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Dec. 9, 2020 - David Icke
54:35
Premeditated mass murder of old people worldwide - David talks with real journalist Jacqui Deevoy
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♪♪♪ We're going to talk today about really one of the central
implications of this COVID nonsense and this lockdown fascism.
And that's the impact on old people, the elderly.
Which, at the age of 68, I'm supposed to be in this upper category as well.
I hadn't noticed, but apparently so.
And what's considered elderly is getting younger and younger and younger, as more and more people are pulled in to the implications and consequences of this literal targeting of old people.
Now, I'm going to be talking to a proper journalist in a minute called Jackie Devoy, and I'll explain what I mean by a proper journalist.
But I just want to make it clear that I'm talking in this video about premeditated murder of the elderly.
And that's my phrase, not Jackie's.
You should speak for yourself.
But I just want to explain why I'm talking about premeditated murder of the elderly.
Because of the unbelievable numbers of old people who've died in 2020.
Not a result of COVID-19, but as a result of the reactions and impositions justified by, quote, COVID-19.
And I've got this definition here of premeditated murder.
Premeditated murder is the crime of wrongfully and intentionally causing the death of another human being after rationally considering the timing or method of doing so in order to either increase the likelihood of success or to evade detection or apprehension.
Premeditated murder is one of the most serious forms of homicide and is punished more severely than manslaughter and other types of murder.
Often with a death penalty or a life sentence without the possibility of parole in the United States.
So premeditated, if people like me and so many others Back in March, could see the health and fatality consequences for old people of these lockdowns around the world.
Then so clearly could the people who impose them.
And if you If you know what the consequences are going to be for some people, a lot of people, in terms of health and fatality, and you still do it, knowing that's going to be the outcome for so many people, that is premeditated.
And in my view, it's premeditated murder.
But we'll get into that as we go along.
But I just want to make the point, that's my phrase, not Jackie DeVoy.
Now, Jackie DeVoy is a proper journalist.
I've known her for a long time.
What do I mean by a proper journalist?
Well, it's like words get so distorted and misused, like love.
To talk about love in the sense that you want to talk about it, because love has become so devalued in terms of the word, you have to use words like unconditional love to try to get across what you're talking about.
And journalism has become so utterly discredited that To call someone a journalist is not enough anymore because what passes for journalism is so much narrative repeating propaganda overwhelmingly today.
So what I mean by a proper journalist It's someone who cares about the truth, who cares about putting facts in front of people and not just singing from the song sheet and parroting the narrative, which we've seen from the media all over the world through this pandemic pandemic.
Hoax, as I would call it.
So Jackie Devoy is a freelance journalist in Britain.
She writes regularly for major newspapers.
But on this subject of...
What's happening to the elderly, not only has she done a tremendous amount of research and talked to a lot of people and written a lot of stories about the consequences of all this, she also has a personal story with her dad.
So it is my great delight to introduce Jackie Deboy.
And how are you doing, mate?
You've not slept well overnight, have you?
Not really. No, I've been worrying about my dad because he's back in hospital at the moment because he had a seizure yesterday.
So yeah, I've been a bit worried about him.
The last time I spoke to him, he's okay.
He's recovering. Well, that's good.
But you have this personal story because you took your dad out of a care home, didn't you?
I did, yeah.
He went into a care home in January after he suffered a stroke.
He was in hospital for eight weeks, then he went into a care home.
The first one was horrible, really horrible.
So we moved him to another one, which was, as far as care homes go, very nice.
Quite like a luxury hotel and he seemed to be well looked after there and it was a much nicer sort of a place.
So yeah, he was in there from January or maybe the beginning of February and it was only when the lockdown happened a month later That it started to get a bit worrying because obviously then we couldn't visit him.
He was very upset about it.
He'd be phoning me like 10, 20 times a day sometimes just you know because he was so anxious.
Then he started to get depressed and so the worry started then you know April or May.
That's when I started sort of looking into things and I'm writing about it.
I just thought I need to write about this.
So the first story I wrote was for the Telegraph initially.
They said, yeah, go with it. And this was about DNRs.
DNRs do not resuscitate orders, which were put on old people when the lockdown started.
Yeah, because I had a call from the care home, a nurse at the care home said she needed to update my dad's details.
Could she go through all the records with me?
And I said yes. And then she said yeah, and he's got a DNR. And then she asked the next question.
I went, oh hang on, hang on, hang on, what did you just say?
And she told me that he had a DNR in place, and I do not resuscitate.
So I asked her to explain what that was, and she told me that, you know, should he stop breathing for any reason, that they wouldn't resuscitate him.
And I said, well, who authorised that to be put in place?
And she said, oh, hang on, I'll check the signatures.
So she said, oh, a doctor at the hospital, a consultant at the hospital.
And I said, well, nobody spoke to me about it.
And they said, oh, I don't know why that was.
So I said, well, can you take that off his file?
Because I don't want him to have that.
And they said, well, he wants it.
And I said, well, he's been diagnosed with dementia.
So he hasn't got capacity.
And I want it removed.
And they said, well, you can't just remove it like that.
You'd need to speak to the consultant that signed the DNR and his GP. So they refused to remove it.
So that's a worry just having that in place because I've heard some horrible stories.
So I spoke to a whistleblower doctor at a hospital in London and he said that DNRs were being put on lots of different types of people.
Anyone over 60 that came into hospital for whatever reason just automatically went on.
Anyone with a mental health issue Or who was mentally disabled in any way, physically disabled people of any age.
And he was absolutely horrified what was going on because even if the patient and the family had specified that they did not want a DNR, this doctor said it's seen notes scored out with overridden by doctor on it and a DNR put on without the patient or their family knowing.
So this doctor had been working for 30 years for the NHS and was now going to take early retirement because he couldn't carry on in this situation.
He also got onto the subject of organ harvesting, but that's another story altogether, where he'd seen young people who'd committed suicide mainly, where doctors were hovering, waiting to get the organs And he said they were like vultures.
And he'd have to go in to assess whether the organ was fit for transplantation.
And he told me one story where he went in, it was a young man who committed suicide, obviously kept alive because they can only remove organs when a person is alive, even though they're called brain dead, their body is still alive and can still feel pain.
Again, another story. And he was so distraught by this situation, he just said, no, no, none of the organs are right.
And the other doctors, the vultures, were waiting, saying, what do you mean, what do you mean, we need the organs?
And he said, no, they're all useless, because he couldn't bear for them to cut this young man open and take his organs.
So that was another, so some horrible things going on in the hospitals that a lot of people must be turning a blind eye to.
Quite horrific. People say, oh, you know, that's just one person's story.
Well, to me, that's enough, really.
Those sort of stories.
Well, the thing, Jackie, is that people grow up with this incredibly naive and almost childlike belief in the medical profession.
And there are some very, very top class doctors who really do care about the patients.
But, you know, it's very clear in 2020, is it not, that there are a very significant number in the medical profession, not just doctors, who actually don't care about the patients.
Otherwise, they wouldn't do these things.
Why would you put a do not resuscitate order on someone?
Why would you do that to a young kid who's committed suicide?
And also, this do not resuscitate theme was so widespread, it had to be coordinated and come from government, surely.
Yeah, this doctor that I spoke to said that all the protocols were coming from the bureaucrats, the men in suits, and people were just following them like sheep, the nurses and doctors.
They were sometimes questioning them.
They'd look at the protocol and think, well, this isn't right.
We can't do this, this is completely the wrong thing to do, but they did it anyway, because they were told to.
Now this is the main worry, I think, people just doing things without questioning, you know, like we have the people now walking the streets wearing masks, even though nobody's even told them to do that, which I find really peculiar.
Without any questioning.
And when you do question them, and I've questioned a lot of people in the street, they just say, well, you know, I don't want to get into trouble, you know.
But it's not the government that they're afraid of, and it's not virus they're afraid of.
They're afraid of each other now, which is very clever, the way it's all been worked out.
People are frightened of confrontation.
Even some of my semi-awake friends say, oh, I just put it on, you know, because I don't want people to come up to me in the street and start a fight.
And this is terrible. I'm saying to people, you've got to, you know, stand up for yourself and not be afraid of confrontation.
But it seems so many people are.
It's like the majority of people seem to be afraid of other people now, which is Which is really sad.
But you're right. It is a common theme between the two because while people wear masks because they're frightened of not wearing them and the reaction of others.
I mean, I suffer from that myself as you know.
But you've also got this nodding dog attitude, like you say, among the medical profession.
Where they don't make decisions on their own morality, but just do whatever they're told, which means a tiny few people can orchestrate this massive assault on old people.
Yeah. I've spoken to lots of people who say, oh, I know that the mask doesn't do anything and I know it's stupid and it doesn't make any sense, but I'm just going to wear it anyway.
They're the worst people because they're willfully, you know, they know what's going on, but they're still complying.
And I don't understand that at all.
And you could say that about doctors in exactly the same way and medical staff and the way they're reacting.
Yes. You mentioned a few minutes ago some horrific stories relating to Do Not Resuscitate orders.
Can you tell us a few of those?
Which ones in particular?
Well, you said that you had come across some horrific stories relating to the content.
The doctor that I spoke to said that he had lots of stories but didn't tell me any more than that particular one about the organ harvesting and also Just that DNRs are going on pretty much everyone over 60 and without consent.
So that was enough for me.
Some of the horrific stories would almost certainly relate to people who could be resuscitated and continue to live okay.
Yeah, there was one paramedic I spoke to who said they picked up a man who was having an asthma attack, a man in his 50s, and he was having a bad asthma attack in the back of the ambulance.
And when they checked his notes, there was a DNR on his notes.
So they didn't do anything to help him against their instincts.
They said, well, we can't, there's a DNR, and he died.
My God.
I mean, what kind of programming does it take to do that?
And the other thing is that I've come across when I was writing the answer is that it's not just DNRs on old people, but also on disabled people and mentally ill people.
Yeah. I don't understand how a paramedic, because they would instinctively go to save the person, I don't know how much they must have been brainwashed or how scared they are to just stand by and let that happen.
It doesn't make sense to me.
They've obviously been either, they're obviously terrified of breaking the rules, or I don't know.
I don't know. It doesn't make sense.
And then we say, okay, so what happened in Nazi Germany?
Exactly the same.
We're going through the same process, except it's worldwide now.
And what did the Nazis do?
They wanted to get rid of people that they didn't think were worth saving, including the disabled and people like that.
I mean, this is Nazis that we're talking about here.
And we've seen so many stories, especially recently, I know you've written a number of articles in national newspapers about it, the way that families are simply deprived and prevented from having any, what you would call, contact with their elderly relatives in what are called care homes.
Yeah, there's definitely eugenics going on, and we all know about that, and euthanasia, really, because they are being killed off.
I mean, my dad has recovered so much just before his seizure yesterday.
He can have very intelligent conversations about this, and he's totally aware that old people are being killed off.
He's totally aware of what's going on.
And that's why he's so happy and relieved to be out of the home, because now this vaccine has arrived on the scene.
He's saying they're all going to be bumping him off with the vaccine now.
And I said, absolutely, spot on, Dad, you know.
So he knows what's going on.
And he's very, very delighted and relieved not to be in the home.
But he does worry about the other people in the home still.
And he has these moments of guilt where he feels guilty for having left.
It's almost like survivor guilt, I suppose, because He did like some of the staff there and had a couple of friends there as well and I did kind of remove him rather speedily so he felt a bit guilty that he just suddenly upped and offed.
So yeah, but he's totally aware as I am and as are hundreds of thousands of other people now aware about what's going on.
So that first woman to have the vaccine yesterday Lots of very strange things about that.
I don't know if you looked into it.
I mean, she's got her face covered in all the pictures.
But a lot of people are saying, do you remember that redhead woman who was pushed over at the rally?
Oh, yeah. She looks like her.
People are saying she's a crisis actor.
So I don't know. I don't know. I haven't really looked into that yet.
And also, the first man ever to have this new marvellous COVID vaccine, he's called William Shakespeare.
William Shakespeare. I saw that.
And he lives near Stratford-upon-Avon.
It's like, really?
Are they serious? Like all the world's a stage, isn't it?
The propaganda over the vaccine in Britain this week and the starting of it is unbelievable.
I mean, the tears of the health secretary, Matt Hancock.
I mean, he'd never get a job in Hollywood, would he, really?
No, Tears of a Clown.
And also T-I-E-R-S of all the other clowns.
But yeah, you're talking about his appearance on Good Morning Britain.
Yeah. What was he doing?
Did you see the duping delight?
You know, when someone can't keep a smile off their face because they're so thrilled that they're conning everyone.
He cannot hide the smile.
He's pretending to cry.
I started to think last night, he must owe them something because they're...
Making himself humiliate.
They're making him humiliate himself on live TV, on national TV. Maybe he's being made to do this, made to humiliate himself as some kind of weird ritual.
Maybe he owes them something and maybe they've got something on him like they have on most politicians.
Certainly, Hancock and Johnson are just script readers.
The real power is behind them.
But you took your dad out of a care home.
And before we come into how difficult that is for some people, how difficult was it for you?
What was the process of going in and saying, I want him out?
Well, I did several window visits, and then I saw him outside on his birthday, sitting in the garden, because I refused to wear the PPE or have any temperature tests.
Actually, no, they lunged at me with the temperature thing, and I was like, whoa, I don't want that, but it's too late, they've done it.
The carer said, oh, your temperature's really high.
And she said it was, I don't know, 40-something.
And I was like, well, surely I'd be dead if it was that high.
I said, oh, can't I go and see him then?
And she was like, no, I'll be fine.
So what's the point? What was the point of her holding the gun to my head?
It's like, got a raging temperature, you know, near to death.
And she let me in anyway.
But I told them, I wrote to them after that and said I will not have that thing pointed at my head again and you shouldn't just nudge at people with it.
I said a lot of people have PTSD and you shouldn't be holding gun-shaped objects to people's heads anyway.
It's quite traumatic and humiliating in a way, isn't it?
Being treated like you've got something when you haven't, that's a typical abuse tactic, isn't it?
Being treated like you're ill when you're not, physically or mentally.
In fact, everything the government are doing to the people at the moment, you can compare it to an abusive relationship.
Not letting people out of their house.
If one other person did that to you, if one other person said, you're not allowed out, you're not allowed to see your family or friends, you've got to wear this thing over your face, you think, what?
Get out of that relationship quickly.
Unfortunately, it seems we're having trouble getting out of our relationship with the government.
So you managed to get your dad out of that care home, but others haven't, and you've written stories about them.
Tell me about the family of Leandra.
Ashton who's an actress in Britain.
Well Leandra first came to our attention when there was a story on MailOnline where they went to visit, she went with her mother to visit her grandmother and they were so fed up with the situation trying to talk to this poor woman who's got dementia Through a window, the poor woman is 97 years old.
They saw an opportunity.
I think when a door was open, the mother, Yeleni, went in.
She's 74, I think, 73 or 74.
She darted in, grabbed the granny in a wheelchair and wheeled her out and said, you know, we're taking you home.
Because she's 97, you know, they know she probably hasn't got long left and they want her They wanted her at home to care for her and Eleni is a nurse, a trained nurse, so she was well able to look after her so there wouldn't have been a problem and they just wanted their mother and grandmother at home.
The care at home called the police.
The police came, they arrested the 74-year-old lady and put her in handcuffs, don't quite understand why that was necessary, and put her in the back of a police car.
And then they escorted the grandmother back to the home in a police car.
She looked thoroughly confused by everything that was going on.
And Leandra filmed the whole thing and it was very distressing to watch.
And then just the other day at the weekend, Leandra put up a post on Facebook.
Her mother went to do a window visit to the grandmother and was literally kneeling on concrete outside the window so she could, you know, get as close as possible to her.
And the grandmother's in a wheelchair looking very, very ill.
And so Yeleni's shouting through the window and To the carer, my mother looks ill.
Her lips are very blue.
She's breathing very fast.
I need to talk to someone.
And they said, I'll bring back on Monday.
And she's saying, that's too far away.
I need to talk to someone now.
She's in a bad way. And as she was saying this, the carer just turned the wheelchair around and wheeled the grandmother away.
And she's shouting through the window, don't go away, bring her back, don't take her away.
And it's just so distressing to watch.
You know, you couldn't watch that without getting a tear in your eye because it's just so cruel and so inhumane that someone would behave like that.
So I was chatting to Leandra afterwards because I wrote a story about it for the Mail about that particular incident.
And Leandra basically says she thinks that the wrong people have been given too much power And they're abusing it horribly.
You've got these people, not all of them, obviously, but certain people working in care homes, probably a bit frustrated on minimum wage, not properly trained, suddenly being given all this power.
And they're just wielding it in a really negative, cruel way.
I mean, I don't know if you're familiar with the Stanford experiment, was it back in the 60s, where the guards and prisoners, you know, some people when they're given power will abuse it, and they can be really sadistic and cruel.
And it seems that a lot of these are working in care homes at the moment.
But they still can't get the grandmother out of the home.
She's still trapped, imprisoned in there.
And now she's clearly not very well.
But Leandra said her grandmother is made of strong stuff and it's almost like she's refusing to die.
You know, she's just going to hang on in there despite them.
But Leandra also says something very interesting.
She said that She thinks the care home issue is going to uproot the corruption that's going on, she said, because whereas we all, you know, everyone disagrees about mask wearing and tier systems, everybody agrees that what's going on in the care homes is wrong.
Nobody thinks that's right.
So that's something that we can all unite on and complain about.
And it might, you know, uproot what's going on, all the corruption and deception.
So, That's the end of the story so far.
They've got a solicitor on the case now.
They're still trying to get her out, but that's the latest I've heard on it.
I'll put that video you've just described with this video on davidike.com.
But a few things about what you've just said.
First of all, I have noticed over the last 20 years, because it's become clearer and clearer, that there has been systematic recruitment of Not just in the medical arena, but in the police and law enforcement arena of particular mentalities, which are in the range and sometimes in the extreme range of psychopathic.
And so if you put that mentality, and I'm not casting aspersions on everybody in the health profession.
There's some fantastic people doing a fantastic job.
But if you put that mentality in there, well, what are you going to get?
If you employ a psychopath or a psychopathic mentality, you're going to get psychopathy.
It's simple as that. And it seems that this has been prepared for for a long time.
It's quite interesting because...
Although a lot of them do seem to be like that, the police in particular, some of them aren't.
I don't know if they're just the kind of leftovers from before, but at the last protest I was at with you on September the 26th, Trafalgar Square, after you left and the police So I asked one of them, what's going on?
What are you doing? And they said, He said, oh, I'm just awaiting orders.
And I said, okay.
And if you get orders to go storming in and hitting people with batons, are you going to follow that order?
And he said, of course not.
And I said, well, that's what happened before.
That's what happened last month.
And he said, well, I wasn't on duty then.
And I said, well, that doesn't mean it didn't happen.
So I moved along the line and there was a very tall...
Robocop type police officer with a mask on and I tried to speak to him but he was just completely blank like a robot.
But next to him was a little guy with fuzzy ginger sideburns poking out under his hat.
And I said, I looked at him and I said, what are you doing?
What are you doing here? Why are you a police officer doing all this stuff?
You know, they're going to order you to go in there and attack people.
You don't want to do that. He said, no, I don't.
I just want to go home. And I said, why did you join the police force?
And then I looked at the Robocop man and looked at him and I said, I know why you've joined it.
And then just look back again.
Because I think those psychopath types obviously enjoy that kind of work.
But there's this little fuzzy sideburned guy wondering why he's there.
You know, just wants to go home.
So you've got this weird sort of contrast.
They're probably gradually getting rid of the non-psychopath ones by the look of it.
Yeah, that's the game.
I mean, I've said in the books many times over the years, being a proper, decent police officer who genuinely wants to serve the community must be a bloody nightmare every day when you're surrounded by these increasing numbers of psychopaths.
I mean, I spoke in Birmingham, in the centre of Birmingham, And the contrast with London, Trafalgar Square, was unbelievable.
The police just let us do our event.
It was down the road in Wolverhampton.
They went big time in to stop the event.
But London seems to be the worst.
The Birmingham one last week, there was no police there at all.
No, exactly.
And it shows you that where these, well, they're not even police officers, are they, with the batons?
I mean, they're, you know, fully paid up members of Braindomers Anonymous.
It's orchestrated to intimidate.
Well, they're not even policemen, it's being said.
They're hired security forces.
They certainly look like that.
There's one other story about another family that you wrote about relating to care homes.
That's the Collins family.
Can you tell me about that? Yeah, Jill and Nick Collins, they contacted me just over the weekend on Saturday saying they were desperate with their situation and could I get them some publicity to try and get the situation sorted.
So Jill contacted me and Nick's 89 year old mother, same situation, in a care home, he hadn't Physically being able to hold her hand or hug her since March.
Again, I think a couple of window visits they'd had, but it's awful window, especially when the person's got dementia.
They don't understand what's going on and why they can't hold your hand.
I mean, my dad used to open his window and push his hand out so I could hold his hand.
And we were caught doing that once.
And this nurse came in.
She said, oh, you can't have the window open.
I said, are you serious?
And she said, oh, yeah, the virus, the virus.
And I'm like, for God's sake.
Me and Dad were sharing water out of a water bottle and everything, you know, arrest us.
You know, it was just absolutely ridiculous.
And they said, well, next time you come, the window has to be shut.
And I said, well, how's that going to work?
And they said, well, you can talk to him on your phone through the window.
And I said, no, no, we are not going to do that.
We are not. That's not going to happen.
And that's when I started to really get annoyed about it.
So I'll go back to that later. But yeah, so the Collins family...
Again, their situation, they've been refused to have visits, even though Nick's mother was on end-of-life care.
This was the problem.
She was the only person in the care home, this is Milton Hall Lodge in Suffolk, she was the only person in the care home who'd had a positive test result.
Why was she the only person?
I don't know. None of the staff, none of the other residents, just this lady, Pat, had positive results.
So they sent her to hospital.
And then she came out of hospital and when she was put back in the care home, they put her on end-of-life care, even though she was perfectly fine before she went in and she didn't appear to be at end-of-life.
But now, with the depression and the dementia and the fact that she's not had any physical contact with any loved ones for such a long time, she is fading away and they can see that.
So, Jill and Nick did a video on YouTube.
This was on Sunday morning, I think.
Nick was standing outside the care home just talking into the camera that Jill was holding.
Just saying, please let me see my mother.
She's dying and I have to see her and she needs to see me.
I'm her only son and I don't want her to be on her own.
And he is practically crying by the end of the video and so would anyone watching it be.
A comment appeared immediately.
The first comment appeared on YouTube under the video saying basically to take down the video and they need to remove it.
And Jill said she thinks it's someone from the care home, you know, anonymously or in disguise.
But they refused to take it down.
And anyway, it resulted in Sunday afternoon, the care home got in touch with them and said he could come for an end-of-life visit.
So he went and managed to spend an hour with his mother.
But he said she's gone now.
She didn't recognise him.
She couldn't speak.
So I don't know what's happened to her or why she's got to that state so quickly, and nor does he, but he was glad.
But it was only the huge pressure, you know, they had to put that huge pressure on the care home and threaten all kinds of publicity, bad publicity, before they actually allowed him to do it.
That was their story.
So that was published yesterday.
So I looked up the On the government's website, I looked up the guidelines, the current guidelines, and they've been changed on the 2nd of December, so just last week, a week ago, today.
So I didn't have access to what they were before, but I do remember from before the measures were quite fierce.
No visits at all.
The second lockdown at my dad's care home, it was no visits at all.
That was it. Not even window visits.
And then I got a certain kind of a newsletter from them reporting that they were setting up pods, visiting pods, and it just sounded like a dystopian nightmare, like a prison visit, where you could communicate through some kind of perspex wall by phones, just like a prison. And a lot of the old people in there who are confused or have dementia or Alzheimer's, they're wondering what they've done wrong.
So many old people are saying, what have I done wrong?
They think it's their fault, you know.
And I'm getting very, very depressed as a result.
So I looked on the government website and it seems to have changed.
They're basically saying that the guidelines aren't down to the government anymore, they're down to the individual care homes.
And I've actually got the actual words here.
Yeah, so it says each care home The registered manager is responsible for setting the visiting policy in that home.
They should do so on the basis of a dynamic risk assessment, taking into consideration the needs of individuals within their home And with regard to the advice of the local director of public health.
So that's just one of the key messages there.
Well, that's not, is it?
That's not the manager of the care home making decisions.
That's just the government passing on responsibilities.
At the same time, telling the managers what they're going to do.
And the other thing, it mentions a lot on that particular part, if you just go to gov.co.uk and just type in the search box, care homes, you'll find all this.
They keep mentioning rights and needs of residents.
That was never mentioned before.
Because I think the government, after setting those awful, draconian, terrible guidelines, Realised that they were seriously in breach of human rights and violating the rights of the visitors and the residents.
So they quickly backpedalled and, like you said, passed the bark on to the care homes.
So when I started talking to the care home manager, Initially about my dad, I said to them, they said, oh, we're just following government guidelines.
I said, no, you're not. I said, because you're making the guidelines now, not the government, you're making the rules, you know, the care homes, individual care homes are making the rules.
And you're getting it all wrong.
I said, you're making illegal rules.
I said, you're also violating human rights.
And so I just said to them, I'm coming to get my dad.
I want to take him out for a couple of weeks.
That was the initial idea.
And you need to have him ready for me tomorrow at three o'clock.
And I'm coming to get him. And they said, no, he can't do that.
And I said, if you don't do that, I'm going to be there at three.
And if he's not outside, if you don't bring him outside for me to take him away, I will take you to court.
Four, false imprisonment and violation of human rights.
Now at this point the manager wasn't much help so I spoke to the owner and he sounded like a very jolly West African chap I'm saying he's jolly because he just laughed at everything I said.
I don't know if he had some kind of nervous affliction.
When I said, I'm going to take you to court, he just burst out laughing.
And when I said, you know, you're falsely imprisoning these people, including my dad, and you're violating my human rights and his human rights.
And you're thinking you're doing the right thing, but you're not.
The government aren't advising you to do that because they wouldn't dare.
They might have done originally, but they've backtracked on that now.
And he laughed again. And I just said to him, seriously, you've got to stop laughing.
It's not funny. This is not a laughing matter.
And I need my dad to be ready at 3 o'clock tomorrow.
So I turned up, and they wheeled him out.
And they were ever so nice.
I thought they were going to be a bit snotty with me, but they were really, really nice and really kind to my dad.
Got him in the car, packed his wheelchair in the back.
And one of them said, make sure you come back now.
And I was thinking, hmm, maybe he won't come back.
And my dad was like, yeah, see you soon.
And as soon as I took my dad back to his house, I said, Dad, I don't think you should go back there.
And he said, no, nor do I. So he was delighted to be home.
And he still is.
And that was September the 29th.
I brought him home.
And And the reason I said, because he was worried, saying, oh, are we going to get into trouble, you know?
And I said, no, we're not. He said, yeah, but we shouldn't have just left like that.
And I said, well, it's the only way to do it.
I said, because I've got a feeling, because what was happening in Australia at the time, Care home residents were not being allowed out and no visits and not allowed out at all.
And I said, Dad, that's going to happen here soon because we tend to be following Australia quite a bit at the moment.
And soon there'll be no visits for anyone and you will not be allowed out, not even five minutes, not even into the garden.
So I think, you know, we've done the right thing.
That's the thing, Jackie, isn't it?
We're talking here about your experience in Britain and stories you've written about people in Britain, but this is worldwide this is going on.
Yeah, absolutely.
I've spoken to people in America as well.
One woman who's in the care home I've been speaking to, she's got a mobile phone.
I haven't heard from her quite a few weeks now, but she's just desperate.
Every time anyone displays a symptom, a cold or a sniffle, there's another lockdown.
And it's never ending because obviously if there's 100 people in a care home, there's always someone getting a sniffle or having a sneeze or a cough.
So this woman was messaging me constantly just saying that she's in prison.
She can't get out. No one can see her.
No one knows what's going on in the care homes.
There's abuse going on.
It's all behind closed doors now.
And that's really scary because obviously there have been reports of residents being attacked, not only by other residents, but even by staff members.
That was the man in the carer, for want of a better word, in Ireland, who's just been convicted of rape of a care home resident.
So, you know, obviously that's rare, but it still happens.
And with the doors being closed and with no one knowing what's going on, Because some of these people can't use the phone.
They're not able to use the phone.
God knows what's going on.
Well, before we finish, Jackie, I just want to read something from a book I wrote a long time ago.
And it puts into context that what is happening here is not the result of COVID. It's something that's been very, very long planned.
Some quick background. There was a guy called Dr.
Richard Day, who was a Rockefeller insider, an executive of Planned Parenthood, say no more.
And he spoke to paediatricians in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1969.
And bizarrely to the audience, he asked them not to take notes and not to turn on recording equipment, because he was going to tell them how the world was going to change, because basically what he was connected to was going to change it.
And in this book, Phantom Self, I... Detail at length what he said that night, and it is utterly fantastic.
He described what is happening now and what has happened in the run-up to now in 1969.
And remember, this is only 20 years after Orwell wrote 1984.
So this shows the plan, but I just want to read this passage.
These are the words of a doctor who was in the audience that night called Dr.
Lawrence Donegan. Who did take notes and in, I think it was 2004, before he died, he did a series of interviews because he'd realised by then that what Day said that night, a man he knew, you know, at a distance, was actually happening and even more so now.
And this is what Donegan said about what Day said in 1969 about killing the elderly.
He said, everyone has a right to live only so long.
The old are no longer useful.
They become a burden.
You should be ready to accept death.
Most people are. Amazing how long they tend to live, though, isn't it?
An arbitrary age limit would be established or could be established.
After all, you have a right to only so many steak dinners, so many orgasms and so many good pleasures in life.
And after you have had enough of them and you're no longer productive, working and contributing, then you should be ready to step aside for the next generation.
Some things that would help people realize that they had lived long enough.
He mentioned several of these.
Now, this just tells you how unbelievably detailed this all is.
Donegan said, I don't remember them all, but here's a few.
Use of very pale printing ink on forms that people have to fill out so that older people wouldn't be able to read the pale ink as easily and would need to go to younger people for help.
Automobile traffic patterns, there would be more high-speed traffic lanes, traffic patterns that older people with their slower reflexes would have trouble dealing with and thus lose some of their independence.
A big item was elaborated at some length, and it was the cost of medical care would be made burdensomely high.
Medical care could be connected very closely to one's work, but also would be made very, very high in cost so that it would simply be unavailable to people beyond a certain time.
And unless they had a remarkably rich supporting family, they would just have to go without care.
And the idea was that if everyone says enough, what a burden it is on the young to try to maintain the old people, then the young would become agreeable to helping mum and dad along the way.
This is where it's planned to go and we're seeing it.
These are all the care pathways where they remove drugs and food so that people die just because the doctor says they're in the last days of death.
And as you well know, Jackie, people who've been on that care pathway and their loved ones have intervened and stopped it have lived for a very, very long time afterwards, some of them.
So, Enough, they would say, what a burden it is on the young to try to maintain old people.
Then the young would become agreeable to helping mum and dad along the way, provided this was done humanely and with dignity.
And then the example he gave was that there would be a nice farewell party, a real celebration.
Mum and dad had done a good job.
And then after the party was over, they would take the demise pill.
And this is what Day was talking about, that you would get to a certain age and then you would take the demise pill and be gone.
And we're seeing this progress towards that.
Say again?
It's like Logan's Run.
Yeah. When they got to the party, they had to be, you know, renewed, I think it was called.
They were killed, basically.
And they all bought into it.
But they'll be putting a sales spin on this soon.
I mean, I wanted to add about the DNR thing.
When I spoke to the nurse at the care home, I said, well, how did you convince my dad that it was a good thing to agree to that?
And she said...
Well, I told him that when someone, an elderly person, you know, stops breathing and they have CPR, it's a very messy business.
You know, ribs get broken.
It's very painful. And then usually the person afterwards is just a vegetable and a massive burden on their family.
And they don't want that, do they?
And I said, is that actually how you sold it to my dad?
And she said, well, that's the truth.
And I spoke to my dad about it.
And he said, oh, no, I want the DNR because they told me all that.
He bought the spiel, basically, from them.
And he said, you know, I don't want to be a burden, nor does anyone.
But that's how they sell it to them, and that's how they get them to agree, the ones who do have capacity.
My dad has a strange diagnosis.
He's got vascular dementia with capacity, which is a bit of a contradiction in terms.
I think he's been misdiagnosed.
He's been stuck in a dementia unit for nine months.
With people who've got dementia, and I don't think he's got that at all.
I think he's got a brain injury from his stroke, and he's recovering.
If you've got dementia, you don't recover.
He's recovering on a daily basis.
Well, that's good to hear.
When you read these longer-term plans for the elderly and demise pills, you start to see the connection.
With the mentality that's been increasingly recruited into the medical profession and these situations, because people with empathy and compassion, they would never, never agree to be part of this, well, Nazi regime that's unfolding in the care homes and the hospitals.
I wonder if it will become the norm and people will accept it and look forward to their demise party.
Like in Logan's Run.
I mean, euthanasia is legal in several countries now, isn't it?
I'm not sure, is it? Canada, is it?
Well, I've been saying as this was coming in, this making euthanasia legal is moving towards the demise pill.
It's step by step by step by step, and you can see it.
So I just want to say what a fantastic job you do.
Thank you. As a popular journalist who seeks the truth.
And, you know, you've written some great stories that don't appear to be many in number apart from the ones that you write.
So it's great that there's some real journalists around and how you how you work in your profession on a daily basis.
You have my sympathy.
I know, it's terrible.
I think I was saying to you the other day, wasn't I, about suddenly realising that some of the publications I've been working for are funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
It's like, oh, now I can't work for them as well.
But as you said, you can't.
If you stopped working for every publication that was funded by someone nefarious, then you wouldn't have anyone to work for.
So... Because I'm trying to share the truth in the mainstream, that's an uphill struggle.
I've been doing it for 35 years, so I kind of enjoy it in a perverse way, but it means I'm definitely not rich, let's put it that way.
I think if you toe the line and write what they want you to write about, then you could probably make quite a reasonable living.
But I want to write about things that they all want to hear.
And there's a lot of having to persuade them.
Most of the editors I speak to don't have a clue about what's really going on.
They're swallowing the stories that they're writing, which is following the government, what the government wants them to do.
Last year, for example, I did a very good, I thought, article talking to about six or seven different families about why they wouldn't be allowing their child to have the flu mist vaccine.
And they wanted it to start with.
And then they got back to me saying, actually, we can't run this.
I know one of these editors quite well.
And I said, well, can you tell me why?
Because normally they don't tell you why.
They just say, no, thank you. We can't run it.
And this time she said, because we're running an ad campaign for the flu vaccine at the moment.
And so we can't publish anything even vaguely anti-vax.
So they published a version of the story, which I made them take my name off.
And they twisted it all around.
I made it about these terrible, terrible parents who are not allowing their children to have this lovely vaccination and how they're putting everyone else in danger because of it.
I said, well, you can take my name off that and take the people's names out as well.
You can just say a parent rather than their names.
They don't want anything to do with that.
So they had to turn it all up because they weren't allowed to run the real story.
And this is happening a lot.
There seems to be sometimes little windows as well where you can suddenly do a little flurry of stories.
And that happened with the vaccination ones back in about 2016.
I did lots of vaccine injury stories and they were accepted and then suddenly they shut down again.
And at the moment it seems to be care home stories.
But anything else I offer to them about anything else I've discovered about, you know, dodgy figures or whatever, they're like, not for us, thank you.
So they say, not one for us, thank you.
Well, I would say to these journalists and I would say to the journalists of the profession of the whole world over and to these people in the medical profession, look at where we are.
Look at the horrors that have been discussed in this video alone.
And find yourself a mirror.
Look it in the eye and realize that you are massively centrally responsible for what is happening.
Because if you did your jobs in caring for people on the basis of the rights of the individual, And if you did your job telling the truth about the world, as it really is, we wouldn't be where we are now.
So all of you are facilitators of fascism.
And exactly the same happened in Nazi Germany.
And you're just repeating it.
You call yourself journalists and you call yourself doctors and so on.
It's absolute self-delusion.
But at least before us today, we've got a proper journalist.
And it's always a joy to talk to them.
Thank you. I'm not going to put that on my head in the paper now.
Jackie's a proper journalist.
So thanks, Jackie.
And best wishes with you, Dad.
I hope he continues to recover.
Thank you. Yeah, I'll keep you posted.
Thanks for having me on the show.
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