Episode 35 - A Shot In the Dark Part 9 - Baby Formula, Diphtheria
So, this week is a real banger. If all the reference links don't show for you, click on this link for the Gishgallop Girl Home Site at Podbean. Candace was full back on her BS with this episode, reminding everyone why she is the one and only Gishgallop Girl.
Candace Owens Links From Patreon for Episode 9 of A Shot In the Dark
https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/california-news/california-bill-vaccines-vaccination-children-preteen-parental-consent/2887398/
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/06/16/biomilq-raises-3point5-million-from-bill-gates-investment-firm.html
https://www.greenqueen.com.hk/biomilq-series-a/
https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/baby-formula-shortage-fda-chief-vows-boost-supply
https://www.genengnews.com/topics/omics/moderna-wins-initial-20m-grant-from-gates-foundation/
https://www.gatesfoundation.org/about/committed-grants/2019/03/opp1203278
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10809457/Colorado-mom-says-daughter-invited-high-school-art-club-actually-transgender-group.html
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/209448?resultClick=1
Candace’s link to Journal of American Medicine
Other Links mentioned on the show
https://sd11.senate.ca.gov/news/senator-wieners-statement-decision-pull-sb-866-teens-choose-vaccines-act
Statement about California State Senate Bill 866 from the desk of Scott Weiner.
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2021-11-17/lausd-to-spend-5-million-for-gift-cards-to-incentivize-students-to-get-covid-19-vaccine
LA Times article about COVID Vaccines incentives for students.
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/baby-formula-problems-abbott-laboratories-doj-investigation-rcna66820
Article about the FDA investigation in Abbott over the Baby Formula, mentioned near the end of article is how Abbott voluntarily shut down while it investigated itself. FDA had nothing to do with the shutdown.
https://www.fda.gov/media/158736/download
FDA report on the Abbott Plant
https://www.propublica.org/article/baby-formula-abbot-sturgis-michigan-shortages-unsanitary-conditions-workers-say
Article on conditions at the Abbott formula plant in 2024
https://vegconomist.com/cultivated-cell-cultured-biotechnology/biomilq-cell-cultured-breast-milk-ready
From May 3, 2022 Biomilq would not be ready for several years at best.
https://agfundernews.com/biomilq-files-for-bankruptcy-amid-ip-dispute-that-made-it-uninvestable-and-unacquirable
Biomilq shut down amid legal controversy with founders ex husband
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/MRNA_vaccine
Wikipedia, mRNA
https://abbott.mediaroom.com/2022-05-16-Abbott-Enters-into-Consent-Decree-with-U-S-Food-and-Drug-Administration-for-its-Sturgis,-Mich-,-Plant-Agreement-Creates-Pathway-to-Reopen-Facility
Abbott statement on plant in Sturgis reopening
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10809457/Colorado-mom-says-daughter-invited-high-school-art-club-actually-transgender-group.html
Daily Mail Link to original story from May 12, 2022 about the Transgender classroom experience in Colorado.
https://cdn01.dailycaller.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/1_Complaint.pdf
Colorado suit not filed until a year later
https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca10/24-1254/24-1254-2025-04-22.html
10th circuit appeal and dismissal on the Colorado suit
https://www.reddit.com/r/asktransgender/s/izWqrBChAw
The post that referred me to the reddit post Candace read from.
https://www.reddit.com/r/asktransgender/s/bnaBSwZFdf
Link to comment section on this reddit post.
https://www.cdc.gov/pinkbook/hcp/table-of-contents/chapter-7-diphtheria.html
Diphtheria info from CDC
https://www.npr.org/2021/02/09/965703047/vaccines-could-drive-the-evolution-of-more-covid-19-mutants
NPR Interview explaining Vaccine mutation theory
Okay, hello everybody, welcome to Gish Gallup Girl episode 35, A Shot in the Dark Part 9.
You may have noticed a lack of a theme song at the front of this.
Do you know why?
Why?
Because two reasons, really.
Yeah.
One just happens to have blended into the other one.
So I got a little bit of, well, since I got us up on YouTube and I've been doing a lot of background work pushing people specifically from the Candace Owens subreddit towards our show.
I've gotten feedback not only on YouTube, but also from a couple of people from there that have engaged with me in conversation that said that the theme songs were a little much.
Maybe stop.
All right.
I was going to give that some space.
I was going to give that some space.
But then the Donna AI app subscription came up.
Yeah.
And it was like, yeah, because I used my Google Points money initially for it.
It was like, we can't charge your thing.
I never set up a backup payment method because that's fucking dumb.
So it couldn't charge me.
So I was like, well, I don't want to pay $60 for another year if I'm getting some pushback on it.
So I'm going to let that sit.
Now, folks, if you liked the theme songs, let us know.
If you didn't, let me know.
But for now, I'm going to cancel those.
What I figure I'll still do, though, is I still want to put together a theme song of just Candace quotes with like some background music to it.
So what I can do at that point is I can just pay for some song credits on Donna and get the background music that I need and use my mixer program to mix them in.
But yeah, that was, I was like, okay, well, that kind of happened at the right time.
Yeah.
Because had it been, you know, another week or so of payments, I probably would have been like, well, maybe not this week.
Yeah.
But yeah, so I was like, well, okay.
That happened at the right time.
I'm just going to roll with it, man.
You know?
So, yeah, how have you been in the last two weeks since we last did an episode?
Well, I mean, I've been doing pretty decently.
The, well, God, the weird political people at work or something else.
They always are.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, especially anybody who's really, like, trumpy in Minneapolis, just, they deserve all of the weird looks and just pain that they get.
Yeah.
There's nothing like having one say that, you know, women shouldn't be in points of authority while standing there next to your female boss.
And it's just like, well.
You sure you're here for a refund?
I don't think you're getting it now.
Something tells me.
I have an inkling.
God.
People suck.
So before we get this episode started in full tonight, I just want to mention to anyone following along, the title of this episode in the stack of Candace shows really kind of threw me off.
So on the Patreon, this is listed as Episode 9, Baby Formula Crisis, Diphtheria, and the Big Pharma Custody Battle.
But on the official episode name, literally anywhere else, the episode title is, Will Hotez Debate RFK Jr.
Yeah.
So when I went looking for the episode in my list, I couldn't locate it and I freaked out a little.
Then I remembered that Candace and her people suck at everything and I poked around a bit and confirmed that I had the right episode all along.
Fucking absurd bullshit.
How do you let something like that slip through?
Oh God, speaking of the Patreon, it's going to get so much dumber.
Okay.
That's to come, trust me.
Yeah.
All right.
The consolation that I get on doing these is a lot of the time I do them not only at libraries, but I found a couple of parks that I like to go to.
So at least I can look out at the beauty and the majesty of nature, usually lakeside.
Yeah.
While I'm listening to this crap.
Yeah.
You know, anyway, here's the first clip with the opening theme music that I usually spare y'all from hearing.
But also, before I hit play, you should know that her microphone in this one really, really, really sucks.
Or her sound engineer sucks or both.
Candace talks really fast in this episode, giving us the Gish Gallup technique on full blast.
I'm not slowing anything down.
I might, I am going to pick up the audio a little bit because there are sections where I swear she's just speaking real fast, but she's doing it like this.
Okay.
Yeah.
It's jarring.
It's jarring to come from like the previous episodes and then into that, and it's like a mile a minute.
There used to be a guy way, way back.
He did two kinds of commercials.
He did other commercials and he worked in other things.
He was an actor.
I don't know his name.
And I feel kind of bad for that now.
But he did, two of the commercial runs that he was known for in the late 80s, early 90s were for Minute Rice and Micro Machines.
Let me guess he spoke real fast.
Super fast, but clear.
Like you could understand him.
He enunciated well as he just flew.
Like I think the only person who did a better job than him was probably Eminem and Rap God.
Yeah.
Like it was crazy.
I mean he was the ultimate pitch man for you know rice you could make in a minute in the microwave and for some reason micro machines which were just tiny little cars in this tiny little world of ramps and shit like they still sell them today but they're not nearly as big as they were no and his his pitching was was part of that just could just belt out a bunch of bullshit in 30 seconds that you could clearly understand like would have like like some another actor probably would have taken,
you know, two, three minutes to do.
This man could compress it down.
It was absolutely stunning.
But, um, yeah.
So, uh, yeah.
This episode only clocked in at about 32 minutes or so, but there's a lot of stuff to cover.
Of course.
Yeah.
So here's the first clip.
All right, guys.
Welcome back to A Shot in the Dark.
This is episode 9, and I'm very excited.
I'm going to do things a little bit differently for this episode because there are just some recent news headlines that I feel need to be covered that really fit the mold of everything that we're talking about in this series, parenting, children, whether or not we even still have custody of our children or whether the state does.
So I want to first just go over some really important headlines that I hope everyone at home is paying attention to.
So there has been this bill that's been making its way through California and it just passed its first legislative hurdle and this is something that you guys should all be paying very close attention to.
I always say that California is an increasingly radical state.
I think it is the worst place to live if you are a parent that wants to make any decisions for your child because the government has somehow wrangled it out of our hands, particularly in this region.
So the bill went through the Senate Judiciary Committee and it passed 7 to 0 and what this particular piece of legislation allows, believe it or not, is for 12-year-old kids to consent to vaccines without parental knowledge or involvement.
What?
What are we even talking about?
Your 12-year-old child, so that would put them in sixth grade, going into seventh grade maybe, is allowed to consent to having chemicals injected into their arms without your consent if you live in California.
It's passed the first legislative step.
It has to go to the full Senate for a vote.
And I think it's likely to pass, if I'm being honest with you.
So that was about a minute and a half.
Yeah.
God.
Big nope on that, though.
The bill, which was Senate Bill 866 in 2022, it did pass the California State Senate, but it did not pass the State Assembly.
And the author of the bill, Scott Weiner, withdrew it from voting when it was clear that it wouldn't get even a slim margin of victory votes.
The bill faced pushback from all angles, including from Democrats.
Link in the show notes.
And by the way, what I'm going to say here, too, about the links in this episode, the links in this episode, there are, this episode has the most amount of links in it.
Like, Candace had eight links on Patreon, but because I actually do research and work, I don't know how many there are on our end.
I didn't count them.
I just realized the link stack was so fucking large.
So there is a very small chance, listeners, that your podcast player of choice, whatever it may be, since we're on all of them now, your podcast player of choice might cut off the stack of links.
If you need any, go to the main Gish Gallu Girl site on Patreon, or you can go to gishgallopgirl.com and our link to, not Patreon, I'm sorry.
We don't have a fucking Patreon.
Podbean.
Podbean, yeah.
Their name is way too similar to Patreon.
Anyway, I was going to fire it up again?
No, God, no.
Trust me, I have thought about it just because it's like we are getting a lot more traffic now.
And I've thought about it, but I'm like, no.
No.
It's not that it was hard.
It wasn't hard to set up at all.
Patreon's very, very easy to work with compared to other things that I've fucked around with in the past.
But no, the problem still stands that we have a government that is getting increasingly authoritarian and having a source of funding just makes it easy to get fucked with.
And even though we live closer to Canada than I think most of our customers, not customers, we don't have customers.
Listeners, it's been a day, y'all.
You know, even though we live pretty close to Canada, we don't live that close.
We could get stopped, and I don't want to get stopped.
You know, because, well, because I'm like, you know, if they go after independent media, because especially right now, a lot of independent media, including people that supported Trump, are not going for this there's no Epstein list bullshit.
Yeah.
You know, so my concern, especially as I pointed out before, that the two top brains at the FBI right now are former podcasters who built impressive audiences based on bullshit.
Yeah.
They know the power and reach of independent media, whether it's a small show like ours or, you know, a large show like Tucker or Joe Rogan, even.
Fuck and the Tates.
Yeah, the Tates especially.
Yeah, like they know the power of independent media and I don't trust how that's going right now.
So I'm still, I'm going to sit on not getting a Patreon back up again for at least a year.
Yeah.
Because I want to see how all this shit's working out.
Yeah.
Because ICE just got ICE just got a huge, a huge jackboot of funding that's going to make them basically the fourth largest army in the world.
Lovely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, yeah, I don't like that our American Gestapo got funded.
And I don't like what they can do with that kind of funding.
So I'm going to play it safe and not put us on a list.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, well, we're, we're, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, so for D ⁇ D purposes, I might add.
Right.
Just or, you know.
Yeah.
So I just, I don't, I don't want to fucks with it.
I don't see the point right now.
Yeah.
I do love the fact that people are glitter bombing the ice agents.
Among so many other things.
Yeah.
So here's the next clip.
God.
There's so much.
There's speed.
There's so much.
Well, I found it.
I just, I'm hovering over the button.
Okay, here we go.
Here we go.
Here we go.
Let's just talk about that.
Let's just talk about why they are doing that.
And by the way, this includes the coronavirus vaccine.
So that means that your child could agree to get four series shots for the coronavirus vaccine.
And as we learned from previous headlines, they have teachers that are bribing children to get the shot.
So there was a story that ran that said a nurse or a teacher had offered a child free pizza, free donuts, all of these initiatives that we saw during the pandemic to encourage people to get the vaccine, free six flag tickets, all of these things.
Well, of course, if you're a child, the concept of getting anything for free would be enough of an incentive for you to say, oh, we have to just get the shot.
It won't be a big deal.
You have a teacher telling you it's for your health.
It's going to be good.
You're doing the right thing.
And on top of that, here's a bonus.
You can get six flag tickets.
You're going to go, okay, that sounds like a good deal because you're a child and your mind is not developed.
This is the reason that we call them children.
It's the reason that we call ourselves adults.
Okay, look, even I, as a perfectly mature adult, if you sat back and went, hey, I'll give you a pizza slice if you let me give you this.
So what you're telling me is you're going to give me medicine.
And pizza?
Fuck, all right, yeah.
Which arm you want?
What are the rules to this transaction?
well, kids were not being bribed.
One, because bribery is a crime, and nothing about this was actually criminal.
Kids were encouraged in Los Angeles County schools with the use of a $5 million fund set aside for it.
They were encouraged to get COVID vaccines with incentives such as event tickets, gift cards, and food truck days.
But these were not sponsored by the teachers.
They were sponsored by the schools and the school district.
Add to it, really, that kids were eager to be safe and be able to do shit with their friends again, and I doubt they needed much arm twisting.
Yeah.
But anyway, it was all done through a raffled lottery system, and I will allow an article by Howard Bloom in the LA Times to explain this.
Quote, from the top.
With the deadline for student COVID-19 vaccinations days away and about 72% in Compliance, the Los Angeles Board of Education has authorized an estimated $5 million for prizes and treats as incentives, including gift cards to Amazon and Target, tickets to Hamilton, and food trucks on campus.
Separately, officials also announced that weekly coronavirus testing for all students and adults will conclude when the winter break begins in December, a massive effort that has carried out 500,000 tests a week at a total cost estimated at $350 million.
The incentive program already underway is part of a broad-based effort to boost vaccination rates by Sunday, the Los Angeles Unified School District's self-imposed deadline for students 12 and older to receive a vaccine dose.
The only choice for students 12 to 17 is the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine.
Those 18 and older could choose instead the two-dose Moderna or one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
Students must be fully vaccinated by the January 10th start of the second semester or they will not be allowed on campus.
Their options would be would be to pursue their education outside LA Unified or transfer to City of Angels, a district independent study program that has faced struggles this year.
The incentives are mainly raffles, and anyone in compliance is eligible, meaning those who are vaccinated, have an approved medical exemption, or have a rare authorized extension.
Religious exemptions are not being granted.
Raffle prizes have also included gift cards to grocery stores, tickets to Disneyland, Six Flags Magic Mountain, and Universal Studios Hollywood, and graduation night entertainment packages.
Some of the money is being spent centrally, but regional administrators have funds to come up with their own plans.
Some have brought in food trucks.
Wilson High in El Sereno has logo t-shirts for every student who follows the rules.
It's really designed to acknowledge families for their efforts in engaging in this bigger public health initiative, said Sarah Mooney, the district's coordinator of civic engagement.
It's all about keeping families safe and students learning.
In approving financial incentives at its Tuesday meeting, the school board had to waive a rule that sets a limit of $40 for personal gifts to students and parents or guardians.
A report to the board estimated that rewards would range from $100 to $350 on average.
The $5 million is paid for with taxpayer funding.
Additional gifts will be sponsored and funded by donors.
The spending serves a legitimate public and educational purpose, according to the board report.
The incentives in the nation's second largest school system resemble an unrelated $116.5 million state program unveiled in May.
In a series of drawings through June, vaccinated Californians were eligible to win prizes ranging from $50 to $1.5 million.
Yeah, just to get a COVID vaccine.
Other efforts by LAU Unified include expanding access to vaccines and working in collaboration with community organizations.
Board member Jackie Goldberg based on an internal briefing.
Probably 64% are fully vaccinated, she added.
The number could be higher once families upload documentation.
She said the County Health Department thinks we are at about 70% based on addresses of those who live in LAUSD.
District leaders remain hopeful.
Early figures on an employee vaccine mandate were alarmingly low, according to sources.
Officials refused to release the information as the deadline neared.
Ultimately, 97% of employees either complied or were granted a medical or religious exemption.
Parents opposed to the student mandate staged their latest in a series of protests Tuesday outside the district headquarters while others called in with their objections.
Board meetings have been closed to the public since the start of the pandemic.
A parent who called in and identified herself as Wendy accused the school board of using incentives as a form of segregation and humiliation.
She added that the board was attempting to isolate and target vulnerable children in front of their peers.
For families willing to comply with the vaccine mandate, officials have decided to ease some restrictions.
The pending end of wide-scale coronavirus testing will mark a turning point in what became a signature program of former LA School Superintendent Austin Boetner, who stepped out at the end of June.
Infections have declined significantly since the start of school this fall.
Last week, tests found 74 infections among employees and 521 among students in a school system with about 450,000 students.
So 74 among employees and 521 out of 450,000.
It's pretty good.
Among employees, only eight close contacts were sent home to quarantine.
The figure was 2,309 among students, as far as close contacts with coronavirus tracking.
Although concerns of a winter uptick remain, officials are confident that increasing vaccination rates and other safety measures will eliminate the need for universal weekly testing.
Also in January, students at middle and high schools where the vaccine mandate will be in force will no longer have to wear masks outside.
The same will hold for elementary schools where 85% of students are vaccinated.
Students ages 5 to 11 recently became eligible for vaccination, but the district is not extending its mandate to them.
In addition, elementary students, vaccinated or not, will no longer be sent home automatically if they are close contacts of a positive coronavirus case.
They can remain in school on a modified quarantine in which students are tested for a coronavirus infection and monitored for symptoms.
The goal is to keep more students in class.
These changes will bring LA Unified largely in line with county and state guidelines.
The updates at Tuesday's meeting also included a hiring report.
With the end of the first semester approaching, the district is short nearly 700 teachers, about the same number as a month ago.
This caused frustrated board member Tanya Ortiz-Franklin to question whether the district needs to work smarter to close the gap.
The situation was exacerbated, she was told, by the transfer of teachers with a vaccination exemption to the City of Angels program, where they will not interact in person with students or other employees.
The teacher shortage is not unique to LA Unified and has forced the district to make its job application process easier and faster and make the work itself seem as appealing as possible.
The candidate experience is the most important piece, said Ilana Davalos, the district's chief human resources officer.
The school district also is trying to hire hundreds of classroommates in schools where students need the most help, as well as more than 500 counselors.
Jesus.
Yeah.
I mean, at least they were definitely putting in the fucking work with it.
Yeah.
Like.
Hi, squish.
Squishy cat has entered the chat.
Find a spot.
Find a spot not near the microphone.
Yeah.
She'll figure it out.
Right.
Okay.
At any rate, now Candace asks us to take a step back in time.
I encourage you to just think about yourself when you were 12 years old.
Think about what you were doing when you were 12.
For me, let's see, I was doing cartwheels, I was choreographing dances to Spice Girls routines for my camp.
I definitively was not within any mental capacity to be making decisions for myself.
Man, I hate doing short clips, but I usually listen past the clip itself before I cut one.
And I had to address this as she flies by it.
So she says she was helping choreograph dances to Spice Girls songs when she was 12.
Now, as we've said before, Candace was born in 1989.
She would have been 12 in 2001.
Okay.
Yeah.
The Spice Girls' popularity had waned significantly by then.
They were everywhere for about two years, in 1996 to 1998.
Yeah.
And by 2001, the band had pretty much split up.
Jerry Halliwell left first to gift the world with her own music, including not a hit song, Look at Me.
Yeah.
And the others were all doing guest spots on other musicians' album to boost their own solo efforts, mostly.
So I don't think Candace has really good recall of being 12 years old is what I'm saying.
Yeah.
Either that or her school was...
Either that or her camp was fairly stuck in the past.
In the late 90s.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, like, sure, that sounds...
Now, we know she didn't grow up poor.
No.
And I can tell you, I grew up in the fucking 80s and 90s, and no one I knew in my working-class neighborhoods ever went to camp.
I didn't know anyone who went to camp.
I have met people since who went to summer camps.
I didn't know anyone who ever went to camp because I didn't hang out with wealthy people's children.
Yeah.
But we know that Candace did not grow up poor.
From the time she was nine on through until she was 18, she lived on the good side of Stamford, Connecticut, in her grandfather's home.
It kind of reminds me of Key and Peale, one of their sketches.
They had made the mention of neither one of them could be rappers.
Yeah.
And they posed the question of why they couldn't be rappers.
And Peale starts to make a case about it, and Key goes, no, where did you grow up again?
I grew up in New York.
Which part of New York?
And he says, the nicest part of New York.
He's like, you were probably the only black family in that part of New York.
You cannot be a rapper.
He's like, sure, I can.
And he starts doing the Fresh Prince of Bel Air role.
And he's like, no, no, you cannot.
No.
I mean, you know, he's not wrong.
I mean, like, yeah, she's just...
God, she's terrible.
But yeah, like...
I only found out about it because my parents were stealing satellite internet.
And I was watching, God, MTV2 at the time.
MTV had pretty much ceased being a music video channel in all but name.
Yeah.
And they had to come up with a separate channel, MTV2, that actually just played random music videos.
Why not just create another station to hold the non-music oriented videos on?
Because they had already done that.
It was called MTV.
No, but no, I mean, like, why not create a separate station to host all of the non-music things on and keep MTV?
Oh, God, I know.
It was pretty bad.
I was also watching the Canadian version of MTV, which was decent for a while until it got weird.
Much music.
And then my friends who had satellite, who had real satellite, like serious, like, I've got a dish in my yard that, you know, you could flip over and use it as a storm shelter.
Yeah.
I knew some people who had satellite dishes like that.
The good ones.
Well, they had a special station called The Box.
Now, the box was unique because when you saw music videos on the box, people were calling in a pay-per-minute line to vote for those videos to be playing.
Wasn't that a thing in...
Just the one where they're all babies.
What, Tiny Tunes?
think so, yeah.
The same one where they played the fucking...
Istanbul, not Constantinople.
Yeah, the Tiny Tunes.
Tiny Tunes did a couple of music video episodes, yeah.
Yeah, for the music video episode that they did for the They Might Be Giants.
Yeah, they did two Might Be Giants songs.
They did Particle Man and Istanbul Not Constantinople.
Well, for that, it was Bugs sitting there going, people are asking for this?
And he's answering a phone and going, oh, okay.
Yeah, they, well, like the box, you would call a number.
And I don't know how it worked because I was never going to pay three bucks to vote for a music video.
But apparently people were.
But, yeah, it was a weird, weird time.
But, yeah, I just...
And then, from what I understand, she went on to make more albums.
And I'm like, who paid for them?
Like, the song Look At me is really quite narcissistic.
Now, if Candace was doing dances to that, okay, that fits.
That tracks.
I doubt it.
There's an EDM song.
I don't know who the fucking author of it is.
Not author, fuck.
Artist.
Artist of it is.
But it's called Mimi.
Okay.
And the song's literally just, me, only, me.
Only look at me, only gift things to me.
I'm the only important thing in your life.
That's all it is.
I feel like if your partner knows all the words to that, you find a way to Irish exit the relationship.
Yeah.
Or you ask yourself the important question of, is the sex really that good?
If the answer is anything short of a resounding yes in your brain, you Irish exit.
You introduce them to someone, even.
Oh no, don't go off with him.
Ha ha ha ha.
Ha ha, you know?
Just like, I can't imagine that.
All right, next clip.
From a health perspective, I mean, right now we are doing this podcast because we have realized how ignorant we are as adults when it comes to big pharma, how ignorant we have all been in terms of pursuing the knowledge and the facts because we've just been blanketly trusting the doctors.
Well, the idea here is to get the children to just blanketly trust their nurses at school, to trust their teachers at school, and to say, you don't need to worry about what your parents are saying.
You now have autonomy over your own body and you should get this injection.
With the amount of injections that we know have been added to the schedule from the time that we were kids to now, this should honestly send a shiver down your spine.
In fact, one of the legislators who voted for this said, some parents really do need legislative circumvention.
Like, you know, like if the kids need to be able to get around their parents, they need to have a piece of legislation that allows them to not have to listen to their parents in these circumstances, because God forbid their parents don't think that this is the healthiest vaccine for their child.
We know for a fact the COVID vaccine caused myocarditis, particularly in young children, particularly in young male children, and yet they are giving the children the authority to get that vaccine without speaking to their parents.
Okay.
Why is her audio so fucking fast?
Well, she is speaking.
Like, I went back and watched the video.
She is speaking that fast.
This is her.
This is how she earned the name of this fucking show.
Oh, that's fair.
That's fair.
Yeah.
That is the Candace Owens that I remember seeing for a long time.
When she's just allowed to rip.
Oh my God.
It's bad.
God.
That's how I gave this show the title Gish Gallup Girl.
That's the Candace Owens that I know.
Fast speaking and fucking terrible.
Now, legislative circumvention is a phrase that was used by California State Senator Sidney Kamluger, who said that, quote, some really do need legislative circumvention like this, end quote.
And this was in regards to SB 866 that we discussed, you know, just a few minutes ago.
I am going to give Candace a little leeway here, just a little.
The bill was sent to committees where it died in August of 2022.
And it passed the California Senate to go to those committees on May 12th of 2022.
This episode originally aired on May 13th of 2022.
Okay.
All right.
So following the alarmist logic, it would have just been sent along for review when this was filmed.
Okay.
As a parent, I understand her thinking on this somewhat.
But since I'm not an anti-vax weirdo, I cannot agree with her on this, of course.
No.
This sucks for the kids of weirdos in California that this didn't happen and likely will never happen in this lifetime anyway.
Candace moves on to a different large story from 2022.
The baby formula shortage.
What are we talking about?
It is not a conspiracy theory.
It's not me being dramatic when I say that right now we are facing a custodial fight for our children against the state in California.
Passing this, going through this first legislative hurdle, I think, is the greatest example that's taking place in the United States.
Their bribery tactics are going to work.
There is no question.
So we'll keep up to date on that story when it goes to the full Senate.
And as I said, I do think it's going to pass.
Another story that I think everyone should be paying attention to, and certainly something that I have been granting about on my Instagram, is the baby formula shortage that is suddenly sweeping America.
And there's a part of this that it just doesn't make sense.
We keep having all of these shortages of things that we needed, and suddenly there appears to be some government solution that enriches the exact same people that have been, that have so much wealth and so much power and control over the way that we live our day-to-day lives.
And I just can't imagine how many times the name Bill Gates keeps coming up.
So before I even talk about his incredible investment that he made, he's done this over and over and over again.
It seems like almost like Bill Gates can see into the future.
I want to just recap the situation in case you guys aren't aware of it.
So essentially, we are facing a baby formula shortage in the United States.
And the reason that we are facing this baby formula shortage is not because people stopped manufacturing baby formula.
It's because the FDA stepped in and shut down the largest plant, which was in Sturgis, Michigan.
So you can follow the story.
You can look it up, look at it right now.
And they shut down this large plant because they said that there were four babies that allegedly got sick.
They thought they had gotten sick.
At least they wanted to investigate whether or not they had gotten sick from baby formula.
And two of the infants that they were referring to actually died from some bacterial infection, so it was worth shutting down the most massive plant in the United States so they could investigate further.
Now.
Okay, let's talk about baby formula.
Okay, so Candace got this wrong.
The FDA did not shut down Abbott, which is the maker of Simolac and other brands such as Alimentum, Ellacare, Pure Bliss by Simolac Organic, and several specialty or metabolic versions, which are Cyclonex 1 and 2,
Glutarex 1 and 2, Hominex 1 and 2, Ivalex 1 and 2, Kitonex 1 and 2, Fenex with a pH 1 and 2, Propamex 1 and 2, Tyrex 1 and 2,
and also ProFree, Free spelled with a pH, Provimin, Calcilo XD, RCF Concentrated Liquid, and Similac PM 60-40.
As you might imagine, these being very special formulas do require a prescription to obtain, which also makes them expensive.
Some medical or state plans can be used to offset those costs, but with the new Bigley bill in effect, man, who knows?
Anyway, Candace was wrong about the FDA shutting down Abbott.
The company did it on its own first.
That said, Abbott was the largest single formula producer in the U.S., holding about 40% of the market at the time.
But Candace laying the shutdown on the FDA is gross, and the information was available at the time that this wasn't the case.
The shutdown and corresponding investigation by the FDA showed that the shutdown was entirely necessary, since it was found from the FDA report that I am linking to, that Chronobacter bacteria was found on various surfaces in the plant, and a lot of equipment that was being poorly maintained, if at all.
Also in the link stack of this episode is an article from 2024 from ProPublica about how things are currently running at the same plant and the news is not good.
The kicker here is that the Chronobacter that killed the two infants was not the same as the five strains identified at the plant.
There were five strains?
Five strains of Chronobacter.
Yeah.
No?
The two that killed the two infants were not the same as those.
So it is thought that the parents accidentally contaminated the formula they used with dirty equipment at their homes.
It is still unfortunate that this happened, but the company wasn't found at fault for those, but it was fined and forced to get into compliance before reopening.
The ProPublica article doesn't give me much hope that it won't happen again.
Yeah.
Moving on.
Candace rapid fires into Bill Gates bullshit.
Something interesting.
Fact checkers have already come out and said doesn't matter.
This is not relevant information.
It's a conspiracy.
It's amazing how quickly these fact checkers work when it comes to Bill Gates.
But Bill Gates has a very good pension, as I mentioned, for making bets.
I mean, this is a guy that should be buying the lottery ticket every single day based on the way that he makes his money.
You know, this is Bill Gates, the guy, Microsoft founder, who used to sell us the virus.
He would make the virus in the computers, and then he would sell us the antivirus.
literally how he made his billions.
Well, Yeah.
First off, this is not true in any way.
I shouldn't have to say that, but anyway, there are a lot of reasons to despise Bill Gates.
Reasons entirely grounded in reality.
And Behind the Bastards, as well as another podcast, Eat the Rich, have done better episodes on him than I would have ever done.
I'm not linking to either of those in the show notes.
Just find them in your own time.
Bill Gates' general behavior and business fuckery is one reason I became a Linux fanboy many years ago.
Anyway, let's allow her to continue.
Bill Gates does it again.
He made an investment in 2000, I don't get the date right, 2020.
He said this investment, his investment firm, which is called Breakthrough Energy Ventures, was investing in lab-produced breast milk in 2020, right?
So you might be thinking, oh, well, whatever, this is what investors do.
They find little startups.
This is a Series A round.
Initially, he gave them $3.5 million through Breakthrough Energy Ventures.
By the way, there are other big names that are a part of Breakthrough Energy Ventures.
Jeff Bezos, talk about the makers of the world, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, and they decide, I don't know, I'm going to suddenly invest in this lab that is creating breast milk, right?
And they're going to make that breast milk called my milk from culturing mammary cells with the help to, which they believe would help to reduce the carbon footprint from the global infant formula market.
Now, what's interesting about this article is that it even says that this is such a long shot investment, right?
They just go, wow, this kind of seems like they actually refer to it as a moonshot, right?
That this is going to take off.
They go, but there are some very big names.
It's 2020.
Very big names are involved in it.
Mark Zuckerberg, Richard Branson, Jack Ma, Michael Bloomberg, these names that we're used to seeing all the time.
So maybe it will take off, right?
And then in 2021, Bill Gates and this investment firm, they decide to go even, to even invest more into this.
Another series around $21 million raised for this exact same lab that's going to be creating this breast milk.
Now, you might think that this lab was something that they pursued and they found this individual and say, hey, maybe this could work.
It might be a long shot, but here's some money and try it.
No, no, no, no.
The co-founders of BioMilk, by the way, and this is very, very important to recognize, come from the Gates Foundation.
The co-founders, they are picking this as, oh, it's a pro-women organization that got together because I was having trouble breastfeeding.
I decided I was going to make BioMilk.
And, oh, we got so lucky and we got funded by Bill Gates.
This is no luck, okay?
This woman left the Gates Foundation to start this organization up, to start this company up, okay?
Okay, BioMilk, first off, is its own company.
Breakthrough Energy Ventures is basically a capitalist big boy club that includes most of the famous investor names that most of you have probably heard of before, including Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg, but also Jack Ma, Michael Bloomberg, George Soros, Reid Hoffman, several others, as well as many different institutions such as the University of California and businesses like American Airlines and BlackRock Foundation.
So yes, it is a murderer's row of questionable persons.
Anyway, both founders of Biomilk did not previously work for the Gates Foundation.
Only one of them did.
That would be Michelle Egger, who previously worked in researching affordable plant-based protein sources for low- and middle-income countries, and that influenced her work at Biomilk.
The other founder, with no ties to the Gates Foundation, is Dr. Layla Strickland, who is a cell biologist.
While I'm certain that the association with Michelle Egger at Gates helped her get past a lot of doors, they ultimately had to have a product path worth pursuing.
Yeah.
That's any investment venture.
You don't continue to invest unless there's something worth it.
Yeah, I mean, knowing people gets you in the door, but you've got to be able to show the work.
Yeah.
Like, because people like this can fuck around with money.
They prefer not to.
Yeah.
All right, next clip.
And of course, immediately the Gates Foundation completely funded the company because she was leaving to go start it.
Not because he believed in this.
Maybe, in my opinion, because he maybe knew something.
So, or maybe he didn't.
According to the factor, Gears didn't know anything.
He just completely gets lucky again.
And here we are, one year later, after he gives up even more money.
And what do you know?
We are facing a baby formula crisis.
Bill Gates, my gosh, please just say numbers to me so I can go buy a lottery ticket.
That's all I want.
I just want to go buy a lottery ticket because you just, oops, you did it again.
Like Britney Spears, Bill Gates.
You just keep getting it right.
And what I'm talking about when I say that he keeps getting it right, right?
Seeding these companies.
And then somehow there's this massive need for these companies.
What's with the chap did Britney Spears?
Right?
I think just the oops I did it again, like that fired off a cell block in her brain.
Is that one of her songs?
Yeah, it was her first big hit, actually.
Oh, and somehow.
No, wait, no, wait.
Hit me baby one more time.
Baby one more time was her first big hit.
Oops, I did it again was her first hit off of her second album.
Okay, see, I've never heard that one.
I don't like that.
Yeah, it was inescapable when it came out.
I must have escaped that.
Oh, it was long before you were even born.
I unfairly hated Britney Spears for a long time because her music was just everywhere.
It was damn near impossible to not hear it blaring out of somewhere.
I mean, it's kind of.
Well, it wasn't just her music either.
It was, you know, she was as big as any of these pop stars ever get.
You know, just like you're in line at the supermarket, you're seeing her face plastered all over magazines, you know.
She's on TV, her videos are on TV, people are talking about her constantly.
It was a nightmare if you weren't into her music because it's like, I can't function in normal society and not get away from this shit.
Somebody asks you your opinion and if you've got anything other than, oh, yeah, her music's all right.
I had, well, fortunately, I hung with a bunch of Gen Xers who hated anything popular.
So that was always nice.
But, yeah, there was one guy in our group, though, that was in love with Britney Spears.
And he had no problem saying it.
He knew the people he was around.
And he was absolutely like enamored with her.
And we're like, why?
The chance of you even being in the same mile radius of her is so minimal.
And he just, he was like, I don't know, man.
Just, it lights me up.
Like, like, all right.
I mean, you know, like, I don't like her music, but okay, buddy.
It took me years to be able to listen to her songs and not just want to like rage quit the music app I was on.
Like, yeah.
Yeah, I can go back and hear them now because there's a universe of other shit, and playing one of her songs is not necessarily going to play the next big hit song.
It's going to play like some other shit from that period.
Yeah.
You know, so like I can, I can get around it, but.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
It was like, it was either her or people she dated, like Justin Timberlake as part of NSYNC that were just like on the radio constantly.
And it's like, yeah, people go, oh, well, you know, you could listen to other stations.
Yeah, I could.
I could.
And I did.
The problem, though, is that like we had a we had an alternative music station in Jacksonville called Planet Radio.
Now Planet was fine.
You were never going to hear Britney Spears on Planet Radio, nor NSYNC.
Yeah.
But it was like they only had access to maybe 30 songs.
So a lot of what you heard on Planet Radio, you could guarantee you were going to hear it in the next fucking hour.
Like, I mean, it was such a big deal when new music came out that they would announce it like, you know, Thursday at 8 p.m., hear the new song from the offspring.
It's like, oh my God.
You know, to look back at that and go, I got excited for that.
Why?
It was going to be like three minutes, three minutes of bliss of a new song that I might hear again if enough people listened and said it was cool.
Like, oh, no.
No, I just, like internet music, internet radio was such a big thing for me because, you know, initially it was like you could tune into radio stations, you know, in Ireland or wherever the fuck.
And you can still do that today.
But just being able to do that and to hear other shit.
Now, what was dismaying was when you would be listening to something, you'd hear like five good bands you'd never heard of before.
You might never hear them again.
And then, and up next, you hear the opening notes to Hit Me Baby one more time.
It's like, fuck!
Fuck why?
Why?
What?
What is wrong with you people?
I mean, using the YouTube, hey, what's popular in this country?
I did that for fucking Spain once.
Yeah.
You know what was popular over in Spain when I did that?
Fucking international love by Pit Bull.
I'm like, don't get me wrong.
I love me some Pit Bull.
But God fucking damn it, I'm here to listen to some Spanish music.
Yeah, well, like, I listen to, just because I got into it years ago, but I love the Norway, like, Hot 100 on YouTube.
I'll fire that up every now and then and hear what's banging over there.
And a lot of Norwegian musicians will actually, like, produce music.
Now, some don't.
Like, there's a band called Catastrophe, and it's spelled with a K, that does some of the most impressive diss music in full Norwegian.
I think if they ever say a word in English, it's just because it happens to be more rhymy than the Norwegian.
And I think part of the lyrics, if I'm remembering how I translated them in my brain, it was like, I don't want you to come back here, so I'm going to play the song you hate.
And it's an uplifting, like, jaunty tune, but it's so, you know, it's so like, it's such a good diss song.
But yeah, it's taken in context.
It's a really good diss song.
But if you don't know what it is, you could just like bounce along to it and kind of like mouth the words and kind of maybe get it right.
But any Norwegian would be like, do you know what you're saying?
It's like some of the Hispanic gangster rap.
It sounds really good, and it's really fucking, you know, get your blood pumping and all that.
Never mind the fact they're talking about the coordinates in which they have buried a motherfucker that did them wrong.
And how they slept with every person in his family.
Yeah.
Just because.
There's a song that's in English called Lone Digger, done by Caravan Palace.
They're one of the EDM jazz band groups.
Well, it's really fucking good.
Like I said, it's called Lone Digger.
And it's great, and it's this song just about going out, having a good time, and then being the only person left standing.
And listening to just the song, I'm like, oh, well, this has like a good thing to it.
I don't get what this whole Lone Digger business is about, but whatever.
And my brain was trying to chalk it up to maybe they're just talking about like gold diggers or something.
I don't know.
Well, I watched the video for it, and it's these three thugs go into a bar, you know.
They're all anthropomorphic people.
They go into a bar, and they're sitting there.
Three cats sit across the way from three dogs, dogs inside a fight between them.
Everybody in the bar is dead except for the stripper that's in the center.
And she's standing there soaked in everybody else's blood, still doing her dance.
She does not stop her dance until everyone is dead.
And I scrolled through the comments on it one day, and somebody in there said, yeah, I was a stripper once, and I kept dancing during a robbery.
Cops got involved.
It became a hostage situation.
I just kept dancing because it was the only way to not lose my shit.
And after the fact, my boss gave me a $500 bonus for dancing all night.
That's crazy.
I'm like, well.
I'm going to give you this, and I'm going to give you this paper to sign.
It says, you're not going to sue us.
Take tomorrow off.
Oh, God.
Anyway, back to the material, yeah.
So included in this stack of links is a short article from a website called Vetch Economist about the company, BioMilk, from May 4th, 2022.
They said in the article they were at least three to five years away from producing a marketable product.
Other sites, such as CNN and Forbes, all reported the same things about this company.
And another one, known as Helena, spelled H-E-L-A-I-N-A.
That said, the company shut down in May of this year, 2025, after filing for bankruptcy due to lawsuits involving an ex-husband of Dr. Leela Strickland.
He claimed a lot of IP rights to the product, and it made the company unsellable, and they were unable to get further funding to continue their work.
So thanks a lot, Fucko.
Bill Gates did not have his thumb on the pulse of solving a problem that he in any way created.
That is fucking absurd.
And fuck Candace for creating a problem that required me to defend the noxious cesspool of a human that is Bill fucking Gates.
But moving on, I get to do it again.
Yeah.
He did the exact same thing with mRNA technology and the vaccines.
The exact same thing.
So let me take you guys back to what instantly happened, how the mRNA technology initially got funded.
Well, Bill Gates, back in 2016, first gave $20 million, which was supposed to be a part of a $100 million grant from the Gates Foundation, to Moderna to look at mRNA vaccines and the technology, antibody therapeutics.
And they said they were going to look at it to develop HIV, an HIV antibody project, also towards an additional mRNA-based treatments for various infectious diseases.
Then again, in 2019, he pours more money into Moderna.
And this is, by the way, directly from his website.
You can look at gatesfoundation.org.
It will tell you every year what they're giving money to.
They actually gave money just the year before the pandemic, more money, despite the $100 million they had already given them, to assess the feasibility of mRNA technology to deliver antibody combinations in selected neonates in low-resource settings in order to reduce the impact of neonatal sepsis in this vulnerable population.
So he's been slowly pouring money into Moderna for mRNA technology for a very long time.
And of course, he then gets lucky.
We have a massive pandemic just a couple of years later.
And everybody now must be mandated to get the coronavirus vaccine, this mRNA technology.
And so you need to just be aware of Bill Gates, because when we talk about Big Pharma, you will see that his name comes up repeatedly.
Okay?
Yes, but also no.
Bill Gates did not start mRNA tech with his money.
mRNA was first proposed in the early 1960s, but we didn't have the tech to even start work on the concept until about 1990, when it was shown that mRNA could be delivered into cells to direct protein production in animals.
Linked in the stack is the Wikipedia article for mRNA.
Anyway, clinical trials using mRNA started in 2001 with research on cancer immunotherapy.
Then again 2008, there was a clinical trial of a vaccine for prostate cancer using mRNA technology and the first mRNA vaccine was approved in 2013 for use in humans called Provenge.
Provenge stimulates the body's immune cells to attack prostate cancer cells.
On the back of this success, mRNA trials began for infectious diseases in 2013.
So the technology was significantly advanced by the time they were needed for work on COVID vaccines.
Gates poured a lot of money into the vaccines, as did many other investors, because it was important to save lives, if for no other reason than the fact that dead people don't make markets move.
That was not said by them, it's just my observation.
But yes, his foundation comes up in a lot of searches for this kind of stuff because this is what they do.
It's not always with good results and the intent can be argued on a scale, but he is not the comic book villain that Candace makes him out to be.
He's just a normal asshole.
Yeah.
With a lot of money.
Yeah, he's a bit of a creep and a sex pest, but, you know, look, if his money helped, you know, put a vaccine in my arm that would have taken eight to 10 years to develop previously, okay.
Yeah.
But yeah, next, Cliff.
When we talk about WHO, the World Health Organization, he is one of the largest donors to WHO.
And when I say one of the largest donors, I mean, he has a tremendous amount of influence, more influence than most countries.
Depending on the year, once upon a time, he was the second biggest donor to the World Health Organization, just a couple of years ago, behind the United States.
Okay.
I'm just pausing this to say, though, this is actually true, with the exception of a period between 2020 and 2021, when Germany became the largest donor.
And since Trump 2.0 has immediately ceased all funding to the World Health Organization since he got back into power, it remains to be seen what impacts this will have down the line.
Candace keeps going, but before she does, I want to say that she is wrong about China.
So it was like the United States and then Bill Gates and then China.
He is giving more money to the World Health Organization than most countries on the face of the planet.
That doesn't make sense for one man's organization to be giving that much money to something that's supposed to be, oh, apolitical, right?
Of course it's not political.
Of course, the World Health Organization is operating like a business.
And Bill Gates yields an inordinate amount of influence to the World Health Organization.
Again, you can look that up.
I will actually post a link to show you guys how much money he gives to the World Health Organization.
It should be completely banned.
And it's the reason why you're always seeing him given the platform to talk about every issue that we're going through.
What do you think about the pandemic?
He's not a doctor.
He didn't go to college.
This is a guy that plays with computers.
Why are we suddenly being told that we need to listen to Bill Gates about anything that's pertaining to our health?
Why is it that actual doctors are being shut down and being censored from having a discussion?
And yet Bill Gates was being told, given the platform, talk about how everyone must get the vaccines, which he himself was invested in.
Does that make any sense?
Of course it doesn't.
It's corrupt and it's absolutely crooked.
And it is one of the reasons why I always tell people to pay attention to who benefits when we're going through various things, whether it's a pandemic or a shortage.
Yeah, Gates is not just some guy that played with computers.
He is also a more friendly face that is willing to talk to the press about these issues.
As for profiting from the pandemic, yes, but not in the way that Candace wants to explain.
The Gates Foundation directed over $2 billion in funding R ⁇ D during that time research and development.
Through its own investment firm, it had previously invested in BioNTech, which was the firm that worked with Pfizer to develop their COVID vaccines.
They brought in about $15 million and sold later for $260 million.
The investment arm is a separate venture of the Gates Foundation, but it is also under constant scrutiny for moves like this.
That said, public health experts had been warning for some time that a pandemic like COVID was likely to happen.
So I think it was just a typical rich guy investment direction.
That amount, around $15 million, is money they could have easily pissed away if it turned out to be a bad investment.
Candace married a guy who does this sort of shit.
And I think she was just angry that he didn't go that route because his family money is in metals investment and futures.
But she isn't done yet, and she's about to get things wrong all over again.
But also, also, fuck her for me having to defend Bill fucking Gates.
God damn it.
I really...
I really...
Like, it's all out there.
Everyone knows it.
He doesn't even deny it.
Yeah.
Like, and, you know, even if you're alleging shit based on actual truth, you could actually just say the actual truth.
It's right out there.
Anyone can at any time Google what the fuck is wrong with Bill Gates and get actual real-world goddamn articles.
Yeah.
Like, oh, just the comic book level, let's turn him into Lex Luthor's shit always gets me because it's like, man, if y'all just dealt in reality, your lives would be so much easier.
But no.
Anyway.
Benefits.
I also want to talk about how unusual the move was because the FDA is implausibly corrupt.
I think we all accept that now, especially after the coronavirus pandemic.
But how interesting to go back and to consider that they made the decision to shut down Abid Nutrition.
That was the plant that was in Sturgis, Michigan.
Largest maker, largest distributor, pardon, baby formula.
They shut it down for three months because of health and safety because they got allegedly four complaints.
Who knows?
Maybe Bill Gates made those complaints like, hey, maybe sick.
And by the way, I just want to make it clear, they investigated all these complaints and determined that there was absolutely no association between these children and this plant.
And yet we still don't have these plants up and going just yet.
The FDA has been dragging their feet on this.
But how unusual of an action for them to completely shut down a plant because of four complaints?
Yeah, that might have been unusual, but it didn't happen that way, as we have already covered.
Anyway, Abbott shut it down, Started their own investigation and the FDA stepped in to see what was up.
Finding several violations in May of 2022, they entered into a public oversight program with Abbott announced on May 22nd, 2022.
I've linked that agreement in the show notes.
Considering that this episode aired on May 4th, 2022, I can give Candace some grace in not knowing this at the time, but also she didn't bother to look into the actual facts, so, you know, fuck her for that shit.
When they allowed for the coronavirus vaccine, despite all of the complaints that were happening, tens and thousands of people all around the world saying what they were suffering from after they got the vaccine.
Women that were saying that they weren't menstruating any longer.
You had men that were complaining of myocarditis, people that had heart attacks.
Don't forget there was a boy in Singapore who was actually awarded money from the government because he had a heart attack immediately following his vaccine.
Didn't matter.
Didn't matter.
Tens of thousands of people all over the world who were suffering from side effects from the Moderna and the Pfizer vaccines that were being mandated into their arms.
Did the FDA ever stop it?
Did the FDA ever pause their emergency use authorization?
No, they said, you know what?
It's for the greater good.
So you know what?
More people are set to benefit.
So we're going to keep this going.
We're going to allow this vaccine to operate under emergency use authorization.
We don't care about people that are being injured because it's for the greater good.
Okay, so the greater good.
The greater good.
So the rate of myocarditis was about 20 cases per 1 million doses of the COVID vaccines in the countries that use BioNTech and Moderna vaccines.
Most of those cases did happen in males aged 12 to 18, with 16-year-old males having the worst outcomes.
Most of the worst cases happened in boys that had already suffered a bout of COVID.
But of those, most of them recovered with no lasting effects other than spending some time under observation in a hospital.
Singapore established a vaccine court of its own just for this, because there were bound to be side effects with a mass rollout like we needed globally.
That all said, I don't know anyone that suffered ill effects of COVID vaccination, but the cases were extremely rare.
20 people per million is one hell of a success rate.
Oh, yeah.
Because if you're talking per capita numbers, right, per capita is anything 100,000 people.
Yeah.
So, what, two people per 100,000 people suffered any kind of ill effects from the COVID vaccines?
That's incredible considering that billions got the vaccines.
Yeah.
And yeah, like I said, most of the effects were not long-lasting.
Linked in the show notes is an article about the Singapore boy.
And, you know, I mean, it sucks to be him.
It sucks to be anybody that would have suffered, you know, long-lasting effects.
But like I said, I didn't know anyone that did.
I knew a lot of people that got vaxed.
I didn't know anyone that suffered.
I mean, you know, like, and I knew that going in.
But I was like, man, I want this vaccine.
I want to be safe.
I want my family to be safe.
Yeah.
You know?
And yeah, it's like, fuck off, Candace.
All right, next up.
Yeah, when it comes to food, for all of these millions of babies all across the United States, just took four unverified complaints and they shut down an entire plant.
That seem a little bit suspect to you.
Is there any consistency between the two things?
It doesn't seem that there's any consistency at all.
I think that they are actually dealing with influence.
In fact, not only do they not care about all the adults that were suffering from vaccine injuries, not only did they make sure that they shut down the speech of people that were talking about how they themselves were suffering, saying, I got the shot and this is what happened to me.
They sent out their fact checkers.
They pulled people's accounts from the internet.
They said, you're not allowed to have a social media account because you're spreading vaccine misinformation.
I mean, not only did they do all of that, but then they authorized the if for use in children.
They just said, you know what, we actually, people younger and younger can get this shot for emergency use authorization, even though they were having virtually no side effects from COVID.
Children, virtually none of them were being hospitalized with COVID, but it did not matter.
Kids were getting sick with COVID.
And this is one of the biggest lies these jackoffs tell themselves and their followers.
In the main four years of the pandemic, 234,000 kids were hospitalized with COVID.
Of those, 1,300 kids died.
And of those, 821 died during the period between August 2021 and July 2022.
What's the cut?
Trying to get into a box.
Come here, Carl.
Come here.
377 deaths occurred in the period between March and December of 2021.
Keep in mind, a lot of this was during lockdown measures.
Black and Hispanic kids suffered the most in the states with the highest body count, such as Texas, California, Florida, and New York, and most of those deaths occurred in urban areas with dense populations.
All of this is publicly available knowledge and was known when Candace did this show.
The next clip is longer than most of the clips have been in this episode, but not our longest ever.
See you on the other side.
So I have promised to do my best to keep this podcast apolitical because I believe that the information is so important that I just don't want these to become one of these polarized discussions.
Like we're talking about information that whether you vote left or right, you need to know it as a parent.
And I actually think that this is one of these topics that can bring people together.
So as we dive into this next topic, I want you to, even if you are like, oh, this is how I feel about this, I want you to just try to listen to everything that I am saying because I promise you that there is a reason and it relates to big pharma.
So this story completely sent a chill down my spine because it is again super underscoring just how much we have the Department of Education fighting for custody of our children.
And this was a headline that premiered in the Daily Mail earlier today.
And the headline is Fury as a Colorado teacher invites a schoolgirl, 12 years old, to an after-school arts club.
That was actually a meeting about trans and queer identity.
Kids were asked who they were sexually attracted to and told that it's okay to lie to your parents.
This is going on in school systems all across the U.S. They are basically telling children that they have the authority, that their parents don't really have, shouldn't have any authority over them, but that they have authority over their own bodies and they Should be able to make decisions, but what really upset me about this particular story was the trickery involved.
And so, this was a young 12-year-old girl who went to school and she, I'm assuming, has this art teacher that she really likes.
And the teacher invited her to go to an arts club and she texts her parents and says, Is it okay if I go?
And her parents are like, Absolutely, because what parent would say no to that, right?
I mean, your kid wants to go do more art, sounds fun.
Well, then her mom and her dad pick her up, and they immediately recognize there's something wrong and that their daughter is uncomfortable.
And her daughter begins to explain to them that she actually went to a meeting for gender and sexuality alliance, and that the person that was teaching this meeting basically told them that it's okay if they lie to their parents because their parents sometimes don't really understand.
Particularly, she said that the youngsters were even asked to keep the meeting a secret and warned that their parents were not safe.
So the mother, her name is Erin Lee.
You guys can look the story up.
I will, of course, drop it onto Patreon because I always share the links with you guys.
And the mother says, essentially, they told my daughter if she's not 100% comfortable in her body, that she is transgender.
Now, there are two things that really upset me about this.
The first thing is that I do not know a single female that is comfortable, 100% comfortable in their own body at the tender age of 12 years old.
I can't think of a more awkward time, honestly, in a young woman's life.
As you're developing as a child, you're wondering, I mean, every day I was like, am I going to get boobs?
Like, do I look pretty enough?
Like, I'm wearing braces.
I literally had braces when I was 12 years old.
There's no way that there's any 12-year-old girl that's like, yes, I am 100% confident in who I am and what I look like.
That just doesn't really come until you're 30%.
I mean, for me, it didn't really come until I was 30 years old.
So the idea that this is the entry point that's happening in classrooms and that they're getting to a show and go, wait a second, can you answer this question?
Are you 100% comfortable in your own body?
And if the kid says, maybe only like 80%, they say, well, you might be, you might be trans, right?
And that's how you plant a seed.
And then, of course, they water that seed and it continues to grow.
And this mother particularly, obviously, complained to the school board.
And the school board answered and came out and gave a statement to the Daily Mail, basically saying, we stand by this program.
The purpose of it is to be secret.
The purpose of this program is to allow children to be able to express themselves in the absence of their parents.
And so this is the direction that the world is going into.
So let's just pause this rant right here and talk about this bullshit that she just said.
Candice had the opportunity to read directly from the article and chose not to do that.
I won't read from the whole thing, but it is in the link stack.
Anyway, the school district said on this matter, genders and sexualities alliances or GSAs were established as safe spaces for members of the LGBTQIA plus community, allies, and any individual to come together with the goals of ensuring inclusivity, safety, and support.
Discussions in GSAs may be confidential, given that they can sometimes be sensitive in nature, i.e.
a student may be out with specific friends, but not with the community at large.
It went on, adding that the GSA was school-sponsored and approved by the district.
The district declined to comment on the allegations made by Lee to protect the privacy of the student and their family.
End quote from the article.
So they did not say the shit Candace said they did.
There is a lot more to say about this, but Candace is using this story as a stepping stone for her transphobia.
First.
Things being what they are here, and the fact that several minutes passed between the story of this family in Colorado and Candace's leap outward, we have to cover the leap outward first.
So anyway, I'm letting her continue.
But when I talk about the transgender issue, and again, irrespective of where you land on this particular issue, I think you probably have guessed where I land on it, the important thing for you to understand is that this will lead to children being big pharma rats for the rest of their lives.
I believe that this is the push that we are seeing.
This is the why.
This is the reason why we are suddenly seeing this sort of full court effort from the universities, the kindergarten classrooms, pieces of legislation, corporate America, right?
I think Target announced with no more genders.
And honestly, if you go to Target, it's just a mess now because I'm trying to find one item and everything's mixed in together.
That's fucking bullshit.
Ask Candace these days about Target and you'll get either this same shit or she will say that she's never shopped there.
That said, I work for Shipped, a shopping delivery platform owned by Target, and I can tell you that I frequently, any given week, get girls and boys' clothes, men and women's clothes, male and female-centric health items.
Target did not just mix everything together in one big fucking pile and command the oinking masses to go dig through it.
This is a fucking absurd take by her and her friends.
Yeah, I can tell you as a matter of fact that the fucking St. Louis Park Target has the largest fucking women's section out of all the Targets I've been into so far.
And it is a bitch and a half when you get told, oh yeah, you can get suit pants and stuff there.
Yeah, but the section's so fucking small you can't find the bitch.
Well, here's the thing, right?
Now, the women's section for clothing at any Target is pretty massive.
Oh, yeah.
But I don't hit up St. Louis Park all that much.
I do like the Ridgedale store, which is one of the largest, like, not a super Targets that I've ever been in.
I still haven't been in a Super Target.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
We need to go to the one in Minnetonka sometime.
Yeah.
That one and the one in Adina are the two largest Target stores I've ever been in.
I swear to God, the fucking Starbucks and the one in Adina, it's the size of a regular Starbucks.
Like you could take a regular Starbucks and insert it into that store and probably still have some room.
It's ridiculously big.
The store itself is pretty big, but I think easily the largest Target that I've ever been in, like I said, is in Minnetonka, which technically Ridgedale is in Minnetonka too, but people that live there know the fucking difference.
Yeah.
The Super Target over there Is massive.
It is such a big store.
And a lot of that space right in the middle is devoted to women's clothing.
I believe it.
You know, the same 10 brands that every one of their stores carries, but just a massive amount of them.
The men's section in any given Target is not as big, but it is bigger in the Ridgedale and Minnetonka Super Target stores, larger than the St. Louis Park one anyway.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, but yeah, no.
I buy boys and girls shit and men's and women's shit all the time, every week.
And that even goes down to like not necessarily, like a lot of the toys are not necessarily male or female, but there is a sort of like noticeable gender kind of bias in them.
Like they'll have like build your own, like even in the craft section, they'll have like build your own toy trucks.
Now a girl could build a toy truck just as well as a boy.
I'm not going to knock that.
And a boy might like, you know, fucking rainbow and unicorn shrinky dinks.
I don't know.
Yeah.
You know, let them do their shit.
But, God, you know, it'd be really cool, though, if you take a shrinky dink that's like a unicorn thing and you slap it on like a wooden toy truck.
Like, you know, like an ornament on the truck.
Like that, that might be, that might be pretty cool.
But yeah, they have all kinds of shit.
Like one of the weirder ones that they have, they have like these cardboard forts that you can build that aren't just like, like cardboard fort is kind of like my catch-all term for it.
But like some of them are lemonade stands.
Like you can, you can fold and build this lemonade stand that you can then color.
Like it's black and white and then the kid puts all the artwork touches to it.
Another one that I saw the other day was a fucking food truck.
Yeah, like a little like kid's food truck that is cardboard that you pull out and you attach it all together and shit.
Yeah, this is some wild shit.
It's a really wild shit.
It's pretty neat.
And they're not that expensive.
I don't remember the prices on them, but I remember every time I've gotten them, I'm like, how the fucking much is this?
Then I'll look and go, oh, damn it, man.
Like, not only did I grow up at the wrong time, but my kids grew up at the wrong time because they're all too old and I can't build this shit with them.
So, you know, but it's like, what the fuck?
Like, like I said, it's not so much like boys and girls necessarily, even though it kind of is.
But yeah, Target was just like, yeah, we're not going to gender the toys anymore because you don't fucking have to.
Yeah.
And I mean, if a boy wants to play with Barbies or a girl wants to play with fucking action figures, who gives a shit?
Yeah.
You know, it's like...
We...
Fuck.
Now, what's funny to me, and I didn't, I don't think I wrote it in this week, but I kind of like thought about it, was Candace is spending all of this time and energy being a mother to as many kids as she can.
Like they just, they just gave birth to baby number four.
Yeah.
Right.
Now, here's the thing, right?
Deal with the kitty.
Here's the thing, right?
So what's funny to me is as Candace has more kids, what she's really doing is she's increasing the odds that at least one of her children will be gay or transsexual.
Yeah.
Just based on population statistics.
Yeah.
That odd increases for the existing children and with every new child.
Yeah.
Because, you know, like, because any one of them right now could be, and they just, you know, they haven't woken up to it yet.
But at the same time, it's like every new child is another possibility.
Well, it increases the odds.
Yeah.
You know?
And especially since, you know, we're supposed to believe that several of her conservative friends are gay.
So a gay or spectrum kid might feel more comfortable coming out.
But knowing that their mother is Candace Owens, they might like come out to the allies that they know about.
But they're like, you know, I don't want to get kicked out of my mom's house.
You know, but how did you deal with this?
You know, like, I think those odds increase with every child and it's just.
Slowly ticking away.
Yeah.
Till eventually one of these days.
Yeah.
Like, I swear, if any of her children write a tell-all book, I'm pre-ordering that shit.
Oh my God.
I can't like, like, what's going to be funny to me, though, is all of these background ideas that I don't talk about on the show and I don't even talk about online.
All these background ideas that are running through my head at any given moment, like, I'm just wondering, like, if a kid writes one of these books when they're an adult, how much of it am I going to be flipping through and going, I knew it.
Called it, knew it, should have said it, you know, like, could have bet on it, you know.
Anyway.
Could have been a hundred bucks, now lost.
God.
I could have bet on it online.
Yeah.
You know, there's no telling.
Anyway, next clip.
And there's got to be a reason for all of them to suddenly get on board.
There's got to be a financial reason.
Again, there's always a financial reason.
Do not ever suspect that these corporations care about you and your family.
That's what I really want you to take away from.
One of the things I really want you to take away from this podcast series is that only you truly care about the individuals in your home, whether that is your husband, whether that's your brother, whether that's your daughter, whether that's your son, whether that's your mother.
You care about your wife, not society, right?
Society is out to make a bump, right?
The Department of Education is out for power and control.
The government wants power and control.
The government does not care about you.
Big Pharma clearly does not care about the health of our children.
They care about making money.
It's all about profit.
And you know, it is amazing how close she can get to the truth sometimes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And still be off the mark.
Damn.
It is true that companies don't have a reason outside of profit motive to care much about their customers.
And people in the rainbow and allies call out corporate bullshit during and after Pride Month every year.
The memes are incredible.
IKEA keeps with it at least.
Yeah.
I mean, and Target is going to sell Pride stuff year-round.
Like, you just got to know where to look.
Yeah.
You know, but yeah, like they, they have taken an effort in the last couple of years to really bury their Pride Month stuff, not to have it facing forward, to have it like facing the back of the store.
Yeah.
That's in any Target that I've been in around here.
So yeah, I mean, but at the same time, no one really expects these companies to really have their back.
No one is, no one, I want to say I haven't met anyone who's that naive.
No, no.
You know, like, but at the same time, it is still nice to see a company make an effort because some of that, some of some of those products have made me laugh to the point that I've almost bought them for myself just because I'm like, oh my God, that's excellent.
You know, like, but the fact is we have enough coffee mugs.
Even if I like what's on one, I'm always like, man, I don't have, I literally don't have cabinet space for all the coffee mugs that I want to buy because I see a lot that are cool in my daily job.
But anyway, you know, pharmaceutical companies do have an interest in keeping people alive and on drugs.
So while that is profit related, it doesn't help them to be totally disinterested in the living.
Yeah.
And society at large has an interest in making sure that people feel safe, secure, and happy.
And this is true of any successful social order.
So whatever.
Moving on.
When you start seeing them all jump on board and saying the same language, you have to pause and you have to ask yourself why.
We know that we grew up, if you're around my age, there wasn't this forceful of a campaign to get this topic of queer identity in the classroom.
I mean, the concept of a teacher telling us to lie to our parents about where we were going, it's unfathomable.
It should be unfathomable.
And whether or not you agree with queer identity or you agree with trans identity, you should be outraged that this was done behind the back of a parent.
That is how you should feel.
And the reason for that is because where this leads, this is not something that is harmless.
This is something that is very harmful.
Because if a child begins to be confused about their gender because of the coaxing of an adult that is not their parent, the next step is to, and legislation is passed to allow for this, to get this child on hormone blockers.
Okay.
And that is a very, very, very serious, irreversible decision if you stay on hormone blockers.
Okay.
So before Candace goes on with this, hormone blockers, also known as puberty blockers, are useful when a child may be developing too fast and for kids that identify as trans either way.
They are useful in halting the puberty process for the sake of the child as they figure shit out along with their parents.
They can stop the development of breasts and menstruation in girl bodies and focal cord deepening, facial hair, and genital development either way.
They have been in use since the 1980s for various reasons by parents and their kids.
For Candace, to say they are irreversible is a load of shit.
If a patient decides to go with their body's original path, they can go off the blockers with doctor assistance and life continues as it was.
But if they are sure about their gender identity, they can move forward with hormone therapy and surgical options if desired.
And these options typically don't become available until about age 16.
The only long-term known effect I could pull up on puberty blockers is a bone density loss, but that problem goes away as the blockers are weaned off, either because they have chosen their birth sex or they have started transhormone therapy and are weaning off the blockers.
Now what follows next is Candace reading from a Reddit post.
I love Reddit and I have used it to grow the show audience significantly by directly interacting with people either in comments, posts I've made, or over direct message.
Candace loves to talk a lot of shit about Reddit even in this very series.
So I have to assume she is on it or was on it quite a bit back in 2022.
Yeah.
Anyway, here she goes.
Which brings me to this next segment.
I have to read for you guys this post that went up on Reddit.
I read it on my show.
I was dishonest when I read it and it made me very, very sad because the woman who wrote this post and she wrote this, you know, if you guys don't know how Reddit works, it allows for people to post anonymously to strangers to ask for help.
And you might say, why would anybody want to do that?
Why would you want to talk to your friends?
Because sometimes something is so confident and you're struggling so internally with it that you're embarrassed to ask your friends, right?
So this is how Reddit took off.
If you can just, everybody on the internet is anonymous and you can ask them for advice about anything.
You can be like, hey, you know, my best friend's my wedding.
I don't want her to be there.
Can I get, you know, a post about how I should ask her to leave?
And all these commenters will say, oh, you're a horrible person.
You're a great person.
So this is a post about a parent that is just really coming into Reddit in desperation.
And she is talking about her son, who she gave birth to, who I don't know what happened along the way, but perhaps got confused about gender and was given hormone blockers.
And she's seeking advice.
So I'm going to just read this woman's post verbatim because I think it's really powerful and it broke my heart in a million pieces.
And I just think it really assigns the reality to what we are talking about in a world of so much deception and so much urging.
This isn't a political discussion.
This should be something that should put all parents on high alert if you're talking about the health of our children.
So this is the post.
So the title of the post is, I have no clue what to do.
Daughter can't get the bottom surgery and is becoming suicidal.
So the bottom surgery, as you know, is that last step of getting surgery.
She writes, hello, I have always been in support of my transgender daughter.
So obviously at birth, just to comment, this was her son.
When she was still a boy and started expressing a want to be a girl, I did everything right.
Therapists, then puberty blockers, everything.
Now she is 20 and everything is falling apart.
We had to hold off on the body surgery because of costs, but now finally had enough and went and got several consults.
All have said the same thing.
The puberty blockers have left her with a micropenis.
She has to get part of her vagina made with her colon.
Well, one of her friends had that surgery and even years later, it smells fairly colon-like.
Obviously, my daughter is now distraught.
She is in counseling, but is becoming worse and worse in her mental state and I am frantic.
On top of this, she has never had any sexual function.
No urges, no erections.
Even when she tried masturbation to see if she could stimulate herself, nothing.
The doctors say this may not change even after surgery.
Her dating life is dismal as well.
We knew it would be hard, but it's impossible.
The one man who was with her for a while soon just became frustrated by her lack of sexual anything and broke it off.
I don't know what to do.
A friend suggested I post here for advice.
Please help me help my child.
I don't want to add too much commentary on this again because I don't want to keep this too political and I genuinely, my heart breaks for this mother because she believed that she was doing all the right things based on what I perceive to be a marketing campaign, a very aggressive marketing campaign that benefits nobody but Big Pharma.
And a lot of lies are being told and people are thinking that this is such an easy decision.
You wake up and you can just change your gender and teachers are enforcing this and in the school classroom and that's why that last story is just so significant.
You have someone who's not abused by their gender and is being taken to an arts class to be confused about their gender.
Okay, so there is some follow-up to the Colorado case, which will be in the show notes.
Anyway, the parents in the Colorado case harassed the school district for an entire year before they finally sued.
They were calling them every day.
This is the original Colorado case.
They were calling them every day to harass the principal and stuff about the fucking the GSA group at the school.
So yeah, anyway, the parents in the Colorado case harassed the school district for an entire year before they finally sued.
Eight days after the lawsuit became a thing, the Daily Mail ran their story.
The attorney that they got, because there were only like 12 people in the world, the attorney that they got was former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, who is the current Attorney General of the United States.
Oh.
Oh.
Ah!
Anyway, the case was dismissed because the court found the complaint by the plaintiffs insufficient to proceed and Pam Bondi was told to refile the case.
She did so and it was dismissed again.
Bondi appealed to the next higher court and it was dismissed.
The case was appealed again to the 10th Circuit Court and again dismissed by the court on the same grounds as the previous dismissals.
The only place it could have gone next is the U.S. Supreme Court, but it seems to have died since Bondi left it alone to go help the Trump administration be more fascist than anyone was really prepared for it to be, and to lie about Jeffrey Epstein.
Anyway, the case went nowhere, and as of this podcast, has not been picked up by the U.S. Supreme Court to be heard.
So if you needed any further proof that Pam Bondi sucks as a lawyer and has a lack of legal sense, there you go.
On to the Reddit material.
Yes, most people on most Reddit posts I've read have not used their real names.
And if I had created my account alongside this show, I would have just named it Gish Gallop Girl.
But I've established this account, but I've established the account I do have on there as me doing this, so it is what it is.
Anyway, about that Reddit post, I went looking for it and by luck, after much scrolling, because I did look for the title, but Reddit only allows so many characters in a search.
Anyway, I found it when it was being talked about in another thread in r slash ask transgender.
I am providing both links with this episode, but basically the one I used to jump over to it, Ahmaud, responded to the original poster of the thing and removed the original post, but the comments are still there.
Basically, when Candace talked about the original post and she did read the title correctly, it was already a four-year-old post at the time.
Jesus.
Which makes it ancient on Reddit.
Yeah.
People down the original comment line were providing solutions to this mother's problems.
So, to us, three years later, this is now a seven-year-old post.
Which is beyond fucking ancient.
Yeah.
So I hope the woman got the help she needed.
Anyway, both links are included with this episode.
I reached out to the person that was involved in the post that led me to it and thanked them.
So I want to describe that a little bit more than I went into the script here.
So Candace read the title out.
Like I said, I went on to Reddit and I searched the title.
Yeah.
Well, I scrolled down.
Like I clicked several in a row that looked like they might have been it or might have had something to do with it.
But then I found one that said something to the effect in the title of, people are reposting this and I have no idea why.
And I was like, huh, are you the golden goose?
I clicked on it.
And what it was was the poster for that one shared the original post because keep in mind, this is three years ago, that this one was referencing the four-year-old post that was the Candace one.
So here's what happened.
I'm going to call this one the original poster, even though they were referencing the older one.
The original poster said something to the effect of, I don't know why people are reposting this and responding to it.
I don't know why they're looking for this one.
Like they were confused.
They were genuinely confused because the people that were talking about it were Nazis.
Yeah.
That's fair.
The mods on r slash ask transgender said, okay, thank you for alerting this to us.
We'll delete the original post, which they did, but the comment thread was still there.
Like the post itself was deleted, but they left the comments alone.
Yeah.
Because most of the comments on the original four-year-old post were actually constructive.
Yeah.
So the comments on the new one were constructive.
Now, I didn't read through all of the comments on the new one, but people were like, Yeah, why is this being brought up?
This is so old.
This is Reddit.
This might as well be hieroglyphics right now, you know?
Well, I didn't get any word back from the person that I responded to directly.
But, and I have a theory as to why I haven't gotten any word back yet, and I'll share that in a moment.
But I told them, thank you for your thing three years ago.
I've run this show, you know, I described it a little bit.
And I was like, you know, just I wanted to thank you.
I'm going to use this material in our next episode, which we're going to be recording Wednesday night, and it should be out in the wild Thursday morning.
If you want to check it out, feel free.
I'm just saying thank you.
That's all.
And, you know, I paraphrase that, but that was the gist of it.
Anyway.
So as to why they may not have gotten that message yet, I was on the Twin Cities Reddit on the same night.
Yeah.
And somebody had said some shit dissing our neighborhood.
Yeah.
They said someone was looking on the Twin Cities Reddit.
They wanted information on like, where can I buy a house, basically.
And they were looking at like areas around here, the north side.
Most of the people were genuinely like, you know, supportive of that idea.
They're like, yeah, I live on the north side.
And, you know, here's some streets you don't really want to live near, but most of the rest of it is pretty cool.
We've got, you know, walkable roads and everything.
Buses are regular.
Like, there's a lot of good shit about living in this neighborhood.
And the person I responded to said something to the effect of, I wouldn't move over there.
All these businesses are closing down.
And I responded to them.
Again, I'm paraphrasing here, but I said something to the effect of, no, only Aldi closed down and they've been replaced with a new grocery store.
All of the other places around the area are doing well.
And I listed off a bunch of businesses.
And then I said something to the effect of calling them a racist fuckwad that deserved, you know, all kinds of violence and death.
I didn't say all kinds of violence and death.
I got really descriptive.
I got real granular.
Yeah.
Well, they reported that comment.
Of course.
Yeah.
And I got a three-day ban on Reddit.
Fair enough.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
I was like, all right, man, I'll take this one on the chin.
I did try to repeal it, though, because I was like, fuck it, why not?
I tried to repeal it.
Or I tried to appeal it, rather.
And Reddit, like, I pretty much got a comment back from a human being pretty soon after that.
And they were gracious, as Reddit is.
And they were like, yeah, the band stays in place.
I was like, all right.
Okay.
Fair enough.
Yeah.
I gave it a shot, man.
But yeah, no, I was like, all right.
Well, you know, that happened.
That could be why they haven't received it then yet.
Like, because if, well, because I had done that prior to sending out the DMs.
And also what really kills me is there's a family back in Jacksonville that I've been DMing with back and forth.
And yeah, I'm not like, I'm getting messages from them, but I can't respond.
And I don't want to respond with one of my sub accounts.
I'm trying to like keep those really private.
Yeah.
Particularly the one that I use to go onto the r slash Candace Owens sub and like fuck around on there.
So I'm trying to keep those like in their own lane.
But yeah, I was like, all right.
So fortunately, my ban ends tomorrow.
So all of the messages should go start towing through.
I kind of hope so.
Yeah.
I mean, well, because I had sent the Jacksonville family, I had sent them a bunch of pictures.
Oh, cool shit.
Yeah, I remember you.
I was taking those photos the other day.
Yeah.
Well, I got informed the next day that I was on a three-day ban.
Yeah.
Well, they may not have gotten any of my messages.
Yeah.
So that's likely.
Yeah.
So that's a thing.
So yeah, if you're hearing this, that's what happened.
But yeah, I'll be in contact with them again tomorrow when the ban is lifted.
I'm like, hey, I got your messages.
Here's what happened.
By the way, listen to the latest episode.
They know about this show.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, the dad in the family is the one that I've been back and forth with.
He's in a field where he can, I don't want to give up, I don't want to throw his business out on Front Street, but he's in a field where he gets a lot of time to listen to podcasts.
Yeah.
And so, yeah, he's been catching up.
Okay.
Yeah.
On our show.
Yeah.
So yeah.
So if you hear this, that's what happened.
Anyway.
When you get to this.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm not sure where he's at on the on the show right now anyway.
I think he was still in the in the high tens the last time that we discussed it.
But okay.
Yeah.
This is episode 35.
Oh, fuck.
Yeah.
You know, I didn't realize we've done this 35 times now.
Yeah, I mean, well, you know, granted, the first seven or eight episodes were please only one lie at a time.
That's true.
And then we have a couple in there.
Like there's the one post-election blues where we didn't really cover any Candace material.
We were just talking about how fucked everything looked.
Yeah.
And then there was another one where I just, where we explained the name change and the show moving forward, and that's only about like 20 or 30 minutes, I think.
I don't think that one's that long.
No, no, I think that one was just a bit of a fuck around as well.
Yeah, because we just wanted to put it out there and just do something and describe like, yeah, we're changing the title because.
Yeah.
So at any rate, here's the next clip.
Who benefits from that is the question.
And so I wanted to share that with you because I just think that this post represents a reality that is not often spoken.
And it's just very important that parents don't get tied up in the political arguments or trying to make a statement politically to show how welcoming and open you are to conversations and really understand what we are setting our children up for for life, right?
Do not become somebody that succumbs to peer pressure, right?
To social peer pressure, right?
I just want to be socially seen as okay or this or that.
No, this is your child the rest of your life.
If you went from hormone blockers for X amount of years and now you're suicidal, I'm going to assume that that now is going to put you on pills that have to do with your mental, right?
This individual, once a healthy boy, is now somebody who is going to be a victim of big pharma, a customer of big pharma for the rest of his life.
Her life.
Candace's transphobia is off the fucking charts.
Before this series, on up to now, like I have to wonder sometimes where it comes from, if it comes from anywhere, or if she's just stupid.
I feel it's probably just stupidity since even Alex Jones has admitted an attraction to trans femmes like Blair White, who Candace, I am pretty sure, still hates with a fiery passion.
Yeah.
And now it's time for her to do a thing I wasn't sure that she would actually do.
I'm going to talk about diphtheria because so many guys work to me and say, Candace, you forgot about the D and D tap.
I am eight months pregnant and things slip your mind, pregnancy brain, which you could just always blame.
By the way, it's besting about being pregnant.
If you've got something, you just go, pregnancy brain.
Okay, so I'm going to very quickly cover this because actually what this really led to were more questions than answers, but I want to tell you early on when we first did the first episode, I told you that Big Pharma uses a lot of tactics.
And one of the things that they've been very good at is convincing people that the problem was bigger than it ever was.
We talked about this obviously with tetanus when I told you that there was only 550 cases in the entire, in the entire United States, and that included children and adults when they decided to introduce this vaccine.
It's just essentially nobody was getting tetanus.
So the document that I want to show you guys right now is the single biggest contributor.
And I can't wait to share this on Patreon so you guys take a look at this, that has made me realize how overblown in our own heads all of these various illnesses are.
Like for some reason, we think that everything was a plague.
When you talk about any virus or any vaccine, you assume that millions of people were dying of this.
And that's why we have this vaccine.
And now it's gotten so great and it's gotten so amazing.
And Big Pharma takes the credit and they go, ta-da.
And diphtheria is one such story.
So this document is from the Journal of American Medicine Association.
Obviously, you guys know me.
I would never, ever, ever share anything but trusted sources, and who more trusted than the AMA themselves, right?
This document was...
And I have to say this, her people on her Patreon misspelled the word published when they put up the link.
Is it purblished?
I'm going to spell it out for you.
I want you to grab your phone and just tap out what I'm going to tell you here.
Just let me know when you're ready.
Let me find a thing.
Okay.
Okay.
So I don't know how this escaped a basic spell check, but it is spelled in the description as P-U-B-L-I-C-H-S-E-D.
Okay.
The only thing that I could possibly give them Because and this is only because it's the second option on my autocorrect.
What I have on my autocorrect is published, publicized, which is spelled with a C, publisher, publishes, publicists.
Wait a minute.
Wait, hold up.
There's no...
Okay, there is publicize in here.
Oh, right, yeah.
Here's the thing.
It was written as if published could be the only possible word in the sentence.
it was written in yeah there's there's there's there's no ch anywhere in any of these there's there's c's that compensate for the sh, but it basically looks like public said publish seed.
Public said.
That's how it's spelled.
That is so fucking slapdash, it just continues to astound me.
Anyway, the link itself that she shares, which is in our link stack, is from November 2007.
So about 15 years prior to this episode of A Shot in the Dark, while I am going with the information she is providing, I was also curious about updated information on diphtheria.
We'll get to that later.
Published in November of 2007.
It is volume 298, number 18.
I'm just showing you guys a screen grab here, but I will definitely send you.
I will share the entire link so you can look through this because it is such a great reference, as I said.
Okay, so what this shows us incredibly, it has every single one of these vaccines that your children are getting listed.
I'm sorry, the vaccines, every single one of these illnesses that your children are receiving vaccines for.
And it lists the annual estimated average of the cases and the deaths related to that particular illness before the vaccine.
So you see right on top there, it says pre-vaccine number.
So this means this lets you know how serious was this illness before Big Pharma came to the rescue on a white horse and said, Rapunzel let down your long hair and now we don't have any more of these beautiful fairy tales about how much we owe everything to our big pharma gods.
Very first one that is on this list, vaccine preventable disease, diphtheria, right?
And it shows you that the estimated annual average of cases was 21,000 cases all across the United States between 1936 and 1945.
And the estimated number of deaths per year was 1,822 deaths that were related to diphtheria.
Now, what does that work out to?
Okay, Well, in 1945, the United States population was just under 140 million.
So approximately 140 million people were living and thriving in the United States, and 1,822 people were dying from diphtheria before they relinquished the vaccine.
That percentage for you means that you can say that 0.0013% of Americans were dying of diphtheria before they said, oh my gosh, you know what?
We got to get a vaccine to save the approximate 0% of people that are dying from this disease.
Okay.
Now, what's so funny, and I talked about this with coronavirus, is that if you knew the number of deaths of people that were dying from car accidents, right, from drunk driving accidents, all of these things that we deal with every single day, we never, ever consider these numbers, you would not get out of bed.
If you think that this is a high number, I mean, this is within the margin of error.
We're talking about a population of 140 million people.
Just 1,822 people were dying of this disease, and they decided to create a vaccine.
And how successful has that vaccine been?
I couldn't tell you.
Because the thing about big pharma, when they declared something away because they wanted to show that this was worth it, that this was like, you know, totally worth it for us to give you this vaccine, this combination vaccine of TDAP, which comes with warnings of SIDS, I will guarantee you you have more kids that have died from SIDS.
You have more kids that have died from all of these various other illnesses that we saw in last week's episode that is associated with the vaccine.
But who cares?
Who cares?
Who cares?
because we say that we've conquered this illness.
Guess how many people have died in America from diphtheria since the rollout of the vaccine?
None?
Almost none.
One?
The people that have gotten it have contracted it overseas and they have lapsed on their vaccinations.
Diphtheria was first described in the 5th century by Hippocrates, and epidemics were described in the 6th century by Aeschus, by Aeschius.
That's A-E-T-I-U-S.
The bacterium that causes it was first observed in 1883 and cultivated a year later.
Diphtheria toxoid was developed in the early 1920s, but was not widely used until the 1930s.
It was incorporated with tetanus toxoid and pertussis vaccine and became routinely used in the 1940s.
Candace was playing her old tactic of liar statistics, of course.
The numbers she was reading from were from after the rollout of the vaccine.
Of course.
Before use of it was widespread.
A better link that explains it is from the CDC, and I am including it in the stack as well.
But from that link, way down the page, in the section marked out as Secular Trends in the United States, we get, quote, during the 1920s, 100,000 to 200,000 cases of diphtheria and 13,000 to 15,000 deaths were reported each year.
After diphtheria toxoid-containing vaccines became available in the 1940s, the number of cases gradually declined to about 19,000 in 1945.
A more rapid decrease began with implementation of a universal childhood vaccination program, which included diphtheria toxoid-containing vaccines beginning in the late 1940s.
From 1996 through 2018, 14 cases of diphtheria were reported in the United States, an average of less than one per year.
One fatal case occurred in a 63-year-old male returning to the United States from a country with endemic diphtheria disease, which I believe was Haiti.
Within the United States, coverage with diphtheria toxoid childhood vaccines, DTAP, has been consistently high.
Coverage has been consistently high.
Among children born during 2016 to 2017, 93.3% had received at least three doses of DTAP vaccine by age 24 months, that's two years, and 80.6% had received at least four doses of DTAP vaccine by age 24 months.
Coverage with the adolescent and adult diphtheria toxoid vaccines, TDAP or TD, is variable.
TDAP coverage among adolescents aged 13 through 17 years reached 90.2% in 2019.
The rest of the information is a fascinating read, but it stands that the information Candace was reading was from the years 1936 to 1945, which is when diphtheria was on the wane due to a slow rollout of the vaccine due to a fucking world war against fascism.
But in post-WW DOS America, diphtheria rates dropped sharply and were almost non-existent by the 1970s.
But remember, prior to the vaccine and treatments, diphtheria infected 100,000 to 200,000 people each year in the United States alone.
It's not even globally.
Yeah.
100,000 to 200,000 people each year, and 13,000 to 15,000 of them died.
And most of those were children.
So yes, protection against a highly communicable disease was a fucking need.
Diphtheria spreads the same way as COVID and the cold, etc.
It is a respiratory disease that spreads when the infected coughs, sneezes, or even talks.
Infected persons can be contagious for two to four weeks without treatment.
It can last on touched objects and spread, or be spread through contact with open wounds on the infected person.
And it can be carried unknowingly.
If a person is vaccinated against diphtheria, they can still be a carrier of it, which is another reason that maintaining vaccination as an adult is a thing you should probably just fucking do.
People that survive to diphtheria or who get it outside of the USA and survive can have a whole range of lifelong issues if the diphtheria spread is bad enough.
Those include myocarditis, nerve damage, such as temporary paralysis, and airway issues.
This is not something that should be a fuck around and find out option.
Yeah, it's that's I never understand why people want to fuck around and find out with those sorts of things.
Yeah.
So get a shot.
Yeah.
You're going to sit in the chair for a couple minutes.
You're going to jab you.
You're going to be done.
And guess what?
You're now protected for 10 years.
My biggest thing got a previous retail job.
Yeah.
Talking to one of the teenagers that had just been hired, just went and got a vaccine.
I don't remember which one.
But got the vaccine and was sitting there and goes, yeah, man, I can't lift anything.
My arms are sore.
And I just looked at them and just went, oh, imagine having three in one arm and four in the other.
After that, they stopped being so sore.
Right.
So here's the next one.
Looking this illness up, and that's why I said that I wanted to cover this quickly because now I'm kind of going on a very big, deep dive.
But I come across a lot of random forums of doctors asking the question, what is the difference between diphtheria and strep throat?
And doctors were responding saying, well, it doesn't really matter.
I mean, there's a slight difference around the membrane of the throat.
It doesn't really matter.
The point is diphtheria is gone.
We don't look for this anymore.
It doesn't matter.
We've already declared that we won against diphtheria.
We no longer have 1800 people dying per year.
So whatever you're looking at is likely strep throat.
I would be willing to bet that Big Pharma plays a lot of games and they just come up with new names for illnesses.
And I want to do a deep dive into strep throat versus diphtheria.
And I want to also offer, because I know that a lot of doctors listen to this podcast, if you know anything about that, because as I said, I saw these on doctor forums, please write to me.
I do read your emails.
I read everything that you guys send me pertaining to this, and I would love to interject it.
But for the time being, I just want to say to parents, you should really, really understand that if your child has a 0.0013% of dying from something before the vaccine was rolled out, then your child has an effective 0% chance of dying from something, period.
Okay, so this is how deep in the weeds I get on some of this shit.
You know what just occurred to me?
What?
I could find out Candace's username real fucking easy.
Yeah.
If I go to Dr. Forums on Reddit and look for her.
Just look for anyone questioning diphtheria from three years ago.
It seems so easy because I don't think she was...
I bet, like, if I can, if I can find her username, I can find so much shit.
What I want to find is a lot of stuff that spills the tea.
Yeah.
You know, like, like maybe her asking about Dr. Forum shit and then like, you know, just anything, really, just anything that would like open up onto her, just her bullshit, just her bullshit fucking life.
You know, like, I want to find that now.
I can't believe it just occurred to me.
I think because when I was getting through these last like few minutes of this episode, I was so, my brain was so fried.
I was so ready to just be done with it.
Yeah.
You know?
I mean, God.
See, and that's, that's something I can thank you for is it's whenever I've worked a job and I've sat back and I've gone, man, this person's really nice.
I know their full name.
Let's see what they've got on social.
Hey, I am going to figure out the most polite way of not talking to them anymore.
Right?
And then when I can't find anything, I get paranoid because I'm like, there's nothing.
You have accounts, but there's nothing present.
Yeah, it's not even like not showing people everything.
It's you have nothing.
You don't even have the thing that says only friends of this person can see this content.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That always, for the modern people, that always kind of gets me.
Now, if I meet like a, you know, I don't want to throw Mennonites totally under the bus, but if I meet like a Mennonite or an Amish, I get it.
Yeah.
I'll give them some leeway, you know, but it's like, I mean, maybe, maybe not.
There's different rules for their different communities.
Yeah, still, it's kind of like, huh, you live in the modern world and you have nothing out there?
Yeah, yeah, no.
That all said, also, off topic here, but Candace, earlier this year, I found this out somehow, like in one of my many deep dives into her bullshit.
She apparently reset or deleted her Instagram account.
It's funny, she was the only person I was following on Instagram.
Yeah.
You know what my username on there is?
If anybody wants to look me up, I don't post Instagram.
I barely, like, I was only following content of hers on there because she had uploaded some exclusive shit, like having a wing eating content with her staff or some shit like that.
Yeah.
Anyway, it is Thomas Anderson, 69, Noice.
I've posted nothing to it.
Oh, yeah.
I was surprised I even got the username.
But yeah, that was one of those occasions where it's like, how can I get an Instagram account and I'm still blocked from fucking Facebook?
Like, what the fuck?
They're the same company, but okay, whatever.
Whatever, meta.
Fucking morons anyway.
You know, if only there was a way to know what the differences between diphtheria and strep are.
I really despise her on this kind of shit.
The differences start at the source.
I'm not a doctor, but I was able to find out in mere seconds that they're two different kind of bacteria and they work In different ways, strep is rarely life-threatening, but diphtheria is life-threatening due to the thick membrane it produces in the airway and the mucous membrane of victims that causes breathing problems and leads to heart issues, brain, and nerve damage.
And makes it easier to spread since air is passing through and over the membrane that is formed.
Yeah.
You know, it's kind of like it puts down its own like fucking off-ramp out of your body.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Both of these things are contagious, but diphtheria is more contagious.
And the most major difference is that a vaccine is available for it, where one is not available for strep A or B. Time for the flu argument now, common among anti-vaxxers.
Right, it's almost a fluke, that number.
It's almost a fluke.
And that's not just amongst kids.
It's the entire United States population, adults.
Almost a fluke.
I would guarantee you more people are dying from the flu.
More kids are dying today from strep throat, probably.
So it's going to be interesting.
We'll continue that discussion, you guys, when I'm going to read some questions that I received on patreon.com from some of my supporters.
Yep, more people do die from the strep or the flu than diphtheria in America because we have a fucking vaccine for it.
We don't have one yet for strep, which kills an estimated 1,800 to 2,400 people a year from invasive and untreated cases of strep A. The flu kills anywhere from 6,300 to 52,000 people per year.
That is no excuse to not protect oneself from a different, highly contagious disease that has a fucking vaccine available.
Yeah.
As such, the last reported diphtheria death in America was a single man, 63 years old, in 2018.
He caught it while traveling abroad and was not up to date on his vaccinations.
Just out there, raw dog in life.
Time for Candace's PayPics to be heard from, though.
First up, I have Kathleen Strunk, and she wrote, Candace, I want to thank you for sharing your story about your nephew and his cough.
My daughter worried developed a terrifying cough when she was barely three months old.
After a few days, it got significantly worse to the point where she would struggle for a good breath and turn bright red.
The doctor seemed to push this off as, well, she had the vaccine and really only suggested testing her for COVID, of course.
This cough lasted for months, but thankfully got less severe over time.
When I say I didn't sleep, I mean it because every minute she was spent watching her breathe.
Now at six months, her doctor still does not believe that she had pertussis, but the more I research, the more I know that she had it.
This past wellness visit, I declined all vaccines because I cannot risk going through that experience again.
She is happy and healthy.
I do not see the need to give her any medications at this time.
I received a lot of pushback from the doctor who was ready with articles and studies on why TDAP and HEPBI are good, but he was unable to answer the question of why she needs all of these vaccinations at six months of age.
I look forward to your series and thank you for bringing parents to a safe place to share their experiences.
Katie, thanks so much for that message.
Absolutely.
As I said, they basically just don't test for certain things.
If you say that you've gotten the vaccine, they dismiss it.
They assume you can't have it, just like what I said with diphtheria and pertussis.
There's just no way my sister's son had a cough for over 100 days and they were going to tell her that it was crude.
I just said to her, this is absolute foolishness for you to even believe this.
That's supposed to be a three to seven day cough, but they're so hesitant because, you know, big pharma needs people to believe that these vaccines are effective.
And by the way, your question brings me to an email that I got and something that I want to explore in a later episode, which is vaccine-induced mutations.
You may have been hearing about this and they talk about this a lot.
There are a lot of studies that talk about it pertaining to protussis, that when you keep introducing somebody to a vaccine, they can actually accidentally create mutations of the disease in which they're trying to vaccinate against.
And those mutations make it so that children's systems cannot fight off the initial disease.
It makes it so much worse.
This was a guy who sent me, I'm just going to kind of briefly read through this, but his email says, you know, there are different types of immunity, vaccine-induced, natural, innate, etc.
As an immunologist, he calls vaccine-induced immunity antigenic immunity and natural immunity referred to as pathogenic immunity.
Our natural immunity will build up defense against a pathogen, whereas vaccines build up defense against antigens.
As this relates to pertussis, researchers analyzed 343 strains of B. pertussis between 1920 to 2010 to determine how the vaccines influenced adaptive behavior and the emergence of new and more toxic strains.
So essentially, again, I'm summarizing here because I want to go through this in a later episode, but there has to be something to this.
I have to assume that this could be the reason behind why all of these children that keep getting this pertussis vaccine are responsible for these outbreaks in various neighborhoods, even though they're blaming it on the children that didn't get the vaccine, they're not getting the pertussis.
I believe that they have somehow created more virulent strains by accident.
And like I said, there's tons of studies surrounding this, so I don't want to put the car before the horse here and speak out of term without having done the research, but there definitely is something there.
So thank you so much for that question.
God damn it.
Okay, so that was a lot of bullshit.
Yeah.
First off, a PCR test can be an easy way to determine if a child or anyone has pertussis or anything else.
And it is usually done because it is cheap and easy to do in most countries with decent health care.
I have a hard time believing anyone that says pertussis was ruled out but no PCR was performed because a doctor has no reason not to do one if for nothing else than to determine a course of treatment for a patient.
That's just good medical practice.
And the PCR test, so we're clear, is the swab test where they swab the inside of your nose, your throat, and then they drop it into a solution.
It's very fucking simple.
Yeah.
Moving on from that, it was interesting that she didn't name drop the immunologist she mentioned.
As for the bullshit she said about vaccine-induced mutations, she got it all wrong, of course.
Mutations do happen in bacteria and viruses, but they happen most often in cases such as 1.
Having an under-vaccinated population where vaccines can mutate among the non-vaxxed and a mutant can get through.
2.
Having no vaccine available to treat a population and as the vaccine grows, mutations Make it stronger and harder to treat.
But among the vaxed, even if there is a breakthrough infection, it is handled better and cannot replicate as well or spread as quickly.
We saw this with the very slow growth of COVID Omicron.
It was relatively rare compared to the spread and damage of original COVID because most of the vaxed people that caught it came through just fine.
I certainly did.
Candace is making it sound like these viruses are laughing at the vaccines and mutating to adapt.
The truth is that they are mutating in the non-vaxxed mostly and becoming a problem for the vaccinated.
I am linking to an NPR radio interview that explains this.
It has a transcript of the conversation and an audio link.
It's not that long.
The term antigenic immunity does not appear to be a term coined by anyone in the medical field.
It sounds to me like the person that emailed her is a charlatan.
Next viewer comment slash question.
Next question is from Barbara Ponto.
She says, hello, Candice, my daughter is expecting her first child and my first grandbaby.
Congratulations, Barbara.
At her last visit, she was told she needed to get a D-Tap now for her baby's protection before she is born, as well as all the people who are going to be close to the baby.
I've heard this, by the way, like you can't be near the baby unless you're going to D-Tap shop.
Ridiculous, since you guys know everything that I've told you about this.
She asked if I received a vaccine like this while pregnant, and I have no recollection of this.
That's because you didn't, Barbara.
They just started, now they're suddenly wanting pregnant women to keep getting all these vaccines.
She has tasked me with delving into this and gathering info for her to review.
I have just signed up with you.
I have not had a chance to review your podcast or info on Patreon to see if you talked about D-Tap being offered to pregnant women.
Can you direct me to any information on this and pass along to her?
Yes, we did cover this early on.
We talked about TDAP and the ingredients that are in it.
So please go back and watch the episode.
Okay, I hope she did not do that.
Because as we all know, that episode was a lot of hot bullshit.
Yes, mothers are being asked to get the TDAP shot before giving birth to boost their immunity and that of the kid they're going to be close to.
And it is not uncalled for to ask people in their lives to be vaccinated before mingling with their newborns.
But it is a real failure on the part of this woman that wrote in to go to Candace Owens to ask medical advice for her concerned daughter.
That infuriates me.
And it is one reason among many why we do this show.
Next clip.
And you know, I have this weird feeling about these women that are going to their appointment 23 weeks.
I just saw a woman about this today and found out the baby had no heartbeat.
It is around that time that they give women the T-DAP shot.
And I'm just wondering how it impacts the baby in the womb.
Again, it's just a gut feeling and a suspicion that vaccines cannot possibly be good for babies while they're in the womb.
It also makes no sense to say that it's going to protect you in the womb and then also demand that the child gets the vaccine when they come out of the womb.
Like, how does that, how are you protecting your child if their child has to get the vaccine?
And why would everybody around you then have to get the vaccine?
I mean, this is just such a big pharma scam.
I mean, it's just a complete big pharma scam.
It doesn't even make sense.
Again, I've only heard these in rare circumstances.
People saying suddenly that they want everyone who's going to be around the baby to get the vaccine.
Who does that help?
I don't think the baby.
I don't think the mother.
I don't think the person that's visiting the baby or the mother.
I think it helps big pharma and it lines their pockets.
That's it.
Everybody just needs to keep re-upping on our vaccines all the time as we make ourselves trillionaires and we make them sicker and sicker.
Again, that's my perspective, so please do not take that as a fact.
But yes, you can go back and you can watch your earlier episodes when we talked about DTAP and I think it might have been episode two and we talked about it again last episode.
So I hope that you are able to find that.
All you have to do is log on to parlour.com, make an account, and follow me at Canvas and you will see all the work that we have done.
You guys, I hope that you've enjoyed this episode as much as I have.
I am sorry to say that next week I'm going to be overseas and hungry speaking, so I will not be able to give you guys an episode.
But I do also promise that when I come back, I will do two episodes in one week to make up for it.
Thank you guys so much for understanding.
I'm just trying to do it all and sometimes it's hard to stay on task with once a week, but I will make it up.
And then soon I'm on maternity leave and it's going to be even better because I'll have more time with you guys.
All right.
Thanks guys.
right Pre-at-last.
Okay, so I let that one play us out.
Anyway, getting the T-DAB during pregnancy has proven safe for babies and mothers and is a surefire way to protect the kid and the mom from passing on something highly communicable before the kid can get vaxxed themselves.
Candace, as usual, was talking direct bullshit that she cannot back up in any way.
But also, what the fucking fuck is an eight-month pregnant woman doing going to Hungary?
Simple.
She was going there to speak and then travel to Romania to meet up with Andrew Tate for their first interview.
While she was pregnant.
Yeah.
She was eight months pregnant when she did that interview.
And in fact, in our episode about the Tate brothers interview that she did, one that I titled Cunningly, Candace is Masturtating.
Yeah.
She, um...
She...
They remarked in the video that this is one of them, I think it was Tristan, had said, oh, you know, I've never seen you like this before because you're not pregnant.
You're pregnant every time that I've spoken with you or seen you.
Like, she's been, yeah, she fully eight months pregnant, went over to Romania.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Fuck that shit.
Anyway, let's drink something from Russia.
What do we got tonight?
The soft drink duchess made by...
Those names from Black Tap.
Isn't that the name of the country?
Black Trap is the name of the company.
We think it's the name of the company.
Hopefully the name.
Well, the name of the soda has to be Duchess because it says on the back in the English.
Yeah, so that's Duchess, but I'm saying the way that the logo is.
Oh, yeah.
We're pretty sure it's Black Trap is the name of the company.
And what was the other shit on there?
Alright, so it's got like This red bird thingy on it, probably a cardinal.
One side of it it says joy, the other side it says the moment, and then black trap legendary taste.
Yeah, now we are using what Google Translate for this?
Yep, okay, and it's it okay, so I have two different variants of it.
One just says see kum kum ripe pears, but the other one says made with ripe pears.
Okay, well, considering that they are part of the ingredients, that's believable.
We have not tried this yet, so yeah, this will be another one that we're like, I mean, as with all of our sodas for the most part, except for Sunday purple and the sarsaparilla, which we're both big fans of either one of those.
Um, you know, because I had brought that, the sundae purple was another one that was in a can.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, because that's not available in bottles, no, but that is so fucking good.
Oh, yeah, oh my god, like I'm not a fan of grape soda, but I have to not buy those because they are so damn good, and they are made with real sugar, and they are very high in calories.
They're very thick, yeah.
The thick-ass soda, but my God, is it delicious?
I don't want to try that brand's other sodas.
Oh, I already have.
Oh, have you had the cream soda?
I've not had the cream soda.
Have you had the orange soda?
Not had the orange soda, but they have a fuck.
Which ones have I had?
I've had their root beer.
Yeah.
Their root beers.
I'm sure it's excellent.
Yeah.
You know, Kowalski's here?
They sell.
Did we buy that one before?
The maple root beer by Kowalski's?
It's in a huge, like, oil can.
Oh, fucking.
I don't remember.
1919?
No.
No, no, no.
No, it's a different, like, local maker.
Okay.
Yeah, like, it's big.
It's a big damned can.
It's five bucks.
Jesus.
And it is 230 calories per serving, which puts it about double that of Coca-Cola.
Fucking Greyhound.
What are they like You've already got tickets for like next weekend, right?
This weekend.
Wait.
Oh, it is this right now.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So we're going to go ahead and talk about this.
So Matthew here is going off to visit some friends.
He's been out there before.
It's no big deal.
He's going out to visit some friends in Colorado.
Now, remember, we're in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
So he's taking Greyhound.
So yeah, he's done it before.
So this should be no big deal.
The before was a lot longer, too.
I lucked out.
I had a feeling one night and I couldn't sleep.
I was sitting there going, if I don't get my tickets now, I'm never going to fucking get them.
And I'm just not going to go.
And it gave me such anxiety thinking about it that I just like, you know what?
Fuck it.
It's a Thursday.
I'm paid up on the bills.
I'll go ahead and get them.
And I go onto the website.
Well, it started with the website.
I downloaded the app because I figured, fuck it, if I'm going to use it on a regular app.
I would have it.
Well, I'm looking through and I'm going 32 hours, 38 hours.
Fucking one was 42 hours.
Fuck.
Yeah.
And I'm like, why are these all taking so long?
My initial trip was only 28.
Yeah.
And then the trip back was only 20.
Yeah.
And I looked at them and they're all rerouting to Chicago for five hour stents.
What?
And I'm like, that makes no sense.
Going down to Kansas City and waiting for a few hours.
Okay, that makes no sense.
Well, that's in the direction of Colorado from here.
Fucking Chicago's the other direction from here.
No.
And it's like, I'm okay.
And so I'm like, well, fuck, I might just cancel this trip because I don't want to spend fucking a day in Chicago.
No offense to any of you Chicagonites.
I just, if I'm going to Colorado.
All the college five boys are in Chicago.
Oh, yeah.
No, no offense to you, Chicagonites.
I'm sure Chicago's beautiful, but I'm not visiting Chicago for fuck's sake.
Yeah, you're trying to get out to Colorado, which is west.
Yeah.
Now that being said, I do have a friend who plans on moving out to Chicago, so I'll probably go visit when I have a friend out in Chicago.
Right.
That's kind of what I'm basing myself.
The trick is to have a place to stay.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying here.
To have a couch to sleep on at the least.
Yeah, right.
Or, you know, a makeshift airbed that just has you on the floor in a couple of hours.
But it's a slow descent, so you don't really notice until you wake up and you're like, hi, everything hurts.
And I know what the fibers of your thing feel like between a thin sheet of plastic.
All right.
You know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what?
Like, okay, one of the hotels that I worked in, where I worked at the front desk, people could get a, like a cot, like an extra cot for a room if they needed it.
And like, we kept them stored away in a supply closet.
They were, like, they were free.
Like, we're not going to charge somebody for a fucking cot.
But I laid one out one night in the office.
I was like, how comfortable is this, really?
Because we have really comfortable beds in this hotel.
And oh my God, like I was surprised.
I was surprised.
I was like, this is free?
You know, like, cause it, yeah, I mean, it's just, it's just basically, you know, fucking tarp suspended on, you know, a rack.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The only thing that sucked was getting up from the cot because they're only a few inches off the floor.
Yeah.
So getting up from it kind of sucked, but being down on it could be really comfortable.
Yeah.
Especially like if you pulled, because, because, well, because I tested it out, I went and I pulled some cushions from, we had like similar couches in the lobby to what we had in the rooms.
So I pulled a couple of couch cushions and I used like a sheet and I put it over the cushions because that was kind of the thing that we told people to do.
It was like, if I'm telling people to do this, I should really have some practical knowledge Of it.
Yeah.
So I did it all up.
It took like five minutes, you know, because I just kind of took my time and I was like kind of following the steps that I had been telling people to do.
I was like, it's weird that I'm telling them to do this and I don't fucking know how it works.
But anyway, I get it all set up and like I laid down on it.
I was like, oh, wow.
Yeah.
Like, this ain't that bad, you know.
But yeah, then, you know, you go to find a cot anywhere that isn't Amazon and good luck.
Like, you're not going to just walk into a furniture store and go, give me the bedding option that seems the absolute worst that doesn't involve being entirely on air.
You know, that's not going to, they're going to be like, do you want this $8,000 bed?
No.
I want something that costs roughly $60 to make.
That's not going to.
Get the fuck out of here.
It's like, you know, I've had a few friends who were ex-military who were doing active tours.
Yeah.
And coming home, occasionally, when they get home from work, they don't want to go sit down on their couch or go sit down in their bed.
They just want to sit right on the floor and lay back and go, man, this is comfortable.
While their partner looks down at them and goes, we have a couch right fucking there.
Like, I know, I know, but like the backpack under my head, it's just, oh, it's the best.
Yeah, like you can, I mean, you can get used to some rough living for a while.
The worst part is when it creeps back up on you later.
Like I knew a new family back in Jacksonville who had the husband in the family had served in the army in Iraq for several years.
And the only way he could lay down a lot of nights was to lay down in the back of a truck, like on the truck bed.
Yeah.
Using his ruck as a pillow.
That was it.
There was nothing else soft about that.
Gave himself major back problems.
Oh, I'm sure.
Because the only other option, like he felt safe at least in the bed of the truck, you know, this was in an area where guys were getting picked off.
And he's like, well, shit, I at least wanted some thin metal between me and a sniper rifle.
You know, because guys who had laid out on the ground were getting shot.
Yeah.
He's like, well, fuck that.
So he traded, you know, the option of getting shot for like back problems, like major.
Like he needed major surgery when he was out of the service because it all kind of like crept up on him.
You know, like, yeah, it's really kind of fucked what can happen to people that just get used to that.
I mean, like, like people that are homeless for any stretch of time, they'll typically not report any problems until years later and then like just shit just like cascades.
Yeah.
You know, like I would not want that.
I mean, you know, falling asleep here and there, okay.
But the permanent rush.
Yeah, when it's a lifestyle and a way of life for you, it can really add up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But yeah.
Anyway, let's pour this thing up.
Oh, yeah.
Also, this is an alcoholic beer.
Not fucking soda.
Yeah.
Now it said alcoholic soft drink in the translation, but I didn't see any percentages or anything.
So we're really like going into this.
Only one thing, but I need to double check.
Okay, yeah, do that.
This, now, that being said, this is a Russian...
Yeah, just, well, just like the...
That was the one that had the 1%.
Yeah, because the other Russian beverage that we tried was the Taiga Forest one.
What's it say?
There's a fucking phone number on here for questions about quality of it.
Okay.
20 calories.
Fuck, they really jam a lot into this.
Okay, I just have to say, as somebody who can partially read Cyrillic, this is a fucking mouthful that they have put back here.
Of course.
And translating it into English is not helping because of how close everything is.
It's all kind of like scrinching in on itself and translates going.
Well, I think we've given people enough information, you know?
Yeah.
I was just hoping to find a percentage.
I saw a bunch of numbers on here, so I was thinking maybe.
Maybe it'd have the ABV on there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All I'm getting is volume 33 liters.
Pour it up.
Let's see what happens.
I had gotten this at Paradise Market, which, again, unpaid, unrequested plug.
I might drop into there.
If you think you can travel safely with a glass bottle.
Oh, yeah, I can travel safely.
I might drop into there and get like a couple that you can take and share with your friends because we might have some guests on the next episode.
Namely the people he's going to visit.
Yeah.
We're not sure yet, but yeah, the timing of the next episode is going to fall in line with when he's over there.
Yeah.
Yeah, it really comes down to their schedules for that week.
Oh, Lord.
I mean, it's got a decent foam to it, decent fizz.
I haven't given a whiff yet.
Oh, wow.
You can really smell it.
Oh, no.
Oh, wow.
I mean, it's Russian.
I'm not entirely shocked, but oh, yeah.
That is pear.
That is...
Man, that is...
I think I understand why my buddy that was in the Marines liked being over on the Russian border so much.
Right.
I mean, this is pear and apple are in the ingredients list, along with some sugar.
But let's give it a shot.
Damn, that's good.
It's wow.
Salad, yeah.
That is really fucking good.
That is pear and apple.
It is.
I mean, it's perfect.
It tastes like those carbonated juices that you get for, like, you're supposed to, like, serve it to kids on holidays in place of wine.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it kind of tastes like one of those.
It's a bit cidery with the fizz, but like a pear cider, but damn, that's good.
Yeah.
The smell, I attribute to...
Yeah.
It's even got a bit of a candied taste.
Yeah, like, like the closest smell I can think of is like that candied banana.
Yeah.
You know?
Smells a bit like candied banana.
The Havana banana.
Better than that.
Way better than that.
Oh, yeah.
Like way more accurate.
Yeah, I know.
I just, I remember the distinct smell of the Havana banana.
This has a bit of that.
Yeah.
That's what I was.
I couldn't quite place it when I was smelling it.
I was like, man, that's real familiar.
This is a lot better.
I wonder if the Havana banana has pear in it and hell.
Right?
I didn't see it on the list.
It didn't get specific, though.
It just said natural flavors.
Yeah.
So yeah, I mean, whatever they can get away with, I guess.
Yeah.
I can tell you, the Russians were really fucking specific about what they put in those.
Yeah.
That's quite good.
That is really, really good.
I don't even like pears.
This is good.
I like pears.
They're just, they're kind of a bitch to really eat sometimes.
And if you don't get them at the right time, they can be kind of mealy.
Like, you want to get them when they're soft, but not so soft.
Because when they're hard, they're hard to bite into, really.
You get a good chunk of.
They're not like an apple.
You've got to get a pear at the perfect time.
At the perfect time?
The perfect time, yes.
You need perfection.
It's like trying to buy any Lorian peaches up here.
They all smell so good and they're all soft and perfect.
But by the time you get around to actually going, okay, I'm going to get some Lorians.
Every motherfucker and their grandmother has made a fucking cobbler and cleaned out all of the good pears.
I mean, peaches.
Well, the thing is, honestly, I love a lot of the produce we get here.
A lot of it is high-end, top-notch shit.
I have not been impressed with the peaches once.
Like, I've had the peaches, I've had nectarines, I've had white peaches, I've had yellow peaches.
Same with the nectarines.
I'm just, I'm not.
I'm not convinced they're any good.
And half of them come from, they come from either Colorado or fucking South Carolina.
And I'm sorry, Georgia cornered the market on peaches, you know, 100 plus years ago.
And they are so hard to get.
Yeah.
Well, it's also, it's a pain in the ass to ship it from there to here without them getting mealy.
As many as possible, yeah.
But I mean, South Carolina is just a state away from Georgia.
True.
You know, I mean, I can see Georgia not shipping them out if they're not going to be guaranteed to be perfect and sellable.
Yeah.
If once again, some friends of mine commit to a move out to North Carolina, I'll just be a border hop away from...
I'll border hop away from South.
Oh.
The only, look, like, South Carolina is fine, I guess.
What I appreciated the most about South Carolina was visiting my grandmother there.
And we would go to things like Fort Sumter, which is where the Civil War started.
And we would go to Battery Park in Charleston frequently.
Battery Park had cannons, like big fucking cannons from the Civil War period that were pointed out to Sumter.
And the wild thing was you could climb on these cannons.
They didn't give a fuck.
You got hurt?
Fuck you.
Gravity's a thing, bitch.
Learn it.
Like, they did not give a shit.
And they had, they had like, you would think of them as sculptures, but they had like, and they were, they were, you know, welded together, but they had like cannonballs in pyramids, you know, posted around Battery Park.
So you could get an idea of how big the cannonballs were that were being loaded into these cannons and fired at the fort.
You know, so Battery Park was free to go to.
So we went to Battery Park all the fucking time.
But we took the we took the ferry out to Sumter a couple of times.
And like, you can't really see Sumter with the naked eye that well from Battery Park.
So you have no idea how powerful these guns were until you get on the ferry and it takes like an hour to get out there.
And then when you get on the ferry and you're out at Fort Sumter, you can barely make out the shoreline of Charleston.
And you're like, holy fuck.
No wonder people were dying.
These guns were massive.
And they're just like randomly hitting the fucking fort, you know?
It's like, holy shit.
You get a real appreciation for ballistics.
But yeah, I climbed all over those cannons as a kid.
Like, it was wild.
All that comes to mind whenever I, like, whenever they leave behind a military installation like the cannons in Battery Park and they're just left there perfectly preserved, all that comes to mind is there were some privates who lied to the upper end because they didn't want to have to move these bitches again.
The funny thing about Battery Park, too, was that, you know, like I said, you could really like, like, they had made the guns largely inoperable.
Like it was, it would have been a bitch to move them kind of thing.
But they've made them largely inoperable.
The funny thing was, though, when Hurricane Hugo slapped into Charleston, people were worried about the houses, about the historic homes that are there.
Yeah.
You know, that were rebuilt after the Civil War.
So, like, they were, you know, over 100 years old.
They were worried about the homes and they were worried about the guns.
Those were the only things standing.
Like, relatively undamaged.
You know, maybe some broken windows here or there, but yeah, relatively undamaged.
But yeah, those were fine.
Even the trees in Battery Park were pretty much okay.
The gazebo, little fucky, needed some repairs.
But most of Battery Park and the surrounding neighborhood were good.
Everyone else was hit or miss whether or not you were fucked.
Because the hurricane was pretty big.
It was a big, big deal.
Whenever somebody gets, well, whenever people get worried about like the historic sites in Florida getting ripped away and I just would sit back and go, how long has that been there now?
Oh, like 100 something years.
I think it'll be fine.
Yeah, it'll be fine.
You're double wide, however.
Don't go there.
Go to the community center, please.
Yeah.
Hell, if you want to, I'm sure you can break and enter into the historic home and just stay there.
Yeah, so we'll be back in a couple of weeks with episode 10 of A Shot in the Dark.
Now, for the original Daily Wire Run.
Oh, this is something else that I wanted to talk about real quick, too.
We're going to continue to do this series right to the very end of it.
Yeah.
If anyone is still hanging out for this and listening, I may mention this again next week because it only just occurred to me to mention it now.
But Candace entertained the very concept of having a debate on her show with Nick Fuentes this past week.
It was filmed at some point, like within the last three months, she said, but it was put up this past week.
Now, here's the fucky thing, all right, and I found a way around this right away, but they charged two bucks for people to watch this.
So yeah, these two idiots got together and charged two bucks for people to watch this on their platforms.
People that were already paying, I think, for their platforms had to go pay more money to see this, you know, battle of the worst people.
Well, then they both separately went off into their separate communities and talked mad shit about each other regarding how they felt about how they were treated during this thing.
And it's like, oh, God.
So we will be covering that after a shot in the dark.
I will cover the Nick Candice feud.
Yeah.
And I hope it only requires one episode.
The Nandis, if you will.
Something.
We'll come up with a name.
God.
You can't say Cannic.
No.
I don't know.
I mean, I'll come up with something that'll probably be like, you know.
Nick Fuantes isn't Canadian, is he?
Nick Can't Standis or something like that.
No, he's very much American and very much lives in his mother's basement.
No shame to anybody that does, but it's just he's supposed to be a millionaire.
Yeah.
He could have a house with the money he's made on donations and shit.