Viva Mondays! Interview with a vaccine -injured Canadian, Chet Chisolm
|
Time
Text
Why?
You said you're going to let Democrats appoint their own members to the committee, but you've also indicated you're not going to let them...
I was very clear early on.
Let me phrase something very direct to you.
If you got the briefing I got from the FBI, you wouldn't have Swalwell on any committee.
And you're going to tell me other Democrats couldn't fill that slot?
He cannot get a security clearance in the private sector.
So would you like to give him a government clearance?
You asked me questions about Santos.
You asked the questions about Swalwell.
Not only was he getting a clearance, he was inside an intel committee.
He had more information than the majority of all the members.
Did you ever raise that issue?
No.
Nope.
But you should have.
You're going to tell me there's 200 other Democrats that couldn't fill that slot?
But they kept him on it.
The only way that they even knew it came forward is when they went to nominate him to the intel committee.
And then the FBI came and told the leadership then, he's got a problem.
And they kept him on.
That jeopardized all of us.
Adam Schiff openly lied to the American public.
All right, so we're listening in to new House Speaker, Kevin McCarthy.
Oh, you're listening.
Taking questions from reporters, a lot of questions from reporters.
I'll tell you what.
It doesn't mean...
Let me see where we are here.
It doesn't mean that McCarthy is now, all of a sudden, totally trustworthy.
That he's...
That all of the things that people have said about him for the last little while are wrong.
But it's reassuring because that's blistering.
That's as blistering...
What's the word?
That's as blistering a public evisceration as you can ever possibly get.
He said Adam Schiff.
It's funny.
He said, I think I heard a T at the end of Adam Schiff.
And then he also said Kep without the T at the end.
He had a very weird pronunciation.
But he...
Promises made, promises kept.
I wanted to start with a Justin Trudeau.
I wanted to start with an Omar Algebra.
But I said, he's growing on me.
He's starting off well.
You know, there's the whole thing where once upon a time he was being very, very hard.
I would say unfairly hard and I would say unrealistically critical of the Trump January 6th insurrection.
The most unarmed insurrection you've ever seen, but a violent protest in certain pockets, undoubtedly.
He might be a politician that floats with the tide, like most of them, like 99.9% of them.
I'll tell you one politician who doesn't drift with the current, Maxime Bernier, for whatever you agree or disagree, and some people might think it's a flaw, some people might think it's a quality, a character asset.
Maxime Bernier does not drift with the political currents.
He stands there like a beam that has been affixed in a foundation.
Most of them are like that.
So back in the day when January 6th was the new 9-11, the new Pearl Harbor, it was the greatest attack on democracy.
Yeah, McCarthy, maybe in order to save his political skin, he had to go along with that manufactured narrative.
Now...
I think we're getting to the point where the political tide is not putting up with this corrupt bull garbage.
Adam Schiff.
Schiff.
Shifty eyes McSchiff for brains.
Schiff, I said, by the way.
Pathological, proven, sociopathic liar.
Eric Swalwell.
Eric Swalwell, whose greatest defense on Twitter is three FBI agents or whatever, you know, confirmed I did nothing wrong with my relationship with Fang Fang, a Chinese spy.
Who was the other one who was nailing there?
Schiff?
Swalwell?
I forget the third one.
It's becoming politically popular to say enough is enough with this crap, and maybe McCarthy is either growing a spine or just going along with whatever the political drift is now.
Okay, so hold on.
I refreshed Viva's Rumble Channel, and there was a new stream up.
Am I running two streams?
There were technical issues before the stream started, people.
I'm not saying it wasn't me to point the finger.
I will take responsibility where I can because that's how I fix the problem.
This problem apparently was a technical problem on Rumble's end.
And I think they resolved it.
But I was trying to do a test.
To set up a new stream to see if it was the same problem with that new stream.
So I don't know now if I have two streams running on Rumble.
It is Viva Mondays.
Meanwhile, in Twitter, we're on the cover page of Rumble.
Yes!
My content.
I'm going to kill the second stream, which had a number two in front of it.
Actually, let me just see if it's live.
It is live.
It is live.
I'm going to tell...
Everyone...
Everyone, go to the other stream.
Sorry about the confusion.
So I set up another stream.
It seems that there are people there.
Because I deleted it from the stream yard, but I didn't end it on Rumble.
So I'm ending it.
Delete.
Are you sure you want to delete this video?
Deleted.
Hopefully everybody figures out how to go to the stream.
Viva Mondays, meanwhile in Canada.
And the Twitter files, Pfizer files.
So tonight, by the way, when I said it was going to be something new, it's not because I was going to screw things up like many people think I've done.
Tonight, I'm doing something new because I'm interviewing someone from Canada.
You've seen him in the chat.
You've seen him in the chat a lot.
He's been around a lot, and he's always had actually quite insightful things to say.
And it's a weird thing.
We have digital relationships with people we've never met before.
And as much as you can ever know someone who you've never met, I know who Chisholm is.
I've seen him in the chat.
I've seen him in the rants.
We know we have become connected with mutual people.
And I know that in the chat, he says, talk to me about my vaccine injury because I believe I have been vaccine injured and I have some interesting things to tell you.
I'm from Canada.
I used to be an EMS or I am an EMS.
Currently, potentially, I'm not sure what his work status is, but we're going to get to it.
Where I feel a little bit naked in all of this is I want to interview an individual I've never met before.
I want to make sure the individual is who they say they are, short of asking for a picture of a license, which still won't tell me anything.
Although I think I even got more of that information in my due diligence.
And then at the end of the day, you never know.
So people are going to come under the spotlight to share their story.
And they're going to be subjected to the scrutiny of the interwebs.
And I do the best I can.
And hopefully that proves to be good enough.
And if there are issues, we'll deal with it afterwards.
So we're going to interview Chet Chisholm tonight, who's going to talk to us about his vaccine injury.
What's going on in...
I believe he's in Nova Scotia.
Life is an EMS.
And the work that he's doing for CARES, which is a website that's been set up.
It's basically the Canadian version of VAERS.
It's the Canadian Adverse Events Reaction Site.
CARES.
You know what it is.
It's the Canadian verse.
So that's it.
If people are watching now, it should be...
Good.
Now the numbers are going up on the right channel, which is good, because I think people might have been on the wrong one.
There was a second stream that was called number two, Viva Mondays.
I didn't kill that link before I started this, so people might have been going there.
This is the good one.
While everyone comes and trickles in, let me make sure we're live on YouTube.
We are.
And before we get going, because I love having sponsors, but I hate doing sponsors.
You know, I hate doing the ad reads when the guest is there.
But this is a sponsored video, and I thank the good people at the two sponsors for today's stream.
You know them because I use them and I do them often.
EnviroCleanse and, I was going to say Field of Dreams, Field of Greens.
And now I realize, I never, I'm not even sure I ever realized that that was the connection.
So we're going to start with Field of Greens, people.
Field of Greens, one of the, say, I enjoy using the product that I sponsor because it makes it very easy to sponsor.
I don't have my, I don't have my container on the table.
Field of Greens, people are talking about, you know, a lot of stuff, to be healthy, exercise, yada, yada.
Actually, in the States, the pediatric associations are talking about surgery and drugs for Obese teenagers.
Obese kids.
You know, kids are overweight.
Kids are unhealthy.
What does the pediatric association say?
Well, give them medication and give them surgery.
No.
How about you just lead a healthy lifestyle?
Exercise.
Calories in, calories out.
But mostly diet.
People don't appreciate this.
You're supposed to eat five to six servings of raw fruits and vegetables a day.
And most people don't have five to six servings of raw fruits and vegetables a day.
What a solution is.
Second best solution.
First of all.
Eat your vegetables and your fruits.
Second best solution?
Field of greens.
Desiccated.
It's powdered fruits and vegetables.
I wish I had my thing here so I could show you.
Powdered fruits and vegetables.
It's basically like pulverized beef jerky of the vegetable nature and fruits.
You get the antioxidants.
You get the nutrients.
One scoop is one serving of fruits and vegetables.
If you do it twice a day, it's a healthy habit.
It's good for you.
Better than, you know, better than a lot of stuff.
You go to...
Fieldofgreens.com promo code VIVA will get you 15% off your first subscription and 10% off your first order, 10% off a subscription.
It looks like swamp water, but it tastes great.
And there's a reason why wetlands are the nutrient breeding grounds of the natural world.
Drinking this is the nutrient breeding grounds of your body.
Do it.
It's healthy.
Fieldofgreens.com promo code.
And then speaking of health, healthy body, healthy...
Air.
We'll do that one later.
You know, I'm going to bring in...
We're going to bring in Chet now.
Okay, so this is it, people.
Viva is spiritually naked now.
I chatted with Chet for five minutes before going live above and beyond texting and messages and super chats and rumble rants and all this stuff.
I know him, but I am naked to the world.
And Chet Chisholm is also going to be naked to the world now because he's going to come and tell his story of what's going on in Canada.
Subject to all of the scrutinizing eyes of the interwebs.
Three, two, one.
Chet, sir.
I can confirm I'm wearing pants, so I'm not that naked.
I'm wearing disgusting shorts and I'm not even going to show them.
Chet!
Let's hear this.
People are going to be...
Watching right now, have no idea who you are, have no idea why your story is important, and what you're doing in Canada, and let's try to raise awareness, share what's going on.
Who are you?
What's going on?
Yeah, so my name's Chet Chisholm.
I'm from Nova Scotia.
I've been a paramedic for going on 12 years now.
If you wanted confirmation, there's a certification I got for 10 years of service just the other day for being a full-time.
So you can go grab a uniform if you want.
I've been around in a lot of the communities.
I've talked to you.
You've seen me in the chat a lot.
Adam Kregler knows me quite well.
Carl Benjamin knows who I am.
I've talked to Carl quite a bit.
And I've spoken out about a lot of these things that have been happening over the last few years.
I've been part of the Canada Marches, spoke as part of their panel.
What else?
Starting to work with the CARES team.
I'm part of the National Citizens Inquiry, which is getting set up to investigate the response to COVID, which is currently being done right now, and testimonies will be starting, I think, in March.
I'm also...
One of the dirty under-vaccinated because I was only vaccinated once and was injured as a result, which prevents me from working as a paramedic in Nova Scotia because you're required to have two doses because healthcare workers in this province are still mandated to do so.
Us and BC are the only places in Canada.
What else can I tell you?
I think I got most of it.
We're going to get into so much actually now.
So first of all, I got to ask how old you are.
How old do you think I am?
You'll get it wrong, I guarantee.
28. No, it could be.
Well, it could be 28. No, I'll say 33. I'll take it back.
33. 37. Well, son of a beasting.
You look good, Chet.
Yeah, thank you.
Born and raised in Nova Scotia.
Yep.
And I won't get into the family stuff, and that's more for a different type of discussion.
But you're an EMS, or I guess you were or are, but currently not working.
Yeah, so I'm...
I'm registered as a primary care paramedic.
I'm trained as an advanced care paramedic, but due to a workplace injury, the last leg of that certification got put on hold.
It's kind of part of how we got to where we're at now.
I've been working in Nova Scotia since 2011, mostly in northern Nova Scotia.
The base that you work out of is just where you park your car in the morning and then you land anywhere in the province.
I did my training in Halifax for the most part.
And then when I went back to school a few years ago to get my ACP, that was in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island.
I was there for two years to get my ACP.
I know I want to get into one issue and we're going to get into the fact that now, policy-wise, Nova Scotia...
Double jab.
Unless you're double jab, you can't work at your job.
And now Nova Scotia, I just posted the article, talked about it briefly yesterday.
Another 37-year-old woman died waiting in the ER.
Wait times are obscene.
588 people last year alone died waiting in the ER.
So we'll see how all of this terrible policy results in the actual cost of life.
But what was your, in your training, what was your accident?
What was your incident in your EMS training?
It's a little bit of a convoluted thing.
So the thing that put me off is I had an actual workplace injury when I was going to school because I had come home to pick up a shift while I was going back to school.
So I came home, worked on the ambulance for a weekend, and was injured on the job and had requested that Holland College make accommodations because, I'll just tell you, I had a seizure.
Never had a season before in my life.
Never had one since.
And so I lost my driver's license for six months.
So when you go to, whether you go to primary, get your primary care or your advanced care or critical care paramedic, like there's your didactic portion of school.
So you go in, it's like classroom and lab, and then you move into hospital clinical.
And then from there you go on to ambulance practicum or ambulance clinical.
You have all your classroom stuff, and then you have certain competencies that you need to accomplish over the course of your hospital and ride time.
So with not being able to drive, I said, hey, look, we've got to figure this out.
Can I do my ride time in Charlottetown where the school is?
And everyone was in agreement.
One of the guys that works on a day truck in Charlottetown, he was like, yeah, man, sounds great.
Well, I'll even pick you up in the morning.
Everyone knows what happened.
It's just bad luck.
Happens to people.
I went through my hospital clinical placements, like five stars across the board, was highly recommended by physicians and staff and whatnot.
And then when it came to actual ambulance ride time placement, I was given the option at last minute, I could either go to basically the other end of PEI, which was two hours away, or I could go to Cornerbrook, Newfoundland.
And I needed to be there Monday morning after finishing a shift on a Friday night in the emergency room.
Which I said, that's not possible, not even with...
Even if I had my driver's license in my Jeep, I can't get to Cornerbrook, Newfoundland and find a place to live in 48 hours.
For anybody who doesn't know, you have to take a ferry to get there if you go by car in the ferry.
If you take it from one spot, it's six hours, and if you go to St. John's, it's like 12 hours or something.
Oh yeah, it's ridiculous.
Or you've got to fly into St. John's and then drive across the province.
I got in touch with the guy I was supposed to do my ride time with and it turns out he was assigned to my roommate and one of my best friends who was like, "I'll just go somewhere else.
It's fine.
I don't care." Because we all know this is what Chet needs to do and the school wouldn't have it.
They told me to pound sand and so I raised a stink with the student union and filed a I guess like a grievance or like or what have you.
And then the school decided to double down and say, well, we're just going to kick you out of school because now we think you're a threat to patients and stuff and we're not going to accommodate you because we don't do that.
So I brought it before the Human Rights Commission and that's where it still sits.
And then going from that, I had some big stressors from work.
Come up with issues with, I'm not going to say specifically who or what, but like issues with things at work.
And it just kept building on the stressors and then having to deal with lawyers.
And then eventually me and my partner went on, when I finally got back to work, my partner and I went on a pretty bad 911 call where we had a 17-year-old girl in cardiac arrest.
And fortunately, we weren't able to resuscitate her.
And just, I'll stop you there so that nobody has any hypothesizing.
This is pre-COVID, 2019.
This is in, would be in March of 2019.
Okay, so March 2019, 17-year-old girl cardiac arrest, just so that nobody thinks this is the vaccine-induced part.
Yeah, it's not a vaccine thing.
I'm not going to, I won't say where it was.
No, it doesn't.
It was a...
She had an artificial cardiac valve, and it let go, and that caused issues.
And now, is part of the reason why I understood very briefly from our discussion before we started that I understood or surmised part of the reason for which you were unable to potentially, arguably, resuscitate was...
Were you having technical, like, mechanical issues?
Equipment issues?
So on...
When the...
Fortunately, that family, the...
The volunteer fire department was right across the street, like the firehouse, and they were having like a fire hall meeting.
And so as soon as the call went out, they were there within less than like two minutes.
They just had to basically run across the road.
But their AED failed after like first or second shock, I think.
So they get there first and then me and my partner show up maybe like 10 minutes later because we got to come from town to get to where we're going.
And so what happened is when her valve had let go, and so you have blood...
I won't spare you a lot of the gory details, but blood regurgitates back in the heart, back into the lungs, and then you have issues there.
So you have a heart that's doing its job.
It's trying to pump, but there's no blood there.
So you have effectively pulseless electrical activity, so you're not getting a pulse because there's no blood pressure.
And you can...
Run that all you want, and eventually it's...
There's no volume there, so you can't...
It's a lost cause, ultimately, in the end.
We worked it as long as we could.
We had problems with our gear, like our suction failed and whatnot.
We got her to the hospital.
Her heart was still contracting, still trying to do its thing, but it wasn't moving anything because there was nothing there to move.
We kept going.
I remember I called my supervisor and said, "Look, me and my partner just had a bad call.
Here's what it was.
We're going to clean the truck and we're going to go home." That's it.
That's the end of the day.
We're done for the day.
us and the other crew.
It took us a long time to clean the truck.
Both me and my partner went home and both ended up going off with PTSD after that due to complicated building of stressors and just a bad call.
And you get to a point where it's like flicking a switch.
Every time you flick a switch, your fight or flight response turns on.
And if it keeps getting flicked enough, eventually it gets stuck on.
And that's what happens.
And so I went off work and was getting treatment for PTSD with cognitive therapy and stuff.
I was going to do EMDR, which is eye movement desensitization and reprogramming.
The short version of it is it's kind of like if you took a clockwork orange, but you did it for a good reason like and I was doing all that leading up to the fall of 2019.
And in December, I was made aware by members of the Canadian Armed Forces that a lot of guys from Wuhan who competed in the military games there were coming home, had come home from China, and they were really, really, really sick with pneumonia.
Things were happening in China and there were some rumblings going on.
And the guy I know in the forces, he's just like, just keep your ear to the ground because this is probably going to affect you guys at some point.
You're probably going to see something come through work.
And so I started paying attention and kind of knew that something was off when the World Health Organization came out and said, hey, this isn't when Taiwan said, hey, we got...
Uh, patient to patient transfer with this new virus and like some severe pneumonia and, uh, who was like, nope, that's not a thing.
And I was like, well, I know that's a thing because I have guys telling me about it.
And, uh, then I started digging some more and, um, it was around the time, um, sometime in January.
Um, uh, that's when I'm on Tim, Tim Pool started his podcast with Adam Prigler.
And I just reached out at one point and said, hey man, I'm paramedic.
I'm off work.
I know the typical news media, they really suck at dissecting what medical terminology and stuff means.
So if you want some help or if you want some good sources and try to learn some of this stuff as it's unfolding, I'll help you out.
And he put me in touch with Adam Krigler and me and Adam have been talking back and forth for three years now.
Play games online together every once in a while.
He's an awesome guy.
You've spoken to him.
Yeah, he's awesome.
This is going to be the opportune moment, people.
We're going to end it on Rumble and go over to YouTube.
We're going to end it on YouTube.
Yeah, I probably got you demonetized already.
Forget that.
I don't care about that.
I'm not...
Hey, YouTube overlords.
I'm not going to Rumble to do something that I can't do on YouTube because I'm going to post the rest of this on YouTube tomorrow.
We're just going to go do it to reward a company that actually allows us to have free and open discussion.
We're going to get into your situation and what's going on in Canada.
So, everybody, ending on YouTube.
Three, two, one.
We're still on.
Brett, Chet, don't do anything embarrassing.
We are still on at Rumble, and I'm going to go look.
Okay.
All right.
So now, first of all, a lot of people who were paying attention or who had friends, contacts, whatever, They either say it now or they knew it at the time.
Something's coming down the line.
A lot of people had that assessment at the time and nobody was really listening.
You're an EMS.
As COVID starts, as we go into lockdown, do you continue working?
Are you back to work?
No, I haven't been able to go back to work yet.
It's a little complicated there.
What I first started doing was I started...
Researching all this stuff.
I was supposed to start EMDR, the Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprogramming Therapy on March.
The first week of March, whatever it was.
That was the first day of lockdowns.
It's funny because I had booked an appointment at the vet to drop my cat off.
I went and dropped my cat off.
And I'm like, sorry, the vet's closed.
I'm like, well, I have an appointment that's an hour away.
And I just kennel him for here for a couple hours while I go to my appointment and come back.
And they're like, no, we can't let you into the vet office.
And sorry.
I was like, okay, well, I'll figure this out.
So I drove.
I went to the grocery store, picked up some kitty litter and a small box and stuff.
And then showed up at the...
Psychologist, like, she runs her clinic out of her house, like, out of an office, and I just go up to the door, and I was like, hey, I know this is the first time we've met, but my cat was supposed to go to the vet.
But they locked down.
They won't let him stay there.
Can you come in?
And she's like, yeah, of course.
And so, like, she had other patients, and he was running around her house and hanging out with him and stuff.
But we did that one thing.
It was like the meet-and-greet thing, and then it was boom, nothing.
All in-person treatment for the indefinite period of time, it has been cancelled.
Because it was hard lockdowns in Nova Scotia, nothing happening.
They shut down clinics, physio, everything.
And so I went and sat in limbo and waited and lockdowns just stayed persistent.
The clock's ticking.
And it goes for pretty well sitting limbo for almost a year waiting to get seen again.
Finally, they kind of lift the restrictions a bit and you can go back in person.
And it was in like December or January of 2021, I think.
Where I was finally able to get in and start getting treatment again, but then lockdowns would come in, they'd shut it all down again, and it was just in and out, in and out, in and out.
You never made any progress, because we would just start to get to the point where we could try to do something, and then we weren't allowed to meet in person again.
Some people don't appreciate this, but Nova Scotia was part of the maritime bubble, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and...
What's the...
Nova Scotia?
Prince Edward Island.
And you couldn't...
Even going between the provinces, you had to, I don't know, show...
Once they got into the vaccination stuff, you had to show...
Yeah, we'll get to that.
That was fine.
Yeah, because even...
And before that, during the lockdown parts, you could travel interprovincially among the bubble if you had a...
what do they call them?
Essential job.
Tell us what, tell us what's like, like Nova Scotia, it's, this is the maritime provinces for people who don't know that they're among the poorest of, I say this nonjudgmentally, but they're already the poorest of the provinces in Canada.
Yeah, like Halifax is the biggest city in the Maritimes and it's half a million people.
That's including all the surrounding communities, too.
So it's not very big.
I think Nova Scotia only has 900,000 people.
PEI's got like 120.
I don't know what New Brunswick has off-man, but we're little.
And our population's old, so there's that, too.
And so lockdown, I mean, the stuff hits the fan.
What do you do when lockdown comes?
I mean, what are you doing for day-to-day stuff?
What's life like in Nova Scotia?
And by the way, and try to sensitize people as to how Nova Scotia or the Maritimes at large fell off the deep end so badly because you guys were even like one layer more extreme than Quebec, but like socially, not necessarily policy-wise from the government.
But what explains how far off the cliff you guys fell?
I don't know.
There were points where you weren't allowed to go between communities and towns.
Because I remember my sister needed help taking care of my niece.
And me and my mom traveled.
My sister was three and a half hours away.
And so me and my mom went down and stayed there for a week.
Technically, we weren't allowed to do that.
And, like, if we would have got caught, you would have got fined thousands and thousands of dollars.
Like, it was ridiculous.
And this is, like, even before, like, this is, like, pre-vaccines and everything.
I know, like, with COVID, like, there was some strain on the systems here and there in different places.
And it's hit or miss whether its strain the system is, but...
Or not.
But Nova Scotia, our healthcare system has been buckling under the weight for a while, so all it had to do was put its pinky on it.
It really felt it.
I know my friends and stuff from work, they were just getting run ragged.
Not just from COVID, but from everything.
It was like that before I even went off work.
But as to why things went As crazy as they did here, I don't know.
And socially, people had no problem with it.
People felt good doing it?
Yeah.
It's funny, too.
In the Maritimes, it's a very friendly and community-driven thing.
One of the things I know we did in my hometown, and this wasn't enforced, it's just a thing that we decided to do as a community with the grocery stores and Walmart and stuff.
If between 7 and 8 in the morning, everybody just kind of came to an agreement, like, let's reserve that for, like, the elderly or vulnerable people so they can go into the stores and not have it populated with people.
And it's just, like, a community thing.
And, like, there's, I think things like that make sense.
Like, because it, one, it lowers the level of stress on, like, vulnerable people who are, like, who are at actual risk for this.
And it just...
It gives them an opportunity to limit their exposure, if you will.
But it's not the government coming down with an iron fist and stepping on your neck saying, you can't go in the grocery store and get milk.
If you needed to, no one's going to care.
But it's just something we kind of said, well, let's do this to give them an opportunity.
But it was this kind of slow roll, and then things got more and more out of hand.
Because at first, At first, it was just like, hey, we're going to shut down large community gatherings and stuff for a couple weeks.
You can make a justification for that, but then it stayed.
Then it encroached more and more on your life.
It quickly got out of hand.
A lot of people went along with it.
You can make the argument for an initial lockdown at the declaration of a pandemic, but I had already known.
You missed the mark on this by months.
COVID was in Canada in November of 2019, and you knew about it.
Because the military was talking about it, and they were trying to quarantine these guys.
So you should have did something in November.
Not March.
November.
And by the way, you know what's really funny?
I'm just going to bring this up because it's going to be The Lancet, which is untrustworthy rubbish, but I don't want to accept all cookies.
Does this do anything?
If I undo, undo, confirm my choices, The Lancet, first imported case of 2019 novel coronavirus in Canada, presented as mild pneumonia.
A 56-year-old man presented to our emergency department in Toronto, Ontario with a fever.
All right.
Given his travel history...
Sorry, hold on.
One day after returning from a three-month visit to Wuhan.
Given his travel history, the transferring ambulance and receiving hospital personnel used adequate...
Whatever.
Let's just get to where...
Well, it doesn't say it.
Excuse me.
But bottom line, it is now almost accepted fact that...
When they were telling us two weeks to flatten the curve, not only did we not know as of when, but we were already three months behind at the very end.
Oh, yeah.
So that is only to, for those who are saying, who's this guy and what the hell is he saying?
It seems to be now accepted, whereas, you know, once upon a time, it was the first case was in, what did they say in Canada?
It was like February, maybe, or March, and then they declared two weeks.
All right, sorry, sorry.
So carry on, Chet.
Where was I?
Actually, now I don't remember how it got so bad in Nova Scotia.
Oh, yeah.
And I think that problem, a lot of it, is just...
I'm a firm believer that the onset of COVID is what you would classify as an emergency.
And that doesn't mean you panic.
Uh, and just lock everything down and whatnot.
No, what I mean is it's an emergency as in you need to act on it right now.
Um, like, uh, give you an example from my work.
Uh, I work in emergency medical service, emergency medical service, where a lot of times when we get a 911 call, we go lights and sirens to the call, get there, we assess the situation, treat the patient, stabilize it, and you drive like grandma to the hospital, right?
Kitty cat saying hello.
Well, hold on.
Ordinarily, I do not like cats, but that cat actually looks kind of cool.
Let me see that.
Yeah, that's a good-looking cat.
It actually kind of looks like Winston.
Yeah, I was like, I see your white fluffy dog and raise you a white fluffy cat.
Cats, I love all animals, but I need an animal that is dependent on me and not an animal that is independent and only needs me for convenience.
That's my own weakness.
I love dogs, but I like cats because they're independent.
When I met Steve Kirsch, he loved my cat and he thought she was great.
But we'll get to there.
But yeah, and I think a lot of it has to do with just people panicked and there was a lot of propaganda and stuff being pushed down people's throats and didn't know what was going on.
The people who got sick, like, at the very onset of the pandemic, got really sick.
Like, I know people who got really sick.
Like, one of the guys I know, one of the guys, when he got sick, and I want to say January, because he had COVID, like, he had, like, lab variant COVID, he was, like, sick as a dog for six weeks, hacking up blood the whole time.
Severe pneumonia, worst pain of his life, and just in complete state of delirium.
And I know there's a family friend whose grandson got COVID in the early stages, and that kid got sick, man.
And so people saw that, but it's not like that now, obviously.
And that scared people, right?
And then it just kind of went off the rails.
You say that, and the funny thing is now...
Life makes sense.
Life can only be understood backwards, but must be lived forwards.
In 2019 to 2020, and I live my life through the video diary that's online, I had a flu that was unlike anything I've ever had.
I talked about it a few times.
Where it started, I remember exactly where.
I was in the townships at my mother-in-law's place, and we were ice fishing, and the store wasn't open for the fish.
And I saw a fish in the ice, so we hacked it out with an axe.
We were going to make a video, you know, a funny video.
And then I got sick.
But I got so sick.
I had like 103 fever for a good five days.
Chills.
I had such a headache that I thought I got some form of like animal parasitic poisoning.
I was Googling meningitis.
And I remember being so sick and saying, if I were an old person, like this would be, if I were an old person living alone, let alone a young, healthy person with a wife and family who could take care of me.
It would be tremendously serious.
This was also after my kid got sick with a massive fever.
And I'm not saying this to be funny, and I was reluctant to even share the story once upon a time because I don't want to be accused of being racist.
It was after we went to Chinatown in the same time for the Chinese New Year.
I might be getting mixed up on the dates, but we went to Chinatown.
Well, and my kid got sicker than he's ever gotten sick, and it was only after I was like, oh, it's got to be a coincidence.
Setting all that aside, yeah, I think everybody remembers having gotten sicker than they've ever gotten sick in late 2019, early 2020.
Whatever it was, who knows?
But I guess we're going to, I mean, look, we fast forward, so stuff went off the deep end in Nova Scotia, so much so that you had court injunctions preventing people from protesting the COVID measures.
That was later on.
Yeah, that was later on.
Yeah, before we segue into there, when did or did anybody start getting really frustrated with the measures in Nova Scotia?
I know I started getting frustrated when I mentioned, like, when they said, like, hey, you can't go to your sister's house to help take care of your niece.
And then I was also, I got pretty frustrated with when they were talking about masks.
Because when they first said, like, hey, we're going to recommend people wear masks.
I was like, okay, well, that...
That, to a degree, makes sense because, like, when we deal with respiratory patients who are infectious or if we have someone who is really vulnerable, like immunocompromised, we'll wear N95s or better.
That's key.
N95 or better.
And proper fitting, training on how to use it.
And proper fitting.
And, like, I get masked.
And, like, in order to...
Scoot over here.
You get a proper mass fit.
And if you and I were going to wear an N95, both you and I have to shave.
Because you're not going to get a tight seal.
And it's not going to work all the time anyway.
It blocks out 95% of particles that are yay big and viruses are a little smaller than that.
So it's not 95% of that.
You're going to get some, you're not going to get all of it.
And you remember, it was one of the conspiracy theories at the beginning.
People were saying, look.
No one had ever heard of coronavirus before, but they were like, oh my goodness, everybody knew this was coming.
Look at the boxes of those blue and white masks.
It says, does not protect against coronavirus.
Those aren't even designed for that.
A surgical mask is basically just a spit guard.
So if you're working in a surgical setting, it's to keep you from getting spittle in an open wound.
What have you, or a patient's face.
That's not what it's designed for, and it leaks immensely on the side.
Even if you have an N95 on, it's not guaranteed.
Better than nothing.
If I was treating a COVID patient, all I had was an N95, I'd take that over nothing.
But it may not work.
But the longer you wear something, like if you and I are in the same room working together, and even if, say, I have COVID and we're both wearing N95s.
It's literally going to leak all day and eventually it's going to be in the air and you're going to get it.
There is a time to failure.
You can't wear these things all day.
That's not what they're designed for.
And you have to wear them properly and you've got to take them off properly.
And when they come off, they go in the biohazard bin and they get incinerated.
When they came out and said, hey, we're going to get masks, and what they had said, this counts as a mask, that's bullshit.
I like the seatbelt analogy where they're like, oh, wearing a mask is like wearing a seatbelt.
And I was like, yeah.
And when you take an extension cord and tie it around your waist, that doesn't count as a fucking seatbelt.
Well, the only reason that analogy doesn't work is because that's even more dangerous.
That'll just cut you clean in half if you get into a car accident.
Yeah, exactly.
Okay, so in Nova Scotia, did you have the problem with the potentially toxic masks that we had in Quebec?
I'm not sure.
So when I had to wear one, I actually wore an N95 because I have them because I have them left over from work.
And we have a wood shop here, so we have them out there.
And N95s, they're actually made of red cedar pulp.
And so one of the things I thought, and I pointed this out to Adam, like...
Back in the day when Trump said we're going to stop trading medical equipment with Canada.
I was like, that's not going to last 24 hours because red cedar pulp is only processed in one place in the world and that's in Nanaimo BC.
So Canada has an entire monopoly on basically the stuff you need to make N95s.
And the next day, bam, we're not going to do that.
But I don't know, man.
I think probably...
But I didn't care.
Something that was proper when the time was.
I think the issue in Quebec was actually the company that had gotten the distribution of the masks and they were these...
I believe they were imported from China masks and apparently they had graphene particles.
I don't even know why graphene would be in there, but big issue.
We'll see.
Thus far...
Probably for a filtration or something, but I'm not sure.
And a daycare...
I've been wearing this mask for four months.
It always felt like I had cat hair in the back of my throat.
And now I read in the news that they might be toxic and were told not to use them.
I wanted to bring my mask from home and I was told I couldn't because it wouldn't be recognized.
Preposterous.
So what are you doing, by the way?
So during all of this...
2020.
What are you doing on a day-to-day basis?
What are you doing to make money?
What are you doing to keep yourself sane?
Because PTSD is considered a workplace injury.
I'm one of the fortunate ones who, because I was off work on disability, I got my WCB check.
So I was covered and then work maintains my medical benefits because I'm a full-time employee.
They maintain that.
And I'm still maintained under workers' compensation because of being injured at work.
So I dodged one bullet by getting hit by another one, if you will.
And now that I think is probably the best segue into your incident.
This is all context.
And by the way, it is interesting because I don't know what your sources are for your information, but you have been...
It's incredibly insightful in the comments and your contribution to the community at large.
But what happened to you?
Yeah, sure.
And that's what I tried to do.
And so one of the things I did to keep busy was try to just stay on top of this.
Because the big issue that I always saw, like actually when you dig into COVID, it was not so much that it was super lethal, is that it injured a lot of people.
Because I have...
I have friends who are injured.
One of the guys on my rotation got COVID and he's been off on disability since just because he's been dealing with long COVID forever.
You're talking from the infection and not from the jibby jab.
I'm catching up very late to the game but now I'm very much focused but Brett Weinstein was on Rogan.
It was recently talking about...
When Brett Weinstein told Joe Rogan that when COVID came to North America, I had told him on his podcast way back in the day, it's like, here's how it came to Canada.
So it was kind of cool seeing Brett Weinstein talk about something I told him a long time ago.
Well, the interesting thing that was revelatory for me was when Brett said the indicia, the indications that this was man-made or man-tinkered with was that...
The virus affected more than it needed to in order to propagate itself.
And just an interesting anecdote, not a doctor, people, period.
And so I learn as we go along, but never fully appreciated why losing your sense of smell is such a traumatic injury, for lack of a better word, to mammals, where as humans, I say, being a neurotic hypochondriac, it's like, oh, you lose your sense of smell, you might eat something rotten and not know it's rotten.
Well, that's good for humans when you have your food in front of you.
The idea that a mammal in the wild loses its sense of smell, it ceases to be able to find food, except for the scavengers who still won't be able to find the carcasses because they can't smell them, not a question of eating something that's bad.
So when Brett was saying, you know, this virus has the hallmarks of something that's man-made because it goes after more than it needs to that would compromise its host in a manner that would compromise its ability to replicate and transfer.
I just thought it was very interesting.
And so, sorry, so you know people who got...
Who got infected early on and got seriously infected.
Yeah.
There's nurses, medics.
One of my friends, he was sick for a very long time.
And this is pre-jab.
And I know one of the kids, I think she's like 12 or 13, who got myocarditis from COVID.
Because it was able to spread from her lungs, got into her heart.
And again, I know some people are going to say it, but this is before this kid was not vaccinated and got myocarditis.
I can tell you, people in the chat, and again, you're an EMS, so we'll all appreciate our respective limitations, but also respect our respective knowledge.
People in the chat and Rumble are saying there's no such thing as long COVID, but I think we might be just describing something a little differently.
People are also saying...
So what long COVID is, it's not that you're still infected with the virus.
What it is, is it's tissue injury as a result of the virus.
It's like...
When people get mono, they can get mono for a really long time.
Some people, when they get the flu, the injuries that are caused by influenza can persist for a long time, and that's what it is.
It's basically the virus and the spike protein, through toxicity, it injures tissues.
There's also, and this happens with COVID vaccine injury, too.
I'm going to pronounce this wrong.
It's like hemoglobin.
It's basically hemoglobin.
It's like hemoglobin or something.
I suck at pronouncing it.
I'm sorry.
But it's not like forming a blood clot.
It's basically your red blood cells kind of clump together.
Not in a clot, but almost like in a traffic jam.
So it makes it harder for tissues to become oxidative.
So you get like a delivery problem.
And this is where you saw what sometimes when you see what's called as the happy hypoxics.
So people who are breathing just fine.
Like mechanically, they're breathing just fine, but their O2 saturations are low.
It's just because they're having issues from, like despite from COVID, like getting out and doing its thing, or in the case of sometimes with vaccine injury, or a lot of times with that.
You're having a delivery issue because your red blood cells are kind of bumping into each other and having trouble moving through your capillaries.
Does that make sense?
It makes sense.
I mean, it makes sense.
And even...
Even, say, the doctors of the day, I think long COVID people think it's like someone who's still had it for months on end, but I think it means injury.
Yeah, the virus is long gone.
It's just to give a name to basically post-COVID syndrome.
It's where you're recovering from the injuries from being infected by a virus that has a toxic spike protein.
That's basically what it means.
And that's why you get a mishmash of things, because if it...
Wherever it goes, if it gets to your kidneys or your lungs or whatever.
And it's going to vary from person to person.
And that's why people kind of feel like that sluggish, they almost feel like they have a concussion is because their tissues just aren't getting oxygenated quite as well as they should be.
So they get tired really easy.
Is that...
No, that's good.
It's definitely good enough.
Let's get into then, I guess we're getting to the point now, fast forward to when the miracle warp speed has come to fruition.
They found a vaccine for a virus that they've never been able to have a vaccine for because of its ability to mutate quickly.
Decades of trying.
They found it now within a year with new technology that has never been administered to humans.
For the purposes of vaccines, mRNA technology, it's a miracle.
Go on to how it affects you now, because you're an EMS.
They say, all right, we're first prioritizing frontline workers.
You're one of those frontline workers?
Yeah, so I was eligible in December of 2020, January 2021, and I said, no thanks, I don't need it right now.
I'm off work.
I know how to take care of myself.
I'm in good health.
And I'll pass for now, because it was elderly.
And healthcare workers could take it.
And so I declined, and I wanted to learn about it.
And so I researched about it, learned how mRNA tech works, learned about a whole slew of things.
And the big thing that I was concerned about is, is the spike protein, like, is that toxic?
Is it...
What does it do?
And after months and months and months of research, the only thing I could find is there's a risk of anaphylaxis.
But you get that with all vaccines.
You get that with any vaccine, yeah.
Any vaccine, anything really.
Any foreign body that enters your body.
Yeah.
And then there was a risk of Bell's palsy, and that's a known side effect for vaccines as well.
Yep.
GBS is another one that's known for all vaccines.
Yeah.
And like...
And so, like, there was this rumbling saying, like, hey, they're talking about making this mandatory for you guys.
And, like, the clock is ticking down for me to try to get back to work to save my job.
Because, like, you can only be off on injury for so long before your job is...
And, like, I had already lost my full-time position, like, at the base that I was working at because I've been off for two years.
And so I was like, well, I'm...
Gotta try to get back to work.
And I'm still not getting treated for this.
But I was doing alright.
One of the things I had sent you in that Google Drive link, it's right from the CDC.
What is it called?
You can pull it up if you want.
It's called...
Understanding mRNA COVID-19 Vaccines is a PDF because it's off of the CDC website because they took this down because this used to be on their website where they specifically say that the spike protein is benign, it's not dangerous and whatnot and the only risk is anaphylaxis.
And so I work With the most vulnerable at their most vulnerable.
There's a very real possibility that you are going to go deal with a COVID patient.
You're going to get a big blast of COVID in the face, and you're going to get that in the back of a truck.
PPE that we have is insufficient.
And it doesn't help that Trudeau sent a whole bunch of it to China.
16 tons in February 2020.
There was a point where on the...
I don't know if this was like this across the country, but there was a point here where even our airway gear, they had to throw it in biohazard bags, send it to fleet to get it deconned, because you couldn't get more because of the supply issues.
Because...
whatever.
But yeah, you deal with the most vulnerable At their most vulnerable.
Most likely going to get COVID.
A full blast of it to the face.
And then right after that.
You're probably going to get a 911 call.
And go into an old folks home.
So.
It made sense to.
If there was a means to try to mitigate this.
And plus.
My mom and dad are older.
Trying to.
You know.
Wouldn't want to hand that off to my parents either.
And so if it was.
If the only safety issue was the risk of anaphylaxis and Bell's palsy, and they're going to make it mandatory, I guess we'll roll the dice here.
Those dice didn't come up very good.
When did you get it?
What date?
May 21st, 2021.
May 21st, 2021.
They started rolling it out December 2020.
I'm not saying you didn't hold out that long.
It's okay.
And it's not that I didn't look, man.
I promise you, Adam could tell you.
I poured through this shit and I was like, here, man, here's everything I know.
This is all I can find.
And they deliberately hid that from us, too, right?
Like the info from the trials.
Everything came back.
We're getting now the secondary review of the clinical randomized trials.
We're getting that data now and apparently the What do they call them?
Adverse events of special interest are 1 in 15 in 10,000, which is 1 in 800.
Yeah, we're getting it now.
So you go get this.
Look, when I got my first, and it was in July, give or take July 2021.
Some of the stuff was coming out, but I was still, and I've said it a number of times, I was still so stupid.
I said, okay, well, there's only so much damage it can cause.
I remember briefly hearing about Malone talking about a toxic spike, and everybody at the time is saying Malone's a quack and don't listen to him.
So I'm like, okay, there's only so much damage, a little bit of fluid from vaccine technology can cause you.
But I held my breath and took it.
It was at about the same time I think there was that death of the Quebec woman.
Who died from a claw from the Johnson& Johnson, and I was much more concerned about my wife than I was about me.
So you go to get this in May.
What happens that leads you to think you have sustained some form of an injury from this, and not just from something else?
Because I was in pretty well...
Well, I was in really good health, with the only exception being...
That seizure once upon a time.
Well, that's cleared, and no one's worried about that.
I don't have epilepsy or anything.
It's just a fluke.
But just dealing with PTSD and insomnia, that's the only thing I have going on.
So I go in, I get the shot, and I'm talking to the nurse.
And we do the whole thing, and I wait around for half an hour afterwards because I have food allergies.
So you wait an extra 15 minutes just to make sure because that's...
The big thing that we're concerned about is an anaphylaxis reaction.
Let me ask you this, if you do remember.
Did they aspirate the syringe before hitting the plunger?
I don't remember.
I didn't get the metallic taste in my mouth that some people get when they suspect that it hit a vein or an artery or a capillary bed.
I'm from Nova Scotia, so all we do is talk.
I was talking and I don't remember.
But anyways, I waited around and then I felt, you know, by the time I got home later that day, I was like, I feel just tired.
But that was normal, like, when I've gotten, like, other shots and stuff.
So I just kind of, like, I'll just sleep it off.
And then that was kind of like what, like, my friends, like, from work and, like, everybody else said, like, my folks, my, anyone I talked to said, yeah, I feel like dog shit for a day or two.
So didn't think anything of it.
And then I, Remained tired.
And I went from being a severe insomniac to sleeping a lot.
Because I was just so tired.
And then I was getting a little winded.
Doing things around the house.
I could take a shower and go make breakfast.
And then I'd have to go sit down.
And this is what?
Within the week?
Within the first two weeks.
It's kind of like a slow ramp up.
And then my chest would kind of feel heavy.
I thought maybe I'm coming down with something.
And then my dad was over because he had taken a tree down.
I went out to help him just move a couple of the logs.
And I moved half a dozen chopped up logs or maybe firewood size.
And put him in the back of the tractor and got rushing chest pain and kind of collapsed against the tree and just told Dad, "You gotta take me to the hospital now.
There's something very, very wrong." Then I started getting heart palpitations.
It was right here, just left of my sternum.
And it was like, if you take your arm and take your fingers and dig your nails really hard into your arm, it felt like that.
Straight through into my back, right into my scapula, and then would ache into my left shoulder.
Dude, you're making me feel like I'm having a hard...
I can...
Yeah, I'm neurotic enough that I can actually start to feel these things as you describe it.
Yeah.
And you tell your dad, take me to the hospital.
Yeah, and we were having problems with EMS issues.
And now I'm a paramedic, so I was like, oh, it's embarrassing to call an ambulance.
So I should have, but...
Dad runs me into the hospital, and I'm talking to the triage nurse, and I told her, look, I'm having chest pain.
I got heart palpitations.
I can feel my blood pressure is up, and I haven't been feeling good the last two or three weeks.
This is within a month, but a couple of weeks after the jab.
Yeah, I didn't feel good the day of.
But, like, the chest pain started on, it was, like, maybe, like, three weeks later is when, like, I was short of breath, and then the chest pain, like, came on, like, when I exerted my, actually exerted myself.
Because, like, I, um, I was kind of, like, taking it easy just because I wasn't feeling well.
Um, and then I was admitted in, uh, and met with one of the nurses who came in and did, like, EKG zombie, and then he's one of the guys I worked with.
And I'm like, dude, I think I have myocarditis or pericarditis or something.
And he's like, man, I think you're right.
Because he's like, lean back.
And as soon as you lean back, one of the telltale signs of pericarditis is when you lean back, the shortness of breath and the chest pain gets worse because the weight of your chest is kind of pushing on your heart a little bit more.
At the time this is happening, and you'll ask, I mean, two-part question.
At the time this is happening...
How well known is myocarditis pericarditis?
I know people are talking.
I don't think they're calling it the clot shot at the time, but I think that name is coming around.
Hadn't heard anyone talk about it yet at that point.
Okay.
And it's not for lack of looking.
And so I get admitted in.
We do a round of blood work and stuff.
And I talk to the doc and explains like, yeah, this all kind of started after I got...
Do you know what?
Do they do blood tests?
Yeah.
I was told they were clear.
I went and got them later because I was, over the course of the summer, I was admitted into hospital three times and told each time that nothing was going on.
For chest pains?
For chest pain and shortness of breath.
And the third time I was in, the doc finally said, yeah, there's a different doc each time and it's like, I think there's something going on.
I'm not sure what, but I'm going to order you an echocardiogram.
So that's an ultrasound of your heart.
And so he gave me a shot of Toradol, which is a strong anti-inflammatory, which helped take the edge off.
And I went home.
And while this was happening, I started hearing from other people, like guys in the forces who were one who had myocarditis.
A friend of mine got POTS.
Hearing people with allergic reactions and stuff.
One of our neighbors got, like, blood clots.
We heard a whole bunch of horror stories of guys in the forces, like, getting blood clots and myocarditis, and the doc's just kind of brushing off.
Just like, what the fuck is going on?
And, like, and I had been digging into it, and it's like, I really think that this is caused by the shot, but nobody wanted to hear it.
And the first time that I saw that somebody was actually in the media covering it was when John Campbell had Kyle Warren on.
He's the mountain biker.
He had pericarditis.
And they went through it, and he basically went through the same experience that I went through with dealing with the docs and everything, and I showed it to them.
And that has always been my intro to people who don't believe you.
I want you to watch John and Kyle talk and they'll explain it all so you can see it from somebody else and not just me.
And so when I was kind of figuring this out, I had contacted my family physician.
I was like, I think there's something going on and I want to come in and talk about this.
And I want copies of my EKGs and my blood work.
And the receptionist initially was like, no, we can't give you those.
I'm like, they're mine.
They're mine.
Oh, my God.
Okay, I'm sorry.
I was going to swear.
Yeah, those belong to me.
You have them because I gave them to you, basically.
Because I want to look at them.
And so I got copies of them.
And I went through my EKGs and...
In my EKGs, there's PR, and this is going to be gobbledygook to you for a second, there's PR depression, there's some ST elevation, there's indications in my P waves indicating that I've got left atrial enlargement.
So what that means is my left atria, so your top chambers of your heart, has become enlarged and it shows up in my EKG based on the way the wave changes.
And then there's some changes, like the ST elevation is showing that there's ischemia to parts of my heart, meaning that my heart is being starved of oxygen a little bit.
Not necessarily that your cardiac cells are dying, but it's just they're not getting enough oxygen to do their job effectively, or basically to depolarize as well as they should.
There's just a little bit of it just to make it present.
And then there's like PR depression.
And all of these things are kind of like...
Your textbook pericarditis signs.
And then when I looked at my blood work, my lactase dehydranase, or LDH, which is an enzyme used in glycolysis, I think.
But it gets elevated after cardiac injury or after tissue injury.
So it was up five times higher than it should have been.
In, like, the first one, and then, like, later, and it was rising every time I had gone into the hospital.
It's like, obviously, there's something, there's some form of injury somewhere, and you're telling me that there's nothing going on.
And when I pointed this stuff out to, like, my family physician, I was like, hey, look, I have concerns that these, this wasn't addressed.
Like, my LDH is up and kept going up, and I've got signs of pericarditis, like, in my EKG.
And just symptomatically, like I'm having chest pain, I'm shortness of breath, it gets worse when I lay on my back.
Like, to me, that sounds like pericarditis.
And his response was, shut the fuck up.
Are you verbatim or are you paraphrasing?
Verbatim.
You need to shut the fuck up.
Paramedics can't read EKGs and they don't know how to do blood work.
I'm like, yeah, we do.
It's part of our job.
I've been doing this for 12 years.
May I ask you the obvious question?
Do you still see this family doctor?
No.
do not.
Did you go to another doctor?
Skeptics out there are going to say, okay, you're just in the EMS.
Skeptics out there said...
Malone just, you know, he worked on a prior version of mRNA.
He didn't work on the current version.
They say Dr. Asim Malhotra is just, he's not an epidemiologist.
He's just a cardiologist.
You're just an EMS who can read the basics.
You go to see a doctor.
You're having physiological pains.
You're noticing things.
And he says, was it shut the fuck up?
Like, we're friends?
Or was it shut the fuck up?
Like, don't talk about this?
Or was it?
You need to shut the fuck up.
Because paramedics can't read EKGs.
Was he trying to do it to, like, be chummy, chummy?
No, that was the tone.
It was very rude.
And then I had asked, because the last doc I had seen in the ER said, hey, like, we should get an echo gun on you.
And I mentioned, like, look, like, we were talking about getting an echo, and...
There was talk about getting me a cardiac stress test and a cardiac MRI.
And he said, you're absolutely not getting those.
We're not going to entertain any ridiculous rabbit hole that you want to go down.
And so that ended that conversation.
I went for my echo.
It took six months to get the echo from initial symptoms.
May I ask you, is that because you couldn't get it booked or because the next available time was six months down the line?
I think it was just a wait list, man.
It's like that everywhere here, man.
This is for an EKG.
I once waited...
It's not for an EKG.
Sorry, this was for the echocardiogram?
Echocardiogram, so it's an ultrasound of your heart.
Looking like a baby or looking at your gallbladder and stuff, same thing, but they go and they look at all sides of your heart.
As far as I know, it came clear.
I know I threw some...
Uh, premature ventricular contractions on the rhythm strip.
So my ventricles were contracting at a time here and there, um, which sometimes doesn't mean anything.
Cause you probably have one every time I scare the shit out of you.
So, um, but they said there was nothing there.
And I did, uh, I did a followup with one of the docs with, um, uh, workers' compensation, like, cause they do like a yearly followup because I've been off work.
And they asked, like, how's your PTSD?
And I was like, imagine it's just fine, like, even though I'm not in treatment, but, like, I have concerns about this, and I brought him all my blood work and my EKGs, and he's like, well, yeah, that's something.
And, like, saying it without saying it, and I'm like, I think I might have, like, pericarditis.
He's like, well, is your troponin stuff?
He's like, well, no, that's why I don't think it's myocarditis.
I think it's pericarditis.
Without meaning to ask a question, you might not be able to answer, but the troponin levels would remain high for how long?
That would only be on your first visit afterwards?
Troponin levels can stay up for a couple days.
And it all depends on if there's ongoing cardiac injuries.
So what troponin is, it's a protein that's used in muscle contraction.
Skeletal muscles, so like the things that move your hands and in your heart, so when your heart beats.
So when you have a heart attack or if you have severe myocarditis where you're having an occlusion of blood vessels in the heart and it's causing cardiac injury where you're having cardiac cells die, the troponin that's in those cells, when it dies, they dump their guts and you can see a flood of troponin released into the bloodstream.
There's always going to be a little bit present because you're always replacing muscle.
Uh, cells as you go.
But, um, when you see a big flood of it, it usually, and like, it would usually be associated with associated symptoms, right?
And EKG changes.
Um, you'll see that big flood of troponin in the bloodstream.
And then that's, that's kind of like your, your cardiac indicator in the blood.
It's like, okay, we've got a bunch of muscle cells that are dying rapidly and we're seeing this protein show up.
And that's why we look for troponin.
And it's why you look for it multiple times when someone comes in with chest pain.
You don't just look for it once and then kick them out.
You look for it and then you wait half an hour and you check it again and you check it again and you check it again until you completely ruled it out and discharged them.
That's why when...
Is it Dan Hartman?
Lost his son?
Yeah, Sean.
Yeah, because I commented on that show because they should have did his...
They should have checked for troponins, and then they should have checked for them multiple times.
The whole problem, though, with Sean Hartman, answers for Sean is the Twitter feed, and it's Dan Hartman's kid, is that, well, first of all, from what I understood from the story, Dan didn't know that this kid had actually been hospitalized and didn't go back to the hospital a second time.
That's the problem.
There was only one time to measure them.
It wasn't done, and then his kid...
Died suddenly.
It's awful, man.
It's horrifying.
Yeah.
But, like, kids get myocarditis.
That's a thing.
And the reason why you have to keep checking is it may not show up right away on the onset, and you can't afford to miss it.
Because if you miss it, you have tragedies like that happen, right?
But going back, my troponins weren't up, so it's likely that my myocardium hasn't had any.
Significant cellular death to a point where they would show up blood work.
But this doc said, yeah, like we're seeing...
This is a doc that had worked out of Halifax.
And he's saying, yeah, we're seeing people come in with troponin levels that are rivaling heart attacks.
I'm like, doesn't that concern you?
Well, so this was my next question.
First of all, why do you know so many people in military?
Is it because you have friends who serve?
Yeah, friends and family who serve.
Because it's a different environment.
Demographics of who serves in the military, I presume.
Where you're from, there'll be a lot more who serve than, say, where I went to high school, for example, statistically.
The next question is, you're in EMS, so you have friends in medical places.
I've discussed with more people than I can count.
Where they are nurses, doctors, or otherwise involved in the medical world, and they tell me it's a badly kept secret.
Everybody knows, but nobody wants to talk about it because nobody wants to be called a conspiracy theorist or have their license revoked or attacked.
I say, well, I wish I could share this.
Would you come do it publicly?
They say, hell no.
You're talking to these people.
You know them, and they're trustworthy.
They're not people who stop you on the street and say, I watch your channel.
Is it the Harvey Weinstein secret of the medical community?
Kind of, yeah.
Everybody knows something's wrong.
And those that don't are doing this.
So what had happened, like the doc says, we should probably try to get you in to get an MRI and stuff.
And nothing ever came of it.
And this takes us kind of to around...
January of 2022.
I started blowing the whistle that summer.
I told Adam Kregler, I went in with the podcast of the Lotus Eaters and sat down with Carl Benjamin and said, this is what happened to me.
You need to know this.
On the Zoom call, there was two other guys that had been injured as well.
But what what really kind of like set things off is when one of my very good friends and he's a medic in New Brunswick contact I mean he's like yeah so we were talking about what happened to you in the hallway in the emerge and in emerge and one of the other crews because we had mentioned like that you had been injured and other people that we knew had been injured one of the other crews piped up and said yeah we in like last few weeks like we just had three like teenagers With cardiac chest pain,
whether it was myocarditis or something similar post-jab.
And then the other crew was like, yeah, we had one too.
And this is in Moncton, New Brunswick, which is a population of 80,000 people.
And you have four cases split between two ambulance crews.
That should tell you something.
That's concerning.
And that's kind of when the trucker convoy was kind of starting to mobilize.
We're starting to cover it.
And I said, I am going to let people know because this has gone too far and this message needs to get delivered.
And so it took me a week to, because I was still really, really sick and extremely tired.
And I would do one little thing.
I went to Canadian Tire and got batteries for my heated vest.
And then I'd have to lay down and sleep.
Just because I'm being winded.
And it took me a week to get the jeep ready.
I got my stuff.
And I was going to go to Ottawa.
And I was going to find you.
I was going to go on stage.
I was going to tell people what happened to me and what was happening to other people.
And what we were seeing in Edenus.
And the first day I left.
And you know what it's like.
And this is in February.
You know it's like driving in Canada in February.
Even if you have a jeep.
It's a disaster.
It's nuts.
Oh, it's crazy.
I went back over Christmas.
Anyone from like a hot country who has never had winter driving through like six inches of snow, slush, ice, I had forgotten how bad it was and that was after.
Oh yeah, it's so bad.
Like it was like driving 80 in like a 110 zone.
But the first day I made it to...
Oh, and this, I forgot to mention, like, in, like, the fall, that's when they, like, dropped in, like, the vax mandates and stuff.
And so, like, I wasn't, because I'd only taken one shot and hadn't gotten a medical exemption, I couldn't go anywhere.
I wasn't allowed to do anything.
Well, that's a question you reminded me to ask you.
After this incident, did any doctor say, don't get the second shot?
Did you ask a doctor, should I get the second shot?
And they say, sure, it's safe and effective?
No, I said I refused.
I told him flat out I will not take it.
And did any doctor give you a medical exemption?
No.
Not yet.
Let me ask, obviously, sorry, that question presupposed that you had asked.
Did you ask to get a medical exemption?
Yes.
And in part of, and I'll come back to the convoy thing in a minute, but in part of trying to get that, like when I went and got blood work done and tried to go pick up my blood work, I wasn't allowed in the hospital.
They stopped me at the door and said, you can't come in because you only got a single shot.
And I had to explain, look, I got blood work done.
And I think, like, I've had, like, ericarditis, and this is what that is.
This is talking, like, security, and it's like, this is why I'm going...
I just have to walk around the corner, and the office is right there, and then I'll leave.
That's fine.
And eventually, like, after...
I was probably there for, like, half an hour, and, like, it took to finally get in and get the blood work and bugger out.
But, like, it was the same thing when I got my Echo.
Like, there were, like, questions, like, did you get your...
Did you get your second shot?
Because when I was talking to the lady...
Can you imagine?
Well, try to give them the benefit of the doubt.
Maybe the existence of myocarditis as a not just potential, but a prevalent adverse reaction was not yet known at that time.
But can you imagine the idea?
Did you get your second shot when you think you're here because you think the first shot might have given you the problem you're here for?
Yeah, I told her.
It's like, I'm here because we're checking to see if I have...
Myocarditis or pericarditis.
And then the lady that I know that was working in the hospital, she leaned over and piped in because she knows me.
She goes, our neighbor's kid has myocarditis from that shot.
And then the girl sitting behind the desk was like, oh, fuck.
You just saw it wash over her face.
It was awful.
You follow me on Twitter, by the way.
And someone had asked, what's your Twitter handle?
They want to follow you.
The Iron Siren.
At Chisholm Chet.
C-H-I-S-O-L-M-C-H-E-T.
That is a $3 rumble rant from The Iron Siren.
Chet, you follow me on Twitter so you know this, and everybody watching knows this, but I don't have that many friends.
And I say friends like people who I know in the flesh.
Would I say that I've known an elderly person who died one day after getting the jab through...
An immediate relative.
A 43-year-old middle-aged man who died playing hockey two weeks after getting the jab through an immediate relative.
A 40-some-odd-year-old man who got myocarditis confirmed, medically confirmed now.
He's just one of the unlucky ones.
Took one for the team from an immediate friend.
And some younger people who have sustained to be determined how serious problems, but within...
Proximity of the jab.
And I don't have that many friends.
And it's just getting shocking and enraging.
I know three possible people who may have died.
These are people I know.
And I probably know about...
And these are people I either know them personally or it's like, let's say...
Let's say it's like my co-worker's brother.
That's how far the separation is.
I know about three dozen, personally.
Let me ask you this.
This is a question that's impossible to answer, but I'll ask it anyhow.
You suffer from PTSD from an objectively traumatic incident.
I don't want to ask any more details than you've offered.
Just in terms of how graphic and how traumatic.
Traumatic.
Now you've sustained what you suspect to be an injury that some people, if you follow the chat, say radically reduces life expectancy.
I don't know if it's less of an issue with pericarditis than myocarditis.
If you had to pick, I'd take pericarditis over myocarditis.
Well, that's my limited neurotic understanding as well.
But the question is, from your end, anger and fear of your future health, if you had to rate them on a scale of 1 to 10. I made a pretty stern stuff.
I'm not really afraid of anything.
Like, some people say, like, oh, I bet you feel stupid.
I bet you regret it.
It's like, whatever.
My reasoning, like, I don't agree with mandates or anything like that.
It should be your choice.
But, like, in a sane world, the reason, or don't live in a sane world, the reasoning for me Getting it would make sense.
It would make sense in a sane world if we had had the information that it now seems was available.
If I had been given the proper information, given informed consent, I would have said no.
Absolutely not.
But I don't feel stupid or anything like that.
I feel violated.
That's what I feel.
A friend of mine, I'll use her words the way she described it.
This is her words.
She's been through the wringer, man.
She says she feels like she's just been raped all over again.
The way that they did this to people.
It's awful.
Not that it's all dark clouds and not that there's any silver lining, but you're now at the very least involved in...
In some advocacy in Canada?
Yeah, so I'll tie all that into the trucker convoy thing.
So I tried to get to Ottawa because I was going to find you, I was going to tell you what happened, and I was going to go on stage and talk.
Because it was one of the things I didn't hear.
And I had let Adam, the podcast, Lotus Eaters, and all those guys know, and a few other people.
Then after, I had to turn around and come back home.
Because if I kept pushing it, I had chest pain so bad and shortness of breath.
I would drive for an hour and then I'd have to sleep for four.
Because I'd be so tired and I was like, this isn't safe.
So I'd turn around and stay at a buddy's place.
Got home and then they did the emergencies act.
So I was like, that wouldn't have been safe for me to be in there amongst that anyway.
But then James started marching.
And I reached out to Canada Marches and said, this is who I am.
This is what's happened to me.
And I spoke as part of the Canada Marches panel in Ottawa.
I spoke after Chris Dearing and Alex Cabana, because they recognized me when I met James in the summer.
I spoke as part of that and told people, this is what's happened.
This is what's happened to me.
This is what's happened to friends of mine.
This is what's happened to people in the military.
This is what's happened to kids.
And then after that, I was interviewed by Steve Kirsch in May, along with Marsha Gee, I think her name is.
She's an injured ICU nurse.
I don't know if Steve ever recorded it, but I talked to him and told him all about it.
He's a very nice guy.
He's an awesome dude, man.
He's wicked.
He's so nice.
I'm Googling right now.
Steve Kirsch.
He set up the Vaccine Safety Research Foundation, VSRF.
He's been on with Brett and Heather a lot.
And he also funded all of the...
He paid for the research funding for fluvoxamine and treating COVID.
I just got confused because I think there's actually two Steve Kirschers and one is with Media Matters.
The other one is the philanthropist.
Yeah, he's an awesome guy.
And so I met him.
He's so awesome.
He's so awesome.
This is how Wikipedia describes it.
Oh, it's probably garbage.
I meant entrepreneur.
Listen to this.
This is just unbelievable.
You know that he must be doing something.
Okay, here you go.
Steve Todd Kirch is an American entrepreneur.
He has started several companies as one of...
And was one of two people who independently invented the optical mouse.
Kirsch has been both a philanthropic supporter of medical research and a promoter of misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines.
Son of a bitch.
He has an offer of if someone will go on and debate him about vaccines safety.
It's a million bucks.
So I met him.
And then after that, I met...
When he did his tour, Pierre Polyev came to Nova Scotia, and I went to his thing, and here.
I'll prove it to you.
Oh, I'm just cracking my back.
Yes, I get sympathy pains listening to this.
There he is.
Me and Pierre.
He's a nice guy.
Yeah, he was nice.
But I met him and said, hey, my name's Chet.
The other gentleman that's here with me is another paramedic.
We're both vaccine injured.
I have pericarditis.
He has neurological issues.
This is serious.
If I may ask, is it Bell's policy?
Convulsions and seizures and a loss of body temperature regulation.
If I may also ask, now that I think about it, it was Malone who had mentioned the Batch test function?
Had you looked at the batches?
Yeah, I looked at my batch, and mine's never been recorded, but there's injuries and stuff recorded in my batch.
And I told Pierre, and this is what's happening in the military, because we have people who have been injured.
Their injuries are being ignored.
They're being acknowledged that they have myocarditis, but they're not getting treated for it.
And there's people that I know that are allergic to polyethylene glycol.
That got direct orders to take it, despite having an allergy to it, had an anaphylactic reaction, landed in the emergency room, and then requested medical exemption.
And then after that, they said, well, no, we can't do that, but you can take a half dose.
And then the same thing happened.
They have an anaphylactic reaction again.
And these are people that I'm not going to, but I could give you their names.
And we have another guy who, when he got, this is right before the trucker convoy thing.
I was actually on a call with Carl Benjamin when I got the text about this, and I told Carl right then and there, and said, because the message was, we just had this guy get a shot.
He immediately went into convulsions and full-body seizures for taking him to the emergency room.
And then when he got there, the doc said, Yeah, that's normal and discharged him.
And the horses guy that I know was like, this is not normal.
I know that.
Anyone knows that.
And what if he had been driving his kids home from school?
And this guy was top physical fitness and then right after that went from being able to do a 16km ruck march, no problem, to not being able to walk to the end of the driveway because then he developed peri...
Pericarditis or myocarditis, I forget which.
And not being treated.
And I told this stuff to Pierre, and the look on his face, he was mortified.
And he's like, you need to talk to Dr. Stephen Ellis, who's been pretty good.
He's been giving Teresa Tam the business in Parliament about lockdowns and mandates and stuff.
But then after that, I...
I did some more stuff over the summer and would keep Adam Crickler up to date with everything I learned.
Same with Lotus Eaters.
And then in August, I went and met James.
He marched through Nova Scotia and I went and sat down with him.
And I went up to him because I had been in contact because I had spoken on the Canada Marches panel back in whenever it was March or February.
No, sorry.
I think it was March.
And I said that I had been in contact with Dr. Laura Braden and she had told James that I was coming to see him and I told him.
And I was like, hey man, I'm Chet.
You know my friend Laura.
And I'm the medic that was going to come talk to you.
I got paracarditis and stuff.
And James was the first person who actually really took a second and said, Geez man, are you alright?
And this is like a year and like three months after like being just belittled by like friends and family members being ignored by and James Topp was the first person he said are you alright?
I said yeah man but we need to talk like I'm doing okay like I'm a little out of breath because I had to go up and down the stairs a few times but he's like We exchanged contact information.
He got me to come back.
I actually met Jeremy McKenzie that day too.
It's the same thing.
I told him, hey man, you and I need to talk.
We got guys in the forces.
We got guys in EMS that are hurting.
People are getting hurt.
I told him what happened to me.
He was one of the few people that was like, man, you alright?
Jeremy's an awesome guy.
I had him on for three hours.
Other than that...
The one indefensible joke, the rest is either good or bad humor.
In as much as he can know someone who you've never met in person, I've had enough correspondence with him.
I think he's a good guy.
He's a lot more toned down in person.
He seems like a very, very nice person.
Yeah, he made a terrible joke.
Yeah, he did.
If it were me, I would have kicked him in the ass, too.
You make a dumb joke.
I still love the guy.
You make a very, very inappropriate comment with a large audience.
It doesn't disappear into the ether the way 99% of all of our stupid comments do.
Yeah, and I understand dark, gallows humor.
If you heard the way paramedics and nurses talk, you'd never call 911 again.
Well, there was that story.
You remember the woman who...
Not the EMS, but the person on the phone who you call up...
What do they call them?
Oh, yeah.
When she was...
Someone was in their car, stuck in a flood, and the person on the phone...
What are they called?
Chat's going to get in two seconds.
But she was yelling at the woman in the truck as to why she was driving in the flood.
I don't remember.
And she was yelling at her.
And then everyone was like, the woman got cancelled.
She lost her job.
And I was like, you never know if that's sort of like the rough way of trying to encourage someone when they're in the street.
It just so happened the person died.
It was not a good thing.
And really, really, really dark, gallows humor.
It doesn't come from a normal place.
It comes from a place of deep, deep-rooted pain.
Well, absolutely.
It's a coping mechanism.
Coping, rationalizing.
It's the old from a Rwandan genocide movie.
I forget which one it was, but it says when you kill your first person, it's traumatizing.
You kill more, not because it becomes easier, but because you want it to become easier for the ones that you already have.
You make the dark jokes.
It's not to make light of the trauma.
It's because you're trying to make it Less hurtful than the initial trauma itself.
Speaking of which, I'm going to read this Rumble rant from Hans von Puppenheim.
$10 Rumble Rant says, My wife got the shot against my will and had her period for five months straight.
Been two years now and cycle is not right.
I may not have children.
I know two people like that.
Not that we're going to try.
There's very little optimism here.
The only question is whether or not there's going to be accountability.
What are you doing now?
You've got your injury to deal with.
First of all, may I ask, how are you doing?
Are you able to exercise?
Is it getting better?
Yeah, so I'm a lot better than I was.
Like, Carl Benjamin could attest to this.
He saw me after I got injured and I looked like dog shit.
Pale as a ghost and sweating all the time and stuff.
But...
What really worked for me is the FLCC protocol.
And so of the bits I could get, I couldn't get ivermectin or anything like that.
But black seed oil, which has the monconil in it, which is a natural anti-inflammatory and it kind of binds to the spike protein.
So it gives your body a little bit of breathing room to try to get rid of it.
That and then intermittent fasting, which can help.
Regulate your immune system and kind of ramp it back down.
Because that's basically what it is.
It's an immune injury.
I went from sleeping 20 hours a day because I'd be so exhausted just doing anything, getting chest pain, doing pretty well anything, to now I can do maybe 30 minutes of yoga a day.
I can kind of bum around the house and get most things done.
I still usually have to take a break.
Maybe grab a nap or something.
But I'm miles better than I was.
Because even when James saw me, I was in pretty rough shape.
Because he and I...
Your brother has it.
He's recording me and James talking for...
Three hours or so about everything that happened.
He took a step out of the spotlight, and so it's never been put anywhere, and I didn't want to put it up anywhere because James kind of wants to back away.
But going forward after that, some of the other things I've been doing is I learned about the Canadian Adverse Events Reporting System, which is set up by Max Daigle.
Max Daigle?
He's not a Montreal...
Is he from Montreal?
He's from New Brunswick.
I know a Max Daigler, so not the same one.
No, no, no.
Unless he's my...
No, that guy was much younger than me.
Doesn't matter.
Anyways, he set it up because he was injured by the H1N1 vaccine back in the day.
And so I reported my injury through them because this is separate from the government.
And they're trying to build a database Of injuries and kind of like establish a trend and to advocate for patients as well.
So if you go to cares.info, C-A-E-R-S dot I-N-F-O, you can pull it up.
And so I've submitted my injury report to them and I've helped several other people that I know.
Let me think.
I'll ask the cynical question that I know everyone's going to ask.
What's the penalty for filing a false CARES report?
There isn't one, but they get vetted.
So they get reviewed by physicians and other healthcare professionals.
Because not all of them are going to be linked.
Not everything was COVID.
Not everything's to jab.
But it's to try to facilitate getting people help.
Because, like, a lot of people are just getting ignored.
They're just kind of getting, people just kind of go, no, it's just anxiety, it's whatever.
And so they initially kind of started bringing things forward with the citizens' hearing.
But you may not, I'll send you that link.
And this is worth people watching.
And while you do that, I'm going to ask a question.
Did you file a report with Canada's Vaccine Injury Program?
I did not.
I never got that far because the doctor wouldn't do it.
That's true.
Actually, I guess I presume you need an official diagnosis if you're going to...
Well, maybe I don't know.
You'll ask my brother how that works.
Everybody, my brother is Dan.
Basically, a healthcare professional needs to fill it out and they're required to if it's suspected.
But I can't fill mine own out.
Okay.
Even though I am a medical professional.
So there was a hearing back in the summer, the citizens hearing that was set up by, oh my god, Preston Manning.
He used to be part of the Conservative Party and the Reform Party.
And he's kind of been, he got it set up and to get some, to hear from people who have been harmed by lockdowns, by vaccines, by the whole nine yards of all this.
Insane shit that's happened in the last three years.
And it was kind of like a preliminary thing to build into the National Citizens' Inquiry, which I'll send you the link for that as well, which I am part of.
I may very well be testifying in March as well.
I'm on the potential witness list where they're going to investigate all of this.
So a lot of what I've said here, We'll begin, probably be repeated, but under oath.
Don't change your story, Chet.
I'm joking.
Rest assured that people will try to, the malicious types will try to pick apart and explain away or rationalize.
Oh, well.
And so what CARES is trying to do is to try to help facilitate that investigation and to get these people help.
And so what I'm doing when we're done here, because I'm going to have to duck out in about 15 minutes.
We didn't even get to everything.
We might have to duck out earlier.
The locals have discovered me.
Get out of here.
I'll be out in a second.
But it's all part of that.
Because in 15 minutes, I'm officially joining the CARES team today to try to help do patient intake.
Kind of vet some of this stuff and try to give a little bit of direction for some of this stuff.
And then just last week, both me and Morgan, Jeremy's girlfriend, we went to the...
There was a Q&A with the Premier and the Health Minister and stuff.
And I sent you a link to Morgan speaking and she asked, when are we going to lift these mandates for healthcare workers?
Because we've got...
The last time it was published, close to a thousand of us off work due to vaccine mandates.
It's so enraging.
It's almost by design.
At the same time that they're lamenting the flailing infrastructure in Nova Scotia in particular, but across Canada at large.
You're waiting hours for ambulances here right now.
Me going back to work is not going to solve that problem.
It's a much bigger problem than that.
And to be fair, the premier and health minister and all them, like, yes, they put these vaccine mandates in place and stuff, and I'm not happy about that.
But they also inherited a dumpster fire.
Well, that's what people don't appreciate either.
Like, the crisis started long before COVID, so the excuse to lose COVID is...
To give you an example, like, we run about 120 trucks on a shift in the province, typically.
When I went to school, we were averaging about 400 calls a shift, like in a 24-hour period for those 120 trucks.
When I went off work due to injury, the number of calls we were doing in a day on average was in the 700s, and it's since gone up.
And I presume, I don't know, staffing at hospitals hasn't gone up.
Oh, no, man.
Everyone's burnt out.
They're tired.
Morale is awful.
COVID lockdowns, everyone was burnt out and tired at the start, and then all the COVID lockdown stuff made it worse.
If you're in healthcare now, you get so much...
One side is just so nasty to you because you're in healthcare.
It's like, I didn't do this to you, man.
It wasn't us.
It is the terrible thing.
There is an administrative level that makes you want to take it out on the administrator, but it's just following rules.
The infrastructure is there to make it impossible for everybody, and it does no good getting angry at a certain level of the administration because you're just going to get kicked out.
Like, I know the health minister.
I know her because of my work.
And she's a very nice lady.
And, like, I think they've made a mistake.
I think they've made a big mistake.
And I'm not...
Because I talked to...
They didn't take my question.
I talked to them afterwards.
Like, look, I'm not here to fight you.
I'm not here to debate vaccine stuff.
Because I know you don't want to talk about it right now.
Please.
Like, we've got people who've been injured.
You sit down with us.
And will you listen?
And she was like, yeah, make an appointment in my office.
I'm like, we'll come in, we'll talk.
And it's like, you know me.
You know me from work.
You know my father.
We've worked with my dad during the hurricane because my dad helped manage a lot of the cleanup and stuff.
So you know who I am and you know I'm coming from a good place and I'm not here to attack you because we're not going to get out of this mess if we just keep attacking each other.
They didn't lie to me.
They didn't lie to you.
It was much higher up the chain where that lie came from, and they made bad decisions on lies that were handed to them.
So that's how I try to look at it, because otherwise you'll just become enraged and you won't get it.
Okay, I think, you know what, Chet, this went, I say not longer, I just hadn't budgeted for this.
Folks, I'm not getting to the Twitter files today.
I'm going to do it tomorrow.
Sorry, man.
I told you.
I'm on the East Coast.
I'll talk your ear off.
There's no sorry.
This is something that needs...
This is something that's a longer story than...
Or maybe...
It's all of it, man.
There's more.
So much more.
Well, for the time being, Chet, I'm trying to get your Twitter handle.
What is your Twitter?
I know I said...
I'll put it in the chat for you.
Okay.
Give it to me one more time because I'll put it in the pinned comment.
What is it?
There it is again.
I see the pleb now.
I see a video from the pleb on Twitter.
I'll put it in the wrong...
Text it to me anyhow.
Stick around.
We're going to end this now, everybody.
Tomorrow I'm going to be live in studio with Mike Ward.
Another Meanwhile in Canada, but at the very least it's going to be how comedy goes bad and not...
Not the same physical issues.
It's atrocious.
I think the tide is turning in terms of public awareness.
You can't deny it anymore.
The doctors, having gone from 1 in 20,000 myocarditis of young adults to 1 in 5,000.
One of the docs that was there when we talked, I told him, I'm a paramedic.
I've got pericarditis.
I'm pretty certain of it for reasons.
Like, I have concerns about this, and I'm one of the people that can't come back to work because you're still mandating this.
And I'm not going to take it, and I know it's not safe for me to take it.
We need to talk about this.
This is important.
And they agreed.
It's like, we do need to talk about this.
And it's like, okay, when?
And like, I...
I know as mad as people are getting at Tim Houston, our premier stuff, I don't envy that guy being in that seat, man.
That sucks.
It's a hard realization.
It's the thing that we did to try to help.
Because, in all honesty, at lower levels, I think people did this trying to help.
They honestly, honest to God, thought that this would help us solve a problem.
Because it is a problem.
And to learn that that has caused things to be so much worse is a hard thing to come to terms with.
It's very hard to come to terms with.
It's like if you did something and you accidentally injured your kid when you're trying to...
That's what I'm thinking of right now.
But then the flip side is always going to be like if someone says, okay, well...
If you did it and injured your kid, or if you didn't get the jab, and then your kid was the one in a million that had a very serious reaction to an infection, and then you can say, I wish if only I had done that.
But you're playing with probabilities on both ends, but you need to be playing with those probabilities in full awareness of those probabilities, which have been largely unknown if you want to give them the benefit of the doubt, or concealed if you don't want to give them the benefit of the doubt.
Yeah.
And I honestly think they know.
Like the people at lower level government, I think they know and I think they're horrified.
I honest to God believe that, man.
And I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt as long as I can.
There are some people that we could mention names I don't think deserve the benefit of the doubt.
I'll give the names.
I'll say any chief medical officer of any province.
I won't name any.
Oh yeah, like Robert Strang should be, he needs to, he's the one giving advice.
He needs to own up to this, and he should know better.
Kieran Moore, a small risk of myocarditis.
One in 5,000.
The doc that was there says, oh yeah, it was one in 5,000 for the Moderna one for myocarditis in young men.
Per dose.
Per dose.
And that's why I stopped giving the Moderna ones.
Why isn't that setting off red flags for you?
Or at least yellow ones.
Green ones that are really yellow.
What is going on?
Who's the one?
Not Bonnie.
That's British Columbia.
Alberta, the one who I...
Dina Hinshaw.
The one who lied about the 14-year-old kid with stage 4 brain cancer who died in a coma.
That doesn't help anybody.
The worst thing to do in a pandemic is to make people panic.
The most important thing to do would be to...
Address it early.
Analyze the situation.
How are we going to deal with this?
And then carry on as normal as humanly possible.
Because the more you cause panic, the worse things get.
Because if you had first responders show up on a car accident and they were all flustered and panicked, it's going to be a disaster, right?
You need to be as cool and calm as collected and you need to bring the stress level of everybody else down.
Because when people's stress levels go up...
Their outcomes get worse.
Because one of the big things with, say, a heart attack, we try to calm you down and we usually give you morphine or, in some cases, we'll give you fentanyl just to try to bring the pain down.
Because pain and stress will elevate your heart rate and basically make your heart...
It also helps with other things, too.
But you're going to...
Vessel dilation with morphine to try to help the blood flow.
But bringing pain and stress down means that your heart rate isn't going up, your blood pressure isn't going up, and you're basically not making yourself self-destruct during a heart attack.
So we get you stoned during a heart attack to try to save you, right?
Among other things we do.
Jet, if I'm going to end it on this, may I inquire about the tattoo on your arm?
Oh yeah, it's Slimer.
What is it?
It's Slimer from Ghostbusters.
Yeah, man.
Okay, I was totally misreading it.
I was seeing it upside down.
Dude, I just saw Slimer.
Okay.
May I ask the obvious question?
I think many people are asking, why Slimer?
Did you love Ghostbusters that much?
Okay, I see.
Well, then.
I didn't put...
Well, now I'm putting two and two together.
Yeah, underneath it says, let's show this prehistoric bitch how we do things downtown.
All right, Chet, you've got five minutes to get out of here.
I want to say our proper goodbyes when we leave, but thank you for telling your story.
Oh, yeah, man.
I got more to tell you.
We'll be in touch.
In due course, but at least this is out now.
What is the word?
Memorialized for the world to see, view, for the government to dissect if they want to find inconsistencies or ways to go after you.
But thank you for telling us.
I would encourage people to go to the nationalcitizensinquiry.ca and sign the petition to investigate all of this.
National Citizens Inquiry.
Yeah, I'll put it in the chat in Rumble.
Okay.
And send it to me afterwards and I'll put it in the pinned link.
Yeah, one sec.
I got it.
And while you're doing that, everybody, tomorrow, stay tuned for the link.
Mike Ward at noon.
So I'm going to be in local studio for that.
The Twitter files, it's nothing more than what we already knew.
Just a different subject matter for the censorship for the benefit of the JVJAB companies who are raking in billions while suppressing any discussion that might compromise their ability to rake in billions off of this.
They did this to good people, man.
It's awful.
Okay, Chet, you stick around.
We're going to see our problem, guys.
Everyone in the chat, a surprising and fantastic discussion.
Thank you for being here.
But everyone in the chat, I'll see you guys tomorrow.