RFK Jr. The Defender - Guitarist Loses Fingers with Jeff Diamond Aired: 2022-07-05 Duration: 15:33 [00:00:00] Hey everybody, we're going to share with you a really disturbing story today, and it's about one of the many stories that the press is not covering about vaccine injuries from these mRNA and the other vaccines. [00:00:15] My guest today is a professional, a very, very successful professional musician. [00:00:21] He has made his life, his livelihood for at least four decades as a guitarist. [00:00:27] He's an extraordinary guitarist. [00:00:29] You can look up his videos on YouTube and see how skilled he is. [00:00:35] He's played as a backup guitarist for the Platters, for the Coasters. [00:00:39] He is a professional vocal instructor, but he's also just a workaday musician who's played in Las Vegas. [00:00:47] Virtually any city that you can name, he has played in. [00:00:52] He has made a lot of money and a living for himself and his family. [00:00:57] In July, on the July 4th weekend of last year, he got the Johnson& Johnson vaccine. [00:01:04] As a result of that vaccine, he ended up in a three-week coma. [00:01:08] He was intubated so that it ruined his vocal cords and he can no longer sing. [00:01:14] He was intubated too long. [00:01:16] Most disturbing, the blood clots, which affected almost all his organs. [00:01:22] And I'm going to let him tell you a little bit about this. [00:01:25] Most disturbingly, there were pervasive blood clots that shut down his kidneys, shut down many of his other organs, affected his hands and feet. [00:01:34] And as a result of that, he had amputations on eight of his fingers. [00:01:41] And he now can no longer make his livelihood. [00:01:46] And this is something, again, you won't read about in the press. [00:01:50] His plight has not been covered, and the mainstream media will not touch. [00:01:55] There are now, as you know, hundreds of thousands of stories like this that are not being reported in the mainstream media. [00:02:03] But I wanted to do the public service of letting one of these Victims of these kind of vaccine injuries talk to us today and tell a story. [00:02:14] And Jeff wanted to tell a story to the world. [00:02:17] Jeff, tell us what happened. [00:02:20] Well, this all started last year. [00:02:24] I had a gig in Atlanta, Georgia, over the July 4th weekend. [00:02:32] And I got back from Georgia and... [00:02:38] On July the 9th, I got the Johnson& Johnson COVID shot. [00:02:46] And the reason I got the Johnson& Johnson COVID shot in the first place is because I kept putting it off. [00:02:51] I was taking care of my mother. [00:02:53] I was her caregiver. [00:02:55] And that's the only reason that I got this shot in the first place. [00:02:59] Or I wouldn't have. [00:03:00] I didn't want to come back and, God forbid, give her COVID. So I got the COVID shot. [00:03:08] On July the 9th. [00:03:11] And then about a week or a week and a half after that, I was found unconscious in my apartment. [00:03:20] And I was in a coma, as you mentioned. [00:03:23] It ended up for about three weeks. [00:03:26] And I was taken to a hospital near my residence here in the state of Minnesota. [00:03:37] I was, as I mentioned, unconscious. [00:03:40] I was intubated, my understanding. [00:03:43] I came out of the coma and come to find out that my fingers, eight of them, were amputated. [00:03:54] And to my shock and horror and amazement that this was done, And there were several people, including doctors and everybody else, the person, the surgeon that did the amputations. [00:04:09] And obviously I had questions and everything else that went on. [00:04:14] My kidney function was at zero. [00:04:17] I had to wear obviously a diaper. [00:04:19] I couldn't, my balance, everything was off. [00:04:22] I was taking medication that I come to find out that why I was on it. [00:04:26] They were giving me antipsychotic medication, which I had never in my life taken before. [00:04:32] And all this medication that I was on. [00:04:35] And when I found this out, I mean, I obviously, I mean, I hit the roof and told them, obviously, stop taking it. [00:04:43] And they did absolutely nothing for me at all in the six weeks that I was in the hospital and in this setting at all. [00:04:53] Nothing. [00:04:54] You would think that at least they would take me out and walk me around in the summer, at least in a wheelchair or something. [00:05:02] You know, to get me out of the room. [00:05:03] But nothing at all. [00:05:05] I had to wait for the six-week period before I went into a nursing home or into a skilled nursing home area for my recovery. [00:05:17] And that continued. [00:05:20] I was in there for about a month and a half where, again, you know, I was lucky to be alive. [00:05:26] I had a feeding tube, by the way, I forgot to mention, that was put inside of me as well. [00:05:32] That burst open while I was in this nursing home area. [00:05:37] And that almost killed me. [00:05:40] They had to rush me down to an emergency room at HCMC, which is the hospital, which wasn't my choice to go to. [00:05:49] But again, the person, you know, saved my life. [00:05:52] So everything, again, that was done. [00:05:54] But the doctor in there actually saved my life, you know, with this feeding tube that burst open. [00:05:59] That also happened to me. [00:06:01] So beside the amputation, and I have been in pain with these fingers ever since. [00:06:08] Now, okay, the feeding tube was placed at the hospital when I was in there, and I had to wait, obviously. [00:06:15] They wouldn't take it out. [00:06:16] I wanted them to take it out. [00:06:18] They would not remove the feeding tube. [00:06:21] I had to wait, I believe it was like six to eight weeks before that they would take the feeding tube out. [00:06:28] The doctor that Saw me that was in the hospital, downtown Minneapolis, was going to try to do it, but he was told that he couldn't do it. [00:06:40] Although, again, he saved my life. [00:06:42] You know, again, blood was gushing out of my stomach, but I got through that as well. [00:06:47] So that was the second thing that took place. [00:06:50] So again, you know, with the pain that I've been experiencing that has been going through my fingers. [00:06:55] Now, I've been seeing doctors at the Mayo Clinic There's a place in Rochester that has made fingers for me that possibly I could play guitar again. [00:07:07] The fingers, however, that they've made look great, but the functionality of them have not been... [00:07:14] We've been working on that. [00:07:16] It's not working out as far as to play guitar again. [00:07:20] Possible playing piano. [00:07:23] As far as my singing voice, that has bounced back a little bit. [00:07:28] But still having a big problem with that, getting my voice back from what has taken place, from what I have been going through. [00:07:39] Again, all from this Johnson& Johnson, I believe, from the Johnson& Johnson COVID shot that I got. [00:07:46] Well, you say you believe it. [00:07:49] Do the doctors acknowledge that this came from your vaccine? [00:07:54] There's been one doctor that says a possibility. [00:07:58] Most of them have said that they won't say one way or the other. [00:08:03] They have actually, there has been one doctor that has said possibly that it has, but most of them won't commit and say that it has or it hasn't. [00:08:15] They won't commit to it and say it has or it From a Johnson shot. [00:08:20] Has anybody reported your injury to VAERS, the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, as a vaccine injury or potential vaccine injury? [00:08:29] Yes, it has been reported. [00:08:31] I have an attorney that I found that has reported it to the CIPC court and haven't heard anything back from that. [00:08:40] My understanding is that you cannot sue the pharmaceutical companies, but it has been reported to To, I guess, the agency, it's called, what, CIPC, my understanding. [00:08:51] It's called CIPC, CIPC Court. [00:08:54] And who reported it? [00:08:56] Did your doctor report it or your lawyer? [00:08:58] The attorney, the lawyer did. [00:09:01] You don't know if your doctor has reported your injury as a potential vaccine injury to the vaccine adverse reporting system? [00:09:11] That I do not know. [00:09:12] Okay, well, you might want to ask your doctor to do that. [00:09:16] Particularly, you know, I'm not a Minnesota lawyer, but I can tell you that it's important for your court case that it is reported to the viruses. [00:09:26] I'm sure your attorney knows that. [00:09:28] Did you have any other injuries? [00:09:30] Did you have, like, brain fog, any kind of brain injuries, or cognitive difficulties? [00:09:36] No, not that I can remember as far as Any brain injury, so to speak. [00:09:43] It was primarily the zero percent of the kidney function. [00:09:48] There was no kidney function. [00:09:51] Incontinence, the balance issues that I could not balance at all. [00:09:57] And then, of course, as I mentioned, the main thing was the amputations with the blood clots was a big issue, but not that I can remember. [00:10:06] With any brain injuries, so to speak, no, that I can remember. [00:10:12] When you woke up, were you in a coma solid for three weeks or were you going back in and out? [00:10:20] I was in a coma for three weeks. [00:10:22] I don't remember. [00:10:23] Take us to the moment when you wake up and Somebody tells you that your fingers are amputated. [00:10:32] Were there a bunch of doctors in the room who told you, or how did you find that out? [00:10:39] Yes. [00:10:40] Actually, somebody did mention it, one of the doctors, and I kind of looked. [00:10:44] The surgeon that performed it, it was a plastic surgeon that did that, that did the amputation, and he had mentioned something, and I had looked at my fingers. [00:10:57] And he is the one, I believe, that pointed it out. [00:11:00] Yes. [00:11:01] That brought it up. [00:11:03] And what was your response at that moment? [00:11:06] Well, one of two things. [00:11:08] They said that I could have been very despondent and could have taken it, been depressed for the rest of my life. [00:11:15] And I was told the way my personality is and the way I looked at it was very, again, I could have looked at it in a few different ways. [00:11:24] The way I just kept approaching it is that it could have been where I could have been depressed or just kind of not laughed it off, but approached it a little differently and just said, okay, well, this is what it has to be and take a day-to-day kind of situation and Kind of live with it and do what I needed to do to try to survive and do what I needed to do. [00:11:46] It was acceptance. [00:11:49] Yeah. [00:11:51] When they made that decision, was that completely a medical decision or was there members of your family, consulted or friends or anybody else? [00:12:01] That's a good question. [00:12:03] The person that was going to make the decision was supposed to have been my mother. [00:12:07] But my mother had dementia. [00:12:10] And she was in a nursing home situation. [00:12:15] And so then they turned to my brother. [00:12:18] And my brother claims that he didn't want to have anything to do with it to make any decision whatsoever. [00:12:24] So I'm not exactly sure how they came to the decision to make. [00:12:29] He claims that they told the doctors to ask me, but obviously I was in a coma. [00:12:35] So I don't know how they were going to ask me to make That decision to have this done. [00:12:42] So I don't know what gave them, again, the right. [00:12:46] I don't know what I would have said. [00:12:47] I don't know what if, again, to make the decision to have my fingers amputated the way I made my living playing guitar, to have it done or not do it. [00:12:56] But I was told that if I didn't have them done, that they would self-amputate and that I would not be alive, that I would die. [00:13:04] That's what I was told. [00:13:06] And so do you have hope that you might at some point go back to your profession? [00:13:12] I'm hoping I'll be able to play guitar again, yes. [00:13:15] I have been going out and doing shortened, if you will, kind of gigs, singing telegrams or shortened type of engagements where I can do some type of singing engagements. [00:13:30] But yes, it is my hope. [00:13:32] And even if it is playing piano, I tried to play a little bit of piano. [00:13:36] I started on piano. [00:13:37] I'm not as good a piano player as I am a guitarist. [00:13:40] I was quite proficient playing guitar, more so than I am a pianist. [00:13:45] I was a better guitarist than I was playing piano, if you will. [00:13:49] Yeah, you know, I've watched you play guitar on YouTube. [00:13:53] In fact, I sent a YouTube video of you yesterday to Eric Clapton. [00:13:59] I was also very impressed by your guitar playing. [00:14:02] So that is a really nice endorsement. [00:14:06] Let me ask you one last question. [00:14:09] Why did you want to do this podcast? [00:14:12] Because I want to get the word out. [00:14:14] I mean, what has happened to me, obviously, I don't want to see this happen to anybody else. [00:14:20] And, I mean, I think it's a crime, what has happened. [00:14:24] What has gone on. [00:14:26] People have got to be held accountable for what has happened. [00:14:32] Especially, you know, as I say, I just don't want it to be about me, me, me, but I'm sure there are a lot of other people that this has happened to in the United States, if not around the world. [00:14:45] But this is definitely has got to be brought to the forefront and brought to the light And some people have got to be held accountable for what has happened. [00:14:56] And it's not right. [00:14:57] It definitely is not. [00:14:59] It's not right what has gone on and what continues to go on. [00:15:04] Is there any way people can find you and support you? [00:15:08] Yeah, JeffDiamondMusic.com. [00:15:10] That's how they can find me. [00:15:12] And I'm on Facebook and I'm on Twitter as well. [00:15:17] But yeah, JeffDiamondMusic.com. [00:15:19] Jeff Diamond, thank you for your courage and your example, and thank you for joining us today. [00:15:26] Thank you for your time, and I appreciate you having me and letting me tell my story. [00:15:31] Thank you very, very much. [00:15:32] God bless.