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0: Making sure y'all can hear me. 1: Loving the emojis on the title. 2: Shall we wait a few more minutes to let everyone come in? 3: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Do that. 4: Can you guys hear me okay? I'm I'm a I have a new headset. Yep. We can. 2: Sounds good. Yeah. 4: Alright. Y'all sound good too, but then again, I talk to you a lot. Too much sometimes if you ask me. 1: You get tired of our voices? Yeah. Right. 4: Yeah. Sometimes. Sometimes. 1: Namaste is on 0: too. Doctor And doctor Witcher's on. 4: Yeah. Doctor Witcher's on. That's Jamie's on. Jamie's on. We'll give people some time to, 0: to gather. 4: Yeah. Start it together. Yep. If we gather, they will come. 2: Yes. 4: Last time, we had a whole bunch of people on, so that was good. That was good. Yeah. 1: I think it was close to 500. 4: It was. It was very close. Very close. Well, 2: well, what I think I'm gonna do is, I guess, I'll get the the rules rolled off and get it started if you guys wanna do that. 4: You might wanna wait for a few people to few more people to join. 1: Yeah. Give it, a minute or 2. 4: Yeah. I'd give it till about 5 after. That's the, generally, the standing rule. Yeah. 2: Well, since we're while we're waiting, at CHPNP, everyone, welcome again. If you if you're new, this is an interesting organization that helps people with, if you're a victim of COVID 19, if you're a victim in a hospital, hospital COVID 19 19 protocol. We are a group that helps people with, seeking information. We have a lot of support groups. 1: We're all over The United States. We have state chairs in every state, almost every state. And we're very active in New Jersey and in Texas. And, there are 2: some other states as well that are really active, really making some strides. 0: Yep. So California, Michigan. California? We're Yeah. 4: Yeah. Yeah. We have a state chair in in a lot of state states. We have multiple projects. We have the COVID Humanity Betrayal Memory Project at former feds. That's the, the project in which we document, we document stories of protocol deaths or survivals, and the shot and, the shot deaths and shot injuries, as well as other COVID crimes against humanity. We document those, and we are creating a living archive. We've got about a thousand stories that have been submitted. And so, there's and they're coming in all the time. I just did an interview today with a, young man. He was 23. His mother was 47, killed in the hospital, by the protocols. So, it's and it's still happening. We're still getting calls, and so we want to bring awareness to what's happening and affect change, get these protocols off the market, bring accountability for what's happened to people's loved ones, and make sure the world never forgets, these these horrendous things that are have happened and are happening. We can't even talk in the past since. They are happening. And so we do that with a, strong support. We've got a citizen task force that we formed. And so what is there? About a 125 members of the citizen task force, and, we'll put some information in the chat in the we'll post the information on how you can get involved if you if you feel like you have time, talent or time, talent, and treasure. That's what it takes. And so, we'll talk a little more about that later. And we all of course, we do this all with amazing partners. With many doctors like doctor Witcher and attorneys like Jamie Shear, Michael Hamilton, Matt Tyson, Dan Watkins. We we we have so many doctors and and doctors, nurses, and attorneys that come along alongside us and and partner with us. I don't know. Cece, do you wanna talk a little bit about, even the we we, the people 50 stop, recall the shots project? 1: Sure. That's our newest project. It's, working with the state AGs or county commissioners or whoever we can get in front of to get the shots, the jabs recalled based on the fact that we know they're contaminated. They're contaminated up to 35% of the shot itself with the plasmids that are used to make them. They should have been purified before they were packaged up and stuck in someone's arm, but they were not. And so they are contaminated. And just like any, contaminated baby food or contaminated, dog food, they need to be recalled and pulled off the shelf and, not ever be stuck into another human's arm again. We know that there's over a modest estimates over 600000, deaths from the jabs and countless injuries. Kat Barker leaves our vaccine injured support group with over 4400 people in it. So it's it's a serious thing. If you have a jab injury story or worse, please contact us, and we'll get it on the record as well and get you some support. 2: Okay. Well, let's begin. I'm gonna do a little quick, intro here. That way whoever's listening, we just have a few rules that we follow. 4 simple rules. Rule number 1, if you are a troll and you wish to speak, do so with some level of creativity. There's nothing worse than a troll who doesn't care to bring his or her their very best to our spaces. Rule number 2, try to keep it under 10 minutes. Everyone wants to have a chance to speak. That's why they're here, and that's why we're here to listen. So, we're not the best at keeping time, so, just let us know if we go over that time. We'll we'll try to keep tab on that. And then rule number 3, seriously, if you are not speaking, just mute your your mic there, because sometimes we hear chatter in the back and others can't hear what others are saying. And then rule number 4, last but not least, this space is recorded. So, be very mindful of what you say and and make sure that whatever you're saying, you don't want to get off. It's something that's, negative. You know, let's try not to go there. So, it is recorded. So passing it off to, back to, to Gail. Okay. Miss Gail is busy. How about Cece? 1: I'm here. Yeah. Thanks everybody for coming to our space. We usually try to keep a a topic each week. Today, we're talking about the bounty that were placed on people's, lives when they went to the hospital because the hospitals were so highly incentivized to use these protocols. Never before have we seen where, the government's having to pay the hospital to use a certain drug, and that should tell you if the drug works, they shouldn't have to pay for it. Right? So, so many deaths from remdesivir. We all know that it's toxic. It, you know, shuts you down your kidneys and other organs. And people didn't die from COVID. They died from these hospital protocols that the that the hospitals made tons of money on. And maybe we can get, doctor Witcher to speak on the remdesivir front. Is he have we made him speaker? 2: No. 1: I don't think so. Him a invite. 4: Okay. 1: I thought we had oh, there he is. Oh, we sent him yeah. We sent the invite, doctor Woodger. You just have to accept it. But, anyway, so, also, if you know somebody or had a loved 1, get remdesivir or pass away from remdesivir, please contact us. We do have a class action going against Gilead for remdesivir as well, which we'll get to Jamie. She'll talk about that. 5: Say hello. 6: Yeah. Hello. This is doctor Witcher. 1: Hello. Sounds like you're driving. 6: Yes. Can you hear me? 1: We can. 6: Okay. Yeah. Yeah. We're driving back, Brooke and I, from Pensacola, Florida. Just down there visiting our kids and grandkids, but for the day. But yeah. So, on the remdesivir front, you know, I'm a medical doctor. I've been a medical doctor here in Mississippi for 25 years. I am a, practicing in the rural setting. And, you know, I see some of the poorest folks in Mississippi over the last 25 years. When COVID hit, I was the medical director of a small rural hospital in Yazoo City, Mississippi. And, you know, we, I treated some of the very COVID patients in Mississippi. And, I was using hydroxychloroquine, zinc, vitamin d, you know, and azithromycin. These were, medications that I think many doctors were using here in Mississippi in the hospital setting. You know, wasn't any, big secret? I mean, you you can go, and look in the literature and and see that was, the the preferred, medications. Of course, you had doctor Zeb Zelenko, and and doctor Peter McCullough, many other doctors that were, promoting these medications. And so that's what I used, and, I had good results. And, and then, the pharmacist at the hospital, approached me and said that, you know, we we don't need to be using these medications to treat COVID. There was you know, I I don't know if you remember. There was a study that came out that showed that, you know, combination of azithromycin with, hydroxychloroquine could cause a, an arrhythmia of the heart, a very rare, cases. But, anyway, you know, I I was following I told the pharmacist that, you know, I was getting EKGs and following the patients very closely. And if I felt anybody was having this problem, then I would, you know, certainly be aware of it and would take them off medications. So this rolled on, and then, he kept pressuring me to, to not use it. And then, of course, the, when the Lancet study came out, bogus study that was eventually, taken, retracted, you know, saying that the hydroxychloroquine was so dangerous. And so, anyway, we, long story short, finally, the, the hospital committee of pharmacists met. And at this hospital that I I was the medical director, I've had 11 hospitals in Mississippi that were all under the same umbrella, corporate umbrella, and 22 total hospitals in Tennessee, Mississippi, and I think 1 in Arkansas. But, anyway, we, they said, you know, we couldn't use it. I still kept doing it until finally, I a memo was sent out to, assume to all the doctors that worked in this, corporate environment that we absolutely could not use, hydroxychloroquine to treat COVID patients. So at that point, I had to, you know, make a decision. Do I wanna keep my job or do I, you know, wanna do what they say? So I followed suit and and and did what they wanted. And then shortly thereafter, within weeks, is when Remdesivir came out. And, you know, the pharmacist, you know, everything was is computerized these days, you know, I mean, everywhere. And so if somebody had COVID, you put it in, it automatically pulled up the pharmacist would actually put in the the protocols on the medications, and and that was kinda how it was, given to the patients based on, on the the computer protocol that was really overseen by the pharmacist. And so so I I asked this pharmacist, you know, how you know, I'm just curious, but how much money does the hospital bill for Remdesivir? And, he he said $3,200. And so I assume that was a 5 day dose. That was kinda what the dosing was at that time. But, but, anyway, you know, the hydroxychloroquine, the hospital was not making any money off of it or very little, you know, probably dollars, compared to $3,200. So, you know, I I saw right away that, you know, that was probably the motive. And, fast forward, you know, eventually, I said, you know, I can't give room to this anymore. Once once the, there was plenty of evidence that showed it was, you know, it was very toxic to the kidneys. Most people that that took it were quickly put on dialysis. And so I I, took patients off remdesivir and attempted to put them on the math plus protocol, which is includes ivermectin, and I was, fired that day. And so, since then, you know, I started treating COVID patients, at home, at that point and, did use, ivermectin and and sometimes combination with hydroxychloroquine and, you know, vitamin c, d, zinc, azithromycin, predestined breathing treatment treatments, blood thinners, steroids. All these are basic things that, that do absolutely work, but, we're not allowed to be given in the hospital setting. 1: Doc doctor Witcher, did you see a dramatic change or a change at all from when you stopped using the I mean, the hydroxychloroquine and you started using remdesivir or peep were patients not improving after that you started the remdesivir? 6: Well, my hospital setting, you know, it's a real small rural hospital. Hospital. So anybody that got intubated was transferred. So we don't have a ICU there. So the patients that we had, you know, the goal was was, you know, to treat them. And I and I think the the the most detrimental part is in combination with intubation and remdesivir. You know, that's really what, you know, those are the people that once they got intubated and they were on remdesivir, it seemed like within a day or 2, they were on dialysis. And, this is that's very unusual. Just because you, you know, are intubated, you know, normally, you don't immediately go on dialysis. And and you can see that across the board that the people that were intubated on remdesivir within a day or 2 seems like a large percentage of them were put on dialysis. And so but no. I mean, you know, we so, basically, what we were treating were patients, you know, like I said, that that we that did not need to be intubated. But I I will say that many times whenever I allow you know, I I could I didn't stay at the hospital 24 7. And so there was times when I would, be treating a patient. Now 1 thing that this is another thing the hospital setting wouldn't allow me to do, and that was give breathing treatments to the patients, or any any, large dose steroids. And, you know, this is pretty typical. You know, anybody that has any sort of respiratory issues, I mean, that your go to is is steroids, high dose steroids and breathing treatments, but the hospital felt like, breathing treatments would, spread COVID and and endanger the, the respiratory therapist that was giving the, breathing treatment. So that was, so that just, you know, total, just a different way of practice. All this came down from the the CDC from the CDC and FDA recommendations to the, hospital administration, and then they pretty much dictated how we would treat patients. So but many of these patients, like I said, I would I would fight to keep them off the ventilator, try to, you know, get them up, keep them moving, try to do physical therapy, chest, therapy on them, that sort of thing. It was a battle. And and then whenever I would leave the hospital, many times these patients would, you know, we had, nurse practitioners that that also worked on these patients and and other doctors. And, a lot of times, you know, they would intubate the patient. Of course, they would have to transfer them. 1: You're cutting out just a little bit. Maybe you're driving through a a non Yeah. 6: Once I started treating patients at home 7: Mhmm. 6: Once I started treating patients at home, and I treated some very, very ill patients that I had to put on oxygen that would deaf would have definitely died in the hospital if they would have went to the hospital because they would have been intubated, put on remdesivir. And I know these medications work because like I said, I pulled quite a number of very, very seriously critically ill patients through with these these treatments. 1: And 1 more other question. Ever in your medical career as a doctor, have you ever seen where the the pharmacist dictates to the doctor what to use? 6: Not at this level. I mean, you know, over the years, over the 25 plus years I've been practicing, you know, pharmacists are becoming more and more involved. I'll use that word. You know, I just saw an article today somebody sent me where, Walmart pharmacists are are now going to, in, like, I don't have any that's quite a number of states. You go in there, and they can do COVID strep and flu test on you and treat you. So you don't you don't have to see a doctor to get, say, antibiotics or Tamiflu or or or they'll probably give you Paxlovid. I'm gonna put Purvir, which is a drugs that are, you know, that I don't I don't, think they're they're helpful and could be harmful. I mean, we we have basic treatments at work. Once again, the federal government's pushing these, these, they're basically just being the the, the promoters for these big pharma companies. But but yeah. So but over the years in the pharmacists, you know, now in Mississippi, I don't know if it's like this everywhere, but they have PhDs. When pharmacists go through, they all get, their PharmDs. And so they're they're gaining more power. And as computer systems come out, you know, yeah. I mean, they they put in every every hospital has a pharmacist, there. Even like I'm say you know, this little bitty real hospital I worked in, 1 of the smallest hospitals in Mississippi and certainly the nation, we had a full time pharmacist during the daytime that that was he basically watched every patient, looked at their chart on the computer, and would, you know, suggest highly suggest, what medications to put these patients on. 1: That just seems like a dangerous line to cross to me because they don't they're not medical doctors, and they don't have the patient's history. And, you know, are they gonna be responsible when they're, when they give us something that they shouldn't have been given, like, that they're allergic to or something? I mean, doctors are doctors for a reason, and it just seems like, that's just a dangerous line to cross in my opinion. 6: Yeah. Absolutely. I mean, I I've never liked, you know, people going to get any kind of, even a flu vaccine at a pharmacist because I mean, they don't. They don't take they don't keep a, record. They don't know the patient's full history, and then then there's no follow-up, no continuity of care. But, you know, this is this is the the way things seem to be going. And, you know, the the, but, yeah, I agree. They, you know, if they wanna be a if they wanna prescribe and take care of patients, you know, on a full level, they need to go to medical school. 1: Exactly. Well, thank you for, sharing and your bravery and taking care of patients. 6: Yeah. Thank you. Thank you for having me on here, and I appreciate, all you me, Brad Geier, and all you guys that work with the Trail 19 project. This is, huge. Here in Mississippi, you know, we've had a number of patients that, some I tried to help get get them ivermectin and and, the these, get them off from here in Mississippi. Unfortunately, I was, you know, very few people that that went into the hospital said again, Mississippi that I tried to help never made it out alive. And so, I appreciate y'all working with those people. And, you know, we want justice. That's the bottom line. We we we know that, what what what they did was, was not beneficial. And, and, you know, I'm just praying that these doctors that are in these hospital settings will will do the right thing and put their patients and not their, careers. 1: Exactly. I'm wondering where most doctors' Hippocratic Oath went to during this pandemic plandemic. Thank you again. Gail, back to you. 0: Okay. Can you hear me? Yeah. So, so thank you for that, doctor Witcher. I mean, we know how worked 3: in this. 4: You know, I've often said that there's, like, a million doctors and only 500 or so are standing in the gap for, like, 3 years saving lives, and you happen to be 1 of those. So, we love you for it. Absolutely love you for it. I would like to go to 1 of the, victims or as I call them, eyewitnesses to crimes against humanity and have her say a word. I see Jenny is on as a speaker. 8: Hey, guys. 0: What? Hey. 8: Hey. I'm a little under the weather. So if I mute my mic, it's because, I'm coughing. 0: Oh, thanks. 8: Yeah. But, yeah. So I just, thank you guys for inviting me to be a speaker tonight. And, some of you who are on here tonight may be new to tonight's space. You guys may have not been on here previously. So I just wanted to give you guys a little bit of a background as far as what happened between, my mom and, you know, the kind of treatment that she received in the hospital. So we live in East Texas, which is not far from Dallas, and she went into a hospital in September of 20 21 with COVID. She went through the drive through at CVS to get tested. They didn't test her again, before admitting her into the hospital and never tested her during her hospital stay to confirm that she had COVID. So, they, admitted her, and the admitting doctor stated per hospital guidelines she wasn't a, quote, unquote, candidate for remdesivir because she was diagnosed with nonalcoholic cirrhosis of the liver in 02/2008, which is NASH, for short. And, so I hadn't heard a whole lot about remdesivir, but I had started to just hear little things here and there about it. So I really didn't know a whole lot about it at that time, and I just thought, okay. She's safe because her the admitting doctor says she can't get this. Well, unbeknownst to me, 2 days later, a different doctor signed on to her care and ordered that she be put on remdesivir. And when that started, her health just started to decline pretty rapidly. There were just a lot of ups and downs of, you know, you need to come say goodbye to your mom, because she's gonna die. You know, we we tried to change her linen, and her heart rate went up went up, so we're gonna have to ventilate her to give her lungs a rest. And I hear this a lot in other stories as well, where people are saying that that's what the doctors and nurses are saying. The reasoning behind ventilating them is to give their lungs a rest, which we all know is just total BS. And so then they started pumping her with everything else, like propofol and, you know, just high blood pressure medication. Then they started giving her, diabetes like, insulin injections. And I remember telling 1 nurse, I was like, you know, my mom's never been diabetic. Like, she's never had any health issue whatsoever other than the the NASH that she was diagnosed with. And she looked at me, she goes, honey. She said it's because of all the stuff that's being pumped into her little body. My mom was 5 2 when she was a hundred and 15 pounds, so she was very, very tiny. And she didn't take any medications, throughout her life. She just relied on, you know, supplements and vitamins. So for the most part, she was pretty, I would say, healthy other than the the NASH. And, you know, comparing my mom's treatment in her care versus my sister who was also in the hospital with COVID at the same time, my sister's, I guess, charge nurse, the night that my sister was admitted, told me you know, because I had mentioned I wanted my sister to to get put on ivermectin. And she said, will you be firm with the doctor? You look them square in the eye. You tell them and demand that you want her to be be put on ivermectin, she said. And if they refuse it, then you can sneak it in. Well, prior to her being admitted, her PCP did, prescribe, and the pharmacy did fill that ivermectin. And I was able to sneak it in for my sister who is special needs. And because my mom was her legal guardian and also in the hospital at the same time, I had to step in and be temporary legal guardian. So I was able to go in to see my sister every day and talk to the doctors and the nurses. Whereas my mom, I was basically sneaking in. You know, I'm a chiropractic assistant. I wear scrubs. And so I would go during my lunch break, and there were so many traveling nurses coming in into that in and out of the hospital. They didn't know if I was a traveling nurse. So they just saw me putting the gown on, the gloves, the mask, and going in, and I got to spend, you know, a couple of minutes with my mom. So she, she developed a, you know, sepsis and staph, and, they put a PICC line in her. And, you know, she just just her health just constantly consistently declined, and she developed a massive bed sore. It was horrible in her sacrum area. Towards the end of her life, you could see through that that bed sore. And when they would roll her over to change her and cleanse and dress the wound, I mean, pools of blood would just come gushing out, and it was horrible. It was horrible to watch her being tortured in this way. And the questions that we were asking, we weren't getting answers. I remember writing questions on the board for the doctors to see because I I I always missed them. And when I would come back, you know, I'd look and there would be no answer. I'd I'd ask for for calls and no calls were ever made. So it was it was horrible. And, you know, I just encourage anybody who is on here for the time and thinks that they, you know, that they're alone in this or they think that this has never happened to anybody else. Well, it has happened to hundreds, if not thousands of us, and, CHBMP is an amazing support group and organization. And I actually found CHBMP through, the attorneys in California, Daniel Watkins and Michael Hamilton. So thank you for letting me speak tonight. 4: Thanks, Jen. I appreciate it. I appreciate it. Appreciate you speaking up. Some of you guys on here probably have a invite to speak. So if if you see it Denise, I think you have 1. Seeing who else who else is a speaker? 1: I believe Jamie has she accepted. Jamie and Steven. 0: Jamie. 1: Steven? Yeah. Steven Shearer. 4: Yep. Steven and Jamie. Steven and Jamie. 1: Report to report to the meeting. 0: You have a report report report to the Twitter spaces, Jamie. Steven. Report to the Twitter spaces. 9: Doctor 4: Jen has a figured out the speaker. Let's go there, and then we'll go to Dwayne's 3: after. 10: Hi there. Am I am I good to speak? You are good to speak. Oh, you're welcome. Thank you so much for giving me the opportunity. I wanna say I am a pharmacist, but not the ones that doctor Witcher talked about. I just wanna clarify. I saw things happening, from the sidelines in 2020 and, was appalled at what my colleagues were doing in pharmacy, whether it was retail pharmacy or hospital pharmacy. I witnessed them overstepping, their role as a pharmacist. Our role is for the safety of the prescription that comes through, not the efficacy. Our role is to make sure the doctor didn't make an error in writing out the prescription, making sure that, that everything goes through the, filling process correctly or in a hospital whether it's compounding, IVs. That's our role. Our role is not to overstep. And what I saw happen in 2020 was more of a divide. There's been such a divide amongst us in the professional career, in medical. So I saw that divide, widen, and it bothered me because I was always the kind of pharmacist that love to collaborate and network, have unity amongst our professions because at the end of the day, it's the patient that we're there to help. It has nothing to do with us. We all, decided to take the journey in the medical field, whatever role we're in, to look after the patient. And so what I saw happening was bothering me and disturbing. And then hearing from doctor Wicker about what took place in the hospital, is even more profound and, bothersome that that that actually took place and that that that these pharmacists are doing that. And I completely agree with him. I never want to be a pharmacist that that can prescribe, and I actually never even became an immunizing pharmacist. I, saw things through my career and felt it wasn't our place at the pharmacy. The pharmacy became a fast food service. The pharmacy became, you know, let's just get people in and out, in and out, in and out. And it was a way for, I feel, the, overreaching arm of big pharma through insurance companies, government, however you wanna look at it, to just push people through the the system, quote, unquote, and have less, less ability for oversight if there was a reaction or a problem. A lot of times, if a patient came to the pharmacy for a flu shot, that was not reported back to the the doctor's office. And then if the patient had a reaction but didn't come to the pharmacy but then went to their doctor, the doctor would have no idea they got a flu shot a day or 2 before. So there was a lot of miscommunication, and it it has been bothersome. So I I look at my my role is to work with the providers, to share our knowledge base, to put the patient And I'm just glad to have the opportunity to say that there are those of us out there who who stand with the doctors, the medical doctors. I I'm a PharmD. I have my, I'm a doctor of pharmacy, but we stand alongside the medical doctors and we want to work with them, not against them because, again, at the end of the day, it's the patient. It's the patient that really, has been suffering through all of this and what's coming, is gonna be a change. It's gonna be a change. People are gonna realize that. And people like myself and doctor Richard and so many others out there who are saying, no. This isn't right. We're gonna be the ones that people are gonna end up coming to for guidance, for help, and support because there's gonna be a need, and and we're definitely here to fill that need because we care. So I I definitely am glad to get the opportunity to share that and happy to answer any questions that that you guys have. 4: Thanks so much. 0: Do you have do you have any questions, Cece? Or 1: not the moment, and I'm sure I'll come up with 1. 0: What what So it's 8: a standby. 1: State Michigan. 0: Yes. What state are you in? 10: I'm in New York. Upstate, though. I'm a country girl. 1: Okay. Yeah. We've got some fellow New Yorkers on. 10: Yes. Yeah. 11: You you 1: had a tough date during all this. Some tough rules. 0: Yeah. Yep. Yep. Well, I see Dwayne's back too. Wayne, it's good to see you. 1: Hi, Dwayne. 9: Hey. Good afternoon. 1: All the way from Alaska? 9: All the way from Homer, Alaska. Beautiful sunny day. Awesome. 0: Unlike unlike it being night here. 9: Yeah. I I I really I didn't ask 6: to be a speaker. 9: I think I got kinda thrown under the bus, but I'll I'll go ahead and take this to Janet to speak. And off, I wanna I wanna I wanna start by saying doctor Witcher and and Brooke, you guys it was an honor to meet you too. I felt like you guys really cared about us, and, you know, she you were listening to our individual stories. And, you know, those those of us that have lost really do appreciate that, and I just wanna say thank you very much. 0: Yeah. I agree. 9: Yeah. So but other than that, yeah, things are going good here. We're we're upright and kicking, I guess. It's really hard to follow doctor Witcher and doctor Jen there, you know, with their their their knowledge that they have, and, you know, I appreciate you guys speaking out and, you know, giving us a voice. It's it's it's it's tremendously helped us in our in our fight for for what we're what we're trying to achieve here, and that's that's justice. 0: Yeah. Right. Exactly. So just for people who might be on, you know, like, last week, you did some speaking. Just kinda tell people who you are and why you're in this fight. 9: Well, I lost my wife, in September of 20 21. Same same scenario, everybody else's. She went in. She actually, she did we we both had COVID together, and, I got better. She got worse. She went to the hospital with a 70% oxygen level. So, you know, we we decided it was time for her to go and, you know, I thought they were gonna fix her, but, you know, they got her in. COVID gave her pneumonia, and she wasn't I I I believe they didn't diagnose the pneumonia, and they didn't treat it. They they just thought it was COVID and that, you know, she they were treating her with the remdesivir and intubation, and, you know, she slowly got worse. And because she was unvaccinated, I believe you know, I can't prove it a 100%, but she was put on a 12 and 12 schedule. So, you know, she was allowed to lay in her feces and her whatever for for 12 hours without any care, without any food. You know? Every every shift, they would dome the PPE, and they'd go in and they take care of her and try to feed her. But she could she couldn't eat much, so, you know, they were feeding her intravenously. They had her to believe that if she pulled her mask off, she would die, I believe. 0: Yeah. I 11: don't think she should have You 12: know? 9: You know? And she couldn't she couldn't text because she she needed her glasses to text. And with the with the the mask, she couldn't she couldn't wear her glasses. 0: What does 12 and 12 mean? Does that mean they would only go in every 12 hours? 9: Yes, ma'am. 0: Oh my gosh. 9: Yes, ma'am. So I I know I know that from an inside source because I know a lot of I know I know a lot of hospital workers up there. You know? I used to service their cars. You know? I was a I was a tire service manager for a busy tire shop for 11 years. You know? And when Fanny and I were together and, you know, we I knew everybody up there. You know? So, you know, the locals anyway. You know, they do have during COVID, there was a whole whole bunch of transient nurses, and I I even think we had some FEMA nurses up here. 0: Yeah. No doubt. A lot of the hospitals have been FEMA and Yeah. Chemists off of the nurses. 9: Well, I sure hope that they were paying attention to what the hell was going on. You know? Federal emergency emergency emergency management. You know? They they should be saying, woah. Wait a minute here. You know? You would think that, you know, that's that's their job is to make sure that everything is running properly. You know? And 0: Right. Yeah. Rather than something to perpetrate it. Right? 9: Right. But, you know, you but, you know, everybody was set in protocol mode, and that's what you had to do, you know, to keep your job, you know, basically. You know? So and that's where it ended up. And, you know, some nurses spoke out, you know, and a lot of nurses. You know? You you spoke last week about Kimberly Overton. You know? I did a I did a I did a podcast with her back, I don't know, last year sometime, and she's really wonderful person. 11: Yeah. You know, she's amazing. 9: She's she's a go getter, and I think I think that Remnant Nursing is is an awesome idea. And, you know, I encourage people to to to look into it. You know? If you're not interested, that's fine. But at least look into it and go see what she's up to. And, you know, she's she's really doing some amazing things. 1: Yeah. I invited her on tonight, but, I haven't heard back yet. 0: She's she's, she's got, commitments for the next few weeks, but she said she'll come on in. 6: She's a busy lady. Yeah. 9: You know what? Some confirmation. God bless her for being on our side. I'll tell you that. 1: True. 7: She's 0: Yeah. Exactly. You know what? She she's 9: a warrior that we need on our side. You know? 0: So She is fine. She's 1 of our 1 of our big partners. 9: Yeah. Absolutely. So but yeah. So, anyways, so that's the whole story that, you know, with the 12 and 12 schedule, overnight, her lung collapsed, and she failed overnight. And they called me the next morning, said, mister Downes, you need to get down here. You know? And they don't call you you don't they don't call you to to to come and dance. You know? You know? Your your loved 1 is dying. And they didn't actually and, you know, I I was at work, and it was, like, 10:00. I got to the hospital, and, you know, and I'm I'm, you know, just a a a train wreck because I know what's coming here. You and I I walked in there like a man of fire. They put you know, they don't the PPE on me, and that's when they did the chest X-ray on her. And it ended up, she had a collapsed lung, and it it had been collapsed overnight. How long, I don't know. But, they they did a bedside procedure to to repair the lung, and they inflated it, got it going. Then they jammed the vent in her and said, mister Downes, we're we're medevacing her to Anchorage, which is 220 miles away. So, later on that afternoon, they they met a doctor, and I I drove in, just because I didn't wanna be stuck in Anchorage. You know? I didn't wanna ride with in the helicopter with her. But her lung collapsed partially mid flight. And when she got to Anchorage, it took 5 hours to stabilize her. And I I I was waiting in the hotel the whole time for for her to be stabilized, and then they called me down again. Well, the when I got there, I was kinda confused. It was the hospital was dead. There was nobody. Of course, this is 02:00 in the morning, so you wouldn't expect many people to be there. But they had big Samoan guards at the door. You know, they weren't letting anybody in, but they knew I was coming, so they let me in. And I got up there, and all the way down to the end of the hall, The door was open. I was allowed to go in and, you know, be with her and pray with her and and kiss her and and so so and so But the chaplain wasn't allowed in. So he wasn't allowed to pray pray at bedside with me. So I got to pray outside the door, which I thought that was kinda baloney. You know? It's like, why can't you put on a mask and come in here with me? You know, please, you know, do something. You know? But, anyway, I talked to the doctor on the on the on the tell or the telescreen there, and he said that the that when when her lung collapsed mid flight, he said the doctor in Homer didn't fix her lung properly. He didn't he didn't do the procedure right. And, you know, he he said it took us 5 hours to to stabilize her, and he says, Dwayne, you're just gonna have to come to terms that she's not gonna be the same fanny. He he said she's she's gonna she's she's most likely brain dead. You know? So anyways and she had the same blank stare all the way. So I I I don't doubt for for a that that, you know, she was she was there. You know? And she might have been there for a couple days. I don't know. I I you know, they the hospital can tell you whatever they wanna tell you. 0: Right. So Right. But 9: but I I I I didn't decide at that point. I I went back to the hotel. I called some family. She she came from the Amish community, so it it took me a little bit of time to get a hold of immediate family. And, but I got a hold of him, and I I told him my intentions, you know, that that what was fixing to happen. And, you know, they I got, you know, not not an okay, but, you know, acceptance. So, the next morning, I I was still I was still I think I was pushing ivermectin. And the lady the lady with or the nurse, she got hackles up on the back of her neck. She's, we don't do that here. That's a that's a not approved blah blah blah blah. You know? And that the same spiel. Anyway, 5 minutes later, the doctor calls me back. He's like, Dwayne, look. Here's the deal. He says, even if ivermectin were to be FDA approved and it if it did work, he says she's past that stage. He says she's got blood clots in her legs, and he says she's got blood clots in her in her lungs. And, yeah, she he says it's he says it's past that point. And I said, well well, what he says, but we have this drug, and I I think I think it was Paxlovid. I'm I'm not I'm not positive of what exactly they were they gave her at that time. I'd have to go through the records again. But he says it's he says, Dwayne, it's like a hail Mary pass. He says, she's either gonna live or she's gonna, you know, gonna have to bleed out. Anyway, so so that's that's where that went. And then 45 minutes later, they called me, and they called me back to the hospital. So I get down there, storm in, man of fire. 0: Of 9: course, I get I had to get a mask on, but I did you know, they didn't don't a bunch of PPE on me. But the doors were closed. The tubes from the IV machines were, stuffed through the the the crack, and they wouldn't allow me in. And I'm like they had a seat right next to the sliding glass doors. I'm like, well, I was just in there to see her last night. Well, the night crew screwed up. It's against hospital protocol, sir. So I'm I'm sitting I'm sitting there in the chair bitching. I don't wanna go to jail. You know, at this point, I'm not you know, I didn't I didn't wanna force the issue because they've got big Simone guards and what have you. You know? You you really just don't wanna go there. You know? So I'm I'm sitting there bitching and moaning and complaining. There's 4 ladies sitting at the desk babysitting is all they're doing. You know? And then I had, I had a I there was a doctor down the hall that was, he was talking to he I heard 2 different conversations with families of loved ones that the guy had the same exact conversation with, same exact conversation with. And, you know, they it's like it's like a like a script. You know? 0: Exactly what the script is. 9: You know? You know, that and that's you know, I've seen that with my own eyes. I heard it with my own ears, and, you know, that's that's pathetic. I you know what? I I wanted to go over and punch that doctor in the mouth is what I wanted to do, you know, because he got off the phone and he looked at the nurse. He says, guess what that was? She's like, what? He's like, COVID, and they laughed. 0: Wow. Yeah. 3: It's a very 4: It Go ahead. 0: So yeah. So, Dwayne, so you you've read the 25 commonalities that are on chbmp.org, not them at the rally. 9: No. I I haven't, but I I I I can only assume I can only I I I I'm pretty sure I know what's all on the list. 0: A lot of what you just described. Right? When you said it was like a script, you know, that that's 1 of those commonalities where it seems like they're all reading off the same script with the isolation, the denied denial of of alternative treatments, the gaslighting, the Reverse. Communication. Yeah. Like, the glasses we hear a lot. I experienced that myself. It's not being able to yeah. 9: I experienced you know, that that to me is is firsthand experience of of that's exactly what was happening. You know? You know? But but, you know, it this this this makes me believe that there's that that that like, Providence Hospital in Anchorage, that's the biggest hospital in the state. You know, it's our main hospital here. It proves that they have a night shift and a day shift that think differently. 0: Yeah. I 9: I really do. I think they split them up between nights and days and, you know, you get doctor Jekyll and mister Hyde in between shifts. 0: I agree. Wrong. You know? But I And 1: we hear that a light a lot, and it's 1 of the commonalities is that things seem to always happen at night, nighttime emergencies, nighttime incidences. So That is 8: very true because I can recall several times where I got calls in the middle of the night saying you need to come over here and say goodbye to your mom. That happened twice that I know of. And, they also pushed a DNR on on us regarding my mom a lot as well and putting palliative care into place. And I actually did start to do palliative care, so they took her off all the medications and everything. And we were waiting for a family to come over and say their goodbyes, and they just had her on a you know, some morphine in the meantime. And I remember 1 of my family members running down the hall saying, Ginny, you gotta come in here. Your mom is responding. And I was like, what do you mean? So I ran in the room, and they're like, ask her a question. And I said, mom, can you hear me? And she would nod yes. And I was like, oh my gosh. I said, mom, do you wanna keep fighting? And she nodded yes, and she had a tear coming down her face. And I was like, oh my gosh. I said, there's no way I can do palliative care. And I ran out, and I told the the the nurse at the nurse's station. I was like, listen. I can't do this. I said, my mom wants to keep fighting, and I'm gonna I'm gonna stand by her wishes, and I'm going to fight on her behalf. And, unfortunately, you know, they she had come so close to being, taken off the ventilator and being trached. And the night before she was supposed to get trached, then the night nurse came in and pumped her with a bunch of, Versed and sent her blood pressure sky high. And so then they said, well, we can't do her we can't trade her tomorrow because she's not stable. 0: They 8: were and I feel like now looking back, they did everything that they could to keep her from coming off the ventilator. And, you know, I was there the night that she passed when they moved her to a different part of the hospital. I was able to spend the night with her, and I was with her every night. I was with her the night that she died. And I remember just talking to her as she died, and I was like, you know, I was like, you fought so hard. We tried. I'm so sorry. And, you know, and she she ended up passing away. 9: Well, at least you got to spend some time with her. You know? That was that was a big thing that most of us didn't get to do is, you know, like, you know, I was called down there and you know what? She was already dead. You know, when I got her when I got there, I'm pretty pretty sure she was already dead. You know? And, well, at least at least I got to see her, you know, in in her last stages. You know? They were still keeping her alive. You know? She was so she something was there. I'm hoping, you know, she heard something. You know? 3: She did. 9: You know? And 8: And that's something that the 1 of the respiratory techs would tell me because she was on the ventilator herself, and she was like, you know, they say that, you know, people can't hear when they're on the ventilator. She goes, we can hear. We can hear. We hear everything. And even just listening to some of the survivors, you know, on Monday nights, they've said that they they remember hearing things and, you know, the nurses and doctors talking and whatnot. And the sad thing about it is that my mom worked in that hospital for for 19 years before she retired. She had just retired, the year before, so she didn't even get to enjoy the life of retirement, that hospital. And she and she actually refused to go. Her her oxygen was at 74%. She was refusing to go in the beginning. And I said, mom, you have to go. Your oxygen is low. She's like, no. I don't want to. And I feel like she knew. She knew that if she was going to go in there, she was not coming back out alive. 9: Absolutely. Yeah. Well, she knew more than you did for sure. So, you know, it's yeah. It's it's terrible. You know? And it Jenny, I had to I had to pull the plug on my wife. You know? I I didn't I didn't just get to sit there and watch her die. You know? They kept her they were keeping her alive, and it wasn't it wasn't her wishes to stay alive. You know? She didn't wanna stay on resuscitation. So, you know, it it was it it was me that had to come to terms with with the fact that I was I was saying goodbye to my wife. You know? And, thankfully, my my niece got me in to see my wife in the last 45 minutes before she did bleed out. And, you know, it was it would be but still, at the same time, it's like, did that just happen? You know? I you know? And they they rushed me to sign paperwork, which I was in no state of mind of saying paperwork. 8: Yes. Same here. I I remember the chaplain coming in. The chaplain came in, and she's like, I need you to sign this. And I'm like, wait. My mom just died. Can I have some time to just absorb what just happened? Yeah. I had I had I had 6: to get out of there, 9: and I thought, well, I have to, I guess, I I have to sign paperwork. I didn't know what to do. You know? I was I was in in not in a mental state of mind to sign, though I realized that at this time, and I shoulda had a lawyer come sign with me. You know? It's like, anyways, you know, hindsight's 20 20 pretty much. So but, yeah, that's about all I have to say. I mean, you know, that's that's pretty much the gist of it. I you know, which is it was horrifying. You know? It's something we all we all had a little different experience, but it was all the same. You know? Wash it like Kimberly Overton says, wash, rinse, repeat. 4: Yep. Yeah. That's pretty much it. Right? 2: Yeah. 4: Alright. Thanks, Dwayne. Let's go 0: to Thank 9: you thank you for having me on. 0: Oh, I need 9: time. Appreciate appreciate the time and and everybody everybody here, you know, keep fighting. We're we're gonna win this. We just need to keep fighting. 4: Yeah. Thanks, Dwayne. We love you. We 9: Alright. We'll talk talk to you later. Alright. 4: Let's go to, Jamie Scheer and then Denise. So Jamie Shear and then Denise. That'll be the order. 5: Okay. Hi. Can you hear me? 0: We can. 5: Hey. How are you? 0: Thank you for 4: joining us. 5: Thank you for having us. of all, doctor Witcher, I really, really wish he was gonna be governor. Oh my god. He would have been great, but, thank you for being on this call. And, Jen Vanderwater, I'm glad you guys all got to get a little glimpse of her. She's 1 of my favorite people. I've known her for a while now. So, definitely can ask any questions about pharmaceutical stuff, and she's awesome. But let me give you guys some updates about what's going on with the remdesivir cases. So I'm part of a team of attorneys that are bringing the class action, which we've been trying to bring for a while now, but I do believe that God watches over us and helps us to decide when timing is correct. And we really feel that timing is right now to bring this case. So while we keep trying to raise more money to, be able to file and and go against Gilead, We also, I think, have convinced 1 more person to be added to the team, which will make a huge difference. So I won't say who it is yet, but, but, we're we're ready to file. And, so I'm hoping that we'll be able to announce that in the next few weeks that we are filed and that we, we're on our way, which will be which will make everybody happy, and it's going to help, maybe take the drug off the market, maybe, to help with all the other cases that people are bringing against the hospitals and against the administrators, which also brings me to my next little update. Melissa Jacobs, who is a New York attorney, who's living right now in Kansas City, Missouri, but, obviously, we can do things by phone. She and I are now helping people to file their cases if they're in New York, in case you're running out with the statute of limitations, which is 2 years for wrongful death. And in New York, there's also an extra little stipulation that you need. You have to be the executor of the estate. You have to be the named executor of the estate, which was something that we didn't know because it's not really my wheelhouse that, that I've practiced in. But, we are helping people to make sure that they don't lose out on filing against the hospital and the doctors and, you know, administrators, nurses, whoever they wanna file against. And it doesn't mean that you have to go forward with it right away. It just buys you some more time. So so that's kind of exciting too because you can bring both cases. You can be part of the class action, and you can also bring a case, you know, with Michael Hamilton, with Dan Watkins, with Matt Tyson, with, any of these wonderful local attorneys that have the guts to go against big pharma and go against the doctors and the hospitals and all that stuff. So, so, yeah, so that's that's the updates with, what we're doing. Unfortunately, the, the list keeps growing. The class action, we keep getting more and more clients, and that's not a good thing. So that means that people are still being being given remdesivir, and that's why we need every single person to wear a bracelet, to buy a bracelet, which you can still get on the former Fed's website. And that brings up another point, former feds. I mean, you guys are just amazing. Gail and Cece, you guys are phenomenal. You do these calls. You do this space now. You do, you know, these every every Monday night. And I know there's other nights that you guys do. I saw there was 1 for just for men recently. 13: Yeah. It 4: it's night except for Sunday. We got something going on. 5: Yeah. I mean, you're saving lives by doing that. It's it's tremendous. But these bracelets are life saving, and I'll tell you guys just a quick story. My daughter, went in for knee surgery 2 weeks ago, and she wouldn't wear the bracelet. She's 26 years old, and I couldn't make her do it. So, of course, I went in with her. And every doctor or nurse that came over to the to us asked me if she had any allergies, and I said, yes. She does. She's allergic to remdesivir and vecillary. What and some of them didn't even know what it was or how to spell it, so I just took the charts from them and wrote it down for them. Anyway, by the time, like, the person came in, my daughter was already repeating it instead of me saying it. So she found that they were accepting of it. It was fine. And I can tell you that it's all over my charts too in you know so if you go into a doctor's office or a hospital, you don't have the bracelet, you put down that you're allergic to Remdesivir or Veklare because, god forbid, you know, you go into a situation and there's nobody there to, you know, advocate for you, you don't want them giving you that because as we all know, it is not acceptable. It's not, you know, something that should be given to anybody. It's poison. I actually put all over Twitter when Jill Biden was, diagnosed with COVID. I said, well, they should give her remdesivir. And they said, oh, no. They're not gonna do that. 1: I wonder why. Yeah. We had a victim's, mother who went into the hospital just the other day for for a UTI complications, and guess what? She was on the next morning, remdesivir. So they are still using it, and they will find any way to get us there. They are still being incentivized to use it. So it's real important that you have your medical alert bracelet on, and it's pretty stylish too. 5: My my Steven's actually speaking up. He didn't accept the invitation, but he said that till the end of the month, they're being incentivized. 11: End of the fiscal year. 5: To the end of the fiscal year. But they're 11: September 30. 5: September 30. And, yeah, but then they're they'll renew it some other way because they make a fortune of money off of it. So just make sure that you have your protocols in your homes. You know? So do everything possible not to go to hospital. But there are times when you have to go to the hospital, whether it's like my daughter, knee surgery, or something else, even an urgent care place. Wherever you have to go, you have to protect yourself. So you have to put it down in your chart so they cannot give it to you. And like I said, these bracelets, you know, they help, raise money for the class action, and, they also help to support former feds. And so everybody should be wearing it. It's not even a question. But more and more people are are waking up every day. We see it. We hear it. You know, some of you know that and you see by by my Twitter name here. I also own a yoga studio, and we try to never really talk politics. But lately, we've been hearing more and more people, you know, that are unvaccinated or they're starting to speak up that they they're they're there's no way that they would get the vaccine. There was 1 girl that comes to my class, and she's a nurse, and she's double vaxxed and double boostered. And I just I I had to say, hey, guys. Listen. We're not closing down no matter what because we live in New York. And, and, no masks ever in this place. Don't wear masks because they're they're not gonna work. And she actually stood up, this woman, and she said, she's right. I almost I almost dropped dead right there. I was, like, dying because I couldn't believe this woman who's double vaxxed, double boostered, and just follows along the protocols as a nurse. She actually, agreed with what I said, which was really wonderful to see. So I'm hoping that the younger people, who have been brainwashed, the ones that are in college or just out of college or still in high school, I hope that they're waking up too because that's that's our future. You know? So that's, hopefully, prayers for that. So if you have any questions, I'm here to answer any questions. 4: Yeah. Thanks for, yeah, thanks for that update. Thanks for that update, on that. So, Cece, I don't you know, people might notice the way that we've titled this is, basically, bounty on the innocent, you know, COVID protocols, the smoking gun. Right? Can you give us a rundown? I mean, I certainly could too just from my own experience, but some people, I find, are still surprised to hear that, these hospitals have put in this protocol, and the protocol is not just the remdesivir or the, medications. It's the overall treatment. But they're surprised to hear about the CMS money and the CMS money that will particularly end on September 30. So they're trying to really cram that in. And it will end, of course, if we don't have another state of emergency, which are ramping up. So, do do you want to say anything about that before we go to Denise? 1: Sure. So, the best source is AJ Depreese. It is white paper on this. It's called follow the blood money. And it's a it's 75 pages, but she condensed it down to 15 for me because it's it's pretty involved. But the average per state ended up being, I believe it was $266,000 a person if they followed the exact protocol, which is a COVID admission, remdesivir, ventilation, and COVID on the death certificate. So you can see that just that's just the average. There's sub states that are way higher than that. And, you know, you have you know, everybody says that when they're in the hospital and they just are survivors at least just said everybody died but me. You know, I fought against the protocol. They happen to know about it previously or just had a a decent doctor. You can see, you know, once they have hundreds of patients that die from this, how much money these hospitals are making. And it's evident if you go to their hospital's financials, which most of them are online, especially like HCA who made literally billions and billions more than they have in previous years, why they were using it. And, again, I come back to the point, why do you have to pay somebody to use a medication if it works? It it's just it's just a strange thing. I don't think I've ever heard of that before, this this, COVID pandemic. But, yeah, the there was a bounty, and people were like, oh, I should have gotten them out. I should have done this. I shouldn't have taken them. People didn't know. It wasn't your fault. This is a trap. And once once the patient was in there, there was no getting to them, and, you know, there was no communication. And, maybe towards the end of the night, I will comment on or read our 25 commonalities because I think they're super important. I always send them to the attorneys that we work with and anybody else, you know, Stella Paul, journalist in New York, is actually writing a long involved, article on the 25 commonalities and interviewing lots and lots of of victims that experienced these. So, I guess I 4: Yeah. I was I was gonna read some of those, maybe in between, in between speakers, maybe we, we should read a few. I had them up. You want me to read a few now? Sure. Okay. So the 1 that we that that we document and then keep in mind, we've documented these based on about a thousand stories that have been submitted. I certainly experienced this in my own story. The 1 is isolation of victims. The victim is denied access to any type of, advocate, family, friends, advocate, pastors, priests, clergy, any type of just absolute seclusion and isolation. And I can just tell you from experience what that does that that puts the family into chaos and this dark space where they don't know what's going on. And the isolation from a victim's perspective on the inside is it's, it it really it really is hard, to be isolated away from family and friends and have and feel like you're just at the mercy of everyone, and just the seclusion is very difficult. I I I I found that to be very inhumane. The 1 is, that strict adherence to EUA protocols, protocols that they financially benefit from keeping you trying to push you into, the 2 and 3 kinda go together. 3 is the denial of alternative treatments, and so they tell you things we hear this over and over again, like, ivermectin isn't, FDA approved when it darn sure is, or ivermectin is for horses, which it darn I mean, they gave it to kids for for lice. It's on the world's the World Health Organization's 10 top 10, most essential and safe drugs, but they tell you those things and, tell you your only option is the protocol drugs, remdesivir, veclorine, baricitinib, tislezumab, Actemra. And, and they tell you this, and these are the drugs that they get those big incentives for from the CMS. 3: And 4: so, so they mock you for wanting ivermectin, hydro hydroxychloroquine, budesonide, those drug vitamins, simple vitamin c. They will tell you suddenly is not good for you. I mean or there's a national shortage or they'll they'll make up something. They'll tell you that it's not FDA approved, it doesn't work, or whatever, and those are all lies. You can go to c19early.org, and there's over 3 over 3,100 studies that show how effective, even iodine and melatonin beat out, remdesivir. Remdesivir is all risk, no reward. But they push it. They they have that strict adherence adherence to it. And sometimes they just force it on victims. They will when they will shoot them up with Ativan, restrain them, give them remdesivir against their will, vent them. We've seen that time and time again. And then number 4, which Stella Paul just did a great article in the American Thinker On denied informed consent. No informed consent provided, regarding the medications, treatments, innovation, or or any other procedure. Great, a great article on American thinker from Stella Paul all about informed consent. And number 5, and then we'll we'll go to Denise after this 1, is the gaslighting. The gaslighting by the hospital staff, it's in it's so intense. Gaslighting looks like this. My day up at the at the in the ICU, doctor Quach, when he found out I was unvaccinated, pat patted me on the hand and said, I'm so sorry, missus Seiler, but you're gonna die. They tell you constantly you're gonna die. They tell your family that you're gonna die because you're unvaccinated or you refuse to be vaccinated. You're gonna die if you don't comply with hospital protocol or ventilation. They constantly say things like this. When when Dwayne talked about a script, I've heard this these words over and over again. The staff said my loved 1 was a very sick man or a very sick woman. You will hear that over and over and over again, this constant gaslighting over the vaccine, the you're gonna die if you don't comply, if you don't do everything we tell you. And the fact of the matter is by doing those things, you're that's what leads to death, ventilation, death. 1: But you experienced it firsthand, Gail. 4: Absolutely experienced it firsthand. All the way out the door, I can tell you they told my family that, that I they needed to let me go because I was never going to get better, and I needed a lung transplant. I didn't need a lung transplant. I can do 45 minutes on an elliptical. I mean, I like, even out the door when my husband stormed the ICU with my daughter and took me out, even as he was putting me in the car, the nurse said, the head nurse said to him, he said, you mark my words, she'll be dead by tonight. And my husband said, you better hope she is because I know my wife. I'm gonna do everything I can to save her. And if she lives, she's never gonna stop coming after you. And here I am. So but the gaslighting is extreme. It is so extreme that even when families go to try to help their loved 1, they have because they have isolated them and they have constantly told them 8 times a day they're gonna die, it's it's just it's very extreme. 11: So they're 1: It's like they want them to die. You know what 4: I mean? Who you would Yes. They from 1: the from the help provider. Like, oh, we're gonna try everything we can. They're doing great. Come on. They're gonna make it. Be encouraging, but they say that from the minute you walk in the door. 4: Yes. I liken it to, I liken it to what a an abuser or serial killer does. Right? Like, it's that it's that isolating you. You know, somebody who's very abusive will isolate you and then gaslight you and think, oh, it's your fault if I kill you or and make the family think, oh, it's because they were unvaccinated. It's the whole and it wears on your wears on your on your mind. I mean, I, yeah. So it it is they they literally by doing those just those top 5 things, they take away hope. The isolation and the gaslighting to together and then, you know, some of the other ones, they remove any hope you have, and hope is very powerful. Hope is very powerful. Michael Hamilton talked about that last week about, you know, hope. And when that is 1 of the things that they do is they remove all hope. So, it's very cruel. It's very unnecessary. So those are those are the top 5, and and we'll do the next 5 in a little while. But let's let's have Denise, Denise Fritter is on. Her daughter, Jane, was murdered by doctors in the protocol in San Antonio, Texas, Texas of all places. Mine and Jenny and, Denise's daughter have had a lot of cases in Texas. Go ahead. 3: Hi. Thank you for having me on. I hope I can get through this. 4: I know it's hard, Denise. Take your time. 3: I don't I don't even know where to start. There's so much to unpack already from the speakers before, but it's September thirteenth of 20 21. It was Jamie's murder date. It wasn't a death date because she didn't die. She was murdered. She was murdered in Northeast Baptist Hospital in San Antonio, Texas by a freaking government sanctioned and incentivized protocol. I'm not a grieving mom. I'm a pissed off mom, and 266,000 stupid dollars is not enough to pay for my daughter. It will never be enough. Okay. Get me a story. As much like everyone else's. She presented at the ED on August 31. I got a call at 02:30 in the morning that her fiance was taking her to the hospital. She was admitted September 1. That morning, I remember Jamie calling me, and she was so excited because they had told her about this new experimental medication that was supposed to help her overcome COVID. I asked her what the name of the medication was, and she said, mom, I don't know. But she was so excited. They sold it to her so well that she was so excited that she just knew she was gonna get over COVID and she was gonna go home and become a wife and a stepmom and raise her son, and she had no idea they were murdering her. They had to wait on the medication because their liver enzymes were high. So they worked to get their liver enzymes down. Shortly afternoon, they started the remdesivir. I tried to find out I spoke to a nurse. I tried to find out the medication, and all the nurse would tell me was, well, I don't have the chart in front of me, so I don't know what the medication is. We didn't find out until September 5 that she was on remdesivir. Her older sister's a nurse. And when we found out she was on remdesivir, her sister said, get her off of that now, mom. Now. I tried. I I spoke to doctor Steven I'm or Steven m I'm. He flat refused. He refused. Said in no uncertain terms, I will not order that medication. Period. He would not discuss any other modalities. Doctor Witcher talked about modalities earlier. Nothing. We asked for the percussion. We asked for the breathing treatment. We asked for hot warm towels. Nothing. No. No. No. No. No. Everything we asked for was denied because it wasn't in the hospital protocol. I asked where the hospital protocol comes from came from. It took an act of congress and a lot of pressure before finally the guard, Victor, who was an RN nurse manager, basically, was his position. He was called the the house officer is what he was called. Everything had to go through him. So 1 day, I was in his office and pressuring him, my daughter and I. 13: She was 3: on the phone. And he finally blurted out, well, we're following CDC protocol. Well, my daughter pulled up CDC protocol. I had it pulled up because she's a nurse. And she read it to him, and she says ivermectin is 1 of the choices. Why aren't you giving my sister ivermectin? He refused to speak to Nicole anymore after that. She still got the she still got the remdesivir. It didn't matter what we said. It didn't matter what we did. Nothing changed. Nothing at all changed. She went into the ICU on September 5. On September, doctor Tamara Simpson vented my daughter. She lied to me. She told me that my daughter's oxygen went down to 45%. She also told me that my daughter gave her verbal consent. And then when I pressured her, she said well, she shook her head yes. Now I'm not a nurse, but at 45%, I've been told by nurses and doctors, you are not coherent at 45%. So there's no way Jamie could have given her consent. There's no consent in her chart, at least the pages I have. What precipitated the vent, Jamie had messaged me, and so she felt like she need a 1 to 1 care. So I called her. And Jamie and I are talking. We're having a conversation. She's she's breathless, but she's talking with me. And she said, mom, I'm in a panic attack. I I I can't get out of it. So I started talking to her. I started having her go through some exercises to relieve anxiety. She was calming down. I could hear it in her voice. I could hear it even in her breathing. And then she said to me, mom, the doctor and the nurse are here. My last words to my daughter. We're okay. Let them take care of you. About 45 minutes later, doctor Tamara Simpson called me and told me she had to venture. Very cold, very aloof, very callous. 13: So the next 3: when Jamie went on the vent was put on the vent, her sister came up from South Texas. Her grandmother came up from South Texas, and I drove in from Kerrville. We all met in San Antonio. We were staying in a hotel close to the hospital. Every night, we would go over and have a prayer vigil for my daughter. 1 night, I think it was the night. Well, of all, I had to fight. I had to fight them to get an open phone line. Jamie had her cell phone with her. So she she and her charger. So she knew what time it was. She could follow a time. Everything that Jamie would call me at times and tell me you know? She called me 1 time, and she said, mom, I feel like I'm gonna poop myself. And I said, have you called the nurse? She said, yes. About an hour ago. So I said, okay. I'll take care of it. I called Victor. I told Victor about 15 10, 15 minutes later, the nurse came in and took care of it. But it was it was constantly that Jamie before she was vented, Jamie had to call me, and I had to call and put pressure on them to get anything done for her. Just simple things like, hello. She's freaking bedridden. She's telling you they were giving her 2 laxatives. They starved her. They did not give her fluids. So when she went when she went on the vent, I asked I asked that we have an open phone line using Jamie's phone. And at it was, well, we can't do that. It's a HIPAA violation because she has a roommate. I said, put the phone on mute, and then we can't hear what's going on in the room. They tried to pull other excuses, and, I think it was at that point where I asked to speak to a patient advocate. That was the only thing the patient advocate did do was she was able to get the open phone line. So when we would have prayer vigils, Jamie could hear the prayer vigil. 1 night, there was 1 nurse, Deborah, who when we called, she said, we'll call back and FaceTime. So we did. That was the last time I saw my daughter vented, medically induced coma. That was the last time I saw her alive. 4: As you know, we're incredibly sorry about it and just the I know the pain that you're in coming up to this 2 year anniversary you are murdered, still not having them held accountable. And, absolutely, share your share your your pain. And I I don't need I just don't have words. I mean, I know Jenny are coming up to 2 years as well in September, and it's for your mom. This is all incredibly wrong. 3: I just I just can't fathom. 4: You know, you know, I 3: know about the the traveling nurses, the traveling doctors, but from all indications from what I've the research I've done is she didn't have traveling nurses. She didn't have traveling doctors. These were people that lived within the community. Their friends and neighbors and people they go to church with, how how could they sleep at night? How how could they how could they go on with their life? Doctor Tamara Simpson has 2 daughters. I've gone on her Facebook page. I've seen the picture of her and her 2 daughters at a concert with the captain, me and my 2 loves. 4: Well, you know what? 3: You know what, doctor Simpson? You took that away from me because that's what I did with my daughters. We went to concerts together. That was mom and daughter's time, and she took that away from me. 1: So sorry. Every time I hear a story, it's so heartbreaking. I can't hold back the tears myself. 14: This is 1: not right. It's not how it's supposed to be in the hospital. 0: I don't trust in 3: them to take care of her, and her trust was violated over and over and broken over and over and over again. 4: And the and this is this is the reason why accountability is so incredibly important. I mean, the teacher was 36 years old. 36. She was only 36. And to be billed to go into a hospital, and you're gonna get help, but have this on your head. I you know, my my husband's has always said people had a bounty on their head, and they committed no crime. They went into the hospital for help, for oxygen and some some med. Even the right proper medication, oxygen and the proper medication, they would have gotten better at the hospital. But at these hospitals, they they were incentivized by our government to make patients sicker and kill them. And and that is that's a fact. That's just a fact. See, the CMS money is real. It's the the data's out there. They and anytime that you incentivize bad outcomes, boy, you're gonna get bad outcomes for for a few dollars. 3: So I mean, 4: it's a lot of dollars. 3: So, Gail, let me let me just say, you know, doctor Witcher earlier said that, you know, he he talked about his protocol. 10: Mhmm. 3: Well, while my daughter was being murdered, I came down with COVID. And in fact, I think 2 years well, 2 years ago tomorrow was when my my oldest daughter took me to her home, and her PCP is the 1 that saved my life, my mom's life, and my husband's life because we all had COVID. I was so sick that the doctor kept telling my daughter, your mom needs to be in the hospital. Well, he was aware of what was going on or what had happened with Jamie because I tried to move Jamie, and at it was denied. And then I was told no other hospital in San Antonio would accept her. And then I was told I had to get a doctor and a hospital to approve and accept her. So my oldest daughter did that all within 2 hours, but they within those 2 hours, they had tanked Jamie's oxygen so much that the doctor said she could not be moved even by air flight. So we had no choice but to leave her there. But I got the ivermectin. I got the steroids. I got the erythromycin. I got the medic the cough medicine. He even had standby orders at the hospital for me to go get oxygen and fluids as needed. And he told my daughter, since I was refusing to go in the hospital, he told my daughter that if it got so bad that she couldn't take me to the hospital. He had standby orders for oxygen and IV at home because he knew my daughter knew what she was doing. So I'm here to tell you that every person and almost every person in my family has gotten COVID. Jamie was the only 1 that went in the hospital. Jamie was the only 1 that received from Disseveer and some of the other medications that you talked about earlier. She's the 1 that's no longer walking upon this earth. We all got the ivermectin. We all survived. So the outside protocols work. The hospital EUA protocol does not work. It's a death sentence. Pure and simple. It's a death sentence. 4: It is a death sentence. You are correct. 9: You are correct. 3: Thank you for letting me share my story. There's so much more, but I'll cut off there. 4: I posted yours I posted Jamie's story in the chat for people to go out to the, rumble and and watch it as well and share it. Please share the stories we put in there. Share all the stories. Make make people look at them. Make these 1: There's a thousand of them to share. So 4: Yeah. And and keep come they keep coming in. I did an interview today. I got an interview tomorrow. I got a you know, we've got interviews going on every single day. 1: Multiple interviewers. 4: Alright, Andy. Over to you. 2: Okay. So we have a special guest that's gonna be joining us this evening. Her name is, Christina. She is an embalmer, and a funeral a funeral home director. I guess she stepped away for a minute. So, is there anyone else that maybe 4: Well, she's, reconnecting, so she's leaving and come back. So, let's see. 1: Oh, she said try her now. 4: Yeah. So as soon as she comes back to she's back in. Soon as soon as she comes back on as a speaker okay. She's there. 2: Okay. Great. Well, welcome, miss Christina. Until she gets connected, I will just give everyone a little infomercial here about my website, death@baylor.com. It's an executive summary about what happened happened to me and my family in March of 20 21. That it it pertains to, the COVID protocol. So, please do check it out. Share that story as much as you can. 1: Do we have her back? 4: We have her. I see she's got the speaker. She's gotta unmute. 2: Yeah. It's a little tricky. 0: Hey, Christine. 10: Can you 3: hear me? 4: Yes. 14: Okay. Hi. My name is Christina Elliott. I was a funeral director through the beginning of 20 20 through, April of 20 23 this year and in Pennsylvania and in North Carolina. So I got to experience things and see things on my side of the picture that made me question a lot of what we were being told from the media and from our government. I started questioning vaccines back in 02/2009. From reading stuff, I had a cousin who was a quote unquote anti vaxxer, And I just started reading the things she was sending me, and it got me really thinking about if these were really good for us, for our bodies. And I was super hesitant to get vaccinated with this, and I chose not to. And I had stuff happening to me that, health wise, not related at all to COVID, that allowed me the ability to kind of side kind of glance away from having to get vaccinated. Though it did affect some future hospital visits I had to go deal with for me personally in 2021, I got a lot of flack from hospital doctors, for choosing not to get vaccinated. I have family who are in the medical field, and they were horrified that I chose not to get vaccinated. I have a daughter who is in college in DC, and for her to be able to take advantage of her full scholarship, she chose to get all the vaccinations. So my heart is heavy in that respect because I do believe I have witnessed the results of the vaccination and how it has affected some people. Not all not everyone that's been vaccinated will have the same results, but I believe vaccinations do target the weak areas in our bodies. And we're just can be more susceptible to the effects of vaccines in our system. Again, my condolences to all of you. I'm speaking from a different view of all of this than most of you have had to go through. I've touched the 3: cloths 14: that made me wonder what the hell was going on. I've witnessed the death certificates and made me question again what on earth was happening. And I had read about remdesivir back in sometime in 2020 because I was reading things on the Internet, And, I also happen to be an old neighbor. Before I moved to New York in 2011, I was neighbors with Brad Geier. Some of you may recognize that name. And I was listening to him and reading him and what he was saying on Facebook posts and delving into things that he was sharing and found other things that people were sharing. And we started having a series of COVID-nineteen pneumonias coming across our death certificates and a particular grouping time period, and I just thought it was super odd. And I knew about remdesivir, and I knew the effects of it and that it shuts down the kidneys and fills the lungs with fluid. And this was in late later in 2021 in North Carolina, and I decided to reach out to Brad and say, you know, I don't know what has happened in the hospitals with these patients, but I'm really wondering if somebody needs to check out if remdesivir is could be part of the equation to these, quote, unquote, COVID pneumonias. And I truly believe that it was REM to severe in my heart, not knowing at all what these people have been given during their hospital stay, but just that gut feeling, seeing the results of what their bodies have been through. So, again, that's just again, a gentleman had said earlier, I believe it was Dwayne, you know, it's my what I saw, what I read, seeing, you know, what I saw in the care centers of the funeral homes I was working in. I'm a licensed funeral director in Ballmer. And it was just I truly believe that the hospital protocols have murdered have killed many people in this. 1: Can you elaborate on what 3: the dog? 1: And what what was different about these people that were brought into your home? 14: Well, back in 2020 when it was beginning, I was working on a Jewish funeral home. And we literally were not allowed to see the bodies. That was the decision made by the owners because they were terrified. People were just really terrified in the beginning. But when I went to work in another funeral home in Pennsylvania, they they were embalming the COVID deaths, and there was definitely, difficulties because of the tons of medications that these patients were being given. There was definitely more difficulty in embalming the COVID bodies. And again, I I say COVID with, you know, parenthesis marks around it or quotation marks because I don't believe it was COVID that killed these people. So I believe it's the the protocols that did. And that's just my layperson, I guess, opinion or and also just putting 2 and 2 together and reaching 4, in the equation. I didn't so they were just very, you could tell that there was, a lot of, air bubbles that would come up, just more than usual. There was the clots that were just crazy long, 8 inches long, this rubbery whitish texture that I had never seen before. Granted, I haven't been a funeral director, for I've only been for 7 years, but there were other long term funeral directors that were saying the same thing. Even in the funeral direct funeral profession, you had the 2 camps. You had people saying, you know, directors and saying that there was something different with the blood clots, and then there were others that were it was the director saying it had to be COVID. It couldn't be the vaccines. It couldn't everything had to be COVID. It was more just the struggle to embalm the bodies and the clots. They were just not normal clotting. They were just more difficult to take care of, and it was primarily new that it was because of the medications. There's been more of a problem as embalmers to deal with the deaths that were coming from hospitals over the past, you know, several years, but it was definitely truer with these COVID deaths that we were getting from the hospitals. So that's a little bit of my story. 1: Thank you so much for sharing that. We've heard, you know, a lot of testimonies and and stuff from many, many different professionals in this movement, but, that's the I've heard heard from a funeral, director or embalmer. 4: So, yeah, I don't 14: There's there's embalmers there's embalmers that kept these the clots and and preserved them because they were so unusual in their 40 years plus experience. So there there are directors out there. They're just a lot of people are afraid to talk. They're afraid of losing their jobs, you know, licensed by the state. So people are just hesitant to speak up. 4: Yeah. And then they got they did get kind of attacked when they did speak up. So 14: Oh, yeah. Oh, it happens even now in the funeral professional world. You have your your your camp that they can't believe that nobody that people would choose not to be vaccinated just because they solely they believe so much that what the government, what the media is telling them and even what other doctors are saying about it, and that anyone any doctor that's saying, you know, anything different than what the media doctors are saying that, you know, you're all quacks and crazy. And, my I have a relative who is a nurse, and she told me point blank, she said, I have very little compassion for you for choosing not to get vaccinated. So that was tough to hear because it was immediate family member. She said, if you get sick, I'm not gonna have much compassion for you at all. So it was hard to take that line as, you know, a respected professional in the community and within my family and, you know, just say, no. I'm not gonna do this. 6: Exactly. 4: So, Cece, I wanna something came to mind here that I wanted to to read I wanted to read something. It's not I was gonna read the next 5, the next 5 commonalities, but we're talking about the, you know, the embalmers and what they found, and I I'm gonna go a little, rogue here, if you don't mind. And I wanna read something. It's it's a it's a few paragraphs, but it it came out in, June of 20 22. And so and I think it really kind of get it's it's and it's not prophetic, but it but it could have been. And it was an article called the unvaccinated will be vindicated. Do you mind if I read this? 1: And then after that, I've got a special guest that is trying to log on right now too. 4: Okay. Okay. Alright. So, so it's called the unvax I'm just gonna read the this bold this part that we bolded out. It says the unvaccinated will be vindicated. 27 months after the World Health Organization announced that the world was gripped by a deadly COVID pandemic, views and opinions vary as to who was right and wrong and whether the science was sacrificed in the quest to pollute the people's minds and bend their will for motives other than health and safety of the world's population. We quoted extensively from a column written by Susan Dunham, a vaccinated Australian journalist whose opinion is worthy of consideration. And this is what it what it says. If COVID were a battlefield, it would still be keep in mind this is June of 20 22. If COVID were a battlefield, it would still be warm with the bodies of the unvaccinated. Thankfully, the mandates are letting up and both sides of the war stumble back to a new normal. The unvaccinated are the heroes of the last 2 years as they allowed us all to have a control group in the great experiment and highlight the shortcomings of the COVID vaccines. The unvaccinated carry many battle scars and injuries as they are the people we tried to mentally break, yet no 1 wants to talk about what we did to them and what we forced and what they forced the science to unveil. We knew that that the waning immunity for the fully vaccinated had the same risk profile as others within society, as the minority of the unvaccinated, yet we mark them for special persecution. We said they had not done the right thing for the greater good by handing their bodies over to medical and medical autonomy over to the state. Many of the so called health experts and political leaders admitted the goal was to make life almost unlivable for the unvaccinated, which was multiplied many times by the collective mobs with the with the fight taken into workplaces, friendships, family gatherings, and hospitals. Today, the hard truth is none none of it was justified as we took a quick slide from the righteousness to absolute cruelty. We might blame our leaders and health experts for the push, but each individual within society must be held accountable for stepping into a well laid out trap. We did this despite knowing full well that principled opposition is priceless when it comes to what goes inside our bodies, and we let ourselves be tricked into believing that going into another ineffective lockdown would be the fault of the unvaccinated and not the fault of the toxic policy and ineffective vaccines. We took pleasure in scapegoating the unvaccinated because for months of engineered lockdowns by political leaders blinded by power, having someone to blame and to burn at the stake felt pretty good. We believed we had logic, love, and truth on our side, so it was easy to wish death upon the unvaccinated. Those of us who ridiculed and mocked the noncompliant did it because we were embarrassed by their courage and the principles and didn't think the unvaccinated would make it through the unbroken through would make it through unbroken, and we turned the holdouts into our punching bags. Fauci, Rachel Walinski, Biden, and the, and the other cast of in prominent roles need to be held accountable for vilifying the unvaccinated in public and fueling angry social media mobs. The mobs, the mass Nazis, and the vaccine disciples have been embarrassed by betting against the unvaccinated because mandates only had the power we gave them. It is not compliance that ended that that ended domination by big pharma companies, Bill Gates, and his many associate organizations in the World Economic Forum. It was thanks to the people we tried to embarrass, ridicule, mock, and tear down. We should all try to find some inner gratitude for the unvaccinated as we took the bait by hating them because their perseverance and courage brought us brought us the time to see we were wrong. So if mandates ever return, which is happening, if mandates ever return for COVID or any other disease or virus, hopefully, more of us will be awake and see the rising authoritarianism that has no concern for our well-being and is more about power and control than it is our health. The war on the unvaccinated was lost, and we should all be very thankful for that. 14: May I may I say 1 more thing? This is Christine. In regards to what you were just talking about 2: That was very powerful. Thank you so much for that, Kale. 1: Go ahead, Christine. 2: Guess we're having some technical difficulties. Definitely this are we good? Are we good? Is she are we on? 1: I can hear you. Twitters are glitchy. 2: It is so glitchy. It's crazy. Yeah. This is, hearing some of these stories tonight is heart wrenching. And, you know, my story, I can relate with a lot of people here. You know, after hearing the embalmer story, I mean, I I mean, mean, when I've and I've heard from others, you know, rubbery substance is being pulled out of the body. This is an amazing time to be alive, but also a very bizarre time. And, coming to these spaces and sharing your stories and and, you know, getting all the getting the word out, raising awareness, consciously growing as a group and as a society, that's what we need to do right now. I think that that's what, healing is is needed. That the healing will come by telling your story, by telling a lot of people. You're not gonna believe what happened to me. Oh my god. Check it out. You know? You do this enough times. That's therapy in itself, and you're helping other people. So that is profound in itself. And you make friends along the way. You meet people you never would have met any other way. So this is this is a time in history that you're gonna meet. You're gonna meet more people. You're gonna get more acquainted probably with more people than you ever wanted to. But along the way, you're gonna learn things. Things you never I mean, I've learned from, from the group that I'm part of. This group, this former feds group, is a wealth of knowledge, a compendium of information. K? And failure does not exist in my lexicon of thinking, and that and that shouldn't exist in yours either. So be very, very confident that we're going to, have accountability for these hospitals, for the administrators, for doctors, nurses. Let's just keep doing it. Let's let's let's stick together. I'm gonna pass it back over to miss Cece. 1: Hey. Okay. Make sure if you're looking for your invite to speak that you click accept and, then we can give you the floor. Christina, I know you were cut off. Are you still on? 4: No. It doesn't it doesn't look like it. I I I couldn't hear her either. Yeah. Something was going on. But, Jabra has been waiting to speak as well. Maybe we could go to him while we're waiting, him or her. I don't know Jeff like, okay. So, like, if I say him or her and it's wrong, it's just because of the, you know, the name. Yeah. Like, I you know, American Granddaughter's pretty easy. You know, when some of the some people so Jabrab, and I may be pronouncing that wrong. But 1: G Jabrab. 4: Jabrab? Jabrab? G j e b r a b 1. 1: Report to the meeting. 4: Report report to the Twitter spaces, please. Report to the Twitter spaces. It's your turn to speak. 2: You guys have received the 3 Stooges? We're calling doctor Harry, doctor Fine, 3: doctor Larry. 4: Oh, man. I I love the 3 Stooges is my favorite, Andy. I love the 3 stooges. 2: Oh, the the best the best 1 is when they're in the hospital and they're doctors, and they and they start doing operations on someone, and they go, Anakanapurnur, and they make up words for different instruments. It's really, like, 4: I experienced that while I was in the hospital. Actually, doctors exactly like that. 0: Oh, I can imagine. 1: A very, very special guest. I'm so excited that he is on. Hopefully, the speaking thing is ironed out. I think it still says listener for him, but, I'm sure 4: It does. 1: You have to accept the invite. 4: Accept the invite? 1: Yeah. 4: Yeah. He's gonna accept the invite. Or Or Departing. 1: Mic and send request, and we can accept that. Yes. Showing you yes. 4: Hit the mic. Hit the mic. Stanford, hit the mic and the little mic microphone, and it'll send a request to make you a speaker. Sometimes if you're on a Oh, 1: is it now I think he's there. 4: Nope. Still a listener. 1: Oh, is he moving up? He accepted. Okay. 4: Ah. Thank you. 1: That y'all know who doctor David and follow him. Been huge, in this space and fighting against these protocols and vaccines. His attorney, Stan Graham, is on, and he's gonna update us on what's they they've got going on. Thank you so much for coming on, Stan. Just unmute your mic. Yeah. There you 11: There you go. Can you hear me, Cece? 1: Yes. I can. 11: Great. A technological Luddite, and I've succeeded anyway. It's great to be with everybody. I've been, listening to some of your stories, and, they're humbling and motivating. So, Cece, thanks for the invitation. It's great to be with you this evening. 1: Thank you so much for coming. So what all do y'all have going on? 11: Well, cutting edge right now, I can tell you that David David Martin's in Europe. David and Kim and Martin are in Europe. They're on a 2 plus week tour to several European countries that specifically invited us back, to speak with them after David's keynote address at the European Union parliament, COVID summit a few months ago where David gave the keynote address, that and I I forward you to cc that link. It'd be great to share that. 3: Sure. 11: That that speech has been viewed over, 4,000,000,000 times. And so it's made a massive impact, in the European Union, to start with, which is why, David's been invited back. The exciting thing about being invited back is that the, the Europeans have developed a backbone. And, after learning what David disclosed in that keynote address, which I think Cece is perhaps the hardest hitting, delivery that he, that I've seen him give in 3 years. Actually started the speech by saying I was here in this seat 10 years ago and I told you what was going to happen and unfortunately I'm sitting here telling you that 10 years ago I told you what was gonna happen and now you all know what happened. So it was a, it was a bit of a jolt for, all the attendees. I think, everyone who has heard that, it's been a bit of a jolt because David has been on this, on this plan at least since the early nineties. As, most of you know who who have heard David speak and are aware of his comprehensive patent intellectual property, attracting prowess. The good thing is is that, there are a number of European states that want to take, initiate criminal action against Ralph Barrick. Which of course is what David and I have been focused on here domestically. After a few years in learning that there's not a single federal official or state official, elected official who's willing to even initiate investigations, we are working with a small handful of sheriffs that, are at the inception of initiating criminal investigations to mister Barrick. So that's, that's wonderful if we're doing this in tandem, with now the Europe a number of European countries that wanting or, wanting to do the same thing. So, even if we couldn't find, you know, high ranking elected officials in this country to take action, actual criminal action against mister Barrick. I think everybody, attending knows mister Barrick's name and his, his history, his CV, right, his, participation in the development and weaponization of the spike protein, his participation in the development of Remdesivir at the University of Alabama, his work at University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, that went on, during the moratorium. You know, I I've gotta tell you, you know, even back as, in 2006 he published a paper, Ralph Barrick did that, that identified the, that an acquisition even back then that 1 could acquire a genome of a coronavirus for under 40000 dollars which you said, raised some concerns. You think? In fact, in 2004 he said it was conceivable that technical advances over the next decade may even render large viral genomes commercially available for use by legitimate researchers, but also by bioterrorists. So the impact of David's delivery about 6 or 7 weeks ago in Europe have had its effect. Like I say, they're David's there not only making presentations, but meeting with lawyers who have stated a strong desire to bring criminal criminal actions against Ralph Barrick. So, we may find that, under the not just US law, but international law, we have treaty violations by mister Barrick, sufficient to, warrant European Union basically extraditing him to those, you know, to their several states for prosecution. But we'll have an we'll have an announcement next week. I won't wanna steal David's, thunder, but we'll have so I'm looking forward to that and, would love to come back and report to you, Cece. 1: Oh, that'd be awesome. Question. Has anybody, do you know, talked to Ralph before? And does he know what he's done, do you think? I mean, he has to, but has he taken any kind of responsibility? I mean, he's part of making the virus, right, the spike protein and part of remdesivir. 11: Yes. 1: And there's all these millions and millions of deaths, it seems Yeah. 11: Almost singularly responsible as, you know, if you can consider that a possibility if you're when you're funded by DARPA, you know, if off off budget, financials, you know, contributions, matching contributions from NIH. Yeah, there's no question. He he knew who was giving in the check, he was cashing the checks at the university. You know, he's, fortunately I can't read the fellow's mind but you can understand that, you know, his personal involvement was establishing the human clinical trials in the Democratic Republic Of The Congo, everybody remember that? 1: Yeah. 11: He was personally involved with the World Health Organization, Fauci was actually personally involved as well with those human clinical trials. You know, you pulled the profiles on those trials and I think everybody on the call is aware that remdesivir is 1 of the 4 drugs that was being tested in those clinical trials was booted out of that, out of that, 4 drug protocol because of its lethality. I think everybody here, is quite aware as well of its, you know, its lethality ranging between 53 to 86 percent. You know after that CC he actually posted on, on a page on the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill website under, you know, under the, the virology department where he works. Even after, it was specifically a few months after that human clinical trial trial where they had so many deaths caused as a result of Remdesivir. He made a statement and I, I checked it just 3 weeks ago and it was still posted there. He said that when a drug works this well, everybody in the world who needs it deserves to receive it. And, it's like the, you know, the communication pattern that these folks use which is they tell you what they're doing in plain sight and if you're not paying attention you miss it. You know, here he says when a drug works this well, you know, it deserves to be used and given to everybody who needs it. It did work very well and just, their plan was not fully published, that, you know, calling the human population was a thing and that we're, you know, at the beginning of, you know, the early part of this century I think if we, if everybody would take a look at what was going on in the 19 twenty's, a hundred years ago with the Eugenics Movement, the deep involvement that The United, that the Federal Government of the United States had from the, from, the highest offices in the Federal Government even through the beginnings of the administrative state and through large organizations, corporate organizations even then in the 19 twenty's and thirty's that the Eugenics Movement was incredibly powerful, in fact it was, it was front page news in scientific journals because of how how it was being touted as, you know, 1 of the advanced sciences and 1 of the ways to improve society was to prevent the propagation of under deserving, you know, the under deserving, part of our species. So, it's, it's almost, how should I say it's, it's almost surreal, going back and actually looking at the data that was openly published by the news media in print, to recognize the, some of the biggest names in science, some of the biggest names in medicine, on the scientific side of things, the beginnings of big pharma and, the focus of all that energy, all of those resources was eugenics. 3: Yeah. 11: And here we are, we're a hundred years later in the cutting edge of that weapon has been sharpened and now it's no longer blunt force trauma, it's that plus, it's got a scalpel edge, they can cut so finely. We can engineer as you all know now, engineering viruses is a matter of software now. Right. Gene therapy is a matter of software now. And so Yeah. It is, it's it's a very strange, world. 4: It's rather frightening, I have a question for you. So you and, you know, doctor David Martin spent a lot of time trying to to bring up, bring about some, level of justice and accountability and, you know, working with trying to work with cons constitutional sheriffs, if there is such a thing anymore. I'm not sure. And, DAs, what do you find what what did you find was the biggest roadblock? Because these people are elected officials. Right? Maybe we need to get better at who we elect. But what did you find to be the biggest roadblock as to why we can't get, constitutional sheriffs and DAs to take some level of action Yeah. Against what is clearly, 0: you know, a mass Holocaust? 11: Yeah. 1 of the so we have a few challenges. 1 we didn't think we would have or that, we didn't think it would be as challenging as it has turned out to be. Like I say we've, we, we cultivated relationships with over 2 dozen sheriffs who were, strident in their support, because we shared, significance of amounts of evidence with them, documentary evidence that was incontrovertible. I can tell you I've seen a number of sheriffs blanch, you know, actually watch the blood go out of their faces, when they understand the, the amount of planning and purpose behind, what's been happening. The challenge, and of those, I would say a little less than half have been able to stay a course, that is to maintain their commitment. Some of those who started with an aggressive and committed spirit simply, ghosted us, just disappeared. 4: Interesting. 11: Others who are still with us, 1 of the challenges we have is, our victim profile, for these cases against Mr. Barrick and everybody under, hopefully everybody understands, we're bringing cases for capital homicide, for reckless homicide, and for negligent homicide. So of course there is no statute of limitations. The challenge that we have Cece is that the victim profile we're looking for is, is very strict. It fits a very specific fact pattern. And the reason that we're insistent on that fact pattern is because we want to bring the cases, not just for the exercise, but to win. There have been enough cases over the last 3 years that have been, inadequately prepared, you know, inadequately argued and failed. On the other hand, there have been cases that have been, into which a lot of resources have been poured, tons of brainpower by some, you know, brilliant people, courageous people and we find obviously that the Judicial System is compromised. We had an experience here in Utah on the Federal District He 1: really is him? 4: Yeah. I can't hear him. Well, now he's muted. 11: Oh, okay. 1: Here you go. 11: I was saying a year and a half ago, David and I and our team brought a federal case here in in Utah. I was just just making the observation that we have a federal judiciary who is compromised. Mhmm. We have a state judiciary which is compromised. And we found out that, we found that out personally, David and I did in our team when we brought the case in the Utah Federal District Court to get an order, just defining, you know, a singular issue which was to define the COVID countermeasures as gene therapy not vaccines. The evidence that we provided was overwhelming including the admissions of Doctor. Birx, the admissions of doctors from the World Health Organizations and others. We waited for over 90 days for a written opinion from that federal judge who was a octogenarian, here in Utah. After 90, they were, obligated to, you know as a routine to get that opinion out within 60 days, it was over 90 days and when we received that opinion, it certainly wasn't the work product of a well exercised federal judge. 0: You 1: think somebody else wrote it? 11: I personally, that's my personal opinion. There were typographical errors in a federal district court's opinion. That doesn't happen. Right. Especially if you put in 90 days of work. And so the, I believe that the judge was handed that opinion. We haven't done linguistic, any linguistic genomic studies on that opinion. I believe if we would, we would find that it would have a language pattern that's inconsistent with that judge's other opinions. But it just, it showed us that, another dimension of the depth of corruption in our society. So it just may be, Cece, it just may be that the European Union will serve as an, a judicial and legal ally with The United States to actually bring justice to those Americans who have been killed as well as those in Europe who have been slaughtered. So we'll see but we, like I was going to say we have, the challenges we have with even our current County Sheriffs and County Prosecutors is finding the specific victim profiles that we need in order to win those cases. And of course the evidentiary burden is very high, the evidence that we have, as it pertains to the development of these countermeasures is very clear. What we need is victims who have a history that includes receiving, 2 injections of these of the Pfizer or Moderna countermeasures within, within a month or so of each other and then being admitted into a hospital and being, in getting a Remdesivir protocol within 2 weeks of that injection. 1: Why is that exact protocol necessary? I mean, how does that prove that Ralph Baric did something? 11: Well, the proof well, we we have the proof that he developed, the countermeasures. Right. That's not the question, that's a factual, that's something that a judge could take judicial notice of. Mhmm. We're doing the reason for the tight fact pattern is to prove intent. 1: Okay. 11: To prove intent to kill. And so of course, as it should be that is a very high burden. 1: Right. 11: A factual burden to carry, and and gratefully so. But, so we're we are very particular with the victims. I've spoken to many, many victims. And, so we have that tight fact pattern, Cece, that needs to be met as well as finding victims in the counties where we have willing sheriffs. 1: Yeah. That seems to be a a balance. Yeah. 11: That's been Yeah. That's been a challenge because we have counties where we have sheriffs that are just chomping at the bit and we have we we've had a challenge for almost a year now in those counties finding kind of the the Rosa Parks, party, you know, speaking metaphorically. So that's absolutely necessary for the cases. 1: So how because 11: the last thing the last thing we want to do is bring, you know, bring those cases and lose and set, begin to set some precedence 1: Right. 11: For any other, district attorneys. They need to come out of this winning. We we need to win. 5: So how can 11: And so 1: Like, the listeners and everybody else just find get get, you in front of sheriff's that people might know or find victims? 11: Yes. So we're, the website, our website, prosecutenow.i.io. Prosecutenow.i0 right now is undergoing, some upgrades. It should be up in 2 or 3 days. But, you can reach us with information at that, at that URL, prosecutenow.io. We need if if you know your sheriffs and, and understand their, desire to, you you know, if they were against, the mask mandates and refused to enforce them, if they were against the injection mandates, the school closings, if there's any kind of indication that your sheriffs were in fact against these unconstitutional overreaches of the federal government. Certainly connect us with, certainly connect us, you know, with those sheriffs, we'd be happy to have you on the phone and conversations with David and I, David and I and your sheriff. Personal introductions are best. Personal relationships, and the trust that is, commensurate with them is something that we certainly, we certainly need on our side because, you know, the enemy is, cloaked a lot of times. So personal relationships with, you know, wonderful people like yourselves, with your sheriffs where you have a relationship of trust is certainly an advantage for us. 10: So with that 3: I'm back. 11: Understanding, you know, learning who victims are in those in the same counties. Anybody that you know who has this particular fact pattern of receiving 2 injections and then within 2 weeks, we could actually stretch it to a month but it needs to be, you know, maximum on the outside of 4 weeks, 2 to 4 weeks from getting that injection to hospital registration and and ivermectin treatment. 1: Remdesivir treatment? 11: I'm sorry. Yes. Remdesivir treatment. 1: So, so we don't actually need to convince the sheriffs. Y'all have y'all are gonna bring all the evidence. We just have to get you in front of them. 11: Yes. Yeah. The sheriff's we we will actually travel to meet them, personally in their office, you know, with their counsel, etcetera. Well, David and I will sit down with them. We've done that a number of times to show them the evidence. It is overwhelming in the conversations we have with them we present, quite a bit of that evidence. That's enough to shock the conference. And so, having those conversations, getting you folks here to make make those introductions for us is 1 of the most valuable things that I can ask you to do. 1: So So, the sheriffs that you've met with that didn't get on board, I mean, what and you're showing them this mountain of evidence. Yes. 10: What are the 1: what how are they denying this or not getting on board with this? What are they saying? 11: Like I said, Cece, 1 of the things that they do is after committing and saying, yes. We'll do this. Yeah. They they go silent. I don't know, we've seen some very, David and I have seen some, we've seen some very interesting behavioral patterns when we were working, you know communicating with a lot of attorneys general in any number of states as well as federal and state, elected officials, presidents of state senates. I mean with elected officials at all levels of state government and federal government to see, some of them be brave enough to make a commitment and then find that when our next meeting is set up something happens. 4: Yeah. 11: Either they're sick and can't meet or, we arrive and there's no record of the meeting. We know that some of them have been have received threats. We know some of them have received, for example, videotapes of them doing things that they should be doing, you know, being places where they should have been. So there's blackmail involved, we're quite certain. So, and of course there are a number of, elected officials, you know, throughout the country that are, they're there as a consequence of, of, bad money. 1: Yeah. 11: Or you can say, you know, bad sources or oppositional sources of funding and they're there to carry out an agenda and it doesn't involve justice. I mean, you've seen the recent, sentencing. 4: January 2. 11: You know, 22 years. 0: Yeah. 11: Where we have a president and his son who are clearly, you know, have a bit involved in criminal activity and, and no consequences. Yeah. So it's, it is disturbing to see an upside down judicial system, and, we certainly hope we can salvage some of it. 1: Right. You know, Brad, our founder, he's represented several j 6 defendants and, you know, he's he doesn't even recognize the the justice anymore. It's it's we got a lot of work to do. 11: Well, that's why we're hopeful. You know, we're hopeful that, this trip that David is, conducting right now in Europe, I think, Europe has a history. They've already been through genocidal anathema to us. 9: Yeah. 11: It's there certainly it's We've had something, we've had certain strains of that kind of activity, but nothing on the order of 2 world wars, you know, we just haven't had those kinds of wars fought on our ground. There is a there is a repellent memory in the European collective mind that, seeing this kind of shit, pardon my friends. 1: Exactly what it is. 11: Seeing this kind of shit go down means that, they remember Stalin. They remember the Eastern Front. Mhmm. They remember the Viki government. They understand, they remember Hitler. They remember Mussolini. You know, that's, that's seared into their conscience. Hell, they had the 100 years war moreover, you know, several hundred years before that. Right. So there's plenty of blood in that European soil. And what David did in terms of his presentation at the European Parliament was, it was chilling. And, you know, Cece, if you can share that around with folks, everybody share that as far as you can because it is a chilling message. The upside of that, you know, the opposite side of that coin is the fact that it is so notoriously, ugly and evil as a is a groundswell of, the opposition against that, a bulwark against that tide. 12: Mhmm. 11: I think we've seen that there's an attempt here with mask mandates and I think we've seen that even in California. It's like not doing it. Right. They're not doing it. And so, I think just that the fact that they're rolling that out again was a test to see, you know, where the population stands now. And, I hope that, you know, let's hope that everybody's memory isn't thatch and, the idiocy of Doctor. Fauci and Doctor. Birx, you know, within the last couple of years and this, the stupidity and willful ignorance of mask wearing and all the other mandates. So 1: Exactly. We have to peacefully disobey as I always say, and not comply with these ridiculous rules. And, I just saw that the, the governor for New Mexico just disarmed them for 11: Yes. 0: That's I 1: mean, talk about just stomping all over your amendment rights, your constitutional rights. It's unbelievable. Not from just buying a weapon, but from actually you 11: Actually, using. Yeah. 4: How how did yeah. Like, how did he get away with that? Because, like she, 1: I think. 11: That that Well, it'll fail. It'll fail, but it doesn't stop them from trying. Yeah. 4: Yeah. Exactly. Exactly. Fail 11: and he'll get his wings clipped. Somebody ought to, you know, take him out by the witch and box his ears a little bit. So hopefully that's happening anyway. 14: A good old fashioned boxing of the ears. 0: Yeah. I I I'm back. 11: On a farm in Idaho, you know. It's, I know the right side of a shovel to use in a in a conversation, You know? So 1: So how how many sheriffs or victims are are we away from actually bringing these cases? I mean, what how how much work do we need to do on this? 11: Yep. We you know, 1: we possible. I'm sure. But 11: We're we're always 1 away. 3: Yeah. Yeah. 11: We're always we're we're very close. We're very close. We've even, you know, we've committed to provide funding for those investigations that has to be done in a in an ethical way and everything else will do everything that will play strictly by the book. Of course, but, you know, the victims it's finding the intersections of these Sheriffs and Cece perhaps 1 of the best things I can do is get you an updated Sheriff, you know, a County list. 4: Yeah, that would 11: be good. We need victims with this specific, victim profile and pathology profile in these counties. 4: That would be good. If you if you can get that to us, we'll do the we will look high and low for those victims. 11: Yeah. Because we need to 3: couple of questions. 1: Go ahead. 3: Stanford, mister I don't know your last name, so I'll call you mister Stanford. question, is it only Vax or are you looking for those that were murdered by the hospital protocol as well? 11: Great question. So we are looking for because of because of our target, that we have a very specific target and his name is mister Barrick. So what we need to invent mister Barrick, has to do with the development in, use of the gene therapy that spike protein. So we need to have, initially the injections of Pfizer or Moderna product. 2 injections and then as far as any other protocol involved the administration of remdesivir within, you know, at most a month of the final, of the, final or the injection of that, Pfizer or Moderna countermeasure. The reason why is because as we stated at the beginning, Mr. Barrick has his name all over the patents of the spike protein 13: development. 11: And that it includes the language of changing its lethal vector. Well, changing its vector to begin with from intestinal, from causing intestinal challenges to be, you know, changing it from a fairly significant intestinal virus to a lethal virus that, is targeted at the heart and lungs. And so he specifically changed the, the vector of that virus to attack the endothelial cells in the heart and in the lungs. So, number 1, as it applies to those, those protocols, or I'm sorry, those countermeasures. Secondly, his participation in the development of remdesivir at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. His name is on those patents as well. He received, his lab received money for the development, in participation and development of remdesivir. He participated specifically individually in the clinical trials of remdesivir in the Doctor Congo even up through the August. So they knew, he knew specifically, in August of 20 19 as a consequence of those, those clinical trials that remdesivir would kill between 53 to 86 percent of a population that it was given to. Particularly where that population, as you may know that the Doctor Congo population was being treated ostensibly for Ebola. There were no safety measures developed for administering Remdesivir to people who had been injected with the statutory bio weapon. None. And so that fact pattern, the weapon development and the weaponization of this technology by Mr. Barrack, gives us the very gives us a very specific fact pattern for a victim where we can match the victim up where the weapons that he devised were used in a specific way, statistically the numbers are actually reach a certainty of death, metric. If you check the CICP numbers, you'll find that, the people who had been injected and received Remdesivir they have a death rate of over 92 percent. And so it's finding these people and Cece perhaps we ought to talk about some of the databases we have and the ability we have to do some reverse engineering to search out some of these people who we have, you know, in the CICP database. But that's the reason we're looking for this, this particular victim profile is because of the weaponization of these 2 countermeasures, these 2 drugs, these 2 bio weapons that Ralph Baric specifically created. His fingerprints are on the weapon, so we're not gonna look around for another he's got his fingerprints all over these things. We know that they're leaked. The the that evidence is, overwhelmingly persuasive. We need to find the particular victims that were, that, you know, were, upon which these, these weapons were used within specific time frame with a with a consequent death. 1: So does getting Barrick eventually get Fauci? 11: Yes. Yes. Because what Fauci did, and we actually have this documentary evidence, after Obama put a moratorium on the development of, bio weapons, Fauci sent a letter to Barrack, they actually put his name on it and with a handwritten note at the bottom of the letter, we have a copy of it, that tells Barrick to go ahead and continue the development of the spike protein after all because it's been fully funded. Mhmm. And this was, over a presidential order. So, you know, Fauci's intent and participation in funding of the development of this, contrary to a presidential order not to certainly pulls him in. I will tell you, I think when, when we get Ralph Barrick sitting in front of a court stenographer for his deposition, you know, some shit's gonna hit the fan. 1: Oh my gosh. I would love to be a fly on the wall tonight. Yeah. God. That'd be like a dream come true. 11: Everybody visualize that. Just visualize that every morning when you get up, that's what I do. Visualize that, it puts a smile on my face and some resolve to to continue to go forward, notwithstanding what seems to be, you know, some some very challenging work, to get this done. 3: I have 1 more question. Yeah. So if, if the victim or the murdered person, fits within that profile. 2: Well, that was very insightful. I believe, 3: we have the 2: other Brad that wants to speak. 1: Andy, I think Andy can hear you. Speaking. I don't know if you hear. 4: Yeah. I don't think Andy can hear. I'm gonna message him. I don't think he Andy, can you hear us? 2: I I can't. 4: Yeah. Denise is speaking. I don't know if you can't hear Denise. 2: I'm so sorry. Go ahead. 4: It's okay. 3: That's okay. That's okay. So if there's a murdered person, murdered loved 1 that fits your profile and you're wanting to talk to a sheriff, does it have to be the sheriff where that person was murdered, or can it be a different county or even a different state? Because we do have some murdered loved ones that were murdered in a different county or even a different state than their loved ones? 11: Oh, yeah. So the the cases will be brought in the county where those individuals were killed. So that's been part of the challenges having, you know, finding those victims in the counties where we have sheriffs that are, you know, rare to go, chomping at the bit to make some dust. But all I can tell you is, let's talk to those victims. You tell me, give me the counties where they are, I can tell you, straight away, you know, whether we have a relationship with that sheriff. And understand that there are thousands of sheriffs, We haven't talked with all of them, not by a long shot, because we're we're very particular about, how we approach them. It's it's always through a personal relationship. Because, being able to trust who we talk to has to be on a very high, I mean, we've got to start at a high level to begin with. We don't make cold calls. 5: Right. Thank you. 11: It it could be an intimidating conversation for a sheriff anyway to say, you know, this is the work that we, we, that you need to do, that we, that we're gonna press you to do because you're in a position to do it and damn it, it's your duty. But we also educate them out about how hot the water is because it's a it's a tall order. 1: So basically, find victims, in a particular county, we need to work on the sheriff and vice versa. 11: Yes. Yes. Exact because, yeah, the the prosecution of Fauci is going to happen in the county where that, where that death took place. And understand the value of this of this, perspective of this approach because the the jury the jury in that trial is a count is a is a pool of people taken from the county. This isn't, in this is, about as American an apple pie as you can get, is conducting these kinds of trials not as, not having, you know, the AG involved, not having the US attorneys involved but having a county district attorney prosecuting mister Barrick for capital homicide, to a jury who are the peers of the victim because that's where we're gonna try the case. 1: That would be amazing. 11: And so understand as well folks that the more cases that we can bring, you know, at at some point in time, we we do change the center of gravity in the battlefield. Imagine, you know, 15 different murder cases that, Mr. Barrick would have to defend himself against. I mean there's obviously a good strategy involved where numerically and it makes defending himself very challenging, very expensive, very challenging and this isn't, these cases aren't cases that you can write a check and settle. 4: Right, these 1: are criminal cases. 11: Yeah. Yeah, these are criminal cases where it's jail time and if they support a death penalty, you know, that's on the chopping block, so. 1: Well, that would be ideal. It could kill so many people. 11: And you know, we're I I can tell you we're not far away from that. We're we're all we're just 1 person away 4: from that. 11: 1 person. 1: We all have our call to action 0: and then I appreciate it too. 3: We all 1: have a call to action to find these victims and get to know your sheriffs. 11: Yeah. And Cece has my contact information, I mean she has my my cell number, my email. You know, I'll I'll make phone calls. 1: Yeah. If it's if 0: anybody We'll 11: take calls and make calls. Then? If Cece knows that. 1: If anybody knows any, victims with that profile or their sheriff, please contact me, and I'll get y'all in touch with, Stan. And we really appreciate the work y'all are doing. We gotta get justice from all angles. 11: Right back at you. I can tell you yeah. I think we'll have an announcement from David next week. There's some strategies that are being actually acted on right now over there against the organization that we love to hate, you know the World Health Organization. There's some very interesting things going on over there to actually, cut the legs out from under that beast. So 1: I put that video in the chat for anybody that wants to, watch it. I highly recommend it. It's doctor David Martin over in Europe giving who was he giving the speech to? 11: It was the European Union Parliament, their COVID summit. So if you want, if you want your sheriff to get an education, send that link, I think David's speech begins about 21 minutes into that. There's some administrative stuff in that meeting that's handled at the very beginning, those who were involved in, in its orchestration and development. But David's speech, he is the keynote speaker and he comes out swinging. So, getting that to your friends, getting that, like I said, particularly to your sheriffs and elected officials because, he doesn't leave a stone unturned and there is, an overwhelming amount of evidence, under each, you know, under each proverbial stone. So he makes, like I said, C. C, I think the best case I've ever seen him make, on the development of this bioweapon for the purpose of, the destruction of a large segment of the humanity. 1: And he he was the reason I got in this fight, really. He's the person I watched a video about, and I'm like, holy crap. We've gotta do some I mean, he's very convincing, and he's got just so a wealth of knowledge and evidence that it was you know, it's hard to to not get involved after you listen to him. 4: Right. And and the bow tie helps. You know, when you see somebody speaking with a bow tie 3: Yeah. 11: Bald and bow tie. Yeah. That's what he that's what he says. 4: Yeah. I'm 0: like, it depends. Sure. 11: My my my, relationship with him started the same way. I saw him, interviewed by Rainer Fullman. Uh-huh. Yeah. Somebody had sent me a link to that. I watched it. I didn't know who David was that, I call I watched 7 and a half minutes of that. I called a friend and I said, Hey I'm going to send you this link, watch it. He did call me back and I said, Look, now we have to do something. Now we know, so we have to do something. 1: The patent evidence alone is just overwhelming. I mean 4: Oh, I know. 1: Yeah. 4: Yeah. 1: Wait. And everybody has a vested interest in getting Barrack even if you didn't have someone in you know, a loved 1 pass away or die or get murdered because COVID has Absolutely. Has wrecked havoc in every single person's life, whether it's your business or your children or you the protocol 11: Our neighbors are our neighbors and friends. 1: Absolutely. There's nobody that it has not affected, and it's all because of the damn gain of function stuff that he did to to make it happen. 4: And there's still people who deny that that's a that that's a thing, and yet the patents are I mean, like, it's undeniable that if you've got eyes to and can read and ears and you can hear 13: I don't know 1: how you dispute that. 4: I I don't either, but you people do. Right? 11: Well, so thank you everybody for all your work, and, I'd be very grateful to receive information from you. Certainly, many emails or phone calls I since she knows I'll follow-up with you immediately. 1: So Thank you so much for coming on. 11: We need you. 1: Yeah. We're we're with you. We're it's our call to action for tonight and, thank you so much for coming on. I hope you'll come back and update us. 11: Thank you. Thank you all. Bye. Cheers. 1: Alright. 4: I think I see somebody else on too. Is that 1: Let me look. No. 4: Nope. I'm lying. I I do see some. So there's John. I I hopefully pronounce this right. Saik, Cinq and then Brianna. Mhmm. Here's so let's go go to John. He's been waiting for a little bit. Probably butchered your name, John. Super sorry if I did. 12: You you you got it. I I appreciate it. I was hoping to catch, Stan before he left, but I'm gonna I'm going to guess you know John Bowden 1: Of course. Senior. Yes. 12: Okay. I was think when he was talking about what he's talking about, that's who came into my mind. So I was hoping they already know each other. But Yeah. So it's shot in the dark. I assume they probably know each other, but just in case okay. And then I was thinking of Brianne Dressen too from Rec 19. She may be able to help with the information. 1: Oh, get yeah. In fact, I got in contact or I had someone contact her the other day because another, call to action that we need is we are going to, start really going after them on the jabs. And so what we need is is a written state written or type statements from the injured and then signed and notarized. And those those statements sent to me, we're gonna start going after the AGs per state and are we the people 50 project. Going through the state AGs saying, look at all your your injured citizens. These shots are contaminated. They must be recalled. When we have hundreds of those, you know, per state, they're gonna have a hard time getting out of that. So, I've reached out to Debtop. Yeah. If you could help, you know, anybody on this call that can help me get start getting the injured, statements in, that would be very helpful. We've made some progress in Mississippi and in Idaho, and we need to keep the momentum going. 12: Is there, like, a template that you have or something? I'm I'm actually about 1: to be injured too. I'm not Yeah. I just know. 12: I'm in Washington. 1: Is Brad's on the is he on the call? He might be able to, to be more specific. But as far as I know, it's just you can just write out your story. You know? It'd probably be helpful if you gave the dates and if you have the lot numbers of the shots and then what happened to you and what your symptoms and illnesses are now. And then get it, you know, signed in front of a notary and, give it get get it to me. Get it. 12: Okay. Thanks. Thank you for all all that you're doing, and I really appreciate you. 1: Not a problem. We gotta get these shots recalled. 4: And and, also, if you're for people who are are shot injured, the COVID Humanity Betrayal Memory Project, the stories that we have documented there and the interviews that we do are not just protocol deaths and survivors. It's also the shots. So if please, you know, consider putting your story out there and doing an interview with us to get that out there. 1: The more stories we have, the better chance we have on winning this. You can't ignore it when we've got tens of thousands of and we'll put that link in the chat. 12: Thank you so much. I I have a number of vaccine injured friends in the audience too, so I'm sure they will appreciate hearing that and knowing they can do that. 1: We're not messing around anymore. 0: They know 1: what they're doing, and it just gotta stop. 4: Right. And it's all the it's all the same issue. Right? I mean, Brianna is also on. I see our Georgia state chair, 11: Brianna. 4: You can unmute. We don't care if you're It's 1: my new schedule or newness. 13: I was about to say, like, my brain, like, turned this loud blasting music as soon as you said my name. Everyone's like, oh my god. 2: It's like, 13: turn it off. Okay. 10: Hi. Hi. 13: Hi. So, I don't know. I'm sorry. I so I'm supposed to I missed earlier, the people that told their stories. I know Dwayne, I see. But they like, your whole story? I just don't even know. Just hit the highlights. Yeah. No. 14: Just a summary. Yeah. 4: Like yeah. Summary. Like, to you know, talk a little bit about I mean, your husband was a veteran. Right? He was a war veteran. 13: Yes. He was he's a marine, and he did, like, 6 years, 9 years, in Iraq, in the war in Iraq or whatever or whatever. I don't mean that in a disrespectful way. He 4: was young. He was young. 13: Yes. Exactly. But yeah. So he was, definitely a hero hero in our life. He was 36 years old, years young, I always say. And we have 3 little kids. My youngest was 2, when this happened, and he was very healthy. We had just gone through this whole detox thing actually earlier that year and went to the specialist and did all this stuff for our health. You know, we were really cleaned up our diet, lot of lifestyle changes. And, anyway, so we went, he was we all kinda got sick. I guess I was and then 1 of the kids actually was and then it was me. And then so it went through the house, and he was, like, 1 of the last ones. And, the protocol we used, I guess, worked. It was more like the early treatment stuff that was out then, like, from the or American frontline, doctors or something. I forget what it was at that time where I had found it. And then he just wasn't he went back to work, and they had to wear those masks at work. So that's a new development that I've been thinking about lately. Those, like, disposable masks. But he had gone you know? We had never wore wore masks before that in at his work either. It was, like, new. They had just started making him do it. And, the vaccines, I guess, had just come out. So, anyway, I I factor all that in. But so he got he he went back to work and, I guess, had to wear that mask and wasn't fully recovered, I suppose, because his symptoms just took a different turn than any of ours. And, you know, after a couple days of trying to help him at home, you know, after he stayed back home, I got scared because, you know, how after they were saying that the the, oxygen was if it was under 90, take him to the hospital. Well, I mean, it got down to, like, 82 or something, and I wish I didn't even have that oxygen thing. I know I heard Scott Sherra say that once, and I'm like, me too. I wish I didn't even have that because, like, we wouldn't we never looked at it before anyway. So but I got scared because of that and I guess and said we just need to go to a doctor, but we went to, a clinic, like, at the drugstore, like, at Walgreens, but it's actually affiliated with the hospital. It's Piedmont Hospital is where we end up going, but it was Piedmont Urgent Care. And she we we walked in and she was like, I can't see him. She said, do you see him? He needs to go to the hospital. I was like, really? Yes. I see him. That's why I'm here. So we left, and then I went in there's an urgent care, right down the street. So I went in there, and they wouldn't see him. I left him in the car this time and went in, and I said he's a veteran. He has veteran insurance. They said we can't take that insurance. I said, well, I'll just pay out of pocket if you can just see him. And they said, nope. We can't see him at all because we know that he has veteran insurance now. So I don't know what that was about. That was kinda weird. And, so we had to go to the hospital. I mean, I I looked at him, and he was struggling to breathe. So, you know, I took him. And I just kept saying because I just heard a few things at a hospital, but I was hoping it was like, you know, these really out there conspiracy theory or something. So, because I didn't know anyone personally that had experience at the hospital. So I took him in, but I still wouldn't sign anything. I knew, right, I knew about remdesivir, and I knew about the ventilator. So I said, he he's not to have remdesivir or would be put on a ventilator. And I'm like, I'm not signing that for him to be admitted until you tell me that, you know, you agreed to that. And they're like, no. We'll prove you have to prove the treatment or I I forget. I haven't written down what they told me, but I forget exactly what it was, but it was just some something, some fluff. And, so he went in, but I told every single nurse I talked to, you know, and everyone there that no remdesivir, no ventilator, no remdesivir, no ventilator. And, they put on on his chart or what they they were supposed to have. But now looking at the medical records, I see, he was they never told me any of this. He was admitted with they said he was COVID positive. They gave him a test and COVID pneumonia and, acute kidney injury, and they never told me that. I I we didn't know anything about that. And in the medical records, it says the ER doctor wrote patient is not a candidate for remdesivir. So right in the chart, even from the doctor, it said that, because of the acute kidney injury. And, they started him on remdesivir the next day. They wouldn't let him come home. I didn't know they started him on it. Again, that's me now looking at the medical records, so kinda jumping back and 4: But, 13: yeah, they they completely lied to me. I didn't know he was given remdesivir until a few days in anyway. And just a lot of really, like, shenanigans. I mean, just throughout I've got I documented everything very thoroughly. So I won't get into any of the like, a lot of the details, but it was just every single thing is just unbelievable because it was so many lies. They gaslighted me. I begged for ivermectin. You know, they you know, horse paste. You know? And, oh, that's not been approved. When I said it won the Nobel Prize in 2016 for 1 of the best safest drug in in the world, and and they're like, for he said, for COVID? And, like, laughed at me. It was just so many things like that. All these different I've got it all all different doctors and the different things they said talking me out of ivermectin and, but knew nothing about the studies about remdesivir that I had I knew about or anything. And just I had no clue about all the stuff they had put him on. He ended up agreeing to the ventilator. I mean, I just think they bullied him, and they made it so he couldn't talk to me that much. You know, his mouth covered with the BiPAP and, oh, don't don't he gets stressed when he talks on the phone. You know, all the commonalities that we have with I I have all 25 of the commonalities, in his story, and some of them multiple times. And so, yeah, it's the whole shebang. It went on for a few days, and I just know it it was our wedding anniversary. He was day 3. He was there. It was our 1 year wedding anniversary, by the way. But we had been together a few years and blended a family already. I mean, so we had been we felt like it was, like, 40 years we had been together, and it was, like, 5. So we but we didn't get to ever celebrate that because he was isolated, of course, like, right after he was COVID positive. And so they kept him, and he got on the agreed to the ventilator the day after our anniversary. I was researching, I was researching how to get him out of there and how to I they told me that to get he kept asking to sign a AMA, and he asked numerous times. And every single time, he'd end up calling me, hey, baby. You need to talk to the nurse. And I'm like, no. Like, you just need to sign it. I told you they were gonna do this. Like, I had warned him. Like, dude, they're gonna do everything to talk you out of it. Like, I know you're sick, and I know you're weak. I know you're tired, but please but poor thing. He was sick. He was weak. He was tired. Found out they had drugged him too, of course. So, I mean, you know, they drug him, and they bully him. And then so, I mean, it was almost like they kinda just put us try to put him to me. You know? And that was just terrible also in itself because I just I felt like I couldn't talk to him, you know, the way I needed to talk to him. And so ended up getting, talked into oh, the lady who studied the AMA, the final thing with the AMA was this is, like, after 3 or 4 times. I've been researching all the, like, transportation, a way we could get transportation, to get him set up with a home health health nurse. And I was like, I mean, I we had some savings. I was like, I will pay for this. We'll figure it out later. Like, I don't care. We just gotta get him out of the hospital. And, I mean, I all kind of I mean, I stayed up all night. I mean, I think a couple of we're just my friends and family, like, helping research all this stuff and ended up you know, she was she said, oh, no. In order to there was no way for us to get him out of there with it unless I stormed it, which I I wish now hearing, Gail and Huckleberry's story. Like, dang it. I should've found somebody to do that with me. But, yeah, I there was no other way. This woman said this nurse said, in order for him to sign, the AMA for us to let him leave, if he signs it no. She said, if he signs it, he will have to get up. We'll unhook his oxygen and everything. He'll have to get up on his own. We can't help him anymore. And he has to, like, get himself dressed and be able to breathe after he's been on oxygen for, like, like, full of blasting oxygen in his lungs for all these days. You know, walking sick, walk no nutrition, like, walk himself down this long hallway. He I couldn't even meet him up there. He they couldn't put him in a wheelchair. He had to get all down this hallway, like, down the elevator, all that, down out the front door to meet me. I mean, it was just, like, so ridiculous how impossible they 1: In other words, they didn't want him to leave. 13: Exactly. So that was that was like I just couldn't believe the details she went into telling me, you know, make just making it impossible. So he got he agreed to the ventilator then. That was, like, 1 of the last conversations after that little attempt at the AMA. And, so he just wanted to do it, I guess, at that point, of course, and they had bullied him, gaslighted him, and he was getting off. He actually was doing good after 4 days, something, 3 days. They were weaning him off, and they stopped weaning him off. Come to find out he had a infection, another pneumonia that was a hospital. I mean, the doctor told me it's a hospital acquired infection, which I think right off the bat, that should just that should be illegal. I mean, that's, like, such a hit. I know I think once Huckleberry said it's a violation or whatever, that's a safety, whatever. Of that. Yeah. Event. No event because that's just it's insane. I mean so that's what took him back down, and then they thought he was doing better, and then that nope. They got this other doctor came on, and he was like, nope. We're gonna start all over and resedate him. I was like, no. Just let him come off the vent. That's what they were saying. He was fighting the vent. All that stuff was just such BS. Like, how are you even gonna get someone off of that fighting it? They're trying to breathe. He's trying to breathe on his own. I'm like, well, good. Isn't that what he's supposed to be doing? And it was just, oh, such a helpless feeling to, like, you couldn't tell them they weren't listening to me. You know? Like, then lay him off of it. It wasn't my decision anymore. So they just did what they wanted to do. And, then in the end, they were like, there's nothing else we can do. And I'm like, are you kidding? Actually, I have a whole bunch of stories about the last night, but that could take hours. I'm like, here, I'll just hit that few the little highlights. I won't talk too much and then like, 3 hours later. So, I'm just gonna, yeah, stop. I guess, they they it was just a whole bunch of shenanigans more, and I was just like, dude. Yep. 4: Yeah. 13: What do you mean there's nothing else you can do? You you fought with me the whole time and wouldn't let me do what I asked you to do. And now you swore this is what was gonna work, and now you're telling me it didn't work? Like, oh, anyway. 10: Seems to 1: me, like, listening to thousands of stories that they almost were mad when people got better. Didn't you get that better 5: than that, Gail? 4: Yeah. They they they literally you know, Huckleberry and I were talking about this yesterday about how they they made people sick. 5: Mhmm. 4: I mean, they they they Mhmm. Yeah. It's like with me with the budesonide. Right? Then they decided to not give it to me anymore because it was working. But, you know, 1 of the things I just wanted to mention is, you talked about AMA, and we had to insist on going home hospice versus AMA because there's a lot of things that they're not responsible for once you go AMA. And so we that's why we insisted that, technically, when you go a, home hospice, they are supposed to help you with the transport. They didn't for us, of course, but but they, they're they're not off the hook. When you go, AMA, then they're like, oh, you can't sue us and you can't your insurance might not pay for stuff, and we're just gonna make you crawl to the door. They say all that stuff. And, so if people are gonna do that, like, the home hospice is insist on we insisted on home hospice. We even rewrote the form. When they brought us that AMA form after 6 hours of back and with the police there, Huckleberry just crossed everything out that was AMA, and he wrote a home hospice form and made him sign it. 5: That was smart. 4: Yeah. Do you, Cece, we've got, a couple things before, you've got 2 things to talk about before we turn it over to, Brad Guy, or do you want to, 14: I'll just read the 1: the next 5 on the commonality sheet. You read the 5. Yeah. So number 6 is removal of communication devices. You know, call lights, glasses, cell phones, iPads, they're either not charged, put out of reach, taken away, all kinds of stuff, and it just causes the patient more anxiety. You know, it's a proven fact that, anybody in the hospital should always have access to their glasses and hearing aids because when you're not able to communicate effectively or hear what people are saying, it just causes way more anxiety. And it's really cruel to the families, but, of course, they didn't want you to have communication with with your loved 1. Number 7, dehumanization. Just dehumanizing the victim. A lot of our victims when we any of the survivors say that they will they were treated like an animal. You know? Denise mentioned, you know, her daughter having to go to the bathroom, and they'll leave them in their own own feces or not clean them, not bathe them, not give them mouth care. Just, you know, just leave them there. And their excuses is, well, we can't come in here because you're not vaccinated. It doesn't matter what your vaccination status. Every patient should have been treated Since something was wrong, so many people probably every case, the, the loved 1 says I just in my gut feeling that something was wrong, that this was not right. There was something going on that was different than other times in the hospital. So they just had a they maybe couldn't pinpoint it in the beginning, but they just had that gut feeling something was wrong. Vaccination vaccination discrimination, huge. You know, we've seen treatment change when doctors find out that they were unvaxxed, and doctors tweeting how they hated the unvaccinated. And you when you hate someone, you you're not gonna give them the best care. So, yeah, they were clearly discriminated, against. And then rapid oxygen increase. You know? The fastest way you can get them on the vent, the better. So you're going from the the nose cannula to the BiPAP and then to these, high flow, you know, masks and blowing out your lungs, giving them a pneumothorax of just so, oh, look at that. We gotta put them on the ventilator. So that was that's another, 5 of the analogies that we've, deducted from our thousand stories, and it's kind of eerie. You know, I read these in the Monday night meetings, and most people put they, you know, they've had all of them, at least at least 20 of them. So that's the next 5 in the list. We'll we'll get to the next 5 in a little bit. Is Brad available? 7: Yes. Good evening, everybody. This is Brad Geier. How are you tonight? Hope you're having a good evening. So, let's see. On January 6 land January 6 land, we really had a, a pretty tough week, no matter how you no matter how you slice it. The leader of the Proud Boys, Enrico Tarrio, was sentenced to 22 years, which, you know, in a sample of probably approaching a thousand cases, the judges in the DC Circuit have not been known for their leniency. The senses tend to be extremely stiff, But this is really, like, this is really off the charts. And then I thought I'd thought I'd seen it when Rhodes got sentenced. I think it was the 15 years, and he's an oath keeper. And, Kelly Meggs got sentenced to 12 years, another oath keeper. I I thought that was pretty extreme. But this 22 years is just, beyond the pale, really. And I think I almost wonder if we may have, hit a high watermark. It it it's so extreme, really. There's really no other word for it, I think, To give this guy 22 years, you know, the Proud Boys, originally, the government was seemed to be trying to create the impression that it was some kind of a racist organization. Well, Rico Torrios happens to be black. He was wasn't even in Washington, DC, on January 6. But, of course, that didn't, you know, make the sentence any lighter. And I think we're getting to a point where maybe people are not people on the right, you know, there's a reliable Greek chorus there. But people on the other side, it may be dawning on them. Some, the ones that are reachable, that maybe maybe things have gone a little bit, have gone too far. He gave a, interview on, Emerald Show. And he he basically says that the attorneys he named the attorneys, wanted him in plea discussions to implicate President Trump. Again, this is this is not something that is new to me. I've heard other accounts of this. I've experienced it to a limited degree where it didn't rise to the level where I thought it was objectionable. But it was a clear implication that they were looking for defendants to sort of build the 6: the Trump 7: tweets into the into the narrative about why why a person did this or did that. These prosecutions are, in my opinion, are alarming. It's the best word I can come up with. 1: Can you, talk about how this ties into the protocol cases? Because, I probably should introduce it to you that way, but this is they're both just mass entrapment, and overreaches of of the government and the the the, corruption in the judicial systems and how you know, all of this is connected from the tax mandates to the j 6 to the protocols. If you could just expand on that a little bit. 7: Yeah. So in the February or thereabouts, 02/2003, I guess, we went into Iraq. 02/2007, we got, we sort of got started to get control over spending goods and services, in the war zone. From o 3 to o 7, it was like the Wild West. People were doing crazy things, like bringing bringing home suitcases full of cash, things like that. And we, I I was very much involved in this when I was when I was with the government. We built all these systems for use outside The United States, to be able to detect this, and, put a stop to it. And it involved a lot of surveillance. It involved a lot of warrantless surveillance. It involved a lot of, searches, incident to crossing borders where there's a diminished or even a non existent Amendment, right against, searches and seizures. So we developed all of these systems. And as best as I can tell, it seems like we we we took all those lessons that we learned in Iraq and in Afghanistan, and we imported them here in The United States. It happened over a period of a couple of decades. Most notably that, when they passed the Patriot Act, I think that was when I started to see reason reason for concern and guess it was around 2008 or 09/2010. I started seeing getting some feedback and some strange goings on. And now we're we're basically in a situation where it's pretty close to a total surveillance state. Every digital ping is captured and stored in Twilley, Utah probably, if not elsewhere offshore. And of course, you know, all the companies do it and, you know, you can pay companies to get about 70 or 80% of what you want. I suspect the government was mass surveilling the crowd on January 6. I don't think that we'll ever we'll be able to prove that until we can regain control of some of the enforcement agencies and do some internal reviews from inspectors general also. You know, we need, congressional oversight, which right now sucks for lack of a better word. It's just absolutely abysmal. There there is no oversight, or certainly very limited oversight. On January 6, you know, they they cut a piece of paper to Facebook, and Facebook turns over all of its data based on geofencing. So anybody any Facebook user who was inside the Beltway, all their Facebook information was turned over to the government with a search warrant. Might have even been a subpoena. You know, I've never I've never gotten to the source documents on that. Very hard to come by. Bank of America, any ATM withdrawal that was made within the Beltway on the fifth or sixth, that bank information was turned over, to the to the government. In the photographs and the video we've reviewed in and around congress, we see all kinds of high-tech equipment, particularly DOD equipment, quite frankly. That, you know, Stingray kind of equipment, which, basically, pretends to be a cell tower and it intercepts phone calls. It can monitor phones based on EIN numbers. I suspect they had a long you know, large number of EIN numbers that they were monitoring in real time, you know, putting it up into a queue where it was reviewed. That's why you saw a lot of delays or just congestion because there's so few people in Washington DC that day. The the congestion was not, was not all that. I mean, it was what I think it was a low volume day, believe believe it or not. So all these systems have been built up for 2 decades to where if the government wants to, it's a total it could do a total surveillance. It wants to go into a football stadium and identify everybody who's in a football stadium and had know their movements in and out, what their purchases were, you know, they wanna do mass arrests on the way out of the stadium. They have that capability. And, there's all sorts of indicia of government, let's just call them suspicious actors of unknown origin or unknown support. Could be US government support, could be another government support, could be NGOs, could be party cut out organizations that fund these guys. Ray Epps is probably the most notable example. There's others who are known like, I can't think of the guy's name. It was on the tower. The tower commander. But many, many people there's there's been reporting about activations of maybe DOD assets and in contravention of the posse comitatus. I mean, just all kinds of just frankly, just wild hair kind of stuff that 10 years ago would be unheard of. And the bottom line is January 6, to a large degree, I think it will become increasingly evident that it was designed failure. It was a protest that became a riot at certain points in time. And we look into the underlying reasons for why it became a riot. You know, there's, there's plenty of blame to go around. But clearly, there are provocateurs in amongst the protesters. Clearly, the police over responded way too early. They didn't give the proper warnings. They used made excessive use of less less than lethal including 40 millimeter canisters of flash bags, bouncing beddies, all kinds of CS gas, everything else. And they were, there were means of the exits were basically shut down from, President Trump's speech. The push through at the Capitol, happened, at a point in time when Trump was still speaking over at the ellipse, which is about a half hour walk away, for another 20 or 30 minutes when the ray of push through happened. And when those people were leaving the ellipse, there are very few police over there. There could have been, you know, injuries or loss of life, my opinion, at the ellipse just because, again, under policed, like, the and and and then that would have been MPD and Park Police. It was heavily under policed. The Capitol Police over the Capitol 30 minutes away was at about 20 to 30% of what they should have had, at the point of the RAF breach of about 5 officers, which is preposterous. 0: So do you have 7: design failure. 1: I have a question. So on these prosecutions and everything, you've written an amicus brief on behalf of the of the COVID widows to, clarify their cases to the Supreme Court. Yeah. That's kind 4: of what we wanted you to we wanted you to get into the amicus brief because the the topic of the, of the Twitter spaces is around that the protocols, you know, the smoking gun that the protocols are and just the bounty, you know, that we've seen that has been have been on the innocent heads of these victims, you know, the massive amounts of, CMS money and and all that. And if can you talk about why the amicus brief is important? 7: Yes. So the January, it, you know, you can look at it as essentially an ambush by interests involving design failure, where otherwise good people wanted their way into a situation. I believe they believed that they were lawfully acting within the law and exercising their amendment rights. And, 0: you 7: know, there's a direct analogy to what, you know, if if you're dropping off your spouse at the hospital, you're expecting them to get help. And there was an elaborate system that, you know, the 25 points of commonality was an elaborate system to draw people in, fill up those beds, get them onto a separate track for payment that was, you know, extremely, generous, let's say, with bonuses that, you know, were were really probably ill considered, you know, giving a $5,000 bonus for remdesivir when there's a you know, we all know what the track record of remdesivir was, and then having a 20% bonus on a total hotel bill. I mean, it's like you you put doctors and nurses into the situation of a waitress who's trying to, like, suggestively sell dessert of the day or, you know, expensive drink from the bar. I mean, it's not where you want the health care system to be. And so January and, people who are impacted by the hospital protocols, whether they survived by the skin of their teeth, or they lost somebody through, you know, torture and essentially, wrongful death certainly, or whether you got a were forced to get a vaccine and were injured or were killed or lost a job because he didn't get it, That coercion was was provided by the fear that, and the panic essentially that the government invoked in the population through the hospital treatment protocols. And there's an extensive, like, you know, they're gonna spend decades just figuring out, you know, what the actual stats stats are. So January 6, hospital protocols, vaccine. We have a beleaguered population that's been turned upon essentially by the government. We're really not sure, you know, not everybody in government's bad. Most are probably good. Something's happened to the systems. Something's corrupting them. We don't really know what it is. We don't know who it is. And the more you look at it, the more it starts to look like what is known as generation warfare. We just don't know who the enemy is. And so we're sitting here scratching our heads. There's probably good people in the FBI sitting there scratching their heads, wondering what the hell happened to the FBI too. 18 USC 15 12, obstruction of an official proceeding, is what the US Government used to, charge, you know, there's a whole laundry list of charges that they charged January. 15 12 is a big 1. It never was intended to be used in the way that it's being used. It was passed in the wake of, Dodd Frank after Enron. It was geared towards the executive using it. You know, if you're gonna destroy documents when you get a grand jury subpoena or something, okay. Great. You can use a 15 12. So they they're making this novel use of it, you know, never been used before. And they're even make it's even a little bit more wild because, it's it's being used for a congressional proceeding. It's not it doesn't have any it's not reminiscent of all of, say, like congressional hearings, which is somewhat like a judicial process, you you know, in in the executive. It's like an administrative counting ballots, you know, whatever that certification thing is. I mean, nobody really knows what the hell that is. And, it's a procedural thing and really has really an extreme application of 18 USC 15 12. And, the bottom line is our Amicus Brief, I'm oversimplifying it, but basically, they make use of the word corruptly. And corruptly, our argument is, should be a higher mens rea requirement, a higher specific intent requirement than just knowingly. When congress wants to use the word knowingly, it does so. And in fact, it has many times involving many criminal and, civil statutes. When it used corruptly, that's a term of art. It means certain things. And the courts thus far have just said they said corruptly, but they probably just meant knowingly. And so we we really focused on that like a like a laser beam. An annex brief is a friend of the court brief. You don't have to have standing. It could be anybody to file it. And the reason that the remdesivir widows and, wolf pack widows and next of kin of people that died in the hospitals, the reason this resonated with them is because, you know, January went to express their displeasure about a stolen election. And there's this statute that comes out of left field that even the prosecutors had no idea what it was before they used it. And they just plucked it out of left field. They contorted it and stretched it, and they just applied it to what was essentially a Amendment event. And, you know, anyone who's lost a loved 1 through 1 of these hospital treatment protocols wants to have the right protected to demonstrate at the hospital or demonstrate at the state house or demonstrate in the halls of outside Congress or inside Congress. And they wanna be protected in their Amendment exercise without having you know, there's hundreds of statutes in Title 18. You could literally charge anything with the statutory catalog Title 18 was the criminal, most of the criminal offenses in the criminal code. So it was it was a way to build a platform of, legitimacy and credibility. And I don't know how to what the term is, but just like the the reason that they organized, the reason they, they put the work behind finding councils to draft this Amicus Brief on 18 USC 15 12, which is used being used to pillory January 6, defendants, is that they basically paid the ultimate sacrifice. You know, they had a loved 1 that was tortured and killed. That's very hard to dismiss. They're basically like Gold Star Moms. And they're saying, look, we're concerned about this. And I'm hoping that it's it's a free crack at the Supreme Court. You know, the the clerks will read it. And you know, they're gonna read the footnote that we drop. You know, what is this? You know, former Fisherman Freedom Foundation. Wait. These are these are next to the kin of people who died in the hospitals? Gee. Maybe maybe that's what happened to aunt Betty. You know, to to unwind the mess that we've created. And this mess has been a long time in being created. I I believe I happen to believe that the stage, which Yuri Bessemanov warned us about in 1984, I believe that we were there in 02/2009. So I I I personally my my current leading view, I have lots of views. You gotta develop lots of views to discern what you know, have a shot at getting objective truth. My current view is that the we went from the to the stage In 02/2009, we and now we're well into the stage. And, it's gonna take a tremendous amount of work to, unwind all this. I believe that all of you are are, I believe there's significant programming behind this. And I don't believe that the programs would have anticipated that this particular constituency would have organized. So I think it it's it's, it's a, it gives us punching power that the powers that be couldn't have anticipated. 5: Thank you, Brad. Who I think we have 1: some other people that wanted to big Gail. Do you have 4: We do. Sure. We do. But, do should we read next? Yeah. 1: And I wanted to tell you, if you wanna sign the Amicus brief, it is on our website. 4: Yes. Somebody can put it in the put the link in. And, 1: Rens put it together for on behalf of the the COVID protocol victims. 4: Yeah. And, Cece, 1 other thing. So if if y'all if somebody wants to speak, please, click the little microphone button in the bottom left. When you hover over it, it'll say request to speak. Andy, do you wanna read the next 5, commonalities, or do you want me to do it? 3: I I 2: can do it. That's fine. What number are we on? Are we on number 5? 4: On 16. We are on sorry. I I'm a liar. We are on 11. 2: Okay. 4: 11 through 16. Okay. Or 11 through 15. Sorry. 2: 11? 15. Very good. Well, 12: I'll fire 2: I shall fire away. So number 11, refusal to communicate. Doctors, nurses, and hospital administration refusing to communicate with family. 1: Andy, I did I did 11 through 15. So you need to do didn't I? 0: Oh, never mind. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. 1: I did proof removal of communication, not reveal 4: Yeah. You you did that. You did 6 to I'll shut up. Yeah. 2: So that was so I'll just say it again. So number 11, refusal to communicate. Doctors, nurses, and hospital administration refusing to me to communicate with family or advocates. Number 12 is dehydration and starvation, denial of food, water, or any nutrition given, diuretics or laxatives. Okay? Number 13, restraint abuse. That's this is something my dad went through. Till his death, he was in restraints. Pretty bad. Number 13, restraint abuse. Physical restraint and or chemical restraints used. Failure to follow legal requirements around the use of restraints. Ventilation used as restraint or as a method of behavior control. And I think in my dad's case, they were sedating him to do that. Bathroom denial, number 14. Denial of bathroom use, which in my opinion is absolutely horrific. But you're forced onto a catheter or a rectal tube. Can you imagine that? And then number 15, nonemergency ventilation. Victim and family are told it is just to give their lungs a rest. Well, we all know that's true. And then number 16, the DNR pressure or, shenanigans of pressure to sign a DNR or ignored or falsified DNR. Passing it on to miss, I guess it was whose whose turn is it next? 4: Yeah. I'll if we do I'll read another 5 just so we because I know we're probably, wanna get through these. But, let me just our it's we got 7 17 through should I just do 17 through 25? 9: Yeah. 4: And then we can people can if you if these sound familiar to you and you want to speak on it, please hit 2: the button to I'll I'll also, if you wanna write us, you know, email c h p m b dot org and email us your story in detail When we're reading out these commonalities, if something pops in your head like, oh my god. You're yeah. That happened to me. You know? Tell your story. Write it out. If you don't wanna say it over the space, you can email us. 13: Yeah. Yep. 4: Put it put it in c there's a place to document your story on chpmp.org. Go ahead and and do that. So you stopped at DNR pressure and shenanigans. I will tell you that was 1 near and dear to my heart because they made me a DNR when I was not a DNR and insisted I be a DNR. Palliative care pressure is number 17. Victims and families are not just pressured into palliative care, comfort care, hospice, but, they are they are told, well, until you do agree, you cannot see your loved 1. So family is often denied participation in the palliative care consult meeting or palliative care. Imagine being put on hospice without your consent. It's it's been ordered without consent at times, isolated even in death, denied people denied access to their loved 1 as they were actively dying, denied access to view the body after death, denial of last rights of any kind. We went through a lot of that. Police and security involvement. We see a lot of this with the police and security teams. You know, the police are used, like, the hospital's own Gestapo to keep, families out, to keep the the victim isolated, and families threat being threatened with arrest. That certainly wasn't my case. We went through a 6 hour standoff before my husband and daughter, got me out. Andy went through that himself. We've seen widows, you know, threatened, you know, with, arrest or accusations many, many times. That is so common. Refusal to transfer to another hospital or change doctors. Oftentimes, not only is it denied, they don't wanna give up that money. But not only is it denied, but it they hasten the person's death to to stop it. Infections or injuries, you heard Brianna talking about this, sepsis, MRSA, or hospital acquired infections. Pressure sores, we have seen pressure sores, and skin tears down to the bone. In some of these photos in medical records, Peggy Hackett Hokett is a you know, if you look at her story out there, it's perfect example. Necrosis is another thing that's common in these stories. Neglect neglect and lack of basic basic care. I mean, we all almost everyone this is almost a 100% across the board, including myself. No no hygiene, grooming, bathing, linen changes, mouth care, none of it. You know, I lost most of my hair because of the neglect. It took me longer to recover from the neglect than the COVID. The nighttime emergencies, you've heard that in some of the stories that were shared tonight. You know, the family woken up and pressured to make these instant life and death choices with so little information. They're plunged into chaos and darkness and not they don't have any any contact contact because of the communication devices that Cece talked about being taken away. And so the staff attempts to scare them or confuse them in the middle of the night and get them to make these life or death choices, and they don't really know what's going on. 24 is the perception of, of mal malvolence. Hope I pronounced that right. Victim states or feels that the hospital is torturing them or gonna kill them. They're Malfeasance. Malfeasance. Yeah. Thank you, Malfi. It's we have seen where people have gotten their loved one's communication device back, phone or and have found videos that they've made or text messages, or they've just said, you know, these people are going to kill me. I certainly sent those kind of messages to my family. Unqualified staff, we heard about that tonight. Foreign doctors, travel doctors, FEMA, just unqualified medical staff. That's number 5 and or 25. And if you're not familiar with Operation Nightingale, you might wanna be familiar with it. 9 nursing schools where people were indicted for selling fake nursing or real nursing degrees, but but they were selling the nursing degrees and the transcripts. And in some cases, people were paying to sit the exam, and these nurses got, those it's over 20,000 nurses now in 12 states. So, that that certainly played a role in there. That's the 25 commonalities. Go and read them. And if that sounds like your story or any of these sound like your story or somebody you love, have them tell their story. Have them have them document their story on chbmp.org and schedule an interview. And we will interview them, and we will make sure that their story is, archived and out there. And we're we are not gonna stop until we get accountability and justice. I know Cece's not Cece spends all of her time every day looking for people who are not cowards, who can hold these people accountable. Yep. Cece, before we since we don't have any, additional speakers right now, do you wanna talk about some of the projects that you're working on, like the cookbook? 1: Yeah. I'm working on it right now as we speak as we're doing this call because it's a lot of work. We are coming up with a really great project, and we hope we get a lot of support for it. I've had all the victims in our group or trying to get all of them. We've got, I think, almost 300 now. Send in a special recipe that was, had tied to a memory of their loved 1 who died or if you survive if you're a survivor, then you can send in, you know, 1 that you like. But they're so they're sending in a recipe with a memory attached to it. So a few lines about, the memory and then a picture of their loved ones. So every time someone goes to cook something, and we're gonna sell these, of course, goes to cook something that they can read about that person and just keeps their memory alive and that person, forgotten. For example, I'm doing 1 right now. Let me get to this 1 right here. But I let me find a shorter 1. Let's see. All of some of the memories are kinda long. Like, this this egg pasta 1 that someone said. This is 1 of my family's favorites, especially Denny's on a hot summer day. And then the then the, recipe and then a picture of their loved 1, and it says in memory of and their name. So if you are lost a loved 1 in the hospital or or jab injured or survivor, you can definitely get a recipe into me into me so you can be part of this really special book. They'll be printed and, you know, a cover made. The the name of the cookbook is Home Cooked Memories, From Our Hearts to Your Table. And then the dedication page is dedicated to the victims of the COVID 19 hospital protocols. Our loved ones remain in hearts hearts and minds despite how pain deceives. The cherished times are eternal because memories never leave. And then, we're gonna have a couple of pages for sponsors that they can, sponsor the production of this book of this cookbook. So if you have a company or know somebody who's a company or just even an individual that wants to contribute to to making this cookbook, we will give them, ad space or dedication area so they can be part of this book as well. And I'm trying to have them out before, the November so we can use them as Christmas gifts. I know a ton of people want want them as gifts. So just a really neat, really neat book and really neat way to keep, you know, people's memories alive. 0: I think 4: it's a great project. I'm excited about it. I can't wait to, to buy the book myself, and, I owe I owe it a recipe. And Yeah. 1: I do. It'll make great Christmas gifts too because it's just it's really it's just something special. And it's got all these people in there with their loved ones' stories. And I've had a really good time making it and just thinking about, you know, what it would have been like with them with their you know, some of them will send pictures of we have a beverage, chapter, and, you know, some people will send in a a beverage rep recipe with their loved 1 drinking it and acting silly. So, yeah, it's just really neat. 4: I've read some of them, and I've I've cried because the beautiful memories of people, even people It's not it's recipes they loved or recipes they loved to cook for their families, and I think, 1: Yeah. I can put some of, examples in the chat, I think. 4: And 1 1 thing that's always so beautiful about that is, you know, we call it the humanity betrayal memory project for a reason, and, we need to remember that these the people who were killed by the protocols and harmed by the shots and killed by the shots even, these are these were, you know, beautiful human beings who made the world a better place. Their family misses them. Their family they were they meant something. They were they were precious souls that were ripped from these families. And we we need to to remember the he human side of this, the humanity of it. 1: Yeah. I put some examples in the chat if anybody wants to see and, really need, some sponsors too to make this happen. So I and I know there's gonna be people that own businesses out there that are gonna wanna be part of it. Even just a little bit, you know, you'll get you'll get a spot in the book. 4: Yeah. What are you looking for in terms of sponsors? 1: Well, obviously, it, you know, costs several thousand to get these produced, but, whatever people can give is is, is helpful. And, of course, it's tax deductible because it's going to a nonprofit. 3: So, see, is there a minimum that you're looking for for sponsors or just whatever? 1: I mean, I think minimum of at least, I don't know, $50, but but more, the better. And the more the more money that they donate, the more space they get in the book. You know, from a quarter page to a half page to a full page if they wanna really and they can make a dedication or if they it's, you know, if they had someone in their life they own a business and they had someone in their life die from the from the protocol, then, you know, that would be a neat thing to sponsor. And a lot of people will see it because, I I mean, I already got a a list of mile long of people that wanna buy them. 4: K. Looks like we do not have any more, requests for speaking. 1: So we only went 4 hours tonight instead of 6. That's pretty good. 4: We only went 4 hours last week. We were at 02:00 in the morning. 0: We 4: were 02:00 in the morning central time. We were still on this. 14: So well, 1: Thank you to all of our speakers. Yeah. Thanks. 2: We appreciate Thank you for coming, everyone. 4: Yeah. We appreciate it. We appreciate the support. We appreciate the people who share. If you want more information about the organization, you know, go to chbmp.org or formerfedsgroup.org. You can also find our support groups. We have support groups as somebody as, Jamie was saying, we have support groups every night of the week except for Saturday or except for Sunday nights. And then Saturday nights, we're here, of course. 1: But we have something going on. Daytime group on Tuesday. 4: Yes. We have a daytime for people who work nights or can't make the nighttime ones, we got a Monday night big group is a huge group meeting. It is amazing. You find out a lot about what we're doing. Tuesdays, we have a daytime support group for people who lost a loved 1 or really anybody. We also have Denise, also she she facilitates that 1, and she also facilitates a, a a support group for, people who had a child killed, parents who had 1 of their children killed by the protocol. And then she, we also or then Erin posts or does 1 for widows for for women on Tuesday night. I do a survivor 1 on Tuesday nights. Tuesday night's pretty busy. Wednesdays, we have our task force meeting. People if people wanna find out what that's about, they can. Thursday nights, we have a Soulcare, bible study and support group for women. And then, we also have a men's group, a men's support and action group because men deal with things a lot differently. That's on Thursday night. That's, facilitated by Huckleberry, my husband Huckleberry, and, a widower named Joel. And then Friday night, Cece, American granddaughter, hosts a hosts a, host a, fun night. A, it's a game night usually. It's just a late night night owl, and a lot of people can't sleep. They ruminate or whatever, and it's actually a lot of fun. 1: Y'all come. It's fun. We play trivia and all kinds of games. Yeah. 4: You had a talent show 1 time. That was that's crazy stuff. But it it's good. And then Saturday nights, of course, we're here. Sunday, we rest. Even God rested on sun on Sunday. So, yeah, that's so find out about all of that, and we've got a lot of projects in the works. You it'll it'll blow your mind, the number of committees we have, doing things. And I do see that we do have somebody else who would like to speak. L Yeah. This is Laura Adleman. Cece, I just wanted to say if you it would help, I'd be happy to, like, prepay for those recipe books if you know, or at least put some down or something if you need money to get them printed. 1: Oh, that would be nice. Yeah. That might be something that we need to do. It's preorders. Yeah. Thank you. 4: Yeah. I'll look for that or Mhmm. 1: Email me or something and tell me how 4: to do it. 1: I love all your recipes, by the way, that you've sent. 4: Oh, thank you. I've got more. Like, I could just keep going. I didn't know how many it is. As many as you want. 10: Okay. I will take that challenge. 1: Some might have yeah. Some might have, you know, some people have sent in duplicates of something, so I have to, like, take some out. So the more you have, you know, to choose from Okay. Then. I will is there anything you're short on for categories? We could use some more side dishes, some more holiday, meat dishes, beverages. We've got plenty of desserts, plenty of beef. We could use some more seafood, pork, appetizers. Perfect. I'll put in I'm gonna put the table of contents in the, in the chat too. 5: Thank you. 4: Mhmm. Sounds great. That sounds great. Thank you. It's a great idea about the preorder because then you'll you'll also have an idea of how many you need to get. Because, I mean, I'm gonna probably preorder 4 of them for people. Like, I'm giving them away for Christmas. All my people can't cook like I can cook, but they're gonna learn. 1: I think there's gonna be some businesses that wanna be part of sponsoring this too. I do too. 4: I do too. 1: Great place to donate and, you know, support would actually be in a book that's not just you know, it'll be someone on someone's shelf forever. So 4: you should reach out to patriot owned businesses and see if any of those 7: I'm sending it to the skeptics in my family. 4: Yeah. That's a good idea. Good idea. 1: Talk about ways to convince 7: people. Everything. It's like it's so it, like, sneaks in under the under the radar. 14: That's a 4: great idea, actually. 1: It's true, though, because, you know, some people you can't make them watch the videos. But if you get them a cookbook and they open to the meatloaf because they wanna make a meatloaf and then see someone's dedication to their loved ones, and you go go to another recipe and you see the same thing, you know, and it's got a, you know, 400 recipes in there, it's gonna be hard to deny. Yeah. 4: I might be giving it to the hospital where my husband was murdered. 1: There you go. Good idea. Give them, you know, gift them to some nurses and doctors and let them see what they've done. Alright. Well, I think that's everybody. Correct? Am I wrong? Do I have anyone? 4: No. I think we've got everyone. I think we everyone, last chance, put your hand up. 1: We'll have some more good guest speakers next time. I'm so glad that Dan was able to join us. Dan Graham, doctor David Martin's attorney. And, I always try to have a few professionals on in case there's questions or just updates that are happening in the movement that people may not know about. So come back, tell your friends, and we'll keep the space going. And this is our fourth Saturday. Is that correct, Gail? 4: Fourth Saturday, and it gets smoother and smoother. Of course, there's always glitches. Twitter. There's always glitches with the spaces because, you know, that's it's all it's not our fault. It's, Elon Musk's fault. So everybody please email, tag Elon Musk and tell him to fix the spaces. He must be working on it because I got knocked off earlier tonight, and it made me answer some questions about how it was. It and it there were specific things. They they said, how was your spaces? Did you were did you have it where you couldn't hear anybody or people couldn't hear? So, like, they must be aware of these problems. 3: Well, if 1: you get in contact with Elon, ask him if he wants to sponsor the cookbook. 4: I will ask him if he wants to not only will I ask him if he wants to sponsor the cookbook, but all of our rallies. But I have other things I I I would want to ask Elon Musk. You know? There's Mhmm. He's a peculiar guy. There's a lot of 14: things you could ask him. 1: Right. And everybody likes to eat. So but, yeah, we could Yeah. 4: But he some help with the org. Yeah. Exactly. Exactly. Like it. Alright. I going once, going twice, and come on. 3: We're at 2: Let your let your voice be heard, people. Chbmp.org. Check it out. Tell your friends. Tell your neighbor. Tell your neighbor's dog. Tell everyone you know. Let your voice be heard. 4: Your mailman, everyone, and share the stories. Watch the stories and share the stories. And, Gotta wake up Americans. Yeah. We need to we need this we need this is the year of awareness, Cece keeps saying. 3: Mhmm. 4: The year of awareness. 1: Well, we also have car magnets that you can get on our website too 4: Oh, yeah. 10: That, 1: you can be a driving billboard. They say COVID hospital desk may not be from COVID, chbmp.org. So that you know, I've I've stuck them on bathrooms, metal doors inside of restaurants, gas, gas tanks, you know, at the gas station. You just gotta wake people up. Let them you know? There's people out there that don't that don't know that their loved 1 died from the protocol. They think they died from COVID, and it's not fair to them. And the more, stories that we have in our database, the better chance we have to win 0: and stop 3: this murder. 4: Right. And they can ignore hundreds of us. They cannot ignore thousands and tens of thousands and so on and so And it is very it is absolutely amazing when people that, you know, most as 1 of the 25 commonalities is, most people kind of they felt something wasn't quite right in their in their gut. And when they meet others who felt the same way, they, they the the awakening is quite amazing, I would say. 1: And follow us on Twitter and on the on our podcast. We have a podcast, called the former feds focus. 3: On Rumble. Rumble. 1: I'll put it in the chat too. 4: Yeah. Can you put put 1 1 of yours? Watch some of the round tables with, with widows. Like, you see the, you can check out their story and and see the round watch the round table. 15: And if you wanna help, go to 4: You you're on you have declared truth too. Right? Yes. I'll I'll press press 1 of those too. Yeah. Put declared true podcast on there too. 1: Okay. 15: Okay. And if anybody wants to volunteer, please go to chbmp.org/join and fill out the little form there. We could really use more help. Thank you so much everyone for coming, and we look forward to seeing you next week. Good night.