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Sept. 25, 2024 - Louder with Crowder
01:26:37
VarmaGate Part 2: Monkeypox Media Spin | Alex Jones Infowars to be Liquidated
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Time Text
I thought you could talk to me.
I'm looking for you.
I'm looking for you.
I understand.
Monkeypox.
A little foreshadowing.
We're going to get to the final installment of the Mug Club Undercover piece on Jay Varma and the COVID response sort of therein in New York, but also how this could affect you moving forward and the next potential pandemic we've been holding back Some of the footage, and today is that day.
But I wanted you to see this before.
This is an intro that we ran during COVID, a parody of The Bravery's Honest Mistake, a Wuhan mistake.
You may not be able to find it on YouTube because it was banned, and the entire episode was actually removed.
because at that point in time, it was actually considered misinformation,
perhaps bordering on criminal, to imply that there was a possibility
that COVID may have in fact emerged from a lab.
But YouTube has said that it's allowed now, so I think we're probably fine.
And of course you can always watch on Rumble.
This is From the Vault, Wuhan mistake.
Wuhan.
Next to wet markets, that's how we do.
But this time, something just escaped.
I just wanted to Dislodge you unknown
Oops, my bad I swear I never meant for this
I never meant Don't look at me that way
It was a Chinese mistake Don't look at me that way
Oh, it's not his mistake.
Oh, it's his mistake.
Sometimes, when I'm in the wild, the pathogens get away.
Chinese flu, I swear I never meant for that
I never meant Don't look at me that way
It was a Chinese mistake Don't look at me that way
It was a Chinese mistake Honest mistake
Don't look at me that way you
It was Johnny's mistake.
Don't look at me that way.
It was Johnny's mistake.
You made a way, but you tried his mistake.
Tried his mistake.
You made a way, but you tried his mistake.
You made a way, but you tried his mistake.
Join Mug Club today for $89 annually or try it Mugless for $9 a month.
You can sign up at ladderwithcredit.com slash MugClub for the entire catalog including Nick DiPaolo, Brian Callum, Mr. Guns and Gear, and of course Alex Jones along with 100% more of this show.
We're working on a drug called monkeypox.
It was a big outbreak a couple years ago.
But it's not going to spread among the general population.
It's almost certainly going to stay primarily among gay men.
Honestly, in the United States, the risk is very low.
It's only primarily transmitted among gay men.
It basically got into the sexual networks of gay men.
And a lot of gay men have tons and tons of sexual partners, and often don't use condoms.
And so as a result, it spreads more.
What's the drug called?
It's called ticovirumab, or TPOX.
We also need to keep up people's belief that the drug works, so that's why spinning it in the media is helpful.
So we want the Food and Drug Administration, the FDA, to approve our drugs specifically for monkeypox, and right now it's only considered experimental.
And they want to approve it based on this study.
You can spin them so that people Carter won't, like, dump the stock, thinking that the company's worthless.
The World Health Organization did an announcement about a public health emergency.
It's all over the news and stuff.
They could give us something called an emergency authorization.
Here's what they did to COVID, like the vaccines and everything.
They actually had to submit the data, but they took the preliminary data.
They didn't wait until the data was followed out for three or six months, because it was an emergency.
Because basically what we're trying to get the media to say is, Oh, the drug didn't work because it was designed the wrong way, so they're gonna do another study, and it'll probably work, and in the meantime, you know, people should prescribe it for that reason as an emergency drug.
That's what we want the story to be, and the problem is, we're stuck with, like, Our drug definitely looks like it works, but the people that we need to buy it are not going to be as confident in it, because the data doesn't look as strong as it would have if it was designed in a different way.
So sometimes you do a study and nothing works at all, or people get really sick from it.
The problem is if you do another study, you don't think a year or two to do it, because you've got to, like, I mean, is it a money maker, the emergency use?
I mean, is it a money maker, the emergency use?
Well, it depends.
It's not that many patients have been seen, which is why my CEO has to decide, is it worth it?
Because if there's only a few thousand cases in the United States, does it really make sense
to do another study that's gonna cost $10 million or to do?
You're not going to make that much money on the other hand.
And so my boss is trying to figure out that she's the money person.
I'm supposed to be the thinker.
It's like on phone calls and work stuff all day.
Getting interviewed by media from different angles and things like that.
I know the reporters well.
Right now you have a vulnerable force that resists you...
Agreed.
While Ricks is clutching his machine gun GO grammar that enemy force is descending to your boss.
Asnyoren!
All right, lord!
In that case...
Command the recover a good block of energy!
Affirmative, sir!
Lovely!
Ritsuki, Quinn!
Oh, no!
What the?! You're a stranger! I know the boss! I'm the speedy destroyer!
You're a stranger! I know the boss! I'm the speedy destroyer!
Mmm.
Mm, glad to be with you.
And you know what makes me so—it warms my cockles.
I don't even know what a cockle is.
I just know the expression.
When I get to—I see Brian Stelter's face as the sun.
We were this close.
We were this close to removing it because we thought, well, he doesn't really—but now he's back at CNN because of the blackmail tapes.
So.
Allegedly.
Why else would he be here?
Guaranteedly, if that is a word.
There's no way that you get to be that unattractive, that talentless, drive ratings into the ground that poorly, and still maintain job security.
And by the way, what you're seeing is the new and improved Brian Stelter.
That's true.
You should see him before the caps and the unsuccessful hair plugs where you can tell there's a day he just said, just go.
At least he's still got his smokin' hot wife, right?
Smokin' hot bod.
Bod wife.
Yeah.
It's the only thing he likes more than brunching, as all heterosexual males speak.
His words, not mine.
It's like he picked the thing that all heterosexual males hate, brunch, and is like, you guys like this, right?
Watch out for monkey pox.
We like that, and we like boobs.
So, and speaking of gay, today there is, uh, this is the final installment of Varmagate that we have been following.
Uh, we told you that we were holding some footage back because people were saying, hey, why don't you release more raw footage?
And we always do, you know, on Mug Club where you can see extended footage.
But, um, we didn't want to tip our hand because what's really important about this And is different from what you sometimes see, what you sometimes have seen in the past, is there still was an active threat.
And I mean, damage that could still be done with positions of influence in our medical and scientific community.
Now, I was let go yesterday.
We'll talk about that.
Or two days ago, was officially fired.
So that's good, but I think you'll probably understand a little better as to why when you see what we'll be talking about today.
Monkeypox!
That's a hint.
Also, Alex Jones and Infowars are being forced to liquidate, of course.
We have the man's back.
We always did, even when he was deplatformed.
And the Haitians are suing J.D.
Vance and Donald Trump which is a phrase that I am saying out loud in America in 2024.
And they're not even from Ohio.
It's not even the Ohio Haitians!
They're San Diego Haitians!
I didn't even know we had those.
I don't even know, they could be like Camp Pendleton Haitians.
I don't know, it's a general municipality.
So if at some point today, thank God we could run that Wuhan mistake video, that's of course because of you, Mug Club.
It used to be banned, we were able to survive it.
We may be banned for another reason today or suspended, so if you're watching on YouTube and you see this...
Head on over to Rumble.
It's a weekday show, 10 a.m.
Eastern.
And let me ask you this, because this has also created a real strong sense of community.
What was the one thing that sticks out to you that you weren't able to do during lockdowns while hypocrites in government and unelected positions were able to, for example, have, I don't know, underground sex parties?
What is it that you felt was taken from you that maybe you never get back?
I know for those who've lost loved ones or friends during that time and you couldn't visit them, of course that would be, but sometimes there are some surprising answers.
You know, like, uh, street cart food.
Someone said that, and I was like, well, you live a sad, lonely existence.
But!
Weird.
I understand.
I had to shower in traffic.
Ugh, missed it.
Captain Morgan, CEO, how are you?
I'm doing well.
I had to wear this in honor of Alex Jones today, so.
Oh!
Now I feel like a jerk.
We all should have worn it.
Well, no, I just, I thought it was good.
I mean, I'm trying to silence this guy.
So, I'm doing good otherwise.
Varma's having, you know, one hell of a week.
Yes.
So, probably not asking him.
I mean, usually my instincts are like, hey, hey, it's all right, man.
Things will get better.
And I don't take these things lightly.
You always have to ask yourself, are we the bad guys?
Does this person deserve the justice that is coming their way?
And always try and give them every opportunity to take an off-ramp.
And there are some people who just will never have ears to hear.
So all we can do is best serve you and help protect you.
Safeguard against this happening in the future.
And in third chair, when you hear this, which also It can be another one.
Among the litany of reasons we could be banned today.
Yes.
He's going to be in Las Vegas, Nevada, September 28th and 29th at Skankfest.
They are fortunate to have amongst them Nick DiPaolo, funniest man alive.
How are you, sir?
Good.
How are you guys doing?
Well, you know.
I miss card food.
That and diarrhea.
Hey.
They go together.
We're going to get to monkey pox in a bit.
Can I mention I'll be at the Bridgeview Senate Theater in Ottumwa?
A-Tiowa, November 9th.
A-Tumwa?
He just did, so... A-Tumwa.
Well, that's... I was just being polite there.
He was being polite.
Doctor... Dread.
Captain... Actually, Dr. Dread, when we were a kid, that was actually the food thing.
We were like, Dr. Dread!
No, it was Dr. Dreadful.
Dr. Dreadful?
Yeah, it was like an Easy-Bake Oven.
They would have little things like, Dr. Dreadful's Worm Food!
And it was just like fries, or like gummy things that you put in an Easy-Bake Oven.
And you're like, Dr. Dreadful!
Wait a minute, you had an Easy-Bake Oven as a kid, Steven?
Not really.
It was Dr. Dreadful.
It's a different thing.
I feel like you weren't listening to the story at all!
I tune out when I'll break the... It was just like they had Polly Pockets for girls, and then they were like, for boys, Mighty Max, and they just like painted over her hair, like, ah, it's not a dollhouse, it's a dungeon!
You're like, yeah!
You want to bake your own food too, right?
Of course you do.
Those things were awesome, though.
They were chemical.
Bake worms.
Yeah, well, I mean, we needed it!
They had the Easy Bake Company.
You ever try to eat creepy crawlers?
Didn't Biden try to ban the Easy Bakes?
Well, it was more so he was hoarding.
He had one in a van.
Yes.
He's banning gas ovens.
A bunch of Jews are going, where were you in 1939?
What, too early?
What am I doing, Oprah, for Christ's sake?
This show's getting really gay.
We are talking about Jay Varma quite a bit today, so that does not fall on deaf ears.
Jay Varma, you guys really gave him a good slap, huh?
No, we didn't slap him because he'd like it.
Now, I didn't realize this was actually a comedian, and you know him, but in a fantastic uh... effort of trolling
uh... there have been groups all across new york city of course have been very
upset with jay varma uh... and then uh...
even some uh...
i guess swingers i'm marcus steinberg
This is my wife.
Tatiana.
And we are Swingers Against Lockdowns.
We're here on Jay Varma's block to bring awareness to the fact that he was one of the czars of the COVID lockdown and was throwing wild sex parties while we, swingers that lived in Queens, could not have parties, had to mandate a whole bunch of rules and laws, and our lives were put on hold while he was having wild sex parties right down the street.
was a huge hindrance.
We couldn't have our closest friends to spend quality time with us.
I think it's very unjust.
While this man got to have sex parties with strangers.
We were living on our phones while he was living for the bones.
I love that there's a mobile billboard.
I know, people went all out on that one.
I never know because you don't want to sort of, you know, pull back the curtain, but I think people know that it was a comedian, Erin Berg, who got together with, I don't know her name, but I guess it's a media watchdog organization, Accuracy in Media.
They teamed up with a comedian.
I had no reason to believe that it wasn't true, because there are bizarre factions today on the left, and they can't help but throw each other under the bus consistently, whether it's the mayor, whether it's the governor, whether it's the pharmaceutical company.
This is what you see.
The rats, they scurry, and that's what's happening right now.
We've always told you, they'll try and make someone out to be a patsy.
Oh, this person isn't actually in a position of authority.
With someone like Jay Varma, they can't do that.
So they say, well, actually, we don't like him and we don't agree with him.
And they just have to attack each other because there's no loyalty in politics and certainly not amongst the left.
And by the way, before we continue on with this, none of this happens without you.
We've talked about this and we obviously are gearing up for, we've told you that they're going to lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, then cheat.
And if you think it's bad now, Boy, can we only guess what's going to be happening on election night.
So we've geared up to be prepared for that.
We will have investigative reporters, Mug Club Undercover, and many more in every major city of every major swing state across this country on election night.
We're not going to stop until the election is over.
You'll have the live electoral integrity map.
When you tune in, we can call dispute states and you can actually in real time,
click open new tabs just from that map and see what's going on.
If something is happening in your city and take an active role.
So there's no reason to be tuning in anywhere else.
Everything that Legacy Media has provided in the past, we're doing that and better.
It's a big undertaking.
None of it happens without you.
Click that button.
If you think it's worth your time.
It's $89 annually or you know you go Mugless for $9 a month.
Right now you can use the promo code right undercover.
Yep for $10 off.
$10 off and of course you also get Nick DiPaolo's show weekdays at 5 p.m.
Yeah and we're actually affecting people's lives and when people in New York were coming up to us and saying thank you so much they were thanking Mug Club.
Yeah.
They were thanking the people that made this possible so thank you for your support.
If you haven't done it yet do it now.
Click the link, sign up, promo code undercover.
And sometimes, well yeah Nick.
lot of people like use the phrase speaking true
music music
did father moe How's it feel, bitch?
I'm sorry.
That's my fault.
Father Morgan.
His comes from his profession.
Yours just stems from hate.
No!
That was such a... We know how you feel.
He's getting a little liberal.
No one actually thought that his joke was anti-Semitic.
It was a joke about the gas oven environmental movement.
Yours is just... That's just an epithet.
I don't think he's gay.
You went to a dark place there, doctor.
I didn't use the full word.
The full word's the one I stay away from, you know.
Oh, git?
Yes.
Sorry.
Sorry.
Okay.
The fruits of your labor.
The fruits of your labor, Mug Club.
Sometimes you get to see it.
You get to see what you have contributed to.
You get to see everything come to fruition.
And sometimes, you know, for you, it may also be fun.
Because Jay Varma was fired this week from, and you didn't know this at the time, or it wasn't necessarily highlighted, a pharmaceutical company, Siga Technologies.
Tonight, New York City's former COVID czar fired from his private sector job after he was caught on hidden camera admitting he attended multiple sex parties during the pandemic in defiance of his own public safety protocols.
Do you think you'd have gotten a hard time if New York City found out that you were having sex parties during COVID?
Dr. Jay Varma appears to have been secretly recorded in this heavily edited undercover video released by conservative podcaster Steven Crowder.
The fallout leading to termination from his job at Siga Technologies, a pharmaceutical company where he served as executive vice president and chief medical officer.
The company did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
A spokesperson for Varma would not comment on the firing.
My God, what a hypocrite he is.
One Democratic city council member not holding back, slamming Varma.
When he's caught, he's blaming the right-wing media.
I mean this guy is what a dirtbag.
I hope you guys.
That's a democrat.
That's a democrat.
I hope you got in layman's terms, sir.
Sometimes it's hard to know like online, you know, because there's this there's this tip fatigue,
you know, okay.
Do you understand?
You have shaken up a whole city.
Yes.
That's what's taken place.
And a huge company, by the way, Sega Technologies.
If you guys have a problem with big pharma, and I'm pro-Western medicine, but have a problem with unfettered power, control, right, and influence over your lives, you have had a direct impact.
You have shaken up a city, the entire city government, And the pharmaceutical industry to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars, at least.
Thank you.
That's what you did.
Yeah, absolutely.
And by the way, we have a bit of an update right now.
So we're going to be watching this as the day goes on.
And look, our job is to expose this.
We'll see what happens, especially when we get to the story and you find out more information about what's going on kind of behind the scenes.
But Sigatech opened up down 6% so far today.
So an $8 stock that's lost about 50 cents on the day so far.
30 minutes, right?
I wonder... let's do like an every 15 minute check on that as we go into the story.
Yeah, I wonder how that's gonna... Remember the Vox Apocalypse?
That was alphabet stock.
Apparently this guy you under... you stung was... they say he's hung like a horse.
What?
You know what his nickname is at the party?
He's a big bomber.
Also, it didn't help that Sega... they had a... they bordered on plagiarism with their slogan.
Sega!
Now...
Real close.
It's one letter off.
There's like five people who are around for 90s commercials who understand.
I was and I still don't know what the fuck you're talking about.
So Sega wrote in their letter to the SEC, which is funny that they're writing a letter to the SEC.
Again, that's you.
It's kind of like they don't typically like to write letters to the SEC.
On September 23rd, 2024, the board of directors of Sega Technologies terminated Dr. Jay Varma effective immediately other than for cause from his positions as executive vice president and chief medical officer of the company pursuant to the terms of his employment agreement.
Dr. Varma's service on the company's board of directors also automatically ended effective immediately.
Now, here's the thing.
Siga's going to have one of two options after today.
Because it's not just Jay Varma.
They wanted to put some distance between themselves and Jay Varma.
And I have a hunch that it isn't because of what you have just seen this past week.
But because of concerns as to what they suspected was likely to come.
So, they're going to try and put some daylight between them and what you are about to see, or they will double-secret extra-fire Varma.
It's time for the last installment of Mug Club Undercover.
And just to clarify, I meant the last installment of Mug Club Undercover on this story.
No one's dying.
That's true.
For those who are new to this, we introduced you, right, Dr. Jay Varma, like we've been talking about, New York's sort of COVID czar, the architect of COVID policy is how it was described.
The new footage that we're going to be showing you tonight, again, this centers around the damage that could be done on a continuing basis.
Imagine if people had known, for example, in the 80s, Fauci's horrible handling of AIDS and incorrect information.
If people would have known, he likely wouldn't have been able to do the same damage, for example, with COVID.
And it's not just an Anthony Fauci, it's not just people who work in government, but it can include people who work hand-in-hand with government, often with big pharmaceutical companies, it could be military contractors, where they get giant government contracts, and of course, I would argue, undue influence.
So in this new footage, this is about the damage potentially moving forward, Varma, you'll see right now, this is the first clip, describes to us how he has since, after being New York's COVID czar, moved to the private sector.
Right now, the only way I would go back to the government is if I would get a very high profile.
So before I took this current job in the private sector, I got asked to be the state health commissioner for New York.
So, you know, for the state of New York to be the health commissioner.
Yeah.
And I was like, you know, I just want to do whatever I can to become that.
Thank you very much.
You have to go live in Albany, which is in upstate New York.
It's a totally crappy town.
I'm a Chief Medical Officer of a small pharmaceutical company.
We make drugs for really rare infectious diseases.
I spent my career, I worked for the CDC for 20 years.
I live all over the world doing infectious disease work.
This is the first time I've been in the private sector.
It's funny we use that term private sector.
You guys have heard the term swamp, CDC, New York COVID architects.
Now I go work for a company in the private sector.
You know, a small mom-and-pop shop.
By the way, Albany's gross.
Talk about elitism.
He's right there, but go ahead.
Yeah.
But he doesn't mention, we'll get to the giant government contracts, right, where I'm Willing to bet he probably has some contacts and allies there.
So first, let's address this.
Sega, as he described it, who have fired him unceremoniously since, because of what you're about to see, he describes them as a small pharmaceutical company.
Their market cap is half a billion dollars.
So compared to Pfizer, yeah, sure.
Small?
It's not exactly the mom and pop shop that you would picture.
Also important to note, Okay, half a billion dollars, but their top institutional shareholders are, take a guess, BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street.
These people are too big to fail.
We've done many installments on BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street.
Are you starting to get the picture?
Varma then goes on to explain that his company was working on an antiviral treatment for monkeypox and describes how the disease actually works.
What we're working on is not necessarily nice background.
We're working on a drug for a disease called monkeypox.
Remember?
It was a big outbreak a couple years ago.
It's mostly spread among gay men and stuff like that.
Honestly, in the United States, the risk is very low.
It's only primarily transmitted among gay men.
It basically got into the sexual networks of gay men.
And a lot of gay men have tons and tons of sexual partners, and often don't use condoms.
And so as a result, it spreads more and it's really useful.
But it doesn't spread very often.
There is some spread between men and women in Africa, but it's most of them sexual.
And for a disease like this, which kind of like gives you ugly rashes all over your body, people will like want to get rid of it.
With COVID, it's a little harder because it's kind of like, oh, it feels like a cold.
Do I really need a medication?
Yeah.
For it to treat this disease.
So it's a virus that you get and it causes bumps all over your body.
Monkey Pox.
Monkey Pox.
What's the drug called?
It's called Ticovirumab or T-pox is the name of it.
So they just did a big global announcement about monkeypox, because there's a bunch of cases in Africa and stuff.
Who did a global announcement?
The World Health Organization did an announcement about a public health emergency.
It's all over the news and stuff, and they want to stop it from spreading around the world.
So that's going to make people sick, because there's going to be other outbreaks of it, but it's not going to spread among the general population.
It's almost certainly going to stay primarily among gay men, maybe some women.
I'm very comfortable being around other men, two men and a woman and stuff like that.
I don't actually get, I don't get turned on by other men, but I don't get turned off.
So I've had men kind of play with me and stuff like that and I feel totally comfortable with it.
And there are times it feels good because there's sort of like a different type of energy, but it's not, but I have to be in the right mindset.
I have to be, right.
But I'm very comfortable with it and it's super fun and it's actually really fun for, to be with two guys in a way.
It's like super fun.
I don't know if I've had that before.
But it's really fun and stuff like that.
Yeah. No, it's super fun and stuff like that.
And to also be able to like, turn somebody on like that.
I have a... Alright, I'll be telling too much.
Said no heterosexual man ever.
And that's not judging.
I've just never heard a man who likes women described as being played with by another man as fun.
He says it's a different energy.
Yes, it's called gay energy.
Especially on a second date.
Yes.
Jesus, open up a little more, why don't you?
And is it super relevant?
Yes, because we are talking about monkeypox.
And you may not remember, but at one point in time, many of you were sold a false bill of goods that it could be, potentially, the next pandemic, that it was one to look out for.
And sometimes people were silenced as though it was hateful if you said, well, it seems like it's spreading exclusively in a subset of the population, which can similarly be said about AIDS.
And you were not allowed to discuss that.
That's not at all to say that anyone deserves it or you hate a portion of the population.
That is to say, hey, if you're going to deal with a problem, You need to be accurate in assessing it.
That's the problem with cancel culture, political correctness, is if it doesn't allow you to identify the problem due to these arbitrary ever-changing rules, well, then guess what?
It opens the door for charlatans, for potentially snake oil salesmen.
So, uh, he, meaning Jay Varma, was tasked with, um, Sega's drug, T-Pox.
Okay?
And he was tasked with sort of bringing this and, uh, making it viable or desirable to the United States government as a treatment for smallpox.
So he's a salesman.
Who likes being played with by men.
Let's see his sales pitch for the company Sega, who he worked for then, but have since fired him.
And this is about accuracy and honesty in dealing with diseases or really any situation that has consequences for Americans.
The truth is where you do have to start.
Zika's primary commercial product is a drug that's used to treat a disease that doesn't exist right now, smallpox.
But it's critical for governments to be concerned about this because we know we are in a new age of pandemics.
We'll have meetings with people in Congress or in government or something because we're trying to sell our
drugs to them a lot of times.
Like what? What drugs?
So the same drug that we make is also used for, there's a disease called smallpox, which was, like, eradicated from the earth, like, in the 1970s through vaccines.
But it was, like, some countries developed it as, like, a biological weapon.
Like, you could spread it through the air and kill people.
So, we sell it to the U.S.
government.
They sell this drug to the U.S.
government and to other governments, kind of as like an insurance.
So they have like a stockpile.
And so a lot of times we have to go and like meet and I have to scare people and say, oh, you know, this is, you're gonna die if you don't make sure we have enough of the drug.
Oh my gosh, I'm kind of a health freak, so now I'm nervous.
I'm like, what?
Well, that's why you need to keep talking about it.
Yeah, I know, I know, yeah, yeah.
Well, what, I mean, what are we in for?
Like, is that the next thing?
No, I think it's, I don't think it's super likely, but it's also, like, it's not impossible, right?
And so what I tell them is that, look, if you want to be prepared, it's not super expensive to stockpile a drug and just keep it just in case of some event.
Did some company, like Russia, made this?
So to be clear, he says it's not very expensive for the U.S.
government.
What he means by that is in 2018, Sega got a $472 million contract from the U.S.
So to be clear, he says it's not very expensive for the US government.
What he means by that is in 2018, Sega got a $472 million contract from the US government,
you, your taxpayer dollars, for T-pox as a smallpox treatment.
And unfortunately when you watch this, it validates a lot of concerns that people have
had regarding whether it's considered experimental treatment or perhaps relationships between
those working with big pharmaceutical companies and government.
You see this and you see someone who says he worked for the CDC for 20 years and now just a paltry $472 million contract with the US government.
Here's what's really important.
We talk about smallpox, that's what this contract is for.
T-pox has only been tested, by the way, for efficacy in animals.
It was tested simply for safety in humans, okay?
So they don't have a test that shows that T-pox actually works for smallpox.
There hasn't been that kind of a test.
It was tested clinically for monkeypox, for efficacy in humans.
The problem there is the studies were not good.
It showed that it didn't work, and we'll get into that in a little bit.
There wasn't the improvement that one would need.
So you have a drug that has been studied to see if it works for monkeypox.
Studies show it doesn't.
Doesn't get a passing grade.
Then a huge government contract for smallpox, even though it's not been tested in humans for efficacy, and you paid for it.
And none of that stopped Jay Varma from trying to convince buyers at the FDA.
So we want the Food and Drug Administration, the FDA, to approve our drugs specifically for monkeypox.
And right now it's only considered experimental.
And they won't approve it based on this study.
Why did they design it the wrong way?
I wasn't part of the company.
My boss wasn't part of the company.
They weren't thinking about this disease.
They were thinking about a whole other disease called smallpox.
And this was part of my conference call, so then it was like us screaming like, why the fuck did they decide to start it again?
So is the emergency use authorization gonna happen?
Will it go through?
We haven't even decided if we're gonna submit for it yet.
You have to do it a certain way, if you don't do it a certain way.
Then they won't approve a drug.
The governments that regulate it, they think that if you don't, if you analyze it and you have what's called a secondary outcome, it's not as valid.
And they don't want to like buy the drug and do things for it.
So the problem was the study was designed in a way which we didn't design to be for all patients.
It should have been designed to study for people who have come in really early.
Anyway, it's a little geeky, but basically the problem is we're stuck with like Our drug definitely looks like it works, but the people that we need to buy it are not going to be as confident in it because the data doesn't look as strong as it would have if it was designed in a different way.
And so my boss is trying to figure out that she's the money person, I'm supposed to be the thinker.
Well, I mean, so is that how it works, though?
Like, if the study doesn't go the way that we planned?
You try to do another study.
Yeah.
If you believe the drug works.
So sometimes you do a study and fucking nothing works at all.
Or people get really sick from it.
Problem is, if you do another study, they'll take a year or two to do it.
Because you gotta like...
ethics approval, you get money, you got to get patients come in.
I mean is it a money maker, the emergency use?
Well it depends. It's not that many patients have the disease
which is why my CEO has to decide is it worth it because if there's only a few thousand cases in the United
States does it really make sense to do another study that's going
to cost 10 million dollars or to do? You're not going to make that
much money on the other hand.
Within seven days is what we found.
Yeah, which kind of makes sense after having a rash.
And actually, the earlier you start it, the better your outcomes are.
But unfortunately, they designed this study because it was in the middle of a humanitarian crisis.
They hospitalized all the patients so they can give them food and wound care.
But as a result, it turns out they got actually better just by getting that, whereas most of the patients don't actually get that stuff.
So it's not a real-world comparison, right?
If you imagine, like, everybody was getting treated better.
I want you to take this in context.
Just think about what he just said.
And by the way, it gets worse.
They didn't design the study in the right way.
It would be expensive to if they'd have done it and they were like, oh, why did we do this study?
We provide all the references.
You can click the link in the description.
You can go and see the study.
To the layman, because I know you're not a doctor and you will say that I'm not a doctor, they took a number of people in this study and put them in a hospital.
One group got T-pox, one group did not.
There was not a difference in improvement because it seemed, well, everybody improved!
And what he is lamenting is the fact, you can hear him there saying it, that we should have designed the study differently because it is irrefutably proven that proper wound care and basic nutrition, which is what these patients were receiving in the hospital, had the same improvements.
You can go and read this study and we have doctors poring over it right now and scientists.
That works just as well as teapots.
And that's a bad thing.
According to some, not all, in the industry.
That means the only way you could design this study to prove efficacy of the drug would be to keep half of the patients starving and not in a facility practicing basic hygiene and wound care.
Think about this should be a done if the goal is to help you.
First off, it's not, as he discusses there.
Monkeypox is almost entirely avoidable.
Behaviorally, that's why there are so few cases.
But if it was something that affected all of you, you would want to champion.
You would want to shout from the rooftops, hey, the good news is you don't need a super expensive experimental drug.
Just food, nutrition, and basic wound care.
You can help people with that information.
Let me help you right now.
If you want to avoid monkey pox, there are three steps.
Don't have unprotected anal sex with strange men, likely from music festivals.
I'm being blunt because that's the truth, demographically.
Congratulations, you have a 0% chance, statistically, almost, of getting monkey pox.
But if you can't be helped, step two, you find yourself with monkey pox.
Get basic nutrition, wound care, sleep, and you will improve to a point where the mortality rate is on par with many other communicable diseases.
Where it's not the kind of threat that would warn a new pandemic.
There you go!
Or, you know what, if none of those things can be practiced, step three, spend hundreds of millions of dollars and take this drug.
But that's not good for sales.
You could literally have a group, and I'm not saying literally, Improperly.
I mean literally.
Looking at this study, it seems you could have a group of people go in and get nothing but teapots.
Talking about if they all have monkey pox, assuming.
Go in and have a doctor prescribe teapots and group two could go in and have a doctor prescribe hoagies and neosporin and you would not be able to discern the difference in improvements.
That's the part that you fear of our pharmaceutical industrial government establishment.
And none of this, of course, is good for sales.
And you know what?
Gosh, it really sucks that a study was conducted where people were given basic humanitarian aid and it's not like we should look at the situation and say, hey, how many, I don't know, wells, local farms you could create for over 400 million dollars in impoverished nations.
Let's try and go at this another way.
The good news is that Dr. J had some connections to address the issue of it not being proven to be efficient or the efficacy of the drug.
I don't want to misspeak because I'm not a doctor.
So the drug is called T-Fox, or Ticovirumat, and it's an experimental drug for monkey pox.
And so that's literally what I've been explaining I was like on phone calls and work stuff all day and getting interviewed by media from different angles and things like that.
So I know the reporters well.
Who's the writer?
Apoorva Mandavalli, she's the health reporter for the New York Times.
I have contacts for everybody kind of at any level in the health world.
And including particularly globally.
I can contact all the people who head up the World Health Organization.
They all know me.
I'm on a big advisory committee for the World Health Organization on how to protect outbreaks around the world.
For the work I do, there's science drones.
Their job is a lot of medical training.
So this woman in Florida, not in Bali, works for the New York Times.
I know Joel Goldstein.
I know his New York Times reporters.
It's good to have friends.
I've got to remember names.
There's Mark R. San Politico, Washington Post, a guy named Dan Diamond.
I mean, I know these reporters.
I even have a number of them at home.
It's good to have friends.
So now that you've learned about, you've met Varma's friends,
let's see what kind of help they give him.
A lot of you talk about this, or a lot of people out there can be conspiratorial
and assume that there are many connections and deals made on handshakes in back rooms.
Seldom do you get to see it.
Remember, SIGA's success is very largely dependent on big government contracts.
So how it is portrayed, how the treatments, how the company is portrayed in the media, And how that relates to approval, and certainly the public's perception, if the public is a group that you need to control, like, I don't know, let's say, for example, in another scenario, COVID.
The perception is very relevant, and how the media portrays it is also extremely relevant.
You said you could spend the results.
Like, why don't you just do that?
No, you can spend them so that people won't, like, dump the stock, thinking that the company's worthless.
So I'm doing that for the reporters and other people so that they could give us an... It's very complicated, but they could give us something called an emergency authorization where...
They would say, okay, your data is good enough for like, this is what they did during COVID, like the vaccines and everything.
They actually had to submit the data, but they took the preliminary data.
They didn't wait until the data was followed up for three or six months because it was an emergency.
We need to design more studies, but we also need to keep up the people's belief that the drug works, so that's why spinning it in the media is helpful.
Because basically what we're trying to get the media to say is, That's what we want the story to be.
because it was designed the wrong way, said they're gonna do another study
and it'll probably work, and in the meantime, people should prescribe it for that reason
as they're working to do it.
That's what we want the story to be, but we'll have to wait until the official press release
comes out.
That's what we want the story to be.
Isn't that the theme of all of this?
It really is so tiresome.
Thank you.
It's exhausting to know that people who have no business exerting this kind of control over your lives have been given the fast lane to do so.
It's... Right now we're dealing with a city where you have people who are not able to work, may not get their pensions, have won their case when they have sued the city and it's just been kicked to an appeal.
And that's been delayed.
People who aren't able to make a living because of policy as it resulted from COVID.
And I don't know if you know this, but there have been civil unrest for far less than that, preventing you from earning a living.
And at that point in time, you believe that, hey, maybe we're not getting the full story.
It doesn't matter.
This is how it's going to be portrayed.
It wasn't about, for a lot of people, helping you.
Whether it's the mRNA injection or whether it's lockdowns, whether it's keeping your children from school, it's about ensuring that the perception was correct.
Here, with monkeypox, it's not about necessarily protecting you because you're not at risk.
And it certainly doesn't seem to be about helping you because that can be done Straight from the horse's mouth, with measures, certainly in the modern world, that you could take yourself.
Nutrition, sleep, basic approaches to human health and wound care.
But if you say that all of these things actually enter into the equation and contribute toward your robust ability to fight off it, that's conspiratorial.
You gotta put on your mask.
You gotta stay in your house.
If you don't listen, you're gonna lose your job.
And they just move on to the next thing.
Gotta take your teapots.
Gotta take your teapots or we won't push the Ebola!
The idea that there are people who look at a... and I want to put a finer point on this.
The idea that there are people Who present themselves as effectively humanitarians.
Out there looking out for you.
And that these people can look at a study and see improvement through something that we all know to be true and would be the easiest intervention to take with no side effects.
Not starving?
Basic hygiene and wound care?
Look at that and see it as a disappointment?
Tells you that their views and their goals are not aligned with yours.
And that's why the problem here is you never chose them to represent you.
We often look at congressmen and senators and talk about the swamp in Washington, D.C., and we fail to realize that there are far more people in positions of power who have never been elected and in no way represent your best interests or have them at heart.
Sometimes they're diametrically opposed.
You know about Anthony Fauci.
You now know about someone like Jay Varma.
Even in the private sector, there's influence in the government.
You may not know the person who's doing that to you.
You may not know the person who's involved with the policy that negatively affects your life if you're California, Idaho, Texas, Florida.
I don't know if you know this, you can go down to any city hall, or you can go down to any state office, likely your governor, your representative, and find a dozen Fauci's or Jay Varma's who you don't know about, who they have on speed dial.
And let's assume that everything I'm saying is complete horse crap and you didn't have it straight from the people themselves.
Let's assume that you don't believe me.
The ultimate problem is you couldn't know.
There would be no way of knowing.
I'm telling you this.
We don't know.
We were able to catch one.
A couple.
It's everywhere.
I'm just telling you this, if you feel completely disconnected, and we know that the people of New York do, thank you so much, Mug Club, none of this happens without you, please consider joining, you are the reason that a city has been shaken up.
We know that people in New York who've lost their livelihoods, and who've lost loved ones, and who've lost freedoms, and experiences that they will never get back, we know that they feel as though Their representatives don't represent them.
And that's because maybe your representatives sometimes aren't actually beholden to you.
They're beholden to what you see here today.
All I'm telling you is this, if you feel like your representation does not represent you, maybe you're not crazy.
Maybe there's a reason for it.
Thank you very much for your support and all the references are going to be publicly available.
You can check out more footage at Mug Club.
Join there.
None of this happens without you.
Thank you for the impact that you've made.
This has been Mugleb Undercover.
And we do have some updates.
We do, yeah.
So one of the things that we thought would be interesting to watch is what the reporters have to say about apparently being so easily kind of pulled into his scheme to help prop up some of these, you know, drugs potentially are the stock of this company.
According to his words, he could do some kind of a media spin.
The New York Times, Benjamin Ryan.
Actually getting ahead of it after the new video on monkey pox base.
He's saying like hey, yeah, dr Varma reached out to me several times I didn't think it was right to quote him because now that he's in the private sector So there's some damage control going on right now getting out very quickly ahead of it.
So that's a really big deal Also the what was it?
Councilman Holden who invited actually had the press conference.
He's put out something about this So big Varma just exposed the truth.
He's actually going with the nickname big Varma.
Oh Good, good job on him.
Good for him.
Don't pull that back up, I was reading it.
Expose the truth about the pharmaceutical industry.
These companies and so-called health experts care only about their bottom line, not about public health.
So that's exactly the kind of stuff that we were talking about.
And this is kind of going back to part one.
Kyrie Irving.
So if you guys remember, Varma said that this is something that actually he had a lot of fun doing.
He targeted- He didn't say, he boasted.
He boasted, yes, boasted and giggled.
By the way, when he said he maybe is talking too much in one of those clips we played today, yes!
Yes.
Exactly!
Exactly that, yes!
Well spotted.
So Kyrie Irving basically put this out on part one and said, God is truly the greatest and the truth is always revealed in the light.
I am grateful.
I am not alone on this mission.
Rise up and out of the ashes no matter what.
Hell, I don't know what that means.
Well, I will say this, because we caught the one who directly affected Kyrie Irving, but hey, Rogers.
Aaron Rogers.
Aaron Rogers.
Maybe you should call people, right?
Call them to the floor here.
Look, we would like to know who's behind all of it.
The reason for these decisions that seemed to defy reason.
Any athlete, celebrity, by the way, high-performing individual, please make your voices heard.
We can prove the Kyrie Irving thing because the guy was dumb enough to brag about it.
I guarantee you uh rogers has his own varma and i guarantee you do too there's more there's there's so much more like i there's people from los angeles i'm sure of it there are people from chicago i'm sure of it there are people from cleveland and cincinnati and and even some of the bigger cities in red states you know dallas houston austin like there are people across the country san francisco for sure we already know that we're doing these same kinds of things like
LWC tips at protonmail.com.
If you're one of those people and you have information about what was going on, send it to us.
We would love to fight for you as well.
This is insane that this even had to happen in the first place, but so many people were looking at Varma.
So many people were looking at New York City and saying, what are they doing?
Let's copy their policy.
Biggest city.
We thought New York would be the epicenter of this.
Giant population from China, lots of global travelers coming through.
We thought that that was going to be one of the places, along with San Francisco and Los Angeles.
Everybody across the country was looking at this guy, and he did something that he didn't believe in, even at the time.
How many times are you chastised and told, trust the science to see this?
You must be one of those science deniers!
No.
Yeah, one of those guys who doesn't think it's fun to have men play back there.
And also, here's the thing.
There are men in prison who, you know, sexually accost other men where it's less gay.
Now it's still gay, but Dr. Jay Varma, just this is an unrelated note, didn't say, you know, sometimes it's fun for me to play back there and other men.
He said it's fun for them to play back there.
That's a double down.
Did he say play with me?
Play with me.
I don't know, but that's what I heard.
But I even imagine in prison, you know, When it's a power move that someone there you know like it's kind of like when you're you see those things on an island and the man is hungry and he sees his friend turn into a hot dog that a prisoner would you know the man in prison because it's been a long time turns into a lady but when Varmus says he's the one who's the lady well so my point is if I'm a betting man
Who's gay?
Do you want another update?
SIGA technology is down over 8% now.
I'm looking at it live on my phone just to see how that is going.
They'll have to dine out in that $472 million stockpile of teapots for a while it seems.
A little bit.
It's at session lows right now.
So we'll see how that continues.
Austerity measures.
I like the light chatter he has on first dates, too.
Yes.
Let's keep it light.
Yeah.
Babies are dying of smallpox.
He came out, he's like a homophobic, racist Stephen Craig.
That's what happened.
And I was just trying to impress somebody, because that's just like, hey, you know what really gets the ladies fired up?
Let me talk about a drug that hasn't been proven for efficacy in humans and how we can spin it in the media.
It makes the panties drop.
He looks like every pharmacist I've ever been to.
Who, by the way, are useless.
I don't know why they're trying to be like, oh, a doctor, ask the pharmacist.
You ask the pharmacist and you can see them Googling it.
Yeah, right through the plexiglass.
Yes.
That's why that's up there, too, so you won't shoot him.
Well, they also have the one step up, and I don't get it.
But here's the thing, with monkey pox, while we're talking about monkey pox, because, you know, it's funny.
Monkeypox is easily avoidable to the point where, but they just, they don't want to tell you how to avoid it easily.
So now they have to sell you a false bill of politically correct goods.
Um at one point in time people were able to recognize where it come from. Well, for example,
you may not remember this, but there was a window where we were honest and this is what a monkeypox PSA looked like.
Are you a f**g?
Do you got chicken pox on your ass?
You ever go to a queer music festival and come back with your balls feeling like braille?
Did you visit the Folsom Street Fair, partake, and come back with a bloody ass itch?
Burning man?
More like burning ass.
Maybe you got monkey pox.
Contact your healthcare professional today.
And stop doing gay s***!
Straight to the point, saves lives.
It's direct.
I actually like how it's direct.
And, you know, I just, I got a note just to make sure, like, we're not sure if he was trying to impress anybody with his talk.
But, I mean, I think that's what it was.
Obviously, with the DOJ story we had, obviously, Bragg was trying to impress people and get elected, but I don't know if there was any connection there.
I don't know if we have this in kind of some of this information.
I know we need to get the Alex Jones story because we care a heck of a lot about that guy and making sure that he's... Holy crap!
It's the Grinch on CNN!
It is!
And his heart grew three sizes that day.
And CNN will feast, and they'll feast, feast, feast, feast.
Oh, CNN's the network I don't like in the least.
He's gonna attack the nuclear plant!
And CNN will feast and they'll feast, feast, feast, feast!
Oh, CNN's the network I don't like in the least!
What are you going for as Halloween?
It's the Grinch!
It's the Grinch.
It's an albino Grinch.
I'm sorry, I interrupted you.
No, no, no, you're fine.
So I'm not 100% sure if we have this in here or not, but I wanted to make sure that we got to it.
So I was just looking at their stock price, and one of the first stories that I see is, Sega secures contract by the U.S.
Department of Justice for procurement of $9 million worth of teapots.
So that's a separate contract it seems. I mean it's a nine million dollar contract. I don't know it's four it's dated
four weeks ago, so it's not like the the you know thing that happened
in the last few days, but it just puts It just puts a button right on our story. We're talking
about this the department of defense spent nine million dollars
on something that We don't one it's not very effective obviously for monkeypox
the hoagie and neosporin, you know, we're Works pretty well.
Comparable.
I'm not sure exactly if it's one-to-one, but it's comparable.
And it's not tested for smallpox.
You were joking around and said the Ebola thing later, but it's smallpox, and you said that one earlier, too.
Smallpox is not even tested for that in humans, right?
Right.
So we spent $9 million on this.
This is following off of the UK buying a different drug, but 150,000 doses for monkeypox in the UK of a drug to fight that.
This is the effect.
This is the impact.
It's not taking into account the opportunity cost, too.
People, they'll see one thing and say, oh, if it saves one life.
We talk about that with firearms, right?
Oh, gun control, if it saves one life.
Yeah, but what if it takes up to two million a year because of the defensive uses of firearms?
Often used by women and the infirm to protect themselves from marauders, from monsters, from animals, who are willing to do harm against innocent people.
That's the cost at that point.
When we just say, oh, if it saves one life, oh monkey, if it saves one, but hold on a second.
What about the good that that money could have done if not being spent on an entirely preventable disease in the new world?
We did this with AIDS.
AIDS was the number one disease as far as recipient of funding.
Do you know there are still kids with type 2 diabetes?
Do you know that there are still congenital heart disorders?
Do you know there's some cancers that we're not even close to knowing how to treat properly?
But because a bunch of celebrities got together and told you, including Oprah, that one in five heterosexual couples in the United States will be affected by AIDS, I believe they said by the year 1993 or 1995.
You can go back and see this.
It was a false bill of goods back then.
If you're spending billions on something that can just as easily be avoided Through not engaging in very specific behavior, as we know with monkeypox, and as we knew with AIDS, you can maybe invest that money to help people who are victims of circumstance through no fault of their own.
But if you speak out, it's hate speech.
Okay, just look at it this way.
We were never speaking out against the AIDS pandemic hoax, the AIDS epidemic hoax.
We were speaking on behalf of child diabetics.
We were speaking on behalf of congenital heart disorders.
We were speaking on behalf of kids with progeria.
How about that?
We weren't speaking against people with AIDS.
We were speaking on behalf of these people who had to forego the treatment that was warranted Because they didn't have the option to not go to a Nordic gay music festival to avoid their disease.
It's so tiresome.
Don't talk about abortion, you'll offend women.
Don't care.
Don't talk about that, you'll offend the LGBT.
Hey, you know what?
Don't talk about it, you'll seem callous if it's right after a shooting, if you don't support gun control.
Everyone guilts you into seeming like the bad guy so that you just stay silent.
Well, you know what?
I don't know.
Maybe those kids who have diseases that they've done nothing to deserve, maybe they need a fucking bad guy to talk.
Huh?
Honestly?
You watch Dallas Buyers Club and you weep?
Weep?
Yeah.
Well, people watch it like, oh my god, I watched the movie Rent.
It's a feel-good comedy.
That's exactly where I was going with it.
I need to recut a teaser.
Matthew McConaughey is the Dallas Buyers Club.
J.R.
and Leto comes in wearing 40 pounds.
Rob Schneider.
Yes.
At his best.
Sat behind him on the plane to New York, by the way.
Did you?
Yes.
Oh.
Didn't do it till the very end.
Hey, if you don't want monkey pox, don't lick a toilet brush at a gas station in Burkino Faso.
That's Judge- That's incredibly judgmental, Nick.
And specific.
Oddly specific.
Yes.
So specific it's universal.
I was wondering about the rash.
Those are bumps.
That's a zimpic rash.
Yes.
Hey, big pharma, work on that.
I get blurred vision, I'm shitting blood, but I'm ripped.
I'm ripped.
It is, it's just worth, it's like no one wants to take into account the actual victims.
Anytime you fake a victim, You hurt actual victims.
Anytime a woman falsely accuses a man of rape, she destroys a life.
Anytime you wrongfully tell people, incorrectly tell people that they are just as much at risk of a disease when you know they are not, that disease, that disorder, that affliction receives treatment that could be better invested Somewhere where good can actually be done.
Unfortunately, we don't have a system that relies upon that sometimes, and we certainly don't have a culture that allows for people to discuss issues honestly.
That's why I don't use the term compassionate conservative.
You know what I think is compassionate?
Allowing people to keep their own money so it doesn't go to dickweeds like that, so it doesn't go to multi-million dollar contracts to unelected bureaucrats for treatments that may not work for entirely preventable diseases in the modern world.
That's why I don't say compassionate conservative because I think that's compassionate enough.
You know what I don't think is compassion?
Having someone installed in a government bureaucracy for 20 years so that they can then go on to the private sector and secure government contracts for shit that doesn't work to treat shit that doesn't affect you.
Don't tell me to be compassionate.
Before this, guess what?
He was the compassionate scientist and we were the assholes.
Still by that?
Go ahead and tell me where you find compassion.
Go to D.C.
Find me some compassion.
Get back to me.
So as we noted, SIGA compassionately terminated Varma.
And you had a bipartisan council in New York demanding an investigation.
You saw that yesterday.
Monday's press conference, I want to go to... Actually, you know what?
We already ran Palladino.
Mayor Adams now has kind of been prompted to respond.
And his response, of course, is entirely predictable.
Distance, distance, distance.
Throw under the bus.
Dr. J has not been kind to this administration about our excellent ability to navigate us through COVID.
You know, what we did to get us out of COVID, you know, there was a lot of outside voices who were saying what we should have done, should not have done, but we were successful in doing so.
I'm not going to return the same page.
What, did you swallow a horsefly?
He's got monkey bucks.
You know, he has to deal with that.
I got bumps on me too.
Jesus!
Jesus! We were, we had a major... Sounds like Willie Brown.
There were rules that were put in place.
People chose not to follow those rules and his behavior doesn't change the fact that we save
lives because of the rules that were put in place and I think Mayor de Blasio made some tough
decisions as well as other leaders, executives, and they carried out those decisions. But I need
to be focused on the city not on, you know, what his actions were. My biggest takeaway is that he
pronounces rules like he's Cockney.
Yeah.
Sorry, lady, but ruse is ruse.
I don't understand, it's so- But I have a divine right!
Your left ain't bad either, love, but ruse is ruse.
It's not- This- This- This response pisses me off in so many ways because this guy- Covid- Mayor Adams- Stop it.
May- Oh, is that more offensive than the potential crimes against humanity?
I know you're not.
I'm just taking it out on you.
I want to kill this story.
I don't like this response because basically what he said is, ah, we don't want to focus on the actions of our... that's not what we're focusing on.
What we're focusing on right now is you destroying people's lives because they refused to take an experimental jab Winning court cases and then you not filing the appeal, slow walking and indicating that you might for years on end.
What they're asking him to do is simple.
Before you came into office, Mayor Adams, another person did a bad thing and you can correct it.
Right now you're perpetuating it.
Just drop the appeal and accept the verdict and let these people get back to work.
And what you said, well, they broke the rules when the rules were in place.
Really?
That's what you're going to stick with?
Yeah.
Oh yeah, that's for the plebs.
That's for the unwashed masses.
They have to follow those rules.
And by the way, I know that you could say that I'm biased.
I am.
And I know that the argument could be made that, you know, as a direct result of the policies that you see implemented from people like Jay Varma, the COVID architects, the people of even Adams' ilk.
I know back then we were dealing with Cuomo's and de Blasio's that, yeah, you know what?
Before they demonetized anyone else on YouTube, we were demonetized first.
So yeah, you could say I have an axe to grind because that's three plus million dollars a year to this company that we believe could do a lot of good.
That's gone.
It's gone, because we're not allowed to discuss the CDC.
We weren't allowed to discuss the COVID deaths at that point, or the flu deaths in children.
We weren't allowed to discuss monkeypox.
Yeah, you could say that, but you know what?
It's about the fact that they do it to everybody.
It's about the fact that it can be prevented moving forward.
Yeah.
Do we have an extra grant?
Yes, because the direct result of your schools, of you losing your job, also of you being ostracized.
As being an anti-science zealot.
That is all.
That is all the direct result, or through several degrees of separation, from people like this.
And you know what?
Hey, if I've done nothing, we'll go away.
That's what we always say.
We are supported by viewers like you.
Mug Club, click that button.
We do need your support.
This has been an undertaking many millions of dollars.
Yep, three million dollars lost per year.
The entire budget right here at Mug Club is less than Stephen Colbert's salary.
That includes mine and that includes the budget for Mug Club Undercover.
We really do need your support.
But he's so funny.
And if not, hey, I'll stop doing it at that point.
We've made our mark.
I hope it's worth it.
And I ask that at some point in time when I move on, just leave my body out for the trash on Tuesday.
Or create a mausoleum that is a haunted house so when people pay their respects, that's really what I want.
Let's do that.
What if we have it stuffed?
I wouldn't mind that.
That's the thing.
I want a mausoleum where people go in and my body pops out.
I like they do that in some third world country.
Did you ever see that?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like a boxer dies and the family has him standing in the corner.
Yes.
He's like decomposing.
Yeah.
With his gloves.
Yeah, decomposing in front.
But they get some hack taxidermist.
You're like, what?
Joe Louis, why do you look like Max Baer?
You didn't even get the tint right.
Yes.
Hey, that guy did my eight point buck.
Really quickly, so one thing I wanted to highlight though, with the Palladino clip, the only people that saw that was Mug Club.
Do you want to play that so the wider audience can see what they said?
Because this was something we only played in Mug Club yesterday.
So just a quick, if you want to play that really quickly.
Well, I guess you're telling me I have to.
Well, I was doing it nicely.
That's a CEO right there.
She's a tough old bird.
No, I said bird.
Gerald, now I have to put some distance between what you just said and the clip.
Here is a very nice lady who has done a lot of good work, a city councilwoman, Vicky Palladino, and Ina, I believe, Vernikov, thanking you, Mug Club, for the reporting that gave them the leg to stand on to continue fighting like hell.
While Dr. Farmer was out taking his drugs and having his sex parties, and who gives a damn about what he did, but what he did do, and I want to say thank you to Steve Crowder and his team for bringing to light what we already knew to actually be happening to us.
Thank you to Steven Crowder for uncovering and exposing what we all already know.
We couldn't bury our grandparents.
People couldn't attend better than their own parents.
All while one sicko, yes I said it, one sicko was partying at the same time he was mandating this on all New Yorkers.
The only thing that would have made that clip better is if Palladino was the one saying, sicko.
These sickos!
These perverts!
She's like the Brooklyn Palladine.
She's like if Palladine didn't let herself go.
She's awesome by the way.
She was the one that goes, when I said, we're a right-wing media outlet, she goes, wow!
Wow!
Oh, what a nightmare!
And speaking of people who have been affected, and you know, truth, and just to be clear, when I say that truth matters, it doesn't mean that any one group gets everything right.
That's why we have an admonish button.
So do not confuse me saying that That enemies, and by that I mean those who are politically motivated, ideologically motivated to destroy someone, that they can't get some things right, or that people like us or Alex Jones can't get some things wrong.
Yeah.
It's about starting off knowing that what you are selling is untrue.
And that's what we see here, and brings us to Alex Jones, a friend of the show here, Mug Club.
You can watch him Fridays.
Of course, it's been a little intermittent because he's been dealing with the fight of his life right now with these lawsuits.
The biggest civil suit levied against an individual, I believe, ever.
And yesterday, a federal bankruptcy judge indicated that Alex Jones, his company Infowars, is going to be auctioned off piece by piece Starting in November to help satisfy the one billion dollar judgment.
A judge has approved a plan to auction off Alex Jones' assets to pay off the more than $1 billion he owes families of the Sandy Hook tragedy.
The ruling was handed down by a bankruptcy judge in Texas today.
Jones' InfoWars media platform and its assets will be liquidated in auctions this fall.
Jones repeatedly made false claims, suggesting the mass shooting that killed 20 kids and six educators was a hoax.
Jones filed for personal bankruptcy after the lawsuit's verdict.
So, to be clear, the auction is going to include the trademarks, any copyrighted material, the company's social media accounts, websites, and I believe then they'll get to assets.
And people say, oh, it still sort of has yet to be determined.
But think of how significant this is.
The issue at hand is whether they'll be taking away Alex Jones's personal social media accounts, not the company's social media accounts.
Does that seem like a ruling that's designed to simply be seeking justice?
Take away someone's voice?
For crying out loud, people in prison, people who committed actual crimes, don't forego, when they get out of prison, their right to speak freely, provided they're not committing a crime.
This is worse than that, you can argue.
It's taking someone's voice and platform away with, by the way, something that is paper-thin regardless of where you line up with, uh, Alex.
Alex Jones.
The one thing, in silver lining, they will allow Alex to keep his OnlyFans.
Yeah.
I will eat your ass!
Well, that was foreshadowing.
Let me make this really clear, too.
The punishment, does it fit the crime when you're dealing... Alex Jones apologized for his comments on Sandy Hook.
Alex Jones never sent any of his followers to harass any of the Sandy Hook families at all.
He never advocated for that.
He was found liable by default from the judgment for damages because he didn't respond in time.
And the trial was just about how much he was going to pay.
And they claim that this is all predicated on the idea that Alex Jones profited off of Sandy Hook.
He spoke about Sandy Hook for about 22 minutes.
Over the course of over 8,000 hours of broadcast time.
Here's something you don't take into account when people want a virtue signal and you'll see it on the right and they act high and mighty.
Everyone makes mistakes.
Let me ask you this.
If someone were to take 8,000 plus hours of your life, you think they could find 22 minutes of mistakes or 22 minutes That you wouldn't necessarily be most proud of or want out there?
That's one thing you may not take into account when people speak for hours a day, every single day.
If people had cameras running on you for 8,000 hours over the course of years, and they could select any minutes that they wanted, and by the way, delete or disregard the rest, how do you think you'd come out of it?
Yeah.
So before you do the whole, oh, I would never, I can't believe, really?
Really?
I know you're full of it.
How do I know?
Because I've spent more than two hours with you and I could pull 22 minutes.
And that's not you personally.
That's anyone on earth.
They can silence anyone.
I want to make it really clear.
People say, it's not just Alex.
They could be coming for us.
And then, you know, they say, give me more money.
Or someone like Zelensky.
That's what Zelensky's catchphrase is.
He's actually have it.
It's like his, did I do that?
He has it patented.
More money, please.
Yeah.
But look, if you're going after a judgment from somebody, right?
So Alex Jones had the largest personal judgment, I believe, in history for an individual levied against him over a billion dollars for comments that he made, right?
We talked about that.
If you're going to go after a judgment like that and somebody can't pay it, he's got a profitable business.
Let him keep working and paying you over time.
That's not what it's about.
And I think, guys, I don't know if you can find that clip of the lawyer basically saying... Yeah, in the closing statements.
In his closing statements, he wanted to make sure that he couldn't do this again or something.
I can't remember.
It was to make sure that no one out there Ever attempted to do something like Alex Jones did again.
They're trying to silence this guy from everything.
They're trying to take his voice away completely.
It is so obvious.
This is not about making any kind of restitution, even if you believed he made a mistake, right?
It's about making sure it's this punitive punishment, this ongoing punishment for Alex.
You can never speak again.
Really interesting that this liquidation is going to happen in November, by the way.
Really, really interesting timing on all of this.
And who did the worst deed?
Mr. Varmer spreading misinformation?
Right.
Or Alex?
Yeah.
By having a theory out there that... Yeah.
And this guy will go on to do whatever.
Right.
And Alex apologized to the family.
Someone else came in with the theory and Alex apologized to the family.
He never encouraged harassment.
He felt bad about it.
People make Mistakes, of course.
But you know what?
Conservatives need to do better.
We on the right need to do better, because I'm telling you, I watched this happen.
You know, a lot of people don't know this.
Alex Jones and I became friends through conservatives throwing him under the bus.
Conservatives, libertarians, republicans, right-wing, truth, whatever you want to say.
People who were his friends removed episodes.
Alex Jones was de-platformed in one day from Facebook, Instagram, that point Twitter, YouTube, Spotify, Apple.
Happened all in one day.
And a lot of conservatives, well you know what, but that's too far.
And I understand that you can think that, but here's where we are.
Removing the man's ability to speak at all, even personally.
Alex Jones and I became friends because I was one of the only people, I think Patrick Pet David was too, if I'm not mistaken, I remember he had him on, who was willing to say, this is wrong.
We became friends.
Before that, I'm not going to lie, I wasn't the biggest fan.
I didn't dislike him.
You know, he did yell out that I raped him in Austin when we were doing A Change My And it was as a joke!
It was as a joke!
And I was like, Alex, what the hell are you doing?
There are people here that think I actually raped you!
You really did.
Yeah.
He says, shame on you for trying to rape me!
I'm sorry, I'm a rotten comedian, I just wanted to do the funny thing.
I'm like, yeah, leave it to me!
It's like a friendly heckler.
Yeah, it was like a friendly heckler.
Like trying to have a good conversation.
Ha ha ha!
And we became friends because of that.
We need to do better.
And you know what?
And then I was brought on Pierce Morgan and Pierce Morgan.
I'm friendly with Pierce Morgan.
I've done his shows a couple of times.
One time he brought me on and he was asking the question five different ways to just try and get me to condemn Alex.
And we may have the clip.
I said, you're not going to get me to come on here and disavow my friend.
Alex can speak for Alex and I'll speak for myself, but I like Alex Jones and I think Alex Jones does good work.
Too many people get press—it's the peer pressure, the, you're gonna sit at lunch with that kid?
I'm sorry, it doesn't work, and we have to stop allowing this to work.
We need to do better.
That doesn't happen on the left, really.
No.
That's what they have over the right.
Only to the point of when it's completely undeniable, like Jay Varma, they'll go, okay, put some distance between themselves.
But conservatives just cut and run very, very quickly.
Wait, you're not—and that's because we have standards.
That's a good thing.
But just because we have standards and someone falls short of them, you know who else has?
You.
Me.
Everyone.
Well, if you want to win, drop them standards.
I mean, that seems to be the rule in this country right now, where we're at.
You have to get down in the mud and roll around with them.
We'll see on November 5th.
The left is willing to drop their standards for someone who hasn't been elected, being installed, who couldn't win a primary, who can't name a single one of her policies if her life depended on it.
And the left has said, yep, absolutely.
And the right is going, well, Donald Trump and bump stocks.
What do you think you're facing?
What kind of calamity do you think is actually... do you understand Do you understand what is going on in this country?
Do you understand the consequences, not just of this election, but you understand that every country has a turning point, right?
That there's a point of no return, and you never know when that is?
Are you paying attention?
And you won't support someone unless they're perfect?
Yeah, but he's mean.
Yeah, exactly, Donald Trump.
Yeah, but Alex goes too far.
Absolutely!
So?
So?
You don't think Fauci went too far?
You don't think... This isn't whataboutism.
It's not even close.
And the level of damage that can be inflicted and has been inflicted is not even close.
Don't care anymore.
Sorry.
I'm not gonna... We're not gonna play this game.
The perfect is the enemy of the good.
Hey, everyone has flaws.
Let's start taking this seriously and stop acting like the world's biggest high school.
Because you know what happens when you do that?
COVID!
Thank God, no, not monkey pox.
But, you know, it's easily avoidable.
Just don't be sodomized in truck stalls.
COVID.
COVID.
COVID, man.
And someone out there will be like, well, I would have shared this, but you made fun of the accent.
It could be perceived as racist.
OK, fine.
Go screw yourself.
How about that?
COVID is funny because it's an elected official who can't speak the language properly.
Or anchor, newscasters.
It's weird how the language gets bastardized.
Right.
It starts with pop culture and it leaks into... Yeah.
It's extraordinary.
It is.
And you know what?
They're trying to silence anyone.
It could be you, could be me, could be anyone as to what they're doing with Alex Jones.
Like you said, November.
Oh, interesting timing.
Also, it seems as though it may coincide with the fact that he's been doing a lot of good work.
Here's Jones in a very Alex Jones way.
Confronting former NIH director Francis Collins over the COVID vaccine deaths.
This is just from, I believe, two days ago.
Hey, Mr. Collins.
How you doing?
I'm alright, how are you?
We're good. 20 plus million people dead from those shots.
A lot of truths come out about you and Fauci.
How's it feel to kill more people than Hitler?
You writing some folk songs about it?
You'll never get away with what you did, your bioweapon.
You're in a lot of trouble.
Nuremberg 2 is coming.
God bless him!
Oh my God!
The funny thing is, he's like, Nuremberg 2 is coming!
And you can tell in his head because, you know with comedy, right, there's that rule of escalation?
Yes.
You can't escalate it once you try.
How's it feel to know you killed more people than Hitler?
And it's like, he doesn't respond, it's like, where do I go from here?
The funny part is, I actually clipped that a little tight, he does just sit there pointing.
It's so funny.
It is just Alex, a lot of people don't think that Alex Jones be what he is, but it do.
And I will tell you this, we also have, we're going to talk about this in a second too, the Haitians are suing, because that's where we are in this country.
It's absolutely stunning.
Can I just say one more thing about Alex?
No.
He's on to something, or they wouldn't try to destroy just his business, but him personally.
That's how you know he's touching the truth.
And the harder they go after you, the more scared they are of you.
Obviously, you're doing good work.
And you know what?
One thing I will say, too, about Alex Jones, just because he probably won't say this, and people don't often get to champion their own cause.
That man's kids adore him.
That man is, like, dad ultimate.
And it's something that you don't see because it's easy to sort of create this caricature of somebody.
But I can tell you that in his personal life and the lengths that that man will go to for his kids, that is a man who means what he says and he really does care about the future for the children that he has.
And you may just, I just let you know, maybe you're surprised to people where you've made him out to be this super villain.
He's a hell of a dad and I know that his family would tell you the same.
And you know what?
We're going to continue standing in the pocket for him.
He's going to be bringing at least the content Fridays to Mucklib as this continues to move on.
There have been a lot of complications.
We've worked with him.
So again, click that button if this means anything to you because we also have always been supportive of him and we work together.
Yeah, what were we about to say?
Yeah, we got the clip of the lawyer saying he's going to make an example out of it.
Oh, yeah.
So let me just be really, really clear about this.
And is this... Bankston.
Bankston, the lawyer who went after him and has boasted about this.
You may not know that this is someone who... this is kind of their raison d'être.
How do you say that in English?
Do people say raison d'être?
D'être.
Sorry, I'm trying to say it the right way.
So here is him saying what I say could happen to anyone.
Here is the man who's proud of, hopefully completely silencing Alex Jones personally, saying we're gonna make sure that this happens to anyone we want.
I ask that with your verdict you not only Take Alex Jones' platform that he talks about away.
I ask that you make certain he can't rebuild the platform.
That's what matters.
Take him out of this discourse, of this misinformation, of this peddling of lies, and make sure he can't do it again.
That is punishment.
That is deterrence.
You should say that to your barber.
Jesus, do that again.
He looks like, what's the little hot dog boy?
You know what I'm talking about?
Little hot dog boy?
He looks like the owner of the- Is it Brazier?
Brazier?
Is it Brazier, the jelly queen, the little hot dog, little kid with the blonde hair?
He's got the same barber as the owner of the Vegas Raiders.
That's L. Davis' kid.
So, we appreciate the support.
Let's move on here.
We'll have Alex on probably very soon, and you can watch me along with Nick DiPaolo, weekdays, and this next story's pretty fun.
The Haitian Bridge Alliance, the HBA for short.
I say it as though you know, you're like, oh yeah, HBA.
I feel like the Bridge Alliance, they're going to build like a bridge from Haiti?
Like, it's a weird name.
Well, they're bridging the racial divide.
Oh yeah?
Yeah, I think that's what they're doing.
Well, they're bridging the divide between Haitians in San Diego, because this is a nonprofit in San Diego, but they're filing criminal charges against Donald Trump and J.D.
Vance on behalf of Haitians in Ohio?
A non-profit has filed charges against former President Donald Trump and his running mate, Senator J.B.
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