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Feb. 7, 2023 - Info Warrior - Jason Bermas
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The Grammy Awards Were A Hell Beyond Parody - Jon Fitch With Jason Bermas
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Time Text
We have developed speed, but we have shut ourselves in.
Machinery that gives abundance has left us in want.
We think too much and feel too little.
More than machinery, we need humanity.
We know the air is unfit to breathe and our food is unfit to eat, as if that's the way it's supposed to be.
We know things are bad, worse than bad.
They're crazy. Silence!
The great and powerful Oz knows why you have come.
You've got to say, I'm a human being!
God damn it! My life has value!
You have meddled with the primal forces of nature!
Don't give yourselves to brutes, men who despise you, enslave you, who regiment your lives, tell you what to do, what to think, or what to feel, who drill you, diet you, treat you like cattle, use you as cannon fodder!
Don't give yourselves to these unnatural men.
Machine men with machine minds and machine hearts.
Yeah, thank you.
You're beautiful.
I love you.
Yes.
You're beautiful.
Thank you.
It's showtime.
And now, Reality Rant with Jason Vermis.
And who loves you and who do you love?
Hey everybody, Jason Burmus here and get ready because this is probably not the take that you're expecting, it's probably not the broadcast that you're expecting, but I intend to go pretty damn hard on Pfizer, really, who I gotta pick and choose my words.
And by the way, I'm looking at my levels here.
What is going on? Do I have to get my microphone this far up?
I think I need to do a restart every once in a while.
Hopefully my levels will be good.
But for some reason, I get to the levels and maybe I'll just bring down that.
Okay. So everybody's talking about Sam Smith.
And the Grammys and Pfizer.
And there's going to be one group that I want to focus on tremendously in this broadcast.
And guess which one it is?
It's Pfizer. And it's going to go beyond whatever last night's performance was and how out in the open it was.
And it was something that I knew everybody was going to comment on today.
And that was kind of the purpose, right?
So, let's start there.
Occult rituals and Satanism in general.
Luciferianism, Mephesto, is nothing new in music, in the entertainment industry.
You know... It's there.
It's been there for a very long time in pop music, in metal music.
It's progressively gotten to the point where obviously there are all these theories that surround it with the Illuminati and others.
When you see, for instance, what appears to be goddess rituals with people like Beyonce or Madonna.
You know what I hate doing here?
But we're gonna do it because we gotta do it.
Madonna doesn't look like a human being anymore.
Like, she looks like she's sick.
It sucks, man.
You know, I don't want to weigh into somebody, you know, no matter whatever they've done in their past and whatever they've represented.
And believe me, although I've enjoyed a lot of Madonna songs, obviously she's been on board with a lot of this stuff.
In fact, I did a watch-along with her prior to everything going down.
She did a song, I think it was with one of the Migos guys, perhaps Future.
And it was all about how not everybody was going to make it into the future.
We're really not going to focus on that stuff here.
I want to say this about Sam Smith really quickly.
There's a new video that's gotten a lot of attention.
I just saw bits and pieces of it.
We are in a kind of post-truth world where taboos are being pushed.
But he's kind of perfect because he doesn't identify as a man or a woman.
The whole thing is transgender men.
And remember, when we talk about that movement, we have to talk about transhumanism.
You now associate that with Luciferianism and Satanism, the inversion of reality.
That really is the message.
And it's the global message, right?
We've talked about how the United Nations, the World Health Organization in particular, are behind it.
So then having it be associated with Pfizer...
It really isn't a step.
It's just so in your face.
It's beyond parody.
That's why we're talking about it.
Let's go with the whole devil thing.
This worked out great for Sam Smith.
He has a video that's just over the top.
He comes out in red robes and a bunch of people in drag and probably with the surgery and the whole thing.
He knows that every single conservative pundit is going to have to jump on this.
And it is rather bizarre because this stuff used to be kind of reserved, but it's progressed, to let's say you go all the way back to the late 90s and Marilyn Manson, who obviously associated with Satanism and the devil, etc., And I remember he did the dope show live, and I think it was VMAs.
And at the end of it, he had a bunch of homosexual police officers in pink come out and then start making out with each other at the end.
Very provocative at the time, you know, pushing envelopes.
So in that sense, I think that's what Smith is doing.
I mean, it is, again, we're in such a weird post-truth world that you kind of just have to accept it, that this is guys like, he's like 30 years old, he's bear style, he's not physically attractive.
In the video, you know, there's like golden shower things going on.
But those who haven't seen it, we've got this one clip, and then it goes to the Pfizer part.
And really, the Pfizer part is all that I'm seriously concerned with.
But here you go. Let's play.
It's been all over the internet. I'm sure you've seen it.
So, there he is.
There's the cages. Most of those are biological men that either have or haven't transitioned and identify as whatever they like.
He's got, obviously, the Satan hat on.
I will say this!
I will say this and people might not like this but you know he was singing his own songs at least he was doing that and there it is and so it's brought to you by Pfizer and that's really where we're bringing this broadcast now eventually i'm probably gonna have to leave youtube just i'm just warning everybody um There's a lot going on in the stuff that we're about to go through and watch.
I mean, a lot going on to the point where I saw this commercial first.
I want to start here. I think it was over the weekend.
I was watching UFC. That'll kind of fit into this.
This is supposed to be mixed martial mindset most of the time.
John Fitch, he's out today.
He's started his coaching classes.
Hopefully we'll move the show to a different time because I would have loved to have Fitch on this broadcast.
I think Fitch could have actually brought a lot to this table to see this stuff.
But this is the commercial that I saw.
Again, everything is sponsored by Pfizer now.
I want everybody to think about this.
What are we watching in advertisement that's truly something that's a necessity anymore?
I mean, we're talking about we see a lot of alcohol commercials.
I mean, I'm wearing the Jack Daniels, but we do.
We see a ton of alcohol commercials.
It's the White Claw stuff.
It's the beer stuff.
It's the booze and stuff.
A lot of those. A ton of big pharma commercials across the board.
In fact, if we get to it, I've got an AstraZeneca ad that I also want to play.
And they're celebrity-full.
That's the thing. These are like Hollywood productions at this point.
That's where we're at.
And not much else, right?
I'd say there's movies, there's entertainment.
Well, there's video games, streaming services, stuff like that.
That's about it. Sports.
You've got what? I'm serious.
Now, you think about that. Obviously, the car commercials are there.
They're trying to wean you away from your car, get you to go sustainable, and everything's about sustainability.
So I'm seeing less and less car commercials, too.
I'm going to say it again. What are they advertising that you need?
Fewer and fewer food commercials.
And honestly, when most of the food commercials I see are now what?
These services where you're going to have delivery food.
Do you need that?
Is that a necessity?
So, I mean, I'll ask again.
Can anybody tell me?
That's the vast majority of what you see.
It used to be at least when they were advertising to you.
Yeah. Coca-Cola, McDonald's, all that stuff.
There were things you actually needed that they would put on television.
Not anymore. Now the thing they tell you you absolutely need is Big Pharma.
That's the big thing. Now, after I show you this commercial, I'm going to go back to a disturbing story that I covered a few weeks ago.
And I made a prediction that there would be a lot of pharmaceuticals involved.
Because that's the MO when things of an extremely disturbing nature that we're going to discuss happen.
Is that loads of big pharma is involved.
And it should be all over the front pages.
You want to talk about a real epidemic in this country and wherever they allow this stuff.
Okay? And when I say this stuff, I've talked about it.
I don't like... Big pharmaceutical companies advertising on television at all.
Forget about sponsoring awards that the Holly Weird entertainment system feeds off of.
They need these things.
Sponsored and all that. You know, again, intertwined with the system where they buy these people off and they show up in a lot of these ads, or they pander to them for social media.
So I'm going to have to be very careful as we watch all of these things, because God forbid I say anything, anything in a negative manner, we may just have to flip the script and Jason Bermas becomes his alter ego, Johnny Nonsense, Johnny Nonsense tells you how he really feels.
So here you go.
We're gonna start here.
Even when things seem quieter, the urge to protect means staying on the lookout to help keep others from harm.
At Pfizer, we're driven by this impulse.
We've reached hundreds of millions of lives with our COVID-19 response.
And we keep innovating.
Whatever comes next, we will respond fiercely.
Like family.
So let's just stop right there.
Now, this is what I saw.
I think I got a slew.
Only certain ones we're going to be able to play on this end.
I feel like we can play that one.
Now, first of all, I saw everybody at the dinner table.
So now I guess that you need Pfizer in your life to have a happy family dinner.
Again, what are you being sold that you actually need in all these commercials?
And When I saw that, it just rubbed me the wrong way.
And that brings us to my next commercial here.
A lot of free advertisement for Pfizer.
Because we love Pfizer because we're Johnny Nonsense.
Johnny Nonsense loves Pfizer.
Can't get enough of it. In fact, you know what?
Johnny Nonsense says, hey, thank you Pfizer for letting me eat dinner with my family.
You're the best. So I was looking for that commercial in particular.
And guys, I got probably like a baker's dozen, maybe more we're going through right here.
But one of the first ones I found, okay, and again, if I didn't have such a great guest today on Reality Rants, the morning show, by the way, we're live again, 8 a.m.
Eastern tomorrow. If you didn't see today's show, awesome show with Stuart J. Hooper.
I was going to play Martha Stewart in one of these ads that I just recently seen.
And again, it's almost jaw-dropping that these kind of things are out there, but this is the type of stuff that Johnny Nonsense loves.
Wow, I love Martha Stewart.
I love family and friends, and I love Kill Bill.
So I love this commercial.
Alright, so without further ado, here we go.
Here's Martha Stewart.
You know that unwelcome guest everyone wishes would just leave already?
That's COVID-19.
That's why I got the new updated booster, designed to help protect against recent Omicron variants.
Got it? So, We're gonna stop that one there.
She's a ninja chef.
And she's smacking down some pineapples.
And you know how she's doing it.
Johnny Non-Sense style, boosting it up.
Awesome. Awesome.
So, we've got so many of these to go down the line.
I want to stop for a moment.
I want to go here.
Johnny Nonsense might say that big pharma helps people all the time.
We're going to revert back to Jason Burmess for a second.
Jason Burmess is going to tell you that you're playing with fire when you're playing with big pharmaceutical drugs Especially those that are serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
Okay? And these have been around for a long time and they're largely along with a slew of other pills for a slew of other disorders all the time.
You're seeing a lot more for immune disorders, HIV in particular.
Just pointing that out also.
First of all, this is the headline, but you don't see that when you paste it in.
Chilling 911 describes how over-medicated midwife mom, Lindsay, cut her own wrist before jumping from top window of her home in suicide attempt after strangling her three children.
Horrible story.
The thing is that I see these on probably like, if not a weekly basis, a bi-monthly basis.
A bi-monthly basis, usually in the United States.
Okay? Just like this one.
And no one asked the question, well, what kind of medication was this person on?
Because you don't just strangle three children.
Your own three children to death.
When I read this to you, and again, suffering severe postpartum depression, here's one of my big worries.
In a society where you've taken away personal responsibility in so many cases, where you've said a pill is the answer, where you've discouraged people from working hard and saving and achieving, And when something doesn't go their way, instead of trying to overcome that feeling, a pill's going to solve it.
A pill doesn't solve it.
Okay? Now, I'm not saying in some cases, but all these things are also being advertised for profit.
And all the time, I'm hearing about mental health.
Mental health. We need to talk about mental health.
I'm with you. If you need a shoulder to cry on or somebody to talk to, that is a good thing.
Now, hopefully...
In those moments, it can be a family member or a trusted friend who's not going to lie or sugarcoat things either.
He's going to look you directly in the eye and agree or disagree, try to help you with things, and not pander to you.
But that's not the society we live in.
We live in a highly, highly...
Drug society now for many many years with a for-profit system to the point where Pfizer is Sponsoring Okay, Sam Smith in in in a like a Satan clown show That's the Grammys now and it's not just the Grammys they're sponsoring all sorts of they're all over the place I don't have to tell you that you know that all right So, I mean, this is going to be hard for me to read.
Again, when I say that a lot of this stuff is beyond parody, I don't know how else to say it.
I don't know how else to say it, okay?
So, you know, again, to me, this is also trusting the science.
Because scientifically, this is all helping this woman.
Reddington says that between October and January, 60 days, folks.
Clancy was prescribed a dozen medications.
Zolpidim, which is sold under the brand name Ambien.
And Clonazepin, which is sold under the brand name of Klonopin.
Diazepin, which is sold under the brand name Valium.
Fluextine, which is sold under the brand name Prozac.
Lamortegine, which is sold under the brand name Lamisatil.
Lorzapam, which is sold under the brand name Ativan.
Meritazban, which is sold under the brand name Remeron.
Quatupel Furnarate, which is also sold under the brand name Ceracol and Trazodone.
I need to stop for a second.
You know, I see those kids.
To me?
Those are the victims of Big Pharma.
And nobody there is going to jail for this.
There's no jail time for this behind me.
Instead, they sponsor every sporting event.
I'm going to show you that in a moment.
Every market, all of a sudden.
It's all about these.
All about these.
Okay? So, you know, I need to take a step back.
I need to flip back into Johnny Nonsense.
Or, obviously, I'm going to get a little overwhelmed and upset.
Okay? But one of the things I want to talk about, again, is I saw that first one during UFC. These things are everywhere.
Again, we're talking about the Grammys also.
This is, again, the big-time Pfizer basketball ad.
All right? There's a reason why it's called a possession.
It's not just who has the ball, but the opportunity.
From Lexington to Nashville to Columbia, possession means this moment has your name on it.
All you have to do is take it.
So be ready and don't miss your shot.
Pfizer and the SEC remind fans there are new COVID-19 boosters designed to help protect against recent Omicron variants.
Learn more at vaccines.gov.
So, again, Johnny Nonsense will tell you, awesome.
I love sports.
I like what they did there with the puns.
All this is still happening.
This stuff is all still rolling, folks.
Rolling, rolling, rolling.
Keep on rolling.
Johnny Nonsense loves it.
Okay. I mean, that's not the only one.
Okay? While we're on the sports...
While we're on the sports...
We might as well play the next one.
We'll bring it. We'll do it live.
Thumbs it up, by the way. Subscribe and share if you are new to the broadcast.
We do this again live Monday, 8 a.m.
Eastern through Thursday.
We do the Mixed Martial Mindset once a week.
I'm on a ton of other shows.
That's another thing. I also do a weekly spot on Making Sense of the Madness for American Media Periscope.
So hopefully that you're enjoying this content because you're not seeing a lot of people cover it like this and lay it down and put it into perspective.
And I know a ton of you out there that are watching this are going, oh, I've seen that commercial.
Oh, I haven't seen that.
Oh boy. Oh boy.
So here's the football equivalent.
To the basketball one that you just saw.
Okay? Around here, Saturdays don't just happen.
Saturdays are in the details.
It takes the X's, the O's, and the T's.
The bouncers, the flips, and the flights.
The bulldog, the bear, and the beads of sweat.
It takes this moment, and this moment.
When anything can happen, every detail counts.
Pfizer and the SEC are teaming up to remind fans to get an updated COVID-19 booster shot.
So, again, we're here to help.
We love football.
You love football.
We love basketball. You love basketball.
Without us, there's no family dinners.
There's no basketball.
There's no football.
So, Now, we're gonna rewind to this piece from two plus years ago while everything was going down and Johnny Nonsense wants to let you know that he was big time behind this message from Pfizer and the gang at that point because this really drove home what science was.
At a time when things are most uncertain, We turn to the most certain thing there is.
Science. Science can overcome diseases, create cures, and yes, beat pandemics.
It has before. It will again.
Because when it's faced with a new opponent, it doesn't back down.
It revs up, asking questions till it finds what it's looking for.
That's the power of science.
So we're taking our science and unleashing it.
Our research, experts, and resources.
All in an effort to advance potential therapies and vaccines.
Other companies and academic institutions are doing the same.
The entire global scientific community is working together to beat this thing.
And we're using science to help make it happen.
Because when science wins, we all win.
Unleash the science, anybody?
Take a good look right there.
Unleash the science!
Let's read that.
Let's take a good, hard look at this one, guys.
Alright. We thank all the scientists working relentlessly in both of our labs and labs around the world to end this global health crisis.
Unleash the science!
Johnny Nonsense loves it.
Johnny nonsense can't get enough.
Okay? Now...
I got a couple more.
Now, here's the other thing. When we go to the other side, there's a new SNL skit that I didn't see from, I think it might even be a few months ago.
And by the way, kudos to SNL. I actually saw two actual funny skits from this week.
The Mario Kart sketch.
Funny. It's funny.
Thank God. Thank you for bringing something pretty non-political.
Even if somebody might think they slipped some agenda in there, I think the parody was appropriate.
And then they also did one on wings, wing pit.
I haven't even seen the whole episode.
Those two things. Thank you, SNL, for doing some funny things.
I hope that's the direction you're moving it.
Anyway, I'm not even going to tell you what this is, but it makes a joke out of almost everything we've done here.
And talked about here and when we go over to the uncensored portion of the broadcast which will be exclusive over at Rumble and Rockfin.
If you haven't subscribed to my Rumble, what are you waiting for?
We're doing it there. As well.
So the uncensored portion of the broadcast when we go there will be on Rumble, will be on Rockfin.
By the way, the links are down below if you can support me.
And support me just by sharing this information.
Thumbs it up, subscribing. That's a big deal.
But financially, the coffees help.
The Rockfin subscription helps.
And of course, Red Voice Media, we're doing it big.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. Okay. So let's get on to the next one.
This is more like that science will win.
2022. This is their next iteration of what science will do.
Because science...
Unleash the science!
They're unleashing science.
This moment...
Was not meant to happen.
Neither was this.
Or this. The odds of this?
No chance. I just want to stop at Midway.
I mean, when they show you this stuff...
You know what I see?
I see really, really slick production.
I see somebody using a nice camera, shooting at 120 to 240 frames per second, maybe more with some of the new stuff, in optimal settings, getting a real dramatic slow-mo shot from something that literally, you know, they're shooting in a couple minutes.
Guys, that's not a joke.
Shooting in a couple minutes. Okay?
So you get that.
You get a nice little piano beat.
Maybe you use something, you know, not so expensive, but hey, you're Pfizer, you got cheese.
If you want, you get a big song.
But, you know, the dramatic piano's good.
And then, you give me 24 to 48 hours in a computer program.
And I could make something original, but there's plenty of stock footage that basically looks like molecular biology.
And slap that all together, and Pfizer's awesome!
Without Pfizer, your child couldn't come out and hug you.
Without Pfizer, you wouldn't be with the one you love.
That's the message.
And Johnny Nonsense would agree.
He loves that message.
Let's continue. This second.
How? And this one.
Not in a million years.
It simply shouldn't have happened.
I want to stop it there.
Babies. Again, molecular biology.
I mean, is this a sign of the directed evolution that we've heard so much about recently?
I'm just... I want to point it out there.
You know, that's that NASA document.
Now look at this commercial!
But... somehow...
they did.
They did. They did. So, you know, not just the piano.
They got some good strings in there, too.
But you get my point? This is what we're seeing.
And this is the next one.
I've got a ton of these. And when I said a dozen, I probably got two dozen.
Guys, I mean, this is a big broadcast.
And probably not what people thought.
But again, this is what's bringing you that other thing that so many people are discussing.
And to some, it's kind of like right out in the open, in your face, ha ha ha, we're going to do what we want.
In a way, I think that's true.
That's not what we're going to focus on.
This, to me, is way more offensive.
That's Jason Bermas, not Johnny Nonsense.
Johnny Nonsense loves it.
So this is a little Pfizer three plus minute spa.
I'm sure I'll be stopping many a time using awesome words that we love here on the program.
Giant nonsense loves anyway.
Such as sustainability.
Well, health and sustainability.
I haven't heard that before. To advance health equity, diverse partners must come together to identify the barriers to better health.
So in the first 11 seconds, we needed diversity and equity because they're barriers to better health for humanity, apparently.
I mean, Jesus. Take concrete action against them and work towards sustainable change.
Sustainable change. So in the first 15 seconds, the three key words.
We're right there, dancing in your face.
Health equity is really about, in a sense, turning the tables that so many of our folks face in terms of health challenges.
For LGBTQ elders, for example, there are serious health disparities that result from the stress and difficulty of growing up as a disadvantaged and discriminated against person.
So apparently...
I mean, did you hear that?
This is what Pfizer just told you.
Johnny Nonsense might agree with that assessment.
Jason Burmis didn't hear any type of diagnosis for any type of disease or condition or ailment these people may have had from another group of human beings based on how they were treated.
And how they felt about it.
Did anybody hear that?
Am I like out of it?
Is that troubling to say?
Is that problematic? Like what scientific diagnosis do you have?
What conditions?
Because of a lifestyle that basically caused more mental stress than others?
And there's just so many discriminated classes these days that that's absurd.
And when we talk about, I mean, talk about first world nonsense and privilege in this country.
Again, too good for too long.
Go talk to the people in the salt mines.
Alright? Go talk to those people.
In the lithium mines.
Go talk to those low level people that work for the cartel.
You know, out in the fields.
Go have a conversation.
See how tough their life's been.
I wonder if they're suffering from the same ailments.
So let's continue.
This is the collective. And again, I hit all of them right away.
Diversity, equity, sustainability.
Advancing health equity for my community has so many layers.
It means for the 10 million Hispanics that were uninsured as recent as 2020, it's making sure that they have access to healthcare, to healthcare providers, to medication.
It's making sure that our communities participate actively in clinical trials.
Now, hold on, we're going to bring it back a second.
Again, I don't like to really make a lot of comments on one's physical appearance, but would you trust anybody with those eyebrows?
My God! Look at those things.
Look at those! Would you trust anybody with those damn eyebrows?
Johnny Nonsense would.
He's like, those are the best brows ever!
That guy. And as far as I know, look.
Again, I don't like that people are uninsured, but if they are insured or they are part of the system, and they do have health care from something, I'd like them to have a choice of the medications they're given.
And I wouldn't want that choice to be driven by financial incentives of large pharmaceutical companies that get to advertise across the board.
Let alone have any type of government immunity for some of their products.
Is that common sense?
I mean, or is that the guy?
Can we get 150 thumbs up?
Can we do it, Burmese Brigade?
Alright, let's continue on.
This is The Collective, everybody.
Oh boy. To me, health equity requires a partnership with the government, with the private sector, with the faith-based organizations to make sure that everybody has equal access health outcomes that allow us to live a happy and productive life.
Equal access health outcomes?
What does that even mean?
Healthy and productive life?
Now, I'm going to look at these people, okay?
And again, I'm not trying to slam anybody.
I'm not trying to slam the viewers.
I'm a little out of shape myself.
I could lose easily 20 to 30 pounds.
But I mean, when you're looking at these people, like the first two people in the front, maybe the left, a gentleman in the back, Do they look at the apex of health?
I'd say it's like a 50-50 crowd looking kind of healthy for their age.
50-50. But this idea of equality of outcome, let's be adults.
Can we be adults for a second?
We all know that rich people get better health care because they can afford it.
It sucks. But it's reality.
And we also know that over the last 20 to 30 years, medical bills and procedures, sometimes of obviously a very necessitative nature that, you know, we were initially doing cheaply for decades, have gone through the roof and can be economically and financially crippling.
Crippling. Okay.
Let's continue with the collective.
The Pfizer Multicultural Health Equity Collective unites value-driven organizations to address the unique challenges historically excluded communities face.
When we started the collective, there was a disconnect between the community, especially the multicultural community, and the Pfizer enterprise.
Multicultural community and Pfizer enterprise.
Is this just word salad to me?
Or is it pure brilliance to Johnny Nonsense?
I mean, you can literally put any group in there, right?
You know, like transnational Eskimos.
I mean they're marginalized.
What is this? Don't we want everybody to be healthy as many people as pop?
Don't we just want a healthy populace no matter what the color of your skin is or what your gender is?
You know and obviously You know, as people age, if we were a benevolent society, we would want them to remain as healthy and comfortable as possible under optimal conditions.
Again, no matter what color they were, or what language they spoke, or what gender they identified as.
What the hell am I watching?
Seriously. So the collective was created to create a relationship with the multicultural community, meeting the community where they are, and then working in partnership together to achieve health equity.
Being a part of this collective has expanded our reach.
It has shown us what our partners are doing, what their best practices are in achieving health equity.
The collective has helped our organization advance health equity by providing the resources that are needed that sometimes may not be within communities of color.
So you see now we're outside of communities of color.
It's health equity and This is the normalization of what, in that NASA document, is the end of the haves and have-nots.
Everybody's going to be streamlined in the system.
Period. And the Have Everythings are going to decide if these people get their way.
I hope there is enough of a resistance that we start saying that, you know what, maybe Pfizer doesn't sponsor college football, the NFL, the NBA, the NCAA. Maybe.
You tell me?
Is that too wild?
Is it? Should we get Big Pharma off television?
That's Jason Bermas.
That's not Johnny Nonsense.
Partnering through the collective and working with other groups allows the community health centers to be at the table on some of the solutions that they can bring to their community.
The most important part of the collective has been the trust that we have created with these organizations.
Our longevity, our showing up every time.
I mean, that's the trust.
I love having things directed at my skillet.
That's what I love. Johnny Nonsense loves...
Johnny Nonsense loves everything about this Bernaysian production, including the term The Collective.
What was I saying this morning, if you were listening?
All you premium members that may have heard me in the second hour talk about how this isn't really communism.
It's not even techno-fascism.
It's all those things, but it's really, at the end of the day, collectivism.
100%. Globalism, all of it.
Collectivism. This collectivist mentality.
And they literally call this the collective.
My goodness. And when they need us, them being there when we need them, has created a long-standing trust.
The best part of the collective, I think, is to convene leaders who are working on innovative programs to be able to help us help each other learn.
And I think that is the power of the collective.
The Collective provides a space for multicultural leaders to explore unique challenges within underserved communities and collaborate to create solutions that support improved health and to deliver quality, equitable care.
So again, quality, equitable care, The Collective.
Alright guys.
You know, I may actually save a bunch of this for tomorrow morning.
and Go over cuz I only I had let me see how many other commercials I had I had to go through I had the AstraZeneca one I had one more Pfizer two more Let's see two more Pfizer's three more Pfizer's four more Pfizer's five more Pfizer's Wow Yeah, I had five more Pfizer's there I've got one two more Pfizer's There.
So we have seven more Pfizer's.
Nope. This is what we're going to do.
I want everybody to come on over to Rockfin Rumble.
Those links are down below.
If you're a subscriber on Rockfin, thank you so much.
I appreciate it. That's where I'd love you to come and watch the broadcast.
If you're not paying yet, don't worry.
We're still streaming this on Twitter, and we're still streaming it over on Rumble.
But please subscribe over on Rumble as well.
And by the way, if you just go follow me, On Rockfin, it'll be free in a day or two.
You know, everything we do, we give away for free eventually.
Even the premium second hour over at redvoicemedia.com.
But those that really want to support the broadcast, redvoicemedia.com slash Jason.
Redvoicemedia.com slash Jason.
Lock it in for a year. A hundred bucks for the year.
Cuts out, you know, twenty bucks.
If you're hesitant, try me out for a week.
For a dollar. For a dollar, you can try me out for a week.
Redvoicemedia.com slash Jason.
So we're going to end the feed over on YouTube alone because it's just too risky.
And we're going to start with what a joke SNL made about all this.
I mean, they really... When I saw this...
I couldn't believe it was actually a skit.
It's two and a half minutes of pure gold.
If you haven't seen it yet, it's the...
I don't even want to say the word because I don't want to get in trouble.
It's a parody of where we are.
And we're still under this whole Pfizer system.
So YouTube, I love you.
But we're going to have to see you on the flip side.
Okay, everybody else over on the platforms that we have kept with.
So this is a COVID commercial where you purposely get COVID because it's not a big deal and you just want to get away from people that you can quarantine yourself.
It's become a huge joke.
They're laughing in your face.
Are you feeling tired and worn down?
Sick of the endless grind at work?
Exhausted by your family, desperate for some peace and quiet?
Then ask your doctor about COVID. By simply getting COVID, you're guaranteed a five and sometimes even 10-day vacation from all of life's problems.
I needed a break, just some time away from everyone.
So my doctor suggested I get COVID and it was the greatest week of my life.
All I wanted was to sit on the good part of the couch and watch the Netflix I want to watch.
And I was finally able to, thanks to COVID. Again, now they're advertising it as something you actually want to get.
But don't worry.
They'll still throw in the, you know, please take five of the shots on there.
You notice how we kept away on the YouTube from talking about the boop boop.
We didn't even want to say COVID-1984.
I wanted to be really, really careful.
Really, really careful.
But here you go.
I mean, check this out.
They're laughing in your face now.
At first I was worried about getting COVID, but my doctor assured me it's fine now.
I'm triple vaxxed. Quadruple if you count HPV. So it's my time to shine.
Side effects of COVID include having COVID, which is still kind of bad, but doesn't it seem different now?
I definitely got sick.
But I also got paid for 10 days to never leave a blanket.
Plus, I got a great story I could tell people at work.
It was like I had a bad cold for three days.
And of course I had to isolate from my three kids because I didn't want to get them sick.
But what do they eat?
I gave it 14 days to be extra safe.
And for an extra fee, we'll knock out the Wi-Fi near your house so you can't do any zooms.
Oh, well, too bad!
Again, it's a hilarious joke now.
It's a hilarious joke.
Well, I promise you the clip that I'm going to play at the very end, and this is what I ended with on today's broadcast on the premium side.
If, uh... If you're not premium, you haven't seen it yet.
Because it's not a joke to me.
And like I said, we got a lot more Pfizer stuff.
And I think that, again, I'm going to cue that up for tomorrow morning.
We're going to continue this. We're going to show you some of the celebrities that have gone the extra distance for Pfizer as well.
We're going to show you the CNN Thanksgiving.
But look, I mean, it's hilarious. COVID is the perfect way to get out of jury duty, cousin's wedding, friend's improv show, neighbor's adult baptism, and husband's murder trial.
At this point, COVID is basically a 10-day cruise, which is also a great way to get COVID. COVID isn't for everyone.
That's why there's also new COVID Always Positive Home Test, the only COVID test that comes with two pink lines already drawn on.
Again? But you just had it a week ago.
Please don't do this to me.
COVID. Because sometimes the only way to get mentally healthy is to get physically sick.
And sure, there might be long-term memory problems, but that would honestly be amazing because there's so much I want to forget.
My brain's already really bad.
If it gets 10% worse, but I don't have to talk to a single person for a week, I'll take that deal in a horse beat.
You mean a heartbeat. Either way, thanks, COVID. Thanks, COVID. Thanks, Bovid.
I think I'll get COVID again.
Today. COVID. Go ahead.
You deserve a break. So, in a way, funny, but dark and laughing in your face and especially as hardcore as NBC establishment media again brought to you by Pfizer brought to you by Pfizer brought to you by Moderna or AstraZeneca all this stuff work and how much propaganda they used against you to inject hate and lies into your life And still continue with this facade.
Because all this is still continually being pushed in the mainstream, guys.
Continually being pushed in the mainstream.
You know, one more.
We'll do one more.
And then I'm going to tell these people.
I'm going to let somebody else tell people how I feel about this COVID-1984 nightmare.
Okay, so this is just, you know, the celebrities going hard for the narrative.
And Pfizer. If this were the real COVID-19, I would be in real trouble, because I have asthma.
And I have depression.
I have diabetes.
And I struggle with my weight.
For us, COVID is a whole different ballgame.
In fact, you could be one of almost 200 million Americans with a high-risk factor that makes COVID even riskier.
Which is why you need to be ready.
And have a plan.
Other risk factors including heart disease or being inactive.
Even being over 50 or being a smoker can put you at serious risk.
Could that be you? Find out.
Go to noplangood.com and know your risk factors.
Then, make a plan.
Because if you get COVID on top of asthma, like I did, the last thing you want to do is wait and see.
Be ready. Have a plan.
And ask your doctor about treatment options that may help.
So, let me tell you something right now.
There weren't a plethora of treatment options.
In fact, there was a protocol of death and destruction.
We've talked about it on this program.
Remdesivir is a part of that.
The ventilators were a part of it.
The isolation was a part of it.
Taking off your medications was a part of it.
It was the protocol. And some of us, including myself, lost a loved one to that protocol.
I've discussed it. Well, this woman right here lays it down better than I ever could.
And this is where we're going to end it, guys.
Thank you for those that did come over to Rockfin that are subscribing that way.
Redvoicemedia.com tomorrow morning.
Because I think I'm just going to get rid of my face here.
I'm going to let this person say it.
You don't need to see my reaction.
If you saw it this morning, you're going to know how I feel.
But I think this person is spot on and justified.
This is what justified anger looks like.
This is what somebody grounded in reality looks like.
Okay? That knows what they're talking about.
Okay? That's all I'm going to say on that matter.
But we'll be back tomorrow.
8 a.m. Eastern, across all the platforms.
I absolutely love you guys.
And this is not a right-of-the-left issue, and it never, ever has been.
So, anybody heard about Kristen the Piston?
Anybody heard about how my father was murdered with remdesivir?
Has anybody heard about how the hospital called me and blamed me and my mom because we weren't vaccinated and that was the reason he died?
Anybody heard about how they put my dad on palliative care and they never fed him and they starved him to death?
And they only gave him one can of Ensure in nine days?
Anybody hear about that?
Anybody hear about how they put my dad in bilateral restraints, restrained him against his will and pumped him full of remdesivir against his and his family wishes while they called me and pardoned me and told me he was dying?
Because I wouldn't take the vaccine!
Has anyone heard this story?
Anyone? You heard this story yet?
You heard about how my dad was murdered in a worse way than people on death row!
Do you hear me?
People on death row are treated more humanely than my father.
He wasn't able to use a goddamn phone!
Are you listening to me?
You know, people want me to act all nice about this shit, man.
Fuck you! Fuck you!
This shit is bullshit!
They murdered my father!
They injected him with poison!
They lied to me! They blamed me!
You want me to act normal, sit here and make videos like everything's okay, so we can watch Rebel News go up to Albert Borla and do nothing!
Nothing! Is that what you want?
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