Speaker | Time | Text |
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Peace. | ||
I mean, every day you're out there. | ||
What they're doing is blowing people off. | ||
If you continue to look the other way and shut up, then the oppressors, the authoritarians, get total control and total power. | ||
Because this is just like in Arizona. | ||
This is just like in Georgia. It's another element that backs them into a quarter and shows their lies and misrepresentations. | ||
This is why this audience is gonna have to get engaged. | ||
As we've told you, this is the fight. | ||
unidentified
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All this nonsense, all this spin, they can't handle the truth. | |
War Room Battleground. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Because what I found was, you know, I saw this Event 201. | ||
And raise your hand if you know what Event 201 was. | ||
Okay, for those of you who don't know, Event 201 was a pandemic simulation, a coronavirus pandemic simulation. | ||
That took place in October of 2019. | ||
Nobody had ever heard of coronavirus till January. | ||
So that's three months later. | ||
In October, we now know that coronavirus was already circulating in September, so the month before, in Wuhan. | ||
But nobody knew about it. | ||
And yet they had a coronavirus pandemic simulation in New York City hosted by Bill Gates and Averill Haynes, the former deputy director of the CIA who did all of the Guantanamo Bay cover-up. | ||
She is like the cover-up queen. | ||
And they do a simulation. | ||
And who else is there? | ||
George Gayo, the head of Chinese CDC, who obviously knows the coronavirus is circulating. | ||
He is the world's coronavirus expert. | ||
He's also the head of the CDC in China. | ||
And then they had all of the social media platforms where they are, the big insurance companies, Johnson& Johnson, the big pharma companies, and they meet for two days. | ||
And they have four seminars, and each one is faking this, you know, coronavirus is spreading across the world. | ||
And they simulate, they don't say, okay, we got vitamin D to everybody, and we got to make sure everybody gets exercise and gets out of their house and gets healthy and, you know, builds their immune system. | ||
And, you know, there's none of that. | ||
And zinc and, you know, all the things. | ||
We've got to figure out early treatments. | ||
We've got to use the Internet to connect all 15 million doctors, frontline doctors around the world, so that we know when they treat people what's working, what's not. | ||
And we're constantly upgrading the protocols. | ||
That's what they should have been doing. | ||
That's not what they were doing. They were working on ways to use the coronavirus pandemic as a pretense for clamping down totalitarian controls globally. | ||
And, you know, they talk about in some of these concentration camps and all of this stuff. | ||
But here, the last simulation on the fourth day, George Gayo, And Avril Haines from the CIA are talking. | ||
They have a soliloquy about how do we clamp down and stop people from saying this came from a lab leak. | ||
They're saying that. This is in October of 2019. | ||
And they say, well, we've got to get the social media companies to censor them and de-platform them and all this. | ||
You can go on YouTube and watch this tonight. | ||
It's called Event 201, and this is the fourth section of it. | ||
Oh, and people knew about that, you know, who are looking at this like me. | ||
And from almost the beginning. | ||
But then I started doing a deep dive when I was writing the book. | ||
And I found out that was not a one-off. | ||
And I describe in that book, I found about 20 of these that they had been doing since 2001. | ||
And they're all scripted by the CIA. And all of them include top-level officials like James Wolsey, the deputy director of the CIA, Taro Toole. | ||
All of them have senior CIA officials. | ||
Many of them have famous people who kind of given the imprimatur of legitimacy to what they're doing. | ||
Like Madeleine Albright or Tom Daschle or, you know, Bill Gates and a lot of them. | ||
And Gro Brundtland from the WHO. People who are respected. | ||
And they end up drilling, each one of them is drilling the imposition of totalitarian controls. | ||
Collectively they have names like Dark Winter and Crimson Contagion and all these weird names, but collectively they're called Operation Lockstep. | ||
And they involved hundreds of thousands of people, public officials from little towns all over America, Health officials from the state, police, firefighters, hospital systems, public utilities, and FBI, CIA, U.S. Marshals in Canada, the United States, all over Europe, Australia, and China. | ||
They're all doing it together. | ||
Drilling, here's what we're going to do when a pandemic comes. | ||
And a lot of these people, you can see, are surprised about what they're doing. | ||
But they're probably looking around and saying, well, everybody else thinks this is okay, so I guess this is what we do when the pandemic comes. | ||
So they drilled people in doing something that was clearly contrary to their values, but it got them all teed up to do it and do it all at once and say, this is what you do when there's a pandemic. | ||
The first thing you do is you end freedom of speech and you start gutting the Constitution. | ||
So, you know, I look back in my new book, I talk about the history of the U.S. Bioweapons Program. | ||
And from the beginning, the CIA was running the Bioweapons Program. | ||
Why? Because we didn't have a Bioweapons Program after World War II. And the CIA's first operation was called Operation Paperclip. | ||
And it was an operation to get all the bioweapons and nuclear and chemical scientists out of Germany and Japan, where they had an extensive bioweapons program. | ||
The Japanese had a horrendous program where they did live vivit sections on 3,000 people. | ||
You know, they killed them all during the operation, removing their infected organs while they were alive with no anesthesia. | ||
And these were horrible, horrible scientists. | ||
The CIA elevated them, brought them over to Fort Detrick, downloaded them, and made them the heads of hospital systems and pharmaceutical companies in Japan, and continued to work with them, and they brought all the German scientists over here. | ||
And then they did all these experiments unwittingly on the American public. | ||
They sprayed toxins in National Airport. | ||
They sprayed them in the Pentagon air conditioning system. | ||
They put poison water in NIH. They put light bulbs filled with bacteria that they broke on the grates and contaminated the New York City subway system. | ||
Some of those microbes still in the subway today. | ||
They did aerial dosing from ships of about 60 million Americans. | ||
They dosed San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York, Virginia, Norfolk, Virginia. | ||
All of the seaside towns were dosed from the air. | ||
And a lot of the Midwestern cities were also those. | ||
They're all unwitting. They did 200 outdoor tests on Americans, unwitting. | ||
And they developed bioweapons that, by 1969, had a nuclear equivalent. | ||
They could kill people at 29 cents per death, according to a CIA study, which they were bragging about. | ||
And then in 1969, President Nixon shocks the world by going to Fort Detrick and ending the US bioweapons program. | ||
He was worried that we were creating bioweapons that could be reproduced for nothing. | ||
They were kind of a poor man's nuclear bomb. | ||
Anybody could reproduce them. | ||
And we were publishing how you did it. | ||
So they were giving blueprints to foreign nations to create these things that could be used against us. | ||
And he said, why are we doing this? | ||
We have nuclear bombs. | ||
We don't need these things, and we have a monopoly on nuclear bombs. | ||
Seven nations have them. | ||
We've agreed not to give them to anybody else. | ||
Why are we letting these guys get, you know, weapons that are going to be turned against us? | ||
So we shut down the whole program. | ||
The Pentagon destroyed all of its bioweapons, but the CIA went into Fort Detrick right before the Pentagon went in there and took cultures of all the different weapons. | ||
And hid them in a warehouse. | ||
A lot of it was in New York City and Washington, D.C. And they continued. | ||
We signed the Bioweapons Treaty, which Nixon, one of the great accomplishments of Nixon, he got all the nations in the world to sign it. | ||
We signed the Geneva Convention, finally, after delaying it for 50 years. | ||
The CIA was breaking the law the entire time. | ||
It's Wednesday, 12 April, in the Rear of Our Lord, 2023, Jane Zirkle and myself. | ||
Jane covers everything on these campaigns of all the different candidates. | ||
And, you know, we don't play a lot of the Republican candidate speeches. | ||
We play a little bit of DeSantis, quite frankly, because it's just more clap-tracking. | ||
This is Bobby Kennedy, R.F. Kennedy Jr. | ||
at Hillsdale College, the most conservative college in the country, I think, or one of them, a kind of bastion for limited government conservatism, giving a talk a short while ago that is quite frankly amazing because, and if you tie this to Tucker Carlson's interview with President Trump, This is about the administrative state, particularly the bio-pharmaceutical weapons industry, the bio-pharmaceutical health industrial complex. | ||
Jane Zirkle, we're going to play a number of clips today. | ||
Give me your thoughts and analysis. | ||
You covered this stuff for a living. | ||
Tell me about Robert Kennedy Jr. | ||
unidentified
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Well, I think the remarks that RFK Jr. | |
gave at Hillsdale College is really critical to the coveted Generation Z vote. | ||
He delivered his remarks to a number of college students, which, like myself, were born in the early 2000s. | ||
And he identifies a point in 2001, which the health industrial complex and the state surveillance system converged. | ||
And he makes a very compelling case for this convergence Ultimately leading to the COVID-19 pandemic. | ||
Now, you talked about interconnectivity a few days ago on the show, and what he does is he eventually lays out the roadmap for how the Patriot Act led to gain-of-function research, which eventually led to Anthony Fauci being the Highest paid federal employee and then ultimately the Wuhan lab leaking COVID-19. | ||
So I think one misconception which he really blows out of the water here is that these totalitarian leaders actually knew exactly what they were doing and it wasn't just in a random occurrence that they took advantage of. | ||
There were blueprints for this dating back decades, right? | ||
I mean these COVID simulations that have been going on since 2001, and as recently as October 2019, that involved Bill Gates and several international health officials, including several health officials that had knowledge of the CDC lab leak. | ||
Okay. Jane, here's my bet, is that he started off at 10 percent. | ||
First off, he should be running the Republican primary because that's where this anti-vac or anti-Big Pharma movement is. | ||
He's running as a Democrat. He comes from obviously one of the royalty of the Democratic Party, at least the old Democratic Party. | ||
He's already at 10 percent. | ||
The first poll came out, Biden at 70, Kennedy at 10, Marianne Williamson, the spiritual guru, at 4, undecided, you know, Split, I think, the other 20%. | ||
But he started off at 10. | ||
He clearly, and I will project this out, the longer he stays in this, the more his message gets out, it's going to resonate, because this is a very smart guy, and he's talking about some of the most fundamental basic issues today about the administrative state. | ||
And remember, Donald John Trump said last night on Tucker Carlson on the interview from Mar-a-Lago, when they said, is the biggest enemy we have the CCP, the existential threat of the CCP? Iran, Russia, them together. | ||
He said the number one enemy we have in this country is domestic, and it is the administrative state and its element of the rogue deep state that is out to stop Trump in the Trump movement. | ||
Let's go ahead. We got a number of clips on this. | ||
Let's play cut two of Robert F. Kennedy's address at Hillsdale College. | ||
Then, in 2001, in June, The CIA sponsors the first of its pandemic simulations. | ||
It simulates a biological attack on Washington, D.C. by Saddam Hussein. | ||
This is in June 2001. | ||
That simulation got international press, and a lot of the CIA people like Judith Miller from The New York Times was promoting it, going around doing all the talk shows. | ||
It triggered two Senate hearings, one by Joe Biden's committee, and that hearing was in September 2001. | ||
What happened in September 2001? | ||
The 9-11. | ||
So that hearing was going on during 9-11. | ||
As soon as 9-11 happened, The neocons, which were working on all this stuff with the CIA, pulled out the Patriot Act, a 350-page statue from a shelf where it had been waiting for a while, and in one week said, we want to pass this in a week. | ||
There's only one member of Congress who read it, which was Dennis Kucinich, and he went crazy and said, you have no idea this is the end of American democracy if you do this. | ||
It allows the CIA to spy on Americans. | ||
One of the things the Patriot Act did is it did not get rid of the Geneva Convention or the Bioweapons Treaty, but it said no federal official can be prosecuted for violating those two statutes. | ||
So it reopened the Bioweapons Arms Race globally. | ||
A week after, when the Patriot Act was being debated, And it was being held up by two senators. | ||
There was an anthrax attack on the U.S. Capitol. | ||
It was blamed on Saddam Hussein. | ||
And the neocons all said, see, we were right in the pandemic simulation. | ||
Saddam Hussein attacked us. | ||
And we used that as a justification to go to war against Saddam Hussein. | ||
And within two days, we passed the Patriot Act. | ||
Who got the anthrax? | ||
Two Senate offices, Tom Daschle and Patrick Lee. | ||
The two senators who were blocking the Patriot Act. | ||
The FBI did a one-year investigation. | ||
They said this anthrax was unique. | ||
It was Ames anthrax, and there's only one place in the world it could have come from, Fort Detrick, the CIA lab. | ||
So, we went to war, we passed the Patriot Act, and immediately started giving $2 billion a year to bioweapons development. | ||
The Pentagon didn't want to do it because it was nervous about the legality. | ||
Death penalty to violate the Geneva Convention. | ||
You would have been committing a war crime even if somebody told you it was okay. | ||
It wasn't. And so they funneled it through DITRA and DARPA. They funneled all of that money to NIH, to NIAID. which became the primary spear tip of bioweapons development. | ||
So Tony Fauci became the bioweapons czar in 2001. | ||
His budget went up by $2.2 billion. | ||
He was personally given a 68 % raise from the military. | ||
That's why he was the highest paid individual in the federal government. | ||
Because he was getting this 68 % bonus every year from the military. | ||
But it meant that he could not stop. | ||
And the thing the military wanted was gain-of-function studies, where they could take wild viruses and turn them into bioweapons. | ||
And bioweapons development always includes vaccine development. | ||
Because unlike chemical weapons, with bioweapons, there's always blowback. | ||
It's called the boomerang effect. | ||
If you give your enemy bubonic plague, your guys are going to get it first, too. | ||
They're going to get it quickly. | ||
So the only way you can deploy a bioweapons is if you have already developed a vaccine. | ||
So the race is to develop a vaccine simultaneously with the bioweapons, and then you can deploy the bioweapons and your enemy It will take a couple of years to develop the vaccine. | ||
And you can inoculate all of your team. | ||
So in 2014, three of Tony Fauci's bugs escaped from federal labs. | ||
And their escapes were public. | ||
And it caused a huge brouhaha. | ||
There were Senate hearings, and people were immensely upset. | ||
And 300 scientists wrote a petition to President Obama saying, you have to shut down Tony Fauci. | ||
He's going to cause a global pandemic. | ||
And Obama declared a moratorium and told Fauci, ordered Fauci to shut down the 18 studies he was then As I show in my book, he didn't do it. | ||
He instead took that science and he moved it offshore to the Wuhan lab and to the Ukraine. | ||
And when he did that, he was not the only one who did it. | ||
Tony Fauci spent about $29 million on gain-of-function science in Wuhan. | ||
But the CIA spent over $100 million. | ||
And the military spent about that much too, about $64 million. | ||
And the CIA funneled the money, most of it through USAID. But they also, the CIA, as we now know, was also running this organization called the EcoHealth Alliance, which Fauci was funneling his money through. | ||
It was like a laundromat where they funneled federal money so that their fingerprints would not be visible on those studies. | ||
Jane, here's what's so amazing is that for a great nation, given the fact we were hit by a bioweapon, and I don't believe it was purposely released, but I'm open to that if the fact's proven. | ||
I know that once it... | ||
It inadvertently got out of the Wuhan lab as a bioweapon. | ||
The Chinese Communist Party exacerbated its spread. | ||
It stuns me that as a great nation, we've never really had any true investigation. | ||
Now, the House has got some things going on, but honestly, that's a little bit in fits and starts. | ||
It's not organized. | ||
Right there. Those are some stunning revelations from Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. | ||
And he wrote the book, The Real Anthony Fauci, which is a blockbuster, sold a million and a half copies, almost two million copies. | ||
I mean, he walks you through, logically, the entire bioweapons industry in the United States. | ||
And Tony Fauci is one of the key, or the key government kind of coordinator and funder of this, Jane Zirkle. | ||
unidentified
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Well, not only does he correctly address the origin of COVID-19, he understands the historical origin of it all. | |
He paints the picture how one thing has led to another to eventually get us to this point. | ||
And I think his candidacy is a really big asset to the American people because he is able to break these very, very complex issues down And put them in a historical perspective. | ||
You know, going back to 2014 when he got in trouble under the Obama administration. | ||
I mean, the outrage that came out from his bugs leaking then. | ||
And you see how this bureaucrat, this incredibly corrupt individual, has been allowed to continue on stealing from the American people and working in government and exporting our resources over to the CCP, which got us to where we are today. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a bunch more clips to go through. | ||
I want to make sure we get as many as possible. | ||
We're going to take a clip now, take it to the break, then Jane and I are going to come back after the break and give you some more commentary, analysis, and observations, and then play some more clips. | ||
Okay, from Hillsdale College, we continue on with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. | ||
The statute that they're relying on says they're unavoidably unsafe. | ||
And the Bruce Witts v. | ||
Wyeth case, which is the Supreme Court case that upheld that statute, has the same phrase in it. | ||
So as soon as he did that, Now they have this liability shield. | ||
No matter how negligent they are, no matter how reckless they are, no matter how grievous your injury, no matter how toxic and unnecessary the product, no matter how unnecessary and ineffective the vaccine, you cannot sue them. | ||
They, you know, and of course, these are the companies that are not good companies. | ||
These are the same companies that gave us the opioid epidemic that now kills more 68,000 kids in this country every year, more than the Vietnam War did in 20 years. | ||
And they knew it. And if you look at That Netflix documentary, Dope Sick, it shows exactly how they did it because the FDA was totally corrupted by this industry and did whatever they said. | ||
This is the industry. | ||
What happens when you go to that industry and you say, Now, no matter what you do, by the way, the four companies that make all of our vaccines have paid $35 billion in criminal penalties in the last 10 years. | ||
These are criminal enterprises. | ||
Criminality, there are serial felons, every one of them. | ||
So, why do you think if you remove any chance they'll ever get caught? | ||
That they're suddenly going to find Jesus and say, yeah. | ||
Because in my political party, everybody knows, the Democrats, everybody knows the pharmaceutical companies are just the worst, most corrupt company that there are. | ||
But when it comes to vaccines, they're not corrupt. | ||
And it's this weird cognitive dissonance. | ||
So then what happened You have these companies that now are absolved from the biggest cost of every medicine, which is downstream liability. | ||
Then they're absolved from something else. | ||
Vaccines are the only medical product that never has to do pre-licensing safety studies. | ||
So, not one. | ||
And this is an artifact of CDC's legacy as the Public Health Service, which is one of the uniformed military services. | ||
And the Public Health Service launched the vaccine program. | ||
as a national security defense against biological attacks on our country. | ||
So they wanted to make sure that if the Russians attacked us with anthrax or some other biological agent, we could quickly formulate a vaccine and then deploy it to 200 million Americans with no regulatory impediments. | ||
Because they said, if we call it a medicine, we're going to have to test it for safety. | ||
That takes five years, because a lot of the injuries from medical products have long diagnostic horizons or long incubation periods. | ||
You don't see them for five years. | ||
And you could be saving 10,000 lives from diphtheria and killing 100,000 people from cancer five years later. | ||
You want to find out if that's true. | ||
But they said, we don't have time to do that. | ||
So we're going to call them biologics. | ||
And we will exempt biologics from any safety testing. | ||
Over many years, I was saying not one of the 72 vaccines mandated for children has ever been safety tested in pre-licensing placebo-controlled trials. | ||
Not one. Tony Fauci was saying he's lying. | ||
In 2016, President Trump appointed me to run a vaccine safety commission. | ||
And he ordered Fauci and Collins to meet with me with White House counsel, president. | ||
And I said to Fauci at that meeting, you say I'm lying. | ||
For eight years you've been saying I'm lying about this. | ||
Show me the study. | ||
And at that point he made the show of going through, you know, a lawyer's red well like he was looking for a study. | ||
And he said, I don't have it here. | ||
It's back in Bethesda. | ||
And I'll send it to you. | ||
I never got it. | ||
So I sued him. | ||
Me and Aaron Seary, and after stonewalling us for a year, Their lawyers met us on the courthouse steps and said, yup, you're right. | ||
We never had any study. | ||
And they gave it to us in writing. | ||
You can go to the CHD website, my website, and you can see that letter from HHS. So they don't have to do There's no downstream liability. | ||
There's no front end safety testing. | ||
That saves them a quarter billion dollars. | ||
And there's no marketing and advertising costs. | ||
Because the federal government is ordering 78 million school kids to take that vaccine every year. | ||
What better product could you have? | ||
And so there was a gold rush to add all these new vaccines to the schedule that we don't need. | ||
Why would you give a hepatitis B vaccine to a child, a baby? | ||
The only way you get hepatitis B, you can get it from the mother, but every mother's tested. | ||
In the hospital, every mother who goes to the hospital is tested so you know. | ||
You give it to those kids, okay. | ||
The only way that you get it is from sleeping with a prostitute, unprotected sex, or male promiscuity, or from sharing needles with somebody who's got it. | ||
Well, the little baby gets it on the first day of life, he's not going to do any of that stuff. | ||
So why do they do it? | ||
I'll tell you why. Because Merck, because Fauci told Merck to make the vaccine. | ||
Fauci helped make it, develop it. | ||
Merck made it, and they said we're going to sell it to prostitutes and to male homosexuals. | ||
Merck came back a year later and says none of these guys want it. | ||
They got other things they want to spend their money on, and they're not. | ||
Pretty stunning. And I think you see, remember, it's Hillsdale College. | ||
This is not a place you would think that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | ||
would be well received. And you see the applause there during the talk, particularly when he's hammering big pharma. | ||
Jane, these revelations are pretty stunning. | ||
Give me your assessment of this before I ask you about the practicality of the politics of it. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, he really hits the nail on the head here. | |
I mean, $35 billion in criminal penalties paid over the last 10 years by vaccine manufacturers. | ||
He calls them criminal enterprises because they are criminal enterprises. | ||
I mean, it's absolutely inexcusable what these vaccine manufacturers have for the American people. | ||
I mean, you look at the vaccine safety report that was recently released by Ed Dowd. | ||
And the amount of vaccine injuries that have come about from this COVID-19 vaccine And it's largely because of the lack of safety screening that's been done to them. | ||
I mean, you talk about how most medical vaccines and things of this nature need years of testing because, you know, you could be saving 10,000 lives short-term, preventing them from getting this virus, but you could be giving 100,000 people cancer five years down the line because the safety screenings have not been properly done. | ||
How do you think this is going to play? | ||
He breaks this down on the camera because this is going to be one of the cores. | ||
I mean, he's running, let's say, as the anti-vax candidate, but it's deeper than that. | ||
He's running as the guy that knows the big pharma or the pharmaceutical, medical, industrial complex. | ||
He's going to be running on that. | ||
How do you think that's going to resonate with people? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, listen, I think being anti-lockdown is one thing, but coming in this hard and being strictly anti-Fauci is another. | |
I mean, this is really bombshell stuff that he's revealing, and he's getting it, going after all the agencies, all the elites, and I think when you look at a candidate, for example, like Ron DeSantis, He kind of would describe himself sort of in this manner, but he has not hit as hard as Robert Kennedy Jr. | ||
has hit on this topic so far. | ||
I mean, he is really getting in there. | ||
He's naming names. | ||
He's calling out the industries. | ||
And I think if Ron DeSantis wants to take that title, he needs to match this energy and start naming the names, going after the manufacturers and going after the agencies that are perpetrating this. | ||
No, I totally agree with you. I think that that's why you see some of the Republicans look so scripted. | ||
Kennedy comes in, it's almost off the top of his head. | ||
He knows this stuff so cold. | ||
And I'm telling you, it's hitting people. | ||
I can see this on the show where people are actually, and then they go check it out, and he's got all the, like the Fauci book he had, it read like the phone book, but people were mesmerized by it, Jane. | ||
unidentified
|
He's called out Fauci to his face and met with his lawyers outside the courthouse and said, hey, you haven't done the necessary testing. | |
The last 72 vaccines that have been released for children have not been adequately tested. | ||
So he knows his stuff. | ||
And if candidates want to compete with this, they need to get on that level because the anti-Fauci agenda is the American agenda in 2024. | ||
Big time. Let's play. We got another clip. | ||
Let's go and play it, Jane, and I'll come back. | ||
They're not people who are really concerned with health, by the way. | ||
So the CDC and FDA said, don't worry. | ||
They said, Merck said, we put all the money into infrastructure and now nobody's buying it. | ||
And so they said, okay, we'll mandate it for children. | ||
That's why these kids have to get hepatitis B vaccines. | ||
The entire safety testing for Merck's hepatitis B vaccine, four days. | ||
It's criminal. And most of these vaccines are unnecessary. | ||
Many of them are for diseases that are not even casually contagious. | ||
It was a gold rush. | ||
Because if you get onto that schedule, the recommended schedule, it's a billion dollars a year for your company. | ||
And in many cases, NIH is fearing the royalties. | ||
So we got all of these new vaccines, 72 shots, 16 vaccines, and now even more because we're doing the HPV vaccine. | ||
And that year, 1989, we saw an explosion in chronic disease in American children. | ||
Any of you who are my age, I'm going to name some of the diseases that are most common. | ||
You think about it, whether if you're my age, I'm 69. | ||
I had 11 brothers and sisters, 70 cousins, and I never saw any of these diseases. | ||
I never knew a kid with a peanut allergy. | ||
And I, you know, why do five of my kids have food allergies? | ||
Well, you know, asthma was around, but it was rare. | ||
My brother's doctor, my brother has asthma, his doctor said there'll never be a cure for these diseases because it's too rare and nobody ever studies it. | ||
Now one out of every four black children has asthma. | ||
The neurological diseases suddenly exploded in 1989. | ||
ADHD, sleep disorders, Language delays, ASD, autism, Tourette's syndrome, tics, narcolepsy, these are all things that I never heard of. | ||
Autism went from 1 in 10,000 in my generation, according to the CDC data, To one in every 34 kids today. | ||
One in every 22 boys. | ||
And some of these kids, you know, in severe autism. | ||
I've never seen anybody my age with severe autism. | ||
Severe, real, you know, full-blown autism. | ||
That means stimming, head-banging, toe-walking, non-verbal, non-toilet train. | ||
Where are these people? | ||
Why don't you see them in the malls? | ||
Because they didn't exist then. | ||
And they're not locked up anywhere because there's no place to put them. | ||
But one in 34 kids, about half of them look like that. | ||
These are kids that will never hit a baseball, they'll never pay taxes, they'll never vote, they'll never write a poem. | ||
These are kids who many of them will never sit on a toilet unassisted. | ||
I'll never go out on date. | ||
We did this to a generation of kids. | ||
Those in the neurological disorders, autoimmune diseases. | ||
I never knew anybody with juvenile diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus. | ||
170 autoimmune diseases that have now exploded. | ||
Congress said to the EPA, tell us what year the autism epidemic began. | ||
And the EPA is captured, but not by pharma. | ||
So it actually did some science. | ||
And it said 1989, it's a red line. | ||
That's the year. Now it could be... | ||
Oh, let me get into that in a minute. | ||
And then the last category is allergic diseases. | ||
There's food allergies, peanut allergies, anaphylaxis. | ||
I never heard of eczema. Al, you go into every classroom and anaphylaxis. | ||
Either way, so many of my kids had food allergies. | ||
I helped found the Food Allergy Initiative. | ||
A guy I was suing constantly, David Koch, was my partner starting this thing. | ||
He had a kid the same age as mine with anaphylaxis. | ||
We brought $200 million. | ||
We brought all these doctors up and scientists. | ||
We created a lab. What I found out is these scientists, the way they study food allergies, is they give rats allergies. | ||
They induce some allergies in the rat. | ||
And then they study it. | ||
How do you induce an allergy in a rat? | ||
You give them The aluminum adjuvant from the hepatitis B vaccine, along with the protein, so if you give him a peanut protein, he now has peanut allergies. | ||
If you give him a latex protein, he now has latex allergies. | ||
If you give him a, you know, a dairy protein, he now has dairy allergies. | ||
That's how they give it to him. | ||
And not only is it, the protein It doesn't have to be in the syringe. | ||
And, you know, a lot of our vaccines have peanut oil excipients. | ||
So it's not, you know, it's no mystery where the peanut allergies are coming from. | ||
But also, if there's something in the ambient and the environment at the time, like if there's a Timothy weed outbreak, That kid now is going to have a lifetime allergy to Timothy weed. | ||
That's why vaccinated children, this is two studies by Cowlings and Mawson, have 30 times the rate of allergic rhinitis is on vaccinated children. | ||
They're sick all the time. | ||
Okay, that's Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | ||
at Hillsdale. There's another big clip we want to play to take the show out. | ||
Jane, how do people get to you? | ||
I mean, this has been incredible. | ||
A little bit I'm going to put up on my getter site later. | ||
I actually was on Alex Jones earlier today, and we also talked about the speech, particularly since President Trump said it's all about the administrative state. | ||
Jane, how do people get to you on social media and follow you now? | ||
unidentified
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Well, I just want to say that Generation Z is without a doubt a generation prescription drug. | |
You can find me at Jane Zirkle on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and Getter. | ||
Generation Prescription Judges. | ||
We'll have James back on maybe tomorrow. | ||
We'll be back at 10 a.m. | ||
tomorrow. I want to finish now with this last clip from the Hillsdale speech. | ||
He announced a week or so after this speech was given, and I think you can see why. | ||
You can tell what his presidential race is going to be against the pharmaceutical industry, against Fauci, what happened in Wuhan, all of it. | ||
We need to have a national conversation with this. | ||
Robert F. Kennedy at Hillsdale. | ||
I ran into a group called Hudson River Keeper, which I represented for 40 years, commercial fishermen on the Hudson and recreational fishermen, suing polluters who are destroying their livelihoods, their property values, their communities. | ||
They had a business model. | ||
We have the oldest commercial fishery in the country on the Hudson. | ||
The people I represented for 40 years, many of them came from families that have been fishing the river continuously since Dutch colonial times. | ||
It's a traditional gear fishery. | ||
They used the same fishing methods that were taught by the Algonquin Indians, the original Dutch settlers in New Amsterdam, and then passed down through the generations. | ||
And they had a business model that worked for three centuries. | ||
And then they were put out of business by polluters who had political clout. | ||
And who were able to manipulate government agencies, capture and manipulate government agencies in order to escape the discipline of the free market and force the public to pay their production costs. | ||
And they had turned the Hudson Valley into kind of a, not free market capitalism, but corporate crony capitalism. | ||
And there's corporate kleptocracy, which really is about socialism for the rich and a very savage and brutal and merciless brand of capitalism for the poor. | ||
And they saw this happening. | ||
And, you know, I fought for them for 40 years. | ||
We were successful. | ||
I brought over 300 successful lawsuits on the Hudson by the year 2000. | ||
We had forced polluters to spend $3.5 billion remediating the river. | ||
The river, when I started working there, caught fire. | ||
It turned colors, depending on what color. | ||
They were painting the trucks at the GM plant in Tarrytown. | ||
It was dead water, zero dissolved oxygen for 20 miles north of the city, 20 miles south. | ||
Today, it is an international model for ecosystem protection. | ||
It's the richest waterway in the North Atlantic. | ||
It produces more pounds of fish per acre. | ||
More biomass per gallon than any other waterway in the Atlantic Ocean or the equator. | ||
It's the last major river system left in the Atlantic that still has strong spawning stocks of all of its historical species and migratory fish. | ||
And the miraculous resurrection of the Hudson inspired river keepers on waterways all over the world. | ||
We became the biggest water protection group in the world. | ||
We have 350 water keepers. | ||
Each one has a patrol boat. | ||
They each patrol a local waterway, and they litigate against polluters. | ||
We're a law enforcement organization. | ||
We have great environmental laws, but because of agency capture, they're almost never enforced. | ||
But we're allowed to enforce them under a provision called the citizen supervision. | ||
In 2003, the National Academy of Sciences published a report that showed that every freshwater fish in North America, 10-year study, was contaminated with dangerous levels of mercury. | ||
And so the water keepers who represent fishermen were particularly, you know, this seemed to us like we were living in a science fiction nightmare. | ||
Where my children and the children of every other American could now no longer engage in the seminal primal activity of American youth, which is to go fishing in the local waterway and then come home and safely eat the fish. | ||
And those companies had privatized the public commons, a resource that is owned by the public. | ||
To make profits for themselves, they had privatized. | ||
We no longer own the fish. | ||
You know, the companies who are doing that polluter, which is coal-burning power plants and cement kilns, primarily. | ||
So, in 2005, we started suing them. | ||
A lot of people were suing coal plants, but we were suing them. | ||
The water keepers were suing them on mercury. | ||
And I had 40 suits going by 2005, and I was traveling all around the country talking to crowds like this about mercury. | ||
And at almost every speech I gave, these groups of women, and they were different at every place, would come and sit in the front row before they'd show up early. | ||
And then when I finished, they'd wait and they'd ask to talk to me. | ||
And as it turns out, they were all of them with the mothers of intellectually disabled children. | ||
And they all believed that the vaccines had caused their child's injury, particularly mercury vaccines. | ||
And they would say to me in a very respectful but also kind of vaguely scolding way, if you're really interested in mercury exposures to children, you need to look at vaccines. | ||
I didn't want to do it. | ||
I had spent a lot of my life working on The issues of intellectual disabilities, I was part of the DNA of my family. | ||
My Aunt Eunice, who was also my godmother, started Special Olympics. | ||
I had been working in Special Olympics, which was then called Camp Shriver. | ||
Since I was eight years old, every weekend as a hugger, as a coach, I spent 200 hours as a teenager in high school working in Ysaic, home for the retarded. | ||
My family, my uncle was chair of the health committee for 50 years. | ||
My family wrote a lot of the legislation that gave rights and changed the entire relationship with individuals with intellectual disabilities, the most vulnerable population in the country. | ||
But I didn't want to do that for my life. | ||
I wanted to work on fisheries, on water pollution, on energy. | ||
and so I was dodging these ladies and then one of them one of them came to my house found my house on Cape Cod in In the summer of 2005, she was a psychologist from Minnesota named Sarah Bridges. | ||
She had a son who got severe autism from a mercury vaccine. | ||
He had gotten a $20 million award from the vaccine court, which recognizes autism came from the vaccine. | ||
There was no controversy, and she didn't want it to happen to other children, and she showed up at my house, And she took out of the trunk her car a stack of studies about 18 inches deep. | ||
She put it on my front stoop. | ||
Then she knocked on the door. | ||
And when I came to the door, she pointed to the pile and she said, I'm not leaving here until you read those. | ||
I'm accustomed to reading science. | ||
I wanted to be a scientist when I was a kid. | ||
And the kind of law that I practice involves a lot of science. | ||
So almost every suit that I brought has involved some kind of scientific controversy. |