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June 25, 2024 - The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters
01:33:45
The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters #944
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Time Text
The Conservative Party's unending desire for treason has led to your people's future being shrouded in darkness.
With nothing left to satiate its hunger for treachery, it has turned to the one thing it has yet to destroy.
The Conservative Party itself.
Many thought it impossible.
After persisting through so much deceit and duplicity, it seemed like nothing could bring about its demise.
But now, with the support of so many, the Conservative Party brand is broken, reduced to a runaway train, with no brakes and zero seats.
After nearly 200 years, when the clock strikes 10 on Thursday the 4th of July, the traitorous project known as the Conservative and Unionist Party of the United Kingdom will finally come to an end.
The greatest enemy of your people will be vanquished forever.
and the best place to watch this truly historic moment unfold is on lotus eaters.com hello and welcome to podcast of the lotus eaters episode nine It is Tuesday the 25th of June and today I'm joined by two very special guests.
We've got John and Adam.
John and Adam, thank you very much for coming on.
Cheers for the invite, it's Dan.
Pleasure indeed.
Grateful to be here.
Grateful for platforms like yourself where we can Well, I've told the guys, you know, the viewers, my story on this.
I mean, I was just, like, happily, you know, sitting around at home enjoying myself until lockdown's come, and I just found it such an egregious event, and I was very suspicious of the vaccines that they were sort of pushing on us.
I mean, I had a bit of advantage on this.
I already didn't trust the government, but unfortunately some people did.
Um and and for me I just found the whole event incredibly stressful.
I mean I actually had a go bag by the door with a stack of cash in it and clothes for the kids and stuff so that if they did go down the route of mandatory vaccines we were out of there.
I don't know what I don't know what my plan would have been next but I just did not trust them at all and then obviously it turned out Pretty much exactly like I thought it was going to do.
I don't think we really trusted the government.
I think we just believed the propaganda, you know?
Yeah.
Oh, it was pretty strong.
Yeah.
It was very strong.
Constant, wasn't it?
Yeah, I mean, it was a battle at the time to try and convince people, you know, just watch out.
Watch out for this.
So, anyway, I mean, you guys have got a great story and you confronted Richie Sunak, so we are definitely going to have to get into that.
We're just with our platform viewers at the moment.
We're bringing the YouTube viewers in the moment.
They're a bit like the platform viewers, just...
Well to the left on the bell curve.
Anyway, so we're the good guys at the moment.
So we do a bit on Assange, then we get into your bit and we do 10 minutes, nice and clean and safe.
We won't mention the thing, we'll just do the GB video.
But then after that, once we boot out the YouTube viewers, then just let rip with We've got a segment at the end if we've got time on that.
So, let's start with Julian Assange has been freed.
Have we got the right segment up?
There we go.
Julian Assange has been freed.
Have you guys followed this story at all over the last 15 odd years? - I've seen things on it, yeah.
I'm not in total depth with it, mate, but I've seen it all on it.
We were having a chat.
I was more familiar with the Edward Snowden story.
Right, yeah.
Similar, isn't it?
Yeah, similar, yeah.
So I haven't followed it completely, but obviously seeing bits that's going on.
Just seeing how tough it must have been for you.
He's been in Belmarsh, hasn't he?
Well, he's been in some sort of captivity for about 15 years, effectively.
Well, Belmarsh is in a horrendous... Yeah, the last five years, yeah.
Yeah, so I think the guy's gonna really struggle with his mental health when he comes out.
Oh, definitely, definitely, definitely.
I mean, he founded WikiLeaks in 2006.
And he utilised a new technology then which was PGP, pretty good privacy, it's a sort of mechanism where you can transmit information so you could have whistleblowers inside the US government or the US military or any organisation really, send him information in a confidential way that he could then publish in WikiLeaks.
And it was really in about 2010 when Chelsea Manning, and I'm not Deliberately avoiding deadnaming, I'd just forgotten what his original name was, but Chelsea Manning sent a whole dump of classified information, and it included a lot of stuff on the way that the Afghan war was being fought, including the murder of about 18 civilians, including a couple of journalists, and it went into sort of diplomatic cables and stuff like that.
And what it kind of did was, is it shattered the image that America had presented itself for a long time.
Because, you know, as I'm sure you remember in like the 80s and 90s, all the movies were, you know, America's the good guy and they hold themselves up to the most impeccable standards.
And a lot of the time the power makers they want to do something but because they're so squeaky clean they can't and they're always hamstringed by how good and virtuous they are.
And what WikiLeaks did is basically just showed no they're just a standard bunch of bastards like every other government in the world throughout history.
But it embarrassed them, it embarrassed Hillary Clinton.
So they wanted to go after him and eventually it got to the point where he knew that he was going to be arrested because they started drumming up fake rape charges on him.
um basically the U.S.
wanted to get hold of him and he went in went into uh the Ecuadorian embassy and he was sort of kept in this sort of because the Ecuadorian embassy out of this sort of two-bed flat this mini two-bed flat um within it and he was in there for about must have been eight years seven eight years something like that and just for speaking the truth yeah yeah exactly and and effectively what he did was what journalists used to do
Yeah I think this morning I wake up and I seen it on Twitter last night actually, quite late on last night and you're thinking you know you wake up this morning and you're thinking oh good you know I'm in a hotel I don't watch TV nowadays but when you're in a hotel it's the only thing you've got You think you'd get it all over BBC?
Or ITV?
You know, Good Morning Britain and that?
Right, okay.
Small snippet, mate.
Small snippet.
Really?
I was literally... I never watch normal TV anymore.
Like I said, because I was in the hotel, they touched on it just briefly, but it didn't go into detail.
Incredible, eh?
Yeah, I mean, that's the thing.
And all he did was he received information and then published it, and that's what journalists used to do.
It's not what journalists do anymore.
No, these days, journalists, they just read out corporate press release and, you know... On manipulated data.
Yeah, or pharma companies as well.
We might get onto that as well.
Yeah, that's the sort of thing they do.
Yeah, I've got an interesting one about the AstraZeneca clinical trial data.
Yeah, let's get into that in the next segment.
I'm just like...
I just cannot believe it's not been reported.
I've spoken to journalists and I've been told why it's not been reported.
Because they're mouthpieces, they're not... I mean, they're wearing the skin suit of a profession that no longer exists.
But yeah, so anyway, so Julian Assange, he's been in some sort of detention.
Now, I'm just skimming over this, because like John said, this news just came out last night.
I was expecting the phone call to say, look John, we can't do it, we need to cover this topic.
But just to say what Adam said, because We were talking about it on the way down and his mental health, man.
Like, that guy's mentally 23 hours in a cell.
I'd imagine it was a padded room.
For how long?
900?
How many days was it?
He was years.
This guy is going to be mentally unstable for a long time.
Yeah, I mean, I remember reading about it at the time, and you've got these stories of, they're trying to discredit him, but these stories about his weird behavior in the Ecuadorian embassy.
And it wasn't really until lockdowns that I realized, yeah, I'm going mental as well.
Yeah.
And he had been in there for about four times as long, and he didn't have an hour outside a day or anything like that.
I guess, like, this kind of goes to show you as well, but the power of the people standing up and never giving up on this man, because if it wasn't, you know, I've seen his wife, and I've seen the amount of people around London when they were doing the trial a few months ago.
The amount of people, when it's all coordinated correctly, people can get justice, and they've never given up on this man.
So it really goes to show you, when people stand up for the truth, Yeah.
We really can.
You can really make a change.
Yeah.
And for those watching on YouTube, make sure you come and watch our next segment, which we can't put on YouTube, but I'll be speaking to these guys about their experience of being silenced because of something that happened a couple of years ago.
So, and obviously, we can't cover that on YouTube, but it's such an important story.
So do come and follow us on Lotus Eats Talk.
You don't have to pay.
You can sign up for a free account and watch the podcast there.
And Josh, we'll be covering this topic properly tomorrow, but I just wanted to sort of skim through this as it's sort of, you know, breaking news.
Here we go, here we got Assange being released from prison for the crime of embarrassing Hillary Clinton.
So I think he's now heading back to Australia.
So anyway, great news that he's out.
For the first time, he'll be able to see his son.
I think he's got two of them, seven and eight.
Heartbreaking.
Yeah.
I mean, he spent, whatever it was, five years in Belmarsh Prison, like you said.
That was in a two by three meter cell, 23 hours a day.
I think they leave the lights on 24-7.
Oh, right.
Yeah.
So they're just completely disorientated.
If you do your research on Belmarsh Prison, you'll be horrified.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's not like he had a good time before that because he was just in a very small flat in the Ecuadorian embassy as well.
So, yeah, pretty bad.
The way he's got out is he's done a plea deal.
Now, there's a lot of questions about why this was done at this time.
For me, I think it's for a number of factors.
I mean, one, at the Libertarian Convention, Trump hinted quite heavily that he would pardon Julian Assange, and if this had gone to trial, as it was expected to do, that's what we thought was going to happen, he would have been on the stand while there was a presidential election going on.
So he would have been talking about all of this stuff, all the sort of dirty laundry of the US state, while Joe Biden's trying to get re-elected.
So I reckon they... Does Joe Biden know he's trying to get re-elected?
Does that man know what's going on?
It's unlikely.
I mean, he would be learning a lot of the stuff like his own name for the first time.
But yeah, I mean, the people who are controlling Biden would have been sort of deeply embarrassed by this.
So I think they just took the calculation that he's going to get pardoned by Trump anyway.
And Trump's going to win, unless they can fortify it again.
And we don't want him on the stand during the election, so let's just give him this.
And actually it's quite smart from their point of view, because they got him to plead guilty to one charge.
So they've set the precedent now that if you publish information that embarrasses the government, you can go to jail.
And is that an undisclosure?
you um not exactly no but um i mean he's been through so much that he probably just wants now to spend time with the family so they probably think look we're this this is out of the bag at this point um people have got the internet and they can use it and they can use it to embarrass us so we're just going to have to cut our losses but at least we get the precedent set that if we want to we can throw a journalist in jail or people who actually do journalists not journalism not not the people who pay you to do journalism but the the people who actually do it for free um you know they
they've got that set and the other thing is of course that um pressure was growing um i mean particularly in australia but i mean there's lots of lots of people um you know my mate peter from what bitcoin did has done a number of podcasts with his uh with his wife um keeping the story alive i mean a whole bunch of people have kept pushing this one so um i i guess they realized that you know this is not 2010 anymore there's not like one website um you know they lost control of twitter
so you know what are you going to do cut your losses um and keep them off the stand during the election so i think that's what it is um the There's this.
I don't think I'll be able to play it, but I mean, let me just play a few seconds and then I'll cut it short.
So this is sort of drone footage or footage from the Apache helicopter.
I remember seeing the footage, yeah.
that took out 18 guys.
So, can't play that, but you get the idea from what you're seeing there, what happened here.
So, 18 guys and a couple of...
I remember seeing the footage, yeah.
I've seen it.
I've seen all the ones.
Yeah.
And it just shattered the illusion that America are these, you know, these whiter than white who are constantly hamstrung by noble principles.
Let's be open and honest, it's not just America, is it?
You know, there's quite a few stories from the UK military as well.
Oh, there's all of them!
No, it's not like... Because we kind of got this thing going at the moment, another story in the news at the moment, where basically Farage was saying, yeah, Putin's a bastard, but we did provoke him.
It's like, well, yeah, all governments are comprised of a bunch of psychopaths.
I mean, all of them throughout history.
And it's not like they're all bad and we are good.
It's no, they're all bad.
Yeah.
And that's kind of the point that he was making on that.
Let's just listen to what he was saying himself, and this is something I think a lot of us appreciate now, but it is back in 2010.
I mean, in 2010 I wasn't... I hadn't figured this out, but I've come to appreciate it now.
You know, what's really going on with these wars?
Can we click into that and play that?
Because the goal is not to completely subjugate Afghanistan.
The goal is to use Afghanistan to wash money out of the tax bases of the United States, out of the tax bases of European countries, through Afghanistan, and back into the hands of a transnational security alliance.
That is the goal, i.e.
the goal is to have an endless war, not a successful war.
Yeah, I mean, that's essentially it.
I mean, he was talking about Afghanistan there.
Right.
But, I mean, you could apply it to, you know, modern wars as well.
They're not designed to be won.
They're designed to keep the money rolling.
And with these wars as well.
I mean, he's saying that the money is laundered through Afghanistan and then back to the country.
I mean, actually, it doesn't even leave the country.
So with all this Ukraine funding, the money goes directly from Congress to the defence contractors.
There's no intimate step where it goes via Ukraine or something.
The money just goes straight to the defence contractors and then it's sort of shipped over.
So, I mean, it's a different war, but same story.
And that's essentially what Julian Assange was exposing on all of that.
The idea is this sort of continuous war footing on all of this stuff.
This is also a clip worth playing.
Let's listen to him here.
Nearly every war that has started in the past 50 years has been a result of media lies.
The media could have stopped it if they'd searched deep enough.
If they hadn't reprinted government propaganda, they could have stopped it.
But what does that mean?
Well that means, basically, populations don't like wars.
And populations have to be fooled into wars.
Populations don't willingly, and with open eyes, go into a war.
So, if we have a good media environment, then we'll also have a peaceful environment.
Spot on there, aren't they?
See, I said this, I think a couple of weeks ago, to Sonia Poulton.
I was at a thing with Sonia Poulton.
Before we had subtle corruption, now it's just blatant corruption all in front of our eyes with so many different level of things now.
I wonder if it's becoming less subtle or we're just better at saying it now?
Like with social media we can see what previously, because I mean before it would have all been filtered through the newspapers and so it would have gone through a journalist.
So all you need to do is bamboozle a journalist and then read about it, you know, a couple of days later.
Whereas now with like the video clips and social media you can see... When did it say that?
Do you know?
Let's have a look if it says when he said it.
I mean it would have been around 2010-2011.
So there was not really much...
alternative media back then was there yeah i mean it was just starting to begin so i mean sargon popped up i think in 2013 uh the guy who founded this place um and and he was one of the very first so yeah i mean that was sort of all before that and one and things like the i mean the afghan war and the iraq war i mean i i at the time i believed in i thought they were good things um because i was sort of bought into the propaganda that the media pushes on all of this stuff and it's only really when you start to engage with this kind of stuff you realize that actually no
it is just another setup.
Well, I mean, especially what's happened to us in the last 40 years now, you know, things that I've seen in the past, I just question everything now.
I've seen documentaries on certain people, I don't want to get into too much because I don't want to muddy the waters.
We'll get into your story next but I certainly now see historic events completely differently.
I used to look at historic events and think how could they get a whole population of people to go along with these crimes?
Or certain.
Yeah.
He does.
Yeah.
And I don't think that anymore.
That's where my thoughts go as well, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But yeah, we will come back to that one in the next segment.
One of the chief things he did was upset this lovely lady, Hillary Clinton.
And this is a remarkable passage coming out of a meeting in the State Department.
Basically they're discussing WikiLeaks and how embarrassing this stuff is that's coming out.
And Clinton just asks, well can't we just drone this guy?
um now initially the the other people in the room laughed politely but then that laughter died off when they realized that she was actually serious no i want to drone this guy um no the u.s state is not supposed to just kill people that are inconvenience but when she's talking like that though it makes you wonder if Yeah.
How many others have been drawn?
Well, I mean, Seth Rich springs to mind rather quickly, but, um, but yeah, I mean, there is, I mean, if you've ever looked at the list, there's a pretty long list of Clinton associates who have died unexpectedly.
I've, I've seen some stuff, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, it's up there with, um, you know, being a, being a, yeah, being a Boeing whistleblower.
Um, yeah, so, uh, yeah, we won't mention Seth Leakes today, But yeah, this is WikiLeaks.
They've got their PGP on there.
I mean that, if you've never seen PGP, that's worth looking at.
So that is like one of the four runner techs for Bitcoin.
So basically it's an encryption method and you've got a public key and a private key.
So that's the public key.
So basically you can take that, take a file of something that you've got from somewhere, some classified file, encrypt it with that public key, send it to WikiLeaks, and if that file is intercepted on the way, it can't be decrypted.
Unless you've got the private key on the other side that Wikileaks have.
So there is a mechanism for people to then start uploading private information.
So if you ever wanted to get into something like Bitcoin, going via PGP is a good starting place because it is like one of the forerunner techs.
Bitcoin is something I can't trust either, man.
Who invented Bitcoin, you know?
Like, we don't even know who invented the thing, you know?
So it's a hard one.
Yeah, I think I've got an idea, but I'll send you the Brokeronomics episode that I did on it.
Yeah.
What else we got?
Oh yeah, this is... So this is also extraordinary, on the point of getting people killed.
Let's see if I can go down.
Yeah, so this is Tucker being interviewed on Joe Rogan.
And he's talking about when he started talking about the JFK assassination, about how he got a phone call from the CIA to say, yeah, stop talking about this.
But he also goes on to talk about Julian Assange.
So can we click into this and play this from the beginning?
He's threatening me.
Is in my car!
I'll never, with my dog sitting next to me, I'll never forget this.
And I said, are you really saying that to reveal that the U.S.
government had a role in the murder of a democratically elected president, to say that out loud, that's the crime?
What about the actual crime, which is murdering a president?
You're covering up for that, Mike Pompeo.
What did he say to that?
He had no response at all.
And so Mike Pompeo is the one who pressed Trump to keep those documents secret.
And so it's like, what's crazy to me is not just that Pompeo did that.
I think Pompeo is a really sinister person and a criminal.
I think that.
I think that because the facts suggest that.
He was caught Yahoo News' Micah Isikoff wrote a long piece on this several years ago.
His employees went to Micah Isikoff and said, hey, Mike Pompeo was plotting to murder Julian Assange, who has never even been charged with a crime in the United States, as CIA director.
That's illegal.
You're not allowed... Federal employees are not allowed to just kill people they don't like, okay?
Just to set the baseline here.
So...
That's who Mike Pompeo is, but he somehow intimidated Trump into not releasing this.
Well, okay, that's all bad, right?
I think it's criminal behavior.
So, yeah, that's a brief summary of Assange, for those who might have forgotten or weren't that close to the story.
Josh will be getting into it more tomorrow, so check that one out.
Right, let's go on to talk about your guy's story.
So we're going to have to be a little bit careful because we're on a big red censorship platform.
We'll try and use code words.
I tend to use the word JAG instead of V. But I just want to point out here before, For anyone watching, I don't wear the shades to look cool, I've got light sensitivity neurological issues now, so just in case people think, I'm always wearing them, I'm always wearing these glasses, so just in case anyone thinks Well, we get into that because obviously the official line is that they are safe and effective.
So that's what we're going to go with until we bin YouTube and then we have a proper chat.
So before we bin YouTube, and just to say to the YouTube viewers, this is an important segment.
This is a segment I've been wanting to do since I joined Lotus Eaters.
The whole reason why I came to Lotus Eaters in the first place is because the What happened to us two years ago was an absolute disgrace, and what they fostered on the population was an absolute disgrace.
So this needs to be talked about, but we can't talk about it properly on a censorship platform.
So just to remind you who these guys are, I'm going to play you something that reminds you who they are.
And then come over to lotuseaters.com.
It doesn't cost you anything.
It's free to sign up to watch the podcast on that, and you can watch the whole thing uncensored, and then you guys don't need to use any code words.
You can just bloody well say what happened.
Anyway, let's play where these two gentlemen sort of first came into the national conversation.
Hi, Rusty Sunak.
I've got so much to say, but such little time.
My name is John Watt, and I'm one of the Covid vaccine injured in this country.
I want you to look into my eyes, Rishi Sunak, and I want you to look at the pain, the trauma, and the regret I have in my eyes.
We have been left with no help at all.
Not only am I in here that's vaccine injured, there's another man over there whose life's been ruined by that COVID-19 vaccine.
I know people who have lost legs, amputations.
I know people with heart conditions like myself, Rishi Sunak.
Why have I had to set up a support group in Scotland to look after the people that have been affected by that Covid-19 vaccine?
Why are the people who are in charge, who told us all to do the right thing, have left us all to rot?
And left me and the thousands and the tens of thousands in this country to rot?
This is Sunak, look me in the eye.
When are you going to start to do the right thing?
The Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme is not fit for purpose.
In Scotland right now, according to the yellow card system, there are over 30,000 people that have had an adverse reaction to that vaccine.
Okay, John, thank you very much indeed for your question.
It's for you to start doing the right thing.
You've made a really strong point, John.
Prime Minister.
John, I'm very sorry to hear about your personal circumstances and you said someone over here also seems to have suffered by a similar thing.
Now, obviously I don't know about the individual situation that you're in.
We're silent, Rashi.
We're silent on social media and everything.
We are silent.
We are the most silenced people in this country.
I'm silenced in the press because my story in the press had to go to the government for comment and they made me take all this stuff out.
Forgive me, forgive me both.
I know I'm happy.
No, no, no one, no one is saying, no one is saying.
And Sir, you raised some very valid points, I'm sure.
What I've got to say is though, we haven't got you on microphone, and as you know, we've got to get through this.
I'm sure we can raise your points with the Prime Minister at a later date, but in the meantime, Prime Minister, if you could cover the issue.
Yeah, I'm very happy to.
vaccine compensation scheme that's in place, as you alluded to in the NHS.
Obviously, everyone individually will work through their cases.
It's difficult for me to comment on anyone's individual case.
I'm sure you'll appreciate that.
I'm very happy to go and look at the cases, and I'm sure you'll get them to the team here.
I mean, I'm very saddened and shocked to hear that you've been silenced by anybody.
That is surprising to me.
So please do get your details to Stephen and the team, and I will happily take that away.
Of course, you should be able to speak about your experience, what's happened to you.
And as I said, we have a compensation scheme in place for that, and I'll make sure that we're working through that.
Obviously, I think you'll appreciate it's hard for me to comment on your specific circumstances, just not knowing them and those things.
The last thing I'd say is, you know, we went through a pandemic, like everyone else, at the points when it came to the vaccine, those decisions were always taken on the basis of medical advice from our medical experts to tell us, as politicians, who are obviously not doctors, about how best to roll out the vaccine, what was in the public health interest, the priority order, how that should be done, who should be eligible.
That was something that the doctors recommended on, and that's something that we followed.
Now, obviously, if there are individual circumstances which haven't worked out, then that's why we have the compensation scheme in place, and I'll make sure that we follow up on your cases.
OK, Prime Minister, thank you.
So a couple of quick observations from that.
First of all, the look of oh shit on his face.
He didn't know that question was coming.
No he didn't.
And the reaction of the host.
He didn't know that was coming either.
So how the hell did you guys get on that?
I don't want to say too much because we've actually done an event in Glasgow.
So I do a podcast as well called Bring the Noise Podcast.
Probably the most censored podcast in the UK because I can't get anything on YouTube but it's on Rumble.
It was on Twitter.
Okay, well we'll try and stick that in the show notes.
Everything I mean can get hacked, but we can get into that as well.
Everything, bank account, Twitter account, everything you can imagine get hacked.
Wow.
About two months ago.
So I've lost my Twitter account which was 55,000 followers and everything, but to go back to this, you're 100% correct.
And like I said, when we done the event in Glasgow, I told everybody at the event in Glasgow how we managed to do it.
I don't want to say too much on here because we're looking at doing another event in London with Top Doctors again.
Do the exact same thing.
It was a fantastic event and we sold it out and it was to try and raise money for the injured and it was quite successful for people that had been affected by it but I can honestly tell you that the one and only question they didn't know in that studio was mine.
That was the honest answer.
So they didn't have a clue.
It was like a military operation to get in there but I don't want to go into too much detail.
There was a bit of sneaky sneaky in order to get you guys on that.
I can well imagine.
We covered this at the time and that's what I said at the time.
He was not expecting that question.
You can see when I tell him to look in my eyes, you can see the gulp.
You know, he's just totally thrown off guard, you know, and it was the fact that, you know, this is the thing, like, me and Adam are still not well, and the thing is, like... You are looking better than you look in there, I'll give you that.
Oh, the sunshine's been out, you know, I've been getting the vitamin D from the sun, you know, I'm a big believer in things that are natural now, I always try and get out in the sun to try and help me as much as possible, but, like I said, Adam's still not as good, and that was a big struggle for us, especially in the winter, wasn't it?
Oh yeah, I mean it took me a week to recover after that and like you say after our event in Glasgow it took me two and a half, three weeks and like when I say recover yeah it's just crazy you know if you've not been injured yourself you wouldn't understand some of the crazy symptoms so even as I sit here now Dan I'm going really really dizzy like I feel like I'm going to pass out you know which I know I won't because you just get used to it but it's bizarre.
Yeah.
Let's get properly into your story.
We say goodbye to the YouTube people now.
Just before we finish on that, I just wanted to say exactly what he said there.
All the doctors, nurses.
Yeah, that's the second thing.
He immediately threw the doctors under the bus.
This is going to be the harsh reality and I've said this before.
A lot of nurses and doctors have got batch numbers against their names, and that is a big problem.
Can I just say something there?
We're still on YouTube, I'll just point out there, 100% safe and effective, blah blah blah, all that kind of stuff.
Anyway, let's get rid of YouTube, come and watch us on lowdiseasers.com and then you can see the rest of this.
Right, so tell us what really happened.
Well, like I said, he threw everybody under the bus, all the doctors and nurses.
When this all comes out, they're going to sit and say, I'm not a medical professional.
You know, June Rain, the MHRA, where the hell is she now?
She's the one that ripped up the paperwork and said we tore up the rule book for this JAG.
So, I mean, on you go mate.
Yeah, I was just going to say, most of your listeners won't be aware of all the doctors and nurses are actually protected.
Right.
So if you go to 2012 and look under the Human Medicines Act, what the British government did in 2012 was, so in 2009, 2010, 86 healthcare workers were horrifically injured by the swine flu vaccines in hospitals.
They took the British Government and GSK to court, who are the manufacturers, and all got upwards of £1 million each because of their horrendous damages.
But the British Government had to pay that out of the taxpayers' money.
So in order for them to take that, they had to sign an NDA.
So what the British Government did in reaction to those cases was, in 2012, they amended the Human Medicines Act.
And in that they put in that anybody that has any ill effects from a drug, a vaccine, an experimental medical procedure, and also anybody that administers that procedure, i.e.
the vaccinators, they cannot be held to liability if it's classed as experimental.
OK, because we had GPs getting £15 per jab that they put in, so some of them were getting lots and lots of money for doing it, and they might have had at the back of their mind, well in fact they should, if they had any basic understanding of medicine, which might be a tall ask for a GP, but if they did they should know that this cannot be safe.
It could be, and actually I want to explain this distinction clearly, because it's possible that the vaccines could have been harmless, but they could not have been safe.
And to explain the difference, let's say I go to the pub and I drink eight pints, and then I drive home.
It might be harmless, what I did, because I didn't cause any harm, but it was not safe.
And these vaccines, they knew that they could not be safe because they didn't have the safety data.
All you need to look at is the original trials, so for example you've got Breanne Dressen, who's in America, so she was in the original, can you say the words on here, the AZ one?
Yeah, say what you like now, we've got the audience.
So basically AstraZeneca, she was in the original trial, look at Breanne Dressen's story, had an adverse reaction, what happened?
Because she didn't take two doses, she couldn't complete the trial, so therefore her Her evidence was null and void.
Look at young Maddy de Grey and Maddy de Gary.
Was that the little girl in the wheelchair?
Yep, the five.
What happened to her?
Had an adverse reaction.
The level of corruption regarding these things is absolutely damning.
You know, the last time I seen the yellow card system in the UK, it was over in the UK all along.
that was our thing I didn't get to finish on that point because when I was confronting Sunak regarding that, you know, you heard me say 30,000 people no longer here 30,000 adverse reactions and over 300 deaths from in Scotland alone but that's adverse reactions and over 300 deaths from in Scotland alone but Now in the UK there's 400,000 adverse reactions but again this was statistics back I would think 2023 November so God knows where they are now
and like I said the yellow card system, you need that Freedom of Information Act And the doctors who administered this, when they've got somebody come in saying, oh, I've got a severe problem, and it started right after I took the jab, the doctor who just administered the jab is not going to say, oh, it's probably the jab.
They're going to say anything else, aren't they?
Well, it used to be that if you took, if you got a medication from a doctor, you would tell it, I'm not feeling good from that, they tell you the symptom, they would report it to the yellow card system.
So the way it works now is, you need to self-report it.
Now I've talked to politicians and, you know, MSPs, Scottish Parliament, you know, and I've said to them, do you know what happens when you have an adverse reaction?
And I said, what do you do next?
And one of them said to me, we sue them.
That's what he said, I've got it on video, it's on one of my Twitter videos.
And I said, so if you don't know how to report it, how does a common person know how to report these things?
So that goes to show you the amount of people that are walking around that haven't reported their adverse reactions.
Number two, the amount of people walking around not realising they're actually affected by this thing because it has so many levels of danger to it.
You know, rheumatoid arthritis, you know, vaccine-gistrombiotic thrombocytopenia, POTS, the list goes on.
Well the MHRA have admitted themselves, haven't they John?
So I've seen Malhotra talks about this and it's openly available in the public domain.
So they're saying 98% of reactions aren't reported and only 10% of severe reactions are supported, including Yeah, I can well believe it because they're going to go to the doctor and the doctor is just going to say, oh, it's something else.
In fact, didn't that happen to you originally?
I think I heard something that when you first went to the hospital, they tried to say it was anxiety or something.
Yeah, so my story goes further than 2020.
I spoke about it in our podcast, but I've been here all day.
But basically, I've given you pictures of what I was like.
I was in a wheelchair.
Yeah, Samson, can we come up with the images if we've got them?
So that was me literally.
I think it was about maybe two months after taking it.
But the picture you had there before, I literally took it, I believe it was November 19th.
I just need to double check that date.
But it was around about November.
And I took it.
It didn't feel good.
And I was just constantly in and out of hospital.
I was vomiting every day.
So I was literally being sick every day.
Every time I opened my eyes, I was just vomiting every day.
I was losing weight rapidly in and out of hospital constantly.
They were saying, you know, you've got health anxiety.
You've got, just didn't want to believe it.
It took me two months to actually realise it was a jag.
Because what happened was I went to a private doctor.
And eventually he said, you've got a condition called POTS.
Which is Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome syndrome.
So it meant when I, exactly why should I know that word, you know?
But basically I used to be sitting down, I'd stand up, my heart rate would go from 70 beats per minute sitting, instantly 120, 130, 140 beats, instantly.
Instantly.
Because when you were confronting Sunak, you were sort of doing this rocking back and forwards, but that wasn't because you were angry.
Well, it's a kind of mixture of a bit of paucity and the dizziness and the light sensitivity.
Like I said, I wasn't wearing the sunglasses there.
I wear them as, you know, it's quite bright in here.
You know, like Adam says, we try and control our symptoms in a way, so I'm kind of swaying left to right.
A lot of people said, you know, he looks a bit crazy and stuff.
Trust me, if you were in my body for For 5 minutes, but going back to when I realised... That's why we're wearing t-shirts now, because of your conditions, you become light-headed very easily, so we're just keeping it light.
Yeah, basically the body, if we're too hot, we feel like we're going to pass out, constantly thirsty, you'll see me constantly drinking water, and then if you're too cold, there's just no balance anymore.
Like I said it wasn't until a private doctor said to me when he said you've got this condition called POTS and I went right okay and I said well what else is going on with me because I've got about 40 different symptoms you know I believe I'm actually not going to be here I believe I'm dying if I'm being honest with you and they turned around and said when did this all start and I said around about November and then he turned around to me and said Did you take any of your Jags, your boosters?
And I said, I took my Pfizer booster.
And I said, do you think it's that?
And it was as if to say, yes, but I can't say anything.
Then after that, I got sent the Joe Rogan and Dr Malone podcast, where Malone spoke about, he developed POTS hypertension from the Moderna one.
After that, Penny had dropped.
And then, like I said, I've got four private doctors and I've spent over 40.
So how many doctors did you speak to before one of them said, yeah, it's the jab?
I must have been in a hospital about 30 times.
Maybe.
Right.
Because the propaganda was so strong.
I mean, I know somebody who, and she was a runner.
I used to see her on Strava, you know, the running app, putting in these amazing, I mean, she was a semi-professional, which wasn't a professional runner, but semi-professional, doing these amazing runs.
And she had the AstraZeneca and blood clots in the lungs and lost 30% of her lungs.
And now, you know, fat old bastard me, I can outrun her easily.
Yeah, you're right, sure.
And the most extraordinary thing is everybody who knew her still went and got their jabs after that.
And it's like, yeah, but you know what happened to her.
You literally know what happened to her.
And they just looked at you and they said, yeah, but TV says safe and effective, so it's safe and effective.
It's like your own eyes, your own experience.
This is again the power of the media, Dan, so this is my bugbear of it all.
So a national newspaper approached me recently and wanted to do a story on me and I said, look, I said, I'm not interested in your story unless you make it about the biggest story.
I said, the biggest story is I'm not rare.
I said, there's thousands of me.
I can get you loads of people.
I said, because I know what you're going to do, you're going to put my story in, feel sorry for Adam, and on the bottom of it you're going to say, and this is one in a million, and it's safe and effective.
I said, you're going to use it to mitigate it, and I said, that's not true.
So as soon as I said that, they've not come back to me.
Do you have any idea what the numbers might be?
Because they're a lot higher than they say, but I've... Well... I've been saying it at least 10 times in the report, it's severe.
I think I've seen one study, I think Maholtra said that 1 in 81 people would possibly suffer an adverse reaction from Pfizer.
1 in 80?
1 in 81.
AstraZeneca, if you look at the, so AstraZeneca recently applied to have their licence removed if you like, so quite quietly in the background to do that they had to submit all their clinical trial data.
Right.
And in the actual clinical trials, 1 in 10 got injured in the clinical trial from the AstraZeneca vaccine.
1 in 34 was a severe, either they died or it was a life-changing event.
1 in 34.
And I think, I think one of the... So let me just say that again, 1 in 34, for them it was a life-changing event.
Yes.
Oh, I'm feeling dizzy for two weeks.
A life-changing... No, like myocarditis, you know, a severe neurological... And, I mean, just, just, I mean, this is a bit of a head trip, but these companies, they knew that they were going to give a life-changing adverse event to one in 34 people, and they went ahead and did it anyway, because there was money to be made.
And this was being rolled out to the entire bloody planet.
Yep.
And they were willingly sacrificing 1 in 34 to make some money.
I can send you the link as well to put in your show notes if you want people to explore that data themselves.
Yeah, please do.
But the worst one as well is the fact that they pushed it on pregnant women.
That's the worst, I think.
And there has been a massive increase in miscarriages and stuff like that.
Because the event we'd done, we had Dr Tina Pears, who's a wonderful woman, absolute phenomenal doctor.
Her and her team, I can't hail them enough, you know.
And it's a shame because they're actually trying to go after this woman's license.
And she's just an absolutely phenomenal human being.
And she speaks about, you know, because that's her kind of expertise, isn't it?
The miscarriages and stuff.
And you just reminded me of mine that, They tried to go after my license too and I was injured.
Yeah so what's your background?
So I was a physiotherapist but I worked in professional sport for the last 17-18 years.
So I worked in professional rugby, professional ballet, worked for England rugby.
I actually did some Work for the military overseas and operational base for a year and then in my last 18 months before the vaccine I was actually consulting in the US for some high-profile golfers so I was doing pretty well for myself.
It was a very serious physio career then?
Yeah, I was actually, when I was in rugby in the back end of my career, I was what's called Head of Medical, so I was the full-time senior medical member of staff, so we'd have like part-time GPs coming in, you know, cardiologists coming in to screen all the players.
It was basically anything medical, you know, the buck stopped with me and I made all the decisions, yeah, with the expertise of these people.
But this is a senior medical position with sports players worth millions of dollars to their teams.
Takeovers.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So yeah, I've met some pretty big people.
And what happened to you after you took the vaccine?
Yeah, I mean, obviously I don't want to talk about why I took it too much as I feel an absolute idiot now.
So I took the first vaccine and I'd say very similar to John.
So I developed all these neurological symptoms, but I didn't know what they were.
So what I'd explain by that is, My autonomic nervous system, so what John mentioned earlier with POTS, so my heart rate was going crazy, I would be basically... So this is heat sensitivity, dizziness, stuff like that?
I was having fits in bed 15 times a night, so I couldn't lie down flat in my bed, which I still struggle with now.
Bloody hell.
So as soon as I lie down flat, so even when I speak to you down now, I've got my, my brain feels like it's constantly spinning in my skull like that, but slowly.
So if you imagine that and you lie down and you close, when I close my eyes, it speeds up even more.
So you're getting like sea sickness in bed?
Yeah, yeah.
And then what happens is as I'm trying to go to sleep and close my eyes, it feels like I'm being dropped off a cliff and my body, like they've seen it on the monitors in hospital.
So my heart goes out of rhythm because my heart was going into VT.
So they're saying as my heart goes out of rhythm, my blood pressure drops that low.
That's what's causing this extreme dizziness, and I miss a few breaths, and then what happens is my body automatically jerks upright, so I sit upright, and I feel fine again.
And then this would happen like 15 times a night, so I... That's not good for a night's sleep.
So I didn't know what was going on, so I phoned my GP up, couldn't get a face-to-face appointment, and he went, are you getting nocturnal panic attacks?
I've never had a panic attack in my life, so I didn't know what it was.
So I left it a couple of weeks and I had to like stop working.
It was the first time in, you know, I didn't, I feel stewed because I did not think it was the vaccine.
I didn't even compute.
And then it was only after I actually had the second vaccine, I immediately, my heart just went, I ended up on ACU in my heart.
I thought I was going to die.
I just thought I was having heart attacks.
It was horrendous.
But the second time it was kind of, it was obvious that it was the vaccine.
The second time I had the vaccine I immediately got severe chest pain, sweating, couldn't breathe, couldn't walk.
I was just like, ambulances yeah and then from that moment I said to him straight away I've just had the vaccine.
It was utterly horrendous what they did in this country but at least we didn't go quite as far as Australia and Canada.
I mean I heard about a story of one guy who had a similar thing to you I think he had the first one and he had a really bad reaction to the first one and you know like in Canada and Australia they were so obsessed with it they were like we're gonna shut down your bank account we're gonna destroy your job we're gonna cut you out your home and doctors said to him yeah if you have another vax you will die but we can't we can't give you a medical excuse because we will we will lose our license I mean it was absolute totalitarian over that period.
But did these doctors not realize Why are they not all banding together and realise how wrong this is?
Why have they all just ignored us?
Did you guys ever speak to Dr Malik?
Yeah, we know Doctor.
I've spoken, not in depth, but I know Doctor Malik.
You've been on his podcast.
I've been on his podcast, yeah, I've spoken to him.
Yeah, I've been on his podcast.
I mean, he's the answer to that question, isn't he?
Because he stood up, and they chucked him out of it.
I don't think they've taken his licence yet, but everywhere he works has said, you're not working here anymore.
So that's why the doctors don't do it.
But I mean, why are they not, oh, can I ban?
They can't ignore that, at this point.
Yeah, because 95% of people are cowards when it comes down to it.
I think as well what it is, is from having worked in the NHS myself at the time, John, is like, so the NHS is run by bureaucrats and managers above them, and if you think there isn't a full-time private sector for medical professionals, well there is, but it's very small, So most of them just wouldn't have a job would they because they're employed basically by the NHS but it's not an excuse because for me they're the people I'm most disgusted with at this stage.
So what happened when you started going to doctors then?
So first of all they said it was just nocturnal panic attacks.
Nocturnal panic attacks and anxiety.
I developed insomnia as you would because I was frightened to lie down because I thought I was dying.
Um, so they answered that question by saying, well, you need some antidepressants.
Well, I took them for about a week and it was like throwing petrol on a bonfire.
That wasn't, it was clearly not, it clearly wasn't right.
Um, they tried to give me sleeping medication, which, because I went for approximately 18 months where I only slept.
At first I could only sleep every five days because of it and then I got down to every third night I would crash so I wouldn't sleep for two nights, third night sleep.
I'd get about four or five hours then I'd miss, so I'd sleep twice a week.
You must have been an absolute wreck.
I was hallucinating by five days.
I can remember the first time speaking to Adam on the phone.
We were on a Zoom call and I was in a bad way because I was bedridden for 14 months I think that's how we connected but I can remember the first time and I was like, I'm bad.
I was getting a treatment called Goldick at the time, spent about £6,000 on it and I remember the first time seeing Adam.
If I'm being honest with you, I genuinely didn't think Adam would be here this long.
Honestly mate I've said that to you before as you know but I honestly didn't think he'd be here this long.
And it's like I mean it's not just me this so I don't want to like talk about me there's a lot of people worse than me but I've had three blood clots in my lungs I've got muscle disease now off it.
No I think I think it is important to talk about your individual cases because If we just talk about the big numbers, and we will do that in the Brokeronomics that we're going to film after this, but you do need to go down to the personal level of what it's actually like to live like this.
Well, one of the reasons that I speak out, and I've got a lot of support, so I've got a good family support round about me.
Like I said, I've done a GoFundMe in the past and, you know, the good people out there and anyone who did watch and did direct to my GoFundMe in the past, I really appreciate that.
I was seriously just begging for help and because I have had the support, now I look at people like Adam and many others, like I say, we've spent as a family probably over £30,000 of our own money to keep me alive and £12,000 I think was from the GoFundMe, like I say every single penny I spent, Hyperbaric Oxygen Chamber, Goldik, everything, And I look at that and I couldn't remember where I was in a bed that I didn't think I was going to be.
Imagine being in that position and not having your family or support round about you and that is the harsh reality.
And the harsh reality again as well is I would have ended my life if I didn't have the support because I didn't think I would get out of my bed.
months in a bed with my mother caring for me, my family all caring for me.
I was literally because of the pots was that bad, I had to lie down.
I was in a documentary called Safe and Effective, a second opinion.
I would tell anybody to go and look at that documentary as well, all facts.
Nobody can debunk it.
But the reason I speak out as much as I do is because I know there's so many more out there and we have to keep the pressure on Let's talk about that then.
So obviously your situation was horrific.
Your situation was somehow even more horrific than that.
It's still horrific.
It's still going on.
Yeah, so for me, as soon as the second vaccine happened, I'd passed out twice, so I'm getting dizzier and then I basically contacted an old cardiologist I used to work with And said, Rich, I said, can you do me a favour?
I said, my doctor's telling me it's panic attacks.
I said, I've passed out twice.
I'm going dizzy all the time.
And he put an ECG on.
He said, come up to the hospital.
And my heart was going into VT, which causes sudden cardiac death.
What's VT?
Ventricular tachycardia.
So it's the bottom ventricles of your heart, which pump the blood down your body.
So they're supposed to, like, as the chambers fill up, they're supposed to squeeze the blood out like that.
And when they go into VT, they're going like that, quivering.
Uh, okay.
So it's what, it's what, it's the most dangerous heart rhythm.
Yep.
Um, so my heart was going into VT for like between 6 and 12 seconds on average, and that's why I was gonna go like, I was gonna collapse, because my blood pressure just dropped.
because I had no cardiac output in my body.
The blood of the tree isn't flowing.
Your heart is misfiring effectively.
Yeah, yeah.
So he said, that's what's happening with your heart.
So he said, this is potentially quite serious.
Yeah, sounds it.
So he said, we need to order you a scan.
So he gave me the copy of the ECG and he says, if it happens again, you go straight to hospital.
It happened again a few days later.
Called the ambulance, showed him that.
They rushed me into ACU, wouldn't let me get out of bed for a week.
And then I told him, look, this is all since the vaccine.
So I didn't know it at the time, but they tested my D-dimor, which was sky high for blood clots, but they didn't find any blood clots.
And they basically discharged me after a week Uh, sent me, because this was my local hospital, it wasn't a specialist heart hospital, they were bamboozled.
So they said to me at the time, because my resting heart rate, I was so fit, was 38, so they couldn't put me on drugs to control it.
So they said to me, oh, we think you've got an athlete's heart, it's Brugada syndrome, so they wouldn't admit it was the vaccine.
Yeah, of course.
And then I just got sicker and sicker and sicker month on month.
I developed jaundice in my eyes, my face rashes, tinnitus, blurred vision, all these muscle problems that I've got now.
So I slowly just got sicker and sicker.
It was a whole year later I collapsed, a whole year after the vaccine I collapsed with three blood clots in my lungs and then I was like in the hospital and I was going, you know, by this time I was just losing my shit.
I was saying this is bullshit, this is all from the vaccine, said you know what's happening and they were like still wouldn't put a pen to paper I had pericarditis in my heart at that time.
Were they prepared to admit it privately, even if they wouldn't write it down?
They would admit it privately, they wouldn't write it down.
Yeah, because the propaganda was just, it was just mental.
But then I came out of hospital and I had, even though I was in hospital for over a month, they discharged me and I called out ten ambulances, Dan, in the space of another four or five weeks.
They took me back in for a few days, kicked me out and basically said, oh, you've got pericarditis in your heart.
You're just going to have to get over it.
So then I had to pay for a private opinion at one of the top heart and lung hospitals in the country.
And they just went straight away.
It's all from the vaccine, pen to paper.
I saw a lung doctor there, a heart doctor.
And then they actually took me in on the NHS for five weeks now.
We need to look at you.
This is serious.
And they kept me in for five weeks and then they found the muscle disease and everything else I've got.
That's the thing.
When you go private to the hospital, we won't mention the hospital, but I spent about £9,000 on an MRI and a private PET scan because the NHS just weren't doing anything.
And then eventually after nearly a year, I've argued with a cardiologist, I'd love to name his name on here, but the man done a hit piece on Dr Asim Malhotra and it turns out he was my cardiologist that left me to rot.
And I'm sitting, and I see him told me, and I'm sitting and going, I see him going, is that your cardiologist?
And I went, yeah.
He went, he's just done a hip piece on me, saying about... And I'm sitting there going... These people, yeah.
So, it took for me to go to... But I mean, that guy, the evidence of his own, I mean, he's got medical experience.
But then I found out he was on Pfizer's payroll.
Ah, yeah.
There you go.
So, like, it's a conflict of interest.
It's not about health.
You know, but I say we had to go to a private doctor as well and that's how I end up getting the diagnosis of myocarditis in my heart which is the act of inflammation which I don't even know to this day if it has calmed down because I can't afford another private PET scan or MRI to see if it has but my heart doesn't feel good.
Like I say, you might see me okay just now but what happens with is we tend to get stages where last week there's no way I could have came down and done this The last few days, but I know I'm going to have a backlash from this.
It's probably going to be another few days in bed, but I really want to touch on the Sunak and, you know, the level of... Well, I tell you what, we get into more of this in the interview we're about to do next, but let's talk briefly about the Sunak thing then.
I'll do a little bit on the polling, but before we get to that...
He said in that thing that he was going to reach out to you so what happened after the GB News event?
Did he come over to you guys and have a chat?
So obviously I've, I'll let Adam speak out.
So after I left, you can see me and you don't see me, but what people don't get to see, because I've had people say, oh, if that was me, I would have done this.
Trust me, you wouldn't have done jack shit if you were in my position, because the guys, the security that I see shuffle round about when I stood up, I've got the guy in my ear, sit down, and I'm like, oh, you know?
And I just, I couldn't sit there, and I had to get out of there as soon as possible.
And then when I got outside, the police were outside, and they were like, oh, you John?
And I was like, yeah.
And they're like, look, we just want to get you out here.
And I says, we don't do this respect.
I've just, I've just confronted the prime minister.
I says, there's no danger.
I'm getting in the back of your police car.
And then Adam was still in there at that point.
Yeah.
So when John was speaking and he was getting quite, should we say vocal?
So what you don't see on that TV thing.
Maybe you get to your mic, you mean?
So when you don't see on that TV thing, there's like a balcony above John, and above that balcony, there was five sort of suited, quite obvious security details for the prime minister.
So as John started, you know, giving it a bit more large, should we say, you know, two of those came down.
A bit Glaswegian.
Yeah, a bit Glaswegian.
So two of them came down and stood behind the seated audience there, just to there.
So then John's obviously, I've seen John disappear out and I've seen two of these guys follow him.
So I'm sat there thinking here, like thinking, you know, I can't, I can't, I can't leave my mate there.
Yeah.
So this thing's going on.
So then I just said to him, I said, I want to leave.
I said, get me out of here.
So then I left, I didn't go out the way he came in and they shuffled me out the back door.
Okay.
And then I went round and that's when.
So next people get in touch like you said they would.
So what happened is, um, They said to Adam, we'll take the details, so we tried to get back in the building, they wouldn't let us back in the building, so then what happened was, a couple of days later, I got a phone call from GB News, so they've got all my details, and they said, is it ok if we pass over the details to the Prime Minister and his team?
I went, absolutely, so there's no problem at all.
So there he is, he's already had, so then, Not only that, I mean, we can play the clip of, in Parliament, Christopher Chope stands up in a full packed house in that Parliament building and says, will you speak to John Watt?
And he says, yes.
I don't know if you've got that video at all, or?
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know.
There we go.
Is it this one or the second one?
It's that one, that one.
Christopher Chope!
Mr Speaker, may I thank my right honourable friend for meeting me six weeks ago to discuss the plight of victims of COVID-19 vaccine damage.
May I ask him, following that discussion and his very sympathetic response during the GB People's Forum to Mr John Watt, who himself is a victim of COVID-19 vaccine damage, whether the government will be supporting my COVID-19 vaccine payments bill this Friday.
Well, Mr Speaker, can I thank my Honourable Friend for raising the issue and the conversation that I had with him previously, and extend my sympathies to all of those who have been affected by this.
I will of course make sure that he can meet with the Secretary of State to discuss his Bill, and as I committed to him, we are looking at the issue in some detail to make sure that the policies we've got are providing the support that they need to.
So, obviously...
He said there that he will get in touch.
Again, didn't get in touch.
GB News, so... He said it there.
GB News get in contact.
Now, I've been... There's a fantastic... Wait, wait, wait.
So, what?
Sunak lied about that as well?
Boy, I've not heard from him.
That's shocking.
So...
That's the second time it was addressed with it, so I've been, so there's a fantastic man and I'm going to give him a shout out, Neil Hanvey MP, Neil Hanvey now talks out regarding this, he was a person that took this, you know, he's actually got really fantastic credentials, he worked in clinical trials in the past, you know, he took this thing, he started seeing things round about him, so Neil's now been working alongside me, he represents me, him and his team emailed
Sunak, regarding this matter, came back and said, we don't have his details.
You've been given my details twice.
And not only that, you get emailed.
I mean...
The thing is, if there was a proper conversation about what happened to you guys and thousands of other people, I mean, we are talking about most of the House of Commons going to jail, thousands of medical health professionals going to jail.
I mean, we're talking about journalists going to...
We're talking about something that could topple a rage.
If it is true, the numbers that you sort of talked about, and they said about, right, that something between one in 34 and one in 81 had a life-changing reaction to this.
Some of them don't even know.
And that could bring down entire regimes.
So they can't talk about it, good or real, they just have to shut you up.
Well, like I said, and it's not just Sunak.
This is a problem.
This is a lot of them.
I mean all of them.
I'm talking like Nicola Sturgeon.
I hope you're watching.
Yeah.
Because you blocked me when I asked her for help on Twitter when I had my other account.
Yeah.
You know, I asked her for help.
You know, Piers Morgan, you know, give up with that guy.
You know, he blocked me as well.
But he's not a politician.
But Axler won.
And I saw some absolute bloody idiot.
Was it Kevin Maguire?
Yeah, so the next day, I'll give you a quick laugh with that one, so after that whole thing happened, I thought, you know what, I'll go for, is it defamation of character?
Is that the correct word?
Yeah.
And I looked into it, right, and I contacted all these lawyers, the amount of lawyers that that man's got behind him is unbelievable, because they were like, we work with him, we can't do anything, and lawyers were saying you need a maximum of £200,000 plus joint to go after him, so I did try and go after him, but to turn around and say I was an anti-vaxxer on ITV or whatever it was.
It's just ridiculous but I've sat down with, you know, Lib Dems.
I've actually sat down with the Labour.
So a woman in Scotland, I sat down with her about a year ago and she's the head of disability in Scotland.
Now you would think, I'm sitting down with her and I would think, you know what?
She'll maybe get an understanding of this.
She'll understand it because she's disabled herself and also she deals with disabilities.
They've done nothing.
The one and only person I can honestly say that has helped me, and I speak to him regularly, is Neil Hanvey.
I know he's a good guy.
I know I pushed this in the past, but he's done a full U-turn on it.
He now sees it.
He's just a fantastic man.
Besides Neil, John, as soon as I came, they took my details as well.
And then I started emailing the Prime Minister, so I emailed his constituency office in Durham, or wherever he's based, and I emailed Westminster, his office there, so I sent loads of emails, I sent loads of, left loads of voicemail messages on his answer phone, in Parliament, and I was getting nowhere, no response, so I went to my MP as well, and she brought it up to Penny Morden.
I think they've got the video on it.
I think they've got it.
Yeah, so she reminded it as well.
Do you want to play the other video?
My constituent Adam Rowland recently met the Prime Minister, who promised, live on television no less, that he would be in touch with him regarding his negative reaction to the Covid vaccine and difficulty accessing the treatment that has been recommended on the NHS.
Since then, despite repeated requests, Adam has had no response from anyone in government.
and feels like he's being treated as some sort of pariah and anti-vax conspiracy theorist.
He's not.
He's just a man who did the right thing in taking up the vaccine, and was one of the unfortunate minority who became ill, and he needs some support.
Will the Leader of the House please help Adam get the response he was promised?
I will, of course, absolutely do that, and if the Honourable Lady will give me the...
So Morgan says of course absolutely.
Did she?
No she didn't.
Right, what a shock.
I got an email last week...
I got an email and I'm assuming it's from my emails to the Prime Minister at his office.
I got an email to say he'd seen the email and he's passed it on to the Department of Health and I got a no reply email from the Department of Health saying the vaccines are safe and effective, we can't look at individual cases and there's a vaccine damage payment scheme.
Yeah, and actually, I also want to mention another friend of yours, um, you know, because you're kind of a trio, aren't you?
Alex, yeah.
Alex, yeah, because I mean, that case absolutely disgusted me because he...
I mean he lost a leg didn't he?
Yeah Alex's story is very very important.
Unfortunately he can't come down because he's just not doing too good just now I think.
He was invited but couldn't make it but that's fair enough.
But I don't want to speak too much on Alex because I don't like putting words in his mouth but I mean Alex collapsed in April 2021 I believe so very early on they knew that this thing was harming And he collapsed I think it was 12 days after his one dose of AstraZeneca and they were removing blood clots from his body and legs I believe in the abdomen.
Er, for over 12 hours, and unfortunately they couldn't, erm, they couldn't save his, his left leg?
It's his left leg.
His left leg, yeah.
And he was a roofer or something, wasn't he?
He was a scaffolder, yeah, and he is, this is the thing, so the Vaccine Damage Payment Scheme, my understanding, has been running since the 70s or something like that, I believe.
Do you know, do you know how long?
1972, I think.
So 70s.
And, and have they raised it by inflation the whole time?
No, no.
Not since 2006.
There's been a lot of inflation since 2006.
So Alex was the first living man, so there has been people that have been compensated before in the past, but they've unfortunately not been here.
You know, Charlotte Wright, whose husband is no longer here, but that man's story should have been first page news.
You know, if we all knew there was a possibility you could have your leg amputated from it, would we have talked?
And nobody can argue that.
And the thing is, Well I say it's called vaccine-induced thrombocytopenia isn't it?
They can't deny it.
It's been proven by government, proven by haematology, proven by doctors and proven by AstraZeneca.
The government admitted fairly early on that they did this to him, that it was the vaccine.
It's a long fight for him to do it.
But the remarkable thing about that story is that...
You've got to give Mark Stein a lot of credit because Mark Stein...
Yeah, he's a good guy.
...was putting Alex on GB News, so we're getting a lot of traction, but again, we've not really...
But the remarkable thing about that story, first of all, they take a leg off him and almost kill him, and they give him 120 grand, which is nowhere near enough compensation for a leg.
I mean, if it was £1.2 million, maybe, but... That's still not enough.
Even that isn't enough, but £120,000 is not enough.
But the remarkable thing for me is that after he got that £120,000, he obviously can't do scaffolding anymore, so he applies for disability and they say, well, spend the £120,000 first and then we'll talk.
I don't know 100% about behind that Alex would talk more on it, but...
Yeah, I mean, £120,000, I mean, for me, I don't even think £120,000... Well, it's not enough for any of you.
No, because the mental... Well, let's be honest, John, it's probably not, what, three or four years of an average salary nowadays?
See, just what you're saying regarding... Obviously, we've had the bod scandal and the post office scandal.
No, I just want to say that how long did these scandals last, right?
They lasted 20, 30, 40 years and it's still going on.
Nobody.
That is obviously the play here.
They want to push this out 30 years until everybody who was involved in it has retired.
So let's put things into perspective here.
I don't know if this is 100% true, but none of the post office scandals, nobody that was a victim of these scandals went toe-to-toe with the most powerful man in the country, let's be honest.
They were sweeping us under, and as soon as I seen an opportunity, we had to take that opportunity.
And it's like, we're in your face, we've told you we exist, now you have to do something.
But again, we said it earlier on, if we knew there was going to be You know, if this was a general election we would have held off.
If it was the BBC or ITV or one of the mainstream media, unfortunately it had to be GB News, wasn't it?
And if it was BBC, the whole bloody country would have been speaking about it, but because it was GB News, unfortunately, they're saying they're not credible.
They use the same vetting company for all the shows.
Right.
Because we've tried to get one for them all since.
And it can't be you guys next time.
You're going to have to sneak somebody else in there.
Yeah, yeah.
And I think as well, they'll have to take the social media accounts down first and things like that, you know.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
We've got to get it out there.
Right, so we talk about this more in an interview, and then viewers can see that next week, so we get into more of that.
I did have a small segment I think I'm going to largely skip over, but I was going to look at the polling.
But I mean, I'll just, let's call it up on screen.
I'll just do it in like two minutes.
So yeah, basically we're working on our election night coverage.
So I've been practising my green scheme.
Bloody hell.
Green screen skills.
So, got a bit of practicing to do in order to get that right, but our election stream will be in here and then we're going to have the data room in there where I'll be doing my green screen stuff.
Oh, I don't know how to get rid of it now.
Anyway, so yeah, so one thing I do want to mention to the audience is we're looking for good inside information.
We've got election at lotuseaters.com, an email account, so if any of you are attending counts or you're inside or you're in one of the political parties, which I know some of you are, and you want to give us tips, send it to election at lotuseaters.com.
I did have a segment... Give us your details, we will get that.
Is that so you can put a bet on that you want those tips?
Yes, yes, good thinking.
Right, now, how do I go to the next one?
So, I was going to talk through some of the election polling on this stuff, which is pretty bloody bad, but since we're short on time, I just wanted to give an example of just... Why's the damn thing not working?
Let's try this one.
Here we go.
So just how bad it's going to be.
So Huntington, for example.
So that was John Major's old constituency.
It is being represented by somebody called Ben Obese and Jerry or something.
There we go.
So that is the candidate for this time.
And he's on track for... Let's have a look.
Oh, a loss.
So that's on track for a loss.
But that constituency was won by John Major in 1997 with a majority of 19,000.
So in fact I've got a whole spreadsheet here with how bad some of this stuff is.
Let's go back.
So I went through and looked on the current polling how bad is it for the Conservatives and these are the seats they're winning.
So Rishi Sunak is going to do probably one of the better ones.
But his majority is going to be reduced to under 2,000.
Right.
Now that always used to be considered super marginal.
You couldn't become a minister or a shadow minister with a majority that low because it was considered that you were just going to be out at the next election.
Wow.
And he's got one of the best ones and even that seat is marginal.
But I mean, you know, these seats are coming up, the seats that they're winning, they're getting a majority below 1,000, in some cases like a couple of hundred.
So every single Tory seat is is a marginal at this point.
They could all go.
I mean, that's what we're pushing for here, zero seats, because they've just betrayed us too much.
So, yeah, I won't go into this segment in full, because short on time, but I did want to highlight this bit of data from YouGov.
What is the lowest number of seats that they've ever held?
Presumably if they obviously don't.
Oh, this, I mean, when they, I mean, it depends when you start the clock on the Tories, because they've got a sort of history that could go back to like 1689 or something.
But never this low.
Never.
Not once.
I mean never in British history has a Prime Minister lost his seat and that is a serious contention for this election.
But this piece of research from YouGov, because one of the arguments is that reform should stand down.
Um, to stop a Labour super-majority.
Well, only a third of reform voters are willing to go to the Conservatives if reform didn't exist.
So, I'm one of them.
I wouldn't go back to the Tories for, you know, if reform didn't exist.
So, um... Is that who gets your vote?
Reform?
Yeah I mean I was a candidate, they actually chucked me out.
Oh did they?
Yeah they chucked me out because I said on Twitter years ago, do you remember that Manchester Arena bombing?
And I said that foreign criminals should be deported and they found that and they binned me.
And it's now on their manifesto.
So, Richard Tice is a massive cuck.
But, you see, Farage is back now, and he's probably going to disappoint us, but I like him better at least.
Farage and Tice, isn't it?
Richard Tice.
I said, I wasn't into politics, mate.
It's unbelievable what it takes for your health, and it becomes political, you know?
Like, I didn't care, but unfortunately the way the world's going, we all have to turn political now, because everything's just turning political.
Well, they at least mention the vaccine inquiry that they're willing to do.
Yeah, so Farage came out and he said, yes, we need to look at this.
Tice said it.
But then, I think it was two weeks later, they brought out one of their guys, I can't remember his name, and he said, I'm grateful for this country and, you know, this revolution.
And he says, and the vaccines that have saved millions of lives.
And I'm like, for God's sakes.
I'm like, what was that guy's name again?
I can't remember.
I don't know, but when they say that I would just point out there's never been one controlled peer-reviewed study that has proven that, you know.
But I don't know if he's talking about all, but... No, it's just, I mean, there are normies even reformed, quite a lot of them.
Well, they need to get a grip of what's going on.
This I found quite interesting.
It's basically a scattergraph showing what has cut through.
So, you know, these are the various sort of gaffes that have come up and it's ranked by how many people have heard of it across the bottom axis and how many people think that's severely damaging on the top axis.
And so you've got things like Sky TV gaffe on there, you've got Gamblegate and you've got the D-Day thing.
I mean, the D-Day thing has had epic cut through.
Something like 90% of people have heard of it and 80% of people think it's highly damaging.
I mean I don't actually blame Rishi Sunak at all for that one because I mean I have no interest in Indian battles so I just don't see why he should care really but you know there's a lot of gaps on there and so we won't do this segment justice but I do just have leaked footage from Conservative HQ where the Conservative Party is discussing their election prospects.
Can we play this?
Is that coming through, Samson?
Just...
You're stepping on my joke!
Make it work!
I was going to!
King Robert Baratheon.
Murdered by a pig.
Give me something for the pain, and let me die.
So there you go, that's the Conservative Party at the moment preparing for the general election.
Not looking good for them.
So right, let's have a look at some comments from our lovely viewers.
We can't understand this Scottish guy!
Let's see if they in fact said that.
Sam Western says, firstly just to say thank you Dan for having John and Adam on this episode.
Please keep up the good work platforming more people who are unafraid to do what's right and to speak the truth about these harms that these things do.
Secondly I also wanted to thank you both John and Adam as well for confronting our treacherous PM about the damage caused.
Please keep doing everything that you're doing gentlemen.
We do indeed need more dissenting voices.
The real facts need to be heard.
Yes, I think we agree with Sam on that one.
Sean has pointed out that Tommy Robinson was apparently arrested today in Canada, so I'm sure we'll be covering that one soon.
And Hector Rex says, keep doing what you're doing, lads.
I wish you the best of recovery and all the justice possible.
I would love to do some Assange ones, but since we're covering that tomorrow, I might go to your one.
AZ Desert Red says, you may not have been on the mic, but Joshua was picking you up, compensation scheme, what's that supposed to mean?
So what's the compensation scheme?
Well it isn't actually a compensation scheme, it's called, it's supposed to be a one-off payment, so vaccine damage payment scheme, but there isn't a compensation scheme as such, is there?
Because obviously £120,000 as we've already spoke about, and just to point out, You know, it's certainly not about money for me.
It's never going to get my health and my life back, but they're not paying out.
98.6% of people, so they've had 12,000, I think it was 12,000 claims around about the last count.
It might have gone a bit higher than they've actually assessed.
They've paid out 1.4% of people.
Now, a lot of the stuff they're saying, so for like, for myself and John, you know, we've got multiple people saying it's the vaccine, multiple consultants, we've put pen to paper on that.
Um, but they go off something that's quite complicated called the WHO, the World Health Organization Green Book.
So if it's not in the Green Book of what the vaccine's done to you, then they're reluctant to play out.
So it's basically that's a con as well?
Yeah, it's a bit of a con, yeah.
That's remarkable.
So that's why they're calling for this reform to the scheme and to get it looked at, because it's a farce of a scheme.
Yeah, okay, well thank goodness they're doing that.
White Rider says, my mum got the jab just before Christmas when this all started.
Christmas Eve she blacks out as she was about to go down the stairs, breaking several bones in her face as well as breaking her arm.
Ever since then she's had a severe neurological fear of falling to the point she can't get around without something to hold on to.
I've got very similar, so every time I stand up I feel like I'm on a boat.
So I've got this kind of neurological, and this is the thing as well Dan, they're telling people, now I don't, I know that FND was a thing, so it's called Functional Neurological Disorder, but there's so many people that they're misdiagnosing with this FND, where really it's from the jag, and the evidence shows that this thing breaks the brain blood barrier, Adam, and it basically causes the neurological issues.
Oh, it passes through the blood-brain barrier, the LMP, and even the spike protein in the vaccine, it disrupts and widens the blood-brain barrier so it gets through.
There's plenty of peer-reviewed studies on the spike protein being found in the brain and in all organs everywhere throughout the body, yeah.
Including people who didn't have any symptoms?
Well, they wouldn't be able to because who's testing them?
Right.
Well, you think you'd randomly select somebody who didn't show any adverse reactions at the time just to see if you can still find spike protein in the brain and... But, yeah, that's a huge, big topic because, um, they don't... there's no tests on the NHS officially.
So it's only through, like, research and stuff and special labs that can do these tests.
Germany.
Germany's advanced for all that testing.
And the thing you've got to realise, Dan, as well, is in our body we've got, like, trillions of cells.
So it may only be infected in a few cells so for one person it could be like in our nervous system or it could be in our brain.
It could be scattered everywhere so if you're looking for something in a trillion cells you're only gonna a small percentage of those infected.
It's a little bit like, I don't like using the word, but HIV and AIDS.
So when someone carries HIV it's only in a certain number of the cells and that's what the medication does to prevent it.
Not looking to scare anyone but it could be a bit of a ticking time bomb.
Yes.
Some people.
Yeah.
Possible.
Hopefully not.
Yeah.
I mean hopefully not but... I mean we see... You'd think after giving it to several billion people there would be some motivation to have a bit of a look.
Well I think when they're... It's really frustrating you know that they're normalising all this you know.
The British Heart Foundation are now normalising that people are having heart issues.
Oh they tried putting out bloody adverts that oh yeah it's normal that kids collapse now.
Yeah, one of the worst adverts I've seen, which was about two years ago, was a young girl playing football drop.
You know, let's normalise this, you know.
It's not normal, guys.
It did happen, but not to the level it's happening now.
When you mentioned that research, you just made me laugh, Dan.
So I went to a hospital last week, so I'm having trouble with my autoimmune system.
So when they did my biopsies on my muscle, They've actually put in writing, and I made it to me, they said, what we found in your biopsy is my own immune system attacking my muscles and my blood vessels.
They said they found the same thing in the deceased organs who've died of COVID.
So I went to the hospital last week, and I give my name to the receptionist for my appointment, and she gets my notes out, and there's a big sticker on my notes saying NIHR.
So that's the National Institute of Health Research.
And then she gives me an 11-page document to say, um, do I consent for my tissue and all my bloods now to be put in a bio-research bank where they can study my DNA for rare diseases?
So they are looking into it, but just quietly?
Quietly, no, but listen to this, and it tells me that I'll never get to know the results.
So they won't admit it publicly, but automatically now people have been studying.
Okay, but they know that they've got a problem and they're looking into it, but they won't even tell you.
Chase Ball says my wife got two shots of the clot and now suddenly she's experiencing heart issues like she's never had before.
Her mum has experienced vaccine injury side effects and her dad is getting heart problems as well.
I just want to say, see for anyone who is in the UK or Scotland, so there is support groups out there.
Yeah, how do they get in touch?
So there is one on Facebook, they're called the UK CV Family.
So if you go to Facebook, type in UK CV Family and you answer the questions on entry because, you know, there is some people that come in and try and take it down.
And if you're in Scotland, there's a Scottish vaccine injury group, which is Scottish VIG.
You have to be...
You have to be either in Scotland and had it administered in Scotland to join the Scottish, because we're in the UK Inquiry and the Scottish Covid Inquiry, so for anyone, like I say, the group's been formed.
We don't have the answers, that's the honest answer, you know, but it's the sick leaving the sick.
But, you know, it's a good group and you can get support and speak to other people and try and get an understanding of what have you done to get better and what's that person done to get better.
But, again, it's trying to show this government how many people it's actually harmed.
Yeah.
Because, oh, we're definitely getting to that.
That's really important.
I just want to second what John said.
I think it's really important.
So by joining these groups, if you give it to relatives, friends or family, by joining the groups, it's the way that we hold more sway with MPs and politicians.
It's so important.
Yeah.
So, you know, I would ask for people to do that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And let's make sure you tell us about those groups and we put them in the description.
Yeah, definitely.
Tom Gordon says, my left arm was completely paralysed on the drive home from the first jab.
Um, only did it because my mother in fits of tears over me not wanting to go through with it and despite being unable to move my arm while driving us home, the gaslighting was so strong that she didn't believe me.
That's got to be tough when you've got a paralysed arm and your mother refuses to believe you because, and it was so intense.
It was.
That's the thing Dan, like there's people, you've got to remember there's families that told you, you need to get this, and that family member They won't want to believe that, because they're going to feel some sort of level of guilt.
So that's why, I know I cut it short in the end and we didn't do a proper segment, but that's why I think a lot of what's happening with this election is that if you ask everybody why the Tories are being utterly destroyed at the moment, nobody says because of the VACs and because of the lockdowns.
But I bet they're all thinking, and you said this yourself earlier, you said that you felt really stupid for having taken them.
But the thing is, with you guys, you've had to confront it.
All of those other people, I bet they also feel stupid, they can't consciously admit it.
And they did all the pantomime, they stepped on the yellow circles and they wore the bit of t-shirt over their mouth and they walked around the shops the wrong way.
Yeah, the bloody pots and pans, right?
And I bet a lot of people, it's like, That if they consciously acknowledged it, they would have to say, oh that was fucking stupid.
The thing is as well, they keep going on about, you know, you hear them all at these debates and they're always talking about the NHS.
I understand why the NHS has run off its feet now, I'm sorry to say, but this thing... It was a faulty model, that's why.
This JAG, this vaccine, has totally ruined people's health and honestly, when it comes out, when are we all going to stand up So if we all stand up around the world at this point, the UK if we can all stand up and say someone needs to be held accountable because we can't allow this.
So my unfortunate answer to this is I think it has to come out because it's far too big, far too many people have been disabled and killed but They are going to do everything in their power to make sure that doesn't happen for 25 years.
Well, I think the thing is as well, you know, they talk about the inquiry.
I'll be straight up.
I've not got much hope for the inquiry.
We'll talk about that next.
I'll just run through some more comments from people.
Dan says, I'd like to congratulate John and Adam, not just on their determination, not giving up the speaking for so many people.
It's comforting for, you know, the people who have been affected like this.
Anon says the doctors they listened to, their BASACs, were behavioural psychologists.
Yeah, that's the thing.
So the vaccine group that the government was listening to, they were all behavioural psychologists.
You know, um, people with the sort of relevant, relevant degrees.
Nick Taylor says, I gave in and got the jab so I could go to a friend's wedding.
You couldn't get a hotel or go to events in Australia.
I developed shingles within three days after my first jab and went back to the doctors who argued condescendingly and tried to tell me that it wasn't, uh, related and, um, that, um, basically suggesting he was an idiot.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Um, standard, unfortunately.
Yep.
Yeah.
We don't even, like, see now Dan, we don't even, the amount of times that I'm in the house and I should sit there when my heart's going, I don't even want to go into hospital because we know what's going to happen.
You go in, get standard blood checks, you know, you'll get your blood pressure checked, you know, they'll do the usual, they'll check the oxygen levels and stuff and then you just get told to be on your way and say, have you got anxiety?
I could add to that a little bit and this is,
It's a defense for medics who aren't educated but also it's a defense to them to hide what's going on so anybody who looks into the vaccine and realize the vaccine and how the vaccine works and makes the body produce spike protein and how conveniently we haven't got any NHS test to test spike protein even though they are available and out there is they don't know the pathophysiology of what this spike protein is doing so when someone's got myocarditis and stuff
That's the end result of it, but we're not getting to what's causing it, if that makes any sense.
Yeah, and it's in everyone's interest, the people who administered this, the politicians who authorised it, the public health who pushed it, the journalists who pushed it, it's all in their interest to try and pretend, even to themselves, that they didn't kill and disable thousands and thousands of people.
Yeah.
But it will come out.
It's the biggest scandal in history.
It is the biggest scandal.
It is the biggest six time scandal.
It's the worst side of history that I've ever wanted to be part of.
Yeah.
I mean the thing as well is from my perspective is, you know, people will say to you, you know, we did try and tell you and things like that and that's not my argument of why I do this.
It's one I'd never want, like, just like John, I'd never want anyone to go through what I've gone through, my family's gone through, you know, a child or something like that.
And I always say to myself now that, like, if I walk past this, you know, when I'm on my deathbed, you know, Even if I don't get anywhere, I know that I've tried to do the right thing and tried to turn a negative into a positive.
But it's like if you walk past vaccine injuries and we let them get away with this, what's next?
Well...
War with Russia is what's next.
I mean, that was my thing.
It's why I went from being just a random guy to having a bit of a platform now.
It's because when this first started, I mean, very early on, I said, look, they're going to try and lock us down.
And then when they did, I said, look, they're going to try and push a vaccine on us, and they're going to try and push it on everyone.
And when they started with the old people, I said, they're going to keep... So, I mean, I was calling it out the whole way through what they were going to be doing next, because that is the route to the maximum profit generation.
I feel like we're in a war already, mate.
the same plays happening now, only now it's war.
They want war. - I feel like we're in a war already, mate.
I feel like we're in a war with our own government.
- Oh, yeah, we are, yeah.
100%.
And mainstream media.
But they want to distract us from the war with our governments by going to war with somebody else at the moment.
100%.
There's too many distractions going on just now.
And to be honest with you, they want to just avoid this topic that me and Adam are talking about.
Because once people realise that my family member could have possibly died from this, There's going to be a lot of angry people out there.
Oh yeah.
Yeah, very much so.
Right, so I think that's all we've got time for today, but we will go and talk about this further and a bit more in depth, so watch out for that next week.
And guys, thank you so much for coming in.
Yeah.
Really appreciate it.
Absolute pleasure.
Thank you.
Appreciate that.
And I like to say, Bring the noise man.
Like I said we'll talk about it in the next segment but everything I mean get hacked so if you want to help get my Twitter account back up it'd be appreciated so it's bringthenoise underscore x just look at it but my big account 55,000 followers that I can't get back.
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