Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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Growing up in the LGBTQ plus community has given me a different perspective on how I see the world. | |
Trans kids are so much more than their gender identity and it's so important for people to listen to kids. | ||
I wish for a world where everyone can be lifted up and celebrated. | ||
So today, and every day, we celebrate those who are helping others realize that everyone should be proud of what makes them who they are. | ||
You've got a visit from Jeopardy! | ||
champ Amy Schneider over to the White House. | ||
You have Secretary Cardona in Florida today for a roundtable, a state where the governor, as you know, has just signed into law the so-called Don't Say Gay Bill. | ||
We're in this point now in this country where almost half of Americans know somebody who is transgender or who goes by gender-neutral pronouns. | ||
But just this year, as we laid out in the introduction, more than 30 state legislatures are talking about passing anti-trans bills or laws. | ||
As a doctor, as a member of the trans community, can you talk about what else can be done on the federal level by the Biden administration, right, as you're seeing some of these actions on the state level? | ||
Well, it is so wonderful that we have a president, President Biden, who supports us and advocates for us and who sees us. | ||
And he has articulated many times, including with an announcement today, about his support for the transgender community and particularly his support for vulnerable transgender youth. | ||
So that support is being demonstrated throughout the administration with Secretary Becerra of Health and Human Services, as you said, Secretary Cardona of of education and so you know this event at the White House further demonstrates the support of the president and the administration for vulnerable transgender individuals. | ||
These characters to become ubiquitous in the Disney movies and I think that is totally unnecessary and out of line. | ||
I don't want you to work out your wokeism on my kid, okay? | ||
Do a movie that teaches tolerance, kindness, support for your fellow human beings. | ||
Don't shove two-spirit people, which by the way is not a thing, and pansexual? | ||
I had to look it up. | ||
You know what that means? | ||
It means you're attracted to everybody. | ||
So you're bi, I guess. | ||
That's not a thing. | ||
That's already a thing. | ||
They already have a letter. | ||
I'm sorry, but please, all these glommers who just want attention. | ||
It's a new thing. | ||
Remember the Willow Smith one? | ||
She was like, I'm this thing that means, um, I just, I only want to have sex with people I care about. | ||
Well, you mean normal? | ||
That's normal. | ||
unidentified
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Uh, this morning, uh, I am going to announce my decision on Judge Jackson's nomination to Supreme Court. | |
I will oppose her and I will vote no. | ||
My decision is based upon her record of judicial activism, flawed sentencing methodology regarding child pornography cases, and a belief Judge Jackson will not be deterred by the plain meaning of the law when it comes to liberal causes. | ||
I find Judge Jackson to be a person of exceptionally good character. | ||
respected by our peers, and someone who has worked hard to achieve her current position. | ||
However, her record is overwhelming in its lack of a steady judicial philosophy and a tendency to achieve outcomes in spite of what the law requires or common sense would dictate. | ||
After a thorough review of Judge Jackson's record and information gained at the hearing from an evasive witness, I now know why Judge Jackson was the favorite of the radical left, and I will vote no. | ||
Wow. | ||
Okay, Thursday, the 31 March year of our Lord. | ||
2020, it's the last day of the first quarter of a historic year. | ||
And every day just gets more and more intense. | ||
We're going to start with this lifetime appointment to the Supreme Court. | ||
And Lindsey Graham, remember where we started this journey a couple of weeks ago? | ||
And we had introduced you to Mike Davis in Article 3, who was really the Who is President Trump's first? | ||
kind of staff person for Senator Grassley for these Supreme Court nominations and particularly Gorsuch, Justice Gorsuch, who was President Trump's first, you remember that. This started with a committee that I don't know, word around town was they're gonna have four or five votes because you just got confirmed a year ago to the what basically a year ago to the appellate court. | ||
appellate court, which is the stepping stone to the Supreme Court, right? | ||
Kavanaugh came from there. | ||
And many others that come from there. | ||
And to start it, it was going to be three or four votes on the committee. | ||
Remember, this goes to the Judiciary Committee first, and then to the overall Senate. | ||
You were going to have Tillis, and potentially Grassley, and Ben Sasse, and Lindsey Graham. | ||
And Graham had the very first thing. | ||
He met her, sat on the couch, and had all the photographs. | ||
Now, there is a judge that he knows, I think, from South Carolina, and he was very pro-her. | ||
He was very happy with this, very pro, and then the Article 3 guys, and it's not the Judicial Crisis Network whose job this is, it's not Leonard Leo whose job and function in life is this, it wasn't Heritage, it was not anybody, except for Terry Schilling of the People of America and Principles Project, and principally Mike Davis. | ||
They said, hey, You know, she may be qualified, but there's some issues here. | ||
Some issues about what she does is terrorism issues and some law and order issues. | ||
There's some CRT issues, but there's principally an issue about child and baby rape and torture, right? | ||
And the filming of that, and the viewing of that, and most importantly, making the money off it and monetizing that. | ||
Probably in a very fallen world The most depraved thing at all and so then we go to these committee hearings and we find out that there's I think 48,000 pages that haven't been delivered and there's all these pages of documents from the her vice chairmanship of the Sentencing committee that has commissioned that has a very formal that hasn't been released and then there's all these documents relating to her decisions as a sitting federal judge in these | ||
in these pedophilia or child rape or child torture or baby torture that we call in this name child porn, which is much more than that. It's much deeper than child pornography. And then you get there and what's so stunning, and this shows you the arrogance because Judge Jackson, you know, she went to Harvard College. | ||
She went to Harvard Law School. | ||
She's clerked for the best people. | ||
She knows how to prep. | ||
I mean, she worked at a top law firm. | ||
She's beyond qualified. | ||
It's not about her qualifications. | ||
And what was so stunning, having gone through exercises this before, and particularly my involvement in the Gorsuch situation, the murder boards you go through, the everything that you prep this. | ||
Totally and completely unprepared for the part about the child torture and the baby rape and what we call child pornography. | ||
Just not ready for it. | ||
Had other bizarre answers, too, but Hawley and Cotton and Ted Cruz and Blackburn. | ||
I mean, I can't say it's a masterclass. | ||
And that's all predicated upon the work of Mike Davis and some of the staff. | ||
But Mike Davis initiated this and he was one man alone. | ||
Nobody want to touch it. | ||
Nobody want to talk about it. | ||
So Mike Davis, this is pretty historic that Lindsey Graham has come, went to the Senate floor today and particularly singled out the child pornography issue. | ||
Mike Davis. | ||
Yeah, I mean, Senator Graham voted for Judge Jackson's nomination to the D.C. | ||
Circuit a mere nine months ago. | ||
And Senator Graham's great on, he's great on judges. | ||
I know that a lot of conservatives can get frustrated with him, but I'll say that Senator Graham, Mitch McConnell, Chuck Grassley, my former boss, they're all very rock solid on judges. | ||
And with Mitt Romney, you have to ask him. | ||
He's one of the undecideds, along with Lisa Murkowski. | ||
With Mitt Romney, you have to ask yourself, if you voted against Judge Jackson nine months ago, and all that you've learned over the last, since this time, is that she has this troubling record on child sex torture cases, why the heck are you a maybe right now? | ||
There's just no reason for Mitt Romney, other than seeking attention, to be a maybe right now when he was just, he opposed her nine months ago. | ||
Let me ask you, before we get to the overall Senate, on the committee itself, As it stands, and you're a pretty good counter of votes, on the committee itself, as it stands, now that Graham's come out, do you believe we're at 11 to 11? | ||
SAS came out the other day. | ||
Do you think we're at a tie? | ||
Do you think we stand at a tie right now on the committee? | ||
Definitely, definitely a tie. | ||
So where does that, because that vote's going to take place, they've scheduled that vote for Monday, correct, Mike? | ||
Yes, yeah, Monday. | ||
And so it will lock up in the committee. | ||
And then you have to have a discharge, which will happen on the Senate floor. | ||
I think it would have to happen on Wednesday, and then you have to close your vote on Thursday, and then confirmation probably Friday. | ||
You could have a confirmation Thursday, who knows? | ||
But it's going to come down to what will Romney and Murkowski do, and if they both are a no, that puts pressure on Collins to switch her vote. | ||
So that number for the switchboard, and remember we had Kelly Chebaka here the other day, who's running against it, and the head-to-head match, the polls, she's 12 or 15 points up. | ||
The number's 202-224-3121, and your calls have made all the difference. | ||
It's this audience that's put its shoulder to the world, because nobody else is talking about it. | ||
Nobody else will touch it. | ||
And my point is, hey, I went to Harvard. | ||
I went to the business school. | ||
She's highly qualified. | ||
It's not about her qualifications, not about her smarts, not about anything, her color, her gender, her race, her religion. | ||
To me, it's not about her professional qualifications, who she's clerked for, the work she's done. | ||
This issue is quite disturbing. | ||
I'm disturbed by a couple of other things too, but this is to me that would unqualifies her, makes her unconfirmable. | ||
And I would say... The number is 202-224-3121. | ||
I want those calls going. | ||
Murkowski, Romney, and Collins. | ||
Go ahead, Mike Davis. | ||
I was going to say, we are ready. | ||
At Article 3 Project, we have bombshell research. | ||
We are ready to push, send, and get it out to the world. | ||
We are just waiting for the green light from the lawyers. | ||
And so it is It goes into detail on these eight cases where she had discretion and she chose to give the most lenient sentence she could. | ||
The details in these cases, after you read this stuff, you're going to be sick to your stomach and you're going to wonder, why would we put this person on the Supreme Court of the United States for the rest of her life? | ||
We need to see the details here. | ||
We need to see the receipts. | ||
And here's what I think needs to happen. | ||
For any senator that's wavering, I believe we have to organize in a professional and citizen-like nature and somehow take the information from Article 3 when it's ready over the weekend. | ||
And I think that citizens of Maine, and we'll assist you in doing this, has to get on the calendar of Susan Collins. | ||
And they have to go, and they have to tell, hey we want Senator Collins to read this in front of us, and we would like to ask her some questions. | ||
I think the citizens have to get involved here, including you all with Mitt Romney, and if have to, but let's go. | ||
Go ahead sir. | ||
That's what's troubling to me, is they, these senators went through Kavanaugh's high school yearbooks, and they can't even be bothered to walk into the Senate Judiciary Committee and read these eight sentencing hearing transcripts, and these eight prosecutors recommendations. | ||
If they read these things and they still vote, For her nomination, you know, that says more about them than anything. | ||
Look, in Nevada and in Arizona, for the two Democratic Senators that vote for this, it's a career... I just want you to know, and write it down, I said it last week, mark that date in your calendar, and the staff should mark that date, that it is a career-ending vote. | ||
It's a career in New York. | ||
All the analysis of both those states and Politico has been doing stories non-stop. | ||
They have to have a massive turnout, a massive turnout of Hispanic American voters. | ||
And guys, trust me, we will make sure that every Hispanic American We will make it our obligation to make sure the citizens of those two states know it. | ||
So just understand, Mark, it's a career-ending vote. | ||
A career-ending vote. | ||
But more importantly, because this is a lifetime appointment, I do believe, and I think that the committee should call her back and give her every opportunity. | ||
I think we quite frankly owe it to Judge Jackson to give her every opportunity to go through every case and explain it. | ||
And maybe she's got a logic to it, right? | ||
Maybe that happens. | ||
But if that doesn't happen, then I think citizens have to get on the calendar, particularly of Susan Collins and Murkowski and Romney. | ||
And get on the calendar with their staffs and go to a place, however they meet people, right? | ||
But have these things read. | ||
And have it read in detail. | ||
You can't look away from this. | ||
You can't look away from this. | ||
This is a problem in our society today. | ||
People want to look away. | ||
You can't look away. | ||
I'm not blameless here. | ||
Like I told everybody, this is not my line of country. | ||
When Mike Davis and these guys came to me, this is not, as you know, you people who follow the war room, this is not what we do. | ||
We felt we were called to do this. | ||
Because it's a lifetime appointment and it has to be vetted. | ||
And now as Liz, you and others come up here, this is a pandemic. | ||
You talk about a pandemic of the CCP virus? | ||
This is a pandemic. | ||
And Mike Davis has called it out. | ||
It's not, we got to stop calling it child pornography. | ||
It's not child pornography. | ||
As bad as that sounds, that's not it. | ||
This is the torture, the torture, the torture of babies and young children that is put on film. | ||
Okay? | ||
For people to watch. | ||
For their perverted pleasure, but also that people make a lot of money off of. | ||
This is rape and torture. | ||
Rape and torture. | ||
Just remember, it's rape and torture. | ||
It's rape and torture. | ||
Rape and torture. | ||
Short break. | ||
Mike's gonna stay with- Mike Davidson's gonna stay through here. | ||
We got Joe Allen. | ||
We got Naomi Wolf. | ||
We got a packed show. | ||
We're gonna get to all of it. | ||
unidentified
|
I commit to you. | |
I promise. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
back in the War Room in just a moment. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Banham. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host Stephen K. Banham. | ||
When I say it's not my, our line of country here at The Worm, you know, we're doing geopolitics and finance and capital markets and politics and, and, and, you know, we got more madness here than anywhere, right? | ||
PAC, shows PAC had to add a fourth hour. | ||
It's not our line of country, but I will say the following, particularly for people that, you know, get all over the queue, folks. | ||
All I'm saying is that I think we've done two specials here in the two years, plus two years, two years and a quarter, two years and a half almost, that we've been doing this show every day, six days a week. | ||
We did the child trafficking special, I don't know, a year, I think it was June, a year ago, did another. | ||
My head blows up when he stats. | ||
And one of the key things in this, and one of the reasons I wanted to pursue it, there's nobody I think I hold in higher regard than Liz Yor. | ||
Liz Yor is the thing itself. | ||
She's a fighter. | ||
She's smart. | ||
She's highly respected. | ||
She's revered. | ||
I mean, Oprah Winfrey, everybody has, you know, from the left and the right, she's known as a person of high integrity that has made this her calling to stop this trafficking in young children and the torture they go through. | ||
And when she came on here the other day and talked about the time, I think she was an assistant U.S. | ||
Attorney. | ||
Assistant Attorney General, U.S. | ||
Attorney. | ||
She was doing the Cyber Command and she gave the statistic, I think it was 24 million. | ||
I think she asked me in the break, I thought, how many hits do you get every year they call these calls? | ||
I go, I don't know, 500,000, maybe a million. | ||
That would be massive. | ||
I think it was 24 million. | ||
unidentified
|
It's it. | |
This is a pandemic. | ||
There's something deeply wrong with all of this. | ||
It's just deeply, deeply, deeply. | ||
There's something about this is not right. | ||
It's something about this, about the technology that makes it global, but also just the personal depravity of what happens. | ||
And that's why you have to. | ||
It's always in the receipts. | ||
And this is very important. | ||
We have to do this as a country. | ||
We owe it to Judge Jackson, because she's a lifetime appointment. | ||
And I'm going to tell everybody on the left, if you just try to gun deck this through, and I know what you're doing, because you're not talking about her hearing at all. | ||
You're humiliated by it. | ||
It's not Judge Jackson's fault either. | ||
She was not prepped. | ||
Let's be brutally frank. | ||
She's not prepped. | ||
She was not ready. | ||
She's not prepped. | ||
That's because of the arrogance. | ||
The media runs such cover for these people. | ||
The White House is incompetent. | ||
And it's lazy. | ||
It just is. | ||
You can see it from Afghanistan to Ukraine. | ||
Everything they touch. | ||
Now he's running around today. | ||
He's going to release a million barrels a day of oil. | ||
These people hate oil. | ||
They killed the oil industry. | ||
Now he's going to say, I'm getting executive orders to make you produce more. | ||
It's a clown show. | ||
It's an embarrassing clown show. | ||
It's just humiliating. | ||
The Chinese know it. | ||
They're laughing at us. | ||
The Saudis are laughing at us. | ||
Qatar is laughing at us. | ||
The Mullahs aren't around. | ||
They're laughing at us. | ||
They're laughing at the greatest country in the world. | ||
We've got an invasion on the southern border and they're playing all these tricks. | ||
We're going to have the guys on tomorrow talk about this new regulation they changed to make sure that just people at the border can sign the asylum documents and go on. | ||
And they think we're too dumb to understand that. | ||
But here it is something different and we have to. | ||
We owe it to future generations. | ||
And this is one we really owe Everybody that came before us and helped build this country. | ||
What would they say about this? | ||
What would the people and what were the people that gave their lives in the revolution or in the Civil War? | ||
Or in World War II? | ||
All the wars in between. | ||
All the conflict. | ||
And not just the wars, the people that went out and built this country. | ||
What would they say about us today when you had an issue of such import? | ||
A lifetime appointment on the most powerful court in the history of mankind. | ||
That's what it is. | ||
That's what the Supreme Court's gotten to be today. | ||
I actually think their role is much too much bigger than what the The framers thought, but Mark Levin and those guys can handle that. | ||
They're experts. | ||
I'm not. | ||
I just think it's way too powerful. | ||
It was never set up to be, but it is what it is. | ||
And it is the people that direct so much of what happens in the world, not just the United States, in the world. | ||
This is a lifetime appointment. | ||
Judge Jackson will be ruling on things 30 years from now. | ||
When people that are, you know, teenagers are about to get into their 40s, you know, mid 40s and 50s, 30 years from now, she'll be ruling. | ||
There's not anything out there that could be more important to us today with the war and everything else going on. | ||
And this is also very important for the conservative movement and for people who say they're conservatives. | ||
Because, let me be blunt, it's kind of a racket, this raising of the money and everything like that. | ||
There are people that just specialize in these Supreme Court things. | ||
And look, the Judicial Crisis Network and Leonard Leo and Heritage, I gotta tell you, you're raising... And everybody here, to me, should just stop giving any money to them. | ||
I mean that. | ||
What they did is embarrassing. | ||
These ads they took was a joke. | ||
This is not going to make Judge Jackson unqualified, that she's got these dark money groups that come in and pitch. | ||
No offense, there's dark money groups that do it on the right. | ||
Newsflash, a full stop. | ||
Okay? | ||
That's ridiculous. | ||
That's just spending money to say, oh, you know, we really took out a bunch of ads. | ||
That's just, that's performative. | ||
That's just optics. | ||
That's the joke that this process has become in this city. | ||
That's why people are losing so much faith in this system. | ||
But it's a guy like Mike Davis who regressively has run this and got into it and said, this is important. | ||
It's got to be vetted. | ||
That's why these senators and I think will help coordinate it and organize it. | ||
They go to the state offices and be obviously very citizen like and professional and kind. | ||
But the details have to be read. | ||
When this stuff's out, they have to be read in detail. | ||
You have to go through the details of what you saw and how and how she came to those judgments. | ||
And then Collins is going to have to tell her constituents, yes, I have read this, I have internalized it, and I've made a decision. | ||
Not to say, right now, oh yeah, she came over and had a talk and had a serious discussion, but that's not good enough. | ||
That's not good enough. | ||
That's not going to hack it. | ||
That's not going to hack it in Maine, and it's not going to hack it in Alaska, and it's not going to hack it in Utah. | ||
It's just not. | ||
And particularly it's not When we get the deed, and we're going to put them all out. | ||
It has to be, this has to come out. | ||
It's not pleasant, we don't want to do it. | ||
This is not something we do, but this has to happen. | ||
This has to happen. | ||
This country has nothing but hard decisions in front of it. | ||
Hard, tough decisions. | ||
Or we're going to lose this country. | ||
Okay? | ||
Someone say, oh, we already lost it in your fetal position. | ||
I don't want to hear it. | ||
We ain't lost it. | ||
By a long shot. | ||
But we're going to lose it. | ||
And we're particularly going to lose it if you go curl up in the corner in the fetal position and suck your thumb. | ||
Right? | ||
But that's not going to happen. | ||
And that's not what you come here for. | ||
And we're never going to do it. | ||
If we go down at all, we're going to go down fighting. | ||
And this is not acceptable. | ||
So Mike Davis, walk me through how we get this, how do we get this information? | ||
How are you going to promulgate this so that we in a professional way can make sure the state offices for us and then we'll figure it out at their federal offices. | ||
That Romney and Murkowski and Collins have to respond to their constituents and to the American people that they've gone through this and after going through it they're still prepared to give a lifetime | ||
Appointment to the most powerful court in the history of mankind Mike Davis So once the the lawyers bless all this because this is these court records are just very disturbing They has very disturbing material in it Once the lawyers blessed this we will post it on article three projects website article number three project org we will tweet out a notice that we're doing this and we're gonna do it in a way that | ||
That's not, we're doing this in the most responsible way we can. | ||
So that's why we're being very careful, we're dotting our I's, we're crossing our T's, we're making sure no one gets harmed out of this. | ||
But it's really important that people read these court filings. | ||
unidentified
|
Look, here's the problem. | |
It's called waking sleep. | ||
You just walk, you just go through your life asleep. | ||
Countries go through their lives asleep. | ||
That great book about World War I, how they all, they're called the sleepwalkers. | ||
That's what's happening in Ukraine. | ||
We're just walking, we're asleep. | ||
No. | ||
You have to be shaken from that sleep. | ||
And this thing is so brutal. | ||
And so incomprehensible. | ||
You have to read it. | ||
You owe it to, you must read it. | ||
You owe it to this country to read. | ||
You, out there in this audience, you need to read it. | ||
You need to internalize it. | ||
You need to think about it. | ||
And then you need to act upon it. | ||
That's what we're doing. | ||
Mike Davis didn't want to do this. | ||
I didn't want to do this. | ||
This is not what we do. | ||
We have to do it. | ||
We have a duty to do it. | ||
We have an obligation to do it. | ||
And you have an obligation to and you have a duty to. | ||
This audience has changed the arc of history so many times in this country in the last couple of years. | ||
And it's always, you're always going to be called back to duty every couple of days. | ||
And we rank order what's important. | ||
There's nothing right now more important than this. | ||
That's why we give it so much time. | ||
So Mike, when do you think this, I know some media companies have this and they're talking about it. | ||
When do you think that this will be able to be promulgated and we can get it out to the war room posse? | ||
I'm hoping that no later than Saturday we can have this posted. | ||
But it's, again, we have to, the lawyers have to bless this. | ||
Our goal is to get it out as quickly as we can in a responsible way. | ||
But people, it's hard to read. | ||
I had to read all this and it was just, it's awful. | ||
But you have to read this because you have to think, Judge Jackson's reading these cases. | ||
One of these is Cain where, just nine months ago, 6,500 plus images and videos of young kids being raped and brutalized and she pretends like she doesn't remember the case. | ||
She either is a She's it's hard to believe that a judge can't remember that case that was during her DC Circuit Court nomination just a mere nine months ago and she pretended like she can't remember that case. | ||
These are you'll remember these cases when you read them and if you read these cases as a judge and you still go out of your way to give the lowest sentence you possibly can That disqualifies you for the Supreme Court. | ||
That disqualifies you for the highest court in the land for the rest of your life. | ||
You don't have the judgment. | ||
You don't share our values. | ||
There's something fundamentally wrong with someone who can read this stuff and think that we're too hard on these people who watch it, who trade it, who perpetuate this industry. | ||
And who monetize it. | ||
Who monetize it. | ||
The rape and torture. | ||
of babies and young children. | ||
Let me repeat that. | ||
The rape and torture of babies and children that people monetize. | ||
They monetize it. | ||
They make money off this. | ||
Mike Davis, how did they get to you on social media? | ||
You've been on fire on this topic. | ||
How did people get to you? | ||
Yeah, and thank you so much, Steve, for doing this. | ||
It's M-R-D-D-M-I-A. | ||
M-R-D-D-M-I-A. | ||
unidentified
|
And I already gave my website. | |
Okay. | ||
202-224-3121. | ||
Call the Senate right now if you're worked up. | ||
Give them a peace of your mind. | ||
Okay, short break. | ||
We've got Dr. Naomi Wolf, we've got Joe Allen. | ||
All next in The War Room. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
War Room, pandemic, with Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
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unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
As springtime comes, as Easter comes, make sure you step up to the plate, take action, action, action, particularly on getting a great night's sleep. | ||
MyPillow.com, PromoCode War Room. | ||
Okay, on a more pleasant note about vaccines that are trying to kill you, if we're gonna go, man, what a show. | ||
I gotta tell you, I can't get this, this thing with the judge is, It's, uh, it's just got to be done. | ||
We're going to have to do it. | ||
We're going to get organized about how, um, you, this audience forces these, um, maybe yes votes to just read the documents. | ||
That's what we want. | ||
Just the information. | ||
And this, remember all kinds of stuff has been withheld on this. | ||
This is not about Judge Jackson's qualification. | ||
She is highly qualified. | ||
Went to the best colleges, had the best marks, went to the law review, clerked for the best people. | ||
She's highly qualified. | ||
It's not about qualification, about judgment. | ||
Okay, I want to go to Dr. Naomi Wolf. | ||
Naomi, can you update us on what the posse and these lawyers and all these volunteers have been doing? | ||
How are we making out on Pfizer? | ||
Yeah, so the volunteers are on fire. | ||
I'm glad to tell you that Team 5, You take it. | ||
their first interim report. It's up on the Daily Cloud website. Other interim reports are coming thick and fast. But I want to spend some time today walking you all through a pretty terrifying set of numbers that have emerged from one of the groups. | ||
Can I just launch right in? | ||
unidentified
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You take it. It's yours. Thank you. | |
You have the deck and the cons. | ||
It's your baby. | ||
You roll with it. | ||
I will make good use of it because people really need to know and understand what these amazing volunteers and the lawyers are finding in these documents that, again, to remind everyone, Pfizer and the FDA tried to conceal. | ||
These are public documents they tried to keep from you. | ||
In just 2021, there were 1,810 deaths From Pfizer vaccines or after Pfizer vaccines and 1832 from Moderna. | ||
So now I'm going to highlight a big difference. | ||
So of the total adverse events in 2021, Pfizer's first dose was, pay attention, 145,664 adverse events, bad things happened. | ||
was, pay attention, 145,664 adverse events, bad things happened. | ||
Moderna's first dose, pay attention, 236,316, a big difference. | ||
Alright, so let's drill down into that and you see something pretty creepy. | ||
Some of you are probably already remembering that a few weeks ago, here on this show, which as far as I know is the only platform where anyone is doing the kind of reporting that should be done about this vastly important trove of documents, you remember we did a feature on how there were different dosages of the mRNA, the lipid nanoparticles, | ||
Well, there's an 89,000 difference between Pfizer's bad outcomes and Moderna's bad outcomes, much worse for Moderna. | ||
I will now tell you that remember the Moderna micrograms were 100 micrograms per dose for adults and Pfizer's first dose was 30 micrograms. | ||
Right there, people who got Moderna for a first dose, and I don't want to scare or upset anyone, but the sooner we realize what has happened here, the better we can treat people and care for people, right? | ||
Moderna was three times the amount of lipid nanoparticles. | ||
I keep going back to these tiny, hard, fatty casings, these industrial casings. | ||
You can buy them. | ||
You can go on the internet. | ||
And order them from pharmaceutical supply companies in boxes, right? | ||
They're lipid nanoparticles and remember we found from the Pfizer documents that they're not staying in the site of your arm, but going into the bloodstream within 48 hours, into the lymph, into adrenals, liver, spleen and ovaries. | ||
So the big question there is, is the 89,000 more adverse events from the first dose of in any way connected to people getting triple the amount of the mRNA and the lipid nanoparticles in their bloodstreams? That's a huge question that's been surfaced. And of course, we're going to keep diving into it. The other thing I want to point out, super creepy, and I sent the wonderful camera and the link so you can all see this for yourselves | ||
if you want, a spreadsheet where you can see dose three of what was clearly intended to be a six-dose course, right? Oh, Oh, the booster. | ||
Oh, the booster. | ||
This was planned from the very beginning that there would be six different dosages. | ||
So we're not quite there yet. | ||
So in the spreadsheet, which I will send, there are different codes for how they administer the vaccine. | ||
So one of them is intramuscular IM. | ||
One of them is intradural into the skin. | ||
And one is, or through the skin, and one is SYR, which is syringe. | ||
The other is OT, which is other. | ||
So this just, I don't know what it means yet. | ||
The medical people are diving into it. | ||
But to me, it's kind of alarming that you don't know, you know, which of these groups you're falling into. | ||
And I don't understand yet why, you know, syringe is broken out from through the muscle, through the skin. | ||
We're going to find out. | ||
The other subcategory is right arm or left arm. | ||
So again, I keep saying this is so visibly an experiment on millions of people where they're not kind of launching a medicine. | ||
They're tabulating what is going to happen to you if you get 30 micrograms? | ||
What's going to happen to you if you get 100 micrograms? | ||
What's going to happen to you if you get it, you know, in the syringe? | ||
What's going to happen to it if you get it in an intramuscular way? | ||
They don't know and they're looking. | ||
The last thing I do want to say, and that's where that table that you just showed is relevant, is it shows you right there. | ||
This is 5.3.6, Table 2, and this is just through February 28, 2021. | ||
So they already have 42,086 adverse events, bad things, right? | ||
That's medical speak for bad things you don't want to have happen to you right there in this section that they're scrutinizing. But what I really want to call your attention to is blood and lymphatic system disorders is right up there. It's 4.7% of that total of bad things. | ||
And one of the things they break out there is lymphadenopathy and that's swollen lymph nodes, right? And the dissident doctors were warning about this a year and a half ago that the spike protein, that the people were having lymphatic problems, swollen lymph nodes, and you've got lymph nodes all over your body, in your armpits, in your groin. I won't go | ||
into too much detail, but the lymph system keeps moving toxins out of your body. So these are blockages in getting toxins out of your body, it would appear. | ||
The other thing is that there are cardiac disorders and that's 2.6% of the total. | ||
And they knew it, and one of them is tachycardia, which a beloved loved one of mine got right after the second Moderna vaccine. | ||
And then finally down below, you've got general disorders, pyrexia, which you think isn't maybe that serious until you look it up, and 18.2% of the adverse events in this one group were pyrexia. | ||
That is, if you look it up, a dangerously high level of fever. | ||
I'm going to say that again. | ||
A dangerously high level of fever, so I'm not a doctor, but a lot of what we're seeing here kind of is intuitive. | ||
If you understand the mechanism that is bringing this novel technology in little tiny hard casings throughout the bloodstream in your body, these are things that happen when your body is trying to get rid of something, when your body is inflamed, when there's a problem. | ||
And also these tiny hard particles are going through the bloodstream into the heart. | ||
So I'm not a doctor, but this is a systemic damage to the human body. | ||
It's systemic and they didn't tell you. | ||
I can tell you one of the side effects is rash. | ||
My loved one who got skin problems after the vaccine, she wasn't told by her doctor that rash is way up there in this set of documents for one of the side effects. | ||
And that's minor compared to damage to the heart, which my beloved relative, sustained and otherwise completely healthy, 84-year-old woman now has damage to her heart, tachycardia, and it's right there. | ||
And her doctor did not say, you know, of these adverse effects, almost 3% are tachycardia, you're going to have an irregular heartbeat, you might faint, you might have a heart attack. | ||
No, safe and effective, safe and effective, safe and effective. | ||
So every time the volunteers turn over, More of what they're finding, the systemic nature of this criminal experiment. | ||
And I say it's criminal because it is against the law to experiment on human beings without their full informed consent. | ||
And none of you, unless you saw these disclosures, none of you had informed consent. | ||
So that is against the Nuremberg Code. | ||
It's violations of your bodily integrity. | ||
I'm sure that it's a criminal offense because it's harming your body through fraud or through deception. | ||
And it's one of the greatest crimes against mankind I can even imagine. | ||
So that's just today's update from the volunteers. | ||
And this is from documents and evidence and receipts that are in this trove of 55,000 pages of the Pfizer documents, correct? | ||
Correct. | ||
Do you think they understood that this was going to be experimental when they gave Pfizer, when the, when the pharma companies negotiated the, we have no liability here? | ||
Was that part of that you think that they, that Pfizer knew that this was going to be basically the experimental phase of it? | ||
And that's why they asked for, that's why they demanded, not asked, they demanded there to be no liabilities? | ||
Well, you're getting into an area I'm not that expert in, but from my medical freedom friends, I believe that the lack of, that they have kind of legislative, I'm sorry, impunity from litigation for long before this. | ||
It's very hard to sue vaccine manufacturers even before this, but I do understand the first half of your question fully, and it's no secret that it was an experiment, right? | ||
They just had such good messaging that they persuaded all the spokesmodels to use scripts to cover up the fact that it was an experiment. | ||
So that's why it's an emergency use authorization. | ||
The clinical trials weren't done. | ||
These are the clinical trials. | ||
We are the clinical trials, right? | ||
That's why so many health professionals who understand what clinical trials means don't want to be experimental subjects. | ||
They don't want to be guinea pigs. | ||
But, you know, I keep saying it's so clear this was a gigantic experiment. | ||
What you should have been told since the end of 2020 is there's going to be a gigantic experiment. | ||
That's what's happening. | ||
Those of you who are willing to volunteer for this gigantic experiment, we don't know how it ends, step up. | ||
There's a bad respiratory disease out there and here are the risks. | ||
But that's not what we were told. | ||
A billion dollars went to spokesmodels staying safe and effective. | ||
Including Fox and Newsmax. | ||
Let's make sure everybody remembers that. | ||
We've got about two minutes here. | ||
You dropped a bombshell in the middle of it. | ||
I just want to make sure I got this right and you can back it up. | ||
You said there's documentation, it's obvious that they knew that six doses were going to be required. | ||
Did I hear that correctly? | ||
Let me be clear about what I know. | ||
The spreadsheet that I will send shows dose three, okay? | ||
I have also seen a CDC spreadsheet that has room for six doses. | ||
So I don't want to overstate. | ||
It appears to me from the internal documents, the way they're structured, that they were expecting six doses. | ||
I can share with you the documentation. | ||
Okay. | ||
I'll tell you what, Dr. Wolfe, can you just stay over? | ||
We'll be back in a moment. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, we're actually going to start the 6 o'clock show battleground with Joe Allen because I got more to go through here and it was my I didn't do great time man clock management. | ||
Naomi, there's another so so first off to finish this up. | ||
I want everybody, and we've got the first mini report or preliminary report from Team 5, and I want to give a shout out to Team 5. | ||
Go Team 5. | ||
I want to put this, Captain Bannon, I want to put this, see we're producing as we move. | ||
This is our running gun offense. | ||
I want Captain Bannon to put it everywhere. | ||
I want to get it up on Getter. | ||
You just heard the ad for Getter. | ||
Getter is amazing. | ||
And this is where you can get all the information. | ||
Even if you don't know how to use technology, go. | ||
And if you have to, contact Captain Bannon. | ||
She'll help you. | ||
Just get a Getter account. | ||
Because, Naomi, we've got people that are 24-7. | ||
It's like Associated Press news sites. | ||
So, I want to get all of this up and links to her. | ||
Dailyclout.io and all the great work they're doing there. | ||
And this is also a prototype, this campaign's system that her great team has built. | ||
It's a prototype for you in the future and what's going to make your life easier as an activist. | ||
So that's why we're running kind of a prototype here. | ||
Like they were experimenting on you, they were experimenting on you in a prototype for the vaccine. | ||
We're running a prototype to do this. | ||
Response has been overwhelming and here's why. | ||
Part of the reason the show and you see this on the moms at the school boards and at the now election boards and the precinct strategy we got some precinct strategy folks next thing you get you meet people you've never met before you have it you have a sense of teamwork and you have a sense you're accomplishing something you're told in your entire life in this massive apparatus in the most powerful nation on earth you're just a tiny nobody you don't mean anything and nothing you're totally and completely powerless Well, guess what? | ||
The exact opposite is true. | ||
You're actually incredibly powerful. | ||
You just have to step into your power. | ||
And this is one way to do it. | ||
You are going to rock the world of Big Pharma. | ||
And ever since Big Pharma, you are literally Davids with the five stones. | ||
That's what you are right now. | ||
What is happening here with 2,500 people that have volunteered, 250 lawyers, Naomi Wolf's team, it's gotten so big and complicated, a program manager. | ||
This is how You take your country back. | ||
When I go in the chat room sometimes, I go, well, you gotta call the Insurrection Act. | ||
That's all nonsense. | ||
That's all happy talk. | ||
That's just guys drinking beer, yelling at the TV, okay? | ||
So stop. | ||
Put the beer down. | ||
We're not yelling at the TV anymore. | ||
Put the channels down. | ||
We're beyond yelling at the TV. | ||
You did that for 20 and 30 years of Fox, and you lost the country, okay? | ||
So we're going to try something different. | ||
We're going to try Moms for Liberty and other groups, other moms, at the school boards in people's face, okay? | ||
About masks and about vaccines. | ||
And hey, I'll throw in CRT and a couple other things in there where I'm at it. | ||
And you're going to be at the medical boards, and you're going to be the election boards, and you're going to be at the precinct strategy, and people are not going to welcome you. | ||
You said, hey, I'm here. | ||
I've arrived. | ||
I'm here. | ||
And it's a new sheriff in town. | ||
You're empowered. | ||
Action, action, action. | ||
This is about human agency. | ||
The whole culmination of the Judeo-Christian West is to empower you. | ||
Take your power, and the way you do it is here. | ||
And you see, this is going to rock the world. | ||
Trust me, they're on us non-stop about this. | ||
They're not happy. | ||
Because they understand where this is headed. | ||
This is why they want the documents, just like they want... What did Earl Warren say about the campaign? | ||
Not in our lifetime. | ||
Not in our lifetime. | ||
Because they figure, hey, people won't worry about it in the 2000s, right? | ||
That's what Naomi Wolf's doing. | ||
That's what this is about. | ||
The same thing with the Judge Jackson. | ||
It's all about your empowerment. | ||
Go ahead, Dr. Wolff. | ||
No, I just want to say it's not me. | ||
You know, I am not doing this. | ||
These thousands of volunteers, these 250 lawyers, you know, Craig Klein, Amy Kelly, Dan Backus, they are doing it. | ||
But just to add to what you were saying, I've always had a dream. | ||
You know, ever since you read the founding documents, our country was set up so that those who led us would be afraid of us. | ||
And I don't mean violently. | ||
I mean, because we had the rule of law and they're answerable to us. | ||
So that got corrupted. | ||
And I've always imagined that if you could just empower everyone, everyone from all walk of life with the law and legislation and understanding it, and also, you know, science and medicine, because everyone deserves to understand those things too. | ||
They shouldn't be priestly codes. | ||
Then we'd have our country back because All the people who are trying to exploit us, who are powerful, count on our being afraid and ignorant. | ||
And so when you hyper-empower ordinary people, what you get is this beautiful thing that the Daily Mail reported, which is these furious moms saying, oh, heck no, and filing a petition to the court to fire these people on the school board who insisted on masking their poor children. | ||
Even after the emergency order was finished, which I think we helped all of us to bring about, and also after, you know, Pennsylvania decided that they weren't going to mask children in a mandatory way. | ||
And these five people behaved the way, you know, school boards have been behaving for the last year and a half with impunity. | ||
And these hyper-empowered moms, and I hope we had a tiny bit to do with it. | ||
I hope the James Ostrowski webinar at least inspired her. | ||
You know, made it out into the universe. | ||
That's how influence works, right? | ||
Maybe she didn't hear about it, but a friend did. | ||
The idea is out there now. | ||
She just said, OK, no, I'm filing a court petition. | ||
And now there are six other districts in Pennsylvania where parents are going right to the court. | ||
And that should scare these school board members who are abusive, just like what these volunteers are doing from all walks of life. | ||
Team 5 is awesome. | ||
They're all awesome, right? | ||
The medical people, the lawyers, but every quote-unquote ordinary person, of which there is no such thing, who has joined. | ||
It's that collection of talents and willingness to step up that is so transformational. | ||
So they should be afraid of us, and I say that peacefully. | ||
Yeah, no, that's what the King George and the Aristotle say. | ||
Hey, real quick, how do people get to you? | ||
How do they still volunteer for this? | ||
How do they get to Daily Clap? | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Well, we certainly need more volunteers because there's Another giant slice of documents available and fresh. | ||
So you go to dailycloud.io and you go to campaigns on the right and you follow the Pfizer campaign and you will get a welcome letter and wonderful Amy Kelly will reach out to you and you'll get assigned to a team and you'll get assigned your documents. | ||
Please keep supporting us because this is expensive to scare the evildoers. | ||
We appreciate it. | ||
How do you get to, what's your getter handle? | ||
Dr. Naomi R. Wolfe on Getter, which I adore. | ||
Love Getter. | ||
Thank you, Dr. Wolfe. | ||
We'll see you in a few minutes in Battleground. |