Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla SLAMS RFK Jr on Vaccine Claims - #129 - Stay Free With Russell Brand
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Brought to you by Pfizer.
So I'm looking for the CEO, looking for the CEO In this video, you're going to see the future.
Plus, the country's pretty hot.
The market is breaking into the Federal lines out there.
Hello there, you Awakening Wonders.
Thanks for joining us on this voyage to truth and freedom that we are undertaking together against the great storms of corruption and deception that avail prevail all around.
We will awaken together by Jove even if it takes me a thousand on-screen assistants.
Today though I have but one.
It's Gareth Roy.
Thanks for joining me to talk about the news.
Oh thank you.
Whatever connection we may have, it is as nothing compared to the chemistry between Rishi Sunak and that fella from Ukraine that everyone likes so much.
Zelensky, I think he's called.
And let's have a look at him, and let's have a look at them now, enjoying themselves.
Hey, we've got some great stuff coming on the show later, by the way, so stay with us.
If you're watching us on YouTube, there's a link in the description.
You can join us on Rumble, where we do this stuff untrammeled by common decency.
No, not common decency, censorship!
We're still decent, and by God, are we common.
We do a lot of anti-establishment rhetoric.
For example, we're going to be talking about, well, we're going to be talking about Albert Baller mugging off RFK, you know, Robert F. Kennedy, saying, oh, you know, I don't know why.
He says this, he goes, if you mistrust vaccines and, you know, you know, no opinion on them over here on OOB, but like he goes, you're actually against all science, isn't he?
So it's like you don't like Galileo?
That's right.
You don't like Galileo?
He's an idiot.
Or Louis Pasteur?
Or the last... Mary Curie?
Doogie Howser?
Doogie?
He's... He... Don't Doogie Howser lie in the trash can of history now?
Does he?
I don't think so.
He's alive and well.
I don't feel physically sick.
We're going to be talking about how the Democrat Party is funded.
Is it an oligarchical machine funded by big donors?
And on our item, here's the news.
We're going to be looking at how they're using Mexican drug cartels to legitimize prolonging the post 9-11 Patriot Act surveillance that allows them to store your data and then later on down the line going, oh, have you got that data from them lot?
Yeah, of course we have.
We've got everyone's data, right?
Let's use it because they've become a bit of a dissident.
But first, in our country, the UK, you can surely see from the bucolic wonder all about me that we are in Britain, the country, until sadly, latterly, of Her Majesty, where dear Meghan Markle attends coronations dressed outrageously.
Like, what was that sort of sheepdog person she was trying to be, Meghan Markle?
It's a brilliant disguise, is what it was.
If the conspiracy theorists are right, and I think they are... If we've established that they are, we ain't heard a conspiracy theory yet.
The problem is, with a lot of these conspiracy theories, some of them are just plain fact, aren't they?
Some of them are silly, like this one.
But that's not Meghan Markle sat next to Andrew Lloyd Webber.
Why not have him?
We have a show called Ant & Dec here, don't we?
That could be Ant & Dec.
Yes, that's one of their best disguises.
You don't know.
If you're American, just look up Ant and Dick.
We ain't got all day to describe it.
Because we've got to go now to talking about Zelensky, haven't we?
The thing about this, just a really quick point about this.
What about conspiracy theorists?
This is the kind of conspiracy theory that appears on the news so that they can say, all conspiracy theorists, you know, like the one about Wuhan and those other ones, they're all... Oh, wait a minute, Wuhan.
Wait a minute.
Allegedly.
Wasn't there more to that than media?
No, no, it's the same.
It's the same as this.
Oh, it's like that conspiracy theory in 2008.
They sort of quantitatively eased all of those failing banks and institutions after they gambled us into, you know, like, we got some information there that's gonna... If you are a conspiracy theorist, get ready for whatever your body's response is to erotic stimuli.
Get ready to feel it because we got some news coming, baby.
But also, Rishi Sunak met with a little fella named Zelensky.
Let's have a look.
Why don't...
Look, Rishi Sunak, he's probably a good human being.
He made a lot of money for, is he?
Because, well, he partied his whole way through.
He didn't let COVID get him down.
He did not let COVID get him down.
He partied through COVID.
Well, you might have been watching Inan's funeral on YouTube.
Not Rishi.
He was living the Vida Loco, wasn't he?
He was living the Vida Loco.
I think you take pity on him because he's... Geeky.
Very geeky and awkward.
When I see him looking awkward like that, I feel like I can remember kids at school that were sort of trying hard and like they're a bit slumpy like that when they walk.
Like they're sort of like falling forwards a bit.
And I think he's trying his best and he's got nice hair.
I'm just trying to see the good in him.
But I do feel like that the hedge fund that he was involved in funded Moderna and I feel like he misses his billionaire.
Not that everyone's being a billionaire.
Allegedly!
Non-dom doesn't pay tax or didn't pay tax?
That's not good.
That's not great.
That ain't good, non-dom.
Non-dom.
We can't keep saying non-dom.
Sounds nice though.
Look, for God's sake, let's just see what Zelensky, he's arrived here, and this is a type of helicopter called a Chinook.
I would say, needlessly militaristic arrival there from Zelensky, because he wouldn't have come all the way from Ukraine in that.
Point proven.
What?
Well done, Zelensky.
Yeah, alright, I get it, you're into war.
Fair enough.
Where are you getting all these weapons?
Actually, we're getting them all from you!
That's how we talk, isn't it?
I'm not being out of order.
That is how we talk.
Actually, thanks very much, mate.
I'm not sure he's not a cockney with a dodgy voice.
If you want to join us in locals, you can chat to us.
What kind of copter?
That's called a Chinook, that, Firegirl2020.
You can join us in the chat like these people.
People say mad stuff in there, so go steady, guys, is what I will say.
He'd better be front row for the coronation, says Marvin Brando.
Yeah, see?
Cockney Dalek, says Night Sports.
Nice.
Nice nickname.
Why don't one of you call yourself that in there?
All right, let's have a look at Zelensky then, and look at my hand coming into the other shot.
I shouldn't do that.
Let's look at Zelensky arriving by Chinook, and the bit that is worst is they have this thing on TV now called constructed reality.
You know those terrible dating shows that you see on Netflix, very badly produced, they're called things like too hot to... Handle.
Yeah, too hot to trottle, too hot to spit on your leg type stuff, right?
What they do is they go, oh look, why don't you go in there, you, Julie, go and talk to Andrew.
That's manipulative producers, isn't it?
Oh, they're sick of me.
And then they call it like a scene, don't they?
They call it a scene, yeah.
That's what they call it.
That's what they do.
Well this is like constructed reality, particularly when, obviously particularly when Zelensky and Rishi Sunak, Prime Minister of this country, did you vote for him?
And they have a conversation.
Have a look.
All leaders like Zelensky, like, and this is not a tackle, people if you, like, Russia's
invasion is criminal, albeit in my view provoked by NATO, it's criminal, there is a humanitarian
disaster, Ukrainian people should be protected, I believe by the ending of that war as soon
as possible through diplomatic means.
So I've just said that, so as you know, in case you're watching it, say in case you're a journalist watching it, trying to find something antagonistic to write, so you'll have to now admit that I said that.
You'll know while you're omitting that.
I'm editorialising this.
Is this wrong?
Is this wrong that I'm doing this, trying to make the world more evil?
I already know it is, but I've got to do it.
It's a job now.
I think other world leaders get off on Zelensky because they feel like, Oh look, he's wearing all that combat gear.
Actually, my job is important.
I'm not just marshalling elite interests and subjugating the population of this country who fund all this stuff through their tax dollars or tax pounds or whatever.
I'm actually important and there could be a war that I'd be in.
In fact, there might be if we keep provoking Russia because they're getting peeved, I believe.
They certainly are.
Aren't they on high alert for nuclear weapons?
They are, mate.
Both land, sea and air.
All types of nuclear.
Putin's gone.
We could send any one of them.
We're not even decided yet.
All of them.
Anyway, so I think they sort of think, yeah, I'm important.
I'm not just a stooge of the system marshalling resources towards an elite like the wealth transfer that happened in the pandemic period.
I'm not that.
I could be in a combat jacket.
Boris was exactly the same, wasn't he?
That was his thing.
He was, I'm going to be part of this.
I'm going to show how much support I'm giving to Ukraine.
You know, we're going to win this war and I'll go down in history.
I think they get off on it.
It legitimises, they feel.
It provides a grandeur.
To the bureaucratic skullduggery and duplicity of ordinary government.
A war with the heroism of those that are willing to give their lives for it somehow underwrites the ordinary corruption of the sort of hedge fund establishment figures.
Meh, that's my view.
Fast forward it till they get in that meeting we are.
You can see them guys there behind the glass.
Right, so that's our team that's working in there.
Just cut them up for a second so I can see them.
There's Phil.
He's running all of the tech.
Behind him is Will, known as Young Putin.
We gave him that nickname before it came about.
There's Leon.
He produces other things as well, like Too Hot to Trot on Netflix.
You might give that a watch.
And there's a whole team of people in there.
There's Jamie.
Won't even look up.
He's very much a Nepo baby because his mum made Bergerac.
That's right.
The outfits, John Nettles, his jackets.
So, right, so let's go back to the conversation between Zelensky and Rishi Sunak.
Let's have a look at that, shall I?
UK, but especially here to Chequers, which is, and you are actually the first foreign leader that I've had the privilege of welcoming here as Prime Minister.
And there's a lot of great history here.
In fact, this room that we're standing in, Winston Churchill made many of his famous speeches in World War So they're utilizing the mythology of the war, the paraphernalia and ephemera of war, the camo jackets and like his hoodie and everything, as well as the history of war and prestige to distract us, in my opinion, and let me know what you think in the chat and the comments, from the fact that a lot of military industrial complex business will get done as a result of this meeting.
There's a bunch of long-range missiles Yeah, these cruise missiles.
I mean, I guess what we're not seeing, this is essentially a propaganda mission at the same time to, I guess, go along with the story that the UK is supplying Ukraine with multiple cruise missiles.
The thing about these cruise missiles is they go three times the range that the current US ones that Ukraine have.
But at a price that's Three times the missile, but at the same price.
But they can get to territory that's currently Russian-occupied, i.e.
Crimea.
Now, Crimea, I don't know if you remember a few months ago, but Putin at one point did say Crimea was the red line.
So essentially what's going on here is, it's very nice, they're meeting on the lawn, and yes we need to protect Ukraine and all these things, but we're essentially saying we'll give you these missiles that can reach Crimea, which Putin has said is a red line and that he'd be willing to use nuclear weapons.
We can all agree that protecting Ukrainian people is a good thing.
Now what we're discussing is the means for protecting Ukrainian people and who ought be charged with that duty.
of course it's going to be people currently in positions of political power whether they were
elected or not and is the method for ending this conflict likely to be a military victory
against Russia by you know as Gareth just suggested bombing Crimea with those missiles
which has already been identified as a red line and provocation for nuclear conflict which will
also affect Ukrainian people as well as non-Ukrainian people and all people anywhere ever.
So in a sense, what happens, I think, the way that the mainstream media, and let me know in the chat if you agree with this, continually manage this narrative is by saying that if you are a dissenter or a sceptic or critical of this conflict, What you are fundamentally agreeing with is the criminality of the invade.
You're saying that Russia's criminal invasion is OK and that it's all right to let Ukrainian people suffer when I feel that those all those ideas don't need to be meshed together.
And I think people needlessly alloy those issues together in order to prevent the conversation advancing.
Yeah, I mean, I was reading a piece on Stop the War earlier.
Now, Stop the War have existed for so long.
They've written about Iraq, Afghanistan, all sorts of things.
They go on marches, all sorts of things, and they're saying these cruise missiles could be very dangerous for exactly that reason.
Now, you have to at some point go, could this just be a similar thing to those previous wars then?
And in the same way today, your leadership, your country's bravery and fortitude are an inspiration to us all.
or you can tell me what you mean again and we'll check you when we get a chance, we'll
read that stuff.
Let's have a look at it just to see some of the awkwardness between Rishi and Zelensky
and remember some of those Marvin Gaye, Diana Ross duets in the late 70s, it's a bit like
them.
...two from this room and in the same way today, your leadership, your country's bravery
and fortitude are an inspiration to us all.
I look forward to us discussing what more we can do to support you and your country.
George Stall, thank you very much.
You supported already a lot for us.
You did a lot.
You, your government, His Majesty, the King, and of course your people.
From all our hearts, from Ukrainians, from our soldiers, we are thankful.
And it's a privilege to be here.
Yes, the first time, you said not the last.
Definitely not the last.
So, of course, we will discuss very important issues, urgent support for Ukraine and security.
I think not only for Ukraine, it's important for all of Europe.
So thank you.
Thank you that you hosted me and invited me.
Anyway, you're just invited to observe this as an authentic and realistic exchange rather than look at what this masks and what it veils.
You recall during the CNN town hall with Donald Trump that one of the most contentious moments was when the interviewer continually asked Donald Trump, Whose side are you on?
Are you against Russia?
Will you say you're against Russia?
And Donald Trump said in one of the moments in that discourse where I found myself agreeing with Donald Trump, that isn't important.
What's important is ending the conflict so people from Ukraine and Russia stop dying because it's not to the benefit of anybody.
And it appears that the Biden administration are going to any length to keep diplomacy off the table, whether that's criticizing Chinese efforts to broker a peace deal, Or even Donald Trump using it as part of his presidential campaign and you think what you like.
I know loads of you love Donald Trump and loads of you hate Donald Trump.
In a sense the personalities are irrelevant.
What we're talking about is the principle of diplomacy versus the ongoing arming of Ukraine prolonging the conflict in order to either benefit this humanitarian effort or as detractors would say benefit the military-industrial complex.
You can decide for yourself what you think is best and let us know in the comments and chat.
You're smarter than us accumulatively.
Very, very bright.
Let's have a look at the ongoing propaganda of the Biden administration that now extends to TikTokery.
And Tim Dillon, fellow podcaster, had a couple of the young kids that are being funded by Biden.
Is that right?
Yeah, well, we don't know if they're being funded or not.
That hasn't been revealed.
But they are, like, influencers who the Biden administration are bringing together.
They're giving them their own briefing room at the White House, apparently.
I'd love a briefing room.
Yeah, of course you would, yeah.
What would you do in there, though?
Just what I'd do anywhere really.
Sit down, think about God, think about death, worry, play with the dog.
But at least I'd know I was doing it in a briefing room.
So on Tim Dillon, what do they say to these kids?
They sort of query the legitimacy of the whole venture.
He's brought them on because there's been controversy around them because of this whole deal.
Because it's like, You know, I guess it's like using TikTok to win over young voters at the same time that these Marianne Williamson things have been banned.
Won't debate RFK.
Right.
Let us know if you've seen our interview with RFK.
It's up on Rumble right now.
If you're a member of locals, you can tell us in the chat about it.
It was one of the best conversations I've had with someone who knows the establishment inside out.
And in particular, we'll be looking at the next few days about RFK's claims that, can I even say it on YouTube?
that the military were involved in the manufacture, I think we can say, that the military were involved
in the manufacture of certain medications and that the National Security Agency
headed up the entire warp speed operation as opposed to the NIH or the CDC
or many of the other beloved and definitely not corrupt organizations
that came to prominent during that period.
RFK, whatever you think of him and whether or not you're aware of the ongoing slurs,
he's certainly a person who understands how American politics works from the inside
and seems to me to be a very principled man who's attempting to deal with some of the issues
we continually talk about on this channel.
He's saying that he would seriously investigate what went on in the last couple of years,
that he wants to disband the CIA.
I mean, like, if you think the problem with the world is that you have a corporatized democracy
to the degree where the will of the people is irrelevant and the donor class is what governs
what happens in national and indeed global politics, then RFK is talking about those issues in a way,
I suppose, that was comparable to some of the rhetoric around Donald Trump, although I'm sure
we will have different views on how that was delivered in government.
Let's check out what these young TikTokers say on Tim Dillon And is TikTokers isn't really a thing?
No, no.
Is that alright that I said that?
It's not bad, is it?
I think that's fine.
I thought I made a mistake.
You sound very young.
Well, I'm quite young.
It's in my hat.
I'm basically a young person.
I know, I know.
Young, young, not jaded person.
I guess have a look at these kids.
And a lot of the people on our side, like, if they start hearing, like, I've actually done it before.
I've criticized, like, Democrats, like, specifically Hakeem Jeffries, and it all just went south.
Like, I started losing followers.
Like, it's bad, right?
And I really want to be that person that, like, reaches the other side, because Democrats, I mean, they're horrible at their jobs, right?
They do a lot of shitty things, although I'll vote for them all the time.
But it's also hard in this space to criticize them.
That's a good, can we clip that quote?
They're horrible at their jobs and do shitty things.
That's the problem with propaganda is it's sort of managed narratives and it's not underwritten by truth.
You remember only too well that during the pandemic period we said, hey you know how through these various apps that are allowing people to track and trace Covid, For your own good!
For your own good!
What if they decided, after the pandemic, that they would continue to track and trace people?
Continue to use data?
I mean, it's not like, you know, years after 9-11, they're still trying to keep the legislation to survey potential threats alive, even though that threat is acknowledged to have diminished by highlighting the threat that cartels pose to the American population.
We'll be going into depth on that story a little later.
Even in our country, the UK, With a new King Bailey on the throne.
With Meghan Markle sat there mustachioed and pistachioed like she's on candid camera.
They're still spying on us.
The pandemic may be over but UK mobile network cell phone providers are still monitoring population movement.
What do you think about that?
Are you astonished?
Are you surprised?
Really?
Not really, yeah.
So this is like O2 and BT, which like our American viewers might not know, but they're tracking the movements of people.
British Telecom!
Like they did during COVID.
O2, that's like named after a bit of air.
It's out of order, isn't it?
We're naming ourselves after a bit of air.
So it's going to track people's journeys on rail and road and footfall in suburban areas.
But this is something that obviously we know the CDC did.
I mean, again, going kind of stateside with this.
Because they did the same thing.
They did the same thing.
They tracked tens of millions of phones in the United States.
They bought this data during the pandemic, like paying a lot, hundreds of thousands or millions To track, you know, people's movements during the pandemic.
And this is, as so many people predicted, these things will be brought in during the pandemic and then they'll be continued afterwards.
And it's exactly what they're saying.
Those conspiracy theorists.
Those conspiracy theorists, yeah.
Because conspiracy theories need go no further than whether or not Meghan Markle dragged up to dress as that composer fella to turn up to the coronation.
Like, as if that's the issue.
Whether someone's getting oil poured on their head to say that they're better than you.
What an outrageous scenario it is.
Hey, before we go over to being exclusively on Rumble, and if you're watching this anywhere else, there's a link in the description.
You should join us in a minute because we're going to go into detail over RFK's claims that the military, I mean, I can't even tell you it, but it's about the role of the military during the pandemic.
And what was the other bit that I wrote, like the military producing certain medications?
If this is true, this changes the whole narrative.
And I know loads of you in the chat said that this was true.
You were right before us.
That's why before we go, we're going to do a few of your letters and responses, epistles and opinions on this item.
I don't know what it's called yet, because some of the lads that work here have made a graphic.
Let's hear how they've presented this, bless them.
Hit your comments!
Hit your comments!
You've got mail!
Oh God, that's actually... that's so bad, isn't it?
Like, normally, when you watch people's work, don't you sort of think, what good work they're doing?
I'm about to do that.
Like, it could be someone, like, tending to a garden, pruning a tree, making, like, you know, making... But I watch, I think, like, if you just showed me for 10, 20 seconds how to do that, I can even hear the individual voices of people that work here.
That's right.
It's offensive, isn't it?
Let's have a look at them in there.
Look at what they're doing.
That lad, I can hear his voice, that's Al, who one time, if you were watching the day that suddenly the stream dropped off, that was Al's fault, he did that.
He's 60% Al because he only does 60% of the things.
Young Joe there, he's actually quite reliable.
But where's Jack?
Where is Jack?
Jack's over there.
There he is.
I can't think of anyone in history that has had the name Jack, even in Whitechapel, London, in the East End, that has wreaked more harm and havoc on innocent people.
Jack.
He's the worst one.
He's the worst of all of them.
There we go.
Let's not use that ever again.
That was appalling, lads.
Now, let's have a really, really bad, even by a Our own low, low, low, post-modern lo-fi standards.
That was appalling.
Here's some general comments.
This is under the subheading.
Russell, love you, love your show, but Gareth is not your on-screen assistant.
He is amazing.
Excuse me.
He is your co-host.
Please give credit where it's due.
Prayer hands, twice.
I think that was for tax reasons.
I think you're called something else now, aren't you?
Let's change his credit.
I think I'm an editor now or something like that.
I don't know.
Let's let them make up what you should be called.
I'd be astonished to see what they do.
Pete Kivvy, thank you for making the news F-ing bearable.
Tom Atamendo, these are all our friends in the show.
I'll be there, big man.
Will you be dressed and ready this time?
This refers to a moment when I was still dressing right as we landed.
That's how live this show is.
I'm literally nude before we begin.
It's a real treat for the team.
Yeah, I know.
That's what people need to see.
An aging man sliding into his clobber.
Apologetic pest.
Does Russell wear underwear?
Yeah.
Stay free.
Halle Baker.
I would like to own Russell's clothes.
I bet they would look great on girls too.
Why don't we have a new clothing brand?
I think they would actually.
Sometimes a lot of men's clothes look better on women.
I also notice that a lot of women's clothes look better on men.
Sometimes I look around at what people are wearing thinking whose clothes here would I wear if I had to?
It's normally a woman's.
You've got to say you'd wear this.
This is your own merch.
Oh, that crap's probably made in a sweet shop!
It's not, it's made legit by people that paid a price that's right.
I'm dressed as Zelensky today.
It's welcome, isn't it?
You can't see the logo, Gal.
Don't crush them, Lin.
They'll show that properly.
I would wear that, of course I would, and you can too.
There's a link in the description if you want it.
All right, let's go over.
I'm going to talk about this RFK vaccine.
Join us over on Rumble, guys, because we're going to get right into this.
We're going to do some anti-establishment rhetoric.
It's about to spill right out about warp speed.
Shall we have a look?
Are we safe?
Are we off YouTube?
Can we do it?
Are we ready?
We're off YouTube.
All right, so RFK said that the military manufactured the vaccines more than the pharmaceutical industry.
He was even saying things like Pfizer and Moderna were covers.
Is this true?
Because I said to him in the conversation, in fact, one of your comments was, did you bring a fart to a shit fight or whatever it was.
This is a comment from Kaelin Cook.
Hearing the entire pandemic and vaccine rollout were headed by the National Security Agency is perhaps the most horrifying thing in this entire interview.
You can watch the whole interview, it's up now.
Not to mention 150 military contractors manufacturing the jabs rather than the pharma companies themselves.
That sounds like a colossal bombshell.
This was medical democide or democide on a scale humanity has never seen before.
Democide is when the government kills its population.
We all know that for God's sake.
Now let's have a look at RFK making these claims and I like RFK.
think he, you know, if I was a person that voted in America I'd be voting for him,
though it's irrelevant, isn't it? It's a Democrat Party internal affair
in the moment, just wait for them to malign him, sideline him, like they did
with the much less outrageous, by their reckoning, Bernie Sanders.
I could tell you'd wear silk panties during the ice bath, says Asturias Turch.
We're talking about Operation Warp Speed!
So am I, darling.
So am I. Those silk panties with an ice cube down them, I move like lightning, sting like a bee!
Um, let's have a look at RFK.
The top organisation that had managed Warp Speed was not HHS, which is a public health agency.
It wasn't CDC or NIH or FDA.
It was the NSA, a spy agency.
That was the top, that was the top agency, the lead agency on Operation Warp Speed and the pandemic was the NSA.
And the second agency was the Pentagon.
And when you start looking at, you know, as it turns out, you know, the vaccines were developed not by Moderna and Pfizer.
They were developed by NIH.
They're their own.
The patents are on 50% by NIH.
Nor were they manufactured by Pfizer or by Moderna.
They were manufactured by military contractors.
And basically Pfizer and Moderna were paid To put their stamps on those vaccines as if they came from the pharmaceutical industry.
But, you know, that's not what they were doing.
They were coming from, you know, this was a military project from the beginning.
Right, PeaceLoveLight says that she's watched the interview multiple times and that he's brilliant, and lots of people have said that RFK shows he's working out.
I believe we've had some documentation on this military claim.
Now, I can't understand that.
That's so confusing.
That's like trying to pay attention to a World Cup much too early, like when they're trying to qualify for the group stages.
But isn't there sort of a breakdown?
Is this to do with the funding and No, so this is to do with basically the military personnel that were involved in Operation Warp Speed.
So Operation Warp Speed, which we all assumed at the time was, you know, scientists, white lab coats, bunks and burners, pipettes, test tubes.
But it was majority military, yes.
Guns, camo, helmets.
That's it.
I sold private, what is your major malfunction?
That.
That's it, yeah.
Shall I read it, or are you going to read it?
Go for it.
No, that's not even the first word.
It was only a two-letter word.
An organisational chart of Operation Warp Speed, the $10 billion initiative obtained by Stat, which is a type of magazine, reveals the fullest picture yet of Operation Warp Speed, a highly structured organisation in which military personnel vastly outnumber civilian scientists.
Okay.
The chart shows that roughly 60 military officials, including at least four generals, are involved in the leadership of Operation Warp Speed, many of whom have never worked in healthcare or vaccine development.
Just 29 of the roughly 90 leaders on the chart aren't employed by the Department of Defence.
Now by that analysis, you'd have to say it was the Department of Defence that were leading that project.
But to play devil's advocate just for a moment, wouldn't you say that because it was a logistical operation about the distribution of resources and the management of a population, I think the surprise is the ratio.
I mean what's their counter argument going to be? It's not going to be, oh no it was some crazy
thing, it's a bioweapon. That's not going to be there. They're not going to admit that and
I don't think that even RFK is saying bioweapon type stuff.
I think the surprise is the ratio.
When you hear like many of these military members have never worked in healthcare or vaccine
development and just 29 weren't employed by the Department of Defence, it seems like the ratio
isn't quite right. Are you surprised by that information?
Let us know in the chat and the comments.
One senior federal health official told Stat he was struck by the presence of soldiers in military uniforms walking around the health department's headquarters in downtown Washington and said recently he'd seen more than 100 officials in the corridors wearing desert storm fatigue.
So that's pretty interesting.
Currently the US army is developing a pan-coronavirus vaccine that could apparently protect against Who's developing that?
The US Army is developing that at the moment.
There's a headline for that, isn't there?
Let's show that asset.
I saw that earlier today, I figure.
I mean, if you've got it, guys.
I feel like, yeah, I've heard that story.
So it appears that the military-industrial complex and defence contractors, and even the military outside of defence contractors like Rafe and Lockheed Martin, all those names that we're so fond of reciting, are across what has been broadly presented as a medical emergency, even though subsequently you would have to say that there were many, many errors in the way that this was handled, whether it was the medical response, the social response, the lockdowns, the use of data, the censorship, the condemnation of people that were, as they called it, vaccine hesitant.
Look, I think it's probably, look, The issue with it being US Army and Pentagon related, I mean, obviously, like prior to the knowledge that we had of the pharmaceutical industry, that was pretty bad anyway, but around the Pentagon and I mean, we literally knew recently about the audits that the Pentagon have failed, the lack of transparency around the Pentagon.
The revolving door within the Pentagon and the military-industrial complex.
It's not the kind of place that I guess if you're looking to solve the pandemic that you want people thinking this is the institution who's developing our vaccines.
It doesn't paint a great picture No, it doesn't.
It seems like social control and it does seem to align with some of the Martin Goury analysis of a time where it's more difficult to control a population.
You have to invent situations that would warrant asserting and exerting control over a population.
Here is some anecdotal evidence that I will responsibly repeat to a wider audience.
It comes from someone in our chat, Tamara.
Oh man, I was volunteered by the military to Get off that, stop moving it.
Damn, it's so hard to read these.
Could you just stop typing things for a second?
I was volunteered by the military to test a pneumonia vaccination that was supposed to last five years and end up causing chronic pneumonia in numerous test subjects, including myself, within two years.
I'm not taking any vaccines the military is offering.
Just saying.
Well, Tamara, I can well understand your cynicism.
A lot of people have comparable stories.
Did we have the news story up there, Gal?
And what was it from, mate?
I didn't see any recognizable branding or badges.
What's this?
What's this?
What's this from?
U.S.
pharmacist.
Well, that's pretty legit.
A vaccine developed by the U.S.
military shows promise for providing wide-ranging protection against COVID as well as other types of coronavirus.
Non-human primate studies also indicate that the spike ferritin nanopark or SPFN COVID-19 vaccine, which was developed by researchers at the Waterreed Army Institute of Research, also elicits a potent immune response.
I don't know if I'm trusting these people ever again on this stuff.
It's tricky.
I mean, you know, I was reading early in 2019, a government watchdog found that the Pentagon's 14 largest contractors had hired 1,700 former Department of Defense senior civilians and military officers.
So that like revolving door, it's such a... What's the revolving door between in this instance?
Between the military industrial complex and Department of Defense senior civilians.
So it's just this kind of murky world.
And as like Jon Stewart pointed out recently, the kind of What we don't know about the Pentagon, about where the money's going, about how it's all being managed, tax dollars of the American people.
When RFK talks about this and the way that we were sold the story and the narrative of the pandemic, it feels like there is more information out there that we kind of should know about.
It does indeed, and tomorrow we'll be talking, once we're off of YouTube and exclusively on Rumble, about another revelation by RFK, and that's about your friend and mine, Anthony Fauci, and how his gain-of-function research in the US was shut down, and that he relocated to a place in China.
I don't know if you've heard of it.
No.
It's called Wuhan.
That name rings a bell.
A bubonic plague bell, baby!
OK, listen, isn't the contemporary world sometimes a little too much to handle, Gal?
Yeah.
Don't you sometimes wish you could fall backwards into a warm and cosy lake of nostalgia?
Wouldn't you like to feel the arms of yesteryear flung about your shoulders?
Why, it's time for This Week in History.
Let's see a title sequence designed by those twits.
If I could turn back time...
I changed the music to that because before it was the Back to the Future music which you voted for
but I think you made a mistake because I think you saw the graphic was Back to the Future and
thought that you should have the accompanying audiograms.
I don't think you were right about that, so I, in an undemocratic move, put Cher, if I could turn back time, over it, because I like hearing Cher say that.
Yeah.
Don't you?
Yeah, I do, actually.
I like Cher a lot.
Do you?
Well, yeah, and I like that one where she goes, Well she gargles it a bit.
Which one's that one then?
I can't believe you!
You know that one!
It's not Turn Back Time.
Believe in love after love.
Oh, that was what you were singing, yeah.
I mean, it didn't sound... Well, no, it's the same.
I can't believe you!
There's a bit where she goes all gargling, digital, like a robot.
Sure, yeah.
Of course she does.
She's like AI before her time.
That's what she was.
The New Zelensky.
She was the old new Zelensky.
She was ahead of Zelensky.
She was AI in her time.
Cher got there first.
Let's have a look at this week in history.
First, in our country, the UK, the imposition of safety measures began in 1983 when protecting ourselves from our own car crashes via the seat belt was imposed.
Look at how lovely British people are.
Look at how lovely the cars are.
Look at the sort of more muted condescension from the news reporters back in 1983 and the broad compliance of British people.
It all bodes so well for the future.
Check it out.
Before the new law came into force, only about four out of every ten motorists regularly used a seatbelt.
But during this morning's rush hour in London, the vast majority of drivers and front seat passengers were securely fastened.
It seems the fear of prosecution was a greater incentive to belt up than all those previous seatbelt campaigns with their appeals to reason.
Yeah, stick me and the lad in.
Firstly, I saw number 33.
Secondly, I like the way that England looks in those days.
Yeah.
It's nice, isn't it?
It is nice, yeah.
Thirdly, should you have to wear a seatbelt if you don't want to?
Consentious issue.
Don't know.
Yeah.
Tricky.
The libertarian in you says no, eh?
The libertarian in me says...
What are you doing tapping on my car?
Like, every time someone tells me what to do, like if I'm just carrying on with my own business, living my life, I'm privately in a car not harming anyone, I don't feel like a uniformed individual, funded by me, should come over.
And not that I don't have a great deal of respect for the police force, who will be vital in any revolution.
And I count among my personal friends.
Right.
I've got a couple of mates that are in the Old Bill from Jiu Jitsu.
A couple of mates.
Handsome Ryan.
Big Dan.
They're both Old Bill.
Plus my mate Nigel.
My God, he couldn't be more fantastic.
All police.
You've got a copper as a mate?
Yes.
It's not like you have to uniformly loathe the police.
He's quite lenient.
What do you mean by that?
He should be using his measures on you in a social context.
It's not like I'm going to arrest you in the middle of a chat.
He tells me about... He's lenient while policing.
While policing.
With speeding and stuff.
If someone speeds past him.
On your way.
Hit them off with a warning.
So it's even that.
There's sort of personal inflections being applied.
So it's not like the law is a transcendent force.
You have to replace God with the state in order to believe that the state should have the right to intervene in your personal life.
Well they're only doing what they're told, aren't they?
I mean if like for example in America in the way in which the police have been militarized like severely like year after year after year that's like they're not going give us loads of guns are they or drones or those weird digidogs that are gonna take all their jobs in a few years time.
Yeah who wants a digidog to take its job?
Can we go see the people with the bowls on their heads, actually?
I prefer them.
You know, those people that put their bowls on their heads that had hay fever.
The hay fever sufferers.
Yeah, let's check them out.
They were amazing.
Let's look at them and leave us on, sort of, during it as well, Phil, if you can.
Alright, now firstly, this is like 1983, but look, this woman, she's from like 1920.
Look at those pearls she's wearing!
Mental!
Oh yeah, do you have to play it or can I?
In the next few months, millions of people will think twice before they venture outside.
The hay fever season is about to start, but help is at hand.
They will think twice before they venture outside.
Think twice? I'd better have another think.
Oh, I will go.
The season is about to start, but help is at hand.
A national pollen and hay fever bureau is being launched to give nationwide...
...mongering in it, really.
You'll think twice before you go outside.
Things are getting worse.
There might be a pandemic.
Stuff like that.
It really scares me.
Where are they going to be in 20 years' time?
Because look at their naive and nascent forms of propaganda they were engaging in then, in the old days, with pearls slung around their neck, an elegant choker, an atavistic hairdo from a bygone age.
Then it was so innocent, even the propaganda.
It was so sweet.
This is pre-pandemic.
But look, it's hay fever time now.
Have you got a bit of hay fever?
Yeah, it's creeping in.
It's like a pill a day now.
Pill a day for the hay fever.
Have a look at the solution suggested by the news for this issue.
And for extreme cases, there's a more bizarre remedy.
Our science correspondent James Wilkinson reports.
They may look odd, but at least... They do look odd, because what's happened is they're wearing 1950s depictions of an astronaut helmet while walking about in the street.
...they're not sneezing.
Without their helmets, their eyes would be streaming.
Look at them, they're doing fine.
At least their eyes aren't streaming.
They've got a cable coming out of the back of their heads, like Matrix, folks.
I mean, it could have gone this way, couldn't it, in the pandemic era?
Sure, I'm only one a million miles.
I thought about when we were hogging through those big plastic sheets.
Remember that?
You promised me you'd tell no one of that!
That was an after-work celebration between friends!
I punctured that plastic sheet.
But what with?
Barely noticeable.
Noses running.
And they'd find it very difficult to work normally.
They suffer from hay fever.
They've gone out with them, haven't they, in the news?
Would you mind putting these on for this item?
You don't have a whole family of hay fever sufferers glibly walking down the street in their mad Jetsons tech.
They're not lepers, are they?
When you say a family of hay fever sufferers, it'd be varying degrees of a sniffle and maybe a little watery eye.
We're hay fever sufferers.
It's the most important thing in our lives.
It's not ISIS.
It's not like a belief system, is it?
Like, you just got to respond to pollen.
Yeah.
It's not, like, fundamental to you.
The helmet works by surrounding the sufferer's head with clean, pure air.
That's obvious!
Yeah, we do get how it works.
So you see, the bubble, it's not just...
It's for sports that they wear this dome upon their head.
Get it?
It's really obvious.
The news is sort of more patronising then.
Now the news is more like it's a snidey little bastard, isn't it?
Oh my God, have you seen these people?
What was her name?
Was she called Kim Iverson, that lady from Fox that I met on Rumble who was married to Trump?
Our friend is Kim Iverson.
Oh no, Kim Iverson's amazing.
Now what about the other one that's called Kim something who was married to Trump Jr.?
I'd seen her on the news going, He is a scuzzbucket scumbag!
I mean, I met her and she was like, don't worry about that.
And I was like, yeah, actually, I won't.
She was so charming.
Look, now, back in these days, the news thought that we were absolute imbeciles.
All the pollen grains are filtered out by an air pump.
The inventor claims that wearing the helmet for only half an hour brings complete relief.
And not from abuse!
I've been wearing this for half an hour and I've been pelted with cans and rocks the entire time, but the hay fever is fantastic.
Head injuries, of course, from much of the flint.
Complete relief, but during that half an hour, it's surely like, then the pollen can get you again when you take it off.
You've got to wear it all the time.
It's almost like, imagine a medication that only provided very temporary results and then you had to keep getting and taking the medication again and again and again.
What, you mean all the time for the rest of your life?
Yeah, basically you're always taking it.
It's like, hold on a minute, are you just doing this because you enjoy making money from this product?
Was it developed by pharmaceutical companies or was it... Oddly, by the army!
What?
Curiously, it's like by cigar chomping generals.
I'm gonna make me a vaccine, mama!
It's better than drugs, he says.
Hmm, I don't know.
Depends what drugs.
Over to our correspondent, young Russell Brand.
Fill that thing with the gaseous fumes of crystal meth, you'll have a wonderful afternoon.
For the entire time you're wearing it, you can't think of anything except of a wonderful inner world of light.
Though there will be an anxiety attack in the morning.
Drugs don't always work, and when they do, they often have unpleasant side effects.
That's true.
Side effects?
Oh, careful!
Although we don't know.
Side effects probably was caused by the disease anyway.
There's no evidence at all that myocarditis or pericarditis were in any way caused by these drugs.
Let's have a look at this thing.
A bit of news on the old FDA when the FDA was in its earlier phase.
Look at how they tried to sell us on the idea that the FDA needed much more funding.
And then before we go, we'll look at Oh God, we'll have to look at that McDonald's advert at some point.
Before McDonald's became masters of advertising, you're going to love this.
They were crap at advertising.
Yeah, I don't know if that's their advert or they got everyone in the world to be addicted to their product based on their first advert.
Stay with us for that, but first let's have a look at him.
He's a famous news guy, this one.
Is he?
Yeah, I like how he's got stonehenge hair.
There's one hinge here, there's another hinge here, and then there's another hinge there.
I call that stonehenge hair.
Let's have a look at him.
Good evening, we begin tonight with a warning that one of the most important regulatory agencies in the country, the Food and Drug Administration, is unable to do its job properly.
The FDA... No change there then.
Although the problem now is, of course, that they receive their funding from the pharmaceutical companies that they're supposed to be regulating.
The problem was then that they didn't get enough funding.
We ain't got enough money.
Well, how could we get more money?
I don't know, sort of from tax?
Where would it come from?
Who would want drugs?
regulated. Who would want drugs rushed through, not properly evaluated?
Well, I've got an idea of who could benefit. I could. We at Pfizer will be willing to provide
75% of your funding, along with other drug companies like Moderna, etc., in order for
favorable passing of our products. We satirized that there, didn't we, Gav?
We've got a little bit of Albert Baller calling RFK a conspiracy theorist.
We'll go back to that in a minute.
But first of all, let's just see a bit more of this dude.
I know he's not Walter Cronkite, but he's one of your main ones, isn't he?
It's just with him being Walter Cronkite.
Because I like saying the name Walter Cronkite because it's in rap songs.
People go, like, Walter Cronkite?
I think I've heard Ice Cube use it in a lyric.
Let me know in the chat which song it was.
Supposed to make sure that the food and drugs which Americans use are safe.
And today, a special advisory panel warns that the FDA is lacking in leadership and authority and without enough money.
In the panel's words, overextended and underfunded.
We begin in Washington.
Here's ABC's Bettina Gregory.
Walk into any supermarket or drugstore in America and much of what is sold is regulated by the Food and Drug Administration.
About 25 cents of every dollar spent by consumers goes for products regulated by the FDA.
But at today's hearing, an advisory committee, which has been studying the agency for the past year, concluded the FDA is at the breaking point.
We feel the FDA is living on borrowed time.
The committee did conclude that the FDA today cannot, cannot carry out...
David Graeber, the sadly recently deceased academic philosopher and cultural critic, talked a lot about how many of the claims that capitalism made against communism is that they were entrenched bureaucracies that stifled creativity.
But we can see how apparently free market capitalism in itself is its own bureaucracy.
Whether it's the administrative bodies that are set up in order to facilitate the growth and expansion of markets on the release of new products, or the way that our own lives are continually stymied by bureaucratic and regulatory bodies in areas like planning or tax there's always someone up in your grill
about something you're trying to do you live in in total bureaucracy you're not
actually free are you just going I'm gonna go and do this I'm gonna go and do
that unless you're sort of Hunter Biden off your nut on crack going to buy a
gun and that's allegedly and I don't mean in a bad way about Hunter Biden
like I'm an addict in recovery I've done silly things but like like him like you
don't you're not free to go live some wacky life
Not that going to buy a gun on crack is necessarily where you should automatically go, perhaps you could just sit in the woods and enjoy yourself freely.
But it's difficult to imagine how you'd do that without any crack at all, or a gun.
Need a little bit of it.
And this is, I suppose, the supercharging of these bureaucratic agencies that we're watching here.
And also, probably, these stories being, would you imagine, Gareth, that these stories are being fed into the media to start, you know, a problem response solution?
Sure, right.
I mean, you know, we don't know how many members of, I don't know if these are members of Congress or who they are, but You know, we know lobbying exists.
What if there was, like, an effort by the pharmaceutical industry to lobby through that the FDA could now be funded through donations from the pharmaceutical industry?
You know, that stuff goes on all the time.
Of course it does.
That is what that is.
Even though we've not done any research.
I basically believe that now.
And I could have a conversation tomorrow with someone and go, how is it that the pharmaceutical companies were able to be funded?
User fees, they call it, don't they?
User fees.
They've re-badged it, you fool!
All that is mandated of it by law.
The report says there are 40% fewer safety inspections than there were in the 1970s.
That food processing fac- It's really deeply scientific, the way that they- The way that they test this food.
This is gonna be- This is science at work.
Right.
This is real science.
How do they- Is it through, like, they break down, they look at the genes, the chromosomes in the food.
How do you know this food is safe?
...are inspected only about once every eight years.
Go- WAH!
BLOODY- EXTREME!
I wouldn't touch that with yours, mate!
That's not science, sniffing a can of fish!
You are going to do the full 100 cans.
Now we haven't got time, we'll do 40 of them.
Pass the next thousand!
They're all alright!
That's not how you test things!
Give it a good old whiff!
Right, who smelt it, dealt it, them sardines is good to go!
Can't call that science.
But before we move on from this what I'm going to call brilliant item, let's have a look at the first ever McDonald's commercial.
This is the first McDonald's advert, because in 1940 the first ever McDonald's opened.
Is that true in 1940?
This advert's not from 1940 though.
Look at that, lovely McDonald's, it's so sweet.
Bro, buy the bag!
Brilliant.
Okay, have a look though at their commercial, it's mental.
Introducing the world's newest, silliest, and hamburger-eating-est frown!
Advert ain't from 1940.
I'll tell you that now.
That's fake news right there that we're making.
After all the work we've done to try to bring down the media.
Look at that.
That can't be from 1940.
It's got to be.
I'd say that's like 58 or 62 between that era.
Don't you think?
That can't be 1940.
There's not been a war yet or nothing and they're making... If I lobby you, will you say it's 1940?
That was 1940, that.
1940, you can see it.
You can tell from the sepia inflection.
That was only in the 1940s.
Got some news coming up in about five years that you guys are going to love.
Hitler is dead.
But first, way back in 1940, McDonald's looking a lot like the 60s.
If you were a car expert, you'd better tell from the back of that car, wouldn't you?
Joe Rogan, you'd better go, oh no, that's a Buick or something.
People like to say that, don't they?
Jay Leno, Buick.
They always say Buick.
That's what they'll say.
Ronald McDonald!
Now, where is that clown?
Oh, Ronald!
Ronald!
Ronald!
Hey, Ronald!
Here I am, kid!
Hey, isn't watching TV fun?
Especially when you got delicious... That's not right, is it?
Someone said that it's weird that he's called the hamburger-eatingist clown.
And what is he... what is this look?
Harlequin, yes, one of the early incarnations of clown, but what I've tried to do is a clown that's got all of the paraphernalia of hamburgers.
Check his mood out.
What is his mood?
Ronald, you can't be on TV and watch it at the same time.
Now come on and meet the boys and girls.
Is it 940?
I mean, he's weird, isn't he?
He's a weird guy.
He's in a weird mood.
Because a clown is an uncanny figure.
A clown, they say, is the shaman stripped of dignity.
Shamed.
Like, a good clown is an amazing thing.
Children like them because they're uncanny, but clowning, of course, is one of the most common phobias because it's not a normal vibe, a clown.
Like that guy.
How they built that business off that clown, yes, from 1963.
How they built that business off of that weirdness.
I know.
Because I always thought that Ronald McDonald, when we were kids, was a freak.
Terrifying then!
Because that was before, I'm loving it!
And that's like 20 years ago when McDonald's came a bit more.
Hey, it's Justin Timberlake, it's all cool.
Get rid of that clown, it's weird.
Listen, do you think it might be nice to have Justin Timberlake rather than this looming, terrifying clown?
But even Ronald McDonald was an advance on this Menacing, macabre figure.
The product looks awful.
Disgusting.
They've not even jazzed it up.
I like to do everything boys and girls like to do.
Especially when it comes to eating those delicious McDonald's hamburgers.
A magic tray here keeps me well supplied.
McDonald's hamburgers, french fries...
The product looks awful.
Disgusting.
They've not even jazzed it up.
Look at how awful...
Look at those chips.
The chips are the killer.
They're like homemade chips.
Like, you know, that looks like you've cleaned a bathtub with it, doesn't it?
That hamburger.
And have you ever seen it when they take a hamburger out that's been in the cupboard for 20 years and it's still the same?
And you think, oh, that can't be good for the old bowel.
It looks like that.
You know, like, do you remember when I was at school, they'd say, like, with some, say, Kellogg's Frosties, they go, you have more nutrition if you eat the box.
Yeah, that can't be right.
Is that right?
And then they sort of make you put a tooth in a can of Coke, and then they go, good luck in the world.
Good luck out there, guys.
There's a tooth in a can of Coke.
Don't eat the box rather than the... See ya!
What do I do with my emotions?
Not our piece.
That is not our area of concern.
We showed you the tooth.
The tooth.
Put it into some coke.
What?
So do coke for your emotions.
Yeah, yeah.
Something like that.
Do coke for your emotions.
Good luck at eating the books, y'all.
Bye!
It's a weird old time.
But anyway, this clown, I don't think he's correctly rendered.
Some people are saying, look, Claude, my tummy hurts looking at it.
Is that really 1940?
No, it's not 1940.
We've told you it's 1963.
We've amended that.
We made a mistake.
We're sorry.
Sorry.
McDonald's, no, they're handling it in there.
McDonald's was founded in 1940, but the commercial was later.
Oh, we don't need to worry about that.
They're regulating themselves.
Like the free market capitalism, innit?
Ah, the business will... the market will regulate itself!
Who's to say you need to shut people down?
You can join our locals community and join all these adorable loonies in there right now.
Let's just play this ad out.
And then just before we go into his news, I wanted to see that bit where baller marks off RFK
Watch movie on TV. We'll have lots of fun That's very well make cuz like who's directing this and
what has he said to that clown?
Right, to get that performance out of me, you'd have to say, I want you to be menacing, macabre, stupid... And oafish at the same time.
Oafish, yeah.
Don't have any of the sort of... a LAN or...
Elegance of the general arabesque of the lunatic.
No.
Have like, just be like... It's terrifying.
It's terrifying.
That is not someone you want near your food.
It's actually quite nuanced in a way because it's such a mix of emotions.
Yeah, it's like, um, it's sort of like an art installation.
It is, yeah.
If you went to like the Tate Modern Gallery in the UK.
That's where I find it, of course.
No, because you need art.
You need art.
And he was in there.
Yeah, it made me feel a lot of stuff then.
It made me feel like the world's gone very, very wrong.
I was very surprised that after that they went, don't use that clown again.
Never.
Rather than, let's have him as the emblem of our entire franchise.
He works well.
We've made a mistake.
Sorry about that.
That idea I had about that weird, menacing clown was wrong.
When I saw it, I realised, I saw how wrong I was.
It was in my imagination it was going to be different than that.
I'll be honest, it was going to be less of a paedophile when I was thinking of it.
I didn't see how terrifying you... I showed it to my kids and they don't talk to me anymore.
They've left.
They've actually established a little company called Burger King as a sort of a riposte to the horror of this psychological scar.
Of course, as we know, kids now work in McDonald's, so, you know.
Mate, well done.
Tied it to news.
And to think that you were labelled an on-screen assistant after you tied that to the recent news story that ten-year-olds have been found working at McDonald's franchises.
Have a look at... Anyway, before we leave... Are we going to leave you and do the... Are we going to do the hero video in locals?
What are we going to do, guys?
You tell us.
Well, firstly, let's have a look at this.
This is Albert Baller, CEO of Pfizer.
Well, that's not him.
I don't know who that is, but she's in a minute.
She's from Reuters.
She's from Reuters.
She's a job in journo and she's talking to CEO of Pfizer, Albert Bourla, about vaccine hesitancy and people that are critical of their products and stuff.
Let's have a look.
Another legacy of the pandemic has been growing mistrust of vaccines.
It has contributed, as you know, to the rise of figures like Robert F. Kennedy.
What needs to be done to counter this wider assault on vaccines?
Transparency, efficacy, releasing all of the clinical trials, being honest about the deficiencies, being honest and open about adverse reactions, accepting that it wasn't effective as it was initially promised, admitting that it was never trialed for transmission.
That's my answer.
Good list.
Good list.
Let's see what Albert Bourlas says.
I think it's a very difficult situation and I would say unfortunately it's not an assault on vaccines, it's on science.
Everything that is scientific right now is disputed.
He's saying that if you are cynical about their product, or vaccines, say, that you act as an assault on science itself, on Galileo, on cosmology, on chemistry, on biology, on all the beauty and grace that has emerged from our kind's intrepid endeavour to understand the material universe.
That ain't the case, is it?
It's simply... Hold on a minute.
This seems to be underwritten by... How do you reconcile that with some of the things that have come out of our RFK conversation?
It's plainly emerged from legitimate concern and from the mishandling of the entire pandemic.
Also, that is contextualised by years of exploitation by companies like Pfizer.
How can you say that?
I suppose you're not going to, if you run Pfizer, go, it weren't very good, that opioid pandemic and all them out-of-court settlements for billions.
You can't.
You can't.
Like for other products, of course.
You know, you can't say that, can you?
I just think, you know, again, with the news or whatever this is, like Reuters, I mean, that is a news network in some form, isn't it?
I just think you should give the full picture.
So I think if you're going to say, you know, RFK and it's irresponsible and maybe there's some misinformation there, I don't know.
But then I would also say, Isn't it true, Albert Baller, that in November 22, you were rapped by the UK pharmaceutical watchdog for making misleading statements about children's vaccines?
Basically, he kind of, essentially you could say, lied about the efficacy of vaccines.
As we know now, the Pfizer Covid vaccine was just 12% effective against Omicron in kids 5 to 11.
So there is information out there... 88% ineffective.
You know, like, what I feel is that there are direct commercial and financial relationships between the media and Pfizer.
I bet you could find one between Reuters and Pfizer.
And even where there are not direct financial ties, there are just cultural ties.
The way that Through, you know, both the advertising model and the number of companies that will, or sort of stock bond companies that will own shares in media organizations and Pfizer.
So like the, you're not, cause I remember that other one, that moonshot interview where he was on something like CNN and they were like, how did you come up with this?
Like you don't ever see a figure like Borla grilled except on that brief walk he mistakenly took around Davos when people from like Rebel Media tag teamed him with difficult questions for 10 minutes on the street.
Yeah, I mean, as a news organization, you should be asking about the relationship between pharmaceutical companies and the government, between pharmaceutical companies and the FDA, about the massive profits that were made, about some of the statements around the efficacy that didn't prove to be true.
Now, all those things, I think you can completely say, and still say, the vaccine should have been taken by a certain age group.
I think all of those things can exist in the same space.
But if you're only going to ask like one portion of those questions, you're not doing your job No, there's no objectivity and there's no attempt to tell a clear story and I'm sure we have our own biases but those are all Gareth's fault.
Now in a minute we're going to continue for a minute on locals and on locals we're going to show our main presentation on their Mexican drug cartels and how It's not like we're saying that the Mexican drug cartels are being exploited.
I was about to go, they're exploiting those Mexican drug cartels, but they're using Mexican drug cartels to prolong surveillance legislation that was initially brought in for like post 9-11 stuff, saying we've got to spy on them drug cartels, we've got to spy on them.
We've got to spy on them!
It's brilliant.
We'll show that at the end of Locals, but join us over on Locals now.
If you're watching us on Rumble, join up on Locals and you can join the conversation there and you can stay with us for another like 20 minutes for some fantastic content.
Tomorrow we've got Matthew Connolly coming on to talk about the secret world of US intelligence and what they're hiding from you.
I think you're going to be astonished that it ain't good things.
These documents contain detailed plans for a birthday party!
You know.
And then, you know, we're going to continue.
If you ain't joined our locals community, there's a red button somewhere there on your screen.
Is it there?
Am I pointing to it yet?
It's somewhere along there.
There!
There.
No, there.
There it is.
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It was there.
It was there.
It took me that long to get to it that it's not there.
Oh, and if you... There!
It's there.
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I can almost taste it.
You can... Also, you get podcasts.
It's gone mad that I could just clip up on a daily basis.
Clip all that up.
That would have been today's clip.
I'm a soothsayer and a shaman and a modern day prophet.
Let your ear feed on the titty milk of truth, why don't ya?
That bit as well.
Basically the majority of it looks like a man in decline.
I do weekly meditations, exclusive for you.
Plus I do community events.
It's worth joining.
It's really good, isn't it Gal?
Oh yeah.
I mean, I swear you do some of your best on-screen assistance.
That's right.
You can come to our community festival in mid-July if you want to spend some live time with me, Wim Hof, Callie Means, Vandana, Shiva, Satish, Kumar, Biet, Skimpkin, Eddie Stern.
It's like yoga, it's meditation.
Hiron Gracie's gonna be there.
You can do Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu with me.
I'm gonna get... Right, finally, a famous person's doing Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu that I will fight.
Zuckerberg.
Oh!
Tom Hardy.
No.
I'm not doing jiu-jitsu with Bane.
No.
Because he'll use Bane stuff.
Of course he will.
I don't want to have... That'd make me sound like Daniel Day-Lewis.
I love Daniel Day-Lewis.
I know.
I miss him.
I met once, sat next to Jim Sheridan, director of Name of a Father on a Plane.
I know I tell you this all the time.
But he went, like, when Daniel Day-Lewis, he goes... I goes, was it true that he went and be a cobbler for four years to prepare for a pie?
He goes, yeah, he gave me a pair of those shoes.
They were shit.
criticized the quality of the shoes.
Um, alright, so listen, we're gonna go over to being on Locals now.
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Until then, stay free. Join Locals though, we're gonna do a great show right now.
We'll probably boot you out and let you back in again.
It's weird, isn't it, Phil?
So if you're in there now, you're gonna get booted out, which is weird.
But then just wait there, because we're gonna let you back in again.
It's weird, alright?
Zuckerberg will kick your ass, says that girl.
He will not.
I'll take you, Zuckerberg!
I will choke him out.
I will footlock him.
I will... I... Zuckerberg, I will get you, sucker!
Will I?
Yeah.
Of course I will.
I don't think so.
Unless he's got some weird... I don't know.
Maybe when you meet him, he might do some weird stuff.
He might stare at me like in that Metaverse commercial.
What's his reach?
He's reaching in relevant pride folds.
Not in BJJ.
I'm going to close the distance.
I'm going to be on the bottom.
I'm going to get him in my guard.
I'm going to use spider guard as he tries to stand up.