But I get the sense from listening to this episode that what Alex believes happened is that she got set up by Patrick Berge. Sure. Berge set her up.
But I get the sense from listening to this episode that what Alex believes happened is that she got set up by Patrick Berge. Sure. Berge set her up.
Now, that being said, Patrick Berge is full of shit.
And it's like, okay, yes, this Patrick Berge guy is clearly lying about my friend Roger Stone and saying that he's involved and possibly in charge of this gigantic conspiracy. And hey, that's a lie.
So here's Patrick talking about his involvement in ShadowNet and how he implies in this clip that the whole coronavirus and COVID-19 is all an internet simulated activity. You understand enough about someone and you can Hack their shadow, right? You can use their fears. You can use their anxieties. Sound anything like pandemics that you recognize here? Oh yeah, definitely. So you can use those things to help reflexively control or influence a target, an individual or whoever it is, right? Or a group of people. Or an entire election, an entire country. So, this is the main talking head of the documentary, you might say. I mean, it's debatable. It's kind of like a co-headliner situation. He's a fellow by the name of Patrick Berge. He's randomly and baselessly suggesting that COVID-19 is a mass psyop that I guess is being run all over the world and includes also killing a lot of people.
For years now, Bergy's been getting out there and trying to tell people about how in his time as a military or government contractor, he worked with the Department of Defense to create a form of social media psychological warfare called IIA, or Interactive Internet Activities.
Berge claims that he was fired for, quote, putting country before company, but the story doesn't seem so cut and dry. His boss, Dr. Klein, himself an Air Force veteran, quote, said Berge stopped showing up for work shortly after he told Klein on October 3rd of his plan to join the military. He declined to comment further on Berge's employment status or work history. Fair. As part of the 1994 Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act, you cannot discriminate against an employee for enlisting, and you're required to rehire returning enlisted persons after their active duty is over, so that would have been a problem. However, according to this Times article, quote, In an October 18th letter Klein sent to Berge, the doctor lauded him for his desire to serve his country and said he intended to comply with federal labor laws. But Klein also said that Berge had been, quote, repeatedly insubordinate, that he had rung up a $340 charge in unauthorized charges on the company's phone, and was unresponsive to reports of computer problems at the clinic. Oh, do you mean his job? That's what it sounds like. Okay. It kind of seems like there is some documentation here that maybe his boss... An Air Force veteran wasn't retaliating against Berge for enlisting as much as he was dealing with a shitty employee who coincidentally was also deciding to enlist.