Right Now - Gareth Icke Talks To UK Nurse Jenna Platt and Canadian Journalist Josh Sigurdson
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Hello and welcome to Right Now.
So ladies, this week you've got the news that you've been waiting for.
Bill Gates is free, single and ready to Mengele.
Bill and Melinda Gates announced they are to separate and they've asked for privacy at this painful time.
Now, someone's marital status is of course no concern to me.
You do you, hun. However, the Gates family asking for privacy when his crazy green Kermit the Frog arms have been flailing around in the personal lives of seven billion people for over a year.
It feels, to me at least, a little bit much.
UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab couldn't confirm if all measures like social distancing and masks would be removed on the 21st of June, as their roadmap said they would be.
Well, obviously, because it's not meant to end, and of course Raab knows this.
Pfizer have applied for emergency approval to roll out their experimental gene therapy to children as young as two.
Unbelievable. And the National Education Union has written an open letter to the UK government to insist they don't lift the mandate for kids to wear masks for eight hours a day at school.
You heard that correctly. They don't want kids to be able to breathe.
It's just another week on the front line of what is now, obviously, to anyone who isn't willfully ignorant, a war on humanity.
We're under attack, but as all good brawlers do, we dust ourselves off and we go again.
On the show today, we've got World Alternative News founder Josh Sigurdsson.
He's going to be talking to us about Canada.
Wow, Canada. A country so woke that its masking profile pic Prime Minister actually referred to a recession as a she-session.
I'm not kidding. Human rights activist Guruchan Singh will be telling us about the situation in India and in particular the destruction of the food supply.
There's very few more powerful weapons to wield than the control of whether or not people can eat.
No coincidence of course then, the newly single software frog puppet now owns more American farmland than anyone else.
We're going to go to Florida, sanity prevailing Florida at last, to talk to Mike Hill, who's worked on several projects in Hollywood about how the perceptual manipulation techniques that they use in the film industry are actually being used against us now.
Richard Dellingpole, brother of last week's guest James, is wading in on the free speech debate and the weaponisation of tech censorship.
Stephen Weibrow will be on the line from Austria to tell us about some developments in the country and how they're actually fighting back.
But first... Jenna Platt is a nurse and has been outspoken over the last year, calling out what she's seen in her role as a caregiver during the pandemic.
She hit the headlines again after attending the massive London protest, you remember the one that definitely didn't happen, on April the 24th.
How dare she?
They yelled from their mother's basements while angrily clicking the Covidiot hashtag.
Hi Jenna, thanks for joining us.
I suppose the first question would be, what is your experience of the pandemic over the last year?
So mine has been, I've been very fortunate.
You know, I've been In a very happy relationship with my husband so and you know we've been able to have open conversations and a lot of people haven't had that from what I'm hearing.
I'm not patient-facing, I am office-based so I haven't had any of the experience of the bullying or the coercion but what's happening is I'm receiving thousands of nurses who are reaching out to me and so even though I'm not having that experience I It feels like the right thing to do to try and help them have a voice and try and help them gain the confidence in speaking out about their own experiences.
So you hear that a lot.
It's kind of, well, if there's something going on, why aren't more nurses speaking out?
But they are, aren't they? Just people just aren't listening almost.
Or they're vile.
On social media, if people are having the courage to speak out, it's almost like that can't be true.
I don't want to hear it.
And I'll say not so nice things until they shut up and go away.
So, you know, when people are saying, well, why are they scared to speak out?
And then you've got an endless list of really aggressive comments.
Like, well, this is why not only about the social side, but people are scared to lose their jobs.
They've got bills to pay.
They've got kids to feed.
You know, they've got cars to petrol and things, you know, just like everybody else.
So what are these nurses telling you in terms of their experiences on COVID wards or whatever?
So the experience is very dependent on what clinical environment they're working on.
But I've kind of like categorized it.
So there's a heavy A heavy importance placed on audits rather than patient experience and quality of life.
There's the coercion, the bullying, so the working experience that people are having right now where if they ask any questions they're being called that they're COVID deniers, COVID idiots, anti-vaxxers, conspiracists, conspiracy theorists and that's not That's not opening debate, it's not opening conversation.
So heavy audit focus, unable to ask questions, and also a decline of patient experience and quality of life or experience where they're missing appointments or because a risk assessment has been deemed that they can't have home visits, let's say. So one lady who contacted me She supports teenagers with eating disorders and they were told that there was no home visits.
So they were asked to text in their weight.
And what happened is you then had individuals who were unable to lift up their own legs.
They were presented as dementia patients.
One young girl, she had a snowball fight and she snapped her collarbone because she was so weak and fragile.
There's those three things that I'm kind of grouping together.
Heavy audits, poor working conditions, and declining patient experience and quality of life.
Is it become then? Because from me looking in, it looks like it's like a COVID health service now, when nothing else seems to really matter.
Yeah, so somebody said, so as a nurse, I was trained Person-centered care, look at them as individuals, risk assess them including positive risk taking and a colleague nurse said that it's become like COVID-centered care rather than person-centered care and I don't know when I say we but I don't know when nurses, healthcare workers started to self-censor but there seems to be a culture of silence now where If you do start to ask questions that you become the problem and people try to put you in a box, silence you, you know,
keep you down, rather than actually acknowledging those points and helping you with answers.
Or if people don't know the answers, just saying, do you know what?
I don't know. I've not actually thought about that.
Yeah, let's explore this together.
It just seems to be a no, be quiet.
But that would be if you were doing something in good faith.
I think that's what you'd expect. If I come, like you say, with a problem or a question, then answer it and prove me wrong or whatever with whatever doubts I have.
But silence is just, I don't know, it just seems like almost like an admission of guilt in my mind.
And is that what made you protest then?
Is that what made you go to London and say, like, enough's enough?
So, as I say, I'm office-based.
I'm not patient-facing, but I'm still concerned about the impact that this will have on my income.
So, you know, and I talk about it very openly on my Instagram, like the process that I've been through speaking out and what I talk about.
And me and my husband, you know, had kind of set a date and we decided that Easter was going to be the date.
Easter, Easter, Easter. Because that's what Boris kept on saying to us.
We were going to have our lives back by Easter.
And then Matt Hancock.
I can't remember exactly what it was that he announced.
But it was when the supermarkets doubled down on the signs and the tannoys and things.
And I was like, this isn't changing.
This is a cycle now.
This is a very predictable cycle that we're going through.
Every time there's A restriction lifted.
There's a new variant or there's a new problem.
So that's when I decided to walk to London because I didn't know what else I could do.
You know, I haven't got any links with politicians or I haven't got any, you know, links high up with people who could be influential.
So I decided to try and raise awareness to people that it's okay to ask questions.
So I walked from Stoke-on-Trent to London, 15 miles a day, 10 days.
to hand deliver a letter to Boris Johnson and what that did was that built a community of people who were maybe the only person in their household or in their workplace that was quite confused about what was going on and they were like I feel the same way like this is what I'm thinking and so that was the first thing that I did and then I have attended protests and I The reason why I'm attending them is because I'm pro-choice, pro-informed, voluntary decision-making and I'm completely anti-coercion.
So I'm attending for those reasons.
And I'm currently walking around with a sandwich board for 50 days to raise awareness because right now nurses don't know where to go.
They've spoke to colleagues, they've tried to speak to the managers, they've possibly spoken to regional, they've gone through the unions, they've spoken to the NMC. And it's like we're just getting this template response of, because of COVID, you know, we're going to give you a template response.
And we don't seem to get any answers.
So what I'm hoping to achieve is if we can come together as a face, because I think that we need, if we want a voice, then we need to have a face and come out of the shadows, because we're not doing anything wrong.
There seems to be this guilt That we're doing something wrong, but we're trying to be advocates for the patients and for the colleagues.
Yeah, which is exactly what your job is, is to look after those people.
That's it, isn't it? I think it's amazing.
I did find at the protest on the 20th and then on 20th of March, sorry, and then on the 24th of April, there was so many people that were coming up and chatting and they'd come on their own.
And they were like, you know, in my family, like, I remember one lady said to me that basically the husband can have the house because I'm done.
You know, like, just like, and they felt alone, and then when they arrived in London, they saw all these people, and then they see people like yourselves, you know, in your nurse's uniform, it's like, oh man, like, I thought I was going crazy almost, like, I'm not alone, and it is a powerful thing, and I'm guessing that's why people want to shut you up.
Yeah, well, I mean, I'm wearing my uniform as a symbol, so, you know, I don't need to wear my uniform, but I feel that people need to recognize you instantly.
So this is a way of identifying myself straight away without even having a conversation with me.
And what I found is that the people who I thought were going to be around me, who I thought were going to be there to support me, we've kind of drifted apart.
And I feel there's a lot of people who I feel quite lost and lonely, not just in the professional world, but their connections and their paths have changed so much.
And coming together with this community, you know, we're told that we're selfish and we're told that we're all these things.
But I have... There's so much kindness.
There's so much support.
People are going out of the way for me.
They're helping me with their skills, you know, that they're coming to me with their stories and sharing their stories and giving me their time.
And it's just such a good atmosphere.
And, you know, it's amazing.
It is. It's amazing that the response that I've received and just seeing people laughing and smiling and just Just being happy around other people and I feel like we've almost forgot.
It's been going on for so long now.
We forgot who we are and we forgot what we used to enjoy.
We're just so used to this cycle of lockdowns and restrictions that we've forgotten how we used to enjoy ourselves and identify ourselves and have fun.
Everything's so serious.
You're so right. And I must admit, look, I didn't really sort of trawl for the comments after the protest.
I had a little look and just sort of, and it was almost like, obviously I was there and it was like you described, it's just full of loving people dancing around and just being human, big smiles on their faces.
And the people that were attacking them as, you know, it was almost like, it's just sheer projection.
Do you know what I mean? They're always what you accuse people.
I'm sorry, they're always what they accuse you of being.
It's kind of that thing. And I've found nothing but love in any of these protests and stuff.
100%. And I was at the Hyde Park when the police attacked.
And, you know, I'd like to think that I'm not completely naive, but I've just never seen anything like that before, where there was a band playing and people were enjoying it.
And the police just came in from behind, from, you know, Not even like face on so people could see and respond quickly.
There wasn't any, what is it?
Encourage, engage, something else.
I can't remember what they wanted. And then in force, they just went straight in with the batons.
And, you know, we were peaceful and they were violent.
And there was four officers with blood on their head and there were paramedics all around.
But they didn't take them to the paramedics.
They were parading them around the photographers.
To actually see that first hand, it really, really concerned me, because it made me think that this is a bigger battle than what I thought it was.
Oh yeah, this is a psychological operation, 100%.
But thank you very much for talking to us, because it takes courage for people to speak out anyway, but especially when the stakes are high on a personal level like they are for you, and hopefully, well it's not hopefully, I know that you will kind of empower other people, so I really appreciate it.
Can I just, so if there are any nurses that want to reach out, so there's nurses, paramedics, police officers, social workers, anyone that's had a professional experience, please find me on my Instagram at ThatNurseWhoAskQuestions and we've got a walk on the 12th of May at one o'clock Hyde Park And that's just about us coming out of the shadows and just saying, yeah, enough's enough now.
We need to have our voice for us and our patients.
Magic. Thank you very much.
Thank you very much for your time.
Josh Sigurdsson knows all about censorship.
His YouTube channel of over 300,000 subscribers was blown up for, you know, opinions and that.
Josh joins us now.
Hey everybody, this is Josh Sigurdsson of Winnipeg Alternative Media, and you're watching Freedom Free For All, your place for live, liberty-oriented news.
When are you going to start listening to the people who voted you in and stepped down?
Why do you think things are so secretive about the Winnipeg?
Well, I guess you're going to have to ask me to leave them.
Excuse me, gentlemen, what exactly is the point of such a huge police presence when there's just a bunch of people peacefully protesting with masks?
Is this really necessary?
I just got a very unfortunate email that I knew was coming eventually, but YouTube just sent me an email saying that my account has been deleted.
Hi, Josh. Thanks for coming on.
I've got a confession to make.
I thought you were in Canada, but you're not.
You're in Mexico, aren't you? I am, but I am a Canadian and I know pretty much, I'm up to date on what's going on in Canada.
Right, because over here, as an outsider, Canada looks like it's followed the sort of New Zealand model of let's basically be as mental as we can possibly be.
Is that how it is?
Well, when we get to the point when we have COVID camps, encampments as they call it, yeah, it's about as bad as it can possibly get.
And the level of tyranny that we see in Canada right now is unprecedented.
But as a Canadian, I'm not surprised.
Is that why you got away then?
Was this something you thought, I'm getting out of here?
I left about two and a half, three years ago due to already existing tyrannies in Canada, moved to the United States and then moved from the US to Mexico during lockdowns last year after I saw Las Vegas get wiped out in one swoop.
But I left Canada a few years ago because of...
I famously confronted the Prime Minister of Canada and he put me on an enemies list and it made doing basically anything in Canada extremely difficult.
Wow! Can you tell us more about that?
My thing with Trudeau is I don't know why he keeps getting elected.
That's confusing me anyway.
Well, as we know, it's selected, not elected.
I mean, at the end of the day, no one is really elected in Canada.
And a couple of years ago, actually in 2017 now, time flies, I was told about a press conference that Justin Trudeau was speaking at.
So I decided to go to this press conference at seven in the morning, no sleep, ready to go.
And somehow I got let in.
I confronted him three times previous to that, but I got in and He did a photo shoot with some children playing with Play-Doh and the usual photo optics.
And what happened was the press corps came up to me and the rest of the mainstream media and said, you have one of these five questions you can ask him.
And I said, well, I have my own questions.
And they said, well, that's too bad.
You have to ask one of these five questions.
So I, of course, I have morals.
I have principles. So I stood at the side of the room.
I was about 15 feet away from him.
And when he was finished answering one of the questions, I asked him my question anyway about carbon taxes and people in rural communities not being able to feed their family and heat their home, etc.
Anyway, his security guard grabbed me by the throat, threw me against the wall.
All the mainstream media cameras turned away.
They all asked the five questions that the government told them that they can ask.
And I got thrown out of the room, but not before.
I did something I don't usually do.
I called them a scumbag, and the number one trend in the world for three days on Twitter was hashtag scumbagtrudeau.
So that was a fun time, but the problem was I wasn't allowed anywhere near him.
It was like a 200-meter thing.
You can't go anywhere close to him.
They have the right to shoot you if you do.
At that point, I realized I couldn't go anywhere on the streets.
Back then, everyone loved Trudeau, and people would literally throw things out of vehicles at me, attack me in the streets, just walking down the streets of my own hometown.
And I realized I can't live in this country anymore.
I will not die for the freedoms of people who will die to destroy my freedoms.
So I decided to go to the United States.
I thought it was better there. And then it got crazy there, so I found myself in Mexico.
I'm not sure, from what I see at least, that Trudeau is all that popular anymore, though.
I think people are kind of twigging, aren't they?
Yeah, nobody likes Trudeau anymore.
I don't know a lot of liberals that like Trudeau anymore.
I mean, when you get to the point where you are seriously saying that people shouldn't be able to say mankind anymore and it should be people kind, I mean, you're at another level.
We have children being forced with puberty blockers in Canada, and parents are getting their kids taken away for saying that their five-year-old isn't a girl.
And I mean, it's just...
Insanity. It's insanity what we're seeing over there right now.
And what we've gotten to at this point, I mean, it's not just the liberals, it's the conservatives as well.
They're all big government.
Basically, they're all tyrants.
And they are so happy to have so much power in their hands.
They had what they call the Bill of Rights under Diefenbaker in 1962.
But it was overwritten by the Charter of...
Human rights in Canada and the Charter of Rights basically overrode any constitutional law.
Basically, they said, hey, everyone is part of this corporate fiction.
They are basically subject to the corporation of Canada.
So when they apply rights or don't, it's subjective to the court.
So there aren't any guaranteed rights in Canada.
So it has gone off the rails with this COVID-plandemic insanity.
And what we've witnessed over the last few months especially, I have a sister who's much younger than me.
She's 13. She's being demanded to give identification just walking down the streets.
She's being yelled at by police everywhere.
You go to dinner there and you can only sit with one other person at the table in Winnipeg, Canada.
One other person at the table and they have to live with you.
And police are going table to table to see identification to show that you live in the same house.
They banned hugging at one point.
You're not allowed to sleep with people that don't live in your house.
And on top of that, the head of Health Canada or the Fauci type that they have in Canada, Dr.
Theresa Tam, told people that if they want to have sex they should go to a glory hole or wear a mask while having sex this is this is actually what she said and she wasn't joking and so when we get to that point right now to get into Canada Garrett it's just crazy you have to get a PCR test and once you get to Canada you have to take a second one you go to a hotel at your own expense $666 a night seriously and then you and this is actually what the government says then on top of that you uh if you can test positive which one in three people does because it's a pcr test they just have cycle threshold over 40 100 falls positive for anything basically then they put you in a covet encampment which could be on a military base with armed guards outside your door and then they send you to one of the non-essential cities Fly you over to your home and then you do another 14 days in your home.
All people have to do to this is say no, walk out of the airport, take the fine and rip it up.
But instead, everyone goes along with it and Canada banned flights to sunny destinations.
You know, sun, that thing that helps you, helps your immune system, helps you stay healthy.
This is how insane the world is getting.
And they have police checkpoints all over the place.
You're not allowed to go from province to province.
And very soon, what they're going to do with the vaccine passports there is stop people.
And I'm just saying this now.
They haven't said this, but so far, I haven't been wrong in this last year, unfortunately.
What they will do is they'll cut people off, just like they will from county to county in the U.S., from going places without the vaccine passport by road, where it will be like checkpoints in New York City.
There's 10 of them a mile.
And eventually, you're going to have to show the vaccine passport just to get from province to province in Canada.
I guarantee you this.
And, you know, when you have police in the streets asking, why are you walking down the streets?
Can I see your papers?
And people say, anyone that disagrees with this is a Nazi.
I mean, this is peak Orwellian doublethink at this point.
Absolute projection. I have to say, I didn't have a health minister saying, why not use a glory hole on my COVID bingo?
And I've, you know, what is COVID bingo?
It could be absolutely anything, couldn't it?
It's just madness. So have you seen it?
Because that is mad for me as well, about the fact that if you call yourself a journalist, you get given five questions.
If you've got any ounce of integrity, as you do, you just go...
I mean, if someone did that to me, I'd go...
What do you mean? I've got my own questions.
Thanks. What do you mean? This is like absolute Orwellian stuff.
Well, and Gary, one of the things that came up a couple of years ago was Justin Trudeau put in place an accepted media list that showed the medias that he supported and gave, I think, $300 million in a bailout to mainstream medias while pushing to ban independent media voices.
Right now, their Minister of Propaganda in Canada, I can't remember the exact name of the ministry, I just call it the Ministry of Propaganda, was talking a few days ago about banning anyone from talking about things that go against the COVID agenda online.
From a government perspective, so all these people saying, oh, you're against private corporations making decisions, you can't say that when the government, and this is fascism, real fascism, When the government's coming in and saying you cannot have your own belief system around COVID, only the mainstream media, which gets 95% of their funding from pharmaceutical corporations, are allowed to talk about this.
I wonder if that's a conflict of interest.
I feel the same whenever I deal with the New York Times.
I say, wait a second.
Everything you're putting out is a commercial.
It's commercial for your sponsors.
Aren't you supposed to disclose your sponsors, which are 95% pharmaceutical companies?
And in Canada, as far as this propaganda goes, people years ago used to say I was crazy for saying that the media was controlled.
But I watched all those mainstream media cameras switch away.
I have dealt with the mainstream media in Canada for years.
And going back into the 70s, Pierre Trudeau, the father of Justin Trudeau, had similar tactics where He declared martial law in Quebec.
People were being killed in the streets by police.
And when someone went up to him and asked him, or said to him, you can't create a police state.
He famously said on video, just watch me.
And people revere that in Canada.
There's actually, I remember one of the public schools I went to as a kid had a poster on the wall that said, just watch me with a picture of Pierre Elliott Trudeau, the former prime minister dictator in Canada.
So, I mean... Canada is beyond repair.
It needs collapse. And, you know, as per usual, like a lot of these places, a phoenix needs to rise from the ashes because there's no saving this system.
And why would you want to save that system?
We are on the verge of complete fascio-communist technocracy.
And people laugh when I mix those words together, but that's exactly what it is.
People that can't afford their house are getting loans.
The government will take over part of their private property and make it public.
And then at the same time, these corporations that are getting bailed out with debts, they can't pay back these debts.
So just like the IMF does, just like China does in Africa, these companies will be partially owned by the Canadian government.
And we see that in Britain, too.
So that is fascism.
And then tie that to social credit, tie that to vaccine passports, which I have been warning about since 2006.
And everyone called me crazy.
And now they say, I'm not crazy.
I'm wrong for being against it.
That's how they switch.
It's how the cult works.
I've been saying this for about 15 years now, and here it is.
And we have full-on cashless technocratic social credit, which they have been planning and plotting in China for decades.
It's a big new Brzezinski Trilateral Commission 1979 creating the blueprint.
For what we see today with technocratic vaccine passports tied to social credit.
This is the endgame.
And if we don't act now, if we say nothing now, when we grow older and we have grandkids, assuming we're not completely sterilized, and they ask us what we did in the most important time in history, Don't sit there and say nothing, because you'll lose all respect of everyone that you ever hoped would have any care or love for you.
Now is the time to stand up, disobey, live freely, live by example, or forever hold your peace and go down with the ship.
Amen, brother. Thank you very much, Josh.
I much appreciate you talking to us, and thanks for being so passionate as well.
It's great. It's what we need.
Absolutely. I appreciate it.
And if anyone wants to find me in that world, I'll turn to the media on Vichy.