All eyes are on Elon and the new Twitter CEO’s affiliation to the WEF. Big Tech lobbyists are shamelessly watering down AI regulations and promoting their own interests. PLUS, Biden's pick for the NIH director job (who’s received $290.8 million in research funding from Pfizer) with our guest Dr Bob Gill.For a bit more from us join our Stay Free Community here:https://russellbrand.locals.com/Come to my festival COMMUNITY - https://www.russellbrand.com/community-2023/NEW MERCH! https://stuff.russellbrand.com/
How our freedom relates to the freedom of others and how freedom is our element.
It is as water is to a fish and we cannot be free when we are surrounded on all sides by systems of control and condemnation.
Thanks.
It's new.
Cheers, guys.
How's it feel?
Appreciate it.
It's silky on the skin, baby.
I feel like Lenny Kravitz in this.
My nipples are as hard as little Tic Tacs.
Little bullets, are they?
They're as hard as a minion's skull.
Oh you could tap tap tap on them if you're watching this on YouTube.
Why not?
We have 6.4 million Awakening Wonders on YouTube and we love you over there but we've got to invite you to join us over on Rumble.
Why?
Because we're going to be talking to a proper doctor.
A proper one.
not a doctor who tells you they're a doctor and then they say it's of archaeology or something
that can't help you when you're coughing up something on an aeroplane. We're going to
be talking about Russiagate and the Durham Report, how it indicts Obama and Clinton,
probably both of them. Jimmy Carter probably was somehow involved in it. I don't know what
to do anymore. We're going to learn a lot more about the lady they're calling the new
Fauci.
The new Fauci because she's the head of the NIH.
The new one?
Well that's Biden's pick anyway.
Picked by Biden?
What can go wrong?
Picked by Biden.
You know in much the same way do you remember when he picked his defence secretary and there were certain ties to more or Okay, if you're going to be Defence Secretary, I want to know that when it comes to matters of the military-industrial complex, weapons manufacturers, you've not had anything that might compromise you?
No, it doesn't compromise me.
Doesn't compromise me at all.
I used to work for them, I work for them still.
We've got a lot of information for you.
As well as telling you the truth about the way that the power functions, the way that these systems operate, we're going to have a little bit of fun.
Because you know what the devil don't like?
Devil don't like being mocked, gal.
No.
Devil don't like being mocked.
Devil wants you serious.
Yeah?
Not us.
We don't want you serious.
We want you free.
Your freedom is our business.
Let's have a look at another man who seems to be a thorn in the side of the establishment.
Elon Musk refusing to be normal on Texas telly, as far as I can tell.
I didn't know they had a particular Texas TV show, but Here, you'll have seen this.
Have you seen this on social media?
Have you seen it on his Citadel of Truth?
That is Twitter.
Look at this.
This is Elon.
He's only just done his sicky mouth interview with Macron.
You know, like where he was talking to Macron the night after his dad dancing.
A lot of your comments.
By the way, join us in Locals.
If you press the red button, you can join us in the Locals chat.
People said, like Wayler went, loved your musky dad dancing.
More please.
I actually thought that...
That was me trying my hardest to come across as sexy.
Yeah, I know, I noticed.
Dad dancing.
It was hard.
I needed the visual reference.
He wasn't on screen.
I thought once you got up, maybe you immediately regretted it.
A bit, did.
A bit.
Because I was up then.
It's too late now.
It's too late.
Gotta commit to it.
It's like these bloody wars.
Oh, well, we're in this war.
Might as well stay and tell you.
Oh, well, we've started to fund you.
Cracking efforts.
Hundreds of thousands of people are dying.
Might as well keep doing it.
Yeah, well that lady, Wayla, at Wayla, who could be a lady or a man actually, or any other kind of gender identity, I don't mind.
At Beasting, who would be the best dancer, Biden or Trump?
Like, Trump owns his bad dancing.
Well, we already know how Trump dances.
Like that.
It's that one where he does that thing, doesn't it?
Yeah, and it's good.
It's actually brilliant.
And Biden, I don't know, like I feel like some chalky bone dust would fly off in your eyes.
You get wristy bone dust.
Go, go, go.
What's the worst situation you've been in like Elon and Macron?
Like when you're too high to do an interview or something.
Drugs are bad.
Like, I don't know.
I've been in a lot of situations where like I've been, not necessarily because of, I once woke up and I was in a room full of refugees.
I didn't know how I got there.
Right.
That was confusing.
Yeah.
It had something to do with things that you shouldn't be taking, doesn't it?
The previous day I had been taking things.
I just remember that I'd been out and then when I woke up I was in a room with everyone.
You know when Indiana Jones gets chased by people because he's been stealing, actually, their sacred artifacts, which he shouldn't have been doing, should he?
No.
Like, we're all on Indiana Jones' side.
He's stealing them eggs, for example, in Temple of Doom.
That was sacred to those villages.
Oh, I know.
You wanted the Nazis to have them, did you?
Oh, now it comes out.
Why not let that lovely gentleman with the badge burn into his palms?
Hasn't he got any rights?
A lot's being revealed here.
I was against those Nazis.
I was on Indy's side.
I'm just saying he's stealing the treasures and antiquities of the tribal people of whatever country that was.
It's true what the newspapers say.
Also, it's not true.
They're trying to bring us down because we're telling you the truth and they hate us.
They can't handle the truth.
But we thought we could handle the truth until we met Robert Kennedy.
Then we realised we can handle most of the truth.
A bit of truth.
Not all of it.
No.
We can handle the bit where it says stuff like, hmm, that's convenient that they introduced all those regulations and all that was quite a profitable measure.
That's an interesting wealth transfer that took place in the last couple of years.
When it starts going, the military... Allegedly.
The whole thing, the whole, the RFK interview is available on Rumble right now.
You can watch it.
If you think you can handle the truth, baby, you must be joining us for a reason.
Click that red button, join us on Locals, and hit us on the chat.
Kelly P says, sweet!
Lady Grayfur, he goes, if it was a white Tiger shirt, I'd have to have one.
I ride a Tiger 900.
I don't know what that means, type of motorbike.
This is Durga, the goddess of feminine power, that is a tattoo I've got.
She rides a Tiger too.
I once did, Some sort of spiritual talk somewhere in Italy.
Okay.
A place where, um, who's that cunning devil?
Regular life you've got, isn't it?
Regular guy.
Tonight, Eton.
The other day, Machiavelli's Palace in Tuscany.
Yeah.
I was out like Machiavelli's Palace in Tuscany.
Right.
Mad at the people.
He's the one to follow, guys.
How are we going to bring people together?
How are we going to change the world if I don't go to Machiavelli's Tuscan palace?
I was doing a talk, anyway, and this scholar of the Vedas, like the Vedic literature that founds the faith that is broadly referred to as Hinduism, said, which aspect of Durga, because this is Durga the goddess, which aspect of Durga is that Menabee, she said.
And I was like, leave it out, mate.
Do you know what I mean?
You can't do that at Machiavelli's house.
You can't say stuff like leave it out.
Machiavelli would.
He'd be doing some skullduggery, wouldn't he?
Machiavelli, Art of War, things that you're supposed to have read that I've not got round to.
Short though, like the Art of War, there's only 50 rules.
Nice references.
You can win a war all nice and quick.
Stay free with Russell Brand.
See it first on Rumble.
Hey, listen to this, guys, that's a fantastic point.
Is Elon going to be reined in by this new WEF committee member,
or is it going to be good for the profits?
Look at this, biology always wins.
We are going to ask your question, but I cannot say it out loud now.
Ask Dr. Bob, why are they keeping women who are having X or late-term X,
if they have a gag order saying it's X.
In 2020, it was down, and in 2020, it jumped up 500%, late is 623%.
I am going to ask Dr. Bob that question.
Join us in the local chat and you'll see what Biology Always Wins is asking us and why I am reluctant to read it out loud.
Very contentious question.
Is this some stuff about that lady from the WEF?
She chairs a committee.
According to her LinkedIn, she's been involved with the WEF since 2019.
Chairman of the task force on future work.
I'd really like to get to this tweet.
It won't take long at all, but about the Russiagate report.
Just to show you the tweet about the fact that Obama and Joe Biden seem to be involved in this as well now.
Yeah, let's have a look at the tweet.
Right, Gael, talk us through this.
Why this is an important story?
Yeah, well, this is amazing because this is like based upon the Durham Report.
Obviously, we've touched on this and we kind of know about the collusion.
We know the broad strokes of it, but it seems that more people were involved than we... One person has said no, but they've said just to see if we counted it.
That's from Mr Martindale.
The Durham report also involves Obama and Hillary Clinton.
It's not just the FBI.
The FBI said that they investigated Russiagate, as we've told you already, without any evidence.
There was no evidence, it was unrequired, they dragged on that time.
But what's the proof that Clinton and even Obama are somehow involved in this?
It literally is contained within the report.
According to the Dung Report, the plan by Hillary Clinton to create a false story linking Donald Trump to Russia was briefed in August 2016 by CIA Director John Brennan to President Obama, VP Biden, AG Loretta Lynch and FBI Director Comey.
So that is, I mean you're talking there, Obama, Biden, Clinton, CIA, FBI all involved in this.
It's potentially huge this.
This is massive.
These revelations are enormous.
It's not enough to bring about incremental change.
Reform will not be enough.
This is why someone like RFK, man, that guy's going to disrupt stuff because he's talking about changing things for real with the MIC, changing things for real with social media and big tech, investigating what's happened in the last couple of years.
We need radical change.
And one of the things about the cultural amnesia that we live within is it strips us of our heroes and the possibility of change.
All of us have forgotten that it's possible to be heroic.
All of us have forgotten that it's possible to live in a different way.
All of us have been trained to ignore evidence such as we've just been presented.
The people that have been presented as heroes, such as Obama and Clinton, are, it seems demonstrably, involved in a corrupt process.
Whatever you think of Donald Trump, and I know loads of you guys love Donald Trump.
I know you do.
The fact is you can't just lie to undermine someone's presidency and then complain when that person uses comparable tactics and rejects the result of that election.
Can you?
Can you?
Let me know in the chat.
Press the red button.
Join us in Locals.
And now it's time for an item that I'm calling Brandy on Gandhi, where I espouse the virtues of a truly great hero.
Let's have a look at the graphic that introduces my item, Brandy on Gandhi.
That's quite good.
That's not bad.
Russell's heroes.
Bit flat.
Bit dull.
I mean, at least he's only using, because Jack, who does our graphics, we worry about him.
We worry that he struggles.
At least he's using a consistent reference.
He's using Top Gun music and Top Gun imagery, I suppose.
Fair enough.
But I think that I could talk about Gandhi.
It slightly suggests your heroes are tied to the military, though.
It does.
It's like I'm part of the military-industrial complex.
Why has he gone for that?
Like what I want to point out right, when I started reading this book, re-reading, re-reading
this book on Mahatma Gandhi, re-reading it, I realized that Mahatma Gandhi is perhaps the
closest thing we have to a contemporary prophet being alive but a century ago and having instilled
potent principles like non-violence, civil disobedience, but also, and this is lesser
understood decentralization.
And he dedicated his life to throwing off a colonial power, an evil empire, that had taken over and oppressed his nation.
Of course, it was the British Empire now, I would say, and with all due respect to you beautiful beloved brothers and sisters over there in America, It's American imperialism that dominates the world through their unipolar hegemony that is threatened even by attempts by China to bring about world peace.
You know, and I know China have their own agenda.
I'm not naive.
But when it comes to we, the people, the real people, we have to look to heroes and philosophies such as Gandhi's to understand the possibility for real change.
Let's have a look at a bit of old news footage introducing this great man.
It will encourage and inspire you. Now you iconoclasts out there, I bet you're
already frantically typing in the chat and you can press that red button to join us in locals. Oh, he's
done a lot of crazy stuff. Of course he done crazy stuff. Of course he trained as a lawyer. Of
course he was a person that was, that there's some weird stuff in his autobiography about sleeping in the
same bed as his nieces or some sort of weird test. And I guess you just have to recognize
that even the greatest people in the world are sort of a bit flawed and maybe focus on these
incredible things.
And let's have a look at this Pathé News footage about Gandhi's visit to Britain, and how he was derided in the most casual way.
Listen to it.
Well, here we are at Folkestone, with the Biarritz coming alongside, and as Gandhi said, in proper English weather, pouring rain and bitterly cold, Miss Slade was the first ashore to tend to the luggage, that is, the goat's milk, etc.
Goat's milk, etc.
That's what they've bought from India, so patronising.
Yeah.
She was followed by Gandhi's son, and then came the little man, still scantily clad, but with an extremely wet blanket around his tiny frame.
It's not like he's scantily clad and he's only got a tiny frozen rib, talking about his body and all.
Look at him.
Imagine, if you will, his nutbag.
I'm sure he must have been frozen.
We wear in thick overcoats.
He picked his way through the puddle.
This was different then.
It was, wasn't it?
He picked his way through the... I mean it's still sort of propaganda, it's still inviting you to take a particular perspective on a great man.
As Albert Einstein said of Gandhi, we will scarce believe that one such as this was incarnated in flesh and blood.
That his life is so improbable, his self-sacrifice so astonishing, his achievement so remarkable that in just a generation or two Einstein postulated he'd be regarded almost as a prophet.
But I feel that our culture likes to destroy and deny us figures such as Gandhi because the function of a hero is, I believe, to help us move from egoic thinking, individualistic, selfish thinking, to compassionate, higher, self-motivated thought.
That the journey of the hero is always to move from primal, primary motivation to, I would say, a higher motivation.
Now, I understand a word like higher has certain connotations.
What I mean is selflessness and service.
He had 11 vows, Gandhi, among them truth, control of the palate, non-stealing, just a sort of a simple set of principles, I guess.
But earlier today, I was looking at Gandhi's 11th principle of Swadeshi.
Listen to this, and listen to how this invites us to have personal autonomy, community control, But to a degree, global harmony.
Gandhi was against, above all else, corrupt, centralized power and exploitation.
I'm not saying Gandhi was a man without flaws.
What's the point of advancing such an argument?
What I'm saying is that in Gandhi and his philosophy, we have clues, codes, examples that can help us to change the world.
It's not a coincidence that one of the most effective civil rights leaders of the last 50 years, Martin Luther King, was greatly inspired by Gandhi.
There's a lot that all of us can learn from Gandhi, because do we not similarly toil under an empire much more insidious, much more invasive, much more powerful due to its invisibility and due to the fact that it doesn't let us know it's there?
Listen to this principle, Swadeshi.
You're going to love it.
Swadeshi is the law of laws enjoined by the present age.
The votary of Swadeshi is a person should as a first duty dedicate themselves to
the service of their immediate neighbours.
Pure service of our neighbours can never result in a disservice to those who are far away,
but rather on the contrary. So first and foremost, be beautiful to the people that are around you.
It's all well and good saying, "Oh, I'm really identified with the Uyghur people,
or the suffering people in Iran."
All of these are valuable and significant and important causes.
But if you, in your conduct, Gandhi is saying, are not being nice to the people that are around you, your family, your colleagues, your literal neighbours, did not our Lord Jesus Christ similarly say, love thy neighbour.
And this word neighbour is significant because it means who is with you?
Who is it that you can actually impact and affect?
It's the people that are with you now.
As we live in increasingly atomized worlds, detached from reality, living embalmed in formaldehyde screens, unable to have organic connection with another, Gandhi reminds us that morality and principles are things we can practice every day.
But they're not meaningless.
It's not glib.
It's important.
On the other hand, a man who allows himself to be lured by the distant scene and runs to the ends of the earth for service is not only foiled in his ambition, but also fails in his duty towards his neighbours.
One must, as far as possible, purchase one's requirements locally, and do not buy things imported from foreign lands, which can easily be manufactured in the country.
So, he is implying an economic policy in addition.
Think about how people now talk about the problems that are inherent in outsourced labour, the problems of people not having work to do, the incoming AI revolution.
Elsewhere, Gandhi talked about the dangers of technology in trinkets.
The guy's writing in the 1940s.
What would he make of a world where we're offered luxury, convenience, safety, pleasure, in exchange for what?
A kind of incarceration in technology.
AI.
AI.
That leads me to think of AI.
Elon Musk, literally, we're talking about Elon Musk and warning about the dangers of AI when he was talking about technology there.
You know, he was onto something, you could say.
It's like a kind of profit, because Gandhi's activism doesn't come from a kind of a secular perspective on simply organising resources, although he touches, of course, on these things.
It comes from a deep spiritual set of values, the enshrines here in this book.
One must, as far as possible, purchase one's requirements locally.
Do not buy things imported from foreign lands, which can easily be manufactured in your country.
There is no place for self-interest in Swadeshi, which enjoins the sacrifice of oneself for the family, of the family for the village, of the village for the country, and of the country for humanity.
That there are ever increasing circles of obligation to one another.
Awaken in the self.
Be of service to your family and neighbours.
Love your wider community.
Be aware of your place as a global citizen.
This is the opposite of globalism.
You are...
Held within a superstructure of complex bureaucracies governed by unelected organizations, supported by apparently philanthropic organizations that have billions that were hard won and difficult to explain.
Peculiar billions come from relationships in big tech and the military.
I'm speaking, of course, of organizations like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
I'm talking, of course, of organizations like the Clinton Foundation.
I'm saying that what Gandhi was fundamentally interested in was Personal freedom, but a personal freedom that's not about indulgence, that's not about glorification of the personal identity, but a kind of disavowing of that.
An awakening to who you could be and how you can change and empower the world.
That's Brandy on Gandhi this week.
I expect there to be a graphic made for this next week, Jacking Graphics, and I don't want it to be patronising.
Glib.
Or racist.
Although, having me appear somehow on, over, or next to Gandhi, I would be well into.
Do you think you can manage that, Jack?
Certainly enough pictures of you in blankets as well.
Yeah, yeah.
There's me in there.
Have you got any ideas, Jack?
Look how he communicates like that.
He never takes his eyes off the screen.
And then all the time these eyes are on that screen, he's never once conceived of a worthwhile graphic, has he?
In all of that time.
All right.
OK, now, listen, we promised you this.
That's why you've joined us over on Rumble.
And if you're on Rumble right now, I say get into your... How about your face on Gandhi's T-shirt robe?
Yeah, I like that, Firegirl2020.
Thanks, man.
That's great.
Brandy on Gandhi.
This is nice.
Thanks, Art by Wendy.
Appreciate it.
You can join the comments there by joining us on Locals.
Now, when we were over on YouTube, we promised you a conversation with a brilliant medical man, a physician who cares, a man who puts his healing first, a man who's willing to confront institutional corruption.
He's a family doctor and health activist.
He's here to talk to us today.
It's Dr. Bob Gill.
Hello, Dr. Bob.
Thanks for joining us.
You've grown a full beard.
You've lost weight.
You look really, really different.
What the hell's been going on?
Hi, Russell.
Yeah, I wanted to come along and match yours and Gareth's beard, so I thought I'd join the club.
You have.
I mean, you look sort of sexier, but you also look like you've been through something.
Has anything... What's happened to you?
What have you been doing?
Have you been involved in activism?
Have you got stuck into something?
No, I've been low-carb, intermittent fasting, and I'm training for a rowing challenge at the moment, so I'm feeling good.
Look after the breath, Dr. Bob.
Look after the breath.
Intermittent fasting, get that lemon water down your neck first thing in the morning.
That's what I will say to you.
So you're giving medical advice to a doctor?
I'm happy to hear it.
You give yourself a heart attack, mate.
You want to watch out, you give yourself a connery.
Dr. Bob, thank you so much for joining us.
The first thing we wanted to talk to you about was Monica Bertagnoli, aka the new Fauci.
She previously received $290 million in funding from Pfizer.
Is she an appropriate person to be working in the position that she is?
When many people suspect that Anthony Fauci's ties to the pharmaceutical industry led to his mismanagement, some people are saying, of the pandemic and possibly, you know, a lot of people talk about how Fauci handled the AIDS crisis 20 years earlier or so.
What do you think about these kind of figures that have had financial ties to Big Pharma being in government positions?
I think it's a very big problem.
It doesn't bode well.
This new appointee got Anthony Fauci's blessing.
If you look at Joe Biden's record in office, it's not been very good in terms of improving America's health care.
But the corporate lobby, the corporate How do they hold power?
They hold power through donations.
They hold power through political contributions.
They hold power through regulatory capture.
And the NIH should be acting in the public interest.
But when you have people heavily sponsored or funded by private business and drug companies, well, that raises the obvious question of conflicts of interest.
You know, what are these people going to get in return for their investment?
You know, in America, their health care system from the 1970s has drifted more and more into corporate control and away from providing cheap, effective health care for the population.
And this seems to me a continue along that trajectory.
We have just found out that the United States spends more on health care than any other country, but life expectancy is going down.
We've got a graph that demonstrates that.
Can you talk us through why you imagine that this peculiar ascendancy is occurring?
Well, you can see the graph which compares the United States to Western developed countries.
They started to drift away to the right and downwards.
That means more expensive, lower life expectancy.
And what they did back in the 70s was to adopt what's called a managed care model.
And this was revealed via the Nixon tapes where the person advocating this shift expressed very clearly that it was all about making more money.
In fact, to quote from what was on the tapes, the less care you provide, the more money you make.
So this was a starting point of a drift away from rational health care.
But the other discrepancy, the American system is extremely bureaucratic.
Up to one dollar in every three goes out in administration, management, And, you know, shareholder dividend and CEO pay.
So a lot of it is hemorrhaging.
It's not delivering any health care.
The way Big Pharma is regulated or lack of regulation means that they can profiteer and charge very high prices for drugs that we get a lot cheaper in this country.
And there's also a perverse incentive.
The more privatized the health care system is, potentially, the more unnecessary interventions you get.
And the more waste there is due to fragmentation.
So, you know, in the States they have a very poorly developed primary care or family physician system and they're dealing with problems downstream.
There's no profit in prevention.
They wait until the problems arise and then they come up with very expensive solutions.
I'm minded of the conversation we had with Callie Means, a whistleblower against the food industries for whom he previously worked, who's joining us at the Community Festival in July.
There's a link in the chat if you want to join us there.
There are still some tickets available and I'd love you to come actually, Dr. Bob.
He pointed out to us and made it sort of evident and clear that the food industry is irresponsible in the type of food that is promoted that they with their knowledge and understanding of like seed oils and processed food and It seems sometimes like these companies are using human beings as a kind of chattel, sort of moving them from one market to another market, filling us up with bad food, giving us bad advice, and health insurance companies are incentivized to make patients appear more ill than they
Actually are.
It feels like systemically there are such serious problems, Doctor, that was nothing less than a radical re-evaluation and even the abolition of some of these systems is what's required.
Tell us a little more about the way that health insurance companies function, if you would.
Yeah, so what you've referenced there is a type of fraud.
It's a fraud called upcoding, whereby if you present a patient as being sicker than they really are, you can attract a greater fee when the government is paying.
And what the private insurers are doing, they are increasing their expansion into the American healthcare by taking over the control of government-funded healthcare.
So that includes Medicare, And Medicaid.
So these are two systems that the taxpayer funds.
And the reason they have them is because the insurance industry wasn't interested in unprofitable patients.
But now they've realized if we can get our hands on government funding as well, all the more profit for our shareholders.
So they are expanding rather than their control being limited, which is what we were promised by Bernie Sanders and others.
We were going to rein in the power of these companies, but exactly the opposite is taking place.
Do you think then a candidate like RFK, certainly based on what he's saying, could make a significant difference in this field?
Do you need someone that's willing to go up against corporations?
Do you need someone that's willing to confront the deep state to meaningfully make a difference in this area?
I know Gareth's got points on this subject.
It's obviously an area that we're continually looking at, but what do you think about the possibility of change being induced by apparently radical candidates, although all they seem to me to be is authentic, honest and willing to go up against Big power.
You know, I'm talking about the likes of Marianne Williamson and RFK.
Have you heard anything encouraging from those candidates?
Yeah, I heard your interview.
I was captivated by, you know, I got lost track of the number of truth bombs he was dropping.
The Kennedy family have history in trying to improve The conditions of normal people.
His uncle was also responsible for introducing health reforms that did improve access to health care for working class people.
You know, Robert Kennedy Jr.
has a track record of looking after and advocating as a lawyer for environmental causes.
And if you look at the root cause of ill health, well, it comes down to environment.
It comes down to food, comes down to pollution.
It comes down to stress, and we are living in a neoliberal economic structure which makes all those problems worse.
You know, if you have a polluting company pouring poison into rivers, Affecting the sea life, what we end up consuming, well, that's going to have a health effect.
But at the moment, our economic model allows corporations to walk away from the environmental impact and the public pick up the tab.
This is called an externality.
So the profits are theirs and the downside we have to pick up.
Dr. Bob, I'm sure you will be aware of the Stanford designed PCR type test that was able to diagnose whether non-symptomatic COVID patients were uninfectious, were not infectious.
We were told, of course, that during the pandemic that even if you weren't showing symptoms, you were likely still able to spread infection.
There was a test that proved that this was not the case.
That test was available as early as May 2020.
Doesn't this seem to be yet another piece of evidence, Doctor, that the pandemic was handled in order to direct policy in a particular direction?
Yeah, there were lots of perverse incentives to be doing things that didn't really make sense.
The PCR test in particular, you know, if you repeat the cycle, then you amplify the signal so many times, then you're going to increase the false positive rate.
And some of these companies were rewarded on the number of positive tests.
So it increased the incentive for them to produce positive tests.
So it was crazy.
And the private companies that were outsourced to do this work, there wasn't much checking and regulation.
So, you know, these positive tests on asymptomatic people was scientifically flawed.
The PCR test itself was never meant as a screening tool.
It was meant as a scientific tool to be used in research.
So, you know, we were, Fauci and co, managed to have a very expensive and unsuccessful management of a pandemic, which just happened to enrich a lot of corporations.
That's just a side effect.
One of the only side effects that can actually be openly discussed due to the way that this narrative is being controlled.
Have you got anything to add, my dear and beloved friend?
Oh, just a point, Dr. Bob, if you don't mind.
Yes.
[Music]
A quick question about just returning to what you were saying about drug prices.
There was a new report that's come out that's saying American families are spending 40 billion extra a year when pharmaceutical companies are making a legal decision.
So these are illegal anti-competitive schemes that pharmaceutical companies deploy to basically boost their profits.
This is a way of keeping generic medicines, which would be far cheaper for the American
public, for things like cancer drugs, blood pressure drugs, things like that.
When it's been reported that these are now illegal anti-competitive schemes, and we're
hearing that the new head of the NIH is receiving almost $300 million from Pfizer, are these
the kind of, when you're talking about what are they getting in return, is it things like
you won't be taken to court or you won't go to prison for illegal activities?
Like, are these some of the kind of bargains that you're, that you're kind of alluding to?
Yeah, well, you have a charade of regulation in the States.
Let's say a company like, who produced OxyContin, the Sackler family, you know, half a million people died as a result of Opiate addiction and the consequence of opiate addiction but nobody goes to prison.
They pay a fine.
The fine is often a fraction of the profit that they've earned.
And then we've moved on to the next tragedy, right?
So this is a pattern of regulation that does not effectively deter, does not effectively punish, and no CEO is held accountable.
And similarly, if you're sponsoring politicians and you fund the regulators, well, you're not going to get effective legislation.
So you have a bar on legislation that protects the public, and that's what the companies buy with their influence.
Wow, what an incredible piece of information.
Dr. Bob, quite understandably and justifiably, you are getting a lot of love in our chat over on Locals.
You can join that by pressing the red button.
Not you, doctor, you're too busy for any of that.
But people here are just saying that they're enjoying your own truth bombs.
They're commenting on the incredible revelations that you've provided in this conversation.
And I'd like to add to that my personal gratitude For the great work you do and restoring some faith and helping me to believe that there that in the main physicians and medics care about people and even institutions of research are about prolonging and improving human life and it's just that somehow we found ourselves co-opted by corrupt and maligned systems but together there is a hope because if we have new voices of leadership and change such as yours we can all rally behind you so thanks a great deal Dr. Bob.
Thank you very much, Russell.
Thanks, Gareth.
Keep looking after yourself.
Keep losing the weight.
You look very, very, very sexy.
You can follow Dr. Bob's work on Twitter.
He's at Dr. B. Gill.
OK, follow him over there on Elon Musk's Citadel of Truth.
Shall we see before I go?
Sexy pervert, did I say?
Yeah, that's what the unicorn plug saying down there.
Let's see if he's revived.
I think we all know the answer to that.
Hold on.
Fantastic.
Oh, no, that's my last message.
You know, when you do a voice note, the voice note just disappears.
No return message from Elon yet, guys.
But don't worry, do you reckon we'll be able to get Elon on by next week?
Of course we will.
Well, I'm not sure by next week.
Why not?
Well, we'll give it a go.
I think we will be able to.
Thank you so much, all of you, for joining us over there on local.
So we've put Dr. Bob's information into the chat.
Now, we've got a fantastic piece of journalism to show you right now.
Over the course of the week, some great stuff coming up.
We're going to be talking to a spy, who's going to blow the whole bloody lid off this game, aren't we?
An actual wide-eyed spy based in Brussels, who's willing to blow the bloody lid on the whole thing.
The CIA, the MI5s, the FBIs, all of them.
Aren't you Gal?
This spy, we're really making some headway.
But now, get over there, join us in locals, join the chat.
Should we?
Why don't we?
And this is just a suggestion.
Go on then.
Why don't you kiss me, you mad fool?
Why don't we now have a deeper look?
You're doing an Elon, aren't you?
Are you trying to put pauses?
Yeah, I'm doing more pauses.
Right.
I'm very confident in myself.
I thought that's what you were doing.
I am, I'm like Elon.
I'm minded to think of the film... Goonies.
Didn't it go in Goonies, the one called Chunk?
That's right.
So... Truffle Shuffle?
Truffle Shuffle.
Think about what?
You sons of bitches!
Um, hey, like, you want to know more about that story we were just talking about, right?
The CDC?
How people that were asymptomatic, oh, you better wear a mask, you better never go out your house, you better take all these expensive experimental medicines because otherwise you killed your nan.
You're just another Harold Shipman.
You're just another nan.
What are you looking over there for?
Is that the right... Am I teeing up the right content?
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure that's true.
Well, it doesn't say that.
It says that... I know, I think it's wrong.
Well, we didn't have time to put that together.
It's not that one.
I don't like it, but I've got to live with it.
Actually, no.
No, I've learned a little something.
You want to change his mind?
I've learned a little something from a man called Gandhi.
I'm getting one of Gandhi's principles.
Oh, not this again.
What do you mean, not this again?
This is good.
Truth!
By Gandhi.
Yeah, that's right.
Join us in locals.
You join us.
We'll just watch your hands and don't touch your face.
That's good advice, nature's child.
At any time of the year.
For someone like Gareth Roy, have you heard what he does at barbecues?
He farted a sausage out of his own mouth.
Truth is the first principle.
That's why football is nice.
One of the things we do here.
Not this again with Gareth, says Sonny B.
Truth!
The first of Gandhi's 11 vowels for my item.
Brandy on Gandhi.
Good item.
I'd like to see Brandy spelt with a H-I.
Same as Gandhi.
Nice.
I'd like to see me dressed in a blanket.
Yes.
Me and Gandhi like that.
I don't know.
And then maybe some sort of Indian sound in music.
I don't know.
All right.
Cultural appropriation.
Got to do what you got to do.
Sure.
Got to do what you got to do in a situation like that.
Okay, so, truth.
Truth is God.
Devotion to this is the sole justification for our existence.
Without truth it's impossible to observe any principles or rules in life.
There should be truth in thought, truth in speech, and truth in action.
Second principle, Ahisma, or love.
Truth alone is being God himself, and the only means of realizing it is Ahisma, or love.
Without Ahisma, it's not possible to seek and find truth.
Not to hurt any living thing is no doubt part of Ahisma, but it is its least expression.
For the principle of Ahisma is hurt by every evil thought, by hatred, by wishing ill to anybody.
It's also violated by our holding on to what the world needs.
Right, we've got to commit ourselves to truth.
We've got to recognise that our consciousness is the crucible of reality.
That if we imagine new worlds, that we can create them.
I don't mean in some sort of crazy, wacky, woo-woo, ooh, the secret way.
I mean that first, you have to acknowledge there's a problem.
Second, you have to believe that change is possible.
Third, you have to be willing to live by a new doctrine in order to create new realms.
And I think this is what we can do together.
Yeah, the FBI should have read a bit of Gandhi, shouldn't they?
I should have read that, guys, before you went and Russiagated us into a bunch of lies, bringing Obama into the mix, Clinton in the mix.
The FBI, this is really funny, actually, this story, because I knew they were lying.
We're going to go now, because I've got to go to Eton for reasons I'll explain to you later.
Join us tomorrow, not for more of the same, but for more of the different.