COVID-19 Humanity Betrayal ㅤ Memory Project

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Speaker 1: Hello, and welcome to another CHBMP space. Please give us a few minutes to get situated, and then we will get started. Welcome, everybody. Andy, you should have your cohost invite. Gail, you should have speaker and a cohost invite. Speaker 2: Invite. I don't have the cohost invite. Speaker 3: Hello, everyone. Speaker 4: Hello. Hello, Andy. Speaker 3: Hello there. Speaker 5: How's everybody doing? Speaker 1: Really good. Good to see you. How are you doing tonight? Speaker 3: Pretty good. I, I know it was really cold today, but I still I still had the audacity to go to the driving range and hit golf balls. So that was fun. Speaker 1: No. That does sound like fun. Speaker 3: Yeah. It was really cold, but, you know, doing it in the cold is actually fun. Really is. Speaker 2: It was but it was freezing. It was in the twenties, and then it was in the fifties. And now it's cold again, And tomorrow, we might have snow. Speaker 3: Oh, gosh. Well, Speaker 1: I'm glad I went out today. I'm glad. Good. Yeah. I just saw Iowa is getting absolutely hammered with, a storm. It it feels like it's almost 40 degrees below zero there. And I think I think Trump is campaigning there, so he's he's earning his way. He's bringing the freeze. Speaker 2: Well, feels like it's been a long week too, and it's like Speaker 3: I I can't It has. You know, I have some updates, more updates on my research and findings of my case and individuals involved in the case. Believe it or not, the nurse that killed my dad is now in in ministry. She is not a nurse anymore, and she goes by a different name. Really? Conveniently conveniently got married in January 2022, not even a year later, less than a year, she married she she married and changed her name. So interesting. Speaker 9: Yep. Speaker 2: Welcome, Cece. I think it's speaker. Now you're soft. Speaker 1: I was just saying welcome, Cece. I see you've joined us. I have sent you a speaker invite, so please accept that at your earliest convenience. Speaker 2: Do you wanna reoff I will in a minute. Rep. I'm gonna read a Okay. Yeah. I'm gonna I'll read a statement in a minute. Looks like we've, at this point, we've only got, what, 17 people in? 17 Is that? It's slowly building. Yeah. It yeah. Let it we'll let it build a little bit. I'm sorry. I'm whenever we get on spaces, whenever we get on spaces is when 8,000,000 people, text message me. Speaker 5: I can Speaker 2: he wants to cohost someone. Does someone want a way to do that? We can hear you typing. Yeah. I said, yeah. I said, you can take my cohost and give it to Cece because I I love her. Speaker 3: You can have my cohost, Cece, if you want. Speaker 10: Thanks, guys. I just have some people coming on. I wanna introduce you. Speaker 1: You should have a cohost invite now, Cece. Let me know if you don't see that. Speaker 3: Well, while we're all still getting situated, welcome, everyone. You know, it's it's definitely cold out, out in probably in the whole country right now. Everyone's freezing, but, I hope every well, everyone had a splendid week, and, we're gonna try and enlighten everyone and share our stories. And, we have several people, I guess, that are gonna be speaking tonight, some guest speakers, so that's exciting. So stick around for that. And, yeah, good stuff. Speaker 10: Have you done the rules and stuff yet? Because I see some speakers that I invited that I would love, for y'all to hear from. Okay. Speaker 3: Sure. Sure. So, you know, I I I think Gail wanted to do that. Go ahead. Go ahead, Gail. And let's Gail Speaker 10: Is Gail around? Someone's in the mic. I think she is. Speaker 3: On a she has mic on Speaker 5: access. Testing? Speaker 3: Hello there. Speaker 5: Can you can you guys hear me? Speaker 3: Yep. Yes. Hello. So, what we're going to do, I guess, we're still letting the l get situated. I'm gonna read off the rules, and we'll just get the show going. So, we have a few rules we follow. If you're gonna, we don't really allow this to be a platform for someone to, troll us or stay or do anything that is, inappropriate. This is a recorded space, and this is a place for victims of that are injured from the vaccine or hospital COVID protocol victims. So, you know, if you're not one of those two categories, you're welcome to be here, but, you know, don't try to start a fight or say anything that's, bad. This is a recorded space. Please be mindful of what you say and do. Welcome. Speaker 10: I sent Gail the mic. She should have it now. She had a couple other things to say. Did you grab that, Gail? Speaker 3: Yeah. If Gail wants to add to that. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. Speaker 2: I missed what you said because I had to log out and log back in. Speaker 10: Christina. Speaker 3: If if you wanna if you wanna say it, I'll let you I'll let you say it since you have the mic. You can do it. Oh, no. No. So did did you covered the so alright. Yeah. So, Speaker 2: basically, here here I just wanna cover a couple things. So one is, and I think Andy was talking about it when when I had when I had the reboot, was this isn't a platform for, trolls or, you know, we we don't owe anybody exactly. Speaker 4: We don't owe Sorry. I have IBS. Speaker 11: We don't continue, please. Speaker 10: Sorry. We don't Go on. Yeah. Like, Gail, but finish, please. Speaker 2: Yeah. Okay. Yeah. We don't owe anybody a a platform, and so, nor will we allow it. So, like, if we if you start off, if you ask to speak and you start off spewing some propaganda that, was rampant for four years while we were being censored, we're just gonna kick you back out. Like, we're just gonna so if you've created a new account from last week to this week, like, it keeps happening, just know the second you start speaking, I'm gonna recognize your voice and you're gonna be out. So don't even bother. Amen to that sister's play. So so there's that. Be mindful of time. So if you're speaking, we we get a lot of people who want to speak, So be mindful of the time so that we don't get into a conversation between two people or whatever, and it goes on for a long time because people are waiting to speak. We want to cycle through the speakers and especially especially with regard to what the spaces is about. So I want everybody to note the, the topic of the spaces is COVID related crimes against humanity, and the primary purpose is to allow eyewitnesses to speak out. And that's eyewitness victims or eyewitnesses who are, in the fight or, doctors, or, you know, anybody who is is a eyewitness to to these COVID related crimes against humanity, protocols, shots, mandates, all of it. That's what the that's what this space is all about. It is to give those people a platform because they have been, they have been stifled and censored and attacked for too long. That's the primary purpose. Don't so we should not don't all forget it. But we wanna be mindful to get all of those speakers in. If you're not speaking, put yourself back on mute on mute. If you are a speaker if if you've spoken and you don't intend to speak at all anymore or you don't think you will, then just drop back down to listeners so we can pull somebody back up because there's only you can only have so many speakers. And this is recorded. It's a recorded space, so be mindful of private information that you share. You know? Don't don't share information that you don't want the whole world to know. Be careful of that. Did I miss anything, Speaker 10: Cece? I don't think so. Alright. And, if you are if you are a professional or an expert and, people may have questions for you, so please stay on for a minute if you can. I wanna be sensitive to your time. But, speaking of someone that's been in the fight, I'm so glad she could join us, a molecular biologist and has been upfront in this fight, doctor Christina Parks. Thank you for coming on tonight. Speaker 12: Thank you for having me. Yeah. You know, you talk about an eyewitness, and the thing is, like, the science for this has been right there in in the public square. It's just that they are counting on no one being able to read it. In fact, a paper was just published, and and this is where I'm a witness to what the science shows. And you actually have to understand the context to really understand it. And so back in 02/2017, 02/2019, they found some pangolins going across the border in China, and they found a SARS like virus in them, a coronavirus. And and then the pandemic started. And so I think they used that time to try to prove that it had jumped from pangolins. But the thing is, you guys, viruses aren't gonna jump from pangolins to humans. We're too different. But then what they did is they actually, the bat lady who made chimeric coronaviruses, like, coronaviruses that are most likely the coronavirus that spread. Right? They they figured out how to get bat coronaviruses to infect human lung cells. And we're supposed to believe that it jumped from a pangolin or from a bat when she's been doing this work for ten years. So she got this pangolin coronavirus and started passaging it through cells. So I wanna back up for a second and talk about a particular cell type that was one of the only ones that this virus grew in, and it's called Vero cells. What Vero cells are? They are a monkey kidney cell that lacks any antiviral defenses. The reason that it's important is it isn't just coronaviruses that are grown in them. A lot of live viral vaccines are grown in them. In fact, the poliovirus was grown in them, and the poliovirus got all sorts of extra viruses from these Vero cells because they lack antiviral defenses. So they're like a Disneyland for viruses. So whatever virus that you get, that you grow in there is probably gonna be contaminated with other viruses. And the viruses will recombine and form novel viruses, which is likely what happened with the SARS CoV two virus and what also happened with this pangolin coronavirus. So they grew this pangolin coronavirus in these viral cells that lack antiviral defenses that have all these other viruses in them and likely recombined, and then they saw if it infected human cells, if it infected humanized mice. And they said, no. They it infects them a little bit, but it's actually not that bad. And And since they thought it was not not that bad, they were actually gonna try to make a live viral vaccine from it. But one group actually got it, and they put it in the mice, and it actually had mutated somehow, and it infect their nervous tissue and killed all of them in a matter of days. Every single mouse, a hundred percent mortality. These were humanized mice with human ACE2 receptors. So they've now done a gain of function by growing these in these Vero cells that lack antiviral defenses and have all of these other viruses that they can recombine in created some novel mutant virus. And, basically, it could if it escapes, like, infect our nervous tissue and kill all of us. Now do we know for sure if it's gonna do that in humans? No. But we shouldn't even be here because this gain of function studies that they're still continuing, they just published this, are still going on, and they're still making new viruses that could, like, wipe us all out. It's just unconscionable. Speaker 10: That's terrifying. I had a question for you, and I just lost my train of thought because I so do you think I mean, I think it was not just a leak. I think it was definitely released on us. Speaker 12: Well, it certainly could have been released. But the thing is, like, if I were one of the researchers working with this new pangolin virus and I just found out that it just, like, destroyed the nervous system of all of these mice, I'd be completely freaked out. What if that does leak? And so, yes, in fact, they're probably not likely to release a virus that's that lethal because they're not trying to kill all of us. In fact, the coronavirus, I think, was intentionally, you know, just bad enough to scare people. That's why they had to not treat people. That's why they had not to treat people because if they treated people, it would not have had the scare factor because the real weapon, the real population control is the vaccine. And I say this not based on conspiracy theory. I say this based on the science. If you look at the science and the thing is, I know as a molecular biologist what they know. And they know the health effects that this is gonna have, that it's gonna shoot inflammation through the roof, that it's gonna cause huge amounts of infertility, that people they're not gonna have to line people up and shoot them. They're basically, gonna die of cancer, of heart disease, of stroke, of all of these different chronic illnesses spiraling out of control. And so this vaccine in and I don't know who all knows this and who are the top people at the top, but was designed to be a slow kill. That is its design. Speaker 10: That is so cruel to be a slow kill. Okay. So they're trying to put this technology in our food and all in other vaccines. Correct? Speaker 12: Correct. Hold on. I've got so yes. And the thing is, I think we need to realize that most of the people that are pushing it do not understand the technology well enough to know exactly how dangerous this is. And, you know, the the really big point is that what it's doing is it's taking genetic information and getting it into your cells and forcing yourselves to become a manufacturing plant for a toxic viral foreign protein. And because it's foreign, not only is it killing yourself just because it's toxic, but it's also making your immune system attack all of your cells. And so that it's in. And so you have your immune system chronically attacking your body. Like, in whose world is that a good idea? One of the reasons they moved to this platform and again, many of the people okaying this at many different levels do not really understand the deep science of this technology. They're just trusting what other people have told them. But they wanted to move from a cell free system. Why did they wanna move from a cell free system? Because remember, they were growing them in the Vero cells that had all of these monkey viruses and other animal viruses in them. And so, they've been freaked out because they've known for a long time that they've been spreading animal viruses to the American populace and that we have all sorts of retroviruses and Epstein Barr and herpes viruses and, all of these different viruses, s v forty, that we've gotten from the vaccines. And they're not really admitting to that, but they know it was happening. And so that's why they first moved from animal cells to aborted fetal cells, but then they were still actually getting human viruses that were being spread. And so now they wanted to move to a cell free system thinking they solved the problem. But the truth is this is, you know, about the worst idea ever because, again, it's gonna cause your body to attack itself chronically. And remember, the goals of gene therapy is to get the the genetic material into as many cells as possible to have it expressed for as long as possible. And so we have people, you know, two years out who are still expressing their cells are still making toxic viral spike protein because that was the goal of gene therapy. That is not the same as the goal for a vaccine should be. And so when you try to hold people accountable, not enough people understand the science to have that debate. And, of course, they don't wanna have that debate. Speaker 10: Well, so I mean, so we know that there's really or we don't know how to stop it, but there there there really might not be an off switch to produce the spike protein since it's the message to for our bodies to reproduce it. All the time when I, talk to somebody about this, I get the debate that it's not gene therapy. It's not gene therapy. Well, I've learned from you and doctor Jancy Lindsay and and many other scientists that it is gene therapy. How do we debate that? I mean, what do we what does the layperson say to make them understand it is a gene therapy? Speaker 12: That it is putting a gene therapy the goal is to get genetic information to make I would get I would say you're right. It's not gene therapy. It's gene transfer. Like, gene therapy was supposed to be making a good version of the of of of a bad gene. Right? It was supposed to make a good version of a bad protein. This, but it's the same exact technology, the same exact technology. It's just that we're putting in a toxic viral information for a toxic viral protein. So if you go back to I know that it's exactly the same because I study gene therapy. When I saw the platforms, I'm like, these are gene therapy platforms. And so when you go to the platforms, when you go to the scientific literature, it's very clear that it's gene therapy. There's no argument at that level. So it's only, I guess, because they've been watching so much TV. And and so, again, gene therapy is getting genetic information for a gene and making yourselves express it, you know, or you could say gene transport. That is the technology. The rest is semantics. It's telling your body to make a foreign protein. You know? And you could say, is it or is it not telling your body to make a foreign protein? If your body's making a foreign protein, what's gonna be the effect of that? Your immune system's gonna attack it. That's really I mean, there's a lot of complex mechanisms of injury, but that's the simple go to one that is so problematic. Speaker 10: But they had to see right in the beginning that it was hurting people and that it doesn't work. Everybody I know has that's gotten the jab has gotten more COVID than any of us that didn't. So, I mean, they have to see, and they're still pushing it so hard. I mean, every time I'm in the store, it's go to the pharmacy and get your COVID shot. And I'm just like I'm look feel like I'm in the twilight zone because people know that doesn't work, and people are dropping dead and getting seriously injured. And I don't know why they're sticking with it unless it's some, you know, evil plan, which you can't help but conclude that that's that's it. But I know that, you know, you're on our We The People 50. We call the shots team, and when we were presenting to Idaho, there was a doctor arguing with doctor Lindsey that it's that is no way gene therapy. I mean, does it or do we know that it does integrate into the genome? I I mean, we know from Kevin McCarron's science that it's contaminated. Speaker 12: But Right. Of of course, it we've always known that gene therapy integrates into the genome. That is one like, when Jansy, Lindsay, and I were in school, there were big committees talking about the potential bad effects of gene therapy. The thing is gene therapy never worked because to get enough in to replace a defective gene, it caused such an inflammatory response, and they just couldn't turn it down. For its use as a vaccine, you don't have to get as much in. So the reason you don't see it is because it was never effective as gene therapy back then. So now a lot of people don't study it in school. But we talked about it all the time, and one of the things we talked about the most was that, you know, if you have any sort of latent viral infection like Epstein Barr or herpes or, you know, a retrovirus, you're going to make an enzyme that copies the mRNA back into DNA, and it's gonna pop into your DNA. Now do I I think that's probably one of the least problematic aspects of that. Although, it is it targets itself to the ovaries. Pfizer's own data show because they're fat particles and the ovaries are fatty that the vaccines go right to the ovaries. So you're basically putting something in the ovaries that has the potential to integrate in the DNA. Does it integrate in the DNA? Absolutely. The question is only how much? A tiny little bit, a moderate amount, a lot. But Kevin McKernan's work showed that you don't even need it to be reverse transcribed back into DNA because the vaccines are contaminated with all sorts of little chunks of DNA that love to pop into your DNA. And I would say that, those little chunks of DNA that pop into your DNA, the the smaller they are, the more likely they are to pop into your DNA, and they're more likely to pop into the DNA of your blood cells. So what what tissues are the vaccine gonna see first? It's gonna be your blood cells, your immune cells. And your immune cells, especially your stem cells, which make all your other immune cells, are actually more likely to take up these small chunks of DNA and integrate them into your DNA and become mutated, and we have seen a rash of lymphomas and leukemias and all sorts of weird blood disorders. So really we need to be looking at those blood cells. Those are going to be the ones that are most likely to take up this fragmented DNA, integrate it into your DNA, and cause all kinds of weird cancer like mutations. Speaker 10: Did you think they knew that it wasn't gonna work? Because it doesn't it doesn't stop transmission and it doesn't stop you from getting it. Speaker 12: Yes. Well, they knew it wasn't gonna stop transmission. They knew it wasn't going to stop transmission. But see, remember, I mean Yeah. I don't know. I mean, you know, because that's a multi faceted question. Like, who knew it wasn't going to work? Like, I think some people maybe still had some idea that maybe it would because the thing is, it wasn't going to block transmission, and they didn't want it to block transmission because they wanted, to continue this pandemic. They wanted the most major transfer of wealth in the history of the world. Right? And you can't do that without a lot of fear. They wanted a lot of fear. So, it's hard to know. The scientists knew it didn't prevent transmission, and so, and they knew that hydroxychloroquine did. That's why, remember, they had two papers, one was completely fraudulent from beginning to end, that they published two major papers that were fraudulent in the Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine. How do you get fraudulent papers in two of the top journals in the world right at the same time, right in it was like the 2020 to debunk hydroxychloroquine? They knew it worked, they had those studies ready, and then of course the retraction of those studies that were fraudulent never really made the press. And so, they knew that hydroxychloroquine prevents transmission, and it was quickly proven that ivermectin prevents transmission. So they knew there were ways to prevent transmission, and they did not want to allow that because they wanted a scare, they wanted people, and that's why they allowed, I would say, murdered people in the hospitals, and and lied to the doctors. So many doctors didn't really under actually understand everything going on. But the science behind hydroxychloroquine was so strong. They knew it worked. They intentionally debunked it so that people would die and that there would be a big scare. Speaker 10: Yeah. That's what's so frustrating. You know, our organization has documented over a thousand hospital protocol, deaths, and it's they all were discriminated against for not getting the vaccine. Some were given the vaccine when they were intubated. Some were getting the vaccine when they didn't even tell them they were doing it, you know, when they were in the hospital. But the minute like, we have survivors, Gail can attest to this, that when she walked in, the first question on the doctor's mouth were, are you vaccinated? And she said, no. You know, I work from home. I'm gonna wait till a little more sleep. He said he's come out. And he patted her on the hand and said, I'm sorry. You're gonna die. And they proceeded to try to kill her because I think they had to keep up the narrative that it's the pandemic of the unvaccinated. You know, we had cases where they blackmailed the family. We'll we'll give your son treatment if you the whole family goes and gets the jab. And some of the people that scared him and that's indigo indigo getting it, and now they're injured. So it's just Speaker 12: it's so it's so frustrating, and it's just sick. And I think that that's why I mean, that's one of the arrogance of the doctors is one of the things that, like, you know, when I even talk about the childhood schedule, it's getting someone to realize that they don't know what they think they know. That vaccinology is really complex science, and you know, some people think that just because they have some letters behind their name makes them smarter. No, I know plenty of women, especially mothers of vaccine injured children, who have basically given themselves an advanced degree in immunology and science because they are trying to recover their children. So, we really need to ask a lot of doctors, you know, questions like does it prevent transmission, and start getting the scientific paper out. And so I am actually launching a website, vita.org, vi-ta.org. We're just finishing up the very last, parts of it, so it is up, but, we haven't done an official launch, but you can see the free pages right now on, the childhood schedule and the mechanism of injury of COVID vaccines, again vita.org and, you know, the thing is that I put a lot of information about the mechanism of injury on both of those because I want you to be able to go, here's the link and here's all the references for your doctor, you know, to to we've got to weigh them up to realize that there is a lot of science that they do not know. Even many wonderful people like, Doctor. Peter McCullough, I don't know anyone who works harder, you know, some people, Pierre Kory, many of these people, they were willing to admit that the COVID vaccine was injuring, but they didn't realize all of the literature showing that the childhood vaccines were injuring. And so, now they realize because once your government will lie to you about one thing, they've been lying about something else. And so, you know, they've been lying for a long time, and it is the money that they got from the childhood vaccines and the fact that they have no liability for them that allowed them to buy the media. That was what allowed pharma to buy the media so that they were able to censor and only have one narrative available. Like, I was talking to, I mean, Barbara Loe Fisher just did an interview and she said she could actually do interviews and talk about childhood vaccines and injury until about 2014 and 2015 when big pharma completely bought the media and would not let any dissenting information into the mainstream media. So that is a big part of of this, issue. Speaker 10: Yeah. That's what's terrifying it being getting into children. I mean, if it can just rip the immune system of a grown adult, I I it just terrifies me to think it would could do it to a child. Thank you so much, doctor Parks. If anybody has a question for her, if you could stick around for just a couple minutes, I would totally appreciate it. John Bodine is about to get on too. I know he's always got a wealth of statistics and everything. But, thanks again. You're always such great information and a true warrior in this fight with us. Thanks for having me. I'll stick on for a couple of questions Speaker 12: if anyone has them. Speaker 10: Yeah. Anybody somebody I think I just saw raise a hand. Cheryl, let me bring the mic. Excuse Speaker 11: me. Go ahead, Cheryl. Let me Go ahead. Speaker 10: Cheryl, let me Can Heidi go? Can you have Heidi go? Oh, I didn't get I'm sorry. I didn't see Heidi's California CHDMP. Yeah. Thank you. Go ahead. For me? And then Yeah. We're ready. And then Sheryl. Yeah. Speaker 15: Thank you. I wanna start out by thanking, the COVID Humanity Betrayal Memory Project for giving us a platform to share our truth since we have been censored for so many years. The truth will always find a bay a way to be told and the deception, the lies, the greed will be exposed. It's just a matter of time. The the question remains, what side of history will you be standing on? The COVID pandemic has been a disaster from the top down. The suppression of truth is literally killing people, allowed my best friend to be murdered in the hospital. In the beginning, we were told to do nothing, to go home, to pray that we didn't end up in the hospital. There should have been a balanced approach to combating COVID, but instead there was nothing. There were no studies, no collection of data, no debate. If our freedom of speech was not silent, if the conversations were the life saving benefits of therapeutics that has saved countless lives around the globe. So many lives could have been saved. On September 28, my best friend was took it from us. She was murdered in Clovis Community Hospital by a medical system that is based on lies and deceit. On August 4, she was taken to Clovis Community Hospital by ambulance upon arrival, the hospital administered remdesivir, a drug that as of 2020 was not FDA approved. Remdesivir is a drug that was pulled six months into a clinical trial done in The Republic, of The Congo in South Africa yet because it killed fifty four percent of the people involved in the study. Despite the death tolls in that trial, our hospitals have and continue to this day to use remdesivir as the sole protocol for treatment of COVID. My beautiful best friend suffered greatly. Lupe Espinosa, she was poisoned by remdesivir and a 121 toxic drugs. She was given high levels of morphine and fentanyl combined together for over a month and a half. She fought for her life for fifty seven days. She was bleeding from her eyes. Her son had to witness his mother's medical murder from outside a hospital window in a 110 degree heat. Heidi, how old was Lupe? Lupe was 48 when she was murdered in Clovis Community Hospital. She would've went been 50. This year, we went and blew up balloons at her graveside. She should be here with us, but instead, she's buried in the dirt. What kills me is that it's still continuing every single day across America. This is an attack on the citizens of The United States Of America. We have 5% of the global population, yet we have the highest death toll of any country around the globe. Speaker 2: Heidi, it's Gail. Talk talk a little bit about, you know, you you come in contact with a lot of eyewitnesses to crimes against humanity, a lot of victims, and there's such a huge age range out there in California. Talk a little bit about what you guys are doing and just the impact that you've seen on some of these families who have lost their child, their who've had their child murdered, really, and, you know, their brothers and sisters and their, Speaker 15: mothers and There there's been many lives that have been taken here locally. For example, Jason York, he only had a sinus infection. He had a headache, so his mom drove him to the emergency room to be seen for a headache. They put him on remdesivir, and he died. He was only 40 years old. He had three young kids. That that's just one story of many around the nation. If our voice if our voices wouldn't be censored and silenced, we can save more people. A month after Lupe this is this is so sinister on the most extreme level. A month after Lupe was murdered, I bought a 14 foot sign to try to warn people to stay out of the hospital because they were using remdesivir, which I know now they use so many more drugs, but remdesivir is one of the drugs that's just known to be toxic and deadly. And so we I bought a 14 foot sign to stand in front of the hospital. It says hospital COVID protocols killed, refused the remdesivir because that was the only, pathway, you know, that we could think of at the time to save lives. And they they literally launched missiles over my house, explosions that sounded like an explosion you would hear in World War two to to use as a scare tactic to silence me. Why would the evil medical industrial complex have to do something like that in order to silence somebody's free speech if there wasn't something really sinister going on? And the news picked up on it, so there's a whole news story out on it because it was heard for miles and miles and miles around. Speaker 2: And tell tell people what what you've been what you're doing now and Speaker 15: some of the lost The only thing we can do, right, so many lives would be saved within a second if CNN, if Fox News, if Newsmax, if if these, major news media outlets would say two sentences. So many lives would be saved. Number one, the hospital COVID protocols are killing people. Please think twice before you go in a hospital. Right? And to add that, they can warn people about the experimental gene therapy, DAP JAP, that is literally killing children. Moms, dads, adults, brothers, sisters, everybody from around the nation. People, we need to wake up. We are literally at war. We are at war and they are killing American citizens. People are dying daily in our hospitals. Speaker 2: That is very true. Me and me Speaker 15: and Cece have been pretty busy this this week. Yes. I if you say, like, you guys your organization is save 17 people this month alone, right? From the hands of the medical system. Because of you guys, because of your bravery, 70 people are live today to go home to their families. Imagine if the word were was able to get out to people on a massive scale. We could save thousands beyond thousands of lives. Everybody out there, I am pleading. Please warn people, talk about this, tell people the hospital COVID protocols are killing people. And they they they're mandated. It's not like these doctors and nurses have a have a choice. They do have a choice. They don't have to work there. I mean, they they can quit, but I don't know. That that's up to them and God. But they're mandated. These pro protocols are mandated. They're mandated from the the top up. For the first time in our US history, our hospital administrators are telling doctors how to practice medicine. When hospital administration, they don't even have a it's illegal. They don't have a license to practice medicine. And where are they getting their marching orders from? They're getting them from the c CDC, the n the HHS, NIH. You know, I I pray someday quickly that we find out who's at the bottom of this. Who created the hospital COVID guidelines, which is the hospital COVID protocol? Speaker 2: The orchestrators of it. Right? The the big orchestrators of it. They're I mean, everybody's responsible, but the orchestrators of it Speaker 15: Exactly. You know, to add to that, I have a friend who vents people even to this day at Clovis Community Hospital. She told me in a room full of people that when Clovis Community Hospital was using hydroxychloroquine, fourteen out of sixteen people survived the vent. After remdesivir was introduced, everybody started dying in mass. So the proof is there. It's in all the medical records. You have witnesses. You know? Some are still in the hospital. Some have left, you know, because they do have a conscience, and they won't murder people. So they did end up leaving a lot of the good doctors and nurses. But yeah, it just blows my mind that it's still occurring today. We, one of our friends, Don Wells, her father went into Clovis Community Hospital three weeks ago. He fell And the neighbors talked him into going by ambulance to Clovis Community Hospital. Upon arrival, he was feeling better. He wanted to leave. They 51 fifty'd him, strapped him down, hooked him up to remdesivir. By the time the family found him that evening, they got a lawyer involved. They were able to to get him out and save his life. And the only reason that they knew that remdesivir was toxic and deadly is because, her sister was given it a year ago, and she suffers every day with her remdesivir, you know, injuries. So yeah. Speaker 2: It's crazy. I mean, we've we've been busy last month and this and sometimes people don't like Just wait. Today. Yeah. Today, we've been trying to get the auto host. Yeah. We're still Today is And it's been it's been touch and go. Right? Like, it's been they're so good at scaring the patient and scaring the like, last week, somebody we were working to get their their mom out, and, and the fam the family went radio silent. Right? So the family went radio silent. They split the family, got moved out the people who did not wanna do what the doctor said, and and we found out she Speaker 15: died. Eight days later, she died. Eight days for the family. If they tell the family, they basically talk them into comfort care. Just so you guys know comfort care means death by medication. K? Don't let them lie to you. It means death by medication, everybody. So you've been with them. Care. Palliative care. Death by medication. And the gas gaslighting. Them into murdering their loved ones. Speaker 10: And the gaslighting is just like, well, if you would have taken the jab, you'd be doing much better. If you would have taken the jab My best friend, the Espinosa, Speaker 15: they they yelled at her. They screamed at her. They they Speaker 2: beyond discriminated. She But what are but what are we seeing now, Cece? We're seeing people who are going in. They're having some kind of reaction from the jab itself, like confusion or whatever. And they're like, oh, you have COVID. And and then they go down that COVID path, and they totally ignore the stroke or the heart attack or or the things that they're having, like like what we're dealing with today. Right? Like, it's like, let's not address that they're they're shot injured. Let's pretend it's COVID maybe, and and then they're having all these problems. So, Speaker 10: Well, Heidi, I have to say you are so strong. You are doing such great work in California with your street teams and educating people and just being the biggest warrior. I know Lupe is looking down so proud of you. Going look at my best friend. Hell, yeah. Look at her girl. She's got she's saving you. Speaker 15: Because people need the we need people, please stand up wherever you're at, wherever you are at in The United States Of America. Hold your signs, talk to people. We just need to educate people that the hospitals just are not safe places right now. Yeah. Yeah, they they just aren't. We and neither of the neither of the shot and we live No. No. The the shots aren't. Like, I live in California. Any grocery store you walk into, the announcement over the overnight. Yeah. And your COVID shot, kid, your COVID shot I mean, Speaker 10: it was it was I had a that reminds me. I have a question whenever we get back. Doctor Parks, if if you have any suggestions on the jab injured on what to do. If you do you agree with doctor McCullough's protocol with the turmeric and the, what is it, the, nitronic? Speaker 12: Well, I think it's a little bit more complex than that. I mean, those all things, can have benefit for sure. I actually am launching a protocol that is on my website, and we're going to have bimonthly seminars to talk about all of those issues. And right now we're still just finishing the final touches, but it is up publicly there. We may actually end up putting a construction site right before the launch, but it is up. It's vita.org And for $12.95 a month behind the paywall, we're going to have a bunch of we're going to have protocols and protocols for injury. And because this is really, I have a we have an alliance of practitioners that we're constantly sharing information to really get at key ways of helping the body to recover. So that is definitely, so I would say bookmark that site and everything isn't up quite behind the paywall, but it really soon will be including those recovery protocols, and then we will be having webinars to discuss more in detail the recovery protocols. So I would just, you know, you know, go and and find that page and bookmark it, and then we'll we'll, we'll have more information on that soon. Can can I add one more thing? Speaker 15: Yes. Can I please make a request for everybody to please log on to the COVID Humanity Patrol Memory Project and please submit your story, document your story? The world needs to know what's happening. We we have to document this for history and we can use that to share that link, you know, to help educate others to the hospital, holocaust, which is happening throughout our nation. Speaker 10: Yes. Thank you, Heidi. I'm so glad you are finally can figure out how to get on and speak. Your story is so powerful, and you're so passionate, and glad to have you as a warrior with our with our group. We're praying for you and honoring Lupe every day. God bless. Patty, our nurse practitioner and trauma counselor and COVID protocol survivor escaper, I should say. Yeah. Speaker 13: Hey. I I just wanted to add, and and thanks so much, Heidi. I actually was out there in, California, and I don't know if you heard me last week. But to answer your question, you know, I've been a chief nursing officer for over thirteen years, and I was working at executive division levels of some of these organizations, the one being over Saint Agnes. And I can tell you I don't know where it all started, but I can tell you that every single hospital as of February 2020 stopped thinking critically and just took guidance as if they were zombies straight from the CDC. Every day, a protocol would come out, and that mandate followed every hospital that I worked at, and there was no room. There was no room for discussion. I had originally been up in, a northern state up in Idaho and when that's when COVID first hit. And the protocol before it was so strictly mandated, we too used, hydroxychloroquine, and people were recovering up through June 2020. And then it stopped. And people were getting sick and people weren't getting better. And then that's when I got COVID in August 2020. But after a a fairly significant recovery because I was hit with remdesivir and, because I was within the hospital system, they watched me very closely and said, we're gonna make real sure if your, you know, your kidneys start to decline, we're turning it off because it's deadly. They knew it. They knew it back then, and they didn't want one of their own to be a risk factor, I guess, because it would have been too too publicly seen. But when I got out and I recovered in December 2020, the right around Christmas, they needed help out at Saint Agnes. And so they had mobilized me because back before I had gotten COVID, I was at odds with my CEO, and she didn't like the fact that I didn't agree with all this Fauci BS. And I was fairly vocal about it. And having been an OR nurse, none of the guidance, as they call it, made any sense. And when I spoke out, you know, against it, they said, you know, you're a public figure here. You need to follow along with the protocol. And if you're not gonna follow along with the protocol, you know, we'll figure something else out. So they had moved me into what they called a divisional position where I would go to the hot spots. Had I not gotten sick in August, I would have probably been to another. But my first hot spot in December 2020 was Saint Agnes. And it was there that I worked up through February, and that's when, again, we had talked to Carolyn, Brad, all the folks, you know, with the with the group here. And I was putting flyers out on cars in Fresno about ivermectin and the protocol and the FLCCC everywhere and anywhere I could. And it wasn't until I was sharing that protocol with the critical care director, the physician, the ED director. They hadn't seen the protocol, And they liked what they saw, and they said, where did you get this? And we went through the whole scenario. And very shortly thereafter, when I said, okay. Well, let's implement it because, you know, Saint Agnes, I watched up to ten people die a day, and I said, this is ludicrous. We're just killing these people. And they had not seen this protocol. Within days, the infectious disease doctors shut it down. And I was a week later said, you know, we don't really need your help out here anymore, so you can go ahead back to the home office and go somewhere else. And so I was relieved of that responsibility. I ended up leaving and going into another organization in Texas, South Texas. The very same thing happened. So to your question, this was all pushed through the CDC and all of those around Fauci and Big Pharma. And every single hospital stopped any logic and reason and took those protocols as gospel and any doctor who spoke out because I did the same thing in Texas, and I was met with resistance. And every doctor that I spoke to, they said the same thing. They're like, this protocol makes sense. So that's kinda where it started and, you know, you're spot on with everything that you said. I just wanted you to know that that's the stuff that that we need to get out, and we need to go after the infectious disease groups and physicians. And I mentioned last week, you know, at the division level, there were chiefs of staff laughing at the protocol, laughing at ivermectin and making fun of people. And then, of course, right into the whole vaccine issue, so many people were trying to find ways to meet the standards because they were losing their jobs because everything was mandated. But, yeah, it was just it's craziness. And to this day, they're still using remdesivir. So we do. We have to continue to push and get the word out and really start to get things to change. And I think it's taking hold. People are asking questions now, but we need to keep the fight. So just wanted to share that and commend you on all you're doing out there. Well, Patty, you are doing so much for our org every Saturday for anybody that's interested, Speaker 10: protocol or jab injured or just been through any kind of, trauma during this whole pandemic. She hosts, a, totally free, a a, PTSD workshop. Tell me, everybody, what what you're seeing in that, what people are experiencing. Speaker 13: Oh, yeah. So it it's been very rewarding, and I feel like, you know, that was what I had shared too about my my reasons and my giving back is because being in the ICU and having been faced with death, I just prayed so hard that if I could make it through, I was gonna do whatever I could to make a difference. And so it was that important to me. And so I ended up leaving the executive role. I, during that time, I also became a psychiatric nurse practitioner, graduated last April. And so going forward now with this group, what I do is I I've talked with people, and so many people just they feel such guilt because they feel like they put their loved ones in the hospital, and they failed them. And that's wrong. And not wrong that they feel that way, but it's wrong to feel that way. So we're working them through relieving themselves of the guilt. We're also helping them go through just relieving those feelings of, you know, just the sadness and the loss of the untimely, unanticipated death of people that would not have died had they been treated with the right protocols through the FLCCC and the work that several of the physicians, doctor McCullough, doctor Corey, doctor Merek, all of them tried to do. And in doing that, we've had two or three people now already realize and kinda come to this point in their trauma that they don't hold that guilt anymore. And to feel and see that in some of these folks, it's just it's incredible. And so many people don't even realize what they've held on to with trauma and even with the vaccine. People have guilt now for having taken the vaccine, and they're scared. So that's what this group is about, and it's about giving them some tools, some ways to cope, ways to heal. I give them nutritional information too, and I talk about some holistic ways of of trying to combat, having had the vaccine. Again, to to that point, we we use the stuff that, doctor McCullough has put out his protocol with the nanokinase. I've also talked about some of the IV therapy that I myself had success from having COVID that, I recommend them to go and take and do. But each week, you know, the group shares something different. We try to do a little bit of, you know, relaxation therapy. I do breathing. And then I give them a tool each week to add to the toolkit, and I give them, a word for the week that I want them to focus on so it helps them to kinda build and repair. So that's kinda what we do, and and it's open to everybody. So I'd love to have anybody there who needs help, grieving, guilt, you know, scared, anxiety, depression, all that stuff is what we're doing. That's good stuff. I love it. That's Speaker 10: I love the special guest you had on last week too. Oh, okay. Yeah. Yeah. He was yeah. I was reading, like, his, Speaker 13: his bio, and, oh my gosh, he's been in, like, he's done so many famous, famous movies. I was shocked. I know. Well, you know, god has been good, and he's put some amazing people in front of me. And so for everybody who knows, it's, Chris Boardman, and he's the composer for things like Lethal Weapon, The Color Purple. I mean, you name it. And he's he's worked with major, music artists and what he's done. And he actually if you wanna all tune in, it's it's a free website. If you look up the missing link, the missing link, and it's Chris, c r c h r I s, and his last name is Boardman, like a board game, b o a r d m a n. It's easy to Google it. And he's got a test pilot out there. And the whole goal behind what he did, which is super helpful for our group and several people have taken this little mini beta class, it teaches you how to use music that he puts out there, but also that you can interpret and use music that's important to you. Things that he said when you find music for people who have when you come of age, so for us, that's like teenage, early adulthood. We remember the words and the songs, and they're so powerful because I guess that point in the brain is what he studied is where it triggers good memories. You know, there's good songs that we like. And he uses that to teach people about how to use tempo, high and low. It's a quick easy class, and it's free right now. So and how he got it started was because he had personal, severe PTSD through an event that he experienced. And his goal was to get it out there because he sees such trauma to our youth and kids in school, and he related it to, you know, some of the the shootings. He related it to all these kids having to do these, you know, gun violence and how to prepare for lockdowns. And he goes, imagine being a kid in in school today. Like, you're faced with trauma and anxiety in a battle zone, a war zone. So his original goal was to take it out into the schools. And so I think more and more people, if they find out about it and use it, he wants feedback. So there's a little feedback section. It can help all of us. It can help everyone. And so I encourage you all look it up. Chris Boardman, the missing link. It's free. Just log in, and then stay in touch with him. He, he will communicate with you through that program. I think it's super helpful. And several of the folks tonight talked about how they've started it. It's like nine sections. I did it in, like, two hours, but I was kinda going through it quickly. But it's super cool, and it's easy. And it's just a tool. It's another tool to help people get through trauma. Thank you. You're you're amazing, Patty. We really appreciate it. Speaker 10: You know that Patty is the first one that I met in this movement over three years ago. That's that's incredible. Yeah. Isn't that great? It's been awesome. Yeah. Who knew would be here by still here right now, Patty. Just look how far we've come. Speaker 2: Hey, man. Hey, Cece. I'm gonna give you the order here. So I'm gonna call out the order of the next four so that people know that they're coming up. Okay? Speaker 10: Okay. Okay. Micmeow, Speaker 2: Cheryl, Nooney, Denise. Micmeow is next. Cheryl, Nooney, and Denise. Speaker 10: I threw John and Mike too if you see it. Okay. Go ahead, Mick. Speaker 16: Hello. Hello. How are you? Hello. Speaker 2: Hello. You have to share, don't you? Speaker 16: Yes. Yes. Well, first of all, I am so grateful to be here. And second of all, I am so grateful to be here. So I'm just gonna give that a shout out at a third. I'm so grateful to be here. Okay. So with that said, I am, just honored and blessed to be with all of you. You know, one of the things, too, that, I saw in the hospital, I just wanted to add to what Patty was saying is, you know, I was working in clinical trials, and everybody was like, oh, you know, they would scoff about ivermectin, or hydroxychloroquine. Well, they knew that I was the only one who didn't, take the vaccine. And they would all come up to me and go, hey, Speaker 10: Nick. Speaker 16: You got you got any ivermectin? You got any ivermectin? I'm like, you have got to be kidding me. You're scoffing at it, but then you're coming up to me to get ivermectin. Listen. I'll I'll pop you some pills, you know, but, anyhow, that was just crazy because, you know, it was like it was almost like they didn't want anybody to know that they wanted to take ivermectin or that they were taking it, you know, on the down low, but they were actually scoffing at people, which broke my heart. Okay. So moving on. I probably had a little too much coffee today. So moving on, I am honored to work with, Sue Roberson, who is the chair for former feds in Oklahoma, and Patty Springer, who is the chair for former feds in Kansas. And this afternoon, we had a talk with, a gentleman. His name is Casey Wooley, and he is, one of the vice chairs for, Oklahoma County GOP Congressional District 5, and we have got a huge lineup for medical freedom forum. We're calling it with liberty and justice for all forum at the Oklahoma State Capitol. It's gonna be 1PM to 5PM Central Standard Time on February 10. And what we're doing is we've got, doctor Jancy. Woo hoo. And, we've got doctor Meehan, and we've got, doctor Bowden, and we've got doctor Sherwood, and we've got Patty. Woo hoo. And, we've got multiple others, and we've got, Rachel Rodriguez with Veers Law Group. She's coming. And, we've just got a huge list going on here, of people who are going to be bringing action. So we are reaching out. We're doing a press release, to get as many legislators as we possibly can. We're getting as many, witness affidavit signers. Is that even good English? I don't know. But we're getting as many people as we can from health care, military, airline pilots. We are just papering the whole state. Us. We're gonna have testimonials. Liza DeGrievey, who is with the, executive director of the Oklahoma Health and Parental Rights, is going to be talking about the legislation that they're bringing. Rachel is going to be talking about the brief for, the request for open investigation and prosecution that they're doing in Florida that we are going to move forward in Oklahoma. Doctor, Jansy Lindsey is going to be, talking about the We The People 50 and recalling the vaccines. We are going to county commissioner meetings. I mean, we are just we we are going in every direction, hitting medical freedom from as many areas and targets that we possibly can because you all know it yourselves that this has so many tentacles. It has metastasized into so many different things. You've got vaccine injuries. You've got hospital protocols. You've got people who are, being still, you know, threatened to take the the vaccine, although, you know, they can get their religious exemption, but still the mandates, California was saying mask mandates, and somebody I heard said it in Oklahoma. I was like, you've gotta be kidding me. The who, with their digital IDs where, doctor Tedros was applauding the EU and their application so that they can put in, you know, their, digital ID so we'll know who's had their vaccine. Well, you know, what better way to instill fear than to say, okay. You can't, you know, be part of society if you don't have your vaccine. So that's that's it. That's a lot of information I know, and I know that I like to just go on and on and on. But, anyhow, I just wanna say you all are welcome to come out to Oklahoma, and you can ask me any questions that you want. Me and Huckleberry will be there for sure. Right on. And, Speaker 2: I'll be there. And then are you going too, Andy? Speaker 3: Absolutely. Speaker 2: Woo hoo. We're riding Speaker 10: I would, but I'm gonna be gonna be on town, but doctor Ferrella might be coming as well. You're welcome to ride up with us, Andy. We're we're gonna leave, Speaker 2: the Dallas area at 7AM and come back that night. When is Speaker 3: when when are you when it what is the day when it's happening? February I'm gonna put the details in Speaker 2: chat if somebody else had or the Nest or whatever you call it. Whatever you whatever this is called. Speaker 10: And if anybody's in the tech in Houston area, I checked the flights, and it's a 140 round trips. So it's probably cheaper than gas if you let fly. You guys. I'm I'll, unfortunately, be out of town, but I will be there in spirit. Speaker 16: Excellent. Well, we will welcome you in spirit. Oh, and one more thing. I spoke to, doctor Lindsey, and so, Sue and I are going to be going I think Casey's gonna join us as well. We're going to be going to all of the legislators so that we can talk to them about getting an in person hearing in Oklahoma so the physicians can bring the receipts and bring that information, so that we can move forward with, getting the AG to recall those shots, getting the protocols out of the hospital. I mean, I just would like to see this explode in Oklahoma as far as medical freedom, and I'm so grateful to Sue and Peggy and Casey. We're calling ourselves the quad or that's what I'm calling us. The Not the quad. Just gotta be the quad. Speaker 10: Yeah. We doctor Lindsey and I, we talked to, doctor Peter McCullough, and he couldn't make it that day, but he said to schedule, he will make an appoint if we could make an appointment with the legislators, he will go go to that meeting. Speaker 16: Okay. Great. Well, we are on it, and I I hope I didn't talk in a circle there. I was trying to get as much out as possible, but, anyhow, there's gonna be a lot of information. I'm gonna be posting a lot about it. I think this is the year that, you know, we've seen so many people wake up, but this is the year of medical freedom. Yep. I Speaker 10: said last week I said last year, we dubbed it the year of awareness, and this year is the year of action because we got people aware, and now we're gonna go go go act on it. So, everyone's all fired up. Speaker 16: Excellent. Everybody come on out to Oklahoma February 10. We're gonna party. Speaker 2: We'll be there. Mick. Speaker 10: Mick Mick was a, a nurse in the in the whole time of the COVID stuff. And because she spoke up, she got fired. So my theory is if the doctor's been fired or nurses got fired, that's who you want as your doctor or nurse. That's what my kids say. Speaker 16: I didn't get I didn't get fired. I I I no. I didn't get fired. No. I was told that, because I spoke up that the white sorority girls were no longer needed in health care. And and so I said, well, I hadn't I I I was flabbergasted by that, and my boss started laughing. And, the medical director looked at me, and she was like, no. We're the most diverse, equitable, inclusive facility there is. Speaker 10: We don't need the white sorority girls. I cannot believe she said those words. I'm just I can't believe it. I can't believe it. Yeah. I'm a I Speaker 16: And that would officially end my career because I was like, I I I can't work in this Speaker 10: then. Yeah. You're a white sorority girl, so you're out here. Speaker 16: Yeah. Speaker 10: Now she's got a podcast and a true freedom fighter. So we are so glad you're you're on our side. Blessed. Speaker 2: And so Speaker 16: yes. I'm blessed by you all. Oh, and and Dustin Faulkner with, with, Battlefront. Battlefront. Battlefront. Thank you. He's gonna be there too. So we're reaching out to all the media. That's awesome. Yeah. Yeah. That's awesome. Speaker 10: Yeah. Denise and I were on the show yesterday as a matter of fact. Speaker 2: Woo hoo. Denise said Go big. So well, hang out. Make you know, you guys have more to say. Okay. The next, person is gonna be okay. So it's gonna be Cheryl, Nooney, and then Denise who has things to announce as well. So Cheryl, Nooney, and Denise. Denise being justice for Jamie. So, Cheryl, go ahead. Did we lose Cheryl? Okay. We'll we'll wait for Cheryl to come back, but Nooney and then Denise. Nooney and then Denise. Speaker 14: Hi. Thank you, ladies. So good to be here with all of you. Yesterday, I was in an exceptional space with doctor Rima Labo, And there is a website that she's drawing attention to called preventgenocide2030.org. You can go there, click on it, select your country and sign the petition to leave the UN WHO. And it's, in Canada, we have 80,000, and, we've passed our 50,000 quota, I think. Yeah. And then, because it's either 50,000 or 5,000,000. But, anyway, the equivalent in America is a couple 100,000, but I think it's a million. But people should be signing signing that, petition, and it's she's got about six countries listed there, and it's in the purple pill. Go ahead. Please sign that petition to exit the UN and the WHO. If we got everybody to do that, if we got enough people to do that, they have to take notice. Speaker 10: Yes. I And that's second then. Speaker 14: The UN Great. Evil enterprise. Yeah. Yeah. So I put it down in the purple pill. It it's there, and I I'm always telling people to, you know, document their testimony with, the CHBMP simply because of the the legal utility you are giving the information as well as documenting it to make sure that it's there for the public record forever so it's never forgotten. But, yeah, I'm just, really glad to hear some of the developments and some of the work that people are doing. It's amazing. Keep it up, please. It's a marathon for sure. Speaker 10: Thanks, Nuni. And if y'all are interested in the the vaccine journey and hearing those stories, and I'm sure everybody is, Nuni has spaces all the time. I mean, I can pop on Twitter and expect to see a Nuni space. Go That's right. Anytime I want one. And anybody Speaker 2: like Uni said, anybody who has a protocol story, a fax story, injury, death, or many of the stories we're seeing are both, unfortunately. Yeah, please, go to chbmp.org, document your story, schedule an interview, and we'll get it out there. Okay. I don't see Cheryl back, so let's go to, Denise. Justice for Jamie. Speaker 10: So proud of Denise. She's done two amazing podcasts with me, and they were they were so hard, but she rocked them. Speaker 2: And you got some announcements too. Right? Speaker 4: I do. I do. But before I get to the announcements, I just wanna say thank you all for having me on tonight. Couple of things that I wanted to address. Heidi was talking about, you know, how the hospital and the nurses and the doctors are so cold and callous, And she was given that warning. I'm gonna also warn people about calling EMS because I've heard horrific stories. I hold a parent group meeting. I lost my daughter. My daughter was murdered 09/13/2021. And, one of my parents that comes on, her son, was 37 years old, and he literally had a heart attack. And the ambulance wasn't even prepared. They did no CPR. They did nothing on him. Even after he got to the hospital, they did nothing. They treated him as COVID. And, you know, same story, he died. He didn't die. He was murdered. Nobody dies of COVID. They are murdered, especially if they go into the hospital. So, you know, I just wanna throw that out there. You know, if if if you think that calling an ambulance is going to help, be very careful. Be very careful with that. It it's part of the medical system. It's a good point. And our medical system is broken, and it is dangerous. Speaker 2: There's no other way to put it. It's dangerous. It's a really good point, Denise, because we've had a lot of EMS horror stories on here too. Right? Speaker 4: Yep. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So it's part IMS is part of the hospital system. It's part of the medical system. And they're they they've all swallowed the pill Mhmm. For for whatever reason. I I I don't know. I don't understand it. But, you know, maybe someday, God will, you know, reveal all. I don't Speaker 10: know. And real quick, who was it, Gail, that they called the ambulance, but the they wouldn't go in and get the patient because she wasn't vaxxed and she Oh, so many of them. They Yeah. So what what why even call them? The the husband had to, like, drag her out, like, by her feet or something. It was horrible. Speaker 2: I think it was Steve Dettl. There was yeah. That was Steve Dettl. And then there was, somebody had to take a relative in a chair to the top of the steps or something of an apartment. Oh my gosh. Yeah. So good point, Denise. And I, I think it is because it's part of the, I think you're right. Because it is all part of the school system. Part of the medical system. Speaker 4: Absolutely. Absolutely. So quick story. You know, we we're, we're talking about cagbmp.org and documenting our stories. So my daughter was cremated, and everyone in the family has these tiny little, capsules, basically, and we have ashes. And I wear mine. I also have a cross that she always always wore. There's an angel wing, and my grandson, now her son, has been alienated from his entire maternal family. That's a whole another story. Horror story. But I I wear these in honor of my daughter and my grandson. And, normally, when I'm out, I have it tucked inside my blouse next to my heart. But for some reason today, it wasn't. And my husband and I stopped somewhere, and, we stopped at a farmer's market. And we, like, we have four dogs, so we didn't need another dog, but I wanted to pet the dogs. You know? It was just a thing. And, we walked up, and we were talking to these two ladies. And one of them noticed my necklace, and she said, oh, that's so pretty. I said, thank you. And I showed her, you know, Jamie's ashes or her container, and I said this is my youngest daughter. You know, I explained the necklace. And she goes, oh my god. She goes, I forget now who it was her husband's some member family member. And then the other woman who was younger said, well, my my boyfriend's grandmother was murdered in the hospital. And I and I share that story to tell you, you do not know when, how, where, or who you will touch. This was a necklace. This is my daughter, you know, and, normally, I have her next to my heart, but she was out today. And I reached two people. I gave them the the, information, chbmp.org, and encouraged them to come on, tell their stories, read this you know, hear the stories, check out the website. Sorry. I accidentally hit that. So be aware because your opportunity to share will come out of nowhere, seemingly out of nowhere. I mean, it's a god thing because god is is definitely leading this organization and leading this fight. So just be open to that. So Texas is ramping up. We are going to we're we're going to have a contest, not quite yet, Heidi, but we're gonna have a contest eventually with Heidi and see who we can see what we can do in in Texas. We're ramping up protests. The first one is going to be in San Antonio, Texas. It'll be February 3 from eleven to one, and it will be at Northeast Baptist Hospital. And I'm inviting anyone and everyone to come. That was the hospital my daughter was murdered in, and I wanna be loud. I don't want any threats or anything like that where, you know, if we're asked to leave, we'll we'll pack up and leave. I will be the last one to leave, but we will leave. We are going to start doing these. We're we're starting in San Antonio, and then we're gonna branch out. But, Gail, maybe you can help me. How many people do we have on the database that were murdered in San Antonio? Do you recall right up? Speaker 10: I know we have, like, close to 70 in Texas. 92. Speaker 2: We have ninety two in Texas, but I don't know offhand how many. I mean, there's there's ninety two thousand that died in hospitals in, Texas and quite Mhmm. A large I mean, San the San Antonio area is one of the top three areas. Speaker 10: I mean, you met two of them today. Absolutely. You literally met three people today. There's thousands out there. Yeah. So Yes. I mean, we've got 92 total Texans that have Speaker 2: no. 90 it's 92 or 97 that told their stories that sent us their stories. So we need we need to reach all the others. So, Denise, you've only got, 92 about 91,900 people to reach. No pressure. Speaker 17: Challenge accepted. Speaker 18: No pressure. No no pressure, Denise. Speaker 4: I'm not feeling it at all. Not at all. God. Let me wipe my forehead. Speaker 2: So yeah. So we need to reach I mean, I will say this the the the spaces have reached a lot of people. Like, we have had a lot of people who found us through these spaces and have put in their stories, so that's good. And, I hope that continues. And then seeing, you know, people driving by and seeing you on the on the street there, doing what, you know, what they're doing in California. I think that'll be so impactful. Speaker 4: Mhmm. Mhmm. So, you know, Texas is huge. I mean, we're the biggest state, and you can drive for ten hours and still be in Texas Speaker 2: depending on where you start. Me and you are both in Texas, and and it's almost double the time if I were coming to to that first rally you're having versus the Oklahoma City one. Speaker 4: Exactly. Exactly. Speaker 2: If I go to San Antonio, it's an overnight trip. If I go to, Oklahoma City, it's a it's a drive up and a drive back. Speaker 4: It's a day trip. Right. Right. So so, you know, I I live in Kerrville, which is about an hour give or take from San Antonio. Obviously, my daughter was murdered in Northeast Baptist Hospital in San Antonio. So we're gonna start in Texas, San, San Antonio and branch out. But so if if you're listening and you live in Texas and you're thinking, okay. Well, what about me? Trust me. We're gonna get to you. We're gonna get to you. The other thing that I want to see happen So in April 2023, I reached out to our elusive governor and our attorney general. I sent them a packet, Jamie's story, the 25 commonalities, picture of Jamie, and a letter asking them to start an investigation to find out why my daughter was murdered, who did it, why it happened, and that I wanted justice for her. Our elusive governor, governor Greg Abbott, sent me a letter back, and his response to me was, well, look on the Texas Bar Association for an attorney, and you can make a complaint to the Texas Medical Board whom I appoint. Mhmm. Was not did not sit well with me. Still doesn't sit well with me. Attorney general Ken Paxton wasn't much better. You know, he again sent me the bar. And, so, Rachel from Veres Law Firm. Texas is one of the places that, we she's sending a letter to our AG. So two weeks after he gets that letter after he receives that letter, I'm planning a protest in Austin in front of his office. Now he may or may not be there, but staff will be there. And if enough people show up and if we make enough noise, within the legal limits, he will know that we're there. And that's what I want. I want him to know that one mother, one grieving mother reached out to him, and he pushed me aside. But now we're coming in a pack. The Warrior Pack of Texas is coming to your doorstep, Ken Paxton. Speaker 2: Be I wonder if I wonder if we're allowed to rent out the Rotonda like they did in Oklahoma City. I was wondering that myself. Because I I'd never heard about that until we'll have to check that out, Denise. Speaker 10: I don't see why I know how but yeah. But with the the complaint that Rachel was sending to the AG, she started, in Florida, now Texas, and then she's going to Oklahoma. Everybody that's a victim in that state needs to write letters, handwritten letters, send them to me, or I can give you the address to send them to. And they were gonna attach it to their complaint. It's 90 pages. It's solid. They've been working on it for two years, to open criminal investigations against Fauci and company for second degree murder among other charges. So this is a very, skilled group of attorneys who've spent a lot of time making this as as ironclad and solid as they can. They just need to get the victims behind it. So if you're oh, in Louisiana. So if you are a victim in in any of those four states, Florida, Texas, Oklahoma, or Louisiana, get those letters in supporting the request for them to open a criminal investigation. I cannot stress how important it is. Send those letters? I have an address so they can send it to me and I can forward them on, or they can, DM me and I'll give them the direct address. But we we wanted many you know, we have got you just said 90 something people in in Texas. We need all of them to write the letters. Same with Oklahoma, same with Louisiana. Speaker 2: Mhmm. Speaker 9: So Speaker 4: And not not only send your letter, definitely send your letter. Because he can't ignore he can ignore one person, but he cannot ignore a group of us. And he gets a letter. He receives a letter. And then, you know, as long as it takes, as often as it takes, we will be there knocking on his door saying, hello. We're still here. We're not going away. This is the only way we're gonna get action. I don't know what's going on with Texas. Texas used to be red. It used to be a fired up state, but it's not anymore. Don't even know it. Yeah. Yeah. So we have to as Texans, we have to go back to our roots. We have to find that fighting spirit, and we have to stand up against this this Speaker 2: atrocity. This is not Well, I think in every state, people who who need to pay a lot more attention to who pulls the strings of who's in office. If Big Pharma if they're sponsored by Big Pharma or medical unions or anything like that, it's, we yeah. You know, we really even fine right? Campaign finance reform, we've tried to do where if you take money from a certain special interest, you can't be on that committee or vote. Like but we just we just need to pay very close attention to who funds the people that we vote. Yeah. Because Speaker 10: although they've made this a political thing, it's really not. They don't ask you who you voted for when they give you the deadly jab. Right. They don't ask you who you voted for when they, you know, give you remdesivir. And we don't ask you who you voted for when we document your story. So this is a lot of the people that are Democrats took the jab. A lot of people that were Republicans got the protocol. I mean, they're killing both sides. And there's there's just as dirty Republican I mean, I'm a conservative, but there's just as dirty Republicans as there are, you know, in there too, and we we've seen that. So I'd I'd like to try to start changing the narrative that this is not a political fight. This is a humanity fight. And, you know, we support all people. Speaker 2: All people get harmed by either one. Yeah. And the longer we fight the longer we fight against each other on this issue in a in a party manner or a, income level manner or any type of division, that is less time that we can fight against them, and they love it. And they will stir that pot as much as they can. And they'll they'll throw all kinds of money at it just to make us fight against each other. Do not fall for it. Do not fall for it. Even in terms of, you know, protocol, vaxxed injured, we're all in the same fight. Mandate fight, the everything, the from the masks, all of the COVID related crimes against humanity. It we're we're in the same damn fight, and we need to stick together. They Speaker 16: Yeah. Unity Unity Speaker 4: fight. And the fight is for our lives. Literally for our lives and the lives of the future generation. Exactly. And and if if people can remember that, this is not an individual fight. Yeah. I'm fighting I'm fighting for to get justice for Jamie. Definitely. But I'm not in this just for Jamie. I'm fighting for the future of my grandchildren. I'm I'm fighting for all the others' loved ones that were murdered. I'm fighting for the survivors. I'm fighting for the vaxx injured. My husband my husband's family doesn't have cancer in his family. And he took two of the damn jab excuse me, two of the jabs and has cancer. Yeah. You know? Speaker 10: Yeah. Everyone. Right. And we have to come together. You know, I see all this infighting all the time and people attacking each other. We don't have to have the same culture or even speak the same language. We don't have to, you know, be in the same socioeconomic level. We we don't even have to like each other, but we just all have to agree that we're fighting the same enemy, we're on the same side, and work together. Speaker 4: You know? It it just You see, the culture the culture and the language is is humanity. Exactly. Exactly. That's the culture and language. It's humanity and the fight for humanity. That's the culture and language. Speaker 10: Yeah. And when you attack cement I mean, you have to look at it like this. We're on one side of the battlefield. The evil people are on the other. Why were you trying to to take out people on the same side of your battlefield? That just leaves less of you. You know? I mean, it doesn't even make strategic sense whatsoever. I mean, I may not like Joe Blow, you know, three three miles down on the my side of the battlefield, but, gosh, I want him on the air. Exactly. Like, I mean, we're, Speaker 2: we don't even you know, we can differ in ideas. We can differ in strategies. We it's good if we do that, actually, actually, as long as we're fighting the same battle. But you know the old saying how some people will sink the ship just because they can't be captain and that kind of stuff. That's kind of the reason, like, the military doesn't they try to get out the loose screws that are just like lone rangers because they have to fight as a, you know, a cohesive unit. They you know, with some strategy. You know? Speaker 10: Yeah. My my husband and her husband too. They were both in the army, and my husband did not like a lot of the people in his platoon. But dang it. He didn't want them out of the fight here. Exactly. Because it's just another person on on on his side with, you know, fighting. Yeah. So it's it's ludicrous, and it's just it has a lot to do with ego and just I don't know what it does, but I don't care who gets the credit. I just wanna win. So and I just wanna needs to get the credit. Humanity needs to get the credit. God. And credit in the end. God is it says what is his flight, and we're just his soldiers. And so Exactly. You know, I just try to ignore it. And Mickey Willis has a great video on this. If you haven't seen it, it's called Birthright. It's on Marvel. Yeah. And, yeah, you should watch it. It's really good. Because he's been involved in very, a lot of humanitarian projects, and he said they all lose from the same thing, and that's infighting. Because we're the people that are doing it are actually doing the work for the other side. You know, this is what they want. They want us to be divided. I'm gonna put I'm gonna put it in that net the nest or whatever you call it because it's so good. Cool. Speaker 4: So just to wrap up, February 3, Northeast Baptist Hospital, San Antonio, Texas. Come one, come all. This is not just a fight for Jamie. This is a fight for humanity. I hope to see a lot of people there. So thank you. Thank you, Denise. Good job on the podcast. You were super powerful Speaker 10: in your stories. And, well, we got three more next week, so go back in your closet and get I'm in my closet now. Can I get out of my closet now? She has to go in the closet because the dogs are too loud, so they bark and she can't hear. So we were doing podcast, and she could tell who she was in her closet. She's like, sorry. I made her pull in her her, her night, nightstand lamp so we can get a little bit light on her. But, anyway, good job, Denise. Oh, yeah. Thank you. Is it John and or Sherry? Or I think Sherry has questions for John. Who's first? Gail. Speaker 2: So let's let Sherry ask her questions of John because for three weeks, we've not. Sherry, does Sherry have the mic yet? Speaker 10: I don't know. Speaker 2: Let's see. Yeah. She keeps getting she keeps dropping. Speaker 10: She let she Speaker 2: reports. She let me Oh, I see her. Can you hear? Speaker 10: I just sent her the mic. We'll give her a second. Speaker 2: But as soon as she responds, her audio is gets flaky because she lives in the boondocks Speaker 9: country. Speaker 2: She's so her her she's so out in the country that, even Google Earth don't know where she is. Speaker 10: Don't even ask me any other story about that. Speaker 2: Yeah. I don't wanna know. Speaker 10: I thank you for calling. Yeah. That was another dumb thing I did. Well, we Sherry, does she Speaker 2: okay. Well, while we're waiting Yeah. Go ahead, John, because we'll probably be here a while. Speaker 10: Oh, yeah. We can't hear you. Hello? There she is. Hi, everybody. Speaker 2: Sherry's back. Go ahead, Sherry. K. Nope. Should I wait? Lost my sound. Yeah. You're there. No. We can hear you. Oh, she lost her sound. You know? Speaker 11: I think I hear you. Speaker 10: Yeah. You're cutting out pretty bad. If you wanna text us your questions, we can ask them for you. Speaker 14: It's so cold there. The Internet froze. Oh my gosh. Speaker 4: Alright. Go ahead, John. I'm good. Because John is talking to me. Speaker 10: Yeah. You're cutting out too bad. Okay. I hear you talking to Jill. Go ahead, John. Speaker 9: Hello? Hey, John. Speaker 10: Hello? Hello? How are you guys? Okay. Speaker 7: I raised my hand when they were talking about Texas and Paxton and and, not getting response. So, I mean, I I have somebody to give it to Paxton, but the more people that give it to him, the better. The CDC memorandum, I just finished a few minutes ago, the the electronic publication version. I have some small things to change, but it it's pretty much it's all done. So I expect that, I'll I'll sign a contract with a printer, early next week. That'll be two weeks. It'll it'll be done. Hopefully, people will have copies in their hands, February. And then the any official versions that go to government people, they can't be published. They're they're private. They're the the government officials will have to keep secret the names that are in there or, you know, the HIPAA violation kind of stuff, even though it's not really a HIPAA violation. So the the one that's gonna be published will have redact I've changed the names of certain people to be, like, John Smith and stuff like that. But, 95% of the names are real. 5% of them will be changed for the published version. So the the the version that I want somebody to hand to Paxton, and whoever else there, the attorney general, that's Paxton. And who else was I thinking? Oh, whatever they have for, like, a surgeon general of the state and the commissioner of the Department of Public Health. So that's it. I just wanted to say I'm I'm I'm nearing the finish line a lot many months after I thought I would, but it's getting really close. Is this something that the attorneys can add to their Speaker 10: complaint they're serving them? Speaker 7: Yeah. They can use it as an exhibit. You can always do that. Okay. They may they may not like what I'm doing. I mean, I'm kinda in my own world. I'm going kinda hard at people. But but this isn't going at, like, PAX. This is going at the FDA, CDC, NIH directors and telling them that if they don't change if they don't correct the fraud that's already been done, then they're not only guilty of the past fraud, they're guilty of any future people who might die because they didn't tell the people the truth. And that equates to murder, and I do a legal analysis of that. So it's really to the the FDA, CDC, NIH directors, but it's a copy to, like, Paxton who would look at it and say, there's enough evidence here to convict these people. Like, we really need a grand jury investigation. The whole point is, like you said, we we we want grand jury investigations at the county and state levels. Hopefully, we can find some places to do it. The laws out west, they're more amenable to, what we're trying to do because, the way I think about it, the the way the West was settled, in order to get justice, that the, circuit judge would come around, like, I don't know, couple times a year. Right? Maybe once a year. And, there'd be this pile of cases, and they kinda go through them. And they had to deputize people, and they had to have these grand juries of the people. We have them here, but not like you guys have them. You have, like, board of county commissioners, and, we have that. But they actually outlawed them in Massachusetts, I found out, back in 1997. They dropped they changed the law, and about 80% of Massachusetts, does not have Board of County Commissioners, but Cape Cod does. So I was thinking of driving down to Cape Cod and meeting with them and saying, hey. You guys gotta get a grand jury going. Anyway, to to the point, we need grand juries. We need to investigate criminally. The grand jury has an awesome power of subpoenaing not only people, but, evidence, like, says, like, bring it with you. Right? Bring bring the accounting records with you. So we we can't the whole trouble with, all these lawsuits, especially the stuff Warner's doing with the False Claims Act is trying to find whistleblowers. And, if if you can get into a criminal investigation anywhere, any grand jury can subpoena to say Stecum the accounting records of a hospital with regard to, the federal payouts for remdesivir or baricitinib or the use of a ventilator, all that stuff that's been kept from us for four years, you know, that can be subpoenaed by a grand jury. And once we get into that, I mean, game over. Those those murderers go down, because we can we can track the money to the behavior. And, it's like, oh, that's why they prescribed somebody with ninety five percent oxygen remdesivir. And that's why they put them on a ventilator, you know, with with no fever. No. Alright. Now I'm just I'm just going on. I'll stop. But, yeah. So I'd like to get the, the CDC memorandum in the hands of of Paxlovid and notice basically, once he knows it, he should act upon it. And then if you guys wanna pressure him, and if you like it, you haven't read it yet, I don't expect anybody to stand behind it until they've read it. Once you've read it and you understand it, then I I hope everybody around the country can get behind it and, you know, demand grand jury investigations. I'll stop now. Anyone? Speaker 14: What he has there is a shit ton of irrefutable evidence as an exhibit. So thank you, John. Like, this is amazing stuff, like, especially that memorandum, like, the unredacted ones for the people, giving it the legal utility, taking them directly to the state representatives who need to see it. Speaker 16: I'm sorry to jump in. Where can I get that? Speaker 7: It'll be another couple of weeks, but you could I'm selling the redacted version on, my website, the real cdc.com. It's I don't expect to sell a lot of them, and I'm already in the hole, like, $20 for all this stuff. So I, the list price is 150 for the CDC memorandum, but I'm selling it with my book for $55 for both of them. So that that gets it down to, like, you know, a reasonable amount. So, if you go to the cd the real cdc.com, it's on preorder now, but, it it'll be, probably, like I said, a couple of weeks. Three weeks. Three weeks for the CDC memorandum. Three weeks. Speaker 14: And if, somebody if a group like, the CHBMP, needs the unredacted one for a legal brief, Speaker 10: how can they get ahold of that? Well, you you guys know me. That That was the that was the question I was about to say. Can we use this in all of our AG ones as an exhibit? Speaker 7: You you you guys can contact me for the unredacted ones. I just wanna make sure they're going to if you file something in a case, it's public record. So Right. I have to talk to whatever lawyers you're you're talking to. It's really Yeah. It's for the government officials, which would have the duty to keep it private. Speaker 14: Correct. Yeah. You have to market with the right, I think whatever security clearance it is, confidential or or whatever, and the documents have to be marked that way. Speaker 7: Well, if they impound them. Yeah. They just ask that they be impounded because there's private information. Speaker 10: I'll just connect you and the attorneys, and then, let y'all decide how you wanna how they wanna put it in the in the complaint. Yeah. That'll work. Speaker 7: And you know what? For the purposes of a case like that, the, the published version, it would be would be fine. Speaker 10: Okay. Speaker 7: Because it's only it's only about 5% of the names that are that are changed. Speaker 10: I think it's it's crucial to go along with this request for an investigation because they're filing to, investigate second degree murder among other charges. So, Speaker 7: Yeah. I have I have the a cursory analysis of that in there. There's there's different second degree murders depending on where you are. I used common law, which kind of covers them. So, felony murder, depraved heart murder, and involuntary manslaughter are analyzed, in the context of some of the evidence that's in there. There's just too much. I could write thousands of pages. Speaker 10: I actually have the complaint. I think I'll just email it to you so you can take a look at it and see if you think it fits and everything. I I think it will. But, because your your research is amazing. I just got kicked off. Like, it just came back on. I think the overlords are onto us, but I completely just dropped out, and then I can't even get back into Twitter. Here's something funny. Speaker 7: New Hampshire. I was this goes along with what they were saying about Texas also. So I just presented in New Hampshire at, one of the, senate committee about s b three nineteen, I think it's called. Mhmm. And, I was told in the lobby afterward that the two the two Democrat women, not only did they not listen to me, they they couldn't look at me. One of them looked up at me very quickly and within less than a second, put her eyes back down. Then they started talking to each other. They pulled out a binder and started flipping through it. They were surfing the web. I looked at them for ten minutes. And then I looked to the right, and I said, well, I guess they're not gonna engage with with me. I'll look over here. And I found out the two that were looking at me the whole time were Republicans. And so I so I I said to them, you know, I'll just look over here. It's on the video. You you can hear me saying that. Speaker 9: And she was Speaker 7: but the point is one point I don't know. What are they? 1.2, 1,400,000 people in New Hampshire? It's about it's about one twentieth the size of Texas. One twentieth. All four senators I heard get money from pharma. This is these are state senators. This is not the problem. Yep. Yep. All four. Problem. So they basically bought every federal and every state politician probably in the entire country. This shit has to stop. I mean, we just have to and, you know, I don't know if you realize what's happened. But farm, vaccines were thrown under the bus to bring in this global communism that's going on. They they knew when they did this, that the truth would come out. People are gonna die and that it's gonna destroy the pharma vaccine market. They knew that. Now people aren't taking even flu vaccines that took them their entire life. The the market's going down eventually because more people are coming out. But but they did all this for, you know, other other reasons. And that's basically to take over the country and and tear global communism or whatever. But but don't think that they didn't know and that they still think they're pushing vaccines and they're trying to, oh, we're gonna make Pfizer make a lot of money. Now Pfizer's probably gonna come close to bankruptcy at some point. The government might bail them out, but they sacrificed the vaccine idol, you know, at at the altar of of of communism. Speaker 10: Absolutely. Alright. I'll stop. Absolutely. For sure. So, John, when do I get my book? Yeah. While you're down. Just kidding. No pressure. Speaker 7: I'm not gonna read it. It it's done. I just I gotta work something out with the publisher? With the publisher. Yeah. I'm trying so hard not to give money to Amazon. Yep. Right. It's so difficult. If you have to go outside The US, it's like, you know, you'd have to cut deals in various countries with their, distribution and printing business. Or if you wanna print them here and ship boxes across an ocean, then you still have to find distributors and stuff like that. I I don't know. It's hard. You know? I No. I'm just kidding. I'll be patient. I'm just excited to read it. No. No. I people are losing patience. I'm getting emails, like, you know, about their orders and stuff. I I don't like the publishing industry. It's the only industry I know where you take a preorder and you take their money. And some books are on preorder for a year and you put their money. That's that's that's not like any I told the publisher, I'm like, you're kidding me. That's your industry? That sucks. You should never you should never bill a customer until you ship the product. That's how every other business is. I can't say every, but that's how most businesses. You don't you don't build them. You take the order, and then you have a backlog, and then you ship it. When you when you ship it, it it revenues. Right? Invoices. Mhmm. And then revenue recognition is a whole another whole beast depending on the solvency of the customer. You can you can declare revenue when it ships. But, anyway, the We'll do a space we'll do a spaces on crappy business models. Speaker 15: I I have a question. But Speaker 2: hold on. I wanna just I do want you to to add yours, but I do wanna ask Sherry Martin's question because she put it in chat. Okay? Okay. She said I'm gonna read it verbatim. She said she Is it me? It's for you. She said Oh. She said, I sent John a picture of Steve's death cert findings, and he said it was Bass Acorns. They they listed acute kidney injury in part two. I was wondering if he would advise me to petition to for an edited certificate. He has the info on which line the cert is actually is actually the primary cause of death. Speaker 7: You what was the primary again? My furnace turned on. I couldn't hear. So it's it has Speaker 2: acute kidney injury in part two. I heard that. Yeah. But the last thing you said he has info on which line on the cert is actually the primary cause of death. And Speaker 7: and Yeah. I I remember it. There there's there's another issue with that. I I would I should have looked it up to see if the death certifier was a doctor attending at time of death or a medical examiner. If it was a medical examiner, then it's really bad the medical examiner doesn't know how to fill up the death certificate. Doctors have an excuse because they're not really trained in it. They should be but they get it wrong all the time. They write it backwards. When I say backwards, I mean cause A should be the immediate cause and then B, C, D. It goes in backwards time order with the last one, whether it's in A, B, C, or D, the last one is the UCOD that CDC calls it, the underlying cause of death. It should be called the root cause of death. So, you know, COVID caused pneumonia, caused anoxic brain injury, caused, you know, cardiopulmonary Speaker 2: arrest, and that's the last one. Alright. I, yeah, I see what you're saying. Speaker 15: I I have a a quick question for him. Uh-huh. Yes. So, so the hospital that my best friend was killed in, right, is Kevin McCarthy's district. And I was at a meeting the other day where two candidates were speaking, right, who are running for his seat. And one of them being sheriff Bedreaux, and I asked him if he was aware of the hospital COVID protocols that are that are killing people here locally and across the nation. And he said in a crowded room, yes. Remdesivir does kill. My father was injured from remdesivir. Now tell me, since he knows that remdesivir kills and it's being used in our local hospitals where he has jurisdiction, is he, isn't he mandated to do something about that Obligently Speaker 9: to do something? Speaker 7: Yes. Yes. I wouldn't say he has a legal duty to act on the information. Speaker 15: Yeah. Because I asked him I asked him if, you know, if he was the highest elected official here locally, right? It's the highest elected position. He said, yes. I said, so you do have, you know, more power in these circumstances than the governor. He said, yes. I said, you took an oath to the constitution, didn't you? He said, yes. But still, he's not doing anything about it. Tell me, Stephanie, what can he do? Speaker 7: Well, is he a did you say he's a legislator? He's a sheriff. He's a In Tulareklamian, Speaker 15: he's running for McCarthy's seat right now currently, and he admitted in a crowded room that Remdesivir is killing people in the hospitals. Speaker 7: Yeah. They he he they they all have a legal duty to at least investigate. Okay? If if not, he he can't really bring criminal charges. He's, just a sheriff. He can arrest somebody, but bringing charges is in the purview of the DA or the county lawyer, attorney, whatever you guys call him there. I don't know where you are, but, that that's he he can't bring charges, but he can arrest somebody, with probable cause. And, he can investigate on information and belief, which is a lower standard than pros probable cause. If you have information and belief that cry crime has been, is being, or will be committed, then you can pursue that, line of investigation so long as it doesn't Speaker 15: violate it. Isn't it a crime for him not to do anything about it? Because he he knows about it. Yeah. He's a sheriff. Isn't that a crime within itself? Speaker 7: It it is. Who's gonna arrest them? The sheriff? Who's the the problem is so many people are breaking so many things. Like, there's a whole decay in society where crimes are just allowed. But to to answer your question, certain people have a legal duty to act. What that means is, I use I use a lifeguard thing all the time, or a crossing guard. I'll use the crossing guard one this time. So Martha's the crossing guard, and she's sitting there. The kids are coming, and and she says, Johnny, wait here. Don't go yet. And, Johnny waits, and she says, look at me, and I'll tell you when to go. So Johnny looks at her, and she waits until the truck is coming down the road. And here comes the truck, and she says, don't look now. Now go, Johnny. Go right in front of the truck. Okay? She she not only has a legal duty to act to keep the kids safe, but even going so far as intentionally doing that is what the the, some of these people are doing with the with the vaccines and the protocols. Now if he says he knows, so he's in a knowing state of mind, then he has a legal duty to pursue, saving people because he is in a position where he can. We can't. We don't have that position. We didn't take that position. He took that position, and whether he's sworn an oath or not, It's as soon as he accepted a paycheck and he's got the position So what can he do? Duty. What can he he can in investigate and then, contact a DA or the attorney general and say these people are being killed by this drug. And once that's off his plate, you know, he's done what he can do in the in the scope of his, employment or the scope of his his office. Speaker 15: Yeah. He won't And don't forget, I'm not gonna I'm not He won't do anything about it, and I haven't told him people are are dying. You know? Every day, people are dying because nobody's doing the right thing. Because Speaker 10: Oh, he's an elected official. Right? You gotta put the pressure on him. Make him, Speaker 7: you know, get a letter writing campaign or get the public involved. Well, just just you know, it it only takes a couple of paragraphs saying, you know, you have a legal duty to act on information and belief that, people are in danger and that a crime is taking place. And that that we know even you know that remdesivir is killing people, and they're still doing it. So if you don't act, you are complicit Yeah. And I don't know. Did you, like, record it? Like Speaker 15: It wasn't recorded, but he said it literally in the middle of his speech in a crowd. Because Speaker 2: if if it's recorded, like, a nice recording of that would would be really great to get And it's very Speaker 15: allow recordings, but there's a whole room full of witnesses. Speaker 7: Yep. Now I can take the other side and say that, you know, if he was campaigning, he wasn't in the scope of his employment as a sheriff, and he was just a regular citizen. And, therefore, he can say things that aren't true. And one of the things that might not be true to the best of his knowledge is that remdesivir is killing people and that he was only saying it to appease the crowd. Sure. But That would be my Speaker 2: But he said it, and he's not doing anything. Like, I I think it's it's high time that we call out these elected officials for being the cowards or the sellouts that they are. At this point, if they're not doing something about the a literal holocaust, a a a democide happening in America, really the Western world, an attack on the Western world. But if they're not doing that, they hate their country. If they're not protecting the citizens of America against this genocide, they hate their countries. And they hate their country and they hate you. Period. End of story. They're they're either cowards, they hate you, or they're or they're greedy, selfish bastards who are just in it for the the big the big, the special interest money. And we we we have to call them out, and we have to get more we have to be smarter with our vote. Speaker 7: Well, I'm in Massachusetts, so I'm kinda screwed because they're all Let's start the shame campaign. Speaker 15: Yes. You are. Speaker 7: But, we gotta find places in The US where there are good people, good Christian people who wanna do the right thing. And and that's I'm not gonna name the place and the people right now, but I have three places that I'm gonna approach. I have a proposal. I'm talking to the local people now, and then I have to sell. Right. Right. Everything you have to sell. And my my career was in sales. Yep. I know that the attorney general of any state is not gonna stick his neck out politically for something like impaneling a grand jury. As soon as he does, his career is over. Farmer will spend a billion dollars in one state to make sure that attorney general never get never never gets to another public office. I and and, you know, that that's the feds will go after him. So they they don't wanna do it. They don't want this is the biggest. I mean, imagine if they impaneled the let's say even Paxton Paxton can't stand. They went after him. Right? Trying to impeach him. He hates them. Even he will bulk at it because to to go after the FDA and CDC for the greatest crime in the history of man, Speaker 2: he he's really sticking his neck. I get it. He's sticking his neck out. But you know, here's the thing. We, the citizens stick our neck out, our neck out too every day when we're doing like, I, I've worked on Ken Paxton's every single campaign he's ever had. His wife is my senator. We, we, you know, I've been involved in politics here for ten years and I'm shocked that he doesn't have the moral courage to do something. I'm actually I am actually shocked because he has historically been a man of moral courage. Historically. Speaker 7: Well, well, let's go get him. But if if, you know, I mean, he is one of the top guys. There's another guy in a smaller state that I believe would would not wanna do it, but you you have to give the guy an out. So think about everybody's behavior and what their personal wants and needs are in their life. Right? And then you have to tailor the the plan to get them, based upon their wants and needs. Doesn't matter what you want. What you're trying to sell, what you're trying to push, the biggest mistake most people make is is talking to others and trying to sell a concept by talking about what they care about. Yeah. That's true. So so with this small state governor, if, certain other very low level politicians force the hand at a district judge level, and all he can do is say yes or no to the, grand jury. But but saying no would mean that, there would be just very he has no choice. He has to do it. You gotta put him in a position where they have to do it, then they can tell pharma I had to do it. I had to do it. Don't you think if if Speaker 2: this is this has been my position for a while. If if even half of the people who have been killed by the protocols and even half of the people that have been harmed by the shots came forward and told their stories and documented their stories and came forward and fought, they it would be overwhelming. You would these politicians would have to decide, do I want the money, or do I want people to think that I'm part of a genocide? Speaker 7: Look at the way the other side does it. You know? You you you can't go to a restaurant, sit down, and eat. You know? I mean, I don't know where you are, but, I'm up in the Northeast. We're densely populated. You know what they all said? What what was your name? Maxine Waters. You know, find out their place of business, the way they eat. Don't give them any peace. And I'm not saying we should do that, but I I am agreeing with you in that this whole group and the and what you guys do with the the, CHBMP is awesome. And and it is making a difference, and it takes time for the ground swell. Like, you know, I there was a a quote that was used to be the title of the presentation I gave, like, a year ago or year and a half ago. But I said it January '21 when I first no. I first saw bears in, February '21. But I basically said, this won't end until everybody knows somebody. That's right. And here we are four four years later. That's right. And Speaker 2: And everybody's scared of those. Afraid. We get people so afraid to tell their damn story or to do an interview. They're so afraid that they're gonna be you know, we've had people tell their story and then a a a brother or sister or somebody calls them up and and sees it and says, you know, you get take that down. It's an embarrassment. Or take that down. Everybody's gonna know. Yeah. That's the point. Shout it. Somebody killed your loved one or somebody hurt you or like, I'm a I'm a survivor and they tried to kill me. They tried to literally murder me in the hospital and that pissed me off. And I will never shut up ever. Speaker 7: And Yeah. There's there's just a lot of people out there that don't that that they they're chic, you know. They don't want any trouble. To stand up. And especially in in the in marriages. Yeah. Right? One's passionate, the other doesn't care, or one's passionate, the other's annoyed. It's it's going I mean, I just I went through that, you know, with I'll just say within a couple of weeks. I I I know a marriage that broke up over it. I had several. Yeah. Oh, it's okay if he gets the vaccine. What's the problem? Just let him get the vaccine. Speaker 10: Yep. Or, you know, just being in this fight, you have you know, your families are divided. My my parents literally wanted to commit me. They thought I was absolutely batshit crazy. And because they're like, oh, she's going off the deep end. Like, what look. She She thinks she's a doctor. Look. She's telling everyone not to get vaccinated. She's telling everyone to take this ivermectin that's, you know, horse paste because they listen to the media. But, you know, like Gail says, even if you are in this fight and your and your husband is supportive, sometimes you have to put down the sword and pick up a spatula. Speaker 2: Women in the fight, especially, you know, men too, but they they can, you know, the grill spatula. No. Speaker 7: Well, this is the problem. The problem in the whole country. The whole country has been feminized. You know? There's how many women are in this fight? There's a lot more Well, they killed a lot of the men. I do have to say that. Yeah. Well, yeah, that's true too. But, you know, I'm talking about, working working age, man. They just put their heads down, go to work, and they don't want any trouble. Just do what they're told and just jeez. I know. We need that. We need that. Because I'll tell you what. Speaker 2: There isn't a day that goes by that I don't thank God, and I think Huckleberry's on here, that I don't thank God that I am married to a alpha male who who said, no way. You're not gonna kill my wife and storm the ICU with my daughter who who has a spine of steel like her mother, but and said, you're not gonna kill her. She's not your guinea pig. I'm taking her home. And I was on 60 meters of oxygen, and he did it. And they said she will be dead by the time you get home, but he did it. He did everything he could, you know, because he has a bunch of stuff in the garage. So he had Mcguy MacGyver. Problem is getting the nurse oxygen and stuff together to Speaker 10: The problem is, though, Gail, he was a nurse, and most people don't know Speaker 7: know anything, know how to do that. You know? Yeah. If if if it had been my husband, I'd be nine feet under because, you know, he would be like They play on your fear. You know, you guys all know this. I don't have to say it. They they they play the the spouse. Yeah. It's like, what if you're wrong? You will have killed them. So you on the side of caution. I mean, Speaker 10: if you die, you die from the doctors and everybody will accept that. Yeah. I do. And you Yeah. Speaker 4: So so couple of things. John, thank you. Thank you for all your work. I know you've put so many hours into that, and you're just a wealth of information every time I hear you speak. I'll be honest. I don't understand probably half of it, but, I mean, it's like, wow. It blows me away. Okay? Second of all, my daughter, my 36 year old daughter did not invade die in vain. There will be no one. Until my last breath, I will speak up, and I will shout to the hillside. I may need to, as Gail says, put the sword down and pick up the spatula every now and then. But rest assured, I'm gonna come back with a vengeance because no one had the right no one had the right to, first of all, isolate her from me or any of her other loved ones. Second of all, and more importantly, no one had the right to murder her. I was there. I had her nurse sister on the phone. We were advocating. Jamie was murdered for four reasons. She was unvaccinated. She was morbidly obese. She was, uninsured, and she had family that would not sit down, shut up, and go away. So they vented her because Jamie was beginning to understand what the hell they were doing. She was beginning to understand that they were trying to kill her. So they vented her so that she could not speak any longer. I do I have proof of that? Absolutely not. Because they were very good at hiding what they did. Do I know it in my heart? Do I know it in my spirit? Absolutely. And I will say that to the day I die, to my last breath. Okay? I don't care who, what, how. When I'm threatened, I'm coming after you, and I've been that way my entire life. I don't I know a lot of people aren't like that. But by god, when it's a life, when it's your life or the life of your loved one, grow a freaking spine. Grow a spine and stand up for them. Because if not, you're gonna be burying them. Speaker 10: And by the way, Denise, she was a few pounds overweight. She was morbidly obese. They put that on everybody's so they can blame that. Yeah. Well, you know what? I I seen it on everybody's Speaker 4: My entire family. My entire family. We are, quote, unquote, morbidly obese, a few pounds overweight. Whatever. Okay? Almost everyone in my family has gotten COVID. Every one of us has has taken ivermectin. Every one of us are here to speak and and to live our lives. Jamie was the only one that went into the hospital. Jamie's not on this earth anymore. I shouldn't be here. I should not be here because I I was sick about halfway through Jamie's thirteen days of torture in the hospital. I was I contracted COVID, and I got sick. By the time my oldest daughter, the nurse, took me down to her little country doctor, and he to she took me to the ER, but he was on the phone with the ER doctor. I was so sick that the doctor kept telling Nicole, you need to hospitalize your mom. He knew I wasn't gonna go in the hospital because he was the only doctor when I was told that I had to find a doctor and a hospital to move my daughter from the hospital she was at. He was the only doctor that's that stepped up, and the little country hospital was the only one that stepped up. Speaker 2: You know, Speaker 4: they say he saved my life. He knew. He I kept telling Nicole, you need to hospitalize her. He had oxygen, IV, everything on standby for me. He saved my life. He saved my life. But Jamie went into the hospital, and they took her life. They murdered her. You know, Denise, Speaker 2: can we stay on? Because you just made a great point, and I've I think CC wanted to go to doctor George Farid. Speaker 10: Is that Speaker 18: and Yeah. It's just so exciting. It's all tied up. What you just said is Speaker 2: perfectly aligned with the early, c nineteen treatments and that type of thing. So I think this is a good conversation. Speaker 6: Well, thank thank you very much. It's great to join in. You're you're what you're saying is so true. There was, so much, unfortunate mistreatment, in during the pandemic, and still can occur if people don't take early treatment. And we're getting variants that could become virulent, and they may lead to hospitalization if early treatment isn't instituted. Everyone should have their home kit available, HCQ, ivermectin, zinc, vitamin d three, doxycycline, azithromycin, aspirin. But, so those should all be present in your on your medicine cabinet, ready to go in an emergency basis because it's a broad spectrum antiviral, and it's, covers other, RNA viruses in addition. And then, with with regard to something very important for everyone to be, informed with is the great, congressional hearing on COVID vaccines, presiding, under the direction of, Marjorie Taylor Greene. If you go to her, yesterday or Friday, the the presentations, testimonies by Ryan Cole, Peter McCullough, and Kirk Milholm, were unbarred and just so informative and impactful. Unfortunately, we don't have the power in congress to, take action based upon all the crimes that were presented, from their testimonies, but at least it's getting the information out. But if one, I really encourage people to listen to the entire testimonies of and hearing with, Ron Johnson and the some of the Republican congressmen, joining Marjorie Taylor Greene. So it's, that's my main message to to you all. Don't miss all the information collected that's presented there. It's the most powerful presentations that I've heard, and I I'm privileged to know those three men fairly well and, respect them tremendously, Ryan Cole, Kirk Milholm, and Peter McCullough. And they their testimonies were, superb and as were the, questions that were asked of them. But getting back to all that you're discussing, in in these, cases that occurred where people were not given the right treatment or subjected to things that didn't, help them at all. It's, those are crimes against humanity, and that that actually, in a way, came up during the hearings yesterday. But thank you for letting me make a few comments. And, Speaker 10: I have a question for doctor Farid. I know that you've been you testified early in, I think, 2020 at when this Yeah. Congressional testimony on early treatments. Speaker 6: Yeah. Yeah. This is, one of the great honors of my life. It was with, the first, Senate hearing, that occurred 11/19/2020. And I thought things would change when we presented the truth and the the, the benefits of early treatment, and and it was suppressed as as it turned out. But that was with Peter McCullough and Harvey Reich, in the hearings in in the senate. And then I I went on to testify and presented international meetings, which, and we all need to keep fighting. That's the truth. We need to remain strong. And So when have when have we ever, Speaker 10: in in the history of, at least, my fifty three years, not gone to the doctor and then and be sick and then tell you to go home until you can't breathe. I mean, we've always treated everything early. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. Speaker 6: Yeah. It was just cruel and and criminal what went on. Speaker 10: Yeah. I wonder I'm wondering why people just listened and accepted that. I mean, I feel like We were taught to accept our, Speaker 6: the authority the agencies and authorities, and we we we didn't expect, pure evil to be there. And that's what was revealed. But it actually was revealed in the, era of the tick borne diseases and Lyme disease that was a vile weapon, in the, nineteen sixties and seventies. And where that was unleashed on on the world by bioweapon research. But in any case, we we didn't learn that at that time from that lesson, but we we're starting to learn now, and it's not gonna be too late for for us to to correct the injustices. Speaker 4: Yes. Speaker 10: Yeah. I I just feel like, you know, everybody knew as a a respiratory virus, you were always told by your mom at two years old, drink plenty of fluids, get some rest, maybe possibly get an antibiotic or, you know, inhale steroid, and most of these people would have been okay. But they they let the viral replication say just go on and on at home until you're blue. Yeah. And now That's Speaker 6: right. That and that can't be exact you have to be prepared not to let that happen even now Right. Because it's a variance confirming Speaker 7: Can I ask you a question? Speaker 5: Yes. Sure. Speaker 7: Sure. Okay. This this might take a minute, but, so I've got in front of me a a file, and, the person had a 97.9 temperature. Heart rate was 81. Blood pressure was one sixteen over 60. Speaker 6: Mhmm. Good. Speaker 7: Breast breaths per minute was a little high at 31. Speaker 6: Yeah. That is high. Speaker 7: The oxygen was 93% as sp o two, not 3%. And what was ordered was a paralyzing agent requires ventilation support. They they basically vent they vented her based on that. Oh, wow. That's it was not indicated. Speaker 6: It would've she would've responded to inhaled budesonide and with the initiation of a antiviral regimen if if it could've been provided with ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine and, and our protocol. Not not remdesivir, but certainly, a colchicine would have helped probably, their and their other motileukast, other agents that would have been appropriate to employ. Speaker 7: Yeah. They hit her with remdesivir just Yeah. Positive COVID test upon her hospital. Yeah. That's, very bad. That's So this I have the vitals before and after, Speaker 6: wow. I'm so sorry to hear that. I mean, Speaker 7: dexmedetomidine, fentanyl, norepinephrine, propofol, the whole the whole thing. You know? Speaker 2: Yeah. Thanks for that. Yeah. Hey. So we've got a few people that have been waiting a while. So I don't know if that's Speaker 6: Thank you for letting me speak. I've gotta go to a meeting that I'm in now. So appreciate, joining. I'll pop in a little later, I suspect. Thank you so much. We were hoping you could stick around for questions. If you can come back, that'd be great. Okay. Thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you. You're welcome. Bye. Next, I wanna go to, Speaker 2: so this is the order the next three are swamp Yankee, Julie, and huckleberry. So swamp Yankee, and then Julie's on deck, and then huckleberry. Go ahead. Swamp Yankee. Okay. Swamp Yankee. Let me Thank you. Thank you. Can you hear me? I can hear you, Swamp. Speaker 19: Great. Thanks. Yeah. I I don't have a lot of I just wanted to point out, an excellent book. I have, no financial connections to this at all, but I know the individual who wrote it. He's, doctor Reid Sheftall. He was somebody who really was ahead of the curve from the beginning in terms of, looking at what the actual infection fatality rates were and, how the, these mRNA, vaccines work. He wrote a book which I posted. I don't know if you all can see it, called, Heroes and Villains, the COVID nineteen Book of Lists. He's actually working on the second edition now, but I I highly recommend this book. I mean, this could be used as a, a road map for a congressional investigation. I I mean, I really think it should, where he he points out, you know, all the a lot of the lies and misinformation that was really coming from the government and public health officials. And he also notes all of the people out there, who were who were telling the truth from the beginning. So Oh, wow. That's, I really a worth worthwhile book, to to check out. It it's it's it's a history of this whole thing, really. And I have a question, a brief question for John. John, did you have a chance to look at, that New Zealand data that Steve Kirsch put out? Speaker 7: Everybody asked me that. No. No. I actually didn't. He called me up and I, I'm just so involved with the book. I haven't had time for the another reason is I kinda don't wanna look at it. Weird reasons. But I understand. Speaker 19: No problem. Thank you. No. So anyway, that's all I had. I just wanted to point out that book, Read Sheftall. He's on Twitter also, has a YouTube channel. You know, I'd say probably half of the videos he he produced on on YouTube were taken down that I I think if anything, that's a a testament almost to his the veracity of the things he was putting out there. They just didn't like it because it, went against the narrative. So that that's it. Thank you for your time. Oh, thank you. Speaker 2: Okay. Julie and then Huckleberry. Julie? Speaker 12: I love Huckleberry. Speaker 18: Hey you guys. Yeah. I thought I'd jump up and talk about Sheriff Boudreaux. I'm in California. Just a quick FYI who I am. I'm up in Butte County, California in Chico. I'm vaccine injured by Moderna, five eye surgeries, microangiopathy. My mom was murdered by four shots of Moderna out of Santa Clara County. And and I was fired as a healthcare worker at Animal Medical Center. So, and we've had remdesivir murders here in town and prosecuted by the former feds. So one of the people I've been working with is Stanford Graham. Stanford's the founder of CardioMiracle, and he's attorney to David e Martin. And, he gave me a list of all the constitutional sheriffs across the country. And I've been, you know, as I've had time permitting, gone out and worked with many of them to give them information about the vaccine deaths and the vaccine injuries in their particular state for, out of VAERS. Right? Because I read all the reports, you know, the deal. So Mike Roudreau is one of those out of Tulare County. And so I had sent him some information and so he is well aware of and and Stanford's talked to him too about the death protocols and this genocide and all this, that, and the other. So here's the deal. Here's the problem. And I'm and I've been supporting him financially because we gotta get Kevin McCarthy out of there, and we can't stand to have whoever's that establishment guy that is his, like, best friend that's running against, Mike. But so, he's only for Tulare County. He's running for the bigger district to to knock out, Kevin McCarthy. So, again, depending on his his county's responsibilities, that might be one issue. But the second is there's no law broken. So they unfortunately see a lot of this as and they don't really see it, they know, but as, you know, basically medical malpractice and you go a different route. Now I have encouraged Corey Hone, who's my sheriff here in Butte County, and I met with him one on one and said, look, you know, here's these vials. Go lock them up. Go get them. Let's go investigate them. Let's do this, that, and the other. He's like, Julie, until you have a law broken, there's nothing I can do. So good for Mike jumping in to start enacting laws, right, and and jump on that side of the border, which I'm sure he does not wanna do. I'm sure he prefers to stay sheriff, but he's doing the right thing. So, I am gonna be filing grand jury petitions in, Butte County, Shasta County, Santa Clara County, Johnson County, Wyoming. So yeah, I just sent California my contact info. I'll go down to Tulare County and we'll just it's the same basic information. It's just a matter of having people and victims that we can attach to it. So that's just one suggestion idea there. Can I ask you about that? Because as you're talking about him, Speaker 2: he's dead wrong when he says a crime has not been committed because it is not about the drug. Speaker 18: Right. No. And I I agree. I agree with you. It's just there's no law in the book. Homicide is a law on the book. Speaker 2: And Right. If he would take one second, which he hasn't trust me. He's been very rude to the victims. If he took one one second to talk to experts who have looked at these medical records, he would see that these people were euthanized and they were murdered. And a lot of the things that happened to them have nothing to do with remdesivir, and that's the problem with these constitutional sheriffs. I understand it's important to get McCarthy out, but why replace him with a coward? Speaker 18: Well, no. And I agree, and I consider my sheriff a coward too. So I guess what I'm suggesting is let's let's at least we've got this grand jury route, and at least we can try to tackle it from that angle. Is he willing to meet with victims or not? Oh, you know, I don't know personally. So, I mean, I had I had to push and shove to get in to see Yeah. My sheriff and and it and, you know, and so and again, I had and Mike right now is in charge of Sheriff Boudreaux, is the is the, president of the California Sheriffs Association. So he does have a bigger area of responsibility, and Corey Corey was it was that the last year. So, you know, it befuddles me. It frustrates the hell out of me. I don't fucking get it either because my sheriff, when the dam broke in Oroville and when the lake was about to flood Oroville, he evacuated that town on a dime without any law or without any precedent or without any, you know, anything then. So I go, dude, you know, you're hitting retirement age two. Why don't you step up and go lock up these vaccines? Just lock them up. Let's go grab them. Let's do this, that, and the other. And it's just they're kinda so myopically focused as law enforcement officials to, you know, if if somebody were to come in and and say, hey, I've filed a lawsuit against Denlow Medical Center for this COVID protocol murder and, you know, here's the here's the legal stuff. Go lock up people. Well, if there's arrest warrant, they'll go lock he'll go gladly lock somebody up. But will he go out of his way to, you know, again, go and this is what I told Sherif Hony. Go walk into Dannette York, our public health director's office. Go walk into her office, and you demand that she gives you the vials to go test. She you demand that she gives you all EUA products that she's administering, remdesivir, all the other garbage ones, right? The monkeypox vaccine, all of this stuff. Who cares? Like, I mean I care but I don't care. Here's here's my problem with the sheriff. Well, what do you mean you don't care? I mean well, okay. That's your I mean, I I was I mean, my mom was murdered on the vaccine, so that's kinda my problem. Yeah. Okay. I care about that. But if that's not a crime, Speaker 2: if that if the if the medications aren't aren't a crime, the sheriffs themselves have an obligation to protect, to to to stand up and protect our constitutional rights. That's their JOB. And when you have people who are Right. Held hostage in a hospital I was held hostage in a hospital. Speaker 18: Right. No. My friend was held hostage. She had to escape with her life. Another best friend of mine, her husband was murdered. So I'm on your side here. So I totally get the the sheriffs need to step up for for I'm not asking them to do any we're not asking them to do anything about the medications Speaker 2: or the standard of care or anything like that. They can't. We get it. This standard of care was changed. However, they there were there are aspects within these medical records where people were were held without with who held against their will, and it's very clear in the records that they were shot up with Ativan when they tried to leave or they had all of these things that happened to them that that that were violations of their constitutional rights, and they were killed. So did they go file a police report and and do that wrong? Here's the problem. The police will not take a report because they say it's the sheriff's job. The sheriff won't take take a report because they say it's it's somebody else's job, and it and and it is the sheriff's job. And so so I call them all out as cowards. Cowards. Speaker 18: Yeah. No. I agree and I agree with you. And I I mean, I even showed I even I showed, you know, I agree. Then I'll just finish here and then I'll end and then I'll go. But no. That's okay. No. It's all good. No. Because I agree with you. I mean, I found a VAERS report for a little kid, a little two year old, who had gotten an extra dose of polio. And this is in California, right, in 2022. And this had nothing to do with COVID. Had an extra dose of polio vaccine. So the so the the person screwed up. They thought that this little kid had was still due for one more polio shot. He got 11 vaccines in one sitting and died that night. And when the when the, health official and this is written up in their record. When the health official called the dad the next morning to say, oh, by the way, we gave your your son one too many polio shots. The dad goes, hey, my son died. And so it's like so I looked at that like that was a freaking crime. I and I for all I knew, it was in Butte County. Right? I can't see the county codes in VAERS, but so I called the sheriff. I said, look, a crime has been committed. This kid's dead by an extra shot of polio vaccine, clear cut murder. This is a public health issue. No, it's not. It's a freaking crime. A little kid's dead, and I wanna know if it's in Butte County. You go tell Danette to go pull up that record and see where the freaking address is and, you know, because it's a crime. Well, they assume that the public health officials and the parents are gonna go file a complaint against the state or against the public health department or whomever. And I'm like, well, how do I don't think we can assume that, sir. I mean, I'm like, my mother's vaccine fatalities in there. Nobody did a damn thing in Santa Clara County, which is why I'm filing a grand jury petition. Because I've gone to Ro Khanna and I've gone all these other routes and nobody's doing a freaking goddamn thing. So I totally agree with that. Talking about people like like where there's cases where you can prove, what is it, mens re or whatever, the the criminal intent. Speaker 2: There are there are literally there are literally cases where we have records that prove they knew they were killing the person, where they were killing the person. I can I can understand when a sheriff or a DA does not wanna do anything where it is a medical malpractice or is negligence or it's so high level? Right? Like like with the shots, you gotta go after the manufacturers and the things like that. It's not the person who gave you the shot. It same with the remdesivir or or whatever. It's not it's not necessarily the person that gave it to you. But but when it's when there's crimes that are committed, the abuse, the medical battery, the, the homicide, and all and all of that. And, from speaking Huckleberry's on. He's he's next, and he'll probably tell you how he how how he handled, the crime that was being committed against me. But, Cece, did you wanna say something? I see you Speaker 10: Yeah. I was gonna say, I kinda lost my train of thought. Oh, yeah. I'm working with Stan too, and we just gotta get them in front of the sheriffs to present the evidence and try to instead of ours, you know, us selling it ourselves because they've got all the all the thing all the evidence, and they can sell this. But and I was gonna say that, Stan wasn't founder of Cardio Miracle. It was John Hewlett. Speaker 18: Oh, wait. Well, yeah, I mean, I just kinda cut to the chase, but you know what I mean. Yeah. But no. I was gonna show Speaker 10: say, I'm looking at some records right now, and, I just lost it. But the the patient was given, well, he was euthanized. There's no there's no question. I sent this to an attorney today. And the, the, let me find his little document. It is Speaker 18: a toxicology report. Because, you know, here's the other hard part too. We need the d a so we have a corrupt d a in Butte County. So even if sheriff were to go lock somebody up, our d a our d a literally closes his eyes to a grand jury giving him a a file that says, hey. This superintendent's poisoning kids and they're hurting children. And he goes, it's not gun crime. So it's like a double headed sword when you don't have a a DA either. Well, this this I'm looking in toxicology report because this person was lucky enough to get one because most of the time they're denied an autopsy and toxicology report. But, anyway, the range for fentanyl, the normal range says one to three. His was 19. Speaker 10: At the same time, he got morphine and, Ativan. But when you get we know how deadly, fentanyl is. And the literal range, I'm looking at it right now on my computer, is one to three, and his his, toxicology shows 19. That is I mean, nobody could survive that. So that is a flat out of these in Asia, and that is a crime, and that is murder. Speaker 2: And the sheriff's need to know something about And and whether somebody has an r, a d, an I, or a p, whatever that means, after their name, if they're a coward, they're a coward. And we we have we have an entire congress full of congressional cowards. By God, we better start putting some men with chess in there. Speaker 18: Yeah. Oh, I agree. And I was I was just thinking when you guys were talking. I mean, I was married to the most alpha male on the planet, and he was law enforcement until he had a sudden cardiac event in 2011 from some medical malpractice garbage. But I'm like, he is rolling over in his grave at you men that are doing nothing, and the Moff is horrible. He's worthless. Gallagher. Oh my god. James Gallagher. And I'm calling these guys out everywhere on social media I can. I mean, James Gallagher is ranking Republican. Here's the problem. James Gallagher accepted money from Pfizer, Gilead. I'm like, James are you insane, Pfizer? And this was for 2024. And Gilead? Do you know we're suing Gilead in Shasta County, sir? You freaking idiot. And, you know, and I'll see him face to face and I'll say it to his face. I'll go to every public meeting. I mean, they gave an award to the public health director to Net York this week. And and Todd Kimball showed him, like, dude, you know she's murdering people here? Because two years of data I've given her on the vaccine vials and the plasmids and the blah blah blah, she's knowingly murdering people and you're giving her an award. And you are the freaking conservative? Are you insane? So, yeah, we're surrounded by the winds. Yeah. Hold on. What what are you running for, Julie? So I'm running for supervisor. So Doug Teeter. So I'll have oversight over public health and it's my number one goal is to take down that public death department. And so Doug and my my district includes Paradise who's had 85 people dead from a big fire, you know, the Camp Fire and they're getting screwed by PG and E and and they're doing nothing about that either. So yeah. Yeah. Anybody listening in in anybody listening in is in that area Yeah. And we know she's we know she's not taking Pfizer money. Oh, hell no no no. I signed the politicians against the shot pledge. So that's the other thing. I'm trying to get these guys, and maybe that's what I'll do right now. I'll go over to Sheryl Boudreaux's, you know, Facebook page and this one and go, dude, if you're not gonna sign Mary Talley Bowden's politicians against the shot, which also says you're not gonna take big pharma money, then what are you doing? Right? So that's another way to put to push them. Yeah. We we need to Speaker 2: is there a list somewhere, Julie, of the politicians that have signed that? Can you put that in? Yeah. I'll put I'll put the update from today in the moment. Yeah. We need to be paying attention to that. Speaking of alpha men and, Mister Huckleberry. My husband, mister Huckleberry. Speaker 10: Yeah. He's got a door. Quite a story. Speaker 2: He Huckleberry. Speaker 5: I I I do not endorse that as a matter of just the record. I am not an alpha male. Speaker 18: I'm also not a hero. Just Oh, you need to arm us, dude. I would be a huckleberry. Hey. Hey. Hey. Hey. Let me just God Speaker 5: deserves God deserves all the praise and the glory. I I can't take anything away from him. Speaker 10: Well, listen. I mean, you are a hero because my own family is not my POA. You are. Yeah. Speaker 5: And I agree to that. I absolutely agree to that. And because they don't know what the hell is going on. Okay. And so, just just to follow-up on this, and Doctor. Fareed touched on it. But, you know, we can sit around and argue what's happened in the past and how we're going to pursue it in the future. You know, me from the beginning, this has been all about informed consent, you know. And this is the one thing that the shots and the hospitalized remdesivir deaths all have in common is a lack of informed consent. And if people go out and read the EUA documents, the EUA documents require informed consent. Okay? So, all these medications that are being forced on people under an emergency use authorization, they're in violation of that emergency use authorization. I don't know how much more you have to prove that they're killing people other than that they're not giving informed consent, which is required by the emergency use authorization. That's not even to talk about the demonization of cheap, effective, and safe pre hospital treatment drugs that no, that only a handful of doctors were willing to put their practices on the line for because they're physicians. Okay? These men and women that stood up to the man and, and took care of their patients and return them to health, they are the true professionals. They are the men and women who are in the system that care and do because healthcare, the goal if if if you're if we're gonna talk about health, what is health? Health is a state of equilibrium, okay, where your body is in equilibrium and it's working the way it's supposed to. That's what health is. The practitioners that are in the in the the the the corporate hospitals, they are practitioners of unhealth or disease. Okay? The state of not being at ease. If you're healthy, your body is at a state of ease. Okay. Disease is a state of not being healthy. Okay. So, these are practitioners of disease. And that's that's it, plain and simple. Okay. So, a shout out to all the doctors like Doctor. Fareed and the and the other hundreds, not thousands, but the other hundreds of doctors in this country that are that are stepping up, giving up, you know, they're sacrificing, putting their practices on the line, to save souls. And this is a battle of souls. This is a battle of good and evil, period. We can argue about what men do and how evil men are, but this is good and evil, Okay? And and I chose to be on the side of good and not the side of evil because God led me into this fight. I didn't wanna come into it. I was not expecting it. But just for the people that don't know who I am, my name's Huckleberry, a k a Brad. I am the husband of, Gail, and I am a former emergency room registered nurse. I'm also a veteran, and and I was called into this fight. I I I I did not register for it. I I was called into it. And, as some of you are familiar with, Gail and I both got sick over Thanksgiving because we invited, vaccinated people into our house to celebrate Thanksgiving. And I believe in shedding. Shedding is real and we now know it's real. When I mentioned, when we mentioned it back then, everybody looked at us like we had seven heads, but shedding is real. We got sick from shedding, I'm convinced of it. And so we both were sick, We both had COVID. And this is part of the story that not a lot of people hear because I've kind of, stayed out of the limelight for a variety of reasons. First and foremost, I'm here to support my wife. I I didn't save her life so that I could take the limelight. That's not why I saved her life. I saved my wife's life because I deeded her, and I was scared. Okay? That was my motivation. So that mere fact alone does not, qualify me for a hero's reward because I was I was afraid. Everything I did was out of fear, and so I did not do it as a hero. I did it to try to save something that I was not prepared to lose. But I did have what I did have was a set of skills and an attitude and an aptitude. I'm I consider myself a jack of all trades and master of none. So I've I've lived by the school of hard knocks, and I've learned by stepping up and taking on things that that first appear to be impossible. But I was sick. And Gail was probably sicker than I was because I was taking my vitamin d, my vitamin k, my zinc, my niacin. I was I was taking a lot of thought a lot of stuff and I was familiar with it. I was taking, tonic water, okay, which has quinine in it. And so she just happened to get sicker than I did. And we were trying to get, the demonized medications, but it was very difficult to get them. And we it wasn't getting here fast enough, and we were running out of time very quickly. And so we had made a decision to go to a hospital that we knew that they administered the frontline doctor protocol. This is the math plus protocol. This is the protocol that doctor Farid referred to. If people do not have a copy of this protocol, I'm begging you, please, please, please, please, please, if you care about yourself and you care about your loved ones, you need to go out to the frontline doctor, flccc.net, and download the math plus protocols. There's two diff there's two pro there's two copies. One is a summary. It's a brief summary that just goes through the protocol and the medications. There's the other part is a longer version that gives an explanation for everything that's in the summary. Okay? You guys need to download those. You need to be familiar with those because it's very important because nobody's going to come save us but us. Okay? And the only person that's going to save you is you. And the only person that's going to we have to do it together. And these people that we're trying to save in the hospital, these people are still not prepared. They're still not prepared. I don't understand it Because if you're waiting for somebody to come up and save you, it's not gonna happen. I'm gonna tell you that right now. So, please, I'm begging you, download those protocols. Have a copy. When you go to the hospital, take two copies. But the goal is is to not go to the hospital. Please don't go to the hospital. But people are winding up in the hospital because they have a broken arm or they have a stroke or they have a myocardial infarction, an MI, a cardiac arrest, okay? Take these things with you because they're going to do a test on you whether you want it or not. And you have to have this ready. This this is your your proof, your evidence that things work. Okay? This is, these are the tools that you're going to use to get these people to do what they're supposed to do. Now, we can help coach you through that, but almost on every case that we get involved with, the people are in the hospital without a copy of this protocol. And you can't imagine the difficulty and the hoops that we have to jump through to get, to find somebody that's willing, number one, somebody that's willing, okay? A lot of people turn us down. Number two, somebody that's willing to print two copies of each one and take them to the hospital and meet up with this complete stranger that they don't know and hand these documents off to them. And that's time. And time is valuable when you're dealing with somebody's life. Trust me. I was an emergency room nurse. I know what I'm talking about. And once somebody goes into the hospital, the emergency begins and the clock is ticking. You know, for myocardial myocardial infarctions, there's called, the golden hour. That's one hour from the time the heart attack begins to help that person. One hour. Okay? Think of this as a cardiac arrest. You have one hour to start acting. And that's not a lot of time. So please, please, please, flccc.net. Go to the math plus protocol. It has two there's two different copies. There's the summary and the full length. Print those out. Make two copies of each one. Read them. Understand them. You won't understand the summary one, but you can read the other one and just have some background information. Because we're gonna use that document and that information to help you in the hospital if it needs to happen. And I know everybody says, well, it's not gonna happen to me. Well, guess what? We're all here because it happened to us. And so there's no better time than right now to do that. Okay. That's, I'm begging you, please, as a healthcare, former health care professional, once a nurse, always nurse. I'm begging you, please. And that's good. But, Speaker 2: that's good because you're right. People are like, can they pay me to bring it there or whatever? But, can you also tell people I want people to understand what I mean, everybody understands, like, the how hard it was to advocate. Describe this scene, like, when you I say you storm the ICU, you feel like you just walked in there, but you didn't see everyone chasing you. Like, I saw it through the window. I mean, when you walked in there, the my hope meter went up. But describe it from your view, number one, what the conditions you're you're a nurse. You walk in, describe it, and and talk about what it took to get me out and what it took to save me. Speaker 5: Okay. So first and foremost, all the glory goes to God. Okay? He opened all the doors that I couldn't, and and I and I did it on faith. I knew from the numerous conversations that we tried to have with the doctor that they were trying to kill her. And I knew that, primarily because they were not giving informed consent and they could not explain the treatments that they were wanting to give. And so I knew, as a as a medical professional, that that was not ethical. And so I made the decision that I was gonna go to the hospital and do an assessment on my wife to assess her condition. And so on one day, I went up and tried to get into the into the, ICU to see her, and they would not allow me in. I'd called the police to come and help me because we have we had recently had laws passed that were supposed to allow me in, but the police department decided to interpret the laws, which they're not allowed to do. But I asked I asked for a welfare check, and they they basically chased me out of the hospital. So I was prepared. I had to prepare myself that I was going to take my wife out of a hospital who was trying to kill her, and I had to face the possibility that I was going to bring her home and she was going to die at my hands. And that's the reality. That was truly what I was thinking, that I was bringing her home to die where she wanted to die because I didn't understand what was going on. I knew her voice was strong when I could hear it, when she would take the mask off and speak to me. So I knew she was moving air well. Because if somebody has a strong voice, they're moving ox they're moving air well. If they have a very weak and faint voice, they're not very strong. So that was an indication to me that she still had strength. When I and all I had going to the hospital was two small bottles of oxygen, I call them pony kegs, and a tall bottle of oxygen. I call it a tall boy. And that's all I had as far as oxygen. And I had a nasal cannula. And that was it. I went to the hospital. That was my plan, two bottles of three bottles of oxygen. When I got to the hospital, I was not prepared for what I found, because she was in so poor condition. They had weakened her so badly that, I had not even begun to prepare to take care of her at home. But I knew that if I didn't get her out of there, she was going to die. And if I brought her home and I tried everything that I possibly could to save her life, and she still died, I knew that her soul was taken care of. And I'm Catholic and I can get into all that, but I had made sure that her soul was taken care of. And so, I was prepared to let her go. So, when I got there, I couldn't believe the condition she was in, so I immediately took control as a nurse and started asking questions and demanding that certain things be done. In the meantime, I had been chased down by a security guard and the police had finally shown up and hospital administrators had showed up, heads of security had showed up, our attorney was around somewhere. And that began a six hour standoff. And it was a standoff. It was a hostage rescue, okay? We have professionals in this country that go in and rescue people from hostile countries and bring them out, and they have all kinds of support to help them do that job. I had no one supporting me in this hostage rescue, except our good Lord. And he provided everything that I needed, whether I needed whether I knew it or not, he provided it for me. And so we stayed in that room for six hours and I held off the throng that wanted to take me away. And I got a call from a senator who had helped me, coach and my attorney to draft this cease and desist letter to the hospital. And, he told me, he said, if the police come in and they want you to leave, I want you to leave. I said, yes, sir. Roger that. And when I hung up the phone, I told Gail, I said, I'm not going anywhere. They're gonna have to take me to jail. They're going to have to haul me out of here and because I'm not leaving without you. And she had agreed already that she wanted to go home. I gave her the option to say no. And if she would have told me no, I was going to honor that. But I she didn't. I told I asked her. I said, do you want to go home with me? She said, yes. She said, do you have everything you need? And I lied to her, and I told her yes. But I knew God was on our side. And so it wasn't alive, but it was. And eventually, after much negotiation, not on my part, but on people for my behalf, people that God sent to stand in my place, they brought in an AMA form, against medical advice. And in our opinion, we were not leaving against medical advice. We were leaving because of medical advice. So I took that form and I I rewrote it to make it a hospice form, that we were taking her home. They had given her a terminal diagnosis, she was gonna die, and I was taking her home to to to put her on home hospice, and I was going to be her hospice caregiver. And I truly believed that at the time. I I really thought that the chances were pretty slim, but we had a chance if I could get her out of there. And so once they brought that form, we we I rewrote it. She, she and the the abuser, manager, nurse manager signed it, and I began the process of trying to get her out of the hospital. And she had she had laid in the bed so long that she had atrophied and her muscles forgot how to work, and she couldn't stand up. And so being a nurse and knowing how to transfer patients safely, I was able to get her into the to position the wheelchair. I had to ask for a wheelchair. They didn't even want to give me one. I had to go look for one. They were hands when we signed that form, they were completely hands off. They did not want to help, offer any help whatsoever. That's highly unprofessional, and I'm just gonna tell you as a nurse, that's that's extreme. That's that is totally unprofessional for for the hospital to go hands off when a patient says they're gonna leave AMA. Completely unprofessional. And that doesn't have anything to do with the per pack. The prep I call the prep act the per pack. And but they went hands off. I found a I found a wheelchair. I got her into it. She was addicted to oxygen so bad that the oxygen bottle that I had, she panicked when I took her off the high flow. And so we had to she had to sit there, and I let her suck up as much air as she could. And the the nurse manager stood there tapping his watch, looking at me, telling me I was on the clock. Okay? That was their oxygen she was sucking up, not ours. And so eventually I said, I got we gotta go. You know, you you need to to get as comfortable as you can, and I'm gonna put this oxygen on you, and we're gonna go. Well, she did that, and the chart the the the abuser told us that he was gonna take us a short way out of the hospital. Well, the way I came into the hospital was the shortest way. The The the ICU that she was in was right above the emergency room. I came in the emergency room, got on the elevator, went up one floor, turned off the elevator, turned down the hall. She was about halfway down. That's the shortest route. The route that they took us on wove all through the hospital. In fact, they took us back to the back of the hospital. The emergency room's on the side. They took us to the back of the hospital where the funeral homes come to pick up the bodies out of the morgue that was down in the basement. They used that same elevator that we went down to go down to the basement to pick up bodies, and that's the elevator he took us to. And so we went out the back door. They didn't even they didn't want anybody to see the condition she was in, because I know they were embarrassed. But they did it they did it because they were embarrassed. I wanted to go through the emergency room so that everybody could see what she looked like and that they were sending somebody home like that. And so I tried to get her in the vehicle, and she couldn't do it. And I had to physically, with adrenaline, I had to pick her up, physically pick her up and put her in the truck because the the nurse manager was just standing up against the wall with his arms crossed. He he didn't want to lift a finger to help us. And so I did it. I don't know how I did it, but I did it. And I got her in the truck and got her situated, and the the nurse made some comments. And the last thing I told him was, you better hope she dies, because I know my wife and if she lives, you're going to hear about it. And that was and that's all I had. I had a couple choice words to say to him, and then I left. And that was the beginning of a very long and exhausting and, it took every ounce of energy and knowledge and creativity on my part to get her to a place where I knew she was gonna survive. And it's difficult. It's a difficult decision to make. And when we tell the story, we don't get into the details of how it of what we did because but we're gonna start getting into that more now. As we go forward, people need to understand it. But the way that the lesson to be learned from all this is we don't want to get to this point. We don't want to have to do this. And the way we do that is number one, we demand informed consent. Demand it. And we educate ourselves. We have lots of information to give to you guys, but we can't do it for you. So you need to inform yourselves. That's informed consent. Number two, you need to be prepared to not go to the hospital. We thought we were not gonna go to the hospital, but we were wrong, and we made a mistake. We have our medications now on hand so that we can start immediately and not get to the point where they forced us to be. Now we know doctors that will actually treat us if we call them instead of telling us, I can't treat you. You need to go to the hospital. You need to wait till you're sick enough to go to the hospital. We know what doctors to call now. We didn't know that before. Speaker 2: So And we know and we know who who we can depend on. Speaker 5: That's important too, your support system. We lost we lost many many people that we thought were friends, that we thought would help us. We lost those people. Because when I when we needed them, they weren't there. They would not help us. And that's their right. They have the right to say no. But don't think your friends are gonna help you. Don't think anybody's gonna help you. Because it was strangers it was the strangers that helped you. Yeah. Tell everybody you got the oxygen. It was all strangers that came to our rescue. First of all, we had somebody who lost their their parent to COVID. They had the three bottles of oxygen and an oxygen concentrator, and they gave those to us because their mother couldn't their mother grandmother couldn't use it. So they gave it to us because their loved one was not able to use it. We we had enlisted a, a home health care company that had sent out another oxygen concentrator and a few extra bottles of oxygen. Patriot group here locally and made a plea, for people to help us. And this, this respiratory therapy company in the city, a couple cities over, came up and said, we we'll help. And they gave us access to their oxygen. Speaker 9: And just understand that Can can I ask you a question? When you said you're prepared, can you tell me what specifically y'all have? Like, because I've I've I've heard that I've heard that statement. Everything on your list? Yeah. A thousand times. So what can you tell can you tell us specifically what you have that So so doctor Speaker 5: doctor Farid, mentioned that they have a protocol and they have an emergency kit. But our basic we basically what we have and everybody get a pen and paper down because I'm gonna I'm gonna take a minute for everybody to grab a pen and paper because I've I say this over and over and over again. And sure enough, tomorrow or the next day, somebody's gonna ask me the same question. So everybody take a pen and paper and write this down. Speaker 10: While they're doing it, tell us how you got the oxygen in again. It's so interesting. Speaker 5: So, this gentleman opened up now understand that oxygen is a controlled substance. You you can't just go get oxygen. It's only by prescription. You have to have an order for oxygen because it's deadly. Oxygen will save your life and it will kill you just as easily. So, you have to know how to handle oxygen. Plus, it's extremely explosive. I'm just gonna tell you that. Okay? You can blow yourself up with oxygen. You can hurt yourself with oxygen if you don't know what you're doing. So please don't think that just anybody can do this. I I had a regulator. You have to have a regulator for oxygen. It's a it's a valve that goes on the bottle. I had that. Okay? You can't get your hands on those. It's very difficult. You have to know somebody that has one, okay, or has access to one. I had a regulator. All I needed was the oxygen because they had given me the regulator that came with the the other three oxygen bottles. And so, he opened up his facility in the middle of the night to my daughter and loaded her up with 22 bottles of oxygen. And the only thing that he charged us for was the oxygen in the bottles. He didn't charge us for the deposit on 22 bottles. That would have gotten very expensive. And so we got 22 bottles of oxygen. And she came home. And I very quickly realized that she was on 60 liters in the hospital, way too high. Let me just interject this. The issue with our loved ones and with patients that have pulmonary issues, specifically pneumonias, is a lot of it is an is a is a gas exchange problem. Okay? Their lungs are loaded down with fluid and and air and c o and carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide cannot no. Carbon dioxide cannot move through water. Okay? So they're not able to exchange gas correctly, And that's called rest that's part of the respiratory process. And, so they're they have an issue exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide. And so I knew as a nurse very quickly that trying to maintain 60 liters of oxygen, I wasn't gonna be able to do it. What I did to do that, and this is the secret, and since this this call is not being listened to, by NSA or the CIA or anybody else, I'm just gonna tell you the secret. I daisy chained two oxygen concentrators together. So I had a concentrator that was up to 10 liters, and I had a concentrator that would put out five liters. And I hooked those two together in tandem through a wye connection so that those 15 liters were flowing through one tube to her nose Speaker 9: through a And, also, Barry, just to throw this in, if somebody has a CPAP, you can splice a CPAP in also. It's a little trickier. You've had to, you know, you need some duct tape. But but it helps it pushes that air in a little more. So if somebody is in that situation, the CPAP can also what you just said, adding a CPAP can force that air in. That was my plan d, Speaker 5: because I have a CPAP. I I have I have a CPAP myself. But here's the issue with people, and masks. Okay? People on masks don't like to wear them. Alright? They're very constrictive, and they feel like they can't you know, it's very difficult to if you feel like it's it's also for me, it's a lot of it. It's just psychological. But having a mask over your face, you feel somewhat constricted. So a lot of people don't like to wear masks. But So, I had, I had, these 15 liter And let me tell you, okay, anything over five liters has to be humidified. You have to put moisture in the air if you're gonna go over five liters. Oxygen dries mucous membranes. Okay? It pull it sucks water like a vacuum. So if you're gonna go above five liters, you have to have some way of introducing moisture into the air to moisturize the mucus membranes. Gail had a nosebleed, and her nose was all crusted over because they were not adequately humidifying the air that they were pumping into her. They were literally pumping air into her. She was having to talk over this air. And so they were drying her out in her nose, and her nose was bleeding. And when it bleeds, it clots. And when it clots, your nose can't filter air. And I'm not gonna get into all that. Okay. So I had 15 liters on a non rebreather mask that was humidified. Okay? I had the bottle going at, 10 liters through a nasal cannula. That makes 25 liters that I was able to get into her. Okay? That was all I could do. I couldn't do anymore. I was maxed out at 25. And she was still experiencing neurological symptoms at 25 liters because her brain was so used to getting 60 liters of oxygen, and her body was so used to getting 60 liters of oxygen that it was crying for more oxygen. I could only give her 25. And so I tried to work with her to help utilize the oxygen that she was getting to benefit her, and that required pursed lip breathing. And pursed lip breathing is very key. Anybody can do it. You don't need a doctor's order to do pursed lip breathing. Okay? And what this does is it holds the air in your lungs longer so that your body can exchange gases that are in there before and you can get rid of the carbon dioxide that builds up. And the way it goes is you take a deep breath in through your nose, and then you purse your lips like you're gonna give somebody a little peck on the cheek or like you have a coffee stirrer in your mouth, and you exhale through your mouth, not through your nose, but through your mouth, through this tiny straw. And it takes much longer to exhale when you do that, And that allows your body to absorb the gases that are in your lungs and to get rid of the c o two. It's more important to even get rid of the c o two because it's a byproduct of your body's functions and you have to blow off the CO two. So by holding the the air in the lungs longer, you have the blood absorbing more oxygen and releasing more CO two to get rid of it. So per slit breathing. And that makes it more efficient for the the oxygen exchange. One thing they weren't doing in the hospitals is nurses were not were not writing up nursing diagnosis and nursing treatments because anybody that has shortness of breath or or, or fluid imbalance or anything that you go into the hospital for, nurses do diagnosing. Now they don't diagnose like a doctor. They diagnose from a nurse's perspective, and all their treatments and interventions do not require a doctor. Okay? This is important for you guys to know, that nurses make they they develop their own nursing plan based on nursing diagnosis and nursing treatments. These nurses in the hospital were not doing that because if they were, one of the treatments for shortness of breath is pursed lip breathing, and nobody was being taught how to do pursed lip breathing. Respiratory therapists know how to do pursed lip breathing. They should have been teaching our loved ones how to do pursed lip breathing. They were not. Nobody changed the standard of care for nursing. Nobody. That's up to the individual nurse to do, and they failed. And so, yeah, I get hard on nurses. I get extremely hard on nurses because I know better. They know better. But, anyway, so by teaching her pursed lip breathing, she was better to able to u utilize the oxygen she was getting. But I knew very quick I was going through an oxygen bottle an hour. So anybody for your reference, a tall boy bottle of oxygen opened wide up at ten at at 10 liters, That bottle is 10 liters, and it's gone in an hour. So we were going through one bottle of oxygen every hour. I was giving her breathing treatments every two hours, and I had to use an oxygen bottle to give her the breathing treatment because I didn't wanna take her off of the 15 liters, the mask. So I would hook her up to, an oxygen bottle Speaker 9: for her treatment. What breathing treatment what breathing treatments are you doing? Budesonide. Speaker 5: Straight budesonide. One mil, one ml every two hours. They come in, point five c c r point five milligrams. Yeah. Point five milligrams. I was giving her one millig I was giving her two of those vials, one milligram every two hours. So one milligram q two. Speaker 9: Yeah. For edification also, there's something that it's really important for people that I've had. My phone has been blowing up. And this is, like, this is going lower respiratory. Like, this next this this wave has been hitting people's lungs significantly more than than Omicron. Prednisone or methylprednisolone is so absolutely critical. So the budesonide, absolutely, but, you know, I just talked to a gal who is a nurse in Minnesota a couple days ago. And, you know, my at the point that she was at when I got the pictures and the the audio of her cough, etcetera, I mean I mean, unapologetically, I had her do a pulse dose of of eighty mgs of prednisone for a couple days and then dial it down. But you you need to have you need to have oral steroids on hand for this round. It's absolutely imperative. Speaker 5: Yeah. So to go back, I was under the direction of a doctor. Some of you guys may know him. It was doctor Bartlett out of West Texas. I had direct contact with with him, and he was calling in orders for all the medications that I needed orders for. And so I was working under a doctor's supervision. If if I if if I did not have doctor Bartlett, it would have been just that much more difficult. But just just as a side note here, guys, you can get budesonide. It's it's available over the counter. It's called Rhinocort, r I n o c o r t. Speaker 9: It's available over the counter. You don't need a doctor's prescription for it. Oh, it's a it's a nasal spray. As Ryan explains nasal spray. It's it's it's nasal spray over the counter. It's nasal spray. Yeah. You can nebulize it. Yep. And what I you you can, and it's not expensive. But what I tell people, and I've been preaching this, call your call your primary care and just just ask for budesonide, you know, and ask for you know, you can say, I've got winter asthma. It started up. This is what I this is the thing that you say. You know, I've I've got a nebulizer. I've I've tried my inhaler. It didn't work. And a friend brought over some budesonide, and it worked great. Can I please get a prescription of zero point five milligrams for two ml, one vial twice a day for one month with three refills? And get the refills. Right? Like, even if you like, you're not gonna need to use it, just get pick up your refills. Like, always get your refills. It's not that hard to get, and it's easier to do. It's it's easier and cheaper to do than having to do Rhinocort, which thank you for saying that, Humphrey, because Rhinocort is budesonide. But, it's not that hard to get. Like, it there's there's a shortage of it, because we just we just left the state, and they didn't have my Videsen already. And thank god they didn't because a woman called me yesterday, and her mom is having a hard time breathing. And I was like, oh, oh, I have I have a prescription of Vudas and I get Safeway ready for me. I said, go pick it up and give it to your mom. You know, just say you're getting it for me. And she was able to get her mom the therapies. So just but you've got to have them on it's imperative that you have them on Yeah. That's a good way to get it because Speaker 2: they won't give it to you once you have COVID. Speaker 5: So so what you're gonna get in the hospital, they're gonna try to force, albuterol on you. Albuterol is not a it it's not a steroid. And so it's you need budesonide. This this budesonide, this is so safe that, preemies, they give this to preemies in the hospital. It's that safe. So that was part of my argument with the pulmonologist in the hospital. I was pushing for budesonide every every four hours, one milligram every four hours. That's what I asked for. They first started it at every twelve hours. I said that's not enough. And I asked for every ten hours. And I was told that administration would not approve that. It wasn't a matter that the doctor couldn't order the medicine. It's that, quote, unquote, administration wouldn't approve that. Okay? So then I called in for a pulmonologist, and I talked to the pulmonologist for a good fifteen minutes about Speaker 2: Yes. Huckleberry, they can't hear you. They can't hear you, I don't think, or I can't hear you. Speaker 3: I can't hear him either. I can't either. Speaker 2: Huckleberry, they can't hear you. Your sound is out. I think he's muted. Did he mute himself? Hold on. They can't hear you. I'm a good nice. Speaker 9: K. So one of the things I'll just say while you're muted, if you again, you're not gonna be able to it's it's rare to get the doctor the doctors to prescribe edesenide, but if you if you say they had and this is something that we've gone over. Cece and I have gone over this in Huckleberry. If you say they have a past history of asthma and they use budesonide and it's effective, as long as you're not trying to treat COVID. If you're just saying, can we at least give medications for for what they've So how can we what they've already what they already have? Speaker 2: Send him a a a request to speak again, guys. He had to redo it. I do wanna just while we're waiting for Huckleberry to take his speaker back, We, Cece, we we had the one today where the hospital said, oh, we'll give him budesonide. This is a trick people need to be watching for. And they the family didn't know, what budesonide from budesonide, but they were giving them the pill form of budesonide, not the, so it was like for Speaker 9: Or or an inhaler. They'll give it an inhaler, and it's like, are you sorry. Are you kidding me? Like, you're gonna be able to inhale it, get it down into your lungs, and it it's so just effing stupid that it makes my brain hurt, but they'll use an inhaler even without a spacer. So when they say, well, we'll use an inhaler, uh-huh. It has to be nebulizer. Also heard of, Speaker 2: the, the IV budesonide. One time, we had that stat come up, and we were like, what the hell are you? Speaker 10: I sent him an invite, but he didn't expect that. Sent you an invite, honey. Speaker 2: And somebody said that they need you, Scott, to repeat the need the RX of budesonide repeated that you gave. I keep responding. Speaker 9: But Okay. So it's so it's zero so so you just request zero point it's zero point five milligrams per two mls. Like, that's the vial that it comes in. It's a two ml vial. So zero point five milligrams for two ml. Because if you ask for the if you try and get one milligram, it's usually not covered. Or if it is, it's it's they don't have it in stock or it's ridiculously expensive. So just go with zero point two five milligrams for two mls, one vial, twice a day for a month, and then request three refills. Speaker 2: Okay. Thank you. He's grabbing a drink, and he's gonna share, the microphone here with, Speaker 9: so Can you have him go over the meds the med list, like, the when you said have everything? I wanna I just wanna hear what you guys, Speaker 2: like, what you guys have in stock that's the It's everything you told us to get, but yeah. Okay. We will. Speaker 9: Well Well Okay. So Adam I know. I just wanna hear it because I say stuff and then yeah. Go ahead. Well, hold on a minute. Speaker 2: He's gonna get he's gonna get his little he's got he's got a a a list because he goes over it with his men's group all the time. Speaker 10: You see why he's my POA, not my husband? Speaker 2: Yep. He's got the Speaker 5: Okay. Speaker 7: So, everybody, Speaker 5: everybody, ivermectin. You need to have ivermectin. Okay? Speaker 9: Go over the dosage too. We like get like dewormer. Speaker 5: Yes. We understand that. It's also people. It's it's also for people. Now this this medication is dosed by the kilogram. Okay? But I ivermectin is extremely safe, so don't focus too much on the dosage, especially if you're using horse paste. Okay? But the calculation is if you take, if you take your weight and multiply it by point four five, so let's just say 200 times point four five, that will give you the weight in kilograms. And ivermectin is dosed at, one milligram per kilogram. One milligram per kilogram. Speaker 2: What's the times? Is it times point six or times said that. Speaker 9: Okay. Your weight, two hundred So I'll give you an example. If you're a hundred and sixty if you're a hundred and sixty pounds, you're you're at forty four you're right right around forty four milligrams of ivermectin. Speaker 5: So, like okay. So there's there's several right if you go out and download the the protocols for the FLCCC It's got a chart. They got a chart. All you have to do is look at your weight, and it'll tell you how many milligrams you have to take. That's the easiest way. Then you don't even have to do math. So please, please, please download the chart with the protocol, and it makes everything so easy for you. It's all in the chart. Everything's everything's in the protocol. So you need ivermectin. Okay? First and foremost, you need hydroxychloroquine if you can get it. Okay? And hydroxychloroquine is gonna be two hundred milligrams twice a day. So that's gonna be a total of four hundred milligrams twice a day, and you're gonna do it for five days. So so four hundred times five is two thousand milligrams. Okay. That that's what you need for five days. You're gonna need budesonide if you can get it. Colchicine is helpful if you can get it. It's it's by prescription, but if you got gout, call your doctor, tell them your big toe hurts really bad, and it's all red and inflamed and puffy, and they'll give you a prescription for for colchicine. Speaker 9: Or any or any type of heart issue, like a myocarditis, etcetera, called so so there's there's other issues that you can get for. But I guess I I think colchicine is more important than hydroxychloroquine. I'm positive that it's more important than hydroxychloroquine. In fact, I'd pick it every time over hydroxychloroquine. So everybody needs to get I've got I've got buckets of colchicine specifically because I consider it the second most important medication. Speaker 5: And I'm just I only learned about that from, from Scott. And ever since he said it, everybody's on that bandwagon. So, we didn't have colchicine, but prednisone, a steroid. You need some type of steroid. Prednisone is an oral steroid. So if you could get prednisone, or prednelasone, those that's the one that's the steroid you want. You also want an antihistamine, and, you can get, Benadryl, Benadryl over the counter. Okay. Benadryl's good enough. Speaker 9: K. Well, can I jump in on that? And so there's also u Unisom, which is is called Doxylamy, d o x y l a m I n e. Doxylamy. It's called Unisom. It should be like, I mean, Safeway, Fred Meyer, whatever store, it should be in the same area as Benadryl. What I find is there are people that have negatives with Benadryl, but they don't with Doxalamine, but it's a type one antihistamine. And you wanna take that at night, twenty five milligrams, it's dirt cheap. But, like, everybody should either have Benadryl or Unisom, but I I always pick Unisom. Speaker 5: K. You you also need, a, an antacid or a a, like a Prilosec or any of your, over the counter, gastric, antihistamines such as Pepcid or So Speaker 9: yeah. So not Prilosec. Prilosec isn't gonna work, but so Pepcid is an h two antihistamine and h two blocker. Prilosec doesn't work from, like so Pepcid, which is called famotidine, that's that's what you want. You want Pepcid AC, forty milligrams twice a day. It's different than it's different than the PPI. So you you literally need the h two, the histamine two blocker. Sorry. Sorry. How's Blair? You need aspirin. Speaker 5: Three hundred and twenty five milligram. Not the baby aspirin. You can take baby aspirin. You just have to take three of them. Three hundred and twenty five milligram aspirin. Here's another one that you have to have by prescription, montelukast. You'll have to get that by prescription. If you can get it, that's fine. The point of this is you need to have You can Speaker 9: tell your doctor that you have allergies allergies or you can get montelukast, which is called singular, and you can just say I've got really bad allergies. And my friend gave me some montelukast, and it worked really well. Can I get it? Ten milligrams if you're over 14 years old? Ten milligrams, one tap at night. It should be easy to get from your doctor. But what I wanna tell you is you need to get ivermectin. Speaker 5: There's no excuse to not get ivermectin. It's it's readily available whether it's in horse paste or or pill form. You you have to have a kit to start with because these people that we're trying to help have nothing. And and time time is is life. Okay? You need to have something. Please have something. Even if it's just Pepcid and aspirin, I mean, have something on hand to help get started off of because we waste too much time trying to to hunt down people that are willing to help and to get the things that we need. And if you have something on hand, it makes it so much better. And even even if somebody else could call you and say, hey. You know, if we can call you and say, hey. There's somebody in the hospital. Do you have any ivermectin and you're close? Don't worry about the medication. We'll get you more medication. We need the medication to help some to help somebody save their life. And we don't wanna hoard medication because this is important. These are lives that we're talking about, and you would want somebody to do the same thing for you. So please, you know, do what you do your best to get ivermectin because ivermectin can is so useful, and we can get it in so many different forms. I won't get into all the forms right now, but, you can it's as easy as ordering it through Amazon. Speaker 10: There there's lots of resources. And if anybody needs them, they can contact me, and I can dial you into that. So Speaker 9: and if you're getting the horse paste, it that's dosed at 0.2. So whatever the dosage is on the on the the paste, it's the same thing. It's not horse paste. It's not horse paste. It's just paste, Speaker 5: but you triple the dose. So on on on those, there the the injector has notches. Okay. Each notch is point two milligrams. At point two milligrams for a two hundred and fifty pound person. Okay. So in horses, it's it's dispensed at two at point two milligrams per two fifty pounds, but these horses are heavy. Okay? So one notch is for a is at point two milligrams for a two hundred and fifty pound person. That's just a good dose for anybody. It's better than nothing. Well, it's easy to get human grade, though, now. It is. But some people just wanna go get course based. If that's what you want if you wanna go get ivermectin in the tube. Do it smart. Speaker 9: Do it yeah. Just Speaker 5: if that's what you wanna take, great. But I'm just telling you that each notch is point two milligrams for for for 200 it treats a two hundred and fifty pound person at point two milligrams. So if you Hey. Quick question on the on the, on the milligrams on the PACE. And three notches would be at point six milligrams. Speaker 2: Denise had a question. Go ahead, Denise. Speaker 4: Quick question on the paste. Do you have to ingest it, or can you just rub it on your body? Speaker 9: Ingest it. You can rub it, but ingest it. Okay. You want that ingest it with with with something fatty, you know, some olive oil and egg, whatever. You want something fatty that's gonna get it into the butter. Yeah. It's gonna get that into the bloodstream. If you're going to put something topically, get the injectable ivermectin, and you can rub that on the feet or chest topically. Do not inject it, by the way. It's it's injectable, but you can rub that on topically. But you you want to get this into your system. If somebody was on a ventilator, like, Taxy is, Taxy is a rock star that's helped get peep so many people off ventilators by using the the injectable ivermectin topically. Speaker 5: But if you can ingest it, ingest it. There's a little trick, everybody. Thank you. If somebody's intubated and they're not able to swallow, you can put things under their tongue, and it will absorb under their tongue. Now, you know, you have to know what you're doing to do that, but the the mucus membrane under the tongue is very absorbable. So you you can use their tongue because you'll have access to it because their mouth is is open with a breathing tube. So that is another option. It's probably not the preferred option, but it's available. You could also give it rectally. The the the anus, the those mucus membranes are very absorbable, and so you can give medications rectally as well. Not preferred, but Speaker 10: Right. You can go also to docintheloop.com, and he's gotten many people off vents by getting a judge to get a court order with using ivermectin. But he has he's licensed in 15 states, but you can you can he can help anybody in any state, basically, if he signs a if he sign a release. Docintheloop.com. Speaker 5: Don't be don't be paralyzed by the lists of things. Okay? Don't get wrapped up that you have to have everything. Anything is better than nothing, and we can get in contact with people that can help get the rest and and do things. Yeah. So don't wait till the weekend. Speaker 2: Okay? Can you also talk about the the the pulse ox and why people shouldn't panic and you know, I mean, like, we how much I hated not being able to see my pulse ox, but what you knew about the gas exchange issues and Okay. Why I So pulse ox is Speaker 5: it's a good tool, and it's only a tool. It's not a diagnostic anything. It doesn't diagnose anything. Okay? It's only an indicator. One problem with fingertip pulse oximetry is it's not reliable for a variety of reasons. So just because you're getting a low pulse ox doesn't necessarily mean that their oxygen's that low. There's several things that you need to do to make sure that it's working correctly. I prefer, and in my practice, I always try to use an ear an earlobe tape. It's a it's the same thing. It's on a wire, and it's got a sticky Band Aid on it. And you fold it over the earlobe, and you attach it to the earlobe. The earlobe's gonna give you a more accurate reading than any fingertip, especially if somebody is cold or the elderly that have poor circulation or somebody that has COVID that has clotting issues. Those clotting issues are going to show up in the capillary beds, the tiny beds in the fingers, and it's going to restrict the blood flow. So you're not going to get a good pulse ox reading. But the most important thing to remember is it doesn't diagnose anything. It's only an indicator, And the only way to truly know if somebody's oxygen level is too low is the first place it shows up is in their heart, but you can't see the heart. The next place it's gonna show up is the brain. The brain is very sensitive to low oxygen, and they have a change in mentation. And those are the things that you wanna look for. If they're sitting around having a conversation and they can remember what they had for breakfast and they can tell you who the president was in 1965 and they know who you are and they know the name of their nurse, they're not suffering from low oxygen. Okay. Speaker 9: Well, can I I I wanna jump in on that because COVID brain, as we all know, is super real, and so there is that that brain fog dementia component to it? But I just had this conversation yesterday with a woman who her oxygen saturation pulse ox was 97%, and I told the husband take it off of her and don't use it again. Use use her symptomatology as a reference point because I don't give a freaking shit about the pulse ox. It's are they like, how do they feel? And if they've got that chest pressure, if they're if they're feeling like somebody's sitting on their chest or having difficulty, it doesn't really matter what the pulse ox is because you can have a normal pulse ox and still have that type of that that acute respiratory distress. And so people use the pulse ox as a as a meter of not treating as opposed to just they're like, oh, my oxygen is ninety seven ninety eight. So they don't have Speaker 2: Or overtreating. Like, I I I would panic if I didn't see my this is just because of the condition they had me from the hospital, so addicted. But he wouldn't let me see the pulse ox at all. And I would get so mad, and I would say, I need to see it. And he would say, you didn't know what your pulse ox was on a good day before you got sick. And we'd go back and forth, and he he just used that as he was saying, like, to he assessed whether my brain was getting oxygen, whether I was getting oxygen. You can explain that. So, Speaker 9: yeah. I just overall, I don't like the pulse ox because it what Huckleberry was saying, it can give it can give false high readings. It can give false low readings. It's how is the patient doing? Like, it's all about, like, what is their status? Like, what is the you know, how do their lungs sound? How do they feel? Even if the even if they have clear lung sounds, but they have no energy. Like, if they said, you know, get up and and, like like, you know, jaunt across the floor quickly and they're like, I can't even get up. You need to be nebbbing. You need to be on steroids. You need to be on all of the medications Speaker 5: immediately. Yeah. And, again, it goes back to it's a gas exchange issue and you have to fix that. That's what the that's what the inhaled the the breathing treatments will do is to fix the gap the oxygen exchange issue. But I would I would use the pulse ox when she was sleeping because everybody's oxygen level goes down when they sleep. So don't be surprised if people, quote, unquote, desat when they sleep. That's normal. It was very normal for Gail, but I had to pay attention to when she was sleeping. I I was up the first seventy two hours, I was awake straight. I didn't go to sleep because I was changing out oxygen bottles every hour, and I was giving breathing treatments every two hours. I was giving medication. We were I was helping her with, she was incontinent, so we had issues that we had to clean up. We had to feed her, had to get her water, and we didn't sleep I didn't sleep for the first seventy two hours. After the first seventy two hours, I rarely got sleep, and I was pretty much up for the first, Two weeks? Two weeks? Two weeks. I didn't get a lot of sleep. I was only able to sleep for maybe thirty minutes at a time. I wound up sleeping out in the living room, next to the chair so I could hear I could listen to her. I could listen to the, oxygen concentrators to see if there was an issue. And our daughter did the same. And so I I was I was on all the time. I had no I was not able to shut myself down. I was always on. She had an allergic reaction when we started antibiotics, and I felt bad because she had an allergic reaction. But I caught it soon enough that I could take care of it. It it was she had a anaphylactic reaction, which, if I hadn't caught it, it that could've killed her. So, I I was afraid to not pay attention. I was afraid to be distracted because she was extremely delicate, especially the first seventy two hours. But the first five days, I would have said that she was, critical. By Christmas, she was stable, and but was showing improvement the whole time. And so, I mean, it's it's not an easy thing to do, and it's not for somebody that's of the faint of heart, and it's not for somebody that doesn't have skill sets, that they can fall back on. Speaker 9: Well, that's why it's important to reach out, like, what we've talked about. Like, reach out to reach out to people, reach out to us because if if this is not something that you've most people are not accustomed to getting somebody out of acute respiratory failure or even, I mean, even, like, well before going into the hospital, it's challenging and it's scary. And so you you wanna have backup and you wanna talk to people that have that have done this. You know, it's you know, I I at this point, I joke. It's like I've had 4,500 phone calls in in talking with people and and guiding them through it. It's hard to do alone. It's hard to do as a spouse. It's it's really and it's scary to do. You gotta have a team and you gotta have people. You gotta know Speaker 2: the people you can count on for support. There's a question in chat about That is how you can can you nebulize Ryan Acourt and how would you do it? And I don't care if you you could tell them how you did it, Huckleberry, or Scott can tell them either way. Speaker 5: Well, thank goodness we had we had dudecinide. We didn't have Rhinecort. But, first, you have to have a nebulizer. If you don't have a nebulizer, I would recommend you spend the money And get a right nebulizer. Nebulizer. They don't cost a whole lot of money. I always say you get what you pay for. So if you wanna pay for a cheap one, get a cheap one, but you need a nebulizer. Speaker 9: Don't and so don't don't get a cheap one. Don't get a handheld unless you're traveling because it takes so long to neb. So you want, like, a a Phillips I mean, on Amazon, you know, if you've got a I mean, most towns have a medical supply store. Phillips is a good brand, but one of the things that I've I've heard, you know, when people are just getting some random nebulizers is it takes, like, thirty, forty minutes to nebulize, you know, five m l's. That's a long time. You're gonna get that to see You don't want a battery operated one. Speaker 5: You Speaker 9: No. You you wanna plug it in and get a mask, you know, pay $2.50 $2 and 50 extra cents for a mask instead of a a mouthpiece. Put it. So you can just throw it on and nub. Speaker 5: And you wanna nub for If you can't get one with all the accessories, don't worry because you can buy those separate. Just get a good try to get as good of nebulizer as you can get. One that plugs in. One that has a good, pressure, on it. But no battery no battery operated ones. Speaker 9: And did I I jumped on late. Did you go over the saline hydrogen peroxide, Speaker 5: colloidal silver, iodine, netting? We didn't we were We were using the frontline, the FLCC, protocol. That's what we used Yeah. We didn't to, to bring Gail back to health. Now, you know, Scott can talk about all the the latest and greatest, but here this is my point before I put Scott on. This is my point. Okay? Do not go to the hospital, number one. Number two, print copies of the the FLCC math plus protocol just in case and have them on hand. Number three, stock your medicine cabinet as best you can. Focusing on ivermectin you know, aspirin is important. I'm I'm sorry. You know, COVID, if it's COVID, aspirin's gonna be important. You know, we have this disease x that's coming. Okay? The there there was an offer, there's an offer through and people might get mad if I say this, but I'm gonna say it. The wellness company has an emergency kit. Okay? It comes stocked with all this stuff. Okay? It's $299. $299. Now what is a life worth? I just wanna ask that question, and people need to think about it. What is your what is your life worth? What is your loved one's life worth? Because if you're gonna invest in anything, you want to invest in things that are gonna save people's lives, and you don't wanna be skimping. So $299, you get a fully stocked and this isn't a plug. I'm not getting any kickbacks, and, no, I'm not paid opposition. Speaker 9: No. We're a Wuhan spy. Neither Kayla or I are paid opposition. I'm just gonna put that out there. Speaker 5: You're a Wuhan spy. I'm not a Wuhan spy. I promise. I don't know Mandarin. So but this this this is a disaster disease kit. It covers all the diseases that they're pushing out there. Okay? So you'll be prepared no matter what with this kit. It has antibiotics, steroids. You name it, it's in the kit. Mhmm. But I wanna push right now. This time of the season, you need to be nasal flushing with either saline solution is perfectly fine, but you either you need to use iodine, hydrogen peroxide, colloidal silver, or help because those are antivirals. But if you just have saline, you need to be doing that four to six times a day. That flushes all the viruses that may be trapped in your nose. It flushes them out of your nose so that they don't enter into your, your body. So you should be nasal flushing and washing your mouth with a gargle. Listerine is great. Saline solution with with iodine in it. Don't swallow the iodine. Gargle with it and spit it out. But you need to be doing these things. If you don't wanna get sick, then you have to be doing nasal flushes and gargles. That's the best way to keep from going to the hospital is to not get sick. And so I wanna emphasize that. It's very important. And because the best way to treat COVID is to not get it. That's the best way to treat it. And so anything you can do to preemptively like, if we go to a gathering and I and I know there's gonna be vaccinated people there, I'll take a hydroxychloroquine before I go. Me too. And an ivermectin just because and it's kept me healthy. Note I haven't been affected by shedding or any of that stuff. So but you if you don't have it, you can't use it. And that's that's the key. So this is a lot of stuff, but, you know, there's no reason to be afraid. They can't scare us anymore because we know what's going on, and we know how to take care of this. But, plea. Speaker 9: Well, I I just wanted I because people are, like, boguarding Speaker 5: their stash. So I don't wanna sound like a weed store. But I don't know people. I don't I don't know about weed stores and boguarding. So Speaker 9: Nobody does. What you just said, our kids were hanging around, other kids and and our neighbor. And she went home, and a couple hours later, she called Shelly, and she's like, yeah. I've got, like, a sore throat and postnasal drainage. All four of us took twenty four milligrams of ivermectin, two hundred of hydroxychloroquine, and point six of colchicine. Like, without batting an eye, Shelley is like, well, do do we need to do this? I'm like, no. We don't need to. But it would be absolutely asinine for us not to because they're antiviral. They're I mean, it's like, you're knocking out, like, 18 different mechanisms with which viruses bind and infect us. So why you know, it's like to me, it's a no brainer. I mean, I just looked at a bin here. We we just moved. And I just looked at a bin, and I've got, like, I don't know, like, twelve thousand twenty four milligram ivermectin and a thousand colchicine and a thousand monteloopast and two thousand prednisone. Like, I could treat probably 1,500 people with this box that I have in front of me. So it's like, have the stuff like, I unapologetically take it, because I put myself in a position where I'm around people that are actively sick. Just, you know, you make them better, but but don't wait. It's like people wait and wait. It's like, like, if I wake up and I have a hoarse voice, I take ivermectin. If I've got a weird feeling behind my eyes, I take ivermectin. Like, just Yeah. It's Speaker 2: it's just a no brainer. Yeah. It doesn't it doesn't it doesn't do it's early treat right? It's early treatment for a reason, and we I'm glad you said that because I can't tell you the number of times we're trying to help somebody in a hospital, and you've been there on some of those times where people are like, you know, I I was wait I was saving my ivermectin until I got were till I got worse, and it's like, don't. It's for early treatment. Right? So good you know, to make sure it's early, make sure it's enough, I mean and all that. We've got some people. So Scott and Huckleberry, I need you to stick around because we've got some I'm gonna go through some of the other speakers, and I know some of them have questions for y'all. So we're gonna go Kat and then Miriam. So, Kat, go ahead and Take me off the speaker thing. Kat, can you, you gotta take yourself off mute. Speaker 16: Next. Speaker 15: Kat. Speaker 2: What dose is that? Somebody also well, while we wait for Kat to take herself off speak speaker, how can there's two questions in the chat for y'all. So, the first one is and this is for either one of you, how can you keep somebody protected when they go into the hospital? The second question is, what dosage for coltrazine and prednisone? Take that one. So, Scott, you take that one. Do you have a kit? There they said does Scott have a kit? Go ahead. Do you have Speaker 5: go ahead. They're hopping around. Speaker 2: No. Go ahead. So do you have a kit? What are the dosage for dosage is for colchicine and prednisone? Let's take those first because they're quick. Speaker 9: Okay. Colchicine, zero so if you get it from Mexico, it's zero point five or one milligram. So it's a it's a or India is zero point five. Mexico is usually one mill yeah. One milligram point six one milligram. So to not get confusing, I don't care whether it's point five, point six, or one milligram. It'd be one tab twice a day for three days and then one tab daily for, say I always did three weeks, but, say, you know, if you're most of the time, you're getting over it so quick. Like, if you're starting early, you're getting over it so quickly that I would say, you know, one tab of colchicine twice a day one one pill twice a day for three days and then daily for, say, seven to ten days. Prednisone, I don't like, if it's day one, literally day one, but no one's ever day one. I mean, it's no one is day one because their day one is just like, I'm a little achy or I'm a little fatigued. By the time they're like, uh-oh. Like, I feel I start to feel bad. I that's not your day one. That's your day three or four. So it'd be, you know, forty milligrams of prednisone. If you're getting a prescription, it usually comes in twenty milligram tabs. So it'd be forty milligrams of prednisone for five days, then twenty milligrams of prednisone for five days, and then you can quit. You could as long as your your symptoms are better. So but it's like, if you've got body aches, headache, especially headache or body aches, like, there is nothing else that will take away your body aches or headache like prednisone from COVID. Scott, what's the caveat to taking colchicine? Speaker 5: I'll I'll give I'll give you I'm taking colchicine for gout, and it's usually at higher doses. Mhmm. But it does cause you can get nauseated taking colchicine. So That's super, super rare. But I I suffered from it with one one dose. So Speaker 9: Then then what I would say, be because I believe it to be so instrumental because of its because of its ability to inhibit IL six and IL-one beta and TNF alpha, that's sorry. It just the the things that the bioweapon kicks up, then then I always something we haven't talked about. Either Zofran or promethazine, Phenergan. Like, Zofran is an h five h two two three blocker, histamine blocker, and serotonin blocker in the gut, and it takes away it knocks out the the nausea. And so, that's something else Food helps. That that somebody could Speaker 5: Yeah. Food helps. Food helps. The what? I used to take my medicines on an empty stomach, and I found if I I took a little food first, it it helped nausea. Yeah. Speaker 9: Well, especially especially with b vitamins because, thiamine we haven't talked about this, but b one, vitamin b one, thiamine, two hundred milligrams twice a day. Thiamine is an potent inhibitor of the the t h one pathway, the proinflammatory pathway. I think you guys were on the call when I was just begging the doctor to just give, you know, I'm injections of thiamine Speaker 2: because it's so potent. I there's lots of questions. So for this panel of two. So I'm gonna run through them. So get your thinking caps on. I know the answer to this one, and it's with regard to the, to the kits. Somebody asked, is the kit, for one person or should and should a family have multiple? Yes. If you're talking about the ones on some of the sites, it it's typically one, but you need to read you need to read what's in them. There's a question about, Speaker 9: And I wanna say for the wellness for that that wellness kit, it's got a number of antibiotics. But, I mean, for for the cost, like so, yes, the antibiotics, but, I would have to look back at it again. But when I saw it, I was like, what what the freak? Where's where's the rest of the meds? But, again, my question is, what is a life worth? And Right. But but it yes. So they got they got them, like And You gotta get something. You have to have something. Speaker 5: So Speaker 9: Right. But but, like, three or four of them are antibiotics. Right? So you've got, like, Cipro, like, Cipro, azithromycin, Augmentin, and and something else, and then metronidazole and a couple other things. But when we're talking you're right. But when you're talking about COVID, like, when you're talking about a kit, like, I look at like, my kit is ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine, colchicine, montelukast, prednisone, azithromycin, hydroxyzine, ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine, colchicine, prednisone Speaker 2: And that's azithromycin, Speaker 9: montelukast, hydroxyzine, and a couple other things. Like like, I've used that to treat Speaker 2: four thousand So you have a kit. That was the next question that somebody asked. Does Scott have a kit? So and where can they get it? Speaker 9: Well Just putting them on the back. They can reach out they they can reach out to me. I can I can I mean, I I I have them, and, yeah, I mean, anybody that that's wanting kits, I'm more than happy to mail them out? I'm listen. This is not why I'm on here, and I'm not I got you. I just I'm not saying it for that. I just want people to have the right stuff to make sure that an emergency is when you don't have the things you need, and I'm so tired know. And exhausted. Speaker 5: Somebody asked that question. So I was just reading the This is the thing, everybody. Okay? What Scott just said is extremely important. We're tired. Alright? We're tired. We're tired, and we're exhausted. K. We need these people to be prepared. We need you to be prepared. Exhaust. My opinion is you gotta get it wherever you can get it, because what is the cost of a life? Yeah. Okay? What is the cost of a life? And so Speaker 9: you have Yeah. That it's the greatest gift that I have is when people call me or reach out to me or write letters to me and they say, you've never met me, but we did what you suggested or we got what you recommended, and we sailed through it. And it's like, my heart smiles. Like, I wanna cry. I just like, oh, like, I didn't do anything. All I did, you know, like, outside of just saying words, it's like they did it. And it's like I'm so filled with joy that I said something that had some benefit to somebody where they were able to get the things they need. I don't care where they get it. I'd like, if they go on wellness and they get part of it and they have to get it from somebody else, just have it on hand, and you're right. Like, what's a life worth? When people are calling me, like, I would do anything anything to, like, you know, undo the horror that their family has been through. And it was like, well, it was $200. And, like, ah, that's a little steep. They don't don't Like, what the fuck? Are you fucking kidding me? Hey. Sorry. Like, I had to buy this. Do business with the carpetbaggers and the faith healers and all those stuff. I'm just gonna warn you. Speaker 5: With with some of these folks out here in disasters, we're having issues with people selling garbage. So make be smart, and get if you have any questions, let us know. But just before Speaker 9: And I apologize for my language. So I I wanna I apologize for my language. It's just No. You're good. You're good. But we Like, we've been we've been through this, and it's it's just hard. Like, it's I I lose my ever loving mind sometimes because something that is so easy to fix so immediately, and there's so much tragedy and loss and hurt and pain and suffering. And Right. It's like I hear you. Speaker 2: I hear you. Okay. Next. The next question is, my question is with nebulizing rhinocort, if buttesinide is not handy, is more in how much rhinocort do you pour into the nebulizing cup? So basically, how do you nebulize, the Rhinocort? That's the next question. Speaker 9: So open up open up the bottle. Take take a, you know, get a a normal syringe, whatever. Take two to three mls out. Put it in the the little receptacle for the nebulizer, and hold it away from your face initially because I've never nebulized the the nasal spray. The biggest thing is make sure that there's no discomfort, there's no burning, there's no irritation. It should be I don't like the word smooth. It should be comfortable. If there's anything even I brought up, you know, like, the saline, hydrogen peroxide, colloidal silver mix, iodine, etcetera. If if there's any irritation at all, you dilute it down with saline. Speaker 5: I I dilute it down automatically with the saline, just one ml of saline. Yeah. And I just dilute it down automatically. It goes longer, but, it avoids issues. Speaker 9: Well, I don't I don't do that with b desk knife. It's just straight if it's, you know, just you get your b desk knife It helps keep the it You know, from the bottom of the chamber clean and It does. It does. And then you wanna the other thing is you want to swish and spit after nebulizing budesonide because it's a steroid, and you want to avoid getting thrush, which is Candida, like, in the mouth. So after nebulizing, you wanna swish and spit. Yeah. That's a great idea. Speaker 2: Thrush is no fun. Next question. Next question, is, and we've got people with their hands up, so I'm gonna go through these questions that we're putting chat and then we're going to hit the people with the hands up. Can someone with a crushed orbital sinus slash sinus cavity wall use nasal wash? Speaker 9: So you're gonna want to so this is gonna sound fairly benign, but I I did a vid I put a video I put a bunch of videos on my website. Like, my friend called it how to survive, but it goes through all of these something as simple as a breathe right strip because of the tension on it. So anybody that's got sleep issues that mouth breathes, that has any type of nasal sinus congestion, if your mouth opens when you're sleeping, you're physiologically screwed. That's just a literal physiological statement of fact because that's how you make nitric oxide, endothelial nitric oxide, which is what opens the blood vessels and allows blood the compliance of the blood vessels and allows blood to flow effectively. Like, I put I probably put a thousand Breathe Right strips on parents, and almost ubiquitously, the first thing that I see is their eyes bug out, and they go, what the heck? Alright, Scott. That's how you're supposed to breathe. So first thing, if you've got any crushed nasal sinus or any of the nasal congestion or narrow nasal passages, you need to soap up like like, soap and clean your nose, dry it off, and put a Breathe Right strip on low enough. If you put it up where the package shows it, it won't work. You have to put it low enough, like, down on the nose. That will open up the nares, and it'll help you breathe. And then you do the nasal flush Speaker 2: or the nasal spray. Okay. So last question, and then I'm gonna go to people who have their hands up. Okay. And in, in two words or less, answer this. Scott said something about a med that starts with the letter l, but I can't remember what he said. Which one? Lumbrokinase. Say it again. Speaker 9: Lumbrokinase. It is like nattokinase. It's lumbro, l u m b r o k I n a s e. Lumbrokinase helps dissolve, it dissolves, the the biofilms, and it helps inhibit clotting without increasing the risk of bleeding. Speaker 2: Okay. Alright. That is okay. So now let me go to people who who have their hands up. So Kat was next. If she if she figured out how to take herself off of, mute, we can go to her. Otherwise, otherwise, Miriam is next. So Kat, Miriam, CV, Heidi. Kat, Miriam, CV, Heidi. Kat? K. We'll come back to you. Miriam. Miriam. Speaker 11: Hey, everyone. Hey. Just wanted to piggyback a little bit off of what Scott and I think maybe Huckleberry was saying. Definitely, preparedness is the key, and I know that it seems super overwhelming. But just to reinforce that, I think that Speaker 10: they both are so right because Speaker 11: the only way you're gonna stay out of the hospital is to be prepared. Okay? And the other side is not going to stop trying to land us in the hospital with their bioweapon attack. It's just straight up the truth. Okay? I know it's very easy for human beings to go, I'll worry about that later. It's not gonna happen to me. It's a natural human condition, but you can't go back once you are in that position. And then the number of deaths that we've had in, you know, in this country, one point six million people with the vast, vast, vast majority, Can't remember the number, but, basically, millions died in the hospitals. So we definitely need to do everything we can to prepare. I will tell anybody who's wondering about the wellness kit. I bought it myself. And there is a nice handy dandy little companion sheet that will explain to you how to use those meds and what what the conditions would be that you would use them in. So, it's very helpful for anybody who's feeling a bit overwhelmed. I'm not endorsing that particular kit, but if you decide to get it, it is very handy. The second thing I wanted to say is they I think that the bioweapon makers and pushers and have realized that there's a certain component of our population that are in fact very well prepared. I don't think that they've had the kind of and I know we've had a lot of death and suffering and everything, but they wanted it to be bigger than it was. So I don't think they're quite happy with the outcome, so they're not gonna stop. And I don't know if anybody's aware, but, I came across a article today, by a person I follow on Substack that is saying that there is another event coming that Google is preparing for. So I'll put it in the chat. I think that it it's not significant other than the fact that I think that it kind of reinforces that we're on the right track here and that we're doing the right things and we're putting a dent in their schemes. So, long and short, it's an email that supposedly an insider sent to this person who posted this on x, and he's saying that, it's gonna be I don't know if anybody's heard about the cyber polygon event. There was a tabletop exercise that was done. You can look it up online. I believe Johns Hopkins was involved in it too. The same one that was event two zero one that preceded the COVID pandemic. But it's a cyber event. So I think that they are so frustrated by the result that they've gotten that they're gonna try a different prong of attack. So, I don't think it's anything to be really concerned with other than it is a good sign that we are frustrating them with what we're doing. So I want to have kind of a weird encouragement to everyone that we're doing the right thing from that. But but I'll post it in the chat and just thank thank you. Thank you, Miriam. I always love when you come on and share stuff with us. Speaker 2: You're so smart. You're so well informed. Speaker 11: Thanks. I'm I'm just, I think I'm compulsively I'm a compulsive reader and a compulsive researcher, so I don't I don't know about smart, but, my husband always said that if I was big, because I was stubborn, the whole world would be in trouble. So I think I'm just I think I'm just like a bulldog, tenacious. I don't know about smart. Just I just won't let go. So Perfect. Thank you. Okay. Speaker 2: CV and, then I don't know. CV multiple CV, much love. Sorry. I had to hover to see the whole thing. Speaker 8: So Alright. Thank you. Sure. And then, Speaker 2: Heidi, after Speaker 8: you. Alright. Thank you very much. Yes. I have a couple of comments, but I do have a question for sure because of something that I used during the COVID season, initially. I did have the original COVID, and I damn near died from it. And then I'm glad I didn't. And, I'm gonna say God save me because he put into my hands what I needed when nobody knew what was needed. So and, and my dad I was taking care of my dad. So, and I want that wellness kit, and I want a few of them. So I need to get in contact with you. Don't let me escape. But I was using also a diffuser in the house, two of them, because I had to I had to cross them. I put one on one side and one over here on both sides of the front door because he had people coming in and visiting him. And some people even came in, and they were sick. Oh, I'm sorry. They cough, and I'm going, get the hell out of here. You know? And the next time I said, okay. You're bad. No. You can't come back forever. Anyhow, I put diffusers in with certain oils. Like, I put clove oil and oregano oil and stuff like that in those things. And then when he was in his bed, in his room, he had a hospital bed, I put the diffuser in there too, and, of course, he was on oxygen. So I think that helped out a whole lot cutting down the the stuff that was floating around in the air. I noticed after I started doing that, things started to to be better, in the whole house. I mean, it just smelled better anyway, but it felt better too. So I'm wondering about that if we can also incorporate diffusers because that humidifies the air, but we can also put things in it that will help us as well. And then I want those kits, so don't let me get out of here without them. Thank you. Speaker 9: So so what you just said, if you look at oregano, some of the essential oils, very, very effective antiviral, antibacterial. So I'm I'm a huge fan of using diffusers and essential oils. Not just diffusing it, but but taking it internally or or topically. But, yeah, that's but especially people that have that have a that have a loss of smell and taste, There's a lot of really cool studies out of Europe using, different sets of essential oils to recover, their from a neurological standpoint. But, yeah, essential Like, if you would have said that four years ago, I'd be like, oh my god. Like, what what a hippie. No. I was so stupid. They're they're huge. They they have a huge impact. They're they're absolutely effective, but I wouldn't rely on those as a stand alone if we were dealing with a regular virus shirt, but it's a bioweapon. Speaker 8: And so we need all the other stuff to diffuse it. Oh, yeah. I was thinking that I would be I done it I did it with everything else. I mean, I combined it with all of the stuff that I used to keep us both alive during this period of time. Speaker 9: So Speaker 8: and if I had to die if I had to go to the hospital, he'd have died. They would have put him in a nursing home, and that would have been into him. So I had to stay alive. Anyway, God saved me, you guys. And, thank you for being here because I'm getting a better education now than, than I ever gave myself along the way. Thank you. Well, thank you. We're here every Saturday night, so wonderful. Speaker 5: Heidi Real quick. Real quick. What I had okay. So talk going along the prevention line, guys, you gotta keep your immune systems up. So zinc, you need to be taking zinc, fifty milligrams. You need to be taking your vitamin d, your vitamin k two, your vitamin c, your, NAC. Scott, help me out. What else would we take prophylactically? Speaker 2: Vitamin wise. Speaker 5: Maybe he stepped away. Elderberry. Speaker 9: You can take elderberry. It's alright. Nigella so Nigella sativa, which is black cumin, is a very, very effective. It's got it's in its main component is thymoquinone. And so black seed is a phenomenal antiviral, antibacterial. NAC, if you're doing it prophylactically, it'd be, like, five to six hundred milligrams a day. If you have symptoms, any symptomatology, especially, nasal sinus, congestion, cough, you're gonna wanna do, say, a thousand to twelve hundred milligrams two to three times a day. So you want you need a dose dependent. If you live above the thirty fifth parallel so if you live above Middle America, you're vitamin d deficient. And so when you're talking about vitamin d with k two, vitamin d three with k two, you're talking ten thousand IU daily. It's always good to get it checked. It's covered by insurance, or if it's not, you can go through, like, Vibrant Wellness, and it's $25. My daughter's vitamin d level was 19, which is so abysmal that it broke my heart. Mine was 37. So when I got COVID the first time, I took fifty thousand IU daily for three days and then twenty thousand IU for a week and then went down to ten thousand IU. It was December 2020. So your five thousand, you know, vitamin d is damn near useless Speaker 5: if you're sick. It's just useless. Yeah. This this is all prophylactic. So it it's you don't wanna get So if it's prophylactic five thousand would be sick. So take care of your immune system and boost it up. So you don't wanna get news is is air is free. Fresh air. Keep your room keep the air in your house circulating. If you lock up the house, you're just recycling bad air. So get fresh air, get sunshine. Stay healthy. That's how you don't get sick. Speaker 2: So I noticed, Kat so before we go to Heidi, I noticed Kat has got gotten herself off of mute. Did you have something, Kat? Kat. Yep. Yes. I hope you can hear me. I can only use the microphone or listen. So I'm just gonna say my question, which was about the pour on ivermectin. It's for cattle. It's the only thing we grab around here. And our friends are sick, and they're, like, four times bats, maybe they wouldn't listen. Now they're sick. They have Paxlovid. That's not working. They're getting scared. Can we give them the ivermectin after they just have Paxlovid? And, should we give them what it says to give per pound regular for cattle, or do we give more or what? I'm gonna pull out my microphone and then listen. Hopefully, you hear me. So, Scott, I'm gonna let you take that one. So, basically, they're getting Paxlovid. They've only got access to the liquor. Go. Speaker 9: Yeah. I'm horrified that they You got it. Paxlovid because it's gonna increased their risk for can you hear me? You're muffled. Speaker 5: Okay. Hold on. Take the microphone out of your mouth. Speaker 9: I'm hold on. Is is is it any better? Speaker 5: Say it again. Is this better? Speaker 9: You're cutting in and out. Can you hear me? Yeah. Now it's just a little bit I'm gonna have to come back in. Okay. Okay. No. No. No. Yeah. Get your Paxlovid. Okay. Yeah. The Paxlovid makes me nervous, because of the rebound that we see, and it's just, good lord. So so you can so they can do the topical. So if, if, you know, if they've my recommendation would be if they've got the if they can get the paste, which they should be able to get the paste easily, would be to take the paste. And let's just since she jumped off, let's just say that he's, you know, a hundred and seventy five pounds. So whatever it whatever it says on the tube of the of the paste, like, for dosage for weight, you triple it unapologetically. I mean, I told so I had a patient that was, like, three hundred and eighty nine pounds and and so sorry. I just said she's like, I'm afraid of taking too much. I was like, listen. You can hub it. And he's like, like, just take the take the tip-off and just expel the entirety of the contents into your mouth right now. Like, you're not she's not gonna OD on it. But, yeah, you would do just whatever it would say on the on the package. You just triple it. If you've got the liquid, I would I would take, you know, I would take several, you know, like like, three or four ml's and rub it on his chest because it actually absorbs into the into the tissue. And then you can do a few ml's and and literally just put it in his mouth and and have him drink it. But, yeah, Paxlovid is just a freaking devil. It makes me so angry. But yeah. So so you can use those. Use it both topically, especially if there's respiratory issues. Put it on his chest, and then you can also do it internally. I well, hold on. I'm gonna do a disclaimer. I'm not giving you medical advice. Speaker 5: Yeah. We're not offering medical advice. Speaker 9: I'm not. I'm not. I'm not. Nobody's offering medical advice. I'm I'm not offering I'm just saying what I would do if it were me. That's all. I'm just just if if, like, if you're asking, hey. What would you do if it were you? That's that's what I would do if it were me unapologetically, and do with that what you will. But that's that's how I would unapologetically treat myself or a family member. Speaker 2: Just one thing quick. I don't think I can put it in mouth or take it and test it because I think it's in alcohol. It smells like rubbing alcohol. It smells like rubbing alcohol, so I didn't think we could ingest it at all. But we've been putting it on our skin, and we never got We are odorless now. But now we wanna give it to them. They're gonna they they're sick as a dog, so we wanted to just give it to them tomorrow. So we'll just put it on their chest, and I wrote down the m l's or I'm wondering so with the liquid, can we put three times the dose that's on the bottle per pound? Like you said, three times with the case, can we do three times with the liquid or just what you told me with three to four ml, Revlon X? I I would I would I would need to see it. Like, if you can send a picture, I I don't wanna give you Speaker 9: I I I would I don't know, because I would need to I would need to see what the what the strength is of it. Thank you. Can you just follow go ahead and follow each other and, Speaker 2: DMs Scott Miller. Speaker 9: No. No. No. Just just give her give her my cell number or something. I don't I don't like, DMing, I have I don't even I'm I'm pulled in so many directions. I just desperately don't wanna miss somebody sending. So if you wanna give her my cell, give her my cell, and she can reach out to me directly, and I can I can work with her? But I never go on Twitter. DM me, Speaker 2: Huckleberry's wife, and I'll DM you back Scott's cell phone number. So okay. So next is Speaker 9: Sorry. I don't mean to be a pain. I I'm sorry. I don't mind being your secretary. I'm good. Speaker 2: Aw. I'm just kidding. Okay. So Heidi has a question, and then and then we'll go to SMA. So Heidi. Speaker 15: Yeah. Yes. Good evening, Doctor. Miller. I I have a quick question. You were saying that you would take ivermectin for pain behind the eyes. Why would that be? Would that be for parasites? Speaker 9: Yep. So what I found can you hear me? Yes. I can hear you. Okay. What what I found specifically for me and the reason I brought that up was each time that I had COVID, it started off weird. It started off where where, like, I didn't I didn't have any symptoms. I literally had, like, a little bit of a hoarse voice, almost like like if I had gone to a concert and you're, like, you're yelling or screaming, and I just woke up a little bit hoarse. I was completely fine, but I had this weird like, later on in the day, I had this weird sensation behind my eyes. I'm like, what's that? Like, something I've never experienced. And it wasn't pain. It was like a pressure. And then the next morning, I woke up, and I had a little bit of a scratchy voice, and I had an increased kind of tension or pressure behind my eyes. And mind you, I had been, like, directly around, you know, like, a bunch of over you know, like, acutely sick people. And so the reason I said that specifically was people wait and wait and wait. And for me, because because I've had the same initial symptoms every time. I've had COVID, like, four or five times. And it was it's the same every time where it's like I get this weird pressure sensation behind my eyes, and I just feel off. So my point in saying that is, like, if you feel something is different, unapologetically, you know, like, I it's like I go to my bag, and I pull out ivermectin, colchicine, hydroxychloroquine, and I pour out, you know, a dose for each of my family members, and we take it. Right. So that that was my point in saying that where, like, people wait. Speaker 5: Like, don't wait. You get sick and then If you feel like you're getting sick, just take a prophylactic dose of ivermectin and whatever you got. That's what you Speaker 9: Not even hold on. Not even getting sick. If you've it's like I'm I try not to be crude, but my my wife heard me say this. It's like, if I fart weird, I take ivermectin. That's my point is if I feel anything different, I take it. That's because you're Scott. Well, and good. We're we're getting shed on. Like, listen. We're around people. We're getting shed on. All the We're we're exposed. They're they've they've got EMF. Like, like, they're able to activate things that we can't even fathom. Speaker 2: Yeah. Speaker 9: They're able to destroy our mitochondrial function just through, you know, electrical wave. You know, like, I mean, it's it's nuts. So it's like like, I look at it as to the degree that they're attacking us. I'm going to aggressively Speaker 2: protect my system Yeah. And my family system. And I, I can't even pronounce half the words you just said. So, we're gonna go to, next. We're gonna do this for because we're just gonna start to wrap up. So we're gonna go to SMA and then Deborah, and then I got some information to share as we wrap up. So SMA. Speaker 17: Yes. Hi, guys. I haven't been on here Uh-huh. Quite a while. Been a lot of stuff going on, but I wanted to ask advice. My mom, you know, has been having some heart issues, and so today, I actually called her doctor because she was gasping for for her breath. They've talked about that she's got a leaky valve. And as you know with what happened with my dad in, April 2020, we he didn't come home when he went to the hospital because they gave him that evil stuff, that remdesivir as we know that killed a lot of people. And, anyways, when she's going to have to get a stamp put in, but they don't know what else is going on. But what really really messed me up today is, well, my sister's a nurse. Okay? And she still doesn't believe that all this stuff, you know I mean, and don't feel bad. I mean, I it's hard to explain, but she's just she's kinda coming around to it, but she still is you know, she follows because she's she's a VA nurse. Okay? So she works for the VA. So she follows what they say. And she's like, well, you know, if mom goes to the hospital, they're gonna wanna give her an RSV test automatically. They're gonna wanna give her a COVID test. And it scares the crap out of me because, you know, I lost my dad in 02/2020, and the first thing they did is gave him a COVID test when he came in. And then we couldn't even see him. We had no say in his care. We couldn't give him vitamin c. So I'm trying to find ways to protect her when she does have to go get this because, like, even today, the doctor on call said, well, we need to make sure she hasn't got RSV. And I said, she doesn't have RSV. That's not what's going on with her. It's her heart. She has a leaky valve, and they have told her that when she got out of breath, she would have to get a stick put in. But So let me just paraphrase. But, basically, you Speaker 2: she has she has no choice but to go in for something, and you wanna know how how do you keep her safe while she's in a hospital for something that is absolutely necessary. Speaker 17: Is that it? Right. Because So I I don't want something to happen to her. I mean, they they killed my dad, you know, with the Well, the first the first thing is if they if they run a COVID test Speaker 9: if if they say they're gonna run one, the first thing write write this down. Say, if you're going to run it, make sure that the lab tells me tells us how many times it was cycled if it comes up positive. Speaker 15: Okay. Speaker 9: Because anything cycled over 29, 30 times is is negative, and it throws them off. And and so so the other there there's a couple components. RSV is a diagnosis. It's die it's it's a physical exam diagnosis. Like, I have a child that comes in in the past, no longer. But a child comes in, and I can walk into the room and look at look at somebody, and I know it's RSV because Okay. Snot is pouring out of their nose like the faucet is on. So if she doesn't have, like, like, extreme, like, nasal congestion and any type of respiratory issues, she doesn't have RSV. So if they're trying to diagnose that if if they're running an RSV swab just because, I would challenge them just from an from an insurance standpoint because they're full of shit. Yeah. I'm sorry. It's just they're they're absolutely just so stupid. Yeah. I know. But they have no reason to run an RSV or COVID swab on somebody that doesn't have symptoms if she's going in for cardiac issues. So so be politely politely unapologetic about challenging that. And if there's any issues, again, I'm I don't wanna throw I don't wanna throw Gail or Huckleberry under the bus, but I'll I'll I'll just say call Gail, Huckleberry, or me Uh-huh. If you're there. And keep us on the phone, and we can walk you through it. But this it should be a no brainer easy type of situation, but we know different with what's going on. And every hospital visit is Russian roulette. Speaker 17: Yeah. Oh, I know. And and, I mean, it's crazy because she was just at the doctor, you know, this past Thursday, and he actually told her they're gonna have to do, an arteriogram. And then she needs to bring an overnight bag because she's most likely gonna have to have a stent put in. That has nothing to do with COVID. But it's like when I hear this doctor on call, it's like, well, well yeah. Yeah. You know? Well, we may need to test her and make sure she doesn't have, RSV. And then, of course, like I said, when I talk to my sister, she's like, well, you know they're gonna give her a COVID test if she goes. And I'm like, I'm gonna Speaker 9: her for AIDS? Speaker 5: No. No. So here's something to here's something to remember, everybody. You still have the right to say no. Speaker 9: Yep. You still have the right to say no. Okay? Speaker 17: Well, that's what I was gonna ask y'all. Isn't there paperwork too, like, that doctor Artis or somebody at one point had some kind of paperwork that you could have with you to protect your loved ones? Do you know what I'm talking about? I I don't know what doctor Artis You can have your power of attorney. Speaker 5: Yeah. I'm her power of attorney. You need to have a copy of that when you go in. Speaker 17: Okay. Speaker 9: Okay. You you have you need to have a And you can and you can yeah. And you can just say no. You you can say no. I'm not I'm not comfortable with that. Like, they have to they have to have a if they said we need to get an MRI on her foot, and you're like, what? But, what? Like, what? Her foot's fine. Right? You wouldn't be like, whatever you think is right. You'd you'd be like, no. No. She doesn't have any symptoms. I'm declining that. And you can decline that. If they push back if they push back because, obviously, she needs she needs, you know, care. She needs this evaluation. But if if there's pushback, that's where I say, that's why I always say please reach like, the calls that I get Mhmm. Where where people just feel lost, and and I'm grateful that that's not the right word. I'm glad I'm glad that that I've been available for it because you're you're not supposed to know what to say or how to navigate it. Mhmm. Just be unapologetic about standing your ground and then be unapologetic about reaching out to any of us Mhmm. For help if you need it. But this should be it should be a seamless situation. It's just it's that's no longer our reality. And I'm glad you brought it up and you're asking it because she should be able to go in, get her you know, get treatment and get home without Speaker 17: any sort of nefarious actions going on. Right. I mean, she actually said to my sister that if they're gonna do that and it's just gonna be all about COVID all over again, she'd rather just die at home. And, I mean, that's how she feels. She would rather just not, she doesn't wanna die in the hospital like my dad, and I completely understand. I mean, she you know, we're coming up on his anniversary in April when he was, killed with the protocol. And it's, you know, that I mean, it's just what she thinks of when all this comes up where they bring up, oh, we're gonna have to do a RSV test or, you know, my sister's saying she's gonna have to do a COVID test. And, oh, and the other thing, my sister said, well, you better not bring up all that about with dad because they're gonna commit you if you do. And I'm like, what? So, you know, it's just Speaker 9: Oh, and with that I'm gonna I'm gonna say this really quick. There's somebody just posted on some somebody had, I I think it's an ivermectin liquid or injectable, and and it said, you know, like, do not ingest. So so just for there are there are kinds that you can. So, you know, I always say rub on, but I want to make sure the Gail Huckleberry have have everybody look at, the posts that are on on the Twitter space, because there are doses or percentages that you don't wanna ingest. You wanna just solely rub on, especially if it's cattle or cattle. So just, like, kind of a disclaimer. Look at look at the look at the pictures on the chat. Speaker 5: So just to go on top of what Scott's talking about, you know, we we all need to read our labels. Okay? So if it says for oral use only, then it's for oral use only. If it says it's for injection only, it's for injection only. So But you're not gonna inject it. You're not gonna inject it by top if it says injection topical, then So if you don't have anything to inject it with, then that should be a red flag to you Yeah. That you don't take it orally. But but please read the labels. Speaker 2: I mean But you shouldn't inject injectable ivermectin is what he's saying because that's very bad. Right. But what I'm saying is see, this is the problem, Speaker 5: informed consent. Mhmm. And if I've said it once, I've said it a thousand times. We have to educate ourselves. Like Scott said, you shouldn't have to know this, but the fact is the only person that's gonna help you is you. And informed consent, we need to inform ourselves and be wise and be smart. Just like telling somebody that you don't want to have a COVID test. It's okay to say no. And if they push back and say you have to have one, then tell them, okay, I want informed consent. Tell me why I need to have a COVID test. And you can push back, and you can ask questions. There's nothing wrong with asking questions. You see where blindly following has gotten us? These people need to know that we've learned our lesson, and we're just not gonna blindly follow what they say. If you wanna blindly follow what Scott tells you, that's great. Okay? Speaker 9: You know? No. No. It's not. No. No. No. No. No. It's Speaker 5: not. Sweet lord, do not please do not do that. Like, vet everything I say, please. And this is not medical advice. This is life advice. Okay? This is what I'm telling you. You need to question. If you're not comfortable questioning, you need to get comfortable questions. You absolutely need to get comfortable questioning. And standing your ground. And it's for your information, and you have the right to get information. These doctors cannot take that right away from you. Okay? And if they want to insist, then ask then ask for the the unit manager or somebody that that you can speak to that is willing to give you information. That's all you're asking for. They they these these you have the right to get information. You know? It just so happens that Scott's given it to you for free, and it's not advice. It's just what he would do. But you have the right. Mhmm. You it's your right to get these things. It's your right to say no to any procedure. If they give you the information and you decide to change your mind, you have the right to say no. You have the right to say no. Let let me go home and think about it, and maybe we can reschedule it. But you always have the right to say no. Over. Speaker 2: So alright. So in we're heading towards wrapping up, but Deborah Moss is next. And then I'm gonna give you guys I think that's the last, and then I'm going to give you some information before we close down. I think that's Speaker 10: And, Deborah, I got your message, so call me tomorrow. Just let you Speaker 17: Okay. Oh, and real quick, can I have y'all's phone numbers before this is over with? So in case I'm at the hospital and need to reach y'all to get advice for my mom. Speaker 2: Wait. I'll I'll get just Speaker 10: I don't care. Mine's out there anyway. But you don't Speaker 2: Okay. Speaker 10: Okay. Speaker 17: I'm looking for a payment. Hold on. Just start. Speaker 2: Just DM me, and I'll give you everyone some more. Gail Gail yeah. And Gail Speaker 9: Gail, send send her my number too. I I wanna make sure that nothing goes south with this. Speaker 17: Okay. Thank you so much. Just bear with me, and I'll get I'll get your numb Speaker 15: Okay. Sure. Thank you. Speaker 2: Anybody who wants phone numbers, just DM me. Speaker 6: My question really was how, does is it doctor Miller, Scott, whatever? Do you have a website, or how do you get a hold of you besides your phone number now? Speaker 9: So yeah. So we I've there I have millerwellness.net, and I I had to put information behind a a onetime paywall because I was getting absolutely obliterated by the state with the information I was putting out. And so I have videos on all of it, like the nebbbing and dosing and the meds that you need to have, the supplements, just basically a a walk through. I didn't title it. A friend of mine called it How to Survive, which I was like, dude, that's lame. It's like just Speaker 6: Well, I'm interested in your kit. But Speaker 9: but, yeah. Yeah. So, yeah, we so you can reach if you Gail, can Speaker 7: can Speaker 9: Awesome. So, yeah, I'd like, whoever needs whoever needs it, I'm more than happy to to get it to just yeah. What whatever I can do to get people the things they need, I'm more than happy to do it. I just I wanna make sure that we have a route with which I'm able to to see that people are are asking or inquiring or needing. So Speaker 15: But where can we find that PayPal link? Do do you have a link you could provide to the video? Speaker 9: Yeah. Yeah. The themillerwellness.net. Yeah. It's yeah. So if you just Google millerwellness.net, I have a and, again, it's just there's a one time paywall, and then it has all the videos. Again, not I'm just I I wish I didn't have to put it behind anything. It's just the like, when I started putting up information and I started getting attacked by it, I mean, it, I mean, just me putting info up on my website probably cost me $30,000 in lawyer fees and and, Speaker 2: Yeah. I gotcha. Speaker 9: In rebutting what I said. So it's like so I had to, like, at least stop Speaker 2: the the insanity. If you guys don't know I'm just gonna break in here, Scott. If you guys don't know who Scott Miller is and how he how much he's been attacked, I mean, they he has to be very careful because they I don't know what what's the next option for them, Scott, killing you to stop you from saving people? I mean, I don't really care. We didn't want it, but they stop at nothing. So It was just a $10,000 Speaker 9: fine in jail. Yeah. And then Yeah. So now we we have to like Speaker 3: Scott, would you like my help to, maybe promote your story? I can do tweets for you, sir. Let's Speaker 2: wait on Speaker 9: Not yet. Not not yet. In fact, I mean, most, like, 99% of people don't know that we moved. Like, they have no idea that we left Washington. Let's wait until it's I I have to I have to talk to my attorneys. Like, I I'm not Cool. Technically, I shouldn't even be on this space. It's just to see you. When I saw it when I was listening to it, and and I just felt compelled to just kind of jump in and and share just some information. But, no, I'm I'm technically not allowed to say anything. Speaker 3: Yes, sir. I respect anything. Your wishes are just you know, if you ever change the mind, let me know. Scott, can you What was your name? And Gail. Andy. Andy Casanas. Speaker 2: That was Andy. Pardon me? Andy Casanas. Andy Cas Casanas. Speaker 9: Hey. Hello there. Yeah. How are you doing? Doing good, sir. Doing great. Oh my goodness. Good to hear from you. I Speaker 3: yeah. Yes, sir. And I'm glad you came to our space tonight. I'm very I'm very happy that you did, and I think you should continue your your your quest as a a savior for many others. And any anything I can do, you know, I have I mean, I know you talked to my lawyer, but if you need help at all, Speaker 9: anything, just call me then. Yeah. No. Absolutely. I I absolutely will. Thank you. I appreciate it. Speaker 3: Yes, sir. Alright. Speaker 2: So Speaker 15: Real quick, Scott. I'm on your website. What link do you click to get to that paywall? Speaker 9: It's it's called how to it's it's called how to it's called how to survive. I did not name that. It should have just been Speaker 15: yeah. Okay. Perfect. Thank you. Speaker 2: Okay. So, Speaker 9: And if you have any issues or if if you have any Speaker 2: You're breaking up, Scott. You you gotta get a ice pack or something for your phone when you're on here. Speaker 9: Well okay. So I just because yeah. So if there's any issues with any of the videos, so my just feel free to text me. It's (559) 361-7109. So if there's any videos that don't work or if there's any issues, just shoot me a text, and I can make sure to that you have access to all of it. But there shouldn't be any issues. You should be able to pop in there and see all the videos, and it will literally guide you through what you need to have and do and know. And it's it's like the blueprint of how to make everything bad go away. Can you repeat that? I was finding a pen, and I'm sorry to be a pain. I just wanna write it down since you just mentioned that. I am so vexed that you didn't have a pen. Speaker 10: I know. I'm telling Speaker 6: you. Thank you. Speaker 9: It's (559) 361-7109. Speaker 17: Okay. Thank you so much. You're so helpful. I I I really appreciate this. It makes me feel better knowing that I've got someone that I can talk to in case things go crazy when I take her to the hospital. I I hear you. Speaker 2: So alright. So, as we're wrapping up here, first of all, great space. I'm so excited that we're getting done five minutes before midnight, and I actually can sleep before I go to church. Mhmm. That's wonderful. But I want to talk about so we had to, regrettably, we had to take down the, last space we did because there was some personal information that was disclosed in it. And, we, couldn't have that person, being in in any type of danger or, you know, what have you. So we had to take that one down. We are going to you will be able to find these recorded spaces at rchbmp.substack.com. So that's the chbmpsubstack. So they, I know our first four spaces are live there now because they only stay live so long on on Twitter, like, thirty days or whatever. So we are going to make sure that they are on our Substack. So so everybody go there and follow the Substack, chbmp.substack.com. Somebody will put it in magically, it will appear in the link, in the chat there, the nest, the Speaker 9: Gail Gail, I I'm getting 911. So I just if I am so sorry. I have to go. So if if anybody has a question, like, if they can put it in and you can reach out to me, I'm so sorry. I just wanna take this. We're we're wrapping up in place. Thank you for what you and Huckleberry do. You guys are awesome. I gotta go. Love you guys. Speaker 2: Bye, Scott. Good to see you. Bye. Speaker 5: Bye, Scott. Speaker 2: So, yeah, so go and follow the, substack, and you'll be able to find all of Chelsea is working to get all of those up. What else do we want to mention? Do you wanna mention anything about the rally? Oh, Speaker 10: the events. Okay. And February 3 is a, protest at San Antonio standing for medical freedom. There's a Facebook invite, but it is at Northeast Baptist Hospital in San Antonio. If you wanna stand for medical freedom and support that, come there. One eleven to one. There is another rally, a really great one with these amazing speakers flying in from all over the country, February 10 at the Capitol, in Oklahoma. They've rented out the entire rotunda. I think it's on the Fourth Floor. Doctor Dancy Lindsey, doctor Sherwood, doctor Renee Moon, state representatives. I'm drawing a blank on some. I think maybe doctor Angie Ferrella is gonna be there. And, oh, Rachel Rodriguez, the attorney that drew up the 90, page complaint to go to the state AG to file criminal, open a criminal investigation and, for second degree murder against Fauci and company. She'll be there and some other parent groups. It's gonna be really great. That's from one to five on February 10 at the Oklahoma capital. If you're in the area or can make the trip, there'll be media there and all kinds of, ways to tell your story as well. And then our HALT Hospital homicide rally number two is in the works being planned. We're gonna be premiering Mickey Willis's new movie, Bad Medicine. He'll be there, of course. And amazing lineup of speakers, Brian Artis and others. And that will be it's tentatively, but most likely June 1. So more info on that to come. We have 15 support meetings, every week, so anybody's welcome to come to those. A PTSD workshop with Patty on Saturday, afternoons at three. We've got the first and third Sundays of the month. We have, a prayer hour with a amazing leader. You can email us prayer request, and she will add it into her list. We have art therapy on Thursdays, men's group, women's group, soul care, parents who lost children group, a Monday mega meeting with a bunch of, you know, almost over a 100 people on that one, Twitter space every Saturday night. Tell Your Story on CHBMP whether you're protocol or jab injured. We're trying to get as many stories on the record because that's gonna help us build these cases and investigations. And, I think did I cover everything? If you wanna be on our podcast, email us, and I'll get you on to tell your story. And we have a sub stack if you are to participate in that, and it's in a task log tier task force. So lots of stuff going on, and, we all need to work together and link arms and join forces so we can be the monster. Like, amen, Cece. There's no Speaker 2: there's no room for division, period. End of story. Speaker 10: Yep. Don't fall victim to infighting or listening to rumors or whatever because it's just a waste of your time and Right. Exactly. We were and we work with, like, we partner with so many different groups and it doesn't Speaker 2: even if they are I mean, there's there's so many medical freedom groups out there that even even if they align with us on one mission, we're gonna work with them on that mission, you know, whether it's the military groups or the the shot groups or, you know, it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter. Speaker 10: I mean not a competition. It doesn't matter who brings the enemy. I think he's gonna take all of this. Groups. I mean, we Speaker 2: we've we've heard from every I mean, that look at the rally, the one that Mick Meows doing in, at the Rotunda. There's different those the the sponsors of those are are anything from, you know, what moms something Oklahoma moms. Yeah. Moms Yeah. Moms of Liberty. Speaker 10: Right. We have people 50. We call the shots. We have, our group. We've got the health and wellness. It's all good. I'm trying to think. It's it's it's a medical freedom forum. You know, if you stand for medical freedom and you wanna fight to get it back. Yeah. That's what it's for. And that's I mean, we're all all this is related. Yep. Yep. Yep. That's right. No. We're not gonna Speaker 2: there's no time for not no time for fighting ourselves. Speaker 10: Oh, and and the street teams, of course. We got different like, Denise is leaving Texas. Heidi's doing an incredible job in California just raising public awareness. So, we had 17 hospital rescues last month, and we've had two this week. So that that tells you they're still doing it. Two this week. Oh my gosh. I know we we gotta sleep, man. We gotta sleep. And I well, what's that? I wish y'all could see my wall. I'm sitting here staring at it. I've I'll have to put it in the nest or something. But I started painting everybody that's no matter who you are, if you're with it or if you're not, I started painting everybody in my special style I do. Every single person, and I call it the warrior wall. Speaker 2: And I'm covering my entire office wall with these little pants. You have to put a you have to put a picture in the in the nest because it's all over Facebook, but not in here. Speaker 10: I, I sent y'all one if you wanted it in there. Speaker 3: Don't worry. All y'all are gonna be on it too. So If I can take a moment real quick and and add to what you guys are saying. If any is thank you. If anyone is a new listener this evening, at your leisure, at your convenience, please go to my website, death@baylor.com. And if you are in the state of Texas, do yourself a favor and look for another hospital chain to take you take care of you and your loved ones. Yeah. Speaker 2: And and and if you do, don't do Baylor, but also don't do Medical City and don't do Methodist. Speaker 10: Just don't do hospitals. Just don't do hospitals. Speaker 17: I was gonna say something real quick. I saw where y'all had had that Tennessee thing planned, and I just wanted to apologize because I'm I'm in Tennessee. And I know that y'all were gonna have the the thing, and then it was really hard to even get anywhere with it. And I guess it was probably because of Vanderbilt. You know? Vanderbilt's running our our state pretty much. Our mayor in Nashville, him and Alex Jayhanger, which is overall the COVID protocol and all that stuff at Vanderbilt, they called him the Fauci of Nashville. So that kinda tells me why y'all had such difficult time getting him. Yeah. And it was it was just expensive. Right? So, like, Speaker 11: you know, we operate on the I think the cheapest we found was, like, 30,000, Speaker 10: the cheapest we found for a venue. And, also, you know, Texas is kinda centrally located for the East And West Coast can be, you know, just meet in the middle. It's a way more less expensive for a venue, and it's way less expensive for people to for lodging. Speaker 2: So we were like, that's where we ended up, plus with Mickey Willis wanting to Speaker 10: Yeah. Move him. And he's here. Bad medicine Speaker 2: there. Speaker 10: That was that was a factor. And doctor Artisan's here. A lot of our main speakers are here. Scott is now here. So Yeah. In Texas. That's good. So Doctor McCullough is here. Doctor Farrell is here. Doctor Jansy is here. Yeah. So it just or since. But, you know, if we did it if we did it in California, the Florida people would be upset. If we did it in Florida, the California people would be upset. So we tried to Yeah. Put it in the middle. Speaker 17: But I was just It's gonna be great. For any of those idiots that are, like because like I said, I hate to call them idiots, but the more I've researched on it, I start to see that Vanderbilt is ground zero for the vaccines and for the remdesivir, literally. I mean, it's just sickening. Speaker 2: And y'all book up fast. So and I'm I'm sure it's because of all the the fun there. But, alrighty. Well, another great spaces. We appreciate y'all, and we'll see you again next week at 07:00. Speaker 10: Follow us. We'll follow back, and let's all work together. Good night, y'all. Good night. Good night. Speaker 9: Good night.