Nephilim Death Squad - March 04, 2025


130: Just the Inserts w⧸ Alexandra


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 48 minutes

Words per Minute

193.93254

Word Count

20,991

Sentence Count

1,427

Misogynist Sentences

34

Hate Speech Sentences

36


Summary

On today's episode of the Nedealim Death Squad, Top Lobster joins us to discuss the current state of the world, and how we should all wake up to the reality that we are living in the end of days.


Transcript

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00:01:10.860 Welcome to TopLobster.com, the ultimate middle finger to people who hate you anyway.
00:01:17.020 Do you want to turn their mild annoyance into a full-blown meltdown?
00:01:20.400 We're not talking about polite little digs.
00:01:22.840 I'm talking about offensive, off-the-page comments that scream,
00:01:26.860 you can't censor me.
00:01:28.320 You can't tell me what to say.
00:01:30.420 I'd apologize, but I don't think you'd believe me.
00:01:34.080 And frankly, I just don't care what you think.
00:01:36.820 At TopLobster.com, we know one thing.
00:01:40.620 Playing nice is overrated.
00:01:42.840 We push all the buttons.
00:01:44.600 We cross all the lines.
00:01:46.240 We dot all the I's.
00:01:47.460 And we live in that sweet spot where your style and your words hit like a sledgehammer on the head of your favorite politician.
00:01:54.420 So why play it safe when you can blow it up entirely?
00:01:57.060 If you're too retarded to stop, and you're too real to worry about being liked by everybody,
00:02:02.580 well, you just found your favorite website.
00:02:05.480 Go to TopLobster.com, grab a shirt, grab a hoodie, grab a sweater.
00:02:09.100 That'll make your family members scream.
00:02:10.960 Because if they hate you already, you might as well give them something spectacular to complain about.
00:02:15.440 TopLobster.com.
00:02:16.780 Too retarded to stop.
00:02:18.040 I dare you to wear it.
00:02:22.260 We are being hypnotized by people like this.
00:02:28.260 News readers, politicians, teachers, lecturers.
00:02:33.220 We are in a country and in a world that is being run by unbelievably sick people.
00:02:41.660 The chasm between what we're told is going on and what is really going on is absolutely different.
00:02:47.520 Oh, yeah, dude.
00:02:48.780 There's some Nephilim shit.
00:02:50.600 It's like we all know what's going down, but no one's saying shit what happened to the home of the brave.
00:02:55.780 These motherfuckers are thinking coolness now, and no one's talking about how they made us try to be slaves.
00:03:00.900 And everybody's just walking around, heading to clouds, I want to wake up to a dead in the grave.
00:03:06.120 But it's too late, we need to be ready to raise up.
00:03:08.920 Welcome to the end of days.
00:03:10.660 Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, to another episode of Nephilim Death Squad.
00:03:16.240 I am David Lee Corbo, a.k.a. The Raven.
00:03:19.240 That is Top Lobster, the father of disinformation.
00:03:22.240 Before we introduce today's guest, I would like to remind all of the live viewers that this is a 30-minute preview only.
00:03:27.840 Sometime around the 30-minute mark, we'll be going live exclusively to patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:03:33.760 But fret not, you can sign up for a limited amount of time only for a seven-day free trial.
00:03:39.680 Enjoy as much content as you possibly can before you have to pay us at the end of that week freebie.
00:03:45.960 But all kinds of goodies await you there at patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:03:48.680 I get the gist, David, that a lot of people are doing that.
00:03:51.240 A lot of people are signing up at the free level in seven days, and they're just like, consuming, consuming, consuming content.
00:03:56.020 But it's like, we release so much content that, like, good luck.
00:03:59.120 Good luck consuming all of it.
00:04:00.080 Yeah, good luck, dude.
00:04:00.420 Every single day, we're dropping something.
00:04:01.900 I know there's a lot of people that have an alarm scheduled.
00:04:04.160 For the end of seven days, they're going to discontinue that, cancel that credit card.
00:04:07.380 But go ahead and try it if you want, patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:04:11.560 Joining us today is Alexandra.
00:04:14.080 Alexandra, for the audience who might not be familiar with you, where can they find your work, and what is it that you focus on?
00:04:20.560 You can find me at justtheinserts.com.
00:04:22.780 And my title isn't as creative because it's basically just manufacturer inserts.
00:04:27.920 So I cover all kinds of pharmaceuticals.
00:04:30.260 I go onto the FDA website, and I pull the manufacturer inserts for all the medical products on the market.
00:04:36.260 And I teach you how to find them and then read them.
00:04:40.800 What is the manufacturer, what is the federal government saying about this product so that you can make a more informed medical decision?
00:04:47.940 When I was first starting to research inserts and medical products, it was just very overwhelming.
00:04:53.220 So I've taken it into aesthetically pleasing, digestible chunks.
00:04:57.620 So then you can go, no matter your background, no matter your educational level, that you can go make the best decisions for you and your family.
00:05:05.820 Incredible.
00:05:06.540 I just want to say, you must be the FDA's favorite person.
00:05:10.040 That's exactly what they want, is somebody helping people to understand all the things that they obfuscate purposely.
00:05:15.260 Yeah, I get censored quite a bit.
00:05:18.640 Yeah, before a lot of the mandates happened, I was deleted off Instagram for sharing .gov information.
00:05:25.260 But hopefully, going forward, it'll be a little bit better.
00:05:29.540 Yeah.
00:05:29.920 Fascinating.
00:05:30.240 I mean, I'm sure that you must just be smitten by RFK Jr.'s, a point, what would we say?
00:05:38.900 Confirmation.
00:05:39.760 Yeah, yeah.
00:05:40.880 So he's in, and from what I've read already, he is doing a number of things like just researching.
00:05:47.540 Well, he's looking into like disease.
00:05:51.540 He's looking, I don't even know if I want to say these words at this point in the show.
00:05:56.120 He's looking into everything.
00:05:56.780 Can I tell the audience about that real quick?
00:05:58.460 Just so you guys know, we're working on keeping these half an hour previews up on YouTube.
00:06:01.920 So at least YouTube gets something.
00:06:03.840 But because of that, we have to dance around the language, which is, you know, what's going on with Top right now.
00:06:08.380 Yeah, I'm trying to figure out.
00:06:09.480 I don't like, I'm not very swift with words right now.
00:06:12.040 Because like, all of my words are buzzwords that get me banned from everything.
00:06:15.200 So I'm like, I haven't practiced any of the good words.
00:06:18.560 But he's certainly just running through and looking at this stuff.
00:06:22.640 What do you think about what's going on?
00:06:25.320 I'm thrilled.
00:06:26.780 And what I think most people, a lot of the controversy that you saw is that people assumed
00:06:32.380 things of him without actually listening to what he had to say.
00:06:35.920 And I saw that consistently on social media and then listening to different legislators.
00:06:41.080 I didn't sleep very well the entire confirmation process because there was just so much information
00:06:46.920 at such a quick pace that it was hard to filter through it all.
00:06:50.580 So I actually did a four part series of all of the concerns that people had about his confirmation.
00:06:56.680 And I addressed every single one because some of them were valid.
00:06:59.480 Some of them were, yes, it's okay to ask questions about the people that are going to be at the
00:07:05.080 federal level that will be executing trillions of dollars of taxpayer money on the health of
00:07:10.620 the future of America.
00:07:11.400 So I was really excited that there were so many people that were passionate about getting the
00:07:16.280 right person in there.
00:07:17.000 But most of the information that they were receiving was wrong.
00:07:20.680 And it was easily refuted by a simple podcast interview that he had done or a statement that
00:07:26.120 he had done on his own website during his presidential campaign.
00:07:29.240 So I was working overtime to try to combat a lot of that.
00:07:33.180 And I think what some people assumed is that he was influencing people from the top down and
00:07:39.860 was sharing his research and things that he had come across throughout his decades, years
00:07:44.520 and in the legal practice.
00:07:46.160 But what most people didn't understand is that it was mothers, it was parents, it was nurses,
00:07:50.780 it was doctors.
00:07:51.360 It was people that were seeing through their own lived experience a problem and they wanted
00:07:57.440 someone to help them with a solution.
00:07:59.940 And that was the most important part of the whole process of the confirmation.
00:08:05.140 All the people calling.
00:08:07.040 I mean, there were phone lines that were down in several of the lawmakers offices.
00:08:11.060 They were getting, I think, 600 calls a minute in those days before the vote.
00:08:17.040 And I have I live outside of Washington, D.C.
00:08:19.480 So I have a few friends that are in those circles.
00:08:22.140 And they said they had never seen anything like this for any cabinet member nominee ever.
00:08:28.080 Probably in the history of America.
00:08:29.660 So the fact that so many people were rallying behind them wasn't necessarily that he was
00:08:34.680 the savior that was finally going to save us all.
00:08:36.520 It was that we all know that there's a problem.
00:08:38.660 And finally, we have hope that maybe the people at the top will start helping us in the solution.
00:08:44.220 The problem becomes really multifaceted, right?
00:08:47.680 Because it's not just I mean, it's great that he's looking into the food.
00:08:51.520 I mean, that's a huge problem.
00:08:52.860 We have an obesity epidemic in the United States that we have a disproportionate amount
00:08:57.160 of morbidly obese homeless people, which is like insane that those two things could even
00:09:01.660 go together.
00:09:02.820 It's a it's a backward society that we find ourselves in now.
00:09:06.360 And it's not just the food.
00:09:08.040 We've got a lot of unpacking to do it.
00:09:09.920 You know, I get excited when I hear talks about removing fluoride from the water.
00:09:15.200 I mean, this was something that conspiracy theorists were ridiculed about for years that that was
00:09:20.100 anything to be concerned about.
00:09:22.100 And somehow it's just there for what is it the benefit of our teeth?
00:09:25.360 I don't even know what the conventional answer was.
00:09:27.800 It's to keep your third eye calcified.
00:09:30.860 I think that's what they're saying.
00:09:32.360 Calcified pineal gland.
00:09:34.040 That's what my husband says.
00:09:35.680 Exactly.
00:09:36.260 So, I mean, he's got his work cut out for him.
00:09:38.660 And I don't typically rally behind an individual, especially a politician, especially a Kennedy,
00:09:45.700 especially a Kennedy.
00:09:47.000 Great point.
00:09:47.540 Yeah.
00:09:48.160 But I am optimistic.
00:09:51.060 It doesn't mean that I have to follow the guy to the ends of the year.
00:09:52.920 I'm optimistic.
00:09:53.500 And I do feel like we're going to turn a corner soon as an entire country.
00:09:57.960 Do you think that that's what's going to happen?
00:09:59.840 Or are you skeptical about where we're going?
00:10:02.160 I think the first year is going to be rough.
00:10:03.840 I have cautious optimism, and I think that we need to not just blindly, like you said,
00:10:09.800 trust anyone.
00:10:10.760 We need to keep that pressure on and that accountability because I'm sure he's getting
00:10:15.780 hit from so many different angles.
00:10:17.900 I was in the federal.
00:10:19.400 I was an Air Force officer for five years.
00:10:21.860 I worked in the bureaucratic federal government for that time.
00:10:25.980 I know how sticky that can be.
00:10:27.960 I know people, civilians that had gone from administration to administration,
00:10:32.960 and they know how to play the game, and they know how to placate certain politicians that
00:10:38.560 are only going to be there for a certain amount of time and then go back to what they
00:10:43.640 want to do.
00:10:44.940 So I think he's going to have a lot of trouble with that, and I think we need to help him
00:10:49.560 keep that pressure on to hold the government accountable and hold President Trump accountable
00:10:54.320 because he made a lot of promises in his campaign, and we need to make sure that we're
00:10:59.240 staying active and not just kind of outsourcing that responsibility to Secretary Kennedy.
00:11:05.600 We need to stay active.
00:11:07.000 And I think he's going to help in the aspect of making everything he keeps saying over and
00:11:11.960 over again, radical transparency.
00:11:14.380 That's what we need as Americans and also for us to pressure at the state level to take
00:11:21.160 that information, that raw data that he's going to release, hopefully within HHS, the CDC,
00:11:26.720 and FDA that we've been clamoring for for years, and then use that to implement, I'm
00:11:33.980 trying to be careful with my words, legislation that will honor informed consent at the state
00:11:39.420 level because there is no why currently, why sweeping mandate at the federal level.
00:11:44.160 It's all within the state level.
00:11:45.600 And so to be able to have those fact-based discussions with our lawmakers and to be able
00:11:49.540 to cite .gov resources is going to be so empowering for us as American citizens.
00:11:55.200 So I do have that cautious optimism.
00:11:58.000 I think there's going to be a lot of heat.
00:11:59.960 It's going to be really, really sticky and hard and messy the first year, but hopefully
00:12:03.480 we'll get over that hump and then start seeing a lot of changes.
00:12:07.980 Well, something that I've seen, we have one friend that is very close to what you're talking
00:12:14.340 about here as far as the administration that RFK is building in DC right now.
00:12:19.080 And I have another friend that would have actually been, would be this, this one's manager, like
00:12:24.400 at a higher level.
00:12:26.100 And I wanted him on the show and he's like, just wait, wait a couple of weeks.
00:12:30.140 He's like, we're waiting to see how this all plays out.
00:12:31.820 I don't want to say anything before it gets out of hand.
00:12:34.080 And one of the last things he told me, I can give you his name in the private chat as well,
00:12:38.380 because I feel like maybe this might help you a little bit, but it seems like there
00:12:42.060 were levels of, there were levels of people stopping, they were stopping RFK at certain
00:12:47.480 levels.
00:12:48.120 And one of the levels would have been being confirmed.
00:12:51.220 And we saw the pushback that he got.
00:12:52.780 I think it was right along partisan lines.
00:12:54.780 Was, was JD Vance involved in the, in the approval?
00:12:57.820 No, he was in Paris actually.
00:12:59.340 And that actually gave me some optimism that he stayed in Paris because if they were worried
00:13:03.380 about the vote, he probably would have come back.
00:13:06.860 So thankfully, I, yeah, I do agree.
00:13:09.960 There would have been some concern, but he, he wasn't part of the vote.
00:13:13.480 Okay.
00:13:14.020 So, uh, so it was basically all Republicans voted.
00:13:16.760 Yes.
00:13:17.340 Almost all Republic, all Democrats voted.
00:13:19.200 No, which is just insane.
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00:14:49.940 But it's even deeper than that.
00:14:51.320 So that's the first line that they were trying to stop, man.
00:14:53.800 And it seems like they gave up on that line.
00:14:55.780 And the last I spoke to this guy, I'll tell you his name after, he said that it seems like
00:15:00.360 people are on the inside and they want to affect who he puts in charge once he is in.
00:15:05.460 And this guy specifically is a whistleblower for what happened in the 2020s.
00:15:12.180 And we all remember what happened in the 2020s.
00:15:14.080 And I think he was going to be put in charge of some sort of accountability for that.
00:15:19.040 It doesn't seem like he's getting in.
00:15:20.620 Our other friend doesn't seem like they're moving to D.C.
00:15:23.680 So I don't know what's going on behind the scenes there.
00:15:26.780 Do you have any insight there?
00:15:30.280 Not that I can.
00:15:31.180 Obviously, this is all subjective and just things that I, you know, from my own personal
00:15:36.300 experience working within the national capital region, there are definitely politics that
00:15:43.720 happen in any branch of government.
00:15:46.140 And the executive branch is not immune to that.
00:15:49.460 And so I do I don't have any insight into the transition team.
00:15:53.680 I don't have any knowledge of the intricacies of the inner workings and the people that are
00:15:59.180 going to be placed in certain areas.
00:16:00.480 But what I would assume from my own experience is that there's probably being tradeoffs and
00:16:06.420 there's probably some very calculated moves and maybe some long term goals or phases that
00:16:14.300 are going to be implemented.
00:16:15.920 And, you know, there I don't think most people understand that for a federal worker, it is
00:16:21.040 very hard to let them go.
00:16:23.920 You have to go through a very thorough process, more so than in the private sector.
00:16:29.140 I myself have had employees that straight up didn't show up to work, but I still had to
00:16:34.960 go through this huge HR process in order to let them go.
00:16:38.300 So there's probably going to be an element to that.
00:16:41.160 And I know that and this is just my opinion.
00:16:45.020 I'm not speaking on behalf of the government or anything like that, but I think that's probably
00:16:49.400 where the force to go into office instead of doing remote work, that might be kind of
00:16:55.780 a filtering process.
00:16:57.280 The offer that was given to them to have a severance pay, which was out.
00:17:03.100 It was crazy, the amount of severance pay that they offered.
00:17:06.320 So I think that is probably a tool that they're using to get the people that are just knowing
00:17:12.240 that it's going to be a fight for the next four years and maybe kind of pick them out
00:17:15.860 up front.
00:17:17.100 But I don't know if you saw he finally spoke to HHS, I believe it was on Tuesday.
00:17:21.500 And the reception he received was actually pretty encouraging.
00:17:26.520 There were happy faces.
00:17:28.140 People wanted to get pictures with him.
00:17:29.680 They were really excited.
00:17:30.740 So that gives me hope.
00:17:33.340 And then I can't remember what I was listening to, but I was listening to a podcast and they
00:17:37.420 were talking about how at the CDC, I believe actually it was Del Bigtree.
00:17:41.460 He did his Maha conference after he, Secretary Kennedy was confirmed and Del Bigtree was no
00:17:50.140 longer associated with him for his campaign.
00:17:53.560 And he did this great conference for like an hour and a half.
00:17:56.500 If you haven't listened to it, go listen to it.
00:17:58.100 It's incredible.
00:17:58.640 It's on X.
00:17:59.400 But he talked about how when they had met with certain people in CDC and FDA, most of
00:18:05.240 them have tried to do what Secretary Kennedy wants to do, but they just weren't, they didn't
00:18:10.640 have the power to do it or they kept getting roadblocks and they weren't able to finally
00:18:15.520 do it.
00:18:15.900 So hopefully because he has been so clear about his intentions and because he has pretty
00:18:22.640 much all of America behind him, hopefully he'll be able to accomplish it.
00:18:27.300 But it won't be easy.
00:18:28.500 It's wild to me that seemingly the entire Democratic Party is trying to resist him in one way or
00:18:34.980 another.
00:18:35.220 And it seems like what we're about to be doing is bringing people to health and wellness
00:18:41.760 while they're kicking and screaming.
00:18:43.140 It just doesn't, it's a weird thing because I wouldn't imagine that what he is railing
00:18:48.900 against was ever a party line issue.
00:18:51.620 It's about health.
00:18:52.620 And when did, when did, when did your own health as a sovereign individual become a political
00:18:58.800 talking point?
00:19:00.220 It's bizarre.
00:19:01.540 It's, it's really, so I'm an independent.
00:19:03.340 I don't fully align with either political party, but I probably lean a little bit more
00:19:08.580 conservative and just like economic and free market and actually probably more libertarian.
00:19:14.220 I'm a little bit of everything.
00:19:16.240 But based on my DMs and based on my comment section, the Democratic Party is hemorrhaging
00:19:23.120 people because of the stance that they're taking on this Make America Health Again movement.
00:19:27.860 The fact that they are making it so political and they are being so vicious about it, they
00:19:33.620 are losing a huge percentage of their base just from my own anecdotal experience talking
00:19:39.700 with people.
00:19:40.300 I mean, I've had people that have been Bernie bros for their entire life and now they are
00:19:44.580 no longer because of the way Senator Sanders interrogated Secretary Kennedy.
00:19:51.700 And I don't know if you saw the onesies that he was pretty ridiculous.
00:19:56.800 Yeah.
00:19:57.040 I think they actually sold out shortly afterward.
00:19:59.900 They're selling onesies.
00:20:00.900 I miss that.
00:20:01.900 Yeah.
00:20:02.180 He like, he pointed out these onesies from a children's health defense and he was like,
00:20:07.340 do you support these onesies?
00:20:08.620 And it was very meme worthy.
00:20:09.640 Um, but I don't, I think they might have overplayed their hand and how, uh, loyal some of their
00:20:18.200 constituents are.
00:20:19.880 So they might see some backlash for, well, it's funny because during the, the lockdowns,
00:20:25.500 um, the political weight was on the other side of the, the, the aisle in that, um, there
00:20:33.560 you go.
00:20:34.020 Yeah.
00:20:35.820 Un-V'd, unafraid, no V, no problem.
00:20:39.140 He's like, are you selling these, sir?
00:20:40.480 Are these on your website?
00:20:41.720 I am once again asking if you are supporting these onesies.
00:20:45.200 Uh, so, so I mean, yeah, during the lockdowns, it was, you know, once again, they politicized
00:20:51.300 the health of American civilians, but it was kind of the other way, or at least the energy
00:20:56.700 was the other way, right?
00:20:57.520 It was a lot of the left shaming the right because the right wasn't trusting the science
00:21:02.680 or whatever the case may be.
00:21:04.300 And now we're seeing a very similar topic, right?
00:21:07.800 In, in regards to our, our own health and nutrition.
00:21:10.880 Um, but there's a falling away and now, now the energy, the pushback is coming from the
00:21:15.020 other side of the aisle.
00:21:15.880 Yeah.
00:21:16.340 So many of them have whiplash.
00:21:17.780 They're like, wait a second.
00:21:18.640 This was what we rallied against.
00:21:21.300 And then now all of a sudden it's demonized because it's not the right person saying it.
00:21:25.320 And I think that's where, um, it becomes a little bit more of, um, unproductive conversation
00:21:32.580 and kind of getting to the root of the problem.
00:21:34.900 Do you really care about health?
00:21:36.300 If you're so upset about who's the person that's leading the charge?
00:21:40.180 And actually Dell during his speech, he quoted a CEO and they were saying, you will get so
00:21:46.940 much farther in your mission as long as you don't care who gets the credit.
00:21:50.060 And I kind of butchered that saying, but it's such a beautiful saying.
00:21:53.000 And I see that in a lot of the Maha, um, movement, some infighting that might happen.
00:21:58.500 And it really just comes down to ego.
00:22:00.180 And it's like, guys, drop the ego at the door.
00:22:04.140 This is America's health.
00:22:05.360 This is our children.
00:22:06.400 It doesn't matter who gets the credit.
00:22:08.120 Well, it's to be expected.
00:22:10.080 We're dealing with some really big personalities.
00:22:12.420 David, I think we're going to, I'm just going to cut the stream now to everywhere because
00:22:15.100 I'm done doing this.
00:22:16.460 Uh, we're going to talk freely.
00:22:18.000 Done tiptoeing.
00:22:19.180 Yeah.
00:22:19.660 You could join the Patreon.
00:22:21.140 Go over to patreon.com backslash Nephilim Death Squad.
00:22:23.860 Continue watching along over there.
00:22:25.240 Otherwise, this conversation is a little bit too dangerous for, uh, for YouTube.
00:22:29.800 So we got to go.
00:22:30.520 It's funny.
00:22:31.000 Like she's, she's one of the most, uh, physically unimposing guests that we've had.
00:22:35.880 She's just like, but I'm like the super, super one of the most dangerous.
00:22:38.840 Yes.
00:22:39.160 Sorry.
00:22:40.700 She's like packing hand grenades.
00:22:42.200 Okay.
00:22:42.400 So we're, we're off.
00:22:43.760 We're only on stream yard now and we can speak freely.
00:22:46.300 I was going to disagree with you.
00:22:48.260 I don't think that it's, uh, it's ego.
00:22:50.760 It's, it's directly money.
00:22:52.540 I think that Bernie Sanders got caught with his pants down.
00:22:55.140 And when he was deposing RFK, it seemed more like he was exposing himself.
00:23:01.160 Yes.
00:23:02.440 Right.
00:23:02.600 He's pointing at, at these, uh, onesies with the vaccines and all this stuff.
00:23:06.480 And he's asking him about this and Senator Warren, uh, Senator Warren as well, um, turns
00:23:12.140 out they're taking a ton of money from big pharma and other places like this.
00:23:18.080 And it's just like, man, I really wish, I wish that this was a long party lines, that
00:23:22.060 this was just about the vote and just about political parties, but it's, it's about money.
00:23:25.720 So they're showing us that they don't really care if our kids get sick, hurt, die, have
00:23:32.120 autism.
00:23:32.500 I mean, that's, that remains to be seen as well.
00:23:34.400 Uh, what do you, what do you think about that?
00:23:37.840 What do you, what do we do with these people?
00:23:40.760 I, you know, I was actually really encouraged when I saw all that because they said the quiet
00:23:45.140 part out loud finally, and it was finally, it wasn't a conspiracy.
00:23:48.400 It was finally that, okay, they addressed it.
00:23:51.300 And when RFK, um, addressed Bernie and said, you're, you know, the issue of financial conflicts
00:23:58.380 of interest isn't just within the government.
00:24:00.400 It's within the politicians too, or within HHS.
00:24:03.740 Yes, it's within, uh, Congress as well.
00:24:05.540 And then Bernie said, well, he fought back on just the semantics of it.
00:24:09.800 And he said, well, it's actually employees.
00:24:12.880 It's pharmaceutical employees that provide donations, not pharmaceutical companies.
00:24:17.480 Okay.
00:24:18.040 But any from pharmaceutical employee is going to want to protect job security and make sure
00:24:24.020 that they're preserving the livelihood and the ability to pay their mortgage and put food
00:24:29.840 on the table.
00:24:30.640 So if a pharmaceutical employee is giving you money, it's not rocket science to assume that
00:24:36.540 they want you to protect their interests in the pharmaceutical industry.
00:24:40.240 So that to me was great.
00:24:43.040 I'm glad that they did that because now it was finally out in the open and it was actually
00:24:47.640 on record.
00:24:48.320 And it was something that we can reference back to continually.
00:24:51.400 And I was so encouraged because if you go and look at the X comments or Instagram comments
00:24:57.100 or social media or YouTube or anything like that, of those videos, I mean, he was getting
00:25:01.220 attacked and people were finally waking up and saying, you know what?
00:25:05.800 My crazy aunt said this, but I can't believe it was actually confirmed.
00:25:09.780 That's the worst part about doing what we do is that we have our suspicions and they're
00:25:15.360 more than suspicions.
00:25:16.340 They're grounded in evidence that other people are unwilling to look at to whatever degree.
00:25:20.640 And we hold on to them.
00:25:22.040 We develop these ideas.
00:25:23.300 We come to conclusions.
00:25:24.360 We try to espouse them and say, hey, this might be what's going on.
00:25:27.300 And it's only until some governing body officially recognizes it all these years down the line that
00:25:33.180 we become vindicated in some way, shape or form.
00:25:35.580 But it's like, what value is the vindication?
00:25:37.620 And this conversation was being had long before some governing body saw fit to concede that
00:25:44.680 this thing is true.
00:25:45.940 And that's all these years that it could have been addressed.
00:25:49.540 And so I just see that happen over and over again with an endless amount of topics.
00:25:53.680 It's so frustrating.
00:25:55.180 And I try to be patient with the people that are just now waking up.
00:25:58.800 But I have a kid that was vaccine injured.
00:26:01.480 He had a lump on his leg for a while and he was nonverbal for over two years of his life.
00:26:06.200 We came out to Florida.
00:26:08.300 We heavily heavy metal, heavy metal detoxed him, among other things.
00:26:12.640 Got him speech therapy.
00:26:13.820 We got to we actually had a speech therapist in New York City, where I was from, and she
00:26:17.700 would show up with a mask on her face to teach him how to speak.
00:26:20.380 So he's not again, not even.
00:26:22.000 Yeah, it's it.
00:26:23.460 I mean, I could wrap my hands around this person's neck, but I was like, I was just like, OK,
00:26:28.180 OK, we just have we have to leave.
00:26:30.640 But, you know, the damage has been done.
00:26:32.240 And now I sit back here and they go, oh, my God, did you see, you know, what Bernie Sanders
00:26:37.420 says or what Elizabeth Warren said?
00:26:39.000 Like her admission to RFK was basically that.
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00:27:09.240 Hi, I'm Darren Marlar, host of the Weird Darkness podcast.
00:27:14.200 I want to talk about the most important tool in my podcast belt.
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00:28:11.080 That these pharmaceutical companies or the vaccine manufacturers will now be allowed to be sued
00:28:16.120 because he'll be printing or publishing data through the NIH that will prove that these things
00:28:23.660 are dangerous.
00:28:24.280 And I was like, yeah.
00:28:25.360 Yeah.
00:28:25.640 What's the problem?
00:28:26.340 I haven't slept because of so many people finally asking questions and they're finally
00:28:32.600 have intellectual curiosity to either discredit what they're being told or to, okay, now this
00:28:41.900 has some light bulbs have gone off.
00:28:44.600 So what else am I missing?
00:28:46.480 And so I'm trying to capture all of these people that are finally asking questions for the first
00:28:52.000 time in their lives and realizing that maybe the people that they trusted and outsourced
00:28:57.580 their responsibility and authority to don't necessarily have their best interest at heart.
00:29:02.000 Or if they do have their best interest at heart, that they themselves have been misled.
00:29:06.460 I've taken CDC training.
00:29:08.520 I've talked to doctors and pharmacists and all of these other people, and they show me what's
00:29:14.820 in their textbooks.
00:29:16.260 And it is not anything what I teach and how you can actually find and read manufacturer.
00:29:21.680 I was talking to a pharmacist and she said, we don't even read inserts.
00:29:26.000 We go to immunize.org, which is funded by pharmaceutical companies.
00:29:30.660 Yep.
00:29:31.060 Well, it's the same thing that we were getting during the lockdowns, right?
00:29:33.860 Where it's like there's all these different articles or broadcasts coming out on CNN about
00:29:40.000 how you can go out and partake in the Black Lives Matter protests, but certainly don't go
00:29:45.320 out and partake in any sort of COVID lockdown protests.
00:29:49.180 And we'll be back after this commercial break brought to you by Pfizer, you know?
00:29:52.900 And it's like, you remember when Chris Cuomo, I mean, this is not necessarily related to
00:29:56.740 the health field, but I remember vividly when this dude said, yeah, we have the laptop.
00:30:01.360 I think it was the Hunter Biden laptop.
00:30:02.940 He's like, but it's, but it has government documents or some government documents were
00:30:05.960 disclosed and we're not supposed to look at them, but we'll look at them for you and
00:30:10.180 we'll distribute.
00:30:10.680 And you just look at what we said and that's all you need to know.
00:30:13.120 And people bought this shit.
00:30:14.520 It's incredible, man.
00:30:15.480 Yeah.
00:30:15.740 We've been programmed really exceptionally well in this country in regards to, you know,
00:30:21.120 kind of just following the leader.
00:30:22.340 We get Pied Piper down a trail and we have our experts, right?
00:30:25.820 It's amazing that we popularize this terminology, like trust the science.
00:30:29.820 And you watch that fall apart in real time when Fauci is up there and he's saying, you
00:30:34.540 know, an attack on Anthony Fauci is an attack on science or whatever the hell he said.
00:30:38.600 And it's like, yeah, you're not talking about a field of study.
00:30:42.020 You're talking about an idol of sorts, you know, something that you look to with, with
00:30:46.640 faith.
00:30:47.740 And that's what you do when you look to the medical apparatus.
00:30:50.260 I wonder what you found then, Alexandra, because you, you mentioned that you, you look
00:30:55.360 through these various pharmaceuticals and you try to unpack them for people.
00:30:58.400 Um, many of us here in, in, I don't know, conspiracy bill suspect that, uh, many of these things
00:31:05.680 are over-prescribed, wrongly prescribed.
00:31:09.440 And also, even if the diagnosis and the prescription was accurate, the plethora of side effects that
00:31:17.020 come with this prescription will also oftentimes lead to you needing to lean on another prescription
00:31:21.800 for whatever side effects.
00:31:22.800 And it becomes this cascading snowballing effect.
00:31:25.500 And next thing you know, you're taking a fistful of pills every morning just to combat all the
00:31:29.840 various side effects.
00:31:31.040 Um, I mean, you were somebody who's intimate, intimately looking at these things.
00:31:36.120 What do we now gleam from the pharmaceutical companies and our relationships with these
00:31:40.300 diagnoses?
00:31:41.580 Well, I don't even really think you need to be in conspiracy bill, uh, to address this
00:31:46.420 because most 99.9% of what I look at and what I cite, uh, is from the government.
00:31:52.900 It's dot gov resources.
00:31:54.380 And when I first started researching, I actually would consider myself at that time, more pro
00:31:59.980 vaccine.
00:32:00.680 And now I don't really subscribe to pro or anti-vax because I think the terms are subjective
00:32:05.100 and, um, there's not agreed upon definition.
00:32:07.540 But when my mom first started sharing information with me, I thought she was crazy.
00:32:12.320 I thought she had jumped off the deep end.
00:32:13.960 And it was because of her sharing information that I actually went to the dot gov resources
00:32:19.300 to prove her wrong.
00:32:20.300 And then I realized, oh crap, I'm the one that's wrong.
00:32:24.100 I'm the one that is emotionally defending an industry and products that I have no clue
00:32:28.900 about.
00:32:29.260 I had never done any research and yet I thought that they were God's gift to humanity and that
00:32:35.060 it was, um, it was me not fulfilling my civic duty by not accepting these products.
00:32:41.220 And so by reading the inserts and realizing the little parts that have been cherry picked
00:32:46.780 over at large by the medical and scientific communities from our dot gov resources, that's
00:32:51.860 it for me.
00:32:52.480 You don't need to go any deeper than that.
00:32:54.440 Uh, um, I actually just traveled back from Michigan.
00:32:57.600 I was asked to speak at Hillsdale Hillsdale college in Michigan on Tuesday to some college
00:33:02.680 kids.
00:33:03.060 And I love that they are passionate about this topic because obviously they went through the
00:33:08.060 golden years of their life, high school and college during the COVID craziness.
00:33:12.900 And they saw firsthand how, um, corrupt it can be.
00:33:17.220 And so now they don't trust anything.
00:33:19.340 So they're looking for all of this information.
00:33:21.620 And I was talking with a lot of them and I ended up taking the chicken pox vaccine and
00:33:25.840 we went through the insert together and we looked at different parts of the vaccine and
00:33:29.580 there's sections in the description section and section 11, where they go over ingredients.
00:33:33.940 It talks about how there's fragments of DNA, um, from human DNA and from animal DNA that's
00:33:41.740 in the vaccine.
00:33:42.840 And so for them, it was mind blowing because they had heard some conspiratorial talk about
00:33:48.560 potentially having that DNA, but for the manufacturer to actually list it and it be on the FDA website.
00:33:54.860 Um, another thing is for, there was a woman that was in the audience and she's, you know,
00:33:59.260 self-admitted called herself, you know, pro-vaccine and she was like, but what about, uh, pertussis
00:34:03.880 and what about all these rates that we're seeing?
00:34:05.560 And I brought up, or I referenced this section of the DTAP vaccine.
00:34:10.020 That's the vaccine for, uh, uh, diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis.
00:34:13.840 That's the one that hurt my, my son, but yeah.
00:34:16.640 Oh yeah.
00:34:17.160 That's a, oh man.
00:34:18.300 I could talk forever about that one.
00:34:19.880 Um, but in the mechanism of action section, it says that the metric to determine immunity
00:34:24.940 to pertussis is unknown.
00:34:27.460 So how do we know that this vaccine provides immunity when the, the metric to define it
00:34:34.200 is unknown and it's in the insert.
00:34:36.320 And then, and another part of the DTAP insert, it says under the adverse reaction section that
00:34:42.180 sudden infant death syndrome is a known potential adverse reaction.
00:34:45.060 And it actually says sudden infant death syndrome.
00:34:47.660 If you go to the infant rates insert page 11, I have it cited on my website.
00:34:51.860 The last words in the adverse reaction section is SIDS.
00:34:57.040 And that product is administered to babies at two, four, and six months old, which according
00:35:02.020 to the NIH is the highest rate of SIDS.
00:35:04.140 That's insane.
00:35:05.260 Even, even that diagnosis, by the way, SIDS is like, what does that mean?
00:35:08.260 It's just a medical terminology to, I don't know, soften the blow of losing your child.
00:35:15.200 Right.
00:35:15.480 If you scroll up and go to the infant recs, um, where it says under training and you, yeah,
00:35:21.200 click infant recs right there.
00:35:23.160 And then you scroll, I believe it's page 11 on the document, but page 12 on the PDF.
00:35:28.040 It should be that bottom one.
00:35:30.000 Okay.
00:35:30.540 Yeah.
00:35:30.700 Let's check that out.
00:35:31.340 I need to see that.
00:35:32.460 This is, uh, this is right there, right there, right there, right there.
00:35:35.160 Sudden infant death syndrome.
00:35:37.020 Wow.
00:35:37.680 Shit.
00:35:38.060 There it is.
00:35:38.840 Yep.
00:35:39.100 And according to the CDC, the definition of an adverse reaction is an undesirable medical
00:35:44.740 condition known to be caused by a vaccine.
00:35:47.660 And that's sitting in the adverse reaction section.
00:35:50.420 They put these things in their own text and, and it's, and it's available to the public.
00:35:54.940 And I guess what they're banking on is the fact that none of us will actually go and read
00:35:59.000 these things.
00:35:59.400 That's a theme that actually keeps popping up on these, on this show.
00:36:01.920 Uh, and I'm, that's something that I'm guilty of myself when, when we, yeah, read the fine
00:36:06.480 print, right?
00:36:06.860 How many times do we agree to terms and service we don't read?
00:36:08.900 But, um, when we were in the middle of the lockdowns, uh, there came across my, you know,
00:36:14.620 awareness, this idea that we were violating the Nuremberg code of ethics.
00:36:19.020 And so I don't know, you know, at the time I didn't know what the Nuremberg code of ethics
00:36:23.160 was, and I, I didn't know necessarily how to find out if we were, but you know, the segment
00:36:27.820 in particular they were talking about, I think it was actually the very first, uh, uh,
00:36:31.780 rule or whatever you would call it.
00:36:34.480 Um, it was that you can't, uh, compel or force, uh, medical experimental medical treatments
00:36:40.940 on a, on a society.
00:36:42.460 And so I held onto that word, right?
00:36:45.220 This idea of like, um, experimental, right?
00:36:47.860 Because it's like everything, the definition of everything is actually quite important.
00:36:51.960 And so, uh, when you go and you look at, I believe they were studying the mRNA vaccination
00:36:56.980 at Princeton.
00:36:57.960 Um, and if you go and look at the, the, the papers, you know, there's all kinds of studies
00:37:03.500 that are released from it.
00:37:04.420 And it's like, I don't know how to, how to discern what I'm looking at.
00:37:08.480 I'm not somebody who went to school for this sort of thing, but I did.
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00:38:06.300 Remember that thankfully for people like me, oftentimes these studies will have a summary
00:38:12.160 at the end, you know?
00:38:13.580 And so if you don't know what you're looking at, you could always go to the last paragraph
00:38:16.500 and see kind of what the entire summary of what they found was.
00:38:20.260 And it tells you right there in the paperwork that there's just no long-term, because of
00:38:26.260 the nature of it being so new, there's no long-term studies, right?
00:38:29.020 They don't have any long-term data for this mRNA vaccination.
00:38:32.620 And so that means by definition, because there's still information that's out to the jury, it
00:38:38.320 is experimental.
00:38:39.500 And so that's a simple little thing.
00:38:41.280 That's all I did was I went and looked at that thing and I said, well, technically, got
00:38:44.260 you out of technicality.
00:38:45.060 It looks like we're violating the Nuremberg Code of Ethics right here, based off of the
00:38:49.080 fact that this is an experimental, you know, medication or...
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00:39:18.400 Hi, I'm Darren Marlar, host of the Weird Darkness podcast.
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00:40:20.580 Medical intervention that we are compelling a populace to take.
00:40:25.140 So right there, the very first rule was...
00:40:26.820 And so what I'm trying to get at is these things are...
00:40:29.800 They're there.
00:40:30.600 They write them down.
00:40:31.280 They're there for you.
00:40:31.980 You can go and find these things yourself, but I think they're kind of banking on you
00:40:36.160 won't.
00:40:36.960 Right.
00:40:37.120 Well, in the National Childhood Vaccination Act of 1986, I actually put this in my free
00:40:41.860 training course in my book because I think it's really important to understand that vaccine
00:40:45.180 manufacturers aren't liable for serious injury or death caused by the products.
00:40:49.720 And within that legislation, it says that they cannot be held liable because they provide
00:40:55.760 the known adverse reactions in the labeling.
00:40:58.960 So they're saying, okay, well, we put it in the labeling so it's on you that you didn't
00:41:04.920 go and read it.
00:41:05.820 And so that's why I try so hard to take something because I know what it's like when you first
00:41:11.080 start reading and you're just scrolling through all these pages of text and it's medical jargon
00:41:15.940 and you don't understand it.
00:41:17.140 It's really overwhelming.
00:41:18.200 And I don't have a medical degree, so I understand if you're looking at an insert and it has all
00:41:22.280 of these medical terms and you're like, what the heck is this?
00:41:25.020 I don't know how many times I've had to copy and paste straight from the insert and go into
00:41:28.660 my search engine and figure out, oh, okay, well, that's hives.
00:41:31.420 Okay, that's fainting.
00:41:32.720 That's swelling.
00:41:33.680 And I've gotten better now that I've done it so many times that I can see it.
00:41:38.340 But it's not accessible to the public.
00:41:42.000 It's not accessible to you and me or people that aren't trained in this information.
00:41:46.900 And so to me, I think that's a failure of public education.
00:41:50.460 I think that's a failure of the medical community that they have this expertise in
00:41:54.780 something and they are not properly ensuring that the patients and parents that accept
00:42:00.620 these products are fully informed of the known potential adverse reactions.
00:42:04.620 And I have a little bit of grace for them because they themselves aren't even taught
00:42:09.860 about inserts.
00:42:10.880 So how can they teach their patients if they don't even know?
00:42:13.980 And I know that's true because I have so many medical professionals that message me and
00:42:18.360 say, I had no clue.
00:42:19.680 So I've had one woman, she's worked in a hospital for decades and she said, I didn't even know
00:42:25.600 inserts existed because whenever she receives a medication, the box that it comes in is that
00:42:31.000 small box of the medication where the insert is actually given in the bulk box at the pharmacy.
00:42:37.280 So the pharmacist gets that little folded up pieces of paper.
00:42:40.720 But when it gets dispersed to all the different parts of the hospital, the small boxes don't
00:42:45.120 have the insert.
00:42:45.740 So she had no clue.
00:42:47.240 It almost feels, I understand having empathy just for people in general.
00:42:51.940 And certainly you pay all this money, you go through the schooling.
00:42:56.120 The last thing that you want to do after you're paid off your debt and you finally have a good
00:43:01.040 career is start turning around and scrutinizing the apparatus that you're now a part of.
00:43:04.860 But it almost feels nefarious just in the sense of like the language that these things are
00:43:10.320 written in is rife with legalese, right?
00:43:12.620 The terminology is such that it, it almost feels purposely convoluted and you know, that
00:43:18.180 could just be me being bitter because I don't want to admit that I'm too dumb to understand
00:43:22.240 this thing, right?
00:43:23.240 I don't want to be like, I'm just stupid to understand this shit.
00:43:25.600 The truth of the matter is though-
00:43:26.740 On the other side though, what are they telling you?
00:43:28.960 They're making it difficult to understand and then they're telling you, trust the science.
00:43:32.360 You can understand it, leave it to the professionals.
00:43:34.380 And that to me feels nefarious.
00:43:35.720 Here's what's really going on.
00:43:37.180 So since my child was kind of like vaccine damaged, a vaccine injured, my wife who is
00:43:42.740 an RN, she's been an RN for probably 12 years now.
00:43:46.000 So she's very familiar with this stuff.
00:43:47.420 And in the doctor's office and in the ER, the RNs kind of do the job of the doctors.
00:43:52.660 The doctors don't really do shit.
00:43:54.240 Like she knows all of these terms and she's looking through like, again, she's looking
00:43:58.680 through these inserts again and she's doing what you're doing.
00:44:00.520 She's like, I have to Google this because I don't even know this.
00:44:02.760 Like these, some of these terms aren't, weren't brought up in nursing school and they did,
00:44:05.980 you know, two years of intense nursing school and then they have clinicals.
00:44:09.680 They have, uh, they have to pass their NCLEX.
00:44:11.620 There's a lot that goes into it.
00:44:12.840 And she's like, I'm not quite sure what you're talking about, but what it is, is this is a
00:44:17.540 conspiracy show.
00:44:18.580 And I will just say, are you familiar with the vampire rule?
00:44:21.900 You know what that is?
00:44:23.560 Okay.
00:44:24.140 Uh, if any vampire novel, whether it be, uh, I don't know, Nosferatu or, uh, Twilight, the
00:44:31.140 rule is that you have to let them in so they can't just come into your house and bite your
00:44:35.420 neck.
00:44:35.880 They knock.
00:44:36.740 And once they're invited in, the consent is given, then they could, yeah.
00:44:41.560 And this is an age old theme of like, we've told you.
00:44:45.940 So now that you know, to whatever level, you know, like, which I, I don't think people really
00:44:50.820 know, but you know, they have the right of saying we've told you.
00:44:53.900 So now we're allowed to suck your blood until you're just dry bones and dead.
00:44:58.760 Well, that's what a lot of hospitals, you going to that hospital is implied consent to
00:45:04.300 adhere to all the hospital policies.
00:45:06.440 So I have a friend, um, they are actually, it's a podcast.
00:45:11.000 They have two, it's two RNs and they both collectively have decades of experience and
00:45:15.300 they both have left the field because they just couldn't be a part of it anymore.
00:45:18.720 And, um, she was telling me about best practices and order sets that are done in the, in the
00:45:24.400 hospital environment and how there are some patients that would come out of heart surgery.
00:45:28.540 And because they chose to have heart surgery at that hospital, there could be a possibility
00:45:33.280 that they would be vaccinated without even being told.
00:45:36.660 And that to me is just completely bonkers, violates informed consent at its very core.
00:45:43.100 Yes.
00:45:43.900 Especially just coming out of surgery.
00:45:45.900 And I don't know, hundreds to thousands of people have messaged me saying, well, my baby,
00:45:51.040 um, was in the nurse area because I needed to get some sleep.
00:45:54.440 And then I got my hospital records or I was charged by my insurance company and found out
00:45:59.120 that they ended up getting these vaccines and we didn't even say it.
00:46:02.180 Or I've had nurses that are in labor and delivery and the mother and father say, okay, we don't
00:46:09.440 want these products.
00:46:10.280 And then if that baby is somehow transferred to the NICU, that declination doesn't transfer
00:46:15.860 over to the NICU.
00:46:16.980 So the parents don't realize that they have to retell the NICU nurses that they don't want
00:46:21.620 that product.
00:46:22.560 See, and that's where it comes down to all these like layers of consent.
00:46:25.560 Like you have opportunities to consent and, and not saying, uh, no is kind of saying yes.
00:46:31.140 That's the way that these things are interpreted.
00:46:33.080 You have to actually vocalize.
00:46:34.780 My son was born in March of 2020.
00:46:37.320 And this is right when the world shut down in New York city.
00:46:39.880 There was actually, what a, what a month to be born.
00:46:42.520 Yeah.
00:46:42.960 Horrible.
00:46:43.380 I feel, I feel bad for this kid.
00:46:45.320 It's like, it's not his fault.
00:46:46.400 You were born at the end of the world.
00:46:47.640 But, uh, there was actually a debate on whether I would be allowed in the hospital room or be
00:46:52.620 allowed to even be there that it was that time period.
00:46:55.440 And after she had given birth, it was an insane process.
00:46:58.920 And it's just, it was, it was the craziest time of my life.
00:47:01.520 We're in, uh, in the hospital and we had to stay there for a couple of days as he had
00:47:04.520 joined us.
00:47:05.440 So like on the first or second day, they're like, oh, we're going to take him and just take
00:47:09.060 a look at him and they bring him out the room and we're tired.
00:47:12.020 Like we've been with this kid and just, you know, you know how it is.
00:47:14.980 You went through the whole process and my wife just goes, just go walk down the hallway,
00:47:18.680 please.
00:47:18.900 And just go check.
00:47:20.100 And I go down the hallway and I look through the glass and they're putting a needle in
00:47:23.220 his leg.
00:47:23.940 And I freak out, like busting the door.
00:47:25.600 I was like, what the fuck are you doing?
00:47:26.660 And it turned out they were giving him vitamin K, but they were also setting up to give
00:47:31.040 him, uh, the next one, uh, like a hepatitis.
00:47:34.680 Yeah.
00:47:34.840 Hep B shot.
00:47:35.500 And I was like, absolutely not.
00:47:36.400 We told you no.
00:47:37.640 And from then on all the, like they gave the baby back.
00:47:40.600 Oh, they treat you like villains.
00:47:42.020 They treat us.
00:47:42.460 Yeah.
00:47:42.580 They just, every, every time they came in, they're like, is he latching?
00:47:45.080 And we're like, well, not really.
00:47:46.260 And they're like, well, have you considered the hep B shot?
00:47:48.100 I was like, what the fuck is wrong with you guys?
00:47:50.260 It's horrible.
00:47:51.640 It's so horrible.
00:47:52.880 And it, and then probably too, I don't know if you know this or not.
00:47:56.160 So my daughter was injured by the synthetic vitamin K injection.
00:47:59.520 Um, and she was severely jaundiced colic.
00:48:02.020 Uh, she had neonatal acts, acne, eczema.
00:48:04.860 And after she was born and she would be in digestive turmoil every time she fed, I remember
00:48:10.740 going to pediatricians asking for help.
00:48:12.960 And the entire time they're shaming me for not giving her the hep B and they don't even
00:48:17.360 want to talk about the colic baby sitting on my lap and me completely sleep deprived,
00:48:22.680 trying to figure out how to heal her.
00:48:24.220 And I remember thinking, are you a salesperson?
00:48:27.680 That's exactly what it is.
00:48:28.540 Cause they're, they're worried about what they can charge you with.
00:48:31.040 That's what it is at the end of the day.
00:48:32.700 Well, and then, so finally, I mean, I'll be honest.
00:48:35.280 I, that was the, the last pediatrician I went to was when she was, I don't know, four months
00:48:39.980 old and I never have gone back.
00:48:41.420 I found a family doctor that, um, she was actually a pediatrician for, um, 10 years and
00:48:46.880 then her nephew experienced an adverse reaction and she couldn't be a part of it anymore.
00:48:50.660 And so she developed a family medicine practice.
00:48:53.520 And so I go to her, but it forced me to leave the industry and to leave that, um, world.
00:48:59.920 And I actually have plenty of people that say, I can't find a pediatrician that will let me
00:49:04.580 do a delayed schedule.
00:49:05.560 Not even saying that they won't do it at all, but won't even let them do a delayed schedule.
00:49:09.600 And I have to be honest with them and say, look, most pediatricians, if they're board
00:49:14.080 certified, they have to recommend the CDC schedule.
00:49:18.120 They are bound by their business model because they are supported by insurance claims and
00:49:23.840 they have to pay for the people in their office to file all these claims.
00:49:28.140 They're not going to let you do a delayed schedule.
00:49:30.620 They're not going to let you not accept vaccines because their business will fail.
00:49:35.140 And so sometimes you have to go somewhere else.
00:49:37.940 And now I will say there are some pediatricians that are going to a more direct primary care
00:49:42.380 model where they do a membership based and they will be a little bit more lenient.
00:49:46.960 Um, I'm actually working on a pro informed consent provider directory.
00:49:50.500 And I found that if there are pediatricians listed, most likely they are in, um, they
00:49:56.120 have a different business model than most conventional pediatricians do.
00:49:59.600 Well, we've been corrupt.
00:50:00.960 It's corrupt down to, down to every level and they, they control it with the financials.
00:50:05.740 Uh, sorry, I, I, I gotta ask you a question and it might be early to ask you this question,
00:50:09.980 but, um, okay.
00:50:12.520 So RFK goes in, he revamps the national Institute of health, uh, the CDC.
00:50:19.700 And now these directives are that, that we're going to these doctors are going to be different,
00:50:25.820 or at least they're not going to be enforced as stringently.
00:50:28.620 It still begs the question, what do I do with these people who have, uh, hurt our children
00:50:37.100 for so long and knowingly or not, I don't care.
00:50:40.280 You have taken this degree, you put this little white coat on and you walked around with this
00:50:43.980 air of confidence that you are who you are.
00:50:46.160 So you know what, you know, great.
00:50:48.020 You were wrong.
00:50:49.540 What do we do with you?
00:50:51.200 There has to be a form of consequence.
00:50:53.960 There has to be a punishment and I listen, extreme side of punishment would be, you know,
00:51:00.320 let's like parade them through the streets, but the more common sense.
00:51:03.440 Have you been talking to my husband?
00:51:04.480 I'm sorry.
00:51:05.540 A lot of us are feeling that sense.
00:51:07.500 Yeah.
00:51:08.500 This is what I talked to my wife about often.
00:51:10.940 I was like, when this, all this stuff comes down and it's revealed the kind of damage that
00:51:15.480 was done.
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00:52:44.580 The pushing that these people did of these narratives, people are going to be really mad.
00:52:49.760 And I would hope.
00:52:51.400 But what do you do with these people?
00:52:53.740 Here's the issue.
00:52:54.440 Take away their license?
00:52:55.600 Because then you have no doctors.
00:52:58.300 Well, yeah.
00:52:59.640 There's a lot of doctors out there.
00:53:01.580 They're just not within the conventional healthcare model.
00:53:04.280 But here's the issue.
00:53:05.700 And this is something that I was so vocal about when COVID first happened and the emergency
00:53:11.760 use authorization.
00:53:12.620 I fought so hard for that not to happen because it put into play a protective measure of all
00:53:21.220 of the medical professionals that partook in administering, recommending all of those
00:53:27.580 things.
00:53:28.100 That product, it protected them from any kind of legal action, from any kind of malpractice.
00:53:34.340 So because of that, legally, there's really not a lot that I could see RFK being able
00:53:41.820 to do.
00:53:42.300 Now, maybe there's a loophole that I mean, he's a lawyer.
00:53:45.720 He has plenty of very smart, intelligent people around him.
00:53:48.520 Maybe it is really interesting that there was a pardon, a preemptive pardon for Anthony
00:53:55.780 Fauci that I don't think has ever happened for a medical doctor in the history of the United
00:54:00.680 States.
00:54:01.380 So I don't know how all that's going to play out.
00:54:03.420 I think it'll be very, very interesting.
00:54:05.260 But I don't think that RFK is going to start out the gate with that if he ever does do
00:54:09.960 that, because there are so many people that are on the fence or so many people that are
00:54:14.840 still the psychology of that time frame still has a hold on them.
00:54:20.400 I mean, there was trillion dollar campaigns funded by taxpayer dollars to convince people
00:54:27.640 to accept this product and to shame people that didn't accept this product.
00:54:31.600 I mean, you had neighbors and family members calling on other family members and people
00:54:36.080 were pitted against each other.
00:54:37.600 Like it was psychological warfare.
00:54:40.780 And it's only been a couple of years, you know, four or five years since then.
00:54:45.220 That's actually not a long time.
00:54:46.700 Exactly.
00:54:47.960 That's not a long time from that happening.
00:54:49.920 And most of us, like you, became parents during that time frame.
00:54:54.040 My first I have three kids.
00:54:55.540 My first child was born in mid-2019.
00:54:59.540 And so I dealt with her injury.
00:55:01.540 And then by the time that she finally started to have some healing, COVID hit.
00:55:05.840 And then the world shut down and everybody went crazy.
00:55:08.080 And then I was actually pregnant during when the mandates happened.
00:55:12.820 And I remember being on the pregnancy apps and seeing women skipping prenatal appointments
00:55:18.220 because their providers were pushing the COVID vaccine so hard on them and telling them
00:55:22.900 that they were going to die, their baby was going to die, and that they were putting everybody
00:55:26.340 at risk by not accepting the COVID vaccine.
00:55:28.180 So I think because we've gone through such like a mental just trauma for the last few
00:55:34.600 years, it's going to take some people a little bit more time to unravel everything that happened
00:55:39.840 in order to have that public support of holding people accountable that need to be held accountable.
00:55:45.980 I think it's going to be the same thing, though.
00:55:47.620 It's like we need some governing body to tell us that we were right because when it comes to
00:55:52.460 the vaccinations, you know, VAERS is underreported to whatever magnitude that it's underreported.
00:55:57.100 And there was a lot of obfuscation in regards to attributing cardiac events that may have
00:56:03.680 been from the vaccination, but it seems that they were trying to attribute it to every other
00:56:07.820 thing.
00:56:08.200 There was cardiac events associated with climate change.
00:56:14.400 They were trying to associate with climate change.
00:56:16.600 They were saying at a point they were even saying eggs were responsible for a great deal
00:56:21.020 of cardiovascular issues within young adults.
00:56:25.560 You know, we were having unprecedented, you know, events in regards to athletes dropping
00:56:32.940 dead on the on the, you know, having these cardiac events on the field, especially in
00:56:36.300 regards to soccer players.
00:56:37.160 But there was a lot of obfuscation.
00:56:39.060 It became very hard to attribute that to the vaccination.
00:56:41.560 What wasn't really obfuscated was the idea that they were telling these people that they
00:56:45.280 needed to be put on ventilators.
00:56:46.840 And then the ventilators were actually causing their respiratory systems to shut down.
00:56:52.060 It was because they were becoming like codependent on the respirator, allowing it to do the breathing
00:56:55.720 for them.
00:56:56.780 And so whatever natural process that would have been in place instead of the respirator shuts
00:57:01.920 down and these people end up dying.
00:57:03.480 And that was not obfuscated.
00:57:06.620 They weren't attributing respiratory issues to other things.
00:57:09.500 It was like, yeah, it seems like that was a mistake.
00:57:11.320 And people saw that, right?
00:57:13.640 And what I mean to say that they saw is medical professionals telling you that you needed an
00:57:18.000 intervention of some sort, and then that leading to your demise, you actually dying.
00:57:22.860 Right.
00:57:23.020 And nobody really gave a shit about that.
00:57:25.760 And so in one way, I look at the vaccination thing, and I'm like, man, if all the information
00:57:30.260 came out that they were telling us to do this, and it was, you know, blowing up in our faces
00:57:34.900 and hurting us, then yeah, maybe we'd be really upset.
00:57:37.220 We're just waiting for that official, you know, remark from the governing body.
00:57:40.420 But we had that in the respirator, or the ventilators, and nobody seemed to give a shit.
00:57:45.200 Yeah, that's true.
00:57:46.080 Well, it is a little bit of a morbid of that Spider-Man meme where the three Spider-Mans
00:57:50.840 are just pointing at each other, because you have the medical professionals that are blaming
00:57:53.700 the government for providing information to them that they went off of.
00:57:58.020 And then you have the medical professionals or the science community that's pointing at
00:58:02.180 the people on the ground saying, well, this is what you were reporting, and we were just
00:58:05.860 going off of the data.
00:58:06.720 And then you have the pharmaceutical companies saying, well, you wanted to have Operation Warp
00:58:12.180 Speed, and you wanted to do it really quickly.
00:58:14.160 And so everybody's just blaming each other and not realizing that there was so many levels
00:58:20.320 of corruption, and not necessarily just with the COVID vaccine.
00:58:24.020 It's baked into HHS.
00:58:26.260 I mean, if you, I cover this in my course, in my training, in the book.
00:58:29.660 It's the financial conflicts of interest.
00:58:32.120 The entity in CDC, the committee that allows products to be added to the schedule, almost
00:58:38.880 all of them have financial conflicts of waivers, and there's legislation that protects them.
00:58:43.600 It says that if the need for you to be on this committee outweighs the amount of financial
00:58:49.060 conflicts of interest we have, we'll waive that for you.
00:58:51.740 And so it really just exposed generational issues that we've been dealing with since
00:59:00.060 like the 70s and 80s on how these products are brought to market.
00:59:04.120 And I think for me, too, this going through COVID, it is a origin of where most people
00:59:11.320 start realizing, oh, crap, I saw this happen in real time in COVID.
00:59:15.880 What about polio?
00:59:17.180 What about tetanus?
00:59:18.180 What about all these other diseases that we were told vaccines eradicated it?
00:59:22.960 And then they start looking.
00:59:24.400 And I actually, that's why I include some important historical context in my training stuff, because
00:59:30.620 how many times do we say, but polio, but all these other things, vaccines are what's the
00:59:36.700 current term now is vaccines are a victim of their own success.
00:59:40.940 People don't want to do it anymore because it eradicated.
00:59:43.160 But then when you look at the history of it and you realize, oh, my gosh, the polio vaccine
00:59:47.840 was deadly, look up the cutter incident, look at all, you know, the oral, oral polio that
00:59:52.900 was causing more cases of vaccine derived politic, paralytic polio than wild polio.
01:00:00.480 It wasn't a success.
01:00:01.960 It actually caused more harm.
01:00:03.380 And so I kind of very slowly introduce these ideas to people because it can be so overwhelming.
01:00:10.340 And that the example that I give is if I start researching at fact A and then I go to fact
01:00:16.020 B and then I go to fact C all the way down to fact Z, but then I go to someone with fact
01:00:20.960 Q or throw something out there, their brain's going to shut off and they're not going to
01:00:25.380 be able to digest it.
01:00:27.020 And so I come in in the angle of, okay, we're going to handhold.
01:00:30.880 We're going to go really slowly.
01:00:32.100 This is all about informed consent.
01:00:33.720 And then slowly disclose, because in order for you to understand a section of it, you
01:00:37.940 have to understand the whole history of it.
01:00:40.300 So you have to be a little bit of a historian.
01:00:42.400 But I do think because we went through this, it made it much more realistic that it could
01:00:48.520 have happened in the past.
01:00:50.260 There's there's also this interesting phenomenon that I've been mulling over my brain of no
01:00:54.660 matter how many times you walk people through eight from A through Z and you do it in a convincing
01:00:58.760 mat.
01:00:59.080 Like I can do it.
01:01:00.100 I understand I'm a bit abrasive, but you probably have a much better way of bringing this to
01:01:04.300 people.
01:01:04.760 They will still be resistant to it.
01:01:06.720 But I'm thinking, I'm like, what if we took the red dye out of the food?
01:01:10.260 What if we took the fluoride out of your water?
01:01:12.060 Like, and something is, yeah, it's something is, you still be resistant.
01:01:15.820 Is it a matter of calcified pineal glands?
01:01:18.220 Is that what's going on?
01:01:18.880 It's not just that, but it's like, it's, I think it, I think it does form, like it causes
01:01:22.540 a form of mental retardation.
01:01:23.960 Like if your gut floor is just completely damaged from years and years, and we all are, I am
01:01:29.020 too.
01:01:29.300 You know, I drink, I drink soda.
01:01:30.580 I like, I like Coca-Cola, but it's like, yeah, sorry.
01:01:35.120 It's, it's, we all have our vices.
01:01:36.820 Yeah.
01:01:37.600 But there is, there is a connection between your brain and your gut.
01:01:40.620 And our gut has been so poisoned over the years that it's like most of these people that
01:01:44.900 like, I feel like that might be step one to untying this knot.
01:01:47.880 Well, that's the, so the industry doesn't really look at that.
01:01:50.620 Right.
01:01:50.820 And I'm thinking as we're speaking, like I'm, I'm, I'm going back to like all the really
01:01:54.020 big, I'm very skeptical of the medical industry and, and rightfully so given just this conversation.
01:01:59.140 But if you go back and you look at these big medical moments throughout history, like,
01:02:03.660 okay, uh, cancer, right.
01:02:05.820 Cancer is a huge one.
01:02:07.060 We have so much of our medical apparatus that's built up to fight cancer.
01:02:11.000 And, and the longer you look at it, the more it looks like maybe they could do something
01:02:15.240 about this, but it almost feels like it's a much more effective, uh, money generating
01:02:19.660 machine than it is, uh, worth fixing and, and, and, you know, making it go away.
01:02:24.240 Cause then all of a sudden your revenue dries up and it's the same thing with like SSRIs,
01:02:28.000 right?
01:02:28.160 That's another huge thing that's going on in the States.
01:02:30.460 And it's like, they're being over-prescribed or at least that's a general consensus.
01:02:33.720 I feel that way.
01:02:34.620 Certainly we're having these neurological, uh, um, interventions in the, in the brain chemistry
01:02:40.340 of children, right?
01:02:41.540 We're, we're, we're prescribing children, various things, Adderall and things like that.
01:02:45.460 Um, you know, even the AIDS epidemic, you go back to like the whole AZT Fauci's there
01:02:50.100 too, which is very odd.
01:02:52.000 That really is disheartening when it comes to.
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01:04:22.680 People's ability to look at history and then see the way in which it repeats because that
01:04:26.320 wasn't even that long ago.
01:04:27.720 And so there are these really big events, AIDS and, you know, our mental health epidemic
01:04:35.320 that we're going through here in the States and the undefeatable boogeyman that is cancer.
01:04:40.540 And when you look at these things scrutinizingly, you're like, that looks awfully corrupt.
01:04:44.160 Actually, it looks like there was a bunch of shady things happening, a bunch of experimentation
01:04:48.160 on the public when it comes to, you know, pushing pharmaceuticals that don't have enough
01:04:52.600 data and, but it doesn't matter because it kind of seems like we're their guinea pigs.
01:04:56.280 The biggest events, the biggest events, the mental health crisis, that doesn't seem good.
01:05:02.140 What then can we champion the medical industry for?
01:05:04.460 I mean, you know, so much of our evolution as far as, you know, quelling big diseases really
01:05:10.400 was like a sanitation issue, it seems, right, where you keep your food clean and you keep
01:05:15.380 your hands clean and that ends up actually dropping the amount of people that are contracting
01:05:20.660 disease by a significant percentage.
01:05:22.640 Tell that to India.
01:05:23.740 Yeah, that's true.
01:05:24.360 Yeah.
01:05:25.200 So go ahead.
01:05:27.080 Oh, I was just going to say, if you go and look at a lot of the historical rates of disease,
01:05:31.500 many times the herd immunity was already happening before a vaccine came to market and then the
01:05:36.720 vaccine came to market and then it introduced a vaccine strain and then all of a sudden
01:05:40.760 cases.
01:05:42.120 Yeah.
01:05:42.560 So it's like, to me, it looks like an opportune thing.
01:05:45.040 It's like, oh, okay, herd immunity is developing.
01:05:48.080 Let's roll this out.
01:05:49.340 And then we can go back historically and claim that it was, you know, the timing.
01:05:53.260 It looks like it was the vaccination that did it.
01:05:55.800 So I'm just finding a hard time looking to, I believe antibiotics are good as a last ditch
01:06:01.480 effort.
01:06:01.920 Like, you know, something you really can't kick if it's not dietary, if it's not getting a
01:06:06.020 little sunlight, staying hydrated, getting some rest, keeping your vitamins up, things
01:06:09.720 like that, eating healthy foods, staying away from things that are causing inflammation.
01:06:13.320 If you can't boot it that way and it is persisting and it's getting worse, then antibiotics are
01:06:17.340 great.
01:06:18.420 But antibiotics are like a, I don't know, a low drone throughout history.
01:06:23.520 I'm looking at these big events.
01:06:25.440 Like I said, like AIDS was a big event and the whole fight against cancer, when it really
01:06:29.900 kicked off, it's spiraled into something that's tremendous.
01:06:32.260 There's so many, you know, non-profits that are all geared towards it.
01:06:36.080 It's like there's a whole culture around these things.
01:06:38.920 Alexandra, with these vaccines, do you think that there's something more nefarious than
01:06:43.200 just, because if they're not helping, what do you, what's in them?
01:06:46.640 And what the hell are we doing?
01:06:47.720 What are they doing?
01:06:49.280 Well, I mean, you could, there's so many different conspiracy angles that you could go
01:06:53.180 for it.
01:06:53.460 And I think you would have evidence for almost every single one.
01:06:55.640 For me, I personally, when I look at vaccines and I look at the very critical moments that
01:07:05.240 these vaccines are recommended, when a woman becomes pregnant, she first goes to a medical
01:07:11.840 professional to find out, confirm that she's pregnant.
01:07:15.140 So right at the beginning of becoming a parent, you set up that precedent that you have to go
01:07:20.040 to a medical professional to verify what you believe that you are pregnant.
01:07:24.860 And then it sets up that relationship that that medical professional has some kind of
01:07:28.860 insight into your body that you don't have.
01:07:31.260 And then throughout the pregnancy, you are being recommended certain products.
01:07:34.960 It's key points of your pregnancy because there's been a host of research and I don't
01:07:39.740 want to downgrade it.
01:07:40.600 There's definitely some benefits, like you were saying, if you need that medication or you
01:07:45.320 need that tool, definitely have that available.
01:07:47.640 But in my mind, when a woman is at such a vulnerable part of her transition period between
01:07:56.280 just becoming a girl and kind of becoming a woman and becoming a mother, they are being
01:08:02.120 recommended these products saying, OK, you are a healthy mother.
01:08:05.700 In order to stay healthy, in order for your child to stay healthy, you have to accept this
01:08:10.340 product.
01:08:11.260 And so it starts them right at the get go.
01:08:13.320 And I believe that a mother's intuition grows throughout her pregnancy and as the child
01:08:20.680 is born, grows throughout childhood.
01:08:22.840 And so I personally believe that when you set that expectation that a mother, in order to
01:08:29.020 maintain the health of her and her child, that she has to accept this preventative product
01:08:33.560 from the medical professional, it now sets her up for failure later on down the road where
01:08:37.940 she can't nourish that intuition because now she has to, OK, your child is dealing with ear
01:08:43.200 infections.
01:08:43.600 Your child is dealing with gut issues or an allergy or asthma or all these other things.
01:08:48.160 I have to seek a medical professional now.
01:08:50.420 I am now so dependent, hyper dependent upon this medical professional that there is no way that any
01:08:56.280 other natural remedy that has been used for centuries would ever be good enough because I need to go
01:09:01.360 to a medical professional.
01:09:02.280 And I see it all the time.
01:09:04.060 I see it within my own circle of influence.
01:09:06.480 I see it in my DMs.
01:09:07.600 I see in the comments.
01:09:08.440 I see it in so many other science communicators that are praying and are quite predatory towards
01:09:15.080 mothers and towards pregnant women because they're in this state of growing their intuition and it's
01:09:21.120 being robbed from them.
01:09:22.620 So I see it in that sense.
01:09:24.700 That's where the more nefarious part of because, again, I come from being trained in business.
01:09:30.480 I look at, OK, how does this industry set up lifetime customers?
01:09:35.860 Well, that's how they do it is by getting them right when they become mothers and kind
01:09:43.020 of like forcing that pipeline, I guess you could say, for the moms.
01:09:52.060 You're creating a trauma, right?
01:09:54.140 Like you're taking the mother, inflicting trauma on them at the most vulnerable point
01:09:59.080 in their life when they when they have these instincts coming in to protect this little
01:10:02.680 thing that really can't survive on its own.
01:10:04.600 It's nefarious, but it's it's a genius because it's playing off of human nature.
01:10:09.100 It just seems like everything they do is to disrupt not just motherhood, but like the
01:10:14.920 raising of a child.
01:10:16.020 Like if it's, you know, that motherhood angle is huge, too.
01:10:20.140 I mean, I'd be interested in seeing what percentage of revenue to the medical industry comes from
01:10:24.300 childbirth.
01:10:25.440 Something strange has happened.
01:10:27.000 Oh, have you seen the business of being born?
01:10:28.900 I believe I have.
01:10:29.900 That was a fantastic documentary.
01:10:31.100 That's a really good one.
01:10:31.660 And anybody who's, you know, had a baby in a hospital, you can feel all of that.
01:10:35.600 You know, much of what Top was talking about before, where it's like they're whisking them
01:10:39.000 away and they're they're doing things in other rooms.
01:10:41.160 And it's like you feel like they're they're I don't know, they're treating you like a
01:10:44.760 product instead of a person.
01:10:46.360 And so they don't even I mean, just to talk about motherhood a little bit.
01:10:50.600 But the reason why C-sections are so high is because they just I can't wait.
01:10:54.280 It's like they're just trying.
01:10:55.180 That's what I'm saying.
01:10:55.680 They treat you like a product.
01:10:56.540 They're ready to get you out of that bed and get another body in it.
01:10:59.000 And what's crazy is we've convinced women.
01:11:00.720 And look, I know, like, I'm a man.
01:11:02.200 I don't I'm not capable of giving birth, but I'm a father and I watch this whole process.
01:11:05.640 And to me, it just seems crazy because I go like I'm like, yo, women have been
01:11:10.720 having babies for, you know, a long time before hospitals were a thing.
01:11:15.820 And now all of a sudden there seems to be this idea here in the West that you can't
01:11:18.700 have a baby without the hospital.
01:11:20.420 And this is yeah, this is my personal experience.
01:11:24.600 My first child was a birthing center attached to a hospital.
01:11:28.420 It was a 44 hour labor, incredibly traumatic.
01:11:31.360 My second and third I had at home easiest labors compared to that.
01:11:36.360 And it was still like, sure, yes, you go through transition, you know, having a baby
01:11:41.200 naturally is hard and it's painful, but it was way better than that hospital experience.
01:11:46.380 And you're comfortable in your own home, surrounded by people that love you and care
01:11:50.320 about you.
01:11:50.860 They're waiting on you.
01:11:51.880 You know, it's everything is familiar.
01:11:53.240 Like the last thing you need to do is go through this traumatic experience in a foreign
01:11:57.400 place.
01:11:57.900 It just adds to another layer of trauma.
01:11:59.740 Exactly.
01:12:00.040 And at the biological level, a woman, when she is going through labor, there are certain
01:12:04.760 hormones that increase in order to suppress the pain.
01:12:09.220 And there's certain hormones that help the labor progress at a natural level and not as
01:12:17.100 so aggressive as what you would get if you are given pretosin or something like that.
01:12:21.340 So when you're in a hospital, those hormone secretions can be limited by harsh lights, strangers
01:12:27.620 coming into the room, a whole bunch of machines around you, being in the clinical setting,
01:12:32.880 worrying about blood pressure and hearing the beeping and hearing all these other things.
01:12:37.760 And they have to come in like every hour on the hour they have to come in.
01:12:42.320 And it's like you want privacy in that moment.
01:12:45.200 You're in a vulnerable state.
01:12:46.560 Like, you know, even as the husband and the father, I'm in a vulnerable state because
01:12:49.880 I'm trying to protect my wife and my son who's on the way.
01:12:53.160 And it's a never ending cycle of strangers coming through the door and jamming something
01:12:57.560 else in you.
01:12:58.420 And it's I mean, it's as far as an industry goes, a revenue producing and it is an incredible
01:13:05.340 what would you call it?
01:13:07.480 It's a it's a scam.
01:13:09.820 It feels like a scam.
01:13:11.100 The disservice that I've done to my children, my son specifically, is something that I could
01:13:15.880 probably never forgive myself for not knowing this stuff sooner.
01:13:18.720 But like he was born in like a Twilight Zone episode, like he came out and I mean, this
01:13:23.820 this birth was like crazy.
01:13:25.300 Like she got an epidural and she got it probably too late because it was COVID time and all
01:13:30.860 the doctors were terrified.
01:13:32.060 They didn't even really have masks.
01:13:33.800 They were kind of like, you know, in between.
01:13:35.780 It was a time when the masks were like limited or something like that.
01:13:39.120 And when he came out, it was like she her blood pressure had dropped.
01:13:44.100 His blood pressure was dropping and they were they had the C-section stuff on the table.
01:13:48.720 And luckily, her doctor was there and like, I'm holding I'm holding one of her legs.
01:13:51.900 Someone else is holding her legs and her doctor is pulling the baby out because he's like,
01:13:55.800 no, you're going to have this this baby this way.
01:13:58.100 Like, we don't have to cut you.
01:13:59.260 Oh, my gosh.
01:14:00.420 And he comes out and there's like 40 people in the room.
01:14:03.120 It's it must all they're wearing masks of some most of them had masks.
01:14:07.020 And I'm like, this must have been psychotic.
01:14:09.100 Imagine the first thing you do.
01:14:10.500 You come out and you're like, what the fuck is going on in this place?
01:14:13.340 The medical industry is not alone in this, because if you're paying attention, Hollywood
01:14:17.760 and, you know, the movies and they make childbirth look like the most terrifying.
01:14:24.060 They love dramatizing childbirth.
01:14:27.580 They love showing this this, you know, scene to women.
01:14:30.440 That's like it's it's like you're on death's bed is and it's so traumatic.
01:14:35.480 It's so dramatic.
01:14:36.480 You know, there's like intense music playing.
01:14:39.740 Everything is suspense.
01:14:40.580 They use all of this Hollywood apparatus to really highlight this moment.
01:14:43.840 And women are inundated with this constantly.
01:14:46.000 And it's like in every good show and every good movie, you'll end up seeing this thing.
01:14:49.780 And to the point where they have successfully solidified it within our culture that, yeah,
01:14:53.620 this thing happens in a hospital bed.
01:14:55.520 It doesn't happen in your home.
01:14:57.420 That's for certain.
01:14:58.420 You know, we're not we're not animals.
01:15:00.240 We're not hominids.
01:15:02.300 You know, we're doing things in hospitals.
01:15:03.940 We're civilized now.
01:15:05.440 And it's like maybe or maybe you're just drying it.
01:15:08.520 You've made you've made an industry where there needn't be one.
01:15:12.560 And you've made it unbelievably profitable.
01:15:16.380 Yeah, I have a motherhood guide that I wrote for free.
01:15:19.280 It's no email required to access on my website.
01:15:22.020 So anybody is expecting go go read it.
01:15:25.320 It's really, really, really good.
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01:16:57.220 And I have lots of resources in it, but I talk about how there are a majority of medical
01:17:02.860 professionals that have never seen a physiological birth.
01:17:05.820 They've never seen a birth that is naturally progressed and they're perfect right there.
01:17:11.160 And I go through what a physiological birth and it's sourced from .gov resources.
01:17:16.140 What does that look like?
01:17:17.420 And what are some questions that you can ask your medical professionals to identify if they
01:17:22.780 maybe don't have that experience?
01:17:24.160 Because most people don't realize OBGYNs are surgeons.
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01:17:53.820 Hi, I'm Darren Marlar, host of the Weird Darkness podcast.
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01:18:55.860 And so when you're going to an OBGYN, they're going to lean towards what they know, and they
01:19:02.040 know surgery.
01:19:04.000 And so if you want a more natural-minded birth, you have to prepare yourself for a physiological
01:19:08.760 birth.
01:19:09.260 And I talk about, too, even if you do need or you want an epidural or you want a C-section,
01:19:14.740 birth is completely unpredictable.
01:19:17.280 You could have a C-section scheduled and have your baby in your bathroom.
01:19:20.740 I have two friends that have planned on having a hospital birth and ended up having their
01:19:25.260 baby at home.
01:19:25.940 And it was such an incredibly traumatic experience for them because they didn't know what it
01:19:29.820 looked like.
01:19:30.320 They didn't know how to prepare because they just were banking on medication to help them
01:19:35.060 with their labor.
01:19:35.660 And then I've had friends that had hospital or a home birth planned, and then they ended
01:19:41.000 up having a C-section.
01:19:42.120 And so I also cover C-sections and different things that you can do for your baby and your
01:19:46.680 body to make sure that your microbiome is seated for the baby.
01:19:50.720 There's things that you could do.
01:19:51.840 There are things that you can do pre and post-op to help your body recover from a C-section
01:19:58.140 and make sure that your breast milk isn't dipping after a C-section because you're in pain
01:20:04.560 and you're trying to filter out all, you know, if you had fentanyl or anything like that.
01:20:08.560 So I cover, and also I cover natural hospital births too.
01:20:11.840 There are things, and now it depends on your hospital and it depends on the policy that
01:20:16.140 they have.
01:20:16.500 But there are some things that you can do to have a more natural-minded hospital experience.
01:20:21.980 But again, I'm probably more biased towards the home birth because it was just, it felt
01:20:26.780 that my body was in control and it knew it needed to do.
01:20:30.520 And it was way less painful, way less time.
01:20:34.380 I mean, I was in labor for almost two days.
01:20:36.740 I had my midwife, when I came in to the hospital, she went at home, had a full day of leave and
01:20:44.060 came back and I was still in labor.
01:20:46.660 I think that it's one of the worst things about this is the medical industry has reduced
01:20:53.060 childbirth to like a very logistical happening, right?
01:20:55.860 And it's all nuts and bolts.
01:20:57.240 It's all what looks good on paper.
01:20:59.520 And one of the things I hate the most is it seems that, it certainly happened to me,
01:21:03.400 it's like after the baby is born, whether it's jaundice or whatever, there's always a
01:21:07.200 reason to whisk it away.
01:21:08.820 And I hate that.
01:21:10.340 It felt so wrong to me in my heart that they're just whisking, you know, my son away to go
01:21:15.800 put him in this thing under a heat lamp.
01:21:17.880 You know, what is that?
01:21:18.480 I would say most RNs that talk to me, never, ever, ever leave your baby alone.
01:21:25.280 Always have someone go with the baby.
01:21:27.020 Whether it's the dad or the grandma or grandpa or aunt, uncle, friend, always have someone
01:21:31.840 there.
01:21:32.660 Even just besides them taking it away, what the medical industry never takes into consideration
01:21:38.180 is this like spiritual moment.
01:21:40.540 There's a connection.
01:21:41.380 There's an immutable bond between, you know, parents and children, especially mothers and
01:21:46.260 their children.
01:21:46.900 And I think that when this baby is born, there's a real, for lack of a better term, magic that
01:21:52.960 needs to take place.
01:21:53.820 That baby needs to be held.
01:21:54.880 There needs to be bonding.
01:21:55.600 You know, you've carried this baby for nine months and you get this opportunity to hold
01:21:59.060 it in your hands.
01:21:59.820 And instead, it's got to go sit in isolation.
01:22:03.020 I don't think that's how babies are supposed to be.
01:22:05.060 Yeah.
01:22:05.140 Rubber gloves under a heat lamp.
01:22:06.560 They're meant to be embraced.
01:22:07.740 They're meant to be, they're meant to feel love.
01:22:10.440 I mean, it's the climax of this moment where this, this, you know, body is developing inside
01:22:16.400 of yours.
01:22:16.960 And even though you can never see and touch this thing, you can feel it moving around and you
01:22:20.580 develop.
01:22:20.880 I watched my wife, you know, develop this love for something that we haven't even seen yet.
01:22:25.600 And then all of a sudden there's this breakthrough moment and you're meant to hold that thing
01:22:29.020 and make some eye contact, some meaningful eye contact and hold that baby and receive it
01:22:34.060 into the world with love.
01:22:35.100 And the industry steps right in the way of that.
01:22:37.560 He goes, no, no love for this baby.
01:22:38.980 When my son was, when my son was born, they forced my wife to wear a mask as they, so it's like,
01:22:44.640 I know dude, it's, I've, I'm trying to think of a word besides like blood rage.
01:22:50.720 I can't really.
01:22:51.560 I understand why you're so bitter.
01:22:53.340 Yes.
01:22:54.040 Rage is really the word.
01:22:55.320 It feels, it feels horrifying because I remember the feeling when I was in the hospital of it's
01:23:01.900 like me versus them suddenly, because you know, you're, you're reduced to a real primal state
01:23:06.660 when you're with the person that you love and they just went through this traumatic experience.
01:23:10.680 And now you've got this vulnerable child that needs your protection.
01:23:14.320 Yeah.
01:23:14.940 And, and because of that dynamic and the way that these medical professionals are behaving,
01:23:19.080 it very much becomes a, an adversarial dynamic where I'm like, what are you doing?
01:23:23.260 Where are you going?
01:23:23.920 Why is this happening?
01:23:24.820 What are you doing with that?
01:23:25.580 And, you know, it's like, and also as the father, you not only feel that towards the
01:23:29.220 baby, but also towards your wife or, you know, your partner.
01:23:31.800 And you were talking about the baby and the importance of the baby having that connection,
01:23:35.740 but also for the mother in order for her placenta to be delivered naturally.
01:23:39.800 And in order for her milk production to start happening.
01:23:42.500 And, um, there are after birth pains that she's going to experience the baby being in close
01:23:48.800 proximity to her gets those hormones working and helps her in her healing.
01:23:54.680 There's a, when the placenta comes out, there's a wound, the size of a dinner plate inside
01:23:58.840 of her because the placenta is no longer attached to her uterus.
01:24:01.880 And so you need all of that.
01:24:03.580 That is such a critical amount of time where all that needs to be taken care of.
01:24:07.760 The newborn screening can wait.
01:24:09.520 There is nothing that needs to be done immediately in that amount of time.
01:24:14.180 That is more, um, important than that bondage to first happen for just the biological level
01:24:20.120 of things.
01:24:21.080 They, um, my, so my wife was in labor for 24 hours.
01:24:23.640 And because of that, like churn and burn kind of effect, they, they insisted, like, we need
01:24:28.860 a C-section.
01:24:29.420 It needs to happen.
01:24:30.360 And I don't know what we're just like, okay, I guess it needs to happen.
01:24:33.200 Sure.
01:24:33.560 And so, you know, she's wheeled away.
01:24:36.360 We go through the C-section.
01:24:37.460 I'm there holding her hand and, you know, they take the baby out and, uh, and I, I get
01:24:41.840 to hold them for a little bit and I look around and realize they've wheeled my wife out without
01:24:47.380 saying anything.
01:24:48.080 And I don't know where she is.
01:24:49.180 And I'm there with my father and her mother.
01:24:51.680 So I pass my son off to my father and I'm going back to the room we were originally in
01:24:55.980 to find my wife.
01:24:56.900 And sure enough, she's in there.
01:24:58.660 She's alone.
01:24:59.860 The lights are off.
01:25:01.160 And she's just shaking in the dark because she's just had this massive surgery and, uh,
01:25:06.780 and she's in shock from all of this.
01:25:08.300 And, you know, if you really ever have injured yourself like terribly, there's a kind of a
01:25:12.480 convulsion that'll, and so she's just convulsing alone in the dark by herself.
01:25:16.980 And I have to go over there and hold her and, and, you know, I didn't even have, it's
01:25:21.760 so foreign.
01:25:22.680 It's such a mess, man.
01:25:24.080 It's such a mess.
01:25:24.860 Like this shouldn't be like this.
01:25:26.260 I shouldn't be passing my baby off and going to console my wife.
01:25:29.320 The question again is like, we discussed like, what do you do with these people?
01:25:33.240 Are they redeemable?
01:25:34.220 These doctors, because like you said, there are a lot of doctors out there.
01:25:37.520 Like when my wife, we moved here, she got really sick.
01:25:40.320 Um, she had Lyme disease.
01:25:41.920 She still has Lyme disease, but, uh, we had to go through a bunch of doctors to figure
01:25:45.880 out really what was wrong with her.
01:25:47.780 And that's, that's kind of when she shed the whole RN Western medicine stuff where she
01:25:51.600 went completely holistic, but there aren't that many.
01:25:54.480 I mean, I maybe 10% of doctors that are thinking along the lines of how we're thinking here,
01:25:59.240 but there's a lot of damn people and they need a lot of doctors.
01:26:02.520 So where do you go?
01:26:04.540 Well, and I think this is where, like, cause I was actually thinking about this earlier
01:26:07.780 cause so many people come to me and they say, well, we're so understaffed and we have
01:26:11.800 all these people coming in.
01:26:13.080 But most of the time, especially with all the inserts that I've read, I think that a big
01:26:18.700 percentage of the issues that we see in hospitals are actually adverse reactions from pharmaceuticals.
01:26:24.420 And so if you gave the public, the information, the transparency, and the education to be
01:26:31.100 able to make more informed decisions and for them to realize, huh, I had this product, I
01:26:36.180 accepted this product, and then I developed this adverse reaction that I had to go seek
01:26:39.920 a 15 specialist for.
01:26:41.980 And then I had an ER visit or blah, blah, blah.
01:26:44.700 Maybe they would make wiser decisions and then you wouldn't have that many people.
01:26:49.480 To me, I feel like it's going to be a long-term process to fix it at its root cause.
01:26:53.880 And then other times I'm like, it all needs to burn to the ground and we all just need
01:26:57.640 to grow a garden of medicinal herbs.
01:26:59.980 And I like, I have a suture kit at home that I practice in case I need to, I have the butterfly
01:27:05.200 stitches for my son cause he's just a hot mess and he falls off the couch all the time.
01:27:09.400 And I know he's going to be the first one that I'm going to have to do stitches on.
01:27:12.240 So sometimes I lean that way and sometimes like, maybe it's, it's, you know, we're salvageable
01:27:17.480 and maybe we can replace it.
01:27:18.840 But I think it just really depends.
01:27:20.480 This is why I said this vote, this confirmation vote for RFK junior was probably the most important
01:27:25.540 vote that we've ever had in our lifetime.
01:27:27.240 Because I do think that is going to be, we were at a crossroads and it was either going
01:27:31.120 to be really, really bad or maybe, maybe just maybe it's going to start getting better.
01:27:35.680 I think we need a cultural shift because even if you revamp the medical apparatus, as long
01:27:40.960 as the average person is so easily deceived and taken advantage of, there are, there's going
01:27:46.180 to be those who are going to place themselves in those positions and think about profits
01:27:50.080 over people.
01:27:51.040 And then surely it's going to happen again.
01:27:53.180 We can't lift our heads up from not only our own nine to five grind and worrying about
01:27:58.300 the average thing, but also the propaganda that's been aimed at us is so addicting, right?
01:28:04.040 It's like, we talk about it often.
01:28:05.460 There's like a scene change every three to eight seconds.
01:28:07.920 It's constantly flashing.
01:28:09.080 It's like a, it's like a brainwashing program that the intelligence agencies would, would
01:28:13.920 run on you.
01:28:14.860 And, um, until we, we break off of that, it's like, we don't have time to look at these things.
01:28:19.800 And even when we do have time, we're addicted to trash.
01:28:22.760 We're addicted to bad food.
01:28:24.360 We're addicted to bad media.
01:28:26.180 No, that's all right.
01:28:27.180 There he is.
01:28:27.800 Buzz Lightyear.
01:28:29.240 Hey, it's Buzz.
01:28:31.020 I'm almost done, bud.
01:28:32.480 Awesome.
01:28:33.540 Okay.
01:28:34.060 Can you go in the human being?
01:28:35.100 Sorry.
01:28:36.100 My, uh, my babysitter cut out on me today.
01:28:39.040 So I had them watching a movie downstairs and it must've ended.
01:28:42.200 That's all right.
01:28:42.900 This happens to me every once, every three episodes or so.
01:28:46.680 They just be like, they bust in.
01:28:48.280 He's like, Hey, the TV is not.
01:28:49.540 I'm like, I don't know.
01:28:52.660 It's just, you know, average parenting these days.
01:28:55.100 You just got to do what you got to do.
01:28:56.680 Well, that's the beauty of doing these things remote, right?
01:28:58.760 It's like, we don't have to, uh, leave them to do this.
01:29:01.120 But, uh, I just think that we, we don't stand a chance at any sort of real long-term,
01:29:07.520 uh, health and nutrition advocacy or awareness as a country until we detach ourselves.
01:29:13.840 So we need both.
01:29:14.580 It's great that we have RFK on the horizon.
01:29:16.980 And I, and I do think a lot of great things are going to happen, but we need to dismantle
01:29:20.280 this propaganda machine and we need to revamp our entire nutrition system here in the West.
01:29:24.260 Well, it's funny how it is.
01:29:26.660 It does seem like it's all happening all at once.
01:29:29.120 Right.
01:29:29.380 Uh, and again, I, I do like, I like Trump.
01:29:32.300 I think he's hilarious.
01:29:33.800 I'm very suspicious of him.
01:29:35.140 I like Elon Musk.
01:29:36.340 I'm very suspicious of him, but they're dismantling, um, the financial systems like through USAID.
01:29:42.540 So we're seeing that happen at the same time.
01:29:44.860 They're, they're telling us about, I mean, Reuters was receiving a couple billion dollars
01:29:49.220 to socially engineer us.
01:29:51.220 It's insane.
01:29:52.280 So while that's happening, we have RFK Jr. coming in and he's going to be working aspects
01:29:57.040 of this, uh, this side of the coin.
01:29:59.960 And I think today maybe cash Patel even is, will be confirmed as.
01:30:04.240 Hopefully.
01:30:04.860 Yeah.
01:30:05.120 Hopefully now.
01:30:06.400 Yeah.
01:30:06.620 And a couple, yeah.
01:30:07.080 And I got to check the internet, but, uh, all of these things are happening all at once.
01:30:10.620 And it feels like we're about to turn a corner really, really fast.
01:30:15.220 Yeah.
01:30:15.380 I'm not sure people are ready for that.
01:30:17.260 Well, it's been a blitzkrieg and I think it's by design.
01:30:20.120 Yeah.
01:30:20.560 Me too.
01:30:21.420 Me too.
01:30:21.720 How else would you do it?
01:30:22.780 Like how you, you can't roll this out slow because you'd get cut off.
01:30:26.480 It's a, it's a war at every single junction of what's ailing us as a society.
01:30:31.300 Yeah.
01:30:31.680 Yeah.
01:30:31.840 And I think, um, I was actually reading this book.
01:30:34.600 It's a, it's about, cause I, you know, have a business mindset and I, I enjoy marketing, learning
01:30:38.660 about different branding of different companies and like liquid death is probably just fascinating
01:30:42.880 to me.
01:30:43.360 That whole story of like selling water in a can that looks like, you know, monster or
01:30:47.460 something like that.
01:30:48.000 So I was reading this book about it and it was talking about when you become predictable,
01:30:51.880 you become hackable.
01:30:53.800 And I think that is kind of.
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01:31:56.220 The mentality that this administration is going for is that we're just going to, if you're on
01:32:01.240 a rug, we're going to pull it and you're going to get on a new rug, we're going to
01:32:03.440 pull that too.
01:32:04.340 And just, he's had four years to plan all this out.
01:32:07.040 So I think that's what's happening right now.
01:32:09.160 And it's exhausting for us who are trying to keep up with it and just try to predict
01:32:14.120 it because it's completely unpredictable.
01:32:16.240 You know, that expression of like human beings are incredibly adaptable.
01:32:19.860 I wonder, we're going to see, we're going to find out because if they change everything
01:32:24.300 that rapidly, and a lot of us do just kind of go with the status quo.
01:32:28.860 So maybe in that way, if the status quo changes for the better, then it'll be beneficial that
01:32:34.980 human beings can be hypnotized in the way that we are so typically hypnotized.
01:32:39.320 And so if, I don't know, we're going to see if that adaptability really holds any water
01:32:44.200 or if we're going to have to bring people kicking and screaming into health and nutrition.
01:32:49.080 It does.
01:32:49.620 It holds water because after COVID, after 2020, I mean, to see the way humanity bounce back
01:32:57.540 in the way that it did, like, I thought we would never come back from that.
01:33:01.200 People were so damaged just with wearing masks and the propaganda and how they were behaving.
01:33:05.080 And now it's fairly normal.
01:33:07.400 Like you go to New York City and things were sort of, there's still a deep scar and you're
01:33:12.420 never going to get rid of that.
01:33:13.280 But people recover quickly, man.
01:33:15.220 They, they're resilient.
01:33:16.980 Well, and I think they overplayed their hand.
01:33:18.420 I think they expected more people to just blindly follow.
01:33:21.280 And for that social engineering to be a little bit more effective.
01:33:24.660 But the people that now are messaging me, almost all of them say COVID woke me up.
01:33:31.260 COVID, you know, COVID was the one that got me questioning.
01:33:33.920 The fact that I was living in Michigan and the government said that I couldn't buy gardening
01:33:38.120 seeds because it was dangerous.
01:33:40.040 Like they just completely overplayed it.
01:33:42.300 And I think that it hopefully will be a pivotal point in our history where we woke up and we
01:33:49.100 realized, okay, our government's been lying to us and there are industries that are protected
01:33:54.940 by the government and the injuries that are caused by these products are actually paid
01:34:00.480 from taxpayer dollars.
01:34:01.540 So I'm paying for compensation for vaccine injury.
01:34:05.440 So you, you just started unpeeling this onion and realizing, oh my gosh, this is horrible.
01:34:10.540 We cannot let this happen again.
01:34:12.200 We can, this has to end.
01:34:13.780 And that's why I see the most, um, unifying thread to me is informed consent in America.
01:34:21.780 You have people that are young and old and black and white and all these different denominations
01:34:26.940 and all these different faiths and, um, all these different socioeconomic classes that are
01:34:31.460 coming together and say, no more, we're not going to deal with this anymore.
01:34:34.880 We want change.
01:34:35.700 And that's what I think we saw with RFK.
01:34:38.500 And that's why I am, I have so much more hope than I did a year ago for sure.
01:34:42.680 I think we are at this pivotal moment.
01:34:44.520 And, and I want to say just like, God bless those people that, that came before us because
01:34:49.700 there's always been anti-vaxxers, right.
01:34:51.720 And they got besmirched with that label.
01:34:54.100 Um, there's always been those whistleblowers against the medical industry one way or another.
01:34:58.360 And up until recently, this pivotal moment in history, it was very difficult to say those
01:35:03.800 kinds of things.
01:35:04.360 Uh, you know, you'd be ostracized, uh, by, you know, your social circle, but you'd certainly
01:35:09.300 be ridiculed by, you know, you didn't have to be you directly.
01:35:11.980 All you had to do is turn on the TV and watch it, a news, uh, segment on CNN about anti-vaxxers.
01:35:17.020 And you just knew in your heart that they were talking about you.
01:35:19.300 The winter of death.
01:35:20.860 Yeah.
01:35:21.100 There's a lot of people that piped up for a lot of years and, you know, we're here and
01:35:25.760 we get to have these conversations now and it feels much easier than what they had to
01:35:30.140 go through.
01:35:30.700 Uh, so I do agree with that sentiment.
01:35:32.240 We are more than likely at a pivotal moment in history and, and I hope it's for the better.
01:35:37.900 Uh, but man, a lot of people got torched on the way here.
01:35:40.600 It was actually genius the way, uh, you know, Trump could have, uh, he could have played
01:35:45.640 on his own ego, but by absorbing RFK Jr. into his administration and not just absorbing
01:35:51.660 him, but then when it came down to the vote, putting pressure on these Republicans to confirm
01:35:56.680 him, this was, he wasn't playing around.
01:35:59.160 He's like, no, this is the guy.
01:36:00.280 This is my guy.
01:36:01.100 And he had no real reason to do that.
01:36:02.500 He could have broken his promise.
01:36:03.720 You know, it was a handshake.
01:36:04.560 Who cares?
01:36:05.000 But he went and followed through with it.
01:36:07.520 And by doing that, so you had the conservative vote or the MAGA vote, whatever that is, that
01:36:12.580 section of the population.
01:36:13.880 But for the previous 10 years, the media has done a great job at calling Donald Trump,
01:36:19.200 this or that, you know, grabbing by the pussy sort of thing.
01:36:21.440 So that immediately takes the mother and the female vote away from him.
01:36:26.100 And I think he got, he got that back just by including this guy.
01:36:30.400 And that's females control 80% of the consumer decisions in this country.
01:36:35.240 That's huge.
01:36:36.560 Yeah.
01:36:36.780 Is it, is it a good thing that he has this consensus right now?
01:36:41.260 Yes, because we're moving in a good direction.
01:36:43.120 But like, I'm again, when, whenever we have too much yeses on one side, I get very suspicious.
01:36:48.320 Right.
01:36:48.740 So like, you got to be careful where we're headed here.
01:36:51.740 Oh yeah.
01:36:52.100 A hundred percent.
01:36:52.700 And I think that's why a lot of us are so overwhelmed because we're just waiting to
01:36:55.980 see, okay.
01:36:57.080 It's like, uh, have you ever seen Narcos?
01:36:59.120 I think it was where it was talking about where you get one, um, boat full of drugs,
01:37:03.780 but then there's like 20 boats that go by while you're catching this one boat and you
01:37:07.640 realize, oh, they kind of just gave you that boat.
01:37:09.300 So I think a lot of us are just waiting and suspended attention to that point, Alexandra,
01:37:14.740 this is something that we talk about often on this show where a lot of the issues that
01:37:18.660 plague us, because we do, I, you know, I'm a self-identified conspiracy theorist and we have
01:37:22.640 like a political party.
01:37:24.120 We have our own, uh, important topics, you know, that go along party lines, uh, fluoride
01:37:30.080 vaccines, uh, chemtrails, whatever the thing is.
01:37:34.380 And all of a sudden now it seems like they, they're, they're represented.
01:37:38.420 And so my issue with that is like, these things were obvious all along, you know, I'm not,
01:37:43.040 uh, markedly intelligent.
01:37:44.840 Why did I see them?
01:37:45.700 I think a lot of us saw them.
01:37:47.060 And so, yeah, I do have a lot of caution going into this.
01:37:49.800 They are doing things that I like, but I recognize that these things were always happening and
01:37:54.020 were easily addressed.
01:37:54.940 It's like, stop flying and poisoning the skies.
01:37:58.020 Maybe that would be a good move.
01:37:59.100 You just got to stop doing that.
01:38:00.620 Uh, so now that they're doing all these things, they're addressing the fluoride, they're doing
01:38:04.100 that.
01:38:04.500 I'm like, okay, that's a very easy win for us.
01:38:07.600 And so, yeah, that's a great analogy.
01:38:10.220 One boat comes in, we celebrate, uh, 20 more go by.
01:38:13.440 We don't even notice that what they had in them.
01:38:15.400 And so I'm trying to, I'm looking for the 20, but I'm also trying to not be that black
01:38:19.120 pill.
01:38:19.700 Just yes.
01:38:20.680 Yes.
01:38:21.920 Yeah.
01:38:22.580 That's, that's my own mom.
01:38:23.880 I call, I say that she's on black pill Island.
01:38:26.240 And so I just like, it's a balance.
01:38:28.940 It's definitely a balance.
01:38:30.400 Yeah.
01:38:30.660 It's a balance.
01:38:31.300 I, but I mean, thank goodness there are people like you who are, you know, it's, you're not
01:38:36.300 a licensed medical professional, but you're going into these things and you're, you're
01:38:40.720 kind of breaking this down for people in a way that's digestible.
01:38:43.960 And I, we were fooled into thinking that it wasn't digestible.
01:38:46.780 And I think that was a huge part of it, man, was like convincing us that we were too stupid
01:38:51.660 to interpret these things.
01:38:53.020 And it's, we got to stop looking to these people.
01:38:55.600 It goes back to that waiting for a governing body to tell you that you're correct.
01:38:58.940 These are just people.
01:38:59.760 And they're intelligent people.
01:39:01.620 They, they're, they're certified and they, they have, you know, their diplomas and this
01:39:06.300 and that, but they're not a different species.
01:39:09.120 They've, they've achieved a level of knowledge that you can achieve too, if you just put in
01:39:13.900 the time and read these things and learn these things.
01:39:16.000 And, uh, I think we need to stop looking at ourselves as idiots, um, and, and stop looking
01:39:20.940 to them as the, the, the covetors of information that's beyond our grasp.
01:39:26.120 Well, and that's why I always refer to them as products because that's what they are.
01:39:29.220 I mean, any other product on the market, if you're passionate about that product, if you,
01:39:32.900 a microphone, a podcast microphone, you probably research that podcast microphone before you
01:39:38.040 purchased it, you find which one works for you.
01:39:40.100 And then your car, you find, well, okay, is this gas mileage good in the environment
01:39:44.140 that I'm living in?
01:39:44.920 I live in a city or I live in the country.
01:39:46.520 Is this the safety level?
01:39:47.760 Because I have children.
01:39:48.620 I want to make sure that it's rate safety rating is fine.
01:39:51.160 We research all products on the market.
01:39:53.880 Most of them.
01:39:54.440 Why don't we do that for medical products?
01:39:56.540 And that's kind of where I say, you are just being an informed consumer by consuming this
01:40:01.740 information, by educating yourself, by being knowledgeable and confident in your decisions.
01:40:05.780 There's nothing wrong with that.
01:40:07.480 And if somebody's telling you that, then they're.
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01:41:10.420 Being coercive.
01:41:11.420 And what's really funny about that is if I'm looking up something and I find myself
01:41:15.780 frustrated and unable to come to a conclusion or unable to understand exactly what it is
01:41:20.200 that I need, well, I certainly just don't go, fine, and then just buy any old thing.
01:41:24.820 And in a way, it's like we don't have the information, but the doctor tells us this is
01:41:28.920 what we need or this is what's going to happen.
01:41:30.200 And we go, I don't know, fine, whatever you say.
01:41:32.640 We don't even do that in consumerism, but we'll do that with our own health.
01:41:35.400 Let me tell you, man, these people are in a lot of trouble because the moms have woken
01:41:40.220 up my wife at the supermarket when, I mean, when it comes to my kids stuff, like I buy
01:41:45.800 them some stuff.
01:41:46.580 I'm like, this is a cool snack.
01:41:47.580 And she's like, get the shit out of here, throw it out.
01:41:49.300 And she's like reading everything.
01:41:51.180 And I'm like, these people are in so much trouble when the rest of the moms understand
01:41:56.100 what they're reading on the side of these boxes.
01:41:58.600 Oh yeah.
01:41:59.220 And now we're getting the teachers involved because my kids, they have artificial dye sensitivities.
01:42:04.660 And so now I've trained the teachers reading labels and now they're starting to talk amongst
01:42:10.620 themselves.
01:42:11.060 And if you haven't seen, there's a great documentary that came out.
01:42:13.680 It's called to die for it's a husband and wife.
01:42:16.200 They have two kids and they did this documentary by themselves and it's fantastic.
01:42:20.360 It's on Amazon.
01:42:21.020 I think Netflix, a few different other places that you can get it now.
01:42:24.240 And I have been referencing the teachers to get it, the principal and talking to everybody
01:42:28.880 else.
01:42:29.200 And so once you get like that community rallied around something, it really won't take that
01:42:34.260 long for it.
01:42:35.220 That's great.
01:42:35.760 Yeah.
01:42:35.920 They, they messed up and they woke up the moms and I'm, I, we really need to do something
01:42:39.500 about this school system too, because, uh, there was a time when, you know, if we, when
01:42:45.060 I make my son breakfast, cause I, I typically make everybody breakfast in the morning.
01:42:48.880 So I make everybody like eggs and bacon or whatever, just like a protein, high fat diet.
01:42:52.780 And, uh, uh, if he misses breakfast or if we're running low or late, rather the, the, he goes
01:42:59.380 to school and there's, you know, he goes, Oh yeah, there's breakfast at school.
01:43:02.060 And they told us that there's breakfast at school.
01:43:03.600 I go, okay, cool.
01:43:04.440 And one day recently I walked in with them in the morning cause he was late.
01:43:08.260 And when we, when we walked in, I saw, uh, like a tiered lunch tray system for the kids
01:43:15.280 to walk by and grab whatever they want.
01:43:16.820 And I look at it and it's literally all pastries and chocolate milk.
01:43:20.240 And I'm like, Oh my God, this is the, why can't they just do eggs or something like
01:43:26.380 that?
01:43:26.520 Can't they do something normal?
01:43:28.060 And then it's like, you know, you wonder why these kids, but they can't focus, right?
01:43:34.760 So you're on this diet of just like a simple carbohydrates and refined sugars.
01:43:38.660 And then that fuel source burns off, you know, pretty rapidly.
01:43:42.880 Next thing you know, you're, you're irate, you're having mood swings, you're tired, you're
01:43:46.920 and, and you can't focus in your, your schoolwork suffers.
01:43:49.760 And so I would love to see them.
01:43:51.720 They've been feeding us, uh, uh, you know, pizza slices and, and chocolate milk since
01:43:56.400 I was in school for the love of God change that.
01:43:59.780 That would be wonderful.
01:44:01.300 100% agree.
01:44:02.880 We'll see.
01:44:03.660 Maybe one day.
01:44:04.840 Um, listen, uh, Alexandra, it's been a wonderful conversation.
01:44:08.540 And, uh, I think that this is one of those episodes where I think we got some good information
01:44:14.820 out to people because a lot of the times on this show, we're exploring like some esoteric
01:44:18.600 ancient conspiracy of some sort.
01:44:20.160 And it's nice to bring it into modern day and, and give people some information that
01:44:23.940 they can actually apply in their own, in their own lives.
01:44:26.520 Uh, technically this, this is Nephilim shit though.
01:44:29.320 Oh, a hundred percent.
01:44:30.520 A hundred percent.
01:44:31.280 Are you aware?
01:44:32.120 Do you know what the Nephilim are?
01:44:33.020 My husband's done a few studies.
01:44:35.080 Uh, yeah.
01:44:35.400 When I told him I was coming, he was like, Oh, I want to watch.
01:44:40.200 Well, I'm sorry.
01:44:41.500 Apologies to your husband.
01:44:42.520 We didn't bring up, uh, too much of the, the spiritual implications or the biblical implications
01:44:47.360 of it, but they're there.
01:44:48.140 You did bring it up in the vaccines you talked about.
01:44:50.400 They're being like, uh, uh, animal genome and baby, like dead baby parts and stuff.
01:44:55.120 That is by definition Nephilim shit.
01:44:58.120 It's a chimeric genetic manipulation.
01:45:00.500 If you haven't yet, you should look at blessed by his blood, the founder of that, um, her
01:45:06.160 story.
01:45:06.680 I won't tell it for her, but she would be a really good person to talk to.
01:45:10.280 We will look into it.
01:45:11.480 Blessed by his blood is what you said.
01:45:12.940 She was a pharmacist and she received, um, inspiration to start, uh, a unvaccinated blood
01:45:20.720 donation offering.
01:45:22.780 That's very cool.
01:45:23.840 Okay.
01:45:24.260 Yeah.
01:45:24.500 We're going to have to reach out to her then blessed by his blood.
01:45:27.540 All right.
01:45:27.720 I got it.
01:45:28.640 I got it.
01:45:28.900 I have her socials here.
01:45:29.640 Okay.
01:45:30.000 Okay.
01:45:30.260 So, uh, Alexandra for the audience, one more time, where can everybody find your work as
01:45:35.360 it sounds like an incredibly valuable tool, uh, for, especially for parents, just the
01:45:39.780 inserts.com.
01:45:41.520 Everything's there.
01:45:42.240 My, uh, Instagram is linked, uh, right there in the top left corner.
01:45:46.680 And then I'm also on X, um, just the inserts and you can find my book, my free training course,
01:45:51.620 all my guides.
01:45:52.220 I have over 50 analytical deep dives into pharmaceuticals from, uh, prescription pharmaceuticals
01:45:58.160 to over the counter to vaccines.
01:45:59.520 It's, it's all there.
01:46:01.040 Wow.
01:46:01.440 You're killing it, man.
01:46:02.300 200 plus thousand followers.
01:46:04.620 Excellent.
01:46:05.000 Good.
01:46:05.240 You're getting this information out to people.
01:46:06.820 That's fantastic.
01:46:07.620 Little by little, little by little, man.
01:46:09.700 But it's going to be a big wave.
01:46:10.900 I think there is a, you were right when you said that we might be moving towards a pivotal
01:46:14.940 moment.
01:46:15.240 I think we are.
01:46:15.900 And, uh, I think resources like your work are going to be tremendous for, uh, all these
01:46:20.260 people trying to, uh, you know, navigate this new landscape as we move into it.
01:46:24.600 Definitely.
01:46:25.100 And having these conversations.
01:46:26.200 Thank you for having the bravery to talk about it.
01:46:28.820 This is, this is how we shift the culture.
01:46:30.660 There's a fine line between, uh, bravery and stupidity.
01:46:34.280 And I don't know where we fall on it.
01:46:35.500 We call, we're like to walk that line.
01:46:37.560 Well, actually there's a, there's a thing that we say, we have like some merch on the
01:46:41.320 show.
01:46:41.620 It's called retard Dio.
01:46:42.780 And, uh, retard means return and Dio means God.
01:46:46.820 And we just said, uh, you have to be retarded enough to return to God, which is like common
01:46:51.760 sense.
01:46:52.100 And I feel like that's where we're at, but we're also, you delve into dangerous territories
01:46:55.860 because sometimes we just say things that we probably shouldn't be talking about.
01:47:00.600 One of us is going to get a knock on the door soon, but Alexandra, I think you're pissing
01:47:04.240 off the FDA more than we are.
01:47:05.620 So, uh, you know, our prayers are with you.
01:47:07.540 Yeah.
01:47:07.960 If she goes up missing, then, then I start to worry.
01:47:10.380 But again, thank you for coming on and, uh, to the audience.
01:47:14.520 Uh, don't forget to obey, submit, and comply to your overlords.
01:47:18.720 We'll see you guys later.
01:47:36.040 Because they'll laugh in the face of an explanation that portrays the bigger picture of what's
01:47:42.000 happening.
01:47:43.140 And they have.
01:47:44.520 And I wait to see you guys.
01:47:48.720 Bye bye.
01:47:50.940 Bye bye.
01:47:53.640 Bye bye.
01:47:58.440 Bye bye.
01:47:58.720 Bye bye.
01:48:01.800 Bye bye.
01:48:03.600 Bye bye.
01:48:08.700 Bye bye.
01:48:11.660 Bye bye.
01:48:12.760 Bye bye.
01:48:13.000 Bye bye.
01:48:13.820 Bye bye.