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Sept. 24, 2021 - David Icke
11:19
'These people don't have anything to lose' - Right Now Australian Special
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G'day and welcome to Right Now.
This week we're focusing on Australia.
We've changed the lights and everything.
Over the last week or so Australia has risen.
It's only taken 19 months but at last we're seeing some of that we're not having it spirit that we often associate with the land down under.
Or maybe I've just watched Crocodile Dundee too many times.
You call that a knife?
Protesters have taken to the streets across the country only to be met with tear gas and rubber bullets.
It's about health, you see. Rubber bullets are good for you.
And getting your head caved in on the pavement is just a clever way of draining out the toxins from the blood.
It's all very advanced.
Yeah, no, you know, that's the thing.
I feel personally, and some people around me too, I feel there's just been a split.
And I feel like it had to reach this level in the pressure cooker for things to then start to change for the good.
So this, what's happened this week, I know it's dramatic and, you know, it's terrible.
People have been shot. But positive stuff is happening.
So, for example, this week, a new union for doctors has been created.
It's called the, let me just get the name right, The Australian Medical Professional Society.
So this union will help doctors in the workplace who've been told they need the jab to keep their job.
They are against government mandates.
They are pro doctors speaking out and not being gagged.
So this is really, really good.
There's one for nurses too.
The one for nurses was originally just created for Queensland-based nurses, the Nurses Professional Association of Queensland.
But I was told today that this nursing union will be national as of tomorrow.
And there will also be one for teachers.
This is a big development and it's very positive.
You're going to get to the point that these people have nothing to lose.
And that is a very dangerous point to have society at.
You've taken away all their freedoms.
You've taken away their ability to earn money.
Now you've coerced them.
You say that this vaccine is not mandatory, yet you can't survive in society without it.
You can't live in society without it.
You can't earn a living.
You can't be treated as an equal.
There's actively segregation going on.
If they did this for any other circumstance within this country, it would be seen as one of the most appalling things that the government could do to its people.
And the government would be standing up, stopping this sort of thing.
But because this has got pharmaceutical company lobbying and the amount of just deceitful people in the background that are making all this happen, the fact of the matter is that we are being forced to be part of an experiment.
I'm still in disbelief that it's happening, but you're getting to a point that these people don't have anything to lose.
Being in a jail cell is not going to be any worse than being out there.
If we get to where society's going.
And these police have no idea what's going to happen when these people decide to, you know, have had enough.
And you're just doing your job, mate.
You're not going to have nowhere near as much fight in you as the guy on the other side has got nothing to lose.
Have you seen any adverse reactions or do you expect to?
I've seen quite a few adverse reactions.
The worst one I saw was a patient who spent a week in hospital after having the AstraZeneca vaccine.
This was back in April this year and he had actually had COVID the previous year and I had He came out of hospital after COVID and I suggested to him to do some antibody tests for COVID which I did and he had positive antibodies.
I suggested and he was told that he should have the he was booked in for the vaccine.
I said well you've got the COVID antibodies you could consider not having the vaccine because you know antibodies mean You're immune to the virus.
It gets crazier every day and, I mean, you know, we've just got people The mainstream media telling one story and the rest of us are, you know, watching live streams all day, seeing, you know, protests are mostly peaceful, except for there's maybe half an hour of trouble or an hour of trouble and, you know, six hours of peaceful protests.
And I mean, this is obviously in Melbourne relating to the mandating of vaccine for construction workers.
There was violent protests against the union on Sunday, I think it was now, and The next day that the Premier came out and announced a complete shutdown of the construction industry in Victoria.
You know, saying that it was because of the virus risks or whatever on building sites or whatever.
I can't even remember what their excuse was, but obviously we know it was because there was violence the day before.
Yeah, there have been protests ever since.
They said they're going to protest now until the mandate is lifted.
We've had teachers and nurses joining today because they've obviously been mandated against as well.
I'm a schoolteacher in one incarnation of my life, so obviously I'll never be teaching again.
You've just got these independent journos.
One group called Rebel News, they got pep sprayed by police on Sunday, I think it was.
You've got all sorts of crap.
We had rubber bullets. We've got people.
Apparently someone died from a rubber bullet.
I don't know. That's unconfirmed.
I just got told that today.
So it's just, yeah, it's out of control, actually.
And the protests weren't as big today.
I haven't been really following it that much today.
There's guys that have been doing some amazing work and you see how peaceful they are.
And, you know, there's trouble, there's agitators, people in balaclavas, people that are not involved with the tradies at all.
So it's pretty unusual.
It's pretty dark out there.
You know, there's literally two realities going on here and there's those who know what the truth is and those who were pro-freedom and bodily autonomy and then the lies and the media gaslighting is seriously off the charts at the moment, really. So, yeah, you know, it is ever increasing levels of insanity here.
But with that increase in insanity, I think has been an acceleration in opportunities for growth and change.
So I do think some positive things are now beginning to occur.
Goran, you grew up in the former Yugoslavia, Serbia, I believe.
Can you see any parallels with Australia now and the former Yugoslavia before?
Look, Gareth, I'm very happy that you have actually asked me that question because I become like a very...
A person who is like putting all these relations like together because I can recognize what's going on.
Considering the situation where I like spend my Beautiful youth in that beautiful country over there.
And I know how media was influencing one side and then the other side and then one religion and then the other religion, making the heat between them and we all know what's happened afterwards.
Of course. So this is a little bit similar with the vaccinated and non-vaccinated people.
So I'm just like putting those strings together, putting those dots behind me and making some analysis which are really, really frightening.
Our Prime Minister said that he wouldn't mandate and now the Premiers are doing it in the States.
So, I mean, I don't know if this is still the case with South Australia.
You can't actually get into the state without...
A vaccination certificate, which is interesting in itself.
It's hard to tell because the media is so on message and on point.
A piece I shared yesterday that I wrote about the building industry and the mandates.
All the people that were attacking me were all people that I used to work with at The Age newspaper, which is the big, big left newspaper in Melbourne.
And they're all, it's like they're all talking from the same talking notes.
It's really weird. It's weird like seeing journalists just completely not questioning anything.
You listen to the press conference every morning and no one asks any curly questions at any point about anything.
The best one we heard this week was someone said, oh, we're going to have Vax passports forever.
And the Premier said no. So that was a good sign.
He said, no, I don't see them being here forever.
That was it. They don't ask anything.
People are starting to come to the point now that they're realising that the scepticisms that they once had last year in terms of whether or not there's a lot more to this is starting to seriously fall away.
And now people are really starting to grasp that there's sinister motives to what's going on here.
And that's why I believe a lot more people are standing up.
And it's starting to affect a lot more people's lives.
And unfortunately, one of the things that's been happening in this country, especially with the construction and all of these people that have been working, i.e.
the nurses or whatever else, they haven't really been affected by this up until this point.
So they haven't really...
It's almost like no one was speaking up unless it was directly affecting them, which is one thing that really annoyed me, to be honest, about what's been happening in Australia.
But that, if I was going to say anything, it would be, yeah, more than likely that there's way more people now that are seeing this for what it really is and are being awake to the lie and the deception.
The next thing was in the nursing homes that I attended, I noticed that people were being sent home from hospital after having a chest infection and they were On morphine and midazolam.
Midazolam is a strong sedative, even can be used as an anaesthetic and it's used in palliative care.
So although these people had recovered from their chest infection, they were sent home on palliative care medications.
And I challenged the nurse coordinator at the nursing home about this.
I said, why are all these people being sent home on palliative care?
And I had a very strange conversation with the nurse.
She said, because they're going to die.
And I said, yes, but I mean, they're not going to die right now.
I mean, if you use this logic, you put everyone in the nursing home on morphine and midazolam.
The answer to this question was, yes, I think that's a good idea.
This was startling to me at the time.
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