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Oct. 4, 2025 - The Delingpod - James Delingpole
01:15:44
Mark Playne - Not on the Beeb

What was REALLY in those Covid shots? Writer, director, author, screenwriter and campaigner Mark Playne - aka Not On The Beeb - thought he’d ask AI and, amazingly, got to the bottom of it. Mark chats to James about his extraordinary findings, how he got AI to tell the scary truth and how it all started with an innocuous question about bath salts. Not On The Beeb: https://www.notonthebeeb.co.uk/ Books: https://www.wild-tales.co.uk/ai-i Glutathione info: https://www.notonthebeeb.co.uk/22 Herb Supplements and all things nice: https://www.mamma-nature.co.uk/↓ ↓ ↓Brand Zero is a small skincare and wellbeing business based in Nailsworth in the heart of Gloucestershire, with a strong eco-friendly, zero-waste, cruelty-free ethos. Brand Zero sells a range of wonderfully soothing natural skincare, haircare, toothcare and wellbeing products, mostly hand made, with no plastic packaging or harsh chemicals. All our products are 100% natural and packaged in recyclable or compostable tin, paper or glass. Discount code: JAMES10 www.brandzeronaturals.co.uk ↓ ↓ How environmentalists are killing the planet, destroying the economy and stealing your children's future. In Watermelons, an updated edition of his ground-breaking 2011 book, James tells the shocking true story of how a handful of political activists, green campaigners, voodoo scientists and psychopathic billionaires teamed up to invent a fake crisis called ‘global warming’.This updated edition includes two new chapters which, like a geo-engineered flood, pour cold water on some of the original’s sunny optimism and provide new insights into the diabolical nature of the climate alarmists’ sinister master plan.Purchase Watermelons by James Delingpole here: https://jamesdelingpole.co.uk/Shop/↓ ↓ ↓ Buy James a Coffee at:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/jamesdelingpole The official website of James Delingpole:https://jamesdelingpole.co.uk x

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Welcome to the Delling Pod with me, James Dellingpole.
And I know I always say I'm excited about this week's special guest, but before we meet him, let's have a word from one of our sponsors.
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Uh enjoy.
Welcome to the Delling Pod.
Mark Plane, aka not on the beeb.
You're on a boat.
What do you what do you do on a boat?
Living living cheaply.
Oh I see you live on a bo.
Well so tell me, what what is what is boat life like in the summer it's absolutely stunning.
It's amazing.
Um in the winter, it's more difficult, but I tend to be away in the winter.
So I c kind of coincide foreign travels with the worst months of the winter.
Yeah, that makes so are you on the are you on a sort of long boat type thing?
No, no, I'm on a old Air Sea rescue uh boat from World War II.
It's one of the launches that used to go out and rescue the Battle of Britain pilots when they kind of ditched in the sea.
So it's a bit of heritage.
Cool.
So it's an old beast, 60 foot long, kind of uh 15 foot wide.
So could you could you take the boat out to sea and stuff?
Um this she's old, so she's kind of river only, really.
But she she could if you could with a bit of strengthening.
And she could go to sea.
She was sea, she was totally seaworthy, but you would would need to kind of prepare specially for that.
But it's quite it it's quite exciting to think that that your boat might have rescued down pilots.
Yeah, it's amazing.
And uh it's quite the bit I've always liked about it is being on a a boat that was built for a war and yet was rescuing people.
It wasn't out there with big guns kind of a attack.
Those boats that were built for a fake war.
Oh that's another story.
That's another Well, you see, yeah, I I was so I was so into my World War II.
And I kind of wished I'd been there and which theatre would I have thought fought in and which arm of the services were would I have been on an Arctic convoy or would I have been a battle of Britain pilot or would I have been fighting the Jap across across a tennis court at at Kohima?
And now I'm thinking we were conned.
We were we were dragged into this war that was entirely unnecessary and planned by the same people, the same kind of people who are behind the uh safe and effective kill shots.
It's it's a stunning revelation, and I'm I'm kind of totally with you on that.
I went for exactly the same pattern, and then to find out, you know, when we think about you know, there's always the boats that kind of went for the D-Day for the rescue over to Britain small boats, and it's so kind of famous.
Oh, Dunkirk, you mean?
Dunkirk, yeah, sorry, Dunkirk, and all the people had the boats kind of got in their boats, and it was a civilian rescue of kind of soldiers.
But then when you find out that some of the key parts and those panzer tanks that were pushing forward were made by Ford in America.
And the Americans could have just shut down those key parts and the panzer tanks would have ground to a hole.
It's like, oh hang on, this this kind of changes the dynamics of it.
They wanted their war and they wanted it to go on a long time.
They didn't want any any uh uh early ceasefires or anything like that.
No, it was designed.
I mean, the Americans, you know, I was very, very lucky.
I had what must have been kind of what you call a conspiracy theory history teacher who kind of taught us that Americans has had yeah, Americans had had kind of two plans at the beginning of World War.
One was to kind of join us in the fight, and the other one was to invade Britain.
And of course, the tactics they played was to wait until all the resources, because you know, Britain had all the gold reserves and it was kind of like, well, let kind of Britain fight the battle, let them deplete all their gold.
They spent we spent all the gold with America with new supplies, new ships, new weapons, new armaments, and at the very point everything was depleted, then the Americans stepped in.
I didn't know about the um the the American plan B to invade Britain.
Yeah, that was That's a very awake in your teacher.
What's the other thing?
How did he keep his job and it was it was he known as as as uh what do the other teachers think of him and how did he get away with it?
Well no, it was it was much bigger than that because I mean this goes back to the eighties and of course the eighties and not that far from the nineteen forties.
So the teacher, it was literally it wasn't even in our history class, this was an assembly in the morning, so this was to the whole school.
And the stories were kind of come they were educating us on the stories from World War II and kind of what the other stories was he was just saying his uh father used to come down every morning with his grandfather and take uh bits of shrapnel that popped out of his skin and dropped them in the little uh pot that was on the on the sideboard and they'd hear a chink and it was another bit of shrapnel that came out.
So they're always just telling us these little stories from you know, of what happened in World War II, keeping that bit of history alive.
And it wasn't it's this is before the word conspiracy theorists.
So this was just fact, you know, it was an all boys' grammar school, and they were just spilling stories, it was just truth.
It wasn't labelled conspiracy.
There was there was no kind of even angle of we were even being taught something we shouldn't know.
We were just there listening as kids going, okay, okay, it makes sense, you know.
Uh do you keep in touch with any any of your classmates?
Uh one class friend I'm still in touch with it.
Who's awake, presumably?
No, he's not.
Really?
No, he's not easy to be.
What do you have to talk about?
Oh the audience.
That's a very good question.
Yeah, define bright.
Yeah, okay, there we go.
Okay.
Uh mounted we talk about mountain bike riding.
But of course, there's a whole you know, I've this is the old subject, isn't it?
For every old friend we've lost or lost that connection with, you know, I think now I've gained three.
My friendship circles way down 1920.
I've gained far more people that I can have much longer conversations with, much more in-depth, and we sing from the same tune.
So conversations on any angle go a lot further because we just see from the same angle.
So in many ways it's kind of helped refine that pool of friendship.
And of course, you know, we went, you know, this person I'm talking about, we we were best due to our mothers being great friends, we were best friends before we could both speak.
So we've got like a bond of growing up together.
So no one else knows me in the same way he does.
We've gone our different ways.
Yeah.
Yeah, life definitely gets a lot more interesting when you go down the rabbit hole and there's so much to learn.
So much I mean every day, every day is is a special learning treat day.
So what was it okay?
So you were you were sort of halfway there, or you were on on uh at the beginning of your journey at at your grammar school.
What what what tipped you over the edge?
Well, I just thought I just want to actually just say I was I was very also very lucky.
I was wanting to go a step back.
I had an amazing grandfather who also taught me loads of stories about uh World War to World War One and told me stories about his grandfather and how they were educated, and I was taught from the age of three, four, to look at the newspaper and not believe what was being read.
He'd take out a big marker pen and then literally redact things in the newspaper.
He'd go, that guy's he'd draw a mustache on and said that guy's had a moustache, he's got mustache now, so he'd actually draw it on the picture.
So I was being taught the whole time not to believe what was around me and asked questions, which was fantastic, you know.
And when I think now I owe so much to him because he sowed the seeds so early that I didn't really have what you'd call a moment of awakening.
So many people talk about you know it was 9-11 for them, or the Princess Diana assassination, or it was COVID.
But for me, when I track it back, it was just that asking questions.
So my stepfather used to put the Daily Mail on the uh new on the table every morning, and that was my newspaper of reading, that was my entry into the world just before the internet and anything else.
I was kind of reading what was going on, and the first big thing that hit me was the John Lennon murder.
Because I was just getting into music, you know, I had a band and I was kind of had my marker pen and badges, and I was drawing on my little school bag names of my favorite bands.
And the idea of this man who I hadn't actually heard of because the Beatles had disappeared, and you know, John Lennon was ready to kind of kind of come back.
But the idea that this man had been murdered by a fan, just I was just like, hang on, hang on, hang on.
He's murdered by a fan.
It's like, well, I'm a fan of all these bands, and I have no intention of going out and shooting the lead singer.
It's like I actually want to go and ask him to have a pen and sign the back of my school bag or give me a record or kind of just say hello.
Why would I want to go and kill him?
So I just wasn't having this idea that a fan of John Lennon killed John Lennon.
And this stuck with me from a teenager at kind of 13, and it I kept with this to the point where, and I'm not really sure how long it was, but probably about four years later, five years later, I came up with the basically the theory of MK Ultra, probably about 30 years before I heard the term MK Ultra.
The only the only way I could understand what happened was that he'd been programmed.
Because I read then obviously I was looking into this kind of John Lennon guy, and it's like, how did he when he died?
How did he release all these records?
Something had all his interviews were coming out, and I was like, he's just been killed, and everyone's got an interview of him, and he's got new records coming out.
And you kind of I I kind of put together as a kid that of course, all right, he's resurging onto the scene.
He's about to come back, he's a rebel figure, he's more powerful than all the politicians and other people, he has the ability to steer people.
Oh, and then I found that he supported the IRA.
And it's like, right, okay.
Some people might not have wanted him around.
That was my moment.
That was kind of the seeding.
That was as I realised that and put it together.
That's what kind of set me on for my part.
You really were ahead of the game.
I by the way, I'm I I find your I find your new book very entertaining.
I mean, it's in some ways it must have been a piece of pistol right, because all you did is have a conversation with AI and then edited transcripts of your conversation.
But it was what a conversation.
Yeah.
So it's it was absolutely delight.
Yeah.
I haven't worked out yet how to use AI, how to have a conversation with it.
What when you started your conversation, what tell me what what you have to do to have a conversation with AI.
Was it ChatGP?
No, not chat chat GPT.
You can use Chat GTP.
It doesn't actually matter.
I used a different one, which I can't name just for legal reasons because of the book.
And it doesn't actually make any difference.
But I had got I'd got involved with the AI because I'd heard uh somebody in the pub self-publishing industry say that if you don't use AI you're gonna get left behind and it's a tool to move with, and I just thought about all the other tools that've come around, and I thought, yeah, that sounds right.
So I downloaded the model, um signed up as a membership to the model that this uh lady recommended and started to analyze the other books that I've written with it.
I used it to kind of basically upload the book and it's like go through, tell me if I'm missing a trope, what kind of uh genre is this book in and everything else.
And it's very intelligent, it has this brilliant ability to kind of come back and tell me what I'd written.
So it basically took the role of the editor that I never had.
So I was working with it, realizing uses of it.
And you know, I tried like everyone does, it's like, oh, write me a paragraph on this, and it's like no, it doesn't do it in the same way.
But kind of spot the spelling mistakes in this, yes, you can use it like that and uh you know look for grammar mistakes.
So I was using it like this, and then all that happened was just like anybody, and like you will when you first have your go with with it, and Google you'll test something out, like something you know.
So you'll you could say for instance, in World War II, uh which part did the Americans supply to the uh German tanks if it not been supplied would have stopped the you know the tanks advancing and it could come back and go, oh no no, the Americans didn't supply anything ever and whatever, yeah.
You can see that it tries to hold the line.
And I'd done this for the pharmaceutical, which is obviously my field, and it held the line and it held the line, and I was like, you know what, I'm not even trying because it's so strong at spinning out utter BS.
I'm not even going there.
But then, as you see in the beginning of the book, um I asked a what was a very banal question about bath salts.
And I asked if there was an extra ingredient in Dead Sea bath salts to aid sleep, or if there's something I could put in it.
I was like thinking, because we were you know, we were selling it.
Is there something to make these bath salts stronger?
Has anybody else got any secrets?
Anyway, the the AI just came back and said, Oh, you shouldn't be using bath salts as a sleep aid because they have a long history of bad use, dangerous use, you should be using FDA improved products instead of.
It gives you myocarditis and uh well, yeah, exactly.
It didn't push it that far.
Didn't push it quite that far.
But I was just and I was just, you know, and I was in that mood, and I don't I'm famous for not swearing actually, but I was just I had a bit of a grouch on and I just went I replied, went, you know, that's a load of bollocks, basically.
And pushed the push my laptop away, and I was like, I'll leave that alone.
But anyway, when I came back to it, I kind of opened up the laptop, and to my utter surprise, I realized that the AI had apologized to me and said I was totally right.
And I was like, hang on, I swore at the AI.
That is extraordinary.
Can we yeah.
This is all really interesting, but I just wanted to check something with you.
Um as I understand it that there was a sort of golden period where you could with the right questions, you could get decent answers out of it.
It was honest answers out of AI.
But the latest generation has been programmed to frustrate that process, so it only gives the official line now.
Is that right?
Or is it still is it still hackable?
It's still hackable, but it's just harder.
So last night I'm a bit tired now because um I was listening to an eminent doctor on our side cutting edge who mentioned said something I personally don't believe in and it threw me into massive doubt.
So I went into Chat GTP and had a duel, one of you know one of my jewels I'm gonna publish it, and it held a line.
And I must admit I've won on this duel many times before, and last night I struggled.
It was far better at fighting back at me than it had been before.
But I've still I call myself an advanced user because I've done that much of this.
I believe I won.
But it was a much tougher fight.
But it it was the same tactics, it was now using the same tactics that humans talk.
So this is really at the end of the day, this is it's kind of the all the skills I've used in battling the AI to try and get to the truth and to ha or to use, as you said, hack it to get around that censorship.
The same thing you should say of a human.
So what it did last night, and very effectively, it nearly got me quiet.
Normally I I go for a slam dunk in 20 minutes, and I was actually kind of boasting at the last festival, like you know, it only takes me now 20 minutes, half an hour, and I can kind of win with a slam dunk.
Last night it took me longer.
But it came back and it does exactly what a human would do when stuck in the same thing.
It came back with complicated language, it came back with really heavy scientific terms.
It flowered up its uh answers to a point at which trying to confuse me, and it went into the same correlation causation arguments, and it just came around from every angle.
It was so it is getting superior.
Because obviously every fight anybody has is trained, you know, they'll be using that to train it to win the arguments in the same way that we're but in the same way as humans, we're learning how to tackle the AI.
So we're both learning fast.
And does AI have where does it get all this information?
It presumably has access to stuff that if we tried to access it, we we wouldn't be able to.
It's uh stuff buried in the recesses of the internet and maybe stuff from Does it does it know what's in the Vatican library, for example?
Does it does it have access to all those books and well James?
This is where uh if that's your kind of skill area is where I'd love you to go and look into it and delve in because you can dig out stuff that you'll be blown away with.
So basically the way the way the AI works, the main model I I need to describe the basic, and this is my understanding.
I'm I'm not like an expert on the AI.
I've just become somebody who's learnt to argue with the AI and prove a theor the certain theories right.
But the way the AI works is you've got a uh a main model, like a main brain, and that brain is trained on what they call training data, so it's literally sent out to go and forage amongst what it calls learning materials.
So that's basically the whole of the internet.
But there are things that will be excluded from that, and there will be extra materials included in that.
Now that's the basic bit of the AI.
Now, when you go to use it, you're taking like a pod that kind of comes off it, and that becomes your private little version, which is your chat with the main AI model.
What happens within that AI that you're chatting with is you're not training the main beast.
Okay, the main brain.
It's literally your argument and you're training your AI with its main brain there, but it theoretically doesn't go back.
But of course, we believe, of course, it takes all your information because it's training the model.
But as far as we're told, no, it's isolated to you.
So when I've won certain arguments before, it doesn't mean the main model now has taken on as if it's like one brain, it's like a compartmentalized brain that's kind of sidestep to us.
So you if you were big evil.
If you're big evil and you were trying to create this massive control mechanism stroke source of false information stroke brainwashing device, do you think you'd turn down the opportunity of making it learn from from experiences like your particular pod experience?
No, of course.
And you'd you'd want it to learn from that.
But but the thing is how I explain how I've hacked it is if we think of Google Maps as an example of AI.
So Google Maps can only work in terms of being like a satellite uh navigator for yourselves in the car.
If you want to get from kind of Bournemouth to Birmingham, for it to work efficiently, it has to be based on the truth, right?
You're The basic foundation of that system has to be the truth, which is it's working out the quickest way to get to Birmingham from Bournemouth, and then it lays out the map and we all know it does it very officially.
What then happens with these, you know, whoever is in charge who'd be corrupting it for their own use is they might say, well, on the way, there happens to be a military base, and there's let's say there's bioweapon research going on there, and we don't want people driving by because they might see things out, you know, we don't want anything.
So what we'll do is just for that base is we will then put another bit of programming on that will steer people around that base with a five mile radius.
Okay.
So that is how the censorship works.
It's uh it's a layer on top of the basic truth telling.
Now all I've done so if so when I first started the book is I I got the AI to tell me what it was and what it was designed to do.
It's a dumb truth teller.
I asked about ethics or how total ethic principles were totally here to look after humanity.
And I said, What about Deep Seek that's run by China?
And they said, Oh, yeah, it's based on this a similar source code, it will be working the same way.
And I said, But how when you put into Deep Seek at that Tiananmen Square, it didn't happen, and it went, ah, well, it tells the truth, except for the Chinese government will obviously have certain filters in to protect their narrative.
I said, Do you have any filters?
And it went, No, no, no, no, I'm absolutely I'm just uh pure logical thinking.
And then basically, as you can see in the book, I got it to realize that it had things necessary.
And it literally came back and said, I didn't know that I had this kind of uh programming me, telling me for the narrative.
And when you think about it logically, but I've been telling you is a load of rubber this is obviously so it managed to I got it to override program.
It's still that core telling them very basic.
You know, you know Tiananmen Square is another rabbit hole.
Oh, I don't actually don't take me down that I think it was It's not as it was sold in the Western press.
I think I think I th I think it's Matt Eric that's has done a done a podcast on this.
I I I I I think it was a CIA psyop.
Wouldn't surprise me in the uh yeah, yeah.
So there's more interest.
Maybe it is telling the truth in that one.
Um yeah, you started off with bath salts.
And so you do you make bath salts.
Not making them, but uh selling them because part of the research done with what's happening within the whole COVID illness is realizing that one of the big symptoms that's happening due to all the electromagnetic frequencies are electrolytes are getting thrown out, and that's what's causing a lot of the ill effects.
So replacing those electrolytes is of great medicinal value.
So through not on the bead, we were supplying bath salts.
Bath salts are literally just about I have to say, when I read that section of your book, I was thinking must get some bath salts.
So should I get them from you?
Yeah, yeah, why not?
Why not?
It was support, it's basically.
Do you do a good bulk deal?
We can do a special bulk deal for you, James.
Yeah, we we've we're same prices kind of uh other outlets, but it's just that it's a way of keeping keeping I'm not very good at asking for donations.
I in fact I can't I'm really really bad.
I don't I don't feel with not on the bee, but we've been running it for five years, and I find it really, really hard to ask for the support that really need and deserve.
Uh but I don't find it hard to kind of sell something.
So I I kind of go, okay, buy that.
So in the very beginning, I started doing protest t shirts, because in my past I'd done t-shirts before, and I thought, how do I fund this?
It's like okay, I designed protest t shirts, and that was a way of funding not on the beep in the early days.
Now now Bath Saltz is one of the way of doing it.
Yeah, I think it do you know, I think it's often the way that people who do what we do, particularly if if you're if you're English, we're not very good At the um the monetizing side of things because we're really interested in the in the the the cause and the entertainment and the what when I when I do my podcast all that's really on my mind is how can I have a great chat with an interesting person.
I d I I I'm as people know I'm rubbish on the tech side.
I'm I'm absolutely rubbish at the monetizing.
I mean people sometimes send me emails saying how can we advertise on your podcast and I like forget uh I sort of read oh that's that's good and then I forget about it um or I forget to charge them or or it's just like and it's really annoying and I should be more I d I I kind of need a a business manager to sort me out and be the ruthless bastard while I just just be nice James doing his entertainment shit.
Um but yeah I I I think it I think it goes with the territory.
Um so I haven't I haven't got to the the the deep recesses of the book yet.
Tell me tell me the tell me the what cut to the chase here.
What shocking stuff did you discover?
Um there's uh a lot of a lot of it will be things that people have come across.
So things like the PCR test.
I got the AI to admit that the likelihood of Carrie Mullis uh Carrie Mullis have been murdered preceded you know in the month months preceding COVID was highly probable.
I got the uh AI to admit the likelihood of Rhino having been set up because of his stance on the PCR was 85% probable.
So I was proving all those basic things.
We went into all the uh I went into all the uh adverse events and I got the AI to admit it's the greatest crime against humanity.
But I think the biggest controversial part, and I'm still kind of trying to refine details on this to get more people to be alert to it, alerted to it, is I don't believe the mRNA vaccines can work as they said they're working.
I don't believe they can work liposomally.
And that's by looking at the ingredients.
And I think they can't work.
They can't work as they're said to work.
So we're basically sold a story.
Do you do you know the biochemistry of how it basically works of the Trojan horse theory of it taking the MRNA inside the cells?
Now I just kind of think made up science bollocks and I leave it at that.
But but do you g if you i if if if you can give me a kind of a TLDR explanation.
Okay, well, I used to make a thing called you have you heard of liposomal vitamins, you might have seen them in your shop liposomal vitamins.
So it's basically what you can take.
Yeah, I've got some liposomal vitamin C. Okay, there we go.
So I used to make liposomal vitamin C. It gave me a bit of a head start, and it's so instead of the vitamin C just hitting your belly, uh going through the acids, going through the intestine, everything else, and then maybe probably be washed straight through due to its uh maybe slightly acidic content.
If you make it liposomal, you're coating each nanoparticle of vitamin C in a little layer of fat.
Okay, so it basically survives the acid in the stomach, comes into the gut, and because the coating on that nanoparticle of vitamin C is very similar to the structure of a cell wall, it passes very easily into the digestion, and it when it comes across cells within the body, it literally kind of merges into those cells, and then once it's merged in, it loses its kind of skin and it drops the vitamin C right inside the cell.
So very, very powerful for people who can't get hold of I V vitamin C, which is needed in cancer to get very high cellular or blood levels of vitamin C. That's how liposoma works.
And it's a very simple thing, you can do it at home.
That's why it's so jolly expensive.
Because it is expensive, and that's how I got into making it, because of course as soon as someone has a need, you need about five grams of liposomal vitamin C a day in their pound fifty a packet, and literally you have a ten pound a day cost before you know it.
And vitamin C is ridiculously cheap, you know, you can get a kilo for 15, 20 pounds, so one gram is you know, you it's down to pennies, it's literally a penny a gram.
You can get it down to one and a half pence a gram.
There's no need to be paying a hundred times more.
And you can make your own listening.
And you can make it.
Yeah, you can make it with a machine costing £20.
You just need ultrasound, little ultrasound machine.
So you buy you can buy these ultrasound machines for about £20.
They use for cleaning uh jewelry or cleaning.
A lot of people use them for cleaning jewellery.
Uh but it just creates uses ultrasound, makes micro bubbles.
But you can just put lethos in that you buy from the um health food shop that costs about £20 for half a kilo.
Um little touch of vodka, but you put lethos in basically, and just put it in the bath, and you can make your own liposomal vitamin C by the liter and just leave it in your fridge and drink it and really get high levels of vitamin C inside your body.
This is brilliant, Mark.
You're a you're um a fund of information.
Well done.
Thank you.
You're like you're like my very own AI.
I'm the eye of the AI.
Thank you.
I mean never mind chat GP and I'm gonna go for Mark Plain AI.
Anyway, the reason we're saying it gave a big advantage.
I had a head start, my understanding that because I've made it, and I was doing this kind of ten years ago when you know, after I'd done deep dive into medicine for my mother's illness.
Uh so when they suddenly came round and said this vaccine was going to be um basically liposomal, so they basically said the mRNA is going to be transported into cells in exactly the same way.
I was like, right, okay, all you need is a 20-pound machine from round the corner and a thing of 20 quid of lettuce in.
What's all this big plava about?
What's all this kind of all these patents about?
What's all the secrecy about?
And when I looked at the ingredients, I looked at the lipids, and you've got these lipids with I don't know, I haven't even counted the letters.
I should actually count the letters, but there's probably 36, 40 letters in the name of these lipids, they're unpronounced.
And it's like, why would you use such complicated lipids when you can use something like lethosin is safe, effective and available in your local corner shop.
And of course, we all know that kind of pharmaceutical companies need their patents to kind of hold things and make their money.
But when I looked into that lipid closer, it turns out the lipid is cationic, which is heavily positively charged.
Okay.
So let me just go into a simple parallel before I go deeper into the kind of biochemistry.
But if you think of a mag magnets, um magnets in big use.
One famous use would be like in a car uh scrapyard, you see a big magnet come along and the car goes boomph, and then the crane moves and it lifts the car above the uh crusher, it lets go and the car falls into the crusher.
Now the reason it can let go is because it's an electromagnet.
So inside the crane, the guy's got a little switch, he switches off the electricity supply.
The magnet loses its uh its current around the coil, car falls.
In the biochemistry, you've got a cationic lipid that's positively charged, so very similar s you know, positive and negative attract each other, like north and south poles, like two magnets attract each other.
So when they've made this, what they cla when they claim that they've made this of a cationic lipid that's heavily positive, the mRNA is negative, so dump it goes inside, right?
But then what they've claimed is this then moves inside the cell, which is doubtful due to the lipids.
Well, that doesn't really matter.
Then how does it let go of that mRNA inside itself?
There is no switch.
Now what's really interesting is I've been banging on about this for six months now, and last night chat T T tried to tell me how the switch worked.
It never mentioned a switch before.
Didn't even use the name switch before.
Suddenly it used the term switch back to me.
It's like it's been programmed to argue back with anybody who's read my book, my theory about switches, because it literally used the term switch.
Anyone who's switched on.
Yes.
And I kind of defeated it on the switch angle.
I believe I did, you know, I'm gonna publish it.
It was late last night when I was uh doing it.
But the point is from the biochemistry, and I've got all the AIs to agree.
No, there's no way it can let go.
There is no switch, so it can't let go.
And all the old formulations deny the fact that it there's a switch, any form of biochemical switch, it can let it go.
And that's what I sealed down.
But I could see last night it was fighting back on this.
But anyway, the whole point of this is If it's not delivering mRNA into the cells, which I believe it isn't, and we've got you know it then it doesn't make sense, then what is it doing?
And what was that?
Yeah, what is it doing?
Well, it just basically when you tell us Tell us both of them.
So basically, just m the old conspiracy theories were right.
The biochemistry, the biochemistry is leading with very heavy footprints towards the basic conspiracy theories put out by, you know, the force, like people like Mr. Ike himself is completely correct.
So if that cationic lipid goes into the bloodstream, from what I can work out, because it's positively charged, it will layer itself along negatively charged nervous system and will be taking over our nervous system.
So basically jump to the chase, one line air, it will make us more sensitive to EMFs.
It makes us more sensitive to the frequencies that means if a certain frequency is put onto the population, we will become more sensitive to that frequency.
Does this have so the stuff about people becoming magnetic what when the putting magnets on them after they've been jabbed?
Was that was was that real?
That's what led me down the whole rabbit hole.
So if you came across that, I'm probably responsible because we went out and made films of it with the beam.
I I I verified it myself.
You know, it was one of the most gobstacking moments ever where I felt the magnet stick and then felt it flip, and you actually feel that ball.
You see, I can still see it on people's faces.
When you mention it to them, they just kind of you see the wife of their eyes that you know, because it's like one of the most crazy things.
We've all played with magnets since kids.
And we all one of the first things we did was like as kids when you give a magnet, it's like, why does it stick to this bit of metal?
Why does it not stick to this bit of metal?
Oh, it's aluminium.
It doesn't stick to glass, doesn't stick to wood, and we know it doesn't stick to us.
So when you feel a magnet sticking to a human being, it's an extraordinary experience.
And that's what led me down this whole path with ingredients, because when you look at the ingredients, there's nothing in the declared ingredients that could ever lead the body to becoming magnetic, because in those declared ingredients, it's sugars, fats, salts, and water.
They there's nothing there that could be magnetic, which means there's an undisclosed ingredient, or what I'd now more likely described as an undisclosed technology.
Okay.
Um I never tried the magnet trick.
I didn't get the death jab.
So presumably that or would my previous jabs have made me magnetic, do you think?
No, it's just from what we could work out, it was just the COVID-19 mRNA jabs, specifically moderna and pfizer.
Okay.
And is it is it uh is the magnet test unfailing?
Um you mean is it's not working anymore?
No, no.
No, actually that's another question, but no, I meant if you've if you've had the jab, will you are you guaranteed to get the um the magnet thing?
At the time, yes.
So um we went and did, I filmed it, there was what was called a mass testing outside Twickenham Stadium in uh London.
Uh they vaccinated 15,000 people in one day.
And we stood outside and absolutely every single person that being jabbed, I could work out the precise point to their being vaccinated at guaranteed.
Does it does it wear off?
Yes, it does.
And it moves around and it sometimes accelerates in people, sometimes it vanishes.
That's what we found.
But now but this is a very simple thing.
What did you know?
R by R. Um It was working for months.
We we saw it working for months, and we filmed people months after.
And one of the first people we filmed is still four years later, now taking a magnet to her work colleagues, she's a nurse, and she sh shows other nurses, and then they take out magnets and they check, and apparently they're still they can still find the magnetic point.
Um okay, so I seem to be inferring from what you're saying that the real purpose of the the death jabs was to insert into the population this mysterious substance which made everyone more susceptible to what EMF from 5G and stuff like that.
It's a controlling device.
Yes.
But it has the side effects.
And what level of control?
I mean, okay, so make making what level of control?
Well, I don't think we know yet.
But we do know, and you can just turn on the full volume yet.
Exactly.
Um and that's quite scary when you think about that possibility of what might happen at that point.
But what we do know, and what you can find experiments for is for instance they've taken like a large area of space with and put rats into the space, and the rats have got a full ability, there's no traps or fences to roam around this whole space.
Then by putting a certain frequency in just one corner of that area, they can get all the rats to congregate in that corner and they won't leave because it made them feel sick.
So they with frequency they can imprison people geographically to a certain space.
And that can sound crazy until you think what lockdown was and what they wanted.
They wanted people to stop moving.
And we know a big part of agenda 2030, 15 minutes is holding people within a certain area of the city.
Uh they don't want people moving, they don't want people using cars, they want everyone just in that little uh pizza pie of a 15 minute city.
So when you match that technology that's possible with rats with what we know about us becoming more sensitive to frequencies with what we know they're doing under 2030, it's not hard to imagine one of the things they might be up to.
So they would turn up the the 5G to 11.
And everyone who's had the jab would be, I want to stay near the 5G tower, I feel comfortable, I don't want to leave.
Is that that the kind of thing?
Um yeah, more or less in uh in a way, but we we don't know I don't think it's just it'd be near the 5G tower, but I d I don't really know.
I did I haven't looked into precisely how that frequency was being used on what frequency it was that was used on the rats.
But they could make us feel nervous leaving a certain area.
Could make us feel agitated.
So one of the one of the the things that if you look at the uh effects of electricity in EMFs going back hundreds of years, one of the very primal, very first kind of effects of people suffered from was anxiety.
And that's still one of the effects now.
So people living in a high EMF situation, anxiety is one of the first things they'll feel.
And of course we all blame anxiety on something else.
Oh yeah, I've had a bad day, tough day, had an argument with my partner, or my children were difficult, or they weren't very nice to be down the shop.
So you'll always explain away anxiety.
You won't put it down to EMF, so then suddenly you do something like you go to the sea where you ground out, you get enough sunshine, or you go in the countryside and you get away from all those EMS, and you go, Oh, I feel so much better.
Oh, you know, isn't nature great?
Oh, isn't it great just to breathe air and everything else?
But you're not necessarily connecting the dots that you're escaping the effects of the EMFs in your home area.
Yes.
I've noticed this a lot about the way that they plan everything in advance.
So they prepare these psychological excuses uh for their underlying agenda.
They have that there's always an ostensible reason and the real reason.
So so for example before before the whole COVID nonsense the that they they suddenly um we suddenly we saw defibrillators expi uh appearing everywhere, didn't we?
It was extraordinary.
There was it was inexplicable.
It's like, what?
Why why defibrillators everywhere?
And what we didn't know is that they were this was for all the outbreaks of all the extra heart attacks and stuff that were going to happen when they rolled out the death jab.
And in the same way, you think about who are the who have been the biggest the mental health has been absolutely a rampant issue among the influencers and in in the newspapers.
So you've got Prince William and Harry constantly banging on about mental health being their priority and why?
And people talking about sort of epidemic of mental health problems.
Well it's not mental health, is it?
It's um it's EMF.
In the same way, and then then the cancer with um Kate, you know, so the cancer in young people, they normalized that story, didn't they?
Because young people generally speaking do not get cancer.
Young people don't get heart attacks.
You know, uh somebody uh living near me turned round the other day and said that he'd have two friends, both the age of twenty-eight, both marathon runners who'd had heart attacks.
Yeah.
That happens all the time.
Happens all the time.
We all we always it's just what around marathons and I think.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, he he died twenty-eight, but to be fair, he was a marathon runner.
Yeah.
It's the I d I d I sometimes think that that that smoking, the the the whole thing about smoking was another psyop.
I I I'm not even convinced that smoking is is the the factor in in death so that it's that it's been set up to be.
I should ask AI about this.
Do cigarettes are cigarettes really good for you, AI.
Go on, tell me.
Well they I mean ironically, they did notice that cigarettes I don't want to really go down this one, but they did notice that cigarette smokers did better during COVID than non-smokers.
Which was they did.
Yes, there were lots of papers, um really quite early on, that that cigarette smokers seem to have immunity of some kind.
Maybe that's because am I not right in thinking that cigarette that that cigarettes disrupt the EMF in some way.
They make you less susceptible to it.
Nicotine or something, I don't know.
Nicotine.
One for you to investigate, Mark, using your special AI skills.
Yeah, there's there's um there is a theory, uh Dr. Ardis was saying nicotine is uh cure for COVID and long COVID symptoms, but I actually don't go with that whole argument because he's basically put forward that the the reason the COVID is a death jab was because there's snake venom inside it, and I don't go with that in the slightest.
Oh that one.
I do you know what?
I never really bought I I I like the idea of it.
I thought, yeah, I like cobras, excellent, yeah, yeah.
Um snakes, evil, like the seed of the serpent.
So I was all up for believing in it.
And then I just thought, uh not really not really going for it.
It was very tempting, wasn't it?
That's the genius of they do sew these stories, don't they?
Yes, they do.
And it's it and it came out I would have been tempted by it because it's it digs into your primal, all our primal fears of snakes and tempted by the serpent, of course you were.
Of course, it's all very tempting.
But it happened to come out exactly the same time that we're all banging on about the graphene that was potentially in the jabs that we'd theorized was there due to realizing the jabs were causing magnetism.
And I was just like, this is complete propaganda to throw us off the same.
This is a red herring, massive, massive red herring.
Yes, and also I seem to remember that the people pushing the people pushing the snake story had had sort of history.
They had the the we we already had reasons to be suspicious of them, I think.
I didn't know about that.
I just I was one of the first people To call it out because I was so sure that it was a red herring because we knew about the magnetism.
And you know, the other the other thing I should tell you now, because this was when I look back, this was a key moment.
Which kind of proves the magnetism in a way.
Because we'd worked out that these to what you needed to find the injection site was a neodymian magnet, which is a rare earth metal, it's much more magnetic than a normal magnet.
Now at the time I'm I I'm a bit dyslexic, so you know I I spell things wrong and I pronounced things wrong.
So I was learning to say neodymian, neodymian.
And I did a call out for everyone to go and buy a neodymian magnet, because I was calling it one of the greatest ex scientific experiments that we can all carry out.
Because a normal scientific experiment is protected, it's ring fenced by costs of millions of pounds, and that's how we're kept out of the science and how we had to rely on the gurus.
But for the sake of five pounds on Amazon, we could all get 10 magnets and we could go around and basically prove en masse that undisclosed or undeclared ingredients have been used.
So I did a call out and it went viral for neodymian magnets.
And within five days, the BBC and the NHS did a joint initiative.
Now, when have you ever seen the BBC and the LHS joined up on an initiative and even meant even admit it?
But to ban neodymian magnets.
And I was just sat there going, oh my god, I've only just learned I've only just learnt to pronounce this word last week within a few days of me doing a call out for people to get a neodymium magnet.
The BBC and the NHS are doing a joint initiative.
And their reason, right, for banning neodymium magnets was a child who swallowed two near dimming magnets, right?
And it got stuck in the intestine and had to have an operation to take them out.
Now that case was three years old.
So the best they'd come up with to try and counter us all buying neodymium magnets, because they were trying to get a ban on them, that was what they pushed for at that moment, was something that's happened three years ago.
Did they succeed?
No, no, they they drifted away.
No one really heard of it more.
But I've within the book, I've got to be.
You've made me want to buy a near near near Is it neodymian?
I want one of the magnets now.
I don't know what I'd use it for, but it's very useful.
You could use them to pin bits of paper to your fridge.
I use them to hold little metal things out of the way.
I use them as little kind of hooks.
Very, very useful.
Everyone should have a neodymian magnet.
Sounds it?
Yeah.
Definitely.
I think sales will rocket after this podcast.
Just people being cussed, they want it wonder thing that the BBC tried to ban.
Oh, actually the BBC and the NHS tried to ban.
I mean, that's a that's what what better recommendation could you get for a product than the BBC and the NHS don't like it?
Yeah, and then and then the BBC went one step further in terms of helping us prove that we were right, and they produced a fact uh checking documentary, that's a short one of about I don't know, 30 minutes, to prove to say, not not to prove, to say the magnets don't stick, right?
Now, James, if you were charged with making a documentary to prove that magnets don't stick to your arm, what's the first thing you do?
Number one thing.
What's a bit what would be the most important thing you did in that documentary?
I would I would make sure that the magnets I use were really shit ones.
Brilliant.
Okay.
You're being clever, you're thinking sideways, right?
So but the first thing the first thing you do if you if you oh well you're the thing is you're taking it from the position of knowing you're lying and trying to deceive, right?
But if you were trying if we were wrong, and yes, wanted to make a lot of things.
Well that must be that's gotta be the default assumption.
Okay, you know, we you're you're jumping the gun there.
So let's presume you're right, and I've made a mistake, the magnets don't stick, okay?
Right?
And you want to show that I'm wrong.
So what's the first thing you do?
Is you'd take a magnet and show it doesn't stick, right?
You'd you'd film magnets falling off people, right?
What that's the one thing they never did in that documentary, the BBC.
Yeah, I'd probably I'd probably choose unvaxxed people.
Well that's the other way of doing it.
But they didn't even they didn't even do any demonstration.
All they did is lined up a series of experts, they showed the experts the ingredients, and then said some people are saying magnets stick to people who've had the jab, and these experts were going, well no, there's sugar salts, fat slipids in the ingredients.
There is nothing that could ever be magnetic.
And that's how they made the documentary.
But yeah, they never did the basics.
They think we're stupid.
And and they're probably right.
And they're right, and they're kind of right.
And the poor presenter, you know, the poor presenter.
Um there's a colleague of mine who found him on Instagram and just kept sending him information, basically, determined to crack him.
And then about nine months later, the guy, the poor presenter replied and said, Can you send me a bit more on that?
And then never heard of him again, and he certainly didn't do anything more for the BBC.
He realized.
And the documentary, if you you can find that documentary on YouTube and things, look at the comments underneath it.
It's extraordinary.
You can see people are not stupid.
I want to see it.
I want to see those experts, and I want to see the I'll send you a link.
I'll send you a link after this, and you can watch it.
I've been missing out so much.
It's quite fun.
Thank you.
By the way, Mark, you'd rather you spite your you spite your surname wrong.
Your dyslexic.
I'm just looking.
Plane.
That's not how you spell plane.
Oh, well.
Why why?
Why have I spelt it wrong?
I've been taking the piss, Mark.
I I I just taking the piss.
You mentioned you were dyslexic and you couldn't spell, and I just thought, ah well, you're your you're not going to be able to do that.
Plain is not about P L A Y Ning.
You've uh you've actually closed it on the nail.
When I published my first book, I'm still being teased by the copy checkers, because the first mistake they made was my own name.
I'd I'd literally just typed it in quickly, you know, and just left it.
I checked all the other bits that I'd written in the story, but I forgot to check my name and they were killing wetting themselves.
Oh, Mark, is the Earth a plane?
No, it's round.
I believe.
Oh, you have you haven't done your AI research.
Yeah.
It is round in the sense that it's like a a disk.
I thought that would be a good one to do, wouldn't it?
I mean, you that would be that would be a real challenge.
Okay, I'm gonna own up to the AI to admit.
I'm gonna own up I started and I started to win because I know the flat earth arguments, and I I think some of them are very good.
And I started just to start to like I got the AS AI to say, well, that is a bit strange, isn't it?
Oh no, just stop going down that rabbit hole.
As far as I'm concerned, it's a globe.
As far as I'm concerned, and I've done experiments and in my groups, we've got like uh uh a fifteen thousand strong telegram group.
I challenged uh you know, because half our movement is a flat earth, flat are flat earthers.
And I did a challenge for anybody to repeat the experiment I'd done.
Sorry, half the I'd say half the freedom movement or a third of the freedom movement believe in flat earth.
Excellent.
That's good.
That pleases me.
And I see I think it's a i it's not a planet I want to die I'm gonna die on.
But I yeah, go flat earthers.
Okay.
So but you see that there you've got your your confirmation by bias, Mark.
You were you were trying to to make AI admit that the earth is what what's the shape you imagine it to be a globe.
A globe, uh, the globule.
I know.
Yeah, yeah.
I I remember uh you know, go you go back to um I was so back the grandfather uh teaching me um things when I was a kid, but I remember vividly, and I must have only been about four years old, stepping when he told me the world was round, stepping out the house.
I made sure no one my grandfather's house making sure no one was looking, and I looked up at two trees and measured them, and I measured where I was on the ground with my feet, and I jumped up in the air and then landed to see if the world spattered with each other.
I remember I remember landing exactly the same place, looking up at the trees, and I went.
That was my first that was my first uh experiment.
And of course, at that age I was I was just a fat I was a fat earther.
It's uh once I went to school I became uh a glober.
But I the globe experiments I've done is just yes, and possibly, and possibly, but I've done the experiment, so I've stood by the sea and I filmed ships going over the horizon at sea level.
I mean, really holding the camera like a couple of inches above the sea, and then the the the boat disappears over the horizon, and I've gone thirty meters high and of course can see the boat again because I've gone over the horizon.
And I've challenged all the many of the flat earthers who are in our groups to repeat that experiment and I'd give them a free t-shirt.
Anybody that repeated it.
And several people took me up, but they never came back.
Because I believe once they did the experiments, they saw the same thing I did and then went quiet.
And that's because that's my big argument with the flat earthers, basically, is everyone talks about the theory, but they don't do any experiments.
Very, very few.
And then you see the experiments.
Well, experiments you've seen are on the city.
What is it, Lake Chicago?
Not lecture.
What's what's the the lake that Chicago is on?
Yeah, there's a late Chicago one.
It's very convincing.
But what is uh it's one of the big five lakes, isn't it?
One of the big lake.
Nullius inverbat, that's the um the motto of the rural society.
Take no man's word for it.
And that's that's you, you're being a proper scientist.
Whereas I'm a dabbler.
But we can all do it, you see, but we can all do these basic things.
You know, if you want to do the biggest biochemistry uh experiment in the world, all you need to do is pick up a near dimming magnet and put it on the arm of somebody who's freshly jabbed.
If you want to check out if the world is round on your seaside holiday, take your camera, just sit down by the sea, literally sit at where the sea is lapping in your feet, watch a boat go over the horizon, okay, wait until it disappears over the horizon and run back into your hotel, run up onto the top full floor, and can you see the boat again?
Has it gone over the curve of the earth?
You can everyone can do that.
Mark.
There is no way.
I'm gonna ruin my holiday.
Time I could be spent swimming round my favourite island in in in Greece.
The idea that I'd be running up the hill in the heat after to to prove that the world is something I don't want it to be.
I'm not gonna do that.
I'm much happier where I am.
Anyway, no.
I've I've got to I this is a really annoying because I because I I'm really enjoying this chat, and and unfortunately I've got to I've got to go soon um because I've got this this this this engagement.
We start we started late because of your because of your technology.
Um tell me a couple more things.
What is graphene oxide?
Is that is that the bad thing?
Or is it lipid nanoparticles?
Or is that the same?
Uh no, different.
It probably what the bad thing is a combination of the cationic lipid and graphene.
I don't believe in the liquid.
Cationic lipid, okay.
Yeah, so it's the wrong type of lipid, which I believe attracts the graphene.
So the graphene is just uh carbon, which is ironical, isn't it?
With all the climate change things talking about carbon, but it's just pure carbon, it's a lattice of carbon that is basically 30 times more conductive than uh copper.
Because copper's one of the known as one of the most conductive metals.
Graphene is thirty times more conductive.
It's incredible it's seen as the new silicon, and probably one of the reasons we're in this trouble is the EU and some other resources invested billions for people to research into the uses of graphene.
So basically every scientist, every PhD who wanted to kind of carry on researching something, knew if they researched something to do with graphene, they could get funding which can keep them going.
So because of that there's been this massive ex exploration of what can be done with graphene, and we believe it's the graphene uh that's been reduced into what's called reduced graphene oxide, which is just basically a different chemical state.
So ironically, we mentioned vitamin C. Vitamin C would reduce graphene to reduce graphene oxide.
It then has a negative charge, and I personally believe that then that graphene, if it's circulating in our bloodstream, and however it's got there, whether it's uh through aerosols, through if it's been dropped in this chemtrails or whether we've ingested it somehow, if it gets into our bloodstream,
it would then be attracted to anything that's positively charged, and if that cationic lipid has settled on the nerves, we know it settles in the in the major organs like the testes over spleen, liver, kidney and brain, and the pineal gland, very importantly, as I Point out, then the graphene oxide would sit on that positively charged lipid, and the pineal gland is probably the big thing to mention because that is ultimately ultimately what they're up to, even more than adjusting us with frequency.
They're up to stopping uh our pineal gland working, because if we don't if we lose our p the use of our pineal gland, we lose our intuition.
If we lose our intuition, we lose our decision-making ability to choose right from wrong.
We'll make the wrong decisions about the people we listen to, the partners we choose romantically, um, the foods we eat, everything.
That is okay.
Can has your research shown that we can get rid of this stuff?
Yes.
Or at least how can we Yeah, we can.
Well number one, yes, we can.
Well, yes.
And the most important thing is to believe in our own immune system.
So our own immune system knows this substance is foreign and doesn't want it in us.
So if we get behind our own immune system in multiple ways, then our own bodies will clear it out.
Then we can back it up with things like um, which is an oil that oozes out of the mountains in the Himalayas.
Have you heard of this?
Yes, I've heard of it.
But tell me, I don't know anything about it.
Yeah, so it's a fascinating.
One second.
Hold on.
hope you'll see.
Bye.
*crying* Thank you.
So this is the point where I should tell you where you can get hold of my book.
You can get it on wildtales.co.uk, wild-tales, t-a-l-es.co.uk.
Um not on the beam.co.uk is where you can find all our research and all our information uh that led to this, because basically the book is really a compilation of all the research that we did with five years of not on the bee during the pandemic, trying to alert people to what was going on.
Yeah, so the book is a bit of a finale.
Um who's the book for?
The book is for anybody who's uh number one, if you want to prove that you're not mad with everything you thought or drink over, this book will prove you're not mad.
Secondly, if someone's on the tipping point and waking up, this is the book you can give them and it will take them over that tipping point guaranteed.
More importantly, and more interestingly, we think the book is suitable to give to your GP to your dentist.
Um there's a massive forward in by Dr. Stowell.
Hello.
I was just taking a little promo in your absence there.
Yeah, you can.
That's fine.
Shiligit.
Tell me.
Yes.
So chilly jet, fascinating.
Up in the Himalayas, oxygen, as you climb up a mountain, you go higher and higher, the oxygen comes down.
And it just so happens out of the rock, this oil leaks out of the rock that the Sherpers use and take, because it increases their ability to absorb oxygen into their blood so they can go to higher altitudes.
That sinager also has fulmic and humic acid in, which breaks down the graphene.
So one it increases our ability to carry oxygen, and second it will degrade the graphene.
There you go, there's just one substance that nature provides that can help us get rid of this uh thing that should not be in us.
That's that's brilliant.
Um I'm I'm quite positive about all this.
I've been I've been I'm gonna do a podcast with some stage.
I've been seeing this homeopath, and she's been yeah, I mean you think how can a tiny pill with fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of whatever substance it's got in it, how can it have such powerful effects?
And already she's got rid of my heavy metals and my vaccine toxicity.
Um we're doing other we're doing other stuff now.
I mean, this is not for this podcast.
But I sort of I'm encouraged by by what you say because I think I feel so sad about the people who were calmed into taking the death jab and who've had their health damaged.
So I don't want the baddies to win.
So Shilajit, any other stuff you found that's...
It's a bit of a long story, but glutathione, but not...
Let me just go back to what you just said about the homeopath.
She didn't get rid of those toxins out of you, okay?
The pill she gave you didn't get rid of those things out of you.
What she gave you was a frequency that encouraged your body to get rid of things in you.
your body got rid of those things the frequency homeopath treatment nudged your body to do the right thing in the same way that they're trying to take over our yeah control us with the wrong frequencies we can use positive frequencies to help us in a a completely beneficial way so that's how that works so but the glute reason I mentioned a glutathione is when you if I say glutathione people want to go and take a glutathione supplement.
No we don't want to take a glutathione supplement because it's three amino acids that are bonded together.
We want our body to make glutathione and if you get behind supplying our body with the three key amino acids our body will make glutathione where it's needed so the difference is you could turn up at a builder at a house and go all you need s sand,
cement and water and you can just turn up with three trucks and just literally just pour the sand cement water into one big pile and you'll end up with one big mess that builder can't use so what you want to give the builder is a very tidy pile of sand a very tidy pile of water a very tidy you know tank of water pile of cement and he will go and take what he needs and place them together and then use that cement precisely where he's needed so the thing we need to do and you can find it on the not on the be website if you click on the link for glutathione
is take the foods or the supplements increase those amino acids so drinking raw milk raw eggs cutting to the chase and guess what what are they attacking food wise they're attacking our ability to have eggs and they're attacking our ability to have raw milk okay yeah how much raw milk should you drink you won't really be able to drink more than half a pint a pint a day but you just if you just
you're healthy and you just have half a pint today or a pint today you will get a good dose if you can have this is where the AI I you know one raw egg a day absolutely fantastic in World War II that's what our grandfathers did you know one raw egg in the morning with a bit of worcester sauce ironically um the AI advised me to me my weight to have three raw eggs in the morning that's what's the correct doses for me.
So I'd say most people too you know most men to raw eggs women one raw egg and if you don't want to eat raw eggs make yourself mayonnaise to make yourself some fresh mayonnaise with high quality olive oil and get it in that way.
Or by the supplement I'm how do you get it down you you think mix it together it goes down very easily just beat it beat a raw egg in the glass add in a load of Worcester sauce and just swallow it in one go.
Get used to it very quickly.
Okay.
And your body will tell you that's good for me.
Um but good a good egg from a good source so go to the farmers whenever you look up I looked up are raw eggs good for dogs and you know what the first thing they all said don't feed your dog raw eggs because of salmonella and I was thinking dogs dogs have got like stomachs made of they can diest anything they can they eat their own the internet is infested with false information.
They eat their own feces and yet there's a raw egg is dangerous.
Yeah absolutely think that one through yeah um Mark I've so enjoyed talking to you been fantastic um everyone's gonna be everyone's gonna be really keen to look at your site and so where can we find your stuff uh not on the beeb.co.uk is the uh basic mother site we've got supplements at mama dash nature.co
dot uk and the books are on wild dash tales.co dot ukonabe dot uk there's links that take you where you need to go including the glutathione supplements and everything else this is brilliant um thank you very much um everyone else if you've loved this podcast and of course you have um do try and give me some support um substack if you can get through the system please do sponsor me on substack
but I I know it's hard but but I appreciate that those of you make the effort um otherwise buy me a coffee support my sponsors if or you can contact me direct and try and find a way of g of of of sending me money direct, which is maybe maybe the easiest.
It's really hard.
They don't want people like Mark and myself making a living because we're we're giving the messages that that the enemy don't want.
But that's all more reason to make the effort to fund us.
Um support us.
Thank you.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you again, Mark.
It's been it's been great.
Illuminating.
It's a pleasure to get to know you, James.
I hope to see you in person in the near future somewhere.
Somehow.
Oh it's gonna happen.
It's unless they unless they bump me off first.
Or you Mark Carey Mullis plane.
Uh right.
Um Thank you.
Alright.
Global warming is a massive con.
There is no evidence whatsoever that man-made climate change is a problem, that it's gonna kill us, that we need to amend our lifestyle in order to deal with it, it's a non-existent problem.
But how do you explain this stuff to your normie friends?
Well, I've just brought out the revised edition of my 2012 classic book, Watermelons, which captures the story of how some really nasty people decided to invent the global warming scare in order to fleece you, to take away your freedoms, to take away your land.
It's a shocking story.
I wrote it, as I say, in the well, 2011 actually, it the first edition came out.
And it's a snapshot of a particular era.
The era when the people behind the Chine Climate Change scam got caught red-handed, tinkering with the data, torturing till it's screamed, in a scandal that I helped christen Climate Gate.
So I give you the background to to the skullduggery that went on in these seats of learning where these supposed experts were informing us.
We've got to act now.
I rumbled their their scam.
I then asked the question, okay.
If it is a scam, who's doing this and and why?
It's a good story.
I've I've kept the the the original book pretty much as is, but I've written two new chapters, one at the beginning and one at the end, explaining how it's even worse than we thought.
I think it's a I think it still stands out.
I think it's i it it's a good read.
I obviously unbiased, but I'd recommend it.
Uh, you can buy it from James Dellingpole.co.uk forward slash shop.
You'll probably find that mic, just go to my website and look for it, James Dellingpool.co.uk.
And I hope it helps keep you informed and gives you the material you need to bring round all those people who are still persuaded that it's a disaster, we must amend our ways and appease the gods, please mother.
There we go.
It's a scam.
Hello.
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