Episode Transcript
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right, everyone, we ready? Yeah! Let's
0:46
do this. Action. Good
1:02
morning, good afternoon, good evening. Wherever you are
1:04
out there in the world, it's time to
1:07
step out onto the high wire. Well,
1:10
I had an awesome week last week.
1:12
In fact, I did get to step
1:14
out there into the world. I took
1:16
a trip to Geneva, Switzerland to protest
1:18
the WHO Treaty, the
1:20
rally in March. We are
1:22
the change that took place
1:25
there. It was just an
1:27
incredible experience, amazing people from
1:29
all over the world sharing
1:31
the same, I
1:33
guess, frustrations, concerns about
1:36
what's going on with the World
1:38
Health Organization, the treaty, the international
1:41
health regulations, all of it.
1:43
Well, this is what that experience was
1:46
like. Take a
1:49
look at this. It's
1:57
fantastic to stand here with
1:59
my friends. You
10:00
know, I would say that in some ways the
10:02
victory was not that long lived. Remember
10:05
last week when I was saying, you know, a lot
10:07
of people called me and say, Del, look, they're not
10:09
going to pass it. Why are you still going out
10:11
there? The WHO treaty and, you know,
10:13
the IHR rules agreements. And I said, I
10:15
don't trust these people. I think that sometimes
10:17
they put out those press conferences, you know,
10:19
those press releases to try and get us
10:21
to not show up. Luckily,
10:23
we did. But what was amazing is, you know,
10:26
it was all supposed to be over that day.
10:29
We were at dinner about nine o'clock
10:31
that night just celebrating the incredible day
10:33
we'd all had when we
10:35
heard that they'd had an emergency meeting and
10:38
brought everybody back in and managed
10:41
to pass the IHR rules. There
10:44
is World Health Assembly Agreement reached
10:46
on wide ranging decisive package of amendments
10:48
to improve the international health regulations.
10:52
Of course, they weren't able in
10:54
this trip to pass the, you
10:56
know, the World Health Treaty, the
10:58
pandemic treaty, which has
11:00
its own teeth. But I just want
11:02
to say that, you know, I watch these
11:04
videos. I think if you're tuning in for
11:07
the first time and maybe like, wow, they
11:09
really take this vaccine issue very seriously. I
11:12
just really can't stress to you enough
11:15
that this is the biggest issue of our
11:17
time of this moment. It
11:19
all hinges around this WHO. They
11:22
are using health as a
11:24
weapon against the world. And
11:27
I had so many great reporters
11:29
and lawyers. There was a press conference in the
11:31
morning with a bunch of
11:33
fantastic lawyers that are fighting on our
11:35
behalf, some from America, Germany, Switzerland, from
11:38
all over the world. And
11:41
you know, while we were watching them
11:43
lay out, we all recognized just the
11:45
power of what this was. But in
11:47
the same hotel right next door was
11:50
the Gates Foundation meeting. And people
11:53
were running into Tejros in their
11:55
hotel. And we were
11:57
hearing from some people that were visiting
11:59
that. you
14:01
know, this is immigration,
14:03
UNESCO. They're building an
14:05
empire there, folks. And as Jimmy,
14:08
who I travel with, my manager,
14:11
said, this is like
14:13
a supervillain's paradise. I
14:15
can't stress to you enough how
14:17
chilling it actually was to see
14:20
what's being built there. They have
14:22
every, it's like a world takeover
14:24
is being staged and these massive
14:26
complexes designed to run the world
14:28
from Geneva are going up. And
14:31
so it's no doubt that the IHR
14:33
rules pass. I guarantee you the World
14:36
Health Organization's treaty will eventually pass.
14:38
They don't plan on stopping, folks.
14:40
This thing is real. This is
14:42
how they take over the world.
14:44
They can't stand the United States
14:46
of America. They hate our constitution.
14:48
We were really a hiccup in
14:50
the entire, you know, plan to
14:52
take over the world. They really,
14:54
because we stood our ground and
14:57
30% of us didn't get the vaccine is
14:59
probably one of the few reasons this thing didn't sweep that
15:01
we're not all, you know, carrying
15:03
vaccine trackers in our cell phones.
15:06
But I want to tell you, it is
15:08
real. It's happening. And in many
15:10
ways, it's like, you know, I
15:12
went over the hill. We're all celebrating a
15:15
victory on the beach that we just won
15:17
D-Day today. It's really on my mind. And
15:19
it's like you climb over the, you know, to
15:22
the back of the island in the mountain and
15:24
you just see all these ships that are landing
15:26
on the beaches. Folks, they're coming. I
15:28
mean, you know me, I'm positive. I know we
15:30
can win this. You and I, if we tell
15:33
everyone we know, but do
15:35
not look away. Do not think that that
15:37
COVID pandemic is in your rear view mirror.
15:40
And this idea that they will use disease and
15:42
fear and some idea
15:44
of international health regulations
15:47
as a way to lock us down again. And
15:50
next time they're coming for all of it. It's
15:52
really happening. And it became very real
15:54
there. So I have mixed emotions. I can't wait to see
15:56
all the beautiful, see all the people out there, see how
15:58
far we've come to see that we can. and
20:00
the pandemic agreement could be finalized
20:03
for this health assembly. IHR
20:07
tick. And
20:11
the pandemic agreement is
20:13
not done yet, but I
20:15
have no doubt it will be. I
20:19
mean, listen to his voice, he either has
20:21
COVID or he's been screaming at somebody all
20:23
day long. Yeah. But you know,
20:25
one of the things I thought about really
20:27
is as we were sitting there, I wanted
20:29
to walk into the, you know, the Gates
20:31
Foundation meeting. I did peek over there, they
20:33
were taking a recess, but
20:35
I wanted to say, you know,
20:38
everyone in the world actually hates
20:40
you, that no one, I mean,
20:42
think about this, no one is
20:44
rallying to pass the IHR regulations
20:46
or the, you know, World Health
20:48
Organization's pandemic treaty, like nobody's like, hey,
20:50
let's get thousands of people together and really
20:52
just, you know, support this and put energy,
20:55
but no one in the world is doing
20:57
that, right? Can you imagine being a part
20:59
of these organizations that just somehow accept that
21:01
we're hated by the world, but
21:03
as long as we have the world's leaders, that's
21:05
all that matters to us and they're showing up
21:07
here and they're, you know, signing these documents, we're
21:09
good to go. I mean, I can't imagine what
21:11
it's like to be those people. Yeah,
21:14
and it must be easy for those people just to
21:16
throw all of their failures and all of that hatred
21:18
onto you. Well, it's just a group
21:20
of anti-vaxxers, everyone else loves us.
21:22
Right. So let's look at these
21:24
amendments that are now in here. One of the biggest things,
21:27
this was right at the beginning of the document. This is
21:29
a document that WHO released on June 1st of
21:32
this year, obviously, just a couple of days ago.
21:34
And right at the beginning there, they define what's
21:36
called a pandemic emergency. And you can see
21:38
here, it says, pandemic emergency means a
21:40
public health emergency of international concern that
21:43
is caused by a communicable disease.
21:45
And it gives three stipulations,
21:47
has or is at high
21:49
risk of having geographical spread within
21:52
multiple states. Next one, high risk
21:54
of exceeding the capacity of health
21:56
systems. And the final one, high
21:58
risk of causing substantial social. bird
28:00
flu detected in Michigan farm worker says the CDC,
28:02
this is H5N1. But
28:04
then interestingly, yesterday I saw this, this was
28:07
a press release from the WHO itself. Remember,
28:09
they have their shiny new international health regulations
28:11
that are going to report things right away.
28:14
This is the first case of
28:16
H5N2. So
28:18
these are all influenza, basically influenza A. There's
28:21
just subtypes of them. So this is the
28:23
first fatal case in Mexico that's ever been
28:25
reported now in the world. And it says
28:27
here from the WHO itself, on 23rd May
28:29
2024, the Mexico IHRNFP, this is the
28:35
national focal point, responded to
28:37
WHO PAHO, a confirmed case
28:40
of human infection with avian
28:42
influenza A, H5N2 virus detected.
28:44
Now from everyone watching over the
28:47
last four years, see if you can pick out some of the
28:49
interesting points in this. Detected in
28:51
a 59-year-old resident of the state of Mexico
28:53
who was hospitalized in Mexico City and had
28:55
no history of exposure to poultry or other
28:57
animals. The case, the
29:00
person, had multiple underlying medical conditions. The
29:02
case's relatives reported that the case had
29:04
already been bedridden for three weeks for
29:06
other reasons prior to the onset of
29:09
acute symptoms. It goes
29:11
on to say whenever avian influenza viruses are
29:13
circulating poultry, there's a risk of infection in
29:15
small clusters of human cases due to
29:17
exposure in infected poultry or contaminated
29:19
environments. Therefore sporadic human cases are
29:21
not unexpected. They have a
29:24
hard time too, just as a side note
29:26
to that, really transmitting person to person. So
29:28
when we see this, the fear mongering, it's
29:31
really falls flat because this is something that
29:33
we're not seeing really, even in the H5N1,
29:36
which has what we're told pandemic potential, it's
29:38
only been about 900 plus
29:40
cases since 1996. So
29:42
these are very low cases despite what we're seeing
29:45
right now. But this WHO, this press
29:47
release, just picking it apart, they PCR tested
29:49
their 29 other contacts around
29:52
this person. They all tested negative.
29:54
This person obviously was bedridden for weeks with
29:56
several other issues. They
30:00
waited weeks after they received
30:02
the report of the fatality. They
30:04
waited weeks to report this, which
30:06
is very interesting. No exposure
30:09
to poultry. And again, the PCR
30:11
tests, they're known for the
30:13
false positives. Right. And what
30:15
cycle are they using in those tests?
30:17
If people want to go back, we've
30:19
covered this issue. A PCR test just
30:21
keeps magnifying and magnifying with each cycle
30:23
until ultimately what we saw out of
30:25
the leader of Africa who's now no
30:27
longer with us mysteriously. Basically
30:30
tested like pineapples and mangoes and they tested
30:32
positive for COVID. And I'm sure this is
30:34
similar. Clearly everyone in his family says, dude,
30:36
this guy was like dying in the hospital
30:38
like weeks ago. And suddenly you're saying it
30:41
has like something to do with an avian
30:43
flu. I mean, so why are they
30:46
testing it? Like they're so desperate, so
30:48
desperate to find this and then so
30:50
desperate to report it all the back
30:53
of being so desperate to control the
30:55
world. So keep your eyes open, folks.
30:57
I mean, whether or not they get away with it with
30:59
this bird flu, they are looking for
31:01
disease X. They want it badly.
31:04
Now, remember from the COVID response, died with
31:06
COVID or because of COVID. Right. There's a
31:08
huge gap between those two conversations. So let's
31:10
go to one of the biggest conversations here
31:12
in the United States when it comes to
31:14
the health. We had Anthony Fauci
31:16
come out of retirement to testify in front
31:19
of the House Select Subcommittee on the coronavirus
31:21
to talk about really the just
31:23
bombshell explosive email scandal from his
31:26
right hand man, Dr. David Morrins
31:28
at the NIH there who I
31:30
mean, clear evidence of just destroying
31:33
any type of evidence of the
31:35
origins of COVID, hiding on
31:37
personal emails, even even waiting till they saw
31:39
each other in person to exchange information so
31:41
they couldn't be FOIA. This
31:44
is this is Dr. Fauci being
31:46
questioned about that. So does he
31:48
stick up for Dr. Morrins? Well, you be the judge.
31:50
Take a look. All right. There's a
31:52
troubling pattern of behavior from
31:55
your inner circle, not just Dr. Morrins, but
31:57
also your chief of staff, Mr. Do
32:02
you agree that it violates NAID
32:05
policy to use personal email for
32:08
official purposes? The
32:12
Dr. Morin's issue that was
32:15
discussed by this committee violates
32:18
NIH policy, yes. But
32:21
using official email, using
32:25
a personal email for official business,
32:27
does that violate policy? Using a
32:29
personal email for official business violates
32:32
NIH policy. Does it violate NAID
32:38
policy to delete records to intentionally
32:40
avoid FOIA? Yes. Okay.
32:43
On April 28, 2020, Dr.
32:45
Morin's edited an eco-health
32:47
press release regarding the grant
32:49
termination. Does that violate
32:52
policy? That was inappropriate for him
32:54
to be doing that for a
32:56
grantee as a conflict of
32:58
interest, among other things. So
33:00
on March 29, 2021, Dr. Morin's
33:02
edited a letter that Dr. Dasik
33:05
was sending to NIH. Does that
33:07
violate policy? Yes, it does. On
33:10
October 25, 2021, Dr. Morin's
33:12
provided Dr. Dasik with advice
33:15
regarding how to mislead NIH
33:17
on eco-health's late progress reports.
33:20
Does that violate policy? That
33:22
was wrong and inappropriate and violated policy.
33:26
On December 7, 2021, Dr. Morin's
33:28
wrote to the chair of Eco-health's
33:31
board of directors to, quote, put
33:33
in a word, end quote, for Dr. Dasik.
33:36
Does that violate policy? Should
33:38
not have done that. That was wrong. And that
33:41
violates policy? Well, I'm not sure of a specific
33:43
policy, but I imagine it does violate policy. He
33:46
should not have been doing that. I
33:49
mean, it's wild watching this.
33:51
It is like watching The Godfather, right? I
33:54
mean, obviously, I have no idea. I had
33:56
no idea he was cooking the books. I
33:58
barely met that guy. I know
34:00
what we're talking about. Yeah, of course, it's disgusting.
34:02
Can't believe he did it. I mean, clearly, this
34:05
Morens is going to be the fall guy, they
34:07
think. Honestly, I hope somebody
34:09
has this guy under suicide watch right now. And
34:13
so you're seeing Fauci
34:15
is basically throwing these people under the bus.
34:17
Morens, he's getting called out. Even Dasek, Fauci
34:20
was asked about Peter Dasek. And Fauci said
34:22
it was right to cut his funding to
34:24
bar him, to bar EcoHealth Alliance. So these
34:26
people, one by one, are going
34:28
under. So you've got to wonder if they're looking
34:30
at this whole situation and saying, wait a minute.
34:32
And if the Justice
34:34
Department wants to move on these people, I
34:37
feel like there could be a real good
34:39
case to have these people come in and
34:41
really side with trying to get Anthony Fauci
34:44
and get some justice there. But I think
34:46
the American people, just seeing these exchanges are
34:48
very helpful. Obviously, no one has been indicted
34:50
with this yet, which is frustrating for many
34:53
people. But seeing these
34:55
exchanges, seeing the emails, being able to read
34:57
them for yourselves and seeing how they're destroying
34:59
this evidence in the background is really, I
35:01
think, a healthy thing for
35:03
this conversation. People can no longer
35:05
be called conspiracy theorists. And then
35:08
there's Representative Congressman from Georgia, Rich
35:10
McCormick. He's also a doctor. He's
35:12
treating patients during COVID. So he had a
35:14
unique position here. And he questioned Tony Fauci
35:16
about the COVID vaccines. Take a listen. All
35:18
right. You
35:20
said in an interview that you gave as part
35:22
of an audio book written by Michael Spector that
35:26
you believed an institutional should make it hard
35:28
for people to live
35:30
their lives so they'd feel pressured
35:33
to get vaccinated. Could we rerun the audio clip
35:35
on that, please? You think
35:37
can be done about it. I
35:39
have to say that I don't see
35:41
a big solution other than some sort
35:44
of mandatory vaccination. I know federal officials
35:46
don't like to use that term. Once
35:48
people feel empowered and protected legally,
35:52
you are going to have schools, universities,
35:55
and colleges are going to say, you want to come
35:57
to this college, buddy? You're going to get vaccinated. lady,
36:00
you're going to get vaccinated. Big
36:02
corporations like Amazon and
36:04
Facebook and all
36:06
of those others are going to say, you want to work for
36:08
us? You get vaccinated. And it's been
36:11
proven that when you make
36:13
it difficult for people in their
36:15
lives, they lose their
36:17
ideological bullsh** and they
36:20
get vaccinated. Thank
36:22
you. Are all
36:24
objections to COVID vaccinations ideological
36:28
bullsh**? Dr. Pouchy? No,
36:31
they're not. And that's not what I was referring to.
36:33
Well, in reference to making it
36:35
hard for people to get education, traveling,
36:38
working, I'd say it very much was
36:40
in context. And I
36:42
take great offense to this. Ms. Allison Williams
36:44
testified before this committee about losing her
36:47
job because she sought an
36:49
exemption for ESPN's vaccine mandate, which
36:51
came from recommendation from bureaucrats like
36:53
yourself. She and her
36:55
husband were actively working with a fertility expert, a
36:58
physician. On how to get pregnant and
37:01
agreed with the premise that she was young,
37:03
healthy, wanted to get pregnant and shouldn't get
37:05
the vaccination for medical purposes.
37:08
But she was fired because you
37:10
made it hard. Just like you said in your statement,
37:13
because you didn't want to make sure that the
37:15
ideological bullsh** in the way
37:17
of her working, of
37:19
living her life, of making a medical decision with
37:21
her healthcare professional. I think Americans
37:23
should take great offense to this. That's
37:28
exactly what you meant when you said making it hard
37:30
for people to live without getting a
37:32
vaccination. You affected people's
37:34
ability to work, travel, be
37:37
educated, to actually flourish in American society,
37:39
to self-determine as we're
37:42
all given God-given rights. Shame on
37:44
you. These
37:46
are amazing hearings. I mean, and I'm thankful they're
37:48
happening, but I do ask myself, where
37:51
were these people while it was going on? You
37:54
know, as our representatives, why
37:56
weren't you shouting from the rooftops that
37:58
this was unconstitutional, that... that we were
38:00
being forced into something to take an experimental product. I
38:02
mean, they just, you didn't see this on the floor.
38:05
We didn't really see this happening. Letting
38:08
both these presidents, frankly, that took us through this,
38:10
just destroy our civil liberties, destroy our businesses, our
38:12
jobs, give me us no due process, can't go
38:14
to a courtroom and fight for rights because no
38:16
one's allowed into a courtroom. Couldn't even get into
38:19
a courtroom. Courts were shut down.
38:21
I mean, we cannot forget how quickly
38:23
this happened, right? And
38:25
as Tony Fauci says, you know,
38:28
if you, you know, basically protect people, they'll
38:30
do whatever we want. I mean, he said,
38:33
as soon as we get a protection in place, which they
38:35
did with the PrEP Act, then, you know,
38:37
schools, they'll take your kid's education away.
38:39
They'll shut your businesses down. They'll
38:42
act like the Nazis we wanted to act like. So
38:45
I'm pretty hopeful. Let's talk about
38:47
that vaccine that Fauci and NIH
38:49
funded, helped develop, marketed through the
38:51
media, and then whose mandates they
38:53
supported to get those in arms
38:56
of Americans. There's been a
38:58
lot of great studies coming out, which is the
39:00
past couple of weeks, showing some things that we
39:02
previously did not know about these shots, but also
39:04
there's been a change in the reporting when it
39:07
comes to, we'll call it mainstream media and
39:10
the increase in heart attacks. So this is the
39:12
morning show, today's morning show. Take a look at
39:14
this clip. Well,
39:17
we are back with our ongoing heart
39:19
health series with a new way of
39:21
thinking about heart attacks. Yeah, doctors say
39:23
they're seeing an alarming number of seemingly
39:25
healthy patients having heart attacks and
39:28
those patients are getting younger and younger. This story is
39:30
gonna blow you away because research shows that more than
39:32
10% of heart attack patients
39:34
had no known risk factors, such as
39:36
obesity or smoking. Now there's a group
39:39
of doctors at Mount Sinai here in
39:41
New York City, tracking patients, to see
39:43
if they can uncover the new risk
39:46
factors behind this trend. Trying to unravel
39:48
the mystery of young heart attacks,
39:50
Dr. Deepak Bhatt, director of Mount
39:52
Sinai Fuster Heart Hospital in New
39:55
York City. He's looking into patients
39:57
presenting with no known risk factors.
40:00
like diabetes, high blood pressure and
40:03
high cholesterol. I think there are
40:05
a lot of reasons for that. One probably has to
40:07
do with the obesity epidemic, but it could also be
40:09
other things. Another potential
40:11
clue, long smoldering, inflammation.
40:15
I'm talking about inflammation in the arteries supplying blood
40:17
to the heart. It might lead
40:19
to the plaque in that artery to act
40:21
up, in fact to rupture a
40:24
blood clot to form. If that blocks the
40:26
blood flow in that artery, that's what causes
40:28
a heart attack or heart muscle damage. The
40:31
cause of inflammation in seemingly healthy
40:33
people like Matthias, who are not
40:35
obese and don't smoke, is not
40:37
yet clear. When
40:40
I watch reports like this, Jeffrey, I can't
40:42
tell you how happy I am that I'm
40:45
no longer working for mainstream media at CBS
40:47
the way I did. Can you imagine having
40:49
to just, on the face of a COVID
40:51
lockdown, that forced an
40:53
untested product that we know causes myocarditis
40:56
and pericarditis to have to say, wow,
40:58
this is just in a shocking rise
41:00
in young people dying of heart attacks.
41:04
We've talked to specialists all over the
41:06
country and around the world, and everyone
41:08
is mystified why this is actually happening.
41:11
It's an alarming trend. It's affecting 10% of all
41:13
people getting heart attacks. Show
41:15
no signs of it. I mean,
41:18
it's absolutely mind-blowing that they can keep
41:20
a straight face while they're doing this
41:22
stuff. Right. And
41:25
so they're saying, well, I just don't know
41:27
why this heart muscle damage
41:29
is happening, this inflammation in these younger
41:32
kids. And at the same
41:34
time, literally at the same time,
41:36
this study comes out in the
41:38
BMJ, and it's titled, so these
41:40
researchers are looking at the effectiveness
41:42
of the COVID-19 vaccination in children
41:44
and adolescents. And they
41:46
say this, among both, and hundreds of thousands
41:48
of kids are looking at here, among both
41:50
adolescents and children, myocarditis and pericarditis, were documented
41:52
only in the vaccinated groups, with rates of
41:54
27 in 100 cases per million after first
41:56
and second doses, respectively.
42:01
That seems like a little bit of signal.
42:03
We looked at all these kids and it
42:05
just, it just quinced is that only the
42:07
kids that got the vaccines were having these
42:09
myocarditis issues that have been reported for the
42:12
last two years in several medical journals in
42:14
the VAERS reports. And you
42:16
know, the Today Show doesn't mention that. We don't
42:19
expect hardcore journalism from them, but these
42:21
are the studies that are coming out. And
42:23
we've known this and the signals were there, even
42:25
when they were voting to approve these vaccines for
42:27
the use in children. Yeah, and I
42:30
mean the death rate was so low in children,
42:32
I think 0.002%, something like that. So
42:35
to be putting them at risk, it's just,
42:37
it's really an atrocity that, yeah. Basically
42:41
talking about all risk and I'm almost
42:43
no reward here. So let's go on
42:46
though. So JAMA, Journal of American Medical
42:48
Association, Pediatrics were, this is a FDA
42:50
study. They were looking at the safety
42:52
of the Pfizer shot and the Moderna
42:54
shot in kids aged six months to
42:56
17 years. And what
42:58
did they find? They said this, in
43:00
the primary analysis, seizure met the statistical
43:03
threshold for a signal in children aged
43:05
two to four years after Pfizer shot
43:07
in all three databases and in children
43:09
two to five years after Moderna's vaccination
43:11
in two of the three databases. They
43:13
went on to say the statistical signal for
43:15
seizure in children aged two to four or
43:17
five years has not previously, have
43:19
not been previously reported for this age group
43:22
in active surveillance studies of mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.
43:24
So you know what that means? That means
43:26
when your child received this shot in a
43:28
doctor's office and had a seizure on the
43:30
spot or went home and had a seizure
43:32
and he said, hey doc, something happened after
43:34
this shot. Doctor said, there's no evidence of
43:36
this. The FDA would have told us it
43:38
would have been in the literature. Now years
43:40
later, they're saying, hey, guess what? We found
43:42
a new signal and this is the problem
43:44
with emergency use authorization of these vaccinations is
43:46
they're just gonna keep finding, oh, there's this
43:48
was a problem too. This was looked like another
43:50
signal we found right here. And this study-
43:52
Well, hold on. I just wanna make it really clear
43:55
for people watching. You would find the same thing if
43:57
you ever went back and looked at the childhood vaccine
43:59
program. I mean, what we are seeing right
44:01
now is not that the COVID vaccines any different than
44:04
all the other vaccines we've given our kids
44:06
that never went through safety trials, never went
44:08
through safety tests, was rushed on the market
44:10
exactly like COVID vaccine was. But
44:12
with all the work we've done with the High
44:14
Wire and Aaron's theory, our legal team, we've never
44:17
been able to get them to go back retrospectively
44:19
like they are right now, looking at databases, saying,
44:21
let's look at kids that got the vaccines and
44:23
look at kids that didn't get the vaccines, which
44:26
is what we're seeing now. And
44:28
what are they finding? Jeez, everybody in
44:30
the group that got the vaccine rise in heart
44:32
issues, rise in seizures. The group that didn't get
44:35
the vaccine, nothing. So clearly there's a signal. They've
44:37
never done these studies. They have never done
44:40
these studies on all the childhood vaccines, which
44:42
is one of the things we've talked a
44:44
lot about this that we
44:46
discovered when we went to when Robert
44:48
Kennedy Jr. invited me to the media
44:50
at the NIH that Donald Trump set
44:52
up back in the beginning of Trump's
44:54
presidency. And we spoke with the NIH.
44:57
We said, why won't you just do a comparative
44:59
study of those that received the vaccines and
45:01
those that have not and just ask
45:03
simple questions? Who has more seizures? Who
45:05
has more diabetes and autoimmune disease and
45:08
lupus and Tourette's and autism and all
45:10
these things? And as I've stated before,
45:12
they said, essentially, we can't figure
45:14
out how to do that study. Well,
45:17
they're figuring it out right now because the entire
45:19
world is doing it. It's all these independent agencies
45:22
around the world that are finally at least looking
45:24
at this one vaccine. Folks, don't just
45:26
think it's just this one vaccine. If they did this
45:28
with all the other vaccines, you'd be seeing the same
45:30
outcomes. And speaking
45:32
of that, so we have a headline here,
45:34
Shocking for Some, Not Too Shocking for Others.
45:37
This is the Telegraph. COVID vaccines may
45:39
have helped fuel rise in excess deaths.
45:42
That's a big headline because this is the first
45:44
time really that that's been reported in such a
45:47
big publication and not just talked about
45:49
by a podcaster or something. And this
45:51
is a study now. So this study
45:53
is titled Excess Mortality Across Countries in
45:56
the Western World. Since COVID-19 pandemic, they're
45:58
looking at autopsy reports. are looking at
46:00
data from the registries
46:02
for vaccine injuries in all countries. And
46:04
they are saying the vaccine is definitely
46:06
up there as a culprit. And it
46:08
says, during the pandemic, it was emphasized
46:10
by politicians in the media on a
46:12
daily basis that every COVID-19 death matter
46:14
and every life deserve protection through
46:17
containment measures and COVID-19 vaccines. In
46:19
the aftermath of the pandemic, the same
46:22
morale should apply. Every death
46:24
needs to be acknowledged and accounted for
46:26
irrespective of its origin, transparency towards potential lethal
46:28
drivers is warranted. And they are suggesting
46:30
so those lethal drivers are possibly the COVID
46:32
vaccine. So what does this do? A lot
46:35
of people are saying, well, yeah, but this
46:37
puts it in the medical journals. This
46:39
puts it in the literature. Other people can
46:41
cite this. And so doctors, the remaining doctors
46:43
that are really just still hook line and
46:46
sinker thinking this vaccine is amazing can
46:48
look at this and say, all right, there's
46:51
a problem here. We can start looking at this now. There's
46:53
a green light for this. There's cover. And
46:55
hopefully they start doing this because the
46:57
studies continue. I'm going to go through
46:59
one more here about blood transfusions. There's
47:01
a lot of questions about, well, is
47:03
it safe to get blood transfusions for
47:05
people who had several of these mRNA
47:07
shots and researchers out of Japan looked
47:09
at the look at the safety concerns
47:11
and they found six of them. And
47:13
I'll list them right here. Spike protein
47:15
contamination is a concern. Contamination with amyloid
47:17
aggregates and microthrombin formed by spike proteins.
47:20
Events attributable to decreased donor immune
47:22
system and immune abnormalities due
47:24
to the immune imprinting or
47:26
class switch. We've talked about this to IgG4
47:30
resulting from the multiple doses of
47:32
these vaccines, presence of lipid nanoparticles
47:34
and pseudo urinated mRNA. Contamination
47:36
with aggregated red blood cells or
47:38
platelets. And then the memory B
47:40
cells producing IgG4 as well as
47:42
the IgG4 produced from them. All
47:45
issues, not simple.
47:47
These are complex medical issues that are
47:49
just now seeing, you know, getting
47:52
into the conversation for blood transfusions, a
47:54
major change. And you got to wonder
47:56
what the Red Cross and what hospitals
47:59
are doing. will this change
48:01
anything? Are they going to just look the other
48:03
way on this? It's really interesting how this could
48:05
be societally changing. And every time someone takes a
48:07
booster shot, and luckily over 90% of America is
48:09
now denying taking the
48:13
latest booster, which is number nine, but one
48:15
of the scientists out in Geneva really
48:17
put it clearly for me. He said, Del, it's not
48:19
the spike protein in the vaccine. It's the problem. It's
48:22
this platform, the mRNA technology
48:24
platform. Essentially, we wrapped a
48:26
spike protein in this fatty
48:28
lipid, and then sent it into
48:30
the body. But it was supposed to stay in
48:32
the shoulder. It did not. As we've shown in
48:35
multiple studies, the second it moves past there, we're
48:37
finding it in the heart, in the liver, in
48:39
the brain. Well, what
48:41
happens when it delivers a foreign
48:43
protein? Your immune system is designed
48:45
to attack any cell
48:47
that has a foreign protein. It has to
48:49
get rid of it. It's under attack. It
48:52
realizes you're not supposed to be here. Well,
48:54
that's what vaccines do, especially with this technology.
48:56
You're putting a foreign protein in, and you're
48:58
lodging it in the heart. And so
49:00
the immune system attacks the heart. If it
49:02
lodges in the brain, it attacks the brain.
49:05
It is not being made so clear. It's
49:07
not the spike protein that is giving you
49:09
the swelling of the heart. It's your own
49:11
immune system attacking your heart because the vaccine
49:13
put a foreign protein there. So it won't
49:16
matter if they put chicken pox inside of
49:18
this thing or whatever, RSV. This
49:23
technology is delivering foreign proteins to
49:25
your organs, and that is going
49:27
to get you killed. This technology
49:30
is an abomination. And it's shocking that
49:32
anyone is sitting going, we have no
49:34
idea why there's a rise in heart
49:36
attacks among children. You have to be
49:38
an absolute imbecile to make that statement
49:40
right now. Del,
49:43
one of the more polarizing conversations I
49:45
want to go into here, we'll hold
49:47
off on the vaccine just for a
49:49
moment, is artificial intelligence. So depending
49:51
on what camp you come from, if you're
49:53
in Geneva at the WEF, you're being told
49:55
that the fourth industrial revolution is the greatest
49:58
thing ever to come. Humanity will
50:00
merge with AI and we'll all live happy a
50:02
life after or if you're from like an Elon
50:05
Musk camp It's AI could be
50:07
one of the greatest threats to humanity. Well right
50:09
down the middle. This thing is just developing It's
50:11
still going and it's moving forward. And this is
50:13
one of the crazier headlines I've ever seen in
50:16
reporting It says world's first
50:18
bio processor uses 16 human
50:20
brain organoids for a million times less
50:22
power consumption than a digital chip There's
50:25
a lot going on there Wow I'm gonna break
50:27
this down a little bit because it's pretty shocking
50:29
and we'll go to this paper What they're
50:32
quoting is this paper this article here in
50:34
research and the research Disclaimer is done
50:36
by the company that is basically marketing this
50:39
so all the conflicts of interest There are
50:41
from these the authors that belong to this
50:43
company that wrote this paper Open
50:45
and remotely accessible neural platform for
50:47
research in wetware computing. They're calling
50:49
it wetware It's this this merge
50:51
between bio biology and artificial intelligence.
50:54
And what do they do? Well, let's take a
50:56
picture From this they grow this they call it
50:58
this this organoid this brain organoid They
51:01
grow it and that's the step
51:03
process there and you can see it
51:05
there in the I guess that's a like a little petri dish
51:07
thing There's this white, you know Cleated
51:09
this this shiny organoid ball and it's hooked up
51:11
to a bunch of sensors and it can be
51:13
kept alive for about a year And it's a
51:15
living thing and they hook up these sensors to
51:18
it and they use it as a processor because
51:20
why well They're saying it uses so much less
51:22
power. So it's so much more efficient But
51:24
this is not a shock because in
51:27
2015 almost a decade ago now the Obama
51:29
White House put forward a grand Nanotechnology
51:32
challenge the world and in that
51:34
challenge they asked the world they challenge
51:36
the world to create a new type
51:38
of computer They say that can proactively
51:40
interpret and learn from data solve unfamiliar
51:43
problems using what it has learned and
51:45
operate with the energy Efficiency of the
51:47
human brain. Well, I guess they
51:49
just took a shortcut and said let's just use the
51:51
brain forget about the energy efficiency We can't design that
51:53
let's just use it and at that time in 2015
51:56
You had a lot of the luminaries that were coming out
51:58
and making these predictions. These are the people that
52:00
were really steeped in this technology. And
52:02
they weren't coming forward saying, at
52:05
some point in the next 10 years, we're going to have
52:07
technology where when you're on Zoom, AI
52:09
will transcribe your Zoom call. No, they're saying
52:11
things like this. This is Wired magazine
52:13
from 2015, the future of
52:15
personal computers. And it says
52:18
this. This is Andy Adaminsky. He
52:20
says, personal computing will become intrapersonal
52:22
and intracellular. Each human neuron will
52:24
be hijacked by a self-growing, self-repairing
52:26
molecular network. Computers will be networks
52:28
of polymer filaments growing and
52:31
together with a human. Seeds of the
52:33
network will be injected into embryos in
52:35
the first month of their development. They
52:37
will form a gigantic network inside the
52:39
brain. Computers will be inside us. They
52:41
will span all living creatures into a
52:43
united computing network. And this is the
52:45
part of this we're seeing. So they're
52:47
obviously looking at this thing to get
52:49
very into the human body. But one
52:51
of the big takeaways there is this
52:53
united computing network. They're hooking up brains
52:55
together. They want brains, according
52:58
to him, of all people together. So they can really
53:00
have this super powerful network. But in
53:03
2015 as well, they were doing that with
53:05
rat studies already. So they were building, this
53:07
is one of the studies here, building an
53:09
organic computing device with multiple interconnected brains. So
53:13
again, this is crazy stuff. But it says in here, they
53:16
call it a brain net. In
53:18
our brain net, all four rats
53:20
were chronically implanted with multi-electrode arrays.
53:22
That sounds fun. Placed bilaterally in
53:24
the primary somatosensory cortex. Once
53:27
animals recovered from the implementation
53:29
surgery, the resulting four brain nets
53:31
were tested in a variety of ways. They're
53:33
talking about basically computational tasks. But they were
53:35
able to do this with mice. And
53:38
you can see the picture here. You have
53:40
all those rats. And they're all connected in
53:42
this brain net. And there they go. And
53:44
they're doing all types of neural activity and
53:47
asking them to do tasks. But you
53:49
can see now, after 2015, you can
53:52
see the research starting to come out and going, wait a minute.
53:55
This brain thing, this brain idea, is
53:57
a really good idea for artificial intelligence.
54:00
And so this is where the
54:02
divorce happens between humanity and artificial
54:04
intelligence if it was ever even
54:07
combined. And this this study
54:09
right here says brain organoid computing for
54:11
artificial intelligence. So here we go. A
54:13
breakthrough in AI hardware may be inspired
54:15
by the structural and function of
54:17
a human brain, which has a
54:19
remarkable, efficient ability known as natural
54:21
intelligence to process and learn from
54:23
spatial temporal information. Their high efficiency
54:25
renders a human brain to be
54:27
ideal hardware for AI. So
54:30
that's what there's the divorce. So
54:32
A.I. is just looking at humanity
54:34
as bits and parts as hardware
54:36
to help synthesize and grow AI.
54:38
That's what we're here for, according to
54:41
according to popular science. I
54:43
wonder how many people watching right now are
54:45
looking up like land in the
54:47
middle of effing nowhere where we could
54:49
take a tent or family and just
54:51
go hide. Wow.
54:55
Amazing and scary. And
54:57
clearly you see science
55:00
and doctors and medicine playing God in
55:02
a way that is truly terrifying. And
55:04
all I just keep thinking is what
55:06
could possibly go wrong? Jeffrey,
55:09
great reporting. So
55:12
important. And thank you for all the great work
55:14
you're doing. We're laying out some heavy reality
55:17
right now. But the truth is, is we're
55:19
still here. We are spreading the
55:21
truth. People are listening. More and more people are waking
55:23
up every day. So it's
55:25
really just a game of chicken. Like who's going
55:28
to have a big enough force first, humanity or
55:30
the globalists? All right. Stay at it. I'll talk to you
55:33
soon. See you next year. Thanks. All
55:36
right. Well, you know, there's
55:38
so much to what we do here
55:40
at The High Wire. We are, you
55:42
know, first of all, bringing you the
55:44
news like nobody else is. I would
55:46
say I think in all honesty, we
55:48
have the most accurate track record throughout
55:50
the covid pandemic and everything that happened
55:52
there of any network in the entire
55:54
world. And I would also bet
55:56
that we've stated most of the statements we
55:58
made, like the vaccine. vaccine is not going to
56:01
stop transmission. There's no basis in
56:03
science around social distancing. All of those
56:05
things that are now proven to be
56:07
true, I think we said them first.
56:10
But beyond that, and you know, it's just the
56:12
reporting that we're doing, the international group of scientists
56:14
that we work with as a
56:16
part of our team, there's also the legal side,
56:18
which gives us information nobody else has. We're able
56:21
to go in and sue government agencies because they're
56:23
hiding information from you. I know it's a shocker.
56:26
I know you're really shocked at your government's lying to
56:28
you, but look at all those lawsuits you've won against
56:30
the government. I want to ask you, what
56:32
other news station do you watch? Do you watch CNN?
56:34
Do you watch MSNBC? Fox? Have
56:38
you ever seen them suing the government agencies
56:40
on a topic that they're like making you
56:42
all alarmed about, saying, can you believe it?
56:44
And on to like sell you more pharmaceutical
56:47
products? Stay tuned, we'll be right back. That's
56:50
what you're funding all the time. Meanwhile,
56:52
we are not just taking your donations and
56:54
trying to bring you the news. We're actually
56:56
fighting to change it, to change the world
56:59
so that we don't have to report on
57:01
this insanity any longer. Every week
57:03
we've been giving you sort of a legal
57:05
update. This is a big one. Do you
57:07
ever want the ability to have a free
57:09
market when it comes to vaccines? You want
57:11
to be able to sue the manufacturer? Or
57:13
do you want, as they said, with Tony
57:15
Fauci very clearly say, if we
57:18
can protect them, they'll do anything.
57:20
They'll kick kids out of school. They'll shut
57:22
down businesses. As long as they know they
57:24
can't be sued, they'll act just like Nazis.
57:28
That's what we're fighting against. And that's
57:30
what's our legal update. Take
57:33
a look at this. The
57:42
federal government paid Pfizer
57:44
and Moderna billions
57:47
of dollars to help them develop, license,
57:50
manufacture their COVID-19 vaccines. It
57:53
then paid them billions more to purchase these products. And
57:56
that's the way we get immunity
58:00
All of this was done on the backs
58:02
of citizens and taxpayers. It
58:05
was taxpayer money that flowed to these companies to
58:07
make these products and to then buy it from
58:09
them. And it literally is the
58:11
skin and bodies of the citizens of this country
58:14
that bear the brunt and pain
58:16
and hurt when these products hurt them.
58:20
It is truly incredible that the
58:22
government then set up to compensate
58:24
those injured by COVID-19 vaccines literally
58:28
was given a budget of only a few million
58:30
dollars, has rules that
58:32
make it virtually impossible to
58:35
get compensation, and has a
58:37
process that is worse
58:39
than the most ridiculous kangaroo court
58:42
that you could even imagine. Who
58:44
is deciding your claim? You don't know. Can
58:47
you confront the experts they supposedly rely upon?
58:49
No. Do you know who they are? No.
58:52
Can you get a hearing? No. Can you
58:54
have literally any of the due process that
58:56
we all come to expect from any court
58:58
proceeding? None. There is literally none of that.
59:01
As most of you probably know, the
59:03
National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act of 1986 gave
59:07
vaccine manufacturers immunity for the injuries caused
59:10
by most of their vaccine products all
59:12
the way back in 1986. And
59:15
so you might say, why does COVID-19
59:17
vaccine need another layer of immunity? Well,
59:20
if you're injured by any of those other vaccines, you
59:23
can bring a claim in the
59:25
Vaccine Injury Compensation Program, which has
59:28
serious issues, and that's for another
59:30
time, but apparently that
59:32
even wasn't good enough for COVID-19
59:34
vaccine injuries. The government really
59:36
wanted to make sure that nobody
59:38
was going to get any relief
59:40
from those injuries. So it added
59:42
another layer of protection called the
59:44
PrEP Act immunity. It sends
59:46
those who are injured by a
59:48
COVID vaccine into something called the
59:50
Counter Injury Compensation Program, the CICP,
59:52
which is effectively the equivalent of
59:55
fill out a piece of paper, go
59:57
to your backyard, bury it in the ground.
1:00:00
and wait for it to actually grow money
1:00:02
to compensate you for your injury. We
1:00:05
are proud that ICANN is supporting a
1:00:08
lawsuit to not only strike
1:00:10
down the immunity given to
1:00:12
COVID-19 vaccine manufacturers under
1:00:15
the PrEP Act, but also
1:00:17
this ridiculous program that supposedly
1:00:19
is pretending to compensate those
1:00:21
injured by COVID-19 vaccines. But
1:00:23
in reality, only is
1:00:25
adding insult to injury. By
1:00:28
creating a show as if
1:00:30
to pretend it's going to compensate them.
1:00:43
Well, first of all, I just want to
1:00:46
thank Aaron Siri and his incredible team of,
1:00:48
I think, it's nearly
1:00:50
20 legal professionals
1:00:54
that are working to protect
1:00:57
us from pandemics in the
1:00:59
future, from being forcibly vaccinated
1:01:01
like we were during COVID,
1:01:03
from having our jobs shut down. We fought
1:01:05
for the military. And going after
1:01:07
the PrEP Act, this is massive. We've got to
1:01:09
be able to take down these things because as
1:01:12
Tony Fauci just told you, as long as we
1:01:14
can protect people, we can unleash them upon
1:01:16
you and they will take away all
1:01:18
of your rights. Many
1:01:21
of you, when you run into me out in the
1:01:23
real world, whether we're in a restaurant, I'll sit down
1:01:25
with you and you say, wow, you're just like
1:01:27
you are on the show. And
1:01:30
that's because I'm really not putting on a
1:01:32
show. I'm just being deadly honest with you.
1:01:34
So I'm going to be really honest with
1:01:36
you today. There's a lot
1:01:38
that we've accomplished. There's a lot that I
1:01:40
want to thank you all for. Everyone that's
1:01:42
donated makes the show possible. All the legal
1:01:44
wins. I still am so proud of winning
1:01:47
back the religious exemption in Mississippi. We're trying
1:01:49
to do that. We're trying to free the
1:01:51
five, all the other states. We've
1:01:53
got amazing approaches. Some of them
1:01:56
are Trojan horse approaches where I can't legislate
1:01:59
as a house. out there doing its thing. But,
1:02:03
you know, and in many ways we are seeing the
1:02:05
same, we're
1:02:07
seeing the same level of donations, we're strong as
1:02:09
we've ever been, but Aaron
1:02:12
is really trying to win
1:02:16
before we lose our turf, to
1:02:19
win while we've got the wind at our backs.
1:02:21
And I'll be honest, he called me last week
1:02:23
and he says, Del, I think I may have
1:02:26
overextended. I think I may have taken on too
1:02:29
many legal cases. And
1:02:31
so we're gonna have to pick and choose and
1:02:33
start pulling back. I'm just being honest with you.
1:02:35
I'm really happy with all the work we're doing.
1:02:37
We're doing a ton and maybe we have done
1:02:39
too much. I mean, maybe we'll just wait and
1:02:41
hope that all of this works out. Clearly there's
1:02:43
no other nonprofit that I
1:02:45
think is having the success that we are in courtrooms
1:02:48
that is actually winning for you. But
1:02:50
this is that moment. And I wanna speak to,
1:02:52
you know, so many of you will go and
1:02:54
you're already donating and you'll put a couple more
1:02:56
dollars in. I want you to just
1:02:58
hold back for a second. I know this is crazy, but I wanna
1:03:00
talk to the rest of you. You know that less
1:03:02
than 1% of the people that are actually
1:03:04
watching this show actually donate to the
1:03:06
work that we're doing here. I know that you're paying
1:03:09
your cable bill. If you're forced to pay a bill,
1:03:11
you'll pay it and you'll let them lie to you
1:03:13
on the news. And that news channel isn't doing anything
1:03:15
to actually protect you. And I
1:03:17
love that you're coming here and you're sharing
1:03:19
this show. And I also get that these
1:03:22
are difficult times. No doubt about it, the
1:03:24
economy sucks. I get it. But
1:03:27
we're running out of time, okay? So
1:03:30
maybe is it possible that this week when
1:03:32
you go into Starbucks, you just say, you
1:03:34
know what, instead of parking, instead
1:03:36
of walking in and getting that cup of coffee,
1:03:39
I'm gonna take this $5 and I'm
1:03:41
gonna donate one cup of coffee every
1:03:44
single week. Do you realize less than 1% of
1:03:47
you are doing that? Can you imagine if just
1:03:49
20% of you did? Look at
1:03:51
what we are doing with those of
1:03:53
you that are donating. And for the rest of
1:03:55
you, I just can't impart upon you how good
1:03:57
it feels to say, even if it's a... a
1:04:00
month to say, I was a part
1:04:02
of that. It really does matter. Voting
1:04:06
with your dollars decides your future.
1:04:09
Do you wanna look back and say, man,
1:04:11
there were so many opportunities I had to
1:04:13
help that group, those winning lawsuits, but then
1:04:15
an election came in and the censorship came
1:04:17
in and the WHO took over and
1:04:20
now we live in some sort of authoritarian state.
1:04:22
I don't even know what my future is for
1:04:24
my kids and I suppose I probably should have
1:04:27
done a little bit more. This
1:04:29
is that moment. This is real
1:04:31
time. I know I'm being dramatic this
1:04:33
week and I promise I'll crack more jokes next week, but
1:04:36
Geneva scared the hell out of me and
1:04:39
I know we can win. I
1:04:41
know we can do this, but
1:04:43
we can't just let the billions of dollars,
1:04:45
let the liars have billions of dollars of
1:04:47
our tax money and not then go out
1:04:49
of our way to say, you know what?
1:04:52
I can throw a couple of dollars to those
1:04:54
people that are actually making a difference in my
1:04:56
world. So I'd rather not
1:04:58
call Aaron on Monday and say, all
1:05:00
right, give me the list. Let's
1:05:03
see what state will let have mandatory
1:05:05
vaccines another couple of years or whatever
1:05:07
the case may be. I would
1:05:09
rather just say, Aaron, your instincts were right. Our
1:05:12
audience is behind us. They really wanna
1:05:14
see you continue to win these lawsuits.
1:05:16
So please, please today,
1:05:19
if you're watching this show and you're thinking, you know,
1:05:22
I'm thinking about it, just go to the
1:05:24
top of the screen, just grab that mouse
1:05:26
right now, roll up to the top of
1:05:28
the screen and hit donate to ICANN. This
1:05:31
is gonna be one of the most important things you ever
1:05:33
do in your life and we will celebrate on the other
1:05:35
side of the finish line when we win. We're asking for
1:05:37
$24 a month, but honestly, $1, $1, $2, a
1:05:44
cup of coffee, $5. Isn't it crazy that a
1:05:46
cup of coffee is $5 now? But
1:05:48
anyway, you get the idea. Help
1:05:50
us continue to do this great work and expand
1:05:52
it. I don't wanna just tread water here and
1:05:54
see how much we can get done. There's
1:05:56
so much more we can do. Let's
1:05:59
do it together. Um,
1:10:01
I think I mean, I don't really
1:10:03
know. I also need to go. I
1:10:05
know, I do need to go. I'm sorry. My
1:10:07
experiences are going to be different from yours. How come? I
1:10:10
think, uh, you know, there
1:10:12
is a thing of, like, white privilege. What
1:10:14
privileges do you have that I don't have? Oh,
1:10:16
see, that's a question I keep asking myself
1:10:18
personally. It's like, not that I think
1:10:21
I'm more privileged than anyone else, because I had to work to
1:10:23
get where I was. Why do you have that mentality
1:10:25
immediately where you, you know, kind of apologize to me?
1:10:28
Let's talk about privilege. Let's talk about, I'm a
1:10:30
white man in America, so we could have grown
1:10:32
up differently. I got you. Why is
1:10:34
that your first initial reaction to me as a brown woman?
1:10:37
Wow, you're getting me good. Would you support
1:10:39
your mother's right to abort you? If
1:10:41
my mama boarded me, I wouldn't really
1:10:43
care. If I were to ruin her
1:10:45
life, I would not forgive myself. Were
1:10:47
you today proud to be an American?
1:10:50
Not one bit. Not one bit. Uh, I've never
1:10:52
been more embarrassed to be an American. The younger
1:10:54
generation doesn't care, because we all, like, hate the
1:10:56
military. We hate Americans. If you could choose citizenship
1:10:58
in a different country, revoke your U.S. citizenship today,
1:11:00
which country would you choose? I'd love to maybe
1:11:02
go to, like, uh, like, Algeria, or,
1:11:06
like, Egypt, South Africa. Anywhere but
1:11:08
the United States. Yeah, you can name all
1:11:10
other, like, 200 in, I think, 67 countries,
1:11:12
and I would go there. Iraq. Maybe.
1:11:16
For this younger generation who hates America, I
1:11:18
mean, what would you say to them? That's
1:11:20
spoiled. If you don't love the country that you're from,
1:11:22
I suggest you leave. There's plane
1:11:24
tickets available. I'll help
1:11:26
you. What would you say to the parents of
1:11:28
the girls that were swimming today who felt like
1:11:31
Leah has an unfair biological advantage? She
1:11:33
has been transitioning for the past three
1:11:35
years, and at
1:11:37
this point, there isn't that big
1:11:40
of a biological difference. What
1:11:42
do you think about kids being targeted for Pride Month? Do
1:11:44
you think it's an issue, or do you think it's a
1:11:46
good thing? I think more
1:11:49
kids should be
1:11:51
given puberty blockers. Men can have
1:11:53
penises. Can men get periods? Men can get periods.
1:11:55
And can men get pregnant? Men can get pregnant.
1:12:00
My message to any American who is genuinely
1:12:03
looking for the truth about what's going on
1:12:05
is to do your own research. Think
1:12:08
for yourself. Stop allowing the mainstream to
1:12:10
think for you. Stop allowing the government
1:12:12
or your friends or, you know, your
1:12:14
political leaning to decide for you how
1:12:16
you should think and feel. When are
1:12:18
Americans finally going to get tired of
1:12:20
being lied to? It's time for people
1:12:22
to get angry and actually stand up
1:12:24
for their freedoms and for their freedom
1:12:26
of thought. She's
1:12:29
my new personal hero and it's my
1:12:31
honor to have her here in Studio
1:12:33
Savannah Hernandez. Thanks for having me, Del.
1:12:35
I'm so excited to be here. You were
1:12:37
a big inspiration to me during 2020, everything
1:12:41
that happened with COVID, especially the lockdowns, you speaking out
1:12:43
against all of that. And I know you've been at
1:12:45
the forefront of this as well. So thank you for
1:12:47
having me. Well, it's really great to be here and
1:12:49
I'll be honest with you, like the type of journalism
1:12:51
you're doing where you just get in there and
1:12:54
get in people's faces like it's something I rarely do. Every
1:12:57
once in a while when the opportunity comes and people
1:12:59
don't know. I mean, it's really nerve
1:13:01
wracking to just sort of really confront people. I
1:13:03
mean, I can sit here at a desk and
1:13:06
talk about it and I can get on stages,
1:13:08
but really getting down on the ground. I mean,
1:13:10
how do you how do you
1:13:13
I mean, just even those moments where people are getting
1:13:15
violent around you, how do you stay so calm? Well,
1:13:18
I think it's because I'm doing this for my country
1:13:20
and I'm doing this for the truth. And
1:13:23
to be quite honest with you, it
1:13:25
really breaks my heart that we have been
1:13:27
lied to as American people. And when
1:13:30
I met with the vitriol, when I met with
1:13:33
the violence, I know that that is a direct
1:13:35
result of the propaganda that every single American has
1:13:37
been hit with. Right. Whether
1:13:39
it has to do with our health, our
1:13:41
economy, why America is the way that it
1:13:43
is. You know, in that real that
1:13:45
we just watched, we talked a lot about distractions
1:13:47
for the American people. And
1:13:50
again, I don't like when people are lied to. I
1:13:52
don't like when we're distracted. So if
1:13:55
I met with, you know, some pushback,
1:13:57
that's OK, because maybe somebody will start to think. I
1:18:00
went to school for journalism, but I didn't learn
1:18:02
anything. Are they teaching to have an objective, to
1:18:04
be unbiased? Absolutely
1:18:07
not. I
1:18:10
was in school during the beginnings of
1:18:12
Trump getting into office, right? So like
1:18:14
2015 through 2017 era. So
1:18:19
I did see from a lot of my
1:18:21
own journalism professors just the already anti-Trump slant
1:18:23
that we were supposed to adopt. And
1:18:28
that was just a given. And again, that was
1:18:30
something that I kind of questioned like, well, why
1:18:32
do we hate this man? Why is
1:18:34
it that this is a given? Why are we
1:18:36
not allowed to question things or ask questions? Why
1:18:39
is it that the narrative is kind of given
1:18:41
to us and we're supposed to run with it?
1:18:44
Again, to go into a lot of these protests,
1:18:46
which were anti-Trump at that time, I really was
1:18:49
just like a clean political slate.
1:18:51
And I told people, you know, you
1:18:53
have a chance to inform me as to why
1:18:55
Donald Trump is so bad. And
1:18:57
I didn't do that because, you know, I don't
1:18:59
really know and no one could explain to me.
1:19:02
Just start screaming at you. How could you not know? Exactly.
1:19:05
Exactly. And then the response
1:19:07
was, well, it just gave me like three points, three of the worst things
1:19:09
he's done. And it was the same
1:19:11
exact response every time, but no one could give
1:19:13
me anything concrete. So
1:19:15
again, I just realized that there's really no freedom
1:19:17
of thought as well because people are force
1:19:19
fed points from the
1:19:22
media and they just run with
1:19:24
them. That's something that we consistently see. You've
1:19:27
done, you've been, you know, you do
1:19:29
a lot of documentary work. You've done some great
1:19:31
documentary work up in New York City looking
1:19:34
at the migrant crisis. This
1:19:37
is a shocking story. And watching this
1:19:40
video absolutely blew my mind. Everybody,
1:19:42
I know you've heard this story, but I don't think
1:19:44
you've seen the whole story. Take a look at this.
1:19:47
This issue will
1:19:49
destroy New York City. Another
1:19:52
12 billion to address the
1:19:55
migrant crisis. Our criminal justice
1:19:57
system is upside down. upcoming
1:26:00
2024 elections. In
1:26:30
an effort to understand just how easy
1:26:32
it could be for an illegal to
1:26:34
obtain different forms of identification, we spoke
1:26:36
to a source familiar with the black
1:26:38
market. We found ourselves in
1:26:40
that helloidag we
1:26:47
spent money for this man Kiss
1:26:50
me The
1:27:09
whole thing about flying migrants
1:27:11
all over the country This guy is like,
1:27:14
I mean he's literally like on a sightseeing tour
1:27:16
right I want to just get a different vibe,
1:27:18
did New York I want to
1:27:20
go check out Chicago Here you go, here's
1:27:22
a plane ticket Go check out Chicago It's
1:27:26
like the new homesteading right You're just like, we'll travel
1:27:28
you all over Just look for
1:27:30
where you want to plant your roots and
1:27:32
hang out Exactly, and that's
1:27:34
actually a shortened clip He
1:27:36
was telling me how he wanted to go to Los Angeles He
1:27:39
wants to go to Chicago He was in New
1:27:41
York Why not? Yeah exactly, it's like well the
1:27:43
taxpayers are going to be paying for it anyway
1:27:46
And then we highlighted how New York is
1:27:48
spending 12 billion on this crisis
1:27:51
Now if we go back to 2022, which was a
1:27:54
short two years ago They were like, oh we're slated
1:27:56
to spend about a billion dollars on this Yeah, now
1:27:58
12 billion billion through
1:28:00
2025. So these
1:28:02
migrants are being treated. I mean
1:28:04
they're rolling out the red carpet,
1:28:07
Del. It's absolutely insane. I actually
1:28:09
did another piece with another whistleblower
1:28:11
in which he exposed just how
1:28:13
much is going on in these
1:28:15
hotels in regards to what migrants
1:28:17
have access to. The Roe
1:28:19
Hotel, which is a block away from Times Square, is
1:28:22
one of the biggest migrant hotels in New York. We're
1:28:24
talking about 3,000 to 5,000 migrants staying
1:28:27
in this hotel room. Previously
1:28:29
rooms were sold for upwards of $500 a night.
1:28:31
Now it is
1:28:33
filled with migrants. They go there, they
1:28:36
get a free room, they get room
1:28:38
service, laundry service. If they are pregnant, they
1:28:40
can go to the hospital, give birth, and
1:28:43
then they are given a stroller for their
1:28:45
children. They are given free metro cards to
1:28:47
ride on the subway, three meals a day.
1:28:49
So it's insane what's going
1:28:51
on there. And also alongside all of
1:28:54
the free things that they are being
1:28:56
given on the taxpayer's dime, there is
1:28:58
a lot of drug and alcohol use.
1:29:00
My whistleblower saying that children as young as
1:29:03
12 years old were getting drunk in this
1:29:05
hotel because their parents checked out for the
1:29:07
weekend, they went to a different state, left the
1:29:09
kids there. Hopped on a plane, went to visit some other
1:29:11
states. Yeah, why not? Because New York's handing them
1:29:13
out for free. It's crazy. And again, it's like
1:29:15
we send in our source and they're like, oh,
1:29:17
well, if you're a US citizen, we can't give
1:29:19
you a free plane ticket because this is only
1:29:22
for illegal immigrants who broke the law breaking into
1:29:24
the country. It's really
1:29:26
amazing. I've done some traveling
1:29:28
down to the border as
1:29:31
of you. And what was shocking to
1:29:33
me is it just wasn't the story
1:29:35
I had expected, at least not the
1:29:37
night we were there. We were there
1:29:39
like two in the morning, really watched
1:29:41
the coming across and the drug
1:29:44
cartels running the
1:29:47
whole thing. They're bringing busloads up. They just
1:29:49
walk right in. Police are
1:29:51
totally overwhelmed. There's nothing they can do except just
1:29:53
hop on a bus and then and there you
1:29:55
can go into a place and get a
1:29:57
plane ticket. But what was shocking was it wasn't
1:29:59
like. like it wasn't, at least that night,
1:30:01
it wasn't Guatemalans or Latin Americans.
1:30:04
I think it was like two people
1:30:06
that were from Latin America. The
1:30:08
rest was like Congolese, like many of
1:30:10
the images you're showing, you know, African,
1:30:12
Middle Eastern, but to your
1:30:14
point, like not families, not
1:30:18
families seeking refuge and really not
1:30:20
a whole lot of women, like
1:30:22
a lot of like military
1:30:25
age men. Single men, exactly.
1:30:27
And again, going into that
1:30:29
report too, right? I really wanted to
1:30:31
highlight that this retaking center in New
1:30:33
York is next to not one, but
1:30:35
two children's parks. And I forgot to put
1:30:37
this bureau into this documentary, but you
1:30:39
can go to the entryway because the
1:30:41
parks are kind of gated off. And
1:30:43
in again, those eight different languages, it
1:30:45
says you are not allowed to come
1:30:47
into this park unless you are accompanying
1:30:49
a child, because
1:30:52
there's so many single unvetted
1:30:54
males there. And keep in
1:30:56
mind too, anybody can go on Google
1:30:59
right now and look up crime New
1:31:01
York city and you have these same
1:31:03
migrants stabbing American citizens, shooting NYPD officers,
1:31:06
raping small children and other females in
1:31:08
the United States, other migrants. It's absolutely
1:31:10
atrocious. And you know, I hate to
1:31:13
even use this type of language, but
1:31:15
it's heartbreaking to me that the American
1:31:17
citizens, not only are we paying for
1:31:20
these people to be brought into our
1:31:22
country, to live off of our taxpayer
1:31:24
dime, but then on top of all
1:31:26
of that, the final slap in the face is
1:31:29
that they are making our city streets unsafe.
1:31:31
And then, you know, more of our
1:31:33
money gets sent abroad for other wars, it's heartbreaking.
1:31:37
What, I mean, you cover so many issues, you
1:31:39
know, we're gonna have to have you on again,
1:31:41
because I mean, you're getting into the,
1:31:43
you know, a lot of things we cover here, the transgender
1:31:46
issues, which you know, you're standing there, but
1:31:48
on this migration,
1:31:50
integration, whatever you wanna call it, I was just
1:31:52
in Geneva as you've been there too. And
1:31:55
I mean, I'm sure you've seen these complexes that
1:31:57
they're building there, it's just like... these
1:32:00
fortresses for migration. And we're
1:32:02
hearing about like IOM, I'm
1:32:05
reported on Darien
1:32:07
Gap, where these camps are being
1:32:10
built to just move people into our country.
1:32:12
I mean, it really looks like it's all
1:32:15
happening on purpose. When I was just in Geneva, so many
1:32:17
people were in Europe, but like it's finally happened to you.
1:32:19
They've been doing this to us for years, infiltrating
1:32:22
our neighborhoods with illegal immigrants and just
1:32:24
saying, we're all supposed to accept it.
1:32:26
Now they're being handed IDs. Why,
1:32:30
what do you think's really going on?
1:32:32
Have you come to some sort of
1:32:34
thesis on the plan? Why
1:32:39
do we need all these people being
1:32:41
let in here without knowing who they
1:32:43
are or adjudicating anything? Well,
1:32:46
I think it goes back to a
1:32:48
topic that I'm sure is very popular
1:32:50
with your audience and that's the great
1:32:52
reset or globalism, right? I mean, we
1:32:54
have seen how the WEF, the WHO
1:32:56
have worked in tandem to take away
1:32:58
our rights and our freedoms and
1:33:01
this mass migration is a great way
1:33:03
to replace the population that does care
1:33:05
about a nation, that does care about
1:33:07
the rights and freedoms that that nation
1:33:09
was founded on. So for example, the
1:33:11
United States of America, we were a
1:33:13
very strong Western country. It would be
1:33:15
very difficult to bring us down from
1:33:17
the outside. So they import people and
1:33:20
they destroy us from within. And that's
1:33:22
what we're seeing right now. We have
1:33:24
heard so many times that you'll own
1:33:26
nothing and be happy. And
1:33:29
that's what we're seeing right now too with
1:33:31
this mass migration. I mean, import people that
1:33:33
have this mentality and think that socialism is
1:33:35
a good thing or that governmental control is
1:33:37
a good thing because the same government allowed
1:33:39
you to break into the nation and then
1:33:41
they're taking care of you. And then the
1:33:43
people who were screaming loudest about this are
1:33:45
getting censored, are getting silenced and
1:33:47
the nation is being destroyed before
1:33:49
our very eyes. So I think
1:33:51
it does go back to the
1:33:53
one world government globalism issue that
1:33:56
we are consistently seeing. Again,
1:33:58
across Europe. So many
1:34:00
of these once beautiful countries have been
1:34:02
absolutely demolished by mass migration and it's
1:34:05
happening now in the United States and
1:34:07
has been for a long time. You
1:34:09
talked about censorship. Have you dealt at
1:34:11
all in your work with being censored?
1:34:13
Absolutely, I was censored off of Twitter
1:34:16
for two years and this
1:34:18
was a direct result of pushing
1:34:20
back against the mainstream narrative on
1:34:22
multiple issues. During 2020, I
1:34:25
went to the Million Maga March in Washington, DC,
1:34:27
and this was at the height of the media
1:34:29
trying to tell the entire
1:34:31
nation that if you were right-wing, right, if
1:34:33
you just basically had common sense and you
1:34:36
maybe liked the Constitution a little bit, that
1:34:38
you were a domestic extremist, that you were
1:34:40
a terrorist. And so I showed
1:34:43
a clip of thousands of
1:34:45
Americans singing the national
1:34:47
anthem. It was a beautiful moment. Then
1:34:50
President Trump retweeted it. I was immediately
1:34:52
banned. All of my work was deleted
1:34:55
and keep in mind, I was covering
1:34:57
the BLM 2020 riots at that point.
1:35:00
So all of the footage that went along with
1:35:02
headlines saying, hey, these riots are not fiery, but
1:35:04
mostly peaceful. They're very dangerous, in
1:35:06
fact. All of the footage that went along
1:35:08
with those headlines was gone. And
1:35:11
then we all watched how censorship
1:35:13
allowed the people in charge to
1:35:16
rewrite history. I
1:35:18
made another account and I went viral
1:35:20
because I spoke to an athlete who
1:35:23
was competing in the same championship
1:35:25
as Leah Thomas during the 2022
1:35:27
NCAA Women's Swimming Championship. She was
1:35:29
the first woman to speak out
1:35:31
against Leah Thomas, saying, this is
1:35:33
a dude, he has a biological
1:35:35
advantage. And she was upset because
1:35:37
her teammate got kicked out of
1:35:39
the finals. It was her senior
1:35:41
year, last opportunity to go for
1:35:43
gold. Leah Thomas took that
1:35:45
opportunity away. And then Twitter not only
1:35:47
censored my voice, but her voice more
1:35:50
importantly, because she was brave enough to
1:35:52
counter the entire nation who
1:35:54
was trying to push this narrative for the media,
1:35:56
per se. Those trying to push this narrative that
1:35:58
trans women are women. when we all clearly saw
1:36:01
that they were not. The third
1:36:03
time I was censored, because I made another account,
1:36:05
because I was like, you know what? I don't
1:36:07
like Americans being lied to. I'm going to continue
1:36:09
to talk to people on the ground that are
1:36:12
living through the nonsense that the media keeps pushing
1:36:14
on us as a normalcy. And
1:36:16
the third reason I got banned was because I
1:36:18
went to Pride, and I spoke to two young
1:36:20
girls who said, I'm bi, I'm
1:36:23
pan, I'm queer, I really don't know.
1:36:25
It's very confusing, but I'm hit with
1:36:27
all these sexualities and now I'm a
1:36:29
queer, Omni, I
1:36:32
don't even remember all the labels, but
1:36:34
it basically highlighted how the LGBTQ community
1:36:36
is targeting and confusing children. That went
1:36:39
so viral that I, again, got banned
1:36:41
for my third time. And
1:36:44
again, too, all three of these stories
1:36:46
made national news, and Twitter
1:36:49
decided to ban them because
1:36:52
they were effective and showed real
1:36:54
American voices. It's
1:36:57
amazing the work that you're doing. And, you know,
1:36:59
it's also, I think
1:37:02
hope for
1:37:04
young people, your generation, do you have
1:37:06
hope, especially for young people? Do you
1:37:09
think there is
1:37:11
a passion there? Do they love America?
1:37:13
I mean, as you went through school,
1:37:15
as you travel around doing this work,
1:37:17
where are the people
1:37:20
that are getting out of college right now? What are their minds? Do
1:37:23
they feel like they have hope? I
1:37:25
think that a lot of them have
1:37:27
been brainwashed as well into hating the
1:37:29
United States of America, hating the white
1:37:32
man that created this country. A lot
1:37:34
of them have been hit with this
1:37:36
racial propaganda. However, I think via independent
1:37:38
media, via social media, where we do
1:37:40
have a voice, we can change hearts
1:37:42
and minds, and we are doing that.
1:37:44
I mean, again, look at where we
1:37:46
are now versus where we were in
1:37:48
2020 in terms of the
1:37:50
vaccine, right? We're in a completely
1:37:52
different ballgame. People who previously
1:37:55
were calling anti-vaxxers, you
1:37:58
know, super spreaders and saying that we... we're
1:38:00
killing people are now saying, you know what,
1:38:02
you guys were right, we were wrong. This
1:38:04
vaccine is ineffective and dangerous. So
1:38:07
I think even with that alone, we
1:38:09
can see how effective being able
1:38:11
to talk on social media has been, especially
1:38:13
to those younger generations. What's your
1:38:15
dream? Where do you wanna be? Where are you going?
1:38:19
My dream is honestly just to have a country
1:38:21
in which I can use my free speech and
1:38:23
my voice to continue talking to other Americans. I
1:38:26
love talking to people. I love being on the
1:38:28
ground. And I love the
1:38:30
United States because this is truly
1:38:32
the last free country. And
1:38:34
we're losing a lot of those rights and freedoms,
1:38:36
which is why we need to keep fighting for
1:38:38
them. But where are we gonna go if the
1:38:40
United States falls? New Zealand, Australia, Canada, look how
1:38:42
that. Yeah, look how that went. There's a lot
1:38:44
that got struck off the list over the last
1:38:46
couple of years. I was like, oh, Katie was
1:38:48
pretty, oh, no, no, no, no. Not that one,
1:38:50
exactly. So it's like, there's nowhere else to go.
1:38:53
And so my hopes and dreams are just to
1:38:55
live in a free country, to be able
1:38:58
to pass on a free country to
1:39:00
my children, have my grandchildren grow up
1:39:02
with the same rights and freedoms that
1:39:04
I had and continue to
1:39:06
fight for what past
1:39:09
men and women die for. What makes this
1:39:11
country great? Because the United States is absolutely
1:39:13
an incredible country. Yeah, it really
1:39:16
is. Your passion is
1:39:18
infectious. And I'm really,
1:39:20
anything we can do to help on
1:39:22
your mission is really, really great. Keep up the good
1:39:24
work. It's very inspiring. Thank you, Del. Thank you for
1:39:26
joining us today. Thanks. All right. Well,
1:39:30
what happens is, as Savannah was
1:39:33
just pointing out, look how far
1:39:35
we've come, but what
1:39:37
were the voices in the
1:39:39
middle of the pandemic? There are some
1:39:41
really big names and people that
1:39:44
are suddenly telling us, I
1:39:47
was trying to tell the world the truth. They
1:39:49
weren't letting me. Can you
1:39:52
imagine hearing that from like, I don't know, the head
1:39:54
of the CDC? Take
1:39:56
a look at this. I was upset
1:39:58
with CDC when I left. because they
1:40:00
stopped tracking people that were infected
1:40:03
that were previously vaccinated. So
1:40:06
if you didn't track it, well,
1:40:09
because then you couldn't report that there
1:40:11
were people vaccinated and got infected. But
1:40:15
no, why did they stop tracking it? But
1:40:18
I think there was a decision not
1:40:20
to do anything that made the
1:40:22
vaccine sound like it didn't work.
1:40:26
You know, I've always tried to be honest that
1:40:28
I think there was some major mistakes in the vaccines.
1:40:30
They should have never been mandated. I
1:40:32
also felt that people should have been more honest
1:40:35
about the fact that there were side effects
1:40:37
to those vaccines and some people were actually
1:40:40
harmed. The
1:40:43
other thing I thought there should be,
1:40:45
you know, more honesty about the fact
1:40:47
that the vaccines don't protect against infection.
1:40:49
I remember Biden saying, you know, this
1:40:51
is an epidemic
1:40:53
of the unvaccinated. When I was
1:40:55
Hogan's chief public health advisor in
1:40:58
Maryland after I left CDC, I
1:41:00
was saying, wait a minute, two thirds of the
1:41:02
people that I'm seeing infected in Maryland or have
1:41:05
been vaccinated. I mean, the president of the United
1:41:07
States said it. Biden said this was an epidemic
1:41:09
of the unvaccinated. Tony wasn't
1:41:11
aggressive in putting this
1:41:13
in perspective. The CDC didn't put
1:41:15
it in perspective. The reality
1:41:18
is this vaccine, listen, it's a
1:41:20
short duration in which
1:41:22
this vaccine provides some
1:41:25
efficacy, maybe four
1:41:27
to six months max. I mean,
1:41:30
if you came down and visited me
1:41:32
and interviewed my patients, you know, you'd
1:41:34
interview patient after patient after
1:41:36
patient that did not have
1:41:39
COVID but
1:41:41
are very sick, you would say, very
1:41:43
sick long COVID patients. And
1:41:45
it's all from the vaccine.
1:41:47
Now, what is it, Chris? Well,
1:41:50
it's the spike protein is immunotoxic.
1:41:52
All right, when you get infected, it's
1:41:55
immunotoxic. But when you
1:41:57
give the vaccine, we make the spike protein.
1:42:00
Now this is my opinion, okay?
1:42:02
When I give you an mRNA
1:42:05
vaccine, which
1:42:07
I helped develop and I've given to a lot of
1:42:09
patients and I've taken it myself multiple
1:42:11
times, I
1:42:14
don't know how much spike protein you make. Right.
1:42:16
Because I give you mRNA and then your
1:42:18
body goes makes it. Right. So you make
1:42:21
eat a little, you may make
1:42:23
a lot, you may make it for
1:42:25
a week, you may make it for a
1:42:27
month. I
1:42:31
just let that sink in for just
1:42:33
one second, shall we? That
1:42:35
was the former head of the CDC that
1:42:37
was there as this pandemic started. I knew
1:42:40
the vaccine wasn't going to be effective. He's
1:42:43
saying I knew it had side effects. We're
1:42:45
injecting a spike protein, like, you know, injecting
1:42:47
and making your body make the spike protein.
1:42:49
We don't, we don't know how much it's
1:42:51
going to make. I mean,
1:42:53
maybe, I mean, granted, maybe if he'd
1:42:55
been just maybe a touch more dynamic,
1:42:57
maybe his voice would
1:43:00
have been heard. And those of you that have been
1:43:02
with us all the way through COVID, we called it,
1:43:04
didn't we? You know that we were actually, I said,
1:43:07
I have a feeling that Redfield is
1:43:09
on our side and he's not being
1:43:11
listened to. I even told Aaron Siri,
1:43:13
can we FOIA every email between Robert
1:43:15
Redfield and Tony Fauci?
1:43:17
And I just want the ones where everything's
1:43:19
written in all caps because I'm
1:43:21
sure those two hated each other. It was clear there
1:43:24
was a battle going on there. But I just
1:43:26
really, I want to take a moment here. You
1:43:29
have the former head of the CDC, a
1:43:31
top health official that didn't
1:43:33
believe in this vaccine, knew it was
1:43:36
problematic, thought it was being rushed, knew
1:43:38
that the president was lying when he
1:43:40
said this is a pandemic of the
1:43:42
unvaccinated. We have shown how all of
1:43:44
that was lies. But this isn't just
1:43:46
a doctor. This isn't just someone's on
1:43:48
stage. This guy was right there in
1:43:50
the meetings running the CDC and his
1:43:53
voice didn't matter.
1:43:56
Is he an anti-vaxxer for saying, you
1:43:58
know what, I wouldn't have mandate the
1:44:00
vaccine. Do you know the definition of
1:44:02
anti-vaxxer is just someone that doesn't believe
1:44:05
in vaccine mandates doesn't want it forced
1:44:07
on people wants it to be choice
1:44:09
that's the definition so technically he's an
1:44:12
anti-vaxxer but his voice the top doctor
1:44:14
scientist one of them in America couldn't
1:44:16
do anything to help us because the
1:44:18
one we were all listening to the
1:44:21
remind you've seen this earlier in the
1:44:23
show while our head of the CDC
1:44:25
wanted to say that this is the
1:44:27
opinion that ran all
1:44:30
over this country. The serious
1:44:33
challenge that's posed by
1:44:36
anti-vaxxers and I
1:44:38
think we need to strategize to
1:44:41
really push back because vaccines work
1:44:44
vaccines affect adults and
1:44:46
we have signs evidence
1:44:48
on our side. I
1:44:51
think it's time
1:44:53
to be more aggressive in pushing
1:44:55
back on anti-vaxxers think
1:44:58
they use covid as an opportunity and
1:45:01
you know all the havoc there they're
1:45:03
creating. For those of
1:45:05
us we were in the international show for those of
1:45:07
you that live in the United States of America right
1:45:09
now. We
1:45:11
have gotten complacent we have grown up in
1:45:14
a country where we think we just rule
1:45:16
the world and it's all going to work
1:45:18
out we're in charge. We
1:45:20
weren't in charge it's already gone we've already
1:45:22
ceded our power we did it during the
1:45:24
pandemic under both of the presidents that were
1:45:27
in the WHO called
1:45:29
the shots and our own scientists
1:45:31
didn't have a voice and forget
1:45:33
about the Great Barrington Declaration and
1:45:35
those great scientists saying that we
1:45:37
shouldn't have locked down forget about
1:45:39
doctor Robert Malone who invented the
1:45:41
covid the mRNA technology that was
1:45:43
being used that came out against
1:45:45
the vaccine our own head of
1:45:47
the CDC did not matter his
1:45:49
opinion did not matter the WHO
1:45:52
already had its sights on our
1:45:55
Constitution. WHO called the
1:45:57
pandemic said everyone millions are going to
1:45:59
die. In the end, it had
1:46:01
a death rate of .35%. And
1:46:04
that was just because if you were
1:46:06
over the age of 80 and had
1:46:08
other serious health conditions, that drove the
1:46:10
numbers up. Everybody else was .00 something.
1:46:13
Here it is, 0 to 19. Your
1:46:16
risk of death was .0027%, 20 to 29.014, .013. I
1:46:24
mean, you don't even get up above
1:46:26
1% until you're above the age of
1:46:29
70. And when you're looking
1:46:31
at these IHR rules, they're
1:46:34
saying the next time there's a
1:46:36
serious crisis. That wasn't a
1:46:38
crisis. They haven't set the bar.
1:46:40
I demanded it in the middle of COVID
1:46:42
and said, at what number do we say? Is
1:46:44
it at 1% that then
1:46:46
we, you know, lock the nation down? Is
1:46:48
it at 2% to 3%? It
1:46:52
certainly couldn't have been at .3%, which
1:46:55
is what every flu season has been, you
1:46:57
know, a bad flu season's a .5%. It
1:47:00
was less than a bad flu season
1:47:02
and they locked the world down. And
1:47:04
now, Tadros is telling you, we're gonna
1:47:06
do it all over again next time.
1:47:08
We predict that there's a virus that
1:47:10
may be out of control. You
1:47:12
gotta see what's happening here, folks,
1:47:15
please. You all giggle
1:47:17
and laugh when you're a three-year-old child
1:47:19
and you're like, where are you? And
1:47:21
they're like, you can't see me. You
1:47:24
can't see me. As though covering your
1:47:26
eyes somehow hides you from the people
1:47:28
or the monster. Are
1:47:30
you sticking your head in the sand? Do
1:47:33
you really think this is gonna blow by?
1:47:35
Do you really think that they don't mean
1:47:37
business? Do you really think that that's the
1:47:40
last pandemic you're gonna see, the last time
1:47:42
they're coming after your job, the last time
1:47:44
they're coming after your constitution? Is there anything
1:47:46
in you that is allowing you to believe
1:47:48
that right now? This
1:47:50
has been a serious show. But
1:47:52
let me just say, one of my favorite things
1:47:55
that you say to me when I meet you in
1:47:57
an airport is you always give me a sense of
1:48:00
hope. So here is my sense of hope. Here
1:48:02
it comes. Are you ready? Here
1:48:04
is the bright shining light of this week's
1:48:06
show that I'm here to report you. We
1:48:09
still have time. That's
1:48:12
it. Not a lot of time, but we still
1:48:14
have time. We are not,
1:48:16
you know, being tracked by our
1:48:18
cell phones, at least not legally,
1:48:20
and they can't arrest us yet.
1:48:24
They aren't stopping us in airports right now.
1:48:27
They did before, and we've pushed back and
1:48:29
won back a little bit of those liberties.
1:48:32
But let me make this perfectly clear.
1:48:35
Every nation in the world involved in the
1:48:37
WHO does not have
1:48:39
the United States of America's Constitution.
1:48:42
And every one of these member states
1:48:44
that were all supposed to be in
1:48:47
this together have one
1:48:49
thing that's getting in their way, the
1:48:51
Constitution of the United States of
1:48:53
America. They've got their sights set
1:48:55
on it. So if you
1:48:58
live here, recognize this on D-Day.
1:49:01
They have already landed our
1:49:04
beaches. They took our
1:49:06
cities. They took our towns.
1:49:09
We beat them back, and now they've
1:49:12
gone and got even stronger troops, stronger
1:49:14
sign up by member states around
1:49:16
the world to continue to attack
1:49:18
America, to continue to attack, frankly,
1:49:21
every citizen of the world, as I
1:49:23
said in the speech, this
1:49:26
was a world war. It is a
1:49:28
world war. They're coming after
1:49:30
every citizen so that you have no
1:49:32
rights. All they have to do is
1:49:35
declare an emergency, and
1:49:37
they are in charge. This
1:49:40
is serious, serious business.
1:49:43
And lastly, as we see these
1:49:45
brilliant investigations going on, the
1:49:48
right questions finally being asked of
1:49:50
Tony Fauci and others, and we've
1:49:52
got assistance saying, hey, Fauci knew
1:49:55
about it. Collins knew
1:49:57
about it. This guy can lie all he
1:49:59
wants. But as long as
1:50:01
he keeps talking, he's going to talk
1:50:03
himself into a hole because now we
1:50:05
know he lied about gain of function.
1:50:07
We know he's lying right now about
1:50:09
the fact that these emails, you shouldn't
1:50:11
have been using private email even though
1:50:13
his assistant, Morens, is saying, Vauci knows
1:50:15
we're supposed to be using Gmail. He's
1:50:18
the one that basically told me and
1:50:20
the foil ladies all in on it. They're all in
1:50:22
on it. It's a pattern of corruption. I
1:50:25
want to say this. We have
1:50:28
worked so hard here at ICANN to get
1:50:30
to this point. For all of you freedom
1:50:32
fighters out there that have been in this
1:50:34
movement even before I was, you were fighting
1:50:36
for this moment for them to finally mess
1:50:38
up at a moment like COVID where we
1:50:40
have before and after video. We know what
1:50:43
the people said when they were lying to
1:50:45
us. We have proof now that they're admitting
1:50:47
that they had lied and that they got
1:50:49
it wrong. We have those
1:50:51
that were healthy adults running and
1:50:53
jogging and running marathons and dropping
1:50:55
dead now. We have the best
1:50:57
and greatest, most important investigation in the
1:51:00
history of the world around a product
1:51:02
that has been alive from the beginning.
1:51:05
But MRNA's take it to a whole other level
1:51:07
and they want to give it to everybody. Tadro
1:51:09
still believes it's great even though the head of
1:51:12
the CDC is telling you it ain't great at
1:51:14
all. So
1:51:16
when you ask yourself, what are we going to do? One of the
1:51:18
things I want to ask you is
1:51:21
who are you going to elect? Who
1:51:23
do you think is really
1:51:25
down to investigate this? Who wants to get
1:51:27
to the bottom of it? Whose
1:51:30
name do they want to say? We
1:51:33
want to make sure that this
1:51:35
investigation happens. You thinking about
1:51:37
it? Joe Biden want to really uncover this
1:51:39
and say, hey, I made a big mistake.
1:51:41
Is Donald Trump really down to keep these
1:51:43
investigations going? Get to the bottom and figure
1:51:46
it out what happened when we rushed that
1:51:48
vaccine out, figure out what's going on. I
1:51:51
don't know. I don't know
1:51:53
who we're going to trust, but I'm
1:51:55
telling you the only people I trust are
1:51:58
the ones that have regular jobs. every day, that
1:52:01
go out and work, that teach
1:52:03
their children to tell the truth, that
1:52:05
stand for what they believe in. The
1:52:08
free citizens of the world are hanging in the balance
1:52:11
right now. You're one of them. I'm one
1:52:13
of them. So what do we do? Now,
1:52:15
we're not all going to be, you know,
1:52:18
Savannah Hernandez. I get it. But
1:52:21
are you going to tell everyone you know that
1:52:24
we shouldn't be celebrating the greatness
1:52:26
of America when we're watching
1:52:28
its buildings being torn down, when we're
1:52:31
watching them landing our beaches and
1:52:33
coming after everything we knew to be
1:52:35
freedom, while they're killing our chickens and
1:52:37
our cows and our food supply because
1:52:39
they have the flu and it doesn't
1:52:41
seem to be bothering them, while they're
1:52:44
celebrating every little disease and screaming, this
1:52:46
may be disease X. And by the
1:52:48
way, we just signed agreements. And we
1:52:50
can find disease X. We can shut
1:52:52
you down again. I
1:52:57
promise I will make us laugh
1:52:59
more next week. But this week, please
1:53:03
do everything you can. Donate
1:53:05
to ICANN so we can continue to be
1:53:07
right all along the way, that we
1:53:09
can continue to pay the scientists that we're using all
1:53:11
around the world to bring you the truth. Donate
1:53:14
$24 a month if you can, but donate
1:53:16
a dollar or 50 cents. Be
1:53:19
a part of change. Be
1:53:22
a part of doing something. Be
1:53:24
in action. Because
1:53:26
over there in Geneva, they're counting
1:53:28
on you to stick your head
1:53:31
in the sand and do nothing.
1:53:34
And many of the leaders right here in
1:53:37
America and our leadership around the world knows
1:53:40
they can lock it down. They'll try to do
1:53:42
it again if we don't stand
1:53:44
for who we are. This
1:53:47
is our moment. I've said it before. May
1:53:50
you live in interesting times. May
1:53:53
you live a life that meant
1:53:55
something, that you were needed.
1:53:59
Every one of you is. is needed, trust
1:54:01
me, right now. You're
1:54:04
dynamic, you're awesome,
1:54:07
you're free, and
1:54:10
we outnumber them. Now
1:54:14
let's go out and do something about it. I'll
1:54:17
see you next week. You
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