Ending the Despicable Medical Industrial Complex w/ Dr Alan Bain (Eps 131)
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Alright, welcome to the latest episode of Blood Money.
Today we have a very special guest, Dr.
Alan Bain. How are you doing, sir?
Hello, Mr. Miller. Hello.
Yeah, yeah. Great to have you on the Blood Money Podcast.
So, you know, we interview like a lot of frontline doctors.
Unfortunately, there's not a lot of you guys to interview because there's not many that actually stood up against But you're one of them.
You're one of them from the start.
You knew what was going on.
And you've been, you know, blatantly honest.
You've been part of lawsuits.
Just give us a bio on what the last three years has looked like for you, Dr.
Bain. Well, sir, thank you for having me.
It was a total roller coaster ride.
Way back in 2020, and part of it, I kind of cut my teeth on two very tough patients who were hospitalized with COVID. The dear Dr.
Peter McCullough, you know, answered his phone, answered the calling, and kind of walked me through the, at the time, the McCullough Protocol.
And so that was the beginning, beginning of my getting used to very sick people who can be helped relative to their symptoms.
And what was wild was that in New York, a man named Ralph Larigio and his group They were having complaints from clients that wanted to help people get off ventilators, right? And so what happened was that in New York, there were three to four cases where Ralph Larigio won these cases.
And the judge rendered a statement saying, you must give ivermectin since it's a legitimate, off-label, utilized drug.
And so I was reading about that, and I actually wound up calling New York to see if this was all true, and it was.
There were three to five people that got off the ventilator after three or four days, and it was with the order of a judge.
So that was the beginning, beginning of the experience in 2020, which occurred in May and September and October, three cases.
And each one of those cases has an individual flavor and dynamic and story in of themselves, every one of those cases.
What basically happened was I was asked to be an expert witness in the second and the third case where To justify the need for this extra drug to be added because of the New York cases as well.
So that was the journey.
Now, the more sticky part of the journey was in Illinois, they wanted the doctor to give the medication.
In New York, the nurses did it.
It's a very easy thing to put this drug down a gastrointestinal tube.
So that whole year was wild, you know, taking care of people.
In the hospital, it was also taking care of people at home who did not want to go to a hospital and who refused to go into the hospital and me being extremely very careful in making sure that they knew what they were doing because, frankly, it's going against what we doctors are supposed to do.
If you get short of breath, you go to the hospital.
So very tricky.
What I can say is that the public policy said if you get COVID, well, when you're short of breath, then come to the hospital, which is ridiculous since I learned about early treatments way back in late 2020.
Could I make a quick comment there?
Yes. Yes, sir. Because that sort of thing where, you know, get sick and come to the hospital.
I mean, we've been talking to a lot of doctors that are essentially pushing this, you know, what's called, you know, they're called medicine 2.0, which is preventative medicine, right?
And it seems as though that, you know, that's a very medicine 1.0 ideal where, hey, get sick.
Once you're really sick, then come to the hospital.
Mr. Miller, I couldn't agree with you more.
You're right. You always catch a disease before.
You're right. I would say medicine 5.0 decreased down to medicine 1 or 2.0.
I'll even make the spread a little bit more there for you.
Since the word money is here, the spread concept is there.
So, you know, sir, totally agreeable.
And by the way, I always say I don't treat COVID. I treat symptoms of COVID because there are symptoms to be treated.
We have repurposed drugs.
And Dr. McCullough would always say it's not just the ivermectin.
It's the total symphony.
It's the steroids when needed.
It's the antibiotics that have antiviral activity as well in the literature.
It's aspirin since the majority of this disease was Mm-hmm.
That's another kind of idea that's important to share.
You know, we've done quite extensive interviews.
For example, with Dr. Peter McCullough, we've interviewed Dr.
Peter McCullough twice. We've interviewed a lot of the frontline doctors.
So we've gotten a really good look at really what happened throughout this whole COVID situation.
You know how they lied to us.
We've talked all about how people like Fauci, Ralph Baric were instrumental in bringing forward this COVID-19 pandemic, scandemic, whatever you want to call it.
And on the same token, they hid all the therapeutics from us.
So we understand the conspiracy with that.
I mean, I guess we could summarize it as, in my opinion, there's a literal genocide happening right before our eyes.
And the doctors that were supposed to look out for the patient's health were somehow convinced to do things like remdesivir, to do things like ventilators, all things that would increase the amount of fatalities.
So you agree with that, right?
This whole thing was a mess.
It was all done wrong.
There were people that were not necessarily saving lives.
I agree with you on many levels to publicly discuss how you verbalize this as a genocide that's stretching it.
I say that the facts that you stated relative to Ralph Baric and all of these types of situations, I could say that it's a big, big, big, big, big, big, big squared question in my mind.
might be able to put the pieces of that story together.
What I can say is fear.
Now, if the powers that be, based on your opinion, sir, are true, then that would imply we need to create fear.
You could say that the fear was so deep, we are living in a land of corporate I would use a word, corporatocracy.
Everything is, you know, the doctors have to be involved in the corporations and those are the people that get, that's where they get their jobs.
They get a chance to be free-thinking folks.
That's where we're losing medicine.
We're losing medicine because the doctors are not allowed to question what comes up above in the hospital policies.
Yeah. There's lack of questioning.
There's lack of critical thinking based on keeping the job.
So if what you're saying is true, it was very well done to take the doctors and have them feel and believe things that are astounding.
One example would be something simple like fluids.
I'm always talking about it.
My nurse assistant, Catherine Pagan, she would go into the homes, The patients were refusing to go to the hospital.
Simply giving normal saline raised the pulse oximetry astronomically high within an hour.
Hard to believe. But if you understand it to be a vascular problem, then if you give fluids, you're going to bring more flow and more oxygen.
So here's a drastic thing you might want to hear.
Why were many of the hospitals not giving fluids?
Fear or planned.
You would say planned all across the board.
You might say that. I don't know what to say to that.
I would say fear.
Oh my God, it's going to invade the lungs.
Oh my God, you're going to have to go on a ventilator.
Oh my God, oh my God.
That is simply not true.
That is the 0.5 medicine.
How about that? I'll take your spread down a little bit.
Yeah, and by the way, you know, let me retract the word genocide because genocide would insinuate that it is focusing on a certain race, right?
I mean, homo sapiens, it seems as though it was targeting homo sapiens, whether it was a conspiracy to kill a lot of homo sapiens or this was fear-based.
The result, nonetheless, was that an extraordinary amount of people perished.
An extraordinary amount of people unnecessarily perished because, and I wrote articles, I did two op-eds, of course I didn't get An answer, but two op-eds to Wall Street Journal, and they said kindly, no, thank you.
And another one, New York Times.
And it basically was on McCullough's team and saying, we need early intervention.
We need early. And you have the literature there already.
You have the stoic trial.
We're at Oxford that says inhaled steroids Budesonide can save lives.
It might have been sprung by Dr.
Robert Bartlett or Inspired or something from Texas.
Another hero giving inhaled Budesonide every two to three hours.
Miraculous things that oral inhaled steroids can do.
What's my point, sir?
My point is, and I put this in my op-eds or my discussions is, when you go to war, the war metaphor...
When you go to war, you just don't have one answer.
You don't have the shot. All the research is geared towards shot, no shot.
Research, you only look at one element.
Well, you know, ivermectin isn't the thing or hydroxy is not the thing.
You need to add the vitamin D. You need to add the fluids.
You need to have, you know, if I took water away from you, Mr.
Miller, you know, let's test what Mr.
Miller looks like with water, but he can eat as much as he wants.
It's kind of ridiculous.
You don't change one variable.
When a man or woman who needs to live, they need multiple variables at the same time.
That's common. So if you want to make a pandemic way, maybe doctors and doctors, that's a way.
Dr. Bain, sorry to interrupt you, but your audio is cutting out.
I'm wondering, could you just log out and log back in?
Because that usually fixes the audio issue.
It seems like our connection got bad for a second.
Maybe you could just log back out and we start right when you log back in where we left off at.
OK, thank you.
Oh OK, alright.
I was at a... You know, the audio keeps cutting out again.
It's, uh, wow.
You know, let me do this.
I'm gonna log back out. If you could just hang out here for a sec, I'm gonna log back in.
Maybe that'll fix it. One second.
Hello, sir, let's see how this is.
Hello, hello. Okay, much better.
All right, so right where we left off at, yeah.
Well, I was talking about fluids.
I was talking about when we've lost our capacity for common sense.
You just don't give a shot and say go home.
You just don't get COVID and say go home.
The trust in doctors is really at an all-time statistical low for those that knew that they weren't properly being taken care of.
Yeah. It's something I hear, by the way, if you don't mind me mentioning this, I've heard so many stories now where people are scared to go to a hospital.
They don't want to deal with doctors.
They're scared that they're going to be forced jab by these doctors and hospitals.
People have heard all kinds of horror stories.
In fact, I know a friend over the last week that was ill and refused to go to a doctor or a hospital, even though under normal times, that would have been the right course.
You're absolutely right.
The trust in doctors and in psychologists, by the way, the trust in psychologists, believe it or not, they overstep their line when they talk to their clients.
Oh, I got long COVID. And then the therapist says, well, didn't you get your shot?
It's none of their business and with an attitude.
So the gaslighting is all over the place relative to that idea with what you're saying.
So You're very right in what you're saying about that.
The fear is very palpable and real.
And we need to help our patients gain trust back.
It's like the big elephant in the room.
Nobody wants to create the idea or believe that cancers are up in the last three years.
The incident of cancer is up and everybody's like, well, we don't know why.
Rare, rare. These are rare, rare cancers that never show up.
There is a muting of the reality.
People need to wake up and take off their rose-colored glasses, per se.
So that's what's going on.
So cancers are up.
I've heard heart disease is up.
Could you give us some statistics on how much up they are, comparatively speaking, with the specific ailments?
I can't tell you specific numbers, but I can tell you specific anecdotes that would curl you, if you'll let me do that.
Please. Now, doc, first of all, In the case of what Dr.
McCullough knows, all the papers of myocarditis relative to the shot, the messenger RNA device, there's really a lot of statistics that show that the myocarditis and the pericarditis, they're up really high.
That's a very big one.
As you recall, actually, Dr.
McCullough's recent article was taken down by Lancet because there were so many requests to get their hands on this idea that after the shot, There was a 74% increase in mortality within a month of people getting sick and dying from a cardiac cause.
And the number is probably larger.
That's just one little cohort, one little group.
But I can tell you, in my own practice, I've got three patients with rare cancers that never show up.
I had a reasonably small practice at the time.
You know, and it's not really large.
I work alone. And a young man getting clear cell carcinoid or a young man getting carcinoid of the lung.
It never happens in people 36 years old.
It's very, very low incidence in 50 year olds.
So it's really happening a lot.
And other illnesses, lymphomas are up or certain blood cancers are up.
We're seeing this.
You attribute this to the jab.
We can't say 100% causal, but very highly, highly correlative.
And it's okay to be correlative because when you don't see it and now you're all of a sudden seeing strange things that cannot be explained.
So, in other words, if you see...
A sarcoma happened in the population 400 times a year in the United States.
Now you see it a thousand times in the last two or three years.
Statistically, that's very, very, very rare.
And here's the deal.
How many rare diseases are you going to see in so many different categories That are rare.
At this point, it's not rare anymore, if that makes sense.
It's a phenomenon, you see?
Yeah. I don't know if anybody's done a review article on all the cancers that are popping up because a lot of the doctors are sleepy and they don't think it through.
They'll just say statistically it's up.
They don't ask why.
Doctors are not asking why.
Very, very, very scary.
I mean, it's almost like they've become, you know, I hate to use the word, but slaves to this corporate medical industrial complex that they've almost lost their freedom to express what is really going on because they are tied to these institutions.
I mean, how would you respond to that?
I would agree with exactly the way you said it.
Medical industrial complex.
I would agree with it. Hospitals are buying hospitals.
And everything is protocol.
Man and women should not be subject to protocol because there's always a difference.
There's always a difference where a person can't take a certain drug or this person can't do that.
There's no It's like written in stone protocols.
Dangerous. And that's why we have this whole remdesivir thing happening.
Everything is a protocol.
This is what's been given to us.
But the bigger crisis as well is the crisis of research.
Dr. McCullough is exemplary taking down something that they accepted.
Mm-hmm....within a 24-hour period, or lying about ivermectin statistically, fucking numbers, lying about remdesivir because they moved the goalpost to make it look effective, 50% more.
More people... They wound up in Ebola, I think, dying of remdesivir in a certain country or here, then dying of Ebola.
So they took remdesivir off the shelves with Ebola.
So if they get back on the shelves with COVID, this is all about, like you said, money here.
This can be a lot about money, perhaps, yes.
Blood money, hey, you know?
But I don't want to say that that's the total causality here.
I don't want to say it's all about the money, but when you don't think of the patient first, And then you don't allow for other things in your armamentarium or your toolkit.
You just use a shot to be the only answer that you could have saved hundreds of thousands of lives if you did steroids and other early treatment and vitamins.
When you knew that and you were just waiting for the glorified shot, That's not good thinking.
That's not common sense.
Why would I want to go to a doctor that thinks that way?
Why? Why would I do that?
Why would I want to go to a doctor that poo-poos vitamins when there's research on it?
So this is a crisis we're having.
We need to re-educate.
Now, that's the key in the corporatocracy word, which is not really a word, but you know what I mean.
In this corpocratic kind of thinking, I was trained in medical school, you see?
Training, training.
We've saved hundreds of thousands of lives with training.
But when it gets too training heavy, where's the education?
I had a preceptor when I was in medical school that said, doctors are trained, not educated.
Doctors are trained.
Now, I know doctors are going to get mad at that.
Oh, no, we educate. We do our grand rounds.
And by the way, are you board certified or you're not board?
I mean, yeah.
But when you're not allowed to think through a problem because of your training, you can't bust out of that.
When you can't, when there's no malleability to the human condition, the human condition is not a computer, is not a robot.
But yet we have human beings wanting to make us into robots with AI, artificial intelligence.
AI cannot account for, nor can protocol, account for the human condition.
The human condition is variable.
When God, and I'm not being religious here, When the Creator made us, it had leeway.
It had an elegant leeway.
There was give and take.
When an enzyme system goes one way, well, your body chemistry moves it back like the ultimate servomechanism of a car.
And the body's not a car.
But the infinite nature or intelligence of this is the profound servomechanism.
You can't do research and you can't account for changes, the air changes, the temperature changes.
And let's talk about temperature for a minute.
Back to the shot. I have a question to ask the world.
Why did they create shots, some of these shots that needed to be held at negative something below zero and then across the world?
Why would you create a device like that?
I don't get that.
Because what if some of it was stale and maybe there's different batches and like you heard with McCullough, there's different concentrations of messenger RNA and there's so many conditions.
So protocol It's just like one condition.
It doesn't account for things, if that makes sense to you.
We're here to bring common sense back.
So the men and women have to demand the common sense.
They demand that their doctors and psychologists need to listen to them.
You know, we pay for them.
We pay for our blue cross.
Let's talk about money. We pay for our big policies.
We pay for pharmacies.
I had pharmacies tell me, you can't write for ivermectin because we don't do that.
Well, I pay for the policy.
Get an off-label drug, but you can't use it for COVID. I'm not using it for COVID. I'm using it for symptoms.
It's been shown. There's an amazing woman, a surgeon, Dr.
Zaidi, that I quoted in a science article.
It was nature. 20 different mechanisms of ivermectin.
20! This is basic research where there's research showing amazing things from one drug.
And there's, of course, you need other things at the same time.
Why are we looking at this instead of being told what to do by institutions?
I mean, I can't tell you how many times public policy got in between me and my patient.
There was a whole thing where Dr.
Shah was along with something at one of the hearings, Dr.
Ashish Shah. He didn't even treat, he never treated, he was public policy.
He never treated any COVID people, but he was spewing out policy based on statistics.
He wasn't on the ground.
So we'll call you a general, General Miller.
Wouldn't you want to talk to your foot soldiers?
Wouldn't you want to talk to your lieutenants on the ground to get what's going on and get a feel for it?
Or make protocol from the top?
No. I mean, this whole one-size-fits-all, you don't have to be a doctor to realize that the whole one-size-fits-all approach is absolutely idiotic.
It just doesn't work in medicine because there's so many X factors to every single person.
Correct. Correct.
And you can't do that.
But it's also communication.
General Miller and Private Bain here.
I'll be Private Bain, you be General.
I like this General Miller stuff.
It's really cool. I'm gonna walk around calling myself General Miller.
On the right side of history, I'll feed your ego a little bit.
Look, General Miller and Private Bain.
General Miller, I got you laughing.
I like to make you laugh.
You're upsetting my yellow with your great laugh.
So, so when would General Miller want to hear from private or Lieutenant Bain what's going on the ground, what works?
Oh, no, we're not going to listen to that.
When Peter McCullough and Fareed, George Fareed, and Rege And others, I mean, there's many.
We're on the ground. We know what works.
It's called a community standard of care.
And where did I learn that word?
Again, all roads, in my mind, for me in the beginning, lead back to McCullough and Merrick and, you know, and Corey.
You said Dr. Corey, you're saying?
Yes. Yeah, yeah.
We love those doctors, especially Dr.
Peter McCullough. I mean, the fact that he stood up from day one, you know?
Yeah, but the thing is, they were treating people on the ground.
They were... Why wouldn't you...
Well, you know, and then...
Why would you make a one-size-fits-all, like you said?
Why wouldn't you want to get information from your foot soldiers?
Why wouldn't you do that?
We're going to lose every war if you don't get information from your foot soldiers.
Exactly. And, all right, you know, I don't...
You know, so, good shots.
If you believe in them, fine.
But don't shove down my throat the Watson study...
Don't shove down my throat the Watson study that says we cured or we helped 20 million people evade COVID or get mad in 2021.
Don't shove that down my throat because it's based on modeling.
We don't know how many people would have lived anyway.
We didn't break it down into class of what age is.
An older person, maybe the shot helped for somebody really old, but there are a lot of statistics that say the opposite.
So don't shove stuff down our throat.
Like that and call it research.
And don't call it science.
Science is not a religion.
Politics is not a religion, but it's treated as such.
Humanity. This is about humanity.
This is not about trust the science.
Science is a dialogue.
It's an argument. And Ron Johnson was asking people to come to these conferences where Dr.
Peter was there, McCullough was there and everybody.
Let's have it out.
This is what science is.
So if you want to know the truth, and forgive me here, but by them not showing up to these conferences, they were anti-science.
Don't give me the idea.
Science is changing.
Mistakes were made in the name of science, but people admitted to it.
Admit. Admit there were mistakes.
Admit and let's move on.
Because you're ruining the population.
You're making people not trust doctors anymore.
You're beating them bullpucky, as they say.
And stop it.
And we don't, you know, we don't need the illusion of propriety, which is safe and effective.
There's enough research and there's enough anecdotal, but more than anecdotal.
You know, you looked at Viers, openviers.com, people just have to look at it.
O-P-E-N-V-A-E-R-S dot com.
You know, America, wake up.
Here. You see these?
Rose-colored glasses, you see?
Everybody needs to wear them that are aware like you, General.
Wear them and take them off and wake everybody up.
Exactly, exactly.
I mean, we talked at length about what's already happened thus far, but one of the key points that you were mentioning earlier, you said that, you know, we're in that never again stage of COVID at this point, that we need to make sure that the mistakes that happen do not just, you know, slip under the rug, that we essentially hold people accountable.
We make sure that this never happens again.
Tell me about that process and where we are right now in this COVID timeline.
Well, the never again idea?
Well, Mr.
Miller, not enough people have woken up.
That's the first problem.
So that's why you seem passionate.
I'm not saying go against doctors.
But, you know, we pay for politicians.
We pay...
You know, to answer your question, I'm not on the ground.
I'm not feeling great about it.
I'm sorry. So you're a service for all of us.
I'm not feeling great about it.
We need people to question and take control and have them believe in themselves and have more common sense and honor their common sense because they have it.
Take the fear away.
Expect more from their politicians.
You know, don't use one-word blurbs.
You know, Hollywood's got us by our nose, tugging on our emotional strings.
You know, that's nice.
You know, I cried heavily with the Song of Freedom.
It was very deep.
Took five years to develop that, but it's still, but in general, Hollywood, because that's not part of Hollywood, so I know.
Yeah. Hollywood, politicians, it's almost like a religion.
Science is being treated like a religion.
I'm concerned about what they're putting in the food.
I can only say what's wrong.
I can't say how we're getting better at this.
I mean, I wish you could, maybe you heard something I didn't.
About where are we heading with this?
But never again is right.
Never again, because we need to stomp our feet equally.
Okay, I can only hope for we have a citizens group, like a citizens group that was speaking out against the World Economic Forum.
You know, we need conflict of interest to go away.
All the money that goes into These public organizations, every rich person or every man or woman that needs to look in their children's eyes and see the future and see what they've created, what they're creating. They're altering genetics so much that they're going to ruin their children.
So when you talk about money, it's funny.
I just want to go there. Everybody where this really is about money, who's making money, who's Infesting our public institutions.
They need to look in the eyes of their granddaughter, grandson, son, wife.
They need to look in their eyes and say, what does the future hold for us, for our children?
What are we really doing?
Do we want our children to be free, to think, to be?
Or do we want things to happen in the environment that might cut off fertility issues or make people more infertile?
And I'm not trying to point a finger right now.
I know you might come up with something, but I'm not trying to point a finger.
We need to really take responsibility.
People first, money second.
People first, money second.
You even have Susie Orman saying that like 10 years ago.
Let me ask you something in terms of like, okay, Dr.
Peter McCullough has been really straight up front that, you know, he believes that there's a population control agenda.
He believes that the idea that, you know, people are becoming infertile is part of that.
He had also brought up the food.
Tell me, what is going on exactly in terms of what they're doing with our food and some of these other elements that have been introduced within our society that are now causing such great Well, the greatest thing about Dr.
McCullough is he has research.
He talks to more people than I do.
He has infinitely many more data points than I do.
Population control is a I see little snippets from the WEF, you know, with billionaires chuckling about things.
You know, I can't say that there's proof of this.
I would tend to know that when Dr.
McCullough has many data points to say that it points to the things that you've just said, I would tend to give the baton to him and say, It's a tough pill for me to swallow.
What's going on now with something basic that we all know is that I can speak to at least is glyphosate spraying with Roundup going on for years.
Talk about cancer there.
We can talk about that if you want.
Infertility, I don't know, but there are cases that speak about Roundup, glyphosate, and I'm Concerned, and the fact that they're using it to make better harvesting, back to the money again, like you said.
I didn't want to prove your point about money, but, you know, the lack of care for our fellow man is astounding.
You know, in the early pandemic, I was writing And the inspiration was Peter McCullough.
Well, my work with doing early interventions with multidrug therapies, it was like emailing Bloomberg.
There was a money guy.
Bloomberg. Emailing Carlos Slim, I recall, in 2020, latter part of 2020, writing emails.
And I can show you to show that I'm not just saying that.
I'm really worried.
I'm really worried.
We need to reinvent ourselves.
And we can still all be capitalistic the way we want to be.
We can reinvent ourselves.
We can do this. But there's a little lazy thinking and greed going on out there.
And all these rich folks, look in the eyes of your son and daughters.
Wake up! Wake up!
Now let me ask you about this, right?
So you seem disappointed that there hasn't been more of a public outcry against what's happened.
Tell me what you've been seeing.
Are you seeing that people are just lethargic about this issue, that they are in denial?
What is going on out there?
Wonderful. Both. And fatigue, too.
Let me answer that. I actually wrote lyrics to a song, and the name of the song is Denial's in the Air.
Nobody seems to care.
Can't be, can't be.
What's going on? This can't be our reality.
Those are some of the lines. So deal with your idea.
Yes, there is denial.
Because, hey, I got a shot.
Nothing happened. So what's wrong with you?
And then there's, yeah, I agree.
And one of our freedom doctors, I think, was on Twitter and said something like, yeah, they're agreeing that maybe these shots weren't the right thing, but so what?
They move on. There's apathy.
There's fatigue. There's battle fatigue.
It's like the fear got to them.
Some of them who believed in the shot and they're not sick, they're like, you know what?
Something's wrong. Something smells wrong.
We're not getting more shots. They don't even know the stuff you and I know.
They don't know. But there's egos out there.
There's extreme wanting to be right.
Everything's about wanting to be right, but not doing the right thing.
Why do these people that own companies that are richer, I mean, they can buy you the rent of your house if you own a house, mortgage, I mean, for the rest of their life.
Why are they...
Not feeling humanity.
You know what I'm saying?
We're here for each other.
We're here for each other.
So yeah, there's a lot of apathy.
And when I tell people about it, I say, you know what?
Thank God you didn't get COVID or you got light COVID or whatever, but your age would have been okay anyway.
Thank God you didn't get sick from the shot.
They kind of like have a smirky smile.
They can't connect.
So what am I going to do with that?
You know, you know what?
How's this? Americans are damn selfish.
We call ourselves the greatest nation.
Oh, we give money here and there.
But amongst ourselves, I think we're selfish.
Yeah. We don't really care.
Selfish, narcissistic, I would throw in there.
I would throw in that for the last 40 years, we've been obsessed with becoming celebrities.
I think we're spoiled as a culture.
And the way I realize this is because I'm a first generation immigrant, right?
So my ancestors came from places.
Where there was true tyranny, where there was true racism, where all these things that we pretend to have on an epidemic level via mainstream media, via government and politicians that are trying to turn us against each other, all this stuff that they talk about is not prevalent here, but it was prevalent where we came from or where we ran away from.
And like every other immigrant story, a lot of us ran away from horrible things that are truly the tyranny that's out there.
And so Americans, You know, sitting here with all the luxuries that they have, you know, and being so spoiled and not realizing what exists overseas and being so harshly critical of this country when it's a lot worse over there.
I mean, it just shows a complete blindness and ignorance to what is happening.
I almost feel like every American needs to get a passport, travel the world, come back here and kiss the ground because that is what I do every time I travel the world.
Because I go to Asia. You want racism?
Go to Asia. Grass is always greener on the other side of the lawn.
I think Americans believe that there's a better place, there's a utopia out there, but you and I know that's all false.
We need to wake up. We're the so-called world leader.
We want fair elections.
You know, right now I'm sort of politically homeless.
So, you know, Mr.
Miller, you couldn't have said it much better.
My dad and uncle, my father's a hero because he took a hernia operation to fight the Nazis, to fight the Nazis.
So he's one of my heroes, my father.
My uncle did many travels up and back To, you know, Europe, the European theater is a gunner.
They fought hard for this country.
And I guess this is, I guess I'm fighting hard because, Mr.
Miller, the way you're seeing it is, you didn't come here for this type of, shall we say, prejudice or totalitarian ideas or corporatocracy that I can...
This is not looking like the country that you were excited about coming to.
Well, we should kiss the ground, but that's why you're here too.
It's like we got to get it together.
Got to really love why we're here and not falter.
Yeah, yeah, totally.
So, the idea of reinventing ourselves, right?
You had mentioned it's time that we reinvent ourselves.
I mean, it definitely seems like we are either due for a renaissance or we're about to fall into the dark ages, right?
That's what it feels like, historically speaking, you know?
Could this... You know, if we look at this from a bird's eye view, could this all have been because we are being forced to reinvent ourselves?
Because as humanity, we basically hit a brick wall and we need to reinvent ourselves.
We need to expose what's going on because there's so much to be exposed.
There's so many flaws with the ways society has become this basically industrial complex world.
Where we have a destructive medical industrial complex, where we have a destructive military industrial complex, where we have a destructive judicial industrial complex, and where we have a basically destructive government.
And are we being forced right now that we must have a change in order to essentially, you know, transcend to the next level of what humankind is supposed to be?
Everything you said I agree with.
We need a rebirth.
But it's like we have the thumb of these rich folks, you know, becoming more interconnected with public policy and telling us how to run governments.
And we have enamored politicians that just are big ego structures and think they're so special.
You know? We need the thumb of these rich folks to have more humanity.
And don't make us feel that we're all inclusive, all inclusive, and some gentleman said, you will owe nothing.
You will owe nothing. Well, we're America.
What do you mean we'll owe nothing?
This world vision.
I mean, you use the word gentleman.
I would call him more of a scumbag, but hey, you're talking about Klaus Schwab.
I mean, the fact that there's anybody in the world that is making that statement about what is yours and mine's, that is already a slavery status statement.
He is looking at us lower than human because who is he to dictate?
I will own nothing. You know, is he going to own nothing?
No, I'm sure he's going to own a lot of stuff, but he wants me to be impoverished.
He wants me to own nothing.
Owning nothing basically means that I'm a slave at that point.
And that's the status that this individual thinks he has the power to put us in.
I mean, would you say that that statement on its own shows a level of disrespect to humanity, looking at the rest of humanity as lower than himself in saying it so?
Absolutely. We also have another person part of that organization that says that God is a myth.
I'm not here to be religious here, okay?
Yeah. God strongly, but...
God is a myth.
We can crack the code.
We could biologically hack ourselves with our knowledge to keep health.
Do you know the name of that man?
Yeah, Yuvaldi Harari.
And I find it very interesting that he is an Israeli citizen that actually says, you know, good things about Nazis.
Hey, if the Nazis had this technology, they could have gotten their Third Reich.
I mean, it's mind-blowing, you know?
I'm surprised that Mossad hasn't gone after him, really.
I mean, he's really espousing Nazi ideology.
You know, what is that all about?
The idea that he, that the rest of the world speaks of AI, that You know, the idea that you can actually hack your own body and really figure things out is very hubristic, if you know what I mean.
It's like the worst form of ego against the Creator.
You don't need to believe in God.
But if Yuval doesn't know where he really came from, and if he thinks he's some coalescing Random soup that made a human being and that there was no creative thought or creative energy in creating this amazing body that we all have.
And then you think you can figure out how that creative force made that soup that makes you cough or makes you talk at the same time as lift your arm.
I can cough and lift my arm at the same time.
That's very...
But now, in addition, cough it...
Lift my arm.
At the same time, my bodily functions.
I have no pain. I can see you.
I can see your face, General Miller.
So... I want to see you laugh again, actually.
I'm sorry. But what I'm saying is not honoring what you don't know.
You don't have to believe in God.
Not honoring and humbling yourself to what you don't know is dangerous.
And that's what these ego folks do.
You could say it with people who talk about you all or nothing or whatever.
Not honoring you.
What? Society. Because society is like a body.
Let's take it further.
Expand it. If the Creator created this body that we can't really understand exactly how it works, we could just look at it like a piece of artwork and just look at it at one angle.
If you look at a piece of artwork at another angle, you'll see something else.
Oh, gee! Mr.
Miller, I saw this in the picture.
Oh, I didn't see that. Oh, I saw that in the picture.
But you're both right.
But we're going to take one variable and say who's really right in the research.
But the picture, you can't do research and do research on the whole picture.
So now you have the society, the society, that's an organism.
It's an energetic organism.
You just can't decide what's to happen for people.
Because if you move one this way, the other will go that way.
Do you have a good servo mechanism?
Do you have a good automatic this or that on it?
When you start pushing your point, something's got to give if you don't account for the other thing.
You know what I mean? Yeah.
But the body, if I press on you hard, hard, hard, your skin will turn red.
But your body says, oh, shit, red.
Red, red, red.
Your body fixes it.
So when a leader of a country presses on something, something you gotta give.
If you're a human being, you need to honor the system.
The human interrelations is complex in an etheric meaning more energetic way.
In communication, it's equally as complex as the human body.
There's things going on that we don't know about.
You've heard of the hundreds monkey principle.
No, I haven't actually. You teach a monkey somewhere in the United States and you keep learning it, learning it.
Somebody went over to Zimbabwe or somewhere.
And that monkey never traveled to Zimbabwe, somehow the monkey figured out, did the exact same behavior that it never saw.
Oh, wow. We are so interconnected.
We are so interconnected.
Yeah. That you will own nothing.
Okay. Well, that affects everybody in the world when you make an assertion.
Maybe some cultures don't operate that way.
There's a lack of honoring.
Each culture for what it has.
Yeah. You know?
I was meeting with somebody last night, and he brought up the book of Genesis in the Holy Bible, or the first book in the Jewish Bible as well, where analysis of Genesis, according to this individual, shows that there are 21...
Dimensions mentioned, right?
21 dimensions. And if you look at books like War Passages, it's by a physicist who uses not religion but science in order to establish a theory that there are multiple dimensions on our planet that we do not see.
And hence, essentially agreeing with the same thesis as what Genesis is saying, right?
Now, we're talking about 2,000 years ago, right?
2,000 years ago, we already knew, based upon the Bible, multi-dimensional existence, right?
And now, 2,000-something years later, physicists are arriving to the same theories.
We won't say conclusions because these are theories, but nonetheless, they're arriving at the same theories, right?
What do you say about that?
I'm astounded that there were...
You just taught me.
I would agree with you.
I can't prove it.
I understand interdimensional thinking.
I get it. I don't know how to prove it, but if there is a dimensionality that teaches one monkey on one side of the world to do something that they never saw, then at least there's maybe a, I don't want to say wormhole, but there's some sort of a slipstream or something.
A universal consciousness, would you say?
But it's very specific that the monkey figured out how to find its food or something like that, or use a tool in a way that it never knew how to use a tool.
I think that's what it was.
And, you know, talk about, let's talk about creativity, how different people on different sides of the planet come up with the same innovative, groundbreaking ideas.
Again, universal consciousness.
I mean, if there is a universal consciousness, I mean, how could you say there is no God?
I'm with you! I'm with you!
I mean, it just seems that those smartest scientific minds, the more they research, they arrive to conclusions that were in this book from 2000 years ago from a bunch of dudes wearing sandals that were supposed to be ignorant, that didn't have the quote-unquote education we have.
And the parallels between that, I mean, it seems as though the more you know, the more we're driven towards faith.
I mean, what do you say to that comment?
Again, I agree. I'm here today because of faith.
I have to have faith that I'm here to speak my mind because we're having a crisis in our society.
If you asked me years ago, would I be so frank and fluid and transparent?
But we're all here together.
We need to we you know the rich folks you know if you if you're just gonna think you could take care of us with whatever you want to do come on the ground with us stop making theories yes in terms of faith i know that there's an ultimate infinite creator but to have a man like mr harari or others say that we can hack into we can figure it out it's hubristic I mean, hubris, ego, arrogance.
I mean, almost arrogance to the level of, like, stupidity.
Stupidity, because, you know, why are we not considering all these other things?
The fact that, you know, again, I go back to 2,000 years ago, dudes in sandals coming up with stuff that we are now arriving to the same conclusions.
I mean, how did those people know there was multiple dimensions?
How did they know these things?
And now we're finding it out through Back then there was less flack, less politics, less institutions.
Probably they heard the word of the Creator maybe better back then.
Instead of saying that the Bible is a myth and now you want to create an A.I. form of Jesus or an A.I. form of a Bible.
Shame on anybody that wants to create an A.I. form of Jesus.
And I'm Jewish saying that.
Shame on them.
You can't do that because you know what you're doing?
You're making the followers of A.I. stupid.
So you hire intelligence because you created A.I. and you want the Dumb people to believe that AI is a big deal.
You're just feeding and not, you're just keeping people stupid by believing in the stupid AI. You're not sparking creativity.
AI is not the source.
That's why to explain what you're saying is the people of 2000 years ago were connected to a source.
The greatest source of all time, would you be our creator or whatever the heck made us, benevolent who made us.
It's hubris. Arrogance, by the way, is included in this.
We focus too much on the brain.
Here's the deal, and you've seen some research in it maybe, I don't have the full research, or people proffer, that the heart has consciousness, it's not love.
The heart has intelligence.
So the minute you get rid of heart awareness, you probably take away, and then you shove it in with fear in your heart.
Then you take away the heart's ability to think through a problem.
Then you take away the ability for common sense to happen.
And then you have Idiot scientists who don't understand that intuition, you know, we still don't understand how Avogadro figured out 6.02 times 10 to the 23rd, the mole.
Now, is it a fake number that we made reality, or was it some divine inspiration?
There's some crazy mathematical things that came up that seem to work in our reality when we describe chemistry, like Avogadro, the famous Avogadro's number.
So, Maybe that was God-given or maybe it was created because we needed a system to talk about science.
But this is in the level of spiritual common sense.
So back then, what you're talking about, 2000 years ago, Mr.
Miller, that's spiritual common sense.
They had their heart and their brain working together.
We don't do that enough.
Well, we gotta separate.
We gotta be logical. You know, logic is man-made.
I'm not saying be emotional.
Logic is a great thing for law.
Logic is a good thing to have.
But interspersed between logic, all lawyers out there, is the human condition, is the heart.
Common sense. If the law doesn't match the common sense, why do you have the law?
Why? Because some judge said it?
Because some Supreme Court said it?
We need the law.
I'm fine with the law.
But if you don't have the common sense with it, what do you have?
Everything needs common sense.
Everything! And you might say, I might say, it's a God-given right to have common sense.
Exactly. Why is that being taken from us?
It's very disheartening and horrible.
I think about these inventions from ancient history.
I was watching a documentary by the BBC of all places about how they found a computer that could essentially measure the constellations.
I mean, it was essentially made To know everything we know about the movement of the universe, the movement of the planets, and the timing of it.
They knew when certain eclipses would happen, all based upon this computer, which has been dated like 8,000, 10,000 years old at this point.
And so, you know...
I'm excited.
I'd love to see that one, yeah.
Yeah, yeah. It's basically, you know, essentially it was a computer where once they found this thing, they said that our current opinion of history and what's happened is totally incorrect because ancient civilizations were actually far more advanced than we were.
We are.
So, on many levels, which is insane.
Wait, so you're leading to the answer that you asked me.
Mm-hmm. Whatever you just said, if we can cultivate that, that could be part of the rebirth, or what was the word we used?
Reinventing ourselves is, I think, what you had stated.
Maybe we have to re-reinvent past and utilize some of that knowledge and wisdom.
We need to go back to the original wisdom.
We need to go back to the original wisdom.
I mean, back to Ivermectin, I'm sick and tired of pushing away mythology.
Oh, it doesn't work. It does this.
It's a horse dewormer.
I'm tired of, oh, we have research to show it doesn't do anything.
Well, if you show that, you probably did the study wrong.
And if you show that, science is not going to show how it really works because sometimes you can't put science or research to it.
You just can't make parameters, which you need to do studies.
But if you make parameters too strict and stringent, you know, the limits, you're going to get a negative study if you really squelch the limits.
You need 15 days of ivermectin.
And I needed five.
I did that in the hospital.
The first patient needed 15 days.
The second patient needed, wound up needing, three days.
The third patient needed five days.
There's all stories in that too.
So there you go.
One size doesn't fit all.
There you go. So when you do research, It feeds your, not feeds, but your suggestion.
I'm working off of your ideas.
Trying to give examples to your ideas.
One dosage or timing does not fit all.
Oh, there were so many people that died from a ventilator and they tried ivermectin and it didn't work.
Oh my God. Yeah, that might be true.
Nothing is 100%. But if you didn't try something, you'd get 70% of people dying of a certain age on ventilators.
And oh, yeah, but they died.
Oh, well, we're not testing ivermectin.
We're just adding it.
Adding it. Were they treated right and properly?
Were they on steroids? Were they on blood thinners?
Look at all the conditions.
Were they on a high enough dose?
Were they on long enough time?
Look at those factors at once.
That's what a good doctor does.
So when you do protocol, you're taking a lot of that away.
You know, when we're talking, you know, I've learned a lot from just my ancestry, right?
And one thing that comes to mind is the Byzantine Empire.
We don't talk about the Byzantine Empire so much.
I mean, this was coming right after the time of Jesus Jesus Christ and what we know as Armenians in terms of the history of the Byzantine Empire is that there was an unusual amount of miracles happening.
And the reason we know this is because there was a lot of, you know, Armenian folks at that time, you know, whether they're priests, reverence or whatever, documenting this.
Monks actually documenting this.
These miracles that were happening, water into wine type of stuff that was happening following the time of Jesus.
And there seems to be definite drop-off in that.
As we get deeper into history, as we get into the 800s, 900s, the Byzantine Empire fizzles out, there seems to be less and less of this.
Have you heard about that sort of thing in terms of miracles being done in that time of history?
And I'm just curious what your opinion on that topic is.
I believe in totally, miraculously unexplained events that boggle the mind.
And they could be in everyday events because there was a miracle that happened to me yesterday that is...
I'm still thinking about it.
Wow. You know, just a curiosity of something very exact.
I think God can be very exact.
Can this happen? Can there be an alchemistic way of looking and things turning into this and that?
If people have access to that type of energetic intervention, then I would say Yeah, I mean, there are things that are not supposed to happen, but happen, and we don't study it enough.
Yes, I do believe in studying the unknowns that are really real.
I really do. So, to say, I'm on your page with that.
I wanted to ask you something, may I? Go for it.
You're important, because we represent the self...
My people were the victims of a holocaust and so were yours.
Exactly, yeah.
And we're special because that's our ancestry and the never again idea for our meanings needs to come out more.
It probably is unity.
So I just want to give a shout out to that.
Thank you, thank you. It's something that I talk about a lot.
It's funny, my great-grandfather was a Schindler type, and my grandfather was a Schindler type, funny enough, because they went through the Armenian Genocide.
My great-grandfather was actually tipped off by the Turks and the French soldiers.
He helped to save a lot of lives, and I tend to think the reason I'm doing this is actually probably because of my bloodline.
There's a calling that comes along with that.
And that to me alone is evidence of God, because why am I drawn to this?
If there is no God, why am I drawn to this?
Why am I out here, frankly, putting my life on the line, putting information like this out there, pissing a lot of globalists off?
Why are we doing this?
And that to me is the voice of God, and I don't need to hear anything else to know that there is a God, you know?
And in fact, you know, people like us that have been through the horrors that we've been through, I mean, it's hard not to believe in God, even though, you know, I mean, we saw the darkest souls of humankind, and that's what makes us fight right now.
That's why I use words like genocide.
That's why it is such a sensitive topic what's happened.
To our world right now.
Because I know what is possible.
I know how civilizations, cultures overnight could turn against people like us and brand us with a Jewish star.
Brand us as infidels.
And, you know, I just, honestly, it's a fight to the death for me.
That's all it comes down to. Because it is not worth living in that form of slavery.
I know what they've done to our people.
I know the humiliation our people have been through.
And that form of humiliation and slavery is, you know, like they say, you know, Would you live your life on your knees, or would you rather die on your feet?
And I could tell you 100%, I'd much rather die on my feet than live on my knees.
Another question for you.
Have you invited Vera Sharab to your show?
I would love to. I would love to.
We haven't yet, but if you could put us in touch, I'd love to.
It's a hymn. He's a concentration camp survivor.
I would love to. I would love to have him on there.
Let me...
I don't know her personally, but I know somebody who maybe can make the connection.
That'd be amazing. That'd be amazing.
I'm sure that's going to be a very difficult episode because of our experiences.
I mean, you know, like I said...
If you want to go through that, but I think putting you two together, as difficult as it'll be, will send a light out to the world for everybody to see.
Yeah. Yeah, people need to understand.
That's amazing, Dr.
Bain. I really appreciate that.
Sir, this has been an awesome interview.
Is there anything we didn't touch upon that's worth mentioning here in closing?
The mic is yours. Well, I think I've said a great deal.
It sometimes feels like saying too much, but we need As mundane as it sounds, we need our children to get away from their Snapchat.
They need to go to the library and look at books.
By the way, I'm in a library and outside the library is a Holocaust statue.
Wow. I'm in a special library in Illinois and That's a quiz question for you later.
But I am actually in a studio, as you can see.
So you're in a studio.
I'm in a studio.
But the idea that our children need to be with each other face to face now.
We're done with the lockdowns.
We need our children to become like you and me.
We need more rabble-rousing, peacefully so, questioners of society and what they're being fed.
Because the technocrats and the electromagnetic people that control these types of social media, we need, instead of Facebook, We need a face-to-face space.
Look at each other's faces in person.
Start a movement of a face-to-face space.
We should also think of starting a citizenry answer to the European system.
I want to be part of that.
An American answer to it.
A citizenry that pushes back.
We also need to Have our own, I don't want to say political party, but we need to all join arms because the politics is not answering our needs of humanity.
That's what it was about, to help humanity and say, look what the Democratic Party did.
Look what the Republican Party did.
Look, look, look!
Well, I'm not liking what I look at.
I don't like spin.
I like honesty as best as can be.
After these interviews, I show people the things that I say, that I wrote those letters, or I like to show different things.
We gotta be transparent and honest with ourselves.
We really need our rich folks who's controlling this operation or our governments to really get us all.
We need to all be on the ground with more, you know, things that are neighborhood.
We need to get back to the neighborhood and help each other.
Yeah, yeah. You know, you brought something to mind that I would love to mention.
You know, when I was studying creative writing, I had a professor that would make us do an exercise every time we started our creative writing class.
And that exercise was that we had to choose a person in that classroom, sit in front of them, facing each other, you know, eye to eye.
And the whole thing was that for three minutes, you got to look at that person in the eye and not break eye contact.
For 30 minutes? Three minutes.
Three, okay. Three minutes.
And the portals of creativity that would open.
First of all, the connection it would make with the person, because we're not used to staring at each other for three minutes.
Try doing that. Try finding somebody and staring at them for three minutes.
Just, you know, shutting the hell up and staring at them.
And look what happens to your soul.
Look what happens to your creativity.
Literally, everything we're talking about where we stare at these soulless machines, right, that make us, you know, that make us into drones, you know, and it's like this machine that we're looking at and we're trying to convey emotion and type all that stuff, you know, throw this crap away, go look at somebody in the eyes for three minutes, look what happens to your soul.
It is the most incredible feeling because you feel attached to that person you feel like you care about that person and those creative synapses those things just start exploding and all of a sudden you make work that would not have been possible without that connection but then try to be creative with this stuff I try to get creative by putting notes in here I'm a creative person I'm going to create a person my whole life I'm an artist at the end of the day right and it just It is like driving with the hand brakes on.
That's what it is. It's like driving with the hand brakes on.
When you sit in front of somebody, you connect with somebody, whoever that person is, watch what happens to your soul and watch how your soul opens up.
You gave me things that I forgot.
The next time anybody makes a device that they call a vaccine, make sure they put the brake pedal on it.
This is where we're having problems.
There's no brake pedal. Where's the brake pedal, world scientist?
Where's the brake pedal? Yeah.
Right? Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Where's the brake pedal? Why would I want to take something that doesn't have a brake pedal in it?
Yeah. Exactly.
Exactly. Dr.
Bain, this is awesome.
I so much appreciate your energy.
I so much appreciate your passion.
Obviously, we have a similar background that I think has made us predisposed to being in this fight.
And I thank you so much for the good fight that you've been fighting and for being a frontline doctor.
I'm honored to be here.
Thank you for allowing me. I'm honored to have you, sir.
For the viewers out there, thank you so much for joining us for this episode of Blood Money.
Please check out our website, AmericaHappens.com, for all of our episodes and all of our shows, including Gloves Off with Joy Gilbert, State National University with Gianna Michele, Conspiracy Truths with Mindy Robinson, our AHN News Live, which comes every Tuesday and Thursday at 2 p.m., live with citizen journalists all around the country.
We are the anti-corporate media.
Our motto is rage against the mainstream media because we are here to tell you the truth about what's going on out there.
Thank you so much for joining us for this episode of Blood Money, and I will see you on the next episode.