Speaker | Time | Text |
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This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
unidentified
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Pray for our enemies, because we're going medieval on these people. | |
I got a free shot at all these networks lying about the people. | ||
The people have had a belly full of it. | ||
I know you don't like hearing that. | ||
I know you've tried to do everything in the world to stop that, but you're not going to stop it. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
And where do people like that go to share the big lie? | ||
unidentified
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MAGA Media. | |
I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
unidentified
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Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | |
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
you you | ||
Thursday, 20 March, year of early 2025, historic day. | ||
The Department of Education is on its path to be no more. | ||
President Trump signed an executive order, something people have been talking about. | ||
For 50 years, President Trump did something about it. | ||
Jackie Torber is going to join us in a little while from Manhattan to talk about. | ||
You'll be shocked to know that a lot of what the Department of Education, quote-unquote, does is finance these radical institutions that are the majority foreign students, foreign radicals. | ||
That hate you, hate MAGA, hate this country, hate Donald Trump. | ||
They're the ones storming his building in the atrium down there. | ||
Take it over. | ||
Also, is there a measles pandemic or epidemic across Texas and the country? | ||
You would think so from the media. | ||
Mary Holland, Brian Hook, Dr. Peter Corey. | ||
Dr. Peter Corey, beloved by this audience, all going to join us in a little while to talk about that. | ||
Also, I've asked Tony Lyons to get some of his experts. | ||
He's the number one publisher of all the books on Kennedy. | ||
They've got, I think, hundreds over there at Skyhorse. | ||
It's unbelievable, the library they have built up. | ||
One of their authors, Mr. Tannenbaum, is going to join us to go through what's been put out so far. | ||
Some pretty Glenn Greenwald and some folks, Carl Higby, who I really respect Carl, saying that they see in the documentation how the CIA is directly involved in this, so we're going to break it all down for you in a little while. | ||
Mike Lindell, are you still in business or not? | ||
I keep hearing rumors that the Attorney General of Minnesota has finally gotten to Mike Lindell and shut you down. | ||
Is there any truth to that rumor, sir? | ||
It's not true, Steve. | ||
It's more fake news coming out of Minnesota, kind of like our corrupt Attorney General Keith Ellison. | ||
And Keith Ellison continues to attack. | ||
I wonder, Steve, if I said, you know what? | ||
I'm sorry, I'm just gonna walk away. | ||
I will never talk again about election platforms. | ||
I'm just gonna go make pillows. | ||
I wonder if they'd quit all their attacks. | ||
They probably would, but that's not gonna happen. | ||
We are moving full steam ahead. | ||
And one of the things I didn't mention yesterday with this new special we have at MyPillow is, I consider this kind of an indirect attack too. | ||
After our great president won the election, I figured these box stores, and a lot of them I talked to, would take MyPillow back now that they were afraid to have MyPillow products or whatever their cancel reason was. | ||
So we ordered for the spring here for all of these great Giza bed sheets, Giza Dream bed sheets, and Percale sheets. | ||
And as I circle around to these box stores, none of them, it's like they've gone silent on MyPillow. | ||
So I said, well, what am I gonna do? | ||
You know what I'm gonna do? | ||
I'm gonna go with the War Room Posse. | ||
These are wholesale prices. | ||
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That's our president's favorite product right there. | ||
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You go down, we put Steve's face higher up on the website, so you click on them. | ||
Make sure you click there. | ||
And there's all your warm room specials, the safe 30%. | ||
All the new my crosses just came in. | ||
They came in two days ago along with these great sheets. | ||
And then we have another special that we launched yesterday, exclusive for the warm room posse. | ||
That's those premium my pillows. | ||
That's where it all started, the gusseted. | ||
Pillows, there's the Queen, 1898, the King, 1988, all the different loft levels. | ||
We've sold over 84 million MyPillows now. | ||
So to answer your question, Steve, we're not going anywhere. | ||
At the War Room Posse, they keep helping us. | ||
Helping us stay in business here as they keep attacking. | ||
My employees, they'd love to take your calls, 800-873-1062. | ||
If you ask any MyPillow employee that's taking these phone calls, what's their favorite customer? | ||
Every one of them is gonna say the War Room Posse. | ||
You guys call and you support us great, and we're very grateful. | ||
And Steve, we thank you and your show. | ||
We're proud to be sponsoring the greatest show ever, too. | ||
I gave a short, brief talk. | ||
Steve Stern had their huge election integrity today and talked about Tina Peters, Cleveland Mitchell, so many people. | ||
Everybody was all the superstars in the election integrity. | ||
And I said, you guys probably have the toughest job because after November 5th, everybody thinks it's all over. | ||
President Trump's going forever. | ||
We're in the darkest fight ever. | ||
The darkest moment we've ever been. | ||
The people that don't do it every day and don't real estate, I understand. | ||
And I'm not criticizing them. | ||
I'm just saying the people in the trenches, and particularly the hardest, is the election integrity. | ||
Because you guys understand this thing can be stolen so easily. | ||
And right now in Wisconsin with this huge fight, and we're right on the cusp. | ||
This is a political war. | ||
Between two sides there's no compromise to. | ||
They're using the federal judicial system. | ||
Right now to step in between what President Trump's doing and being Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces. | ||
He's trying to get rid of terrorist groups, terrorist criminal groups. | ||
These are the hardest of the hard, the worst of the worst. | ||
He's got a federal judge. | ||
Some pencil neck is coming in between him. | ||
And today, he's, and I'm telling you, he's setting up contempt charges for the staff of the White House. | ||
You watch. | ||
I can see having gone to prison on a contempt charge, but instead of bending the knee to Nancy Pelosi, I can see where this is going. | ||
the election and tell you what Steve Stern does, what you do, it's a thankless task, right? | ||
It's not glamorous. | ||
It's not, you know, it's hard. | ||
It's grinding. | ||
But if we don't get it right, they're trying to steal things all the time. | ||
It's over. | ||
And that's why I really admire what you're doing, Mike. | ||
And this is why Ellison's coming after you. | ||
If you just shut up and went about your business... | ||
There wouldn't be anything. | ||
Go ahead, sir. | ||
That's right. | ||
And I want to say one thing there, you guys. | ||
I want everybody to know we aren't giving up. | ||
You can check out LyndalePlan.com. | ||
We are not stopping just because Keith Ellison is attacking me and attacking my pillow. | ||
I figure, Steve, we have till the summer of 2026 to secure our election platforms like other countries around the world. | ||
Why? Because that's where uniparty Republicans will take stuff in the primaries. | ||
I don't want people to get complacent and say, well, our great president's in. | ||
I told him, I made a promise to him. | ||
Two weeks ago I said, I promise you we will secure our elections, and obviously with the administration's help too, but we cannot let these next four years be in vain. | ||
We can't let it go back to where it was, and if you don't have secure elections, you're right, Steve, they can steal it anytime they want. | ||
They can do whatever they want, and we can't ever let that happen again. | ||
And they're going to try to do it. | ||
By the way, Tina Peters... | ||
I know people behind the scenes. | ||
You had Todd Blanche from the Justice Department with the President of the United States. | ||
The Chief Magistrate, Chief Law Enforcement Officer goes there on Friday. | ||
Media melts down. | ||
Todd Blanche, the deputy, gives a talk before he gets there. | ||
Mentions Tina Peters. | ||
They're working around the clock to try to get Tina Peters out. | ||
These are guys that run the Justice Department, main justice. | ||
You can't get them out of Colorado. | ||
Everything dealing with election integrity is hard. | ||
And the reason they understand that is they don't cheat. | ||
They can't win. | ||
Let me be blunt. | ||
If they don't cheat, they can't win. | ||
They can't win. | ||
If they don't cheat, we're 70% of them. | ||
100%. We're two-thirds of America. | ||
Yep. Promo code WORM. | ||
MyPillow.com. | ||
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You go back to work. | ||
We'll see you tomorrow. | ||
You keep fighting, brother. | ||
Yep. Thank you, guys. | ||
Thanks, Steve. | ||
You have no earthy idea the pressure Mike Lindell's under. | ||
You have no earthy idea what's coming after this guy. | ||
Just like President Trump for all those years. | ||
Until they started charging publicly. | ||
Behind the scenes, de-banked, de-platformed, all of it. | ||
It's sick. | ||
Jackie Tobroth. | ||
Here's the other thing. | ||
Last week, President Trump, beautiful Trump Tower. | ||
He's now President of the United States again. | ||
And you have this massive protest in the beautiful atrium. | ||
It's historic. | ||
Because that's where Trump came down the golden elevator. | ||
Was it June 15th of 2015? | ||
Right? And that magnificent, you know, his entry into politics. | ||
They give that talk right there in the lobby. | ||
And it's a desecration of what they're doing. | ||
It turns out they're protesting from these schools and universities. | ||
Jackie Toberoff joins us. | ||
Jackie, almost 60% of the students up there at Columbia and Barnard are not American citizens. | ||
They're foreign students, ma'am. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, we have an American institution headquartered in New York City, in Manhattan, and there are approximately 3,500 students. | |
And out of this amount, approximately 24,000 of them are international students. | ||
So to keep this in mind, the admittance rate for Columbia University is 4%. | ||
The majority of students at Columbia University are minority American. | ||
That's, I mean, I think pretty outrageous for any American citizen here. | ||
We are getting screwed in every which way. | ||
Hold on, hold on. | ||
I just want to make sure you get the math right. | ||
That American citizens are in the minority. | ||
They're less than 50%. | ||
Is that correct? | ||
unidentified
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Correct. It's almost 60% international students. | |
And so when you look at this, this really is why Columbia University is ground zero of the so-called cultural revolution. | ||
I'm gonna tell you something else that's breaking news. | ||
The professors, faculty, and staff at Columbia University, it's approximately 7,100 employees out of this amount. | ||
3,200 are international faculty and staff. | ||
So, again, almost half of the staff at Columbia University is international. | ||
Now, the average... | ||
Hang on. | ||
Institution that's an American institution and a revered American institution. | ||
Lou Gehrig went there. | ||
Essentially, Alexander Hamilton went to the predecessor. | ||
I mean, this is a revered American institution. | ||
You're telling me virtually half the faculty and staff are international and over half of the student body, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
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Correct. So here's what taxpayers should be really upset about. | |
That is that the salary annually for these professors is close to $300,000. | ||
Were there no American professors to be found with a 4% admittance rate, why is the majority international students? | ||
This is either a searing indictment on our educational complex that our students just aren't up to snuff, or there is a concerted effort to replace America. | ||
American students, faculty, and staff. | ||
Now, something else, I looked into the numbers. | ||
This seems to be a trend over the past 20 years. | ||
Let me give you the numbers in Yale. | ||
Yale has 5,000 faculty members, 2,500 of them are international. | ||
Brown University has 1,000 faculty members, approximately 450 of them are international. | ||
So American institutions are really not American institutions. | ||
It's unbelievable. | ||
I know some are private, but these have massive, massive infusion of taxpayer capital. | ||
I know you're all over this. | ||
Is anybody else getting up in arms on this? | ||
First off, the international faculty, unless it's in very special circumstances, like you've got Albert Einstein there on some sort of biotech project or some sort of scientific project, the English, the history, all that, they've got to go. | ||
If you just general arts and crafts. | ||
You gotta go. | ||
If you're general law or whatever, gotta go. | ||
If you're some highly specialized science or technology that can't be replicated in the United States, which no one's ever proven to me they couldn't, maybe they make it. | ||
But 90% of these foreign faculty ought to get the boot, ma'am. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I mean, the problem really is with the international students. | |
It's not that we are assuming they are all Islamists or terrorists or anti-American. | ||
The real issue is when you have a majority of people that are not American, they have no connection to America. | ||
And the schools are already owned by the Marxists. | ||
So really, the international students are fertile hunting ground, not only for the Marxist teachers, but then, of course, Jackie, | ||
where can people find out more about this? | ||
You're putting up stuff all the time. | ||
You're getting us research. | ||
Where can people go? | ||
unidentified
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Please come to my substack, which is supermomsactivated, and you can also follow me on Instagram, which is Jacqueline for NYC. | |
That is J-A-C-Q-U-E-L-I-N-E-F-O-R-N-Y-C. | ||
Please subscribe to my substack. | ||
I'm going to have a follow-up piece. | ||
Fantastic. Unbelievable. | ||
Supermomsactivated. Thank you, ma'am. | ||
Appreciate you. | ||
unidentified
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Thank you. | |
Incredible. You would think the Department of Education would be able to root that out. | ||
Of course they're not. | ||
I've got a cold open for our next guest. | ||
This is one I've been tracking for the last couple of days. | ||
I can't make head or tails of this. | ||
I think I'm being lied to by the mainstream media. | ||
Let's go ahead and play it. | ||
We're going to have Mary Holland on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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An escalating controversy today over the death of a six-year-old Texas girl of measles, the first in this country in two decades. | |
Critics say her story is being used as propaganda by the anti-vax movement, with her parents giving their only on-camera interview to the anti-vaccine group founded and until recently led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. | ||
In the emotional interview, the girl's mother encouraged parents not to give their kids the measles vaccine, saying measles is, quote, Not as bad as they're making it out to be. | ||
NBC News health and medical reporter Erica Edwards joins us now. | ||
Erica, what more did the parents say? | ||
You know, it's interesting. | ||
I've spent time in this community where vaccinations are very, very low. | ||
And there seems to be a lot of... | ||
Thought is generally about personal use of vaccines, right? | ||
So it's not necessarily the religion, but also, like, personal freedom. | ||
And that's where generally they're coming from. | ||
Now, you know, I have not spoken directly with this family. | ||
However, I do know that they are in a community that relies greatly on their faith. | ||
It's God's will. | ||
However, they also sought out medical opinions when their child got sick. | ||
You know, it would seem like the death of a child from measles would underscore the importance of vaccines, but the anti-vax movement has turned that around, and they've done it effectively. | ||
What are we seeing as the consequences of that? | ||
You know, this community in West Texas and really others around it nationwide... | ||
have stopped vaccinating actually about 20 years ago and that was when there was a study that came out that I cannot overstate enough was studied and largely debunked linking the MMR vaccine which protects against measles to autism. | ||
And it also coincided with the rise of social media. | ||
So people started to get their medical information online from who knows where, right, Chris? | ||
Relying on Facebook posts and YouTube channels instead of their personal physicians. | ||
And it allowed fear to creep into decisions that parents would make. | ||
I had the same fear when I started having children 20 years ago. | ||
That's when I turned to my own doctor and my kids' pediatricians to get the real science. | ||
Fast forward now to 2025, you have large pockets of groups who don't trust the medical establishment. | ||
Now we have a death, as you said, the first child who's died from measles in more than 20 years, and now it's being used as propaganda in some of these anti-vaccine movements groups. | ||
The fear is that people, these groups, won't just... | ||
We'll just accept this as what it is and not necessarily more as the norm and not necessarily turn towards vaccination. | ||
Okay. Mary Holland, head of the president of the Children's Health Fund. | ||
Bobby Kennedy is now the director of Health and Human Services. | ||
The mantra that's been played, as we've observed this here in the war room on mainstream media, particularly MSNBC and CNN, is the six-year-old girl died from measles, died from measles, died from measles. | ||
And then they have all kind of perturbations about that. | ||
Is that scientifically correct, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
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That is a lie, Steve. | |
And I'm on today with Doctors Hooker and Corey, who will explain that her death is the result of an egregious medical error. | ||
She did have measles. | ||
Four of her siblings survived measles with appropriate care and treatment. | ||
They're absolutely fine. | ||
This girl wound up in the hospital because she did have some difficulty breathing. | ||
And instead of giving her breathing care, you'll understand from the specialists with me that she got inaccurate, wrong-headed medical care. | ||
And that's why she died. | ||
Okay, let me bring in Dr. Brian Hooker first. | ||
We have Dr. Pierre Corey who's also here. | ||
Dr. Brian Hooker is Chief of Scientific and Medical Research at the Children's Health Defense. | ||
So can you explain that to us? | ||
Because the media keeps saying she died from measles. | ||
They say she died from measles. | ||
Then they go into how you guys and others have gotten people so afraid of vaccines that the parents don't know what to do. | ||
And it's because of misinformation. | ||
But the mantra, and we've watched now, I think, dozens of hours of this we've monitored. | ||
She died from measles. | ||
She died from measles. | ||
Why, sir, do you say that's inaccurate? | ||
unidentified
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Well, she was actually recovering from the measles when she went into the hospital. | |
She had had the measles before, and she had a few spots left on her legs, according to the parents. | ||
But she went in because she was having trouble breathing. | ||
She had what was called community-acquired pneumonia. | ||
And as Dr. Corey will expound upon further, she was given the wrong antibiotics to treat for the strain of pneumonia that she had. | ||
And when those wrong antibiotics didn't really do anything, they were for different bacteria. | ||
She had a bacterial pneumonia called mycoplasma pneumonia. | ||
And the standard of care is to, as soon as they are admitted into the hospital, treat for mycoplasma pneumonia. | ||
However, the antibiotic that is appropriate to treat that was left out of the mix. | ||
She was not given the standard of care. | ||
But hang on, slow down, slow down, so I can understand it. | ||
How do you know she just had a couple of spots on her legs? | ||
How do you know she was over measles? | ||
How do you know she entered the hospital? | ||
She had pneumonia. | ||
And how do you know for a fact that she got the hospital or the emergency room, whatever, gave her the wrong medicine? | ||
Because they didn't know. | ||
They didn't check her for, I guess, pneumonia. | ||
You're saying they checked her for measles. | ||
How do you know all that? | ||
unidentified
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Spots on her legs. | |
They checked her for the wrong type of pneumonia, and we got the medical records. | ||
We were able to legally obtain the medical records. | ||
From the parents directly and it was about 200 pages of records and I poured through the records as did Dr. Corey and it was really Dr. Corey's discovery that she was given an ineffective antibiotic for the type of pneumonia she had and she did not receive the appropriate antibiotic until she had been in the hospital a total of three days and she had been in the ICU overnight. | ||
Even though they knew by the time she was in the ICU the correct type of pneumonia she had, they still delayed 10 hours and they did not give the appropriate antibiotic, which is azithromycin or Z-Pak. | ||
So she did not get the proper care and they deviated from the standard of care, which is to give something like ceftriaxone and azithromycin for a community-acquired pneumonia. | ||
They made a huge blaring error. | ||
Okay, hang on a second then, Doc. | ||
Dr. Hooker, Chief of Science and Medical Research at the Children's Health Defense. | ||
Let me bring Dr. Pierre Corey. | ||
Obviously, Dr. Corey, we know you from the pandemic and from all those years of going through and fighting all the misinformation and lies that are out there about that. | ||
Dr. Corey, it's a 200-page, approximately, report that they gave the parents when this incident was over? | ||
We're going to have to get his microphone. | ||
Okay. Hang on a second. | ||
Hang on a second. | ||
Let's start at the beginning because I didn't hear you at the beginning. | ||
Just go ahead and answer. | ||
There's a 200-page report the parents had and the parents gave that to you? | ||
Yeah, so they released the records, and I was sent the records. | ||
I'm a lung specialist and an ICU specialist. | ||
Probably one of the most common diseases I've treated in my career is pneumonia. | ||
But to keep that 200 pages in context, Steve, I've done medical malpractice reviews throughout my career. | ||
200 pages is not a lot. | ||
I've had 1,000 and 1,500-page records. | ||
Because the reason why it's not that a lot... | ||
She was not in the hospital very long until she died, and that's one of the tragic facets of this. | ||
But, you know, per what Mary and Brian were saying, I'm going to be as clear as I can be. | ||
She came in with a community card pneumonia, and I'm going to give the hospital credit. | ||
They made the correct diagnosis. | ||
In the chart, it clearly says that it's a secondary bacterial pneumonia, which can happen after viral infections. | ||
I have three daughters. | ||
One of mine, when she was 13, had influenza, and a couple of, like a week later, she also developed a secondary bacterial pneumonia, which we treated at home with an antibiotic, and she did fine. | ||
So it's not just about measles. | ||
Any virus can do this. | ||
They temporarily suppressed the immune system. | ||
But let's go back to this case. | ||
This case, the child came in with a pneumonia. | ||
It was correctly diagnosed. | ||
The standard of care, and when you talk about malpractice, in order to prove malpractice and the definition of malpractice is when a physician's treatment violates the standards of care. | ||
The standard of care for the treatment of community-acquired pneumonia is the administration of two separate antibiotics. | ||
One, which is what's called beta-lactam, which is like penicillin or cephalosporin, and the other one is a macrolide, which is like azithromycin. | ||
That combination is standard. | ||
It's what I've given to patients all throughout my career, anyone who comes in with pneumonia, because you don't know what the organism is. | ||
So the guidelines are set up so that the antibiotics that you choose, Mycoplasma is what she died of. | ||
is so common. | ||
It's like medicine 101, Steve, to put someone on a Z-Pak because penicillins and cephalosporins do not cover mycoplasma. | ||
And what's worse about this case is, okay, so you don't know what the pneumonia is on admission. | ||
That's why we have those. | ||
We've studied data for decades. | ||
We know what antibiotics to use. | ||
unidentified
|
And | |
They didn't do it. | ||
They chose two antibiotics, none of which cover mycoplasma. | ||
What's worse about that is she continued to decline over the next few days, and they still didn't change the antibiotic regimen. | ||
They only changed it after a test came back. | ||
Hang on one second. | ||
I'm going to hold all three of you. | ||
Dr. Brian Hooker, Chief of Medical Research and Science at Children's Health Defense. | ||
Mary Holland, the president. | ||
And independent researcher, physician, Dr. Pierre Corey, on a very disturbing case where it's being at least promoted by mainstream media that this young child, six-year-old girl, died from measles. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
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Short break. | ||
Back in the warm in a moment. | ||
unidentified
|
I got American faith in America. | |
Okay. | ||
Okay, I'm going to go back to Dr. Corey in a second, but Mary Holland, here's what I want to understand. | ||
This is a very prominent hospital in Texas. | ||
We'll go back to Dr. Corey about what happened here, but how could the media, just from the facts you're laying out from the parents who gave the report to you guys and Dr. Corey, How could the media then have been saying, absolutely, you know, she died from measles. | ||
She died from measles. | ||
She died from measles. | ||
I mean, it's – and you see these specials. | ||
They break in and they're doing – and in days when there's so much political news coming out of Washington, right, with President Trump and they're stopping President Trump everywhere and going to the Supreme Court and doing – you've got war and peace in Ukraine. | ||
This story is taking up a pretty significant amount of time because it's a measles outbreak in Texas that's spreading everywhere. | ||
And a little six-year-old girl has died, and she died from measles. | ||
How could that possibly happen, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
|
So, the fear-mongering among measles didn't start yesterday, Steve. | |
This is what they did in 2015 in California to get rid of the religious exemption there. | ||
This is what they did in 2015 in California, 19 in New York, and here it is 25 in Texas. | ||
This is a ploy to induce fear. | ||
Uptake, the vaccine uptake. | ||
And what's different this time is we're getting into the media that this is propaganda. | ||
She did not die from measles. | ||
She died from a medical error, the third leading cause of death in this country. | ||
And I think it is going to stop this measles narrative that they're pushing so hard. | ||
And as Secretary Kennedy has said, there are effective treatments against it. | ||
Complications of measles, Steve. | ||
Typically, measles, you know, back in the day, every child in the United States by age 15 had measles. | ||
And there were some deaths, but very, very rare. | ||
But they're making it out to be now that it's this deathly disease that everybody dies from. | ||
That's just not true. | ||
I remember I was a kid. | ||
I had measles. | ||
My brother and sister has measles. | ||
The whole neighborhood. | ||
Once a time, kids would have measles. | ||
You knew when the kids had measles. | ||
They had the little spots on them. | ||
It didn't seem like that big a deal back then, but hey, it's not my line of country. | ||
I don't know. | ||
Now it seems like the black plague's coming. | ||
But Dr. Corey, here's what I understand. | ||
How can you have a prominent hospital in Texas? | ||
And what you laid out seems pretty standard what the care would be. | ||
How did the people blow it that badly? | ||
You know, I can't get into the mind of the physician, but... | ||
I will tell you, it was a teaching hospital. | ||
There was a resident who was a doctor in training. | ||
They chose an antibiotic regimen, which included a standard one. | ||
They chose one of them correctly. | ||
I'll give them credit for that. | ||
Ceftriaxone is pretty standard. | ||
Yeah, but hang on. | ||
Hang on, hang on, hang on. | ||
There's a lot of residents in training around the country. | ||
Aren't they supposed to? | ||
I thought there was a chain of command. | ||
Because the operator there is resident in training. | ||
So they're not making command decisions. | ||
They have to have somebody, a supervisor over top of them, right? | ||
A doctor, a guy like yourself. | ||
A man or woman like yourself. | ||
I am not saying that it was a trainee that made the mistake. | ||
I don't know what was in their head when they chose the regimen. | ||
But what happened next is the doctor above them, right, who was called the attending physician, for whatever reason, did not change or correct that regimen. | ||
And the regimen that was chosen was they got one of the two antibiotics right. | ||
The second one was actually a very powerful antibiotic, which is used to treat multidrug-resistant organisms. | ||
However, it doesn't cover the very common community-acquired pneumonia organisms. | ||
It's not clear to me. | ||
Whoever chose that must have felt, oh, we're doing very aggressive antibiotic care, but it showed it belied a lack of knowledge into how to treat a community-acquired pneumonia. | ||
But hold it. | ||
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But hang on. | |
What you laid out doesn't seem that complicated. | ||
The little girl came in. | ||
She had, as you said, going through the records, pretty standard, I guess, pneumonia. | ||
It's pretty standard treatment. | ||
Something you need to be Louis Pasteur to understand, correct? | ||
Pretty basic? | ||
Treatment pretty basic? | ||
That's absolutely correct, Steve. | ||
I mean, they chose an antibiotic that you use for patients who live in facilities or hospitals. | ||
The other antibiotic was vancomycin. | ||
They put them on, and vancomycin is used for MRSA and other multidrug-resistant organisms. | ||
You only use that on patients who get sick while in hospitals or facilities where a lot of antibiotics are used. | ||
You would not use it on a Mennonite child from a community. | ||
They don't get multidrug-resistant organisms. | ||
They get common organisms. | ||
Which mycoplasma is one of the most common. | ||
That's why the standards are to give an antibiotic that treats mycoplasma. | ||
And they did not give a mycoplasma-treating antibiotic. | ||
And let me just finish here, Steve, and say, what's worse is she continued to decline. | ||
Everything got worse. | ||
She landed on a mechanical ventilator. | ||
They never changed the antibiotic regimen. | ||
And one of the things that I've said in my entire career, I taught medicine for years, is that if what you're doing is not working, change what you're doing. | ||
At no point in the daily rounding on seeing this patient did someone say, She's getting worse. | ||
She's getting worse. | ||
Let's change what we're doing. | ||
They only changed what they were doing when a test result came back on the computer saying that she was positive for mycoplasma. | ||
And even when they made that change, it took 10 hours to deliver the antibiotic to the child. | ||
It's egregious. | ||
Okay, hang on. | ||
Dr. Corey, and maybe you can answer or Mary, jump in. | ||
A free ball. | ||
Given the facts, and let's assume for purposes of this discussion that Dr. Corey's just laid out the facts, how could they possibly then promote to the media, the hospital promote to the media, that the little girl, | ||
and let me repeat this, died from measles, sir? | ||
It does, because there's no facts to state that. | ||
She had measles, and she died. | ||
So the most simplistic and superficial assessment is she died from measles. | ||
But when you actually look at the data and the facts, the story is very, very different. | ||
Like I told you, My daughter had a post-viral pneumonia, and she was treated very well with the appropriate antibiotic. | ||
It happens all the time. | ||
Post-viral pneumonias are very common. | ||
The only reason she died is someone failed to correctly treat a post-viral pneumonia. | ||
In this modern day and age, you wouldn't die from measles if appropriate. | ||
Appropriate treatment was delivered, and it was not in this case, and it's truly sad, and I even feel bad for the doctors. | ||
They made a mistake. | ||
I'm sorry that they didn't recognize their mistake in time, and that we're talking about the death of a healthy six-year-old as a result. | ||
It's really unconscionable. | ||
Dr. Hooker, if those facts are all true, how can they continue to push? | ||
That because it's nonstop on TV, how can they push she died from measles, sir? | ||
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It's like pulling teeth to get this information out there, Steve. | |
The mainstream media, this does not fit their narrative. | ||
That somebody would die from a medical error when it's so much more convenient and so much more palatable for the pro-vaccine pundits to say, yes, she died from the measles. | ||
See, these evil anti-vaxxers, these individuals that are trying to kill our kids. | ||
Unfortunately, it fit the narrative. | ||
It was a convenient narrative. | ||
And the hospital literally rolled out a press conference the same day that she passed away to tell everybody. | ||
Mary Holland, what then is to be done, ma'am? | ||
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Well, I think I'm grateful to you, Steve, for having us on, because I think when we put out the truth, it really, it hampers the mainstream continuing with their propaganda. | |
Measles is treatable. | ||
What this child, unfortunately, sadly died of was medical error, not the measles. | ||
Okay. Mary, where do people go to find out more about this, ma'am? | ||
And what's your social media? | ||
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Childrenshealthdefense.org. | |
I'm at Mary Holland NYC. | ||
Thank you, ma'am. | ||
Dr. Brian Hooker, how do people get to you and your social media, sir? | ||
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You can see the video clip of the interview that I did with Dr. Corey at chd.tv, or you can reach me at BrianHookerPhD. | |
Dr. Hooker, thank you so much. | ||
And Dr. Corey, glad to have you back. | ||
Where do people get you, sir? | ||
I think I do my best work on Substack, which is PierreCoreyMedicalMusings.com. | ||
Thank you, sir. | ||
Thank you guys for coming on and doing this. | ||
We are going to reach out to the hospital and see if they want to come on and we'll show them the clips of this and they want to try to refute it. | ||
Then we'll have everybody back on and fight this one out. | ||
A tragedy. | ||
One thing I will tell you from a group that has sat here and watched this story, this narrative built up, it's been ironclad. | ||
The little girl died from measles. | ||
The little girl died from measles. | ||
The little six-year-old girl died from measles. | ||
That has been ironclad, so we'll work to get to the bottom of this. | ||
Birch gold. | ||
The Fed came out with some numbers. | ||
I'm going to try to break it down tomorrow. | ||
I'm going to get Ed Dowd on with me. | ||
From Hawaii, it'll be, oh, dark 30 there, but I've asked Ed to come on because there's very confusing numbers coming out of the Fed about growth rates and about inflation I want to get in back of. | ||
But right now, I will tell you, times of financial turbulence, they are upon us. | ||
Gold is reaching an all-time high every couple of days. | ||
It's not the all-time high number that should be your focus. | ||
It's why that is happening. | ||
And that's what Birch Gold does. | ||
So make sure you go to birchgold.com slash war room slash Bannon and you get the end of the dollar empire. | ||
The last is modern monetary theory. | ||
This is an idea that had very negative consequences for the world and very negative consequences for your personal financial situation. | ||
Make sure you get it and check it out today. | ||
Let's go. | ||
We've got a cold open for our next guest, Robert Tannenbaum. | ||
Let's play it. | ||
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The convenience of Lee Harvey Oswald. | |
Now, the reasoning of Oswald being the lone actor was that he had met with Cuban officials in Mexico City before, and this whole assassination then happened. | ||
The official reports allege that it was carried out as retaliation related to the Bay of Pigs. | ||
But was it? | ||
We know that LBJ and Kennedy had beef, which led to a variety of other theories, including allegations that LBJ was in on it. | ||
With people citing multiple reports, what appeared to be LBJ ducking prior to the first shot even being fired. | ||
And one of the first things LBJ did as the president after the assassination, which raised even more concern, was to establish that Warren Commission I mentioned earlier to investigate it. | ||
And who led that? | ||
A little guy named Alan Dulles. | ||
Now, Alan Dulles had been the former CIA director. | ||
That JFK had fired! | ||
There were also significant policy 180s, like the reversal on Vietnam, where Kennedy's intent was to withdraw from Vietnam, and then LBJ, when he took over, accelerated the war. | ||
Now, almost all of this is not new, and much of it the CIA was happy to release at the time, but what we're finding out from these recent docs last night is that the CIA had one request. | ||
They had no oppositions to releasing most of this stuff years ago. | ||
But they did have one request for redactions. | ||
Any mention of Israel or Israeli intelligence. | ||
Why? What were they doing? | ||
Were they involved in this? | ||
In fact, over a dozen incidences cited in the recent documents we got last night said that it was redacted from previously released documents. | ||
I don't have the answer to this. | ||
And these documents don't tell us. | ||
But this issue is part of the 1% that has been withheld all these years. | ||
Which leads me to my already previous conclusion in general, that is you can't trust the government for anything. | ||
By all accounts released, it appears that our own government assassinated the President of the United States, classified it, and then systematically leaked parts of the files over decades to the public, allowing for theories to be perpetuated for decades. | ||
Some of them were widely accepted as fact, even. | ||
This type of campaign? | ||
That drip, drip, drip of information, that is a classic... | ||
Okay, Carl Higby's a good man. | ||
That's over at Newsmax. | ||
And Carl was a little worked up. | ||
Pretty definitive statement right there. | ||
We asked Robert Tannenbaum, author of That Day in Dallas, to join us, one of the world's leading experts on the Kennedy assassination. | ||
What would he make of the file in Brother Higby? | ||
Laid it out there. | ||
He believes the government's involved in these documents show it. | ||
Robert Tannenbaum, your thoughts, sir? | ||
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Well, thank you, Steve. | |
The bottom line is when I was asked to go to Washington by Richard Sprague, who was the staff director of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, and he contacted me in October of 76 to go to Washington with him and take over the investigation into the assassination of President Kennedy. | ||
Committee also was working on the assassination of Martin Luther King. | ||
And the first week I was in Washington with Dick Sprague, who was the chief assistant DA in Philadelphia. | ||
Brilliant lawyer, very honest, very thorough. | ||
I was asked to meet Senator Richard Schweiker, who had just come off the church committee investigation into the executive committee responses. | ||
To the executive intelligence community committees in response to the assassinations of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King. | ||
And he said to me, he handed me his file, and he said to me, I'm there for one week, as I mentioned. | ||
And he said, you're gonna run into tremendous problems from the CIA. | ||
They're gonna obstruct, they're gonna do everything they can, not to tell you the truth. | ||
It's based upon my investigation, he said. | ||
He was involved with the assassination issue having to do with the executive intelligence agencies, a subcommittee of the whole. | ||
He said, I believe that the CIA was involved in the assassination of President Kennedy. | ||
It was quite a shock, but again, the culture there was... | ||
Hold it, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, full stop. | ||
Repeat that? | ||
What did he say? | ||
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What I just said was that Senator Schweiger told me from his investigation, which was the Church Committee investigation into the Executive Intelligence Agency's responses to the assassination of President Kennedy. | |
Okay, full stop. | ||
The Church Committee, which the Senate Intel and the House Intel Committees came out of, you're telling me Swiker was not considered a bomb thrower. | ||
You would agree with that? | ||
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That's exactly right. | |
He was a senator from Pennsylvania. | ||
And Schweikart was also a Republican, I believe? | ||
Yes. And Frank Church and Gary Hart both eventually ran for President of the United States coming out of the committee, correct? | ||
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That's correct, yeah. | |
And Mike Mansfield, one of the most revered leaders of the Senate in the history of this republic, set up that committee and handpicked those gentlemen to be on the committee? | ||
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That's right. | |
And those committee members spent a lot of time with not just former CIA heads, but also with James Angleton, particularly. | ||
That's exactly right. | ||
And you're telling me that Swiker told you? | ||
I want you to repeat it, not my words. | ||
I want to hear it from you. | ||
What did Senator Schweikert tell you? | ||
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I was in Washington with Sprague, which was in January of 77, of 97. And he said to me that he was very concerned about his findings. | |
And he handed me his file. | ||
And he said, the CIA is going to obstruct everything you try to do to get to the truth. | ||
And he finished by saying in his office to me that he believed that the CIA was a participant in the assassination of President Kennedy. | ||
Did anything in this file, I know you haven't had a chance to go through all of it, but it's Carl Higbee and you got Glenn Greenwald and two guys I respect. | ||
They're coming to kind of this conclusion. | ||
Is anything in this information reinforce your previous research, or you think this is something that's already been washed by the intelligence community before they put it out? | ||
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No, look, they didn't wash everything that is incriminating against them. | |
Yes, I do believe, having the opportunity in 62 years to lie to the American public, that they did wash it. | ||
I had information that they created testimonies that were inaccurately Recorded by CIA, not what the witness has said. | ||
But there were two other major factors about the CIA's participation that caused great concern. | ||
And the first one was a memo that was written by President Truman on December 22,'63. | ||
And it was a major critique, a scathing critique of what the CIA's role has been. | ||
And he said that he was very disturbed. | ||
By the way, the CIA had been diverted from its original assignment and has become an operational and at times policy-making organization. | ||
And there's insufficient oversight. | ||
And he says this has led to the trouble that many have had and that has compounded the difficulties in several explosive areas. | ||
But even more important is a March 3, 1964 letter that John McCone, the director of the CIA, wrote in response to James Rowley, who was then Chief of the Secret Service. | ||
And what was interesting about this is, this just went right to what Mr. Higbee said a few moments ago. | ||
And that is, McCone wrote in his letter in response that he was concerned, along with Rowley, about leaks that were going on from what they had determined in Washington. | ||
And those leaks mostly to do with Lee Harvey Iswald, his training, and his suspect activity. | ||
And then it's a two-page letter. | ||
Signature's on page. | ||
And in it, he said, quote, I'm concerned that if someone in any way disclosed the wrong person... | ||
Robert, let's leave it hanging there. | ||
I'm going to get you back on tomorrow. | ||
Where's your social media? | ||
We've got about 30 seconds. | ||
We've got to bounce. | ||
Where do people get you? | ||
Website, social media. | ||
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Well, they can get me on my telephone number, which is 310-270. | |
3-9-0-4. | ||
Okay, great. | ||
That's good social media. | ||
We'll get back to you. | ||
Tomorrow morning, we'll be back in the warm at 10 o'clock. | ||
Pretty explosive. | ||
Mary Holland and the team of Children's Health Fund said the little girl, six-year-old girl, did not die of measles. | ||
We'll get into that more. | ||
And some pretty prominent people, people who we respect, are saying the Central Intelligence Agency, they think, had a role in the assassination of John F. Kennedy, the President of the United States. |