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Aug. 28, 2022 - Jim Fetzer
59:43
Inconvenient Truths Ep. 5 First Mass Vaxx Program,Glow Kids, Early TV Indoctrination, Fake Measles
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This is Jim Fetzer, joined with Gary King to bring you Inconvenient Truths, our new series inspired by Gary's active imagination.
This is, believe it or not, episode number five.
Gary.
And it's starting to get more and more popular.
We're getting more and more.
Look, we had 85 thumbs up and on YouTube, I mean, minus the four bots that gave us a thumb down, we're doing really good.
All right.
So, If anyone ever goes back to episode number one, they're going to realize that it wasn't the name of the show, but for about 45 minutes, it was called Non-Random Thoughts, which was Jim Fetzer's very first radio show.
God only knows how far back that goes, but we're going to incorporate Kind of random thoughts and non-random thoughts along with inconvenient truth today.
So there's no telling, we'll get serious.
And then a lot of times we won't be serious, but what I'm going to do is, let me make sure I got my volume right.
Okay.
We're going to start out now.
Who wants to talk about Richard Nixon?
I mean, that's almost like talking about LBJ.
However, Richard Nixon did say that people will not believe something until they've seen it on TV.
And here's a clip to prove it all right here.
And we'll get Jim's comment on it.
Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale of a fateful trip That started from this topic port aboard this tiny ship The mate was a mighty sailor and the skipper brave and sure Five passengers set sail that day for a three-hour tour A three-hour tour The show was on the air for about ten weeks and I get a call from the Coast Guard, a lieutenant in the Coast Guard.
And he said, "Can I come down to see you?" I had no idea why a lieutenant in the Coast Guard would want to see me, but I said, uh, fine.
Come down.
Came in.
He said, I don't want to tell you over the phone because I didn't think you'd believe me, but here, read these.
And he tosses about a dozen or 18, I don't know, batch of telegrams on my desk.
I said, what side is this readable?
And they all said almost the same thing, all from different parts of the country.
And they were addressed at Hickam Field in Hawaii.
They were addressed in Vandenberg, Air Force Base, and different places.
And they said, for a couple of months now, we've seen seven Americans on an island, and they're going to die.
Now, we send millions, billions across the ocean, all kinds of other countries.
Why can't we spare One vessel to go and save these people.
Yes!
Who do they think was laughing at what was happening to these people?
Where do they think the music came from?
And the commercials?
The tiny ship was tossed If not for the courage of the fearless crew The minnow would be lost The minnow would be lost The ships are found on the shore Of this uncharted desert isle With Gilligan The skipper too The millionaire Gives birth to a little girl or a little boy
I mean the television has such a power Well, look what happens on soap operas when somebody gives birth to a little girl or a little boy.
They're flooded with little socks and things for the baby, like it really happened.
There's a belief factor that's incredible in television, and it's not true in any other medium.
It's scary.
Really scary.
I think that's wonderful, Gary.
Really scary.
You know, I in my life have not watched one episode of Gilligan's Island.
I mean, I had siblings who were captivated, you know.
Actually, they were into the Beatles before I was into the Beatles.
But, you know, it was just that age difference and it passed me all by.
I'd probably find it rather intriguing.
How many males and how many females were on Gilligan's Island?
Well, we had Mary and the Skipper.
We had Gilligan and the Skipper.
We had the millionaire and his wife, the movie star, The Professor and Marianne.
And I think that was the way it goes in the song.
So, or two, three women because of, you know, the millionaire's wife.
Remember, she was always prissy and stuff, had diamonds on, pearls.
And one was a movie star, one was a... Correct me if I'm wrong, but my impression is this was so wholesome that you never even had the faintest hint that it was such a thing as sex.
I mean, am I right?
Oh, no, they didn't have anything like that, Jim.
Last week's show proved how far we've fallen since the days of Gilligan's Island.
Oh, with the trans stuff and the pole dance.
I just saw a news story about, you know, teaching little kids how to pole dance.
I mean, it's just unbelievable.
I mean, it makes me sick.
It really does.
So before we go to screen share, what about what Richard Nixon said about if they don't see it on TV, they won't believe in it.
And I really believe it's the same today.
And if they see it on TV, they will believe it, even if it's a fantasy, even if it's as fantastic as Gilligan's Island.
Gary, that's really intriguing.
Yeah.
His observation and reaction was fascinating.
He had to come down and tell them how these demands were being imposed on the Coast Guard to go save these seven stranded on Gilly Goods Island!
Well, they should come on down to the set, you know?
Wow, it's amazing we haven't seen any of those shows.
All right, so we're going to go ahead and we're going to talk more about propaganda back in the day.
All right.
Miss Simpson's got one other thing to show you here.
You know what that is?
Looks like something for Siphon Insider.
I ain't gonna stick that thing in me.
Mr. Hollister, our records show that you've never had a technical shot in your life.
Lady, you can put that thing away right now.
I ain't never been jabbed and I ain't fixin' to be.
Goodbye.
Yay!
I promised my supervisor that I'd get 100% cooperation on those shots.
She wouldn't look like a fool.
Well, what's happened?
Rafe Hollister turned you down, did he?
Want me to take you back up there?
What?
Talk to Rafe Hollister.
He's giving me shots.
Ronnie, if Andy couldn't do anything with him... And you know why Andy couldn't do anything with him?
Because Andy's too soft!
Right?
Ray Foster!
75 here!
Come on out!
What you want, Ronnie?
And what's that nurse doing back here?
She came out here to give you your shot!
Now you stop acting like a child and come out here and get it!
What?
You heard me here!
Right now!
Alright, I'm going to give you exactly three to get out of here!
One!
Two!
Three!
And I'll give you exactly three to get off of my property!
Two!
I don't even know how to count to three!
How did he shoot at you?
I'm sorry, I just wanted to get you to safety.
Alright, I'll be back, Ray!
You're in trouble, fella!
Big trouble!
Okay, buddy!
You just threw away any chance you had for an agency!
You're in trouble!
That's what you are!
Big trouble!
Easy now, Ray!
Ain't nobody gonna make you take a shot against your will!
Of course not, but... That would just make you understand how important this is!
Not to me, but to yourself and your family, and to your friends.
This could save your life one day, or one of your children.
If you don't want to think about yourself, you think about them.
Does it sound like COVID-19 commercials?
Well, pro-vax propaganda.
I don't know, you know, tetanus shots aren't going to cause you to go deaf or have blood clots or a heart attack.
You got to start somewhere.
They built up a lot of goodwill so that they could take advantage of it and buy up the, you know, the health care system, the CDC, the NIH, the WHO, the FDA.
It's really disgraceful that these people deserve to be indicted, prosecuted, and punished to the full extent of the law, Gary, because they have sold out, they knew better, The first principle of medicine, after all, expressed by the Hippocratic Oath, is first, do no harm.
And they have done precisely the opposite.
They're doing the maximum damage possible in the shortest amount of time.
Yeah, you have to start somewhere.
And the public trust, because a lot of people walk right into the COVID vaccination on public trust, right through the TV, and it's going way back to here.
I'm doing alright now.
I'm telling you for the last time, I ain't taking no shots.
There we are.
That all?
That's all there is to it.
That wasn't so bad.
Of course not.
Here, I'll rub off the alcohol.
No, leave it there.
I like the smell.
Well, Mr. Howser, I can't attend to you having the line in Iowa.
I just hope now I can get all the other stuff in your district.
Well, little lady, you just come on up.
I'll have them all ready for you.
Oh, that's wonderful.
Well, I'll just tick off your name now.
You spell it with two L's, right?
You've done a fine thing there, Ray.
Do y'all feel proud?
I do!
I feel a little ashamed, too.
Growing up making such a to-do over a little thing like a shot.
Sometimes it's the big ones that make the worst babies.
Well, I'm glad I caught this.
Caught what?
Caught your name, Barney.
What about my name?
Well, it isn't checked off.
You haven't had your tetanus shot.
Well, this will get over with right now.
Go to sleep.
Did you see that look?
Did you see that look on that woman?
Take a look at that.
or something.
I think we ought not to rush.
You've got a thing like this, y'all.
Investigate it and make sure.
Make sure.
Come on, man.
Did you see that look?
Did you see that look on that woman?
Take a look at that.
It's just a look that only a woman can have.
How's it?
Is that Suzanne?
Is that Suzanne?
I don't think so.
- It's just alcohol. - That's pretty hardcore for going way back to, was it 60s, huh?
Oh yeah, that's real ancient history TV-wise, Andy Griffith.
Yeah, exactly.
So, um, I mean, today the rational attitude would be to stay the hell away and use your gun to enforce it.
So, you know, the guy is supposed to be the miscreant and the retard here actually would be at the front of the class today, sad to say.
All right.
If you can stand one more hardcore propaganda from the 60s, we got one more and then we'll get a little more serious.
Go for it, Gary.
OK, hang tight.
I forgot to do the screen share.
And that messes things up.
Here we go.
All right, now, if there's anyone out there that doesn't know what a false flag is yet, they're gonna have one right here in Mayberry, and we can't explain it any more simply than this.
Barney?
What's the matter?
Turning in one badge, one notebook, one pencil.
Barney, what are you doing?
I'm handing my resignation as deputy.
That's what I'm doing.
One gun belt, one holster, one revolver, and one bullet.
Barney, what do you mean you're handing in your resignation?
Just what I said, I'm handing in my resignation.
There once was a deputy called Pye, who carried a gun and a knife.
The gun was all dusted, the knife was all rusty, because he never caught a crook in his life.
That's undermining indignity of all!
It makes out like I never wanted to catch crooks.
And that just ain't so!
I'd catch them in a minute.
But how am I gonna catch them if there ain't anything for heaven's sake?
If only somebody would just commit a crime.
One good crime!
If only somebody would just kill somebody.
Barney!
Oh, I don't mean anybody, we know!
Opie, you know something.
Hi, Paul!
A good town owes its citizens a right to keep busy.
Now, if there's a tooth dentist in town, why, folks ought to get a toothache once in a while.
And if there's a street cleaner, why, folks are obliged to keep the streets just a little bit dirty.
And if there's a deputy sheriff, why, he ought to have a crime to work on well once in a while.
Oh, nothing big.
Nothing big.
Just a nice, friendly little fry.
What's that got to do with going over to Walker's for a soda?
Well, yeah.
Walker's Drugstore.
Why, that'll do just extra good.
Yes, sir.
Honestly, I don't know why I'm doing this silly thing.
Well, of course you do.
It's going to do a whole lot for Barney and have him out with Miss Rosemary.
But what if he finds out that it's only...
Here it comes!
Now, now, now, let's remember.
Act nervous.
Alright, now let's see.
Uh, he was wearing a mask, and he had a gun, and he made me open the cash register and give him all the money.
How much was there supposed to be?
Oh, $24.
$24?
Isn't that sort of a cheap crime?
Well, it's Barney's first crime, and we all kind of let him start at the bottom and work his way up.
Since you called, Andy.
Miss Ellie, was you really robbed?
Like someone took your money?
Without you walking too?
Came right in and held you up, did he?
That's terrible!
Yes, Barney, this masked man with a gun walked right in, made me open the cash register, and took $24!
Good for him!
I mean, you just leave everything to me!
Boy, this is the first chance I've had to use my fingerprint scanner in two years!
That's as basic as a false flag can be, huh?
And I'll tell you right now, in New Orleans, if they had a quiet night for real, you're not going to hear that in the morning.
You're always treated to a couple of gunshots, domestic homicides, things like that.
Unfortunately, they're all real, Gary.
None of them are just pretend.
being a little facetious there, Jim.
All right, hang on.
Well, Gary, it is about as innocuous an example as you could have of a false report being reported as though it were a bona fide crime Unfortunately, we've escalated to situations like Sandy Hook, the Boston bombing, Orlando, Dallas, Charlottesville, Parkland, Las Vegas, Buffalo, Uvalde.
I mean, the acting, it's still acting, Gary, but it's involving a whole lot more people in the audience isn't let in on the game.
The fact that it's all fraudulent where these communities are paid big bucks to participate in these events so that the public can believe they're real and be manipulated to promote a political agenda where Barack Obama It was especially resourceful and nullified the Smith-Mutt Act of 1948 by the Smith-Mutt Modernization Act of 2012, just in time to bring us Sandy Hook.
Right on time.
But it's amazing to me that the script writers would be thinking about basically a false flag way back then and running the vaccine script and all that.
It seemed like they might have been having a little bit of a nudge from the big boys.
All right, well, maybe, Gary.
I mean, you know, pharma wasn't so big then, but it would be a way of promoting, in this case, tetanus shots.
And I think the false flag was just a comedic innovation, but often it inspires others, you know, to Turn a technique to bad use.
It's like a tool, like a hammer.
It could be used for good things, for ivy nails, putting furniture together, building houses, but also for bad, beating someone over the head till they're dead.
I mean, you know.
I have friends that it took me five years for them to understand what a false flag was and that they go on.
So that's for those guys, not the dean of false flags.
All right.
Now, Dr. Fesser, Question.
When was the very first mass vaccination campaign?
Would you know?
Mass vaccination campaign?
Very first one.
Tell me.
Well, they got a big clue right there on the screen.
Oh, polio.
Polio vaccine.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
All right.
Putting it in sugar cubes, yeah.
Okay, so you were saying that the big pharma wasn't around so much back then?
Let's see.
Hold on.
Nice.
Great catch, Gary.
Great catch.
All right.
This is going way back.
And here we go.
I had to edit this so much because it was like 20 minutes.
I got it down to about four and a half.
hold on nice great catch gary great catch all right this is going way back and here we go i had to edit this so much because it was like 20 minutes i got it down to about four and a half very good Holio outbreak.
That was the ominous headline which faced the City of Hull on October the 5th, 1961.
During the following week, newspapers in Hull and throughout the country pinpointed the alarming spread of the disease.
The task facing the City Health Department was enormous.
Speed was vital.
The Medical Officer of Health set the target.
300,000 men, women and children to be vaccinated in one week.
The first job was to tell the people of Hull how and when they could get the vaccine.
At press conferences, up-to-the-minute news was given, and soon the location of clinics was known in Hull and the neighbouring areas.
Twelve new cases of polio on the eve of the campaign gave it a grave impetus.
Advertisements were placed in the local papers giving clinic times and places.
Posters were prominently displayed in the city shops.
By noon of the first day, 150,000 people had been vaccinated.
Supplies of the vaccine were quickly running out.
The Royal Air Force stepped in.
An aircraft from RAF station Lechenfield flew to Manston Airfield near to the factory to obtain these urgently needed further supplies.
Jim, isn't that a Japanese symbol, that target?
Yes, yes, yes, yes, for the zeros.
Yeah, I mean, and it's the Royal Air Force coming in with the vaccine.
This was a cargo which received VIP treatment.
Packed in special containers lined with dry ice, the vaccine was carefully and quickly transferred to a waiting van.
From the airport, the van drove straight to the city health department.
The staff have been alerted to receive the new supplies.
Here, the crates were unpacked.
Special care was taken to ensure that in the de-icing process, the inner containers with the vaccine were not damaged.
If the vaccine had been kept in the containers packed with dry ice, it would have remained frozen solid for another three days.
Once it's removed, it thaws quickly, but retains its potency for about seven days.
In its frozen state, the vaccine is in concentrated form.
Before use, it must be diluted.
This is a simple procedure.
And then they're left to thaw.
Now we come to the only part of this vaccination campaign which requires a needle.
Now the vaccine is ready for use.
The diluted vaccine is repacked into the original boxes for distribution to the clinics.
Where necessary, the ambulance station's shortwave radio was used to order the transfer of stocks between clinics.
This clinic was in one of the 40 schools used for the purpose during the Hull campaign, and here the vials of diluted vaccine were opened for immediate use.
The Lord Mayor of Hull and other members of the Corporation took their sugar lump vaccine and obviously enjoyed it.
300,000 cubes of sugar were donated for the campaign by a well-known sugar company.
For the very young, the under fives, the vaccine was given in a teaspoonful of syrup.
Unlike most vaccination campaigns, there were no tears or tantrums.
The children, with a superb variety of expressions, took their syrup and enjoyed it, with no idea that they and their parents were making medical history.
For citizens, the vaccination campaign meant little disruption to their normal life.
But for the Public Health Department, it had meant many long hours of work.
How did the campaign work out?
A month after the first case was notified, I met the Medical Officer of Health for Hull.
Doctor, as Medical Officer of Health for Hull, you've been the director of the first mass immunisation campaign with the Sabine oral vaccine to be used in Western Europe.
What was the object of this campaign and do you say you've succeeded?
We'd hoped to give as many people as possible in Hull this vaccine And I think that when I tell you that we gave it to 96.3% of the population, I think we can claim fairly that we have succeeded.
Well, you know, Gary, the problem is there was something wrong with that vaccine.
It caused debilitating effects.
So, you know, the history of vaccines really is very checkered.
And I think that there would be great wisdom in not leaping into anything.
There's a new article in Children's Defense, the Bobby Kennedy Jr.
publication about how the first You know, the lockdown took place here in the United States, and it appears as though persons who are completely unqualified to make these decisions were involved in orchestrating, in very short order, like in a two-hour period of time, what to do by way of response.
And of course, it was catastrophic for the nation.
The lockdown was a calamity.
Yes, one of the first things that come up is, what about the polio vaccine?
It wasn't that successful, but I've talked to, I've had Dr. Tenpenny on my show, I've had Rima Label on my show, and they were saying that as the conditions, water conditions, sewage conditions, and better food and everything began to be more widespread, that all of these Diseases began to just fall and it looks like they just kind of jumped on the back of it and said it was all polio.
Our vaccine saved the day.
Well, you know, Gary, polio was thought to be completely extinguished, but now it's making a resurgence, and I think that has to be deliberate.
I mean, there would be no good reason why polio ought to come back after it's been really essentially wiped out, and yet that's happening now.
And, you know, Gates had an anti-polio vaccine introduced in India and wound up to I mean, they've got to hang this, man.
500, 5,000, some staggering number of young girls were paralyzed by this polio vaccine that was being used.
And I don't know why it would have been only with girls.
But there are serious issues here.
And Bill Gates has been front and center in almost all of them.
I mean, they've got to hang this man.
And what's your view on Fauci resigning?
He's trying to get his head out of the news before the Republicans retake Congress and put him on the hot seat.
It's Fauci first, last, and always.
He's just getting the hell out of Dodge before the new sheriff arrives.
Yeah.
All right, we're going to go on to... You had this man on your show, and I tried to find it, but I wasn't able to.
I believe it was 500,000 Indian girls who were paralyzed.
It was on that order.
It was a massive number.
I know that Bill Gates is responsible for more deaths and so will Fauci be.
I just hope that finally people come and demand justice.
I mean, when you have people dying, which I know many people who are sick because they're double-boosted, double-vax, double-boosted, The more you have, the worse your odds become.
The latest statistics from the UK show double and triple vax have the highest death rate of all.
I mean, the more you get, you might be able to make your way through with only one, but if you go after that, I think the situation is working very much against you and your odds are diminishing fast.
Yeah, I don't have as many clips for this one right here, but I listened to your show in 2016.
I don't think there could have been a show more calling the future with a crystal ball than that one.
It was called Glow Kids.
And I'm telling you now, Dr. Fetzer, in my own life, these iPads are simply, simply the devil's tools.
I have seen my own grandchildren other people's grandchildren.
I mean, I have a lot of kids around me and they sometimes are they if you try to get them off of their iPad, especially when it's a kid that's just there for a day or two and their mother's not around.
They you've never heard more cursing more violence that all the fights we've ever had around here was over the iPads and God help you if you have only one iPad and two children and the very Gary the Cell phones have been completely addictive.
I mean, it's been staggering how much it's changed society to be able to talk to anyone you want, no matter where you are, provided there's, you know, sufficient microwave routers.
I mean, it's just stunning.
The effect has been probably the greatest technological innovation of all time, certainly among the very few.
And I am talking about seven, eight, Nine and ten-year-olds who are completely hardcore addicted.
And I wish I had a better word.
Maybe you can come up for it.
But when they came down, they came down to my studio and showed me a video.
And I said, well, hey, cool.
I want you to hang out with me.
But they went to the door, and they have this special look.
And they're only nine years old.
And it's a jonesing, you know, like when you've got to have a drink.
And there's two of those children.
They had that, and I let them go upstairs.
And I went up there, and they were just hardcore on it.
Now, my 14-year-old granddaughter, She was on, this is during the hurricane, had all these kids here because their, you know, their houses were under, not necessarily flooded, but they were no electricity and stuff.
And one of the 14 year olds were on her phone with iPads 14 hours straight.
And I told her dad, I said, you know, don't you think she's been on there just a little bit too long?
You know, I'm trying not to use any names.
And he went to her and said, you know, don't you think you might've been on there?
And my beautiful blue eyed, blonde haired granddaughter cursed him out like a dog over screen time.
So I've seen, I mean, it's as bad as it can possibly be.
And so this might give us a little bit of insight and I salute you for having this guy on way back in 2016 and talk about calling it out.
According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, children are spending an average of seven hours a day on entertainment media, including television, computers, tablets, and other electronic devices.
But all this screen time may have a negative effect on them, creating a generation of kids addicted to that digital glow.
Dr. Nicholas Carderas is an addiction expert and author of Glow Kids, How Screen Addiction is Hijacking Our Kids and How to Break the Trance.
Doctor, thank you so much for joining us.
Very insightful book, worrisome for a lot of parents as well.
First off, what are Glow Kids?
Describe that title.
Glow Kids was sort of the idea came to me for that name, and I went into a restaurant with my wife, and I think I saw what millions of other people have seen.
Children hypnotically staring at a digital device, really almost in a trance-like state, with their faces washed by the digital glow.
And so, as a name, it struck me as this is sort of a generation of kids who have the hypnotic glowing faces.
But I think what I saw was that Uncontrovertibly, there was a major shift happening with children, and children were effectively getting into these trans-addictive ways of being with their digital devices, and it really has crept up on us as a society over the last 10 or 12 years.
And you look at kids today, as you mentioned, you constantly at restaurants, on airplanes, what have you, looking at their devices.
Some people may say, you know what, it's just a sign of the times.
It's just technology over the years.
You know, they go from writing things down to watching television on screen at home to now having these portable devices.
And it's just as we evolve as, as people and as a society, it comes along with it and there are benefits.
What do you say to those people?
Sure, and I understand that, and I'm not a Luddite, I'm not anti-technology.
The whole thesis of my message is that technology has to be age-appropriate because children's brains are very fragile developmentally, and this generation of screen media is qualitatively different than, let's say, television.
Television is passive visual stimulation.
An interactive screen is immersive and much more hyper-arousing and stimulating.
So, there's been over 200 peer-reviewed studies that have shown some of the clinical and neurological effects of this generation of screens that are much more impactful than, say, a television or a book.
I get it.
Plato had warned us about the written word.
Plato thought that books would make us lose our memory and that every generation of technology has the sky is falling sort of chicken little effect.
But the reality is, and I think any person who has eyes in this generation has begun to see that this is different.
Kids are, and again this hypnotic trance that I call it, is now being backed up by research that shows that these screens are affecting the frontal cortex of a child's brain in exactly the same way as cocaine addiction is.
Yeah, in fact, you and other experts call this now digital drugs, which is worrisome, of course, when you see that headline.
And as a parent, in the past, we talked about this topic and the concern being the children were limiting themselves as far as outdoor activity, as far as being mobile, instead of going outside and playing with their friends, they're staying home and playing with their devices.
We were worried about obesity levels.
You're talking about real impact on brain development per se, though.
Talk about that.
Well, the first diagnostic clinical criteria for addiction is the behavior or the substance negatively impacts your life.
And so if screen time is taken away from real life activities, if a child that used to play sports or enjoy reading or outdoors or interpersonal activities all of a sudden is now Not doing any of those things, and more and more and more is isolated and in front of a screen, we begin to see that the screen has a very compelling effect that is now reducing their lives to just a digital world.
And the reality is, for children, the digital world is so hyper-arousing, and the other word that we use is dopaminergic.
They raise dopamine levels significantly, and that's the addictive effect.
that they prefer, they don't have the neurological apparatus that we do it with.
We have fully developed frontal cortexes, and the frontal cortex is the executive functioning part of our brain that allows us to control our impulses, to do consequential thinking.
So an adult can engage in something stimulating, a sexual experience, coffee, watching movies, and they have the neurological apparatus to sort of moderate that.
Children don't.
Their frontal cortexes aren't developed, so when they experience something that's so powerfully stimulating and arousing, they don't have the breaking mechanism in their brains to say, let me just do this for half an hour, which is why we're seeing kids who are, you know, I've worked with gamers.
I mean, I talked to a young man yesterday who was gaming 19 hours a day, he had been a state wrestling champion, he had been a straight-A student, and then he got totally consumed by his gaming addiction, and it literally destroyed his life, and now he's in residential treatment to try to get past that addiction.
And are you seeing it impact social skills as well as children development?
It's such a crucial development for children to learn early on in schools and what have you.
Are screens taking away from that development at all?
Absolutely.
Interpersonal skills are developmental stages, just like learning language is a developmental window.
Learning how to pay attention and develop our attentional abilities, they're also developmental windows.
So, I didn't talk about the ADHD effects, but the reason why we're having an ADHD epidemic is that screens are hyper-stimulating kids during the developmental window when they're supposed to be paying attention.
To your point, socially as well.
Kids are supposed to be socially interacting and we're supposed to for interpersonal interaction to have meaning.
Researchers say we're supposed to have eye contact 70% of the time.
Kids now are having eye contact less than 20% of the time.
That's the screen effect.
Kids are no longer learning how to make eye contact and that makes them suffer interpersonally.
And I don't think I'm necessarily saying anything that people who are somewhat aware and have eyes can see.
I mean, kids, I sound like an old person, kids today, but young people today who are very digitally immersed are beginning to lose certain very important qualities of youth. - And what do you, How do you factor in the fact that a lot of these devices are being used at schools as learning tools, as guides?
It's one thing where a teacher takes away someone's phone because they're texting.
It's a totally different subject, however, when they're using their computers as part of the curriculum.
Are schools at fault?
Is the education system at fault?
A lot of parents view this as a positive that the schools have a lot of technology.
Right, that's what gets me the most upset.
That's an absolute lie that screens are educational, or that I think what's happened, and I'm trying to be kind here, educators have been conned by technology companies into believing a narrative that iPads or interactive screen devices are somehow educational.
And in fact, if you look at the research, I've looked at the research and other people who are education experts have looked at the research.
It's the greatest lie going.
It's the biggest scam going.
Education technology is a 60 billion dollar a year industry.
I wrote an op-ed about that in Time Magazine.
And so there's a financial agenda.
To implement screens in schools, but yet a country like Finland, who is at the top of the educational world hierarchy, they've rejected screens.
They've said that we'd rather focus on traditional teaching, face-to-face interactions, the Socratic circle.
Digital education is a myth in terms of its efficacy.
And that's what really, as a parent, I have nine-year-old twins, I, in my book, I have a parent opt-out letter.
I don't want my kids to be given a tablet when they're in second grade.
It's not age-appropriate, it has the potential for clinical disorders, and it doesn't help them learn.
That's the bottom line.
It's a waste of money and limited resources that schools are investing because they've bought this lie, and the emperor has no clothes.
That's extremely interesting, Gary.
Did I play this on one of my shows?
I mean, this woman interviewing this guy, he knows what he's talking about.
The cumulative consequence over decades have been profound.
I think he's got it exactly right.
You know, when we went through the lockdown and kids were wearing masks, it had debilitating effects.
Young kids who are learning to speak couldn't see words being formed by the mouths of those with whom they were communicating.
They've been set back neuro-linguistically.
I fear it could be permanent.
We have many of our educational system turning remedial.
You can't teach new stuff because you got to make up for old stuff.
It's been a calamity and it's been part of the dumbing down of American education where this technology he's addressing has made a big difference.
This guy's admirable.
He's got the right message and I'll bet no one paid attention.
He was really It's falling on deaf ears, Gary.
And I'm telling you, the consequences are going to be enormous.
I'm feeling it right now in my own life.
I mean, I might be getting, I'm not really getting personal.
This is just hardcore, real local stuff that I have seen and not just me, but other people around me.
Um, I decided to turn the internet off just for an hour and tell all the kids it was for, um, They were upgrading the lines or something like that.
So I turned the internet off and I had an 11 year old boy weeping equally as if he had lost his mother.
He was crying that hard because at four o'clock there was a game that they play with other people through the internet and he was just Devastated and wouldn't stop crying and then I finally said, okay, let me go flip it back on.
It's back on and then everything went away and then I did it again on a different day.
It was a little girl.
She's eight years old and she just fell into a bawling, whining, crying fit.
It's really beyond what this guy's saying is almost like he's under under understating everything and now the first generation of all this computer stuff it wasn't so interactive and actually have a grandkid this in his 20s and 21 22 That actually made a living with this stuff.
They got good at computers, and then they were able to get jobs and all that, but this has gone beyond that.
Now, they're guilty of too much screen time, but not like this generation here.
I've been around a lot of crazy bands, and I've seen addiction, and it's just as hardcore as any addiction I've seen among musicians around me.
It is an addiction, Gary.
It's 100% an addiction.
That's the right language to use.
And then the lockdown...
See, you had to be using your computer for school, and that's where some of my grandkids got away with it.
They said, aren't you on your computer a little bit?
Oh, it's schoolwork.
Mom, it's schoolwork.
And you really don't have time to go in there and check all the time.
And who knows, they could probably just click a little button in the screen, you know, the schoolwork would come right up after they get out of their chat.
You know, so it's really hardcore, Jim.
Gary, you're making telling points and your little experiments are quite revealing.
They were like six dogs.
All right, on to the next non-random thought of the day.
I want to show you something that I found Probably in 2019, this was before COVID.
And if you remember, right, they were really pushing the measles vaccine.
And I just love this researcher here, because she catches these, catches them just with their pants down.
The point of making my little contribution to this.
Sharing, Gary.
Sharing.
Sorry about that.
Hang on.
I hate it when I do that.
One more second.
All right, we're coming back.
I needed to adjust the volume anyway.
All right, this is how they do it, Jim.
The point of making my little contribution to this heinous situation is let's just go backwards.
Let's go backwards.
This is the article.
The Times of Israel.
Toddler dies of measles in Jerusalem and first such incident in 15 years.
So now I just clicked on that and I wanted to save the image so I could make my video.
So what do you do?
You right click on it and you save the image, right?
But, when you do that, Save Image As, look what happens!
Look at the name of the image!
iStock 857285148.jpg.
Okay?
So, let's just go back one more step here.
iStock.
Okay?
Because, just to show you the, you know, the backward path I took.
Go to Stock Photos.
Doctor holding beautiful newborn baby.
The thing is, you don't even have to look for it, because these idiots at the Times of Israel did not even think to change the name of the photo!
So they're showing us the proof, as plain as day, that they doctored a stock photo!
They doctored a stock photo, which is available right here!
Okay.
And look, you can see the little wrinkles on the little child's foot.
I mean, how much... Yeah, how outrageous.
I mean, they're just faking the illness so they can...
You know, it's like faking a shooting.
I mean, is this all normal?
It's like Jussie Smollett faking a racist attack.
They just create this bullshit anytime they want to manipulate the public, and very few have the skills here.
The intelligence has sorted out.
That's why it's so invaluable that we have to develop our ability to see through these fraudulent... I mean, they're affecting our lives in ways that are profound, Gary.
An awful lot of, you know, we don't know exactly the total percentage, but a huge amount of the time is just made up.
It's just bullshit.
The problem is it becomes people's reality, other people's reality, and they form something called mass formation.
So when they hear something, they turn into like a big blob.
And if they hear any opposing view, you'll just bounce off of it like a rubber ball.
It's just crazy.
Here we go.
Latence!
Can you get in the orchestration of propaganda?
Okay?
The Times of Israel goes and pays nine euros.
How many shekels is that?
Nine euros to get a photo, and then they pay some idiot intern to go copy and paste rubber stamp marks on the photo, and the photo was uploaded on October 4th of 2017.
So this is by no means something that was new.
So when we look at these other similar images, if we click on this one for example, Right?
This one was uploaded on September 26th of 2016 with the blue background.
I came across a very similar baby photo.
This is on Shutterstock.
Okay, so he's got an account on Shutterstock, another stock photo site.
So here he's got his little watermark on it.
So it's the same guy.
And then I did the same similar images.
And what have we got?
Spotty baby.
Sick baby.
Healthy baby.
Sick.
Healthy.
Yeah, I want to point something out real quick.
Right there.
Wait, let me just catch.
Right there.
If you just take a little bit of a look, you can see where it looks like a little smiley face.
And on every one of these, you can find a smiley face.
It was almost like you had a rubber stamp, but it only made, you know, you can see that it's, you see the three spots, the three spots here.
It's just, they use the same dots over and over to make this baby spotty or unhealthy baby.
Great catch, Gary.
Great catch.
This is the kind of thing we have to understand.
See, we're not used to medical false flags.
You know, we're getting used to these shooting false flags.
I think the public's starting to become aware that almost all of this is nonsense, fabricated and staged.
But this medical false flag, this coronavirus thing, this just took the whole world by surprise.
I think it's going to be tough to pull it off again, but it's already done immense damage.
And I predict A billion are going to die from this minimally and potentially many, many more.
And as I forgot who said this, but so far the genocide has been relatively peaceful.
So, all right, now talk about taking a detour.
I'm going to let you guys know, and I don't use this word anymore.
It's called Freak Out.
And just like the word conspiracy theory, Jim and I, we know where it comes from.
It started right there in Lakeview at Jim Garrison's house, blah, blah, blah.
But when you hear someone say, boy, that dude was freaking out, okay?
All right, just a little backlog on this.
This is Laurel Canyon stuff.
And when they were developing this music scene, And they were buying up these clubs like the Whiskey-A-Go-Go, and they were paying actors like Jack Nicholson, Henry Fonda, Goldie Haunt to go out in these clubs and just mingle to make it appear there was more of a scene.
All right, now Vito and the Freaks, they were also paid by the CIA.
They were paid to go into these clubs And start dancing.
In other words, so when you walked into one of these clubs, especially before there was nothing, anything like this, you would have to recognize that there's something crazy going on.
All right.
Now, Frank Zappa is playing.
However, the heirs of Frank Zappa will not allow his music to be played along with this.
And this is one of the very, very few surviving clips of a real freak out.
And every time you hear that, this is where it came from, but there's no audio.
I had to take it out.
So just imagine you're in Sunset Strip and you're in Laurel Canyon and there's... This is what they would do.
And these are all paid to be there.
Vito and the Freaks.
And they won't let you use the music.
No, but you can see Frank Zappa in there now and then he's, you know, his big nose and his, uh, mustache, but no, they would not allow.
Um, I mean, probably because it sounded so bad.
See a lot of these bands were just being formed and they were being formed on the spot and not necessarily everyone in the band was good.
Now I'm going to tell you, Frank Zappa could play more than most of these people, you know, unlike the birds and stuff like that.
You know, I mean, Uh, but see that guy?
That's Vito right there.
I'm almost sure.
And I watch these facial expressions.
Yeah.
Well, because you're a musician yourself, Gary, and you teach guitar and other instruments, I think you have insights about many of these musical aspects that most of us would miss.
So I really, truly value and treasure your insights about so many of these issues.
Yeah, well, people are just going to have to realize that The whole music scene made during the 60s was manufactured and the CIA had their hands deeply, deeply in it.
And that's just the way it is.
Now, Jim, I want to catch your opinion of this guy here.
He's your senator, I believe.
And he's talking a little bit of COVID talk here.
And so let me get that going.
And I want you to comment on that.
Here we go.
All right, where is he at?
Here it is.
If you're a doctor and you're awakened to what's happened, if you know that it's wrong and it's not right, Don't sit by the sidelines anymore.
Don't let just Peter McCulloch and Dr. Malone and Pierre Cory and all these courageous doctors who've stepped forward to warn the public.
They need help.
We literally need thousands of doctors who are aware of the problem to join together.
There is safety in numbers.
And be honest and truthful with the American public.
I'm begging doctors, I'm begging nurses to come forward.
Join together as one massive group and put an end to this insanity.
And help restore yourselves to the position that I think you all thought you'd be in going through medical school and taking the Hippocratic Oath.
Being loyal first to your patients and being the one to call the shots when it comes to how you care for your patients.
I'm just, I'm begging doctors.
You have to step up the plate.
I got to tell you, Gary, I'm so proud of Ron Johnson.
He's just sensational.
He's one of the few with courage and integrity.
Rand Paul is another and the past Cynthia McKinney.
Uh, You know, the fact is there are too few who have the courage and integrity, the intelligence and the knowledge to do the job effectively.
That guy ranks number one, in my opinion, among United States senators today.
And I'm very proud.
We met five, six weeks ago at an event here in Wisconsin, in Verona, actually, not far from where I reside in Oregon.
Was able to speak with him for several minutes.
I'm just very impressed with Ron Johnson.
And I, I wish we had a whole lot more like him.
We'd be a whole lot better off.
I think we were about down by about 400 to two.
If I have my Jim, I'm going to get your comment on this last one and we're out of here.
I promise.
This is the last clip as our hourglass goes down.
And I really got to get your comment on this one.
Talk about random thoughts.
So this is one of Oprah's favorite She says it's a miracle fountain of youth and her magic wrinkle cure.
I'm going to put a little on your hand.
So this is made from human foreskin.
I'm sorry, Steve.
You just sat up here and squirted somebody's private parts in my damn head!
What you laughing at?
I'm sorry.
This your last time on the show.
She knows.
There were a couple of protesters about it because they are sales from Baby Foreskin.
Oh, Baby Foreskin.
That makes it better.
Yeah, that's different.
I thought it was some grown-ass man.
What are you pushing into the skin?
Well, you push in whatever the facialist would like to insert into your pores.
But what is it?
It is an extraction from a, um, a, um, a piece of skin, uh, that came from a young person, um, far, far away, and they somehow figured out how to extract.
It's foreskin from a Korean baby.
That's what it is.
Okay.
Who comes up with this?
I don't think, I don't think, it's not like I'm lying there with little pieces all over my face.
Who thinks of collecting it and having it for, we'll do something with this someday.
And why didn't we come up with that?
Right.
And so we call it, well, I call it the penis facial, and I think when you see how good it is to your face, you too will run to your local facialist and say, Give me the pen.
...claim it can reverse the aging process.
It's being tested in patients over the age of 35 as part of a clinical trial called ambrosia.
Ambrosia, a drink that tasted like honey and delivered by dubs to the Olympians, was the source of Greek gods' immortality.
A myth dating back 1,500 years tells of several gods fighting over a valued urn of sacred ambrosia.
A magical liquid could provide immortality.
Where people paid $8,000 to get the rich growth factors found in blood plasma platelets.
It's pretty much people from most states, people from overseas, from Europe and Australia.
Results of the trial have not been published, but Dr. Jesse Karzman, who plans to open a business selling young blood, says patients who've had it say they feel amazing.
And he says he's seen evidence of reversing the aging process in rats.
Their brains are younger, hearts, their hair, if it was gray, So this is one of Oprah's favorites.
She says it's a miracle.
Well, what he was calling it the end of brochure appears to be a drain of chrome.
I'm very, very disturbed by that Gary.
I mean, this is a horrific.
And women go out of their way worried out of vanity about their looks.
I like a woman who looks her age.
It isn't a problem for me, but most women prefer to be young eternally.
It just ain't in the cards, I'm sorry to say.
They used to Observe that there are only two things certain in death and taxes, and now they're giving the tax man the guns to ensure you get the other.
It's quite a combination, Gary.
We're in a weird world, I'm sorry to say, and you're doing a great job of picking up on some of these bizarre aspects.
Thank you, my friend.
All right, we'll call it Inconvenient Truths number five, and we'll see you next week.
And I hope y'all had a good time with us.
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