Consultant Surgeon Dr Ahmad Malik Suspended For Exposing Vaccine Harms - Gareth Icke Tonight
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If your heart tells you that something isn't right, believe it.
It's Thursday night.
night. The Scareth Heart tonight.
It's the oldest trick in the book.
Keep the masses focused solely on the minute details that separate them and never let them spend too much time acknowledging this skyscraper high pile of similarities and shared beliefs.
Because a united population can't be ruled over, can it?
Because there's too many of us.
That's why in the early days of the Covid tyranny, as mere hundreds stood up on the streets and said no, they were batted away like an annoying fly at the dinner table.
Go away.
But that fly came back, and that fly brought friends.
Friends of all different backgrounds and faiths, sexes and ages.
And suddenly, they couldn't be swatted away, and the narrative collapsed.
And as that narrative that had been upheld by mouthpiece media bobbleheads collapsed, so did the tyrannical rules, mandates, and impositions.
The people stood as one in their hundreds of thousands.
It was beautiful, it was emotive, and it spoke to those in perceived positions of power.
It spoke very, very loudly.
Now, the media and establishment fluffers did their best to vilify these protests, because that's what they do, but the numbers were too great.
As a result of this, the government seeked to bring in legislation to stop these protests taking place in the future.
Several attempts were made to bring in these new policing bills and amendments and backdoor red tape, still being promoted as recently as August this year.
The people spoke in 2021 and the establishment did not like it, didn't like it one bit.
Now, roll on two years and the same demonization and media manipulation are at play again.
All pro-Palestinian protesters are Hamas terrorist supporters.
It's just the same as all anti-lockdown protesters are far-right conspiracy theorists.
Just edited the word in.
But the technique to tar everyone as something they aren't is exactly the same.
Now, of course, when you get hundreds of thousands of people together, you'll get troublemakers.
You'll find yourself alongside, but in disagreement with people.
That's just what happens.
It happens at any march.
And it certainly happened at the anti-lockdown marches, where people were off verbally abusing shoppers that were wearing masks.
Now, I didn't align myself with that, but I was on the same march.
So I'm guilty, right?
Because that's how this works.
And the media, at that time, were more than happy to portray all of us in this light.
The government, media and social media influences, many of which, ironically, were part of that anti-lockdown movement and protest, have taken umbrage at people wanting to protest the ongoing massacre in Gaza on Armistice Day here in the UK.
Now Armistice Day is when the British pay their respects and give thanks to all those men and women
that paid the ultimate price and gave their lives for this nation.
It's seen as disrespectful for people to be using that time to take to the streets to demand a ceasefire
in the Middle East.
I mean, armistice literally means ceasefire, but you know.
Despite organizers reiterating that the Palestinian rally will be nowhere near the cenotaph
where the armistice ceremony is to take place, that hasn't stopped politicians and the media
claiming that it will disrupt proceedings.
The government have even called an emergency Cobra meeting about it.
The stage is being set.
Social media political influencers that will in the most part be sat on their arses at home nowhere near the trouble this weekend have urged Britons to take to the streets and counter-protest.
Take your country back!
The media are already whipping it up as a battle between pro-Palestine, sorry, pro-Hamas and the far right.
A powder keg is being prepared and it's nauseatingly blatant to watch.
The Metropolitan Police wanted to stop the march, but they said they currently lack the powers to do so.
What's the betting that they'll get those powers should the powder keg explode this weekend?
You're being played, mate.
As Mary Howard wrote in 1829, will you walk into my parlour, said the spider to the fly.
Should the two protest me, agent provocateurs and those purposely whipped into a rage on both sides, We'll clash and the demons that seek to divide us all will be rubbing their hands with glee.
Don't give them the satisfaction.
And by the way, I'm not telling pro-Palestinians not to protest.
Hell yeah, take to the streets, make your voices heard, but please be smart.
And I'm not telling people who want to honour our war dead not to go to the Cenotaph either.
Go, pay your respects, but please keep your heads and be streetwise.
And if you really want to honour those that have died in the military uniforms of the United Kingdom, rather than aiming your ire at those that march against war, that if it's allowed to continue will lead to more British lives lost, aim it instead at the line-up of former Prime Ministers and Heads of Defence that stand there in their black overcoats and shed crocodile tears as they lay wreaths for men and women that they themselves ultimately sent to their deaths.
That's a really good question.
So, my lawyer has specifically said don't go into details right now, so I can't go into that, but...
It's just bullshit, frankly speaking.
In a nutshell, it's absolute garbage.
I've just been told it's all about my social media activity.
And you can go on my social media, you can go on Twitter, X, whatever you want to call it, and you can see what I talk about.
And all I do is expose all the lies and scams that we see in the world around us.
And it all started back in December last year when I said, look, these these jabs, this big, massive experiment on The human population, it seems to be causing a lot of harm.
I'm seeing it.
I'm hearing it from my colleagues.
My colleagues are scared to speak up.
You know, maybe we need to do a pause button on this and look into what exactly is going on.
And from that day, it feels very much like bullying and harassment and trying to shut me up.
And I've just done the opposite, which is speak up even more.
So a lot of people say, you know, where does this guy come from?
Well, I just want a quiet life.
I want to fix feet and look after my family.
I don't want the limelight.
But it got to a head when the mandates were coming through.
So that's when I got on GB News.
And then when that was overturned, it kind of settled back down to my life again.
But last December, it got to a point where it was getting ridiculous.
What I was seeing was ridiculous.
And when I got told to stop tweeting on the matters of COVID and the vaccine,
because it's out of my scope of practice, I was like, no, that's bullying.
I'm going to speak up for patient safety.
What I'm doing is what is actually recommended by the GMC raises a patient safety issue.
And instead of being patted on the back and saying, well done, Ahmed, for flagging this and yes, we'll look into it.
It was be quiet, take that down.
If not, we'll have to review your practicing privileges.
So just to make it clear, I left the NHS call in 2017.
Partly so that I could treat patients the way I wanted to and I was free to speak up and do things the way I wanted to do.
But here I was in the private system being bullied by private hospitals into being quiet.
So anyway, I pushed on and kept posting on issues of informed consent, medical ethics, and everything else that I see as a scam.
Because Gareth, I'm sure you appreciate everything is linked, whether it's a climate scam, net zero, you know, the wars that we're seeing, the fake jab, everything's linked.
And once you see one lie, you see them all.
So I've just been open and honest about it.
And fundamentally, what it all comes down to is, What I'm saying is not palatable and acceptable for certain people, and they don't want me to do it.
And now I'm being punished by being suspended.
And there's no pay because I'm self-employed.
I can't earn any money.
So 80% of my practice has just gone out the window.
And here I am.
And do I regret it?
No.
Will I fight it?
Yes.
So I've raised £25,000 in just over a week for a crowd justice fund.
None of that money is going to me.
It goes straight to the lawyer, my legal fees.
Because I want to fight it.
I'm going to fight these guys.
And even if I don't win, it doesn't matter.
At least people will know the bullying tactics that are existing and why so many doctors are scared to speak up.
And do I regret it?
No.
And I don't want to be unsuccessful.
I want to be successful because basically what they're doing is making example of me and doctors like me, Dr. Sam White, Dr. David Cartland, Dr. Adeel.
Basically, what they're saying is a message to all the other doctors, the 280,000 doctors.
You wouldn't think that considering the silence over the last three years, but there's that many doctors.
You know, what they're saying is if you dare to speak up and question the official narrative, This is what's coming for you.
So if I fail, it's not going to be good because ultimately, if you think about it, you, me, all our family members, your listeners, at some point in time will be affected by the medical system.
We'll have to go and see a doctor.
We'll have to go to a hospital or a clinic.
And if you can't trust that that person, that nurse or that doctor is looking after you and in your interest at heart, bearing in mind medical ethics, but they're actually doing what they're scared of, you know, because it's what they're scared of because of what the government's telling them to do.
That's a dangerous position to be in.
How can you trust that person is doing what's in your best interest or your family member or giving you proper informed consent?
So my case isn't just about me and my suspension.
You know, I will survive.
I've been down and out many a time before and I've picked myself up and I'm going to pick myself up again.
And if I have to reinvent myself, I will, although it's pretty scary.
But what is at stake is informed consent, medical ethics and how, you know, doctors and nurses are treating patients and whether, you know, they're free to speak up when patient safety is at stake.
And right now it looks like they're not.
No.
It is crazy to me.
Before we started filming today, we were just chatting in the gallery and I was making the point, because I knew I was going to be speaking to you, about the fact that I've had broken legs and I've had about eight surgeries now.
And I was saying, when I had my last leg surgery, I had a double broken leg.
Tib and fib.
I was sat down pre-surgery and this doctor talked me through and we were talking like 0.0 something percent chance of this, 0.00 percent chance of this.
Good.
And I came out of it going, shit, am I going to die or something?
But he was giving me informed consent and I signed it and I went, OK, I like those odds.
They're pretty good to be fair.
We'll go for it.
Roll forward, you know, 10, 11 years, or whatever it is now, and it's like that is not how it is.
So for you, working within it, how have you seen the medical arena change in your 25 years?
Yeah.
I mean, that's a great question.
So basically, you know, you've nailed it.
That is what informed consent is.
Informed consent is you being informed as a patient to all of the factors related to your treatment and being given choice.
So, you know, non-operative management is a treatment option, operative management, drugs, injections, whatever.
And everything has its pros and cons.
And you as a patient should be warned of the pros and cons, the risks, the absolute risk, not the relative risk, the risk to you as an individual.
And you should be free to make that choice under no coercion or incentive.
So no one's going to threaten you with, you know, unable to work or travel or, you know, go to the pub.
And equally, you're not being given a burger or donut for taking that choice.
You're free to make that choice with no coercion and no judgment being passed either.
So whatever decision you choose to make, I respect it.
And I don't write you off as a crazy person or a misogynist or a white supremacist.
And that is what, you know, informed consent is all about.
But we've seen that being completely trashed in the last few years.
But it is, it has, like you said, been a process over more than just a few years.
It's been decades in the making where medical students are now being indoctrinated, not really being taught anything other than here's pathology, here's a drug, that's how you treat it.
And when I started off, you know, 25 years ago, there was still a degree of autonomy and consultants were consultants.
Now, you're not allowed to practice like that.
You need to follow guidelines.
Everywhere you look, there's guidelines.
And it's funny, it's such an Orwellian word, because guide suggests a guide.
It's just nothing more than a guide.
But guidelines are anything but guides.
Guidelines are dictats.
Guidelines are, you must follow this, and if you deviate from this, You will be punished.
You will be investigated.
You'll be pulled up and said, you know, what, what are you doing?
And increasingly I'm hearing this from doctors, like if doctors don't prescribe a certain number of drugs, they get hauled up and said, why aren't you prescribing this medication?
You know, what's your problem?
And so it's nothing, it's nothing but guidelines.
It's diktats.
And the problem is when you have guidelines coming from a very centralized authority up top, like nice guidelines, They can be influenced, these people who are making the decisions, a handful, three, four, five, they can be influenced by big pharma, by, you know, conflicts of interest and captured.
And then those people are then affecting Thousands of doctors' ability to practice.
And, you know, Gareth, we're all unique.
You know, you're different from me.
You know, you've got bulging biceps and a great beard and you look really handsome.
If I had that beard, I'd be a bloody terrorist.
Right.
So we're all unique.
We're all individual.
We all have to be treated as individuals and our own personal circumstances.
So this blanket approach of This one size fits all is absolute BS.
And while it might work for a lot of people, a lot of people will fall through the gaps where actually that guideline was not the best thing for them, was not in their interest.
So guidelines are actually, I can see the allure, I can see the efficiency and the economy in it.
Of course, I'm not an idiot.
But it's also dangerous.
It's a two-edged sword.
And I don't think it's in patients' interest.
But we have gone down the pathway now where the NHS is the national sick service, not the health service.
And what a lot of people don't realise, it's already modelled like the American system.
There's an illusion that it's free.
It's not.
You and I pay a lot of money Like all the other people in this country to fund the NHS.
It is really inefficient.
The bureaucracy is massive.
In 1980, 4% of the cost went to management.
Now it's like 30%.
And America's like 36%.
So think about that.
Every 36 pence in your penny, in a pound, Pennies went to, you know, management.
And in this country, it's 30 pence.
I mean, we're not far from the American model, which is about managed health care.
How do you manage these patients to maximize profit and to feed big pharma and the hospital system and the insurance system?
And that's what you've got in this country.
It's managed health care.
You're managing everything.
And it's not about patients and patients' well-being.
Because I can tell you right now, if it was really about doing what's in the patient's interest, you could reverse
so much chronic illness and disease and save money by starting the education system right at year
four or five, when you're four or five years old. Because I know I'm teaching my kids, my youngest
is four years old. I'm teaching him now what it takes to live a healthy life and avoid chronic
disease. You could be doing that en masse to our children.
And instead, we're teaching them about gender ideology.
And this is what, you know, this is where I'm saying, you know, if it's really about health, if it's really about the interest of the public, we wouldn't be seeing all these government policies because they're anything but what they purport them to be.
Exactly.
Exactly.
It's interesting you point out that guideline part though, that almost pyramid system, because I heard throughout the whole COVID, you know, the three years where it was kind of crazy, where you would say certain things and the comeback was, oh, so all the nurses are in on it.
Oh, so all the doctors are in on it.
It's like, well, but if you've got a top-down system, they don't need to be.
Like you say, they just follow the guidelines.
I mean, you mentioned this.
I know you went into private practice, but you worked in the NHS before that.
And that was my final question for you, actually.
And it's quite a big one.
But all I hear is the NHS needs more money, it needs more funding.
And then I look at it and I go, well, you're spending fortunes on, you know, inclusion officers and job roles that are actually, to be fair, more political than they are medical anyway.
What would you do to fix the NHS?
And I know it's a huge question, it's a behemoth of an organisation,
but what would you do?
It's a great question.
It's a great question.
So for many years, I really loved the idea of the NHS.
It's all cosy, warm, and that's all indoctrination and propaganda.
Look, there's enough money.
The NHS is actually not public, really.
It's private.
It's a private organisation.
It's wholly corrupt.
It's just a cash cow.
It's a gravy train.
It's very corrupt.
You're just handing out contracts left, right and centre.
And it's all wink, wink, free masonry, handshake, you know, in the club, the people get the contracts.
And just look at, you know, the digital contract that was, you know, 10 billion was wasted in that.
Where did that money go?
Where's the accountability for that?
And that's what people need to understand.
The NHS as it is, is a massive cash cow.
And if they really wanted to deliver healthcare properly, it could be done in a much more efficient manner with a lot less money and wastage.
And it's designed the way it is to get doctors to not be independent, not to be autonomous, To be compliant, to be indoctrinated and just follow orders.
And we've heard whenever you do things, when you, oh, I just followed orders.
I mean, do you remember when, when have we heard that before?
That didn't end, that didn't end too well.
So, you know, I used to think you could revamp the NHS and change it and make it more efficient.
And like, I could talk about this for hours, but in a nutshell, I've changed.
It's BS.
I do not believe in any centralized structure.
You know, it might start off all noble and nice.
It will eventually become a behemoth and a totalitarian, top down, wholly corrupt institution taking away liberties and freedoms.
So what you need is decentralisation.
So some people will be like, oh, well, you're advocating private health care.
No, I'm not saying an American model, because that's a reductive kind of argument.
Oh, well, if you don't have the NHS, you want an American system.
Why is it like that?
Why does it have to be that?
I mean, we have almost the exact same as the American model, just with an NHS logo slapped on top.
No, what I would want is, you know, decentralised healthcare structures where, you know, they're serving their community, where you can have, you know, trusts, where you can have charities, where you can have non-profit organisations, where they're not owned by monopolies or duopolies, where, you know, it's, Not for profit, where clinicians are leading the hospital management structure and dictating what's best for their patients, where patients and the public are involved in the running of the hospital, where, you know, yes, you might have to pay, yes, you might have to have your own personal insurance, but you're freed up from the centralized structure.
And the funny thing is, in the private sector, it's not any better.
You know, the private sector is very centralised as well.
You know, you've got a handful of private healthcare operators which are in effect working like a cabal.
They are doing price fixing, they're reducing the fees that they pay the doctors, they're increasing the fees that they're giving their patients.
Instead of being an insurance company where the patient said, hey, I'm sick now, give me money so I can go and get myself sorted.
These private insurance companies are now saying, oh, right, well, you can only see A or B doctor and you can only see them in this hospital.
You can only have two appointments and you're not allowed any of these scans.
And if you do, you need to pay more money for it.
Now insurance companies are dictating to patients what to do.
So we need to have a completely different healthcare model.
And it might be a mixture of public and private, where public treats, you know, emergency care, like if you're in a road traffic accident, you know, cancer, where there's not much money in there, but the government will come and pick you up, or I prefer local communities.
So everybody pays insurance to their local community and you're served by your local community, your local town or city or whatever.
And then if you want to have anything else, like if you want a boob job or you want your piles treated or you want a knee replacement, pay insurance for that.
And equally, this insurance should be tax deductible.
And you know, it should be an ethical insurance company, not the kind of rapacious corporate greed that we're seeing right now.
So I mean, it's not easy.
I mean, this is going into the world of economics.
But I mean, the system right now is so bad, I would say it's dangerous.
I personally would be terrified of going into a hospital at this stage.
Yeah, a lot of people have been over the last few years.
I mean, I'll be honest, you used the word decentralised there, which is instantly, you know, that's appealed to me because that's what I believe in.
I believe in local communities.
I don't believe in this big, giant, in the end, global.
You know, system, which is, you know, like you said, one size fits all.
That's not how it works.
Just finally then, Dr. Malik, can you give us your crowd funder?
Where people that are watching this can go if they want to support your fight.
That would be amazing.
I mean, first of all, just go on my podcast.
That'd be amazing.
You can find it on DocMalik, D-O-C-M-A-L-I-K.com.
That's not Malik, DocMalik.
And if you just go to CrowdJustice.com and, you know, just Google Doc Malik's right to medical free speech, they'll find me.
You know, and subscribe to my show.
I've got a paid sub stack.
I mean, I hate to be at the point where I'm begging, but, you know, I've got four or five months of savings and then I'm totally screwed.
And this is the price you pay for speaking up.
I mean, I'll be honest.
I'll be honest with you, Gareth.
I had a real crisis of confidence over the weekend.
I was getting quite down at one point.
I was like, have I just lost the plot?
Have I just gone down?
You know, You know, I don't know if you've heard this meme, but if you, if you start keeping chickens, it's a gateway to conspiracy theories.
So we got some chickens earlier on in the year and I just feel like, have I just become, you know, down this rabbit hole of conspiracy theories and I've just lost the plot.
You know, I went to a meeting recently of foot and ankle surgeons and there were hundreds of them and I was walking around like a leper.
You know, I mean, none of them agree with me.
They all think I'm Raving loony.
So now I'm thinking, have I actually lost the plot?
How can all these doctors and surgeons not agree with me unless I'm wrong?
Either they're wrong, which is scary.
Thousands of doctors who are wrong.
How terrifying is that?
Or I'm wrong.
Now, what's the likelihood it's all of them are wrong?
And I started getting a trickle of emails and they were all just thanking me for what I'm doing and for speaking up.
And it kind of makes me think, OK, maybe I am doing the right thing, but it's scary.
It's scary when you've lost your livelihood and your career and your ability to look after your young family.
But I'll say it again, I don't regret what I'm doing.
I am doing this for my children.
I'm doing this for humanity.
And unless people step up and say, no, we're not going to do this and speak up, things are going to get bad.
They're going to get bad before they get better.
And I don't think a lot of people appreciate that.
And I think your audience probably does.
But we need to somehow get through to the masses and make them aware that There's a lot at stake here.
Absolutely.
And that's why your voice is so important with, you know, 25 years experience and thousands of patients that, you know, I can sit here and say certain things and people will be like, well, what are you?
What do you know?
You're just sat behind a camera, whereas you're coming from the cold face, essentially.
So we appreciate that, Dr. Malika.
Thanks so much for talking to us.
Don't say that!
Before you end, Gareth, you are the son of David Icke.
Man, of course we're going to listen to you.
Well, I appreciate that very much.
Thank you.
That's all for this week.
Thank you for tuning in.
During 2020 and 2021, I was part of several freedom marches all across the country, many of them in the capital.
On one particular occasion, I was walking with thousands of others down Oxford Street in central London when we saw a small pro-Palestinian march coming the other way.
Some of you watching this may well have been there and will possibly remember it well.
For me, it was quite something, as I've been on many of these pro-Palestinian marches over the years, which might now make me a terrorist.
As the two protests got closer to each other, both sets of protesters began to clap one another.
It was wonderful to be part of that, because behind the divisive headlines and racial pot-stirrers, they're not hate marches.
These are simply people peacefully fighting back against two different forms of oppression.
One marching against a military occupation and the other marching against, well, what was a medical occupation.
And so to see a sizable chunk of those I marched for freedom with now railing against those that marched for freedom and survival is deeply saddening.
It just shows how strong the tribal conditioning is and how a default tribal position can be fallen back on with just the slightest manipulation from government and media.
But times of turmoil are a great revealer and many have revealed themselves.
And that can only be a good thing.
Because we now know who is a genuine believer in all lives matter and who isn't.