All Episodes
Dec. 9, 2021 - Rebel News
39:48
EZRA LEVANT | The latest on the lockdown madness

Ezra Levant exposes the UK’s lockdown hypocrisy, from Boris Johnson’s Christmas parties to vaccine passport mandates despite Omicron’s mild impact. A Pfizer dosing error—six doses in one syringe—left a patient hospitalized with breathing issues, dismissed by nurses who refused tests like D-dimers. Legal action stalled due to lack of proven harm, but whistleblowers like those in Rebel News’s campaign urge reporting vaccine mishaps. The episode reveals systemic failures where public health measures clash with medical reality, raising questions about accountability and long-term consequences. [Automatically generated summary]

|

Time Text
Boris Johnson's Christmas Party Controversy 00:08:56
Hello, my rebels.
In today's show, I tell you, best I can, what's going on in the United Kingdom.
Boris Johnson found throwing Christmas parties last year when he locked down everyone else, including Queen Elizabeth, who wasn't allowed to sit next to anyone at her own husband's funeral.
She was all alone in the church wearing a mask because Boris Johnson said so.
Meanwhile, he and his insiders were partying.
I'll tell you a little bit about it and I'll show you some video too.
I'd like to have you subscribe to Rebel News Plus because I want you to see the video.
This podcast, obviously, you'll just hear it, but this video shows Jacob Reese Mog, a senior Tory, at a party joking about, well, we have two inches of separation, not two meters.
Just to see these snobby insiders laughing at the rules they put on everyone else, I'd love you to see the video of that.
Just go to RebelNewsPlus.com and click subscribe.
You get the video version of this podcast.
All right, here's today's show.
Tonight, the latest on the lockdown madness.
It's December 8th, and this is the Ezra Levant show.
Why should others go to jail when you're the biggest carbon consumer I know?
There's 8,500 customers here, and you won't give them an answer.
The only thing I have to say is the government for why I publish it is because it's my bloody right to do so.
The United Kingdom has had some atrocious policies during the pandemic, but they're also, I guess in some ways, they've been a little more sensible than us here in Canada.
An example of that is they respect natural immunity.
That is, if you get COVID-19 and recover, so your body is naturally maybe antibodies to the virus.
In the UK, they don't force you to take vaccines like they do here in Canada.
Why would they?
You've already got the antibodies.
They're also less mask insane than we are over here.
Although not always.
Take a look at this.
Not exempt, right?
I'm exempt, so I don't need a mask.
So mind your business, yeah.
Mind your business.
You don't need to ask me.
If I'm exempt, no, you don't need to ask me.
It's not your business.
So what I'm going to do with you now, yeah, I'm going to ask you why you're exempt in terms of...
You don't need to worry.
It's my medical history.
I'm asking your medical history, Tales.
Don't worry, no, you won't.
No, you won't.
I'll be going.
No, you won't.
You don't even have your mask on properly.
Look at this guy.
He's got his nose out and he's trying to tell me to wear a mask in a subway when I'm exempt from asthma.
So mind your business.
Listen to me.
And let me go on my journey.
Right, say that.
I'm saying you.
You're saying you're not wearing a mask.
You weren't even wearing a mask in the first place.
At a minute, right, you're under arrest.
Under arrest for not wearing a mask.
They're under arrest for wearing a mask.
Give me that.
They get a lot of things wrong over there, but they seemed to pull back from the brink at least once or twice.
They had proposed vaccine passports, but then they stopped.
I think part of the reason is that there is a diversity in their media on the subject that we lack here in Canada.
That there is a diversity even in their ruling Conservative Party.
It doesn't have anywhere the same party discipline as we have here in Canada.
So individual Conservative MPs in the UK regularly criticize the Prime Minister or defect from his bills, and that isn't cause to sack them.
I don't even know if their Prime Minister can, unlike our rigid party discipline here.
Even if you were to say that people in Canada opposed to vax mandates are just 10% of the population, I believe it's higher.
Where are the 10% of MPs saying that?
Where's 1% of the MPs saying that?
1%.
That would mean three MPs in Canada.
But there's not one.
When Marilyn Glady talked about a Freedom Caucus to bring some common sense to things, she was immediately disciplined and humiliated by Aaron O'Toole, who shows far more rage towards his own conservative MPs than anything Trudeau has ever done.
But back to the United Kingdom.
There's a scandal there now because while the government ordered ordinary Brits to cancel Christmas last year and to stop visiting grandparents and not to mix households, they seriously had something called the rule of six, limiting your social circle.
They actually banned singing.
What?
It was crazy.
While the government was doing all that, while they were ordering other people around like that, they themselves didn't follow it for a moment.
Not their senior advisor, Dominic Cummings.
Not the top scientist telling everyone not to mix and mingle.
Well, he was caught zipping around the city having a torrid affair, just so gross.
The health minister himself, an idiot named Matt Hancock, he didn't even bother running around the city.
He was a homewrecker right from the parliament buildings themselves.
He was caught by one of the United Kingdom's ubiquitous surveillance cameras.
I don't like spy cameras, but it's a bit of karma that a spy camera caught the politician who installed the spy camera.
But my point is, nobody in power follows the rules, except for Queen Elizabeth, whose husband of more than 70 years died.
And she followed the rules, sitting by herself alone with a mask on at his funeral.
What a disgrace.
She followed these pointless rules, but none of the politicians or bureaucrats did.
And so today comes news that precisely when Boris Johnson was ordering citizens not to gather, why there were a bunch of Christmas parties last year at 10 Downing Street.
It seemed to start as sort of a hot mic moment.
This story broke.
Take a look at this.
I've just seen reports on Twitter that there was a Downing Street Christmas party on Friday night.
Do you recognize those reports?
I went home.
hold on hold on um uh ah would the promise to condone uh how are you chris What's the answer?
I don't know.
I didn't want the party.
It was cheese and wine.
It says cheese and wine all right.
It was a business meeting.
Just joking.
It is recorded.
This fictional party was a business meeting.
And it was not socially distanced.
One more, and then we'll one more.
And then video the party itself.
Here's Jacob Rees-Mog, a conservative.
Take a look.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, my lords, ladies and gentlemen, thank you all very much for coming.
I heard that the comedian was speaking after me, and then Glenn started.
And I thought, well, clearly it's going to be a whole evening of comedians.
But I'm going to be both.
I may get to jokes at the end, but I'll come from the 18th century joke book, which most of you won't find funny, but I find absolutely hilarious.
There we go.
Mark was saying that we've had a couple of years that made people think that we should have lots of regulation, and it's been difficult for those of us who believe in free markets and free enterprise.
But I'm going to disagree.
In a Christmassy sense, because I see we're all here obeying regulations, aren't we?
I mean, this party is not going to be investigated by the police in a year's time.
You are all very carefully socially distanced.
We've moved, I'm pleased to tell you, from the metric back to the imperial system.
I know you're all at least two inches away.
Oh, ho, what a laugh.
Imperial measure, not metric, not two meters, but two inches separation.
What a droll man.
Two inches, not two meters.
You gotta feel so funny.
Ha No prison for him, no police bullying for him, certainly no masks for him.
That's all performance art.
This was a party for the elite insiders.
They don't follow the rules.
Two inches.
That's what I mean.
Just the working classes and the queen, not the politicians, not the rulers, not the fancy people.
But it looks like not only will Christmas be banned this year, a new lockdown put on Prince, but vax passes are back, as if they weren't just waiting for the right moment.
It's now the proportionate and the responsible thing to move to Plan B in England while continuing to work closely with our colleagues in the devolved administrations so we slow the spread of the virus, buy ourselves the time to get yet more boosters into arms and especially in the older and more vulnerable people, and understand the answers to the key outstanding questions about Omicron.
Plan B Revisited 00:02:46
So, first, we will reintroduce the guidance to work from home.
Guidance to work from home.
Employers should use the rest of the week to discuss working arrangements with their employees, but from Monday, you should work from home if you can.
Go to work if you must, but work from home if you can.
And I know this will be hard for many people, but by reducing your contacts in the workplace, you will help slow transmission.
Second, from this Friday, we will further extend the legal requirement to wear a face mask to most public indoor venues, including theatres and cinemas.
There will be, of course, exceptions where it's not practical, such as when eating, drinking, exercising, or singing.
Third, we'll also make the NHS COVID pass mandatory for entry into nightclubs and venues where large crowds gather, including unseated indoor venues with more than 500 people, unseated outdoor venues with more than 4,000 people, and any venue with more than 10,000 people.
The NHS COVID pass can still be obtained with two doses, but we will keep this under review as the boosters roll out.
And having taken clinical advice since the emergence of Omicron, a negative lateral flow test will also be sufficient.
It's so obviously an attempt to distract from the Prime Minister's scandal, but the excuse is the Omicron virus, except that in the United Kingdom, not only has no one died from it, not a single person has been hospitalized by it.
How many of those who have tested positive in the UK are ill?
Secretary of State.
The number of confirmed cases in the UK is 336.
They are all by definition infected.
They will have been various, some may be asymptomatic, others will be feeling ill.
None of them so far, as far as I am aware, have been hospitalized.
Makes sense.
That's what all the doctors in South Africa have been saying.
The overall patients that was recorded yesterday was 3,000 and around about 3,700.
So our positivity rate is 9.2%.
It is, yes, it is more than we would have loved it to be.
But looking at the mildness of the symptoms that we are seeing, currently there is no reason for panicking as we don't see severely ill patients.
Vaccine-Resistant Mutations Explained 00:04:56
But listen, Pfizer has products to sell.
Boris Johnson has a scandal to distract from.
But let me ask you this.
Isn't it odd that the infections seem to be climbing precisely as vaccine use is going up too?
Isn't that weird?
Is this supposed to be the opposite?
Well, look at this.
This is from, as you can see, a U.S. government agency called the National Institutes of Health.
That's Anthony Fauci's company.
It's a department, it's an agency of the U.S. government.
This is a published scientific paper by pandemic researchers.
This is a U.S. government website specialized in health.
This is not some skeptical, right-wing political opinion I'm reading from.
I'm going to read to you from the abstract, which is a technical way of saying a summary of the study.
The study is called Mechanisms of SARS Coronavirus II Evolution Revealing Vaccine-Resistant Mutations in Europe and America.
Okay, just a reminder, SARS-CoV- COVID-2, that's the technical name for COVID-19.
I'm just going to read that phrase as COVID-19 from now.
But the headline basically means, why are there vaccine-resistant versions of the virus now?
I mean, aren't you curious?
Everywhere you look, people who are double or even triple vaccinated are getting the virus again and passing it on to others again.
How did that happen?
I'm going to read this slowly because it's dense language, okay?
The importance of understanding COVID evolution cannot be overlooked.
Recent studies confirm that natural selection is the dominating mechanism of COVID evolution, which favors mutations that strengthen viral infectivity.
All right, natural selection and evolution, that means the virus is changing to become more infectious.
I'll keep reading.
Here we demonstrate that vaccine breakthrough or antibody-resistant mutations provide a new mechanism of viral evolution.
Specifically, vaccine-resistant mutation Y449S in the spike S-protein receptor binding domain, which occurred in co-mutations Y449S and then 501Y, has reduced infectivity compared to that of the original SARS-CoV virus, but can disrupt existing antibodies that neutralize the virus.
Okay, try and translate into English.
Vaccine breakthroughs, that's just what it sounds like.
It's when the vaccine doesn't stop the virus.
We're seeing more and more of that.
But here's the key sentence, I think.
Here's the one you really want to understand.
By tracking the evolutionary trajectories of vaccine-resistant mutations in more than 2.2 million COVID genomes, we reveal that the occurrence and frequency of vaccine mutations, vaccine-resistant mutations, correlate strongly with the vaccination rates in Europe and America.
Okay, did you get that?
Correlate strongly.
So the more a place is vaccinated, the more breakthrough mutations of the virus appear.
I didn't say this.
The National Institutes of Health published a study that says this.
Let's read this part really slowly.
We anticipate that as a complementary transmission pathway, vaccine breakthrough or antibody-resistant mutations, like those in Omicron, will become a dominating mechanism of COVID evolution when most of the world's population is either vaccinated or infected.
So these scientists are predicting that vaccine-busting viruses, these new mutations, will become dominant.
I'm just reading what they're saying.
And the good news is, as you just heard, Omicron is so mild, there's no reports of anyone being hospitalized for it.
We have a word for that, catching a cold.
And in fact, if you get natural immunity from Omicron, and if no one is so sick that they need to go to the hospital, that's a pretty good outcome.
In fact, if you can get such a mild virus that no one ever gets really sick, isn't that better than a Pfizer vaccine that can cause side effects like myocarditis or even say death?
Like, isn't Omicron actually effectively a vaccine?
Except, of course, Pfizer doesn't get rich of the Omicron virus.
They get rich off selling you drugs to fight the harmless Omicron virus.
Last sentence in the study's abstract.
Our study sheds light on COVID evolution and transmission and enables the design of the next generation mutation-proof vaccines and antibody drugs.
Yeah, maybe, or maybe you don't have to end with a marketing pitch for more vaccines and more drugs.
Vax Pass Controversy 00:15:12
I think we're pretty much vaccined out and drugged up right now.
And I think this entire paper, until this sentence, makes the opposite point.
The vaccines aren't stopping the new mutations.
But hey, look, I mean, come on.
Pfizer's got to get paid.
And Boris Johnson has to change the subject.
And the media party needs to keep you scared.
So that's what's going to happen.
It has nothing to do with being healthy or not.
Stay with us for a moment.
I'm happy here.
I'm going to wait because what he's trying to do is actually unlawful.
We're not in.
You don't have to like our network, but you can't expel us from a press conference.
Then suddenly I see Daniel Andrews himself walking towards me.
Mr. Premier, do you think it's okay for the media to be shut down at your press conference?
Just because they criticise you?
Mr. Premier, are you okay with this?
Because it seems a bit like communist China, not Victoria.
I didn't realise at the time why he didn't even look my way, as if he was purposely avoiding me.
But as you're about to see, not only is the Premier okay with it, his office ordered my removal.
I've never seen such a thing from a democratic leader removing journalists they don't like.
Let's go through all, Barbie.
They're side of Greens.
Do you want to cuff me and take me?
No, I'd just walk this way, yeah.
I think you have to go straight down.
Straight down?
Oh.
I could also be here for a period of seven days, okay?
So you're not permitted to return here for seven days.
It's on film.
Who advised that as well?
The authorised officers of Parliament House, that is me.
And where's the boundaries that this journalist can't?
So the authorised officers of the parliament is banning journalists they don't like.
The government doesn't like it.
He certainly doesn't seem like a fan.
He's watched a few years.
Well, you've come in here with a fake pass on.
You've accessed the ground.
Sorry?
Hold on.
Let's go.
No, no, no, Hold on.
No, no, no.
Hold on.
How is that a fake pass?
Because it says on the top there, this is not a security card, doesn't it?
That's not a fake.
It's a media.
They asked me for my media pass.
How is that a fake pass?
That's issued by the federal government.
That is a frustrating video.
It goes on.
There's another part of it where a cop says the specific reason that Avi Yameni, our chief Australian correspondent, was frog marched out of there despite being permitted entry by a sentry is because they didn't know what kind of questions he was going to ask.
They couldn't have been more brazen about it.
Atrocious.
It's what we go through in some parts of Canada sometimes too.
Daniel Andrews, the communist sympathizing premier of the state of Victoria.
Well, we got some amazing news.
And here to tell us about it, himself is our friend, Avi Amini.
Avi, great to see you.
Thanks for getting up very early in the morning, time zone-wise, to do this interview.
I appreciate it.
How you doing?
That burned me up just to see that again and how they said you got a fake ID and how they manhandled you.
And the video gets worse, by the way.
But you've got some good news, don't you?
Absolutely.
We've had our very first win on this matter, which has been a long time coming.
That was in the beginning of 2021.
And even just watching it back there, Ezra, it shocks me like it happened as if it happened yesterday.
Now, the government has been trying to stop this for months, you know, because behind the scenes we've been fighting this and trying to get in there.
And they've been dragging their feet.
And not only that, they've tried to get the court to drag their feet.
But yesterday, thankfully, we had a really big win that the court has decided, has ruled that this is going to be expedited from here on.
So they're fighting against you.
The cops are banning you.
Premier Dan Andrews, and when I say he's a communist, I'm not saying that as an insult, even though I find it a negative attribute of someone.
He really is a sympathizer for Communist China.
He went to Beijing.
He signed a secret treaty with them to put Victoria under the Belt and Road colonization plan.
It had to be rebuked from the federal government of Australia.
He really is a communist sympathizer.
I'm not saying that as meanie.
He just is.
He hates you.
And so he's marshaled the whole power of the legislature to keep you out.
We hired to get you in.
And yesterday the court said the government can't delay any longer.
We need the soonest possible court day possible.
Is that a summary of what the judge said, basically?
Absolutely.
And Ezra, it's not a conspiracy theory.
In that video, if you go back and watch it, it was his staffer that ordered me being frog marched out of there.
So it's outrageous, but the court sees the urgency in this, especially leading up to an election.
So hopefully this is the first of many wins, not only in this specific matter, in all the matters we're running here.
As we know, they can take a very long time.
My case against the police is already a year and a half in.
But now that this one's expedited, we expect to have some really big movement in the beginning of the year.
You know, it reminds me of when the Canadian government kept us out of the federal leaders debate.
They did it in 2019.
They tried it again in 2021.
In both instances, we were able to get into court on a very expedited basis, like in a matter of days.
And in both cases, it was a bit of a miracle.
We won.
And I got to tell you, Avi, that has given me a lot of hope because if we would have lost that and all the other setbacks, I'd say, really, we've got no chance.
But having those, having the federal court of Canada say, no, this is wrong to keep out a journalist just because you don't like them, that gave me a lot of hope.
And I'm hopeful, based on what happened in this court hearing yesterday, I'm hopeful they'll do the same for you.
And from what you told me, and we spoke about this yesterday after it happened, it made a big impression on even the mainstream media.
I saw lots of reports of this from rival journalists who don't like you, and they use lots of mean words like, you know, right-wing YouTuber, Avi Ami.
Like they were trying to be very condescending, but they couldn't deny it.
This was a big win for press freedom, even if they had to grudgingly give you credit.
Absolutely.
You had to read the full article from the mainstream media yesterday.
All their articles were the same.
The headline wasn't as impressive as what really happened.
But when you read it and you understood the government was trying to have this heard in September next year, and we've managed to pull it all the way back to March.
And they're not very happy about it.
So like you say, I am hopeful.
Yeah, well, listen, we're on a winning streak down there in the courts, just like we are up here.
What's the website for people to go to that you've got this whole story on?
What's the best website for people to visit?
Letabbyreport.com.
All right, letabbyreport.com.
I sure hope they let you because I think you're doing a great job.
And you're a source of information, not just for our viewers here in Canada, but I think truly around the world, it's quite a coincidence that you happen to be from Melbourne, the epicenter of the most brutal lockdown in the world.
I'm not happy that you're suffering under it, but I'm sure that millions of Melbourneians are grateful that you're there to tell their story because there's not a lot of other journalists who would.
So keep it up, my friend.
Thank you, Ezra.
All right, there you have it.
Abhiyamini, our chief Australian correspondent who's having successes in court against censorship down there, gives me a little bit of hope.
Stay with us.
more ahead.
Your feedback.
Brian DeRaj says, I have to admit, as of late, I have been changing my view of this guy.
This is not the first time I have agreed with him regarding economics and the oil and gas industry.
Refreshing to see a major player setting his own path other than what the government and climate change else would have him follow.
You're talking about Elon Musk, of course.
You know, the irony is that his recent girlfriend, I don't know if they actually were married, her stage name is Grimes.
She's a pretty cool rock star, I'd say.
But her mom is a hard left-wing socialist activist in Vancouver.
It makes me laugh so hard that Elon Musk, the world's richest man, turbo capitalist, small government aficionado, that his mother-in-law was one of Canada's biggest leftists, Sandy Garrisino is her name.
Someone with the nickname, Don't They Booster Shots FFS says the answers were way too straightforward for that reporter.
She was expecting a 10-minute non-answer that does nothing but contradict itself.
Yeah, what I like about Elon Musk is he answers the questions so bluntly and tersely.
He's a great interviewee.
I really like Joe Rogan's interviews of Elon Musk.
If you're on YouTube, they're so easy to find.
Google Joe Rogan, Elon Musk, and Elon Musk is a bit of an amateur philosopher.
I like it.
Terry McNichol said, Elon Musk, the man who wants and predicts a chip in your head by the end of 2022.
Now, a hard pass on this futurist.
He's a major part of our present situation.
Yeah, he was talking about that neural link in that same interview.
I didn't include those, but he was talking about it in terms of letting people who are quadriplegics or paraplegics use their mind to actuate some sort of system to let them walk again.
Very futuristic.
I'm sure that could be abuse.
Absolutely.
A lot of technology can be.
But what I do, I mean, I think the key ideological point in his whole conversation was not when he said, I don't want government regulation.
I don't want government subsidies.
Government is bad at doing that's sort of easy to say.
I think the most startling thing he said was, We need more people in the world.
And then he joked that he's personally doing something about that.
I think he's got six or seven kids.
So, to me, when you say people are key, we need more people, that tells me that he's not part of the Bill Gates globalist extremist set.
So, I like Elon Musk.
He's not a perfect man.
I don't agree with every word he says, but I like him a lot.
Well, that's today's show.
On behalf of all of us here at Rebel World Headquarters, to you at home, good night and keep fighting for freedom.
And let me leave you with this video from our British reporter, Lewis Brackpool, talking to someone who was given six times the appropriate dose of the vax.
See you later.
They tell me to sit over in the waiting area.
They make you wait 15 minutes usually, about 10 minutes.
And the GP comes over to me and says, Can you come in?
Like, there's a little back cubby room away from the main area.
He's like, Can you come here where you get to talk about something?
So, I thought he was like joking around with me or something.
We go in the back room, just meeting the GP and he says, We forgot to dilute your dose.
Lewis Brackpool for Rebel News.
And in today's report, is a harrowing interview I've done with a young man who was given six times the normal dose of their first vaccine just to travel back to their home country of Canada.
Now, if you enjoy my work and value me as a reporter for Rebel News, the best way to support me is at ukreporters.com, where I am flying the flag of the UK for Rebel News.
So, your support there, ukreporters.com, is the best way to support me.
Thank you very much.
Enjoy the report.
Could you explain to me the entire story of why you decided to get the vaccine and then the effects it's had on you after you went and sat down to get the injection?
The reason why I wanted, well, I didn't want to get it.
The reason why I didn't get it when I first could, just not convinced about all of it.
Obviously, I mean, one day it's safe, one day it's not, just back and forth.
So, I already had COVID and I already had like the antibody test.
So, I did have natural immunity.
I held out as long as I could, really, just because I wasn't convinced it's necessarily fully safe.
The reason why I had to get it is to fly back to the UK from Canada because the government puts some law and needs to be vaxxed to fly pretty much any way.
At least that's how I interpreted it.
There are like a few loopholes, but obviously, they're not like they're not guaranteed.
It's like a luck with a draw if they work or not.
Like, you could put a doctor's appointment here and say they can't deny you for that, but then that's just really risking it.
I booked online planning to get my first dose here and then return home to get my second dose because here, here they make you wait seven or eight weeks and at home, it's only 28 days.
I was gonna get my first dose here, go home, wait the 28 days, and then I'd be fine.
So, when I got to the vaccination site, they wanted to give me a Moderna, and I explained at home they can't get Moderna for my age group, which is another big questioning point of why it's safe in one place and not safe in the other.
And then they were trying to make me mix, and I stood my ground and I was like, No, I want the Pfizer.
If I'm getting this vaccine, it's going to be the Pfizer one.
So, I sit down and they're like, Do you consent all this?
And I said, Yes, obviously, thinking that I was going to get a proper dose.
Um, they give it in my right arm because I'm left-handed, and then they tell me to sit over in the waiting area.
They make you wait 15 minutes, usually, about 10 minutes.
And the GP comes over to me and says, Can you come into like there's a little back cubby room away from the main area?
He's like, Can you come here where you get to talk about something?
So I thought he was like joking around with me or something.
We go in the back room, just me and the GP and he says, we forgot to dilute your dose.
And I said, how is that?
Like, there's no checks.
How is that possible?
And obviously I got a bit mad.
And their one and only job is to really vaccinate you.
Doctor's Oversight 00:07:56
It's not that hard to dilute it, right?
I would have thought that, you know, because they usually come in little small containers, right?
I would have thought that they would have checked that.
According to the Moderna one, you just put it in the needle and it's good to go or in the syringe and it's good to go.
The Pfizer and they actually have to dilute.
And the vaccinator guy came up and into like the cubby room.
It was just me, the GP and the vaccinator.
And he's like, I assumed that it was pre-dilute, like already diluted because the other ones I gave were.
And that's almost a quote.
So I'm like, you're assuming stuff.
I mean, it's too late.
It's not like, you know, you can give me a refund on it.
I mean, it's now in my body for good.
You can't just say sorry, you know what I mean?
Or exchange the product.
I mean, it's not like that.
It's like, now it's, I mean, there's no taking it back, really.
They wrote up an incident report internally.
And I was obviously wanting like perfect evidence and proof.
So I'm like, got a picture of it.
I made them write up a more professional letter saying what happened and what's going on because I said to him, well, if I go home, right?
And they're not going to let me fly now, come back to school because I'm not double jabbed.
They made a letter for me saying essentially what happened and that they recommend waiting at least eight weeks, but I should still get my second dose, even though there's absolutely no data to back up that I need the second dose.
Well, you've just had six times the normal amount.
Surely, theoretically, you're set for how many years?
Plus, I already had the natural immunity.
Exactly.
So after that, the buses out that way of town are not regular or good.
So then I walked basically like an hour back.
Like I'm obviously not in like the best shape ever, but I'm also not unfit.
And like there's a tuscos across the road from the site.
And I went there first and I had not a heavy bag, like just a normal shop, just one bag.
And I noticed like I was breathing weird.
I don't know.
I didn't really want to risk it because again, doctor originally said when it happened, just go home, you'll be fine.
If anything happens or rain, he didn't even want to like, he didn't want me to be there anymore.
Like as soon as I got my two sheets of paper or one sheet of paper and one photo, he didn't even want like he, they were basically pushing me out.
You feel fine?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
Just go home and lay low.
I obviously touched with my mom and I went to the hospital because I had the shortness of breath.
It was fast.
Like I was breathing in my mouth too.
I never breathe out of my mouth, like just walking.
I'm like, okay, something's up.
So I spent two and a half days in the hospital.
I didn't speak to a doctor until they discharged me.
You didn't speak to them.
The doctor didn't come and talk to me until they discharged me.
It was just nurses doing routine shit, like blood pressure and temperature checks, really.
That's all that happened there.
We have a family friend that's an MD, like a GP here.
And I asked the nurses if I could get a D-dimer test, D-dimer, I have a repronceer.
They would just dismiss the idea and shot it down, saying it won't show anything yet.
It hasn't had a long enough time in your body.
Might be true.
I'm not sure, obviously, but if one doctor is recommending it and I have a nurse saying no, that's odd.
And then it just doesn't really add up why.
Like they just did not want anything to do with me, really.
The entire like at the hospital or at the clinic, like they, I don't know why they did not treat me well.
The National Health Service in Britain is almost, you can't criticize them.
You're not allowed to.
It's almost like a bit of a religion here in the UK, where if you criticize or you say anything out of place against it, that means you hate nurses, doctors, you hate everything that they do.
It is like a cult, unfortunately.
You said that you've noted down as well all the actions that happened and all the symptoms that were occurring since you were put under watch in the hospital.
As soon as I got told I had the six doses, I started documenting in my phone what's going on and whatever.
When they first took me in from the AE, the nurse, his name was Sean, he was probably the best nurse I had.
He right away went on the phone and tried to call Pfizer UK headquarters to look for advice because this was the first case at the hospital, which is contradicting to what the site manager said at the vaccine clinic.
Apparently it happened before and everything worked out fine.
But the GP at the vaccine clinic said it was the first time seeing this.
And at the hospital, the hospital is also the first time.
So I'm not sure if there's a bit of a line just to try to get me out the door or not.
Pfizer UK, this is what from what I was told in the A ⁇ E from the nurse, but the Pfizer UK didn't have any information and they called the headquarters in the States.
What I was told from the nurse is that they don't have any like specialty doctor or type plan on call on a weekend.
So we have to wait until Monday in my perspective, you know, monitor me until Monday, call them and see what they say, and then go from there.
But as soon as I got moved up into the ward and out of the A ⁇ E room or section, everything changed because obviously I was in urgent need of anything.
But meanwhile, no one knows what really was going on, right?
It's just a quite a bizarre yet surreal kind of story, isn't it?
Because you don't ever hear of people receiving these vaccines without someone checking, without someone doing a routinely check and making sure that, fine, if Pfizer needs to be diluted, it needs to be diluted.
Surely everyone should have been briefed on that.
Yeah, in this case, it's almost like these doctors didn't know what they were doing.
They weren't briefed.
The GP at the vaccine site, I know it was first just me and him in the little like cubby room.
I'm not sure exactly what he said, but something along the lines of I don't know how he fit six doses of the Pfizer into the syringe because I don't know the measurements off, obviously, I'm not sure.
Right.
But he said it would be, it would have been hard to get everything out of the vial and got it in my arm.
That's what the doctor, like the doctor said that.
How do you feel?
Is the main question.
I got home on the Monday, like late afternoon, early afternoon, and I didn't go like my doctor from home said, just miss class, lay low, don't overdo yourself.
And I probably slept about 90% of that time.
I get spurts of like very, very, very tired and then spurts of like energy.
Overall, like sometimes, you know, there'll be something that feels weird, but it only lasts for like a second, but I obviously note it down.
I haven't done anything exuberant or anything.
I haven't done more walking than 15 minutes, 20 minutes at a time, really.
What's your next action?
What's your next move?
Well, I've already tried to contact a few solicitors for medical negligence or that's mainly the reason like the reason I reached out to them and none will take the case because there's no significant harm directly caused by their negligence, at least yet.
So I have three years to make a claim, but as of now, unless something really bad happens, I don't drink it off at this.
I mean, I can call and make a complaint to the third party vaccine company, but I mean, what's like they're going to get a slap on the wrist, really.
Right now, I'm trying to get an exemption, even if it's a temporary one, at least I can finish the school year.
So I don't like I can wait a while to get to the next dose if I have to.
I don't really want to at all.
Stay low, don't overdo myself.
And hopefully everything pans out really.
I mean, you don't really know, right?
At the guessing game.
Rebel News have started a pandemic whistleblowers campaign to help us bring truth to the public.
And just a little bit more about it.
At Rebel News, we do appreciate the bravery of anyone who has come forward with information.
And that's why we created an intake form for whistleblowers to come forward and expose some important details.
Please fill out this form on this page here.
Export Selection