Stay Free - Russel Brand


Dr Jay Bhattacharya ”The Government Censored Me & Other Scientists. We Fought Back—and Won”


Summary

Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, co-founder of Illusion of Consensus on Substack, won in the federal court against the Biden administration for coercing social media companies to censor content. He s a scientist and a doctor, as well as a conspiracy theorist. In this episode, he talks about why the Great Barrington Declaration was censored, and why the idea of a scientific consensus in favor of the scientific consensus is so fundamental to our understanding of the world, and how it led to censorship, lockdowns, and ultimately to his eventual victory in the Supreme Court case against the Obama administration. He also talks about the role of hubris in the silencing of ideas that challenge the establishment, and the process of aggregation of data and data-driven decision-making that led to the creation of the "hubristic" scientific consensus, and explains why there isn t an illusion of consensus in fact, but rather a process of collaboration, collaboration, and a right-ending data-ending process of data-endending data, which is an ongoing process of making sense of what we're really trying to do rather than what we claim to be the physical embodiment of. This episode is a must-listen-to-the-fact. Stay free, and don t be afraid to join us in the fight against fear! we're going to keep going together, wherever you are in this world, wherever we are in a world that will not yield, no matter how bad it gets worse, and no matter what we do. - Don't be afraid, we're gonna keep going, keep going! Stay Free, and Don't Be Afraid, Don t be Afraid. . -Isaac Newton, The Little People's Guide to the Big Idea? by John Gray, The Big Idea by John Graddell, and more (1957, (1968, 1973, 1977, 1978, 1984, ) Join us in this episode by clicking here to learn more about the Big Thing by John Greenidge, . . . and more than you can be a skeptic in the real world? (cited by Dr. John Grady, The Big Thing? , , and more? ) . . (2006, , 1977, & more , 1978, ? & , 1984, 1985, etc., )


Transcript

00:00:00.000 Hello there you awakening wonder wherever you are in this world amidst the omni-crisis that will not yield.
00:00:06.000 Well done for continuing to transcend fear in a darkening space at a time of deep complexity.
00:00:12.000 It's more important that we come together now than ever before.
00:00:16.000 We must transcend this complex time by looking within and finding deep power Deep power that some would regard as holy is present with you now.
00:00:26.000 Don't be afraid.
00:00:27.000 We're gonna keep going together.
00:00:30.000 Joining me now is Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, professor of medicine at Stanford University, co-founder of Illusion of Consensus on Substack.
00:00:38.000 He's recently won in the federal court against the Biden administration for coercing social media companies to censor content.
00:00:46.000 Plainly, as well as a scientist and a doctor, this man is a conspiracy theorist.
00:00:51.000 Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, it's a great joy to meet you, sir.
00:00:55.000 Thank you for coming on Stay Free.
00:00:58.000 Thank you, Russell.
00:00:58.000 Thank you for having me.
00:01:00.000 I wonder, can you tell us, sir, what exactly did you express that was initially subject to censure?
00:01:10.000 It was the Great Barrington Declaration.
00:01:11.000 So, it was an article, basically a proposal that I wrote with Sunetra Gupta of Oxford and Martin Kulldorff of Harvard in October 2020.
00:01:20.000 I'm sure your audience has heard of this.
00:01:23.000 I've seen you telling your audience this, so they don't need to be told so much.
00:01:26.000 But basically, the idea was that we knew it was older people that were really vulnerable to COVID.
00:01:32.000 And that young people, especially children, were not particularly vulnerable.
00:01:35.000 The argument was to lift the lockdowns and do focused protection of vulnerable older people.
00:01:41.000 That led to a tremendous propaganda campaign, a campaign that essentially villainized me and Martin and Sunetra as if we wanted to kill vast numbers of people and we were calling for better protection of vulnerable older people.
00:01:55.000 And it led to censorship.
00:01:57.000 Like, we were kicked off of Facebook for a week.
00:02:00.000 Google de-boosted our, you know, if you Googled us, it would be on page five and we have all the hit pieces above us.
00:02:08.000 You know, that kind of thing.
00:02:09.000 And then Twitter, of course, made it difficult to share.
00:02:13.000 People lost their jobs for signing it.
00:02:16.000 Oh man, can you just remind me, when was that?
00:02:20.000 When was it chronologically?
00:02:22.000 So that was October 2020.
00:02:24.000 So we wrote it because the spring lockdowns had failed.
00:02:28.000 It was really clear from the epidemiological data that the COVID was coming back in the fall.
00:02:34.000 It had already come back in several places.
00:02:36.000 And it was also clear that the establishment was going to push for these lockdowns,
00:02:41.000 that it had already damaged the well-being of the children, of the working class, of the poor worldwide.
00:02:47.000 And we thought it was a tragedy that we were essentially throwing away the futures of these vulnerable people
00:02:53.000 in the name of protecting people against a deadly infectious
00:02:56.000 disease, which actually didn't end up protecting anybody, these lockdowns, instead of actually just directly
00:03:01.000 protecting the people that were most vulnerable.
00:03:04.000 It's likely, of course, based on just what you've explained in the last couple of minutes, that we've yet to fully experience and appreciate the consequences of those actions.
00:03:16.000 Can you tell me why, Doctor, you feel that what even a few years later seemed like perfectly reasonable proposals, that if they had been followed, many economic problems, sociological, psychological, If problems may have been, if not entirely ameliorated, somewhat assuaged, why was it met with such ferocity?
00:03:38.000 Why?
00:03:40.000 I mean, I think part of it is hubris.
00:03:43.000 So, you had a few people at the very top of these medical and bureaucracies, the social bureaucracies, that had taken on themselves this mantle of almost godlike authority.
00:03:57.000 You remember Tony Fauci saying to some reporter, or maybe even to Senator Rand Paul, if you question me, you're not simply questioning a man, you are questioning science itself.
00:04:07.000 I mean, who says that, Russell?
00:04:08.000 I mean, let's think about the hubris of someone that says, I am science, in effect.
00:04:13.000 You know, la science c'est moi, if you're like, you know, Louis XIV or something.
00:04:19.000 And the idea that there would be credentialed people that would oppose them, that would say, look, you're saying that there's a scientific consensus in favor of lockdown when, in fact, just the very existence of the Great Barrington Declaration means there isn't.
00:04:33.000 It means that you've just created an illusion of consensus to fool people into thinking that we ought to do what you say to do, rather than having a discussion and a debate, which is really what we owed the public.
00:04:45.000 Claiming to be the physical embodiment of science, which is an ongoing, never-ending process of analysis, collaboration, accumulation of data.
00:04:57.000 That is hubristic.
00:04:59.000 You're right.
00:05:00.000 And in fact, it's more akin to religious demagoguery than even scientific orthodoxy.
00:05:07.000 The early period, or perhaps the pandemic in its entirety, functioned as a lens that revealed I think already present but concealed institutional behaviours and assumptions, particularly too it could be used to identify where convergent interests met and where a kind of unconscious systemic process unfolded that might not require every step malfeasance, deliberately applied evil, but certainly showed a
00:05:38.000 Institutionalism that is worryingly unconscious.
00:05:44.000 But there are points when it seemed quite deliberate.
00:05:47.000 Now I suppose it's very difficult to prove that there was something nefarious unfolding.
00:05:54.000 But can you tell me from the Can you tell me where you think you could have identified the most concerning moments and decisions?
00:06:05.000 Obviously the early attempts to censor, the denial of the existence of the Barrington Declaration.
00:06:13.000 These are key moments.
00:06:15.000 Are there other significant moments that start to suggest a tendency, if not a strategy or conspiracy?
00:06:22.000 I mean, you saw this almost from the beginning of the pandemic, maybe even from the very beginning of the pandemic.
00:06:27.000 The idea that this virus may have been the outcome of a research enterprise actually aimed at preventing pandemics, ironically, that idea was turned into a conspiracy theory.
00:06:42.000 Even though it's a viable scientific hypothesis, it's likely even a true hypothesis.
00:06:48.000 In 2020, anyone who brought that hypothesis up was essentially labeled as a fringe figure, a conspiracy theorist, a racist demon, because you're saying it might have been the Chinese that were involved in this.
00:07:00.000 Which is a crazy thing.
00:07:01.000 It's okay to say that because of strange Chinese eating habits in wet markets, that's how the virus emerged.
00:07:07.000 But it's not okay to say that there was an intentional scientific effort, funded by Americans in part, but also conducted in China, that led to the virus.
00:07:15.000 The latter is racist, but the former is not.
00:07:19.000 But yeah, people who said that there might actually have been a virus that was created in the lab
00:07:26.000 were deemed racist.
00:07:27.000 That was a conspiracy theorist.
00:07:29.000 And it was by the same people that suppressed the Great Barrington Declaration using very,
00:07:33.000 very similar tactics to deploy the press to smear and destroy
00:07:37.000 the reputations of anyone that disagreed with the central powers that be.
00:07:41.000 Actually, Marcy, you said one thing I think is really important, this confluence of incentives, right?
00:07:49.000 So, I don't think it was a conspiracy theory in one sense.
00:07:53.000 I think, like, for instance, the pharmaceutical companies, they viewed this as a huge opportunity.
00:07:58.000 I don't think they drove it, but it was like they jumped in, right?
00:08:01.000 A lot of people who were, you know, in governments gained a lot of power from this.
00:08:07.000 And again, I don't think it's not a conspiracy theory to say that they jumped in to take advantage of the chaos.
00:08:14.000 There's a lot that goes into exactly what led to this.
00:08:17.000 I think a lot of it was opportunistic.
00:08:19.000 But the central sin was hubris, and the central tactic was smearing and censorship of outside voices that criticized the people that were designing the pandemic response.
00:08:32.000 If you are interested in centralizing authority and increasing authority particularly beyond national sovereignty in the reach of democracy there is going to be necessary censure because we live in a time where divergent opposing and dissident voices are now at least have the potential to be platformed and to gain incredible traction and it seems to be a pretty prominent evident and plain tactic that to Undermine the credibility of, as you say, dissenting voices.
00:09:01.000 It's almost a uniform observable strategy.
00:09:05.000 If you cannot win the argument because it's unwinnable, because what's being claimed is true, let's take simply the case of the Great Barrington Declaration or, you know, the lab leak theory.
00:09:17.000 then what you of course have to do is undermine where those voices are coming from. And you're
00:09:23.000 right, this extraordinary array of hypocritical tactics that are deployed suggest a kind of...
00:09:31.000 it would be on nihilism, kind of beyond amorality, an interview almost, a kind of cynicism that
00:09:39.000 really scares me, particularly given that I've had recently some experiences of how these
00:09:45.000 institutions can function.
00:09:47.000 Did you Note the corroborating component that the media were willing to perform.
00:09:57.000 Did you note that there was a great willingness in addition to the censor practice and social media spaces?
00:10:05.000 In legacy media sites to condemn, criticise you and frame you.
00:10:10.000 Because even when you said that, even though this is stuff I know about already, when I just hear Harvard, Stanford, Oxford in relation to a scientific endeavour and furthering a discourse, I think, oh well this sounds pretty legitimate.
00:10:27.000 How did they even bypass that?
00:10:29.000 Well, I mean, they were almost immediately after we wrote the declaration, I started, there was pit pieces about me and Sinatra and Martin essentially accusing us of wanting to let the virus rip.
00:10:42.000 The argument was that we were somehow being deeply irresponsible by wanting to just ignore the virus.
00:10:48.000 Again, as I've said, even though we wanted focus protection, you saw story after story in mainstream media saying this, essentially pushing this propaganda campaign.
00:10:57.000 There was a story in the Washington Post.
00:10:59.000 There was a story in the New York Times.
00:11:01.000 Story after story, essentially pushing this lie.
00:11:04.000 What we wanted was a discussion of how to better protect vulnerable older people.
00:11:07.000 And in fact, I did a And now, I'd already had experience with this, Russell, before this.
00:11:14.000 In April of 2020, I'd written a study, which was basically showing that the disease had spread much more broadly than people had realized, even as early as April of 2020, using antibody evidence from blood in the population.
00:11:27.000 And what we found was that there are 50 cases, you know, for every single person that had been identified as a case, the infection fatality rose much lower.
00:11:35.000 That led to a tremendous number of personal hit pieces against me.
00:11:39.000 Allegations that I had taken money to change the study, which was an absolute lie.
00:11:44.000 Hit pieces against my wife, who had written an email to my kid's middle school listserv, encouraging them to join the studies, because she'd committed the sin of saying that if you have a positive antibody, That might mean you are immune, which has turned out to be true, you know.
00:12:01.000 And it was for me, personally, as a scientist, I've just written papers and published them in journals all my life.
00:12:07.000 I never faced that kind of media assault.
00:12:10.000 I felt helpless to protect my family.
00:12:12.000 For a month, I lost 30 pounds because I couldn't sleep.
00:12:15.000 I forgot to eat, you know, in April, May 2020.
00:12:20.000 And for me, it was a very, very difficult time.
00:12:23.000 Essentially, the power of these conventional media sources to excommunicate you is tremendous.
00:12:31.000 And I felt the full brunt of that before I decided I was just going to need to keep doing my job, which was to say what the scientific evidence said and provide health policy advice to the public.
00:12:45.000 Sorry, go ahead, Russell.
00:12:46.000 I was thinking about, like, yours is a name that I've heard from the beginning because it was a significant, it was a pivotal moment in spite of how it was handled, the Great Barrington Declaration, and your name, whilst I'm still never entirely confident, Jay Bhattacharya, like, was one of the names that was synonymous with the credible opposition to the dominant narrative, and for me, therefore, legitimized my own concern And an amateur analysis of how the scientific orthodoxy was being mobilized to legitimize authority and it's almost at odds with what science is supposed to be essentially.
00:13:30.000 It made me realize what dogmatism is and that dogmatism is not alloyed indecipherably or inextricably to a religion or politics.
00:13:41.000 Dogma means that you're willing to say stuff like, I'm science, if you argue with me, you're arguing with science.
00:13:48.000 It's a kind of...
00:13:50.000 It's a sort of a human trait.
00:13:53.000 And to hear that you actually suffered in the way that you just described, obviously, particularly because of recent experiences that I've encountered, should we say, like it provides a sort of a, you know, you were right.
00:14:08.000 You were actually right.
00:14:10.000 What does it mean?
00:14:12.000 To someone like you, who's a scientist, a career scientist at Harvard, whose previous life has never taken you into these chasms and schisms of controversy, what does it tell you about how science can be industrialized, weaponized, deployed, defied, utilized in order to create conformity, oppression, Isn't, I mean, it must terrify you.
00:14:43.000 I mean, it really does.
00:14:44.000 I mean, I, you know, of course I knew the power of science.
00:14:47.000 I mean, that's the, that's one of the reasons that anyone enters science is because it is a powerful tool to learn about the physical world through this process.
00:14:54.000 But it's, I always viewed it as a fundamentally humble thing, right?
00:14:58.000 If I am doing science, I have some idea.
00:15:01.000 It's always a, it's a provisional idea and it's tempered by data and by other critics.
00:15:07.000 Who say, look Jay, you've thought of this wrong, this piece of data disagrees with how you think, and then I change my mind on the basis of those data.
00:15:14.000 It's a fundamentally humbling thing if you're actually going to do science for a living.
00:15:19.000 To see it turned into dogma, as you say, is a violation of basically every norm that I've lived by in my entire career.
00:15:29.000 It basically means that I don't really need to know what the data say.
00:15:33.000 I don't really need to be creative and think about different hypotheses.
00:15:36.000 All I have to do is I have to just pay attention to what the most powerful people inside the scientific community say, and then I'll know the truth.
00:15:45.000 As you say, it's not simply, it's not a matter of like a particular, you know, it's not a religious thing, it's not even just even a political thing.
00:15:51.000 It is just, I think, is a common human thing to have that hubris.
00:15:54.000 Even scientists themselves often have that hubris.
00:15:57.000 When you get things right, I mean, it's like you feel like you're on the top of the world.
00:16:02.000 You make some prediction and it comes out to be true.
00:16:04.000 But then the next prediction you make is going to be wrong.
00:16:06.000 I mean, you have to remember all the time in science that every idea may be met with a fact that disproves it, even if you had it, even if you're the brightest person.
00:16:16.000 Even Einstein was wrong over and over again.
00:16:20.000 Of course, he was right about some fundamental things.
00:16:23.000 So, I think that humility, the loss of it during the pandemic, was a real shock to me.
00:16:30.000 But then to see how that power is used in the world outside of science, right?
00:16:36.000 Because the ability to tell, to distinguish between true and false,
00:16:41.000 if you have an entity that can do that, the power is tremendous.
00:16:46.000 It's far beyond what kings of ancient times had.
00:16:50.000 It's analogous to what maybe the medieval church had.
00:16:55.000 You say the distinction between what's true and false.
00:16:59.000 But you know, even within religious traditions, the best of religious traditions have at their center a fundamental humility.
00:17:04.000 You know, God is beyond us.
00:17:06.000 We are not God.
00:17:08.000 So, it's every human endeavor, I think, faces this.
00:17:11.000 But during the pandemic, it was deployed at scale to say, look, Jay from Stanford and Martin from Harvard and Sunetra from Oxford are wrong just because Tony Fauci says so.
00:17:25.000 By the way, we discovered this was not just like an organic reaction.
00:17:29.000 It was a specific organized campaign.
00:17:31.000 Four days after he wrote the declaration, the head of the National Institute of Health, Francis Collins, wrote an email to Tony Fauci calling me, Martin Sinatra, fringe epidemiologist, FRI.
00:17:44.000 I have a card that I made up says fringe epidemiology on it now.
00:17:49.000 It was one of these things where like the head of the National Institute of Health, and then he called for a devastating takedown in an email to Tony Fauci.
00:17:57.000 Devastating takedown.
00:17:58.000 He used those words.
00:18:00.000 And that led to the propaganda campaign.
00:18:03.000 They used the control of what the press sees as true and false to smear us and destroy us.
00:18:11.000 It's one of these things, if it's some random scientist doing it, even a prominent scientist doing it, that's one thing.
00:18:16.000 But the head of the National Institute of Health controls $45 billion of money that And that amount of money essentially makes and breaks the careers of every biomedical scientist known in the U.S.
00:18:28.000 and many scientists outside the U.S.
00:18:30.000 It's very difficult to cross someone like that.
00:18:34.000 If someone like that says, this guy is a brilliant epidemiologist, let's do a devastating takedown, even a scientist that agrees with us is going to want to stay silent.
00:18:42.000 It's unfortunate and ridiculous that they use the phrase devastating takedown because that's the sort of thing that people with evil intentions say.
00:18:51.000 They don't say that.
00:18:53.000 You look like the baddies.
00:18:55.000 Let us do a draconian and wicked, I have a plan, a coup.
00:19:01.000 It's ridiculous.
00:19:03.000 Were you surprised by how few people were willing to support you?
00:19:08.000 Were you heartened by the support that you received?
00:19:11.000 Given that you just said you lost 30 pounds, you didn't sleep and you forgot to eat, which all seems pretty unscientific to me as a matter of fact, you should have been paying attention in the lab of your life.
00:19:22.000 I wonder, was it interpersonally challenging and did you get a lot of heat from Harvard and stuff?
00:19:29.000 Well, yeah, I'm actually at Stanford, but I got a lot of grief from friends of mine at Stanford.
00:19:38.000 But on the other hand, almost a million people signed the declaration.
00:19:42.000 I hope you signed it, Russell.
00:19:44.000 There were tens of thousands of scientists and epidemiologists signed it.
00:19:50.000 It created a community of people that found each other that before that felt isolated
00:19:56.000 and alone.
00:19:57.000 As you said, Russell, for you, you heard it and it gave you a sense that you weren't crazy,
00:20:02.000 that you were there some sense that what you were seeing with your own eyes could be true.
00:20:08.000 It wasn't just some figment.
00:20:12.000 That was one of the major goals of the Declaration, to tell people, "Lots of scientists are seeing
00:20:17.000 what you were seeing."
00:20:19.000 Lots of scientists are saying, look, look at the devastation we're causing to the poor.
00:20:22.000 Like, you know, in Uganda, four and a half million children were out of school for two years because of the lockdowns.
00:20:29.000 I mean, actually 15 million people, kids out of school for two years, four and a half million never came back to school in Uganda.
00:20:35.000 And it turns out the UN did this report on this around Africa.
00:20:40.000 It turns out a lot of those kids didn't come back because the little girls were sold into sexual slavery and the little boys were put into child labor.
00:20:47.000 Because the reason is their families were put on the brink of starvation by the economic dislocations caused by the lockdowns.
00:20:54.000 We put those poor families in this like devastating bind where they had to like essentially either do this terrible thing to their children or starve them.
00:21:04.000 That's what those lockdowns were doing.
00:21:05.000 That's the cruelty of the lockdowns.
00:21:07.000 A lot of scientists are saying, look, this is not even stopping the disease from spreading.
00:21:11.000 Why are we doing this?
00:21:13.000 Let's protect the elderly better.
00:21:16.000 We weren't protecting them with the lockdowns.
00:21:18.000 It was the opposite of science and thank you for introducing me to a level of reality that I'd not pondered because I was still somewhat selfishly looking at the lockdown for the personal inconvenience I'd endured and perhaps on occasion I would think of the psychological impact and the educational impact and mental health and suicide and all of those other things that we were told not to think about or worry about when people were speculatively discussing those things and now to introduce to it rafts of almost inconceivable suffering for children in
00:21:50.000 Uganda. That's a new component to consider. I felt the phrase I found myself using was,
00:21:59.000 but in this instance, science is a subset of a different ideology, whether that's an
00:22:06.000 economic ideology or an authoritarian ideology or a sort of an unconscious ideology.
00:22:12.000 It's a subset.
00:22:13.000 Science is not freely functioning.
00:22:15.000 It's science within censorship, so it's no longer worthy of the name, therefore.
00:22:21.000 Do you see this idea as kind of a subjugated science, a deployed science?
00:22:27.000 Does that seem right to you, Doctor?
00:22:30.000 I mean, that's exactly right.
00:22:31.000 You can't have science without the ability to speak to one another, to be able to freely, without undue influence.
00:22:39.000 A lot of the distortions in science that we documented before the pandemic come from this.
00:22:44.000 So, for instance, the role that pharmaceutical money plays in scientific output.
00:22:51.000 Huge, huge amounts of money poured into doing science that's essentially like aimed at making sure that pharmaceutical companies do well, right?
00:23:01.000 That's distorted science.
00:23:02.000 That was known before the pandemic and there's like, you know, mechanisms in place to try to, you know, you don't want to say if you're a pharmaceutical company, you can't do science.
00:23:09.000 What you want to say is, look, you have to declare that you are a pharmaceutical company funded scientist and now you can use that in your assessment of the scientific result.
00:23:18.000 Right.
00:23:19.000 I personally never taken any pharmaceutical company money.
00:23:21.000 So I never I just because I wanted to stay independent of that.
00:23:25.000 Wow.
00:23:25.000 You realize then on some personal and ethical level that to take that money and this is not a judgment of obviously it seems like the majority I presume people were funded in that manner.
00:23:37.000 But you personally made a choice that that would impede your ability to indeed be a scientist and you were right about that.
00:23:46.000 It's been proven.
00:23:49.000 I wonder, Jay, what you think if you'd like to explore further the necessity for discourse, conversation, account and narratives in the pursuit of true objectivity and how that Aligns with your recent experiences in federal court and the attempt to further curtail, legislate against free speech by the Biden administration.
00:24:18.000 Tell us about that recent, and I understand you were victorious.
00:24:22.000 The whole experience we've been talking about led me to this suspicion that this suppression of scientific speech wasn't simply an organic thing, that in fact there was a campaign organized by governments to suppress scientific discussion online.
00:24:40.000 A lot of people suspected with social media is doing it, right?
00:24:43.000 So YouTube, for instance, banning your video.
00:24:46.000 I mean, last time I was on, Russell, you told me that you were only going to say approved
00:24:51.000 things to put on YouTube and then the rest you'll put on Rumble.
00:24:54.000 That's right.
00:24:55.000 Right.
00:24:56.000 Why are there approved things for someone to talk, having a discussion about scientific
00:24:59.000 matters to be put on YouTube?
00:25:02.000 Why can't we just have that discussion?
00:25:04.000 Scientific discussion requires there to be people disagreeing.
00:25:09.000 One person will be right, one person will be wrong.
00:25:10.000 It's normal.
00:25:11.000 If you suppress things you always think are wrong, you're not going to have science.
00:25:15.000 So the question is, why are these social media companies doing this?
00:25:18.000 Their interest is to foster free discussion.
00:25:20.000 These are not illegal ideas.
00:25:24.000 Are there such a thing as illegal ideas?
00:25:27.000 Their business interests would normally cut in favor of allowing this kind of speech, and yet they didn't.
00:25:33.000 It turns out, so there was the Missouri and Louisiana Attorney General's offices approached me, Martin Kulldorff, Aaron Cariotti, another scientist, and asked us if we'd be willing to join any lawsuit against the Biden administration.
00:25:46.000 That lawsuit in federal court led to discovery where we read the emails of a tremendous number of federal officials in the White House, in the CDC, in the Surgeon General's office, in the FBI, in the State Department.
00:26:03.000 Basically, what the Biden administration did was that they would contact social media companies, give them a hit list for censorship.
00:26:12.000 These are the ideas you need to censor.
00:26:13.000 These are the people you need to censor.
00:26:15.000 And they would then threaten the social media companies that if you don't censor these people and these ideas, we're going to regulate you out of existence.
00:26:24.000 Now, often the threat was implied.
00:26:27.000 So, you know, and a lot of these social media companies, like Stockholm Syndrome, they would just say, oh yeah, what's the next thing we need to censor?
00:26:32.000 Because they just didn't want to fight.
00:26:35.000 Some of them fought back sometimes, but it was that whole censorship industrial complex, essentially.
00:26:40.000 The judge called it a new ministry of truth.
00:26:44.000 Wow.
00:26:45.000 Directly quoting Orwell.
00:26:47.000 And, you know, it was a federal judge that found this.
00:26:51.000 The Biden administration then appealed it, saying that they needed to be able to censor to keep the public safe.
00:26:58.000 And then a district court basically said, you can't do that.
00:27:02.000 That violates the American First Amendment.
00:27:05.000 I was and this is just this, by the way, all this just came out this year, just in past this summer, actually.
00:27:11.000 But the judge issued his ruling in July 4, 2023.
00:27:15.000 So, what we now see is part of the mechanisms by which the scientific discussion during the pandemic was suppressed, the policy discussion was suppressed, was by direct government policy.
00:27:26.000 Governments decided, and I'm certain it's not just the United States government that did this.
00:27:30.000 I know the UK government was involved in this as well, based on reports I've seen from organizations like Big Brother Watch.
00:27:37.000 You know, what you have is essentially a government policy in the West to suppress Dissident voices, because they think that the dissidents are so dangerous to public health.
00:27:50.000 At least that's the argument that they make when they're pressed on it in court.
00:27:57.000 But it doesn't seem that the way that they behave generally is motivated by the desire to preserve, protect and improve public health.
00:28:04.000 Otherwise, you would not have made those decisions relatively early in the pandemic period that caused so much damage and even for children to be sold into sexual slavery.
00:28:14.000 It seems that these choices were at best misguided and at worst malevolent, that dissidence and opposing the dominating narratives is being Gosh, I sometimes feel it's not even incrementally.
00:28:30.000 In a way that appears to be coordinated, the possibility for dissent is being shut down.
00:28:34.000 Legislation in the UK, the new, again, the sort of ludicrously and somewhat ironically named online safety bill in Canada, they've introduced new laws to control information in these type of spaces.
00:28:47.000 And based on what you've just told us and the kind of relationships between government and social media platforms, this legislation is merely enshrining something that's been
00:28:56.000 happening less formally and will now happen to a far greater degree. And the dangers that you've
00:29:03.000 described, the evident, observable, actual danger that has taken place, the lives that have
00:29:09.000 been lost, the lives that have been ruined, it feels like this is gonna get worse.
00:29:15.000 Now, I understand that YouTube are using the WHO's medical guidelines now, not just for COVID, but for all diseases.
00:29:24.000 The WHO is preparing a pandemic treaty that will allow them to further bypass national sovereignty, taking, I think, 5% of the budgets of any nation that's a participant in the treaty.
00:29:36.000 And people's fears that The censorship is increasing, surveillance is increasing, globalism and by what I mean by globalism is that there are unelected bodies that are not tethered to nations and therefore are not democratically accountable are making decisions transcendent of democracies and so it's like this subject that we're discussing that used to just be about oh like the pandemic which we're already being sort of invited to forget and just move beyond because as I say of the omnicrisis of the
00:30:06.000 Endless wars, escalating wars, the whole climate of horror and fracture.
00:30:12.000 It appears to me that this is a significant issue and it's one that is increasing in its power.
00:30:21.000 These kind of measures are increasing in spite of your recent significant victory.
00:30:26.000 I mean, I share with you the dread of the future if we allow this kind of infrastructure to stay in place.
00:30:36.000 You mentioned the WHO.
00:30:37.000 You know, the second largest funder of the WHO is the Gates Foundation.
00:30:42.000 That guy!
00:30:44.000 But doesn't he also invest in vaccines?
00:30:46.000 Wait a minute!
00:30:48.000 I mean, and the WHO, it's not as if they got things right all the time.
00:30:51.000 During the pandemic, a few days after we wrote the Great Barrington Declaration, the Great Barrington Declaration is premised on the idea that if you get COVID and recover, you have some immunity, right?
00:31:00.000 That's what herd immunity is based on, which is true.
00:31:02.000 You get some immunity after you recover from COVID.
00:31:06.000 The WHO changed the definition of herd immunity to exclude immunity after recovery from the disease.
00:31:13.000 Only vaccines produced immunity in the definition of herd immunity and they did that in response to the Great Barrington Declaration.
00:31:20.000 The WHO put out misinformation over and over, information at odds with the scientific data over and over and over again during the pandemic.
00:31:30.000 They downplayed the damage to the poorest places of the world.
00:31:33.000 They recommended the lockdowns because in February 2020, they thought that what China did, it worked.
00:31:40.000 That the lockdowns would get rid of the disease everywhere if we just did what China did.
00:31:44.000 The World Health Organization has a lot to answer for.
00:31:47.000 And to have YouTube then say, okay, we're going to take this organization that failed so fundamentally during the pandemic and take it as our lodestar, the science itself, and we'll suppress everyone that disagrees with them.
00:31:57.000 Well, you know, why even have science?
00:31:59.000 I mean, that's one of these things where, like, you essentially are done.
00:32:04.000 You know, you created this epistemic bubble that cannot be pierced because you say this organization has a monopoly on the truth.
00:32:15.000 It is really scary.
00:32:16.000 I do think that the American First Amendment, before the Missouri versus Biden case, I had started to despair.
00:32:23.000 During the case, and especially with the recent rulings, I'm starting to feel a glimmer of hope, Russell.
00:32:28.000 I hope you don't talk me out of it, because I think the American First Amendment might be strong enough to shatter this whole regime.
00:32:35.000 Do you think so?
00:32:36.000 And I'm not trying to talk you out of hope.
00:32:37.000 I need hope.
00:32:38.000 I need your hope, and I certainly need my own.
00:32:41.000 I'm just looking at the article you wrote, I think, on Substack about your experience, I think, On arriving in America and becoming an American citizen at least and you talk about the First Amendment and that it's not only constitutional but it's almost formative and it's in some ways the crucible of all other American values, rights and even perhaps even human rights.
00:33:06.000 Can you sort of reprise what you mean?
00:33:13.000 I got a little emotional when I wrote that piece, Russell.
00:33:15.000 It was for Barry Weiss's Substack, the free press.
00:33:21.000 When the July 4th ruling came down from the judge saying that the Biden administration had violated my First Amendment rights, my free speech rights, I thought back to when I first arrived in the United States, I was four years old.
00:33:39.000 My parents came from India, and they came for economic opportunity.
00:33:45.000 My dad was an engineer, my mom ran a daycare center, but in India it was much harder to do.
00:33:50.000 But they also came in part because You know, the instability of political regimes in India is like the mid-70s, early 70s.
00:33:59.000 Just shortly after we came, Indira Gandhi, the Prime Minister of India, declared an emergency, essentially suspended Indian democracy through her opponents in jail, suspended basic civil rights, you know, killed a lot of people actually that opposed her during a state of emergency that she declared.
00:34:19.000 And I remember in my family, I was young then, very young then, but just the horror that this could happen in their home country, and also the relief that we were in a country that valued free speech, where that kind of suppression of dissident ideas could never happen.
00:34:37.000 And that for me was a formative value, like a sense of like, you know, the United States can stand as a bulwark against this kind of authoritarian power.
00:34:48.000 And when the judge ruled in favor of the First Amendment in this case, it cracked open, I think, this entire enterprise.
00:35:00.000 Because it doesn't take much, Russell.
00:35:01.000 It just takes a few people telling the truth that are heard widely that then shatters the
00:35:07.000 power of these authoritarians.
00:35:10.000 I really very firmly believe that.
00:35:13.000 It can cost a lot to the people telling the truth, of course.
00:35:16.000 But that cost is part of how we renew our societies, that we bring these basic fundamental
00:35:25.000 values back to our societies, fundamental ideas, the scientific ideas like we've been
00:35:30.000 talking about, ideas of free expression.
00:35:33.000 I think free expression to me is the fundamental thing that allows even David to overthrow
00:35:40.000 Goliath.
00:35:44.000 It seems that we move in our conversations between the importance of the work that you do, because it is empirical, because you're able to say, wait a minute, that's not true.
00:36:00.000 I can prove it's not true.
00:36:01.000 This is not conjecture.
00:36:03.000 This is not modeling.
00:36:04.000 This is not theology.
00:36:07.000 This is, look, we can show you.
00:36:10.000 And to, in a sense, what can be Extrapolated from that and what can be observed when that kind of data is censored, shut down, ignored, attacked.
00:36:25.000 So It's interesting that the pandemic period had nestled within it so many little crises, sociological, ideological, philosophical, judicial, political, and even within the biological component,
00:36:46.000 The cover-up of myocarditis and the administering of vaccines.
00:36:51.000 There's the non-medical interventions, there's the social interventions.
00:36:55.000 We're now beginning to go, okay, all right, well the lockdowns were wrong, the masks didn't work, social distancing was arbitrary.
00:37:03.000 That's why people were having parties during it, because they knew it wasn't dangerous.
00:37:08.000 They were just letting us know it was dangerous.
00:37:11.000 An area of conjecture, of course, is Oh, now they have recognised that it is possible to impose levels of previously unimagined control on a population as long as they legitimise it.
00:37:22.000 It is possible to destroy dissenting voices as long as you are able to use information that legitimises the destruction of those voices.
00:37:32.000 When it comes to myocarditis and the increased rates of myocarditis in people that have taken vaccines and the way that the information was initially framed, can you tell us what we have learned with that particular little lie?
00:37:48.000 That is a little bit heartbreaking, because when the vaccines were first introduced, they had run honest studies, like large-scale randomized studies.
00:38:01.000 Tens of thousands of people enrolled in a control arm that included placebo.
00:38:05.000 But the thing about vaccines, when you go from tens of thousands to billions, you're going to learn things that you didn't know automatically.
00:38:13.000 They're going to be people that have conditions that are a result of the vaccine sometimes that you learn about.
00:38:21.000 The way that it's always been handled in the past is an honesty of like, okay, if you see these conditions in this group, you tell people in that group, maybe don't take this vaccine, maybe take a different vaccine, maybe You put it off and tell them to go talk to their doctor, decide what's best for them.
00:38:41.000 A lot of like, you know, sort of like nuanced discussion based on what you learn after the vaccine has been rolled out.
00:38:49.000 One of the things we learned very early on in the rollout of this vaccine is that young men taking this vaccine have a higher elevated risk of myocarditis.
00:38:59.000 Myocarditis is inflammation of the heart muscle.
00:39:04.000 You know, it can be deadly.
00:39:05.000 It's not like it's a median thing.
00:39:08.000 Most people that get it, it goes away, but it's not something you want, and it can last a long time.
00:39:13.000 It can be debilitating.
00:39:14.000 It can even be deadly, right?
00:39:15.000 And so, in young men, you see on elevated risk, there's a fight in the scientific literature about exactly how elevated it is, maybe 1 in 2,000, 1 in 10,000.
00:39:21.000 I mean, I believe anywhere in between there.
00:39:25.000 And I think, but that's high enough to say, well, look, I'm going to give it to billions of people, including, you know, hundreds of millions of young men.
00:39:34.000 I'm going to end up getting a lot of cases of myocarditis.
00:39:38.000 And we need to, you know, normally with vaccines, you want something to be so safe that no one would question, not just that vaccine, but all vaccines.
00:39:46.000 If you have a 1 in 5,000 risk of some severe outcome, you would probably be very careful with that vaccine for that group because you don't want to create this skepticism about all vaccines because you're seeing a subgroup of people hurt by this vaccine.
00:40:03.000 That's what they did, by the way, in the United States with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
00:40:06.000 When they saw an elevated risk of thrombocytopenia and clotting in older women and middle-aged women, they paused the rollout of the vaccine.
00:40:17.000 My colleague, Martin Kulldorff, who wrote the Great Parenthood Declaration, disagreed with me about this, but I actually think it was probably the reasonable thing to do.
00:40:24.000 Again, you could argue with me about this, whether I'm right or wrong, but the point is that's consistent with what we normally do with vaccines.
00:40:30.000 As soon as there's a signal, we pause, we're careful about it because even relatively rare signals can undermine public confidence in all vaccines.
00:40:38.000 That's why most of the traditional vaccines that are out there, we have a lot of confidence in it because they pull them every time there's something, just a few, one in a million cases of something and they're very careful about it.
00:40:50.000 With this vaccine, that caution was thrown to the wind, especially with the mRNA vaccines and the signal for young men.
00:40:56.000 It should have led to a pause for young men taking the mRNA vaccines and it didn't.
00:41:01.000 Certainly vaccines have been cancelled on the basis of much statistically lower impact than that.
00:41:09.000 I understand.
00:41:11.000 And this sort of crisis of confidence in our institutions and science itself has to be halted at some point.
00:41:18.000 Because in a way, science is one of the few things that can prevent us becoming hysterical.
00:41:22.000 Because I wondered, As many people surely must, if you have felt that the kind of certainty that you've had in the institutions to a degree you participate in, if you consider at least science to be an institution, although I recognise there are many, many sectors within that, plainly the funding being a significant point of difference.
00:41:46.000 I wonder if like, you know, when you say something like, you know, vaccines historically have been like, you know, they're verifiably much safer.
00:41:56.000 Is there anything that happened in the pandemic period that made you think, hold on a minute, I'm going to have to review the trust that I'd bestowed on either other medical or legislative or regulatory, you know, like, for example, Andy Fauci, most people didn't think about Andy Fauci very much prior to that.
00:42:12.000 I feel like during the AIDS crisis, some people were like, whoa, this guy's making some crazy decisions and many might argue some crazy dollars as well through some of those royalty arrangements.
00:42:22.000 But generally speaking, it's not something you think about.
00:42:25.000 I wonder if you've had the opportunity, chance or inclination to review some areas that you previously would have considered that didn't require further analysis?
00:42:34.000 I mean, it's funny, Russell, you ask that, because I actually have on my bookshelf somewhere a textbook that Anthony Fauci edited from which I learned internal medicine.
00:42:44.000 You know, it was, you know, before the pandemic, I had tremendous admiration for him.
00:42:50.000 I had to revise that admiration considerably.
00:42:54.000 I've been at Stanford for 37 years, first as a student, then as a professor.
00:42:58.000 The motto of the university is, the winds of freedom blow, and they didn't blow during the pandemic.
00:43:06.000 A lot of my colleagues, I'm now deeply disappointed in.
00:43:10.000 I do think that You have to resist the urge to say, everything I knew before was wrong.
00:43:17.000 I don't think that's true.
00:43:18.000 But it is absolutely an opportunity to revisit those things and try to understand some of the things.
00:43:23.000 Why do I think those things?
00:43:24.000 Do I still think those things in light of new evidence?
00:43:27.000 We always have to do this.
00:43:28.000 In any endeavor, we're going to take a lot of things for granted.
00:43:32.000 Science has to take, by the way, when you do science, you take a lot of things for granted.
00:43:35.000 I'm not going to revisit gravity.
00:43:40.000 You know, so I just it's not like I have to take for granted certain things when I do science.
00:43:45.000 And you're right.
00:43:46.000 I mean, it's but I think part of science is genius, is that we can go back and question even those foundational things.
00:43:53.000 You know, most of the time, those foundational things are foundational for a reason.
00:43:57.000 There's a lot of evidence behind them, but it's not wrong to go back and to look.
00:44:02.000 And on vaccines, I actually worked on vaccine safety with the Food and Drug Administration in the U.S.
00:44:07.000 before the pandemic.
00:44:09.000 That kind of questioning happens all the time with vaccines.
00:44:12.000 It's a normal part of why vaccines can be recommended at scale, is because as soon as there's a safety signal, you say, okay, well, even if it's not really, even if it turns out to be just a statistical artifact, you still, with an abundance of caution, you pull the vaccine.
00:44:27.000 Right?
00:44:28.000 It's frustrating, but you do that because you want to make sure that the public sees vaccines as safe.
00:44:33.000 It's the process by which you do that that allows the vaccines to be seen as safe.
00:44:38.000 And I am completely in favor of revisiting.
00:44:40.000 I mean, I think that's part of what we do.
00:44:42.000 I suspect many of the vaccines we have that I think are quite essential, like the MMR vaccine, we'll see is essential even if we revisit.
00:44:51.000 But maybe others won't.
00:44:52.000 I don't know.
00:44:52.000 I mean, this is a scientific process.
00:44:55.000 Personally, I'm confident enough that I would give my kids those traditional childhood vaccines.
00:45:01.000 But I can understand the desire to revisit, given how poorly our scientific institutions, our regulatory institutions did during the pandemic, to protect the health of the public.
00:45:11.000 I can completely understand where that impetus is coming from.
00:45:14.000 Yeah, because you start the question, who's spending money to ensure that non-profitable drugs are promoted, that profitable drugs are rigorously explored?
00:45:25.000 Where's that appetite coming from and what is this trend and what was revealed during that period?
00:45:30.000 That's a very sort of open-hearted and open-minded answer.
00:45:34.000 And I was thinking about like, you know, revisiting foundational principles and it Yeah, epochs are defined by those moments of revision and revelation, whether it's heliocentrism, if I'm saying it right, or in the nature of sub-particular reality, when those revelations are made,
00:45:56.000 It defines our species, it defines our kind, it defines our time.
00:46:02.000 That's why the neutrality and objectivity of science has to be protected in the same way that something like free speech has to be protected.
00:46:09.000 When science is a subset of financial interests and methods of dominion, then it's difficult to see how you're not going to end up in a Some kind of form of tyranny as a result of that because the biases accumulatively will lead to the end of the ability for debate and the ability to undergird dissident voices in so many ways.
00:46:32.000 in so many ways. Getting to the sort of, not the heart of the matter, but a significant
00:46:39.000 part of the matter, it seems that here it says Moderna and Pfizer made $1,000 of profit
00:46:44.000 every second. They charge governments up to 24 times more than the potential cost of generic
00:46:50.000 production. It seems that there were many systemic problems, plainly, between the kind
00:46:56.000 of relationships between, let's just say, government and big tech, government and big
00:47:00.000 pharma.
00:47:00.000 pharma.
00:47:01.000 It seems that what's needed is new capacity for regulation and I would say decentralization of power, breaking up of monopolies in all the areas where they appear to be able to reign, to reduce indeed end the ability of companies of this scale to influence government through lobbying and other forms of funding.
00:47:22.000 And these are the kind of ideas that need to be discussed in independent media and won't be discussed outside of it.
00:47:29.000 Absolutely.
00:47:30.000 I mean, I think that there's almost a revolving door, it seems like.
00:47:34.000 I didn't really know this, really.
00:47:36.000 I mean, I knew that it existed, but I didn't realize the scope of it before the pandemic.
00:47:41.000 The regulatory agencies that are supposed to oversee and represent the public interest, you know, the Food and Drug Administration, the CDC, a lot of this, a lot of that has, there's this like revolving door with industry.
00:48:01.000 There's a sense of where the regulators who are supposed to protect the public from the depredations of the pharmaceutical companies are often representing the pharmaceutical companies.
00:48:14.000 You know, it's like the you have like former FDA chairs now on the board of, you know, big pharmaceutical companies.
00:48:23.000 It just looks really bad. And it is really bad.
00:48:27.000 Like you want an independent regulator.
00:48:30.000 And governments during the pandemic essentially became partners with pharmaceutical companies.
00:48:37.000 You mentioned Moderna and Pfizer.
00:48:41.000 Governments around the world, the contracts they wrote with them essentially said, there's no liability if you have a bad product.
00:48:47.000 What entity ever has that deal?
00:48:51.000 If you have a bad product, part of the deal of capitalism is that you are responsible for it.
00:48:57.000 You have to make amends for it.
00:48:58.000 You have to pay penalties for it.
00:49:01.000 you have the wrong incentives in place.
00:49:03.000 If you don't have some possibility, if you do something bad,
00:49:07.000 something bad will happen to you, right?
00:49:10.000 And essentially that's what these deals with the pharmaceutical companies did
00:49:14.000 is they told the pharmaceutical companies, you can have a bad product
00:49:17.000 and you don't have to pay the price for it.
00:49:19.000 We the people.
00:49:20.000 I can't believe it that I'd ever say, we have to get back to capitalism.
00:49:24.000 So like, I didn't realize that we'd gone so far beyond it in so many areas where subsidized energy companies
00:49:30.000 are able to profit in energy crises, medical pharmaceutical companies benefit
00:49:35.000 in health and medical crises, military industrial complex organizations benefit in wars.
00:49:42.000 Seems that there's some opportunity for real review.
00:49:46.000 Dr Jay Bhattacharya, thank you so much for Joining us today, thank you for your easy, effortless, or at least it seems effortless, ability to communicate complex ideas gently, and thank you for the plain morality of your position and the lack of hubris and presence of humility that's most heartening for me.
00:50:06.000 You suggested that somehow I could diminish your hope over the course of this conversation.
00:50:10.000 Certainly you've lifted an increased line, so thank you.
00:50:13.000 Thank you, Russell.
00:50:14.000 It's a real pleasure and honor to talk with you.
00:50:16.000 There you are.
00:50:17.000 Beautiful conversations can still take place, even in this increasing omni-crisis, even in this fragmented and fractured space.
00:50:26.000 That's why it's so important that you support us.
00:50:28.000 If you can, become an awakened wonder and support these conversations.
00:50:33.000 Also, support Dr. J. Support Dr. J by going to illusionofconsensus on Substack.
00:50:39.000 Follow him on X, where he's Dr. J Bhattacharya.
00:50:42.000 It's sort of how it sounds.
00:50:43.000 We'll post the spelling in the description there.
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