The Spirit Of Freedom - 'Virus' Whistleblower Louise Hampton Talks With David Icke About Pandemic Li
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♪♪♪ I'm delighted to say that with me today is Louise Hampton,
and she personifies the spirit that is necessary to turn around this unfolding fascism in the world,
which is taking away all freedom.
Because it's not fascists that impose fascism, of course there's not enough of them.
It's the public, the population acquiesce into fascism.
So everyone who speaks out instead of staying silent is speaking out against and challenging This unfolding fascism, and certainly Louise Hampton has spoken out.
She was working in a call centre for the National Health Service in Britain, working for a company called Care UK in South or West London.
Of course, she had her experience of working every day, but then she's looking on the news and she's looking at government pronouncements and what they were saying was happening is not what her experience was.
And eventually, she famously broke out in a Facebook video using words of very few syllables to explain the fact that what you're being told about all the over-and-hospitals was, let's say, nonsense. So I am delighted to say a welcome to Louise Hampton.
How are you doing? I'm okay, thank you.
How are you? Well, I'm good.
Well, as good as to be expected in a madhouse.
So let's start by just talking about what was your job with Care UK? So I worked as a health advisor.
Sorry, the cat's trying to get in the video now.
I was working as a health advisor at NHS 111 service.
So I took all of the frontline calls that came into London, Bristol and Birmingham.
So what I'll do, I'll do a telephone triage.
So people will tell me their symptoms.
I'll go through a triage and then at the end of the call, I would give them a disposition.
So I'd send them to either accident and emergency, arrange an ambulance for them or send them to an out of hours doctor, etc.
And if there was anything that was complex or out of my remit, I would pass that person on to a paramedic or a nurse.
Okay, so we're back in, what, February, March.
You're going to work, doing your job, and then this alleged pandemic started.
So how did your job change?
What was your experience?
Before the pandemic, we took call after call.
Our call centres were unindated with calls daily.
But as soon as the pandemic hit, our call volumes just went down.
We had like six or seven minutes between telephone calls where we were just sitting there doing nothing.
And we were wondering, where are all these people that are supposed to be ringing us?
And when people did ring us, they didn't actually have COVID symptoms.
So there were no people calling with the symptoms and my own personal opinion is that people were too scared to call us in case we said go to hospital or you need an ambulance.
So the call volumes were so low.
Well it is incredible that you have a national health service and what you do is terrify people from using it because that's that's the experience that I've seen as well.
You must have been surprised because all the propaganda was saying that even beforehand the NHS and hospitals are going to be overrun and suddenly the calls basically disappear compared with what they were like before.
Why did you think it was happening at the time?
You must have surprised you.
Yeah, definitely. I think people were too scared to go to hospital.
So we weren't getting anybody with COVID symptoms, like the continuous cough or the fever.
So then that started to ring alarm bells.
I thought every single person calling us would have some kind of COVID symptoms, and that wasn't the case.
And then when people were calling us with clear-cut heart attacks or stroke symptoms, and I was saying to them, based on your condition, I feel like I should arrange you an ambulance, they would refuse the ambulance.
They would say, I'm not going to hospital because I'm too scared to catch COVID. And I would then have to beg and plead with people who are usually elderly to take the ambulance.
And a lot of them would say, sorry, I'm not going to hospital.
I'd rather stay at home.
And then I'd have to say, in that case, I'm going to have to escalate your call and you're going to have to get a callback from a nurse or a paramedic.
So then they'd be put on a callback list.
And I feel that that must have been delaying their treatment as well.
It's very frustrating for me to try and get people into the hospital.
Well, that would explain why suddenly the figures for people dying at home went through the roof compared with what they were before.
Yeah, definitely.
So at what point did you start to think, I can't stay silent about this?
So I think it was around August, September time.
We were all sitting there at work, eating loads of snacks, putting on weight because we had time between calls to chit-chat and eat snacks.
We were colouring NHS rainbows, talking amongst ourselves and I thought, something's just not right here.
We're in the middle of a pandemic, we're staying two metres apart at work, there were massive screens up at the desk, they were doing the temperature gun every time we walked in the office and I just thought, there's all this hoo-ha, yet we're not getting calls with people And having breathing problems or coughs and stuff.
And I just thought, no, there's something not right here.
What about your colleagues?
Yeah, they were the same.
They were saying, where are all the people that are supposed to be calling us?
We just expected every other call to be a COVID call, but it wasn't.
But at the same time, you're seeing on the news and in these government briefings by these pair of Prats, Valance and Whitty, and the other pair of Prats, Johnson and Tim Cook, that the NHS is being overwhelmed.
You're reading in the newspapers that some hospitals are like war zones.
I mean, it must have been like the twilight zone for you.
Yeah, it really was.
I took all of the calls for Northwest London, Bristol and Birmingham, which are major cities.
And before the pandemic, I would constantly send people to out-of-hours GPs at the hospitals, send people to the urgent treatment centres.
I just, I wasn't sending the volume that I usually sent.
So I'm thinking if I'm not sending anybody to hospital, hardly anyone else is here either.
So the hospitals must be empty.
So I made that assumption And also, the out-of-hours doctors for North West London were in the offices below us, and every time I used to finish my shift at midnight, all of their doctor-on-call cars would be in the parking bays.
They weren't even out on call.
I don't know what they were doing, but that raised suspicions too.
Yeah, so at what point then did you say, I've got to speak out on this, and then you made the video?
I've been speaking out on my Facebook since about March or April, posting memes and quotes and news reports and kind of saying, look, I don't really buy this.
But the thing that made me make the video was I was having a bit of a bad day.
To be honest, it was a bit of a rant and a bit of a breakdown because I've had enough of going into work, having the temperature gone and everything.
And yeah, I just got in my car, got on the video and That was it really.
And what was the reaction from your employers?
So it went viral whilst I was actually on shift and I got a text message from somebody that I know and they said what the hell have you done?
So I quickly told my employer that I had a headache and said can I go home please and I escaped the office And I never saw them again.
I only communicated with them via email.
And they told me that I was under investigation.
And then they wanted to fire me for gross misconduct.
Yeah, I mean, you're under investigation for telling the truth.
This is the world. Yeah, exactly.
What was the reaction from people in general, though?
Because, I mean, you know, I remember the video.
We posted it on davidi.com.
And it was so refreshing to see.
And you must have got a lot of support as well.
Yeah, definitely. I feel like I got more support than hate.
However, my entire family now think I'm crazy, has mental issues, and they've turned their back on me.
But the support has been overwhelming.
There's a lot more truth seekers out there than I realised.
Yeah, there are. And it's testament to the way not just this country, but every other country has been divided by this, by people who bought the official story and people who haven't.
But it is amazing that they can say that about you when you're not standing on the other side of the street saying, this is what I think is going on.
You actually experienced it day after day and realized it was a scam.
Exactly. I've had a lot of people say to me, you're not medically trained, you wasn't working on the wards, what do you know?
But all I know is I was taking the frontline calls for three major cities in this country and I wasn't sending the volume of people to hospital that I usually did.
I wasn't getting people with the Covid symptoms.
So I feel like my experience is valid.
Well it absolutely is.
Didn't they give you a certificate, I know this was in the video, a certificate for all your hard work when you knew that that was not the case?
Yeah I'd worked a lot harder in the past at that company but during the pandemic we were just eating snacks and colouring rainbows And just chit-chatting amongst each other.
I definitely didn't deserve that certificate and that's why I said it was a certificate of, you know what?
Bollocks I think was the word.
I'm embarrassed by that video now.
Well you shouldn't be, it was brilliant.
It was not only great because the information got out, it was hilarious the way it was delivered.
Another bizarre thing for you must have been every week watching all these people all over Britain coming out of their houses and clapping for the NHS who were dealing with situations.
Definitely. I did that for the first couple of weeks because I kind of got caught up in the hysteria and I felt really proud.
I had my NHS badge and I worked for 111 and I got swept away in that.
And then I thought, hang on a minute, I'm not dealing with all of these COVID patients.
So I just gave up with the clapping.
I just thought, what's the point?
Yeah, I gave it a miss before it started.
It was so obviously a scam from the start.
So, where did you think these numbers were coming from?
There you are at this call centre, and they are major cities.
The number of calls plummets.
But the numbers keep coming out of government with all the cases and the deaths going up.
How did you square that in your mind?
I believe that they were marking people as a Covid death, even though they didn't directly die of Covid.
That's if it exists.
I have seen since that people were dying of cancer and stuff, but if they had COVID in their body, COVID was put on the certificate.
So I just think the numbers were inflated because of that.
Yeah, of course, they were being tested and still are with a test not testing for the virus and more and more of that is coming out.
And the scale of the scam is unbelievable.
And you were in the newspapers again in the last few days, because you went out, didn't you, to accident and emergency units, two hospitals.
Yeah. So I went to two, because I've had so many people discredit me, I decided to go to two London A&Es that I used to send people to at 111.
I went to Ealing Hospital and Hillingdon Hospital and what I discovered was they were completely
empty and it was a Friday night. I went to Ealing at 9pm, there were a handful of people
in A&E, then Hillingdon at 10pm on a Friday, two people sitting in there. I couldn't believe
it and I was actually born in Hillingdon Hospital. I used to be a horse rider so I've been in
A&E a lot at that particular hospital and it's usually rammed full of people but to
see two people sitting there was a real shock. Well, doing what I do I get information from
lots of people and the constant theme since March that the hospitals were empty has just
been constant.
Yeah. I got stopped about 10 minutes from where I'm sitting by someone who works in A&E in the Isle of White Hospital.
This is back in, yeah, it must have been April.
And he came up to me, he says, what you're saying is absolutely right, that we've never known it as quiet as it is now.
And this is all over the world the same.
Which brings me to this, Louise.
Yeah. You're someone who's had the guts and the integrity to speak out.
But of course, enormous, the great vast majority of people working in the health services of the world have not.
They've stayed silent.
What's your view on that?
Going back to when people used to clap for the NHS, I myself was a victim of getting caught up in that in the very beginning, feeling quite proud.
I work for the NHS etc and then after a while I realised this isn't right and I kind of left it there.
I think some people have got so caught up in it I don't know.
Maybe it's narcissism.
I'm not sure. Some people want to carry that on.
They want to pretend that they're doing a good job and they're working hard during the pandemic.
I don't know if I'm going down the wrong road, but I think a lot of it is people don't want to tell the truth.
They just want to carry on this lie that they're this NHS hero.
And also, there must be a lot of intimidation.
You've experienced some of it.
Yeah. Intimidation to stay silent.
Yeah, definitely. I've even had family members handwrite me a letter telling me that I'm dangerous, I'm going to kill people.
Having my own family cut me off has been really hard.
But then to have strangers inbox me as well to tell me I'm selfish.
I've just done it for five minutes of fame has been quite difficult as well, but I just feel like I have to stand in my truth and I don't believe that this is a real pandemic.
And I think what have I got to lose now?
Everybody thinks I'm crazy and I'm a nut job.
I'm just going to keep talking the truth and that's why I was going out to test centres and A&Es just to try and show the other side Well, good on you.
Thank you. You can be called a nutter and survive and prosper out of that personal experience.
But when you think about it, and this is one of the frustrations for me, is that this whole pandemic hoax is founded and can only work because people who know stay silent.
Yeah. As they stay silent, therefore the public don't know the truth of what's going on, and so they believe the government and the media.
And as a result of believing that, governments can impose gathering fascism and tyranny and destruction of freedom.
So if you break it down and you bring it back, the health workers, doctors, nurses, and other health staff of the world By staying silent are actually facilitating this fascism by keeping the public in the dark of what the truth really is.
Absolutely. And I'm really angry at them for staying silent when some of them know, they must know deep down in their heart that it's not right.
And there's going to come a point where they're going to have to face that as we move forward, unless we can turn this around, which we're trying to do.
So you've taken the classic consequences of speaking the truth, which is being called the mad or bad usual reaction.
So what now for you?
Where do you go from here, do you think?
I'm quite enjoying going to the test centres and the A&Es to try and show the other side, the side that the mainstream media don't show.
So I think I'm just going to try and do more of that.
I just go along, do a Facebook Live and just show people that these test centres, these A&Es are empty.
Because when you watch the news, they're full of people, they're queuing up at the test centres.
I just want to show real life and try and stick to the facts.
Well, anything you get, send it to me and I'll post it on the website and circulate it because it's people like you that are going to turn this around.
And it's the people who are abusing you that are facilitating fascism.
So I know which side I'd rather be on.
So on behalf of all of us, thanks so much for what you've done.
And I know you'll keep going.
And I think you've done a fantastic job and a tremendous service to human freedom.