government letter issuing

    Speaker 7: you will have your shot at 08:10PM

    Speaker 7: at the Civic Hospital

    Speaker 7: or you will be terminated. That is it. That was the end of it. And I it was I had no and I know people say they had no choice. And I've never said this before, and this is I know I say a lot of stuff, but it dawned on me when I thought back and go,

    Speaker 7: I could've tried to work somewhere else, but everything was closed. I couldn't even have gotten a job at McDonald's

    Speaker 7: to to to take care of my children and myself if I just didn't get the shot. There's no compensation.

    Speaker 7: I have no insurance. I was a right? I was a regional nursing director, so I wasn't under a union. I had no money. I wasn't saving money into any kind of

    Speaker 7: a future plan at 45 years old. I was just trying to pay my bills and survive. So it was like that's kind of

    Speaker 7: the the cement wall we were pinned against

    Speaker 7: and you know even if I did want it, I would've worked anywhere. I was pulling up three jobs even working a full time job. I had two part time on weekends when we were in lockdown

    Speaker 7: Anything to just try to pay the bills off as fast as I could. So

    Speaker 7: even as responsible as I was, I still got the bloody shot. I had the heart attack within three days, rush to the hospital, they lie, they take all my blood work, lie to me, don't lie by omission by not telling me they took my d dimer and it was 4,000.

    Speaker 7: No. It was a panic attack and sent me home with Ativan,

    Speaker 7: which almost

    Speaker 7: it it did.

    Speaker 7: My son took them when he was depressed, because I wasn't taking them. And I didn't even I put them in my drawer and just put I should've just thrown them away, but, you know, all this stuff leads to one trickle down effect. Right? But Arizona, that this is my point. Sorry.

    Speaker 7: Go to my go to see my mom and dad tonight. My dad isn't rough he was a professional hockey player. So was my brother

    Speaker 7: who also now has all the same symptoms as I do. And he played for the AHL, so not NHL. But if you're American, the AHL is right below. You're already drafted and you're on that farm team. That's how good he was, but then he had his ankle shattered with a shot. So that that like, not vaccine injured. But

    Speaker 7: all of them in my family now, no one has any history of heart condition in my entire family, both sides. We're Irish Catholic, you know, your typical

    Speaker 7: farmer kind of people. Healthy, healthy people, very athletic. And now everyone has a heart condition. Every single one of us.

    Speaker 7: Some more severe than the other, which is very and it doesn't matter how old. My siblings are much younger than me. But, anyway,

    Speaker 7: my dad still golfs. He's he's still healthy enough and he goes to Arizona every year. Well, guess what happened? This is something interesting about Arizona. So here's where I put my little spy cap on and just because you guys are talking about Arizona and I wouldn't have anticipated that because I had this conversation with my dad tonight because my dad ended up getting something called vasculitis.

    Speaker 7: Vasculitis is deadly. It shuts down your kidneys, it's like a lot of stuff. But the side effects of it are very similar, this is very specific to Arizona, which is interesting because they're gonna be digging up a grave, you're gonna see construction, you're gonna see a lot of people, and it's probably gonna be outside. If it's inside, correct me. I don't know. I don't know the details. I haven't been on x. But,

    Speaker 7: Arizona is infamous

    Speaker 7: for something called Valley Fever.

    Speaker 7: So infamous that when my dad got sick from his last golf trip years and years ago, he came back and they told him it was pneumonia. It was bronchitis.

    Speaker 7: He had wicked headaches. He lost his taste. He lost his smell. It's a very specific it almost has flu like symptoms,

    Speaker 7: and it is infamous in that area of The United States Of America, but specifically to Arizona. It's a fungi in the soil, and if you guys already know this, I'm sorry, but I'm just sharing because I actually got in touch with the University of Arizona

    Speaker 7: infection control

    Speaker 7: physician, the specialist, and they actually communicated with me because I was like, I think my dad's dying because I started back then I was this type of person. I was like, this isn't pneumonia. This is not don't don't the antibiotics aren't working. He all of his organs shut down. So I find it very interesting

    Speaker 7: if anyone can help me out what they know about the details of this. If people start getting

    Speaker 7: sick

    Speaker 7: maybe with some kind of respiratory

    Speaker 7: sudden illness,

    Speaker 7: who's going there? Are there any big people that are gonna be there? Did do they know? Is it gonna be windy that day? These are all the little key little things that are interesting to me that all tie into a loop. Sometimes I don't say it when I should,

    Speaker 7: just like when we were talking last week. But and thank you for letting me speak, but I just thought you guys should keep that in the back of your mind. Is this are they gonna release different

    Speaker 9: Hey, Tanya. Just real quick here. I just wanna bump it and say, they put the entire lineup,

    Speaker 9: and I should've took a screenshot of this. I was in a hurry, so I didn't. They took they they put the entire lineup of who was going.

    Speaker 9: Now first off, talk about security.

    Speaker 9: Right? Like, why would you put the all the

    Speaker 9: hitters

    Speaker 9: that are going to this tomorrow?

    Speaker 9: And, you know, Trump,

    Speaker 9: all of them. Like, literally all of them. So to to answer your question,

    Speaker 9: the heaviest of the heavy hitters are all going tomorrow,

    Speaker 9: and that's why it's so important. And thank you for bringing that up. Fantastical

    Speaker 9: point.

    Speaker 2: Great,

    Speaker 2: point there, Kyle, too. Why would you announce it? It's not like it's

    Speaker 2: an event where you want to put the lineup up to draw people to pay to come to the event.

    Speaker 2: Why would you do that? That makes

    Speaker 2: no sense to me.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. They yeah. And let me let me tell you. They said that the building,

    Speaker 9: the outdoor venue

    Speaker 9: only holds 60,000,

    Speaker 9: and they already have a 100,000

    Speaker 9: signed up or more. So they're gonna have to put the overflow.

    Speaker 9: They already announced the overflow building in the entire lineup

    Speaker 9: of speakers and guests.

    Speaker 9: I just there's something that's just way off of, guys. Way way off, folks.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. That,

    Speaker 2: is very, very concerning because,

    Speaker 2: there's no way you can have adequate security in that situation.

    Speaker 7: And are these buildings open air, Kyle, or are they closed? I just I just have a really bad feeling. Yep.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. One of them, I believe, is the baseball stadium down there, so it's gonna be open. And then the other one is a hockey arena,

    Speaker 9: and I'm not sure if it has an open roof or not, but it but it but it might be closed. I'm not I'm not positive. And I say roof, and she says roof.

    Speaker 9: She says a boat.

    Speaker 9: I say about,

    Speaker 9: just to clarify.

    Speaker 2: Tomato and tomato. Right? There you go.

    Speaker 6: I'm back, and the hockey rink would probably have a roof on it.

    Speaker 6: Just saying. Hi.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. There's so many issues with what has just been described that,

    Speaker 2: it gives me and I don't generally have a sense of foreboding,

    Speaker 2: but

    Speaker 2: it gives me a

    Speaker 2: real sense of foreboding about tomorrow.

    Speaker 2: I do think that we all need to pray for everyone who's going and for all the people who are attending because,

    Speaker 2: I think there's a real possibility

    Speaker 2: for some very nefarious things. It's it's very, very sad that we have

    Speaker 2: to feel that way, but,

    Speaker 2: I just think that it's it's another thing that we have to face

    Speaker 2: with

    Speaker 2: the reality

    Speaker 2: of the days and times that we're living in and with those who

    Speaker 2: are we are actually fighting against.

    Speaker 6: I think I wanna believe, though, on this one, Miriam,

    Speaker 6: that God is definitely watching. Oh, absolutely. He's all And you know what I mean? So

    Speaker 6: I am not I refuse to give evil Oh, no. Even the the fear. We just wanna circumspect

    Speaker 2: and be aware of our environment,

    Speaker 2: because, you know, we're supposed to be careful about how we walk. But then again Oh, not only that. You know? But he kinda

    Speaker 6: he overplayed his hand. I don't care. I agree. He woke up so many people that,

    Speaker 6: and and it's not even our generation

    Speaker 2: that I mean, we want them to wake up too. They should be awake already, but I'm just saying. Oh, no. It's the five somethings and younger that this Yes. Both of my sons are in his and Charlie's age range. As a matter of fact, my younger son is just a few months older than Charlie.

    Speaker 2: And every person I speak to,

    Speaker 2: and they tell me in their age groups, it has absolutely

    Speaker 2: been

    Speaker 2: like a lightning rod for this

    Speaker 2: for that generation.

    Speaker 2: And I, you know, I think God definitely

    Speaker 2: is using this

    Speaker 2: for good. So no matter what happens tomorrow,

    Speaker 2: good wins.

    Speaker 2: Good absolutely wins no matter what happens tomorrow.

    Speaker 1: You look like you had something else to add, Deb.

    Speaker 6: No. I just forgot to turn my mic off.

    Speaker 6: But, yeah, Touche on that one, and, I just wanted to let y'all know I was back.

    Speaker 2: We're always glad you're back. We are absolutely glad.

    Speaker 2: I wanted to also remind people, if you do have something to say and you want to contribute to this conversation or have a story to tell, please raise your hand. We'd love to hear from you.

    Speaker 1: Yep. Whether you've told your story in this space or not, we are here to hear your stories about your experience and your family's experience with, COVID policies, protocols, and mandates,

    Speaker 1: which we believe have caused so much incalculable

    Speaker 1: harm

    Speaker 1: to untold numbers of people over the last five years. And I think what we've been discussing tonight, because it's on so many people's minds

    Speaker 1: in relation to

    Speaker 1: the the Charlie Kirk assassination

    Speaker 1: and the subsequent tragedy of what we saw unfolding

    Speaker 1: on social media

    Speaker 1: really drives home

    Speaker 1: the effect that this kind of dehumanizing,

    Speaker 1: weaponized,

    Speaker 1: militarized

    Speaker 1: propaganda

    Speaker 1: has against a population

    Speaker 1: where that's that's been the

    Speaker 1: the response I've seen from so many people

    Speaker 1: are they're taken aback. They're like, oh, wow. I didn't realize

    Speaker 1: my own my own neighbors, my own family members, my friends might

    Speaker 1: just as soon

    Speaker 1: see me dead because of my political views, if they knew my political views

    Speaker 1: or whatever it is. And,

    Speaker 1: and that's

    Speaker 1: it's

    Speaker 1: chilling, and it it should serve as a wake up call to all of us that this

    Speaker 1: campaign

    Speaker 1: of dehumanization

    Speaker 1: has to stop. We have to recognize again that we have

    Speaker 1: common humanity

    Speaker 1: and, and shared

    Speaker 1: ideals, however deep we have to go to find those

    Speaker 1: at this point, because they've been so

    Speaker 1: reality itself has been perverted and twisted into something. It's not

    Speaker 1: to the point you see people who are,

    Speaker 1: they're not actually living in reality. They're living in a manufactured

    Speaker 1: narrative that they heard on the TV machine

    Speaker 1: and and not engaging with reality. And I think part of our

    Speaker 1: part of what we need to do

    Speaker 1: is try to bring those people back into

    Speaker 1: objective reality very, very gently because the mind will protect them

    Speaker 1: almost at all cost because they're in so deep at this point. 100% true.

    Speaker 2: I've had one of those weeks where I've repeatedly

    Speaker 2: you know, I told one story earlier, but listen to this one.

    Speaker 2: This week, I go into the integrated medicine office and the nurse who works there tells me that the other nurse, he's a male,

    Speaker 2: says to her, and I'm paraphrasing, but, basically, he was celebrating Charlie Kirk's death.

    Speaker 2: And I said, you've gotta be kidding me,

    Speaker 2: you know, because we work alongside this man. Okay?

    Speaker 2: And so we go into the IV Room because I I get some IVs for myself for health.

    Speaker 2: And he proceeds to come in there

    Speaker 2: and says, hey. There's this patient coming in, and and I'm I'm gonna say exactly what he said. He goes, he is just a bad person. He's such a misogynist

    Speaker 2: pig.

    Speaker 2: Blah blah blah. And he's talking about this guy who is a Amish guy, and he's talking about how horrible he is and how bad he treats his wife and blah blah blah. And I said, you know, yeah. You know, there's a lot of hateful and angry people now. I said, I've seen so much of it. People wishing people celebrating Charlie Kirk's death. You know, there's so many and it's really, really obvious now. And I slid that in on purpose because I knew what he had said to this other nurse.

    Speaker 2: I mean, in a split second, this man looks at me and he says,

    Speaker 2: well, I don't have to mourn him.

    Speaker 2: And I said,

    Speaker 2: no.

    Speaker 2: Nobody has ever said anybody has to mourn anyone,

    Speaker 2: but you don't get to celebrate other people's

    Speaker 2: assassinations.

    Speaker 2: It made And he should be fired. Made him so upset that he turned around and marched out of the room.

    Speaker 2: But

    Speaker 2: this is the kind of

    Speaker 2: it's pervasive.

    Speaker 2: And this is the kind of law processes

    Speaker 2: that we are dealing with now. Or for some reason,

    Speaker 2: people literally think

    Speaker 2: that they have the right to celebrate another human being's

    Speaker 2: death.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. Miriam, as a medical birds.

    Speaker 2: Oh, yeah. I mean, you're right, Deb. He should be fired. And he wasn't there when I was that was Tuesday. He wasn't there when I was there Thursday.

    Speaker 2: Unfortunately, the owner of the practice wasn't there either, so I didn't have a chance to ask.

    Speaker 2: But I think he may be gone, which is great because that's what needs to happen. And I so far, I think there's over 700 people who have lost their jobs for this kind of crap on the social media as they should.

    Speaker 2: Because you don't see anybody,

    Speaker 2: you know, you don't you don't see anybody on

    Speaker 2: the side of conservatism and

    Speaker 2: and Christianity.

    Speaker 2: You don't see them going out and rioting and tearing stuff down.

    Speaker 2: You know,

    Speaker 2: there's nothing but peaceful

    Speaker 2: prayer vigils, but yet you have people coming out

    Speaker 2: like, the New York, Republican on a campus in New York.

    Speaker 2: They were having a prayer vigil, and this guy comes up to them and says,

    Speaker 2: I really want you all to effing die. And they were going, well, we'll pray for you, blah blah blah. And he just kept going on and on, and it's on video.

    Speaker 2: So, you know, this is what we're dealing with, pure absolute evil even when people are standing in front of you and lovingly talking to you and saying they're gonna pray for you even though you are literally threatening their life. This is what we're seeing.

    Speaker 6: But the where do you have a oh, I'm sorry, Chelsea. Go ahead.

    Speaker 1: That Jimmy Kimmel

    Speaker 1: was let go

    Speaker 1: because

    Speaker 1: he

    Speaker 1: he basically

    Speaker 1: off offloaded

    Speaker 1: responsibility

    Speaker 1: onto the victim,

    Speaker 1: and and he that was abhorrent, and he lost his job. But it was just a couple years ago, he was saying to to the unvaccinated,

    Speaker 1: have some horse paste and rest in peace, Wheezy.

    Speaker 1: And that was that condone that gave license to many medical professionals

    Speaker 1: to

    Speaker 1: neglect

    Speaker 1: or mistreat

    Speaker 1: or even in some cases

    Speaker 1: euthanize

    Speaker 1: the unvaccinated

    Speaker 1: who they came into contact with.

    Speaker 1: And he didn't lose his job for that. That was just fine. It had to come it had to be targeted at one specific person

    Speaker 1: before it was politically incorrect enough for him to lose his job. But targeting an entire swath of people

    Speaker 1: based on their medical status

    Speaker 1: was just fine.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. Isn't it disgusting that,

    Speaker 2: you know,

    Speaker 2: that it requires

    Speaker 2: something like September 10

    Speaker 2: for any kind of reaction

    Speaker 2: to that kind of betrayal,

    Speaker 2: that kind of just evil.

    Speaker 1: Right. Rest in peace, Wheezy, was saying they the unvaccinated

    Speaker 1: shouldn't even be entitled to treatment.

    Speaker 1: Yeah. They should be turned away. And this wasn't just rhetoric. It became policy. Mhmm. And we were talking last week about people being denied life saving transplants.

    Speaker 1: They're sitting there waiting for them, but they're denied because that's used as a cudgel

    Speaker 1: to try to drive them into compliance.

    Speaker 1: Oh, you can have your life saving transplant

    Speaker 1: if you take this experimental shot. And if you don't, we will literally let you die.

    Speaker 6: Or But in the same respect though,

    Speaker 6: Chelsea,

    Speaker 6: they also brought a huge light on the fact of all the harvesting of organs and things like that.

    Speaker 6: That became you know, that's so much more

    Speaker 6: talked about, known about,

    Speaker 6: you know, than it ever was. I mean, people did it before because that's you know, we wanted to save lives. When we realized that

    Speaker 6: what they were doing was what they did with kindness, you know, how they turned that to

    Speaker 6: to evil.

    Speaker 6: People started waking up and realizing during

    Speaker 6: especially because of COVID and people not having access to the body or

    Speaker 6: or say or things like that.

    Speaker 6: We know lots of,

    Speaker 6: nefarious things went on.

    Speaker 6: And the but it said light huge light on it at the same time.

    Speaker 2: Yes. And, you know, speaking of shedding light and some positive things, although I am a little guarded about this, I will find it and put it in the purple pill. I don't know how many people saw where CNN Van CNN's Van Jones, if you remember Van Jones from the Obama era,

    Speaker 2: he actually

    Speaker 2: posted

    Speaker 2: that he received a DM from Charlie,

    Speaker 2: Kirk, just one day before Charlie was assassinated.

    Speaker 2: And I'm just gonna read what what Charlie said to him, what he posted.

    Speaker 2: He said, hey, Van. I mean it. I'd love to have you on my show to have a respectful conversation

    Speaker 2: about crime and race. I would be a gentleman as I know you would be as well. We can disagree about issues.

    Speaker 2: We can disagree about the issues

    Speaker 2: agreeably.

    Speaker 2: And and this is this is the problem.

    Speaker 2: You know,

    Speaker 2: Van knew this, and I guarantee you, we would have never seen this

    Speaker 2: if this hadn't happened

    Speaker 2: to Charlie.

    Speaker 2: But

    Speaker 2: this is this is the problem.

    Speaker 2: The the other side can't disagree agreeably.

    Speaker 2: It's violence.

    Speaker 2: It's we're gonna silence you. We want you dead.

    Speaker 2: And and that's the issue.

    Speaker 2: Although I do applaud Van for actually

    Speaker 2: putting it out there, but

    Speaker 2: sadly, I'm gonna be really honest, I don't trust his motivation in doing that. I really don't

    Speaker 2: because

    Speaker 2: he

    Speaker 2: he was such a radical during those years. He was very inflammatory during the Obama years,

    Speaker 2: and I wonder

    Speaker 2: if it's not for his own personal

    Speaker 2: aggrandizement,

    Speaker 2: honestly,

    Speaker 2: because,

    Speaker 2: you know, what he said about that note, here's what he said. Charlie Kirk and I were not friends at all. In fact, the last week of his life, we were beefing hard,

    Speaker 2: beefing online, beefing on air. But the day before he died, he sent me a message that shocked me. So the message

    Speaker 2: shocked him. That nice message shocked him. He sent me a personal message calling for personal dialogue,

    Speaker 2: wanted me to come on a show. He said we could be gentlemen together. He said we could deal with our disagreements agreeably.

    Speaker 2: And in the past week and a half, just watching people talk about civil wars and censorship

    Speaker 2: and all this stuff coming out of his death, I just thought it was important to let people know, don't put that on Charlie. Because last day of his life, he was reaching out to have not more censorship,

    Speaker 2: more conversation,

    Speaker 2: more dialogue

    Speaker 2: with somebody,

    Speaker 2: honestly, with who was, honestly, one of his adversaries, me. So he calls himself Charlie's adversary.

    Speaker 2: So, again, I'm looking forward to seeing what he actually does. If he actually calls for all of this craziness to stop

    Speaker 2: instead of just talking about his personal interaction. That's what I want to hear. I want to see more high profile

    Speaker 2: people

    Speaker 2: say it's never appropriate

    Speaker 2: to kill someone for their words. That's what I wanna hear.

    Speaker 1: Yep. Frankly, Miriam, when I saw that, I was shocked

    Speaker 1: that CNN

    Speaker 1: was apparently

    Speaker 1: walking vitriol back a little bit by by allowing Van Jones to come on with this personal account.

    Speaker 1: If you missed it, I have pinned it to the

    Speaker 1: the nest. So watch that. But at the end, after after he says all of what you just said, Miriam, he

    Speaker 1: he's in conversation with Anderson Cooper.

    Speaker 1: And Cooper asked, well, would you would you have taken him up on that? Would you have gone on his show? And he was like, oh, no. I wouldn't have

    Speaker 1: given him the platform by going on his show, but we would've maybe we would have talked about it behind the scenes and opened a discourse and blah blah blah.

    Speaker 2: Okay. So you just confirmed what my intuition was. That's exactly it. You see what I mean? It's it's

    Speaker 2: it

    Speaker 2: it's never going to be an honest dialogue. It's always going to be what's the utility of it for for the other side.

    Speaker 2: It's never gonna be an honest dialogue in my opinion, especially with these high profile people that have a history

    Speaker 2: of just being inflammatory,

    Speaker 2: and it's all about

    Speaker 2: the political victories. It's not about humanity.

    Speaker 2: It's not about caring about other people and respecting their right to live.

    Speaker 2: It's disgusting.

    Speaker 1: For example, we just saw AOC

    Speaker 1: on the house floor talking about, oh, you know, we shouldn't we shouldn't honor the legacy of Charlie Kirk, and that's actually a bad thing because

    Speaker 1: and she goes into a long litany of the same

    Speaker 1: misquotes

    Speaker 1: that have gotten Washington Post journalists fired over the last week

    Speaker 1: because they change a few choice words to manipulate

    Speaker 1: what was actually said. And she's just

    Speaker 1: unabashedly

    Speaker 1: doubling down on that, and I think it's shameful, and she should feel bad.

    Speaker 2: She really should. And and even worse, you've got people losing their jobs for for

    Speaker 2: saying things and as a result of the things that she was then quoting and misquoting and misrepresenting.

    Speaker 2: And any person in a leadership position like that should be removed from that position

    Speaker 2: for

    Speaker 2: spouting that inflammatory

    Speaker 2: crap.

    Speaker 1: Side eye Ilhan Omar,

    Speaker 1: who,

    Speaker 1: I think everybody probably saw it. She retweeted

    Speaker 1: something that was basically celebrating

    Speaker 1: the assassination,

    Speaker 1: And it is it is very unfortunate. We we should demand better of our so called

    Speaker 1: elected representation

    Speaker 1: because they are

    Speaker 1: supposed to be representing us, and

    Speaker 1: we we should hold them to account on that as well.

    Speaker 2: 100%.

    Speaker 2: I mean,

    Speaker 2: there is no excuse for that, and I can list you

    Speaker 2: all kinds of politician. Maxine Waters. I mean,

    Speaker 2: it's unbelievable

    Speaker 2: the things that they've been allowed to say

    Speaker 2: and have had no

    Speaker 2: repercussions. And don't get me wrong. I'm thankful

    Speaker 2: for the 700 some odd people

    Speaker 2: who lost their jobs and there there were consequences

    Speaker 2: for them. But there needs to be some political types losing their jobs too for the things they're saying.

    Speaker 1: And

    Speaker 1: and with no hint of irony,

    Speaker 1: the the one I just pinned to the nest,

    Speaker 1: his rhetoric

    Speaker 1: and beliefs

    Speaker 1: were ignorant and uneducated.

    Speaker 1: That's what she had to say of a man who was just assassinated

    Speaker 1: and and then goes on to misquote him. And that is either

    Speaker 1: uneducated

    Speaker 1: and ignorant or

    Speaker 1: it's deliberately

    Speaker 1: lying,

    Speaker 1: misframing

    Speaker 1: reality

    Speaker 1: to

    Speaker 1: to advance

    Speaker 1: her her narrative and, quote, her side.

    Speaker 1: And that's not where we need to be.

    Speaker 2: No. We don't need to have if it if it's ignorance and uneducated, we don't need that person in the office. And if the if it's the other part, we definitely don't need her in the office either. So I don't I don't see a reason why she would remain in office with either one of those options. She needs to be out of the office and everyone else like her. And I don't care if it's Republican or Democrat or whatever. If that's how you're gonna behave and talk and you have no more sense than that or you're that

    Speaker 2: evil and manipulative, you all need to be gone. Every single one of you need to be out of office.

    Speaker 1: It's so cynical.

    Speaker 1: We have to get back to

    Speaker 1: I mean, I guess politics has always been cynical to some degree, but this level of depravity

    Speaker 1: is

    Speaker 1: it's new to me in mainstream

    Speaker 1: political discourse. They always tried to shroud it in,

    Speaker 1: you know, some civility,

    Speaker 6: but that that's been You used to be able to have real discussions and be disagree

    Speaker 6: and maybe not like the other person's opinion or anything, but you didn't not like the person.

    Speaker 2: You know what I mean? Look at the exchanges

    Speaker 2: from the eighties from Reagan. There you go again. That was the worst you got.

    Speaker 2: There you go again to his opponents.

    Speaker 2: You didn't have

    Speaker 2: just

    Speaker 2: horrific

    Speaker 2: denigration of the other person to the point that

    Speaker 2: you made them hated

    Speaker 2: to the point that people shoot them.

    Speaker 2: It's unbelievable.

    Speaker 1: It really is.

    Speaker 1: I'd just like to take a second in the break in the conversation

    Speaker 1: to invite anyone

    Speaker 1: who might be listening to press the mic in the bottom left hand corner of your screen

    Speaker 1: and come up and join the conversation.

    Speaker 1: We are here as we are every Saturday night to hear about your experiences with COVID policies,

    Speaker 1: protocols, and mandates.

    Speaker 1: But as you can hear, we are,

    Speaker 1: you know, kind of following the zeitgeist and discussing

    Speaker 1: the things that are on everyone's mind. And I just like to bring that back occasionally to

    Speaker 1: how the the COVID

    Speaker 1: protocols, policies, and mandates really fostered the environment that brought us here.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. I mean,

    Speaker 2: what it comes down to is a lack of respect for your fellow human beings

    Speaker 2: and a lack of care for their very lives

    Speaker 2: based on

    Speaker 2: whatever agenda you ascribe to.

    Speaker 2: And it seems that the the COVID agenda was and is,

    Speaker 2: very much

    Speaker 2: you don't deserve to live if you don't conform

    Speaker 2: to what the agenda is. That that's what it boils down to.

    Speaker 2: If if you disagree

    Speaker 2: with the experts, you if you disagree

    Speaker 2: with the agenda, you don't deserve to live.

    Speaker 2: And and that's where the commonality is right there.

    Speaker 2: If you disagree

    Speaker 2: with the woke agenda,

    Speaker 2: which the woke agenda very much

    Speaker 2: is part and parcel of trust the experts, mindlessly do what we say.

    Speaker 2: It's exactly the same thing.

    Speaker 1: Yep. And we will,

    Speaker 1: protocol widow will momentarily,

    Speaker 1: grace us with a reading of the 25 commonalities.

    Speaker 1: On the page, there is a a recording from a space we did last year, I think,

    Speaker 1: where she had just,

    Speaker 1: the way she went through and and elaborated on each one,

    Speaker 1: was just it was so spot on. I I put it on the page

    Speaker 1: itself, but but to have her,

    Speaker 3: live with us to go over I just wanted to reiterate a little bit of what Chelsea said because, Chelsea, you were

    Speaker 3: really,

    Speaker 3: you know, robotic and breaking up.

    Speaker 3: So what what she was pointing out was,

    Speaker 3: the 25 commonalities

    Speaker 3: page

    Speaker 3: has a list, and, for anybody that wasn't here earlier today when I was first talking about this,

    Speaker 3: it's a little sterile when you when you read the,

    Speaker 3: the list.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: we were we were in the midst of a a a pay a a space one night, and there was an attorney in the group that,

    Speaker 3: we all respect a lot.

    Speaker 3: But he had he was kinda new to the whole protocol problem,

    Speaker 3: and,

    Speaker 3: we decided to do the 25 commonalities,

    Speaker 3: and I got lucky and got picked. And

    Speaker 3: so I read the 25 commonalities, and I started to elaborate a little bit on them.

    Speaker 3: And he admitted, I

    Speaker 3: I did not.

    Speaker 3: I read them, and I never knew what they really meant.

    Speaker 3: So I don't know if Miriam, if you,

    Speaker 3: or, Deborah

    Speaker 3: can pull them up so that we could switch off,

    Speaker 3: that would be fine.

    Speaker 3: And I will go ahead and start.

    Speaker 3: But if you miss these or if you want to share them,

    Speaker 3: the page has been linked in the purple pill,

    Speaker 3: and,

    Speaker 3: the

    Speaker 3: there is a recording. They she took this recording from that night on that other space.

    Speaker 3: So if somebody's, like, driving and they wanna just listen to it or share it to somebody who doesn't wanna sit and read,

    Speaker 3: they can listen to the recording.

    Speaker 3: So

    Speaker 3: there were

    Speaker 3: we had volunteer interviewers

    Speaker 3: who

    Speaker 3: basically, Tracy Bird said one day they had a big meeting.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: she said, if I hear

    Speaker 3: and I don't remember what the the comment was. But if I hear that one more time, I think I will scream.

    Speaker 3: And somebody else replies, I hear that all the time too. And the next thing you know, they start pulling together things they've heard

    Speaker 3: repeatedly

    Speaker 3: from

    Speaker 3: either

    Speaker 3: survivors or from the families of victims.

    Speaker 3: So these are 25 things

    Speaker 3: that the COVID nineteen humanity betrayal memory project

    Speaker 3: has listed

    Speaker 3: that

    Speaker 3: basically it becomes one of those things where when somebody says, I don't know if my loved one was a victim.

    Speaker 3: Read the list.

    Speaker 3: How many of those things pertain to your case?

    Speaker 3: So

    Speaker 3: number one,

    Speaker 3: isolation

    Speaker 3: of victim.

    Speaker 3: Victim is denied any access to family,

    Speaker 3: friends,

    Speaker 3: advocate,

    Speaker 3: pastor,

    Speaker 3: priest,

    Speaker 3: or clergy, etcetera.

    Speaker 3: This begins

    Speaker 3: in the emergency room.

    Speaker 3: They immediately kick out the loved one or the friend or whoever brought them to the hospital,

    Speaker 3: and they're on their own,

    Speaker 3: keeping in mind that many of these people entered the hospital and they were short on oxygen, which meant that they did not have,

    Speaker 3: in many cases, the cognizance to be able to make their own decisions, but now their advocates been removed.

    Speaker 3: Number two, strict adherence to EUA protocols.

    Speaker 3: The only option allowed to patient victims are hospital protocol

    Speaker 3: drugs like remdesivir,

    Speaker 3: which is also called veclary,

    Speaker 3: baricitinib,

    Speaker 3: which is also called Olumiant.

    Speaker 3: One that I can't pronounce well, tocilizumab,

    Speaker 3: which is also known as Actemra,

    Speaker 3: often

    Speaker 3: forced on the victim when refused, and that is not a lie.

    Speaker 3: When we say forced, it's because if you refuse it, they wait till you go to sleep and they hang the bag.

    Speaker 3: Number three,

    Speaker 3: denied alternative treatments.

    Speaker 3: Denied requests,

    Speaker 3: often ridiculed for those requests,

    Speaker 3: for treatments like vitamins,

    Speaker 3: ivermectin, budesonide, hydroxychloroquine,

    Speaker 3: etcetera.

    Speaker 3: False statements made that they are not FDA approved

    Speaker 3: or do not work

    Speaker 3: because, suddenly,

    Speaker 3: what had been FDA approved was no longer acceptable

    Speaker 3: because it's not FDA approved, quote, unquote,

    Speaker 3: for COVID,

    Speaker 3: which has never been done before.

    Speaker 3: And by the way,

    Speaker 3: often ridiculed,

    Speaker 3: they even put it in the medical records.

    Speaker 3: They were

    Speaker 3: basically laughing at me in my in my husband's medical records because I had asked for,

    Speaker 3: high dose vitamin C.

    Speaker 3: And for anybody here who knows anything about medicine,

    Speaker 3: to them, high dose vitamin C

    Speaker 3: was a thousand milligrams.

    Speaker 3: Look at your bottle of vitamin c. What do you normally take?

    Speaker 3: Denied inform and by the way, that was pill form.

    Speaker 3: Denied informed consent.

    Speaker 3: No informed consent provided regarding medications,

    Speaker 3: treatments,

    Speaker 3: intubation,

    Speaker 3: or procedures.

    Speaker 3: No counseling

    Speaker 3: whatsoever

    Speaker 3: for any of these things at

    Speaker 3: all. No questions,

    Speaker 3: no paperwork to sign,

    Speaker 3: nothing.

    Speaker 3: Gaslighting.

    Speaker 3: And, Miriam or Deborah, if any of you want if you guys wanna, like, kick in here, just say, hey. I'll start at number whatever. Okay?

    Speaker 3: Gaslighting.

    Speaker 3: Gaslighting

    Speaker 3: by hospital

    Speaker 3: staff. Victim and family constantly told that the victim will die

    Speaker 3: because they are unvaccinated

    Speaker 3: if they refuse to be vaccinated

    Speaker 3: or if they don't comply with hospital protocol or ventilation,

    Speaker 3: constantly told their loved one was a very sick man or a very sick woman.

    Speaker 3: And keeping in mind,

    Speaker 3: the family is not just I mean, this is literally the victim. The patient is laying there.

    Speaker 3: Many of them who survived were told multiple times,

    Speaker 3: you're gonna die. You didn't take the vaccine.

    Speaker 3: I'm really sorry.

    Speaker 3: Removal of communication devices. Call lights, glasses, cell phones, or other communication devices are removed from the patient's possession or placed out of their reach.

    Speaker 3: Two things that we can tell you.

    Speaker 3: Our friend Charlene,

    Speaker 3: her mother,

    Speaker 3: when she was finally able to get into the hospital after

    Speaker 3: about thirty days, had been having a hard time, could not reach her mom.

    Speaker 3: Cell phone was never charged. It was always missing, whatever. And then when she gets into the room, she finds that the room phone

    Speaker 3: had been unplugged and put in the top shelf or on the top shelf of the

    Speaker 3: closet,

    Speaker 3: you know, right where her mom could not get out of bed and go get it because they tied mom up.

    Speaker 3: Another of our volunteer friends

    Speaker 3: is a

    Speaker 3: person who has multiple jobs, and one of her jobs is a

    Speaker 3: server

    Speaker 3: at a

    Speaker 3: restaurant, I believe. And she was waiting on a couple that she

    Speaker 3: does talk to on a regular basis, and they had another couple with them.

    Speaker 3: The woman who was within the other couple

    Speaker 3: was a nurse.

    Speaker 3: And somehow,

    Speaker 3: in the conversation

    Speaker 3: without knowing that our friend was a widow,

    Speaker 3: this nurse relayed

    Speaker 3: that as an RN on the COVID floors,

    Speaker 3: they were instructed

    Speaker 3: to remove

    Speaker 3: cell phones,

    Speaker 3: laptops,

    Speaker 3: etcetera.

    Speaker 3: All the communication devices

    Speaker 3: devices. Call lights are placed out of reach.

    Speaker 3: It's it's

    Speaker 3: criminal.

    Speaker 3: Dehumanization.

    Speaker 3: The methodical

    Speaker 3: dehumanization of the victim often described as being treated like an animal.

    Speaker 3: This is outright

    Speaker 3: criminal as

    Speaker 3: well. Many people who have ever been in an ICU department understand that the walls of the ICU department are usually not walls, they're windows.

    Speaker 3: And it became

    Speaker 3: quite frequent. You will see in the records. You will hear it in the interviews.

    Speaker 3: The patients are found with no sheets or blankets,

    Speaker 3: totally nude

    Speaker 3: with all of the privacy

    Speaker 3: curtains opened

    Speaker 3: completely up to the hallway.

    Speaker 3: So if

    Speaker 3: the hallway had cleaning staff or anyone else

    Speaker 3: walking up and down the hallway,

    Speaker 3: They're looking at a nude patient

    Speaker 3: on their stomach, on their back, didn't matter.

    Speaker 3: There was one

    Speaker 3: sister who was

    Speaker 3: advocating strongly

    Speaker 3: while in the hospital.

    Speaker 3: Not necessarily I see some of these people don't get to go into the room with their their relative,

    Speaker 3: but she was advocating for her sister. And I think she she was, like, only allowed to visit from the hallway.

    Speaker 3: And there was an argument between the sister and whoever, the nurse or the doctor, about whatever the the sister wanted for her sister.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: when she returned the next day, there's her sister,

    Speaker 3: unconscious,

    Speaker 3: naked,

    Speaker 3: face up,

    Speaker 3: uncovered.

    Speaker 3: And she said, I really felt

    Speaker 3: that they did that to her

    Speaker 3: to make sure that I understood who was in charge.

    Speaker 3: A pervasive

    Speaker 3: sense of wrongdoing.

    Speaker 3: Family members, friends, and often victim all had a feeling that

    Speaker 3: something

    Speaker 3: is wrong.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. I know what that feels like.

    Speaker 3: Definitely know what that feels like.

    Speaker 3: And you do. You feel like, this is just not right.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: like that that first that last one

    Speaker 3: about being taught taught a lesson,

    Speaker 3: there was a point in my my husband's stay, that offensive

    Speaker 3: pervasive sense of wrongdoing,

    Speaker 3: After

    Speaker 3: he was

    Speaker 3: ventilated,

    Speaker 3: I went in the following day, and he wasn't in the same room.

    Speaker 3: Oh, no. No. No. We had to move him over here. He's with another patient, but that patient's not

    Speaker 3: COVID positive anymore.

    Speaker 3: And I said, okay. I mean, I'm not really sure why you're doing this, but I felt like everything was wrong anyway.

    Speaker 3: And I go in there, and that man is also on a ventilator.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: so I'm I'm kinda talking to my husband a little bit even though I don't know whether he can hear me or not.

    Speaker 3: And the man in the other bed

    Speaker 3: sits

    Speaker 3: up and is appearing to be gasping for air even though he's got a tube in his throat.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: he's his eyes are now open

    Speaker 3: and it the the look on his face, I'll never forget.

    Speaker 3: And he was tied. His his hands were tied to the rails, and he had grabbed the rails and pulled himself up. And then he collapsed again, and his eyes closed.

    Speaker 3: This happened probably

    Speaker 3: five times during my visit.

    Speaker 3: Then I came to the conclusion that they were probably weaning him off of the ventilator,

    Speaker 3: and they wanted me to know what my husband would go through when they started weaning him. Can I interrupt you right there for a second, though, Sarah? Vaccination. This is number nine. Vaccination

    Speaker 3: discrimination.

    Speaker 3: Discrimination

    Speaker 3: based on vaccine status,

    Speaker 3: mocking verbal and physical abuse for being unvaccinated.

    Speaker 3: Patients report that they have been slapped,

    Speaker 3: laughed at, yelled at.

    Speaker 3: So,

    Speaker 3: yeah, it's

    Speaker 3: vaccine status. The we just talked about this just a little while ago about

    Speaker 3: the

    Speaker 3: illiteracy of some

    Speaker 3: health professionals

    Speaker 3: regarding

    Speaker 3: vaccines. Rapid oxygen increase, number 10. Oxygen supplementation

    Speaker 3: increased

    Speaker 3: quickly causing lung complications

    Speaker 3: and damage leading to mechanical ventilation.

    Speaker 3: And that is also another thing. It happened to my husband. It's happened to mostly all of our husbands.

    Speaker 3: I cannot hear Deb. No. I can't.

    Speaker 3: I don't know whether you want me to back out. She rejoined. Can we hear you talking? Let me know what to do. Oh, you can't hear me? Can you guys hear me?

    Speaker 6: I can hear you, sir. Can you hear me now?

    Speaker 3: I'm not hearing anything.

    Speaker 6: Can anybody hear me?

    Speaker 2: Yes. I can hear you. It sounds No. I can't hear you. Can you hear me? It sounds like that,

    Speaker 3: that because I'll I'll drop down and come back.

    Speaker 3: And then I can hear Sherry, but she can't hear me. Refusal to communicate. Go ahead and finish reading. Okay. Then rejoin. Alright. So you guys get to listen to me all the way through this. Sorry about that.

    Speaker 3: So rapid oxygen increase,

    Speaker 3: yeah, they do do that. They,

    Speaker 3: they'll start out with the cannula and then they'll go to the BiPAP and then they'll, you know, work you right into the ventilation the mechanical

    Speaker 3: ventilation, but they keep increasing the pressure

    Speaker 3: the whole time

    Speaker 3: so that the leaders are just running up. And this will happen, you know, every hour or two, they're running that up. Oh, you're not your your oxygen's not staying at 98%.

    Speaker 3: We've gotta keep going.

    Speaker 3: Refusal to communicate.

    Speaker 3: Doctors, nurses, hospital administration

    Speaker 3: refusing to communicate with the family or advocates. Sometimes you never hear back

    Speaker 3: from anybody in the hospital

    Speaker 3: at all

    Speaker 3: ever.

    Speaker 3: And that is I mean, sometimes you get a callback, but then you won't or you'll get multiple calls because there's some emergency, and they'll talk to you every two hours for six hours. And then the next day, you can't get a response to find out what the end result was, and they never call you back.

    Speaker 3: Dehydration

    Speaker 3: and starvation.

    Speaker 3: Okay. Deborah will talk about that patient.

    Speaker 3: I want to hear what you have to say,

    Speaker 3: in public.

    Speaker 3: So when I'm done, we will talk about that.

    Speaker 3: Dehydration

    Speaker 3: and starvation is number 12. Denial of food, water, and any nutrition,

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: given diuretics or laxatives at the same time.

    Speaker 3: The

    Speaker 3: patients are wearing,

    Speaker 3: usually the BiPAP, which dries them out terribly, but we can't let you have a drink because you'll choke. And, obviously, you can't

    Speaker 3: eat right now because if if you try to eat, you'll choke.

    Speaker 3: So

    Speaker 3: we we we also don't want you to have any food or water on your stomach because we never know when we're gonna have to ventilate you.

    Speaker 3: Restraint abuse.

    Speaker 3: Physical restraint and or chemical restraints used, failure to follow legal requirements around the use of those restraints.

    Speaker 3: Ventilation is used as a restraint

    Speaker 3: or as a method of behavior control.

    Speaker 3: That is not an exaggeration.

    Speaker 3: There is at least one medical record

    Speaker 3: where

    Speaker 3: the ventilator was used

    Speaker 3: by the doctor.

    Speaker 3: In the medical record,

    Speaker 3: he says,

    Speaker 3: for

    Speaker 3: behavior

    Speaker 3: control, as well as

    Speaker 3: both

    Speaker 3: 2.4

    Speaker 3: restraints

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: chemicals

    Speaker 3: at the same time. And usually,

    Speaker 3: because these patients are in quote unquote isolation,

    Speaker 3: there is no such thing as the,

    Speaker 3: legal

    Speaker 3: care

    Speaker 3: to take

    Speaker 3: as far as having

    Speaker 3: nurses

    Speaker 3: either in and out of the room to keep track of the patient

    Speaker 3: or

    Speaker 3: even visit the room.

    Speaker 3: Bathroom denial, number 14,

    Speaker 3: denial of bathroom use forced on forced

    Speaker 3: onto the catheter and or the rectal tube.

    Speaker 3: Yep. Heard that in the background.

    Speaker 3: You can't get up right now.

    Speaker 3: I have to pee.

    Speaker 3: I'll be there as soon as I can.

    Speaker 3: Many patients are found by their loved ones covered in their own excrement

    Speaker 3: and urine

    Speaker 3: because of that.

    Speaker 3: They did it too. As a matter of fact, just as a reminder,

    Speaker 3: Grace Shara.

    Speaker 3: Her sister left to go take a shower, was back within an hour, hour and fifteen minutes. And in that time frame, they had upped her,

    Speaker 3: sedation because she wanted to get out of the bed and go to the bathroom. She had to have a bowel movement, and they refused to let her get up while her sister was not there. They just gave her more sedation and told her to go ahead and go in the bed. And that's the way her sister found her when she came back,

    Speaker 3: which by the way was the day that she died.

    Speaker 3: Non emergency

    Speaker 3: ventilation,

    Speaker 3: number 15.

    Speaker 3: The victim and the family are told it's just to give the lungs a rest. Many of these patients

    Speaker 3: are ventilated

    Speaker 3: at 85%

    Speaker 3: oxygen and above.

    Speaker 3: One of the victims

    Speaker 3: both we have two victims who were actually working from the hospitals on their laptops at at the hospital, two different

    Speaker 3: states,

    Speaker 3: obviously different hospitals.

    Speaker 3: The lady was working on her work,

    Speaker 3: and they came in and told her she had to get off the computer because she had to be ventilated right now.

    Speaker 3: And later,

    Speaker 3: when she was able to sort everything out about what had happened, because they just took her her laptop away,

    Speaker 3: she checked her Apple Watch and her oxygen at the time was above 90%.

    Speaker 3: The other gentleman,

    Speaker 3: they came in while he was working, and as an accountant, he was actually doing taxes from his bed.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: they came in and said,

    Speaker 3: we have to vent you now. And he said, wait a minute. Let me close my computer. We'll take care of it. Took his computer away, wheeled him out of the room, took him to the ICU and ventilated him. So

    Speaker 3: the fact that he was a survivor, as was she, he was able to go back and he looked at his work. You know? Did he cross all the t's? Did he do the math right? And everything was perfect.

    Speaker 3: So there was nothing wrong with his oxygen.

    Speaker 3: Number 16, DNR

    Speaker 3: pressure or shenanigans.

    Speaker 3: Their patients or advocates are pressured to sign a DNR

    Speaker 3: or they are ignored, or a fast falsified DNR is created.

    Speaker 3: And that is,

    Speaker 3: that is what happened with Grace.

    Speaker 3: Scott Schauerau didn't realize when they kept pressuring him for a, do not resuscitate order,

    Speaker 3: his response was, we can talk about it if that time arrives. I'm not gonna sign a blanket DNR.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: what he didn't understand was, well, if you don't

    Speaker 3: want to have your

    Speaker 3: daughter

    Speaker 3: resuscitated, then we assume

    Speaker 3: that you're okay with her not being resuscitated, so she's a do not intubate

    Speaker 3: regardless

    Speaker 3: as if there are no options.

    Speaker 3: Okay. I'm, I'll take over Chelsea.

    Speaker 3: Chelsea is going to be backing down for a little bit because she's under storm warnings

    Speaker 3: and is not sure about her connection.

    Speaker 3: So we'll just keep going.

    Speaker 3: Number 17, palliative care pressure.

    Speaker 3: And by the way, as far as that DNR, of course, when Grace was dying and her sister was begging for help and they were saying that she was not a DNR,

    Speaker 3: they,

    Speaker 3: the the health professionals, all of the nurses in the room said she was a DNR, refused to help her as if there was no rescinding

    Speaker 3: whatever order had been put in by the doctor

    Speaker 3: that morning.

    Speaker 3: Number 17, palliative care pressure. The victim and the family are pressured into palliative care, comfort care, or hospice, and the family is denied participation

    Speaker 3: in the palliative care consult meeting. Palliative care is ordered often without consent.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: there was an NBC

    Speaker 3: expose

    Speaker 3: that was done on that.

    Speaker 3: It turns out that,

    Speaker 3: when properly when the paperwork is properly done, if that patient is in the hospital

    Speaker 3: and put on palliative

    Speaker 3: care or comfort care,

    Speaker 3: the room doesn't change. The care really doesn't change a lot. All of the staff is identical.

    Speaker 3: But because of the change in status to the patient,

    Speaker 3: when the death occurs, it does not hit the hospital

    Speaker 3: stats as far as mortality goes

    Speaker 3: and therefore protects

    Speaker 3: the hospital

    Speaker 3: from having a high mortality

    Speaker 3: rate. So the more often they can put a patient

    Speaker 3: in those categories,

    Speaker 3: then that mortality isn't considered a

    Speaker 3: mark against the hospital.

    Speaker 3: By the way, that keeps the CEOs of the hospitals getting their bonuses instead of being dinged for their high mortality rates.

    Speaker 3: Number 18,

    Speaker 3: isolated even in death.

    Speaker 3: Families denied access to the dying victim,

    Speaker 3: then they're denied access to view the body after death.

    Speaker 3: And in many cases, there's a denial of last rights.

    Speaker 3: That's pretty self explanatory.

    Speaker 3: Number 19,

    Speaker 3: police or security involvement.

    Speaker 3: Police

    Speaker 3: or security

    Speaker 3: used to keep victim isolated,

    Speaker 3: and families are threatened with arrest.

    Speaker 3: And there has been a big push now where these police or security are also using

    Speaker 3: German shepherds as part of their rounds

    Speaker 3: and part of their intimidation technique.

    Speaker 3: I know someone.

    Speaker 3: Her husband was never

    Speaker 3: considered a COVID patient,

    Speaker 3: but she was removed from the hospital because

    Speaker 3: she had

    Speaker 3: begged and pleaded and repeatedly repeated that she wanted to be with him.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: they took her out of the she was not

    Speaker 3: in front of them arguing with them because she recorded this. She was actually sitting in the waiting area

    Speaker 3: waiting to she just wasn't gonna leave. She was gonna wait until they let her in. And they removed her from the building,

    Speaker 3: and they told her not to come back on the entire campus.

    Speaker 3: Number 20, refusal of transfer.

    Speaker 3: Now

    Speaker 3: refusal to change doctors

    Speaker 3: or make hospital transfers.

    Speaker 3: And in many cases, this not only do they refuse to transfer,

    Speaker 3: they also

    Speaker 3: will allow the transfer paperwork to begin, but then the day of or the night before,

    Speaker 3: the patient takes a downturn and it's no longer safe

    Speaker 3: to move them. Happens all the time.

    Speaker 3: Number 21, infections and injuries.

    Speaker 3: Sepsis,

    Speaker 3: MRSA, or hospital acquired infections,

    Speaker 3: pressure sores,

    Speaker 3: skin tears,

    Speaker 3: necrosis.

    Speaker 3: The photographs

    Speaker 3: of the skin sore the pressure sores and skin tears and necrosis

    Speaker 3: will

    Speaker 3: turn your stomach.

    Speaker 3: And many of these patients are

    Speaker 3: on ventilators

    Speaker 3: or they're tied down.

    Speaker 3: They're chemically restrained as well. They can't verbalize the pain they're in, and these things are not dealt with. And the sepsis

    Speaker 3: and the hospital acquired infections that you get from the ventilator

    Speaker 3: are normal,

    Speaker 3: quote, unquote normal,

    Speaker 3: and sepsis was a major part in many of these patients' deaths.

    Speaker 3: Number 22,

    Speaker 3: neglect.

    Speaker 3: Just basic neglect, lack of basic care, general hygiene or grooming, bathing, linen changes.

    Speaker 3: Like I said, they're found by their families laying in their own excrement for days. It's all up the

    Speaker 3: one of the family members said completely

    Speaker 3: up their back.

    Speaker 3: Number 23, nighttime emergencies.

    Speaker 3: The family's woken up and pressured to make instant

    Speaker 3: life and death choices with little information,

    Speaker 3: then the staff is attempting to scare them or confuse them. Yep. They did it to me. Yep. Wake you up at 2AM. We gotta we gotta ventilate him here right now.

    Speaker 3: We just need you, you know, your permission.

    Speaker 3: I can come there. I can be there in in twenty minutes. Nope. We need to do it now. Fortunately, they put me on the home phone with him for me. They put me on the phone with him. But in most cases and he calmed down and they got him back in order. But what I'm saying is in most cases, they just they just wake you up and tell you we've got to do it now.

    Speaker 3: One of the things that has come out in in the multiple,

    Speaker 3: in, you know, kind of whistleblower type things is in some hospitals, they really don't have a team that understands how to do ventilation.

    Speaker 3: So they have a roving team that might be working in their district. And these teams go from hospital to hospital

    Speaker 3: as requested.

    Speaker 3: So if they're in a hospital

    Speaker 3: and they come in because they've been asked to do a ventilation on, you know, the patient in 03:18,

    Speaker 3: when they're done, if they've got time, they're like, okay. While we're here, do you need us to ventilate anybody else?

    Speaker 3: And that's when the family gets this phone call because they're being

    Speaker 3: ventilated

    Speaker 3: while the team is in the building.

    Speaker 3: Number 24,

    Speaker 3: a perception of malevolence.

    Speaker 3: The victim states or feels like the hospital staff is torturing them or going to kill them.

    Speaker 3: Lots of these patients

    Speaker 3: were texting family and saying, they're gonna kill me if you don't get me out of here. There was one 22 year old man who didn't text his family,

    Speaker 3: texted all of his friends, they're gonna kill me if I stay here, and they did.

    Speaker 3: But the family didn't know about it until after he was dead, and then the friends showed all the text messages.

    Speaker 3: Number 25,

    Speaker 3: unqualified staff,

    Speaker 3: treatment

    Speaker 3: by foreign,

    Speaker 3: travel,

    Speaker 3: FEMA,

    Speaker 3: or unqualified

    Speaker 3: medical staff.

    Speaker 3: The FBI,

    Speaker 3: on their website,

    Speaker 3: you can look up

    Speaker 3: operation Nightingale.

    Speaker 3: It is detailed.

    Speaker 3: They are not done with it, and they found multiple,

    Speaker 3: schools, quote, unquote schools,

    Speaker 3: who were certifying

    Speaker 3: out of the country,

    Speaker 3: professionals, quote, unquote, both nurses and doctors.

    Speaker 3: And they could buy their certifications,

    Speaker 3: and they were turned loose in The States. And it was

    Speaker 3: build it was literally build by the government as

    Speaker 3: we are we've been able to to get more

    Speaker 3: staff from outside the country.

    Speaker 3: We had plenty of staff inside this country. They took a lot of that staff and sent them home.

    Speaker 3: I maybe I'm looking at this in a limited way, but if you've got RNs who are on other floors who have been moved out because you now don't have any of the elective surgeries or therapies

    Speaker 3: or whatever,

    Speaker 3: why can't those RNs or

    Speaker 3: or, whatever class of nurses,

    Speaker 3: why couldn't they be moved into the ICUs as support staff?

    Speaker 3: They don't have to know everything, but they could still be there to help change linens and and help be with the patients and feed them.

    Speaker 3: Come on. There there was no reason to send these people home. They were support staff. Anyway,

    Speaker 3: I have gotten two. That was number 25.

    Speaker 3: So I'm gonna come back over to the space.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: Miriam, can you take over? I'm gonna have to back out so that I can

    Speaker 3: rejoin, and then I'll be able to hear you.

    Speaker 2: Absolutely.

    Speaker 2: I believe that Deb had a comment on

    Speaker 2: the

    Speaker 2: ventilator,

    Speaker 2: example that, Sherry gave where the patient was sitting up multiple times when her husband was in the room with another ventilator patient. So,

    Speaker 2: go ahead, Deb, and,

    Speaker 2: go with that comment.

    Speaker 6: Well, I'm gonna go with a few comments because I'm kinda after

    Speaker 2: hearing that list again. I'm just really pissed off. I I don't blame you, but for those to the protocols,

    Speaker 2: it is very it brings back all of those memories.

    Speaker 6: And as a nurse, I'm just freaking appalled.

    Speaker 6: It it I just I cannot wrap my head around

    Speaker 6: when I was a nurse

    Speaker 6: to this.

    Speaker 6: I I just can't wrap my head around it, so you might need to give me a minute. Sure.

    Speaker 2: Absolutely, Deb. You just, let me know when you want to go, but I will tell people a little bit about

    Speaker 2: what happened with my husband. And he had he and I, between the two of us, had almost every single one of those commonalities

    Speaker 2: out of the 25. The only one we didn't have was the one

    Speaker 2: about,

    Speaker 2: being unvaccinated

    Speaker 2: and and the abuse that people took because of that. And the reason was because my husband,

    Speaker 2: died on 10/06/2020,

    Speaker 2: which was a full two months before that before the the quote vaccines. They're not vaccines.

    Speaker 2: They're bioweapons,

    Speaker 2: and they're gene

    Speaker 2: gene therapies,

    Speaker 2: and they're killers.

    Speaker 2: But,

    Speaker 2: so he did not experience that, obviously.

    Speaker 2: But he experienced every single one of the others.

    Speaker 2: I'll give you an example

    Speaker 2: where they said denial of food and water, you know, starvation.

    Speaker 2: He absolutely had that happen because, he went in on Friday, September 11,

    Speaker 2: and, he

    Speaker 2: texted me,

    Speaker 2: and asked me to bring

    Speaker 2: some food and some other basic items he needed for personal hygiene.

    Speaker 2: And at that time, they had a locked ICU. You could not even go into the hospital itself.

    Speaker 2: You had to go into the just the initial doorway and give them what you wanted to send up.

    Speaker 2: So,

    Speaker 2: that was, September

    Speaker 2: 11

    Speaker 2: fourteenth.

    Speaker 2: October 6 when he finally passed,

    Speaker 2: I go into the room. They let us in

    Speaker 2: three days earlier

    Speaker 2: after him being in there all that time, and I see the bag that I sent up. And there's rotten bananas in it, and everything is in the exact same position that it was in when I brought it on the fourteenth.

    Speaker 2: Okay?

    Speaker 2: We're this is October 3.

    Speaker 2: So nineteen

    Speaker 2: days

    Speaker 2: nineteen

    Speaker 2: days

    Speaker 2: they kept those things from him.

    Speaker 2: And he didn't go on the ventilator until

    Speaker 2: five days after I brought that bag. So it sat there for five days

    Speaker 2: while he was still conscious and alert.

    Speaker 2: So

    Speaker 2: and that's just one example

    Speaker 2: of the things that he endured.

    Speaker 2: So

    Speaker 2: and we saw that this was not accidental. This each one of these commonalities,

    Speaker 2: these are people who are in different states.

    Speaker 2: We didn't know each other, but yet we're all experiencing the same thing.

    Speaker 2: So this was coordinated. This was planned, and this strict adherence to this protocol

    Speaker 2: was absolutely no accident

    Speaker 2: at all.

    Speaker 2: I asked for

    Speaker 2: the I asked for glutathione IV. I asked for high dose IV vitamin c. I asked for hydroxychloroquine.

    Speaker 2: Every single one of those were denied,

    Speaker 2: and I got the same line. Oh, that's not approved. That's not approved.

    Speaker 2: We don't do that.

    Speaker 2: So everything if you look take a look at those commonalities, I can attest to the fact that those things absolutely did happen.

    Speaker 2: Every single one of them.

    Speaker 2: Deb, are you okay with,

    Speaker 6: Okay. Yes. I can breathe now for the minute. I might get a little excited along the way, though. Okay. But what back to when Sherry was the number nine was the intubation of the guy sitting up. I've been on a ventilator,

    Speaker 6: so I'm just gonna explain why he probably was doing that.

    Speaker 6: Because when you're on a ventilator and

    Speaker 6: you you should be you know, nurses are all trained to suction. It's not respiratory therapists coming and do it all. We're we're trained in all of that.

    Speaker 6: So and when you're on a ventilator, you have to be suctioned quite often, or

    Speaker 6: you're going to do that because you get a plug. It's called a plug,

    Speaker 6: and you cannot breathe. And so, yes, your body automatically does that. So that's why that happened. Should it be happening?

    Speaker 6: Absolutely not.

    Speaker 6: As far as the 25 commonalities,

    Speaker 6: I mean, as a nurse, I could go through them all and tell you how it should have been

    Speaker 6: and how we did it back in the day. I'd I I'm I'm I'm just sick

    Speaker 6: because I got

    Speaker 6: all the opposite

    Speaker 6: of that as my with my husband.

    Speaker 6: I never I know he thought I was running the show and never did I get to say anything.

    Speaker 6: Everything I got told was after the fact.

    Speaker 6: All the commonalities are there.

    Speaker 2: I I yeah. I don't know. That's all I can say right now. It's it's okay, Deb. I totally understand. I did want to tell people too that

    Speaker 2: this was not, you know, a onetime thing,

    Speaker 2: not just in 2020. This continued

    Speaker 2: and is continuing to this day. But I can tell you, I know for a fact personally, it was happening almost exactly one year later because both of my adult sons, then 29

    Speaker 2: and 33,

    Speaker 2: ended up in the hospital.

    Speaker 2: And my older son, nursing, was coming in and turning his oxygen up while he was sleeping.

    Speaker 2: And he woke up and challenged them, and he and the nurse had an argument for forty five minutes

    Speaker 2: because he was supposed to go home the next day, and she was in there cranking up his oxygen.

    Speaker 2: And he's like, absolutely

    Speaker 2: not.

    Speaker 2: You will turn that back down.

    Speaker 2: And,

    Speaker 2: she got so ticked because he would not shut up about it that she said, fine. I'm gonna turn it back down to under where you were,

    Speaker 2: and we'll see how that goes. Now that's how vindictive

    Speaker 2: these people are. She wanted to put him into more respiratory distress

    Speaker 2: by punishing him for challenging her.

    Speaker 2: And he looked at her and said, fine.

    Speaker 2: Go ahead, but, you know, the doc will hear about.

    Speaker 2: So she did. She turned it down below where he was before she cranked it up. He laid there and did not move a muscle because he was determined. He was controlling his breathing so that his oxygen levels wouldn't tank.

    Speaker 2: And, he never saw that nurse again because he raised

    Speaker 2: unbelievable pain. He has a legal degree. But this is the kind of stuff that people went through

    Speaker 2: in these hospitals

    Speaker 2: with these so called

    Speaker 2: health care professionals.

    Speaker 2: Vindictive,

    Speaker 2: nasty, angry people

    Speaker 2: punishing people

    Speaker 2: for being sick.

    Speaker 2: And I guarantee you the reason was that neither one of my sons were vaccinated.

    Speaker 2: I guarantee you that was the reason for the way they were behaving toward them.

    Speaker 6: So Well, you know that for a fact, Miriam, because in all of our records

    Speaker 6: and even though now in Jeff's case, I know that he well, I I knew that he got it in there, and I couldn't figure out why. And it but now I know he had got it the day he got sick.

    Speaker 6: But,

    Speaker 6: can you hear me? Because I just heard something drop. Yes. I can hear you. I can hear you. Okay.

    Speaker 6: Oh, I forgot where I was at.

    Speaker 6: You were saying that, that Jeff had gotten the shot and that you guaranteed Oh, yeah. And about the, vaccine or unvac but all his records, every line says patient unvaxxed.

    Speaker 3: Yes. Oh, yeah. Because he didn't, you know, he wasn't the didn't have the two weeks. Yep. You gotta have two shots and be two weeks out. Otherwise, you're unvaxxed.

    Speaker 2: Right. And that was for their statistics to be able to But do you have just want

    Speaker 6: the other thing I wanted to point out, Miriam, is, you know, like, on respiratory

    Speaker 6: too, when when you have a respiratory, like, any respiratory patient or

    Speaker 6: you usually

    Speaker 6: did not use high flow oxygen already because lungs couldn't handle it. So, you know, you never went above a four,

    Speaker 6: ever, four liters.

    Speaker 6: I mean, I understand some cases I had to go a little higher, but but but because a patient like that can't blow off the c o two, there's where your gas and change starts to be the problem.

    Speaker 3: Right. I can see that. That makes sense. Yeah. 100%.

    Speaker 2: And so

    Speaker 2: it it is a concerted effort to push people along that spectrum.

    Speaker 2: It's when you think about the attack that their bodies were under,

    Speaker 2: no hydration, no nutrition,

    Speaker 2: sleep deprivation,

    Speaker 2: obviously.

    Speaker 2: Right?

    Speaker 2: Isolation. So the stress levels were incredible because you couldn't see your family, and you were in this hostile

    Speaker 2: environment.

    Speaker 2: You have people doing those things. You don't know what's going on. They're loading you up with toxic medications.

    Speaker 6: And then Can I interrupt you again? Just I'm sorry. Absolutely. Go ahead.

    Speaker 6: You know, that was one of the things I feel I I'll always feel this till the day I die, and God will have to point it out if it's different,

    Speaker 6: is that because I was a nurse,

    Speaker 6: I was even more,

    Speaker 6: what's the word I'm looking for here? You know, they didn't call me or anything because of when they did finally call me

    Speaker 6: now Jeff had only talked to me a couple of times, and then I never got to talk to him again.

    Speaker 6: The first thing they said is I understand you're a nurse.

    Speaker 3: Mhmm.

    Speaker 2: Yep.

    Speaker 2: And that's why you didn't get any interaction with them because they did not want to deal with you. Exactly right. Yes. Exactly right.

    Speaker 2: And, again, you know, shows what the intentions were.

    Speaker 2: They that protocol was gonna happen, and you were gonna be moved along that course

    Speaker 2: because the incentives were there.

    Speaker 2: You know, if you came out alive, you weren't nearly as valuable monetarily as dead

    Speaker 2: with the word COVID on your death certificate.

    Speaker 2: There's a 20% bonus on the entire hospital

    Speaker 2: bill, and that doesn't count all of the incentives along the way.

    Speaker 3: I'd like to I'd like to add to that, Miriam,

    Speaker 3: and this is where

    Speaker 3: it gets darker.

    Speaker 3: There are plenty of the health professionals

    Speaker 3: in the hospital

    Speaker 3: who will argue, I didn't get any of that money.

    Speaker 3: Well, I would argue, did you get a retention bonus around Christmas time? Because that's part of the money. But the other And, Sherry, you are so on, dead on, and especially the travelers,

    Speaker 6: because they were getting paid

    Speaker 6: 10 times what you get paid as a traveler.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. But the but the the thing is

    Speaker 3: the culture

    Speaker 3: in the health fields

    Speaker 3: was so

    Speaker 3: anti COVID patient

    Speaker 3: that they had

    Speaker 3: once we particularly once we got into 2021

    Speaker 3: and the vaccines became available,

    Speaker 3: in Bob's case,

    Speaker 3: I think it was about the the the

    Speaker 3: the fear,

    Speaker 3: treating Bob as a leper,

    Speaker 3: and we can't go in the room. If we're in there, it's gonna kill us. He might as well have been in the movie Aliens and that thing was gonna come out of his stomach or something and get them, chase them around the room.

    Speaker 3: So that's why

    Speaker 3: Bob and people like Bob in the 2020 range

    Speaker 3: were so badly treated. And then you get into 2021.

    Speaker 3: Now you have people who are deathly afraid of the ill,

    Speaker 3: and they blame them

    Speaker 3: because they got sick.

    Speaker 3: Because you aren't vaccinated,

    Speaker 3: you low intellect,

    Speaker 3: redneck,

    Speaker 3: MAGA dumbass,

    Speaker 3: you deserve to die.

    Speaker 2: Yep. And there's that there's that programming again that we were talking about earlier.

    Speaker 2: You know, the demonization

    Speaker 2: of people through propaganda,

    Speaker 2: and it is absolutely sickening and disgusting to know now

    Speaker 2: that the absolute

    Speaker 2: reverse

    Speaker 2: was true.

    Speaker 6: That Yeah. Right. Because what they did was everybody they got alright. All all the medical. Look at how many times each of them after they got the shots,

    Speaker 6: for whatever reason they got it,

    Speaker 2: how many of them got are Right. Got sick and still getting sick. There were there were people, and I have friends who worked all of 2020,

    Speaker 2: never got sick, never got sick. And as soon as they started injecting

    Speaker 2: the the medical professionals, then they all got sick. And the reason is it's now proven. There's an IgG four shift

    Speaker 2: now, reduction in interferon type one that happens with taking those shots so that you become

    Speaker 2: immunocompromised,

    Speaker 2: and they they have coined a term called VAIDS,

    Speaker 2: vaccine induced acquired immunodeficiency

    Speaker 2: syndrome.

    Speaker 2: VAIDS

    Speaker 2: that now people do frequently,

    Speaker 2: very frequently get sick with not just COVID, but everything now. Okay?

    Speaker 2: So and that is all that's been proven. So the entire time that they are vilifying

    Speaker 2: people who didn't get the shots,

    Speaker 2: it's actually the people who did get it

    Speaker 2: that got

    Speaker 2: sick, and then they played the statistical game.

    Speaker 2: Hey.

    Speaker 2: Oop. Nope. Nope. There's no vaccinated people in the hospital. It's all unvaccinated.

    Speaker 2: And they they even chain they even made it so the medical records wouldn't allow them

    Speaker 2: to say that they were vaccinated

    Speaker 2: so that the statistics

    Speaker 2: would prove the propaganda.

    Speaker 2: And you know what? You can make statistics say anything you wanna make it say. All you have to do is not provide a way to record that they're vaccinated, and that's exactly what they did.

    Speaker 2: It's disgusting.

    Speaker 3: I don't even there's a point where I'm like,

    Speaker 3: am I supposed to say something now because everything that I wanna say has four letters and that's about it?

    Speaker 3: Yeah. I'm it's

    Speaker 3: Deborah's like a 100%.

    Speaker 3: Going back to your description, Deborah, of why this gentleman was

    Speaker 3: sitting up,

    Speaker 3: There was a nurse who came in there periodically

    Speaker 3: while he was sitting up. She wasn't cleaning

    Speaker 3: the any potential plug in his ventilator.

    Speaker 3: That's what made me think that

    Speaker 3: he was maybe being weaned,

    Speaker 6: and this was Yeah. But you would still use suck anytime like that even on weaning.

    Speaker 6: Number one, there's if they're weaning, nobody's far away. You don't just wean somebody and leave the room.

    Speaker 6: Number two, you still have to select. I am telling you I was on

    Speaker 3: No. And I'm not arguing with you. I'm telling you what was No. I know that. I'm just saying that it really pisses me off because

    Speaker 6: being on a balance, it's not yeah. That's probably probably part of my problem is

    Speaker 6: is is I know what my husband went through because I've been there. Yeah. Yep. You know what I'm saying? That is But I also know what they're capable of doing and what they're trained to do,

    Speaker 6: and

    Speaker 6: I'm not hearing any of that. I'm not seeing any of in the time of COVID that any of that was being done.

    Speaker 2: Hey, Deb. You know why she came in the room

    Speaker 2: because she came in there to sedate him again. She wasn't about to to solve the problem with the plug. She's just gonna sedate the man again.

    Speaker 3: No. I don't think so. I don't think she sedated him because he kept it kept happening, and then she would come in. And I got the distinct impression she was taunting me. You know? Like, what will we do with you? She was taunting you and and and terrorizing

    Speaker 6: him if that's the case. Because I'm telling you what, when you can't I don't

    Speaker 6: anytime, people, you cannot breathe

    Speaker 6: because I didn't end on a ventilator because I could breathe.

    Speaker 6: You panic.

    Speaker 6: Right. Yes. When they panic, and it's not something you're sitting there going, oh, I think I'm gonna panic now.

    Speaker 6: No. It just I mean, when I what happened with me, you know, I I just literally

    Speaker 6: my husband told me when when it I walked we finally went to the hospital. I I wouldn't go because I'm a nurse and I'm, like, I'm not going, you know, that kind of thing. But by the time I could not breathe, I was like, okay. I'll go now.

    Speaker 6: But when I got to the hospital, I walked away from him, and he he's I I guess the

    Speaker 6: girl at the desk kinda stood up, like, you know, what are you here for?

    Speaker 6: And,

    Speaker 6: he asked me where I was going. I don't remember any of this. And

    Speaker 6: he said, I turned around. My arms went right up. So I went right into a grand mal seizure.

    Speaker 6: Okay. So they intubated me in in the waiting room.

    Speaker 6: And, of course, my husband called the code because she was too busy trying to figure out what to do as a professional, you know, working in a hospital.

    Speaker 6: Anyway,

    Speaker 6: and I gotta share the tying down story with you guys, though, because it's pretty funny.

    Speaker 6: When they did extubate me finally

    Speaker 6: alright. Now this went on I ended up intubated two more times, so it went on for days. But

    Speaker 6: this when they first extubated me, I when I came to, I was tied down in four points,

    Speaker 6: and I lost

    Speaker 6: my mind.

    Speaker 6: And and that's there's a reason behind that, but it but I don't care. Anybody wakes up tied down, you're gonna freak.

    Speaker 6: And,

    Speaker 6: you know, because you're not supposed to be using restraints like that, number one. And I being a nurse, but they didn't know I was a nurse,

    Speaker 6: already know that. So, anyway, when I I kept screaming, somebody get me untied.

    Speaker 6: And so this nurse came and stood at the at the foot of my bed,

    Speaker 6: and she goes, you need to shut up. And I said, and you need to hope I never get untied

    Speaker 6: because I will beat your ass.

    Speaker 6: And so finally, they untied one side of me. And

    Speaker 6: believe me to this day, I would still know who that nurse was, and, yes, I will be harassed.

    Speaker 6: But you know what I mean? It was just

    Speaker 6: the stuff that I went through and and a lot of what our loved ones went through going through that, there some of it, it was unhelpable because it's just what happens.

    Speaker 6: You know, I put on tons of weight, or fluid. Tons.

    Speaker 6: When they tried to walk me, I couldn't walk. I mean, there was nothing left to walk. You lose all muscle,

    Speaker 6: all of that. So some of it is

    Speaker 6: it didn't happen. That part of it didn't just happen because of COVID, but they did it. They took it to the nth degree,

    Speaker 6: and the care went the other way.

    Speaker 6: Yep. Because when your ICU is one on one, one on two max.

    Speaker 6: I'm a nurse, and I've taken care of 12. Okay?

    Speaker 6: So in ICU, you are because the patients are so critical,

    Speaker 6: you can you only have time to take one care of one or two.

    Speaker 6: But that didn't happen.

    Speaker 6: Everything that we're saying what should have happened,

    Speaker 6: none of that happened. I will never understand it.

    Speaker 6: When the one thing that almost sent me over the edge with Jeff

    Speaker 6: was when

    Speaker 6: I made the decision to take him out of the van,

    Speaker 6: which was terrible to have to do.

    Speaker 6: Even as a nurse, it was the worst thing I've ever done in my life.

    Speaker 6: But when they took you know, started taking, they took the propolisol

    Speaker 6: first, so he he was unparalyzed.

    Speaker 6: Of course, they never stopped the fentanyl, which was enough to kill a horse.

    Speaker 6: He because the body relaxed so much. And when you're

    Speaker 6: obviously,

    Speaker 6: paralyzed, your body doesn't excrete either.

    Speaker 6: And,

    Speaker 6: so

    Speaker 6: as he was, you know I mean, Jeff went when they extubated him, thank god, he just went into a snore like he was sleeping.

    Speaker 6: He didn't gasp. He didn't do any of that, and that's my only saving grace.

    Speaker 6: But when his body let go,

    Speaker 6: I'm sitting there, and I went and got the nurse. I'm a hospice nurse. I know what you're supposed to do.

    Speaker 6: And they all they did was come and move the covers back and cover it up

    Speaker 6: and left him like that

    Speaker 6: while I sat there and watched my husband die.

    Speaker 6: I'll never get over that part.

    Speaker 6: It it was just it was disgusting,

    Speaker 6: disgraceful,

    Speaker 6: humiliating to my husband.

    Speaker 6: And from a nurse to a nurse, wow.

    Speaker 6: Sad.

    Speaker 2: Horrible.

    Speaker 2: I,

    Speaker 2: for me,

    Speaker 2: it was,

    Speaker 2: they called me

    Speaker 2: on a Saturday after I served them on a Friday

    Speaker 2: telling them that I was demanding

    Speaker 2: the treatments that he needed.

    Speaker 2: And within twenty four hours,

    Speaker 2: his eyes were fixed,

    Speaker 2: and it weren't they weren't responding to light. And I found out about eight months later that they overdosed him after I served

    Speaker 2: the the demand letter to them, to the hospital,

    Speaker 2: to the CEO,

    Speaker 2: to all the officers, and to the attending physicians.

    Speaker 2: So lo and behold,

    Speaker 2: the next day, I get a call that his eyes are fixed, not knowing that they'd overdosed him like crazy.

    Speaker 2: And

    Speaker 2: after being in the hospital since September 11,

    Speaker 2: this is October 3,

    Speaker 2: for twenty two days,

    Speaker 2: we couldn't come in because, oh, no. That was protocol.

    Speaker 2: But now that they've overdosed him and killed him, yeah, me and my husk me and my son can go in.

    Speaker 2: Yep.

    Speaker 6: Sure can. Interesting, isn't it? Miriam, I when they called me to come in when they finally when I was finally allowed in

    Speaker 6: Now mind you, I hadn't heard from anybody.

    Speaker 6: And I finally I got two calls when one that they had to take blood from him

    Speaker 6: in an emergency,

    Speaker 6: which later found out their emergency. The order went in three days before that. Mhmm.

    Speaker 6: Secondly,

    Speaker 6: the second phone call was now they had to give him two units of blood.

    Speaker 6: And,

    Speaker 6: oh, by the way, we had to vent him too.

    Speaker 2: Yeah.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. And that was the last call I got again until

    Speaker 6: was, you can come in. And I by then, I was sick

    Speaker 6: and told them I was sick. And I had nothing to take because I'd already got the medicine for my brother my other brother to take. So I couldn't very well call them and go, hey. I'm sick.

    Speaker 6: Because, you know,

    Speaker 6: probably when they gave it to me. But, anyway,

    Speaker 6: but I told them I was sick.

    Speaker 6: And,

    Speaker 6: they said, well, they didn't care I could get in.

    Speaker 6: Yeah.

    Speaker 2: So for two weeks it mattered. It mattered a day or two before, didn't it? It mattered. Absolutely. And it's And then I got their agenda. It's all about their agenda, and they, you know, they are controlling what they want to have happen to both you and your loved one. I mean, my son and I go in there, and I want you to know the first thing out of the nurse's mouth was, well, when's your when when's your other son gonna get here? Because I'd explained to them

    Speaker 2: that, you know, I understood what that meant,

    Speaker 2: that his eyes weren't responding to light because I knew what they were doing.

    Speaker 2: And I said, well, he's not gonna be able to get here for at least two days.

    Speaker 2: Oh, this nurse looks at me, and she remember, she asked me the first question, when's the other one gonna get there?

    Speaker 2: She literally looked at me and said, well, he won't make it that long.

    Speaker 2: I was like I looked at her, and I said, get out of the room right now. Get out and go get the house supervisor.

    Speaker 2: So,

    Speaker 2: I said,

    Speaker 2: no.

    Speaker 2: You you don't get to do that.

    Speaker 2: So she disappeared.

    Speaker 2: But from then on, for two days, the war was

    Speaker 2: we want we want your permission.

    Speaker 2: You know? We want a DNR. We want palliative care.

    Speaker 2: They already knew. They already knew what they had done,

    Speaker 2: but they wanted me to sign for

    Speaker 2: for to cover their butt.

    Speaker 2: And I was determined it wasn't going to happen.

    Speaker 2: But

    Speaker 2: the sad thing is after two days,

    Speaker 2: you know, having a medical background, I knew there was no point

    Speaker 2: in continuing that,

    Speaker 2: but I did make a point. I'm sorry about my voice. But

    Speaker 2: by that Monday, I I said no. You know? The only I will come in and sign the paperwork, but I want the physician

    Speaker 2: there that I had the meeting with last night, and I have something to say to him.

    Speaker 2: And he met me in the hallway, and I was so thankful he was right outside in the hallway where everyone in the nursing station could see this because I said to him,

    Speaker 2: you should be ashamed of yourself, number one,

    Speaker 2: because you know what has happened, and you're asking me

    Speaker 2: to sign

    Speaker 2: for this tube to be pulled for my husband.

    Speaker 2: And you act like that it's no big deal.

    Speaker 2: Yet last night, you wouldn't even give me an EEG

    Speaker 2: for me to be have the comfort of knowing

    Speaker 2: if his if there's any brain activity.

    Speaker 2: But yet this morning, because I checked,

    Speaker 2: you drew blood.

    Speaker 2: You drew blood for my

    Speaker 2: purpose.

    Speaker 2: You know, how dare you deny me

    Speaker 2: a

    Speaker 2: noninvasive

    Speaker 2: EED for my peace of mind and comfort, but yet you'll draw blood.

    Speaker 2: Shame on you. And I said,

    Speaker 2: I I'll sign, and I want you to watch me sign and then run away while I go in there and watch my husband die.

    Speaker 2: He didn't say one word. He turned around and walked off.

    Speaker 2: But it made me

    Speaker 2: it made me feel good that I got to tell him that I knew exactly what they were doing.

    Speaker 2: And

    Speaker 2: and it was like he was a robot. It's like he he did not care one bit. My son and I walked into that room.

    Speaker 2: We watched my husband be extubated, and I watched him take three breaths, and he was gone.

    Speaker 2: So this is the kind of people

    Speaker 2: that you're dealing with

    Speaker 2: when you go into those hospitals.

    Speaker 2: They're there to follow a protocol and do what they're told.

    Speaker 2: You're not human. Your husband is not human.

    Speaker 2: Your suffering means nothing.

    Speaker 2: And this is the dehumanization

    Speaker 2: that we were talking about

    Speaker 2: that has been systematically

    Speaker 2: foisted upon us through the propaganda, the COVID propaganda, all the other propaganda.

    Speaker 2: And that's why it's so important

    Speaker 2: that we tell these stories and that we're here every Saturday night because people need to know the truth.

    Speaker 2: And the only way to get that truth out there is to tell it no matter how much it hurts.

    Speaker 6: Miriam, I am so sorry that you and Bob had to go through that, and

    Speaker 6: I wanted to add on to what

    Speaker 6: with your pain because my pain is there too. And

    Speaker 6: I never even got

    Speaker 6: the consideration,

    Speaker 6: even after I got to the hospital,

    Speaker 6: to even see a doctor.

    Speaker 6: Not even not for his extubation.

    Speaker 6: The nurse and I did that.

    Speaker 6: Not

    Speaker 6: I never saw one doctor

    Speaker 6: through the whole

    Speaker 6: process

    Speaker 6: nor I talked to a PA. That's it.

    Speaker 2: And see, that's that right there I'm so I'm so sorry, Deborah. But that right there shows you the lack of respect,

    Speaker 2: the lack of care, the lack the dehumanization.

    Speaker 2: It's like they had a little

    Speaker 2: assembly line protocol that they they take your loved ones in there, and they just move them through this

    Speaker 2: just like a just like an assembly line, and it it means nothing to them.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. They literally told me

    Speaker 6: they did not have time.

    Speaker 2: Exactly.

    Speaker 2: Exactly.

    Speaker 2: And, you know,

    Speaker 2: as much as it hurts,

    Speaker 2: I realize

    Speaker 2: that they are going to pay a price for that

    Speaker 2: because that is on their conscience, and they won't be able to outrun it no matter how hard they try.

    Speaker 2: Heidi, I see that you've got your hand up, and I know that you have a story to tell. You lost your precious

    Speaker 2: father and,

    Speaker 2: just

    Speaker 2: we thank you for being here, and and thank you for sharing your story.

    Speaker 10: Hey, Maryam.

    Speaker 10: Yeah. I'm so sorry for what happened to you and

    Speaker 10: your husband and Deborah too. I I'm I never get tired of hearing your your stories either. It's just

    Speaker 10: it's it's unbelievable

    Speaker 10: still. Yeah. I I lost my dad. I'll I'll tell you a little bit

    Speaker 10: about my story that I'm still, you know, struggling.

    Speaker 10: But, you know, it's been a couple of years. This happened in April

    Speaker 10: 2023.

    Speaker 10: He was,

    Speaker 10: just the light of my life. He was a hero daddy. I mean, I couldn't ask for a better dad, really. He was so devoted,

    Speaker 10: to me and my sister.

    Speaker 10: He was Atlanta policeman and retired, and

    Speaker 10: then he went with Delta and he had a stroke,

    Speaker 10: in the eighties.

    Speaker 10: He was in his early forties. He was like 42, I think.

    Speaker 10: And he ended up with a little paralysis in his right arm, so he couldn't go back to work. He always wanted to go back, but he was very independent

    Speaker 10: and had been healthy other than this stroke.

    Speaker 10: I mean, really, when I did he was fiercely independent. I mean, he didn't want me to do much for him, but he was real involved with me and just lived down the street, lived on his own,

    Speaker 10: really independent. But, he had this backed up bladder. His prostates, well, was swollen,

    Speaker 10: and that was kinda where it started. And he got left with a catheter bag. And the urologist was we were recommended this urologist. He's connected to Piedmont in Fayetteville, Georgia,

    Speaker 10: the hospital. And it was supposed to be one of the top urologists, but we couldn't really get my dad right to the urologist. They'd put a catheter bag, and it got infected

    Speaker 10: several times. This was the third infection. They were telling us his bladder was just

    Speaker 10: had just went to sleep and, you know, they'd take it off ten ten minutes tops and throw it back on. And so I finally got him to the urologist,

    Speaker 10: like, a week before. This was in,

    Speaker 10: I wanna say it was,

    Speaker 10: let's see, March, I guess, of twenty twenty three.

    Speaker 10: And we went probably about a week and a half, and he started acting. He was doing exercises, but we never could get him totally walking. He was, like, you know, in and out of his wheelchair.

    Speaker 10: He could walk across his kitchen,

    Speaker 10: and the therapy would come. And, I mean, he was doing good, though. He was really trying. He wasn't giving up. And

    Speaker 10: but the infection started on the catheter bag. We just got it changed. I was gave horrible advice. I he practically begged the urologist to take it off. He he said it's uncomfortable. I don't like it.

    Speaker 10: And and we were like, well, this is you know, he told us this is the best option. And and he said it it probably just got infected last time because the nurse changed it wrong. He blamed it on the home care nurse.

    Speaker 10: And my dad was like, you know, he wants it off. And he was like, well, we can't do any he did he could do a flu type surgery, but that was like

    Speaker 10: he said my my dad had heart failure, so he didn't wanna put him under anesthesia. But then I found out later you can actually do, like, laser treatment

    Speaker 10: for swollen prostate, and then there's straight cathing.

    Speaker 10: I mean, you know, we we just feel like he didn't help us with any options. And, of course, I didn't have any knowledge about any of this stuff. It was all new to me. But,

    Speaker 10: anyway, the infection brewed up, and my dad was just, you know, falling asleep that morning. I had therapy coming, so I called the home home health, and I said,

    Speaker 10: you know, he's just falling asleep in his chair. He's all confused. He was saying, like, he'd ordered me a pizza.

    Speaker 10: He loved pizza. And I said, daddy, you haven't ordered a pizza? He said, yeah, it's in my car.

    Speaker 10: And I said, daddy, no, no, something's off. You know, and his bag was golden.

    Speaker 10: Cause I was always checking his bag, but it, you know, that lady, the nurse, she said, oh, it's infected. You better just take them to the ER.

    Speaker 10: And I was like, oh, I didn't you know, he didn't wanna go to the hospital. I didn't wanna go. My husband checked. He was stable. His oxygen was good,

    Speaker 10: but I had no antibiotics. And I was really scared. I thought if this turns to sepsis, it can spread.

    Speaker 10: So, I opted. I hate that I didn't just try to go to a walk in clinic or something.

    Speaker 10: But there I was by myself and well, my husband was at work and

    Speaker 10: everything was crazy. I just so we went into the hospital in the ambulance and

    Speaker 10: the ambulance driver was like, Ugh, I see elderly people all the time come in with these catheter bags. He said, Ugh, these things are a mess.

    Speaker 10: And

    Speaker 10: so, you know, my dad was still talking that he was just tired, you know, and he was kinda a little confused. He,

    Speaker 10: he couldn't remember his birthday exactly, that he knew his name. You know, he was just kinda weakly. But anyway, the, the hospital seemed, you know, good the first few days. I mean, they, I wanted to take him home really the next day, and I was pressing to just get him back in therapy. Because I said, well, you know, we've got him up to about walking.

    Speaker 10: I mean, he's got the Hemi walker and the therapy said his legs are really strong. So I, you know, I don't wanna him delay in bed too much.

    Speaker 10: And,

    Speaker 10: but they said, no. Let's just keep him and monitor his heart. His heart was aggravated.

    Speaker 10: But within about, I would say, three days, I mean, he was really doing good. He was coming out of it. He was stable.

    Speaker 10: And, you know, his heart was a little wonky, I guess,

    Speaker 10: popping around because he had AFib also, which I think his doctor thought he was, the family doctor thought he was born with AFib that, you know, he always had kind of that weird heartbeat.

    Speaker 10: But,

    Speaker 10: so, basically, I think it was like his

    Speaker 10: maybe the one side of his heart was weaker than the other, you know, probably the stroke. I I mean, who knows? But I'm sure the infection

    Speaker 10: had aggravated it, and there was really nothing they could do because they said just we can monitor the heart,

    Speaker 10: check his you know, maybe look into some other medications. And as I talked to a couple of the,

    Speaker 10: I guess, heart doctors there and but he was doing good. Like, he started talking fine. He was up to eating. He got in his, he got the nurse to put him in the chair. He wanted to watch Westerns.

    Speaker 10: And he was watching Gunsmoke and they brought him a dinner

    Speaker 10: and I was even going to help him eat. And he was like, no, no, I can eat myself. And he toasted his tea glass to me and he had a pot pie

    Speaker 10: And he said, gun smoke, you know, Matt Dillon.

    Speaker 10: So he was kinda smiling and talking to the nurse, and she came in and was asking him about being a police and working at Delta. And, you know, he was, like, acting like himself, you know, a little tired, but he must have set up about five or six hours watching TV, and then he wanted to lay back down.

    Speaker 10: So they, you know, got a little glider and he stepped into the glider, held on, you know, basically,

    Speaker 10: you know, had a little support that, you know, the nurse was even like, gosh, he's pretty strong. He's, you know, he can kinda move for himself, you know, basically just needs a little support. And he got in the bed and laid back down and then,

    Speaker 10: everything. So I was like pretty trustful. And they said, well, well, he said, just go ahead and take me home, I think, that day. And I said, no, no. They wanna, you know, monitor your heart. He said, well, I feel good.

    Speaker 10: He he was so funny. He was a character, but he raised his hand and, you know, mess moved his fingers. He said, they want the damn money. And he slammed his fist on the bed when I said, you know, I, they wanna look at your heart and stuff. So he was really mad that I didn't take them and I wish now I had, but,

    Speaker 10: I said, well, you know, they're, they're looking out for you. I mean, I like the nurse there. Everything was going good. But the next,

    Speaker 10: it was, the next day, this strange out of town nurse came in and she he was still doing pretty good, but I did notice he had diarrhea.

    Speaker 10: And I started saying, well, what's the diarrhea? And she was like, oh, could be the antibiotics or something.

    Speaker 10: She wanted then she wanted to do a contrast dye.

    Speaker 10: And she said it's just routine, nothing to worry about, and wanted me to sign this waiver for the x-ray contrast. And I said, well,

    Speaker 10: you know, does he really need this? I mean and she was like, oh, it's just routine. Don't worry about it.

    Speaker 10: It's rare that any side effects happen. Well, I signed for it. He was mad. He didn't wanna do it. And I I regret this too because,

    Speaker 10: they took them and then when he came back, he ate his chicken dinner and was drinking and all of a sudden his neck started swelling and he couldn't breathe.

    Speaker 10: And through I ran, I couldn't find the nurse. She was real hateful to him. She was the only nurse that was really mean. And she had admitted that she came from out of town. I don't know if she was part of this protocol, but,

    Speaker 10: on the records, they had given him already

    Speaker 10: laxatives and opioids, but I didn't know this. And when you do contrast, you're supposed to have so many fluids, you know, in your body. It's really dangerous, really not recommended for people with heart failure.

    Speaker 10: So that was odd, and he had these three,

    Speaker 10: you know, attacks. Like, his throat swelled and the respiratory crew came running. They said it was an allergic reaction, and they just gave him a nasal cannular, and he settled down. And he was still awake, and he was watching Perry Mason. And he said, well, Perry Mason's coming on. You just go on home and rest because

    Speaker 10: he, he knew I was stressed and tired. And then

    Speaker 10: when the next morning came, he called on the phone and he sounded very panicky about 08:30, 09:00.

    Speaker 10: And he said, hi, hi, you know, and he slammed the phone. So I never could figure out what was it he wanted to tell me. That was very odd. But when I got there

    Speaker 10: about 12:30

    Speaker 10: or so, he was laying in the bed with a high flow BiPAP blowing real hard.

    Speaker 10: And the respiratory girl came in and I said, what is this? And she said, this is just gonna rest his heart and lungs.

    Speaker 10: It'll be real good for him. And he needs this rest. It's it's gonna help him a lot, and oxygen's good. So I said, oh, okay.

    Speaker 10: Well, I said he was real alert, you know, the last couple of days and up talking and sitting in his chair. And I said, it's just kinda weird. He's, like, all out of it. I mean, he could respond, but he was

    Speaker 10: sleeping real heavy. And then,

    Speaker 10: from there, it just went he went downhill. He was filling up with fluid, and there was a little interim young nurse,

    Speaker 10: Tiffany.

    Speaker 10: And she was real sweet, but she didn't she was all confused. She said, I don't know what's going on. They took his IV,

    Speaker 10: and he wasn't getting any fluids. So I started asking him, where is his IV? She said, well, we don't recommend it right now with his heart like this.

    Speaker 10: So from there, he really didn't have anything to eat, but, like, maybe a couple of apple spoon

    Speaker 10: applesauce bites or

    Speaker 10: a little bit of Ensure drink one day with me. But he was still trying to, like, do exercises

    Speaker 10: with this BiPAP.

    Speaker 10: And,

    Speaker 10: the whole thing, it went down within fourteen days.

    Speaker 10: And they it I think that after the BiPAP, they called, I think, the next day, and I had this awful doctor.

    Speaker 10: Couldn't stand him. His name was,

    Speaker 10: manic,

    Speaker 10: viral manic Patel of Piedmont Hospital. I don't care if they get mad that I told his name. He was no bad side man or horrible. He was the only one I spoke with and he was always in a hurry.

    Speaker 10: Would just say my dad was really old anyway. He was weak.

    Speaker 10: I mean, just not very thoughtful or like he was looking back. He wasn't like trying to find any solutions.

    Speaker 10: He never said anything positive.

    Speaker 10: And he just said, let's wait and see what happens tomorrow. So I went into saying, well, you know, he had an allergic reaction to that guy and,

    Speaker 10: you know, and I said he was, but he was doing really good, you know? And he would say, well, that was yesterday. Well, let's just see about tomorrow. I mean, it was just strange.

    Speaker 10: So he said he had COVID positive

    Speaker 10: on the test.

    Speaker 10: I think that was right after the BiPAP, but I I'm kinda jumping around. But after the COVID, then, of course,

    Speaker 10: he just kept declining. And then looking at the records, I didn't put it together. They were drugging him with a big load of drugs. I mean, all sorts of several opioids,

    Speaker 10: laxatives,

    Speaker 10: diuretics,

    Speaker 10: and he had

    Speaker 10: several antibiotics. All of them just happened to be for not for respiratory, not for heart failure. And,

    Speaker 10: I mean, it was just cruel. And then they told me called

    Speaker 10: and told me there was no hope. He wasn't going to make it through the night. Although he was still alert and talk and calling my name into the night.

    Speaker 10: And my husband came and sat with me and we stayed with him.

    Speaker 10: And I just never was able to tell my dad that he wasn't gonna make it. I didn't wanna scare him. So all I said to him, I said, well, daddy, you're gonna come home with me. And I smiled,

    Speaker 10: and he nodded his head, like, really furious

    Speaker 10: and just looked angry. He couldn't really talk of a lot that he was able to call my name. And I held his hand, and I just laid with him. And they, you know, they sent the hospice in, told me, pushed me into kind of, like, the hospice like they do everybody and saying that he just didn't have hope.

    Speaker 10: And, of course, he hadn't drank any foods or ate hardly anything in, like, six days, like, the last six days. So,

    Speaker 10: I mean, and and seeing all those different drugs, I mean, it and also threw in, like,

    Speaker 10: I think a high blood pressure pill when he was having low blood pressure and a cancer drug. I mean, there was

    Speaker 10: several strange a narc Narcan drug, I think, for overdose. That's that's another bizarre I mean, I still haven't figured out everything they gave them, but I try to look through the records.

    Speaker 10: I'm still going through them here and there. But, I mean,

    Speaker 10: they they ordered remdesivir,

    Speaker 10: but they said he was out of the window.

    Speaker 10: So, I mean but all those different drugs definitely just send them crashing and and send them into a decline.

    Speaker 10: And it was confusing for me because I was

    Speaker 10: thinking that, was this his heart?

    Speaker 10: You know, he was 78,

    Speaker 10: but he was, you know, fairly healthy up and up until this.

    Speaker 10: And,

    Speaker 10: I kept trying to talk to him about the catheter bag and that it was causing all these problems with his heart. And, you know, I think it was the root of a lot of the problems. Maybe it wasn't everything, but I think he still had a chance. And he was still even trying, like, the last

    Speaker 10: two days, he got on the side of his bed and was kicking his arms and legs, I mean, just a little, like, just desperately trying to do the exercises. And in the records, he was actually denied,

    Speaker 10: asking water, asking for water.

    Speaker 10: And,

    Speaker 10: he was hiding some of the opioid pills under the bedsheets,

    Speaker 10: which we thought this was crazy. Like, after seeing the records,

    Speaker 10: horrifying, you know, and I would go, I would stay all day, but I would go and leave through the night and the morning hours. And I think that's when a lot of these drugs were being

    Speaker 10: gave to him. Of course, sometimes they would just come in and give it to him through his

    Speaker 10: through his IVs. And I, you know, I would kinda ask sometimes a little vaguely,

    Speaker 10: and they'd say, oh, just a little antibiotic and or, you know, he needs this, you know, Lasix. He needs another shot of this. And,

    Speaker 10: and and I didn't question because I wasn't trained at all medically. I didn't even understand anything about oxygen

    Speaker 10: levels, but I did notice on the record that they were ordering, you know, to keep the oxygen high flow at all times, and it said high 90% or higher.

    Speaker 10: And,

    Speaker 10: so, I mean, I I definitely think they weren't trying to help them, and they

    Speaker 10: and and they didn't want him to come home. And and then it took about a year to find the group

    Speaker 10: because I thought I thought right after it happened, I I was very confused, but I did have a feeling something was off and that they had killed him.

    Speaker 10: And we had heard strange things about COVID. I thought it was over because this was April

    Speaker 10: 2023,

    Speaker 10: and hospitals really weren't in the, you know, the the whole crazy COVID thing that, you know, there were still a few people that wore masks and that the hospital wasn't, like, in a panic about COVID like it had been.

    Speaker 10: So I thought the whole COVID thing was kind of, like, in the past, but, you know, evidently not. And then,

    Speaker 10: of course, you know, it took about a year and I finally found the groups online, and I was able to,

    Speaker 10: find the CHBMP

    Speaker 10: group and and,

    Speaker 10: you know,

    Speaker 10: find everybody. And it it's really been great. A lot of support.

    Speaker 10: And I'm glad you know, I hated to meet everybody this way, but I'm glad I found them. And, I mean, just lost the best dad in the world. And he was he never met a stranger. I mean, he was it couldn't have happened to a better person. I mean, just and the guilt that I carry because

    Speaker 10: I just feel like I let it happen. But, you know, even when I felt like something was off because

    Speaker 10: I once you're there, you're really under their control. You have no I I had no idea there was any help groups or advocacy

    Speaker 10: groups.

    Speaker 10: I thought the only advocate was the one in the hospital.

    Speaker 10: You know, I didn't really

    Speaker 10: who to call. Like,

    Speaker 10: and so this is just

    Speaker 10: I don't know. I I've I hated it. I hated it. And I felt like

    Speaker 10: and then there was part of me that I prayed so hard, and I thought, well, maybe God

    Speaker 10: this was God's plan. And I just, you know, I did everything I know to do, and I have to accept if if

    Speaker 10: God didn't want my dad to live that, you know, maybe his heart crashed, but I never got an explanation. That doctor came in the room,

    Speaker 10: and he just said, you know, after my dad passed, it was the weirdest thing. A big light

    Speaker 10: came through the window.

    Speaker 10: And right as his heart left the monitor, a sunbeam, I mean, no kidding,

    Speaker 10: went right into his face and just like, it was just straight into his face and stayed there, like, maybe ten minutes.

    Speaker 10: And his heart

    Speaker 10: just went right off the monitor and I grabbed onto him and I was hugging him, you know, telling him goodbye. And and it was so horrible. And this doctor comes in about, like, maybe fifteen minutes later in the room. The son kind of left, but it was so weird. And

    Speaker 10: then the doctor just kind of said, well, you know, he was old.

    Speaker 10: Old people know when it's their time to die. He kept saying he wanted to go home,

    Speaker 10: you know, like that. And I was like,

    Speaker 10: oh, it's just incredibly cold. And then he said, you don't control everything.

    Speaker 10: He looked over at me and, you know, I was like in shock. And, I felt like, is this some kind of horror movie? I mean, where did these people come from? That something just seemed totally off. I mean, it really, truly,

    Speaker 10: I mean, I wouldn't accuse anybody honestly of murder without,

    Speaker 10: you know,

    Speaker 10: really

    Speaker 10: definite

    Speaker 10: information.

    Speaker 10: And I was even a little confused when I first found the group of what had really happened, but there was just no doubt in my mind after going through the records and hearing all the stories, I share

    Speaker 10: most all the commonalities.

    Speaker 10: I mean, they weren't,

    Speaker 10: they, they had, they wanted to make that money. There was no doubt. I mean, there was a payout, and he was just a low hanging fruit, unfortunately.

    Speaker 10: But, I mean, they'll go for anybody, even healthier people. So it I I hope that there'll be some accountability

    Speaker 10: down the road. I just I would like to see it stop, and I would like to see some of these hospitals.

    Speaker 10: I mean, honestly, they should be fined. It they should be publicly shamed, you know,

    Speaker 10: for doing this to to our loved ones.

    Speaker 10: You know, we'd like to see acknowledgement

    Speaker 10: at least, and there should be big Memorial services like there are for Charlie Kirk. I mean, really, I mean,

    Speaker 10: to have this this this many different people

    Speaker 10: have this happen. I mean, it's just

    Speaker 10: it it it truly is, like Chelsea said, crimes against humanity.

    Speaker 10: Really.

    Speaker 10: I mean, it it's I never thought that we would see this in America. I mean, I I can't even it it's still hard to wrap around my mind

    Speaker 10: this kinda evil, really.

    Speaker 6: Like, somebody up here says I think it is it

    Speaker 6: Sherry that came up with the war we didn't Chelsea, somebody.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. A war we didn't know we were they were in. They all died in a war they didn't know they were in.

    Speaker 2: 100%.

    Speaker 3: Is that how it goes? Yeah. I'm a little dyslexic, so, you know, you gotta help me out. I mean I mean, that's the basic idea that that we were all thrown into a war we didn't even know existed.

    Speaker 3: You know? And and

    Speaker 3: Heidi's story

    Speaker 3: needs to be told

    Speaker 3: because

    Speaker 3: one of the things that is

    Speaker 3: pervasive

    Speaker 3: and and is evident in her story

    Speaker 3: is that there is

    Speaker 3: a culture

    Speaker 3: where they have a four letter acronym

    Speaker 3: to describe people like her dad.

    Speaker 3: It's called tot,

    Speaker 3: t o

    Speaker 3: t e t.

    Speaker 3: Too

    Speaker 3: old

    Speaker 3: to

    Speaker 3: treat.

    Speaker 3: That is a fact.

    Speaker 3: They actually

    Speaker 3: have

    Speaker 3: a word,

    Speaker 3: a phrase

    Speaker 3: to describe

    Speaker 3: elderly people.

    Speaker 3: Where does that sound familiar from,

    Speaker 3: ladies and gentlemen?

    Speaker 3: Can we say

    Speaker 3: useless

    Speaker 3: eaters?

    Speaker 3: That goes all the way back

    Speaker 3: to Germany,

    Speaker 3: actually pre Nazi Germany.

    Speaker 3: They brought it here

    Speaker 3: and now it's pervasive

    Speaker 3: because, let's face it, people like me and Deborah and Miriam,

    Speaker 3: we're getting old enough. We don't need to be treated. We need to be

    Speaker 3: warehoused.

    Speaker 3: So I'm sorry, Heidi. I'm so sorry.

    Speaker 6: Chances are they're not warehousing me, but they might get me on the old part.

    Speaker 10: Well, what is the cutoff date? It could be, like, 5055,

    Speaker 10: '60.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. My husband's assigned for Medicare. So Yeah. I said you're probably on the chopping block now. And and and yeah. I feel I feel like anybody who's getting close. I mean, when Steve went into the hospital, he had just turned 64, but all of his hair was white and his beard was white. They didn't have to look at his chart to see he was 64,

    Speaker 3: but they had themselves a paycheck,

    Speaker 3: you know, that extra bonus and the administration.

    Speaker 3: In our hospital,

    Speaker 3: things you find out later,

    Speaker 3: in our hospital

    Speaker 3: the former mayor

    Speaker 3: had

    Speaker 3: gotten himself a job on the board at the hospital.

    Speaker 3: They gave him some honorary

    Speaker 3: something about media

    Speaker 3: because everybody on the board was on the take because there was so much money from COVID rolling in.

    Speaker 3: Ain't it grand?

    Speaker 3: You gotta know where to get the best jobs.

    Speaker 6: That's the sad part about these hospitals is

    Speaker 6: most of your administration,

    Speaker 6: none of them are physicians.

    Speaker 3: None of them. Right. That that that

    Speaker 6: definitely went out Or if they have a PhD, it's in some dumb other thing.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. But usually, they're paper pushers now because the whole thing after Obamacare

    Speaker 3: was they decided to make these hospitals more or less a community,

    Speaker 3: of people who are there to make money.

    Speaker 3: They treat it like a retail business or an insurance business or whatever

    Speaker 3: because they have stockholders or stakeholders or whatever you want to call them, and that's who they answer to. Not to the patients. They're not there for patient care.

    Speaker 3: So,

    Speaker 3: that's just something

    Speaker 3: one of the things that we hope with this space isn't just to let people know what happened during COVID.

    Speaker 3: This is ongoing.

    Speaker 3: This will continue.

    Speaker 6: And Jerry, I just said that to a doctor

    Speaker 6: a couple weeks ago

    Speaker 6: that

    Speaker 6: he was making

    Speaker 6: a decision

    Speaker 6: based on him

    Speaker 6: while he knew nothing about me

    Speaker 6: about me, though. Mhmm.

    Speaker 3: Yeah.

    Speaker 3: And it really pissed me off. Right. Well, in in in in our case, as you get up in age and, you know, particularly under Medicare,

    Speaker 3: or Medicaid,

    Speaker 3: they've got a checklist.

    Speaker 3: They've got a checklist of things that need be done. And if you don't get all of that checklist done, they get their little hands slapped

    Speaker 3: by Medicare and Medicaid,

    Speaker 3: because you're not keeping these patients in line.

    Speaker 3: And that is part of the reason. I I mean, it's similar, not part of, similar to the reason that vaccinating your children

    Speaker 3: and pedia p d pediatricians

    Speaker 3: who will fire

    Speaker 3: their patients, fire the patient's family, technically.

    Speaker 3: You take your child in for the, quote, unquote, well child visit, and then you refuse

    Speaker 3: vaccines.

    Speaker 3: And they wanna know why, and you're like, I don't believe in it, or I believe that my child needs to be older,

    Speaker 3: or maybe I need to bring my child

    Speaker 3: back in a month and a half, and we'll get that second vaccine instead of doing, you know, eight of them at one visit.

    Speaker 3: And they fire you because they

    Speaker 3: the goal is that you if you delay

    Speaker 3: or you deny the vaccines,

    Speaker 3: then you water down the pool of

    Speaker 3: vaccinated

    Speaker 3: patients.

    Speaker 3: And when that happens,

    Speaker 3: that means their percentages change, and they need a certain percentage of their population of student of children,

    Speaker 3: patients,

    Speaker 3: to be

    Speaker 3: fully vaccinated

    Speaker 3: in order to qualify

    Speaker 3: for

    Speaker 3: the whatever they've agreed to get, you know, 40,050

    Speaker 3: thousand a year that they're gonna get from these vaccine vaccine manufacturers

    Speaker 3: because x number percent

    Speaker 3: of their population of patients is fully vaccinated.

    Speaker 3: So if they're not fully vaccinated, you're watering down that pool.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. I mean, they literally have quotas. Yep.

    Speaker 2: The I mean, Blue Cross Blue Shield literally had quotas

    Speaker 2: for percentages of people in in in physicians' practices

    Speaker 2: to be COVID vaccinated.

    Speaker 2: And if they did meet those quotas, they lost, in some cases well, in every case, at least 5 figures in income,

    Speaker 2: at least 5 figures, and in and in some cases, 6 figures.

    Speaker 2: So, you know, it is it's a business,

    Speaker 3: and it's treated as such. Yeah. It's not about how healthy you are or anything anymore. This is about

    Speaker 3: stakeholders

    Speaker 3: and percentages

    Speaker 3: and participants

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: no. Humanity is missing from this entire

    Speaker 3: discussion. It's all done. There

    Speaker 3: and

    Speaker 3: I think that everybody needs to be aware of this, whether you need a gallbladder surgery

    Speaker 3: or you, you know, you

    Speaker 3: you cut your hand. I mean,

    Speaker 3: there's another one. Okay. So I cut my hand. I'm in my kitchen. I cut my hand, and maybe I need stitches. I don't know. Maybe I'm just bleeding a lot, and I don't know what to do about it. And I end up in the ER. Oh, well, we're gonna give you a tetanus shot. No, you're not.

    Speaker 3: No, you're not.

    Speaker 3: I'm not on a piece of property that has horses on it. I'm not

    Speaker 3: mucking stalls, so I didn't get horse shit or cow shit in my cut.

    Speaker 3: This happened with my clean

    Speaker 3: knife in my clean kitchen,

    Speaker 3: But we need to make sure you get that. First of all, you're not gonna give me a straight tetanus shot. You're gonna give me a,

    Speaker 3: TDAP, I think it is. TDAP. Right. Shit. And yeah. That's horseshit. Right. It's gonna take two weeks And it said cable. The,

    Speaker 3: two weeks for the antibodies to build.

    Speaker 3: And I'll if I've got tetanus in a week, I'm gonna be,

    Speaker 6: showing symptoms. Right? So why am I doing this? No. I don't think so. This is just for you. Just so you know, I've been in there for a long, long time. I have never seen anybody get tetanus.

    Speaker 3: But and there's a there's a lot oh, but see, if you say that tetanus is not prevalent in the in in the in the body, in the in the

    Speaker 3: population?

    Speaker 3: Well, that's how good the the the shot is. It's keeping everybody from getting tetanus.

    Speaker 3: No.

    Speaker 3: Hygiene. But they always have a they always have a answer in their propaganda. They always have It's called hygiene. We know how to use soap now. Excuse me.

    Speaker 3: Yep.

    Speaker 6: I never got a tetanus shot all in years I was growing up on a farm.

    Speaker 6: I had my first tetanus shot, I think, when I became a nurse.

    Speaker 6: Just saying.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. It's it's not about health.

    Speaker 2: It's about that green stuff

    Speaker 2: that gets shoved in your hand and put in your pocket and in your bank account.

    Speaker 2: That's what it's about as far as the providers are concerned,

    Speaker 2: you know, especially people who have their own practices because they know how much they make if they meet that quota. Well, the other thing and when she was talking about pediatricians

    Speaker 6: because, you know, back in the day, there was no such thing as a pediatrician either. Your doctor was your doctor.

    Speaker 6: Everybody's doctor in the family.

    Speaker 6: You know? And it became a specialty

    Speaker 6: along with all the other I'm I'm not a fan of special specialist anymore because now your doctors can't even be a doctor because they forgot how to be a doctor, and now you gotta go see the,

    Speaker 6: someone who specializes in that one thing. It's a money grabbing bullshit game still.

    Speaker 6: But pediatricians,

    Speaker 6: they, you know, their population

    Speaker 6: is small, number one.

    Speaker 6: They don't you know, kids don't ask questions.

    Speaker 6: It's parents not right there. You know what I mean? They they can do so much more. But I'm telling you, it I I don't have I've never seen one that I really would give you 2¢ for

    Speaker 6: in in in my life.

    Speaker 2: Here's the thing. I mean and what? Healthy child. Healthy children tend to stay healthy until the medical system intervenes.

    Speaker 2: So there would not even be pediatric

    Speaker 2: practices

    Speaker 2: without children who have chronic illnesses.

    Speaker 2: And how did they get chronic illnesses?

    Speaker 2: You need to read the book by doctor Paul Thomas.

    Speaker 2: He had something like 5,000 patients,

    Speaker 2: and he literally did a study.

    Speaker 2: And he compared his completely unvaxxed very small population

    Speaker 2: to his vaxxed population,

    Speaker 2: and it is jaw dropping.

    Speaker 2: The the bottom line is unvaccinated

    Speaker 2: kids don't have any of the illnesses of vaccinated kids.

    Speaker 2: They don't have asthma. They don't have ear infections.

    Speaker 2: They don't have chronic conditions, autoimmune diseases. They don't have any of those things,

    Speaker 2: including autism.

    Speaker 2: And needless to say, he got blacklisted,

    Speaker 2: but

    Speaker 2: here's the thing.

    Speaker 2: That's why it's such genius by the pharma community.

    Speaker 2: You push those vaccines,

    Speaker 2: you create sick kids, and then they have reasons to be in the pediatrician's office

    Speaker 2: over and over again

    Speaker 2: and have more pharma pushed at them. It's the perfect money making business model is exactly what it is.

    Speaker 3: Yeah.

    Speaker 3: And and

    Speaker 3: the way it's working under Obamacare

    Speaker 3: is

    Speaker 3: it's all geared towards money, and they've got the doctors and the nurses,

    Speaker 3: particularly in the hospitals,

    Speaker 3: bent over.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: the patients are paying the price.

    Speaker 3: And until the patients

    Speaker 3: learn to advocate,

    Speaker 3: and learn to question things,

    Speaker 3: and push back. Just push back.

    Speaker 3: You you don't you don't have to take what they hand you.

    Speaker 3: It you know, if you were at the McDonald's and you ordered a a sandwich and they said, oh, we're we're out of those, so we just opted to give you this,

    Speaker 3: you'd refuse it unless you were getting a really good deal of something that you actually did like and it was a bigger sandwich and there was no extra cost, you might take it. But if it's not what you ordered,

    Speaker 3: why would you accept it?

    Speaker 3: And and if we're not gonna be treated

    Speaker 3: as humans,

    Speaker 3: as as feeling people

    Speaker 3: with integrity,

    Speaker 3: with

    Speaker 3: sincerity,

    Speaker 3: and we're gonna be used because we're you know,

    Speaker 3: I might as well have, you know, one of those big three digit number tags on my ear like a a cow

    Speaker 3: because you're gonna treat me like a stock animal as you run me through your offices and stick me as many times as you can.

    Speaker 3: I'm gonna I'm gonna take TeeBird. TeeBird's got her hand up.

    Speaker 7: Hey, my love. Hello, sweetie.

    Speaker 7: I kinda feel like well, obviously, every time I open x in the morning, I'm learning that more bad things have happened to me with these shots. You know? I'm already living it, and it gets kinda depressing

    Speaker 7: when you're, oh, now I have AIDS. Now I have AIDS. Now I have just like you. I'm like, I'm just like, this is what you wake up to every morning, and now there's proof. Blah blah blah blah blah. I'm already knowing all the different organ failure I'm in, but it gets more and more depressing every day. It's like, oh, now you have some rare

    Speaker 7: autoimmune that never existed, and you're probably contagious. And if you breathe on someone, you're gonna kill them. It's like the guilt just keeps getting deeper and deeper. You can't win. It's like,

    Speaker 7: my kids you know, I already feel guilty enough. Thank god I never injected anyone. Like, I don't know.

    Speaker 7: I honestly

    Speaker 7: I don't think I could've

    Speaker 7: I don't think I would have chosen to continue living if I knew

    Speaker 7: that I did this to someone else, what I'm living, and the pain I'm in and the pain all of you are living

    Speaker 7: from your loved ones being taken from you because they didn't take the shot

    Speaker 7: and being literally

    Speaker 7: taken out, snuffed out, because we're just like cows. We're in a slaughterhouse, and we're still in this experiment is what I feel. It's like we don't talk about it very often, but if I'm still here, they're still studying. If you guys are still here and speaking,

    Speaker 7: they're watching you. Right? You're there there's this is a game, these motherfuckers. Excuse my language.

    Speaker 7: Two things. You talked about cutting yourself. Two things. This is all I really wanted to say.

    Speaker 7: I think sometimes I I miss I miss so much, not sometimes, always I miss being a nurse.

    Speaker 7: There's no add value to me waking up in the morning other than good, I lived another day. But

    Speaker 7: to wake up every morning and go, what do I I have no purpose. I have what am I gonna how do I waste today? Because I want to do stuff, but my body physically can't. Right? So you're trapped in this body, but then your mind is also gone. Well, mine is, clearly. I I I I was trying to walk my dog tonight. This is this is just a sad truth, an honest truth that I don't share, but it's very vulnerable.

    Speaker 7: There's this elderly lady who always walks her big dog down the street. He's

    Speaker 7: a Saint Bernard, and she's nine 90. I think I said started to tell you guys that earlier.

    Speaker 7: And I had to tell her that

    Speaker 7: I can't I will I just cannot remember her name. I cannot I never talked to anyone. I have no life. I don't have anything anymore. So, like, this is the one person who walks by and checks on me when I'm sitting on my front porch.

    Speaker 7: And and she says to me now,

    Speaker 7: Tanya.

    Speaker 7: It's it's Maggie. And it's like it's like I have

    Speaker 7: Alzheimer's the way she speaks. She's talking. She's and she talks louder. Right? Because everyone

    Speaker 7: that when you have dementia, people tend to yell at them. I worked in geriatrics my whole life, but she'll be like, Tanya,

    Speaker 7: it's Maggie. And she's tapping on her chest like, do you remember? And I'm like,

    Speaker 7: no.

    Speaker 7: I I know your face, but I don't I can't. That's the kind of stuff that happens. Just my life. That's my life. Anyway, back to being a nurse.

    Speaker 7: When you talk this is just helpful for anybody just because you brought up slicing your hand and you wanna go. And we we aren't told not to go to the hospital anymore. I don't wanna go to the hospital. It's a dangerous place. I didn't like it when I worked there. I didn't trust the nurses that worked with me. That and that's since day one, and that's a long that's decades and decades.

    Speaker 7: When you can't trust your own colleagues to hang the blood if you go on break, that's a bad feeling in your gut. But

    Speaker 7: at the end of the day, slicing your finger, good advice for everybody,

    Speaker 7: keep very clean, brand new crazy glue, gorilla glue, whatever it is, keep it sealed in your emergency kit for if you're because this I did this to my son once. I didn't take him to Emerge. He slipped and sliced his eye over his eyebrow. And, you know, that's what we used to do in Emerge. So if anyone can do that, or buy yourself steri strips. Those are you can get them. They're buying three m. I'm gonna I'm not I don't sell it. Don't worry. But that's the one that I use is the three m company. If you go to any pharmacy,

    Speaker 7: the steri strips, you just pull the wound toward, keep the wound together, and that's easier than going to emergency in there for twelve hours before they even look at you. I just wanted to say that. And secondly, my son, the rabies thing.

    Speaker 7: My son never I never took him to the doctor. He was never sick. He was perfectly healthy his whole life. And then when he turned about 16, 17 I can't remember.

    Speaker 7: Something like that. He's he's an adult. He's 16, something like that.

    Speaker 7: And he had acne. It wasn't acne. It was pertussis from his three Pfizers, and he has one of my batch numbers. But they told him it was acne. So they had him go in, and I went to the doctor's appointment with him. They know I have the same doctor as him. He knows I'm against vaccines. He knows I'm vaccine injured. And I'm sitting next to Rowan, and

    Speaker 7: Rowan's like, mom, you don't need to sit here. Like, I'm I'm just gonna talk to him about getting some acne cream or whatever. Right? I'm like, alright. Like, and

    Speaker 7: I I'm sitting in the waiting room. I I just go sit. He comes out. He's holding his arm. I'm like, what? What happened? He goes, he gave me a needle. I'm like, what?

    Speaker 7: And he said, yeah. He told me I needed a rabies shot that I didn't, I needed tetanus because, no, not rabies, tetanus. I needed a tetanus shot because I hadn't had one. And I'm like, are you fucking kidding me? So I just wanted to remind everyone,

    Speaker 7: sometimes that's a really bad age too because, you know, they take away our children's. Right? They take away our parenting. Right? But never leave that room, eve especially when they're teenagers

    Speaker 7: who

    Speaker 7: the he is really smart. He saw me. He's the one that took care of me. I just wanted to say that because I know I just went off there, but that it was just like I just it hit me again. Like, you just don't know what these assholes are doing in a split second. I was there, and I I had a bad feeling, and I thought, you know what? He's just gonna get a prescription for something for his acne. And I thought, okay. I'm gonna let him handle this himself. And you know what? You can't do it. You can't trust these motherfuckers. Excuse me. I was just really angry tonight about a few things. But thank you for letting me speak again, protocol.

    Speaker 3: Thank you.

    Speaker 3: Makes me wanna go to the local,

    Speaker 3: Walgreens and get some steri strips because I know now that you've said something about clean super glue, I won't have any of that around here, and I for sure will cut my hand off tomorrow.

    Speaker 3: So what can I say?

    Speaker 3: Kyle, did you just put your hand up on?

    Speaker 9: Yeah. Son of a gun. Yeah. You girls know the song. Hit me with your best shot.

    Speaker 9: So t so, yeah, so Tee just hit me with her best shot there, and she reminded me of something I didn't tell her yet, actually. It's the night we talked, and I was saying,

    Speaker 9: I was at my mom's, and

    Speaker 9: their neighbor, he was in his seventies.

    Speaker 9: And he went in for surgery.

    Speaker 9: And he had

    Speaker 9: something with frostbite

    Speaker 9: on his foot from a long time ago. And then he also had diabetes,

    Speaker 9: and

    Speaker 9: I'll just

    Speaker 9: nor here or there, but I think we all know a lot of times type two diabetes comes from a lot of the high blood pressure medications and

    Speaker 9: Lipitor and all the other fun stuff they tell you to take. And, hey, don't eat eggs and, you know, don't take high grade fish oil or krill, but go ahead and take Lipitor and see how that, how that treats your pancreas and kidneys. Just just go ahead and try that. Anyway, so, you know, this happened to my dad. I've probably told this story in here before, but, oh, yeah. You have high triglycerides.

    Speaker 9: So, we're gonna put you on this and then a year later oh, now your cholesterol is actually out of whack worse than it was.

    Speaker 9: Let's put you on this and then a year later. Oh, you have type two diabetes, sir. And now you're on ten to twelve pills,

    Speaker 9: for the rest of your life. How's that sound, sir? It's just it's it's it's fantastically

    Speaker 9: ridiculous.

    Speaker 9: Talk about a fuck a a twilight zone. Anyway, so the neighbor there, he's in his seventies, and he went in for a routine surgery

    Speaker 9: to do something with his foot. I'm not sure if they were gonna amputate one of the toes or do some corrective surgery because he had some frostbite issues from a long time ago. And whatever the story was, it had something to do with a complication from type two, but also he had frostbite

    Speaker 9: in the past. So it was kind of an odd kind of a mixture of things.

    Speaker 9: And he went in and blood,

    Speaker 9: the the pressure dropped, blood pressure, and that was it.

    Speaker 9: Died right on the Operating table. And then you start thinking about all the stuff. So so T was just kinda reminding me of that story that I forgot to tell her.

    Speaker 9: You think about the medical malpractice, and that's something that I think needs to be posted about every day,

    Speaker 9: and talked about every

    Speaker 9: day. Medical malpractice

    Speaker 9: in The United States

    Speaker 9: took over

    Speaker 9: number one slot from cancer and everything else. Medical malpractice took it over. And then people were like, no, I think it's actually still third.

    Speaker 9: I think it's the third leading cause of death in The States. No. Go find a real study and go and and then and then start cross referencing numbers,

    Speaker 9: and you'll find out medical malpractice is actually number one.

    Speaker 9: Number one cause of death in The States. And I just think it's just hilarious that, like, it's not something that's brought up more often.

    Speaker 9: And, I was just telling Tee just a few minutes ago. I was like, hey. I was just texting her. I was like, it's kinda funny. I just remember this. I was 17,

    Speaker 9: and I had two top wisdom teeth. Right?

    Speaker 9: And, how ironic is that? You know the word wisdom Wisdom teeth And they're like Oh we gotta pull those out It's gonna It's gonna compact your mouth And we might have to break your jaw You know all the horror stories about wisdom teeth and everything So I just had two top wisdom teeth. And I go in there at 17 years old. Right?

    Speaker 9: And

    Speaker 9: not a brag here, but I'm gonna go ahead and say it.

    Speaker 9: I was discerned enough then spiritually to be like, I don't think I want anesthesia.

    Speaker 9: I think I just would rather have you guys just I I wanna stay awake. So so my whole thing in my mind there was I wanna experience this. I wanna see because everybody talks about how bad it is. Right? Like, oh, if if they're impacted, it's gonna be a tough surgery. It's really violent.

    Speaker 9: There's gonna be a lot of blood. Well, they're right, folks.

    Speaker 9: There's a lot of blood, and it's super violent. You can hear all the cracking,

    Speaker 9: and, the blood was all over. It was, like, squirting, like, up into my face, down on I think they had goggles on me. If I remember, it was all over the place. But I'm really happy I stayed awake for it. And I just wanna say that if you can ever do that with any kind of surgery,

    Speaker 9: I just I really do plead with folks.

    Speaker 9: Stay the hell away from anesthesia

    Speaker 9: if you can help it

    Speaker 9: if they want to give you a local of some kind that's gonna kind of make you feel weird like a laughing gas or whatever That's that's different

    Speaker 9: but they just went ahead and numb me up and and it just started literally, like, operating on these wisdom teeth that were impacted into my jaw. And,

    Speaker 9: I'll never ever regret doing that. It was truly an experience,

    Speaker 9: and it kinda makes you, like, I think a better person to, to go through something like that. So if I can just recommend anything to younger folks, especially with wisdom teeth or any of those kind of surgeries that are kinda routine,

    Speaker 9: stay awake.

    Speaker 9: Do not risk anesthesia.

    Speaker 9: That's all I'm asking. Just just don't.

    Speaker 1: Just don't risk it. And I don't wanna deter people from

    Speaker 1: undergoing necessary

    Speaker 1: surgical interventions,

    Speaker 1: but I think in our culture, in our society, we take it far too lightly.

    Speaker 1: We have something called elective surgery

    Speaker 1: and,

    Speaker 1: elective cosmetic surgery. And, of course, we know what they've been doing

    Speaker 1: to children under the guise of so called gender affirming surgery.

    Speaker 1: And all of this is just like, oh, you just go in and, you know, a week later, you come out and it hurts for a while and then you get I mean, surgery is a very no matter what it is,

    Speaker 1: I don't think there's any such thing as a routine

    Speaker 1: surgery necessarily because things things go wrong.

    Speaker 1: You never know what's gonna go wrong,

    Speaker 1: and,

    Speaker 1: and you you can bet that the people who will be

    Speaker 1: in most cases, I don't wanna there there are a few good doctors out there, and and

    Speaker 1: they should be commended for what they do,

    Speaker 1: especially through this climate.

    Speaker 1: But it it's possible you're on a table

    Speaker 1: under the the knife of somebody

    Speaker 1: who doesn't have your your best interest at heart, and and

    Speaker 1: it's just a routine surgery to them. And it's your entire life

    Speaker 1: if something goes wrong. So I think we we should take it a little more seriously.

    Speaker 1: If if you're considering an elective surgery, I would think really hard about whether you really need,

    Speaker 1: whatever it is that

    Speaker 1: that you think you need because there are other ways to to go about remedying many things and sometimes just changing the way you think about something

    Speaker 1: can

    Speaker 1: can have the a similar or or even more beneficial

    Speaker 1: outcome

    Speaker 1: than going under the knife.

    Speaker 3: Yes. It's very, very scary to think about

    Speaker 3: something you might need to be you know, have done.

    Speaker 3: Little work to, you know,

    Speaker 3: fix things or something.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: there's no way I wanna be

    Speaker 3: underneath

    Speaker 3: any kind of sedative that's

    Speaker 3: not gonna allow me to either be awake

    Speaker 3: or cognizant. It's just

    Speaker 3: no.

    Speaker 3: I'm not sure that we're gonna do anything.

    Speaker 3: You know? So that's the answer to any question. Well, we can fix

    Speaker 3: this. Yeah. Just because you can doesn't mean you will. Okay? How's that? Anyway

    Speaker 2: Yeah. And I can tell you from personal experience that there's very few things that actually require hospitalization.

    Speaker 2: Even in December

    Speaker 2: 2023,

    Speaker 2: I had a bad case of pancreatitis

    Speaker 2: and diverticulitis,

    Speaker 2: both of which,

    Speaker 2: you know, can be actually life threatening.

    Speaker 2: And I went three days, and I knew

    Speaker 2: that I was becoming,

    Speaker 2: like, seriously septic because I was having chills, and I was cold, and my abdomen was killing me.

    Speaker 2: And I was nauseous, and I couldn't eat.

    Speaker 2: Kept a little bit of fluids, could get some fluids down, but that was it. And after three days, I called my nurse practitioner whom I trust,

    Speaker 2: and I even told her then, no. I'll go get blood work done, but I'm not going in the hospital. And she already knew it was serious because I never call her unless I am at that point. Went and had it drawn, and then they did a they did a CT, And they're like, yeah. You need to be admitted. I'm like, oh, no. I'm not. I'm calling my nurse practitioner,

    Speaker 2: and I had home

    Speaker 2: IVs with antibiotics and stayed home.

    Speaker 2: So

    Speaker 2: there was no way I was going to be admitted into that hospital.

    Speaker 2: Now, of course, you have to have a practitioner who will listen to you, who knows what they're doing. And even she said to me, look. If you don't get better, and I'm sending you over to the infusion place, you're gonna get some done there. And because you have a medical background, you've got a son who can help you with it. I'm gonna give you this for home, and we did fine.

    Speaker 2: But you need you don't need to wait until you're in that position to try to find someone. You need to find someone now that you can trust that can help you in those situations.

    Speaker 2: You need to be looking now and, you know, have a frank conversation with whoever your provider is now and say, hey.

    Speaker 2: If I get really sick like that,

    Speaker 2: are you willing to, you know, provide for me to have some outpatient treatment to take care of me?

    Speaker 2: Because if you're not, I'm gonna start looking around. I mean, that's the kind of brutal converse brutally honest conversation you wanna have now. You wanna make sure you find somebody that you know

    Speaker 2: will act in your best interest.

    Speaker 3: Just saying. Yeah. Let let's face it. If they're gonna treat it like a business arrangement, we should too.

    Speaker 3: So

    Speaker 3: now unfortunately,

    Speaker 3: I've got

    Speaker 3: T Bird and Heidi both have their hand up, and I don't know who was first.

    Speaker 7: Heidi was. I think Heidi was the first. Okay. There you go, Heidi. It's all about you.

    Speaker 10: Hey. I I didn't have anything

    Speaker 10: big to add. I was just going to mention my mom had,

    Speaker 10: stent surgery. I mean, this was crazy. Like, right a couple of weeks before my dad went back in.

    Speaker 10: And,

    Speaker 10: so he was in the home therapy with me, and I couldn't hardly

    Speaker 10: go up there with her to the hospital. And it was the same. It was the Piedmont

    Speaker 10: hospital. So she had, you know, pretty good luck. I mean,

    Speaker 10: she thinks that she needed the stents, who knows, but she was having trouble breathing

    Speaker 10: and

    Speaker 10: she went up there and they told her they wanted to they were pushing her to do the open heart surgery

    Speaker 10: and fly her to a bigger hospital in Atlanta.

    Speaker 10: And I think it was the, I was trying to think of the name of that hospital. It's pretty popular in Atlanta and do the open heart.

    Speaker 10: And she opted to out of that and push for the stents, and they gave her, like, four stents, I think.

    Speaker 10: And, I mean,

    Speaker 10: she did recover pretty quickly, and she had good luck. And the doctor the cardiologist

    Speaker 10: up there was she really liked. He was,

    Speaker 10: a long time doctor that everybody liked, and,

    Speaker 10: he had a good, you know, reputation.

    Speaker 10: And he

    Speaker 10: was leaving for the weekend, and she said she remembered that looking back that he said, well,

    Speaker 10: when I'm when I'm gone, you know, this weekend,

    Speaker 10: just be really careful. Okay? Because I don't know who will be in in place of me.

    Speaker 10: And he said we have some different doctors on the weekends. And she thought that was very odd looking back at that. And she did never he never went into detail. He just said be very careful

    Speaker 10: who will come in in my place. And

    Speaker 10: so that was strange, and then she didn't think of it until all this happened with my dad. But, I mean, it was a mess. And I mean, my aunt came up and sat with her some in the hospital, but I mean, I was dealing with him and then that happened and I was like,

    Speaker 10: Yeah, when it rains, it pours. Like,

    Speaker 10: that, but that was just strange that she had had good luck. So she did have,

    Speaker 10: you know, she had a hard time believing

    Speaker 10: hospitals did that cause she thought, well, they helped me. So why would they, you know and they had also signed her for the do not resuscitate.

    Speaker 10: But it was maybe a few days before she got out or something. And she she was recovering that they told her,

    Speaker 10: you know, kinda talked her into it and said it would be better to do that

    Speaker 10: and have it on her record.

    Speaker 10: And, you know, she didn't discover till later when I was finding out about my dad and she said she called and had that removed off her record. But, I mean, she's close to my dad's age, about a year younger than him. So,

    Speaker 10: you know, we have no idea what did they know and did the good doctor kind of

    Speaker 10: had he heard some things and we know he retired not long after this.

    Speaker 10: So, I mean, he's older and, you know, everybody liked him. We we hadn't heard anything bad about this one particular doctor that he it was like he was kinda warning my mom. Like, so that was odd, but I just thought I'd throw that in and I'll let t bird talk.

    Speaker 10: But

    Speaker 1: And then after t bird, I think

    Speaker 1: we'll we'll take True Maga, and then we'll go to the reading of the names. Go ahead, T Bird.

    Speaker 7: Yeah. I just I saw Shine in here. That's her own story to tell. But, you know, I think I just wanted to acknowledge how important these spaces are for us to learn. I know we all have certain procedures that come, blood work that comes, and it all makes us second guess things and question the doctors. So everything that is said in these spaces, I take personally.

    Speaker 7: I take the nursing right out of it whether no matter what I know. I always learn from these spaces, and I think she made a great decision recently

    Speaker 7: from working it out. I mean, you never know. Right? You you don't know whether to take something, take a dye. Don't take a dye. That it's those little things that you talk through with people that

    Speaker 7: have gone through it, who understand,

    Speaker 7: and it helps them make a more of an informed decision than they're gonna get from their own physician. I worked in cardiovascular surgery, Heidi,

    Speaker 7: and I'll never forget my first open heart, and I was taking care of my patient after. And I was I'm I'm a wound care nurse. That was my absolute specialty, necrotic tissue, everything. I love it. So we used something called a VAC machine, and, it's really cool, but it doesn't matter. Anyway, at the end of the day, I'll never forget closing this guy up,

    Speaker 7: and this is my patient, and I I take huge pride. I have OCD. I'm super protective

    Speaker 7: of everything and my license, of course, And I will never forget, I was a young nurse and,

    Speaker 7: the the sutures, everything was approximated beautifully, like, at staples. Everything's perfect right down the sternum. And I did the most beautiful dressing. I was so proud of myself. And then this head cardiologist comes in.

    Speaker 7: He rips the bandage off, the sterile dressing,

    Speaker 7: and

    Speaker 7: he obviously, there's some oozing because that's natural. Right?

    Speaker 7: He takes a Kleenex from the Kleenex box on the bedside table

    Speaker 7: and dabs

    Speaker 7: the suture.

    Speaker 7: I that's when I was, like, I was young young. That was a new I don't even know how many years in, but I'll never forget that till the day I die. Seriously, I was so upset,

    Speaker 7: aggravated. I

    Speaker 7: like, everything I learned went down the tubes that moment, but I just kept being a nurse. But, like, what do you do? See, there's where the indoctrination you you bow to these people who have a license that's higher than you even though you know

    Speaker 7: you're you know what you learned. You know you did everything exactly sterile with the sterile dressing kit.

    Speaker 7: And then that happens, and you go,

    Speaker 7: oh my god. What's gonna happen in this guy? This is right on his heart. Like, all these panic moments, but that's all I wanted to say. I wasn't gonna talk about cardio, but I do remember that moment. But I I just wanted to mention that that we're just seeing shine down there, and I'm thinking so proud that, you know, we are making decisions with other women that and men that just just

    Speaker 7: share, and and the sharing is so important

    Speaker 7: to make more integral

    Speaker 7: decisions in our lives moving forward. Thank you. Have a great night, guys.

    Speaker 1: T Bird, you remind me said, T Bird.

    Speaker 3: I was I was gonna tell T bird. She reminded

    Speaker 3: me in her in that little story that she told

    Speaker 3: about Nicole has

    Speaker 3: a an Instagram page. And at one point, she

    Speaker 3: posted up a video,

    Speaker 3: and it was one nurse, like, telling tattling on another nurse without names.

    Speaker 3: You know, I saw this happen today.

    Speaker 3: And so Nicole posts it and says,

    Speaker 3: tell me in the comments

    Speaker 3: if you've seen

    Speaker 3: anything

    Speaker 3: that you

    Speaker 3: were wondering

    Speaker 3: why do they think they can get away with it. And one of them was a a nurse who was in the process of,

    Speaker 3: changing a Foley, which to me, I think means catheter,

    Speaker 3: dropped it on the floor, picked it up, and used it.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: it's it's it's one of those things where you get into that comment stream and you're like, are you freaking kidding me? These people did this stuff?

    Speaker 3: T bird, if you're on Instagram, go find Nicole. This is the kind of stuff that will just, like, curl your hair.

    Speaker 2: So And by the way, for anybody who's looking for Nicole, the last name is Sirotek,

    Speaker 2: s I r o t e k, if you're looking for her. Yep. So if you spell that, you will get her because that's an unusual last name.

    Speaker 2: S I r o t e k, Nicole.

    Speaker 3: She also has a Telegram page. It's for American frontline nurses,

    Speaker 3: and they they advocate

    Speaker 3: for they help you know, you can help get them to help advocate if you've got,

    Speaker 3: a need in a hospital

    Speaker 3: situation.

    Speaker 3: I mean, there's also Remnant Nursing

    Speaker 3: and or Remnant Health Care now.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: I'm trying to think. There's another one. Graith,

    Speaker 3: g r a I t h, Graith.

    Speaker 3: Graith Nursing or Graith Health Care.

    Speaker 3: So there's a yeah. This is one of those things that that developed in COVID, the

    Speaker 3: new

    Speaker 3: lexicon,

    Speaker 3: hospital

    Speaker 3: rescue.

    Speaker 3: Would you think that you ever heard that before?

    Speaker 3: True Maga was next.

    Speaker 12: Hey there. Hello.

    Speaker 8: I feel like I walked into a bridal shower. I can't, I haven't heard any men here.

    Speaker 3: Okay. Kyle, you better shake his hand before he gets concerned.

    Speaker 8: I I wanted to kinda ask I wanted to tell you something about Kennedy and that thing in a second, but what was with those dancing nurses? Now you guys gave me faith in nurses again, but I was really getting a stomach ache looking at those dancing nurses. That was some nurses who had something to do

    Speaker 1: after they had emptied their hospitals.

    Speaker 1: Exactly. Just sitting on their hands.

    Speaker 8: Yep. That's what I forgot. I forgot that. Yeah. I knew that. I just did there's so much bullshit going on. But I didn't know that to, you know, to demoralize and and

    Speaker 1: And

    Speaker 8: Jimmy Kimball with that dancing needle. Oh, man. That guy is freaking killing me too. That was worse than a dancing nurse. Yeah. That was ugly.

    Speaker 8: But this thing about Kennedy, I mean, it said remember he was I guess he was trying to Trump's plan to cut,

    Speaker 8: 10,000

    Speaker 8: employees and centralize

    Speaker 8: the h a HSHS

    Speaker 8: agencies.

    Speaker 8: Mhmm.

    Speaker 8: And I guess the court turned them down on the seventeenth. Did you I just wanna make sure you guys heard that.

    Speaker 8: They turned that they blocked the injunction or something.

    Speaker 8: It was an appeal too.

    Speaker 8: Yeah. So I'm not And it's because 19

    Speaker 8: states

    Speaker 8: 19 states filed a lawsuit. So, I mean, it's just like it's all probably the democrats. I don't know. What were you gonna say? Oh, I'm just you know, the the whole,

    Speaker 3: legal warfare thing kind of annoys the heck out of me,

    Speaker 3: because

    Speaker 3: it may I mean, if this was a private company,

    Speaker 3: would the

    Speaker 3: employees who were being cut due to reductions, would they be able to sue to keep their jobs?

    Speaker 5: I don't think so.

    Speaker 3: This is just

    Speaker 3: this

    Speaker 3: lawfare that they're using.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: you know, if they were if we could actually have,

    Speaker 3: some kind of metric

    Speaker 3: like you do when you have a real, you know, company where you judge a person based on their work output.

    Speaker 3: Maybe we could get rid of some of these people

    Speaker 3: still, but I I would imagine

    Speaker 3: that if they really want to remove them, they will continue to appeal. And they may because the Trump administration

    Speaker 3: has to take these as far as they can because whatever happens from this point out is the precedent

    Speaker 3: for anything that an administration

    Speaker 3: wants to do later,

    Speaker 3: in my opinion.

    Speaker 3: But you agree it does need to be overhauled, the agencies. Right? Are you kidding me? I would burn the whole thing down and start over.

    Speaker 8: Yeah. That's what he's trying to do. We would then right after that,

    Speaker 8: everybody forgot about about it because Charlie got shot. That's what I've been bringing up to everybody. It's like, we all forgot what you're saying right there. Because we're all talking about Charlie and Epstein. These guys are freaking

    Speaker 8: sly, man. You gotta be careful. It's a it's like David Copperfield. Look at this hand, but I'm doing this. You know what I mean? Exactly. You gotta be really careful with these guys. They're really sly. And they're all lawyers. Did you see that meeting with Cash?

    Speaker 8: I was screaming. I mean,

    Speaker 8: if any kids saw that meeting, right, the way we're so separated, you know, if you were running a high school class and you had Americans and immigrants in the class,

    Speaker 8: and they're like in the yard they fought once in a while, and it wasn't all the time, but they'd never hung around each other. It was always Americans and they say, But once in a while, they get in a in an early fight. But you'd as a teacher, you'd go, look. We're gonna do a project. You wouldn't let them sit on that side and that side. You'd say, two of you here. You know how they did it. Two of you here. Two of you there. You're gonna work on this project together.

    Speaker 8: But

    Speaker 8: but that example doesn't happen in congress. It was disgusting. I mean, those guys were saying

    Speaker 8: just the most brutal things to cash. Not that I love cash that much, but, I mean, I don't know.

    Speaker 8: It's just so much division right now.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. Well, if they were forced to actually sit together and work together, it would ruin the theater.

    Speaker 8: Exactly.

    Speaker 8: Yeah. Because they all gang up like, oh, he said one word, and you got 25 lawyers ganging up on this one word that the guy might have said wrong. Right? And then they get a second round of questioning,

    Speaker 8: then they all use that word. And I'd like her to respond too, and they're all in on it. I mean, they shouldn't be able to even talk to each other. I mean, they sit sit

    Speaker 8: sit apart, like I said, and don't get up until the meeting's over.

    Speaker 9: And we might get some results. I mean, I don't know. It's just Hey. Hey. Just real quick here. I know, Annette, you have your hand up. I just wanted to say this. It's a true mega. Oh, I mean

    Speaker 9: I'm not sure if you were in here earlier. You probably didn't hear it. But tomorrow is huge,

    Speaker 9: and I just wanna repeat it. Everybody needs to keep their head on a big swivel

    Speaker 9: for the, Charlie Kirk Memorial in Arizona.

    Speaker 9: We've been looking at that real close.

    Speaker 9: And,

    Speaker 9: I just hope that everybody really watches close because

    Speaker 9: there's a lot of things

    Speaker 9: that have been back channel chatter.

    Speaker 9: We already know that you don't probably go into a casket in forty eight hours.

    Speaker 9: We can sit there and, like, debate all that stuff,

    Speaker 9: but he's in a casket in forty eight hours

    Speaker 9: after the biggest mass casualty,

    Speaker 9: biggest,

    Speaker 9: assassination

    Speaker 9: in America's history

    Speaker 9: for probably, what, fifty years, and he's in a casket in forty eight hours.

    Speaker 9: So,

    Speaker 9: tomorrow's gonna be very wild. They announced the entire lineup

    Speaker 9: on Fox today of who's going to be there, what exact time, and they have over a 100,000

    Speaker 9: people.

    Speaker 9: And they already announced there's gonna be overflow of at least 40,000

    Speaker 9: in an adjacent hockey arena. So god bless everybody that's going to that.

    Speaker 3: And to Kyle's,

    Speaker 3: point,

    Speaker 3: Glenn Beck, I thought, was correct.

    Speaker 3: In the number of members of the administration

    Speaker 3: that are planning on being there,

    Speaker 3: Beck said,

    Speaker 3: I think this might be a lone survivor event.

    Speaker 3: Yep. He said if if the if the Earth opens up and swallows that stadium,

    Speaker 3: they gotta have somebody set up somewhere to take over because it's gonna take the majority of the administration out.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. They said Vance and Trump are both going to be there. And all of the secretaries

    Speaker 3: of all Amen. Yeah. All of the secretaries too. Plus, all of the podcasters

    Speaker 3: and show people

    Speaker 3: because what Beck was saying was because he's got private security, he knows this.

    Speaker 3: It didn't matter who your security people are, even if they're badged,

    Speaker 3: whatever that means, badged in that state maybe that they live in. He said they they are going to be allowed to take their people. Like, his security guys can walk him to whatever his seat he's gonna be in on the floor. Apparently, at the bottom is where all the important people will be on the ground.

    Speaker 3: He said, and then they all of the security

    Speaker 3: guys have to back away

    Speaker 3: and get

    Speaker 3: be in the tunnels and wait because secret service is taking over everything on the floor.

    Speaker 3: And can we be sure about Secret Service at this point?

    Speaker 3: I'm just throwing that out there.

    Speaker 2: That's a big no.

    Speaker 3: We can't trust the FBI. They're talking about closing the stinking case on

    Speaker 3: Charlie already.

    Speaker 9: So I think the biggest thing to be aware of, girls and boys, is the air,

    Speaker 9: air quality. Yes. And, and and definitely, obviously, you know, rooftops, but the air quality is huge here.

    Speaker 9: There's gonna be a wind.

    Speaker 3: Me and T were looking earlier. Yeah. She posted that. I saw that. That's ugly.

    Speaker 7: Thank you. Yep. Yep. She nailed it. Yeah. Well, I didn't post I went a little further deep dive. I know I sound like an absolute

    Speaker 7: schizophrenic, and that's okay because, oh, well, I guess the vaccine did that to me. But I actually said

    Speaker 7: we all know this. Everything goes from west to east. Right? Everybody everybody knows this. The weather comes from the West to the east In when you're in the central land, well, I'm not on the ocean, so that's different. But they create weather. I told you about the valley fever. It's real. It's really, really real. I started looking at all the different

    Speaker 7: places, the valley it's Tucson,

    Speaker 7: and there's five specific places that are most prominent. They are all

    Speaker 7: around in a kind of like a backward sea around Glendale where he this is going to be held. And I'm like, that doesn't make sense. They're all a little bit southeast, but the wind goes to the west. Guess what? I found the wind trajectory for tomorrow in Arizona in Glendale

    Speaker 7: and from I actually took screenshots. I'll put them in the bulb. I know this sounds crazy, but

    Speaker 7: valley fever will kill you. If it gets in your brain, it will kill you. It can cause you to go into a coma. It causes vasculitis. It but it presents like pneumonia or a cough or flu like symptoms immediately

    Speaker 7: or within three weeks. That's that's fast enough for me. But people are gonna not remember. They're just gonna be sick suddenly. Right? And it's most prominent

    Speaker 7: guess when? Late summer, early fall. Where are we? Perfect timing. Number two,

    Speaker 7: the wind trajectory starting at 12AM tonight is all going east. Arrow's going east, east, east, east, east. Then right around nine or ten, it just the compass changes, and it's going

    Speaker 7: northwest

    Speaker 7: directly towards Glendale. Shit you not. I'm gonna I'll put it in the bubble. Like, you can't make this shit up. It's there. It's right in our faces. And and and, Tee, all the all these cities that you looked and that we went ahead and researched, they're all within a 100 miles

    Speaker 9: or less. One of the cities was 22 miles. One of them was nine miles. Yes. There's six of them. Mhmm.

    Speaker 9: A 100%. So you're looking at all the pinpoint accurate positions.

    Speaker 9: The other I think the other big thing I'll just finish with this. The other big thing to do

    Speaker 9: is be prepared.

    Speaker 9: I think that one day with the whole Kirk thing, a lot of people were totally

    Speaker 9: taken off guard. I remember Tee actually called me right away

    Speaker 9: just like with Pennsylvania. Right?

    Speaker 9: And so when I said mass casualty, I misspoke earlier.

    Speaker 9: I didn't mean mass casualty meant for the Kirk deal. I meant if you think about Vegas, right,

    Speaker 9: in 2017,

    Speaker 9: and then you fast forward to Pennsylvania,

    Speaker 9: Every single one of these has something very much congruent,

    Speaker 9: which is they're not

    Speaker 9: putting it out. They're not telling you. And

    Speaker 9: I don't think I'll ever forget

    Speaker 9: the image, and Tee was right on it. She's been to more funerals than I think any of us in this room

    Speaker 9: combined.

    Speaker 9: And when you look at those hands

    Speaker 9: and you look at the position of those hands in that casket,

    Speaker 9: forty eight hours later, I'm sorry.

    Speaker 9: There is no way I'm biting here. I cannot bite on this. And all these people are like, oh, yep. Sorry. Like, I get it. Like, he's a great guy. He was a good guy. If if he's gone, god bless him and his family. But how are we gonna bite on this, folks?

    Speaker 9: Forty eight hours?

    Speaker 9: Forty eight hours

    Speaker 9: in the casket.

    Speaker 9: That's all.

    Speaker 3: There's a lot of stuff,

    Speaker 3: Kyle, that makes no

    Speaker 3: sense.

    Speaker 8: Yeah. I mean, that chair,

    Speaker 8: they picked up the bloodied chair and stood on it right after it took down the recording device above it.

    Speaker 8: A bunch of people saw, like, drones little drone those little tiny drones flying around.

    Speaker 8: But if you guys want me to tell you what I think, I will. I mean, I don't know if this is true and stuff,

    Speaker 8: but there's a guy with something in his pocket that

    Speaker 8: you can see what it is in his back pocket. And if you flip it upside down, it's

    Speaker 8: it's something that fits in your palm, and it shoots something. Oh, yeah. There's not And it reset it. There was one guy Let me just and he's been running through the crowd.

    Speaker 8: Yeah. And this same guy

    Speaker 8: hopped over the barricade after, and he's one of the guy. The thing the guy that's carrying him to the helicopter

    Speaker 8: and all the other guys, which there was no ambulance, they took him to some kind of helicopter. And this guy has it in his back. No. They threw him like And he's had traumatic. I watched him. They loaded him into a black SUV

    Speaker 3: and drove him about four miles to the hospital.

    Speaker 3: There was no ambulance on-site, and the ambulance passed them as they were en route to the hospital.

    Speaker 8: Yeah. This dude that, had that thing in his pocket was part of the guy carrying him, so I don't know what the heck happened. But and all the other the other guy that was carrying him was one of the guys that was behind him

    Speaker 8: waving and stuff. So there's some weird stuff going down.

    Speaker 8: And then, Cash said, if you get on that roof, you could just ask yeah. He goes, how can you get on that roof? And Cash said, well, basically, there's a staircase in the back and anybody could walk right up to the roof. So you're telling me after Trump got shot from a roof, they're not gonna secure that little staircase. I mean, nothing makes sense about it. Right? Well, the

    Speaker 3: according to,

    Speaker 3: one of the men that was behind him is a guy named Frank Turek. He's a pastor.

    Speaker 3: And he,

    Speaker 3: he said that

    Speaker 3: because Megyn Kelly Megyn Kelly asked him,

    Speaker 3: why weren't the roofs covered?

    Speaker 3: And he said, I can't say for sure,

    Speaker 3: but my understanding

    Speaker 3: is

    Speaker 3: that the agreement was the campus would secure the roofs.

    Speaker 3: Isn't that what we went through in Butler?

    Speaker 3: The local cops would secure the roofs.

    Speaker 8: Well, that would double

    Speaker 3: So,

    Speaker 3: yeah.

    Speaker 8: And my opinion, Charlie I don't wanna be mean or anything, but I've always saw Charlie look weird to me. And not weird, but he looked like he has autism. Does he have autism? Because he has that phase of autism. I mean, it's possible, but he certainly had an IQ out out numbering all of us, I'm pretty sure. Because he kept woah. Yeah. A lot of autism people do that. He was really smart. Yeah. Well, I was saying he might need some kinda so if he did have autism, he could he could be, like, some

    Speaker 8: big pharma example, you know, like because everybody's been saying their vaccines give autism to everybody. Right? Well, maybe they're trying to put this guy out there that

    Speaker 8: someday he was gonna disclose, I have autism, and I'm this big smart dude. Well, they are smart. I mean, I went to school, and our school had handicapped guys here, and this one guy could recite every freaking baseball player none of us could remember. He knew every name, every stat, but he was in the special needs class over there because he just didn't talk right or something. But those guys are smart as heck. That's called a savant.

    Speaker 2: That's called a savant. And, that's

    Speaker 2: pretty pretty rare thing, and it's,

    Speaker 2: it's,

    Speaker 2: it's not something you see associated with,

    Speaker 2: vaccinations, but,

    Speaker 2: it it does happen there. And there's yeah. I'm trying to think of,

    Speaker 2: who was the woman who,

    Speaker 2: played on taxi,

    Speaker 2: red haired. She she had this incredible memory. She could tell you whatever Mary Lou Henner. There you go. Mary Lou Henner. So, So, you know, there's a there was always been people who have those kind of gifted

    Speaker 2: things.

    Speaker 2: But, yeah, you're you're describing a savant. So

    Speaker 2: I doubt that Farmer would ever try to take credit for that because, you know, that's not been associated with that. But but I will say this. He he definitely was very brilliant and can definitely had a high IQ,

    Speaker 2: and it's very sad that,

    Speaker 2: this has happened.

    Speaker 2: But there's been some very good things come out of it in the sense that people seem to be much more bold about,

    Speaker 2: standing up and speaking the truth. And so,

    Speaker 2: you know,

    Speaker 2: we also see people disavowing

    Speaker 2: violence and political violence. So,

    Speaker 2: try to see the silver lining on what is a very terrible cloud.

    Speaker 3: And, Drew, Maga, just so you know, the the guys who took the cameras, they they were true Turning Point guys.

    Speaker 3: The one guy,

    Speaker 3: Candace Owens recognized him,

    Speaker 3: had worked with him for a couple of years in her early time with tan with Turning Point. She texted him. He called her back,

    Speaker 3: And he admitted, yes. I took the cameras

    Speaker 3: because that's the high definition video of exactly what happened. And I wasn't taking any chances that that was gonna fall into the wrong hands. And I'm scheduled to turn it over to the FBI.

    Speaker 3: And she said,

    Speaker 3: yeah. I wanna see that before you do it. And he was like, well, I you know, it's all high definition.

    Speaker 3: I don't know that I can send it to you. They they ended up doing she wanted particularly

    Speaker 3: to see what happened from the one that you that everybody noticed, the one that was taken down from the back of the tent because

    Speaker 3: he was supposedly shot with a 30 aught six in the throat. And if anybody's ever shot a deer, you know that that's gonna go straight through. It's gonna be really bad on the backside because it's gonna take out a lot of

    Speaker 3: meat, basically.

    Speaker 3: And in this case,

    Speaker 3: there was

    Speaker 3: no

    Speaker 3: hole or damage to the back of his neck or head.

    Speaker 3: He

    Speaker 3: the the cameraman

    Speaker 3: shared it on a FaceTime

    Speaker 3: so that she could see it. She had him replay it multiple times,

    Speaker 3: and she's still going to work on him to try to get all of the digital stuff.

    Speaker 3: But he's in hiding.

    Speaker 3: He is afraid for him himself and particularly for his wife.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: but he he that was the reason he took everything down. He didn't know whether they were gonna have be overrun with people

    Speaker 3: or local cops, or the FBI,

    Speaker 3: and he wanted to make sure that that stuff was safeguarded.

    Speaker 3: So

    Speaker 8: Yeah. But I mean yeah. Okay. I mean that's but,

    Speaker 8: I mean, like,

    Speaker 8: if you're there, okay, you're just at the mall, let's say, right, and somebody gets shot right next to you. And there's security guys at the mall, like, cop guys.

    Speaker 8: Well, everybody's gonna back up first, right, so they don't get shot. So there's gonna be, like, this circle. Like, when you see people fighting,

    Speaker 8: It's gonna be a circle first. Let's talk about reality. Okay? Nobody's gonna run-in there and step on a bloody chair

    Speaker 8: because that's a crime scene.

    Speaker 8: So if you do that, you should be arrested, actually. I mean, you shouldn't touch a crime scene. You shouldn't even go near it. But the cops around there should keep you away from that crime scene.

    Speaker 8: So everybody shouldn't touch a crime scene. Everybody's back around nobody wants to go in a crime scene right now

    Speaker 8: unless you're not afraid to get shot again or something. I mean, what is the shooter still shooting? Right?

    Speaker 8: You're gonna jump up on a chair, a bloody you're gonna stand up a bloody chair, put your feet on it. Now you've you've destroyed all the evidence.

    Speaker 8: I mean, that's it. It's over. They didn't You can't even use that evidence anymore. No court of law is gonna use that evidence. Right? So you direct the crime scene. I mean,

    Speaker 8: it just doesn't add up. I think he's still alive, basically. I don't even know what the hell is going on. No. I I don't believe he's alive. There's too many,

    Speaker 3: too many trauma surgeons who have weighed in on what they saw. And,

    Speaker 8: and it's it it No damage in the back of Maga.

    Speaker 8: There's no damage. Through Maga.

    Speaker 3: We have to accept the possibility that the three the 30 ought six may not have been the murder weapon.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. I I wish I had it,

    Speaker 2: but I did see some footage of a gentleman today purporting,

    Speaker 2: showing if if you were sitting in Charlie's position, two people to Charlie's right,

    Speaker 2: and purporting to show someone raising what looks like a firearm.

    Speaker 2: And then he showed close-up footage of the actual, you know, footage that's been circulating of Charlie when he's hit.

    Speaker 2: And he purported to show,

    Speaker 2: a actual high a bullet hitting Charlie from his right in the right backside of the neck, and then that trajectory would make sense if it came out the front left because that would be a direct linear,

    Speaker 2: movement of the bullet from right rear to left front.

    Speaker 2: Now,

    Speaker 2: again, with AI and everything, I'm not sure that I'm convinced that that that's realistic. But, also,

    Speaker 2: the man that he's showing lifting his arms up over in the crowd to the right,

    Speaker 2: you know, if that's a smaller caliber handgun, that would make sense,

    Speaker 2: that, you know, the trajectory and the fact that there wasn't any large exit wound

    Speaker 2: in the rear.

    Speaker 2: So I don't know. I need to find that again. But once again, I'm very skeptical because

    Speaker 2: it's so easy

    Speaker 2: with AI just to create things.

    Speaker 6: Well, then you are so correct on the fact that

    Speaker 6: a nine millimeter, say, you used. Okay?

    Speaker 6: You could do that and and not have the exit wound that you but 30 out of six, I'm sorry. It's just not happening. Right. Now So And now and and and if you guys,

    Speaker 3: Deborah, if you listen to this again, I know you're gonna know what I'm talking about.

    Speaker 3: If you listen to it, that's not a 30 aught six.

    Speaker 3: That's not a 30 aught six that went off. That would sound like a cannon

    Speaker 3: with or without the bowl that they're sitting in.

    Speaker 3: That was a that was a smaller caliber rifle.

    Speaker 3: There is a muzzle flash

    Speaker 3: on a Second Floor

    Speaker 3: on Charlie's right.

    Speaker 3: There are two

    Speaker 3: videos,

    Speaker 3: put out, one by a

    Speaker 3: navy seal,

    Speaker 3: in an interview with an established podcaster,

    Speaker 3: And another one that was put out,

    Speaker 3: I don't even know what this guy does, but apparently, he is

    Speaker 3: respected because it's being shared a lot, and he's just doing exactly

    Speaker 3: what Miriam described.

    Speaker 3: Entry just below the right ear,

    Speaker 3: exit left lower neck.

    Speaker 3: The concussion

    Speaker 3: would then

    Speaker 3: potentially

    Speaker 3: destroy the brain stem, and he was dead on impact.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. I mean, I I tend to believe that, yeah, that it that

    Speaker 2: Robinson is Patsy, and I tend to believe that he was shot from the right rear coming out the front left of the neck. But I don't know that we'll ever have, you know, definitive proof of that or that anybody will ever adopt that narrative and investigate it. But I I think that from a, you know, trajectory standpoint and from the sound

    Speaker 2: and from the blood that we saw,

    Speaker 2: at the exit wound, which I believe it was an exit wound and not an entry wound, and I did see that actual footage.

    Speaker 2: I I believe that, yeah, it was coming from from Charlie's right slash rear

    Speaker 2: right rear neck out front left.

    Speaker 2: As but, you know, again, I think they're working really hard to say case closed, and they don't want to explore that.

    Speaker 2: You know, and, again, only my opinion because I don't I don't have proof. It's just what I've seen people posting, and it makes a lot more sense than Tyler Robinson on a rooftop.

    Speaker 3: Yep. All day long.

    Speaker 3: I believe

    Speaker 3: that Tyler

    Speaker 3: may have been convinced

    Speaker 3: to bring his gun up and drop it somewhere like in the woods with a towel around it for someone else to use.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: they never needed to use it because that wasn't the plan. They just needed somebody to be

    Speaker 3: have a gun up there that would have DNA and finger

    Speaker 3: fingerprints on it that they could frame.

    Speaker 6: That's sad that on date night, we're, doing better than the FBI.

    Speaker 3: I don't wanna ignore Annette. She's had her hand up so long her arm's asleep.

    Speaker 5: Thank you. Thank you for my

    Speaker 5: great great conversations

    Speaker 5: tonight.

    Speaker 5: Everything rings a bell. You know? There's so many gems in here.

    Speaker 5: And,

    Speaker 5: we are

    Speaker 5: city nearby here.

    Speaker 5: We had a vigil,

    Speaker 5: kinda like vigil for Charlie Kirk.

    Speaker 5: And we've just thrown together by a local dude in three days and

    Speaker 5: no. Two days notice.

    Speaker 5: And it was really good turnout for our conservative

    Speaker 5: little town.

    Speaker 5: Yeah. It was, was beautiful. And then somebody took it and put it on Reddit.

    Speaker 5: And you can imagine what happened

    Speaker 5: because Reddit is the

    Speaker 5: the local liberal,

    Speaker 5: your version of Democrats,

    Speaker 5: forum.

    Speaker 5: And they ripped one of the local politicians who's always speaking out against this woke stuff.

    Speaker 5: They ripped him for being there

    Speaker 5: and, like, the the comments were just

    Speaker 5: horrendous.

    Speaker 5: And as a Christian,

    Speaker 5: I see what happened,

    Speaker 5: and I

    Speaker 5: I know it's an attack on Christianity.

    Speaker 5: And

    Speaker 5: I I know it

    Speaker 5: you know? And you don't know what to believe.

    Speaker 5: AI is so good with altering videos and,

    Speaker 5: like,

    Speaker 5: you you don't. You really

    Speaker 5: we we will never know. Like you said,

    Speaker 5: I I believe

    Speaker 5: that the person that they've

    Speaker 5: found

    Speaker 5: that supposedly

    Speaker 5: murdered him

    Speaker 5: is the patsy.

    Speaker 5: So I or

    Speaker 5: or something bigger was behind it.

    Speaker 5: I think it was Israel.

    Speaker 5: There's there goes that conspiracy theory.

    Speaker 5: But I've got a trusted health care provider,

    Speaker 5: and,

    Speaker 5: I am going to, excuse my language, un fuck myself.

    Speaker 5: Just one day at a time.

    Speaker 5: I had a beautiful night. You know? It it it was a great night.

    Speaker 5: We went out to a live outdoor concert

    Speaker 5: and saw old friends

    Speaker 5: and just had a really good time, but it was in a field,

    Speaker 5: and the train was rough.

    Speaker 5: And I'd had a few giggly puffs. I'll admit it. I haven't drank for over thirty years, but,

    Speaker 5: you know, I'll have a giggly puff.

    Speaker 5: And,

    Speaker 5: my legs don't work for it was dark. It got dark,

    Speaker 5: and I didn't fall.

    Speaker 5: But

    Speaker 5: it's

    Speaker 5: you know, the band was so good, and there was people up dancing.

    Speaker 5: And I and I can't dance anymore.

    Speaker 5: And,

    Speaker 5: you know, you don't even know what to blame because, you know, stupidity,

    Speaker 5: indoctrination,

    Speaker 5: blind trust.

    Speaker 5: I just all the things that Kyle mentioned there, the statins,

    Speaker 5: the twenty five years of flu shots is

    Speaker 5: a good nurse. You know?

    Speaker 5: I was asked to go to the vaccination

    Speaker 5: center. I was a

    Speaker 5: volunteer for Woke.

    Speaker 5: Oh, when I woke up, it was brutal.

    Speaker 5: For a Woke,

    Speaker 5: program in town called Rebound for Troubled Teens.

    Speaker 5: I used to have to sit across from

    Speaker 5: clearly girls

    Speaker 5: that identified as boys

    Speaker 5: and give them different pronouns. They actually give them tags. So

    Speaker 5: and I'm so old.

    Speaker 5: That's a girl. I'm I'm sorry.

    Speaker 5: But, anyway, because I was registered

    Speaker 5: volunteered with them, but they had closed down

    Speaker 5: in person stuff over COVID.

    Speaker 5: They they gave their volunteer list because we're all checked and everything

    Speaker 5: to,

    Speaker 5: the volunteer vaccination centers

    Speaker 5: or not volunteer, but the mass vaccinate

    Speaker 5: vaccination centers.

    Speaker 5: And they called and asked me if I would

    Speaker 5: come in and volunteer at the arena to give COVID shots.

    Speaker 5: And

    Speaker 5: at the time, I was severely depressed,

    Speaker 5: and I took antidepressants

    Speaker 5: for twenty five years.

    Speaker 5: And I was still depressed.

    Speaker 5: And the good news is,

    Speaker 5: I'm doing much better since I've gone off them.

    Speaker 5: You know?

    Speaker 5: When you're harmed by by fireman, you you you don't wanna go back there.

    Speaker 5: As a matter of fact, I went and had my eyes checked, and

    Speaker 5: I have a three out of four gray cataract.

    Speaker 5: And I can't see at night anymore,

    Speaker 5: and they're recommending

    Speaker 5: that,

    Speaker 5: I have it removed.

    Speaker 5: And I happen to know that those shots that they give you to freeze your eyeball

    Speaker 5: have graphene oxide in it.

    Speaker 5: And

    Speaker 5: I I I I I'm still taking binders. I take binders because we're exposed to this shit every day,

    Speaker 5: but I haven't,

    Speaker 5: I did get my aluminum rechecked, but not the same test I had before. My my aluminum levels have gone down

    Speaker 5: some. But,

    Speaker 5: in my memory,

    Speaker 5: I met people tonight. Pop would say, who was that? I went,

    Speaker 5: like, five minutes later, I can't remember their name. It's like t said.

    Speaker 5: There's so many things

    Speaker 5: that I've heard and,

    Speaker 5: you know, and my daughter,

    Speaker 5: she

    Speaker 5: it's really it's bad.

    Speaker 5: And

    Speaker 5: I think of all the great things she had accomplished. You know?

    Speaker 5: She went she went

    Speaker 5: to three different college courses, and

    Speaker 5: right, she was a volunteer firefighter. She

    Speaker 5: paramedic.

    Speaker 5: She took the nursing program,

    Speaker 5: and then she got a job at my hospital. The first the first position she got was on the same unit as me.

    Speaker 5: Psych ward. So she had to call me nurse Annette.

    Speaker 5: And one time she slipped to call me mom.

    Speaker 5: Not that we don't look like the Bobsy twins, but

    Speaker 5: she rollerbladed

    Speaker 5: and

    Speaker 5: did all that shit.

    Speaker 5: She's really mentally

    Speaker 5: declining,

    Speaker 5: like, decompensating,

    Speaker 5: like, fixed delusions.

    Speaker 5: It's really interfering,

    Speaker 5: and

    Speaker 5: I get that you get angry sometimes.

    Speaker 5: You just like,

    Speaker 5: you know, then they then they assassinate Charlie Kirk. And he is so

    Speaker 5: yeah. I think it's a distraction.

    Speaker 5: A lot of it. It's

    Speaker 5: they're keeping us in a states of confusion

    Speaker 5: and

    Speaker 5: and chaos.

    Speaker 5: And, you know, we just need to get back to God, and I have to know that

    Speaker 5: I do not have to fear because I am covered by the armor of

    Speaker 5: God,

    Speaker 5: and I'm gonna be okay

    Speaker 5: no matter what happens here.

    Speaker 5: You know? We will never know how, who, why,

    Speaker 5: you know, the in the big picture,

    Speaker 5: you know, we're all we got.

    Speaker 5: And I'm so glad you're here, and

    Speaker 5: again,

    Speaker 5: another great space. Thank you.

    Speaker 1: We are so glad you're here too, and I'm I'm so glad you were able to come on and share that with us tonight. That was so

    Speaker 1: so touching, and and I'm I'm glad I was able to hear it. And I hope you'll come on again

    Speaker 1: and share with us again sometime soon.

    Speaker 1: We've been waiting for quite some time for the reading of the names unless you covered that protocol, widow, while I was away during the storm.

    Speaker 3: No. No. I didn't I didn't do that yet.

    Speaker 3: I wasn't sure where you were, and I didn't wanna do it with you not being here. So,

    Speaker 3: we had, you know, hands up, and I thought we would take the hands first. So

    Speaker 3: if you want me to do that now, I can do that. Or or whenever you're ready.

    Speaker 1: Oh, I'm I'm ready. Takes a just takes a bit of gearing up for because it's just so so tragically sad and especially during this season when the list is

    Speaker 1: so heartbreakingly

    Speaker 1: long.

    Speaker 3: That is a definite yes. It is long, and it is heartbreaking.

    Speaker 3: And for anybody that happens to have joined this space and not really sure

    Speaker 3: anything about us,

    Speaker 3: the host, Chelsea,

    Speaker 3: built

    Speaker 3: what could only be considered a platform, not a website.

    Speaker 3: And,

    Speaker 3: on that platform,

    Speaker 3: you will find

    Speaker 3: the stories

    Speaker 3: of a number of different victims of COVID.

    Speaker 3: Not COVID the

    Speaker 3: illness, but COVID

    Speaker 3: the program,

    Speaker 3: because this was all a government

    Speaker 3: fiasco

    Speaker 3: designed

    Speaker 3: to kill and intimidate.

    Speaker 3: That's my opinion, not necessarily the host's opinion.

    Speaker 3: However,

    Speaker 3: the,

    Speaker 3: the people who have passed,

    Speaker 3: whose names are on that platform,

    Speaker 3: we read the memorial names for their death date.

    Speaker 3: And tonight, we'll cover

    Speaker 3: the twentieth

    Speaker 3: through the twenty sixth. So that's today, Saturday,

    Speaker 3: through next Friday.

    Speaker 3: Anyone who is is their story has been told.

    Speaker 3: I am gonna read their name

    Speaker 3: and their

    Speaker 3: loved one's name who turned their story in.

    Speaker 3: James Maxwell was killed on 09/20/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Nikki Maxwell.

    Speaker 3: Carla

    Speaker 3: Masterson

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/20/2021.

    Speaker 3: Her story was told by her daughter,

    Speaker 3: Shonda

    Speaker 3: Masterson.

    Speaker 3: John Conway junior

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/21/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Michelle Conway.

    Speaker 3: William Brown was killed on 09/21/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife,

    Speaker 3: Jerry Brown.

    Speaker 3: Ian Bonnet

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/21/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Catherine Bonnet.

    Speaker 3: Robert Guntner

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/21/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Elizabeth

    Speaker 3: Guntner.

    Speaker 3: Andy Lawhon

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/22/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his daughter, Leslie

    Speaker 3: Hobson.

    Speaker 3: Calvin

    Speaker 3: Jones

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/22/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Teresa Jones.

    Speaker 3: Ronnie

    Speaker 3: Brock was killed on 09/22/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife,

    Speaker 3: Diane Sayer Brock.

    Speaker 3: Michael Hobbs was killed on 09/22/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Theresa Hobbs.

    Speaker 3: Shannon McDonald

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/23/2021.

    Speaker 3: Her story was told by her son,

    Speaker 3: Toby Dixon.

    Speaker 3: Ricardo Fimbrez

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/23/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Janice Fimbres,

    Speaker 3: and daughter, Jocelyn Fimbres.

    Speaker 3: Steve Wood was killed on 09/23/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Kimberly Wood.

    Speaker 3: Anthony Watley

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/24/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Dawn Watley.

    Speaker 3: Elfred Ketu was killed on 09/25/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Doreen Ketu.

    Speaker 3: Jonathan Shaw was killed on 09/25/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his mother,

    Speaker 3: Beth Crane.

    Speaker 3: Jacob

    Speaker 3: Karasaka

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/25/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his mother,

    Speaker 3: Tasha

    Speaker 3: Karasaka.

    Speaker 3: Jeffrey Smith was killed on 09/25/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Julie Smith.

    Speaker 3: Gerald Pishon

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/25/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Tamara Pishon.

    Speaker 3: Philip Booth

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/25/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Tracy Booth.

    Speaker 3: Gregory Powell was killed on 09/26/2020.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Sharon Powell.

    Speaker 3: Ken Stifler

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/26/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife, Stephanie Stifler.

    Speaker 3: Stephen Blatt was killed on 09/26/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife,

    Speaker 3: Arlene Bright.

    Speaker 3: Ronald Flaherty was killed on 09/26/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife,

    Speaker 3: Mikaela Flaherty, and sisters,

    Speaker 3: Rochelle Ralston

    Speaker 3: and Rhonda Norris.

    Speaker 3: Shannon McDonald

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/26/2021.

    Speaker 3: Her story was told by her mother,

    Speaker 3: Patricia Jordan.

    Speaker 3: Rich Michael Wood

    Speaker 3: Hood. Michael Hood was killed on 09/26/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his sister,

    Speaker 3: Sue Roberson.

    Speaker 3: Leo Shishmanian

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/26/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife,

    Speaker 3: Andrea

    Speaker 3: Shishmanian.

    Speaker 3: Raul Galinda

    Speaker 3: was killed on 09/26/2021.

    Speaker 3: His story was told by his wife,

    Speaker 3: Laura Galindo.

    Speaker 3: The members of the COVID nineteen humanity memory

    Speaker 3: betrayal

    Speaker 3: project

    Speaker 3: want to extend

    Speaker 3: our deepest sympathies

    Speaker 3: to all of our families

    Speaker 3: for these horrific crimes.

    Speaker 1: They're just there aren't words.

    Speaker 3: No.

    Speaker 3: There

    Speaker 3: aren't. It's just

    Speaker 3: unreal.

    Speaker 3: When you think about

    Speaker 3: the extrapolation

    Speaker 3: of

    Speaker 3: this is the tiniest

    Speaker 3: microcosm

    Speaker 3: of what actually

    Speaker 3: happened.

    Speaker 3: Extrapolate

    Speaker 3: out

    Speaker 3: these names,

    Speaker 3: these families,

    Speaker 3: because we're talking about

    Speaker 3: 2021.

    Speaker 3: Majority of these people, there was only one from 2020.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: like Miriam's loss

    Speaker 3: that had nothing no no chance of being related to the shot.

    Speaker 3: But these ones from 2021,

    Speaker 3: there's a possibility

    Speaker 3: that these were part

    Speaker 3: these aren't all necessarily protocol deaths

    Speaker 3: because the shots start we're killing people in 2021

    Speaker 3: as well.

    Speaker 6: Siri, do you know the total?

    Speaker 6: No. That was a lot.

    Speaker 3: This was, 28.

    Speaker 3: We've actually had the last three weeks were more people that we talked about.

    Speaker 3: Wow. It just seems really, really long. It is. It it it That's so heartbreaking. It it looks like it when I when I type it up. It really does.

    Speaker 3: So

    Speaker 1: You you twigged me, protocol widow, when you said COVID, not not the virus, but the program

    Speaker 1: because,

    Speaker 1: one of my accounts

    Speaker 1: was

    Speaker 1: permanently I was it permanently suspended? I was suspended

    Speaker 1: for months

    Speaker 1: for quoting Biden

    Speaker 1: Biden verbatim

    Speaker 1: when he he said,

    Speaker 1: I know you all know, but a lot of people may not know what COVID is. That is a system whereby we provide funding for states to be able to get access to vaccines.

    Speaker 1: And it sounded on its face like, you know, a typical

    Speaker 1: Biden blunder

    Speaker 1: that he misspoke.

    Speaker 1: But who

    Speaker 1: who could be?

    Speaker 1: Why would they suspend me

    Speaker 1: so relentlessly

    Speaker 1: just for quoting him verbatim and posting that video? And I pinned the

    Speaker 1: the screenshot of the suspension notice to the next.

    Speaker 1: Wow.

    Speaker 3: And that just occurred to me when I was saying

    Speaker 3: due to COVID and I I didn't want anyone in the audience to think that

    Speaker 3: I literally do not believe

    Speaker 3: that these patients died of COVID.

    Speaker 3: Did they get COVID? Maybe.

    Speaker 3: Maybe they had pneumonia and they were misdiagnosed,

    Speaker 3: but they definitely died of the protocol or the shots.

    Speaker 3: It was not

    Speaker 3: the illness.

    Speaker 3: So that's just me.

    Speaker 6: They could get away with that because of the PCR, so that's how they pulled that off. Mhmm.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. Because they it was it was a faulty test that was designed,

    Speaker 3: not designed. I'm sorry. I I misspoke on that. That was

    Speaker 3: instituted because it could be manipulated.

    Speaker 7: That's it. They just give it even posted in the past many times. I have the inserts for them, and it says right in it that it contains

    Speaker 7: animal biohazard

    Speaker 7: material. It's in black and white in the insert. I kept it. It went to my lawyer. Like,

    Speaker 7: it it it's right there. It shows that it was only tested on,

    Speaker 7: was it 10 facilities

    Speaker 7: globally?

    Speaker 7: Like, before it was released, 250

    Speaker 7: people. It's it's in black and white on a it's like that shiny insert. It's huge. It's like 20 by 20, and it's double sided. It's the smallest little writing. I had to use a mag a literal magnifying glass to find where they hid what they wrote, but it it's

    Speaker 7: that's true. And like I said before, and not that anyone's asking, and I apologize to cut you off, but I told you what I used to do as a regional nursing director. I had 400 residents per home in 10 homes. That's 4,000 patients geriatric.

    Speaker 7: And in 2020, I was still working full time as a nurse. I was perfectly healthy. I was very tired, but I wasn't sick, never got COVID, none of my staff. I had a over a 100 staff per building.

    Speaker 7: That's a lot of people to be in charge of.

    Speaker 7: No one died of COVID. And then my best friend who ran at that different company, my actual competitor at that time,

    Speaker 7: she didn't have any COVID deaths either. That's in Canada, mind you, but we're in the biggest we're in the capital, Ontario.

    Speaker 7: So it's pretty interesting when you're running, like, 20 separate different even competing,

    Speaker 7: competitors

    Speaker 7: in a geriatric facility, which is these are the people that were supposed to die, and no one got COVID and none of the staff died. No one no one tested well, people tested positive, but they had no symptoms. And that's when I knew the PCR tests were weird. There's something wrong.

    Speaker 3: Keeper, what

    Speaker 3: when you were talking about your insert, what brand?

    Speaker 3: Let me look. I'll have to find it. It's in one of my banker boxes. Just Oh, no. You don't have to go looking for it. I was just wondering if it it was Moderna for Pfizer or if you guys were using,

    Speaker 3: one of the other ones that might not have been, you know, marketed here. And the reason that I say this

    Speaker 3: is I go back in 2023.

    Speaker 3: I wanna say it was January or February,

    Speaker 3: on Epoch Times,

    Speaker 3: they run a

    Speaker 3: series called American Thought Leaders.

    Speaker 3: And Jan Yakelick

    Speaker 3: was interviewing

    Speaker 3: Aaron Siri. And for many of us, I you know, when it comes to vaccines, Aaron Siri is a hero.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: Aaron

    Speaker 3: is our probably preeminent

    Speaker 3: vaccine

    Speaker 3: fighting attorney

    Speaker 3: for

    Speaker 3: legal rights under the law

    Speaker 3: federally.

    Speaker 3: And so

    Speaker 3: Jan was

    Speaker 3: the look

    Speaker 3: on Jan Yakelick's face because

    Speaker 3: Aaron is spitting out statistics

    Speaker 3: and medical information

    Speaker 3: and, you know, just like the percentage and this many of test subjects and blah blah blah blah about all vaccines.

    Speaker 3: And Jan said,

    Speaker 3: okay. Alright. Because the thing is, many of you already know,

    Speaker 3: vaccinations

    Speaker 3: for children

    Speaker 3: or any any vaccines before approval,

    Speaker 3: none of them have been tested

    Speaker 3: on,

    Speaker 3: in a true placebo controlled blind study. It just hasn't happened.

    Speaker 3: And so

    Speaker 3: Jan said

    Speaker 3: to Aaron,

    Speaker 3: what

    Speaker 3: okay. Okay. Okay. He says

    Speaker 3: because he was horrified. And he finally said, which one had the longest study period before it was approved for use?

    Speaker 3: Which one,

    Speaker 3: t? Which one, Miriam? Which one is it, Miriam? I see you've got your mic open.

    Speaker 3: Nope. She hung up on me.

    Speaker 2: I

    Speaker 2: cannot recall, but

    Speaker 2: which one which one of the childhood vaccines Nope. By name? Which which vaccine,

    Speaker 3: in general,

    Speaker 3: has the

    Speaker 3: longest running

    Speaker 3: study prior to licensure?

    Speaker 2: I do not

    Speaker 2: if I heard it, I don't recall. I'm sorry. I wish I could help. You you are you are all

    Speaker 3: going to hate life.

    Speaker 3: It was the COVID vaccine

    Speaker 3: because technically,

    Speaker 3: it's been studied for decades

    Speaker 3: and they knew it was deadly before they changed the meaning of the word

    Speaker 3: vaccine.

    Speaker 2: Yes.

    Speaker 2: That's correct. Because they were working on that technology for, like, twenty years. Yep. And They absolutely knew all the problems with it and everything. Yep. Because they were killing animals left and right.

    Speaker 3: The the animals were dying from all sorts of things, usually cancers.

    Speaker 7: I I found it. Oh, yay. The minute

    Speaker 7: yeah. Because I I was organized. I had to go see that, POTS cardiologist member just recently, so I have everything in a folder. So this is it. It's it's massive, and it's that laminated kind of stuff, but it's it's it's got all the stuff here.

    Speaker 7: Mhmm. And, so it's rapid response. This one, they were also given out at Walmart. And I know in Canada States, we all use Walmart. So they were giving these out for free as well. So this is another one,

    Speaker 7: BTNX.

    Speaker 7: That's,

    Speaker 7: BTNX

    Speaker 7: Inc, and there's, like, a little hydrogen symbol with the little arms hanging off with the circles.

    Speaker 7: And it's rapid response rapid response test device.

    Speaker 7: And so, basically, what this says is, I I just highlight these two small little tiny pieces. Just let me get my magnifying glass out. My Flintstone I thought you were talking about the insert for your vaccine.

    Speaker 7: What Oh, no. I was gonna ask that question, and I thought she was talking about the PCR. So that's good to know. Yeah. This is this is the PCR. This is how bad it is. They were poisoning us with the the PCR. Listen to this. I I got my magnifying I believe that too. I Yeah. It's big. I'm gonna take a picture. It's kinda sexy. It looks like, Flintstone horn. It's really big. I don't know. I like home decor, and this is just odd, but I am now. I actually have I have to actually use it now. It used to be for decor.

    Speaker 7: Okay. This is what it says. One second. One second. Here it goes. This device and trust me. This writing's very tiny. I'm not old. The device

    Speaker 7: contains

    Speaker 7: the wait.

    Speaker 7: This device contains material of animal origin

    Speaker 7: and should be handled as a potential

    Speaker 7: biohazard.

    Speaker 7: Do not use if the pouch is damaged or open. Now that's somewhere way on. This is two full pages of tiny, tiny writing. Then I find way over not even close to that. And most of this, I don't even understand, I'll be honest. It's very scientific.

    Speaker 7: This says,

    Speaker 7: the performance of the rapid response COVID nineteen antigen rapid test device

    Speaker 7: was established with 82

    Speaker 7: direct nasopharyngeal

    Speaker 7: swabs

    Speaker 7: collected and enrolled from individual

    Speaker 7: symptomatic patients who were suspected

    Speaker 7: of COVID nineteen, period.

    Speaker 7: Samples were freshly collected

    Speaker 7: from two sites oh, it's worse than I said. From two sites where the operators were minimally trained.

    Speaker 7: That is exactly what it says. Forty six positive specimens

    Speaker 7: and thirty six negative specimens were confirmed by RT PCR.

    Speaker 7: And, the performance of the rapid response COVID nineteen antigen rapid test device based on these results from these two sites is summarized below. And then, of course, it just shows it just shows it's a fucking lie.

    Speaker 7: It's a fucking lie.

    Speaker 7: Yeah. This is it.

    Speaker 7: I don't know how I can't win a legal case having this in my hand, but I'm probably gonna get my house burned down. If my house burns down tonight, ladies

    Speaker 7: I heard you. I heard you. I'm not kidding. I'm gonna send you a picture of it because I tried it I did I've posted and then I also posted the video of Tedros in March

    Speaker 7: 2025

    Speaker 7: where I caught him at the conference, and he's actually saying,

    Speaker 7: we

    Speaker 7: first learned

    Speaker 7: of

    Speaker 7: the

    Speaker 7: pandemic. The oh, pneumonia,

    Speaker 7: like what was it? It's it's on my page. I posted it when I found it. And I didn't it's a huge conference, so I actually just clicked one minute of it. He says he says right there, it was oh, yeah. Viral pneumonia. That's in March 2025. He's at a conference

    Speaker 7: calling it viral pneumonia. I shit you not. He quotes it. It is viral pneumonia as of March 2025. He says it. And I'm like, fuck. Hey, Pete. As his neck was shaking does anybody remember the clip

    Speaker 9: where his neck was shaking?

    Speaker 9: It was, like, convulsing,

    Speaker 9: and, like, people zoomed up on the neck, and they go, what the hell is going on right now? And I and I did you say Tedros, or are you talking about the other guy?

    Speaker 9: I'm pretty sure it was Tedros. The the clip I have

    Speaker 7: after my research and continuous investigation

    Speaker 7: is

    Speaker 7: Tedros, t e d r o s, from the WHO

    Speaker 7: standing

    Speaker 7: at the conference

    Speaker 7: explaining that it was viral pneumonia. As of five years ago today, we detected viral pneumonia.

    Speaker 7: That's exactly what he says.

    Speaker 7: Mhmm.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. Yeah. And so so I I so I was thinking about, Burla.

    Speaker 3: Oh, Burla. Yeah. Yeah.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. Our boy. His neck was convulsing,

    Speaker 9: like something was inside of his neck trying to get out. I don't know if you guys remember that part. But yes. Yeah. But but no. But but Tee has that a 100%. She posted the clip. I remember retweeting it right away,

    Speaker 9: from from Tedros.

    Speaker 9: But then Albert Bourla absolutely these people again, it's really hard to believe that they're human.

    Speaker 9: And then a few months ago, I just posted it. Tee just,

    Speaker 9: reminded me to post this,

    Speaker 9: just from what she was saying. And, so I I just posted the Pfizer ingredients,

    Speaker 9: in the current shot here in Nebraska

    Speaker 9: from this summer.

    Speaker 9: So I posted that in the bubble as well,

    Speaker 9: and then also that undercover clip where it she basically admitted that Moderna did not have an insert,

    Speaker 9: at Walmart. And that's what Tee just kinda rang my bell there a little bit again because

    Speaker 9: that's where I went was Walmart when I got the undercover video. So thanks, Tee. Appreciate it.

    Speaker 3: Good lord.

    Speaker 3: There

    Speaker 3: these people are everywhere, and they

    Speaker 3: they step on rakes every time you turn around because everything was a lie,

    Speaker 3: and they can't keep them all straight.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. That's a little bit of a problem for them. You know, when all you do is lie,

    Speaker 2: there's no way you can keep up with your lies. You're gonna it's gonna find you out,

    Speaker 2: and they're nothing but liars,

    Speaker 2: cheats,

    Speaker 2: murderers. That's exactly what they are.

    Speaker 7: I posted in the purple pill

    Speaker 7: the specific

    Speaker 7: that I highlighted in yellow. I know it's really tiny,

    Speaker 7: but I also took the large screenshot of it's huge, though. So if you really wanna read it yourself, it's gonna take some time of opening and closing. Okay?

    Speaker 7: Anyway, it's real. Like, this is this is terrifying

    Speaker 7: that they it just gets worse and worse. And I remember

    Speaker 7: when

    Speaker 7: this is another interesting thing. Like I said, running retirement homes. We would and, again, I did it for

    Speaker 7: seventeen years for the one facility.

    Speaker 7: So it's this clockwork of its repetitiveness. Right? It's like

    Speaker 7: every July,

    Speaker 7: we get all of our residents wait. This is for the Tamiflu, which is also poison. We know that now. I didn't know that at the time. I'll be honest. But

    Speaker 7: what we would do every July for all of our residents, we would go through all the consents for for flu viral, which was the type of or flu quad for the elderly depending on how old they were. And we go through the consents with either their power of attorney for care if they had dementia, or we went through with them if they were independent.

    Speaker 7: Every nurse would sit down, go through all the risks. If you were allergic to chicken, if you're allergic to eggs, if you're like, there were so much. There was pages and pages of consent forms just to get a flu shot.

    Speaker 7: And we would get that all in preparation, then we would have to do blood work for all the residents in the building, which was your creatinine because we needed to balance your creatinine with your weight to calculate Tamiflu

    Speaker 7: in the event of a facility wide outbreak. That's how it worked. It worked like that for decades and decades. If anyone else is a nurse and did this for a living, they know that's just what we did. So

    Speaker 7: we always had nasopharyngeal

    Speaker 7: swabs, which are the swabs that we use. These those PCR, that's the type of swab it is. It's very painful. If you do it right, you have to go from the nays the your nares, your hole in your nose, to your ear. That's how deep you have to go to get a nasopharyngeal

    Speaker 7: swab for influenza, strep b, all that stuff, influenza a. That was typical.

    Speaker 7: We would get bags of these things delivered to us in advance with the expiry dates. They had expiry dates, these swabs.

    Speaker 7: And then suddenly, I think I've said this before. I'm sorry if I'm repeating myself, but for anyone new.

    Speaker 7: Suddenly, they start taking swabs away from us. This is in before 2019.

    Speaker 7: It was twenty seventeen ish. And they start and I I called public health. I'm like, why why aren't you giving us the swabs in case we suspect there's influenza?

    Speaker 7: What what happened? Like, what well, we'll just bring you the one swab. I'm like, but you guys don't work either public health sector government workers. They don't work after 3PM on a Friday. They don't work on weekends. They don't work evenings. That's just the way it is. So I'm sorry if I'm offending anyone, but that's real life. And when you're a nurse and you're working twenty four seven and you're responsible for lives, you kinda need the swab right away and you wanna just get it done with. No. They stopped giving us the swabs, which was suspicious to me then, and my best friend knows because we were working together at the time. I remember calling out public health going, what? Why aren't you giving these to us? Why aren't you no. Well, we can't. You know, it's just a waste and blah blah blah. Anyway, it didn't make sense then. That's when these things started to go a little bit weird. And then, I when we wouldn't okay. This is something else I totally forgot. You guys are triggering me tonight.

    Speaker 7: So when COVID, quote, was here,

    Speaker 7: we had no swabs. We had no swabs to test, and we couldn't get any. We just couldn't. There were not there's nothing called public health. Nope. There are none. There's no swabs. We're waiting for them. We're waiting for from where? Guess where they came from? China.

    Speaker 7: And that was the same with the masks. Remember I told you guys? They wouldn't give us PPE,

    Speaker 7: protective equipment.

    Speaker 7: For they wouldn't give us masks. They we were using surgical masks. When I knew I lived through the first SARS, we had to use the M 90 Fives. There were no M90Fives. No one had any 90Fives.

    Speaker 7: No KN90Fives.

    Speaker 7: Nothing. We had no equipment. We didn't have gowns. We didn't have gloves. We didn't have masks.

    Speaker 7: Nothing. And no one died of COVID here in Canada that I mean, maybe people did. I just didn't see it in my elderly population.

    Speaker 7: No one that I knew personally did. No one that I know personally knows anyone that know did. But, what what do we know? Right? Anyway, I just wanted to say that. It's just very interesting the timing of getting products

    Speaker 7: and protective equipment, and I would say, again, like I was saying the protocol earlier,

    Speaker 7: get Krazy Glue or Gorilla Glue. Keep it sterile. Don't use it for anything else. Save it for when you split your face open or your hand when you cut yourself in the kitchen. Don't go to the hospital. Use that. And, also, I would say get yourself some antifungal,

    Speaker 7: or antibiotics, things like that. If because in Canada, you can't get that. You have to go to the doctor. They won't give it to you if you're not sick. But in The States, I think you guys can get those things proactively.

    Speaker 7: So I personally, if I lived in The States, I'd be having some,

    Speaker 7: things that maybe fight pneumonias, things like that, and antifungals,

    Speaker 7: like, you know, what I was talking about earlier.

    Speaker 7: That would just give me peace of mind and the crazy glue, of course, protocol.

    Speaker 3: Well, you know, it's interesting that you put it that way, Tiburt, because,

    Speaker 3: I am avoiding veterinarians

    Speaker 3: like the plague because, you know, in my state,

    Speaker 3: they're required to have rabies shots every year. And,

    Speaker 3: no. It ain't freaking happening. And the way the law is written here, they they won't accept titers. So,

    Speaker 3: I've got a little dog that has seizures, so I'm really serious about not getting any shots for him.

    Speaker 3: And last week, he came in from outside after dark, and

    Speaker 3: he was acting like his eye itched. And before bedtime,

    Speaker 3: the third eyelid was coming up, and he was, you know, almost keeping his eye shut the whole time.

    Speaker 3: So I've

    Speaker 3: I actually had some eyewash that was, you know, brand new, never been used, people eyewash.

    Speaker 3: Then I rinsed his eye, and the next morning, we're still having a problem.

    Speaker 3: So I kept rinsing his eye, did it a couple times that day, and then I thought, you know what? I need to look at

    Speaker 3: write this down, boys and girls, if you have pets

    Speaker 3: Doctor. Jones

    Speaker 3: veterinary

    Speaker 3: secrets

    Speaker 3: YouTube channel.

    Speaker 3: So I watched a couple of his videos

    Speaker 3: and one of them said to use green tea.

    Speaker 3: Just steep yourself a little bit of green tea,

    Speaker 3: don't add anything to it, let it cool for about fifteen-twenty minutes, take a syringe

    Speaker 3: with no needle and put a couple drops in the dog's eye

    Speaker 3: three or four times a day,

    Speaker 3: perfect. Everything took care of itself in a week.

    Speaker 3: No vet.

    Speaker 3: I have done the same thing,

    Speaker 3: with,

    Speaker 3: not necessarily for the eye, but for various things.

    Speaker 3: Oil of oregano

    Speaker 3: that I made

    Speaker 3: and oil of,

    Speaker 3: garlic oil that I've made.

    Speaker 3: So,

    Speaker 3: look into doing stuff yourself and and stock your pantry with things that you can use

    Speaker 3: for all the owies

    Speaker 3: and all the colds

    Speaker 3: because

    Speaker 3: we don't need their chemicals for most of the things that we will get.

    Speaker 3: Just saying.

    Speaker 3: You know,

    Speaker 3: Flash Backlund, you haven't had a chance to speak yet, and you've been on

    Speaker 3: mic for a while. Did you wanna

    Speaker 3: bring something to the table before we get too far into the night?

    Speaker 3: I kept her so long she's asleep.

    Speaker 1: Nineteen seventy coupe.

    Speaker 1: No pressure.

    Speaker 1: Just like to be sure everyone who might like to speak has an opportunity to do so.

    Speaker 1: Go ahead, Kyle.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. Thank you for saying that about

    Speaker 9: the animals. We talked about that last week

    Speaker 9: with the, Somerasol,

    Speaker 9: the rabies vaccines,

    Speaker 9: and,

    Speaker 9: how ridiculous it is. And so I called a place called

    Speaker 9: Five Elements

    Speaker 9: Veterinarian

    Speaker 9: in Omaha, Nebraska,

    Speaker 9: and they have some aerosol free,

    Speaker 9: injections,

    Speaker 9: rabies, and then I think they have several other ones too,

    Speaker 9: for dogs and cats.

    Speaker 9: And

    Speaker 9: I was kinda talking to him about that.

    Speaker 9: And then it's just kinda funny how we talked last week about how now all of a sudden, thrombrosol

    Speaker 9: is one of the biggest ingredients

    Speaker 9: in the last few weeks

    Speaker 9: that causes,

    Speaker 9: autism in children and babies and stuff. And,

    Speaker 9: I just think it's really important

    Speaker 9: for any of the holistic

    Speaker 9: veterinarians

    Speaker 9: that you guys have in your area

    Speaker 9: to go ahead and back them and share them

    Speaker 9: and post them everywhere.

    Speaker 9: I've been doing that a lot,

    Speaker 9: in the last few months, just just screaming about five, five elements,

    Speaker 9: holistic veterinarian.

    Speaker 9: It's just huge because I feel like it all starts with the pets, and that's kinda how they started experimenting on humans

    Speaker 9: was with our pets. So and then the thing that Tee was saying real quick,

    Speaker 9: I think it's really important

    Speaker 9: to find and pinpoint

    Speaker 9: when those masks started coming in

    Speaker 9: and the PCR swabs for the nose,

    Speaker 9: when they started coming into The States and Canada. If we could pinpoint that,

    Speaker 9: and maybe someone has already done that

    Speaker 9: and got actual data sets on

    Speaker 9: how much this spike

    Speaker 9: happened

    Speaker 9: with, you know, symptoms and whatever else they try to say that we have.

    Speaker 9: I think that'd just be huge

    Speaker 9: just to kinda know exactly when because I remember going into Menards,

    Speaker 9: Home Depots,

    Speaker 9: and everybody's just losing their minds. Like, you gotta put it on. And I'm like, look at the box. You know? It's like it says right on the box.

    Speaker 9: It does not protect

    Speaker 9: against any virus.

    Speaker 9: And then it says, made in China.

    Speaker 9: Get the fuck out of here. Excuse my French. Thank you. You're no. You're quite right.

    Speaker 3: That's my my husband was a,

    Speaker 3: renovation guy, auto auto restoration

    Speaker 3: and, you know, painting.

    Speaker 3: So, you know, if you can smell the paint, then you're breathing the paint. So he knew

    Speaker 3: about,

    Speaker 3: you know, how these damn things are supposed to work. And cloth masks don't stop viruses.

    Speaker 3: Sorry. You know? If you could smell a fart, you're gonna get whatever the virus is.

    Speaker 3: Sorry.

    Speaker 2: I'd like to also warn Not too many. I'd like to warn people real quickly before we shift from the animals.

    Speaker 2: There is,

    Speaker 2: Merck is actually already marketed in Canada, and I'm highly suspicious that it's here in The States as well.

    Speaker 2: A rabies vaccine that is marketed as adjuvant and preservative free, which means no thimerosal.

    Speaker 2: Right? But it is an mRNA replicon

    Speaker 2: rabies vaccine is what it is. Okay? Exactly.

    Speaker 2: So when you hear, oh, this is a great new thing,

    Speaker 2: and it's thimerosal,

    Speaker 2: aka mercury free

    Speaker 2: and preservative free,

    Speaker 2: your antennas should immediately go up,

    Speaker 2: and you shouldn't be accepting that one.

    Speaker 2: Because,

    Speaker 2: again,

    Speaker 2: it is MRNA.

    Speaker 2: And it the one brand that I know for sure is that is Merck,

    Speaker 2: and it's called Novivac, n o b I v a c.

    Speaker 2: And it's got

    Speaker 2: then it says n x

    Speaker 2: t or the three letters after the word Novavac. So keep your eyes and ears peeled. Don't let them give that to your animals.

    Speaker 1: And on the subject of kind of Guinea pigging, a lot of the tyranny that they're attempting to

    Speaker 1: exert on us, on our animals.

    Speaker 1: It is worth noting that

    Speaker 1: a lot of people

    Speaker 1: voluntarily

    Speaker 1: went to go get their their pets chipped,

    Speaker 1: And a natural progression is,

    Speaker 1: well, you know, you you keep your pets safe with the chip. Why aren't you keeping your kids safe with the chip?

    Speaker 1: Why why aren't you safe with the chip? Because, you know, what if you get kidnapped or

    Speaker 1: what, you know, any of this? So,

    Speaker 1: baby steps and incrementalism

    Speaker 1: is a lot of how they do it.

    Speaker 1: Coop, I'm glad to see you you came back on. How are you doing tonight?

    Speaker 1: Lash Backlin.

    Speaker 13: Sorry about that. I was away from my phone. And earlier,

    Speaker 13: I couldn't find my phone. I misplaced my phone, like, at least five times a day.

    Speaker 13: And I'm because I have my Bluetooth on, and I'm running around and doing things. So

    Speaker 13: sorry about that.

    Speaker 7: But,

    Speaker 1: No worries. Good to have you on.

    Speaker 13: Nice to be on. Thank you for having me on.

    Speaker 13: I just wanna say, because I haven't talked in a while, I'm vaccine injured since,

    Speaker 13: September

    Speaker 13: 2021.

    Speaker 13: I was a hospital worker, and I was fired.

    Speaker 13: And,

    Speaker 13: so but what I wanted to comment on,

    Speaker 13: the conversation earlier

    Speaker 13: when

    Speaker 13: I think somebody,

    Speaker 13: compared it to

    Speaker 13: to,

    Speaker 13: Germany, Nazi Germany.

    Speaker 13: My mom was,

    Speaker 13: 12 years old when that happened

    Speaker 13: during, World War two. From 12

    Speaker 13: to 18, she worked in a labor camp in Germany.

    Speaker 13: And,

    Speaker 13: before she passed away, and I took care of her for thirteen years. Before she passed away, she said,

    Speaker 13: what happened to us in Germany is happening to you guys right now, and you and most people don't even see it.

    Speaker 13: And just like she came to her she came too. She she and she was in the right mind and everything when she said this. And then she told me she says,

    Speaker 13: don't give up your guns like we did.

    Speaker 13: And,

    Speaker 13: you know, and then short then she went out of it again. But you know? And

    Speaker 13: it is sort of like that.

    Speaker 13: And I shoulda took heed.

    Speaker 13: Also,

    Speaker 13: back in 2001

    Speaker 13: when I was pregnant with my son,

    Speaker 13: two doctors told me, stop stop that. Don't vaccinate him, and if you could help it, don't get any vaccines.

    Speaker 13: And he said, he just said, these are ones that these are the doctors that were getting ready to retire.

    Speaker 13: They had to wait till all the older doctors were out before they did this because

    Speaker 13: with all those doctors,

    Speaker 13: this wouldn't have happened.

    Speaker 13: That's all I wanted to say.

    Speaker 6: I agree with her. She hit it right on the head.

    Speaker 3: There's,

    Speaker 3: I cannot believe that I can't remember her last name. Her first name is Vera,

    Speaker 3: and she is a holocaust survivor. Vera Sharov.

    Speaker 3: Yes.

    Speaker 3: And you're right. Your mom was right. And Vera is

    Speaker 3: trying to explain to everybody.

    Speaker 3: This is how it all started. And in Germany,

    Speaker 3: there was always the hope

    Speaker 3: that another country would come save them.

    Speaker 3: But now it's worldwide, and there's nobody that's gonna come save you.

    Speaker 3: So your mom was right.

    Speaker 7: I saw I always wanna

    Speaker 7: be ahead of the predictive programming. I'm always like

    Speaker 7: I always try to be even. I'm I'm not against Muslims. I'm not against the Jews. I'm Catholic, but I don't even trust them anymore.

    Speaker 7: It's true. I just

    Speaker 7: I try to

    Speaker 7: is Charlie Kirk dead? Is he not? I'm trying to open my mind to everything. Like,

    Speaker 7: do I think it happened?

    Speaker 7: Did I see them roll him off the stage by his neck and roll him under the stage under the skirt? Yes. Did I did Kyle and I have a conversation? I said, I wonder if there was a tunnel that took to that airplane that just suddenly appeared but lost control, and all of a sudden, no one can track it. And then suddenly that it's back on, and it's an Israel plane. And now Charlie Kirk's gone, but yet we saw him being carried. Was that really him being carried? I look at everything.

    Speaker 7: I don't I don't think I'm right on anything. I think I question

    Speaker 7: everything, and I'm never right. Like, I'm never right, and I'm never wrong because I'm neutral. I'm, like, open to that's why I love these spaces because you guys talk about so much and there's so many.

    Speaker 7: Like,

    Speaker 7: what mega whatever his name was that came in and said, I feel like I'm at a bridal shower.

    Speaker 7: But being sorry, I had a sneezing fit a second ago. I'm not crying.

    Speaker 7: I learned so much, but to look at all the different angles, the different gifts that all of us have,

    Speaker 7: what we've learned, what we've lived through, what we've survived, what we're still surviving.

    Speaker 7: And,

    Speaker 7: now God knows where the hell I was going with that. Oh, Nazi. So I started looking up Nuremberg, and everyone's like, this is Nuremberg too. The research I find is very fascinating

    Speaker 7: because Russia's involved.

    Speaker 7: And so

    Speaker 7: there can never be a a Nuremberg two because if you look at how Nuremberg

    Speaker 7: one worked,

    Speaker 7: it was done very quickly. I don't know if anyone's done that. I'm sure lots of people here have done that research, especially in this room. But

    Speaker 7: I blew my mind

    Speaker 7: when I started

    Speaker 7: to research and go, what was because, you know, you hear people say the lingo. I I'm not a historian. That's for sure, and definitely not a military person.

    Speaker 7: But

    Speaker 7: if you actually do the research on what Nuremberg

    Speaker 7: actually involved, who it involved, how it happened, and how fast it happened,

    Speaker 7: it was like a three month window,

    Speaker 7: which is really fast. We're at we're at five years at this point, people. There's no Nuremberg two because the players

    Speaker 7: do not exist anymore. So you can't. It has to be something totally different. We have to come up with a new name. But

    Speaker 7: what I wanted to say was, god only knows what I wanted to say. How about that? To be

    Speaker 7: Jesus Murphy and Murgatroy.

    Speaker 7: I just think, like, listening and I listen to a lot of war stories as as a young nurse, as a personal support worker at 16 years old. I had,

    Speaker 7: World War one vets who told me stories, World War two. Some of the stories are the most terrifying things I've ever heard, things they would never tell their parents,

    Speaker 7: and you just never think it's gonna happen to you. So that's what I wanted to say. I look at that's why I went to Nuremberg. I'm like, what can we predict to happen next? If this is Nuremberg too,

    Speaker 7: what should we expect? That's you always have to that's well, that's what most nurses

    Speaker 7: I don't know. My name might agree, might not. We always I always looked at the worst case scenario before the best case scenario, which sounds very cynical, but I always wanted to be prepared

    Speaker 7: in case

    Speaker 7: that what we did didn't work, that I already had the backup already hanging or ready to go. But

    Speaker 7: I'm really confused this time. That's why I'm like, oh, I'm looking at tomorrow at this this this valley fever. I'm like, I'm I'm, like, totally freaking out tonight about that. Not I'm not freaking out about it, but it's like, so what can we expect to happen next? And I try to learn from our past, the World War one, the World War two. What happened? How how did that happen?

    Speaker 7: And I can't get the answer. Can anybody help me with that? I know that's a very deep question at this hour at night, but it's like, how do we prepare

    Speaker 7: for what's coming? It's it's

    Speaker 7: it it it has to follow trajectory, I would think. I don't know. I don't even know.

    Speaker 1: I think being aware of what's happening now,

    Speaker 1: being fully aware that we are

    Speaker 1: a nation at very much a war,

    Speaker 1: and and the nature of this very strange war

    Speaker 1: is is a good place to start.

    Speaker 7: I love that.

    Speaker 7: You're very

    Speaker 1: you're very soft. Until we bring

    Speaker 1: Cali,

    Speaker 1: then we'll we'll have a hard time knowing

    Speaker 1: the precise answers to that. But I I still stand firm in that

    Speaker 1: right now,

    Speaker 1: the best thing we can do is bring as many people

    Speaker 1: as possible

    Speaker 1: into reality and just

    Speaker 1: tell them our stories, tell them

    Speaker 1: what we've seen

    Speaker 1: and what we've experienced,

    Speaker 1: and and try to get through to them about,

    Speaker 1: you know, the the propaganda.

    Speaker 1: And, again,

    Speaker 1: my my weekly reminder,

    Speaker 1: if they're still watching TV and you can't get through to them, if they're still, you know, ingrained

    Speaker 1: in

    Speaker 1: mainstream media in any fashion,

    Speaker 1: getting them off or away from that in any ways, you can go for a camping trip for a couple weeks after they've been,

    Speaker 1: kind of declaimatized

    Speaker 1: from the the constant

    Speaker 1: barrage

    Speaker 1: of the propaganda,

    Speaker 1: which is like a droning in their ear and in their mind,

    Speaker 1: I you'll probably have a much

    Speaker 1: easier time getting through to those people. And if we can bring people into reality,

    Speaker 1: then

    Speaker 1: they understand the nature of the war, then

    Speaker 1: preparing for it becomes a lot, you know, a lot more,

    Speaker 1: doable because

    Speaker 1: everyone,

    Speaker 1: you know, at least most people would have a clue

    Speaker 1: and don't want this thing.

    Speaker 1: Nobody wants to be

    Speaker 1: driven down the road to techno enslavement

    Speaker 1: or

    Speaker 1: this this techno dystopia that they're they're trying to create for the greater good

    Speaker 1: and to save the the planet or whatever their line is this week.

    Speaker 1: Nobody really wants to be a part of that, and if they do, it's because they've

    Speaker 1: they've been misled.

    Speaker 1: They and that's why I think we need to have some compassion

    Speaker 1: for those people even even when they they

    Speaker 1: rile us up because they're so so ignorant and so

    Speaker 1: kind of willfully. So if we can get through to them, and we can because they're they're people, and at some level,

    Speaker 1: they're starting to to realize it themselves.

    Speaker 1: So it's just breaking through

    Speaker 1: that layer of, you know, I I don't

    Speaker 1: hands over

    Speaker 1: eyes and ears

    Speaker 1: and don't wanna listen.

    Speaker 1: Breaking through that

    Speaker 1: and and getting through, and then

    Speaker 1: then maybe we're not mired in this strange war because it's been such a war for hearts and minds.

    Speaker 1: It really is. I think it's the first information

    Speaker 1: war

    Speaker 1: at this scale

    Speaker 1: And

    Speaker 1: the, the bioweapon component

    Speaker 1: is almost pales in comparison

    Speaker 1: because both have done

    Speaker 1: incalculable

    Speaker 1: damage

    Speaker 1: to

    Speaker 1: to individuals,

    Speaker 1: to families,

    Speaker 1: to society, and to the world at large. And if we don't fix this, then we are

    Speaker 1: on a very dark path, I think.

    Speaker 1: Go ahead, Kaya.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. I really appreciate that.

    Speaker 9: You know, Tee just asked, what can we do? You know, how can we prepare ourselves? And I think you look at the media and you look at people like

    Speaker 9: Charlie Kirk and, like, what he was doing. And you look at Joe Rogan

    Speaker 9: and how much convincing that took him. Right? Because he was friends with all the

    Speaker 9: Hollywood folks, all the comedians,

    Speaker 9: and they all had that left slant

    Speaker 9: for so long. And And a lot of the big ones just started waking up, you know? And it took people that everybody hates

    Speaker 9: like Alex Jones and all those kind of crazy bastards that took all those guys

    Speaker 9: banging and banging and banging and getting things wrong. But when they got it right, holy shit did they. Right? You know, when those when those conspiracy theorists get it right,

    Speaker 9: you know, I I think his number in his head is 98.5%.

    Speaker 9: You know, I'd probably give him closer to an 87%

    Speaker 9: accuracy rate. I think some of the stuff has been way off.

    Speaker 9: I've been criticized

    Speaker 9: my whole life, basically,

    Speaker 9: for listening to Alex Jones

    Speaker 9: and supporting him. Oh, you're, you know, you're an idiot. That guy is a psy op. You know, this and that. But my gosh, he was platforming, you know, people like doctor Francis Boyle,

    Speaker 9: early twenty twenty. You know?

    Speaker 9: He was screaming, like, hey. This is bad. You know? And if I would have known somebody like t

    Speaker 9: back then, can you imagine, like, what that would have done? But then you look at Canada, you look at those kind of countries, and they're so censored. And they didn't have access to people like doctor Francis Boyle, you know. And they didn't have access to crazy bastards like Alex Jones and all those guys. So you just sit there and I think it comes back down to media and and you look at patterns.

    Speaker 9: And, you know, Tee just said it perfectly. I question everything now.

    Speaker 9: George Carlin,

    Speaker 9: greatest comedian of all time in a lot of people's eyes. Alright? George Carlin was fantastic.

    Speaker 9: He was good at putting

    Speaker 9: the craziest stuff out there. He was talking about the immune system

    Speaker 9: and how they used to swim in the river in New York.

    Speaker 9: Right? The Hudson.

    Speaker 9: And they had all the sewage and stuff, raw sewage. Like, it it it fortified that one. Yeah.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. Like, it fortified our immune system. We didn't need a flu shot. It's like because

    Speaker 9: we were constantly around dirt, chemicals, bacteria, and our immune system built up to it, you know, rub some dirt in it. So he he was just so ahead of the curve. So you look at media and you look at the trends

    Speaker 9: and

    Speaker 9: what what Tee said, you learn everything from history. Right? History repeats itself. So I go back to the Vegas shooting.

    Speaker 9: I go back to Pennsylvania.

    Speaker 9: Right?

    Speaker 9: You go back to the Batman

    Speaker 9: killer in the movie theater. His dad was CIA.

    Speaker 9: You start making these connections,

    Speaker 9: and then you start realizing

    Speaker 9: the world is a stage.

    Speaker 9: How do

    Speaker 9: we get off the stage? It's the question. Right? How do we see

    Speaker 9: what's coming next? Well,

    Speaker 9: our guest tonight

    Speaker 9: I'm not I'm just gonna speak for myself. I won't speak for anybody else.

    Speaker 9: My guest tonight is something is not going great.

    Speaker 9: And I pray to God, I'm I'm a 100% wrong about tomorrow. I pray to God it goes off without a hitch. I pray to God everything's perfect.

    Speaker 9: But from all the signs

    Speaker 9: and all the things that they've already got away with, guys, in this last week, this last seven, eight days with this,

    Speaker 9: it just doesn't look good. It's not shaping up great.

    Speaker 9: So I think the answer to Tee's question ultimately,

    Speaker 9: how do we prepare ourselves?

    Speaker 9: Watch the signs, which she does very well, which I try to do. Right? I try to emulate people that are smarter than me

    Speaker 9: because I'm not the smartest. I can give you all that right now.

    Speaker 9: I try to emulate

    Speaker 9: trends, and I try to watch what's going on.

    Speaker 9: When I saw Trump tonight

    Speaker 9: come out, you guys can see the post. I reposted it on my on my on my page. Owen Shroyer came out about two hours ago before right before where you guys were getting on.

    Speaker 9: And he says that Trump is now demanding

    Speaker 9: that Pam Bondi

    Speaker 9: release this information

    Speaker 9: and start doing her job.

    Speaker 9: What is the odds that Trump came out with that statement

    Speaker 9: tonight

    Speaker 9: before this

    Speaker 9: event tomorrow?

    Speaker 9: What is the odds, guys?

    Speaker 9: So you just start thinking about stuff like this, and you start looking at the trends. So I think the best thing we can do is pay attention to the media

    Speaker 9: as best as we can without getting duped, without keeping our TVs on twenty four seven and driving ourselves crazy.

    Speaker 9: But start looking at some of the comments from these leaders. And tonight, Trump made a big dump.

    Speaker 9: He He made a big dump

    Speaker 9: in this in this in this commentary,

    Speaker 9: and he told Pam Bonny to do her job.

    Speaker 9: That was just three hours ago.

    Speaker 9: So God bless everybody. Thank you for all your ridiculous,

    Speaker 9: words of encouragement for me and people like us that wanna research. They don't have any quit in us, and you guys are all just fantastic.

    Speaker 9: Cannot be more, honored to be a part of y'all.

    Speaker 1: Thanks so much, Kyle.

    Speaker 1: I hope whatever job Pam Bondi is doing is,

    Speaker 1: less in line with some of the rhetoric she's put forward

    Speaker 1: recently and

    Speaker 1: more in line with,

    Speaker 1: some of the administration's

    Speaker 1: better

    Speaker 12: advisers because The good thing about the only good thing she's doing is,

    Speaker 12: supreme court cases

    Speaker 12: on the various

    Speaker 1: policies and such. She's doing great on those, but not much else. And I saw her just very recently talking about, oh, doctors are causing the the opiate crisis by prescribing. Can you imagine they're prescribing ten hydrocodone

    Speaker 1: for patients who just finished surgery?

    Speaker 1: Or it might have been a different drug, but the the point is the same.

    Speaker 1: He is not a doctor. I had 300 prescribed once after a surgery. Right. That they're sending people home after surgery,

    Speaker 1: really, I think, fostered

    Speaker 1: a lot of the the callousness

    Speaker 1: that we saw during the the so called COVID crisis because doctors had to be inured to the suffering of their patients

    Speaker 1: or they would lose their licenses. Because if they took pity on on their patient, if they had mercy,

    Speaker 1: they would prescribe

    Speaker 1: adequate painkillers

    Speaker 1: after surgical

    Speaker 1: events

    Speaker 1: and so forth,

    Speaker 1: but

    Speaker 1: they they couldn't do that. So,

    Speaker 1: I think Pam Bondi should stay the heck out of medicine

    Speaker 1: and leave it to the doctors, and,

    Speaker 1: and really that's what we need to get back to is

    Speaker 1: respecting

    Speaker 1: the doctor patient relationship,

    Speaker 1: which should be paramount. But Kyle, on the subject of George Carlin,

    Speaker 1: one of his, most transcendent lines, I think, is it's a big club, and you aren't in it.

    Speaker 1: And I think that's

    Speaker 1: that's really about the sum of it, and that's what we see with the uni party politics and the fact that,

    Speaker 1: you know, we go from Klaus Schwab to Larry Fink

    Speaker 1: and,

    Speaker 1: and from

    Speaker 1: from the frying pan into the fire

    Speaker 1: so so frequently because we we have our hopes tied up in

    Speaker 12: Frankly, I'm starting to wonder if,

    Speaker 12: frankly, I'm starting to wonder if we didn't have the opportunity

    Speaker 12: to be in

    Speaker 12: that very same club and turned it down

    Speaker 12: because,

    Speaker 12: I mean That's a very aside.

    Speaker 1: There's a there's a very good reason we aren't in that club, and y'all don't even want any part of that club. It is dirty.

    Speaker 1: It is dirty business, and we see that with the

    Speaker 1: oh, first, it was, the Epstein files. You know? I I think there's a lot

    Speaker 1: of a lot of secrets that'll come out if those Epstein files come out, and I'll definitely

    Speaker 1: look into doing that Hasn't found that desk yet. Democrat

    Speaker 1: party hoax,

    Speaker 1: the Epstein hoax, it's being called now, which is such wild turnabout. I nearly have whiplash.

    Speaker 1: But, go ahead, Lorraine. Welcome to this space. How are you doing tonight?

    Speaker 4: I'm alright. I'm hanging in there. Thanks for asking.

    Speaker 4: You know what? It's kinda disturbing

    Speaker 4: that, like, the people on the right I'm an independent, by the way. I don't belong to either party.

    Speaker 4: So I don't affiliate as a democrat or republican.

    Speaker 4: But

    Speaker 4: it's like the people on the right are like, oh, yeah. You know, Jimmy Kimmel's up the air. It's so wonderful.

    Speaker 4: You know, I don't like him. I can't stand him.

    Speaker 4: But

    Speaker 4: we're hypocrites if we think that

    Speaker 4: because he has every right to say what he wants. That's why we're here tonight.

    Speaker 4: So, like, the rhetoric on the right with Trump saying, oh, we have to censor these people, and I wanna,

    Speaker 4: you know, take on these night,

    Speaker 4: hosts off the air. And Jimmy Fallon is now singing a different tune and because he's afraid he'll be next on a chopping block. It's like,

    Speaker 4: you know,

    Speaker 4: they still have a right to speak even though we don't agree with them,

    Speaker 4: you know, because

    Speaker 4: we're hypocrites.

    Speaker 4: We're hypocrites if we're in saying that. You know?

    Speaker 4: But that's how I feel about that, so I'm very disappointed

    Speaker 4: with that.

    Speaker 4: It's kinda disturbing

    Speaker 4: to see the celebration,

    Speaker 4: that they're I don't I mean, I I'm not for that at all.

    Speaker 4: I'm for everyone to have freedom of speech no matter what,

    Speaker 4: and that's why I'm on this platform tonight speaking.

    Speaker 4: And,

    Speaker 4: Brushfire is down there.

    Speaker 4: I wanna give a shout out to him. He's, always courageous,

    Speaker 4: battling the,

    Speaker 4: the ProVaxxers.

    Speaker 4: And,

    Speaker 4: you know, it don't matter if you're ProVaxx

    Speaker 4: or, you know, or anti vaxx.

    Speaker 4: No matter what goes in your body, we should all have conformed consent.

    Speaker 4: What are the side effects?

    Speaker 4: You know? What are the deaths?

    Speaker 4: They shouldn't wanna hide it for seventy five years,

    Speaker 4: you know.

    Speaker 4: And,

    Speaker 4: we always should have conformed consent.

    Speaker 4: So

    Speaker 4: we all we all learn that during COVID. No matter if you go in a hospital

    Speaker 4: or what kind of medication

    Speaker 4: they want you to take,

    Speaker 4: you should always, you know, look it up,

    Speaker 4: see what the, you know,

    Speaker 4: what the risks are, what's the benefits are.

    Speaker 4: And, unfortunately, it took COVID to wake a lot of people up

    Speaker 4: to what's actually literally going in our bodies.

    Speaker 4: But

    Speaker 4: I'm I'm for freedom of speech

    Speaker 4: a 100%.

    Speaker 4: So I hope they put Jimmy Kimmel back on,

    Speaker 4: you know, and, I hope Trump doesn't

    Speaker 4: say, well, we need to censor these people because,

    Speaker 4: that's a hypocrite,

    Speaker 4: you know, and why he's

    Speaker 4: dining and whining with the Bill Gates of hell and,

    Speaker 4: Mark Zuckerberg,

    Speaker 4: that is totally against

    Speaker 4: free speech, by the way, too.

    Speaker 4: And now he's dining with the royal family and all the other elites and globalists.

    Speaker 4: Like you said,

    Speaker 4: there's a club out there, and we're not in it. And, he's one of them, 100%.

    Speaker 4: And, he's gotta make some statements

    Speaker 4: to make himself look good for tomorrow.

    Speaker 4: But,

    Speaker 4: this mark my words,

    Speaker 4: I don't trust them.

    Speaker 4: And there's AI data centers coming from my house, like, twenty minutes. There's actually two. Thirty minutes away one direction and twenty minutes in the other direction.

    Speaker 4: And, what are these AI data centers for that has to be this close to my house? Ask yourself,

    Speaker 4: where where is the data

    Speaker 4: that they're gonna be collecting from?

    Speaker 4: Don't forget. You know? Censoring,

    Speaker 4: collecting data,

    Speaker 4: lack of freedom of, you know,

    Speaker 4: speech.

    Speaker 4: I'm all against that.

    Speaker 4: So before you celebrate that,

    Speaker 4: look in the mirror and say, are we becoming one of them? Because I sure to hell ain't. That's all I have to say. God bless, and I love you all.

    Speaker 1: Thank you, Laurie. I just wanna point out that there is a a clear distinction

    Speaker 1: between

    Speaker 1: censorship

    Speaker 1: and accountability,

    Speaker 1: I think.

    Speaker 1: And,

    Speaker 1: I don't believe in one, and I very strongly believe in the other.

    Speaker 1: So to put it in context, what we experienced,

    Speaker 1: during

    Speaker 1: this so called COVID crisis

    Speaker 1: when we couldn't

    Speaker 1: say the word ivermectin

    Speaker 1: without having our account suspended,

    Speaker 1: when we we doctors

    Speaker 1: doctors I know across the world

    Speaker 6: had their action.

    Speaker 1: By government action. By doing that. By the will of government action, Adam points out correctly,

    Speaker 1: because we know now that the the government was leaning

    Speaker 1: on the the social networks. Of course, in in the case of Twitter, we know that it was a very cozy relationship,

    Speaker 1: and they were happy to oblige.

    Speaker 1: But, but, yes, government was facilitating this censorship. They said these are things we don't want people to say. They would even single out individual

    Speaker 1: accounts or individual posts on individual accounts

    Speaker 1: and provide lists

    Speaker 1: of the the content, the offending content to be taken down.

    Speaker 1: This was censorship the likes of which

    Speaker 1: I have never seen in my life.

    Speaker 1: Parallel to that, we had the the emergence

    Speaker 1: of cancel culture,

    Speaker 1: which nobody wants to own

    Speaker 1: cancel

    Speaker 1: culture, but I believe John Podesta

    Speaker 1: is, in WikiLeaks, and I'll find the find the post and pin it to the nest for you in a minute,

    Speaker 1: saying our our culture wars...

    Speaker 1: Speaking of, you know, taking full responsibility

    Speaker 1: for the the the culture war, which they've said doesn't exist or is a conspiracy

    Speaker 1: theory.

    Speaker 1: And,

    Speaker 1: and the culture wars were the the campaigns to get people fired

    Speaker 1: for the things they said. So that was holding people to account

    Speaker 1: for the things that they've said. And we we saw doctors losing their licenses,

    Speaker 1: not for talking about how they they think unvaccinated

    Speaker 1: patients should probably die,

    Speaker 1: but for admitting that they prescribe HCQ or ivermectin or other off label treatments

    Speaker 1: or for speaking ill about the sacred cow

    Speaker 1: mRNA products.

    Speaker 1: That that was

    Speaker 1: also

    Speaker 1: unprecedented,

    Speaker 1: but

    Speaker 1: fair enough.

    Speaker 1: Right? Like, you have a position, especially if you're in a position of

    Speaker 1: authority over other people.

    Speaker 1: And when you're a medical profession professional,

    Speaker 1: you are,

    Speaker 1: you know, you have someone's life in your hands, so you are in a position of authority over people.

    Speaker 1: Or if you're a teacher or a professor

    Speaker 1: or any of these positions,

    Speaker 1: and you're you're saying things

    Speaker 1: that indicate that you

    Speaker 1: not only dislike,

    Speaker 1: but would sooner

    Speaker 1: see die

    Speaker 1: this person or that because of their political or,

    Speaker 1: idio

    Speaker 1: ideological,

    Speaker 1: I

    Speaker 1: tenants,

    Speaker 1: then

    Speaker 1: they shouldn't they shouldn't be in that position

    Speaker 1: because they they might who knows? If they really feel that strongly about it, maybe they will kill that unvaccinated

    Speaker 1: person because,

    Speaker 1: they think they're endangering their lives

    Speaker 1: and grandma,

    Speaker 1: and they're they're just horrible people that don't care about other people. And this is how it was framed,

    Speaker 1: during during the COVID crisis. So,

    Speaker 1: I I do

    Speaker 1: I don't like censorship,

    Speaker 1: but I think

    Speaker 1: people being fired

    Speaker 1: for saying really egregious,

    Speaker 1: horrible things

    Speaker 1: is is reasonable and is the prerogative of the the company that employs that person.

    Speaker 1: And,

    Speaker 1: you know, I

    Speaker 1: I don't really have a problem with that, but deplatforming

    Speaker 1: people because of

    Speaker 1: what they've said

    Speaker 1: is

    Speaker 1: is something else. So there there's a fine line. It's a, you know, something we should probably

    Speaker 1: discuss, but I think

    Speaker 1: it's not necessarily hypocritical

    Speaker 1: because there is there's a distinction between censorship

    Speaker 2: and accountability. I I would like to put a fine point on that if it's okay, Chelsea.

    Speaker 2: I think the difference is when it's government

    Speaker 2: censorship

    Speaker 2: versus

    Speaker 2: societal

    Speaker 2: norms

    Speaker 2: and

    Speaker 2: versus

    Speaker 2: incitement,

    Speaker 2: that's a whole

    Speaker 2: different ballgame

    Speaker 2: because

    Speaker 2: the government is not here

    Speaker 2: to police our speech

    Speaker 2: or to curtail our freedoms.

    Speaker 2: And when you see government

    Speaker 2: driving that through social media,

    Speaker 2: yes, absolutely,

    Speaker 2: Censorship is a no no.

    Speaker 2: Absolutely from the government.

    Speaker 2: Now when you're talking about,

    Speaker 2: it's kinda like if kids are in a classroom and you have

    Speaker 2: you're a teacher

    Speaker 2: and you have kids actually using

    Speaker 2: very threatening

    Speaker 2: language and bullying someone

    Speaker 2: and egging on another kid to attack

    Speaker 2: another kid.

    Speaker 2: It's your duty to step in and actually stop that

    Speaker 2: that speech and egging on a fight. Absolutely.

    Speaker 2: And I think that that teacher to me is kind of like an employer

    Speaker 2: or the rest of the public going, not appropriate.

    Speaker 2: You don't get to do that, and we're going to stop you from doing that. And that

    Speaker 2: is not censorship.

    Speaker 2: That is

    Speaker 2: societal

    Speaker 2: order,

    Speaker 2: okay,

    Speaker 2: and maintaining order and safety.

    Speaker 2: But the government,

    Speaker 2: no. That's not their power. That's not their right to censor,

    Speaker 2: especially,

    Speaker 2: things when it comes to bodily autonomy and speech and all that. Absolutely not. So I think it's it's important to put a fine point on that and realize that there is a great difference

    Speaker 2: between

    Speaker 2: outrage being voiced and saying, hey. This is not appropriate to celebrate someone's death,

    Speaker 2: and then having an employer saying, hey. I agree,

    Speaker 2: and, yes, you don't have a job anymore, versus the government going, hey. You can't say x, x, and x, and we're going to use the social media companies to shut you up. That's a whole different ballgame in my opinion.

    Speaker 1: But I think it's awesome that there's been this sea change

    Speaker 1: where

    Speaker 1: saying something,

    Speaker 1: taking

    Speaker 1: kind of being gleeful

    Speaker 1: about the demise of other people

    Speaker 1: is no longer politically correct.

    Speaker 1: So we've we've crossed the Rubicon in that because this what Kimmel said recently

    Speaker 1: was really just an escalation

    Speaker 1: of what he said during the during COVID, and he said lots of things, but that,

    Speaker 1: good luck, rest in peace, Weezy

    Speaker 1: remark

    Speaker 1: should have been caused to

    Speaker 1: to give the company employing him,

    Speaker 1: you know,

    Speaker 1: pause,

    Speaker 1: a long time ago. But now

    Speaker 1: now that maybe it's because the the levers of power have shifted, maybe it's because

    Speaker 1: we've won the the narrative war, which I think we have, and we're we're still seeing that play out. It's not like it's not like it's over,

    Speaker 1: but we have them we've had them on the run for some time in the the battle for narrative and and

    Speaker 1: reality, really.

    Speaker 1: So it's great that finally,

    Speaker 1: they found the line. They found the line, and and now they're they're trying to walk it back even and so far as having CNN,

    Speaker 1: talk kind of amicably,

    Speaker 1: nearly amicably

    Speaker 1: about Charlie Kirk earlier yesterday.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. And don't you find it very interesting, Chelsea, that

    Speaker 2: the the the public outcry

    Speaker 2: on social media is what drove these employers

    Speaker 2: to take that action.

    Speaker 2: And you can't have a public outcry if you've got a government

    Speaker 2: that's censoring speech

    Speaker 2: through social media.

    Speaker 2: So it comes full circle, doesn't it? If you if you don't have a government that's censoring speech

    Speaker 2: through social media, there can be a public outcry,

    Speaker 2: and

    Speaker 2: actions can happen

    Speaker 2: that

    Speaker 2: are appropriate

    Speaker 2: to stop the kind of egregious things that we've seen

    Speaker 2: in the last

    Speaker 2: seven to ten days. And, again,

    Speaker 2: you know,

    Speaker 2: we want our social norms and our social mores to be humane,

    Speaker 2: to not treat people, not to dehumanize

    Speaker 2: them,

    Speaker 2: and to celebrate

    Speaker 2: taking a life over words.

    Speaker 2: And,

    Speaker 2: you know, lots of lives were taken during COVID because certain words couldn't be spoken.

    Speaker 2: And I see that as coming full circle

    Speaker 2: because now words can be spoken

    Speaker 2: and true words and

    Speaker 2: righteous,

    Speaker 2: you know,

    Speaker 2: anger can be spoken,

    Speaker 2: and that public outrage can drive

    Speaker 2: some accountability.

    Speaker 2: And I think that's what we saw in the last week.

    Speaker 1: And we really see the power. It really drives home the power of one story

    Speaker 1: versus

    Speaker 1: a number.

    Speaker 1: And and Charlie Kirk had you know, he had talked about the protocols. He had had,

    Speaker 1: speakers like Mary Talley Bowden on to talk about some of what she had been through and what she had seen.

    Speaker 1: And, and he was raising awareness about

    Speaker 1: this stuff. And he, he kind of in

    Speaker 1: in becoming a martyr

    Speaker 1: for for all that he worked for, he sort of became the

    Speaker 1: the single individual

    Speaker 1: embodiment

    Speaker 1: of all all of those who who

    Speaker 1: were subjected to this dehumanization

    Speaker 1: and sometimes

    Speaker 1: murder

    Speaker 1: over the last several years. And,

    Speaker 1: and so the importance of that one individual

    Speaker 1: story, you know, I hope that I hope that motivates others to come forward

    Speaker 1: and share their experience because

    Speaker 1: it really can make a huge difference.

    Speaker 1: We'll go to Kyle and then TeeBird and then Steve.

    Speaker 1: Go ahead, Kyle.

    Speaker 9: Hey. Thanks for that debate. That's a great debate, Laurie,

    Speaker 9: about free speech. I think we all love free speech.

    Speaker 9: Without free speech, we don't have,

    Speaker 9: with the first, we don't have the second amendment. Right? Like, you just don't.

    Speaker 9: Without those two intertwined. We don't have either.

    Speaker 9: But I really wish the left would have stuck up for Roseanne

    Speaker 9: Barr.

    Speaker 9: That was one of the first nastiest

    Speaker 9: cancel culture moments I've ever seen.

    Speaker 9: I would say it's probably the worst

    Speaker 9: cancel culture moment

    Speaker 9: in the history of America.

    Speaker 9: She had the biggest TV show

    Speaker 9: ever. We all know Roseanne.

    Speaker 9: K? If you didn't grow up with Roseanne, you missed out big.

    Speaker 9: It was in the early eighties, mid eighties, all the way up.

    Speaker 9: She came back. She had the biggest ratings

    Speaker 9: ever.

    Speaker 9: She wanted to be the conservative, and she wanted Jackie,

    Speaker 9: her sister,

    Speaker 9: in real life, by the way. Not sister, but, I mean, in real life, the the character Jackie is a leftist,

    Speaker 9: clearly.

    Speaker 9: And, apparently, John Goodman is too. How sad is that? I always really liked John Goodman. I thought he was a really nice cool guy,

    Speaker 9: super big guy, super fat, but everybody kinda, like, liked him. Didn't judge him for being a fat piece of, you know, whatever he might have been.

    Speaker 9: We all liked him. He was funny.

    Speaker 9: We loved Roseanne. We didn't care. Right? It wasn't body shaming. We liked it. We loved that show.

    Speaker 9: So she came back on, had the biggest ratings in history

    Speaker 9: for a comeback for Roseanne,

    Speaker 9: and she was trying to show the narrative. She was trying to say, I'm a conservative.

    Speaker 9: Jackie's gonna play the Democrat, which in real life she is.

    Speaker 9: And,

    Speaker 9: it was amazing. And then she said some comment about Valerie Jarrett,

    Speaker 9: about planet of the apes or whatever it was.

    Speaker 9: Wink, T. Right? How funny is that? Inside joke. But, you know, she says something about planet of the apes and how, like, she was, like, resembling she was on a sleeping pill, and she was very, very tired, and she made some stupid joke on x. She's a comedian, folks. You wanna talk about free speech?

    Speaker 9: She's a comedian. It was a joke.

    Speaker 9: She then

    Speaker 9: apologized

    Speaker 9: from what I understand.

    Speaker 9: She finally went on Joe Rogan,

    Speaker 9: and it that devastated her. Right? It devastated her. That was her baby.

    Speaker 9: Roseanne was her show. She was the writer and creator of Roseanne.

    Speaker 9: The fact that they somehow duped her out of the contract

    Speaker 9: and excluded her from her own show,

    Speaker 9: I've never looked at John Goodman or any of those actors or actresses on that show the same sense. It's despicable.

    Speaker 9: It was the worst case of censorship I've ever seen. So my main point, guys, is I really wish that the left would have had her back, and they didn't. They didn't. Do you know why? Because she criticized somebody on the left for being a traitor to this country,

    Speaker 9: which was Valerie Jarrett.

    Speaker 9: And I'm sorry. I'm just gonna say it. That's exactly what happened. She criticized somebody.

    Speaker 9: It was a joke, but still criticism.

    Speaker 9: And there's no free speech. So it just shows it. So, anyway, thanks, Lori, for bringing that up. I really appreciate that. I think people like Jimmy Kimmel

    Speaker 9: and any of the other ones, they're so far left that they don't really care

    Speaker 9: about our free speech. They don't care about our our freedom. They were the ones pushing the vaccines.

    Speaker 9: Stephen Colbert with this bullshit little dance he did with those little shot dancers, and they were dudes, and they were clearly gay.

    Speaker 9: God bless, you know, anybody that's a different sex. I don't I I really don't care. But the fact that Stephen Colbert

    Speaker 9: and those kind of folks got away with what they got away with during the pandemic, I have zero,

    Speaker 9: emotion or zero care about what happens to people like that. They are not American.

    Speaker 9: They are so non American that they really should move somewhere like China or or maybe go to Mexico. It's pretty close. Go somewhere else, like, with your with your hate speech and what you're doing.

    Speaker 9: God bless Roseanne Barr.

    Speaker 9: Thank you.

    Speaker 1: Interesting

    Speaker 1: interesting thoughts, Kyle. I did have I did have something I wanted to,

    Speaker 1: respond with, but I'm gonna go to T Bird first. Go ahead, T.

    Speaker 7: I can't even remember what I was gonna say after that rant, to be honest, Kyle.

    Speaker 7: I do wanna say,

    Speaker 7: you know, maybe this is an example.

    Speaker 7: I I'm not sure,

    Speaker 7: hopefully,

    Speaker 7: if if they can cancel one, cancel either, I think they're running with their pants down, these little pussies, to be honest. I'm just gonna be straight up. They know they're caught,

    Speaker 7: and they got caught with their pants down,

    Speaker 7: bending someone over without lube, as Shelley used to say. But that's that's what's happening. This is this is coming out. The truth's coming out. CDC is caving. Everything's caving.

    Speaker 7: It's taken a lot. It's taken

    Speaker 7: billions of lives

    Speaker 7: and energy, and I actually wanted to say this about Miriam earlier when she was talking about her husband.

    Speaker 7: And I've heard protocol too. I've heard Deb. I've heard all of you

    Speaker 7: with your you're always so strong and neutral with each other and with everyone on stage. You let us all have a voice. Very much appreciated. I'm not being schmoozer. I'm being serious because it's very controversial topics that come up, and it's very emotional.

    Speaker 7: But I appreciate you guys because

    Speaker 7: the amount of pain that I hear sometimes in your voices, we all take turns, obviously,

    Speaker 7: and I think that's the only fair.

    Speaker 7: We we have different night different Saturday nights where one of us is in

    Speaker 7: excruciating,

    Speaker 7: you know, angst about what happened, guilt,

    Speaker 7: loss, all that stuff. And I wanted to applaud you all for coming out

    Speaker 7: and staying strong,

    Speaker 7: staying the force when you're already living your own nightmare, and it's it's very,

    Speaker 7: admirable.

    Speaker 7: I hope

    Speaker 7: I I obviously agree with free speech. I don't have much of it in Canada as you know. So please, you know, hold on to that, all of you. You won't know what it feels like when it's gone. It's horrific.

    Speaker 7: And, of course, that's why there's not a lot of Canadians speaking or even to my extent. Not I'm no hero. I'm just I have nothing to lose except for

    Speaker 7: going in the ground, which I've x nayed that on too. I'm not going in the ground. But it's, like, at the end of the day,

    Speaker 7: I hope this is a message

    Speaker 7: that if

    Speaker 7: Colbert can get fired and Jimmy Kimmel maybe it's just a facade. Right? We're in we're in a show as we all know. Maybe it's just a show. Oh, look. We're punishing them. But but

    Speaker 7: it goes no different. This is all I was gonna say before Kyle.

    Speaker 7: Mainstream media is equally as guilty. The mainstream news is equally. Why aren't they firing them? Okay. We've got some comedians and some jokesters and people that get a script given to them, and they make a lot of money to do it. But these news anchors

    Speaker 7: don't have the girth to be honest.

    Speaker 7: They all need to be terminated. They know they're lying. They know what's going on. They didn't take the vaccines. We all know that. The parliament.

    Speaker 7: When Laurie mentioned earlier,

    Speaker 7: the uni party, the uni party, what hit me was because my dad my dad and I my mom and dad and I, we just don't go along. I butt heads with them. I have since I was a little girl. They're both very strong,

    Speaker 7: strong

    Speaker 7: construction family, own business.

    Speaker 7: They made a lot of money. I'll be honest. I just don't I'm not close with them. We're not we are not, unfortunately,

    Speaker 7: just not good. But I wanted to say, I stopped by today to see them. It was my birthday. I turned 51 yesterday.

    Speaker 7: I can't believe I made it to 51.

    Speaker 7: But

    Speaker 7: I stopped by because there's this fair every year where I grew up here, and they have those little mini cinnamon donuts. And I know they're my mom's favorites even though I don't really like her and she doesn't like me. I thought and my best friend Linda was driving, of course. So I said, can you just drive by my parents' town, and I'll just drop them off. And we ended up in a political conversation, which is never good because they think I'm a Trumper.

    Speaker 7: It's always a fight. My mother takes food. If I'm making dinner, she'll throw it in my face. Like, it's a very aggressive family, if you can imagine.

    Speaker 7: But so we just don't talk politics. But today was the first day ever. Sorry. I'm rambling, but this is really, honestly,

    Speaker 7: first day ever. My parents are in their eighties.

    Speaker 7: And like I said,

    Speaker 7: work their ass off. Like, they owned a huge company,

    Speaker 7: whatever. They worked with a lot of Jewish people. Every nationality you know, it's construction. You gotta imagine.

    Speaker 7: And my dad and I finally came to a truce today that we all agree that money is power. It doesn't matter if you're

    Speaker 7: any nationality or any religion.

    Speaker 7: Money talks. And just like Linda not Linda. Laurie was saying, there's a video. When you have Prince Charles in the same room with Trump and Soros, all these people are in the same room last this week this week.

    Speaker 7: And you're like and this is what my dad and I were talking about. He's a very, very smart man, but, man, he's stubborn.

    Speaker 7: And he's like,

    Speaker 7: Tanya. He's like, you don't understand.

    Speaker 7: And I said, but I do, dad. I I I was probably a Trumper. I'll be honest.

    Speaker 7: Now I'm confused. I'm but I do believe in the Uniparty, and the Uniparty

    Speaker 7: is every freaking leader in the world is the uni party, and we are just their pawns.

    Speaker 7: And that's how I feel. But these media people, they all need to be take into account. It's my opinion.

    Speaker 7: If Jimmy's going down and Corbe is going down, they all need to go down. These new systems need to go down. And we actually got in a in a in an argument where my best friend is always neutral. She's always the smart one. She's always, you know and my dad started yelling at me, and he's like, you need to get off x. And I said, you need to get off CNN.

    Speaker 7: Right? So this is a fight. And she said, exactly. It's all. You don't know anyone on x. You don't know who's telling the truth. You don't know who's going to show up at your house and

    Speaker 7: assault you or take you down.

    Speaker 7: And the you don't know there's nothing true on the news. So so, basically, at the end of the day, it's like, at least I get to talk to some friends that I actually do believe in the space, but who's listening to me. They know they can find me. They know my house. They've been here. So it's like, this is scary. It terrifies my family

    Speaker 7: that I'm on x, and I should get off. My my kids have begged me never to go on x again

    Speaker 7: because it they say that makes me crazier,

    Speaker 7: which it probably does.

    Speaker 7: But what else am I doing? Staring at a wall? So I guess, albeit, I'll be crazy. But, anyway, I love you. Shauna just wrote me told me I'm her favorite nerd. So that that you know what? That's what makes me happy when I can make someone who lost their daughter to this bullshit

    Speaker 7: that we can still joke around behind the scenes, and she calls me her poopy. And it's just, like, that's just the the goofiness in some of us. We just we love each other, and we find love sometimes in these spaces. And sometimes we find hate, but I prefer the love in this space. Thank you. That was a very long rant. I I'll I shut myself up now.

    Speaker 1: I'm so glad I I let you,

    Speaker 1: go on that tear, t bird, because you totally set me up for what I what I was prompted to say in response to Kyle. But,

    Speaker 1: you know,

    Speaker 1: being fired

    Speaker 1: is just I hope I hope it's just the tip of the iceberg.

    Speaker 1: And, Loring,

    Speaker 1: I I know you,

    Speaker 1: you know, you have some very firmly held beliefs about free speech, and so do I.

    Speaker 1: But if we if we are honest

    Speaker 1: and and cognizant about the nature of this war,

    Speaker 1: which I've said so many times has been an information

    Speaker 1: war

    Speaker 1: and a war of proper propaganda

    Speaker 1: and censorship.

    Speaker 1: It was people like Kimmel

    Speaker 1: and Colbert

    Speaker 1: and all of the, the journalists at New York times, New York times is trash. And,

    Speaker 1: the people at USA Today

    Speaker 1: and all the various publications

    Speaker 1: that really played along

    Speaker 1: with this game

    Speaker 1: to deprive people of informed consent while they were mandating

    Speaker 1: experimental gene therapies masquerading as vaccines

    Speaker 1: on the entire world.

    Speaker 1: Firing better be just the beginning. And I I was really kind of heartened when Trump said in his initial,

    Speaker 1: address to the nation in the wake of the Kirk assassination,

    Speaker 1: he said

    Speaker 1: he is going to to

    Speaker 1: get to the the root, and I'm very much paraphrasing,

    Speaker 1: of the cause of the the dehumanization

    Speaker 1: and what

    Speaker 1: what laid the groundwork for someone to

    Speaker 1: to believe all of this nonsense that, you know,

    Speaker 1: they're fascists and Nazis, and they're this and that, and they they should be shot after all. Like, get to the get to the bottom of that, which is,

    Speaker 1: you know, get to the root of that, and you get to the root of all the other things we've been discussing because it, like Kyle said,

    Speaker 1: like Carlin said,

    Speaker 1: it's a big club and you aren't in it. And,

    Speaker 1: frankly, it's not that big a club. There's probably about 10,000,

    Speaker 1: we estimate about 10,000

    Speaker 1: people in earnest

    Speaker 1: involved in the the planning

    Speaker 1: and carrying out the the conspiracy

    Speaker 1: that was,

    Speaker 1: in lockstep, the the propaganda

    Speaker 1: in tandem with the mandates

    Speaker 1: and the censorship

    Speaker 1: and the the protocols that were killing people and all of these other things.

    Speaker 1: So if they if he means it and they really get to the bottom of that,

    Speaker 1: then I think we'll see a vast,

    Speaker 1: horrific,

    Speaker 1: coordinated

    Speaker 1: conspiracy

    Speaker 1: to deprive American citizens

    Speaker 1: of their

    Speaker 1: constitutional

    Speaker 1: rights

    Speaker 1: and and really

    Speaker 1: mount a a global assault on human rights in general

    Speaker 1: while simultaneously

    Speaker 1: rewriting what human rights even are, what death is to to justify taking organs or exerting more power or whatever it is.

    Speaker 1: So, you know, firing,

    Speaker 1: to my mind, is not good enough.

    Speaker 1: They need to go right in front of the tribunals along with Fauci and Gates and Klaus and all the rest of them because they participated in this,

    Speaker 1: and, and I believe they should be held to account. So,

    Speaker 1: here's hoping that

    Speaker 1: that mass firings are just the beginning

    Speaker 1: and, and that we maintain

    Speaker 1: our our tenuous

    Speaker 1: grasp on free speech. Because look at our look at our neighbors across the pond.

    Speaker 1: The UK isn't doing so well. Like TeeBird said, Canada

    Speaker 1: isn't doing so well. They don't have a solid foundation.

    Speaker 1: We need to resist any urge or inclination

    Speaker 1: to rewrite

    Speaker 1: our foundational

    Speaker 1: tenants and our principles

    Speaker 1: while we are under this

    Speaker 1: attack

    Speaker 1: and just hold true to the things that have made sense

    Speaker 1: for generations

    Speaker 1: and and and get rid of the things that don't,

    Speaker 1: because those

    Speaker 1: invariably are in service of the clown world reality that they tried to force on all of us.

    Speaker 1: Kyle and then Steve.

    Speaker 9: Hey. Hey. No rant. I just wanted to say, I think the best thing we could do right now

    Speaker 9: is do a petition

    Speaker 9: to get bank records

    Speaker 9: from Colbert,

    Speaker 9: Kimmel,

    Speaker 9: Don Lemon,

    Speaker 9: all these prick bastards that did what they did.

    Speaker 9: I wanna see bank records. Can we get a can we get a warrant? I mean, can we see bank records?

    Speaker 9: Because I know these guys were so arrogant. Right? And they were promised protection.

    Speaker 9: They were promised. They were promised protection. I I swear to God, I know this in my soul.

    Speaker 9: They were promised protection

    Speaker 9: from Obama and from all these folks in our government. K?

    Speaker 9: And they're like, no. You're good. Trust me. We have all the the legal documents. We have it all sealed, signed, delivered.

    Speaker 9: Now that they've had their contracts severed,

    Speaker 9: maybe those promises aren't gonna be made. Can you imagine seeing bank records, guys,

    Speaker 9: of Colbert,

    Speaker 9: Kimmel,

    Speaker 9: Don Lemon.

    Speaker 9: Who's another huge one on CNN?

    Speaker 9: Well, Cuomo

    Speaker 9: on the East Coast that was doing all that stuff. Chris Cuomo, his brother on CNN. Can you imagine seeing bank records? Because I promise you these guys are so arrogant and so low IQ

    Speaker 9: that they weren't hiding very much.

    Speaker 9: I'm just bringing that up. Thank you.

    Speaker 1: And,

    Speaker 1: the the color revolution that was fomented in the streets, those people had also been given

    Speaker 1: explicit or implicit cover.

    Speaker 1: If you recall some of the scenes we saw

    Speaker 1: when Minneapolis was burning or when New York was being

    Speaker 1: just widely looted,

    Speaker 1: you know, people

    Speaker 1: trotting down the

    Speaker 1: the road on a police horse being like, I stole the horse. It

    Speaker 1: just

    Speaker 1: things that would never happen in,

    Speaker 1: you know, normal

    Speaker 1: law and order everyday

    Speaker 1: America,

    Speaker 1: but happened,

    Speaker 1: all over the place with impunity. I think the same

    Speaker 1: and probably it's all it's all coming out of our pockets too, the money for all of this,

    Speaker 1: through

    Speaker 1: various

    Speaker 1: private public partnerships

    Speaker 1: with NGOs like USAID

    Speaker 1: and the Soros and the the Clinton

    Speaker 1: Foundation

    Speaker 1: and the Gates and Melinda Depopulation

    Speaker 1: Fund and all of this.

    Speaker 1: It's a they have a a lot of money, and they have bottomless resources that they have poured into this, which is why it's so phenomenal. And everyone in this room should give yourself just a huge pat on the back

    Speaker 1: for

    Speaker 1: really, you know,

    Speaker 1: grassroots

    Speaker 1: turning this around,

    Speaker 1: and and bringing other people into reality just by,

    Speaker 1: being relentless

    Speaker 1: in in knowing and and telling the truth

    Speaker 1: and,

    Speaker 1: and not taking it, not not taking

    Speaker 1: the propaganda

    Speaker 1: on board.

    Speaker 6: Go ahead, Kyle.

    Speaker 1: Is your hand just perpetually up? And I'm

    Speaker 9: yeah. Yeah. Yep. Yep. Yeah. It wasn't. I think I think it's Steve.

    Speaker 11: Welcome, Steve. Good to see you. Yes. Thank you. I guess, good morning, everybody.

    Speaker 11: I I stand for freedom,

    Speaker 11: truth, and accountability.

    Speaker 11: That's where I'm gonna stand with that. And I also find

    Speaker 11: that governments,

    Speaker 11: I don't care which way you look.

    Speaker 11: They're all done like Hollywood.

    Speaker 11: Okay?

    Speaker 11: Trump did his, no offense, fake assassination,

    Speaker 11: attempt there.

    Speaker 11: We do have video,

    Speaker 11: that, a veteran in The US put together,

    Speaker 11: to show that he was not shot in the ear. And if he was, it would have been like a spade shovel to the head.

    Speaker 11: Ear cartilage does not grow back, and if you view his right ear, it's perfect.

    Speaker 11: This is some of the stuff I do. I do human rights, but I wanted to get on COVID because,

    Speaker 11: this is what this area is for.

    Speaker 11: I just wanted to know if anybody

    Speaker 11: else knows that,

    Speaker 11: anywhere else in the world that are doing,

    Speaker 11: vaccines,

    Speaker 11: by aerosol.

    Speaker 11: They're not spraying

    Speaker 11: by, drones or planes.

    Speaker 11: It's not being produced,

    Speaker 11: as I know as of yet that way.

    Speaker 11: But the McMaster University

    Speaker 11: in Hamilton, Ontario has already completed phase one trials,

    Speaker 11: and they just got, like, over $8,000,000.

    Speaker 11: $8,266,315,

    Speaker 11: for the second phase trial over the next three years.

    Speaker 11: So I was just wondering, anybody else know about that? This is AerialVax.

    Speaker 11: Again, we're Canadian,

    Speaker 11: and we're censored,

    Speaker 11: so I can't share any news links out. Usually, we gotta do is take screenshots and send it that way.

    Speaker 11: That's one way of getting around it. But,

    Speaker 11: yeah, Canada, we're kinda heavily censored, but I fight against that as well. But I was just wondering if anybody else knew,

    Speaker 11: or has any more information

    Speaker 11: on these, aerosol,

    Speaker 11: vaccines that they're trying.

    Speaker 11: They claim they actually work better because it goes into the bronchio and the lungs,

    Speaker 11: apparently, where COVID attacks.

    Speaker 11: Yeah. So that that's my thought of the night.

    Speaker 11: Anybody have anything?

    Speaker 2: I I don't have any more information than what you said at for it's Aerovax, a a e r o v a x.

    Speaker 2: But,

    Speaker 2: I do believe that

    Speaker 2: it's

    Speaker 2: highly possible that that's one of the potential

    Speaker 2: things. T Bird asked, you know, what's coming next. I mean, I think that's something that's probably in their arsenal

    Speaker 2: that they may or may not choose to use,

    Speaker 2: simply because

    Speaker 2: the uptake is so poor,

    Speaker 2: on their other, quote, vaccines.

    Speaker 2: You know, the uptake is so poor now on mRNA

    Speaker 2: injections that that may be their next tack as far as that goes.

    Speaker 2: I don't know how efficient it would be, however, because anything that is aerosolized,

    Speaker 2: it depends on,

    Speaker 2: you know, the population density, the wind, the how you deploy it, you know, etcetera, etcetera. So I'm not sure that that's even practical,

    Speaker 2: as far as achieving what they would want

    Speaker 2: to achieve.

    Speaker 2: But,

    Speaker 2: I can say this with confidence.

    Speaker 2: They're not giving up, and I'm sure they have

    Speaker 2: several options.

    Speaker 2: They intend to continue with their agenda without a doubt. And just knowing that keeps you on guard. It keeps you alert.

    Speaker 2: It motivates you to do things to bolster your own health

    Speaker 2: and to empower yourself. And that's what's important

    Speaker 2: is being aware and

    Speaker 2: knowing

    Speaker 2: that that agenda is there.

    Speaker 2: You don't need to be stressed. You don't need to be fearful because the one thing that,

    Speaker 2: that helps a person

    Speaker 2: is knowing that and taking some action

    Speaker 2: because then that gives you

    Speaker 2: some confidence that you've at least taken an action to attempt

    Speaker 2: to protect yourself and those that you love.

    Speaker 2: The worst thing you can do

    Speaker 2: is be fearful, stick your head in the sand, and not take any action.

    Speaker 2: So, you know, knowledge is power and,

    Speaker 2: taking action is power and then also

    Speaker 2: sharing that knowledge

    Speaker 2: so that others can join you in that fight and those actions. I think that that's what gives you

    Speaker 2: a modicum of peace and

    Speaker 2: some power in this situation

    Speaker 2: because

    Speaker 2: you have to know

    Speaker 2: that

    Speaker 2: the battle is real. You can't stick your head in the sand.

    Speaker 6: Miriam, though, I wanna bring up. Remember last,

    Speaker 6: it was late fall, early winter,

    Speaker 6: when all the aerosol you know, like, here in Florida was real bad and I got sick.

    Speaker 6: Different states were having it, and it was this real thick,

    Speaker 6: foggy,

    Speaker 6: but you could see particles if you had your like, my phone light was on. You could see particles in the air. I remember that. Yeah. Yeah. So they've already been doing that. Yeah. I think they do I think they absolutely do that. They pilot it and try it in different places

    Speaker 2: to test it and see how

    Speaker 2: effective it is. So yeah.

    Speaker 2: It they're they're and, you know, they've always done that. The government has

    Speaker 2: tested things on populations

    Speaker 2: unknowingly

    Speaker 2: for decades.

    Speaker 2: So, without a doubt, yeah, they've tried it because, obviously,

    Speaker 2: they're not gonna spend their money on something that's not gonna give, you know, an effect that they want to get, but they sure will test pilot it for sure.

    Speaker 9: But, Miriam, remember this too. Money is not an issue. So we have to always keep that in our back pocket. Money is not an issue to these people

    Speaker 2: at all. Not. But I'm sure that, you know, they do want to make sure that they get a good bang for their buck because, obviously,

    Speaker 2: you know, how many trillions

    Speaker 2: and billions did they spend on COVID? They spent a lot, and, you know, they didn't all their modeling, their fear mongering

    Speaker 2: you know, I lost I lost my husband, so I don't say this lightly.

    Speaker 2: They did not achieve a fraction

    Speaker 2: of what they wanted to achieve. You know why?

    Speaker 2: Because the human body is not that easy to kill. That's why they had to have the protocol

    Speaker 2: with several layers.

    Speaker 2: I mean, it it wasn't going

    Speaker 2: it the the gator function virus wasn't going to kill enough people alone.

    Speaker 2: No. No. No.

    Speaker 2: They had to starve, dehydrate,

    Speaker 2: isolate,

    Speaker 2: overdose with

    Speaker 2: respiratory suppressants and,

    Speaker 2: morphine and fentanyl and,

    Speaker 2: you know, it took a lot to kill the people they did kill.

    Speaker 2: That's why, you know, when they start talking about

    Speaker 2: and fear mongering, oh, all these people are gonna die. That's exactly what it is. In their dreams, they wish they could easily kill that many people,

    Speaker 2: but they can't.

    Speaker 7: They must be

    Speaker 7: absolutely

    Speaker 7: shitting their pants

    Speaker 7: for those of us who survived

    Speaker 7: and who are still here

    Speaker 7: and connecting.

    Speaker 7: We're respectled all over the globe

    Speaker 7: and so strong whether we're poisoned or whether we're just so devastated from our loss of our loved one,

    Speaker 7: yet we're still here. They must be like, who are these people? Are they who are these people? Right? But I wanted to say to Steve,

    Speaker 7: you're right, Steve. Like, I I'm in Ontario as well. Waterloo, Guelph Waterloo is one of the top universities for genetics here in Canada.

    Speaker 7: When you look up the most educated world actually, Kyle and I talk about everything under the moon.

    Speaker 7: Canada is number two under South Korea. Is it North Korea or South Korea? For education.

    Speaker 7: We have some of the the most educated Yeah. South yeah. South Korea. South Korea. Yeah. South Korea is number one. Canada is number two if anyone cares. Not that I'm better than anyone because I didn't go to Guelph University. Trust me.

    Speaker 7: But,

    Speaker 7: they are world renowned. Why do you think there are two specific scientists

    Speaker 7: who came up with the s v 40 and the fetal DNA. They both went to that university. They both live out there. Is that not interesting to anyone? How did those two scientists

    Speaker 7: find that out before anyone else in the world? Before Japan even. That that's a fact, and you guys know who they are. So, you know, they're on spaces. They're on x. They they don't speak in spaces very often, obviously. One of them took my DNA from 02/2016,

    Speaker 7: my records, and then my 2023 I had repeated. Guess what they did?

    Speaker 7: Ignored me after that completely

    Speaker 7: because I wanted the proof. They were saying that our DNA changed. So I thought I'll get my DNA done again in 2023

    Speaker 7: because I only joined in in October 2023. I joined DAX, and I heard this. Oh, our DNA gets changed. Well, guess what? I got all my DNA done in 2016 when I was a perfect tribal athlete. You name it. And guess what?

    Speaker 7: I knew, because I looked at the coding, that it changed. I send it off with this this scientist from Guelph Waterloo

    Speaker 7: and crickets.

    Speaker 7: Isn't that funny? Then I wrote Philip Buckard in The States, the DNA guy. He says, oh, we're gonna be coming across with something soon in, January

    Speaker 7: 2024.

    Speaker 7: Zero.

    Speaker 7: No response after that. I harassed him. Like, harassed him in, like, once a month. Like, did you find anything yet? Can you take my DNA? Who

    Speaker 7: has their DNA from 2016

    Speaker 7: who gets poisoned to my level and then follows up with doing a repeat DNA out of her own pocket to prove

    Speaker 7: and no one wants it? Does that not seem suspicious? Yes. No. And and then and then sells for life. Oh, no. Go ahead. Go ahead. Sorry, ma'am. Different. Sorry. Oh, it's very suspicious. That silence speaks volumes, doesn't it? Mhmm. Yeah. And I called them out. I called them both out, these two scientists who we both know. Very huge on these spaces that speak and say they found you if you guys just look up who found s p 40 and who found,

    Speaker 7: the fetal DNA, it's these two Ontario scientists from that university that he's talking about the aerosol,

    Speaker 7: which was approved to be sprayed in Western Ontario.

    Speaker 7: And I'm I'm in Eastern Ontario, but doesn't matter. They're they're doing it. They passed it. They're gonna do it. So it's just like they're doing all this stuff. They're getting all the money. We all our money is going there, and it's just there's so much. But I will tell you by me speaking out, I I could say so much more, but I'm not going to.

    Speaker 7: I'll tell you there is a fear. And, Miriam, you just you said something that triggered me in a in a, like, an emotional way

    Speaker 7: because

    Speaker 7: free speech. Yeah. K.

    Speaker 7: I wanna say everything I know because I'm living it and I'm doing it, and you see where the roadblocks come up. Like, Steve brings up stuff when he comes into spaces, which always makes me go like,

    Speaker 7: yes. Like, this this guy knows. It's it's for sure. But

    Speaker 7: here's the thing.

    Speaker 7: I am terrified. Do I wanna admit that? No. But I'm gonna admit to you guys right now.

    Speaker 7: I go to sleep at night, and my sons and I are we're we're double locking the doors. We're closing the blinds. We're, like, not that that's gonna protect us from something. But by me speaking out,

    Speaker 7: I need to keep doing it. I need to. But

    Speaker 7: I will tell you, Kyle, I don't give you compliments very often because that's not my personality.

    Speaker 7: But Kyle, some nights, will just stay on the phone if I'm having a bad night and I'm like, I'm I'm having a bad feeling that something bad's gonna happen tonight because I'm afraid something's gonna happen and I'm alone because my son went to college now.

    Speaker 7: So

    Speaker 7: he'll stay on the phone with me all night. If I breathe wrong, which I do, sometimes I stop breathing because I'm on oxygen. Right?

    Speaker 7: So he he'll be like, Tanya. Tanya. Like, he'll wake up. He like, he's in Nebraska.

    Speaker 7: He is such a good person

    Speaker 7: because he knows those nights, which are rare. But when I need

    Speaker 7: that comfort knowing that someone's gonna hear something before I do

    Speaker 7: or it's terrible. That's it's a horrible way to live. It it I self admit it, but that's what I'm going through and that's because I'm afraid to speak with free speech because we don't have it in Canada as far as I'm concerned.

    Speaker 7: But I'm still doing it, and so everyone would say, well, then just stop.

    Speaker 7: But but I can't because I have the truth.

    Speaker 7: But I still

    Speaker 7: don't really feel like being murdered.

    Speaker 7: That's just not my option right now.

    Speaker 7: But I wanted to give Kyle a compliment that he is there for me when I'm, like, having a really bad night and I'm not breathing well or, you know, I'm scared. I I am.

    Speaker 7: We all should be scared. The our government

    Speaker 7: are tyrants.

    Speaker 7: Every single one of our it doesn't matter what country you're in. We're in trouble. You know what? He wrote, I wanna say something.

    Speaker 2: You know what?

    Speaker 2: Courage is not the absence of fear.

    Speaker 2: Courage is doing what you're doing even though you're afraid.

    Speaker 2: So you know what? You are brave, and you do have courage because you're continuing to do it despite being afraid. You'd have to be crazy not to be afraid.

    Speaker 2: That that's realistic,

    Speaker 2: but you're doing what you need to do anyway and and that's the hallmark

    Speaker 2: of courage. That's what it is. It's doing it afraid.

    Speaker 2: And I think we've all been doing that the last five years at least.

    Speaker 2: We've, you know, when we're heartsick and afraid and feel like we can't say another word but yet we do it anyway,

    Speaker 2: that's courage

    Speaker 2: And we're gonna that's what we're here for is to encourage each other. I love that word,

    Speaker 2: encourage

    Speaker 2: each other

    Speaker 2: because that's what we're doing. We're giving each other courage.

    Speaker 2: That's what encouragement

    Speaker 2: is, to continue

    Speaker 2: in the fight despite

    Speaker 2: a reasonable fear.

    Speaker 2: It's real,

    Speaker 2: but we're just not gonna stop.

    Speaker 7: You're so beautiful. That was beautiful.

    Speaker 7: Sorry. That's beautiful.

    Speaker 9: And, Miriam, I just wanna follow-up real quick with you. Thank you so much for saying that. God bless you,

    Speaker 9: and god bless the in protocol and and

    Speaker 9: and COVID and and, Chelsea. I I just wanna say this.

    Speaker 9: It is a 100% spiritual.

    Speaker 9: We've all made our mistakes. We've all had our falls. Right? We've all skinned our knees really, really bad.

    Speaker 9: All of us. And any different way

    Speaker 9: 10 ways to Sunday. Right? We've all made mistakes.

    Speaker 9: But finding that one

    Speaker 9: path or that one

    Speaker 9: goal

    Speaker 9: and not giving up

    Speaker 9: what she just said.

    Speaker 9: And courage is contagious.

    Speaker 9: It really is contagious.

    Speaker 9: You get to the point where

    Speaker 9: you feel like a failure,

    Speaker 9: not waking up in the morning fighting with everything you have, even if that door gets knocked on at 07:30 in the morning, and you avoid it, and you know they're coming back, and you paint those toenails, and you say, I'm going

    Speaker 9: I'm getting rounded up today.

    Speaker 9: It doesn't it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter because

    Speaker 9: the only thing that matters now

    Speaker 9: is fighting it.

    Speaker 9: And I just can't again, cannot be more grateful for being a part of this,

    Speaker 9: for being able to speak on here with you girls and you guys

    Speaker 9: and all the bravery that I see here every Saturday night. I cannot be more proud

    Speaker 9: and be more grateful to be a part of it. And I just wanted to say something about t. You know,

    Speaker 9: when I went up there

    Speaker 9: I I've been up there about three times, and,

    Speaker 9: I'm I'm hoping to go back soon.

    Speaker 9: It's so crazy how these bioweapons work on the body

    Speaker 9: Because you could have a couple days of clarity.

    Speaker 9: Right? As a as a bioweapon victim. You could have a couple days of clarity where your body's like, Okay. My gosh. It's working. We're scooping the driveway together, you know? We're doing this! And then it's three days of

    Speaker 9: just absolutely

    Speaker 9: flatline.

    Speaker 9: Because it's working on all the organ systems. It's working on all the muscles. It's working on all the nerves.

    Speaker 9: And I've seen it up close and personal, guys,

    Speaker 9: and,

    Speaker 9: I've never seen anything like it.

    Speaker 9: It's,

    Speaker 9: it's truly science fiction.

    Speaker 9: There's a there's a show that came out.

    Speaker 9: I know a lot of us don't have time,

    Speaker 9: and and I'll include myself in that, you know. Right? Because we're because we're doing all these things all the time. But sometimes you watch certain things on TV and you're like, I shouldn't even watch TV, but, it's called Alien Earth. It's this new show that was,

    Speaker 9: released, like, I think two months ago on FX.

    Speaker 9: And every single thing that we talk about in these spaces,

    Speaker 9: and I mean all of them,

    Speaker 9: it's on the show. They're showing

    Speaker 9: every single thing that we talk about between the bioweapon, between

    Speaker 9: love and loss and all the things. And it's like

    Speaker 9: such gaslighting.

    Speaker 9: I've never seen gaslighting on this proportion ever.

    Speaker 9: I'm really, really close. I pay attention close to certain movies. That's what I've brought up in these spaces before.

    Speaker 9: I really pay attention close.

    Speaker 9: You know, t asked that earlier. How can we figure out what's coming next? Well, you watch the shows that they're putting out because they're gaslighting you constantly. They're showing you because if they don't show you, it goes against some kind of universal law, some kind of spiritual code. They have to show you

    Speaker 9: what they're doing to you

    Speaker 9: in live time.

    Speaker 9: So if anybody gets a chance,

    Speaker 9: this is the most recent one that I've seen. It's called Alien Earth

    Speaker 9: on FX.

    Speaker 9: If you wanna just look up a trailer for it, whatever you guys wanna do, it has every single thing. It has the cloning. It has the bio weapons. It has the love loss and how, you know, this person lost their loved one because of this. And they didn't have any say over it. And now their body is owned by the government because of the DNA splicing and all the things. So, anyway, thank you so much, and and,

    Speaker 9: God bless all of you. Love you, t.

    Speaker 1: You referenced, I think, the the satanic principle

    Speaker 1: of revelation of the method where they

    Speaker 1: they have to that's how they obtain consent.

    Speaker 1: They've told you what they're doing to you. Now

    Speaker 1: you stand there and let it be done to you.

    Speaker 1: They told you.

    Speaker 1: And and that that's their ethical framework.

    Speaker 1: Sorry, t bird. I didn't mean to

    Speaker 7: cut you off. No. I let you're no. No. I'm so sorry. I like to put my hand up on purpose. That's why. And then you say, don't put your hand up and I'm like, I'm not feeling like I'm cutting someone off.

    Speaker 7: I posted something. I know I'm super, what's that called, brain brainwashed. I'm probably brainwashed too, but,

    Speaker 7: I know I'm scrubbed or whatever from this site because I post stuff that's just really real, and it's new. It's not stuff that I took pictures of four years ago.

    Speaker 7: I try to keep you guys up to date on what's happening. You know I'm old,

    Speaker 7: and I'm sorry if I'm 51 and I'm younger than you when I say that, but I'm not young. I'm not an IT person. I don't know how to do Photoshop. I don't know how to do, what's that

    Speaker 7: called, bronzing or what what whatever people, those young Instagram girls do. I don't know anything. I just take a video

    Speaker 7: and I never I look either how I look. I don't know how to change it. I just post it. And sometimes I don't well, I always don't know how to edit it. But

    Speaker 7: if you see a video from me, it's not for attention.

    Speaker 7: I'm gonna repeat this. It is currently happening, and I'm doing it as documentation

    Speaker 7: for my legal case. But, also, to share if someone because I'm so far ahead of a lot of people with the injury, that if it happens to them or a loved one, I want them to go, maybe it triggers them. Maybe they saw something.

    Speaker 7: Do you think it's so embarrassing for me to post. Like, I posted the pHACS, Public Health Agency of Canada. All the research I did there, you can see I'm in complete congestive heart failure. Just look at my face, any nurse in this room. You the bags under my eyes. I was 120

    Speaker 7: when I got injected the first time. I'm a hundred and eighty pounds, and I'm on diuretics

    Speaker 7: twice a day on top of my heart failure meds right now, and I can't get the fluid off my heart fast enough. That's how swollen I am all the time. It's not pretty. Kyle's seen it. It's he's seen and it it actually meant a lot for me for you to explain to them, Kyle.

    Speaker 7: It really is real. This is not

    Speaker 7: this is not just I'm injured.

    Speaker 7: This is

    Speaker 7: every organ is failing

    Speaker 7: slowly, but then a new thing happens. So recently, I just wanted to say, when you when I couldn't sit on a chair, this is how it really started.

    Speaker 7: I couldn't sit. I couldn't stand. It was in my bones. It was the worst pain I ever had in my life. I thought

    Speaker 7: maybe they hit a nerve in my arm when they got it. You know, you you make all these excuses in your head. I'm gonna repeat this because I know you guys have heard this a million times, and you already know this. But I got all three Pfizers. Three,

    Speaker 7: two, and then the booster because that's what I was mandated as in Iran in Canada.

    Speaker 7: I didn't want them. Got the first one. Got the second one within four weeks even though I'd already been hospitalized with a heart attack. They didn't tell me they lied, so that's medical malpractice. They took my d dimer. That was 4,000. I have the records now. I didn't think to look at it because I was so out of it. Totally you know when they say you have brain fog? I was denying it. I don't have brain fog. I still had to get up and go to work every morning and take care of my two kids, get them to school, feed them, make their lunches. I had no one to help me. So you just you're like a robot. You just do it, but I was suffering so bad with dizzy spells. Almost crashed my car three times.

    Speaker 7: 911 calls. I've got the ambulance calls. You name it. This is just the beginning. That's in the first

    Speaker 7: week,

    Speaker 7: and and it's four and a half almost five years now. But what I wanted to say was,

    Speaker 7: do you think I can remember? Probably not. Oh, the muscle twitching. This is new. Who would know? When I knew I was having the pain, I'd be like, oh my god. This is the worst. Oh my god. I don't know what's happening.

    Speaker 7: I never thought I would have a heart attack. I never thought I'd go into heart failure. I never thought I would have brain demyelination proved on two brain MRIs and multiple sclerosis, sudden sudden acute

    Speaker 7: onset. What what the what the hell is that? What you never think it could get worse and then gets worse. And so now I'm like I'm like, okay. Every organ's shutting down now. That's confirmed,

    Speaker 7: medically confirmed.

    Speaker 7: And I'm laying on the couch the other day, and now this starts up a couple weeks ago, where all my entire body starts spasming.

    Speaker 7: Okay? Now I used to have the spasms and the twitches and the tremors, which is different. That's different. That was the initial neuro stuff.

    Speaker 7: This is different. Guys, I videotaped my right thigh, and all I was doing was just sitting on the couch like I always do watching my decorating show. And suddenly,

    Speaker 7: my largest muscle in my body, in my right thigh, is like

    Speaker 7: you know, if you go to physio and you get those little pads put on and, whatever those are called, I forget now, and it's your whole muscles are spasming. They're, like, tense. They're, like, like, angry.

    Speaker 7: My whole body's doing that constantly. Can you imagine all your muscles

    Speaker 7: spasming out of control and and intensely

    Speaker 7: contracting

    Speaker 7: contracting

    Speaker 7: tight, tight, tight, and then release? And then you have no control. Like, you can't walk, like, obviously.

    Speaker 7: But it's painful,

    Speaker 7: but it's also

    Speaker 7: exhausting.

    Speaker 9: Like, my entire body, my face does it, my arms do it, my legs do it. I tried to put a video, but, of course, I can barely hold the phone because my whole body's doing it. Right? So I just And key Yeah. Go ahead. Sorry. And and I was gonna say this this is not dehydration. I just wanna say this. Oh, please continue. I just wanna make sure everybody understands. You know, a lot of people think, oh, yeah. This might be, like, a dehydration thing where her body is so dehydrated

    Speaker 9: that she's having these, you know, these switches and stuff because she doesn't wanna drink it. No. She drinks more water than any human I know, and it's extremely clean water. It's Canadian water, and it's filtered.

    Speaker 9: She drinks

    Speaker 9: four

    Speaker 9: How many ounces do you drink a day, Dee? Oh god. Probably

    Speaker 7: two to three liters, but I also drink with lemon water. But I I just because I like water. I don't drink pop. I like, I really I but I also take magnesium. So it's not a supplement thing. This is new. This my life has not changed since this

    Speaker 7: happened. It's not anything. I know I love when people try to help me. I do love it and appreciate it. Like, when I sent Maryam my information about the oscaler respiratory, she did this research for me. I couldn't have done it. I don't have the wherewithal, and I appreciate everything she did because that was the beginning in 02/2019.

    Speaker 7: But, anyway, back to that. The the the muscle spasms, I'm just sharing that. And if you wanna see what it looks like, I put it on my it's somewhere on my page, but it's recent and it and it's very intense and it's very painful. My back's spasming. Everything's

    Speaker 7: hurts. Everything it's like I'm turning into an alien. That's when I watched Terminator and I thought I saw the t 1,000.

    Speaker 7: The first time it happened,

    Speaker 7: I couldn't I was sitting on the couch. That's when I had been paralyzed almost two and a half years completely, like, can my entire left side.

    Speaker 7: And my son was in the basement. I've told you guys this story before, but he came up because I was storming the main floor suddenly,

    Speaker 7: out of control.

    Speaker 7: I had no control, and I was just like the Terminator. And that's all I could picture in my mind was I feel like that that naked

    Speaker 7: wet guy that walks that's what Adam's like, storm storm.

    Speaker 7: And he came up and he stood there and he's like, mom,

    Speaker 7: what are you doing? And I'm like, I don't know. Go back to the basement. I don't know what's happening. I don't know what's happening. And I was, like, literally

    Speaker 7: had no control of my body. I didn't know what was happening. Shit. You know it. So I tell Tove, who's in Detroit is just North of Detroit.

    Speaker 7: And he says, oh, that's the t 1,000. I said, are you shitting me? Guess what? Look into t 1,000 and the science behind the t 1,000 and the Terminator.

    Speaker 7: It's the same chemical reaction that they put in the mRNA technology. It's the same and it asks it's also connected to what? Oh, Elon Musk's

    Speaker 7: Starlink.

    Speaker 7: Shit you not. It's all documented.

    Speaker 7: Yeah. Just back to Kyle's point. That's the end of my story. I promise I'll go go to sleep now. I'll just listen. I love you guys.

    Speaker 4: You better not.

    Speaker 1: You you still cannot eat. You're, like, obligated to stay on for the rest of the night and keep this entertained with you.

    Speaker 7: No. But it's real. This Starlink thing, it's in the Terminator movie. If you look up t 1,000,

    Speaker 7: look up what the t 1,000 is made of, then look up Starlink. I shit you not. It's there. And I'm like, that's what happened that night. And that was

    Speaker 7: when was that? A year and a half ago? And now I have all those weird twitches, and now I'm having these weird muscle spasms.

    Speaker 7: So I just you you start to question yourself and go, the tran they're telling us transhumanism.

    Speaker 7: I don't wanna believe it, but, okay, do I embrace it? Am I a transhuman?

    Speaker 7: Am I am I, like, one of your loco friends? I'm one of your transhuman friends with the normals. You're the normies, and I'm, like, I'm kind of in between. I'm like, I am transhuman.

    Speaker 9: But And and and, Teeq, can we also talk about RoboCop? Because the first thing I thought when she was talking about boom, boom, boom. Right? I thought about the eighties movie, the first one, RoboCop,

    Speaker 9: and how

    Speaker 9: he got killed.

    Speaker 9: He was a very good man,

    Speaker 9: had a great wife that loved him.

    Speaker 9: He got killed, but they kept his brain alive. Right?

    Speaker 9: So when she told me that story, the first thing that came to mind was RoboCop

    Speaker 9: and how her brain was still there. Her body was not. Right? And she was, like, kinda looking off, and that movie shows the whole thing with RoboCop.

    Speaker 9: Shows the whole thing that she went through. Kind of the drooling and kinda looking around like she wasn't sure, but her brain and her soul were still there in her body. So when she got up and started smacking her legs super hard, so hard that her son and this is a nice place. Right? This is a very nice she worked very hard. This is a nice house, very solid floors. For him to hear that, that has to be a RoboCop stop. Right? That has to be a thousand pound RoboCop

    Speaker 9: walking around up there,

    Speaker 9: really hitting the floor hard. And so I kind of

    Speaker 9: understand the t 1,000.

    Speaker 9: That makes a lot of sense. But RoboCop hit me harder because

    Speaker 9: he literally was still there, but they had to rebuild his body around it. Right? Around that man the mind and the and the soul. And so when he I got back into

    Speaker 9: work,

    Speaker 9: he was stronger than he ever was.

    Speaker 9: That's how I feel about Tee. I feel like she's had this

    Speaker 9: third, fourth, and fifth win now in the last couple couple years.

    Speaker 9: I would say probably since I met her, she really started coming alive and changing and getting smart. And and she'll she'll tell you this. She feels like she's smarter now and quicker now on her mind than maybe she was

    Speaker 9: before the shot. Right?

    Speaker 9: It's it's kind of a wild thing to see happen,

    Speaker 9: and I see how fast she works. I mean, she's literally like a computer. Her mind is fast. Her body's not always there for her. Her legs don't always come around or may maybe her arms or, you know, she's feeling these twitches and these sensations, but, man, she is fast. So you think about RoboCop.

    Speaker 9: It's one of those movies I wanted to watch with her because I don't think she ever saw it. 1987,

    Speaker 9: I believe, was the first RoboCop.

    Speaker 9: And it just kinda puts you into that mode where he was fighting for

    Speaker 9: the truth and justice. So it just kinda landed super hard,

    Speaker 9: with me and her, when it comes to RoboCop. So if anybody's ever seen it or hasn't seen it, you should.

    Speaker 1: I was thinking about RoboCop

    Speaker 1: last night. We just watched the

    Speaker 1: the second two

    Speaker 1: Terminator

    Speaker 1: movies. Just like last night, we watched the third one.

    Speaker 1: So interesting that you you bring that up. And when you said t 1,000, I can, like, I can see the

    Speaker 1: robots, the early models.

    Speaker 1: And, what was novel about that is that, you know, the early models are just they look like

    Speaker 1: big clunky

    Speaker 1: armchairs with legs,

    Speaker 1: but then you get into the the later models that,

    Speaker 1: are played by Arnold Schwarzenegger.

    Speaker 1: And then in the last movie, you have the the fancy new model that,

    Speaker 1: you know, can morph into anything

    Speaker 1: and has all this scary

    Speaker 1: tech built in. And,

    Speaker 1: yeah, the predictive program is amazing. That's the

    Speaker 7: t the t bird 1,000.

    Speaker 7: It's the t

    Speaker 6: T. T. T bird.

    Speaker 6: Well then, sweetheart, I'm gonna be waiting for you to melt through my phone,

    Speaker 6: and we'll have

    Speaker 6: coffee.

    Speaker 6: You know?

    Speaker 6: So I'll see I'll see you sometime this week. Okay? Okay. I'll see you soon.

    Speaker 1: Steve, go ahead. Jump in there.

    Speaker 11: Okay. Thank you.

    Speaker 11: T Bird, you're talking about a TENS unit.

    Speaker 11: I had one after my, 2012 accident.

    Speaker 11: That's what they are. If you enjoyed the movie,

    Speaker 11: Jackass, you can find some other uses for that.

    Speaker 11: Kyle.

    Speaker 11: Canada does not have clean water. I hate to tell you. I've been researching it for the last four to five years.

    Speaker 11: All my documentation

    Speaker 11: is on x, IG, Facebook, Tumblr,

    Speaker 11: Blue Sky,

    Speaker 11: a whole bunch. Okay?

    Speaker 11: I can actually tell you what is in our waters.

    Speaker 11: And the worst part is is what's in the fish.

    Speaker 11: Going by the,

    Speaker 11: Ontario,

    Speaker 11: eating fish

    Speaker 11: guide,

    Speaker 11: put out by a doctor,

    Speaker 11: and the Ontario government.

    Speaker 11: If I select that native reservation on First Nations,

    Speaker 11: I'm gonna use Musa Nee.

    Speaker 11: Musa Nee, if you use the interactive map and you click on it,

    Speaker 11: it'll tell you the fish has mercury

    Speaker 11: and

    Speaker 11: arsenic, but not the levels.

    Speaker 11: Okay? So,

    Speaker 11: indigenous has a high intake of fish.

    Speaker 11: So if we are not warned that what are the levels,

    Speaker 11: eating too much of it could turn you into,

    Speaker 11: mercury poisoning or arsenic poisoning.

    Speaker 11: So I've been battling with my government as well.

    Speaker 11: Some of the stuff that I put up there,

    Speaker 11: you know, sure draws,

    Speaker 11: eyeballs.

    Speaker 11: I have communicated

    Speaker 11: with the, prime minister,

    Speaker 11: not him directly, but, through his office.

    Speaker 11: I sent lots of letters to Doug Ford. He don't like me. That's okay. I don't like him either

    Speaker 11: and stuff like that. But

    Speaker 11: if you really wanna see what's in your water, you you gotta have it tested.

    Speaker 11: I had,

    Speaker 11: our water analyzed.

    Speaker 11: It cost us a lot of money,

    Speaker 11: and our government and government agencies

    Speaker 11: stated,

    Speaker 11: no. We're not gonna accept it because it comes from a lab that, is not credible.

    Speaker 11: Hold on.

    Speaker 11: The Ontario government uses the same lab

    Speaker 11: for wastewater

    Speaker 11: and freshwater,

    Speaker 11: checks.

    Speaker 11: So I use the same lab

    Speaker 11: that they use. The lab that I use was also more expensive.

    Speaker 11: But a lot of, chemicals

    Speaker 11: and heavy metal

    Speaker 11: from mining,

    Speaker 11: and industry is in the water.

    Speaker 11: You know? The glaciers, when they melted, left Canada with a a lot of beautiful freshwater

    Speaker 11: all over it.

    Speaker 11: But I can you pick a lake, and I'll show you,

    Speaker 11: how bad it is. We're actually losing

    Speaker 11: the Great Lakes, and we're losing it at a faster pace

    Speaker 11: than most people realize.

    Speaker 11: A lake only

    Speaker 11: naturally,

    Speaker 11: refreshes itself annually

    Speaker 11: by 1%.

    Speaker 11: If we go to

    Speaker 11: the,

    Speaker 11: Tar Sands in Alberta,

    Speaker 11: Danielle Smith and the government over there,

    Speaker 11: I can't remember the acreage they've harvested over there, but they only achieved

    Speaker 11: 1%

    Speaker 11: to bring it back to land that's usable,

    Speaker 11: for citizens.

    Speaker 11: It's what humans.

    Speaker 11: And I'm saying humans because, you know, I wanna include everybody.

    Speaker 11: What we have done to the environment

    Speaker 11: is why we have the environment we have today

    Speaker 11: and why we're gonna have,

    Speaker 11: you know, whatever environment we're gonna have in the future.

    Speaker 11: I spent,

    Speaker 11: probably the last three weeks talking to

    Speaker 11: governors, senators,

    Speaker 11: all across The US,

    Speaker 11: introducing them to Tangier one satellite that was launched last year.

    Speaker 11: I had the previous even,

    Speaker 11: seeing all the, the stuff as it came online.

    Speaker 11: It shows,

    Speaker 11: c o two emissions

    Speaker 11: and methane

    Speaker 11: emissions

    Speaker 11: right to the source, right at the ground.

    Speaker 11: So you can, pick, it scans,

    Speaker 11: and, it shows you a bunch of little circles. The US has tons

    Speaker 11: of leaking gas wells that leak methane into the atmosphere.

    Speaker 11: Your power plants down there are pumping sealed throughout like it's crazy.

    Speaker 11: And,

    Speaker 11: it gives you the plume and plume size,

    Speaker 11: and it also gives you a flow rate in kilograms

    Speaker 11: per hour.

    Speaker 11: Okay? So one well

    Speaker 11: that, I looked at, it's in Canada.

    Speaker 11: It's leaking 288,000

    Speaker 11: kilograms

    Speaker 11: per hour.

    Speaker 11: Okay? This is what I do. This is what I love. I can go off on any tangent.

    Speaker 11: Anybody wants to go there, that's fine.

    Speaker 11: I don't watch a lot of news. I don't watch a lot of TV, but I listen to a lot of music because I need it to help me, think.

    Speaker 7: I think you're great,

    Speaker 7: and you're very smart.

    Speaker 7: So I'm sorry that you had an accident. I heard you said that you used that. Yeah. You're right. It was the TENS machine. That's what it feels like. It feels like if you get a TENS machine placed on you for physio

    Speaker 7: and it's contracting, it's very uncomfortable feeling. So if any of you had that, that's what my body is doing on its own.

    Speaker 7: So if anyone knows what's triggering that, I would be all ears.

    Speaker 7: So thanks, Steve.

    Speaker 11: All good, t bird.

    Speaker 11: You know, we all have our our things. I had my first injury, I think, back in 1989.

    Speaker 11: I broke

    Speaker 11: down near l two,

    Speaker 11: became paralyzed.

    Speaker 11: My second accident

    Speaker 11: in 2012,

    Speaker 11: took me to Life Flight.

    Speaker 11: Midland Hospital

    Speaker 11: had to, pull me back,

    Speaker 11: or bring me back with, lifesaving measures.

    Speaker 11: I was, given a sedative,

    Speaker 11: to put down my throat,

    Speaker 11: because because I was going into a coma, drug induced coma, and then I was, orange lifted from Midland Hospital straight to Sunnybrook where I spent

    Speaker 11: a week in ICU recovering.

    Speaker 7: I wonder if I was your nurse. I was were you there?

    Speaker 7: I don't you know what? I won't ask, but that's where I was. I was a trauma nurse at Sunnybrook. That's why I was just gonna ask you. You must have been there. You you guys should discuss that in the DM because I certainly

    Speaker 1: wanna give away any details, but,

    Speaker 1: that that wouldn't that be an interesting,

    Speaker 1: an interesting thing?

    Speaker 11: Well, no. That's that's that's got me interested now. But, t bird, don't don't apologize for my accidents.

    Speaker 11: I'm kind of the evil, kenevo Canadian version. I'm not sure which bone I have not broken.

    Speaker 7: Well, you did say you're native. There you go. You bounce. You bounce, boy.

    Speaker 1: T bird, do you have any,

    Speaker 1: myelitis, or have the doctor said anything about myelitis in regard to your condition?

    Speaker 7: Yeah. Actually, I have avascular

    Speaker 7: necrosis, osteonecrosis.

    Speaker 7: And when I was with my breathing, my breathing was always good

    Speaker 7: until I wasn't in October 2023. That's where they said I had

    Speaker 7: some type of myelitis.

    Speaker 7: And now I'm having a brain fart right now. But, yeah, I don't think

    Speaker 7: what do I know right now?

    Speaker 7: I don't know anything about that now, but that's true. I did hear it Well back then. Yeah. I just I I just asked Adam,

    Speaker 1: you know, you said if anyone knows about this,

    Speaker 1: sensation, like, you're on a TENS machine where everything's tensing and releasing,

    Speaker 1: and his hit was,

    Speaker 1: well, does she have any myelitis?

    Speaker 1: And, so that might be why that's happening. Do you have anything to add to that? Well, I mean, I'm presently working on a lot of,

    Speaker 12: autoimmune related

    Speaker 12: study, and,

    Speaker 12: that comes up very frequently on it in terms of,

    Speaker 12: back injury, which I presume we are talking about. Mhmm. So,

    Speaker 12: I'm I'm working on an article right now.

    Speaker 12: About IGG four. Right. Right. Which is yep. I'll I'll get to that when I get to it.

    Speaker 9: But I have a quick question for Adam when he has a chance.

    Speaker 12: Sure.

    Speaker 12: As far as any general

    Speaker 12: info,

    Speaker 12: I'm sure you've heard high dose ivermectin

    Speaker 12: that can, help to regenerate myelin sheaths

    Speaker 12: on nerves. That's the protective covering over the,

    Speaker 12: nerves. And when that gets eaten away by,

    Speaker 12: autoimmune reactions,

    Speaker 12: that, causes all manner of nerve strangeness,

    Speaker 12: presents in various different ways.

    Speaker 12: Regular steroids,

    Speaker 12: they tend to be the first line

    Speaker 12: of

    Speaker 12: treatment. So if you can ask a doctor to combine those two, some

    Speaker 12: steroids and appropriate dose and, high dose ivermectin

    Speaker 12: that might be able to both,

    Speaker 12: shut down the continuing problem and also

    Speaker 12: give you nerves the opportunity to regenerate

    Speaker 12: while the,

    Speaker 12: immunosupp is lessened.

    Speaker 12: And, that might yield results within a month or so of

    Speaker 12: using such protocol.

    Speaker 7: Adam, what can you explain to me like, if you if you do look at my video, it's it's it's my leg. If you can see it, then maybe that might put a picture to what I'm going through. Just it's just my thigh that it's not anything inappropriate. But

    Speaker 7: but what is myelitis? Like, because myelitis is very general to me in my in my brain. What what could you explain that to me and to anyone else who doesn't understand? Myelitis.

    Speaker 7: Yeah. Myelitis

    Speaker 12: literally means

    Speaker 12: inflammation

    Speaker 12: of the myelin.

    Speaker 12: So it is anything that's

    Speaker 12: that ends in it is is an inflammation,

    Speaker 12: and myelitis is inflammation of the myelin.

    Speaker 12: So that is the nerve sheets that protect the nerves

    Speaker 12: as they,

    Speaker 12: so nerves, they exchange their chemical signals and electrical signals

    Speaker 12: inside their sheaths so they're not disturbed by anything external.

    Speaker 12: When those sheaths are damaged

    Speaker 12: or, as is the case, frequently eaten away by autoimmune reactions,

    Speaker 12: then the nerves are exposed,

    Speaker 12: and

    Speaker 12: anything can ensue from there,

    Speaker 12: certainly including what you were talking about. Although that sounds very systemic if it's,

    Speaker 12: happening to you all over,

    Speaker 12: so that probably

    Speaker 12: isn't a good sign. But, I'm not a doctor. I can't diagnose you.

    Speaker 12: But, yeah, that that's, myelitis. Myelitis is when

    Speaker 12: nerve sheaths are being attacked by the immune. Well, being attacked by anything generally, but most of the time, it is autoimmune.

    Speaker 6: But they've always said in

    Speaker 6: that once the myelin sheath

    Speaker 6: is destroyed,

    Speaker 6: there is no

    Speaker 6: fixing it.

    Speaker 6: Not saying that they can't come up with something now, but I'm just saying that's what they, you know, all these can regenerate.

    Speaker 6: There are studies that Like, how high dose are you talking though, Adam?

    Speaker 12: I don't have a protocol, but high would be on the order of the cancer treatments like that. So,

    Speaker 12: what are we thinking here?

    Speaker 12: I can pull I can pull, I guess thirty to sixty milligrams per kilogram?

    Speaker 6: I didn't hear that. What did you say?

    Speaker 12: I said possibly

    Speaker 12: at a wild guess getting up to the thirty per sixty milligrams per kilogram,

    Speaker 12: like,

    Speaker 6: extremely high doses. Oh, you're talking high, high doses.

    Speaker 1: Oh, yes. Yeah. Which is quite dangerous. At that level, it has to be monitored by a doctor. And I know everybody, you know, is kind of glossing over that after the last five years when I can't trust most doctors.

    Speaker 1: But I can't emphasize that enough with some of these protocols.

    Speaker 1: And I'm pinning the the cancer protocol

    Speaker 1: article that he referenced,

    Speaker 1: that the that's kind of the the baseline of

    Speaker 12: I'll further qualify that though. I mean, I just pulled a number out of thin air right there. I do not have a protocol

    Speaker 6: for regenerating I was just I was just curious on when you were saying hi to how, like, how were you talking hi? Yeah. But I Well, Adam, have you seen doctor William Macas's

    Speaker 2: protocol? He actually has one that goes from, you know, low BP face line. Low low BP. Mackes, actually.

    Speaker 1: Mackes is one of the few,

    Speaker 1: doctors who who publicly credited Adam

    Speaker 2: for that protocol when he put it into use. So So what I was gonna do is I have a graphic that has all that on it. And if you guys want, I can put it in the purple pill.

    Speaker 1: Yeah. That would be great.

    Speaker 1: Okay. And I I did pin the the cancer article just as a reference point for what he's talking about when he's talking about high dose.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. There's a graphic that talks about low, medium, and high dose that is doctor.

    Speaker 2: So,

    Speaker 2: and, T Bird, for your reference, he is a Canadian oncologist.

    Speaker 12: Yeah. And Macas has his own take on,

    Speaker 12: protocol and what to do, which is what always what exactly

    Speaker 12: what I've recommended

    Speaker 12: that, you know, the protocol I've published is a baseline.

    Speaker 12: Take it, adapt it to your needs, adapt it to your patient,

    Speaker 12: discover what else you want to go with it. Recently, I saw someone was,

    Speaker 12: talking about a keto diet alongside

    Speaker 12: protocol, which was interesting, but everyone's got their own little take.

    Speaker 12: When it comes to cancer, the key there is those four drugs.

    Speaker 12: Some doctors only go with the two and change it around, so Fenben and ivermectin.

    Speaker 12: But my protocol is benben, ivermectin,

    Speaker 12: sorbic acid, and, sodium vodka.

    Speaker 1: And he explains all the various mechanisms of action that make that a viable protocol in the article.

    Speaker 9: So maybe we're free go ahead, Kyle. Yeah. Just a quick question for Adam and and you guys,

    Speaker 9: about the thyroid. One night, we were in a space, and we're talking about,

    Speaker 9: nuclear radiation, and we're talking about all these things.

    Speaker 9: You know, T had found some stuff about irradiation

    Speaker 9: and how certain things were, you know, adapting

    Speaker 9: and and being, you know, used to

    Speaker 9: basically be proactive in some of these injuries.

    Speaker 9: And, so I went and looked about the thyroid,

    Speaker 9: hyper and hypo. Right? So he taught me hypo and hyper,

    Speaker 9: the two different types

    Speaker 9: of thyroidism.

    Speaker 9: And then I looked at the connection

    Speaker 9: between the thyroid

    Speaker 9: and heart failure,

    Speaker 9: osteoporosis,

    Speaker 9: and a vascular necrosis.

    Speaker 9: Even Epstein Barr,

    Speaker 9: all the things that she has,

    Speaker 9: they all popped up with the thyroid.

    Speaker 9: Then I asked Tee, and, hopefully, Tee, you can back me up here. I asked you, I said, how is your thyroid? And then you said that you've always had kind of an issue. I I I can't remember exactly the quote. I don't wanna wanna quote you right now. But,

    Speaker 9: just just a question for Adam.

    Speaker 9: Is there a way to

    Speaker 9: link

    Speaker 9: these things that she's dealing with? Because because my opinion after my research, Adam, was that they were actually targeting the thyroid

    Speaker 9: more than they were targeting anything else. And all these symptoms that t has and a lot of these vaccine bioweapon,

    Speaker 9: injured and and and disabled,

    Speaker 9: they're coming from the thyroid.

    Speaker 9: Everything is coming from the thyroid. Does that make any sense, Adam?

    Speaker 12: It makes absolutely no sense whatsoever.

    Speaker 12: Thyroid is

    Speaker 12: I mean,

    Speaker 12: over the course of this work, I mean, the vast majority of the

    Speaker 12: body is affected in some way or another that can be described.

    Speaker 12: I don't think

    Speaker 12: this is possibly the first conversation I've had in this context where the thyroid has come up at all.

    Speaker 12: I

    Speaker 12: I mean, if you wanted if you were to try to draw a connection there, then,

    Speaker 12: I mean, the first place that I would start would be looking at peptides and,

    Speaker 12: any way that Spike or the LMPs or any of the rest of it is actually affecting your furrow.

    Speaker 1: Isn't isn't that what Kat Crum was

    Speaker 1: to no. Sorry. Kat Parker

    Speaker 1: was talking about was peptides. And weren't you, t bird, at some point talking about a peptide treatment?

    Speaker 1: And you were like, that doesn't make any sense. They were talking about exogenous peptides. I'm talking about

    Speaker 12: what part of

    Speaker 12: the vaccine

    Speaker 12: or the virus or the capsule

    Speaker 12: would be projected to interact with the thyroid in any way in which manner. Is there anything in the thyroid that is bound that binds to the spike somehow?

    Speaker 9: So Yeah. Yes. So what I'm asking yeah. Yes. So, Adam, so what I'm asking is if your thyroid is severely off

    Speaker 9: let's just talk about female right now. Well, let's not talk about male. Let's just talk about, like,

    Speaker 9: for her case

    Speaker 9: right now, if her thyroid is way off, k,

    Speaker 9: if she get her thyroid back on track in the proper range,

    Speaker 9: I think this is something that we should go down. I I think this is a path that we should look Kyle, my my thyroid's fine. My thyroid level's fine.

    Speaker 9: Well, that well, that's not what I understood. So thanks for making me look like a full on idiot.

    Speaker 7: I I didn't do. I just wanted to stop you because, yeah, the the it was, like, out of range, but everyone's goes out of range here and there. But that that's not no. I've never considered it a thyroid issue. But that's just I'm not trying to make you look bad. So No. I know. I'm joking. I'm just simply saying I looked up the thyroid.

    Speaker 9: I looked up what

    Speaker 9: hypo or hyperthyroidism

    Speaker 9: can do, and it has every single side effect that you're dealing with. So I looked it up. It it took me three hours one night. Right? I'm just fucking scientist in my own little fucking apartment here, and I'm looking it up and every single side effect that you have,

    Speaker 9: including heart failure,

    Speaker 9: was linked directly to the thyroid.

    Speaker 9: That's all I'm saying.

    Speaker 7: I think the problem is yeah. I know. I I just wanna it's

    Speaker 7: my heart failure is from not having

    Speaker 7: my tachycardia

    Speaker 7: or sudden onset POTS from the vaccines

    Speaker 7: was not dealt with properly, was not acknowledged, was not medicated properly. I was given polypharmacy,

    Speaker 7: multiple

    Speaker 7: traditional

    Speaker 7: beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, all the things that we normally give to our elderly patients and work once a day,

    Speaker 7: because this was different. This wasn't a vaccine. This was a poison. And so EKGs came back normal because when you lay flat within the EKG, we know not we know that now,

    Speaker 7: it will always read normal because what this

    Speaker 7: bioweapon did,

    Speaker 7: bioscientific

    Speaker 7: chemistry

    Speaker 7: injection,

    Speaker 7: synthetic

    Speaker 7: injection

    Speaker 7: that is not I'm sorry. I'm gonna say it.

    Speaker 7: I got a synthetic

    Speaker 7: injection into my bloodstream that affected all my organs. I don't believe I know

    Speaker 7: everyone's saying their studies that say it's they're shedding. But if you can't prove a vaccine injury still to this day well, I know I I feel like I can, but

    Speaker 7: it's like, how do you prove shedding

    Speaker 7: if you were getting your nasopharyngeal

    Speaker 7: swabs with all the animal biohazard on it? Because if you didn't get the vaccine, but you were shoving that thing up your nose twenty four seven, maybe you gave it to yourself. Does anybody think about that? No one talks about that, and I shouldn't be an asshole. But I'm just saying, we were in maybe we were injecting ourselves.

    Speaker 7: The people that thought they were doing the right thing, that didn't get injected, which was the right thing, but yet they still took those swabs and shoved them up into their brain, and it had bio well, now you guys have it. I put it in the purple pill, and I have all the screenshots of this PCR test. Like, this this is real shit. It wasn't tested. It's confirmed

    Speaker 7: animal biohazard.

    Speaker 7: It's in black and white. What if you guys gave yourself your own biohazard?

    Speaker 7: And even we did. Obviously, the ones that got vaccinated, we all had to test before we went into work every morning to be a nurse.

    Speaker 7: We had to. So not only was it the vaccine, but we were also shoving the shit up our nose,

    Speaker 7: because we couldn't walk in the door without it. With a serial number, we, like, we were like robots then. I'll be right back. Here here what was the guarantee bird. We never use when the PCR test was used, it was only used for certain,

    Speaker 6: ailments,

    Speaker 6: like tonsillitis.

    Speaker 6: Things like, you know, you were culturing. That was it. That's all it was used for.

    Speaker 6: Then when when it when COVID hit,

    Speaker 6: of course, they I mean, that's when everything really changed.

    Speaker 6: You know? And and I believe and I've told everybody this from the beginning, which is probably where I started making

    Speaker 6: so many friends. I'm kidding.

    Speaker 6: Lost a lot of people. Because

    Speaker 6: of

    Speaker 6: they already we know they were putting things on the the tips of those.

    Speaker 6: Them just

    Speaker 6: you being a nurse, me being a nurse, you don't wear a mask. You go you wear a mask to go do whatever you gotta do. You take the mask off, and you just and you throw it away. You don't put the same mask back on 19,000

    Speaker 6: times a day.

    Speaker 6: You know, all of that

    Speaker 6: played in the role of

    Speaker 6: you making your body start destroying itself.

    Speaker 6: But just like,

    Speaker 6: like, they'll do a COVID test now, and they'll just barely swab the ins you and, you know, I never had one and never going to.

    Speaker 6: But but so many people told me, you know, when they were doing it, they were showing them up in your brain. There's no reason for that.

    Speaker 6: So

    Speaker 6: every bit of it

    Speaker 6: that they have done

    Speaker 6: was

    Speaker 6: they had a reason,

    Speaker 6: and people just continually just kept going for it. Just like now, every time I hear,

    Speaker 6: I

    Speaker 6: mean, like, now, not

    Speaker 6: three or four years. Now.

    Speaker 6: All these people taking these damn tests still.

    Speaker 6: Knowing,

    Speaker 6: I mean, they've heard over and over and over and over and over, they are not accurate.

    Speaker 6: But they're not even swabbing the same way now, but still coming up with freaking COVID.

    Speaker 6: You know what I mean? It just none of their bullshit

    Speaker 6: makes sense. They just keep changing it. They keep doing things one way one day, one way another day.

    Speaker 6: Your stuff that they were giving was, you know, all of it was time sensitive,

    Speaker 6: then they stopped paying attention to their own expiration dates,

    Speaker 6: how to,

    Speaker 6: was it supposed to be cool? What you know? I mean, they broke

    Speaker 6: every every,

    Speaker 6: protocol

    Speaker 6: they wrote. They broke.

    Speaker 7: A 100%. They broke every policy and procedure

    Speaker 7: within

    Speaker 7: weeks.

    Speaker 7: Policy procedures. No temperature control. No recordations.

    Speaker 7: Nothing. Nothing. I can't find any of the audits from the WHO

    Speaker 6: for covering the expiry,

    Speaker 6: expired

    Speaker 6: because I had a pharmacist tell me him or themselves

    Speaker 6: that they even called the CDC

    Speaker 6: to say, you know, we can't use these. They're expired.

    Speaker 6: And they were told to use them anyway. They

    Speaker 6: luckily, these people had,

    Speaker 6: conscience and destroyed them.

    Speaker 6: Because they said they weren't using if they couldn't give expired meds, they weren't using an expired vaccine.

    Speaker 6: You know what I mean? What?

    Speaker 9: My mom had a

    Speaker 9: PCR swab shoved up her nose.

    Speaker 9: She asked them politely

    Speaker 9: three times.

    Speaker 9: I watched this. She went in with a heart arrhythmia.

    Speaker 9: They put her to the COVID floor.

    Speaker 9: They said if you don't take this this was three years ago. Lakeside, Omaha, Nebraska. They threw the PCR swab up her nose.

    Speaker 9: I stood there. I said, let me see the PCR swab. I asked them, where does this come from? They go, from The States. I said, so it's not from China. I asked them specifically, Deb.

    Speaker 9: Specifically.

    Speaker 9: They threw it up there. My mom has not been more tired,

    Speaker 9: not been more sick in her life since that PCR swab. It made me so fucking angry. I can't even tell you guys. This happened at Lakeside, Omaha, Nebraska.

    Speaker 9: She was not in there for COVID. She was not in there for anything else other than a heart arrhythmia.

    Speaker 6: They put her in there. T bird saved her life, just so you guys know. Yeah. We know. We I remember that I went and she was going through all of it. And,

    Speaker 6: Amen.

    Speaker 6: But you are right.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. I I

    Speaker 6: like, my grandson just got sick here a couple weeks ago.

    Speaker 6: My younger grand youngest one. And

    Speaker 6: his mom was getting ready to take him, and then I said, under no circumstances,

    Speaker 6: do you have them do any kind any of those tests. None.

    Speaker 6: Which this time, you know, they he didn't have it because I am so sick

    Speaker 6: of if you don't get one,

    Speaker 6: they'll stop being told they have a freaking COVID.

    Speaker 6: No. Half of the time, they still have the same ear infection, same cold,

    Speaker 6: all the things that they'd stopped having during COVID.

    Speaker 6: You know, we didn't have the flu anymore. We didn't have any of that.

    Speaker 6: But now the flu is back. Now the flu shots are you know what I mean? It's just it's just

    Speaker 6: a merry-go-round

    Speaker 6: we can't get off.

    Speaker 6: Well, some of us ain't getting none. But

    Speaker 1: The the deep rain swabs

    Speaker 1: always seemed really weird to me. I've never seen testing for anything

    Speaker 1: via that method.

    Speaker 1: It looked really painful,

    Speaker 1: And I've heard stories from victims who were forcibly

    Speaker 1: restrained

    Speaker 1: and held down

    Speaker 1: while this swab was forced into the

    Speaker 1: the back of their head

    Speaker 1: through their nose.

    Speaker 6: And And this and that's you know, I'm sorry to interrupt. Just hold your thought there for a minute, Chels.

    Speaker 6: Because

    Speaker 6: weren't you all taught as little tiny children never to shove anything way up? I mean, next is your brain. So where do you think they were going for?

    Speaker 1: It really The brain. Yeah. Does make you wonder. And all of the nonsensical

    Speaker 1: guidance, we talked earlier about the mass,

    Speaker 1: the

    Speaker 1: the arrows that they painted on

    Speaker 1: floors in stores that kept some of their aisles open but

    Speaker 1: closed off the home improvement and seed sections,

    Speaker 1: for example, just really nonsensical

    Speaker 1: crap. But on the subject of the the vaxx and the contaminants,

    Speaker 1: we had a whistleblower

    Speaker 1: on this space

    Speaker 1: just a few weeks ago, and we'll be talking with him again next Saturday, so be sure to tune in for that,

    Speaker 1: who brought us documents,

    Speaker 1: official military documents

    Speaker 1: that prove that the the army was well aware that there were, quote, black particles

    Speaker 1: in some of the

    Speaker 1: some of the shots. And they said, what after you reconstitute

    Speaker 1: the

    Speaker 1: the product,

    Speaker 1: you may see these black particulates. And if you see those black particles,

    Speaker 1: discard discard that shot. But, you know, you can use the rest of the shots that you don't see the black particles in. And how close do you have to be looking

    Speaker 1: to notice these black particles? And were any of the people who were injecting

    Speaker 1: this stuff into the arms of unsuspecting,

    Speaker 1: people who were trying to keep grandma safe, were they mindful of this? Were they looking for particles? No. Because we were told that they were they didn't even get the Berry and and They didn't see them

    Speaker 6: draw up a syringe either.

    Speaker 6: When when when you're drawing up the syringe, you don't stand there in front of your patient and drop in front of them. So they didn't ever see what was in the bottle to begin with. And they also told they instructed medical professionals not to aspirate

    Speaker 1: the needle.

    Speaker 6: What the heck? Which is that right there, another the only thing that you've that I was ever taught

    Speaker 6: not to aspirate was insulin

    Speaker 6: and,

    Speaker 6: interferon,

    Speaker 6: not interferon.

    Speaker 6: You know, what goes in for,

    Speaker 6: my brain's fried here.

    Speaker 6: What am I saying? For,

    Speaker 6: blood clots. Isn't it interfering?

    Speaker 7: Heparin.

    Speaker 6: Heparin. Thank you.

    Speaker 7: Those are the only things two drugs that you don't aspirate on, period. Everything else, you do. Yeah. You've been an RN like, I've been an RN twenty six years, but I was a PSW ten years before that. You've been an RN a lot longer than me. I'm not even RN. I'm an LPN. Oh, okay. But either way

    Speaker 7: so if we're taught that, that's over four decades for me knowing this, and you've,

    Speaker 7: whatever, five decade. I don't know I don't know how long you've been. But

    Speaker 1: why did it change suddenly? Right? That you you hear I I'm I'm I'm I'm not calling anyone out. Figured it out. Because when you aspirate the needle, what do you do? You hold it up and you look at it. And if you hold it up and you look at it, you might notice the black particulates.

    Speaker 6: When you aspirate the needle, the reason is you wanna make sure you're not in a blood vessel.

    Speaker 6: So if you if you pull back and you have any kind of blood, then that that yeah. It gets tossed, and you do it all over.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. That's good. Ever give a shot in a blood vessel.

    Speaker 7: You know what else I noticed, Deb, when they were doing it? They weren't you know, when you okay. So ampules are different than

    Speaker 7: say, there's glass top and then there's the ones with that rubber top. I'm just gonna explain it like that.

    Speaker 7: When you put your needle in, you always have to clean it with alcohol at the top first. You put your needle in, but you have to how much you're taking out is how much air you have to put into the ampule. Right? That too. Right. Yes. And anytime that you're using a glass bottle Mhmm. You were supposed to be using a filter needle first. Exactly.

    Speaker 7: Okay. So these are the things that I'm I've not talked to another nurse about this ever, actually. So, yeah, these are the things that I watched when I was sitting there going, I don't I don't feel comfortable. I but I was feeling so uncomfortable because there was thousands of us in line like sheep like sheep because we were warned. Like, get there or you lose your job. And we were all just standing there. It was hot. I'm gonna forget it. But I remember sitting there feeling really uncomfortable going, oh my god. I feel like I'm gonna pass out. I'm feeling and I'm watching everything. Watch. Watch. Watch. And I remember she didn't aspirate, number one. She didn't do this. She didn't do that. She didn't put the air. So what you do is when you go into an ampule that's sealed with the rubber top,

    Speaker 7: if you're gonna take, say, 0.1

    Speaker 7: out, then you have to pull back on the needle that exact amount. You enter that amount into the ampule,

    Speaker 7: and then you draw back because that leads to less air. Can you imagine how many people maybe they hit a vein because these people weren't trained? Maybe some people weren't trained, and they're they're hitting a vessel and putting air in the vessel too. Mhmm. I'm just thinking that now as I'm

    Speaker 7: shit you not.

    Speaker 6: I just wanna for the record too,

    Speaker 6: T Bird, I did the whole RN program,

    Speaker 6: and I'm not afraid to or not ashamed to say it. I failed the final,

    Speaker 6: and I wasn't about to go back through all that again because I'd already had all the clinicals passed with them a 100%,

    Speaker 6: and that's where it was important.

    Speaker 6: And they couldn't unteach me what I was already taught, and I didn't go into nursing for money anyway.

    Speaker 6: So

    Speaker 7: that's why I'm the nurse I am. Hey. I'm not questioning you. I appreciate your honesty. It it it does it just if you're a nurse, you're a nurse, but

    Speaker 7: you're very honest and that makes you a real nurse. You know? That's a real nurse. So at the end of the day though, we all have the same principles. Whether you're an LPN or an RN, we're taught how to give an injection. That's a very simple thing. Doctors don't even give them. Doctors don't give them. That's what pisses me off the most. No doctor gave me a shot. It was fun. Because they don't know how. Exactly.

    Speaker 7: But they get the money. We don't get the money.

    Speaker 7: Anyway, I'll stop. I'm just now I'm getting angry.

    Speaker 1: It's enough to it's enough to make anyone mad, and,

    Speaker 1: I'm sorry about that. But I think talking about it

    Speaker 1: is the first step to

    Speaker 6: doing something about it. Go ahead. You know how to I'm sorry. Before Steve. Sorry, Steve. Hold on.

    Speaker 6: You know,

    Speaker 6: as a nurse, because I worked

    Speaker 6: I did every there was you know,

    Speaker 6: obviously, I had a different license, but it didn't matter. I was out there doing the same thing everyone else was doing.

    Speaker 6: Anything I mean, I was certified in everything,

    Speaker 6: critical care, you name it, because that's what I wanted to do. But my point is is that,

    Speaker 6: number one, I already knew you couldn't eat the title, so the title don't really mean jack shit. But,

    Speaker 6: it was a point I was going to, but now I lost it. So I guess go ahead, Steve.

    Speaker 11: Alright. Thank you.

    Speaker 11: I just wanted to let,

    Speaker 11: you guys know,

    Speaker 11: through my satellite,

    Speaker 11: stuff here that I'm doing, I'm taking some courses through NASA.

    Speaker 11: And, one is,

    Speaker 11: to find infectious diseases

    Speaker 11: in our environment.

    Speaker 11: Now the data that we're gonna be trained on is,

    Speaker 11: finding malaria

    Speaker 11: in Ethiopia.

    Speaker 11: Now once I get my certification in that, I I wanna start research,

    Speaker 11: to see if we can actually find COVID.

    Speaker 11: And can we monitor the movement,

    Speaker 11: because most infectious diseases

    Speaker 11: are spread through the air, our environment.

    Speaker 11: That's one.

    Speaker 11: Really, what I should be doing right now is working on my EP,

    Speaker 11: CCBI,

    Speaker 11: and GEE certification. I got homework to do.

    Speaker 11: But, anyways, folks,

    Speaker 11: watch,

    Speaker 11: my pages,

    Speaker 11: for that research coming out because that will be my research

    Speaker 11: going and, using,

    Speaker 11: NASA satellite data,

    Speaker 11: incorporating it

    Speaker 11: into,

    Speaker 11: GEE,

    Speaker 11: which is a a Google Earth engine,

    Speaker 11: which we can overlay

    Speaker 11: onto Google Earth. And then if you, use the historical part of, Google Earth,

    Speaker 11: as we add more and more data to it, you will be able to go backwards,

    Speaker 11: just like the satellite.

    Speaker 11: Satellites can go backwards

    Speaker 11: right to the day they they became operational.

    Speaker 7: Can I ask you something, Steve, if this is okay?

    Speaker 7: Could you

    Speaker 7: look up

    Speaker 7: a chemical?

    Speaker 7: It's

    Speaker 7: it's, called polyalloy,

    Speaker 7: p o l y a l l o y.

    Speaker 7: If you could,

    Speaker 7: that would be great.

    Speaker 7: And,

    Speaker 7: secondly,

    Speaker 7: if you wanna talk about malaria,

    Speaker 7: when I couldn't get ivermectin where I am because I never heard of it, to be honest, as a nurse and in Ontario,

    Speaker 7: never heard of ivermectin,

    Speaker 7: didn't hear about it during COVID. Not I just I didn't. Okay? But I learned about when I couldn't get ivermectin, when I got really, really sick after the shots,

    Speaker 7: I found the chemical compound,

    Speaker 7: plasmodium

    Speaker 7: oh, shoot. I'm having a brain fart. Plasmodium.

    Speaker 9: Nitrate.

    Speaker 9: No. Oh,

    Speaker 7: it's two piece. Anyway, it doesn't matter.

    Speaker 7: Yeah. I I match ivermectin

    Speaker 7: over top with the hydrogen and peroxide

    Speaker 7: and the different compounds. I'm in a because I'm not,

    Speaker 7: I'm not good with numbers or words, but I'm really good with pictures and visual stuff. So I matched pictures over pictures to match the compounds of ivermectin

    Speaker 7: to match it with something that would be,

    Speaker 7: similar, which I came up with artisimonin,

    Speaker 7: which is sweet wormwood, but it's artisimonin,

    Speaker 7: which is Chinese. It was invented by doctor Tu Yu Yu. Her first name is Tu.

    Speaker 7: Her last name is y o u

    Speaker 7: slash y o u. And she invented artisimon in in China long before ivermectin,

    Speaker 7: and it cures malaria.

    Speaker 7: So I was so desperate that the compounds matched the pictures. Right? This is my own research in my own little tiny office here in my in my house.

    Speaker 7: So I'm I'm not blaming anyone else, but I'm not giving anyone else medical advice either. But when I they told me I needed a double link lung transplant. That was October 2023. I was in the hospital. I almost died. Literally,

    Speaker 7: everybody heard me. I sounded like bagpipes,

    Speaker 7: and I started taking ArtisaMed. I double downed on it because I'm a typical nurse, and, Deb would know that. Any real nurse was like, okay. If you're desperate, you're just gonna, like, no. I'm not gonna take one today. I'm gonna take four in the morning, four at night. I'm just gonna fucking hammer this down. And guess what? Within three days, doctor Alan Bain

    Speaker 7: heard me in the space that night when I was, like,

    Speaker 7: like, dying, literally, lit physically, clinically dying,

    Speaker 7: and I just started hammering this Artesamin in. And,

    Speaker 7: I'm still alive today. I believe it was that. I believe it was the Artesamin in. And when I gave it to my mother,

    Speaker 7: I said, you should try this. It's a really good anti parasitic.

    Speaker 7: And she read up on it. She's like, it's for malaria.

    Speaker 7: And I'm like, well, I really don't care at this point.

    Speaker 7: Maybe that's what I have. Who knows at this point. Right? So anyway, I believe in it. I don't have ivermectin because I can't get it, but I do believe in artisanal.

    Speaker 7: That's all I wanna say. But, yeah, look her up yourself, doctor Tu, You You. She's a Chinese. She is a Nobel Prize winning before ivermectin even was invented. That's all. And so, Steve, that was for you.

    Speaker 9: When we posted it in the

    Speaker 9: Go ahead. Okay. If that Sorry. It's called plasma.

    Speaker 9: I I just posted it in the bubble for you, T. Thanks.

    Speaker 11: Okay, T. Barrett. If you could send me a,

    Speaker 11: DM

    Speaker 11: on the chemicals you want me to look up, because I've been researching and looking up,

    Speaker 11: 50 chemicals,

    Speaker 11: from Domtar leaking,

    Speaker 11: toxic effluent into the Spanish River, which goes to Lake Huron,

    Speaker 11: goes through two indigenous communities.

    Speaker 11: But, yeah, I I will do it for you.

    Speaker 11: And I'll you know, if you want something done, just let me know.

    Speaker 11: I just got really a full plate. That's all. And I'm gonna say good night, everybody, or good morning.

    Speaker 11: Have a great day, and I'm out of here.

    Speaker 6: One thing, Steve, before you go, though,

    Speaker 6: like, I'm from Michigan, and Lake Huron is very, very, very polluted, very, very high mercury.

    Speaker 6: And that's been a fact for a while. I'll I mean,

    Speaker 6: you might go fishing and catch a fish, but you pretty much not too many people eat them anymore.

    Speaker 11: The fish that we have caught and studied,

    Speaker 11: bass had a,

    Speaker 11: grayish color. Absolutely no colors to it.

    Speaker 11: I don't know what the other fish was, honestly. It was like a real small, skinny little thing, and I'm like, ew. What are you?

    Speaker 11: Deformed.

    Speaker 11: The fish that we have caught and checked,

    Speaker 11: when we cut into the fish, and, I'm hoping

    Speaker 11: that we have secured a private lab,

    Speaker 11: this year,

    Speaker 11: and working into next year.

    Speaker 11: The the actual flesh,

    Speaker 11: meat meaty part of the fish,

    Speaker 11: has a rainbow

    Speaker 11: of colors in it.

    Speaker 11: That right there is a warning. Do not eat it.

    Speaker 11: But because the government of Ontario is not putting out exactly what the quantities

    Speaker 11: of

    Speaker 11: is in the fish. I wanna do it independently.

    Speaker 11: Now I'm sorry. Just to basically,

    Speaker 11: you know, give the Ontario government a swift kick in the butt.

    Speaker 6: I just wanted to know we used to go fishing, like, oh, probably,

    Speaker 6: yeah, forty ish years ago.

    Speaker 6: And we always went on Canada's side by the tankers there

    Speaker 6: and caught all the best walleye you could ever catch. That was when it was clear water.

    Speaker 11: Now the only clear water I remember is, back in my teenage years,

    Speaker 11: doing a lot of fishing with my grandfather.

    Speaker 11: We caught it mostly. We fished for a walleye bass, a few others, trout.

    Speaker 11: But,

    Speaker 11: like I said, there's there's an interactive map that the Ontario government has put out. It's called the eat eating,

    Speaker 11: eating guide, eating fish guide to Ontario or something like that. I can't remember. My brain's fried right now.

    Speaker 11: But if you look at it, then like I said, you can just go on the website there and just pick an area on the interactive map, and it'll tell you what's in the fish. And, I mean, I have some really good areas I'd like to harbor fish for

    Speaker 11: and, invite,

    Speaker 11: Doug Ford and, you know, several government agencies

    Speaker 11: at the come on out to a reservation. We'll have a fish fry.

    Speaker 11: And, 613

    Speaker 11: indigenous communities do not have clean drinking water.

    Speaker 11: So at the same time, let's all have some water. I mean, it's good for you.

    Speaker 7: I love you, Steve. Steve, I can't DM you because you're not following me. I'm following you, but I can't message you. So just if not that I want followers.

    Speaker 7: No. I'd never asked for that. I don't but I can't message you if you're not following me. And, also, I love your idea of giving Doug Ford some clean drinking water. I love that.

    Speaker 6: Yes. She is. The biotic woman is too. Okay. I'm just getting to

    Speaker 11: okay. Then you won't wanna know my

    Speaker 11: my plans for the,

    Speaker 11: ring of fire in Northwestern

    Speaker 11: Ontario,

    Speaker 11: since there's gonna be no municipal law,

    Speaker 11: no provincial law, and no environmental

    Speaker 11: law.

    Speaker 11: I came up with an idea real quick to solve on a few,

    Speaker 11: issues with indigenous communities.

    Speaker 11: Gonna need a heavy lift helicopter,

    Speaker 11: and I'm gonna drop or or funnel

    Speaker 11: 20,000

    Speaker 11: pounds of liquid perch,

    Speaker 11: exactly where the government is trying to, no offense,

    Speaker 11: screw the natives.

    Speaker 7: I would like to break into song now, Steve.

    Speaker 7: I fell into a burning ring of fire.

    Speaker 9: It went Went down, down, down. Down,

    Speaker 7: the flames going high.

    Speaker 9: Higher,

    Speaker 9: and it burns, burns, burns.

    Speaker 11: The ring Okay. Fire.

    Speaker 11: T bird, I've actually found a a fire. Send me the TM now.

    Speaker 11: Good night, everybody. I love you all.

    Speaker 1: Good night, Steve. Thanks for coming. We'll see you next week.

    Speaker 11: For sure.

    Speaker 7: Chelsea,

    Speaker 7: I

    Speaker 7: destroyed

    Speaker 7: your beautiful

    Speaker 7: space.

    Speaker 7: I talked, talked, talked, and I talked off my face. And we go down, down, down

    Speaker 7: that ring of fire.

    Speaker 7: Sorry.

    Speaker 1: Not at all, Tiburt. You make our spaces just a little bit brighter. We're so glad you She's melting. She's melting.

    Speaker 7: I'm coming for coffee.

    Speaker 9: You know what she did, girls?

    Speaker 9: She asked me to sing for her parents tonight.

    Speaker 9: Right? She puts me in the spot, and I'm like, how am I gonna pull this off? So

    Speaker 9: that's the first song that came on my mind.

    Speaker 9: Ring o' fire.

    Speaker 9: Ring o' fire. And then her dad laughed,

    Speaker 9: and that was kinda funny for me, I guess, because I guess I could make him laugh. Right? He's a tough mob guy.

    Speaker 9: And then,

    Speaker 9: I sent her a I sent her a audio recording that I had sent her a few nights before, and they got a good laugh out of it. So thanks, Tia. I appreciate you,

    Speaker 9: getting your dad a laugh.

    Speaker 6: Well, not only that,

    Speaker 6: Kyle, but that's because they're 80, and you picked a song from their era, just so you know,

    Speaker 6: which is, like, one of my favorite songs because I love Johnny. Hey. Hey, Deb. Johnny Cash is my man, like, a 100%.

    Speaker 9: I don't think I'm born

    Speaker 9: in this time era. I don't think any of us in this space probably feel like we are.

    Speaker 9: I look back at those cars from the thirties and the forties, like Bonnie and Clyde cars, and I'm like, why the hell

    Speaker 9: are we having electric cars?

    Speaker 9: What are we doing?

    Speaker 7: Okay. But, Kyle, you did post down low,

    Speaker 7: sweet chariot.

    Speaker 7: Down low,

    Speaker 7: sweet

    Speaker 7: chariot.

    Speaker 7: Plasmodium

    Speaker 7: falicorum.

    Speaker 7: Thank you very much. That was bothering me. That's what it is. So,

    Speaker 7: it's a single celled parasitic protozoan that causes the most severe anyway, yeah, it's called plasmodium

    Speaker 7: falciparum.

    Speaker 7: That's what I found on my own research, and that's how I found Artisiben. Don't ask me how I found it. It was all through pictures. I'm like like a cartoon artist, I guess.

    Speaker 7: I was, like, matching a lot, but that's what it was. Thank you very much.

    Speaker 1: Now if I recall correctly,

    Speaker 1: that came to our attention

    Speaker 1: in mid twenty twenty shortly after,

    Speaker 1: we were talking about ivermectin, artemisinin.

    Speaker 12: Artamycinin.

    Speaker 1: Artamycinin.

    Speaker 1: Yeah.

    Speaker 1: Because a an African

    Speaker 1: resident

    Speaker 1: had been Madagascar. He had actually

    Speaker 1: oh, right. It was Madagascar.

    Speaker 1: He had, been

    Speaker 1: making little drinks out of it, if I recall, bottling it. And

    Speaker 1: vitamin c. Oh, it was it was that and vitamin c,

    Speaker 1: and he put it in bottles and was distributing

    Speaker 12: it to his population. It had a very similar effect to ivermectin

    Speaker 12: insofar as,

    Speaker 12: interferon production.

    Speaker 1: And he was subsequently

    Speaker 1: assassinated.

    Speaker 1: And he was among the first, if not the first, if I recall,

    Speaker 1: of

    Speaker 1: I believe I eventually counted seven,

    Speaker 1: presidents

    Speaker 1: who had been African presidents, who had been

    Speaker 1: assassinated

    Speaker 1: for countering

    Speaker 1: or in my opinion, for countering

    Speaker 1: the lockstep narrative.

    Speaker 1: So, and

    Speaker 1: and especially

    Speaker 1: for treating it properly, as Adam points out to me. Anyone who was treating it

    Speaker 1: was denigrated, demonized,

    Speaker 1: shunned, lost their license

    Speaker 1: or their job

    Speaker 1: or both,

    Speaker 1: and, meanwhile,

    Speaker 1: ridiculous

    Speaker 1: on their face preposterous

    Speaker 1: protocols that literally no one with two working brain cells

    Speaker 1: should have taken on board were rigidly adhered to

    Speaker 1: to the detriment of

    Speaker 1: well, as we've seen tonight, to the detriment of so many families and so many people

    Speaker 1: who are needlessly

    Speaker 1: needlessly

    Speaker 1: lost their lives or were killed as a result of these policies.

    Speaker 2: Hey, Chelsea.

    Speaker 2: Speaking of people with

    Speaker 2: more than or not even two working brain cells, that would be doctor Jake Scott, would it not?

    Speaker 1: Yep. Yep.

    Speaker 1: And he was just,

    Speaker 1: wow. Roundly made an absolute fool of himself in front of lots of people if I recall.

    Speaker 7: He embarrassed himself. He was an embarrassment to himself.

    Speaker 7: He's probably gonna hang himself. I'm not kidding. He's but what an embarrassment to society.

    Speaker 1: This is the face of the experts. These are the so called experts that we were told to shut up and trust.

    Speaker 2: Yeah. And he's sitting there saying, oh, I lost all my patients. And I'm like, and you continued using the protocol.

    Speaker 2: Really? Okay. Yeah.

    Speaker 9: Karma is one hell of a drug.

    Speaker 7: I I do wanna say one more thing about the Artesimin in because Adam was chiming in. Hi, Adam. I didn't acknowledge you earlier. I apologize.

    Speaker 7: This is really important.

    Speaker 7: So what also triggered me because it again, this is going back

    Speaker 7: to the 2023,

    Speaker 7: almost two years ago. Well, two years ago, almost exactly now.

    Speaker 7: So what happened was my blood work started coming back really weird.

    Speaker 7: My MCV and my MCH

    Speaker 7: were super, super high, which shows

    Speaker 7: liver failure.

    Speaker 7: Right? But everything else was failing, so everything

    Speaker 7: did made sense. Everything's failing. So it was like, oh, but they weren't telling me the doc you know, when something when they say if you don't get a call, then everything's fine. But if you get a call, yeah, something's wrong. K. No problem. So, anyway,

    Speaker 7: this is huge. This is huge because because I worked in Toronto

    Speaker 7: as Steve like, as I said, I was a trauma nurse at Sunnybrook. It's the biggest trauma unit in Canada. When 911 happened, 09:11,

    Speaker 7: I had just worked an eighteen hour night shift and just got home, and I got a call to come back to receive bodies from 09:11 as I watched it happening live. So it it hits me still. Like, I'm not American, obviously, but I'm only an hour north of New York.

    Speaker 7: So it's very personal. My American friends are very personal to me, and and it means a lot to me because I did go back to the hospital after an eighteen hour shift. I had, like, a quick, like, egg McMuffin

    Speaker 7: and was, like, in shock, obviously, and then had to take the street car back and,

    Speaker 7: got back to the hospital. And I was like, okay. We're waiting, waiting, waiting. Nothing's coming.

    Speaker 7: Nothing. Obviously, no one's coming.

    Speaker 7: But that's what my unit we're the closest trauma unit to New York City, just so you guys know. That's where I worked.

    Speaker 7: So we took a lot of trauma unit. Like, when I talk about Charlie Kirk and the gunshot stuff, I saw a lot of gunshots, just so you know, gang violence, you name it. Everything

    Speaker 7: he was talking about when this happened,

    Speaker 7: I lived it as a as a trauma nurse. It was I'm not an ER nurse, a trauma nurse. So, anyway,

    Speaker 7: my MCV MCMA

    Speaker 12: chart. Did you happen to see any,

    Speaker 12: 30 o six wounds where

    Speaker 12: the bullet had been stopped by

    Speaker 12: the neck?

    Speaker 7: No.

    Speaker 7: That's what the first thing I said. I I've never even seen a gun. I honestly, god, Adam, I've never seen a gun in my life in real life. I've never seen a real bullet in my life. That's my that's that's me. I'm a shell I'm a country girl. I'm a farmer, but I I did hay. I did cows. I did I didn't shoot. I'm I'm not a hunter. I'm just I'm not a I don't I'm not a killer. I and I don't have a gun because I'm not allowed to. In my province, I'm not. Anyway, at the end end of the day,

    Speaker 7: never in my life, I said to Kyle, Kyle can confirm this. As it was happening, I called him and said he didn't even know because he was driving. I said, do you just see what happened? He's like, no. I don't I don't know what you're talking about. I'm just listening to my music, driving my truck.

    Speaker 7: And I was like, that wound in his neck is that's all I said was that wound on the front of his neck is so big. I've never seen anything like it. That did not go in through the front. That's all I said. And I I asked started asking him

    Speaker 7: about bullet sizes and how to measure them and and put put something next to it, put a pencil next to it, put, like right, Kyle? I'm sorry.

    Speaker 9: So we did a sharper

    Speaker 9: we did a Sharpie marker. Right? So I still have the marker, and I have the picture. So I should probably post it in the space so you guys can see it. So she's like, I need you to show me the diameter of the bullet.

    Speaker 9: So I'm like, okay. Let me just show you what a long Colt 45 looks like. Because

    Speaker 9: the reason we are talking about this is because there's something called a Dillinger.

    Speaker 9: Anybody in this space is an American

    Speaker 9: that has any

    Speaker 9: clue about guns or handguns

    Speaker 9: knows what a Dillinger is. A Dillinger fits in your palm. Right?

    Speaker 9: So if you're close

    Speaker 9: contact,

    Speaker 9: that Dillinger fits.

    Speaker 9: There's no trigger guard. It's just a short trigger.

    Speaker 9: It's about,

    Speaker 9: I'd say, two centimeter pull.

    Speaker 9: You can get

    Speaker 9: a Colt 45,

    Speaker 9: a 45,

    Speaker 9: a nine millimeter,

    Speaker 9: a 40 cal, whatever. You can get any of those bullets, a 22

    Speaker 9: magnum. You can get any of those bullets out of this Dillinger. It fits in your palm.

    Speaker 9: So she goes, make sure you show me the diameter. So the third pick, I got it right.

    Speaker 9: And the diameter of that was about a Sharpie marker.

    Speaker 7: We measured it because I was freaking out at that point. I'm like, do you not know what a diameter is? Because he put kept putting the bullet in the palm of his hand lengthwise. I'm like, that means nothing to me. You have small hands because that's who I get. I get it. I when I get it it I'm, like, upset and frustrated. I'm like, Diane, I need to see the thickness. This doesn't right. This is me as a nurse. Never shot a gun, saw a bullet, nothing. I'm like, this She was looking for the girth. She wanted the girth of the bullet. I did. I always want the girth. Oh, what girl doesn't want the girth? We want the diameter. Otherwise,

    Speaker 7: don't call me back. That's anyway, go ahead. Sorry.

    Speaker 6: Yeah. But part of that you guys gotta take into consideration

    Speaker 6: When you're shooting I'm not I I agree with what you're saying on the it's not that he that wasn't the the bullet that hit him. But when you're if you're shooting at 200,

    Speaker 6: yards,

    Speaker 6: so I was shooting a 100 yards and doing shooting the same gun,

    Speaker 6: the diameter going in is going to be different, and the diameter going out is going to be different.

    Speaker 6: So it it to be

    Speaker 6: it has to be a smaller,

    Speaker 6: like, a nine or something smaller

    Speaker 9: Correct. To be able to do that. And it can't be hollow tip, Debs. Because if it's hollow tip or or, ballistic tip like a hornady round,

    Speaker 9: then that's going to open at least, I would say, seven inches on the backside even if it's a nine millimeter. Right? So we're talking about this and the fact there's no pattern

    Speaker 9: on the backdrop.

    Speaker 7: And and, no, we weren't really good. Else is also not realizing

    Speaker 6: to even be hitting the neck and to

    Speaker 6: hit the branch or whatever would somewhat distort the face.

    Speaker 7: But but, Kyle, we weren't even talking about the backdrop. I just said,

    Speaker 7: does it explode

    Speaker 7: on the exit or the entry? Like, does a bullet explode? Do you remember me asking that question? I was asking a lot of questions.

    Speaker 9: It doesn't wanted to know be because if it came through

    Speaker 9: the front side,

    Speaker 9: which everybody said that it didn't in the beginning, but if it came through the front, he wouldn't have a neck anymore. Right?

    Speaker 9: Especially close quarters.

    Speaker 9: Then she asked, I need the diameter of the biggest bullet that you can shoot

    Speaker 9: out of a small gun that you can hold in your hand. And I told her about the Dillinger. I said, the biggest bullet that comes out of that is a Colt 45.

    Speaker 9: Right? It's about

    Speaker 9: two and a half, three inches long,

    Speaker 9: and it's almost an inch wide.

    Speaker 9: Just short of an inch.

    Speaker 9: If you're shooting up close,

    Speaker 9: we talked about

    Speaker 9: go ahead, Dee.

    Speaker 7: Oh, I didn't say anything. I'm listening. I yeah. This was our conversation a 100% as it was happening. Yeah.

    Speaker 9: So the biggest thing that we came to and I I won't speak for tea, but the biggest thing that I came to here, and if she wants to

    Speaker 9: chime in,

    Speaker 9: not only was

    Speaker 9: the fact that

    Speaker 9: he got hit,

    Speaker 9: It looked like an exit wound,

    Speaker 9: not an entry wound. But then secondly,

    Speaker 9: if you're

    Speaker 9: getting assassinated

    Speaker 9: on this big of a stage

    Speaker 9: in America,

    Speaker 9: the biggest assassination,

    Speaker 9: I would say, since,

    Speaker 9: the attempt on Trump and or JFK or

    Speaker 9: or

    Speaker 9: or MLK, whatever,

    Speaker 9: very high level,

    Speaker 9: you are not

    Speaker 9: in a casket in

    Speaker 9: forty eight hours.

    Speaker 9: And I went into a huge space

    Speaker 9: about four nights ago.

    Speaker 9: K?

    Speaker 9: And I talked to these folks, and they all argued with me, and they said, oh, absolutely.

    Speaker 9: They got him right in there, and they had everything done. They knew exactly what they were doing. I said, no. You're not listening to what I'm saying.

    Speaker 9: I'm saying that he was in a casket.

    Speaker 9: His hands were not placed correct. There was a button undone.

    Speaker 9: There was no face shot

    Speaker 9: of him in the casket at all. K?

    Speaker 9: And you're going to tell me

    Speaker 9: that this makes sense to anybody

    Speaker 9: on planet Even, wait,

    Speaker 7: when I've been to over thousands of funerals, because it's part of my job is to go to every funeral. That's part of my contract.

    Speaker 7: So thousands and thousands and thousands. Women, men,

    Speaker 7: Jew, Christian,

    Speaker 7: Muslim, you name it. They're dead. They're dead. Chinese, you name it. They all are placed the same. Their hands usually are crisscrossed across their chest.

    Speaker 7: Fingers usually are interlocked

    Speaker 7: nine times out of 10, and there's always a wedding band.

    Speaker 7: And after forty eight hours, also, I went to McGill University

    Speaker 7: and,

    Speaker 7: did,

    Speaker 7: cadavers.

    Speaker 7: They weren't orange. Some of them had been dead for twenty years. They were not orange.

    Speaker 7: That the the those hands were not real. Plus, he had the Illuminati sign around his crotch as she crawled down his body and put her head down and says, I love you.

    Speaker 7: I'm like, is she singing to his penis?

    Speaker 7: Yeah. No. No one does that. You know what? If you're in love with someone, I'm sorry. I don't I'm sorry. I'm gonna say it. If I was in love with Kyle and he's dead in a casket, I'm probably gonna put my head on his chest.

    Speaker 7: Yes. Maybe I'll crawl in a casket. Maybe I'll do maybe I'll do something like that, But I'm not gonna put my head around where his penis is, where his hand looks like an Illuminati sign, and his hand looks like a mannequin just like Kyle bought that blow up doll that one time. Do you remember that, Kyle? You bought that blow up doll before you met me? And No. Actually, I made fun of people that bought

    Speaker 9: and you went ahead and made it out to be that I was gonna buy one. But, hey, we're good. Guys, we're having a a great time tonight. Let's be honest. But when she's talking about this, and she's been to almost a thousand funerals, and she sees the hands,

    Speaker 9: and she understands that they are not properly placed,

    Speaker 9: and you see these folks coming out,

    Speaker 9: the biggest thing that I'm trying to warn against, and I'm not gonna speak for you, t, but I wanna warn everybody here tonight.

    Speaker 9: Tomorrow is a big day,

    Speaker 9: and I ask it in Jesus' name.

    Speaker 9: I'm asking

    Speaker 9: in Jesus' name

    Speaker 9: that everybody keeps their head on a swivel. And if you know anybody

    Speaker 9: in the surrounding area

    Speaker 9: where that's going to happen tomorrow,

    Speaker 9: kindly pray for them tonight.

    Speaker 7: Dead bodies have a bluish

    Speaker 7: grayish tinge,

    Speaker 7: mostly gray,

    Speaker 7: sometimes green.

    Speaker 6: That's that's the truth. I'm just speaking to But that you gotta remember too. They were doing that in a casket. He's already got makeup on, and makeup is orange.

    Speaker 6: So, I mean, you know, and it looks different on everybody's skin because everybody's skin tone's different.

    Speaker 7: Yeah. I'm I'm I agree.

    Speaker 6: I have been to thousands and thousands as a hospice nurse

    Speaker 6: also and buried a ton of my family,

    Speaker 6: and the hand placement, I agree,

    Speaker 6: is not normal.

    Speaker 7: Thank you, Deb. It's just not it's it's actually ridiculous.

    Speaker 9: Yeah. Yeah. And, Tee, can can we talk to Deb real quick here?

    Speaker 7: Deb? Go back to the Dillinger. Go back to the Dillinger.

    Speaker 6: I don't know. Okay. I don't mind cashed you a little bit. Okay. Yeah. You can talk talk to me. Well, Deb, I'll buy you a cup of coffee and a few donuts, and I'm not a cop. I told the other gal last night Yeah. I'm a hospice nurse. You better get better than that. I'm doing it out, dude.

    Speaker 9: Well, I'll bring you something special. How's that? This is the deal.

    Speaker 9: This

    Speaker 9: okay. Okay. This is the deal. Deb, I need this. I need this from you, and I need this I need this backed up from you and someone else as well.

    Speaker 9: How many people

    Speaker 9: do you know

    Speaker 9: in your life

    Speaker 9: that have been

    Speaker 9: murdered?

    Speaker 9: We're not talking about high profile murder. We're talking about just a normal

    Speaker 9: murder. Like, somebody's

    Speaker 9: getting carjacked, unfortunately, they get murdered.

    Speaker 9: How many people do you know in your entire career, Deb,

    Speaker 9: that have been

    Speaker 9: already exhumed?

    Speaker 9: Every single process has been complete.

    Speaker 9: All the corner, all the autopsy, everything.

    Speaker 9: How many people in your career, Deb,

    Speaker 9: in forty eight hours

    Speaker 9: are in a casket?

    Speaker 6: Well, I can say that not only from my career from but my own personal experience because my mother died that way.

    Speaker 6: When they gotta have an autopsy

    Speaker 6: and all of that crap,

    Speaker 6: zero.

    Speaker 9: So

    Speaker 9: in your experience, Deb,

    Speaker 9: how long does it take

    Speaker 9: and I'm sorry, by the way. God bless her.

    Speaker 9: How long does it usually take

    Speaker 9: for a situation like that

    Speaker 9: for someone to be

    Speaker 9: done

    Speaker 9: and in the casket? How long does it usually take on average?

    Speaker 6: Well, on a high profile case like this or a murder case like that,

    Speaker 6: probably anywhere

    Speaker 6: from probably a week.

    Speaker 9: So no less than six days?

    Speaker 6: Probably not.

    Speaker 7: I agree.

    Speaker 7: I agree. I concur with that.

    Speaker 7: Most of the most of the trauma people that I got that were shot in the throat or the heart through gang through grand

    Speaker 7: literally gang violence,

    Speaker 7: they were,

    Speaker 7: accompanied by police that sat at the bedside with me.

    Speaker 7: We had we very, very violent,

    Speaker 7: in a trauma unit. You don't know who's coming after these people after the shot. That's what people don't talk about.

    Speaker 7: Most people don't talk about this.

    Speaker 7: And I remember this one time this guy was, like, he had flipped his car. The kids were dead. It doesn't matter. At the end of the day, the cops are running and the the ex wife is running. She's got a gun. And I'm I'm his one on one. When you're in a trauma unit, like, these people are really seriously injured. Some of them are handcuffed

    Speaker 7: to the hospital bed with police and reports. Right? Even experience several of those.

    Speaker 7: Right? That's it's it's true. It's this is true. I'm not giving an opinion right now. I'm telling you my actual

    Speaker 7: experience and evidence, and I'm that was in Toronto, Canada, but,

    Speaker 7: yeah, very bad. It's very much like New York City, Toronto. So it's like yeah. There's a lot of gang violence, a lot of shots, a lot of,

    Speaker 7: stabs.

    Speaker 9: So so so, Tanya, can we look into the future for tomorrow? I'm just gonna ask this. In Jesus' name,

    Speaker 9: can we look into the future tomorrow

    Speaker 9: and just all on this?

    Speaker 9: Anybody listening here, how many people we got in here, can we all just kindly pray

    Speaker 9: for anybody

    Speaker 9: going to this event tomorrow?

    Speaker 6: Hey, Kyle. I have a great idea.

    Speaker 6: Since you're right on this,

    Speaker 6: start praying, brother.

    Speaker 7: Kyle,

    Speaker 7: are you gonna pray?

    Speaker 9: Yeah. I'm gonna I'm gonna say a prayer here. Just give me one knees. Get on your knees.

    Speaker 9: Not that's only for you. So just give

    Speaker 9: me just give me one second.

    Speaker 9: Let let me get ready here.

    Speaker 6: Backwards, but never mind.

    Speaker 7: What I wanted to say before he prays,

    Speaker 7: MCV and MCH before I forget,

    Speaker 7: MCV and MCH, those are your red blood cells when we're talking about,

    Speaker 7: blood thinning and stuff like that. That's what everybody needs to know.

    Speaker 7: MCV and MCH are your red blood cells. Your red blood cells,

    Speaker 7: it doesn't matter about your hemoglobin

    Speaker 7: going back to COVID now and vaccine injury.

    Speaker 7: I just need everybody to understand

    Speaker 7: that

    Speaker 7: when I saw MCV and MCH elevated, it's, like, easy to say, oh, your it'll your liver enzymes are elevated.

    Speaker 7: But guess what? It's sickle cell anemia.

    Speaker 7: And knowing if you know your genetics,

    Speaker 7: if you know where you come from, because, obviously, my father's

    Speaker 7: black and my mother's native Indian, actually.

    Speaker 7: So but I'm white. Yeah. I I mean, I look I

    Speaker 7: I identify

    Speaker 7: as white and blonde with green eyes, but Oh, you're white. You definitely But I'm very dark white. I'm a very I'm like a Swiss Chalet

    Speaker 7: bronze chicken

    Speaker 7: white, I guess. I'm not a white I'm not a pasty white. Anyway, it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter about my skin color.

    Speaker 7: The point is people would think I was white, but my mother's native Indian. My dad's black. Right? This is this is my life, and this is my genetics.

    Speaker 7: But

    Speaker 7: MCV and MCH are very important. People need to get that. Do not just think that it has something to do with your liver. And what I wanted to say was what I learned was when I was working with a lot of these patients

    Speaker 7: with liver cirrhosis and things like that, it was sickle cell anemia, which is very typical for the black population,

    Speaker 7: which, guess what? That's what they attacked.

    Speaker 7: So when I saw this, that the the MCV and MCH

    Speaker 7: so you have your hemoglobin.

    Speaker 7: So for a typical white person who doesn't know that they have any black lineage,

    Speaker 7: native lineage.

    Speaker 7: We don't if most people don't know their lineage.

    Speaker 7: But if you don't know that,

    Speaker 7: genetically

    Speaker 7: speaking,

    Speaker 7: your red blood cell is your hemoglobin. So your hemoglobin

    Speaker 7: is gonna be like,

    Speaker 7: okay. It's supposed to be a 100. I'm carrying oxygen, so everything looks perfect. That do you know what do you know how clever these assholes were? They made sure that your hemoglobin

    Speaker 7: on a typical test

    Speaker 7: would come back perfect. It'll come back at 98, a 100 hundred's perfect, right, for hemoglobin transportation.

    Speaker 7: Your hemoglobin is your oxygen to your red blood cells, blah blah blah. However,

    Speaker 7: what they did was they totally modified the MCB and the MCH,

    Speaker 7: which are your two, yeah, liver enzymes. However, it is the weight of your red blood cell and the,

    Speaker 7: yeah, the weight and the size. So

    Speaker 7: one of them, the size gets enlarged,

    Speaker 7: and one of them is the weight of the hemoglobin. It gets too heavy. So then it clots.

    Speaker 7: Even though your hemoglobin

    Speaker 7: is reading perfect,

    Speaker 7: they dis they

    Speaker 7: discourage. They're like, oh, well, your MCV and MCH are high, but your hemoglobin's fine, so you're fine. And they discharge you. K? That's what people don't know. So people need to remember that. So and anyone can cut me off right now and and correct me, but I know what I'm talking about because it's real.

    Speaker 7: So knowing that I had,

    Speaker 7: black lineage from Africa, I was like, wait a minute. This sounds like sickle cell anemia because that's what happens with sickle cell. Your red blood cells get disformed.

    Speaker 7: They're like weird oval shapes. They're not round anymore. They're

    Speaker 7: Anyway, guess what? That's what this is. So that's something else everyone needs to just consider,

    Speaker 7: getting your blood tested for your MCV and your MCH, and just make sure that it's not too high because that's what they attacked. They attacked because that's what's causing those clots, by the way. And then no no one talks about it, but I'm just saying it. See,

    Speaker 6: Jeff's hemoglobin,

    Speaker 6: because it was it's not,

    Speaker 6: the three you just did, but they turned it into whatever because it was 21.1.

    Speaker 6: So a normal for a man is 14.

    Speaker 6: So hemoglobin

    Speaker 6: changes. There's

    Speaker 6: this changes

    Speaker 6: because that's why they had to take the the blood off of him.

    Speaker 6: They took five hundred cc's off,

    Speaker 6: but that was his hemoglobin

    Speaker 6: when they when they did it.

    Speaker 6: It was 21.5.

    Speaker 7: Wait a minute.

    Speaker 6: Are you sure that was his hemoglobin? Hemoglobin seems to be a 100. It was why would they take it off of him? No. Because it was so thick. That's what I'm trying to say. There has to be there had to be some kind of trans

    Speaker 6: because without looking at it, I can't tell you anymore. I've I've been out of it too long. But I know for a fact when they called me

    Speaker 6: and I know, like,

    Speaker 6: anything I've ever measured was hemoglobin, and we were doing it. Like, a a woman's was always higher because we shed blood.

    Speaker 6: Men do not.

    Speaker 6: But that's why they took the blood off, and it was 21.5.

    Speaker 7: Are you talking about ferritin?

    Speaker 6: Like, I'm not I'm talking about hemoglobin because that's why it was so thick.

    Speaker 6: I mean,

    Speaker 6: it got so thick,

    Speaker 6: so they had to take it off. And then, like I said, my next emergency call was then he was bleeding out, and they had to give him two units.

    Speaker 6: But yeah. No. It was hemoglobin.

    Speaker 7: K. Pull

    Speaker 7: pull those results

    Speaker 6: when we can, and let's look at them, like the Yeah. Like I'm saying, it may have been measured in a different way, but I know, like, they've always like, I was always taught,

    Speaker 6: you know, for hemoglobin.

    Speaker 6: Now the red blood cells and the other,

    Speaker 6: I think that's that's different

    Speaker 6: than what you're what you're talking about. It's not just your hemoglobin. It would be,

    Speaker 6: I don't know. We'll talk about this because,

    Speaker 6: I

    Speaker 6: know for a fact I can tell you in his record, but, I mean, I just know from nursing school that we that's how we always did it. So Yeah. And our numbers are different. As far as gold and silver,

    Speaker 7: you guys look like you make less money. But

    Speaker 6: Right. Well, you know what I'm saying, though? No. I do. I do. No. All labs are different, and they

    Speaker 6: they put it differently. But I know I mean, because there's the three you have three sections

    Speaker 6: for your red three different

    Speaker 6: how do I wanna say this?

    Speaker 6: In the red blood cell, there's three.

    Speaker 7: There's three different markers.

    Speaker 7: And Yes. You know what? You're absolutely right. So the bottom line is, who cares about the number, the thickness.

    Speaker 7: That's what people are not measuring. Yes. Right. These physicians are not measuring the thickness of the blood. Like with Jeff, he was on

    Speaker 6: blood centers already.

    Speaker 6: You know, he was receiving chemo and all you know, he had bladder cancer.

    Speaker 6: So he was on

    Speaker 6: coumadin and getting you know? And then, of course, they obviously changed it

    Speaker 6: to heparin in the hospital.

    Speaker 6: But so he was on all these blood thinners

    Speaker 6: and taking Eliquis.

    Speaker 6: I think well, I think they just switched him from Cuminant to Eliquis

    Speaker 6: because he was in AFib,

    Speaker 6: and,

    Speaker 6: he had a loop recorder in him.

    Speaker 6: Why was I telling you this?

    Speaker 6: I'm telling you. I'm brain dead tonight.

    Speaker 6: Why was why was I what were we just talking about before I said that? We were talking about the size of the red blood cell and the missing of the red blood cell. Yeah. Yeah. The girth. The girth of it. Well, no. What I was getting the point was is, okay, he went from

    Speaker 6: he went so he was on all these blood thinners before he went to the hospital. Right?

    Speaker 6: And the first thing

    Speaker 6: he had was his hemoglobin

    Speaker 6: went

    Speaker 6: sky high. So they had to pull off five they called me like that was a normal thing when they called me with their emergency.

    Speaker 6: Like, that was a normal thing with him, and I was like, no.

    Speaker 6: I mean, I gotta worry about him when he saves.

    Speaker 6: You know? I mean, that's how thin his blood was.

    Speaker 6: And especially, he was on chemo and get you know, and all this bullshit.

    Speaker 6: So,

    Speaker 6: and I'm a noncology nurse, and I've never bought into the chemo bullshit.

    Speaker 6: But, anyway,

    Speaker 6: so my point is that

    Speaker 6: he was already on all of the blood thinners, and his hemoglobin,

    Speaker 6: his blood still thickened

    Speaker 6: so badly.

    Speaker 6: If they wouldn't have done the test I know he stroked out at that when that happened because when they were trying to they collapsed both jugglers,

    Speaker 6: and, you know, I mean, that's pretty crazy.

    Speaker 6: But to pull off

    Speaker 6: five hundred cc's

    Speaker 6: and then

    Speaker 6: not long after you're calling me because he's bleeding out, you know, he's gotta have blood.

    Speaker 6: It it's just crazy. The one But when you're talking about the cell, if we think about the cells, the smallest living organism. Right? But it has the most power in our body.

    Speaker 6: So all the cells and they keep making cells. But if the cell's damaged

    Speaker 6: and the mitochondria is going to continue to damage the other new cells that are coming along.

    Speaker 6: So that

    Speaker 6: it all goes back down to a cellular problem.

    Speaker 7: Do you know what just hit me? I'm sorry. I'm I'm I'm gonna stop now. I I just wanna say dab, though, because it's really hitting me tonight.

    Speaker 7: When I talk to the embalmers that I know and the coroners that I worked with, like, that's I this is what I did for a living. So I ask a lot of questions, and a lot of them won't speak to me anymore, obviously, because I ask too many questions. And I have a blood clotting disorder. Personally, I do. So I was I already knew that in 02/2016.

    Speaker 7: So that's why I didn't take Advil, never took it. And so I never took any blood thinning. Thank god.

    Speaker 7: But what I wanted to say to you was when you're saying this about him

    Speaker 7: and how he stroked,

    Speaker 7: this is interesting. He's on blood thinners. He's on blood thinners already.

    Speaker 7: And when you're saying it was his carotid artery, when I talked to my embalmer friends, they say the biggest fibrin clots they found when I asked them specifically because I wanna prepare myself, and I wanted to have an,

    Speaker 7: an autopsy done, which they won't let me have in Canada, by the way,

    Speaker 7: unless I'm dead. So that it's kinda crazy. But

    Speaker 7: I asked the embalmers,

    Speaker 7: Laura Joy, Richard Hirschman, all of them personally spoke to them on the phone, and they all said they're pulling the biggest clots out of the carotid artery and the femur artery. So in your groin, so on either side of your groin

    Speaker 7: and in e each side of your neck, that's where they're pulling these large clots out of. I'm just sharing that because that's my personal,

    Speaker 6: information. Yeah. There's no the one that's when I walked in the hospital

    Speaker 6: because I have experience in taking care of people who are dying. I mean, I had a lot of experience in it. So when I looked at him,

    Speaker 6: I knew he was gone.

    Speaker 6: You know, he was I mean, he was on a vent, obviously, and his chest was going up and down. I knew he was not there.

    Speaker 6: Plus he still had all the dried blood that all over his face that I mean, you're talking two and a half weeks prior,

    Speaker 6: that they did this procedure that they didn't even clean him up.

    Speaker 6: But,

    Speaker 6: one thing I wanted to say to you too, though, is my brother that I was taking care of that that was

    Speaker 6: back injured who had a massive heart attack, blew out his atrium.

    Speaker 6: He fell while I, you know, one day I was while I was taking care of him.

    Speaker 6: And he

    Speaker 6: I I well, I had just ran to town real quick. I only left him home five minutes. He can't leave you guys home for a second,

    Speaker 6: and you stay out of trouble. But, anyway, he got some tried to get up, and he ended up falling. And I just happened to be back and had the door,

    Speaker 6: only I had to kinda break down the door to get in. Anyway,

    Speaker 6: when he, you know, when he he he first just thought he had hit his head, and I said, Glenn,

    Speaker 6: you've got to let me see if you're bleeding. He goes, I don't think I am. And when he put his hand behind

    Speaker 6: his head, you know, he moved his hand. Of course, he was bleeding bad.

    Speaker 6: But at that point, it was

    Speaker 6: I've seen lots of blood in my time too.

    Speaker 6: But it was so

    Speaker 6: thin. I mean, it almost looked like it was water coming out of him.

    Speaker 6: Right? But

    Speaker 6: so I got him, I well, I got him up and I had him immediately put the pressure on him. But I literally

    Speaker 6: watched

    Speaker 6: the blood that was on the,

    Speaker 6: floor, which was quite a bit.

    Speaker 6: I literally

    Speaker 6: watched it before my eyes come together,

    Speaker 6: and I picked it up and I picked that up in one clocked.

    Speaker 6: It blew my mind. I mean, that was crazy.

    Speaker 6: But the stuff I've seen come out, like I was saying before,

    Speaker 6: the things that I saw come out of his open wounds and things like that,

    Speaker 6: At the time, you know, I didn't know about the fibrous class, but I watched that come out of his body while he was alive,

    Speaker 6: which is insane.

    Speaker 2: Wow. Wow.

    Speaker 9: Yeah, Deb. If I could just say too, I remember I think it was, like what was it now? Three years ago,

    Speaker 9: I went out to my van one day after it had rained

    Speaker 9: and dried,

    Speaker 9: and the stuff on the hood and windshield

    Speaker 9: looked like crack cocaine. It was white. It was a substance.

    Speaker 9: And you start

    Speaker 9: kinda thinking to yourself,

    Speaker 9: how much of this

    Speaker 9: is not just the stuff that was injected, but how much of

    Speaker 9: it was actually

    Speaker 9: nano

    Speaker 9: particulate?

    Speaker 9: And how long have they been doing this to us?

    Speaker 9: How long has it been getting into our lungs and going into our bloodstream

    Speaker 9: and causing

    Speaker 9: clots and causing these issues.

    Speaker 9: I literally

    Speaker 9: took a picture of this. I've never seen anything like it. And there's, oh, oh, it's pollen. It's something off the trees. No. It wasn't fall, and it wasn't it it wasn't spring.

    Speaker 9: It was midsummer.

    Speaker 9: There was nothing that could explain

    Speaker 9: this stuff that I saw. And then I went to national,

    Speaker 9: what's it what's it called? Geoengineeringwatch.org.

    Speaker 9: And he said that we all inhale a credit card

    Speaker 9: amount or more

    Speaker 9: per month in North America

    Speaker 9: of nano particulate

    Speaker 9: into our lungs.

    Speaker 9: And then you start wondering, well, what's in the nano particulate,

    Speaker 9: and how long have they been doing this to us?

    Speaker 9: And then you start thinking to yourself, maybe it's been ten years.

    Speaker 9: And maybe some of the side effects

    Speaker 9: from all these shots these folks have taken and all these bioweapons, maybe it's in a kind of a

    Speaker 9: an an an equivalent, kind of a stacking mechanism.

    Speaker 9: Right? And you kinda you you kinda start wondering.

    Speaker 9: One thing that me and Tia have been doing,

    Speaker 9: kinda interesting research,

    Speaker 9: is I look at her weather every morning,

    Speaker 9: and I look at the air quality.

    Speaker 9: Where she's at in Canada,

    Speaker 9: she's always a one.

    Speaker 9: A one or a two.

    Speaker 9: One or a two, and air quality is the best air quality you can get.

    Speaker 9: I look here in Nebraska.

    Speaker 9: It's always a 20

    Speaker 9: to a 35.

    Speaker 9: And I know that there's a big, you know, gap there

    Speaker 9: because anything from one to 30 something or 40 something

    Speaker 9: is considered good.

    Speaker 9: But her air quality there in Canada

    Speaker 9: is so much different

    Speaker 9: on the nano particulate

    Speaker 9: from what she's getting in Canada versus what we're getting in The States.

    Speaker 9: It's something I think that needs to be researched more.

    Speaker 9: I don't wanna dry this out. I do wanna play this for you guys,

    Speaker 9: this prayer

    Speaker 9: for all of us and then also for tomorrow.

    Speaker 9: This is from Johnny Cash

    Speaker 9: from about 1969

    Speaker 9: to 1970,

    Speaker 9: somewhere in

    Speaker 9: the late sixties to to mid seventies. I just wanna play this for you guys real quick.

    Speaker 8: I'm no slave to whistle, clock, or bell,

    Speaker 8: nor weak eyed prisoner of Wall Street.

    Speaker 8: Let me be easy on the man that's down.

    Speaker 8: Let me be square and generous with all.

    Speaker 8: And guide me on the long dim trail ahead

    Speaker 8: that stretches upward

    Speaker 8: toward the Great Divide.

    Speaker 9: I just wanna say a quick prayer in Jesus' name, for everybody that goes to this event tomorrow,

    Speaker 9: for Charlie Kirk, no matter what happened in this

    Speaker 9: particular situation with him,

    Speaker 9: I pray for everybody that attends,

    Speaker 9: all the innocents

    Speaker 9: that go to this.

    Speaker 9: There's supposed to be over a 100,000

    Speaker 9: folks. They're gonna rally here in Arizona tomorrow.

    Speaker 9: I just wanna pray in Jesus' name

    Speaker 9: for their safety,

    Speaker 9: for their quality of air,

    Speaker 9: for whatever happens to them tomorrow. I pray that

    Speaker 9: God can take their hand,

    Speaker 9: lead them to safety,

    Speaker 9: and I pray that something amazing comes out of tomorrow's,

    Speaker 9: memorial

    Speaker 9: no matter what that may be.

    Speaker 9: And,

    Speaker 9: I pray for everybody in this room.

    Speaker 9: Chelsea,

    Speaker 9: Protocol,

    Speaker 9: Annette,

    Speaker 9: Deb,

    Speaker 9: T Bird.

    Speaker 9: I pray for everybody in this room that's listening to my voice

    Speaker 9: that we can somehow

    Speaker 9: rally

    Speaker 9: and, work in Jesus' name

    Speaker 9: and work in the highest of high

    Speaker 9: and,

    Speaker 9: continue to push forward together

    Speaker 9: and let everything that's trying to divide us

    Speaker 9: sew us together

    Speaker 9: so we can have ultimate strength

    Speaker 9: in Jesus Christ's name.

    Speaker 9: Amen.

    Speaker 6: And I wanna come up right behind them and say,

    Speaker 6: and, lord, may you be glorified tomorrow

    Speaker 6: by all your people

    Speaker 6: in Jesus' name.

    Speaker 1: Thank you, Kyle. Thank you so much, Deb. I think that is really kind

    Speaker 1: of a a beautiful note to take us out on. And,

    Speaker 1: I I really appreciate your contributions

    Speaker 1: to the conversation tonight and everybody who spoke.

    Speaker 1: I really appreciate you being here

    Speaker 1: and helping us every week relentlessly

    Speaker 1: raise awareness about these crimes against humanity

    Speaker 1: and demand accountability.

    Speaker 1: Trump is talking right now about

    Speaker 1: we're gonna get this autism

    Speaker 1: disclosure on Monday.

    Speaker 1: And,

    Speaker 1: almost in the same breath, he's still talking of the benefits of

    Speaker 1: operation warp speed. So,

    Speaker 1: one way or another, it will be a very interesting

    Speaker 1: week coming up,

    Speaker 1: and we will have a lot to discuss

    Speaker 1: next Saturday.

    Speaker 1: I hope that anyone who does attend,

    Speaker 1: you know, just be safe, stay safe, stay aware

    Speaker 1: of your

    Speaker 1: surroundings,

    Speaker 1: and

    Speaker 1: and keep your loved ones safe. And,

    Speaker 1: I really hope it will be a

    Speaker 12: peaceful

    Speaker 1: camera. And and bring a good camera, he says.

    Speaker 1: And and

    Speaker 1: we are witnessing history right now, so we need to remain cognizant of that and remain vigilant.

    Speaker 1: Unfortunately,

    Speaker 1: Miriam was encountering

    Speaker 6: the Can I say,

    Speaker 6: can I take Miriam's spot for a second then? Sure.

    Speaker 6: I just wanted to say,

    Speaker 6: thanks

    Speaker 6: tonight.

    Speaker 6: I really needed tonight,

    Speaker 6: just to

    Speaker 6: be around my friends.

    Speaker 6: And,

    Speaker 6: I really love and appreciate y'all

    Speaker 6: because this things are tough right now. So

    Speaker 6: just wanted to know how much I love you. So thanks.

    Speaker 1: Thank you so much, Deb. It wouldn't be date night without you.

    Speaker 1: And I've missed you too. I've been so busy and under the weather and

    Speaker 1: trying to get stuff together, but,

    Speaker 1: you are always in my thoughts, and that is true for so many of the people in this room. And

    Speaker 1: I'm I'm very grateful for you,

    Speaker 1: spending your time with us and really being part of

    Speaker 1: what's become

    Speaker 1: more than a community. It's it really feels like a family,

    Speaker 1: and I'm very grateful for you.

    Speaker 1: Protocol widow,

    Speaker 1: would you like to take us out?

    Speaker 3: I don't ever

    Speaker 3: I don't ever regret meeting any of you guys because I love y'all.

    Speaker 3: I regret how we had to meet

    Speaker 3: I regret everything about what you

    Speaker 3: and myself

    Speaker 3: have had to live with

    Speaker 3: I feel like we are

    Speaker 3: heading into some times that might

    Speaker 3: might not be so much fun.

    Speaker 3: There were a lot of people who thought when Trump got elected it was gonna be

    Speaker 3: a free ride,

    Speaker 3: and it's looking really, really ugly right now to me,

    Speaker 3: and I'm really glad that I've got an army like this behind me.

    Speaker 3: So

    Speaker 3: let's hope

    Speaker 3: that this time well,

    Speaker 3: 07:00 next Saturday. Not this time next week. Okay?

    Speaker 3: Let's hope we can get together

    Speaker 3: and have

    Speaker 3: a discussion that's not really eventful for the last week because there is always

    Speaker 3: some major event.

    Speaker 6: Sherry, I just want you to know too,

    Speaker 6: and I hope I'm not I don't mean I'm not gonna embarrass I hope I'm not embarrassing you, so forgive me if you look at it. I've got I put my nightgown on. I can handle it.

    Speaker 6: Alright. Well, I just want you know,

    Speaker 6: I know that right now, this is a really tough time for you

    Speaker 6: because

    Speaker 6: and you're living through it again.

    Speaker 6: And I just want you to know that I'm here and I love you.

    Speaker 6: And if you need me,

    Speaker 6: you know how to get me. I appreciate that.

    Speaker 3: You know, one of the things that's helped me get through it is that I'm so damn angry right now.

    Speaker 3: You know? The whole Charlie Kirk thing has just pissed

    Speaker 3: me the f

    Speaker 3: off

    Speaker 3: because I see so many correlations

    Speaker 3: in the gaslighting

    Speaker 3: that we are seeing right now

    Speaker 3: to COVID.

    Speaker 1: So Because it's the same it's a continuation

    Speaker 1: of the same it's an escalating

    Speaker 1: continuation of the very same campaign. Yes.

    Speaker 3: And we can go back.

    Speaker 3: This is not

    Speaker 3: this is not

    Speaker 3: 1963.

    Speaker 3: So we can see.

    Speaker 3: We saw a lot in Vegas.

    Speaker 3: We saw a lot in Butler.

    Speaker 3: Now we see this.

    Speaker 3: And it the the details just get clearer,

    Speaker 3: and they still gaslight us with the same BS.

    Speaker 3: So,

    Speaker 3: I can't keep talking because then I'll we'll be here another hour.

    Speaker 6: Well, I have to add to this. I'm sorry.

    Speaker 6: But,

    Speaker 6: you know,

    Speaker 6: they have to get it through their heads that we have had enough.

    Speaker 3: Well, we have to figure out You know what I mean? To figure out a way to make that really damn clear.

    Speaker 6: And that's why Yeah. But did you look at the other countries,

    Speaker 6: which amazed me

    Speaker 6: that the people that hit the streets together

    Speaker 6: I mean,

    Speaker 6: hundreds of thousands. But

    Speaker 3: here's the here's the the really downside, though, Deb, is that there are a lot of people in that damn country that don't know that happened because they were told, like

    Speaker 3: our people are told

    Speaker 3: by

    Speaker 3: some TV station,

    Speaker 3: oh, there's maybe a thousand people on the street.

    Speaker 3: And

    Speaker 3: the freaking sheep are just going

    Speaker 3: the whole way.

    Speaker 6: No. But I the ones that I'm talking about were the ones that

    Speaker 6: were there celebrating

    Speaker 6: his life

    Speaker 6: and celebrating what he stood for. That's what I was talking about. About in in England.

    Speaker 3: There was more than a million people on that on that just across the bridge.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. That we're talking about the same thing then. And what I'm telling you is there are people in England that have no idea that happened.

    Speaker 3: They heard there was a thousand people on the street.

    Speaker 5: Oh, wow.

    Speaker 3: Yeah. So we saw it because

    Speaker 3: they are more censored than we are, and now the censoring is starting to really pick up here.

    Speaker 3: So, yeah, Trump is not the answer, and we've gotta take it back.

    Speaker 3: Something's gotta change

    Speaker 3: because this is not the America we paid for.

    Speaker 7: So No. Protocol, I need to say one last thing.

    Speaker 7: I wasn't going to. I brushed my teeth. I'm like, nope. I'm not gonna say it. I'm not gonna say it. Do you know what? There might

    Speaker 7: be 40 people in the space,

    Speaker 7: but we are stronger

    Speaker 7: than the million that are watching CNN.

    Speaker 7: You know why? Because we watched our loved ones Mhmm. Be murdered. Yep.

    Speaker 7: We watched our own bodies deteriorate.

    Speaker 7: We did what we didn't wanna do because we had to keep a job, whatever. There's no reason. What I wanna say is

    Speaker 7: those of us that are still here

    Speaker 7: are still stronger than all of them combined. So you can take all those rich elites, you can take all their money,

    Speaker 7: and go fuck themselves. And you know what? You know what I love about us? We're we're never gonna quit because guess what? We have nothing to lose because now Yeah. We're angry.

    Speaker 7: We're not

    Speaker 7: this is not money motivated.

    Speaker 7: We are not looking for millions of dollars so we can get pay off some whatever

    Speaker 7: constituent.

    Speaker 7: We want

    Speaker 7: justice, which we won't get. We know that. We're not stupid. That's also what scares them. We're not stupid.

    Speaker 7: And guess what?

    Speaker 7: How many of us are women?

    Speaker 7: We're mama bears. We are going to take this by storm. We are going to just do it with love.

    Speaker 6: Right? No. I don't. Just mama bears with love. Well, I can't promise you. I don't know. But I'll I'll try. I was being poetically correct. Who is who is doing so good? We're gonna do it with love. What are you, stupid? No. I wanna fucking hit somebody. You got the you got the wrong girls on the panel here today

    Speaker 6: on this one.

    Speaker 7: I was just trying to bring language.

    Speaker 7: That's all. Just language.

    Speaker 6: Will lead the army. Just saying if y'all wanna join the army.

    Speaker 7: Alright. See? That's what it's like living in Canada. You can't say

    Speaker 7: anything.

    Speaker 7: Yeah. You're going to jail. Even my best friend today said to me, Pete, I know you've been to jail before, but you can't do it again. You just you're not gonna live through it. And I'm like, oh, well. Here we go. Let's go. If I go to jail, just y'all somebody bail me out with you

    Speaker 6: because

    Speaker 6: I can guarantee you I'm not jail material, but I will start a ministry

    Speaker 6: if I have to.

    Speaker 1: Alright, boys and girls. In a way, that's kind of kind of what we've we've done here. We've created,

    Speaker 1: a a platform,

    Speaker 1: if you will, to

    Speaker 1: serve as a replacement for all the institutions

    Speaker 1: who have

    Speaker 1: absolutely,

    Speaker 1: negated their obligations

    Speaker 1: to the public. And

    Speaker 1: and I don't know who just hit mute all, but

    Speaker 6: Oh.

    Speaker 1: It is late. It is so late, and it's been such a great conversation. But I think you guys made so many

    Speaker 1: really great points, and

    Speaker 1: I really hope that,

    Speaker 1: some of the

    Speaker 1: the worries and and fears

    Speaker 1: expressed about what what goes on with,

    Speaker 1: this memorial

    Speaker 1: are not realized, and we can spend the duration of the next space talking about these

    Speaker 1: amazing

    Speaker 1: autism revelations

    Speaker 1: and

    Speaker 1: and how how we can continue

    Speaker 1: to talk up the fruits of operation warp speed

    Speaker 1: in the face of

    Speaker 1: that

    Speaker 1: and not be talking about another,

    Speaker 1: another tragedy.

    Speaker 1: So we will,

    Speaker 1: we will keep praying for that, and, I really appreciate you, Kyle,

    Speaker 1: doing that for us tonight. And

    Speaker 1: and, I see it working. So just

    Speaker 1: keep the faith, guys.

    Speaker 3: Good night, everybody.

    Speaker 1: Critical widow. I thought you were gonna say something. I'm just saying good night, everybody.

    Speaker 1: I was gonna say something. And as soon as I hit unmute, I I

    Speaker 6: lost I was gonna I was gonna do the very same thing, Chelsea. It was something that you had to say. And

    Speaker 6: as soon as you got done, I had no idea what that was.

    Speaker 6: But oh, I know what I wanted to say.

    Speaker 6: Yes. This is the first new one for the books of how late we stayed on.

    Speaker 1: Oh, I think we've done even worse than this, but not in recent history. We put, like, a six hour limit on it, and, we've adhered pretty rigidly to that recently, but

    Speaker 1: I think we're going on

    Speaker 1: seven hours right now. And I I hope people

    Speaker 1: even though it's it's a long space, this will be

    Speaker 1: transcribed

    Speaker 1: and,

    Speaker 1: and put on our Substack and on Spotify.

    Speaker 1: And I hope people take the time to listen,

    Speaker 1: to the the full you know, just put it on the background while you're

    Speaker 1: doing your chores or whatever and and share it with others who might do the same

    Speaker 1: and help us raise awareness about these things and

    Speaker 1: finally

    Speaker 1: stop these policies, protocols, and mandates, which are still very much

    Speaker 1: in place and and still harming people

    Speaker 1: even to this day. This is not a thing of the past,

    Speaker 1: and there is the urgency

    Speaker 1: of discovering treatments for the

    Speaker 1: injuries caused by the mRNA and so much else we need to do. So please

    Speaker 1: share this space,

    Speaker 1: help support us, subscribe to our Substack,

    Speaker 1: donate if you can,

    Speaker 1: volunteer if you're able to,

    Speaker 1: and,

    Speaker 1: and

    Speaker 1: we're grateful for you, and we'll see you again next Saturday. Thank you so much, everyone.