Transcript
0: You bear with us for a few minutes while everybody joins and get started? Alright. Andy and Sticky, you should be able to receive email.
1: Let me know if you can.
2: I'm yeah. I'm here. Shall I well, let's wait a few more minutes, and then, I guess, read off the rules here. Welcome. Welcome, everyone.
3: Can you hear me?
2: I sure can.
0: Perfect. K. Wait a few minutes to get people on.
2: As everyone is waiting welcome. Welcome. We're just, waiting a few more minutes. Please stand by. Just another minute. Okey doke. Hello and good evening, everyone. Welcome to the COVID, Humanity Betrayal Project, crimes against human crimes, COVID related crimes against humanity. Eyewitnesses are speaking out. If you are an eyewitness or you're a victim, you have experienced something like mistreatment in a hospital in The United States. Welcome to our space. This is what we're about, so feel free to speak up. I have some rules. We have some rules, excuse me, that we like to follow here. Just a few. The first rule is if you are a troll and you wish to speak, do so with some level of creativity. There's nothing worse than someone who doesn't really wanna be original about talking smack. So please be original. Rule number 2, try to keep it under 10 minutes so everyone has a chance who wants to speak because, you know, we, sometimes we're not the best at time and we get over we get over the limit. And, so if you go over that limit, that's fine, but be mindful of your time. And, rule number 3, seriously, if you are not speaking, just mute it. Mute your microphone so others can hear others that are speaking. And, please remember that this is a recorded, space. We record everything we do, so be mindful of what you say. Thank you so much, and, welcome.
4: Thank you so much, Andy.
2: Absolutely. I'm going to, we have some other hosts and speakers here. We have the, the the our our fearless leaders, American granddaughter and also the, Chelsea who's, the, the 1 of the leaders at CHBMP. I'm the social media outreach director for CHBMP. We have a lot of things that we always cover in this space. You know, while we're waiting, if you have a moment, feel free to check out my website death@baylor.com. It is an executive summary of what happened to me in an American hospital in the state of Texas. Please review it. Share it with with everyone you know. If they're doing this today, what will they be doing tomorrow? That's the question you must be asking. Chelsea, would you like to take over? How about cheese? Okay. Very good.
4: Sorry about that. I love
5: As as yeah. Yeah.
6: You need
0: to Sorry.
4: So, so, yeah, Cece, you wanna tell us what you've been working on? I know you you're doing so many things. Tell us about the cookbook.
0: Oh, yeah. We are making a, cookbook in honor of the victims. So all the, family members or widows from the victims have sent in recipes that are tied to a memory, and it's just been an amazing project. It's going to print pretty soon but within the week, and you can get them on our website. But each time you read a recipe or cook something, you'll read a memory about a person just to help keep their memory alive, and it'll say, in memory of in the person's name and a picture of them. It's it's really great. We're already having to start on volume 2 because we got so many recipes in. But, it's gonna be it's called Home Cooked Memories from our hearts to your table, and it's dedicated to all the COVID 19 hospital protocol victims. We also are about to put out the press release for the class action that's about to be filed, like, against Gilead. So excited about that. And, I was gonna follow-up with Andy. If you haven't if you have a story and you want to share, please go to CHBMP.org and document your story. The more stories we have in there, better chance we have at winning, and I use those, those case files to send off to attorneys that come up that step up to the plate whenever I find them. And more are coming forward every day. So you wanna get your story on the record. And, also, if you've got if your loved 1 got room to disappear, you can get into class action. That's all about what all I have right now. We had game night last night, which I we have support meetings 6 nights a week, but I try to do 1 night that's not as serious to give people a break and try to have a little bit of fun and some laughs. We had about 13 people on, and we had a really good time. So, we always do that, on 1 night of the weekend, mostly Friday nights since we're doing the Twitter space on Saturday nights. But, it's it's a good time to kinda get a break and laugh and win prizes, actually. That's all about all I have. Does anybody want to share or or speak? Please, request, and we will allow you to.
4: I see Gail has joined us. Welcome, Gail.
2: Hello, Gail.
6: Hello. It would help if I unmuted before I spoke. That
0: Hello, Gail.
1: Hello. Can you hear me?
6: Yes. Okay. Sometimes I feel unheard, but not here. Whenever I come to this Twitter spaces, I always feel heard.
0: So
6: where were you guys at? I joined
2: We were we were, we're just waiting for people to join. Would anyone like to anyone that is here that is a listener, if you wanna request to speak and, tell any any updates on your story or maybe you haven't we haven't heard your story yet, we'd love to hear it.
6: I see a lot I see a lot people I know of people I know.
4: Cece, we'd love to hear an update about the lawsuit if you if you have anything to update us on in that regard.
0: Which 1? We've got about, let's see, about 60 or 70 across the country, individual civil suits, in the works, and, several have made it past the PrEP Act immunity hearing. So, that's good. I haven't heard any bad news yet on any of them. That's not to say that we won't hear it, but so far so good. Using fraud instead of, Medmal because you can get around the prepack with fraud. They the doctor or the fiduciary has a obligation to tell you what's going in your body. And in any of the cases that we've done, they're not telling the patients what remdesivir is or any of the EUA medications, what, side effects they have, and what benefits they have actually, or that the hospitals are being financially incentivized to use it, or give them an alternative choices. So that is, that is fraud. And so that's why we're getting around that. Also, elder abuse and negligence, medical battery.
6: And I do believe the 1 the Kaiser 1 is the decision I heard is coming. The judge said she will issue her decision October 2. October second. So people need to be praying that that 1 Yep. Hits the mark.
0: And then the class action is getting ready to be filed, I believe, on the 20 seventh against Gilead for false advertising remdesivir saying it does did something it didn't do. And anybody in the country that got that drug can get into that class action. They're not because of the Provac, we can't exactly sue for damages. So they're, suing to get remdesivir pulled off the shelf to never be used again, to never hurt another person. But, the judge also could, award disgorgement, which means they feel like the, company should not have profited off that drug, and they can refund those profits back to the victims. So that's exciting. Oh, there's doctor Ferrell.
1: I was
6: just gonna say 1 of Texas' favorite doctors is on.
0: Let's let her take the like, she's she knows all about remdesivir.
6: In fact,
0: had a loss in her family from it. Hi, Angie.
6: I would love to hear her her take on the,
0: Let me make her a speaker.
6: Yes, please. I would love to hear her take on the the, FDA approving that shot for babies too.
0: Oh, yeah.
6: That's right up her alley.
0: How do I thank you. Doctor Ferla, I think you have to request to speak so we can make you a speaker.
6: Yeah. Because you Cece, you're only a speaker. You're not a cohost, so it has to be I
0: got promoted.
6: You yeah. We we
0: demoted that
3: I invited you, but I don't know what happened.
6: We demoted you for your sauteed cucumbers.
0: Oh, gosh. This is yeah. Throw me under the bus too.
6: You need that cook that cookbook.
0: I know. Right? I'm in charge of it real quick. Hey. Yeah. What is what's going on with that? What did you just say, Gail? That medication that was approved? Oh, so
6: the, the latest COVID shot was was approved for, babies. I think there was only 1 doctor on the at the FDA that said, no. We don't have enough information. Let's let's not. Everybody else approved it. So, like, there's so many things there's so many things going on right now, and I know, you know, like, especially with the targeting towards kids, you know, like pushing remdesivir for RSV, which kids get, you know, that type of thing. So, I mean, I would just would love to hear anything that you have to say.
7: Can you guys hear me?
0: Yep.
8: Oh, how nice. Okay. Hi.
7: I'm like, I can't I don't know if you can hear me or not. Okay.
6: Well,
7: you know, the, if anyone watches HGTV, you might watch that for just a short period of time. And the, American Academy of Pediatrics actually put out a commercial that is just chock full of misinformation and disinformation. There's 4 physicians highlighted on that particular commercial, and they make no note of, you know, any negative side effects from the COVID vaccine and also tell people that COVID was worse for children than than getting the vaccine. And we know that to be an absolute falsehood. We know just by CDC's own numbers, you know, that by, COVID for children was 0.001 percent across the board. It was it's minuscule. It's basically nonexistent. We know that the harm to children, from the vaccines, not even including the cardiovascular issues with myocarditis, pericarditis, but in excess of a thousand children have died directly from the shots. And that's what they're actually allowed to you know, what they're approving for reporting. And when I meet what I mean by that is that the numbers have changed. If you're following it closely, the numbers have changed on VAERS, periodically, and it's because the CDC will actually or supposedly, they're supposed to evaluate what's going on there and eliminate, like, duplicates and things of that nature. And so you'll see the numbers flux. There was a time, not too long ago that because we follow the numbers on a weekly basis in my, you know, in my staff my staff does this for me so that we could see the numbers. And I could tell you that for a while there, it was really stagnant. Like, it the nothing changed for, I think, 5 weeks, 6 weeks, which to me tells me that there is some kind of, I would say probably a block into the reporting system. The reporting system, for most of you that don't know, is, you know, highly underreported. VAERS is is supposed to be used in cases of, injury or death secondary to it could be a drug. It could be a vaccine. Of course, the we're talking about vaccines in this particular case. And, unfortunately, the process is so cumbersome that most of the time, it's it most of the practitioners don't have enough time to put it in there. I encourage my patient population that have had vaccine injury to report to self report. And the reason why I say that is because, they have all the information at their fingertips. They know the they should have their lot number on their immunization card. They should have the information that is asked in in the VAERS report. So for instance, when we recognize that there is a problem, I know this from personal experience, I went into VAERS, and I was trying to report patients that have had adverse events. And what happened at that particular time, and this was probably a little over a year ago, it kept looping me. Meaning, like, it it would never let me complete the actual input. It would just loop me around, loop me around, loop me around. And, you know, I spent a good 45 minutes on 2 or 3 patients and never got anything reported. So it's a very frustrating situation because they do it on purpose. You know, they make it difficult on purpose so that this isn't a quick and easy reporting system. It's cumbersome. It's made to protect, you know, the CDC. It's made to protect, the companies. It's not for true reporting purposes. Because if it was, these vaccines would have been thrown in the trash a long time ago. We all know that. You know? If this if if the FDA, the CDC, the ACIP, and all the other letter agencies were doing their absolute jobs, NIH is to be included, then they would know for sure that there's more harm than good. There's more there's absolutely more harm than benefit across the board. The new statistic was that a million people would have to get shots to prevent 1 fatality from COVID. That's the that's the statistic. So what's where is the the where is the benefit risk ratio there? There's absolutely 0 benefit. A million people would have to risk an adverse event for 1 person not to potentially die. It it just doesn't make any sense. And especially since the follow-up information has shown that people that have gotten COVID, jabs have not been completely scot free of the disease. We know many, many people who've gotten COVID multiple times after getting their so called vaccination that is supposed to protect them from further disease. And we know that this you know, now we're seeing other horrible things, which they're not allowing the proper, information to get out. You know, they're blocking the reporting from scientists. You know, Hotez, doctor Hotez just put out kind of a a whiny piece about how the government needs to protect science. And and, you know, it's such it's such a gaslighting piece. I don't know if anyone read it.
6: Yeah. I did. I did. It's absolute trash.
0: He's a joke. He's such a joke.
7: And he's from Houston, and he's a vaccine developer for children's vaccines. I mean, this stuff is just it's too you can't even make this stuff up. It's so frustrating because, you know, he needs protection. Why does he need protection? Why is it that other docs who have tried to publish were blocked from publishing their results? Why is it that they won't let us analyze the the pieces, and they they trash doctor, McCullough when he comes out and he analyzes pieces? Right? I mean, this is this is not that's not science. So every story has 2 sides. Right? Science has 2 sides.
6: Exactly. I when I hear
7: You're both sides.
6: When I hear those words protect the science, it's like that that just that sends up so many red flags because it we're constantly challenging. We should be constantly challenging it. Like Like That doesn't even make sense. Sense.
4: Recently, they did a campaign that was protect women with science,
6: not protect science. Protect women with science. What?
4: Protect women with science, not from science.
6: Oh, not from science.
8: Yeah. Wow.
4: Wow. And they were mandating the shots on pregnant women.
6: Oh my gosh.
0: Well, it's hard to target, but,
7: you know, we are gonna look back, and we're gonna this is gonna be a huge shame for our country when we look back in the next couple of decades. It's it's it's a horror show, and it's so disappointing because, you know, these these processes were put in place to protect the American people. And I unfortunately, I'm 1 of those optimist people that I don't think that everything was sinisterly done, but, because, you know, because there were times, you know, that vaccines were thrown away and were stopped and were pulled off shelves and were you know? And it wasn't too long ago. You know? 1999 was the last 1. So and, actually, come to think of it, Santa Fe Pastor so Santa Fe is a big product producer of influenza vaccine, and they actually pulled their product this year because efficacy did not prove true for them. So, I mean, kudos to Sanofi Pasteur. You know, how much money did they throw out the window there? But, you know, hey. At least I had a glimmer of hope not too long ago about that. And that came out about probably about a month ago that they were not gonna release their influenza vaccine, which it was an mRNA vaccine, but they said that in their study that there was not, proven efficacy, and so they were not gonna market the product. So at least that's good.
0: I don't understand how there can be 38,000 documented, adverse events or deaths, actually, in VAERS. I mean, that number is underreported, we all know, but that just using that number alone, how come it can it's not pulled just from that. I mean, the evidence is out. I don't understand how they can keep getting through with this.
7: Yeah. I don't understand it either, especially since unless it's not directed from the from the you know, there's always this possibility that this truly is protected a protected government program or military program. You know, that's the only way, honestly, that I can see that this would make any sense. Because if it if it followed the guidelines like it normally did back in '99 or '76 or whatever, this stuff would have been pulled at the first within January of, let's see, January of 21, this would have been pulled off the market. Because in the health care systems, when they were giving the vaccines to health care workers, there were more than 25 deaths in December of 20. There was 1 in Houston. So, I mean, come on. There's just no way there's just no way that that they didn't know. Because I'm telling you, it would have never rolled out in January if they were following the guidelines that they put forth from, you know, the red what I call the red flags. I mean, those are things that are there for a reason. Those those are safety flags to stop production and stop the distribution of a dangerous product. We knew that in January of 20 21. So there's gotta be something else.
0: I think it's another motive, because, you know, doctor Jansy, Lindsay, and I have started that group, We The People 50, and we're trying to get the shots recalled just based on the fact that they're contaminated with the with the plasmids used to make them according to Kevin McKernan's work and 4 other independent labs. And we've gone to she's gone to the CDC, and and told them and the FDA, and they don't care. So we started presenting at in different states, Idaho, South Carolina. We're about to go to Utah. And just based on the fact that, you know, you don't even have to go conspiracy theory or whatever you wanna call it. You can just say, hey. They're contaminated just like contaminated baby food or dog food. They have to be recalled. And you know listening.
6: And you know how many interviews we do with with, families who had a loved 1 killed by the protocol, and they're afraid at first because they're in a state of confusion. The hospital puts them in that state of darkness and confusion and gaslights them. And they go and they get the shot, and they're injured, and they have problems. I interviewed somebody today, just today, that that was true for. So I actually interviewed 2 people that that was true for actually this week. So they you know, it's the gaslighting, the killing, it all of that stuff really it's big it's just 1 big psyops, you know, to push people to get the shots and to hear that they're contaminated. And I, like, I don't know what we can do about, you know, other than what we're doing. So from, like, a doctor's like, you're you're involved with a lot of well, you're all great doctors, by the way. Like, I have total respect. I I see you guys working on all sorts of things in the media, in legislation. You're you're just constantly fighting this. So what are the things that we can do to to best, partner with you in fighting all of this and supporting you?
7: Well, you know, I've been trying to do
9: an effort
7: for quite a few years to actually overturn the 1986 law, giving pharmaceutical vaccine companies the amnesty from, any, you know, problems that they that the vaccines cause. And, there's actually a website called writeyourlaws.com, and you could search, immunization law or 1986 law or something like that in there, and it'll pop it up. If you guys can just print those out and send them to your representatives, and I would do it on all sides, like local, state, federal, the whole kit and caboodle. Because what's happening is and and I could tell you, I was on a Zoom call with physicians with, senator Johnson. This was, quite a long time ago. The years are kind of sliding into mine, but I think it was in 2022. And I was invited on this call, the Zoom call, and I asked him flat out. This is right before, of course, an election cycle, and he was up for reelection at that point. And I said to him, okay. I have this this law. It's exactly what was passed in 1986 except the verb you know, if it said can, then it changed to cannot, you know, that kind of thing. So it's the exact law that passed back in 1986, except now it would flip it over and make the, vaccine manufacturers liable for their product. And I don't see why that's a big issue. And I asked him very specifically, will you please just sponsor this bill? Just put it out there. And his response to me was, there's not enough public support. And that, kinda blew me away because I said, oh, contrary, sir. With all due respect, I've been traveling all around the country, and there's a lot of public support. What there isn't is there's not a lot of legislators that will support this bill. And I can tell you, I handed that bill in reference to that bill to multiple people on the right side of the aisle. Multiple, including senator Ted Cruz
0: Mhmm.
7: Including Marjorie, Marjorie Greene Taylor Greene. Gave it to her. I gave it to a bunch of people, and nothing came of it. And I just you know, I I think, really, the groundswell is in the will of the we the people, because I think what what a lot of these legislators don't understand is that they work for us. We are the ones that possess the power. And, unfortunately, the public has kind of fallen back from that, and and we've kind of allowed these legislators to get power hungry. They get insider trading all the time. You know, all the stuff that we would go to to jail for, they don't go to jail for. And this is very, very frustrating because, you know, to me, there's there's a saying that goes around in my house a lot, and it's, you know, some are more equal than others in The United States.
6: Yes.
7: And and what that proves to me is that the law is not equal equally applicable across the board, and that's not right. That's not what we that's not what this country was was founded upon. And it's really just a really bad precedent. You know, we really need to take it back. We need there's been so much, you know, there needs to be term limit. I mean, people that are in their nineties who can't walk should not be leading any kind of legislative they they should retire. Get them out of there. I mean, it's it's insane.
6: There's a You know? There's a thought process, serve your generation and get out. Right? Right.
7: But there's also, you know do they do they take any kind of aptitude test? Do these people are they taking any cognitive testing? I mean, as you age, some people are sharp as tax, and I'm not saying that there's a problem with that. But, you know, even then, they shouldn't hold positions that are that strict in power. That's what I think that's where I'm having a little more difficulty because do they do they have the cognitive wherewithal? I mean, there's there we have been calling this into question for quite a while Yeah. With quite a few legislators, you know, across the board. So Yeah. This is this is a big problem because we are we are it's a security risk.
10: I mean yeah.
7: I mean, among other things. Right?
11: For sure.
6: But I agree. There's some some of them couldn't couldn't pass the little put the blocks in the,
0: shape. Yeah. Just on their
10: own.
0: Even young, they couldn't. Right.
6: There's the queue.
2: I would love to hear anyone in, the congress right now explain give me the definition of the consumer price index, their definition. I would love to hear that. And another thing that I recently discovered on Twitter, AOC having a very insightful conversation with the current president of The United States and Nancy Pelosi about how they should punish the protesters. They're not afraid of us. AOC was like, they're not afraid of us. What do we do? Unbelievable. Government officials are are trying to intimidate the people. That's not what they're there for. Pure and simple.
6: Yeah. I saw that too. Yeah. I saw that too.
0: What the nice thing is, that answer, he said, you know, that not enough public support. What in why in the world would the public not want accountability from the drug manufacturer?
6: That doesn't even make sense. It doesn't make sense. And, you know, it was kind of was a little bit of a loaded question because, you know, I've, you know, I've I've seen you walk the talk like you're down in Austin walking the, you know, walking the halls and trying to get stuff done. I've seen you there when I've been doing it. And people need to I say it all the time. People need to become their we can't afford expensive lobbyists. We need to become lobbyists, and we need to go door to door and, you know, hand deliver those. Like, he's I'm aware of that that site. It's a great site. You know, print hand deliver it. Hand deliver it. Tell your story. Go down with a bunch of people. You know, we went down with a busload to Austin and, you know, see what committees they're on, walk into their offices, introduce yourself, you know, go to the calendars committee, go, you know, do do you know, strengthen numbers. So I appreciate you talking about that.
7: Absolutely. And I think you I think a lot of people are feeling intimidated. I know when I went to the capital for the first time, I was very intimidated, super intimidated. And then I realized when I got in there and I started talking to him more, I was really like a fly on the wall the first time. I just kinda listened. I didn't really participate. And what I realized at that particular moment is they only know what we tell them.
6: That's right.
7: And that was a very scary realization when I when when I realized that almost immediately, and I said, okay. That's it. You know? And that's kind of what started me on this whole, like, legis I'm going to the legislature. A lot of you know, I whenever they're in session, I go once a month. I spend at least 1 day. Sometimes I spend 2 days depending on scheduling.
12: Yeah.
3: And I
7: go in there and I I advocate for patients. That's pretty much what my job is. You know, the first day I go around with with TMA, and I kinda try to see what TMA is doing. Mhmm. A lot of time, I I don't agree with them. So, you know, we actually have this, like, debriefing session where we can actually discuss questions and stuff. And and then, you know, the next day, I'm not a representative of any kind of organization. I'm just me. And that's when I go in and I tell them, like, as a physician, you know, and I'm an advocate for my patients, this is what I think of x, y, or z. And, you know, and I tell them sometimes this is not in agreement with, you know, our large medical association. But, you know, since I'm in the field and I'm boots on the ground, this is what my patients I I kind of act like my patients are my constituency. Right? And I go in there and I tell them, this is not what patients want. This is what patients want. And so once once they start to understand that and understand your point of view, you see that that the the moment kinda pops up every once in a while. Not all the time, but every once in a while. But it's important for them to document that you were in there and that you said your piece because that is huge because especially if you're a constituent of that particular person. So I go into my my people first, my legislators first, and then I hit on my neighboring legislators, so the ones that are outside of my jurisdiction but maybe in, you know, our bordering areas, and I'll and I'll try to go to them, or I go to like minded, you know, people and and try to just enforce, like, hey. Yeah. This is this is good. I'm behind you. I just want you to know I'm here to help you. And and that's where it's at. You know? I think a lot of Americans just kind of poo poo the whole system. Like, our government is such a faraway thing. It's not really an intimate thing. And that's where these that's where these strongholds start, and it starts in our own in our own towns. You know? Become a part of the city council or get on 1 of their committees or go into the student you know, the the school boards and be a part of the PTA and Booster Club. Because that's right now in our country, what is very, very scary is that if you look back at history, things are starting to repeat itself. Right? Those who do not know history are bound to repeat it. Back in the 19 thirties in in Germany, they were actively taking children and manipulating them in school to separate them from their parent. And more and more of that is becoming very, very visible currently. The kids the kids do not get schoolbooks. I mean, I pay enough taxes to get schoolbooks for all 3 of my kids from the public school system, and none of them oh, I take that back. 1 kid got 1 book. Right? And I have 3 kids, and they each have 6 glasses. So do the math. This is a horror show. So what they're doing is they're removing us as a parent to know what our children are learning. That's a big problem. They're also setting ideals for our children that may be contrary to what you've teach them in your home, and that is so important. I want people to understand that. Debrief your kids. Make sure you talk to them. Make sure that you they they understand, like, what your family stands for because that in itself, those children are going to take what you say well above. This has been studied before, but they're going to take what your influence is above what anyone else that's not related to them tries to influence them with. And understand that those cell phones are bombarding them nonstop to try to just to take away your message as a parent. So it's really important across the board to do that too. I mean, I know that's a little off, but that's something too that I got very upset about when they were bringing clinics, like medical clinic into the schools with
13: Yep.
7: Personnel that aren't qualified to to take care of these kids or to influence these kids in medical decisions. And you see it in California.
6: It was I
7: mean, right now, teachers have the power to remove children out of the home.
6: Yes. Exactly. And that's been like that in Texas. I remember us fighting a bill, back in 2006 when they were gonna give, student counselors, principals, and teachers the right to have children removed if the parents, if the parents did not put their children on psychotropic drugs if it was recommended. So this has been a thing for a long time, and we took busloads of people down to testify. Not we. Like, this was a a different thing I was working on, but, and and we were able to kill that bill for for for a season. But, you know, the clinics and schools, that's 1 of the primary reasons my daughter homeschools.
0: Mhmm.
6: Yeah.
0: Yeah. People need to read the bills too. They might have some title that sounds really good and and what you are and that you when you read it, it's worthless.
6: Yeah. The devil's in the details. Right? Like, it could be the bill could be titled don't kick puppies and everybody can agree with that, but then on the inside of the bill, it Yeah. Thompson every right you have.
0: And this is why we're, you know, we're we're in this position in the first place with these hospital protocols and vaccines. We've people have, you know, gotten lazy about getting involved in their legislation legislative, initiatives, and government's gotten too big. And it's our own fault, so we need to reinstate ourselves back into the process.
6: Well yeah. And they've spent a long time trying to abolish the nuclear family. So it's you know, like like you know? I I always said be in your kid's business. That's you know, it's your JOB. Be in your kid's business, and don't let anyone tell you you shouldn't be. Alright.
0: I love the Thank
7: you, guys. I'm gonna have to sign off now, but thank you so much for listening to me.
10: Oh, we always appreciate are awesome.
13: Joining. Thank
0: you, doctor Ferela. Good night. Bye.
2: Thank you so much. Have a wonderful
6: evening. Yep. And some of some of y'all have, have a speaker yeah. He some of y'all have speaker, invites if you can check and, do that. I see we've got, Anna. Is Anna wanted to speak and then, Con Lusdro Research. So Anna and then Con Research and then, John for the rest of the night. No. I'm just kidding.
0: I could listen to him while I use
6: that I know. Information.
14: Hi there. Hi. I I was just navigating the rooms, and when I joined, it made me a speaker. So, anyway Oh. But, I I was, actually, an a nurse in New York, 19 85 to 1995. '3 in New York City. 3 of those years, I worked at New York Hospital, Cornell Medical Center. So I worked frontline aids a couple of years there. So I've known about doctor Fauci all these years, since 1986, '19 '80 '7. I'm also vaccine injured, actually, since 1988, a hepatitis b shot. So I was a patient all these years. And, so in March 2020, when I heard Fauci, say no to hydrochloroquine, you know, my eyes popped out of my head. I couldn't believe it because he said no back then to early treatment that would save the those patients from dying of that pneumonia. They were all dying of on the ventilator. So I knew, you know, I knew. And I did a search on the Internet and found doctor Zelenko's group and got my hydrochloricline connection. I knew you know, I said to my friends, I says, watch. We're gonna see a whole new generation of patients now, whether after the COVID, which is another thing. Fauci buried. He buried these post infectious disease chronic illnesses all these years. You know? He, he made sure they were assigned to HHS's office of women's health like it's a woman's illness. I I'll tell you, I've been I I had, it took me 28 to 30 years to get a dysautonomia diagnosis and a mass cell activation syndrome diagnosis. I went from anxiety to depression. 3 chronic fatigue syndrome diagnosis, 3 fibromyalgia. I mean, it was unbelievable. You know? They'll whip up these criteria with a list of symptoms. If you got this, this, this, and this, that's your illness. Meanwhile, you have no idea what's going on, and that's what the patients, you know, go through. And, you know, the gaslighting is nothing new. I mean, this comes the gaslighting comes right out of NIH and CDC. You know? And these illnesses should have been, you know, the vaccine injury. I mean, should have had treatment years ago. It's all been buried under the rug. You know? I mean, I I remember, when I was working there, you know, in the unit with the patients on the ventilators. It wasn't even a month these patients started coming in. It was a CCU, actually, and these AIDS patients started coming in off the street. They had no idea they had AIDS because they weren't what the media was saying, so they weren't all that gay population. I mean, there were patients. You know, we hear stories like the the businesswoman from West Virginia who's, she got short of breath in the hotel room, comes to the hospital, and it turns out her former fiance took had 2 blood transfusions. All the blood was infected. So, you know, I'm not you know, we had the heroin addicts and the prostitutes. The hospital was on the Upper East Side, so it was a different population than the like Saint Vincent's in the village. That's where your, large gay population that's where a lot of them lived, but not on the Upper East Side. So I only had a couple of patients on that unit that were of the gay men that the media said had this illness. You know? So, you know, I've known about doctor Fauci. He has buried a number of things. He's been involved with the biodefense for many years, the the Gulf War. I mean, those patients. You know? I mean, we I've been on Twitter with friends over 10 years protesting Fauci. So it's kinda hard for me to believe that a lot of people didn't know about doctor Fauci. I mean, doctor Fauci, you know, all I could say is he's a criminal. He belongs in prison. He really does. The pattern of behaviors. Right. And, you know, there is no science. Okay? Because if there was, patients would have, you know, treatment to be
12: in a better place.
14: I mean, they're not gonna be cured. That's permanent damage. You know, I you know, I'm doing well, but for years, I was down up to 23 hours a day on the recliner chair, the bed, and I communicated with my disabled friends online, you know, advocacy. My advocacy is a little different, you know, because I'm very familiar with this mafia like activity because, my group sort of grew up with it. So I my my advocacy platform is sort of medical mafia, and I keep track of all these crooks. You know, Fauci is not the only 1. Maybe some of you have seen while this 1 was saying how they could help the patients. I could give you all the names of the players that are connected to Fauci. So, you know, it's really it's criminal what these patients are going through. It's terrible. I know what they're going through. I went through it, and I knew when they were talking about this mRNA vaccine, I thought, oh, wow. I said to my friends, watch whatever they're cooking up there, really didn't know much about it. I said it's gonna be worse than it was through the years for all the people. You know? Nobody knew about us. We were sort of brushed under the rug, but there's a lot of us here. You know, so I started reaching out on the spaces and you know, I consider some people friends because I know what all of you you know, I'm sure there's a lot of people in here. There's Melissa down there, my friend Melissa. She's in the same community as me. You know, CFS, chronic fatigue syndrome, was sort of created to actually cover up an old disease called ME, myalgic encephalomyelitis. That's right. Neuromyastemia, actually.
0: That speaks about that a lot. Right.
14: And, you know, if any of you know doctor Judy Mikovitz, we know her well. She tried to help us, and I'll tell you, Fauci just they made you know, they buried her, and she had a gag order for 5 years. She couldn't come on the social media. But what they did to her was unbelievable. You know? But they knew, you know, there's a guy there in NIH named Harold Varmus, I think. When Judy was talking about the cell lines having the retrovirus, he says, oh, is that what we saw in the cell lines in the eighties? So they knew. They knew about all of this. Yep. You know? So, anyway, you know, I come by to give support. You know, there's a lot of us that have been through this for years. We know when you're going through same diseases, we have all the same diseases as these new vaccine injured and post COVID patients. I I really feel I feel terrible because I know what they're going through. It's a shame that the patients are suffering. 1 good thing is I noticed they're getting diagnosed with things quicker. It took us many years. I mean, you know, they make up these things like chronic fatigue syndrome, then fibromyalgia, and they'll say, well, you gotta have sleep meds, antidepressants, pain medication. Those things do nothing. You know, what they do is just drug the patients to keep them quiet. You know? So, anyway, thank you for letting me speak, and I love all of you. I knew you were coming. I didn't know you before, but I knew we'd all be together somehow. And, you know, all of us long timers, we're, you know, we're here for support. So we love you.
0: Thank you for sharing and for
14: your support. Oh, you're welcome.
0: We'll probably see you around in the space.
14: Okay. Okay.
12: Okay.
0: Thanks. Who's next? Gail, did you have the list going?
6: Yeah. So next is, consultro research. No.
15: It's good.
0: No. It's Joseph.
15: It's Joseph. It's Joseph. Anna knows me, and lots of people who are vaccinated knows me. Anna's a wonderful girl. She's a nurse from New York, has been vaccinated for years, and I've been I've been helping the vaccine just for a long, long time for about a year and a half now. So where are we where are we at in terms of all of this? We know what I get is I on my timeline, I get, you know, the the Jikki links. I get all of them telling me everything about the vaccine, and I get Kevin McKernan, and I get all these wonderful people telling me what's in the vax. But but they don't tell me how to solve it. Okay? I've been through my company, we which we're solving these issues. Peter McCulloch is I will put my hand on how it is moving it moving it forward. So, you know, that's the first thing. So so, you know, put put my hat off to Peter. The second part of it is is that what are we talking about COVID and what we're talking about long COVID because you can you can have MRIs scans forever. But the whole thing is and I've I've put this out for 2 years, and I'm finally getting some people actually understanding what it is. It is 2 things. 1 is is, mitochondrial dysfunction. So it completely obliterates the mitochondrial function in your body, and it's called is it causing autoimmune diseases, which cause cancer. The second part of it is that it's also causing fibrin, dysfunction, which means that it's either causing your body to bleed or your body to clot. Everybody else who's around the world who's scanning is causing a hydro gel and all that don't know anything about medicine. And that's really what I'm talking about. I've heard, you know, I've heard people from other, you know, these scandalous sites saying that there was hydro gel. It's not. It's a lipid enamel particle, and you end up with lipid nanoparticles that stay in your body for a number of months or even even years that have never degraded, and your body treats them as cholesterol. So the you know, we we're seeing we're seeing these scary things that are on on situation, and I'm supporting the vaccine. Okay? So I wanna put it out there is that at the moment on the first vaccine so we get this all clear. There isn't graphene oxide in the first facts. There may be in the second, there may be in third, maybe in the fourth, maybe in fifth. But as we know it, there is no geo in the first facts. We know that there is an s 3 40 promoter, which is cancers. We know that there's s m 1 0 2, which is also cancer. We also know that there's glyca, glycine, ethanol in there. We also know that there's other other stuff that shouldn't be in there that that has has been involved in the suit to the urinating process, which means it's very difficult to get it out of out of the RMA. But that if you actually look at RMA, it it is not impossible to get out of RMA. So we need to we need to step back, look at the truth, and actually start working through what the issues. We need to we need to give everybody who I this is how I see it, is that people who who've who've been vaccinated need need to have a check to make sure that their fibrin levels aren't going off skew, which means that they could end up with my carditis or pericarditis. And that's a simple check that can be done with a doctor. The second situation is is to make sure that the sit the person who has taken the vaxx hasn't had issues around, you know, in terms of in terms of where they are in terms of their, hormones. And that the hormones haven't suddenly gone wacky between testosterone and estrogen because that's the other thing. The other part of the last thing is the ACE, protocol actually attacks, attacks the liver and sends sends a lot of things out of whack, which include autoimmune diseases such as diabetes. That's why you're seeing turbo diabetes. And and it seems like that that we need to really focus on. All of those things can be can be done, and we've got a girl, that I'm working with at the moment who's gonna be taking, an NAD infusion, this week. And if this is the proof of it, it will actually potentially stop all of this nonsense in its in its track. Because NAD has been given to most of the billionaires, including Gates and everybody, and it's a way of of looking at longevity. So what we may be able to do with the COVID stuff is to actually push everybody into longevity rather than depopulation. So this is the way forward, and I'll leave it there. And if anybody wants to come back and and and challenge me on anything, that's what we've got. It's all a mitochondrial dysfunction that they've put into the body, but we know how how a way to turn it around and actually create longevity.
0: Yep. Thank you so much for sharing. Let's see. John, is that he's up next, Gail?
6: Yeah. So it would be, oh, we've got lots of speakers. Okay. So John
0: And Scott's on and doctor Dane's on today.
6: So John and then, Cheryl, Melissa Scott. Scott. So John, Cheryl, Melissa, Scott, doctor Bang, and we can this is gonna be a great night.
16: I know.
5: I think that's before.
0: I sent a text to all these guys, like, last minute too. I'm like Ah. Last minute, and they're all coming on. Thanks, y'all.
6: Because they're amazing. I know. Why they're all coming on.
15: Oh, it's because it's it's because of me. I know.
5: Yes.
0: What's up, John?
17: Hey. Actually, I liked hearing Joseph. It's good to have a grounded person that's not looking at the, being on the crazy train with all that.
15: I I love you, John, and you're you're such a beautiful man. And and God bless you with your work in terms of digging out the truth. And once you get that truth, publish your truth, and God bless us all, my friend. Thank you, and I love you lots.
17: Thanks. Yeah. I actually made a decision. The, this the CDC memorandum is taking a few extra weeks, and it's it's just getting so big that, I think I'm gonna publish it, which should take an it'll take a couple of weeks, but I I can't put it out in its form anyway because there are names in it. It's going directly to government officials. So I can't put it out to public until I do redactions. So as long as I'm doing the redactions, I might as well just publish it when I'm done. But what I asked to talk about is I, I wrote a bill, and it was submitted to,
15: John. Can can I ask
18: you can I
15: ask you a very quick question? I know that, ICAN would be wanting to do the publication. So you might want to talk with them through Ed Dowd as well because they've done some stuff with him. So you might wanna do do them as a publisher. That's just I'll just leave it there.
17: Yeah. No. I appreciate that. I never even thought of them, because my book, probably gonna self publish just the way things are going. Ed was gonna do the Ed Ed is the 1 who told me to write the book. So he was gonna do the forward, but I think he's kinda busy. I don't know. I haven't heard from him. Anyway, let me let me get to what I was gonna say, though, something new. I wrote a bill that was put through the New Hampshire. They call it the the the drafting attorneys. Like, a legislator will write a bill. So I wrote it, gave it to a legislator up in, New Hampshire, and he submitted it in the legislative session. It's like a 2 weeks a 2 week window in September, and he put it in. And, it's been assigned a a drafting number. And I, you know, I don't hold out any hope. There's no money behind it. It's just me. I I put a bill into their I live in Massachusetts. I hope to move to New Hampshire. But as I read it and think about it, and it took me about an hour to 2 between 1 and 2 hours to write it. I've had all this stuff in my head for over a year, and so I I banged it out. It's probably some errors in it. But for the most part, I don't know of any other bill that provides more transparency to the people for immunization, and and public health records. So if you guys don't mind, I'd like to read a little bit of it. Is that okay? Or or how much time do I have?
0: Absolutely. Go ahead.
17: Alright. So it's an, immunization public safety bill, CDC 1, an act improving public safety and immunizations. And then I try to fool whatever reader is gonna be from the other side at the beginning, I say. The bill improves immunization uptake and safety by requiring regular reporting to the public by the New Hampshire Department of Public Health and Human Services. Public health records reside on multiple disparate systems such as the New Hampshire Immunization Information System, the New Hampshire Vital Records Information System, the New Hampshire what is it? State Division of Vital Records Administration. Anyway, I name a bunch. These records will be used to provide data vitally important to the public interest, safety and health. This act requires 3 low cost, easy to implement actions to be performed by the New Hampshire, Health Department. Number 1, require death certificates to include the dates and types of immunization administered within 2 years before the date of death. Number 2, require the New Hampshire Health Department provide quarterly and annual public reports by immunization type of the total number of people who died within 1 day, 3 days, 1 week, 3 weeks, 10 weeks, 25 weeks, and 1 year of any immunization. And 3 require that the, New Hampshire department conduct biennial, that's every 2 years, cause of death and injury studies and produce public reports within 2 weeks of the date that is 1 year before each general presidential election and or gubernatorial midterm election. Basically, I'm saying, you you have those elections every 2 years. In the year between them is when the reports need to be done because it can't be we have to stay away from politics. So section 1 goes through immunization records. It's more detailed. It says, like, vaccine route administration, vaccine site administration, vaccine product name, lot number, expiration date, all that stuff. And it says it should be on the death certificate. For children 18 years of age, the entire immunization record text shall be placed into a text field such as part 2 of the decedent's death certificate. Anytime a child dies, all the information should be there. This section shall be enforced for all deaths that occurred on or after 01/01/2020, so I'm making it retroactive to 2020. Section 2, required regular public DHHS immunization death reports. So within 10 days after the close of any fiscal quarter of New Hampshire, produce a report to the public that includes the the prior 4 quarters of the following data, total deaths that occurred within 24 hours of immunization, then I go through that list I just told you, 1 day, 3 days, blah, blah, blah, and so forth. And then 3, biennial cause of death analysis. Basically, it's what I've done. I did I looked through all the ICD 10 codes. I did cause of death analysis. I'm 1 guy with a computer who isn't even medically trained, and I was able to produce it. So it should be pretty cheap for them to do it for the for the state. And and that state is 1 seventh the size of Massachusetts. And then I put in a section 4, and this is my favorite 1. Require facilitation of independent audit of reports resulting from this act. So section 4 a, the health department shall select by random lottery 4 public health audit proposals every 2 years from a person or persons or organizations not affiliated or dependent upon any government entity, pharmaceutical industry, ecosystem entity, or public official. B, the selected auditor or auditors shall be required to sign a nondisclosure agreement to protect the privacy of individuals that the state, excuse me, that the data represents and conduct themselves in accord with state and federal privacy laws and share their findings with the Department of Health at least 2 days before any public disclosure of the findings unless life or injury might occur within, or injury might occur life loss or injury might occur within those 2 days. C, the Department of Public Health shall provide a reasonable office or conference room space for up to 4 weeks for the auditor or Auditors to conduct their work. D. The Department shall provide the files or databases either on a portable or accessible storage device or through the network access. E. Prior to the on-site engagement of the Auditor or Auditors, the State shall make efforts to communicate and decree upon the format of the data files to be shared with the auditors in the on-site audit. F, the Department shall in no way attempt to obfuscate, frustrate, impair, unnecessarily complicate, or hinder the auditors in
0: their
17: mission. And, g, this is the end. The auditors' proposal must meet minimum standards of competence in data management, aggregation, depiction, and presentation as a result of the work to be done. So this bill would not only require that the government's health department, the state government's health department provide quarterly and annual reports with regard to immunizations and also put the immunization records on the death certificates, but it would also, force them to allow public independent auditors to come in from outside the government and by lottery selection. So, you know, people put in their proposals, and they're randomly chosen. They They choose 4 each every 2 years. And the the people, whoever the auditors are, at their own cost, will evaluate and then analyze all the public health data and then provide a report. That basically brings transparency to the people, returns power to the people, and it doesn't allow government to hide and obfuscate all the data like they have for the past 3 years. Any comments?
0: Love it. Get the get it out of the hands of the government so we can definitely get some honest reporting.
17: Yeah. I'm I'm hoping that if I don't know. I don't have time to blow it up. But if this gets any traction at all, a year ago, I put it on a an email list with about 20 people, Robert f Kennedy junior, McCullough Malone. There was an email list somehow I got put on, and, it was about 20. It it fell apart because somebody pissed off here at Penn and Bosch, and people just stopped talking, with the ADE controversy, you know, antibody dependent enhancement thing. It it kinda fell apart. But, anyway, I put it out there. I put out the idea of this, over a year ago, and only 1 guy wrote anything. It was Robert f Kennedy junior, and all he said was, I love it. So, I'm thinking that this could have traction. And if it does, if any state adopts it, man, the pharma companies are gonna shit their pants.
0: And what better state to try than New Hampshire, the 1 of the free estates?
17: Yep. Yep. I'm trying. So Awesome. I'll hang out a little bit if you guys want me to hang out. Oh, and the, I got the I got new data, through August. And, you know, a lot of the immediate stuff is going down because very few people are getting the boosters, which is good. Right? So when I say immediate, I'm talking about all the the the clotting and bleeding stuff is generally soon after. Unfortunately, the, lymph node and bone marrow cancer is accelerating. It's still it's it's not just it's getting worse. You know? A lot more people are dying from it even in 2023 up up to present time. So, yeah, it's it's the the cancer stuff is bad. It's just getting really ugly.
0: Yeah. The Well,
19: and the the the clotting and bleeding isn't just I mean, there's there's the immediate, but we're also seeing 3 to 5 months post booster depending on how many they've had and especially if they've had COVID multiple times. The they're not testing for microclots. They're not they're running d dimers, but they're not running MMP nines. They're not running, you know, VEGF t. Right? They're not I just got off the phone with a hospital with a dude that's been on a ventilator for 917 days in Minnesota.
1: Yep. Oh, and
17: I think I I think I know them.
12: Yeah. Yeah. Okay.
19: And so he's actually doing way better. We got his peak pressure from 50 to 60 down to 8 to 10 within 12 hours of utilizing a technology that was actually made for the Navy SEALs, which the respiratory therapist and pulmonologists had no idea that we even did it or how. But Instead of rebooting? No. No. No. No. That's not gonna do it at all. It it can't because he's got pulmonary fibrosis.
17: Well, you said the seal, so I was just thinking
19: Oh, no. So no. So he so so, yeah, he he actually helped develop that 1 too, which is super cool. But what we did for this guy but but on that, with the with the the clotting, the problem is they're not testing correctly. They're only doing d dimers. They don't even look for ferritin levels, but they're which isn't necessarily, you know, relegated to clotting, but, they're not looking for microclots. And so you've got all these people that have, you know I don't wanna get into the weeds, but, you know, like, unilateral limb swelling or, you know, just all of these, you know, unexplained symptoms, and they don't test for it. And that's where that's where even prophylactically or or just actively treating for the for suspected clots with either lumbrokinase or nattokinase is so critical. Because if you've gotten the shot, you're you're going to get micro clots. It's what the spike protein does. It damages the endothelial tissue. So you're going to have them, period. Unless you've got a batch that was
15: You know what I mean? You're you're a fantastic guy because I spent the last 6 months arguing with tossers on spaces about ACE and ACE 2. Mhmm. And they didn't understand that it would cause microglots, and they couldn't understand about ferritin levels. And when I said if you put everybody on, lactoferrin
19: Huge fan of that, by the way.
15: Yep. So it would it would actually, sort out the ferritin and the iron levels and and would identify people who are anemic. And I was shot shot down, and I've been shot down for over 2 years.
19: Now you're completely right. You're spot on correct with that, by the way. Spot on. So Because nobody talks about the ferritin. The these like, this dude's ferritin levels were in the 4 hundreds, and I was freaking out because it's like we've got a we and and he's anemic and all this stuff. And it's like, well, like, let's, you know, like like, let's put the pieces of the puzzle together from a, you know, from a biochemical level, from a, you know, like, let let's look at it from a cellular level of why these things are happening versus just going like, they put them on dexamethasone.
15: Do do you know that 2 years ago, I wrote a paper with a Italian Italian professor, and I said, treat everyone with this is a thrombosis disease. And I was laughed out. I was shut down.
19: It's it's it's a circular it's it it you know, even even when Peter McAuliffe says this is a respiratory disease, it's a circulatory disease.
17: I agree. It
19: it's a it's a thrombotic disease. It
15: It's it's a thrombotic disease. Yeah. Correct. Yep. But it starts there. Mhmm. It starts there and then and then it ends in your lungs. That's what it that's what people should realize. And after doctors don't even realize it, they're they're thick as shit. I don't understand it.
19: Well and then what you just said about the ACE to expression, and then you have all of these people on lisinopril, which e which increases ACE expression, which is like a a
20: magnet
19: for for s 1 to bind to ACE 2, but then you look at the secondary mechanisms in in those pathways, and then you're looking at in, again, nuclear factor like, NFKB, nuclear factor kappa beta. It's like, how do we down regulate these things? And and we can. Melatonin is a potent inhibitor of NFKB and TNF alpha. In fact, I was supposed to do a system test on myself. I was gonna do an IV of a hundred milligram bolus of melatonin, yesterday just to just to see how I do. But but subcellular melatonin is is 1 of the main ways that we can increase mitochondrial function and electron transport efficiency and decrease reactive oxygen species. But everybody's like, oh, you can't take melatonin. Oh, you you you I mean, it's it's it's hard to take too much in a short period of time.
15: You're a % correct because all it starts is once once you kick it in, it's I l, interleukin number 1.
19: And and Interleukin 1 beta. IL 1 beta. Yeah.
15: So so I don't understand. All these people who've been to med school haven't learned this as part of bloody med school.
17: Can I ask how old you guys are? Joseph and and Miller, how old are you guys?
19: I'm 50. I'm
15: 50 as well. Alright.
17: We're all 50. About med school. There's different med school. Right? There's pre and post. 92.
15: Well well, god god help med school. I don't know.
19: Listen. I didn't I didn't learn anything in school apart from how to auscultate and prescribe meds.
17: So everything changed around '92, at least in North America, when the Canadians, out of McMaster University put together that that, EBM bullshit. And then it it it went like wildfire in every single medical school, and it became indoctrination. So everybody looks to a central authority, and the doctors aren't thinking for themselves at
6: on on
17: their a given age.
6: Hey, y'all. Real quick, if
2: I wanna interject, this is a fascinating discussion, and my father was a a man who used many modalities in addition to his medical training. He was a head of neck, otolaryngologist, a head and neck surgeon, board certified, but he believed in rife technology. He believed in dark dark field microscopy to, kinda get a compass of what's going on in someone's health, doing live blood analysis in front of them. There are a lot of things that I feel they should definitely teach, doctors, but they don't. And some of these modalities have been suppressed, and, really, the work of Nikola Tesla and people like him about a hundred years ago, made all these discoveries. And, for some strange reason, the medical community just doesn't wanna hear it. So it's this is interesting. I just thought I'd mention that to you guys. But
15: Yeah. I I I'd like to come back on that because, you know, I'm doing it. I'm I'm advising Lindsay, and I'm very much, an open advocate of the right stuff. So, you know, I won't knock any new new, technology that's out there. So she's having some stuff done at the moment. She's had some blood work done. She's only had 1 blood work done. I've already come back to her saying that I think I know what the issue is. Matthew has has come out with something, and I've asked Matthew to come out with another blood test. If it if if, you know, if Matthew in 7 days, has a positive thing for Lindsay, I am so proud. So so proud because I am not a skeptic. I'm I'm, you know, I'm very open to this, as as as in terms of everything that ranges from grounding to spiritual to, you know, to eating things that potentially don't exist in in nature. So you you have to you have to have an open heart and understand that, some things will are blessed by God that may may may change your life. We are we we are not we are not doctors. I we are not infallible. You know? We are not infallible. So we can only help and provide guidance where we can. And from our training, we can only provide the best guidance. And and but we're not we're not miracle workers. And and sometimes we all have to have to step back and realize that.
2: Absolutely.
15: I hope I can give you if I can give you the alternative view. Yeah?
2: Well well, 1 thing I wanna ask you, I'll pick your brain on this. What is your take take since we have a you have an individual you're helping with the vaccine. What's your take on UV ozone therapy and also, obviously, apheresis is probably not gonna work on vaxxed people, but UV ozone therapy and chelation IVs. Are you familiar with any of that?
15: I mean, chelation is well, you got lactoferrin, which is a chelator. Yeah. You've got, wonderful stuff, which is c, which which probably you don't know, which is c k CHK, CU, which is a copper chelator Ah. Which gets rid of which gets rid of heavy metals. It's used by most of the most of the, sports people in the world. If you go to NFL, they're using it to get rid of heavy metals that they touch on the sports field, for example, to to performance enhance. There there's a lot of stuff that is in the sports enhancement world, which isn't even in the medical world. And half the doctors don't even understand about gelation or zeolite or other other stuff that's out there, or even, carbon, you know, that can be used to, you know, can activate, removal of heavy metals and blood. So we're we're doing all this stuff. We're we're doing all this stuff with Lindsay. We're doing it we're doing it correctly. Every time she has a problem and and, you know, and she she gets scared, you know, she is scared because I've seen her blood work. But we we we've got answers, and and she's got a lot of doctors behind her who are gonna give her answers. So hopefully, you know, we can solve we can solve it altogether without panicking the world, if you know what I mean.
2: Absolutely. Absolutely. Wow. This is so insightful. Thank you for that. Wow.
15: And we've been doing it we've been doing it for over, you know, 18 to 8 12 to 18 months now. So we've been helping you know, we got 50. We've got other people. Give an example. We've we've also helped, people get off asthma drugs. We've also helped people get off, COPD drugs. You know, we wanna break down big pharma, you know, and go back to the old school where your health is your health. Your your life is your life and and and get a way of being sucked into this, you know, that you you you have to go to a GP or a a physician, and and and then they tell you that you're, you know, you're ill. You know, you're not ill. You just need to get off their shit and get working and get better. I think that's right. That's what and that's all we gotta do. We gotta help people to stop getting in this namby pamby state. Well, you know, there's big pharma.
12: There's I
0: like that I like that quote. Get off their shit. That's what we
10: need to do. Get off
0: of it. They're the big pharma is not health care. It's sick care, and it's Eugenics in my opinion. Go ahead, Andy.
2: I'm sorry. Real quick to follow what this gentleman was saying. My father always said there's an ancient Greek it's an ancient Greek, philosophy, but let food be your medicine. Let medicine be your food. Nutrition is very important, especially if you have if you're a cancer patient. You know, it's how you heal yourself. So, you know, whatever the what what God made in this world, the creation of of our vegetation and then and and the animal kingdom. It's there for us. And, and I know they don't teach us in school, but we must put emphasis on
15: I I I I teach I teach you something, and and I teach everyone in this space and this situation. In 19 thirties, Rockefeller had a plan because he made so much money from from from the oil industry. He decided that he he decided to take over medicine and to make everybody ill because he could see it as a monopoly. Okay? Yep. What he did what he did was we now have we all know about vitamin a and we all know of or a to k. But we all don't know about vitamin p. Now vitamin p, do you know what vitamin p is? I guarantee you no 1 on this space unless they're a doctor or probably to my level. Don't understand that vitamin p is the 5,000 flavonoids that exist in the plant kingdom. And every 1 of those flavonoids so you're talking something like licorice licorice root or citrus or
0: Corsican.
15: Comes from. Or, yeah, anything. Right? There's 5,000, and that's what was known in 1930. There's probably there's probably another, you know, 30,000 more by now. But the fact is in in 19 thirties, they banned it. They banned it from every single meds situation. Every drug for cancer I'll give you an example. Just on 1 so you understand where I'm at. Every drug that now is given for cancer is from rhubarb extract, and they're banning rhubarb, selling it in supermarkets. Tell me anywhere in the world you can find rhubarb, and then I'll leave it there.
7: Wow.
17: We grow it in New England.
15: Well, then you grow it, and you'll never get cancer. Just eat eat it regularly, and you'll never get cancer. It's called rhine, r h e I n, if you think I'm talking bollocks. Every drug that's made from cancer that's in big pharma comes from rhubarb extract.
17: You ever have strawberry strawberry rhubarb jelly?
0: Hey. I just did a recipe for that for the cookbook just, like, 5 seconds ago. That's so funny. Strawberry rhubarb jelly. Yeah.
17: Good stuff.
12: Yeah. Well,
19: and you well, you said something about I think you'd I don't know if you said c 60, but that buckyball, carbon 60 molecule, I've I studied it in Yep. The context of autism.
15: Activated carbon. Activated carbon, I was talking about.
19: Okay. So you said activated, but when you look at, so if you anyone Google c 60 and looks at how c 60 the the impact on on mitochondrial function increasing that that cellular energy decreasing free radical that the our the the reactive oxygen species. Right? Like, c 60 is is potent in your right, like liquor, fruit, etcetera. I mean, these are these are huge things you were talking about. Alright. You had mentioned a peptide. The 1 that I've been using the most is is, GHK. And when you look at if you Google, like So
15: how how is how is g, GHK working for you? Because I would like to know.
19: It is the from a photobiomodulation standpoint, I consider it the greatest miracle for me, for me personally, like, physiologically for not having to get a total right knee and surgical repair on my left knee. It's it's, a straight up miracle. I I've I've never seen anything like it. Now I use that in combination. Like, if you've had any type of neuronal injury, like vascular or neuronal injury, AHK is, like, the combination of those 2, in in terms of
15: Miller, explain to the group because you're you're very detailed, detailed, and I'm very detailed. Explain what GHK d 2 is.
19: So g so it's glycine like, glycyllyl, histidine, lysine. So glycine, histidine, lysine. And when activated in the body it binds to copper, 2 plus copper and we know that copper is a potent antiviral but it's it activates pluripotent stem cells because as we age our our stem cells are no longer functioning the way they should. It down regulates multiple, multiple oh, sorry. Oh, chippy pro inflammatory cytokines. It helps increase collagen and fibrin. So so the things that we need to like, if you Google on the NIH, it will say, like like, heals COPD, which doesn't exist. Right? Like, the the fibrotic changes that happens in lung tissue from from like, with COVID or, you know, like, intubation that it actually heals it. That's the NIH saying that. That upregulates the p 53 gene, which is the the, tumor suppressor gene.
15: And the household clearance gene, which is amazing. Yeah.
19: So that that's something that, that that's 1 of the ones that we're using on that that gentleman in Minnesota, where they're trying to figure out how how his lung function is so much better. But, but there there are there there's so many there's so many things that, you know, in in, you know, even in all of the studies, PubMed and NIH, they're like, this is all these things, you know, all the things that it can do, and then they always finish up. But there's just not enough studies to determine its efficacy, etcetera. And it's like, yeah, there are. You just I just read 60 studies on its benefits, just like and cancer and antiviral. Right? Like, we see all these studies. It's just no 1 talks about it.
15: Yes. Mila Mila, you you you you talk so amazing because you're telling me research that I already know, which is the COPD and the, changes to the, lung function and the spirometry, right, which is amazing, using a peptide, which is not known to half the bloody doctors in the world. You know? It's it's phenomenal.
19: Did you did you just say half of the doctors?
15: Alright. Okay. 99 percent.
19: There you go.
15: And and we've got we've got a wonderful girl on on user speaker, Anna. She's Anna, you can tell talk us about mitochondrial stuff here. Come on. Tell tell us tell us all.
14: Well, 1 more, dysautonomia, but, yeah, the, through the years, I've known people actually and I I took the mito protocol, the same mito protocol that the mitochondrial disease patients take. I've known people who were, sick and disabled. 1 particular guy was an advocate for chronic fatigue syndrome. He, testified to congress in the nineties. I think l carnitine. He started taking l carnitine when they started talking about the mito protocol, and he was able to go back to work part time. So some people do well, you know, better with, feeding their mitochondria.
15: There's different ways there there there's different ways to to my to hit the micro onge. I'm gonna publish a paper in about 5
14: days. In my my
15: Using your help, by the way.
14: In my case, when the dysautonomia was treated, it was amazing. The cardiologist actually, I have a cardiologist. He offered me treatment for 4 years, and I said, no. I don't think that's gonna work. I don't think that's gonna work. And when I started when I was the syncopal near syncopal episodes got so bad, I thought I better see what this guy has to offer because I'm gonna fall and hit my head. Nobody's gonna find me for weeks. So I said to him, okay. Let's do it. This is in 02/2018, and we did redid the workup, and he says, go home and do an orthostatic diary for a week and bring it back. Normal cardi cardiac tests, when you have dysautonomia, regular cardiac tests are normal. I mean, I have a great ejection fraction. People don't believe it when I tell them my ejection fraction. It's the numbers and the orthostatic diary. You don't need to be tortured with a tilt table test. I actually had 1 in 96, and they brushed it under the rug, you know, and sent me to the infectious disease, and then the psychiatrist, they ignored it. So, when we started the treatment, he prescribed Midadrine, and I was walking the dog. There was no crash after the walk. I said, Then I realized it was working, and I was consumed by the survivor guilt. I thought, how am I gonna tell my friends? It took me 6 weeks to tell my friends who I knew almost 30 years with the same thing. So, now I don't have the pots. I have the neurogenic orthostatic hypotension, and a lot of people patients have patients have that. They don't get tachycardic. And they the doctors don't know what to do for them. They say, well, fluids and salt. If fluids and salt would have cured me, it would have been, you know, 25, 30 years ago. It just didn't do anything. I needed the rest. You know? And then we the thing with Midadrine, it only it has a very fast half life, so it was only lasting, like, 2 and a half, 3 hours. I was having to take it 4 or 5 times a day. So we, people with dysautonomia have low blood volume because when you stand up, the gravity pulls your volume down. So, we tried to my my doctor tried to order Procrit, actually, and the insurance company didn't approve it. We appealed it. Didn't work. So we went on to Northera, which is also droxydopa. They give it to Parkinson's patients because they have this problem. And I've been on Northera, well, medroxyopa, for 4 years. And I was actually able to, go back to work, not as a nurse. I'm in the business profession. I didn't go back to nursing. So, you know, my particular doctor has been treating dysautonomia, POTS, Mast Cell. I was Danlos syndrome for many years. He was Dysautonomia International doctor of the year a few years ago. You know? So some people do well getting the dysautonomia treated, if their doctors know what they're doing. Some people do well treating the, you know, treating the mitochondrial issue. You know? But, you know, I think it's good for everybody to take care of their mitochondria because I'm sure everybody's as damaged to a degree with this vaccine injury. You know? So I hope that's helpful. What else did you want me to say, Joe?
17: Well, I'll take the silence to, the opportunity to say good night. I'm gonna, I I have to do lymph node cancer here for the first half of the year. Have a good night, everybody. Thanks for the time.
0: Hi, John. Hi, John. Alright. Let's see. Let's see who's up next.
19: Good night. Carol.
18: Can can
3: I add
6: Yeah.
12: Yeah. It's Scott.
19: Can can you hear me?
0: Can hear you. I can hear you.
3: Can you hear me?
0: Twitter's so glitchy. Can y'all hear me?
2: I can hear you. I can hear you.
0: I don't know if we can hear Scott. Maybe it's just alright. Well, when he comes back, he he can talk. Cheryl, I think she was up next.
9: Hi, everyone. I just kinda wanted to touch base on, I guess, the frustration of people not understanding what's going on in our world, not only with the vaccines, but also the the CDC hospital protocol. The vaccine and the CDC protocol has touched my life. My sister-in-law, my husband's sister, Rachel, had received her vaccine in January and then second 1 in February. 3 months later in May, she was diagnosed with stage 4 kidney cancer. The cancer was in her bones, her lungs, her kidneys, and then she passed away 2 months later in July. Family and friends, they don't believe that it was vaccine injured. Part of the problem, I guess, you know, CNN, ABC, NBC, They're not giving, people in real information about what's going on in the world. I just wanted to, elaborate. I really wasn't an eyewitness for my husband's death. I was, locked out of the hospital. I wasn't able to see him. I wasn't able to talk to him on the phone. He got COVID and was in patient September 28 to October 8. They gave him 43 different medications. They didn't give him any food or any water for that period of time. Supposedly, they gave him 3 bottles of Ensure a day, but, that really wasn't enough for my husband. He had remdesivir, and I actually after 4 days of him being inpatient, a friend of mine shared an email with me pertaining to remdesivir and what it does to his kidneys. So by the fifth day, I did get power of attorney for his health to try to get him off this remdesivir. In the meantime, he did start to get double pneumonia in his lungs. His white blood count increased to 34.7. And, I don't know why my phone's doing this, but he did pass away October I'm sorry. He did pass away October 8. What they did was they also had given him, antibiotic, vancomycin, I believe, which does also some havoc on the kidneys. So between the remdesivir and the antibiotics that they gave him, by Friday morning, his kidneys had failed. And by Friday afternoon at 01:25 in the afternoon, he passed away. He was 55 years old, and I just wanted to interject, 1 other thing. Rachel, my sister-in-law, she was 51 years old. The frustration is is that, you know, the problem with, I believe, people in this world, they just don't wanna hear about it. They just wanna close their eyes. They don't wanna stand up and fight for what's right in this world. And, you know, 20 years ago, if I was to say, you know, the hospital murdered my husband, people would think I'm crazy. But, you know, 20 years later now, people still think I'm crazy. And I tell them, you know, they asked me what happened to my husband, and I tell them he was murdered. They gave him this medication that killed him. Next month, he'll be gone 2 years. October eighth, he'll be gone 2 years. And it's just painful because I live with PTSD every day. I can't sleep at night. And it's it's the horrific part of knowing how they tortured my husband, how they tortured him with no food, no water, and all those drugs and how they killed him. Thank you.
2: Thank thank thank you, Sherry. I'm so sorry that you had to go through that. My dad had to go through that. And, you know, I don't know why this had to happen to so many people, but here's the good news. We're all here telling our stories. There's a group that's willing to listen to you. We're, we're all in the same boat. And, you know, we're here for you. Please, anytime, reach out to us, if you haven't already. We have someone else that wants to speak. Who's next on the list here? Does anyone know?
6: Melissa. Melissa's next. And then Louis.
2: Okay. Melissa, fire away.
13: Hi, everyone. My name is Melissa. I'm currently 40 years old. In 02/2006, I was scared of HPV, and my friends were getting it. I was young and stupid. I took the Gardasil vaccines, and that same year we had a West Nile virus outbreak. I ended up with 3 MECFS diagnosises, 3 fibromyalgia diagnosises, and I didn't suspect what was going on until a documentary that was a bullshit documentary called Unrest came out. It made me question many things, and I caught a forum, for an after showing of a panel of doctors at UC Berkeley talking, and they mentioned an event that happened at Lake Tahoe in 1984 and how everybody ended up labeled with MECFS. I knew then that either it was the Gardasil or it was the West Nile virus, and I didn't know for sure until 2016 when I saw the 10 year review on the Gardasil come out. My injury was never reported. Instead, they gave me those diagnosis, shunned me, told me that I was mentally ill, told me that I had, you know anxiety, put me on all these drugs that made me cognitively impaired. It was really bad, and, when COVID came to town, it whatever it was, I'm still not sure. In April 2020, it hit me, and it was like a neurotoxin, And it was like I had MS or, like, Parkinson's really bad for 3 days, and no 1 would see me to scan my brain, see if anything was fine. And I seemed to get better, but I was tired and dragging ass. And in August 2020, I was told that my Gardasil HPV vaccine failed, and they took a sample, and that takes about 3 or 4 days turned around. And before the test even came back, I had a lump show up in my breast, by December 2020. That was diagnosed as HER2 triple positive breast cancer found in stage 1 with no known genetic marker and no known family history. I went through all the chemo rounds. I had a double mastectomy, a radical hysterectomy. I ended up needing a blood transfusion, which I think was contaminated blood. I ended up with some sort of hypergamous glibolemia that was impairing my immune system b cells, and I couldn't heal, and I went through 4 failed, chest rebuild attempts, and I keep losing my hair. I am though technically cancer free. They declared me but didn't want to take out my chemo port. They wanted to leave it in for 2 years. When I came on finally to Twitter, it was November because just this last November because I had been sick for so long and wasn't well enough to, focus. I, found some people and found out about finbendazole, and since they didn't want to take that port out and I figured out what was kind of going on, I, did my own research, and I ended up taking some Safeguard goat dewormer along with some CBD and I believe it was cayenne pepper. And, 3 months later, my cancer antigen number and everything else was so good they had no choice but to sign off and take that port out. I am off all of their major prescriptions minus 1 steroid, montelukast, which I wanna get out. I'm not even taking their hormone blocker. Instead, I am using, green tea extract EGCG, 2000 milligrams a day minimum. I'm doing a lot better. I'm more cognitively aware. I was an MECFS patient advocate. When I started to catch on what was going on in 2016, I signed up, and I was doing it for the solve MECFS initiative and the open medicine foundation online through Facebook. And I started to realize something was wrong in November 2019 when I saw a doctor Ron Davis formerly who worked at the CDC and was working with the Solve MECFS initiative, Stanford Stanford Health, and the Open Medicine Foundation posted a video on the Solvum ECFS, YouTube page. And, he said something was going on that might help cure us all, and I was like, oh, this could be good or this could be bad because I'd already seen what happened with doctor Micah Vits.
15: And Melissa, darling. Melissa Yeah. Melissa, darling. Monoclonal sucralast is, a COPD, or severe asthma drug. And you can get off it by taking, 400 milligrams of lactoferrin, which is a Yeah.
13: I've been looking into it, Joe. It's on my list. Thank you very much. I'll move it up towards the top.
15: Thank you, darling.
13: Yep. And, so I saw what was going on, and I actually saw lots of documentation. So I saw the Solve MECFS initiative make an agreement with the COVID COVID-nineteen stakeholders, and then I started to see how the funds were shifting and how these doctors that had been supposedly fighting for us backed out to take the money, and how they started researching long COVID alongside MECFS, and I realized right then and there what was going on. I said to myself this is another cover up for another gain of function leak that was either intentional or not intentional and, to cover up vaccine injuries and to make more people sick to make more money. I was very angry. I did even see the original BioNTech patent at 1 point and saw that it said mod RNA, and I lost my shit. Unfortunately, I did not get it downloaded or printed off in time, and my family thought I was losing my shit for a while and wanted to stick me in a loony bin. But they are now aware of what's happened to me and that the doctors here won't help me. I'm in Rapid City, South Dakota. Most of them are indoctrinated. We also have a problem with senator Mike Rounds, being half owner of the largest health insurance firm that makes big money here in South Dakota so my options are very limited. I want you guys to know though about this Doctor. Ron Davis and about what I saw with the MECFS initiative and, the saw the Open Medicine Foundation and then that they made all these agreements. It it screams foul play, like, massively, and, I'm lucky to still be alive. I also found a person here by November who got me in touch with his wife, and his wife is friends with doctor Judy Mikovitz and schedules her events in Orange County. They've been a great big help. She calls and checks on me at least every 6 weeks, sometimes a lot more often. I'm getting ready to try chlorine dioxide solution next month. I'm doing way better. Get off all the drugs.
15: Melissa Melissa, wait until Monday, and we may have a cure for everybody, which is with Shelly, which is DNA d plus an IV drug. And she's doing something that I'm telling her to do. And if that does, it will kick start every serotonin in your body, and it will start shutting down all these mRNA, cells through
13: through the process. If I have any mRNA unless I got it from the
15: No. No. No. No. No. What it what it does what it does is is is there is is for me and you because I'm not vaxxed. Okay? So what it means is, it will go through my shit. So all my childhood vaccines, all my shit that's in my body, all my zombie cells, and will physically close them down. Okay? So this is this is what you know, I'm I'm I'm trying to say this doesn't affect the vaccinated or the unvaccinated. This affects affects everybody. This is what we've got to come together. We've got to stop talking about vaccinating or unvaccinated people. We've got to talk about health. How do we how do we beat big pharma to stop them selling their shit, which is which is autoimmune dysfunction? And all of this, I keep saying, is about mitochondrial dysfunction. That's what the issue is. If we solve mitochondrial dysfunction, they're out of business. Okay?
14: Exactly. And that's
15: what and that's what Judy loves me for. I met Judy once. I've told her and she said, how do you know this shit? I said, that's what it is all about. We kill we kill big pharma at the mitochondrial level, and then they have no they have no audience. They have no they have no nowhere to go to. We beat them to lovely.
13: Yeah. And I've been doing everything the vaxx injured have been doing for COVID 19 in addition at, doctor Mikovitz, friend's request. Well, she told doctor Judy about me, and and doctor Judy knows I exist. I do not talk to her directly. I am worried that that it
14: would cause
15: problems. And cancer is at the microandral level. So that's how it works. We we we we sort we sorted it out. We can get rid of cancer. We can get rid of everything. We just need to we need to all come together and and make it our pattern, not far farmer's pattern, not Fauci. You understand? That's how we do it. We gotta turn at the tables.
13: Right. Right. So I want you guys to know about that MECFS stuff with the solve MECFS initiative, Open Medicine Foundation, and Ron Davis. That was my main point, but you said COVID related crimes against humanity, eyewitnesses speak out while I'm a walking crime scene. So I thought I would add that in. My brother is a registered nurse, by the way. He, after his second jab, he within 2 weeks, he developed Crohn's disease, and, my friend Stephanie who was an RN that worked with my brother, she had taken the Gardasil but seemed fine, and, when she a month after her first jab she died in hospital with her uterus full of tumors. I've also lost my cancer surgeon. She was taking the Moderna shots, and her husband is still alive, but he's a kidney doctor with kidney disease now. How ironic is that? So I've seen a lot. I've seen a lot, and, I don't wanna see any more, but, we need to make it stop. So I will keep seeing it and speaking out until it's done.
15: No. I agree, and I love you for that. I've I'm just gonna say my piece. I've, seen, in a in a in a village of 1,000. This is 3 months ago. I don't I'm not even counting the stats now. I've seen 40 40 out of 1,000. So and these are people under the 40. So, you know, I'm, you know, I'm I'm stuck, you know, and I and I haven't even picked up. That was 3 months ago.
2: What what is your take what is your take on mitochondrial biogenesis affected by electromagnetic energy? Do you think that people with cancer can benefit from EMF technology in your experience?
15: I think you're you're my truth. I think I think it's the the way forward. I think we we have to we I think there was a way to get rid of, pseudo urination. That directed towards? Yeah. Who's towards?
2: Pardon? I'm sorry. What was that?
15: It was in Who was that directed towards? Was that Scott or to me?
2: Oh, that was actually, to, to you, sir. I I either 1. I'm just, you know, I'm I'm a I'm I have a PEMF machine in the medical office that and then we use it on cancer patients, and it's actually helped stop the, the the it helps stop the cancer from basically metastasizing in many cases.
18: Correct.
2: So did I
15: I mean, well, I'd
19: say, I mean, we know that, like, you've got, you know, an opera singer hits a note and a glass shatters. So frequency can break things can break things down. So we know that there are bio resonant technologies that can, at specific frequencies, can can
15: But but like
19: like break down or
15: or Like like like I
19: mean, like, that's
15: what he's saying.
19: Voodoo science. I mean, we we know this to be a fact.
15: Yeah. But like I say, it's
19: just I mean, there are
15: You can't rely on And even the discussion on,
19: you know, cancer and parasites. You know, Lee Merritt talks a lot about it. It's something that we've been looking at for for quite a while. So, and when we're talking about you know, when you're talking about mitochondrial dysfunction, I think the biggest thing is how do we increase you know, if you have a if you have an 8 cylinder car and you take a few cylinders out, you're gonna get from point a to b point a to point b, but it's gonna be a really crappy ride. The car is not gonna work very well. And and so, you know, if we're looking at at increasing mitochondrial function, you know, it's it's like, what are things that that improve that that electron transport or, like, redox redox interactions. So, like, methylene blue is a beautiful small molecule redox, you know, enhancer of of being able to accept and donate electrons and and, you know, the use of of h of of I call it HPOS, but, you know, like doing doing oxygen therapy and and ozone where, you know, even hydrogen peroxide. I mean, huge fan of nebulizing hydrogen peroxide.
15: Scott Scott.
19: Where you're able to donate those extra
15: oxygen. I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna jump in so that we can do. I'm gonna jump into the function.
2: Yeah. And
19: there's supplements, obviously. And but, you know, it's it's just in allopathic medicine. These words don't exist. So that's why
15: Correct. Correct.
19: Everybody's having to go outside of the box thinking, which isn't shouldn't be outside of the box. It's it should be normal thinking because we're looking at a disease state and trying to figure out how to get the body back into a state of homeostasis and functioning. And there's a lot of things that we can do. It's just, you know, it's either not covered by insurance or, you know, people don't have access to it. So it's just finding as many solutions as we can to help people, you know, just to maximize help people get the therapies that they need.
15: I'm gonna go 1 1 step further with with what Scott, and I concur with what Scott's saying. If you ask any doctor how many how many would would diagnose you with a peptide to actually make you better, probably 0. That's how that's how the medical profession is at the moment. They don't understand that amino acids at the lower level or even peptides, can actually, you know, which is even lower, and certain peptides could actually look after your health and create your health into the next zone. They don't understand because they're not into sports science. They're not into endurance. They're not into molecular structure. And, yeah, all of these things are biochemistry. And that's what Scott Scott is just simply saying in in a in a very simple simple manner. And and a lot of people don't actually understand it. And and that's when your physic when you need to change your physician and understand that, you you you live you live in in somebody who's never done anything to do with biochemistry or never been trained in biochemistry.
2: You're
15: never got a
2: You're very correct on that. And I do believe I do believe that, that's a big part of the medical training that's missing with doctors and nurses. Gentlemen, thank you so much. We have several requests, to speak, so we're gonna just pass the mic on here. Very insightful conversation. Thank you so much. I see we had some hands raised, but, I see a justice for Jamie, if you would like to speak.
10: Yeah. Hi. This is Denise.
6: Hey. I just wanna sorry, Denise. Lewis has had his hand up for, like, a really long time, Andy.
19: I'm so sorry about that.
15: I
6: am Denise. Have It
13: used to be, like, an hour.
2: Luis, go ahead. Fire away, sir miss. Whoever.
8: Who? I'm so confused.
2: Luis? Luis, I believe you had your hand raised. No? Okay.
13: And I don't see Louis even up here to
7: speak.
6: Yeah. He was for a while. I guess he left. Sorry.
2: Very sorry about this.
6: Poor guy. Alright, Denise. You're next.
13: Anyways, thank you for letting me talk before I forget to say so. Thank you very much. Go ahead.
6: Sure. Denise, go ahead. Louis struck.
10: So, this has been fascinating, the conversation with, Scott Miller and Joseph and Andy. I'm gonna bring it down to my level, and some of you know my husband has just been diagnosed with bladder cancer, an aggressive, type. I am lost. I don't wanna do the conventional stuff even though he starts, BCG and not next week, but the week after. But I am lost. I I have got all this information, and I don't know what to do with it. I I understand the mitochondrial dysfunction. I do understand that. I'm not a medical person. I don't understand what I don't understand the best way to help him. He's got other underlying issues as well. So y'all are talking about all these different supplements and and modalities and all this stuff. And then, you know, and I'm listening to this. I'm thinking, okay. Well, maybe that will work. But then I start thinking, okay. You know, the interaction with the medications he's on already. I mean, I'm lost.
15: Okay. I'll give you top top 4 that I would take, and I'll give you the dosage. Okay? I would take that in on route.
19: The likelihood that there's I mean, we'd have to look at the other medications he's on. The likelihood that
15: No. No. No. I'm gonna tell because they have their signs.
19: With the negative interactions.
6: I don't I don't
0: seem to hear you. Hold on.
19: Let's let's just throw out.
15: I'm gonna I'm gonna give you some I'm gonna I'm gonna say it because
19: you're doing.
15: No. I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna turn saying it.
19: Enemas or coffee enemas or just whatever. The the likelihood that there's gonna be a negative interaction with the the the pharmaceutical disease on is very low. You know, obviously, we wanna look at the whole picture, look at what what these meds, these on are. But but there's there's the I don't wanna say unequivocally, but there's usually low likelihood of negative interactions with I mean, and, you know, I'm not you know, I don't wanna on a forum like this, I wouldn't wanna get too specific, but and I understand that that that lost feeling. But, you know, when you're when you're doing things that are boosting the body's immune system to allow it to heal or recognize, say, you know, cancer, you know, at this point, whatever we wanna call it. It's it's a there's a low low likelihood of you doing harm by increasing the body's ability to heal itself. Right? Like doing doing near and far infrared sauna. Right? There there's no possible way that that's going to negatively impact his impact his body.
15: Scott, can I just ask can I just ask Justin 1 thing? What what what where what stage is your, husband at? What stage?
10: You know, the doctor did not tell us the stage, but I can tell you that we caught it early. They removed the, it was a tiny little spot in his bladder. It had not it was noninvasive. So I am presuming that stage 1, but it is very aggressive. It is very fast growing.
15: And and has he been vaxxed, by the way?
6: Twice.
19: Wi Fi. What's their plan? What's their plan?
10: BCG for 6 weeks, once a week.
15: That's correct. That's correct.
19: I know. That doesn't work?
3: Let me
13: I have a friend whose husband has prostate cancer, colon cancer, brain cancer. Besides the chemo that they they have prescribed, he is doing a finbendazole cancer protocol on top of it. I sent you a message about it. I can send you some information, a website, and a PDF that you could review. I have a friend on here who has HER2 negative breast cancer that has spread to her bones, and she's refusing chemo. And she's just doing a straight protocol off of that website, Florida Shark Man. She's doing pretty good so far, but you gotta think outside of the box. Sometimes you have to couple the treatments together. I was not doing very well, and I was gonna end up needing more chemo if I didn't act. It's just something to consider, and I am so very sorry. You and your husband are in my prayers.
10: Thank you, Melissa. I understand what you're saying, but that's where that's where I'm asking for guidance because I don't know that 1 thing's gonna help him. I don't I'm afraid of the interactions with his other medications.
7: I I don't know.
19: So I'll just say that with with the fenbendazole fenbendazole, nidazoxoneide, ivermectin. Right? If you're if you look at those, like, you do, like, those combinations, those don't have interactions with chemotherapy the the chemotherapies. Right? Like, there's so if you look at Fenben, nidazoxoneide, ivermectin, there's no there's no contraindication with chemotherapeutics or or chemotherapy meds. So you can do those as, you know, as a you know, these these co treatments with that. I'm not telling you to do it, but if you look at the the data on it, you're you're not going to be increasing some risk factor for him doing worse or increasing tumor growth. It just that's not how they work.
15: And and Scott is correct.
19: I would
15: I mean, look at look at
19: the data. I'm not telling you to do it. No. No. No.
15: Scott Scott is is correct because Ivermectin People that ivermectin is not, renowned for being anti cancer, but it is actually in a huge amount of studies anti cancer effective.
10: Isn't cancer parasitic?
15: No. No. That's a joke. Come on. Okay. It it's all to do. It's to the
1: virus that wrote a No.
15: It it it it
12: she pointed it down to a fluke parasite. When it comes down to ivermectin ivermectin, what it does is it pinpoints the the attack of the immune system to recognize the cancer, and it works together with your chemo. So it actually is helpful. Okay. And what it also does
15: is it
12: helps could
19: you please
0: just be
6: quiet for something?
12: It helps the immune system. So when you fight the parasitics that are already working against your body, whether it's whether you believe that they are completely tied to it,
0: Sorry about that.
10: I hear no 1 speaking.
0: Twitter is so glitchy.
1: Hang on.
0: I don't know what happened, but, well, Andrea.
2: Go ahead, Andrea.
5: Oh, hey, you guys. Hey. Question. Was, Justice and Scott, were they done talking?
2: You you go ahead. It'll be okay.
5: Hey. So question for Scott. Hey. So I've had a just more so since surgery, I had surgery back in August for just pelvic, laparoscopic, and they didn't really find much. Just, some scar tissue, but I've had upper abdominal pain since. And if I eat, my stomach just kills. My stomach kills. Like, it burns. It feels like there's a hole in my stomach. Just painful even, going to the bathroom. So just any advice on that? But, you know and if I did a c I did a recent CT as well, and it was fine. He just said did note that I had some inflammation and maybe some fatty tissue or just some kind of scar tissue by my navel because I was kinda thinking I maybe had an incisional hernia besides the upper stomach stuff, but they said that was fine. And I don't have to worry about I mean, if they did a CT and stuff, I don't have to worry about stomach cancer or anything, do I, if the CT was fine? Or is that more, say, looking with an endoscopy? Do you know?
0: Anybody have a, opinion on that? Go ahead.
15: Hello? Hey, Scott.
19: Yeah. I I sorry. Right. Right. We had a little chat.
0: I think I think when you're all
19: thinking need to worry about stomach cancer?
5: No. Like, if you did it like, I've had, like, pretty horrific upper abdominal pain since my surgery. And we did a CT after, you know, because I had some incisional stuff going on too, but I didn't have an incisional hernia. But I've had just navel up, you know, to up to my breastbone, just pretty horrific, like, just burning. Almost like there's a hole in my stomach. You know? I don't know if it's I mean, you have possibly an ulcer right, and I know an endoscopy would check that. But if a t CT was fine, besides they said inflammation and maybe some scar tissue by my navel area, or some kind of fatty tissue and umbilical cord kind of thing. But I've had upper stomach that I I mean, I did in the beginning of this back injury couple years ago, 2 and a half years ago, and they said gastritis, but this is just different. I mean, it's unbearable pain. It's just like a burning hole in my stomach. Again, I could have, you know, an ulcer. You know? But, I mean, once they you do a CT, I don't you don't have to worry about stomach cancer or anything like that, do you?
19: Yeah. Well, so so the other thing is scar tissue is always an issue. Right? Because I get so I've been on the phone, and I've moved around my yard, and I found a place where where I can hear the conversation. So as it cuts out and I can no longer hear the conversation, I'm not like, my phone broke. Right? Something was interrupting the signal. Right? Like, if you are an IE if you and I were on the phone and you're driving through the mountains and we're chatting and all of a sudden the phone drops, you know, the call drops, we're not we don't look at our phone and go, my phone broke. We think the connection failed. But we don't think about that from a physiologic level of inflammation or scar tissue where cells have to be able to communicate. If cells aren't able to communicate and like, at a quantum level, it it like, these things are happening at the flip of a switch. Like, when you turn your light on, it doesn't take, like, 3 minutes for it to gradually light up. It's instant. That's how cells need to communicate. And when cells can't communicate, when when something is impacting the ability for cells to communicate, the body sends out an alert system. Right? They they send out a strike force to go figure out, like, why why aren't these cells communicating? And and then there's a tendency, you know, for for some of those some of those cells, if we think about it like an army where they're like, well, army is like, well, shit. What's going on? So they just start firing away. They're just you know, it's like they just spin in a circle, and they're firing at whatever to try and mitigate what could be, you know, affecting the system. It's the, like, the the insane soldier that's just shooting everyone. Like, the you're shooting at the good guys and the bad guys.
0: Let me, get to Scott, I mean, to, get
19: So that's that's part of a problem when when cell to cell communication is is interrupted and with scars. Like, when I talk to moms that have a c section, I'm like, oh, jeez. Right? Like, there's usually a number of other things going on because that that transverse scar across the abdomen is going to affect cell self communication, so they often have other things going on. So, and I just kinda went into the weeds there, but, you know, you're you're talking about, you know, could it be cancer? I'm I'm looking at it. We would have to have probably a 45 minute conversation on your bowel movements. How often do you have a bowel movement? What what are you eating? What's you know, you know, thinking about gastritis because, you know, the treatment, quote, unquote, for what you're talking about, like gird or upper that
2: that Got it. Upper.
19: So please God, if you
15: if you
6: I think
0: he can hear me is the problem.
2: Oh, shit. Good. Oh, Cici's trying to interject. Scott, I'm very sorry to interrupt you, sir. Cici
0: Sorry sorry, Scott, to interject. I don't think that when both of you guys are on for some reason, y'all can hear each other. So, I just wanted to get to Joe because he he was trying to say something too, but y'all I think y'all are agreeing because he's given the % on the thumbs up sign. But,
15: Oh, no. I I was just gonna say quickly, which is, Scott is a % correct.
7: But Yeah.
15: But but but what's very important is that, in America, which a lot of Americans don't understand, it's because people are in the you know, they're they're they're very good at serving. They're serving good food and whatnot, but they don't wash their hands. And h Bribery is, like, the number 1, issue in America. It's 85, 80 to 90 percent of people who end up with h bryony infections and and they don't even know to have it. So people like Andrea, you know, have got to be tested and so does everybody. K? Because if you don't stop the h bryony infection, you end up with colon cancer. So that's why Big Pharma doesn't wanna tell you that you have h Briory. Okay? Scott will agree and and so so whoever else is a doctor on the on the thing will agree. We you need to be tested for a h Briory so that to make sure that you don't have this, burrowing little thing that's happening in your stomach, and you can get rid of it naturally through a lot of enzymes. So it's very, very simple. Okay? But as I said, big pharma doesn't wanna do it because they wanna sell you drugs, they wanna make money from you, and they wanna make you ill. Okay? So, Andrea, you need go back to your physician. First thing, everyone on this space, please go for a h priority test. And and then once you've got that out the way, then you know that you haven't got then you haven't got cancer. Okay? That's the first thing. Okay? Please do it.
0: Yep. Agree. Yeah. I don't think you could hear it there, Scott. And, so I know you weren't intentionally talking
18: about I
15: I I love you. I love you everybody in America. You know, we do this in Europe. But, you you have to you have to be educated because they're not telling you. They're they're they're, you know, they're not telling you about water. They're not telling about fluoride. They're not telling me about food.
7: Right.
8: They're
15: selling you shit. And you've got you for Christ's sake, ladies and gentlemen, take back your country, take back your food, take back your health, take back your children, take back your education, take back your universities. You're not sick. You're not sick, but come on. Let's do this altogether. We love America.
0: Amen.
15: Let's do it together. Yeah?
0: Yeah. Yeah. Big Pharma does not create cures. They create customers for life. Okay. Let's see. Who else is next? Andy, do you know do you know who is next?
2: I do not. Let me look at the requests here. I have 3 requests. I have, really, the SCF seems to be whoever SCF has has a request to speak.
0: And I think, our fearless leader did too, Brad.
2: Brad? Go ahead. Brad, fire away. I have former feds Org. Wants to speak. K. The quest so really, we're down to SCF. So if SCF can hear me, fire away, SCF. You are you have the mic.
0: I don't think she
15: Okay.
0: Did this request it. I hadn't turned her to speaker yet. Twitter is twitchy.
2: That's all good. Now now to follow what the the previous conversation was to end it in a in a wonderful way, my father always said a chance according to the AMA to the AMA, not him, AMA, a chance to cut is a I'll say it again. A chance to cut is a chance to cure. That is not medicine to me. Go ahead, former feds.
21: Hey, everybody. This is Brad Geier. Hi, CC. Hi, everybody.
0: Hi.
21: I just wanted to check-in and give everybody a quick update about what we have on tap for this week. I believe on Wednesday, we're gonna be filing a suit against, Gilead, regarding its use of remdesivir. It's basically a cause of action based around, different kinds of fraud and, false advertising. We anticipate we'll be filing that on Wednesday. This is sort of a big moment. We've had this ready to go
2: now for,
21: really since probably the fall of last year, but we, now think it's an opportune time, to to move forward. Among the reasons that we're moving forward now is because it seems as if, the horrendous clinical results that Remdesivir has, given the world, we've now documented thousands of instances where, it caused kidney failure and caused patients to basically, over time, tank causing grievous injury and even death, and it seems like the system is kinda ramping up. We noticed that there's approximately 20 new studies, most of which are Gilead funded that have come out since we were ready to go last year. So, because they seem to be doing a new rollout now of the vaccines, they seem to be now rolling out remdesivir to even people that have kidney injury. We felt like we had no other choice but to go forward. So that'll be happening on Wednesday. Also, on the January 6 front, we anticipate that we'll be filing an amicus brief this week. It's taken a lot of time. All these things take longer than than we would like. It just requires a lot of legal effort to get it to the level of polish that's needed, to get it done, filed, and in this case, filed in front of the Supreme Court. This involves the use of 18 USC 15 12, which is basically a statute that was never really used before to counteract protesting, and, it's been, expanded and, twisted, and, it's been used to egregious effect, going after people who are there on January 6 being charged with, obstruction of an official proceeding. The reason that the nonprofit, formerfeds.org, its members wanted to back this effort is because the expanded creative use of these of this particular statute, which was never intended to be used this way, could easily be contorted, to go after them. They may want to protest in front of hospitals or protest in front of state houses or protest, lord forbid, in front of the US Capitol. The last thing we need is to have the US government making creative use of statutes, novel use of statutes, and, using it as a means to charge felonies. So, we thought this is an important place where we can make a difference. We anticipate that that should be done this week. And, thankfully, 1 of our courageous attorneys, in the movement, many of you know his name, Thomas Rentz. He's a a supreme court barred attorney. He read it. We worked for probably about 3 weeks just refining it and polishing it. He's ready to sign off, and I anticipate that that will be filed this week. I'd like to we're we're we're now basically going more on offense, and we have more of a coordinated effort now. This is gonna continue. Our efforts are going to intes intensify, and I think it's really important what each of us can do is 1 on 1 deprogramming. Speak to your neighbors. Speak to anyone who you hear is going to the hospital. We must avoid, at all costs, getting this vaccine, which has never been safety tested. It's causing all kinds of death and injury. And for anybody going into the, anybody contracting COVID, it's really important that they seek early treatment. We have physicians in the movement who can help them at the first signs of being sick. They can have medication, federal express to them or pick it up at the pharmacy, and they can be better in as little as 24 to 48 hours. If anyone goes to the hospital, obviously, nobody is to touch remdesivir. We have bracelets. You can have a bracelet. It's a it's a medical alert bracelet. Many state laws around the country make it a crime to administer,
0: a
21: drug drug to somebody with, or certainly causes, civil liability for anyone who administers a drug over the warnings that's contained on a medic alert bracelet. So, that's basically, the Saturday night briefing. We're now in the trenches, and we are now in a situation where every single 1 of you on this call can make a difference. We are
15: Oh, can I can I ask 1 thing, sir?
21: Certainly.
15: If Vendesimir is called Valkyrie, so you gotta be very careful.
0: Yep.
15: Because you got you gotta you gotta remember that they've renamed it Valkyrie in hospitals, so you need to change the bracelet.
0: They have Valkyrie on the bracelet too. It has Valkyrie and Vendesimir.
15: That's fantastic. And secondly, which I would love you to do for me, sir, is to join, Antonio Fauci in that in that lawsuit. I really do hope you get that passed.
21: Yeah. So there's a lot more work that we're gonna have to do. It's gonna be a period of months and years before we can get all the necessary, discovery or Freedom of Information Act materials from, NIAID, which is at the National Institutes of Health, be able to get all that information from the Wuhan Lab. It's, all the communications with scientists like doctor Barrick and all these others, communications between and among, NIH, FDA, CDC, how that was all coordinated to unfold the way that it did, and most of all, how was that that coordinated with the World Health Organization? All those things are yet to come. Right now, we're building a foundation. We're going after the what is essentially the low hanging fruit, and trust me, the low hanging fruit isn't hanging that low because, these are hard won gains. And, frankly, we we really take on overwhelming odds when, when when we go after these cases. Right now, I think we I don't know what the numbers are, but, I'm working, collaborating with a growing number of attorneys who are filing hospital homicide cases around the country. I know 1, saw 1 got filed in Pennsylvania this week. I just responded to 1 in New Jersey. We have a phenomenal expert who's volunteered his services, doctor Joseph Barron, a 347 page curriculum vitae. So good people are coming forward. Courageous people are coming forward. But the most important thing is this is not something that other people do. This is something that each of us has to do. The place this is gonna be when, 1, is in your backyards, in your school boards, having coffee with your neighbors. Everybody can help on the education effort. That's how we're gonna win.
0: I'm so glad to hear your positivity tonight, Brad.
15: We're gonna win.
5: I warned you.
0: This is good. That's right.
22: It's gonna be it's gonna be
15: I'll go see if we can we're
20: all gonna win. We're gonna at the end of the day,
21: we we prevail. Yes.
15: Yeah. We are all gonna win. And and but I just wanted to tell, everybody a sad thing. Go check with your, funeral parlor, your funeral, you know, director. How many people under the age of 40 have died in 2023, and they won't tell you the answer. I guarantee you, they will not tell you the answer. They are so busy, but they will never tell you the answer. And then you realize what the hell
0: We had a funeral director on last Saturday, and she was telling us the strange things that she was saying that she's never seen before in her career. But, I wanted to get back to, Denise was asking about the protocol for her husband, and you you were gonna say something, Joe, about about that, what she should do?
15: Yeah. I I can I can say for for if I was in in her shoes, it's very simple? I would take, 1 gram of lactoferrin per day because that's, an iron cheetah and it kills it's anticancerous, it's antimicrobial, and everything. So that's and that's generally regarded as safe. It's FDA approved. Okay? The second part I would take is berberine. I would take 1 1.2 grams per day. The the third part of it, I would take, these are all natural situations. I would take, dandelion, which is 1.2 milligram, 1.2 grams per day. And the last the last part of the the equation is, making sure that, you you have, vitamin c up to, 3 milligrams per day. And that's it. That's what I would take, and that's what I would take if I was in her situation.
0: Alright. Thank you very much for answering that. Yes. I don't I'm sure she told you I might have been out of the room, but she already lost her daughter to the COVID protocol. And so this is not good news, and, our prayers are with you, Denise.
10: Thank you. Thank you all. I appreciate it. I'm just, he was we got the diagnosis on Monday, and I'm still I'm still kinda reeling trying to figure out what
15: I I I can give you I if you want if you want, I I will publish into the into the purple pill all the research that is is related to lactoferrin and, berberine and, in relation to bladder cancer. Okay?
10: Okay. And, Joseph, I I also reached out on your, website. I sent you an email and also I,
15: responded. Wow.
0: Yeah. You've
15: been asking me. You're you're a follower. Okay. Liz
0: I think you got
8: lots of
0: new followers tonight, Joseph. I think you're good.
15: I just know. I've I've been helping everybody who's my mission in life is that I I need to see people walking again. I need to see people who are injured, healthy again. And Good mission. And and I think we're getting there. We're we're we're almost getting there because if if Lindsay if Lindsay takes this NAD plus IV infusion with what I'm adding to it, which is all natural, I think she's all her stem cells were were were were reborn. And which which means that I will take it because it will basically, it's like the the holy grail of life. Yeah? It means we we can all be reborn. So that's what I'm hoping she's doing because she's my she's my guinea pig. And if she she's improving. She's now walking. She's now doing things. But we're not there yet. You understand? We need to get we need to get and this is the next stage. Right? We understand that her microntera is fucked because it needs to be reset. This is the only way you can reset it through, 2 different mechanisms. 1 is an IV and and 1 is 1 is, supplementation. Are you And that's
2: it. Are you talking about, like, increasing membrane potential when you talk about mitochondria? I'm just trying to understand the the mechanism.
15: Who's saying this?
2: Health Warrior, Andy Katsanos.
15: Okay. I'll explain.
2: Yes, sir.
15: The billionaires, the likes of Elon Musk and whatnot, are looking at Serratins. You heard about that or yes or no? You can say yes or no.
2: I have yes. Yes, sir.
15: Okay. So the only way you can create create serritins and what does serritins do? They either cause cellotopsis or they call rebirth for cells. Okay? Okay? So people who who've got mitochondrial dysfunction because they've been vaccinated, you need to get rid of your cells. You need to get rid of your cells and and make them reborn. The only way you can do that is either through medicine or through a natural mechanism called NAD plus. Okay? NAD plus to get rid of the mic, mitochondrial dysfunction, which is, serotonin 3 and serotonin 6, means you need to it means that you need to activate. And that's and that is what I've given to, Shelley to activate her irritants and and almost cause new cell, no new stem cell growth in those situations. Does that make sense?
2: It does. Yes, sir. Interesting.
15: Okay. So so what so what she's gonna be doing hopefully on Monday is that she's taking high doses of NAD plus. Okay? If you if you look at sirtuins, s I r t u I n s, because I hope I teach people. If you look at number 1, that will cause DNA repair. You can and it it can be initiated, and it will cause DNA repair. DNA repair, if you've been vaccinated, means that you you could potentially wipe out the mRNA in your DNA because your golden copy of your DNA comes in God. It doesn't come from Pfizer. Okay? The second thing is if it doesn't come if it doesn't wipe out the DNA repair mechanism, you need to go down to the lower level, which is the mitochondrial level, which is the micro 5 5 e of looking at how do I get rid of the individual cells that are zombie. And that's that's how, the serotins 3 and 6 come in, which can be activated through a different mechanism. Okay? And that's what we're gonna be doing with, Shelley. K? All of this is natural. All of this doesn't cause any, health issues, and this is what God gave to all of us because I'm known to big pharma. This is what is natural, and we can we can actually beat them. Okay? So so, hopefully, on Monday, we might have a new Shelly. Okay?
2: Wow. That's fascinating. Wow.
0: That's great.
15: But let's And and if and if it all works, it means she has no more autoimmune disease. And Anna, Anna, Anna, come up. Come up to the stage because she's a listener now, and she can tell you all about the mitochondrial dysfunction. Come on, Hannah. Come back up. Can you get her up, Melissa?
2: Thank you.
0: I think the speaker thing is full. You know, we have to drop somebody to till
15: Yeah. Because she she well, she I Anna's Anna's been doing it for Anna's been doing it for 20 odd years. Okay?
14: What's this? What am I doing 20 odd years?
15: Come on, princess. You know. You've been doing the mitochondria.
14: Oh, yeah. The mito protocol.
15: Everything about mito.
14: Right. I, actually, I used to take the whole mito protocol for years. I forget. Let me see. L carnitine. It was, I forget which b vitamin.
15: Well, I don't I don't I don't think in your case, but
14: I Branch chain amino acids. I drink a
15: Yeah. I I don't think it was ever structured in your case because it was too new in the in those Right.
14: We had to figure it out ourselves and,
15: Right. So so I'm I'm now saying, you know, 20 years old, we have figured it out.
14: What I do though, I have a smoothie You're gonna you're gonna amino acids.
15: You're you're gonna kill me on that 1. Right? So, you know, 20 years on 20 years on, Fauci's still doing the AIDS shit Right. And he's killing people. Yeah? As we know. Right? Mhmm. And that's not a joke. That's still not a joke. Okay? But where we are now, I believe the mitochondrial dysfunction is the key.
14: And you know why it's important
15: COVID and everything.
14: So, Joe, you know why it's important that this mito protocol, you know, mitochondrial function should be a focus? Because parents with children who have mitochondrial disease and mitochondrial issues, they, get accused of Munchausen's by proxy. I don't know if anybody remembers the case 10 years ago at Boston Children's Hospital, Justina Pelletier. What those parents went to she went in the hospital walking, and they put her in a psych unit. She left in a wheelchair, and they had videos of her ice skating before she went in. They didn't believe the parents and what the parents went through with the courts and the what is it? The CPS services. Oh, it was a nightmare. We did Twitter storm on on Twitter protesting. So it's really important because look at all these kids that are vaccine injured too. You know? Mitochondrial Yeah.
15: And those and and a lot of people don't understand the simple biochemistry is that your your body without magnesium at the mitochondrial level, which is gonna be replaced at 3 7 5 milligrams per day, will cause you, you know, depression, will cause your brain to flip out. It could it's it's unbelievable. And and yet it's never never, never studied, never even never even presented to in school. They want you to fail. It's unbelievable.
6: I
14: went to a researcher doctor years ago. So, the did you say magnesium, Joe? I was injecting magnesium every day for years.
15: Magnesium. Yeah.
14: I injected magnesium every day for years. I forget how long. Maybe 15 years.
15: But I'll ask anyone in space. You know, how many put your hands up on space. You do you take magnesium daily? I don't think anyone does.
14: Right. And, you know, I'll tell you. I was feeling the early on when I was the patient of the researcher, I was feeling palpitations. Right? And I and I was still working in a cardiac rehab. So I hooked myself to the monitor, and I says, oh, I'm having PVCs. And what the cardiologists were giving to the patients who had the history family history of sudden cardiac death was this supplement over the counter called Slow Mag. They didn't even have a bleep on their EKG with the Slow Mags, so I thought, let me get some of that Slow Mags. So I've been taking Slow Mags since 1994. It's a time release magnesium. You could buy it over the counter. You know, I'm sure there there there's some better ones, but that always worked for me. And I do get some nice magnesium from this company that I get toxic free products from. You know? But a lot of people, I I know if I don't take the magnesium, I get these, cramps in my legs like the charlie horse. That's just terrible.
16: Yeah.
0: Me too. Oh, terrible.
14: Like, you wanna shake it out
16: like that, it's
0: magnesium spit cream at the health and freedom summit that
19: Right.
0: Seems to work really well.
14: And I always had I had low potassium too, and I've been on, a prescription potassium since '94 too. If I don't take that potassium and magnesium, that charlie horse is just terrible. And no more palpitations since then either.
0: Good. Let's see. Who is this?
1: Walton, it looks like.
23: Hey. Oh, thank you. So I I was actually, man, you guys are amazing. I just like to say it. Like, I learned a lot from you guys and and stuff like that, but, I was just actually, want to ask about my mother's, like she was, like, a stage 3, cirrhosis of the liver. I don't know if you guys don't know anything. You guys probably know about that, whatever, but she's she wasn't a alcoholic and everything like that. So, like, when I went into the hospital, I'm from, Toronto, Canada or whatever, and they were, like, kinda shocked when that happened. So they pushed that they pushed on it. Like, they're like and I'm like, no. That's that's not what it is. But, apparently, she she held it. She held it for, like, about 10 years, so she had, like, a a lot of scar tissue on her liver. And, I learned a lot about it, whatever. Like, basically, with the poison that goes up to her brain and stuff like that, and, like, she has to take the lactatoxin and all that stuff so she can be aware of what's going on? So, like, when I came home and I noticed she wasn't all up there. And, she's been doing good for, like, 3, 4 years. But then, when everything started going good, that's when the the pandemic happened or whatever do you wanna call it. And I didn't take the vaccine or stuff like that, so I wasn't allowed in. And she did it. She did take the vaccine, and I was like, what what can you do? She took it. My my father took it, so we can go with her. I didn't take it. My brother didn't take it. Other people didn't take it. Whatever. At the end of it all, it's been about, about 5 years now in. And, she had a she eventually got a clot on her main portal vein that goes towards her her liver. I'm thinking that's a few few years in. So now she has to take injections in her belly. I don't know if I'm talking too much, if I'm too quick, if I'm stepping too in or too not.
8: Oh, absolutely. You're fine.
0: Go ahead. Okay.
23: So she's taking injections in her belly now. And, I brought her in, like, I brought her eventually, like, actually, like, before when it was all in because I'm in Toronto. Right? So, like, I do have some type of connections, like, from the hospitals, from, like, the neighborhood neighborhood gang related or whatever. Like, certain Downtown Toronto is like, when I talked to an information desk, she's like, okay. You know what? They are good. They're not bad even though it's Canadian or hip or whatever. She's like, okay. No. If you come in in at this time, at this door, there's security. You can come in. Right? So I'm like, yeah. Fine. I'll fucking wear the mask, and I'll fucking go in. I'll fucking you know, like, I'll deal with it. Go in, and I'll deal with it. But now, like, now it's years past or whatever. But now she's taking the injections in, and she's getting all paranoid. She's like, oh, goddamn it. I'm diabetic. And I'm like, no, ma'am. You're not diabetic. Like, that's what it is. Like, and she's like, and it's a clot. It's a clot in her main portal vein. And I don't wanna say it because I say conspiracies or whatever. I'm like, goddamn it. You got a fucking clot on your fucking your main bigger portal vein that's going into her liver. And she's like, she's basically stage 3, stage 4, fucking sources of the liver. And she never really drank. That's something before all this stuff, before the vaccine, but, like, that's something that's just it's a miss. Right? It happens to people. But now she's like and I'm like, goddamn it. Like, why did you take the fucking vaccines? Even my stepdad, he was like, I had to bring him I had to bring him to places to take the vaccines. I'm like, where am I gonna bring him to a place to, like, to be good to take the vaccines and shit? And he's getting all mad at me. He's like, why don't you take it? You're making me take it. I'm like, buddy, I ain't fucking taking this shit. You know what I mean? Like and he he agreed with me or whatever. But he had to be there sitting next to her. Right? But I I, me and my brother, like, we, connived the fucking the hospitals, whatever. We got in there. So now the basic thing is now she's taking, she's about 3 3 years in cirrhosis of the liver, 3, 4 years in, and they're freaking out. They're like, how's this lady still going on? How's she going on? And now, like and they're like, okay. Give her 3 3 months, November. After this needle, injection in her belly, they're gonna try to convert her into a pill. Right? Blood center and all that stuff. And, and they give her the booklet. Right? Like, when you got cirrhosis of the liver and shit like that, there's nothing to cure it. They just give you a booklet, a basic vitamins and stuff like that. Like, you're just gonna go. You know what I mean? Like, there's nothing to cure sources of the liver.
15: Yes. There is, my friend.
23: Well, yes. I know there is. If you're if you're stage 1, if you catch it, like, half of stage 1, and if you catch it, you can once you have multiple scars in your liver to reduce the scars off the liver, it's nearly impossible. If you're stage 4
15: I'm gonna I'm gonna I'm gonna teach you because they don't teach you. It's it's
23: very much doing that. Okay.
18: Because what's your name? Walton?
23: Yes.
15: Okay. We have a girl who is seriously vaccine injured. Okay? I keep talking about I keep educating people about NAD. You need to get your mom onto the NAD process. It's all vitamin b, b 3. It's NMN. It's NR. And and there's a 2 other 2 other mechanisms that that will actually increase it. Okay? But it doesn't matter. If you get those on the on the first 3 and you'd start start giving your mom high doses of vitamin b 3, NMN, and r, okay, her NAD plus goes into into the zone. Okay? What NAD does, it goes through and it starts getting rid of cancer. Okay? So in your mom's case, what you need to take in addition is red wine extract. This is what a girl is gonna be taking on Monday, and it literally sends sends all the way through the body in that situation. Your mom also has, you said, liver issues. Okay? So she should be taking naturally. Okay? She should be taking, milk thistle extract, high doses, 1 gram of that because it's been known for over the 1000 years to sort out the liver. Okay? And so and also dandelion root. Okay? And and that both of those are anti cancerous, and they will clear the liver. Okay? That's it. I wish you well.
13: I just wanted to say that if we're talking about the liver, if you're starting to have any liver problems and it's not liver cancer, look at CBD oil fasting where you maybe take 25 milligrams of CBD and wait, like, an hour to an hour and a half before you eat and a full serving of hemp seeds every day. I had nonalcoholic fatty liver disease from all the meds they they were giving me. And my liver put on 30 pounds, and I was hospitalized in liver failure. And, now the only sign of it on my chart is the non fatty liver disease, diagnosis. That's it.
15: I don't know who's speaking then, but I would concur, but I've never seen a research document.
13: That was Melissa. It's Melissa. I did that.
15: Okay. Okay. You're beautiful. But I can't confirm because I've never seen a research document. And all my everything that I say on this space is research based as everybody knows, and I can put into the bubble a research document. So I love you, Melissa, but but I don't know. Okay? That's it.
13: I know. It's hard to, take antidotal evidence, especially with everything going on. It's okay, Jess.
15: Especially when it's cannabis. So so
0: I think my
15: My my good friend know who asked who asked the question about his mom Mhmm. Is is is a % right. You know, it doesn't matter how how you come at it. And, you know, at the end of the day, she's your mom, and you need to sort her out. And, you know, whether whether you're a doctor, whether you're working in medicine, whether you're, you know, a plumber, whatever, it's it's still your mom, and you need to sort sort her out. And and the question is what is right and what is wrong, and what is determination for health. We so the question is, who's better, who's right, who's wrong? You leave it to you leave we it it's an informed consent. Yeah?
16: Yep.
0: Alright. I think the next thing we have my partner in crime, my good friend, Michelle Herman, owner of Snoot nasal spray, chlorine dioxide nasal spray. You want go ahead.
3: Oh, hello, everybody. Hey, Cece. Thanks thanks so much for hosting this space. Again, it's it's, great to be on with this group. You all are doing amazing work, and, every time I hear these stories, it it just it's just like a punch in the gut. It's just horrific to me to to hear how many people are still suffering. So I wanted to say a couple things. On behalf of, the, COVID group here, the CHBMP, and also the former feds group, they've, allocated they've sponsored, 20 free snoot kits, which I put it in the comments. And, for those of you who don't know, I own a company, snoot spray, that is a patented nasal rinse that uses the compound chlorine dioxide.
0: And I
12: was real
3: and I I was real happy to to hear Melissa saying that she was she was gonna be trying chlorine dioxide. I think that like so many of these supplements, and processes that everybody is talking about tonight, there's so many options for people that are not pharmaceuticals, that will not have horrific side effects. And, of course, chlorine dioxide is 1 of those, and and 1 that that frankly even before you know, here we go with another, COVID variant once again. And I think the reason or or 1 of the ways that that if you're interested in chlorine dioxide, I wanted to direct you to a couple places, couple resources that
5: you could get from
13: I appreciate it, Snoot. Share your resources so everyone has them, but I am taking light dove I'll be taking light dove ministries. Andrew Serafinis, He is doctor Judy Mikovitz's godson. That's the 1 I got lined up.
3: Oh, wow. That's fantastic. That's fantastic. Wow. That that's that's incredible. That's incredible. In fact, Cece and I were talking about Judy Mikovitz and I I just had a conversation with, Tanya, Carmona Daniels. She's actually with the commissab organization that's, an organization of about 60,000 people primarily outside of The US. And that's even know who these are. Yeah. Oh my gosh. Okay. So 1 of the groups that you all should definitely join, it's actually a nonprofit, and I'll put I'll put that in the notes as well. It's, commisab, which is a Spanish You want you got it? Yep. Okay. It's a Spanish acronym for basically, like, health health and life. And, I think it was actually a doctor out of, I think she was actually out of Spain or maybe Switzerland who when COVID was, kind of rearing its ugly head, 3 years ago, she kind of corralled all the doctors that had been involved in using chlorine dioxide in a variety of ways, also working with the Jim Humble protocols. And by the way, Jim Humble, just passed away about 2 weeks ago at, at, I think, 93 years old. But the good news is, that he left. He he did a lot of research, and he did a lot of phenomenal work also with Andreas Kalker. And Andreas Kalker, is is really the, the, I guess, kind of the the person who really puts the the scientific edge on it. He's a German biophysicist, and he himself had had he actually had rheumatoid arthritis. And, he was really frustrated because he couldn't work in the lab, and 1 of his friends said, okay. I know this is crazy, but there's this compound called fluorine dioxide, and they're calling it MMS and some of these other, scenarios, and this is what it does. And so he actually tried it. He actually gave it to his dog first, and, his dog jumped around and, you know, was was happy and didn't die. And he was like, okay. Well, let me try this. And, so he became very curious about why does this work and what is the mechanism of action, and, why is it that nobody knows about this? Like Ivermectin, I don't know Does it work? Yes. Yeah. Cece, go ahead and chime in there on your
5: Yeah. I just gotta tell
13: you, my contact to Mike Evitz, that schedules her events in Orange County. She is doing the Light Dove Ministries, CDS right now and a custom cream that Andrew Serafini had whipped up for. She's got some sort of melanoma skin cancer that's very weird. So she's trying it. We'll see what happens with both paired together.
0: We have many people that have taken it for cancer and been cured in, like, 30 days. But, yeah. Go ahead, Michelle.
3: Yeah. You know, I I think it's it's 1
0: of these things that, you know,
3: I was gonna say if any of you all have have read, doctor Pierre Kory's book, The War on Ivermectin, I I ordered that book and devoured it within about a day. And, literally, you could take the word ivermectin and replace it with chlorine dioxide, and it is the same exact story, same exact scenarios. The only difference is chlorine dioxide has been censored and demonized, really been censored, for about 60 years. So it's got a longer track record, frankly, of being effective. It's also incredibly cheap. And, you know, I I think 1 of the things if you're if you're interested in trying these, you know, I hate to say alternative because, really, these are the things that have been around for frankly over a hundred years that, you know, our friends at the FDA and the CDC don't like, because they they are incredibly inexpensive. They are incredibly effective, and they don't require a prescription. They don't require a doctor to get involved. So they don't like those things as we know. But there's you know, for those of you who are interested, I would I would point you to there's a documentary that was done, beginning of 20 21 called the universal antidote. And, there's a documentary. Just type in that web address. I think I put it in the in the notes as well. Great. That is a documentary. It's great. It's, and hope I see doctor Bain is on the call, so maybe Cece has, coerced and, bent doctor Bain's, arm enough to get him to actually watch the whole thing. But it's a great starting point, and it's a free documentary. And on that same website, there is a, like, a 7 hour training, tutorial that's a video training, and there's a bunch of downloads, with it. So if you wanna learn what is the compound, how do you get it, how do you make it, that's a great place to start. I would definitely recommend you start there. We also are you know, we're working with, as I mentioned, COMICEF. Okay. Back to COMICEF. So this, doctor out of, again, I think it was Spain. Got all these doctors together that have been work really working together and training and helping each other and helping their patients. They've been doing it for about 10 or 15 years working with Andreas Kalkar and Jim Humble, and she said, you know, we'd really need to start a nonprofit. We need to help the world understand about chlorine dioxide. It is criminal that this this protocol, this compound is being suppressed and is being you know, there's 3 guys in jails right jail right now because of this, and it's it's tragedy. It's an absolute tragedy. So they started this organization, commu sav, commu sav Com. And in this organization, there are about 12,000, doctors and attorneys. The rest of them are kind of various medical professionals, people who are just interested in it. But on that site, there's a whole bunch of videos. Right now, there's only a handful that are in English. They're mostly in Spanish. There's some in German and Italian. And we're actually working with I don't know if Jamie Scherr is still on the call, but we're working with Jamie Scherr and, also, attorney Todd Callender, who is now running CloutHub. CloutHub has a program that they've recently launched that essentially translates video into each user's native language. And that has been 1 of the big challenges is that a lot of the chlorine dioxide really kind of experts have been out of the country. They're not English speaking, and people in The US really need to see they they need to read information in English. They need to to hear the videos, watch them. So we're working with them to to see if we can make a difference on that and and actually get that information accessible and and easily consumed. So I'd encourage you to to sign up for Cloud Hub for sure. It's, it's kind of a combination. Right? Social media. It's like LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, Zoom,
0: Twitter combined. 70 translates into 72 different languages in real time. Truth Hub is their, like, their, Zoom platform. It's all US owned and really, really good.
3: Yeah. It's it's great stuff. And, you know, actually, Todd Callender is, Jamie was kind enough to to do a, face FaceTime introduction to him, a couple months ago with me and my my other business partner, Valerie Allager, who's, Howard Allager's daughter, and has been working with had been working with him in chlorine dioxide since she was 13 years old. So we got to meet Todd, and his story is remarkable. It it's, it it's it's frankly shocking. He's a he's a pretty bigwig, in the international attorney world, and he's, and maybe CC you can clarify. I think he's working on, you know, he actually sued a bunch of the, current administration for lack of a, an actual signed, statement and or or oath of office. And I think he's involved in suing the FDA, and I think he's also helping Jamie with the lawsuit against, Gilead for remdesivir. So he's very, very active and, doing a lot of work in, in this world of of COVID, injuries and and vaccines. So his whole story is fascinating. In fact, you can find it on Rumble. If you go to Rumble or Brighteon or Bitchute and search for chlorine dioxide, you will find hundreds of videos about people that you've seen and known. Todd Callender is 1 of them. He'll tell you his story about how he had pancreatic cancer and was pretty much told to get his affairs in order, and somebody said, well, what the hell? You wanna try this? It's worth a shot. And, he went back 30 days later.
5: Mhmm.
3: And they're like, well, okay. I guess we can do your knee surgery, but, by the way, you don't have pancreatic cancer anymore. So, this this compound is incredible, and, by the way, it's incredibly cheap. There was a bunch of places to get the compound. Right now, we don't actually sell the the 2 components to to make the CDS and for for a variety of reasons, but you can there's a bunch of places where you can get it. But what we do is we actually make products that use chlorine dioxide and essentially put put the chlorine dioxide in a usable, shelf stable, palatable product. So you don't have to there's no guesswork. You just literally, you know, spray it up your nose if you got allergies, and and, the chlorine dioxide, is is, going back to the frankly, earlier in the back to the forties, back to 18 hundreds. It's a proven, virus side and bactericide. It, it's unique in that it kills all pathogens. Anything that's acidic in nature, when people talk about cancer and what is what is actually cancer. It's when a cell in the body turns highly acidic. And so anybody could have cancer and it could be activated by a number of reasons. I'm not an expert, but that's just kinda what I've what I've hear. But the action of chlorine dioxide is we don't really know why, but it searches out, acidic cells and it brings oxygen to those acidic cells. For pathogens, it actually, obliterates the like, for instance, for, COVID. COVID virus, cell is actually has a protein envelope, and chlorine dioxide essentially oxidizes that protein envelope. And so what we do is make chlorine dioxide easy to use, and also what we do is and the reason we're involved in this is, sure sure, we'd love to make money, but the the bigger issue is helping people understand that these compounds are out there and available, and you can make your own stuff for literally, for $30, you could have enough chlorine dioxide, till probably last you a year. But by the way, it doesn't really taste very good when you swish it around in your mouth, and it doesn't taste great to use as a toothpaste or a nasal rinse. But we make products like that, and it's a hell of a lot easier to use, and that's kind of what we do. And that's why we wanna share some of these products with you on the house. We're we're very dedicated to this, to this this group, the vaccine injured especially. And, we also we we've been, talking for quite a bit. We're also working with, Kat Parker. We're working with the commuSAV doctors and the organizations, to essentially put together kind of a case study where we have a group of vaccine injured folks that, and send us a note send a note to Cece or myself. We are getting experts who are trained and knowledgeable, and the bulk of these are medical doctors. They are medical doctors from typically outside The US. 1 of them actually is doctor Pedro Chavez. He is actually a retired army general from Mexico, and, he's a he's a medical doctor. He's an MD, and he's on board. He's in charge of training for the entire commuSAB organization. So we have the backing of them, and our our goal is to really pull in US Doctors, Medical Professionals who are interested to learn more about chlorine dioxide. In fact, I think it was doctor Lee Merritt who said said she you know, 80 percent of the the the ailments that come in through her door, she's recommending chlorine dioxide for. So our goal is to help people understand it, help the medical professionals also understand it so they feel confident going onto spaces like this or talking in front of a group or talking to their fellow medical professionals about this is why you should use chlorine dioxide. This is what it does. And just like washing your hands should be the absolute first level of defense. Chlorine dioxide in my mind, it's it's probably the cheapest, most effective tool that you can use, for a whole variety of things, practically everything except for a broken bone. And and it's easy, it's cheap, it works. And that that to me should be your first defense before you take even ivermectin. Ivermectin's a great cheap inexpensive drug, but it's also a drug. And, you know, not everybody can tolerate it, and it does have side effects. So, you know, for anybody who's trying to avoid drugs and just, you know, improve their lives, this is this is a great compound. And, you know, that it's it has literally, you know, our founder, of Frontier Pharmaceutical and outside, Howard Allager, his first patent, he started in 1975. It got issued in 1978. And by the way, I have letters from universities, from government agencies, including the CDC, the, FDA, the NIH, the, USDA, a whole bunch of different universities where he worked with all of these entities to essentially do studies on chlorine dioxide for for I'm gonna tell you pretty much every virus compound that's out there, including HIV, including herpes, including cancer, including, there's other, publications from COVID. There is tons of document documentation on this, and if you can look on PubMed, you can look on, USPTO database, you can just Google Howard Allager, you'll see, his 20 some odd patents for chlorine dioxide products. His patents are referenced about a zillion times, but there are there are hundreds of them. And Howard Allager, who's the the inventor of soot spray, he's really the pioneer in taking this, this gas and incorporate it into a liquid or gel for for topical use. So it's it's an incredible compound, and and our goal is to really get it kind of mainstreamed. So I I I appreciate everybody on this call who's piped up before on earlier calls and is is helping with this project, and we're we're really excited about it. We we think that with your support, we can we can really make some positive changes in a lot of people's
19: lives. Wow. That was
2: yeah. Go ahead, Cece. I'm sorry.
15: I was
0: gonna say thank you, Michelle. Oh, I think we've been skipping accidentally SCF.
10: Hi. Sorry. I'm
7: sorry. Hear me?
2: Before before we continue, I just want before you go ahead, SCF, thank you very much. I just wanna interject real quick. Everything that was shared tonight is fabulous knowledge. I hope to god you never have to pursue this knowledge, and how you're gonna have to do that is by simple thing. Stay away from hospitals. You'll live longer. Next speaker.
24: Great advice. Hi, everybody. Thank you for taking me. I have 2 questions, and I've never heard the first 1 addressed on a panel or in my research. I'm a 4 time COVID survivor, 68 years old, COPD. Thankfully, to God and to ivermectin. However, before I received my ivermectin, during the first bout with COVID, I panicked, and I had the antibody intravenous treatment. Is anyone on this panel aware of any long term side effects or dangers to my body from receiving that. And then secondly, I've recently been diagnosed with MAC lung disease. I'm anti pharmaceutical and allergic, basically, to every antibiotic in the in the market. They wanted to treat it for 18 months with a stiff regimen of 3 different antibiotics. So I'm looking at natural ways to help me combat that also. So I'll
3: turn it over to you.
0: Joe, you're
15: up. Well, I can tell you let let's work it through. Let let's work it through together. You you've got COPD. Yeah?
24: Yes.
15: So why are you taking lactoferrin?
24: Oh, I'm not taking anything for the COPG.
15: So there you go. So that's what you need to be taking.
24: Could you spell that, please?
15: Lacto, l a c t o, barrin f e r r I n. K? And you need to ask for the APO, a p o, version, and then you'll never get COPD again. K?
24: Thank you.
23: If you if
15: you take 1 gram up up to because you you probably had
18: it how many years have you had it? 68?
24: Oh, I'm 68 probably 15, 20 years now.
15: What? COPD?
8: Yes.
15: So you
24: need to take smoke, they automatically said I have COVID.
15: That's okay. So so you you need to take 600 to 1 1 gram a day.
24: 1 gram per day. Okay. Thank you.
15: Okay. And and you'll be you'll be walking 10,000 steps in a week.
24: I I hope so. Where do I find this?
15: You can go to chemist. Just ask your chemist. I told you. Ask him for the APO, a p o, like the
0: pharmacist?
15: Yeah. The the pharmacist. Yeah. So so the next thing you have, what what was the next thing?
24: MAC lung disease.
15: Same thing. Okay. Yep. Next thing.
24: Okay. And that'll target the bacterial infection, which is deep in in the lung.
15: If it's in your lung, yes. It will get rid of it. Yeah.
24: The lactoferrin?
2: Correct.
24: Oh, thank you so much. What a relief.
15: You'll be you'll be walking. Where where are you based in America? Because I like to know.
24: I'm in Wisconsin.
15: So you'll be you'll be walking halfway around, you know, probably Lake Michigan.
24: I hope so. Well, you
0: gotta report back and tell us how you're doing.
24: I certainly will.
15: You better do. You you better DM me and tell you how much you love me. Alright?
24: I I love you right now for even suggesting it.
15: Alright. You need 1 1 1 gram. I would recommend take a 1 gram of lactoferrin for about 2 months, and then you'll be you'll be amazed how your breathing has improved. You might even not be on, an asthma drug. You know that.
24: Well, I I was on asthma and COPD drug, a drug called Trelegy. But it I know. It's $600 per month.
15: Well, I'm gonna tell you that I have 9 90 people who've who are all COPD who are not taking any drugs. And how much does that cost in big pharma? Oh, ouch. Ouch.
5: Ouch. Stick it to them.
14: Definitely. And so
15: and I'm telling everybody on on the space, the general immune support, general to make sure you never get a cold or flu again in your life. Just take lactoferrin 200 milligrams per day, and then and then in winter, increase it to 400, and that's it.
0: Nice. Thank you.
15: Okay. But but again again again, you won't hear this from a New York doctor or or a Wisconsin doctor because they want you to get ill. Okay?
24: They certainly do. I couldn't even find any information on how to treat this naturally. They all directed me to antibiotics.
15: You don't need antibiotics because lactoferrin is antimicrobial, it's antiviral, and it's antibacterial. And it stops TB, and it's been around since 19 thirties. The FDA I'll keep saying on this space, I would say, on every space. It's it's generally regarded as safe. It comes from milk. It's a milk protein, and it's the same milk that comes in in the breast milk from mother to child. Interesting. And why and why aren't they give telling us we need it?
23: For sure.
15: Exactly.
7: For sure.
15: I'm tell I'm telling you, you tell everybody and we can end this big pharma shit once and for all.
24: I will. Thank you so much. And in regard to the antibody treatment, is should I be concerned with that?
18: No. Because the lactoferrin will will sort that out.
24: That'll take care of that also.
15: Yeah. Because you're taking 1 gram you'll be taking 1 gram. Okay?
24: Okay. Alright? Alright. God bless you. Thank you.
15: I wanna I wanna see you in a week or 2 telling me that you're running a mile. That's all I wanna see.
24: Well, how do I get in touch with you?
15: Get in touch with anyone on the space and they they tell me. Tell me the miracle that you've had. Yeah? I just wanna see I just wanna see you out there doing 10,000 steps. That's it. End of story. Yeah?
24: Okay. Thank you so much.
0: Alrighty. Do you know who's next?
2: Anyone who has their hand raised? Let's see. We have some
8: Like, Andrea.
5: Yeah. Hey, guys. Quick question. So a couple things.
16: SEM I'm
15: not Calabrio, by the way.
12: I was
5: gonna say Calabrio. Calabrio. We call it cholesterol Calabrio, just so you guys know. Anyway, couple things. SEF, cholesterol, Calabrio Joseph there. He does have he does sell, lactoferrin. He doesn't like to promote his products, but you can find it on his profile at the top. Because I'll give it a
15: shout out. Sell anything. I don't sell anything.
5: I know. But it's on your you do you can find it through his stuff, which is good. Sometimes we need to find out where good products are. So that's the first thing. Second thing for Snoot, you know, I saw a functional medicine doctor couple years ago, end up seeing his daughter just for nutrition and muscle testing kind of thing because I was having quite a bit of, food allergies from all the SPAC's injury. Anyway, so she told me to get, and, again, from the doctor as well, NACS. And NACS is chlorine dioxide as well. There's MMS. And I started it last year, but I didn't continue because I was taking so many things, I mean, from Miramarac and all this kind of stuff. And I just don't wanna add it all in there. But I have it still, and I need to start it again because I do have lime as well. And I and the gal from Ricky Ranch, they have the NACS, which is chlorine dioxide, same as MMS. But my question to you is on the on the nasal cleanser, is there chlorine dioxide in the nasal cleanser as well?
3: Yes. There is. Oh. 0, wow.
5: And then how how does it so works the same kinda way as I mean, is 1 better than the other drinking it versus doing a nasal cleanse?
3: You know, it's interesting. We've been really focused on just topical usage, and we knew about people consuming it orally. And I've actually done it myself a few times, and it it's you know, I think it kind of, I'll say from a sinus infection standpoint or, you know, cold and a flu, you know, there's a tons of ton of information out there that that talks about that how we essentially get sick and why you have repeated sinus infections or a lot of, postnasal drip and drainage is typically your sinus cavity is actually coated in biofilm, and biofilm is essentially slime. Right? It's, it's a layer of bacteria that kind of, you know, feeds upon itself, so to speak. But it's, you know, a slippery rock in a stream. That's biofilm. Algae in a water tank or in a swimming pool. That's biofilm. And so what chlorine dioxide does is it actually helps break up the biofilm. So, it's it's phenomenal to use it as a topical to spray it up in the nay no nose and sinuses, because that's where it really needs to get to. So people who have, like, sinus surgery, they're often very frustrated because their came back within a matter of weeks or months. Because even though maybe they cleared out space physically in the sinus cavities, they actually didn't rid get rid of the biofilm, or maybe they got rid of just part of it or or a a section of it. But it's really based on that biofilm. So that's really kind of the the key benefit. And and and I really, biofilm is, again, it's it's physically on the layers of those sinus cavities, so that's why that topical, you know, sprayed up your nose is is, you know, it's my guess is probably more effective to spray it up your nose than to be consuming it orally because where the infection lies is actually on the layers. It's a mucous membrane. So, you know, if if you've got other issues, I think, you know, consuming it orally has a lot of benefits to it. I'm not an expert on it, but I I can you know, certainly, you know, there's a lot of people doing it, and I've done it and for a variety of things, and it's pretty amazing.
5: Yeah. It is. I know doctor Lee like you mentioned, doctor Lee Merritt. You know? She's she's definitely a promoter of it as well. So I would imagine if you're I I just need to start it again because the the gal, at Reiki Ranch, she actually had Lyme and actually cured her Lyme. And, and I have Lyme now from all this too, so I just need to start it up again. Thank you. You're welcome.
0: Has, protocols on her website too for Lyme for
5: Yeah. That's awesome. Okay.
3: And and I'll just say on the on the NAD, NAD, I think it is an oxidizer, as is chlorine dioxide, but it but it is a it is totally different chemical compound. So it is NAC is not chlorine dioxide.
5: Well, there's actually yeah. So it actually yeah. I have 2 bottles. It's called NACS, and it's from Reiki Ranch. It yeah. So it's the same thing as MMS.
0: Are you talking about CDS?
5: No. It's called NACS. N as in Nancy, a as in apple, cat. Because I'm
7: in Sam.
0: The same thing, but I've never heard of Yeah.
5: So NACS, if you, you know, go to Reiki Ranch, it's it does because when the the function of medicine with doctor was talking about MMS, I said, oh, you know, your daughter told me to take NACS, NACS, and he said, oh, it's the same thing because they both have chlorine dioxide in it. And, and the and the gal there, I mean, she's gosh. She's been doing this for 40 years plus. And and she says she takes it all the time, and it cures her Lyme and and so many other things. And she says even if she goes out in public and it's, you know, around a lot of people, she'll come home just as a maintenance and do that as well.
3: Yeah. I see she's got a guest on there on her site. Yeah. I I will check it out for sure, and I'd I'd love to get in touch with them for sure and have a conversation. It'd be great.
0: Alrighty. Who's next?
12: Thank you.
15: Do you
0: have anybody waiting, Andy?
2: We have, 3 requests. I'm gonna go just down. Let's see. We have Joe.
5: Joe I think
0: he has his hand up.
2: Joe has his hand up. Go ahead, Joe.
15: Yeah. I have a I have a slight problem from medical perspective because, you know, I I, you know, I don't know how to shoot anybody down, but, you know, like, people come back to me. This MMS is not, FDA approved. Okay? So what does that mean? That means that from my I have to I, as a medical practitioner, would have to say, I wouldn't recommend it to a to a dog. Okay? Because there's a lot of, you know, situations, and it's no different than Clorox.
0: No. It is different.
12: Well, no. I drink it every
0: day, though. I drink it every day. I just hear it a lot from it.
15: Let me let let let me speak, please. Just let me speak and let everybody else, you know, a situation. I'm I'm saying it from a medical perspective. So, you know, so so the situation is you can you can say what you you take and whatnot. I can take I take lots of things that are not necessarily FDA approved or whatever. But but I think we we got we got something like 200 people in the space, and they need to understand that, you know, there are things that are yes or no approved by the FDA for a number of different reasons. So that's all I'm gonna say. Alright? So I don't I don't give a damn what what people take. They can take care of and take, you know, for whatever. Right?
3: I totally totally appreciate that, and I think that, you know, I'm I'm certainly in alignment with you, is that is that we actually don't have FDA approval on these products and and chlorine dioxide. Dioxide. Actually, chlorine dioxide itself as a compound has multiple FDA and EPA uses that it's approved for. Technically, it's not approved for human use because and, again, if you're on the call
15: But then but then you had we had on the space earlier. You you met, you know, Scott Miller, and and we were both having a debate about peptides, and they're not they're not they're not regulated by the FDA, and they're illegal under the FDA, but they are used in sport, for example. And they're used in sport to enhance, at the Olympic games. So it's all it's all a it's all a balance of what what what is what is there and what's not. So like I said, I'm I'm not I'm not god, and I don't agree I don't agree in some things, but I just have to put it out there so that people are informed. It's called informed consent.
3: I totally agree with you, and and I will say that probably most of the people on this call are a little bit suspicious of the FDA or they wouldn't be on this call. So if you understand what's happening with the FDA and the CDC that that the f like like I said, like ivermectin, You know? And and, frankly, Afrin do you know how many doctors I talk about that say Afrin should never even be over the counter? It should be a class 2 narcotic because of what it does. There are so many FDA approved
15: Or even or even or even paracetamol. Yeah. Right. You're right.
3: Right. So the FDA approval and this is why, you know, we purposely we don't go in and sell to the medical community on purpose because most doctors who are, you know, you know, going along with the with the rote process of, you know, oh, you tell me a symptom, I give you a drug. They're not interested in anything that's not FDA approved. They're not interested natural. They're not interested unless it's a drug. Question. You don't wanna know.
15: You've heard you've heard me on this space. I'm not saying don't take it.
3: Yes.
15: I'm just saying, you know, make your own choice.
3: Sure.
0: Sure.
3: And it's like absolutely. And and I think it's I think it's fair. And I think, you know, the FDA I think if we pretty much all understand, the FDA is not your friend, and neither is the CDC. They are not our friends. And if you wanna take care of your health
9: The EPA is the 1.
3: The EPA let me tell you. The EPA, again, you can look up EPA approval for chlorine dioxide. There are hundreds of EPA approved and FDA approved uses. Do you realize every bit of poultry and produce that you eat has been sanitized by chlorine dioxide fumigation? Do you realize that every municipal water system in The US, I think every single 1, uses chlorine dioxide to, to sterilize and disinfect water? So it's being used all around us, but they don't want to approve it for a topical use. By the way, we could go down that path and it you know, anywhere hundred million dollars for FDA approval that gives us what? We we're a part of a a cabal that's killing Americans, frankly, I'd pass on that. I I don't even I don't even wanna sell to Walmart. We got into a Walmart pitch. I'm like, you know what? Walmart, honestly, you know, I I don't even wanna go that that route. And if if peep I think the people that we that chlorine dioxide, attracts are people who are educated, their eyes are open, their ears are open, their brain is open. And just like all and by the way, just like the NAC and, basically, it's MMS. So it's it's just their brand of chlorine dioxide mixture. So that's what it is. So, yes, you're right. It is, basically mixing sodium chloride in an acidifier. So they just came up with another name for it.
1: But on
0: Amazon too. Okay. Yep.
15: But can I can I ask can I just ask a very, very simple question? Because I'm here in Europe. K? Why do you need why does anybody in America tell me tell me if I'm sick. Right? Because I I'm sometimes I am sick. Why do you need chlorine dioxide, in water or in any other situation if if you've got good water, if you've got good health.
3: That that's a great point.
15: I I don't understand why these municipal people are trying to push it down the throat.
12: Well, I'm
15: you why you why you're in a business to sell this as as a last resort. I don't understand it.
3: Well, I I think that, you know, sadly, the, this America's water sources have been contaminated for decades by big industry, big pharma. There's a a ton of reasons why water can be contaminated. So there, you know, there's all these rules in place that say, if you're gonna have a municipal water system, you must do a minimum to make sure that there are no, you know, mold, virus, pathogens, in the water that you're delivering to your people. I mean, it it's you know, if we were in the countryside in Europe, we were all living, you know, with 10 people in a a town of, you know, 50 50000000 acres, you know, we could get well water, and it'd probably be pristine, but that's not the case here in The US. So, every every water system, frankly, in the world, and there is US is not the only 1. Just because you you pull water from a stream or a well, you don't know what's in that these days. And they they have to make sure that that water is is that drinking water is safe. Now they used to use chlorine bleach, and they used to use, I think, even hydrogen peroxide and some other, compounds. But from a I'm sorry, environmental standpoint, everything else breaks down into horrific byproducts. And chlorine dioxide is unique because it's frankly, like, 10 times stronger than chlorine bleach, and it breaks down into simply salt water. So it is the most environmental friendly compound that exists with the strongest microbicide effect.
0: And safe, not like bleach, though. Yeah. Right.
2: I'm going to interject real quick, everyone. We have some people that would like to speak. But before we go to them, I want everyone to do me a wonderful favor and go to chbmp.org. If you have a story to tell, please tell us your story. I also wanna inform everyone, if you live in the state of Texas, if you're thinking about coming to the state of Texas, stay away from Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas. The administrator that runs that hospital orchestrated the violent murder of my father who was working for Baylor at the time, death@baylor.com. I see miss Melissa. Fire away, Melissa.
13: Yeah. So about Baylor, by the way, doctor Peter Hotez fine Hotez or whatever you his name is, he finally blocked me, so I am proud of that accomplishment. So I just wanna blow it a minute.
12: About the
13: chlorine dioxide solution, Andrew Serafini is doctor Judy Godson's, his cannot be bought through lightdoveministries.com right now. It is being throttled by the fed. It has to be bought through the hmbstore.com, and you can't do a search for, CDS and you can't do a search for God's detox to find it. You have to scroll down the product list and look for God's detox and then click on it and you'll see the bottle says Light Dove Ministries and then you'll see that it says God's Detox. There otherwise, it's throttled too. So they've got all these protections up so that their site doesn't get taken down, and they're trying to help Andrew in the meantime. So I wanted to make sure everybody knows, and I actually got booted from the room trying to grab it with my Brave browser to put in the bubble, but I managed it. It should be down there for people so that you can kind of see what I'm talking about. That's all I wanted to add in for now. Oh, and, the lady with the stomach and the antibiotics. Antibiotics do more harm than good long term use and they give us them like candy on purpose. Make sure you're replenishing your gut microbes with something, please, if you're taking that stuff. I do a humic and fobic acid tincture every day. I I put it into an herbal tea mix I make, something to help restore them because those antibiotics break them down, and those gut microbes help protect us from the cancers and all the other diseases. So it's a big problem. That's all. Thank you.
2: Thank you for that, Melissa. Before you go, is there anything you'd like to elaborate with the group in this space about your experience with Baylor Scott and White?
13: No. I, just, had been going after Peter Hotez on Twitter because he lied about ivermectin. He wrote a paper on it saying that it could work on coronaviruses way back in the day. And now he's pretending he has amnesia, and he never said that. And the ivermectin is bad. And then he's been producing COVID 19 mRNA jabs that have been going to third world countries. And we're getting all these minuscule. Getting all these, all these, interviews. And, so I've been going after him on here, and finally, he blocked me. I've not had any direct
15: Melissa, can you send me that paper? Melissa, darling, can you send me that paper? I'll go after it.
13: Oh, Jikki Leaks has it, and I think No.
15: Can you send send it to me? Send it to me. I'll go after it.
5: I don't think I have it bookmarked. I don't think I have it bookmarked.
13: I I keep getting hacked, Joe.
2: If there's anyone anyone that has any any complications available, satellite, his nurse or or please let me know. Message me. I will work with you in exposing them exposing them.
0: Can I say
8: can I say something something? I'm new to you. I'm I'm new with new spaces. I usually go to some other spaces, but I haven't been around lately because I'm too ill. Please go ahead. Has anybody does anybody know a lot about lupus? I mean, because I'm I'm very I'm very well informed about lupus.
15: Lupus lupus and
5: Can I
8: just say some can I Just a second? Please don't interrupt. Are you from England? Are you from England?
15: No. I'm from Italy.
8: Oh, you're from Italy. Okay. So you're from other you but you're not from here in The United States, are
15: you? No, darling.
8: Okay, dear. Thank you. So let me just say something, and then I'll let you Okay? I'd like to hear you talk. It's okay. I'm I'm I I was born here, raised in in in in in New York City many, many years ago. Before I turned, like, 2 weeks before I turned 80, I came down with very bad cancer. But but I've had I I I have lupus. Okay? I have lupus for 50. It'll be 50 years of December. And, no 1 there's there's not too many doctors that know about lupus. There's only there's only 1500000.0 people that have lupus in The United States. Out of the total United States, I have 300 and what, 50000 people. But, lupus is a is a very crazy disease because you can have lupus for a long time, and the rheumatologist treat it as, as rheumatoid arthritis or, you know, some kind of arthritic condition. So, that's, when you when you're dealing with, peripheral neuropathy and you have, akylosing spondylitis and all these kind of different things that you have to learn to live with and try to keep away from the medications. I only take just 3 medications a day. I take Lyrica and I take Effexor for my my stress, and I take, Plaquenil. I've been taking Plaquenil for 12 years, the malaria drug. That's a hydroxy hydrochloroquine, hydroxychloroquine, but I don't take that 1. I take the real Plaquenil. And, but right now, I I'm I'm I'm having, I'm I'm dealing with not walking because I can't walk. I'm severely disabled. And having fallen down about I have no balance. My left my left leg doesn't make any contact in my brain. And I have I have, lesions on my on my skull. I yeah. That because I have cancer. I I have breast cancer. And then it metastasized to, to skull cancer. So I have I have skull lesions on my skull, but it hasn't reached my I'm I'm very lucky lady because it hasn't reached my, my brain yet. But I'm sure by the time it happens, I won't I won't be here anyway. So I I I don't know. I I I don't have that long to go, but but I'm I'm very happy with my life the way it is, and I I and I don't take too many medications and change my my my my eating habits tremendously the last 15, 20 years. So I only eat salads and fruits, you know, and I take a lot of take a lot of vitamins, a lot of gummy vitamins, vitamin c, and stuff like that. But I don't take a lot of medications, and I don't take any kind of, antibiotics, nothing like that. And if I have an issue, I go I go to the clinic because, you know, I have the I have the excellent coverage. I could do that. And, because I I've been on Medicare for a long time. And, I I'm I'm with the teachers union. Teachers union plays my secondary medications. But I don't take much medicine. And when I do take some medicine, when I have to get my my my my stuff that I need to to live with every day, the 3 pills that I have for the Lyrica is for my neuropathy and stuff like that. And, I I I take it from the, the out, Rx Outreach. It's a mail order. I don't go to if I have to go to CVS for something, it has to be, like it's it's very little. Cost me just a few dollars, but, I I don't I don't I don't use CVS. I don't use Walmart at all, and I don't use Walgreens. So, I just, you know, and I I just take life the way it is, you know, and I'm I'm but I'm happy. And, my, I have my my first husband died of lung cancer. He smoked like a chimney. I mean, I don't know how many people that I'm talking to right now that smoke, but I've never smoked a day in my life, and I don't drink. So I'm I think I'm I'm pretty good, and and I'm I'm gonna be 83. So for 83, you know, and I do a lot of reading and a lot of writing, a lot of writing, because I, you know, having lived with lupus for 50 years is a very, very long time. And, some of the doctors said it's it's, like, very unusual that, I'm able to deal with it because I, you know, I I I have a lot of things from it. And, so but but I'm happy. And but I'm gonna be writing about it. I'm gonna be putting some, article lupus and how people can deal with it. Because I know people do have lupus. A lot of a lot you know, not that many. But the few that I know that I've that I've met in the in the cancer center at the center here in, in, out of Miami, but I got into your field. There's a a few of them that, they don't know how to deal with. They don't know how to deal with it because there's there's different size that people have. You know, they there's there's times when I I feel like I have somebody's you know, I also have, thyroid disease. When I got the cancer, I got thyroid disease too. But I had I I have the kind of feelings where somebody's putting their necks their hands around my neck, like, strangling me, and then then then I can breathe for a few minutes. But then I'm okay.
6: That's alright.
2: Yeah. Real quick, and I I I thank you for that. That was, so sorry you're going through all of that. It's it's No.
6: It's alright.
2: Sounds like an obstacle course you're going through. We have other people that would like to speak. I see mister Timothy is here to speak. Timothy, you have the floor.
20: You're talking to me? Hi.
16: Yeah. Yes.
20: Hi. Well, I I was listen. I wasn't really ready to talk yet, but, I I I understand what you're talking about with the lupus. I myself have lupus too. And I've been 1 of those people you were speaking of that, don't know how to deal with it. I tried to get answers from my doctor about it, but she just keeps telling me to just keep taking the hydroxychloroquine. And, so that's all I Timothy,
6: I saw in your, I
20: Go on.
6: No. Yeah. Timothy, I saw in your on your Twitter, you, your wife, Lisa, was killed by the protocols that we were talking about. Is that correct?
2: Timothy, we saw on the feed that your wife was killed by the protocols. Is that correct, sir?
20: Yes.
2: Yeah. Can you please elaborate a little bit more? We'd love to hear your story.
12: Yeah.
20: Excuse me. It, she got sick, in December of 21, and she really didn't have much for symptoms. She took a home test, and it came back positive saying that she had the COVID. But she didn't wanna go to the hospital right away because Christmas was right around the corner, and, she has children from her previous marriage. And 2 of, her sons were still under 18, so Christmas was a big holiday for her. So she insisted on staying home for Christmas to be with her boys. Well, she pretty much just laid on a couch the entire day. The thing she complained about most was not being able to breathe. We, we did some research into, the remdesivir prior to getting sick, and we've seen what was happening to people from it. We put 2 and 2 together with the remdesivir and the ventilators, and we, you know, we assume we surmised on our own. They were killing people. So we promised each other that if either 1 of us got sick and went into hospitals, and we would do everything we could to deny the remdesivir and, the ventilators. Well, our time came up that 1 of us were gonna have to do deal with this. Well, she went into the hospital. I brought her in the day after Christmas to the emergency room. They immediately put her on the oxygen, and she started feeling better. They admitted her in. They wouldn't give her anything but remdesivir. The first emergency room I brought her to, they didn't even tell her what they were giving her. They just stuck it in her, and they because, you know, they were only letting the patient in. They wouldn't let me go in with her. So she kept her phone with her, and I asked her from outside, what are they giving you? And she said, I think it's the remdesivir. So I told her, pull that crap out of her arm and tell them you're leaving. So I made a u-turn because I was headed headed back home because, you know, there was nothing for me to do there at the hospital. So I turned around, and I went back to the hospital to get her. And I made my way inside to the emergency room where she was. It seems like they started employing a lot
0: of
20: oversized, orderlies at that point in time because there were some big dudes appeared out of nowhere to stop me from getting near near anywhere near my wife. Well, she signed the, the AMA papers. I got her out of there. She kept complaining about being short of breath, so I brought her home. I started looking for a way to contact, frontline doctors so I can get her ivermectin and, any other stuff to go with it. I already had hydroxychloroquine because of the lupus and and a Z Pak. I already had called my doctor, my personal doctor for that, and I went and picked it up. The only thing I was missing was the ivermectin part of it. So I was on a search for that, and I was also trying to get prescriptions for so I can get my own oxygen to bring home for her to help her breathe. In the meantime, she had bad anxiety, so the anxiety wasn't helping her breathing. So, she had my mom on the phone with calling then calling me, then my sister's getting on me. Take her back to another hospital. Take her to another hospital. And, so I brought her to a different hospital. And And as soon as we got in the door there, we started telling them she didn't want remdesivir. She wants something different, some kind of different treatment, and they refused to give her anything else. And they took her in. They admitted her. They put her on oxygen, and she felt okay with just the oxygen. But they kept telling her and kept putting it in her face that if she didn't take the remdesivir, she was gonna die. Every day, she would the first 3 days she was in, they wouldn't give her no steroid. They wouldn't give her any antibiotics. They wouldn't give her nothing. All they kept telling her was remdesivir, remdesivir, remdesivir. So the first 3 or 4 days, we stayed constantly in touch with each other through the phones, FaceTiming, texting, calling, you know, whichever way we possibly could. Being I wasn't allowed to get in there. So after about 5 days or so went by, she text me. It was maybe, I wanna say, 04:00 in the morning. The the time keeps sticking in my head for some reason for this. And, she text me and tells me she's gonna take the remdesivir. I think I I told her I I why? We we she says I don't know what to they keep on me about it. They keep telling me that if I don't take it, I'm gonna die. I said, but you know that if you take and she said, what about you? And there was more in our conversations with that, but I don't wanna get into it. She ended up taking the, the first 5 day, treatment. And for the first 3 days, she seemed okay that, there was no kind of side effects or anything from it. But after the fourth day, we started talking less and less. Contact between us became less. And then by the fifth day, I didn't hear from her at all. She didn't answer the phone. She didn't return any text messages. I called the nurse's station. They were telling me that because of her anxiety, they gave they were giving her a, opiates. They were giving her morphine. And I was like, why the fuck would you be giving her morphine for this? She's not in pain. And the only thing I could think of is they wanted to slow her breathing down more than it was already was because that's what an opiate does. It slows down your breathing. It slows your heart rate.
6: That's
20: right. And then they told me then they called me in the morning. It was
17: a Tuesday
20: Wednesday morning, they called me on the phone and told me they were moving her into ICU so they can, watch her better, and she'll be under better care because I'm just a regular COVID floor. There's too many patients to 1 nurse. In the ICU, there's less patients per nurse. Okay. Well, what am I gonna do? You know, here I was in, you know, in Linden, New Jersey. The hospital's up in Summit. So
2: who am
20: I to tell them any different? What you know, I couldn't stop them. Alright? The ICU nurse I spoke to, she's telling me about they have the Zoom calls that are hooked up in the rooms as soon as she's situated in her in her room that somebody will will get in touch with me to hook all of that up with the Zoom calls so I'll be able to just click on the link, and it'll turn on in her room, and I'll be able to to see her. And just when I feel like I'm in the room with her, it would be like they tell me. But it never made it that far because that night at 04:18AM, my phone rang, and it was the hospital's phone number. And they called to tell me my wife's heart stopped beating and that they did everything they could, but they couldn't save our life.
2: Timothy I'm so sorry, Timothy.
6: Incredibly incredibly sorry. And your wife was fairly young. She was in her 46. Right? You know, 46. And I I know you we sent your story in on CHBMP, and just you and Diane were trying to work out a time for a interview. But I would encourage anyone who has a story like this to put their to to submit their story to the COVID Humanity Betrayal Memory Project.
0: And He had all all these when I was listening.
6: Say that again.
0: I think he hit every 1 of the commonalities.
6: Yeah. Every 1 of the commonalities, the isolation, the only the protocol, the Emergency. Like, gaslighting. You know? Know? If you're gonna die, you're gonna die.
20: I I had I I I had 1 doctor. I asked him about writing a script prescription for ivermectin, giving her ivermectin, and he told me flat out, I'm not writing a script for that. I'm not losing my license. Just like that, those plain and simple words.
19: Yep.
20: I can still hear his voice in my head saying those words.
0: And bullying her into taking the remdesivir?
20: Yeah. They both did her.
2: Timothy, if you would like, you know, when you're when you're ready, you you know, tell your story at CHBMP. And, I have a thing that I'm doing where I take I'm trying to get everyone's stories out there as much as I can through what I'm doing in my platform. But when you tell your story, your story sounds very similar to my story, and I'm very sad for you right now. I wish I could give you a hug, buddy. What I'm gonna what what I'm gonna do for you is when you're done with telling your story, I'm gonna broadcast it and make it viral, because this is powerful, what you're telling us. This has happened to so many people, and I it needs to to stop.
0: And I'm gonna in the remdesivir class action suit.
2: Absolutely. Please join please.
0: You're not alone. We have 1,100 stories like this and, support meetings 6 nights a week.
2: I also, I I always recommend to people if maybe you're not the religious type, you gotta go talk to somebody about it. It's okay. I talked to someone about what happened to me. It's okay. You know? And when you're ready, tell us to when you're ready, come to us, and we'll help you, Timothy. Okay?
0: That'll be great too.
12: Okay. Yes,
2: sir. Thank you for that. Thank you, Steve.
16: Thank
20: you for giving me the opportunity to, put it out there.
6: Yeah.
20: Because I'm I can't I I just don't understand how this the the this stuff is still being used.
0: It is. We're gonna stop it. We're we're filing on the 20 seventh against Gilligan.
20: I just bought 1 of those bracelets.
0: Oh, good. Good. To you.
2: That's awesome. That's good.
0: Yep. Gotta wear it.
20: Because and then I heard I heard they're they're they're giving it to kids now too?
6: Yeah. They started giving it to kids last year. Right? 28 day babies enough. It was the only treatment that they would use for COVID, but then now they've started, doing it for, RFV. And then a couple weeks ago, we had somebody call us. They were trying to give it to their a 19 year old for West Nile. Jeez. Yeah.
0: Yeah. And they're still being incentivized to use it, but they, you know, it doesn't even matter what I mean, you could have kidney failure, and they'll still give it to you right now. But,
18: Can I can I can I ask a very, very stupid question? Because
12: I'm not
18: really stupid.
6: When the when
18: the FDA has approved that physicians can give ivermectin for COVID, why do they need an EU EUA? Exactly. Why do they or why do they need Gilead involved in an SOC?
0: Exactly.
18: So I've never it's a simple bloody logic. Right? If the FDA have approved the physician's grant whatever, why are physicians in the hospital putting in an SOC relating to something that that's actually harmful? That's the first thing.
0: Yep. It's
18: The second the second thing is, given that in Italy that everybody should be using lactoferrin, and in 16 days, every other treatment doesn't work including ivermectin, ironically, why lactoferrin hasn't been a defect standard of SOC care throughout the world. I don't understand it. So I think there's there's a lot of grounds to say that the HHS and f d FDA and CDC haven't actually done their patients', you know, their patients, livelihood in in the best in the best situation.
0: No. The the the goal is not to make us better.
20: Oh, they wanna kill us.
3: Yeah. And Joe
15: I'm not
6: saying took
18: your time. I'm not saying that. I'm not
8: saying that. Yeah.
18: I'm not saying that. I'm just saying I am. Take the logic. Take the take the reverse logic.
0: Yeah. I'm saying it because as we're you know, they think we're overpopulated. Populated. They're not trying to save us. It's clear with our data. I mean, it's it's sickening. It's happening.
20: I've been saying it, you know, before my wife died. Yeah. There's a genocide happening.
0: Exactly.
20: I've been trying since day 1 when all of this COVID thing started, and I I started seeing, like, comparisons from stuff in the past.
14: Mhmm.
20: And and and, I said I said to my wife, I said, they're trying to kill off billions of people here. And she's like, you're crazy. I was like, I don't think it matters if they get away with it or not. They're trying to do.
0: And Agree.
20: There it is 3 years later 4 years later now, and look at where we're at.
15: Mhmm.
20: Yeah. And I just had this discussion with my mother a couple of days ago. They're they're they're getting away with it.
0: The protocol, the vaccine, all this that they're doing to our food, they are clearly not trying to make us healthy. Oh, because it's truly about
3: don't even know. It's about money and power.
20: Thinks I'm all freaking nuts anymore because I read every every label. Every every item I pick up at the grocery store, I'm reading all the labels of what what's in it.
6: Oh, you have to.
22: And and then I
20: say then I turn and I say, this 1 might be good, but just because it's not listed on there doesn't mean it's not in there. And they're like, oh, you're nuts. They're not gonna put something in there that they don't list on it. I said, you wanna bet?
0: That they they are.
18: Yeah. I I just wanna I think everybody in America is becoming Amish.
0: Right? But Amish don't have
20: We we should.
0: Disorders or anything, and they don't get any vaccines. Exactly. They don't
20: have no auth they don't have no autistic kids.
0: Nope. They're on it. That's right.
20: That's a fact.
3: Yep. Do y'all follow Steve Kirsch? If if not, I highly recommend
18: I I love Steve. Me me and
15: Steve are good friends.
18: He's amazing.
20: Listen to him a few times.
3: Yeah. He he's really regularly. Yeah. I'm, you know, I think he's seeing things that shocked him that has have really shocked him. And I love the fact that he is getting so deep into this. Mhmm. And he's going down the path of, you know, what why are we even giving any vaccines and the whole vaccine injured and the autism. And, you know, it's, you know, it's shocking how many brilliant people out there, again, don't know anything about what's really going on. I actually met him. I actually went ahead and ponied up, and I I had dinner with him in San Antonio or not San Antonio, Dallas, I guess, Fort Worth back in, March or April. And he had never heard of chlorine dioxide, and I couldn't believe it. And, in fact, I I actually ponored up the money. I'm gonna go out to San Jose in October to get a to go to the dinner with, RFK junior and also Steve Kirsch. And it's like, I don't know if these people really don't know about these alternatives or if they just are too afraid. I know some people are afraid to talk about it, but this whole vaccine injured thing, you know, it's about kids with autism, but it's also about the COVID vaccine. And the you know, if if if y'all have not read read the, the Warren ivermectin, get it. Read it. It'll shock you. Get get RFK Junior's book, The Real Anthony Fauci, by Turtles All the Way Down. Horrific book. You will be shocked. But when you read all those books, you will understand. It'll put it'll put everything into perspective, and you'll understand why, as Joe just said, is, like, what's going on here? It's because the FDA and the CDC, they're they're primarily funded by the pharmaceutical companies. And who's investing in the pharmaceutical companies? Everybody in Congress, left
0: and right.
3: That's the answer. It's money and power, and it's tragic. And, you know, it's the only silver lining to this COVID thing is that things have gotten so bad that people are searching out alternatives, and things are being exposed. People are being exposed, and it's you know, I read The Turtles All the Way Down, and I had to put that book down a couple times and walk away. Because when I realized what The US has done to literally millions of children and their families for decades. It's heartbreaking, but read it. Recommend it. Give it out as Christmas presents to your friends. You know, people are in such denial. They don't want it.
18: It's even it it seems speaking Not not to
20: get off subject, but but I wanna know why Bill Gates is still walking around a free man. Yeah.
18: Yeah. That's that's another that's that's another big question. That's another day. We can do a big space on that 1.
0: We could.
18: I'll I'll give you a dollar. I'll give you a dollar.
2: The answer to
15: that now.
2: The military industrial complex is partnered with the communist Chinese regime and people like Bill Gates to do what they're doing. That's the
23: Mhmm. Yeah.
18: Yeah. But the but the the question was, why is he still walking around? And I said, I'll give a dollar to somebody who can He
2: has deep pockets.
18: Sure it's not
2: You gotta pay to play, guys. He has the deepest pockets probably next to Elon Musk, and he can pay for his his, freedom. I'll say it that way.
20: He can't pay me for his freedom, and neither and neither can Anthony Fauci.
18: I agree.
0: Eva Littleman.
3: Okay. Did did y'all see Elon Musk's post months ago or maybe it was last year? And he said after it was shortly after he took over Twitter, and he said his pronouns were prosecute Fauci.
20: Yeah. I saw that. Yeah.
12: That's
3: hilarious. See it.
0: It's funny where his mouth is. Right.
18: Yeah. But what has he done? Jack shit. So, you know, at the end of the day, that's that's what that's what the man is about. You know? We don't know if he's on that side or on another side. You know? At the end of the day, let's just close him off. You know?
0: He needs to put his money where his mouth is then. Yeah.
3: Agreed. Agreed. Yeah. I I I hope that he would do more, but I think he's, more than anybody else, has really opened people's eyes and especially because he was a big lefty, and all the lefties now hate him because they think he's now a hard right, and he's just ants asking questions. And
0: he But
12: And it's hard
20: as He still wants to put a chip in your head, though.
3: Oh, yeah. That's true. But we already have a chip in our hand right now as we're all on this call. So Right.
18: You're you're gonna love it. You're gonna love it because I sent Anna yesterday. Fauci said that he was he'd saved over
15: a million people, and he's
0: been blessed by God.
18: And and and she she started laughing, and and then she shared it. And and it's gone viral. So, you know, the whole the whole thing, the Vauci said that, you know, he should
15: be applauded that
18: to for saving a million people.
3: He's a big Yeah.
15: For fuck
18: fucking hell. You know?
0: Yeah. Mass
3: murderer. Yeah. You know, I was gonna say, you know, I think I think it's, Tom Renz and maybe even Todd Callender are are doing these lawsuits against the FDA and the CDC. You know, what I was shocked to find, which I mentioned earlier on the call, you know, we're wondering if, like, you know, doesn't the government know about these things and and what what is going on here? I actually have proof because I have all these copies of letters that were sent to Howard Allager when he created Alside Corporation, using chlorine dioxide, and they're all from the government. And I I look I I my jaw hit the floor when I realized the government has known about this forever. They've been participating in this. And to knowingly subvert something that could actually help people, it's like this goes back to the seventies and eighties. And I
20: think it goes back further than that.
3: Wafer. It does. But it's like okay. Even with HIV, there's I gotta I just looked at a, a paper that, several universities, and I I maybe it was, NIH, was testing chlorine dioxide with Howard Allager against HIV. And they're like, yep. Basically neutralizes it in less less than 30 seconds. And yet, why do we still have this going on? There's there's a process to, sanitize blood bags. How many people are still getting any kind of pathogen or who god knows what, right, from you need a blood transfusion? There there's so much evidence that the government has known about this and suppressed it and has been killing people. And, it just it's horrific to me. I I don't even I don't know where
15: to start.
2: It's it's
18: very it's it's very simple. It's very simple. Everything you you say that you know, you're you're an advocate for chloride dioxide. I'm an advocate for lactoferrin. Lactoferrin kills HIV. The the lactoferrin kills, COVID 19. It's been done in universities in including the Vatican, right, who funded all this shit in NIH and, North Carolina because that's where we all know that this come from. Right? So it's all paid for by the by the back. Okay? So, the very simple situation. Alright? It's, it's already there. It's already been published. And and the fact of the matter is it's that we're we're now in a situation where,
15: you know Come here, buddy.
18: The long short long long short, it's it's already been done. Yeah? Come here. Hello?
20: I'm still here.
18: So so I I got cut off there. It's really weird. You know, when I sort sort sort of said about the Vatican, fucking hell.
22: It's
3: probably Joe Biden tapping in.
18: Yeah. Probably. Yeah.
22: Oh, I'm
12: I'm sure they're listening.
0: We always have problems on this on this. Like, it's booted or something. I don't know what's
20: going on. Sure they're listening.
18: I must have I must have Fauci Fauci
12: talking in there.
7: Yeah. I got booted off,
0: like, 3 times last week. I don't know what's going on.
3: I I I think there is there is some positive news. I think it was, doctor Mary, Bowden, right, who, the Breathe MD?
0: Yes.
3: She had a lawsuit with, Jade Bhattacharya and I forget the other guy's name. And they just had you know, they had some hearings last week or week before, with the FDA.
18: That's correct.
3: And, you know, I think I don't know. I think that's I think it was just, like, preliminary hearing. I'm not sure exactly, but I think it goes forward. But, I mean, that was just, like, like, comical to hear this stuff.
13: No. It's good.
18: That that that was to prove that was to prove that she didn't act as a physician in bad faith, and she was granted correctly as you won 4 cases.
3: Thank god. And and 1 of
1: the things that she yeah.
3: Yes. When you when you saw the, the conversation, the FDA the the gal from the FDA was like, oh, we didn't tell anybody that they couldn't use ivermectin. I don't know what you're talking about. And, Meredith Bowden was like, I'm sorry. Here's your Twitter post that you said, hey, y'all. Stop use you're not a horse. Stop using, you know, ivermectin.
18: Exactly. Exactly. Exactly. And that
20: every late night TV shows, TV show host
12: Right.
20: Always telling everybody
3: to do. Yeah. So I I think this lawsuit that they have is is is really groundbreaking and I think will help open the door because I think they are are going to rule or if they have not already ruled that the FDA cannot prescribe, they cannot diagnose, they can simply make commentary. And but but what's happening
18: big which is a big showstopper because it means that the FDA has no power over over positions.
3: Right. But they but, yeah, they've been in they've been in basically, in enforcing their power by making these mandates and coming out with this information. So if if they can actually if it is then decided that, like, the FDA and the CDC, they're just there to provide information and, really, it's up to doctors to make their own decisions, then I think that will be a groundswell to enable doctors and pharmacists to to really say, okay. Well, now we're not afraid not afraid to talk about alternative methods. Because they are afraid, because they have lost their license and a bunch of crazy stuff has happened. So I think that's 1 positive that will impact I think, everything going forward. And it just showed how ridiculous the FDA has been and just total double speak and just total BS.
20: Dude, I've worked
18: for a while. That's that's that's very powerful.
3: Yeah. I think it's huge.
13: Joe, if you've got any of those lactoferrin studies, handy, some of the people might like to see them if you could put them in the bubble. It's just a suggestion. And
18: What do they want to see what do they want to see, Melissa? Do they wanna see antibacterial, antivirus, or anti cancer?
13: HIV 1 and maybe an antiviral. Okay. Just pick 2. Yeah. Yeah. Just so people can kinda get a feel for it. And then make sure if you're looking up lactoferrin stuff, for research that you're using a Brave browser, guys, or else you're not gonna see much. And this Todd calendar that you brought up, Snoop, I I just gotta tell you. I heard about him for the first time Thursday from my contact to Micah Bits, and she said that her and doctor Judy met with him and saw his evidence. And it's very compelling. And they do believe that something is gonna happen between October 3 through the eleventh. Mhmm. It's just kinda freaky because everybody's saying it's conspiracy, but, I'm I'm my my radar's on. Oh, my radar's on.
0: Yeah. No. There's I got to Todd almost daily, and there's something going on. I'm not, I don't know the exact date or something, but yeah.
2: To continue this magnificent, wonderful space of, compendium of information and knowledge. We have some requests. Let's go to my group here. I, let's see here. I have 2 requests. So I'm gonna let Laura Muncy speak because I see you have, wanted to speak. I don't know.
20: I have 1 more question I wanna ask about an attorney.
2: Fire away.
20: Has anybody heard of an attorney, Gregory
23: Kravovsky?
12: I don't know.
20: He's out of DC.
0: Yes. I know him.
20: You know him? What do you know of him? Is he
0: I know him personally.
20: Okay. He, I've been in contact with him a few times. I've sent him my wife's hospital records Mhmm. To go over. And, he's returned some calls to me, but I haven't heard from him of lately.
0: Yeah.
22: But
0: He basically he was interested in these cases. He came to a couple of MonaMy meetings, and he basically refers cases out, though. So he wouldn't actually represent you himself. He's in DC, but he works with attorneys across the country. I know of 1 case that he has referred out in the space. But, once you have your story in in your in our database and stuff, I'll I try to help everybody find an attorney. I can't guarantee it, but that's what I do full time.
20: Okay.
0: And Yeah.
20: Who are who are you and what's your name?
3: I don't
20: wanna write you down.
0: Cece with former feds.
20: No. Your first name is what?
0: CC or Carolyn, my full name. Carolyn.
5: Yeah.
20: Okay. You're
2: Are you what what what you're an attorney out of what state, sir?
12: No. I'm not He was
0: asking me if I knew Greg. I do.
2: Okay. That's fine. Welcome.
8: Yeah.
20: Yeah. Because he he asked me to send him, $200 so he can have his his, people go through through the hospital records and, you know, go over things and make sure that that I that I do have a case.
3: Yeah.
20: But I do because according to the hospital records, they followed the hospital protocol.
0: Yeah. Hold off on that. Let me let me send him shoot him an email and see, where he's at with that.
2: Oh, part pardon me, Timothy. I actually, it's Timothy speaking. I thought it was someone else. I'm sorry, Timothy.
0: Yeah. You can email me, or you we have your story. Right? We have your email your contact information?
20: Yes.
0: Okay. Yeah. I'll get in touch with you this week.
20: Okay. Great.
6: And I just asked the guys to invite him to make sure he's invited to the men's group to cc
0: Yeah.
6: So that he can stay up to speed with what's going on.
3: Yep.
0: Definitely so.
20: Yeah. That's the thing. I get emails for these groups, but it it's always telling me, central time.
6: Yeah. That's good.
20: And it always throws me off, and then I always miss the the meetings.
6: Oh, we're on for hours. Let me tell you.
12: We've never done a short meeting. We don't.
6: You know, if you can just join because if it says 07:00 central time, you can bet your boots that we are still on at 02:00 in the morning. No. Not not quite that sometimes, but we're at least on till 10 central. Right? 10, 11, 12.
20: Well, I live I live in New Jersey, so I'm on eastern time.
0: Yeah.
20: What's the is that an hour difference or 2 hour difference?
6: It's 1 hour difference 1 hour difference. And are you in contact with our New Jersey team? We have an outstanding New Jersey team. They literally just did a flyover. They did 5 billboards and a flyover over the Jersey Shore up and down the Jersey Shore in August. These women are amazing.
20: I I didn't see it personally live, but I saw video.
7: Yeah. I'm a get you connected. Flyovers.
18: Okay. I'm I'm gonna come back really quickly. Okay. 3 examples of major research.
6: Can you hold on can you hold that thought for 1 second? Because Drew's been waiting a long time. Just to just let if Drew could just then or do you
2: Yep.
6: Will you remember? I'll remind you.
25: Thank you. I appreciate that.
6: Yeah. Go ahead, Drew, and then we'll go to the research.
25: Yeah. Really good stories, Tim. Yeah. It's, we've been through some some tough stuff, all of us, in in kinda different ways. So some of you heard my story.
6: Yeah.
25: Serving in the Minnesota National Guard, everyone's nudging me to get the the vaccine. The VA sent an email saying, come get it. We got it early. Family encouraging it just and my university was telling me to get her or be suspended. Work was a federal contractor. So I got the vaccine and immediately got cold like symptoms, turned into muscle aches, turned into tingling in my hands and feet. Wow. And then I wake up the next morning in full paralysis. Could only really move my feet and hands, my trunk, my abs, you know, legs, everything's turned to just like like an alien's taken over my body or a robot. It's it was the strangest feeling ever. And so I go in the hospital, and they say I have Guillain Barre syndrome and, rushed me into the neurological ICU in the in the bigger hospital. And, yeah, immediately kinda go to town. Different specialists are coming in. It's a revolving door of neurology and respiratory. They said, they need to put me into a coma for well, they they say a coma. They, like, they didn't know how long I was gonna be in there. It ended being 7 days in order to do the IVIG and plasmapheresis. So I was coma for a week. And, in order to stop it, the spread of whatever it was, basically, my immune system turned on my body and started ripping apart the nerves, which caused the paralysis and and worse. But they're able to stop it with those treatments. But it left me completely paralyzed after that, so I was stuck in the VA hospital for for 6 months just trying to get any kind of, my life back. I watch a lot of Netflix and a lot of movies and podcasts. I I wish I knew about Twitter spaces back then. But, yeah, I had to do anything to keep my mind busy. I was in constant pain. They pumped me full of every, probably, you know, drug, whatever pain killer that we think of. Yep. I've I've sent all patches. They're switching every 3 days, you know, everything, oxidiluted, all the stuff. I was I was in and out of either pain or, you know, kind of forced sleep. And so it's it's complete mess. I'm it's it's gonna be my comeback story, my origin story, but I gotta figure out how to kinda live again differently. It's, it has gone away. The the doctors said more they said they say so generally. It's like most people fully recover within 12 months. And I it I went way past 12 months. It's been, I think, 2 and a half years now. It's happened early in 02/2021, and it's just a mess. I'm medically retired now from the the army, so I can't serve anymore. I can't even concentrate on computers or typing with the peripheral neuropathy. My hands shake. And I hate talking about myself and all these things that I can't do, but I just wanna make sure that we're we're talking, we're connecting everyone with their different skills and abilities and stories and family members and selves that were affected by all this. Can't let it happen again. It's gonna come back in a different version and different thing. Like like, we a lot of talk you were talking about in the past hour about the corruption, the the, the control, the manipulation in every angle, the more you look into it. So it's it's ridiculous. I'm gonna do whatever I can to get my, well, get my life back. And if I can't get that same 1, I'm gonna get, you know, something different where I'm helping people out, starting my own business, traveling, and just kinda doing doing the best I can with with all these limitations. But it's the only way I can, you know, keep my mind, in the game, basically, is to figure out how to have a purpose and and keep going now that my my military service is done, and I just gotta change things up. But like I said, these connecting on these spaces is amazing, and, keep doing it. Keep putting these on. They make a difference. Awesome. Yeah. If anybody's got questions, I'm I'm happy to ask. I I put some some links and some verbiage in the in the notes below and, just a little bit more about my story. I started a YouTube channel and had a videographer basically interview me for, like, 4 hours and turned into a little little docuseries. So feel free to check out that Drew outstanding in field on, on YouTube. It's on my, my pay my profile too somewhere on there on the top. So Yep. I've already checked it
6: out. It's good.
25: Everybody Thank you. Yeah. He the videographer did a great job. Yeah. So she helped out my realtor friends, and he said he was able to help me with with my story that that since it's so hard for me to share. So thanks so much.
6: I I hope you'll tell your story on CHBMP, as well, and we can link it all in that as well. So, think about that and put your story in. We'd love to
25: I'm happy to do that. I've I've given some podcast interviews and and talked to people, and and Awesome. I'm doing more speaking engagements and and, yeah, doing whatever I can. I'm I'm open to it as as long as it's, it'll help make a difference. I'm Yeah. You can count
6: me in. Thank you so much. Thank you so much. Alright. I want to, just we've got a bunch of people that are waiting to speak, so I'm gonna go through them first. And, because we've we had some people that waited a long time and left, and I hate to see that. So I'm just gonna give it a shout out here. It we've got Denise and then Joe Desirah. Not to be confused with the other Joe. So Denise and then Joe Desirah, then Melissa, then Comfy, and then Joe Conlustro. So so Denise and then Joe DeCera. Me, Denise, or someone else? You yeah. You, Denise. Did you have your hand up to speak? No. I didn't. Oh, if I did, I'm sorry. No. It's okay. So then Joe Joe Desira, Melissa, Comfy, and then Joe Conlustro. So Joe DeCera first, then Melissa.
13: I'm just gonna say that I said what I wanted to say to with Joe to get him to put the link up and about, Todd calendar.
6: Oh, okay.
13: My hand back after. So
6: Okay.
13: Once Joe goes, whoever was after me is next.
6: Alright. So, Joe DeSara, report to the Twitter spaces, please. Joe DeSara, report to the Twitter spaces.
20: I think they heard that in Walmart.
6: Joe. Come on, Joe. Joe. Alright. We'll come back to Joe DeCera. We'll go to Comfy, and then we'll go to Joe DeCera and then Joe Conlustro. Hello. Hi.
12: Yeah. Hi. So this is my first time speaking on a space, and, so I I just had something very short. I just wanted to, commend everyone for your courage, and, it just breaks my heart of all the injuries. And I I just I just pray all you guys keep keep up the good fight. And and I just wanted to say too how everyone knows how evil the CDC and the FDA and the pharmaceutical industries are. I'll just say my my brother-in-law took the jab, and he has had an extremely low heart rate, and is being monitored by a cardiologist. So we really don't know long term, but this was so upsetting to my husband. And he was on antidepressants for a number of years. And with all of this COVID business and worried about his brother, he took his life in November.
0: Oh. And yeah.
15: And so
22: to hear that.
1: I'm so sorry.
12: Yeah. I am as well. It's been really hard, and I I'm not trying to make this about me. I just I just wanna say that this whole COVID stuff and the evil that these that these, companies and these these, federal agencies have done, it's just it's it's crossed over into other areas as well in terms of depression and antidepressants and the vaxx and all of it. I mean, 1 way or another, they wanna get they wanna get so they wanna take out so many of us. Yeah. So, I'm just I just wanna thank you all for your courage and for fighting, and, thank you all. Thanks for letting me speak.
6: No. Thank you for speaking and and talking about it. Thank you.
12: Thank you.
0: I'm sorry. It's heartbreaking.
12: Yeah. It is. 24 years of marriage and and left me and my, 14 year old son. So and and this crazy world, it's kinda scary. You know? Yeah.
2: Yeah. Well, I'm sending you sending you hugs and peace to your heart. So I'm sorry this happened to you.
0: Thank you.
2: Yes, ma'am.
12: We just need to take you
6: know, we need
12: to we need to get rid of these agencies, and we need to call these pharmaceutical companies out because I really think that this, these antidepressant medications are just so bad.
0: I agree. They're so bad.
2: They sure are. Absolutely. They are.
6: I'm so sorry.
12: God. Thank you. Well, I just wanna commend everyone's courage and, keep up the good fight. But I I saw I saw this, this, I'm trying to think of what you would call it. This, this whole thing was just like a a a big red flag for me when everything was was starting to come out. I don't know. I've never really, taken to, people telling me what to do. Mhmm. And when when people sorry?
20: Join the club. I'm right there with you. I've never looked at people telling me what to do.
12: Yes. And when when they're pushing it and telling us what we have to go do, it just raised the raised the red flag for me. My I guess my Spidey sense went off. Mhmm. And, I just I just feel so sorry for all the people that had so much fear and felt like they had to do it to keep their jobs and their livelihoods. It's it's disgusting. It's disgusting. I hope they get theirs.
6: Yes. Yes. Thank you.
20: I pray every day that they get theirs.
12: I do too, 1 way or another.
6: Thank you for your courage. Just to be able to speak up and say that.
12: Well, thanks, everyone.
6: Okay. Thanks.
20: You're welcome. And you stay strong.
12: Thank you. I'm trying. Thank you.
6: The, next person is, Joe Decira and Joe and then Joe the other Joe.
0: Is that our Joe Desirah?
6: Yeah. That's our Joe Desirah. If he ever Hi, Joe.
15: Hey. How are you doing?
12: Hey. Hi, Joe.
15: I hit the to talk button by mistake, but now that I have the floor, hello, everybody.
6: Hello.
15: Wish you all well. Working on my, working on my story. The rewrite.
6: The rewrite of the story? The rewrite of the rewrite?
15: The rewrite of the rewrite of the rewrite, and this one's for this purpose.
6: Eventually, we'll get to the interview. Joe is a survivor like myself, so, we have a survivor group for survivors of the deadly hospital protocol every other Tuesday. So, if anybody is a survivor, they can join us. Thanks, Joe. Thanks for joining.
15: Thank you. Thanks for calling me our Joe. I appreciate it.
6: Yep. You are our Joe. Appreciate it. So now the other Joe, Joe, is it
12: let's see.
6: Yes. Thank you.
18: Yeah. No. No. I'm just I'm I'm just, like, livid with, the world because I think, you know, we're now living in a world of, strangeness. I don't even know, you know, how people can sleep at night. I can't even understand how I can sleep at night. You know, we're now facing situation where our government wants us dead, us us us dead.
6: Mhmm.
18: You know, we're we're now facing where our health systems want us dead. And the doctors that treat us may want us dead. And then the question is, where do we all fit in in all this nonsense? And we're not answering this, and then WEF? Do you represent people above above us? Mhmm. Or who are you? Who are you at the lowest level? And that's something we've all got to now look look at our politicians because I don't think any of them represents you or me. Yep. And and we need we need to call it out now.
0: Not anymore. They don't Well think they have for a
20: good 25, 30 years.
6: We need to be in their business. Like, there's not enough people in politics for 10 years now, and the lack of people willing to out a politician that is bought and paid for is astounding. But most people don't even know what's going on in their own county or state or whatever, And we need to we need to wake people up. We nobody's coming to save us. We have to do it ourselves. Have to.
20: A lot of people think Donald Trump's coming to save us, but
6: We have to do it ourselves. I don't
22: believe that at all.
6: We we have to all politics starts local. We've we've gotta be in our our mayor's business, our city council's business, our school board's business, our county you know, I think people got a big rude awakening when the emergency declarations came in because they never thought about who they, voted for in the county commissioner races, and they never knew how much power a county commissioner would have in a state of emergency, and they people got a real a real eye opener on
20: And a rude awakening.
6: Yeah. What their can we were lucky in our county because our county commissioner was very constitutional and declared every business essential. And so, we were super lucky, but most counties were not that lucky. So we have to be we we have to you know, there's an old saying, you get the government you deserve and sometimes you get it good and hard. We have to get ourselves a better it's up to us. Up to us. We need to wake up. But with that note, Miriam Miriam Belt Map. Hi. Our Miriam. That's our Miriam.
1: Hi. Hi, Gail. Hi. I just wanted to say a couple of things. First thing to, Drew and to Comfy Numb. Drew, thank you for your service. My husband was a veteran who was murdered by the Remdesivir protocol, and he would be proud to know
20: Sorry to hear that.
1: That, Drew, that you are standing up and joining the fight. Okay? And for Comfy Numb, you're in my prayers, and, it really strikes my heart to hear your story. And if you never need to talk to anyone, reach out to me. I'm 1 of those that's up half tonight, and I will be there for you. The third thing I wanna say is I'm noticing that that the common theme is that we all have to find our place to stand in the fight, and we have to speak the truth relentlessly because you're right, Gail. Nobody's coming to save us except us. And if we don't stand up and if we don't draw others in with us, we don't have nearly the chance that we need to have, and it's gonna take every single 1 of us in the areas where we are equipped to do that. And, I just want to encourage everybody to stay in the fight, and I love you all.
20: Thank you.
6: Thanks, Miriam. And Miriam walks the talk. She is in the fight. So let me tell everyone while because that's such a great opportunity to tell you guys what we do at for so at former feds, we we we do have support groups almost every night of the week except for Saturday nights. We're here, and it's on the Twitter space or x space or whatever we call it now. And we're here, and it is kind of like a support group, but in it's an educational and just a great platform to to, have these conversations. But every other night of the week, we have a support group. Except for Sundays, that's God's day.
0: And we have a daytime 1 too.
6: And we have a daytime 1. Yes. We have a daytime 1 on Tuesdays that Denise runs or facilitates. Denise facilitates a, 1 for parents who've had a child killed by the protocols or the shots, and she facilitates the daytime 1. 1 of our widows, Erin, she does the Tuesday night 1. I facilitate the survivor group, and I facilitate the opposite weeks of the survivor group, I facilitate a Catholic group because I'm Catholic. And then, on Wednesdays, we have the citizen task force meeting. We have a citizen task force. We have have a citizen task force that is volunteers that work that volunteer their time on several committees that we have such as our interviewers, our content team, our social media team, our, we have a legislative committee. We have records, medical records committee. We have, victim outreach committees. We have a lot of Media. Support. Fundraising. We have a lot of like, if there's a play if you have a talent, there's a place for you to plug in. And so on Wednesday nights, we have our citizen task force meeting, and people who are interested in that task in joining the task force can can join that meeting. On Thursdays, we have, a woman's group called Soul Care. It is a bible study and a support group. And it what we have and Thursday, we have our men's, support and action group, which is facilitated by Huckleberry here and a widower named Joel. So we and then Friday night, Cece, American granddaughter here, runs a fabulous night owl meeting because we realized y'all don't sleep.
0: So Nope.
20: We don't sleep.
6: And so, it was necessary to have a nighttime meeting, especially on the weekends when people are struggling. Because not only do we want you to put your stories in and do an interview and get it out there, we want to give you an opportunity to say, okay. Now I told my story. Now what what can I do? Like Miriam was saying, how do I fit in the fight? How can I how can I, you know, put my armor on and get out there with the on the battlefield and do something and make sure that what I went through was for wasn't for nothing? And so we have that answer, and we we have a place for you to get plugged in and to be with, other people who are fighting the good fight.
0: And about Monday. You forgot Monday.
6: Monday. Oh my gosh. How could I forget Monday? Monday is our big support group. Meaning, like, everyone, it's it's it's, vaxx injured, protocol, protocol victims. Any type of crimes against humanity victim is on that call. Whistleblowers are on the call. Some of the doctors that are in the fight, anyone who wants to join that call can join that call, and that is our big Monday night meeting. We give updates about the projects we're working on. We we Lawsuits. Lawsuits. Everything.
20: Does that start at?
6: That starts 7. Everything is at 7PM central.
12: So, yeah,
20: you guys are all out of Chicago or something?
6: We're out of Texas. Texas. Okay.
3: Our founder actually lives in New Jersey. Yeah.
6: Our founder in New Jersey.
0: In New Jersey. Great New Jersey group.
6: But you know us Texans Yep. We just everything's text. Like, CC's in Texas. I'm in Texas. Huckleberry's in Texas. Andy there is in Texas.
10: Yep. We're
6: lots of
2: I will say this about Texas. If y'all don't know about Texas, you ever come to Texas, we're different than everybody else. We do things differently. They're all scams. That's Texas.
5: We're a little different.
6: Oh, yeah. Denise is in Texas too.
20: We do things we do things different here in Jersey too.
6: A lot different. I live in Texas.
2: I'm sure. And they know what I I respect all of The United States. Every part of this country that I've seen is fabulous, and, we're 1 big happy family. And we need we need to remember that because World War 1, World War 2, Vietnam, North, Korea, there are many men and women who fought, gave up their life so that we can have what we have. So long live The United States.
6: And so I I want I want to encourage like, this is this is the thing. It has this has happened everywhere. The those 25 commonalities that we have on CHBMP, .org/commonalities, those 25 commonalities happened everywhere. Ev it happened everywhere. So,
0: Gail, can I interject real quick? A couple more things that we do Yes. Besides the support meetings and the task force and the committees and I was probably get yeah.
6: I was probably getting there, but go ahead.
0: Oh, sorry. When we do your story, we build a case file, and it'll have all the details of the case and then a written account, and then we do live video testimony. And that's all stored in, a case file. So I I would look for attorneys all the time. And if I find 1 that's in their state, then I send your case file to them. Also, we have a group. Sorry. I'm out of breath. I was on the treadmill. We The People 50. And so the the web the web address is WeThePeople50.com, and that's our vaccines, action group. So I work with doctor Jansy Lindsey, doctor McCullough, Sasha Latacova, Kevin McKernan.
18: We do people
20: 50 dot com?
6: Yeah. It's WethePeople50.com. Yeah.
0: We're going state by state to the county commissioners and to, the AG if they'll listen to us to get the shots recalled based on their contamination alone.
6: Yeah. So wewethepeople50.com. It's Wethepeople50 recall the shots. You sound you I don't want you to have a heart attack, Cece. Right. And if you if you're interested in joining the, support groups, hold on. I'm gonna make sure I
19: c h
0: b c h b and
3: p and then
0: click on document your story, and then it's up at the top. That's
6: group groups, it's It's no. It's under there too. Is it at the top for the support groups? Okay. Yeah. So you click on document your story, and then you'll see support groups at the top. If you want to join, the task force, it's formerfedsgroup.org/join, and you just fill that out. It'll come to me, and I'll add you to the Monday or to the Wednesday meeting. But just, you know, because it came up what you know, to get in the fight. We've got a lot of ways for you to get in the fight.
0: And just for the record, former everyone's like, feds? Oh my gosh. The the whole keyword is former feds. Our founder was a former federal prosecutor of 21 years, and he got out of government because he saw the corruption in government and decided to fight against it. Yes. So he's he's represented many j 6, political prisoners, who were put in solitary for 2 years because they wouldn't take the jab even though they were found innocent, 2 years later. And he's, on the team for to file the cost action against Remdesivir, and he's representing some protocol cases as well.
6: That's right. He he's a hell of a guy. He's a great guy. He's a constitutional purist and a heck of a singer.
15: Yeah. Can can I ask another question?
6: You sure can.
20: It's not really it's off topic, but not off topic. It's about, vaccine injuries. Mhmm. I know that pharmaceuticals got their, immunity from the government. But what about what's going on? Is anything happening about with people that have really gotten injured from these vaccines? Like, the first go around of vaccines, not the new crap that they're putting out now. But I got a friend of mine who's going through kidney failure. It's definitely from the vaccine. She was perfectly fine before she got them. And and now it's getting it's getting worse, and now she's complaining about pain in her legs. And I'm starting to think now the clots are coming in to that.
6: Doctor McCullough doctor if you haven't seen doctor McCullough's, protocol for that, you need to check follow him on Facebook, the nattokinase, bromelain and checkpoint.
0: Ar cucabine. Yeah.
20: Alright. I did tell her about that. I don't know if she actually went and got it because she's at she gets discouraged a lot over things. And she's at the point to where she's like, why should I even bother?
0: We have a large support group for Vexenger too. There's about 4,400 people, and it ran by Kat Parker. I encourage, you know, you to get a hold of us so we could get her an invite to that.
6: Yeah.
23: Okay.
20: Yeah. I'll definitely, see if I could get her in into 1 of the groups
0: 1 thing that
20: that we could put her on it.
0: 1 thing you won't find a lack of with us is support. I'll
6: be Exactly.
0: Yeah. Whatever you need, there there are people are up at all hours to talk, to help you with whatever you need. Also We don't sleep.
2: Have if you ever have any if you since you're in the Jersey area, I don't know anyone in the in in medical community in complimentary medicine in that area, but I know people that probably do. And if you ever have a health concern that, you know, you don't wanna go to a regular doctor, you wanna have maybe a second opinion, you know, let me know. Just just message me, and, I'll ask around for you, sir. Yes, sir.
0: We we also have, a doctor that's on our team, doctor Bain. He's licensed in '15 states across the country, but he can treat in any state. And his his he's on our side. He thinks just like us. He treats, you know, the ivermectin and the early treatment protocols. He saves many people off the inhalators. His, his website is docintheloop.com. And he he's an amazing person.
20: Doc, d o c?
0: D o c in the loop dot com. So if you come down with any kind of illness or whatever and you don't trust to go into anywhere, just just get a hold of doctor Bain.
20: How do you spell his name?
0: B a I n, Timothy? Doctor Bain.
15: What's that?
1: Timothy, this is Miriam. I put in the chat a link to doctor McCullough's protocol for you.
0: Thank you, Miriam. Thank you, Miriam.
6: Yeah. Because that's a great I even started doing that 1 because he recommended it for people who Getting shed. Who are getting shed on or who are, who had COVID, you know, because the pro it's the pro spike protein. I do wanna get to, SMA.
16: Yes. SMA. Hi, guys. How is everybody? Hello. I just wondered if y'all had seen all the Tennessee news about Pfizer lately. We, it was I mean, it just I'm starting to be amazed. I honestly think Tennessee is a swamp more than I thought. There's so many connections, but the biggest thing, James O'Keefe showed up at the board meeting in Williamson County because the VP on the board is basically the VP of Pfizer, and they're getting ready to make him over the school board. And parents are having a fit about it because back in 02/2021, he was pushing the mask on the kids and all the kids to get vaccinated. I mean, imagine that. Right? Because he's on the Pfizer board. But the biggest thing is when they had the meeting going on, they didn't want to continue, and they were trying to turn the mic off. And the lady who had invited James O'Keefe there was like, what are you doing? You know? He has a right to be here. And this is what really troubled me. And, of course, they thought it was funny, but, supposedly, a veteran escorted James O'Keefe out of the meeting, and so they just thought that was wonderful. Well, reason I'm bringing this up is not only that happened, but now I realized that the mayor who's in Nashville now, our new mayor, that he is connected with Vanderbilt. And the more I've been digging lately because I've been talking to the attorney general's office in Tennessee, in Nashville. His secretary has been very helpful, telling me what I need to do next. And she said, look in all these connections. You know? I didn't even realize it, and, and hopefully, I'm not stepping on anybody's feet because I know there are people who have good intentions that are in the medical world. You know, my sister's a nurse. She's a VA nurse, and she tries to help people. She's not 1 that would hurt someone. Although she doesn't believe my dad was harmed, she still doesn't wanna believe that, but I think she's starting to see a little bit of things because she doesn't understand how Vanderbilt is so powerful in fact that now they're even, a part of our mayor who just got elected in Nashville. The czar, they called him the COVID czar, in fact, they call him the Fauci of Nashville, if you can believe that, is, on his transition team. And he's the same guy, that wrote the book The COVID Hotspot because he was the 1 who gave all the directions for all the metro public schools to shut down during COVID in 2020 in Nashville even though he sent his kids to a private school, and he was also over the pretty much protocol, like, what was given to my dad at Vanderbilt. So it just blows my mind when you start seeing all these connections and even the lobbying that went on with all these people and how it's kinda like what y'all were saying earlier. We didn't realize it's not just the person who's the president, the person who's in congress out in DC. It's people that are in our own towns, the mayors, the the school board. I mean, these these things have been so infiltrated, and we didn't even realize it until it's, like, right there in front of us. And, you know, and I don't know what to do about it. I mean, I'm fighting. I'm in this fighting mode right now where I'm like, I told my mom tonight, and she was crying about it because we found out so much now lately of Vanderbilt and how they've just ugh. It's awful, all the things that's connected with this. And as you know, my dad was in the early part of the remdesivir. He was in the trials that they had when they knew that they were no good, and all the connections of that. But now we're starting to realize, and I'm sure y'all have heard of Metabiota. Metabiota, there's a guy who's been researching, and I sent it to Charles Wright, and he's been looking at it too. And there was a scientist who came back to me, because I guess he saw what I was saying. He said, you realize Vanderbilt was ground 0. I was like, what? You know? And I start looking at it, and it really does seem that way. I mean, I don't know for sure, but I think they had a big part in all this with the protocol because all the other hospitals in Tennessee, would say, well, we're following the Vanderbilt protocol. And it's just sickening when you think and they even got
11: an an award.
16: This is what really got my mom and I crying about it. We were upset, and I just told her, I I'm ready to to go after these people, you know, and and stop this stuff. I mean, I know like I told the attorney general's, secretary, I know I can't bring my dad back, but enough of these deaths already. These people, it should be stopped. This this protocol should not be allowed. They know what it does, and they're still doing it in these hospitals. They're still forcing the test that they know causes them to become the hostage in the ICU, like what happened with my dad. I mean, all this stuff is still being done, and this is what really sickened me. I found out that the Tennessee Hospital Association, and I'd never I mean, I don't know all these things, but I found out that they gave Vanderbilt an award for their remdesivir protocol. They gave them the president award.
20: You gotta be fucking kidding
16: me. I'm not. I wish I was. I'll have to send you the proof of it. It's just disgusting.
20: You I believe you.
0: You don't
20: have to send it to me.
23: I don't wanna
16: send it to you. I mean, it's just
12: you just
16: can't believe how evil these people are, and they they don't even seem like they're worried at all. They just keep doing it. And the thing that I've realized too, there was a lottery. I know that may sound strange, but when my dad was was killed in in with the protocol, he didn't make it through. They gave him fentanyl. They gave him all this other stuff that I had no idea until I started looking at the notes.
20: What are we getting fentanyl for?
16: I don't know. I have no idea, but I know that just a little grain of it is deadly.
6: Yeah. Everyone gets fentanyl. Like, almost every story that we have documented, they get fentanyl fentanyl. That's why the, bracelets the medical alert bracelets say allergic to remdesivir slash veclary, baricitinib, and fentanyl because those are the main drugs that we have found that they're using to kill people.
20: My wife didn't get fentanyl. They they gave her morphine.
16: Yeah.
20: But not not no fentanyl. I guess the fentanyl, they're just it's a
15: new thing they added into it.
0: Well, to
2: add to what you guys are saying, and the prison system has been having a shortage of midazolam the past few years, and I'll let you figure out the rest.
6: Oh, yeah.
12: Exactly. Oh, that's awful.
6: Well been killing COVID patients with it.
16: What I was gonna say and I don't wanna take anybody some more time because I know other people wanna talk, but I found out and what I realized now is that, I came across something where some certain amount of people went you know, they they made it through, not my dad and the other people that were with him. It was almost like a lottery. Like, okay. We're gonna let this group of people be okay with remdesivir because we're not gonna we're gonna give them something extra that will make them okay versus this group's gonna get all this stuff plus fentanyl, and they're gonna die. I mean, I know it sounds crazy, but I really am starting to think that there was something like that because I've met some people who say, oh, you know, they they can't understand how remdesivir could be deadly. Their loved 1 was put on it, and they came home, and they're fine. They have a little health issues, but they're fine. It just, you know, it starts making me think there's something more sinister here that that they thought they could do this to keep us from paying attention. You know?
6: I don't know. And your dad your dad was killed in Tennessee? Yes.
16: Uh-huh. No. Yeah. That my, it was, April 13. He went in on the seventh. He had no breathing issues whatsoever. He was just dehydrated, and they killed him. We couldn't have a say in it either. He was 82, but when the doctor 1 of the doctors, saw him, they actually told and I remember it's in the notes too that they did not realize you know, they they couldn't believe his age because he, you know, he worked out. My dad was really strong for his age. He you wouldn't know he was 82. And they were shocked when they saw, you know, who he was. And, in fact, 1 of the doctors who was really nice like I said, there's some that were nice, but the ones that were in the controlling part weren't. And they were saying how, you know, he seemed to be doing fine, and then all of a sudden, it was like they just wanted to push this wonder drug. You know? Oh, it's the bee's knees for COVID patients, and, you know, we didn't hear anything else but good things.
6: Yeah.
16: And, you know, we just felt like we were so tricked. You know? We Yeah. It was early on, but they knew because of the Ebola trials.
6: Yeah. Right. Exactly. Is yours did you put your story in at CHBMP? Yeah. Yeah.
16: Yeah. My mom and I, we yeah. But Yeah. Mainly do it for her because she can't it's just too hard for her. She started crying tonight and said, I know I'm a marshmallow. I said, it's alright. I'm gonna and I you know, like I said, my main thing is I just don't want this to continue to happen, and it shouldn't still be happening, and it is. There's still in fact, June of this year, they stopped making it the main treatment, but it's still being used. She talked to a a friend that is, knows, you know, because the the doctor was telling them they still use it. It shouldn't even be used. That's what I don't understand. It should have been Yeah. Shut it down.
20: I can't understand that neither.
6: Was your dad your dad was killed in, 2020 or 2021?
16: '20 '20. He he he was killed in April. And and, you know, the other thing, he was a retired lieutenant colonel, so that really bothers me too, the fact that he, you know, zone governor. I mean, I
20: So you're high. Right?
16: Yeah. That he Yeah. I mean, you know, not that he's better than anyone, but it just breaks my heart that they did this to our veterans. Hear that so much that that was the ones who really they I mean, they just had no care for him. You know? Yeah.
0: That's awesome.
6: I I remember I remember your story. Your dad your dad is Frank. Right?
12: Yes. Uh-huh.
16: Yeah. His name was Frank Carter, and, he, you know, he was I mean, honestly, I really was shocked when when he didn't come home because, you know, he gotten sick before, but he is so strong. He'd had a quadruple bypass years before that, in 02/2008, and that's why they wouldn't do the hydroxychloroquine. But now as I find out, they knew that the hydroxychloroquine was okay because they did these trials called the ORCID trials. And then that's right when Fauci told them to shut it all down because he was getting remdesivir. So, I mean, they knew what they were doing, and they're still doing it. That's what Yeah.
13: I yeah.
22: It's just
18: can't really happen. This
2: is that I have a friend I went to high school with. I don't know what happened to the guy. He He kinda just disappeared, but he served tours in Iraq. And, this is before COVID, of course. He, he was an he serves, I wanna say, 4 tours Uh-huh. In Iraq.
6: Yeah.
2: His mother his mother his mother 1 day calls me when he comes back home, you know. He's severe PTSD. This is a guy who who saved people's lives, by the way. This is a guy who almost killed himself to save his men. Aw. So his mother 1 day saying he's using his bed as a machine gun turret. That's how bad PTSD is. Yeah.
6: And I'm
2: thinking, these men and women who picked a gun up and went through this hell
10: Yeah.
2: Then are by their own government to go basically die young, take this experimental drug shot, whatever, you know, so you feel better. And then they have permanent injury where they have paralysis or they're dead.
0: Mhmm.
2: It's unbelievable. It's unbelievable.
6: Oh, yeah. And I I know your you know, of course, your mom, like I mean, if I remember correctly, I mean, they were married
16: 61 and a half years.
6: Yeah. 61 years. Right? Yeah. Because they got married young, and your mom yeah. I mean, of course, she's I mean, of course, she's a she she she's still I mean, it's the grief and the trauma she's had to go through all these years.
16: Yeah. I mean, I think it's shocking to her that that nobody's doing anything. Like, she, you know, she says, you know, you hear congress talk about it. It. That's all they do is talk about it. They don't Yeah. I mean, how can they allow these murders to happen and keep happening? That's what you know, she just doesn't I mean, now they're giving remdesivir to infants, and that's being allowed.
6: I know. 28 old baby.
0: Not not for long.
20: Not for long. Crazy.
16: Yeah. It is crazy. It it is so evil. And and, you know, my whole thing is I I can't believe that this you know? And I'm sure everybody's familiar with Klaus Schwab, you know, with the COVID reset.
0: Who is
20: the h n I c.
16: Right. Who made him the authority of who lives and who dies? I mean, why didn't somebody take him out? That's what I I mean,
12: it's hard.
20: It goes it goes deeper. It goes a lot deeper than that.
11: Yeah. But
16: you know, it what it's just it sounds so crazy when you're thinking about all the things that are connected. That that's the thing. Like I said, the Metabiotic, you know, that's connected with Vanderbilt. It's connected with our hospitals. The you know, all these people met in New York before COVID even hit us talking about event 2 0 1.
6: That's why we need that's why we we're kinda that's why we're doing all the things that we're doing because we really need to wake people up to the to the big picture, the Mhmm. You know, that The plan. Yeah. Right? I mean, like, the stuff
20: they plan and they had in place for years.
15: Oh, yeah.
14: It's not
6: about each little thing. It's it's collectively everything. I wanna get to, so there's 2 people got their hands up. So JP and then Comfinem. JP. And I know these aren't your Christian god given names that your mama gave you, but JP and Comphynom.
22: Okay. I'm gonna defer to Comphynom because I believe he or she had her his or her or me. So I'll go after them.
6: Alright. Comfy num and then Jamie.
20: Comfy num. I keep thinking of Pink Floyd when I hear that.
0: Well, that's been my
12: that's kinda what I was thinking of when I added that. I I just you had said something about going to commissioner's courts, and, I I just wanted to say I mean, before, you know, my husband took his life, I was very involved in local politics. And, I have a a a group of ladies that I'm close to that go to the commissioner's court regularly.
6: Mhmm.
12: So if I'm in Texas as well, and, I'm so happy that my representative in the house is Dan Crenshaw. I mean, what can I say?
20: Woah. Woah. Dan Crenshaw is a World Economic Forum company.
12: I know. I know. I was I was sarcastic. I was Oh, okay.
0: I didn't
20: catch the sarcasm there, so that's why I I think you're
6: feedback. If if if you're not talking, can you I got some feedback coming in.
20: I'm talking too
22: close. Go in.
12: So it so, anyway, I just wanted to say, I'm I'm in Montgomery County. I'm in a pretty red, county. But,
0: Oh, I'm right by you then. Yeah. I'm in the Woodlands.
12: Oh, you are. I'm in Magnolia. So, wow. We're we're we're really close.
1: Yeah. So We wanna get
0: you 1 of the, county commissioners there if you got a.
1: And do what now?
0: What are you looking for? The measure in the county. Okay.
12: I'm sorry. You're breaking up. I'm I'm sorry.
0: Over there, babe. I don't know what that feedback is.
6: Yeah. I think it's estimate, estimate. I think it's coming through your speaker or Tim. I
0: can submit your Okay.
12: So I'm sorry. What can you repeat that?
0: There you go. Yeah. If you've got a contact the the county commissioners in in Montgomery County, please let me know. We'll get in front of them and send the evidence.
12: Oh, yeah. Yeah. I can definitely reach out. I can give you some contact names. Unfortunately, I'll have to work, but, these ladies are there every week, and they're very active. They're they go to the capital regularly during legislative season. They are for session, they are all over us. So I'll be I'll be happy to, you know, reach out to you and, potentially, you know, we can get that set up because this stuff needs to come out. And,
6: Yeah. So,
12: yeah, I can I can do that?
6: And then you do y'all have a plan for, replacing the iPatch machine?
12: A a plan for what? Sorry.
6: Replacing the iPatch machine.
12: Replacing what? I'm sorry. It's
6: Yeah. Timothy, I think it's coming it's coming through from y'all's that feedback.
0: Somebody's I need it everywhere.
6: No.
12: There's somebody there's somebody Brown that's not muted. Well, they're listening. Okay. I'm sorry. So can you try that 1 more time? Replacing what?
6: Eye patch McCain.
12: Oh, well, yeah. You know, I I I don't know if you know he he, if you heard about it that he was at some, I forget gosh. I'm just drawing a blank here. The, the tea the Montgomery County Tea Party, he was there and got into it with a 10 year old.
7: Oh, no.
12: Okay. Yeah. Well, I even hear references to that, but I was there and I heard it. Jan Patrick actually was there as well. So, yeah. I mean, I know I know a lot of these people, but the problem is our GOP chair is a rhino.
11: Yeah.
12: Yeah. And there's been a lot of, issues going on. But like I said, I've kinda been out of the loop since November, since, you know, I had the loss. So, but my sister-in-law is very involved in Do
0: you go to the Republican women at Landry's?
12: To the what? Sorry. To The
0: women's Republican meeting. What is what the women's Republican women's meeting?
12: Do do I go to the Republican women's meeting at Landry? Yeah. No. Like I said, since since I lost my husband in November, I have been kind of, kind of out of the loop. But, I I, you know, I I I went down to work the the GOP convention down at the George R Brown Convention Center. I mean, I've been very involved. I know a lot of the the people that are trying to push a lot of this through. So as far as what they're trying to do to eyepatch right now, I'm sure that the the heat is kind of ramping on that, but I I'm not sure where they are right now, honestly. I've kinda checked out last few months, but I need to start getting involved again. But, I can definitely reach out to you and put you in contact with some people, that are down at the commissioner's court, like, every week.
0: That would be awesome.
12: Yeah. Because there's some, people that that that they want out there too besides eye patch.
0: Yeah. Right.
12: Okay. I'll definitely do that. I appreciate that, Huckleberry. Are you still I can't hear anything.
2: Hi, ma'am. I can hear you.
8: I can hear you. You.
0: Is that right?
12: I'm sorry? Okay.
22: Okay. Is it my turn?
12: Okay. Fine. I'm hanging I'm I'm I'm muting. Thank you.
22: Alright. So 1 of the, main concerns I have right now is unifying the people, who didn't buy into the c 19 agenda when it rolled out in March of 20 20. So I'm in LA, California. We were the very first state to lock down. And, right from the very beginning, I was suspicious because of, some of the red flags that I saw going up. And it made me doubt what the government was telling us. And 3 years later, you know, I won't go into the details right now, but 3 years later, I feel more confident than ever that I made the right decision. Now I will say that, the numbers when we found out eventually, I forget when, but roughly, it boiled down to 70% bought into the agenda, 30% of us didn't buy into the agenda. Okay. Now so keep in mind, this is early, you know, 2020. Right? So, after 3 years, that 70% that bought into the agenda has probably shrunk a little bit, hopefully a lot. I don't know. But what I'm getting at is that, we know now that since the CDC has approved this latest vax for the latest variant
15: Mhmm.
22: Which is not a threat to anybody, but they've approved it for 6 month old babies. Okay. So what that tells me is these people are not stopping. They are not going to stop, and they aren't stopping. So my question is, when are the 30% going to lay down their Democrat, Republican, right, left, red, blue, whatever other divisions that come between Americans and say, we are the 30%, regardless of Democrat, Republican, right, left, black, white, Asian, Latino, whatever, old, young. We have this 1 thing in common, and that 1 thing in common is that common enemy that's coming at us again. That's what I'm looking for. And so, along those lines, I have kind of, just recently got involved with the COVID vax injured group. In fact, I'm working on something right now that could hopefully be a unifying document for them, kind of like a declaration. Like, the early, colonists who basically got fed up, and they said, you know what? The next red coat I see, I I'm I got a loaded musket for his ass. Okay? It's kinda like that, and then they wrote the declaration of independence. Right? 1 of the most important documents in history. And now we fast forward to, 2020, and, Jay doctor Jay Bhattacharya, Martin Kulldorff, and I forget the list. I can't remember the woman's name. She's in England. She's out of Oxford. She's also a medical doctor. Those 3 put together
0: Tess Lori? Tess Lori?
22: No. No. That's not her. It's an Indian British woman. Sunetra Gupta, I believe, is her name.
0: Yeah.
22: Anyway, so Martin Kulldorff's out of Harvard. Doctor j is out of Stanford. So Stanford, Harvard, and Oxford. And they put they wrote they composed the great Barrington declaration, which if you guys aren't familiar with it, I I won't lecture you about it. But I will say when I read it, when I listened to doctor Jay talk about it, I was like, this guy makes so much sense. He's calm. He's cool. He's collected. He's eminently qualified. This guy has you know, he teaches in the, qualified. This guy has you know, he teaches in the, Stanford Medical School, and he's a PhD slash doctor of economics as well. And so so, you know, I'm listening to him talk, and I'm like, man, this guy makes a lot of sense. So I I, you know, I read the Great Barrington Declaration, and I'm like, this guy make or these people make total sense. Meanwhile, I'm listening to the government say, you gotta lock down all the small businesses. The big businesses like Walmart, Costco, Trader Joe's, you can stay open and just hoover up, you know, record profits, but you mom and pop businesses, 32,000,000 SMBs, small and medium businesses in America, had to be compromised or shut down. They had to lay off tens of millions of people. So all I'm saying is that I'm looking to forge some kind of unity between the vaxx injured, those like me who are not vaxx injured, but we didn't buy into, you know, the the bullshit, and form some kind of, union where we can where we can speak as 1 voice and say, you know, we see what you're doing with this latest CDC approval of the latest facts. I don't know what number is this 1, the sixth 1, the seventh 1, the eighth 1. I've lost count. This is crazy. And so what I want to see is some kind of pushback, right, against the, coming storm because it it seems very clear to me that these people are not gonna stop, and I'll stop ranting there.
0: Totally agree. And I I like your approach to that. I I think that's what we need for sure.
22: Well, I will say this. Let me add this 1 last thing. I'm willing to work with anybody who's on my side. I don't care who you are. Agreed. I want and so I'm, you know, I'm actually talking to another guy who is in in in another space the other day about for the COVID vaccine. He has a marketing background just like I have a marketing background. So we're actually getting together tomorrow, and we're gonna start hashing out some kind of a declaration, some kind of a document that can serve as kind of like a stake that we, who do not want to put up with this BS anymore, can can plunge down into the ground, like a stake in the ground and say, okay. Enough is enough. Here is where we stand. Just like our forefathers did with the declaration of independence, they said, that's it. No more. No more.
0: We have to because, otherwise, this country's gone.
22: Well, you know, yeah, I I would agree with that. I think I think there's a lot at stake here. When you think about what what we found out via the Twitter files alone, where our government our government was colluding to censor opposing views. Yep. This is this is this is so outrageous. It it is beyond me why these people are still in office. It's beyond me.
0: Because all the institutions are corrupted and captured.
22: Well, I yeah. I think I think there's that, but I think I think I think the truth lies somewhere in that in those initial numbers. 70% went along with the agenda. 30% didn't. Now that's twice as much
12: who believed
0: is such a fear campaign.
22: You know? Yeah. But why but okay. But but why were some of us equipped to, you know, the 30%? Why did we not buy into it?
6: I mean, it was actually it was actually 81% that went along with it
0: just Okay.
22: I'm again, it's a symbolic, you know, it's a it's a symbolic argument. Okay. 70 30, basically. So, you know, which is still a great disparity. Right? It's a huge disparity. It's over twice as many. So you have to you have to wonder to yourself, you know, what was it that tipped the scales for I'm sure everybody here, like, me included, has relatives, friends who bought into it. Yeah. Right?
12: It's because we don't suffer. I've
2: fallen in
0: my family for 2 and a half years. Yeah.
6: We don't suffer well as Americans. We don't wanna lose a friend. We don't wanna lose a Facebook friend. We don't wanna not get invited to a party. I hear all sorts of excuses. I you know, you know, my my kids said I can't see the grandkid unless I do this or that. You know? I would have been, like, didn't
22: know you. I get that.
20: Like, that
22: I understand that. That's logical
0: I mean
22: But when you have mass media suppressing
15: Exactly.
22: People like like Rogan, you know, Jordan Peterson, Brett Weinstein, you know, you have to ask yourself, you know, Peter McCullough.
3: Mhmm.
22: You have to ask yourself. It's like, what is going on here? And then you have to ask yourself, when this is happening, why are the people who are buying into the agenda, why can't they see this too? Why can't they see this?
12: It's
2: called corporate globalism who is also paying off the guy who likes the paycheck. And No.
22: No. No. I'm talking about just the just the everyday reality of people who look out at the world. We all look out at the world, the same world. Right? But we interpret it in different ways. And so
2: That is correct. But also remember that what you're talking about is the perception of reality based on the individual, and I know that it's different for everyone.
22: So I that okay. Yeah. You're just repeating what I said. So what I all I'm saying all I'm saying is is that it's it's behoove now it's, upon us. The 30% now who try to convert those people, you know, that within our our our touch point radius. Right? Our friends, our relatives. You can say, well, what do you think now, Joe? You know, you know, now that we have Ed Dowd's analysis of the excess deaths, and they're just spiking like crazy. And and get a load of this, Joe. The media isn't talking about this. And these numbers come from life insurance, so we know it's not bullshit. This is money talking now. Right? Right. Money talk is mostly what? Alright?
1: May I interject?
0: Ego, people don't wanna admit they were wrong.
1: I, wanted to say, I think it's because they have successfully achieved putting people into their, what I like to call their little social and social media silos. And everybody is into their own little bubble and their own little life. And until the until something impacts them to the degree that they can no longer stick their heads in the sand, that's exactly what they're gonna do. They're and and I think I think the pain has this is what is so scary about the situation, is I have people in my own family who, they know what happened, but they still
6: Yeah.
1: They still stick their head in the sand because it wasn't their husband. It was their brother brother-in-law, or it wasn't their
0: son or daughter-in-law. That that is Oh, get a get a load of it.
1: Terrifying that people can be that siloed in their own bubble. And so I think it forces us to to exactly what you said, sir, to go to them and keep at them and keep at them until Yep. They either
22: Okay. So totally walk away. I'm gonna give you a tool. Okay. So so I'm gonna give you a tool that you can use when you talk to people like this. And here's the tool. The tool is the real world. And what I mean by that is I have the advantage or I don't know. I don't know any other way to put it, but I have the fortune of being from Los Angeles. So I'm born and raised in LA. And here in LA, for those who don't know, and Laura's probably heard me mention this several times now, we have the capital homeless population. Okay? It's called Skid Row. This place is huge. It has by conservative estimates, it has 10,000 people, if you can imagine that. Now when c 19 rolled out, I'm think and and, you know, they locked us down. California was the first state to lock down. I I said, wow. You know, this must be really serious to, you know, lock down and shutter all the businesses and keep everybody in their you know, this is really serious. And then I thought, well, what about Skid Row? You know, what are they doing over there? You know, people living in squalor and guess what? 3 years later, Skid Row is bigger than ever. Now
12: now Yes.
22: Why would that be? Here here's the tool. Look at the real world and start thinking, people. And now you can use that as a tool when you're talking with, you know, your relatives or your friends who don't believe and say, well, what about the homeless population? What Yeah. There could be bodies piling up in the streets. Right?
1: I can't tell you this, this, but, you know, I've had those exact conversations with my own family members. And I hate to tell you this, but they just don't care because it didn't happen to them.
6: They don't.
1: And and They don't. And and so and I'm not trying to be negative, but
13: what I have done in
1: that instance is I've moved on to those who who are partway there who will listen. So I've learned to conserve my energy.
22: So you're telling me that you you know people who will deny reality?
6: Yeah. I mean, come on. Like, let me tell you something. Let let me
22: excuse that? How do they justify that?
0: Let me
6: let me tell you something, Vicky. We we have we have a thousand cases with medical records showing people were literally murdered in the hospital. I'm a survivor. Absolutely. Absolutely. Husband stormed the ICU to get me out. We had a 6 hour standoff with police in Texas, and people still do not believe it. We we have showed people medical records where it literally says, patient tried to leave hospital or ICU room. They shot him up with Ativan, restrained him, gave him the protocol. Our people
22: Remdesivir and, respirator?
6: Yeah. Remdesivir, baricitinib.
22: That that's the Kitsid death. That is the Kitsid
6: And Yep. And time and time again, we see these medical records that say vented the patient for behavioral control. All of these things, we've seen it. We have it. We we we have recordings. We have
22: And the punchline is after the patient dies, what do they record the death as a result of?
6: Well, right. They do it. They put it out as as but but the point is, we have proof of murder, and people still don't see it. So when you ask, will people deny reality? People will deny reality because there's a there is literally 1500000.0 people that were murdered in in hospitals by the protocol. And if people realized or admitted if they admitted to themselves that that there is a hospital holocaust going on, it's actually a democide because the government has funded it. If they admitted it, then they have to do something about it, and people do not wanna do anything about it. They they they can't answer the questions that they they can't make Exactly.
2: Happen. Panel, if I may
12: pets. Here's
22: the thing. When it the hospital desk, those are behind the scenes. Right? Those are not out in the open. Homeless people, the homeless population are out in the open for anybody to see. And
6: But people will know that. People don't
1: want to be.
6: Yeah. That was the the people are like, yeah. That's that's just because they're hardy. That's just because they they always come up with some reason why
16: they can't prove it.
0: I wanna see it.
6: Like, they will
22: What about the Amish? What about the Amish then? The Amish don't don't don't vaccinate a deal.
11: They don't wanna
22: see it. The Amish didn't have a a c 19 problem.
0: I'm telling you, they don't
22: They're fine.
2: People don't care. They're okay. I'm gonna interject.
0: Alright. Uh-huh.
22: Okay. What?
2: I think JP, everyone. Please let me speak. Is. Let me speak, everyone.
22: Wait. Put your hand up because Laura's next.
2: Yeah. JP. Can you hear me, sir? Can you hear me, JP?
22: Laura has her hand up.
2: JP, can you hear me, sir?
6: Can you hear Andy? I can hear you, Andy.
2: Okay. Let's let's just put it to rest here. I want everyone to know that I had to almost institutionalize my mother for what happened to my family. I had to put my whole life on hold for what happened. I have on video the violent murder of my father. I have on video a police officer telling me to turn the camera off right now, or I'll have you arrested for criminal trespassing. Now, JP, if you would like to have a rebuttal to this, I invite you to debate me any further about the subject. You sound like you're very upset about what we're doing here. We're here to speak to victims. And if you have a problem with that, you can message me and debate me all day long. I'll even give you my cell phone number.
22: What are you talking about? I'm supporting you, guys. What are you talking about?
6: I mean, well,
22: I'm on your side. What are you talking about?
6: I get where he it's it sounds like you're like, okay. Like, when you say people
2: There are a lot of people with no know the story, and it sounds like you're on our side. But I'm gonna tell you, JP. If you don't if you don't agree or concur with what we're doing or with what has happened to humanity, especially in The United in the context
22: what's stopping me saying? I'm arguing on your side. What are you talking about?
2: Then why are you questioning all the data we're giving you?
22: I'm not questioning it. I was talking about I was talking about the real world and an example of a tool of critical thinking that you can use when you're when you're trying to convert those in the 70% over to our side.
12: Yeah. It's not the problem.
2: You know how that's gonna convert? I'm gonna tell you guys right now how that's gonna convert. When we see civil war in The United States, which is about to happen because of what just happened, that's your answer, sir.
6: I mean, we What
22: are you talking about?
0: I don't know
22: what you're talking about.
2: The we're about to see we're about to see trench warfare in The United States because of what just happened. If people don't wake up within the next
22: week what just happened? What just happened? What are you referring to?
2: COVID. COVID, buddy. What about all the Okay. Okay. I just told you my story. So what else do you wanna know?
0: I mean,
6: like, I guess
12: do this too.
6: Andy, let me let me take this. So, like, I I hear what you're saying. We but people have been looking at the homeless, and they've been looking at the Amish. That's been that's been the the what's been put out there for people to come along for 3 years now, and it has it it really hasn't moved the needle. What Andy's saying is, you know, we have video of people being murdered in hospitals, and and we have audio of people, you know, admitting the truth. Right? So if if people people when people are at a point, that that 70%, it it they're not gonna come they don't believe their own eyes in their own ears. Right? That's how that's how much of a psyop successful psyop this was. They don't believe what they see and hear, and, you know, it's they ignore the data. They ignore the, they ignore the videos. They ignore the stories. They ignore the, the the people dying of the vaccine. They ignore the, the homeless not being affected or the migrants not be like, they just ignore it. It so we can wake people up. We can lead people to the truth, but we can't make them see it. We can't make them come out of their their shell. We can only put it out there. And, you know, I mean, scripture says my people will perish for the lack of knowledge. The there's also another saying saying, I think somebody said, blind and ignorant, they'll they'll go off to the slaughter. That's what's happening, and that's what's going to continue to happen if people don't take the information that they're given. I I don't know. There if you want to wake people up, you gotta get them away from the boob tube. You gotta make them look at real information. And it I don't think that they'll be swiping.
0: That want to. They they'd rather just live in ignorance and denial than have to face what's going on.
6: But some people do. Some people do. I will tell you. Some people see all of the stories, and they they do wake up because we see it. Yeah. We see the when people when the reality hits them, and we've seen it with medical professionals, where when reality hits them and they're like, oh my god. I participated in killing people. It's it's tremendous when that happens and and that realization of what everything that they believed was a lie, and it falls. And we see it with with victims' families where they thought their their loved 1 died from COVID. They went out and got the shot because they were so afraid because their loved 1 got had they thought died of COVID. They got shot injured, then they realized that their loved 1 was murdered in the hospital. It didn't happen. So people do come. Do do but, you know, do they come quick enough? Not for my liking. I I would love for that 70% to wake up. I think some of the 70 percent are waking up because only 40 percent of people took the, the boosters. So I think it was less than that. Depends what state you're in. Like, some states, it was 29%. Some states, it was 41%. You know? But, yeah, quite a bit less.
1: The good news is, Gail, on CDC's on-site, they admit that on average, it was 17% across the nation for the boosters.
6: Oh, good. Good.
0: That's what I thought, 17. Yep.
1: Yep. That is the good news. So the sad news is that, you know, I think you're exactly right that until you've heard the old thing, first, they came for so and so, but it wasn't for me, so I did nothing. Yeah. Okay. I think that we're going to see because it's the human condition that until something really, really impacts you. And usually
6: Yeah.
1: With these kind of mindsets, it has to be them personally, not even a family member.
22: What was more impactful than the last 3 years? The last craziest 3 years in world history.
0: What was more impactful? Yeah. But I won't make it.
18: It's just
23: I don't get it.
1: Historically historically, nobody does anything until it happens to
6: them personally. And then even sometimes they don't do anything
0: Yeah. Disrespected everybody.
15: What are you talking about?
0: Living their lives in their little self centered bubble.
1: Yep. And so, you know, that's why I am not going to spend I am going to share with people and try, but I won't linger there. I will move on to the next person because we have to be efficient and effective, and we have to reach people who are reachable. So, sir, JP, I I applaud you for your efforts. I think just our experience has been that we have seen so many people have it happen to family members and, close people, and they've nearly experienced it themselves. So, you know, we have seen that it takes some pretty harsh experience for people to actually wake up.
22: Everybody has. Everybody has. Yes. So the question now is, what now come c 19 2? Because we again, the CDC just approved the latest vax. This is a fact. This is not my opinion, so we know they're coming again. We know that.
6: We deal with it every week. Every week, we have people calling us to to be saved in a hospital. We're it's already here. It's not coming. It's been here for the last 3
22: All I'm saying is that I would just just as the evil empire on the other side is highly organized
19: Yeah.
22: And they're they and they've got tons of, reach into the mass media
0: Yep.
22: And, obviously, the government. You know, we know via the Twitter files that, you know, they had they were utilizing this this, this, shithead up in Frisco, Elvis Chan of the FBI, had a backdoor into Twitter and was censoring journalists, ordinary people who were, against the the c 19 agenda. So this is a fact. We know this.
0: That's right. So
22: where is the concerted organized effort on our part? And that's what I'm speaking to.
6: Well, I mean, that's 1 of the reasons we started the citizen task force because when agencies are captured, we have to do something. I mean, former feds has a citizen task force where citizens join. We have committees that we are trying to take this on from every
22: Okay. Okay. Comfy, can you send me the link to that so I could check it out?
6: It's Huckleberry's wife. Yes. I can.
22: Okay. Because, you know, quite frankly, I I think 1 of the problems is that we and the 30% are so atomized. You know, we're we're pissed off.
6: Mhmm.
22: We're angry, whatever. But there is nothing for us to plug into. Right? The The government on the other side, they have all kinds of things to plug into. They can plug into the media. They could plug into the FBI and on and on and on. They can plug into the CDC, the FDA, and on and on and on. What do we have?
6: Well, we have the We
22: have a squirt gun. We have a squirt gun in a cannon fight.
2: That's only Yeah.
6: That's only in California. Yeah.
15: I have to
2: ask you a personal question, sir. Are you a victim of COVID or someone you know that's a victim of COVID?
22: Everybody's a victim of COVID. You a
2: victim of COVID, JP. Everybody is. Answer the question. Me.
22: Well, I'm if if I say to everybody, that includes me.
2: Okay. Are you a hospital victim? Are you a vaccine injured victim? Did you lose someone to COVID protocol in your life? Yes. Yes. Your mother, your father, your brother, who? Your neighbor?
22: A friend.
2: A friend. Okay. Yeah. How long ago was that? What was the date they died?
22: The date?
2: The day they they passed. If they're your friend, you would know.
22: I'm I'm not I I can't
14: tell you.
11: They might get a call on
6: me. Oh, yeah. Laura, go ahead. Let's let's let Laura
22: Yeah. I I agree.
6: Sorry.
2: Go ahead.
22: Sorry, Laura. Health is just trying to corner me or something.
6: Much. Sorry, Laura.
11: I have a quick question. I got caught the tail end of the conversation between the Italian doctor and Seth, and he was talking about lactoferrin. Mhmm. Does lactoferrin help with neuropathy?
0: I don't know, but he said he it helped with a lot.
6: Yeah. I don't know enough about it.
0: Oh, he's still on, ain't he? Joe?
6: Joe, you on? Yeah. He is on. Con Joe, consult research
0: guy.
11: Yeah.
6: Joe?
11: Hello. Hello. Hello, Joe. Mister lactoferrin?
2: Joe, you're fire at will, Joe. You're, you have the floor.
6: We need more information about lactoferrin.
11: He might be asleep. I think it's a I don't know what time it is
6: in Italy. Don't get me in a line.
11: It's pretty pretty late here right now.
0: Yeah. He might be.
11: Okay. I was just curious. What what because he was talking to her about he wanted to see her walk a thousand, a thousand steps, which is what made me think that maybe that we're talking about neuropathy.
1: Laura, this is Miriam. Yes. She the she was actually a COPD patient, which means she had a difficulty breathing, which lowered her ability to walk and move. So and I know that lactose
11: That's just happened to me recently too.
1: Yeah. I know that lactoseren is, from colostrum. So it what it does is it helps support the immune response. And a lot of people believe that, COPD and the inflammation in the lungs is an immune issue. So, it sounds like that it is a bit of a different issue from your neuropathy. I don't know if you have it from a past.
11: I think that well, I still don't think I think that I might have a that that is another, new another new injury.
1: Okay. So you have a vaccine injury?
11: I've been recently diagnosed with COPD, and I've never had that problem before in my life.
1: Yeah. I mean, it is if you've if you've been vaxxed, I have read studies where that people who get a lot of small, you know, microclotting can have problems with circulation in their extremities, which will give you, like, the neuropathy like symptoms. So you might want to go see a functional medicine practitioner or someone about looking at if this is a new symptom after being vaxxed, looking at your d diolos. The the
11: the neuropathy was an was a pretty much was 10 days after the first shot.
1: Okay.
11: Yeah. The COPD is kind of just recently diagnosed.
1: I would, recommend, you know, at least looking at doctor McCullough's protocol
12: because it does
5: Mhmm.
1: Help with that issue, and also seeing a practitioner who would order, like, a d dimer on you to look at clotting fact you know, the microclotting and that kind of thing. Yeah. But okay. That's what I would say just from the things I've been writing about. And I'm not a medical doctor, but I I work with a medical functional functional medicine doctor, and I am a physical therapist. So I was
11: Which kind of the which kind of specialist does the d dimer?
1: Not many in the mainstream medicine because they don't acknowledge it. So I would go neurologist? No. None of the mainstream docs you you'd be very lucky to find anyone who would do that. I would go see a functional medicine practitioner. Okay? And many of those are medical doctors, but they've gone into functional or integrative medicine, and they will actually do it. I can send you, a link to the doc that I practice with if you want, or I can put it in the chat. And I would say he does telemedicine, so I would say reach out to him or another functional or integrative medicine doctor to get that Right.
11: Is he in is he in since everybody a lot of people are in Texas here. Are you in is he in Texas?
1: No. He is in Kentucky. That's where I am. Okay.
11: Yeah. But If you could send it to me.
6: I don't know there I don't I don't
11: know that we have to follow each other for you to send it to me.
6: Where are you at in Texas, Laura?
11: I'm in Austin.
18: K.
1: Yeah. Almost you can even you can even Google functional medicine doctors, and there will be some in Austin because that's a big city. I would definitely go to see 1 because they will help you with figuring out those symptoms. And especially if it happened 10 days after VAPS, I would get their opinion.
6: And I would think that FLCCC
0: would have
1: help you. Yes.
6: We can. In Austin because
0: Yes.
6: Who? Flccc.net. They have list of provide like, they have a list of of functional medicine providers. That's actually where we found the 1 that my husband goes
5: Yes.
6: To in the Dallas area here.
1: It's, it's frontline critical care.
6: It's covid19criticalcare.com or flccc.net.
0: Online critical care COVID coalition.
1: Yes. FLCCCCA. If you put that in, it'll pop up. Hang on.
11: Just a sec. Let me get my pen in my hand.
1: Yeah. If you put that in and you
2: put it
11: on 1 1 more time.
1: FFLCCC.net. It's 3 c's. FFLCCC dot net. Yep. And if you go there ccc.
16: 3
6: c's? Yeah. FlcccDotnet..net.
0: Yeah. Uh-huh.
6: I'll say it because I I I don't have as much of an accent.
5: Yeah. Those Texas girls. Go go there,
1: and they have vax injured protocols, and I am am certain that they will do the investigative work that you need to figure out what's going on.
11: So did you call the physician again? A functional
1: Well, that's just the 1 that I work with, but FLCCC.net will have the appropriate doc for you there. I promise. If you get on there and just ask for a consult and then tell them what has happened to you, your timeline, they will know exactly what to do.
0: Doctor Bain can help as well too, and he's licensed in tech
1: Oh, wow. That's great too.
6: Yeah. Doc in the loop. Right? Is it DocintheLoop?
0: Doc in the Loop Com.
6: Dot com.
11: Doc in the loop Com?
6: Yep.
11: D o c n the loop. Mhmm.
6: Yep. Yep. He's great.
0: He's 1 of
16: us. I
11: got it. So it's d o c
5: n n
1: I n. Just n. I n. Not I n.
0: No. I n.
6: I as in igloo, n as in Nancy.
11: Okay. And then iintheloop.com.
6: Alright. Mhmm.
11: No dots. No anything until the com?
6: Yeah. Right. Docintheloop.com.
11: Okay. Alright. Thanks.
6: You're welcome. Sorry about the we had to make those translations happen.
0: Excuse me.
6: It's okay. Hey. Yes, y'all. We better and we better Everybody says that that's the
11: that we people on Texas have thick accents. I don't think so.
6: Yeah. I'm just trying to see if we've got anybody else that so we've got Capo and then Capo is wanted to and then we're gonna try to wrap it up because it's almost 01:00 in the morning.
26: Yeah. Hello. I'll keep it under a minute. Just wanna say I worked in the health care industry for about a decade, in the cardiac cath lab. When COVID hit, I was 1 of the I was the first person in the lab to actually get COVID, and I took a nice 6 week vacation after feeling sick for 3 days. Long story short, I left due to the mandates, and I had nurses reach out to me afterwards that had realized what they had done. They had realized that the protocols they were given were meant to kill people. And, you know, some of them woke up, some didn't. There There were still doctors that were getting extra boosters under their radar because they thought that's why they kept on getting COVID because they needed more boosters, which was insane to me. And the thing is, in this world, you know, not not everybody is awake. About 70 percent of people are asleep as as you mentioned earlier, and it's just it's not for them to see. The veil is still down. Some people will never wake up in this lifetime. And as it was mentioned before, it's just as a reminder is can't waste your time. You say it once. If they don't understand it, you have to move on for your own sake.
6: Yeah. That's right. And some people, I think, show themselves to be people that you even can't trust. Like, I've found that to be very true. You know? Like, I I have to surround myself by people who, you know, that I can go through this battle with. And, my, you know, my goal is to save as many people as possible. And so to do that, I have to focus on the ones that will that are are at least curious about the message and accept the message. Right?
1: Mhmm.
6: Yeah.
26: And, also, I wanted to add, I have a friend that works as a pharmacist, and she says within the past couple weeks, they've been having meetings with the higher ups, and they're harassing them and pressuring them that they aren't giving out enough COVID shots and that this is their main moneymaker at the moment.
6: Yeah.
0: Ding. Ding. Ding. Ding. Ding. There's there's the answers.
1: And that's exactly why you can use all the the arguments you want, but when money is motivating it, they aren't going to stop in the middle and upper levels. It's not gonna happen. So at the at our level, we have to help people to understand so that they can make choices because the way we win is by not complying and not and being prepared so that they can't kill us. Living is living is how we win and helping others live.
6: Yeah. I mean Sure.
1: I mean, it's sad, but it's true.
6: It is. Right. I would agree. I I I would agree.
26: I think mother Mary said it. I think it was mother Mary that said it. She was against war, but she said she would never attend an anti war rally. Because for 1 side to succeed, there needs to be another side. So the best thing we can do is just say no and stand in our peace, and that's that we can't fight them because war breeds war.
6: Yep. Yep. Well, this was this was a great let me see. I wanna make sure I don't have any I wanna make sure we've got every we let everyone speak that It needs to speak. There we go. Alright. Now now can we close and go to bed?
2: I would like to thank everyone for coming this evening. It's, you know, Saturday. There's a lot we can be doing on a Saturday night, but you came here. You made that choice. Thank you for coming, and we look forward to seeing you next Saturday.
6: Yeah. Next Saturday. We're gonna hear every Saturday, and, it's always interesting, always different people, different people coming. And, we hope to, we hope that some of you will, get involved with former feds as well to get in the fight. You got anything, Cece?
0: Just visit our website at CHBMP.org. Join the task force, and we will see y'all next week. Actually, I won't. I'll be on vacation, but they will.
6: Good night, everyone.
0: Jealous. Good night.
20: Good night, everyone.