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May 17, 2021 - The Delingpod - James Delingpole
53:19
'Nina'
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Welcome to the DellingPod with me, James DellingPole.
And I know I always say I'm very excited about this week's special guest, but I think this one is going to be an absolute stunner.
I I think she's got a really important message that needs to get out.
It's urgent.
Her name is Nina.
She works in a doctor's surgery and she's seen at first hand the truth about people's reaction to these so-called vaccines.
So Nina, I'm going to mainly leave all the speaking to you because your story, I've heard little snippets of it, is extraordinary.
So tell me first of all about the place you work and your background.
It's a large GP practice in the north of England and yeah, we have lots and lots of patients, about 20,000.
So it's pretty intense and there's easily over 1,000 calls a day we're receiving.
That's a lot.
A thousand calls a day.
So many.
I mean, sometimes it's beyond that.
It's like fifteen, sixteen hundred.
It's pretty crazy.
Your ears must be burning by the end of the day.
With that many calls.
Absolutely.
It is the most intense job I've ever had.
And what are they all... That's obviously not the normal level of calls.
What's the normal level?
Pre-Covid.
I mean, on like, in like, well, Mondays and Fridays are obviously busier.
But like midweek, 500 would be a busy day.
Right.
So this is at least double what you'd normally get?
Beyond, yeah.
I mean, all the staff are completely, not just the receptionists, but all the clinicians are completely exhausted by the volume of calls and adverse reactions, specifically.
Well, this is the thing, isn't it?
You're about to tell me that these calls are not routine calls.
These are calls about adverse reactions to the Covid jab that we're told is perfectly safe.
Absolutely.
I mean, obviously, because sometimes it doesn't necessarily happen immediately, although with the very old people it does happen very quickly.
Mostly because it's not immediate that they aren't connecting it.
But these are people, and I've been purposely focusing on Patients that were previously well.
They may have had an underlying health condition, say asthma or diabetes or something like that.
But it was stable, it was controlled and the health was relatively stable.
To suddenly, sometimes quite serious, decline.
And do you know all these people?
Not personally, no.
I mean, I know some of them, obviously, because you do have people that, you know, phone a lot.
Yeah.
So sometimes it is the same people, but... I mean, when they first started rolling the vaccine out in care homes, I mean, I noticed that straight away.
Pretty much like immediate deaths of quite a lot of old people.
Really?
Yeah.
So that's when I first thought, ah, yeah, there's something not right about all this.
I mean, to be honest, I thought it was bullshit before, um, the whole, the whole COVID thing.
So... Right.
That, I was already suspicious of that whole narrative.
So then when that started happening and I was witnessing it, it just kind of, um, it changed everything for me.
Out of interest, what made you suspicious about the Covid narrative?
Well, actually, it was initially just the videos coming out of Wuhan of people collapsing on the streets and things like that.
It just looked like total theatre to me.
So, when everyone was freaking out about that, I just took a step back and, as it kind of came over here, I could see that we weren't getting the volume of calls that we were expecting.
Ah, that's interesting.
So I thought we would be completely inundated, but no.
And also, I've got quite close connections to people that work in the local hospital, which serves a big northern town.
And their hospitals were completely empty.
Right.
So, given that that's the case, Why is it that all the people who spoke for the NHS, all the doctors and nurses we saw were interviewed by the BBC, why did they all come up with this story about how they were being overwhelmed and stuff?
I've got no idea.
I think they scared people to the point where people just weren't, they were purposefully keeping away.
So they were cancelling appointments and they weren't going to A&E as readily as they were before.
Right.
So, you know, when I know that first hand, you know, I often drive around the perimeter of a local hospital, especially now, and there's nothing going on.
Right.
Right.
So every week we were supposed to clap for our NHS.
Yeah.
And meanwhile, these hospitals that are supposed to be filled with angels working their butts off.
Yeah.
This was not strictly true, was it?
Or at least not in your local hospital.
No, certainly not.
I mean, well, they had time for TikTok dances, so that's how busy they were.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A lot of top quality TikTok videos.
And of course, those things required rehearsals as well.
Absolutely.
Some of them were quite complicated as well.
Yeah, I mean, we shouldn't laugh because actually this is just, this is so, so depressing.
I mean, I think you've got to though, James.
I mean, it's got to such a ridiculous point now that how can you not?
Oh, well, I agree.
Dark laughter is the only...
The only rational response.
So I'm fascinated, obviously, I think a lot of listeners will be, about what you've personally witnessed.
Because, okay, so you said that they started rolling out the so-called vaccine, which isn't a vaccine, and they started in the old people's homes.
So you would have had clients of the surgery in these old people's homes, is that right?
Absolutely, yes.
And so, what are we talking?
People are dying within days of getting the jab, or what?
Well, I mean, there was quite a few, you know, like 80 plus.
Yeah.
That received vaccinations in like mid-January.
Yeah.
And then within two weeks they were dead.
Right.
And do you know anything about the health condition of these people?
I mean, if you're in an old people's home, you're going to be fairly frail, aren't they?
But were these on their way out or not?
Not, obviously not all.
Some, some were, but they've also, what I found outrageous was the DNR, the Do Not Resuscitate orders that they were slapping on so many people, all the care home residents.
And vulnerable disabled adults.
Where were these DNR notices coming from?
Well, I mean, they were put on the patient notes.
By whom?
By the doctor.
So the individual doctor who was charged with those patients?
Yeah.
um he he or she slapped a dnr yeah and then when they started so when they began to deteriorate in the care homes as a result of the vaccination yeah They then put them on the pathway, the end of life care pathway, which is Midazolam, and I mean that just sees you off so quickly.
The amount of times I've been in tears when I've come home, it's just really sad and distressing to be a part of, and I'm ashamed of being a part of it as well.
And tell me why you feel ashamed of what you think is being done wrong here.
Well, everything.
I mean, it's just...
The surgery's just become basically a COVID health service, that's it.
They're not really bothered about anything else.
Is that right?
So if I were in your area and I had, I don't know, I was about to say a nasty cough, but that wouldn't work because that would be like COVID.
But if I had, I don't know, a gammy leg, they wouldn't be interested.
Well, everyone is assessed over the telephone or via video call now.
Yeah.
But we do have patients that don't even have a landline.
So what do they do?
Because we've shut the doors, they can't get in.
So when they do turn up, which they do, some do, try to get in, we have an intercom system and we were told to tell them to go away.
So you've had sick people lurking outside, you're desperate for treatment and they've been turned away?
Yeah.
By our NHS.
By me, you know.
By you.
Yeah.
I can see why that's personally upsetting for you.
Yeah.
That's horrible.
So it doesn't make me feel great, obviously.
No.
Well, I can imagine.
Yeah, yeah.
And this is one of the main reasons why I'm doing this now.
Well, it's very brave of you.
I mean, I'm going to ask you in a minute why you think, given why more people aren't speaking out.
We'll come to that in a moment.
But, I mean, My understanding of when you go to see the doctor, a key part of that process is face-to-face encounter with examination, which gives the doctor the chance to, well, examine you.
I mean, absolutely, the chance of a misdiagnosis happening is so high.
Yeah.
It's terrifying, and things are getting missed, and obviously the enormous backlog that the NHS now has.
I mean, it's disastrous.
Actually, I'll ask you about untreated, undiagnosed conditions in a moment, but I just wanted to ask you more about the care homes first.
There is very much a propaganda machine, I guess you'd call it, which is defending the NHS, denying that the vaccines are anything Other than a miracle.
Nurses are angels and so on and so forth.
I imagine that people will say, well it's just a coincidence that these old people died within, what, how many days of the vaccine generally?
A couple of weeks in some cases.
Obviously some ongoing deteriorations.
Yeah.
Which eventually kills them.
Right.
But generally, what are you finding?
How quick is the reaction to the... It can be.
Well, we've had a few that it was pretty much within 12 hours.
Right.
But that's not...
A common occurrence.
So it would be more common for it to be like a week or two weeks.
Two weeks seems to be the magic number for some reason.
Right.
And what sort of, when you have deterioration, what are the most common reactions to the vaccine?
Heart problems.
For some reason, like, infected legs and, like, really awful things like that.
Headaches, obviously, but, like, severe, debilitating headaches.
Yeah, just lots of heart things.
And also, as well, much more recently, because they've been vaccinating much younger people.
Yep.
Menstrual problems.
What kind of... So, obviously, this is for the younger people, yeah.
Well, no, I'm talking about, you know, like, ladies that have maybe gone through menopause, so mid to late 50s, that perhaps haven't had a period for, I don't know, five years, suddenly begin to menstruate again.
So, I mean, that really scared me.
Obviously, because I'm a woman, but, like, what is it actually doing?
Because I don't think it's that they're becoming fertile again, is it?
No, absolutely not.
It's damage of some kind.
Right.
How many... So, I had to guess, how many of these cases have you had?
Oh, many, many.
Don't forget, we have 20,000 patients.
20,000.
So, are we talking hundreds?
20,000 patients.
20,000.
So are we talking hundreds?
Yes, hundreds.
Oh, really?
And so you get to hear about this, what, because they call up the surgery?
We have to ask them, you know, well, give a brief description as to why they want the call.
Yeah.
So we have to take booking notes for that.
Right.
So that's how we find out the basic information.
So you get confidential details?
Yes.
But then I often go back and check after they've had the phone consultation what the outcome was.
And what do they say?
Well, the doctor's office, not all patients, but some patients will suggest it was as a result of the vaccine.
And that is always noted.
Yeah.
If it's mentioned.
But then the doctor will always manage to convince them it isn't.
Really?
Yeah.
There's only been, I think, one Yellow Card report, from my knowledge anyway, just one.
So, just confirm this.
You're saying that hundreds of, presumably you haven't started vaccinating People below their 40s, so you are talking mostly sort of middle-aged.
Yes.
Well, post-menopausal women.
Yes.
And you're saying that hundreds of them have had sort of periods coming back after they've had the menopause.
Yeah.
And they've gone to the doctor, and this is, I can't imagine that any of them, this thing happens normally, and they've gone to the doctor, and the doctor has said, this has nothing to do with the vaccine.
Yeah.
But given the doctors have dealt with hundreds of these cases, they must know that what they're saying is not true.
Well, they get paid a lot of money.
Yes, what is the deal with that, actually?
Am I right in thinking that doctors get a sort of vaccine bonus?
Yeah, they get money every time they vaccinate somebody.
Right.
What do they get, you know?
I don't know individual prices, but I think for the Covid one, it's probably about, I think I read it was about £15.
Right.
Per patient.
And I think it's more actually for care homes, I think that's about £25.
Do you think it's a fair enough inference to say that the doctors are lying?
I would say that that's what I think they're doing.
Because they... I mean, OK, if you had one or two patients with this problem, you'd think, well, it's a coincidence.
But hundreds?
No.
I think they are just doing what they're told.
And who's telling them?
Well, everything that... I think... I mean, I don't know because I'm not management, so I don't get access to that kind of information, but I'm assuming it's NHS England and the government directives.
I mean, I can't think where else it would come from.
And are you... Presumably you're giving both the Pfizer and the AstraZeneca stroke Oxford vaccine.
Yes.
Are those the two?
Yes.
And do you find any difference in the responses to these, or is it much of a muchness?
I would say there is more so with the AstraZeneca.
More problems?
Yeah, much more problems, yeah.
But generally, they're all causing problems.
Right.
So, okay, so going back to the other symptoms apart from the disrupted menstrual cycle.
Yeah, I've noticed as well quite a lot of falls, increased confusion, obviously breathing problems, post-vaccination shaking came up quite a few times, chest pains.
But also, I think it does something to... So, we were talking about what it does to ladies' cycles and things like that.
Yeah.
But I also think it does things to men as well.
Lots of prostate things are appearing all of a sudden.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
What sort of swollen...?
Prostate tumours and... Because don't forget, you know, these people have been vaccinated, a lot of them, for a few months now.
Yes.
Some, you know, some since December in the care homes.
That was when we started doing some of those.
So, you know, it's becoming more apparent.
So some of these problems are arising months after the vaccine?
Yeah.
That's interesting.
And different, in different forms.
So you might get headaches at the beginning and then sort of... Yeah, yeah.
Prostate later.
Yeah.
And also eye problems as well.
Right.
That's another thing.
What kind of eye problems?
Just deterioration of sight, sometimes blindness.
You've had people go blind?
In one eye, yeah.
That's quite a big deal.
What, permanently blind?
In one eye, well, so far, yes.
Whoa.
Um, okay.
So you've had, you've had patients Also, and this is awful James, I don't want to say this, but lots of like blood in stools, people that just start soiling themselves for no reason, that weren't doing that before.
So I think, you know, the damage it's doing, it's not just doing to the heart, the brain, it's all over.
It's all over.
I really am shocked, actually.
What sort of age group are we talking, or is it across the board?
Well, obviously, initially it was very old, but obviously that age is now coming right down.
I mean, there was a 30-year-old lady I spoke with the other day, Who very recently, I mean, she's got some health problems, but not related to what she told me on the phone.
So she had this, she had the Pfizer one actually, and then the next day she had a massive lump that just appeared on her neck, which is still there.
So these are things that are just appearing on people's bodies, like big lesions, lumps, infected legs.
I mean, it is crazy.
And they're rolling their sleeves up and demanding more, which is the craziest part of it all.
Because they don't imagine that it was the jab that did it or is it because of a sort of out of a sense of public duty?
I just think that I think there's a little bit of public duty going on and you know that also links in with You know, the virtue signaling that goes along with that.
Being a hero type of shit.
Yeah.
You know, there's loads of that going on.
But I've noticed that in my colleagues.
They think they're heroes and it makes me sick.
Does it?
They think they're heroes merely for working for the NHS?
Yeah.
Right, because they brought into the government's narrative.
They frightened everyone.
There's very few people that I associate with that think it's, you know, bullshit.
Really?
What, they're all genuinely scared that if they don't get this vaccine they'll die?
Yeah, and I thought these were intelligent people.
Right.
But no.
They watch the BBC News and they don't do their own research or... It's... They're just blind.
Right.
Right, so you mentioned the 30-year-old woman.
Have you had any sort of younger people dying of these vaccines?
Not yet, but we've not really.
Gone below the 40s yet.
Right.
So, I'm pretty sure we'll see that soon.
But yeah, we've had, like, 43-year-olds passed away, um... Are you saying... Well, I mean, I call that young.
That is young.
Well, it's younger than me.
Well, yeah.
So, you've had a 43-year-old die?
Yeah, 54, 62, 24.
What?
Yeah.
You've had a 24-year-old die?
- You've had a three year old die.
- Yeah, 54, 62, 24. - What? - Yeah.
- You've had a 24 year old die? - Yeah.
I think that person was disabled.
Right.
Like physically disabled, in a wheelchair.
Yeah.
And their parents thought it would be a good idea to give that poor person this vaccination.
Right.
And was that disabled person somebody who had a DNR order put on them, or was that...?
Yes, I think they did, yes.
Because this is one of the weird, I mean I'm quite surprised by this, it genuinely does seem to be, do not resuscitate labels seem to be attached to disabled people.
Yeah.
Which is, I'm sorry, it's like something out of Dr. Mengele.
Out of Dr Mengele?
Yeah.
But do these patients know that they've got do not resuscitate things being stuck onto their files?
Some do.
Some consent to it.
Especially the older people in care homes.
But quite often there's been a few cases where The family have found out about it and, obviously, they've not been happy.
Well, why?
And they've made that clear and they've had it removed and, you know, I applaud those families.
So the do not resuscitate thing means that, what, you get put on this kind of pathway towards death?
Yes.
And get given the drug?
They basically speed it up.
They don't try to slow it down, they just speed it up.
Right.
OK.
So, you've had... So, tell me about some of these people under 50 dying.
What are the... Do they have underlying conditions or what?
Well, obviously that person did, that was 24.
that was 24. - Yes. - But there was a 36 year old and a 43 year old that died recently, which I believe was as a result of the AstraZeneca.
Yes.
They both had the same vaccine.
And they both got swollen feet.
Then the next thing was they couldn't walk.
Then severe headaches.
A&E trips with said problems.
And then they died in hospital.
Did they?
Yeah.
And do we know what they died of?
Well, we'll probably put COVID, won't we?
I don't know.
Yes, they probably will.
Yes, they probably will.
Well, what I mean is, what was the kind, yeah, we suspect it.
I don't know.
We don't get access to death certificates, so we don't really see them.
But that's really frightening.
Those are young people.
And were they otherwise healthy, as far as you know?
As far as I'm aware, yeah.
They weren't known to me.
So you have people that phone up regularly that you actually get to know.
And the people that have passed away were unknown to me.
So, yeah.
The fact that they both had swollen feet developing after the vaccine seemed to indicate to me that this is not some random thing that appeared from the blue.
And, okay, so how much of this stuff is being reported to Yellow Card System by the doctors?
Well, like I said, as far as I'm aware, one.
One?
One.
And that was because the family insisted on it.
They basically said to the doctor, if you don't do it, then we will.
Right.
So all the others, all these... I mean, give me an idea of the number of deaths have been.
I wouldn't... Hundreds.
I suppose in a practice, I mean, that sounds a lot to me.
Adverse reactions?
Thousands.
Thousands?
Thousands and thousands.
And none of these are being reported?
No.
But whose job is it, out of interest, to report these adverse reactions and deaths?
Well, I mean, anybody can, a member of the public can do it, but if, you know, if you're dealing with a patient who's, because lots of them have, you know, stated they think it's as a result of the vaccine, so the patients have told the doctor that's what they think it is.
Yeah.
And the doctor basically reassures them, placates them, convinces them it's nothing, it's not connected, nothing to do with it.
And do you think that that might have the effect of persuading these people not to report it?
Yes, because people trust doctors.
I don't anymore, obviously.
Yes, that must have been an eye-opener for you.
I mean, I have to say, I've been through the same process.
I actually...
I'm actually scared of going to see my doctors now because I don't trust them.
No.
Me neither.
And I think we're right not to.
Right.
But it's not as though the medical profession is a kind of magnet for immoral or evil people, is it?
Something's clearly happened to people who presumably became medics out of a sense of vocation.
Yeah.
I think, well, Not, the clinicians aren't, like the nurses and, you know, at that level they're not paid particularly well, but the doctors certainly are.
Yes.
And they like to spend money on, you know, flash cars and, so we've got, we've got, you know, GPs in our practice that are in flashy, you know, big Range Rovers and things like that, so they love money.
Right.
Right.
So there's you.
Who else is sceptical in your practice?
Only really a couple of others, but none of the clinicians, just my colleagues that I work directly with, really.
So, none of the doctors, none of the nurses?
There is one doctor that looks like she's going to have a nervous breakdown.
Yeah.
She looks like she might crack.
Right.
But other than that, they all seem to be quite enjoying.
They don't want it to go back to the way it was before.
Because they don't have to see any of those curfewed patients?
Yeah, I mean, you sometimes go into the room to get, like, a prescription signed or something like that, and they've just got their feet up on the desk, you know.
Really?
Yes!
Really?
Laughing all the way to the bank.
Totally.
That must be like a horrible thing to see.
They all disgust me.
Do they?
Yes.
Yes, well, I can see why you're speaking out.
I mean, that is really shocking.
Yeah, I've just had enough, James.
I've got to the point where I just feel like I'm going to go mad if I don't say something.
And what do you think?
Do they try and persuade you to have a jab yourself?
Yes.
But I haven't.
You'll be proud of me, James.
I've not won.
Were you put under pressure to take the jab?
Yes.
My job was threatened very briefly.
And how did the threat disappear?
Because I just said that's illegal.
I can't do that.
Ah, well done.
Yes, that's a good one.
And I said that's coercion and if it means that I'll lose my job, fine.
Well done.
And so... Has everyone else had a jab?
Most of them.
There's only a couple of us that haven't.
And the other ones that haven't, do they work with you in reception?
Yes.
So you've obviously talked about this?
Yes.
Because there must be... Well, I mean, after what you've told me, I'm amazed that anybody who works in a doctor's surgery would get the vaccine themselves.
I mean, I do hear that there is quite a... There is some resistance, isn't there, among doctors and nurses to taking this thing?
Well, not from my perspective, but... I know quite a few people that work in care homes.
Yeah.
And they're not going for it.
Presumably that means they're going to lose their jobs because it's going to be made compulsory, isn't it?
Oh, I didn't know that, is it?
Oh, right, well... I think so.
I think the government has issued a new edict that it's made it illegal.
Right, so that's fucking terrible.
Yes.
Yes.
And you told me something else about... in a previous conversation we had about the effect that these jabs have on people, that they become kind of... Different people.
Different people.
Is that true?
Certainly from what I've seen, it's like neurological damage, that's the only way I could describe it really.
It's like they're not as on the ball in their jobs and they seem very distracted and just not.
Just different.
Like talking to a different person.
These are what, your fellow receptionists or what?
No, no, no, the clinicians.
The clinicians?
Yeah.
And also as well, just to go back to when the vaccination rollout happened for healthcare workers.
Yeah.
So they all went and had the job and they were all off.
There was so much sickness.
Was there?
Yeah.
Do we know what?
Headaches again?
Yeah, just like very severe flu-like symptoms but also one of my colleagues had like a big lump under her armpit and another one had like a big lump at the site of the injection, like a tennis ball, like a big lump.
Yeah.
And I'm just looking at everyone thinking that they're all mad.
I just...
It's funny, actually.
I had an example of this.
I do this online exercise class.
And you see, you know, the person who's in charge of the class asks how everybody is.
And there was somebody who had a really badly swollen arm.
And it had been swollen for two or three days.
And time was, you showed great sympathy for this person with this, you know, like, that's not normal.
But very much the attitude I noticed was, oh yeah, well, you know, you'll live with it, soldier on.
I was thinking, there is some weird thing they're putting in the water that's making us all accept the unacceptable.
Yeah, I think everyone's drunk the Kool-Aid apart from us, James.
It's so weird, isn't it?
It is so weird.
I feel like an alien.
Because I don't wear masks and I don't socially distance from the people that I love.
Yes.
I cuddle them.
So... Yes.
I hugged my mother when it was illegal to do so.
When Michael Gove hadn't given me permission.
But that's the kind of devil-may-care I am.
That's the guy I am.
So, you've seen... When you say clinician, is that the same as a doctor?
Doctors, nurses... So, they obviously did have the jab.
They didn't just have a kind of placebo or anything?
No, that's the celebrity vaccine, James.
Does it exist?
I believe so.
Have you not seen that letter that was circulating on Twitter about two or three weeks ago?
And somebody had had the vaccination and then a few days later received a letter from the Surgery scene.
There's been some kind of error and you were given a saline solution.
So you need to come back and have your... I definitely want... I want the celebrity.
I have one of those.
I totally will.
I'll even have one of those intramuscular ones you get in your bottom.
If that's the price I have to pay for...
Well, they were on about anal swabs at one point, so what's the difference?
They were on about... I think that was... I think the whole anal swab thing was a... the Chinese just playing us, as they have been throughout this particular...
Yeah, mocking us, yeah.
Mocking us, yeah.
How much will the stupid guilo take before they call us out on our bullshit?
And apparently a lot more will take before we call them out.
So, well, you must be very unhappy in your job.
Yes, extremely.
I mean, you must feel a bit like the angel of death, having all these people coming in.
I just feel like a complete hypocrite because of my beliefs.
Well, and what is going to happen... I imagine this surgery is putting... is eager now for younger blood.
It's going to be targeting pregnant women and children?
Oh, absolutely.
Yeah, they can't wait.
They can't wait.
Because I suppose actually 20,000 times, say, £15 is... Very profitable.
Yeah, very profitable.
Yeah.
I mean, that's what... Is that £300?
£1,000?
Yeah.
I think it is.
It's a lot anyway.
That's pretty good.
And are the patients given any indication that there may be side effects when they come in and take these vaccines?
I mean... No.
They are not given full informed consent.
Right.
They tell them that they might have soreness at the side, you know, a bit of a dead arm, cold flu symptoms, but that's it.
Right.
They don't say, you know, your legs might swell up and your brain might explode, because if they did, people wouldn't take it.
They'd walk out.
Oh, and we've had a few that have just collapsed as soon as they've had it and ended up being taken to hospital.
Really?
Yeah.
Is there not any... Surely word of mouth must give... Is word of mouth not happening?
Well, I mean, it is for me.
I'm trying to wake everybody up, but they don't want to listen.
I think there's a lot of cognitive dissonance going on.
Yes.
To the point where they're not even thinking in terms of reality anymore.
I don't think they're connected to reality.
I was going to say, from what you were saying earlier about if people are genuinely Fearful of death if they don't get the jab.
Yeah.
I can imagine them coming like, I don't know, like sort of hurling themselves gratefully off the cliff like those Japanese on that Pacific island in the war.
Oh yeah, they love it.
On Okinawa.
They love it and then, you know, they've had the first one and then they were constantly phoning, you know, when are we going to have the second one?
Really?
They're that enthusiastic?
Oh yeah, absolutely.
Right.
I mean, I was shocked at how many people went for it.
Right.
And here you are, speaking from the North.
I'd always thought that the North was a place of... No nonsense, yes.
...robust common sense.
Yes.
You'd think, wouldn't you?
You really would, actually.
But no, I'm definitely in the minority here.
Right.
But my partner's on the same page as me, which helps, obviously.
You are so lucky.
Yeah.
You have no idea how much division this has caused within families.
Yeah, I know, I know.
It's so sad.
It is.
It's so needless as well.
That's what really sticks in my craw, because there's no reason for this to be even happening.
Yeah.
Yes, no, well, because you think the vaccine is unnecessary?
Completely unnecessary.
Because what you've seen is that this is presumably no worse than any other... It's so toxic.
I don't know what the hell is in it.
Well, you can kind of find out what's in it, but is that what's in it?
You know, I even question that.
And what happens... Say I was a member of your... What are they called?
Customers?
No, what are we called?
Patients?
Patients, yeah.
Suppose I was a patient at your surgery and you contacted me for the vax and I said no.
What would happen?
We'd just code it as declined.
Right.
And that's it, you wouldn't hear from us again.
But I personally have received many, many.
I've received two letters, four text messages within a few weeks.
Are you a patient at your practice?
No, no, not where I work, no, thankfully.
So the practice where you're a patient has been much more proactive in trying to get you to take the vaccine?
It would seem so.
We don't seem to employ such, you know, bully boy tactics, but yeah.
And if you've turned down the, I keep mistakenly calling it a vaccine, which it isn't, if you turn down the jab, do you get a sort of black mark against you or anything?
Well, not as far as I'm aware.
I don't know, you know, what goes on at management level.
Yeah.
They could well be.
I don't know.
But I also know that patients have been turned away from the local hospital for treatment because they've not had the vaccination.
Is that right?
And I've heard that directly from a person that was declined.
And what was their condition?
They were having just, like, the camera down the throat.
Yeah.
I don't know the term.
Endoscopy.
Endoscopy, that's the one.
And they basically got there, and then they were asked as to their vaccination status.
And they said, oh, I haven't had it.
So they said, I'm afraid you can't have the procedure.
Well, well, well.
But I've heard a few reports of that from patients on the phone as well.
And, um, what I haven't asked you about is, have you, has there been a kind of increase in cancer deaths from people who've hadn't been, had their cancer spotted in time because of, you know, for obvious reasons?
Well, we don't get to read the death certificate, you know, the reason for death.
Yeah.
So, I wouldn't like to say, but symptom-wise, yes.
What do you mean symptom-wise?
Well, you know, like the signs of certain types of cancer.
Obviously, you know, chest problems, lung cancers and things like that.
Also, lots of prostate problems.
And then somebody died quite recently who was in his mid-sixties.
But that, he'd had a prostate issue many, many years ago.
Yeah.
Then had the vaccination and it killed him within three weeks.
Oh right.
So it was like a really aggressive tumor that just returned from 20 years ago.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So that's another vaccine, another one to chalk up to the vaccine probably.
Yeah.
And do you get, Suicides seems to be something that one, there seems to be few records of this.
Oh my God.
The mental health problem is off the scale.
Is it?
The amount of calls we receive from suicidal patients.
Also, you know, family members concerned about They're the relative and their state of mind.
And yeah, we've had quite a lot of suicides as well.
Have you?
What, more than you'd have in a normal year?
A lot more.
A lot more.
Again, what numbers are we talking here?
Oof.
Hundreds again.
Hundreds of suicides?
Hundreds.
Really?
Yeah.
How do they kill themselves?
It's normally an overdose and there's lots of people that are actively trying to kill themselves as well.
We have so many people overdosing because we'll receive A&E reports.
Yeah.
So obviously we're front desk, we get the mail, we open the mail, we see the mail.
So we can see the A&E reports coming in and things of that nature.
Yeah, it's terrifying.
What are they taking?
What are they overdosing on?
It's normally antidepressants, so they're already, you know, maybe suffering from depression, so they're on medication.
Yeah.
And they'll just either store it up, maybe not take it for a little bit, and then take too many and overdose, purposely.
Right.
So, these are generally patients who have already shown, sort of, depressive tendencies.
Yeah, but I mean, that is huge.
The amount of patients that are taking antidepressants is huge.
What do you mean?
Has it increased in the last... Yes, definitely.
Definitely.
And people with, like, anxiety so bad they've not left the house since last March.
Right.
Because say if you had OCD anyway, and then this happened, it would push you over the edge in terms of hygiene and not wanting to get bugs or viruses or anything like that.
So, yeah, it's exploded.
Right.
And it's in very young people that as well.
That mental health kind of crisis... What age are we talking?
Oh, from like... We're even getting, you know, depressed ten-year-olds.
And are they being given antidepressants?
Some.
Obviously very mild ones.
So the doctors are just...
Churning out these antidepressant prescriptions?
Oh yeah, yeah.
Well, they'd rather do that than, you know, signpost you to therapy or, you know, something that would actually be meaningful and possibly help you deal with whatever trauma you've had in your life.
Right.
Which would be a better option, obviously.
One or two conclusions one can draw from this.
Either you are a crank who is determined to slur the good name of our NHS when actually what you're describing is completely unrepresentative of what's going in the country, or this is happening, because I can't imagine that you're atypical, or this is happening across the country.
It's got to be.
It has got to be.
Why are people like you so rare?
Because, I mean, there have been a few whistleblowers, but very few seem to... relatively few, given the scale of this.
Why is that?
I think people have bought... most people have bought the narrative.
I also think that most people don't do their own research.
So, I think those things couple together.
You know, most people are just fast asleep.
They just watch the telly.
I don't watch the telly, so... Yeah, I don't watch the news.
Well, I sometimes have a little listen to it on the radio, just to see what nonsense they're coming out with today, but I generally don't, you know, don't pay attention to mainstream media at all.
I think it's certainly the case that almost all the people of our persuasion don't touch the news.
I mean, I don't watch TV news, I don't read newspapers.
No, me neither.
So, yeah, I think there's just... people are scared, people are ignorant.
There's also a lot of very stupid people out there that don't question anything.
Yes, but as you said earlier, there are also quite a few intelligent people who are...
Yeah.
Falling for this?
Yeah, that's probably more scary, because, you know, you can understand the idiots not knowing, but... Yes.
Idiots will do what idiots will do.
Well, but yes, yes, I mean, very intelligent people who think that they're going to die.
But they've enjoyed, like, kind of, like, basking in the glory of, you know, being an NHS hero.
I've seen it in my colleagues.
Really?
They've actually bought into this?
Yeah.
I was embarrassed by it.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Have you encountered anyone else in the medical profession who you've been able to talk to about all this?
No.
You can't engage with them.
I mean, I've tested the water with a few.
Yeah.
You know, asked a few questions, and they've just shut me down, pretty much.
Because the last London march I went on, I saw some people, some women, in nurses' uniforms.
Yeah, I saw those ladies.
And I was very impressed with their courage.
Yeah, they're fantastic.
I'm presuming they were nurses.
I wish I'd had time to talk to them, but I imagine that... Are you going to any of the marches?
I plan to.
I haven't as yet, but I do plan to.
Because I... The 15th, I think, is... There are lots of marches, rallies, all over the country.
And I must say, I found my experiences at the London rally... You come away...
On a cloud, because you realise you're not alone.
Yeah, I can imagine.
They look amazing.
They are, and they're all such good people.
They are.
They're just... It's like, if you had to be exiled to an island, these are the people you'd want with you.
The best of the country.
Oh, I couldn't agree more.
Yeah, I couldn't agree more.
That's a brilliant way of looking at it.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I hope we can bring people round to the cause of truth.
So, finally, tell me, if somebody was considering having one of these vaccines, what would you say to them?
Well obviously I would say don't have it.
Just don't.
Or at least do some research into it first and then at least you'll be going in with full informed consent.
If you do want to still have it then at least you'll know all of the possible risks.
Yes.
And I'd also like to plead with anyone that's doing what I'm doing or even just adopting whatever in that industry to just please come forward and share your story because this cannot, it can't be hidden anymore.
What's happening in GP surgeries and hospitals, they've basically just shut the door on everybody else.
And people are dying as a result of that, as well as the vaccine.
It's, it's catastrophic, what's happening.
Yeah, yeah.
It's not, I imagine, what you thought you would be doing when you joined the NHS.
No, no.
Obviously I did it because I'm a caring, you know, I do care about people and I want to help people.
Yeah.
So that's initially why I chose to do that job.
Yeah.
But now I just feel like a complete hypocrite, and it just makes me uncomfortable and unhappy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm so sorry to hear that, but thank you so much for speaking out.
No problem, James.
Thank you for asking me.
And I think this will be widely shared, I hope.
Anyway, good luck.
Thank you.
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