Stay Free - Russel Brand - March 30, 2026


What They STILL Aren’t Telling You About Spike Protein - the Fallout We’re Still Ignoring — SF697


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 19 minutes

Words per Minute

156.57613

Word Count

12,393

Sentence Count

729

Misogynist Sentences

5

Hate Speech Sentences

15


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcripts from "Stay Free - Russel Brand" are sourced from the Knowledge Fight Interactive Search Tool. Explore them interactively here.
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:07.000 Ladies and gentlemen, Russell Brand, Russell, Russell Brand, conspiracy theorist trying to bring real journalism to the American people.
00:00:17.000 Hello there, you awakening ones.
00:00:18.000 Thanks for joining us today for Stay Free with Russell Brand.
00:00:22.000 We're talking to Dr. Tina Piers, who treats people for long COVID and vaccine injury.
00:00:28.000 And if you're a person who has been affected in that way, then stay on this stream because you'll probably get some information that's helpful.
00:00:35.000 She's been on a bunch of podcasts that you might know, maybe like John Campbell, things like that.
00:00:39.000 And I'm very interested in someone from the medical profession who's addressing the consequences of COVID, something we've all forgot about why, because we've been deluged in naught but Armageddon ever.
00:00:51.000 Since then, we're continuing to reappraise and attempt to understand what the world is doing right now.
00:00:58.000 Is the mighty nation continent of America being steered via a Middle Eastern principality that it primarily funds?
00:01:07.000 Let me know in the comments and chat what you think about that.
00:01:10.000 Is the Israel of today a unified place?
00:01:15.000 Does political Israel 2026 carry the historic theological and religious baggage of God's chosen people from the Pentateuch?
00:01:24.000 All questions that we'll be answering definitively and absolutely over the next few minutes.
00:01:30.000 But before we get into that, let's have a quick look around the world to see what's going on in the UK.
00:01:36.000 Is it still a place beset by endless endless challenges where rape victims are ignored, where people are arrested for Facebook posts, a kind of topsy-turvy, anarchic tyranny, a dystopia?
00:01:54.000 And if it is, can the rest of the world be far behind?
00:01:58.000 Firstly, let's have a look at Melania Trump and her extraordinary cake walk with Plato, the AI robot who's being proposed as a potential replacement for human teachers.
00:02:13.000 Well, some people miss their Joe Biden presidency and will be encouraged to see a jittery biped ambling through White House corridors.
00:02:33.000 There's a kind of nostalgic quality to it, if nothing else.
00:02:36.000 Melania Trump points out that this AINAE will be a useful educational tool.
00:02:43.000 But what is education?
00:02:45.000 What is discipleship?
00:02:46.000 What are we doing with our children?
00:02:48.000 And do any of us believe that there's a clear vision for America or the UK or anywhere really?
00:02:54.000 Or do you start to get the sense that what we're doing now is managing an interim period as we move towards centralized global power or perhaps towards a kind of inevitable China v US showdown or treaty?
00:03:09.000 It seems like they're in a positive vision, doesn't it?
00:03:13.000 Does it seem like to you?
00:03:14.000 Do you still feel a kind of sense of optimism about America, whether you're a Republican or a Democrat?
00:03:19.000 Do you feel optimistic about the UK or France or life at all?
00:03:23.000 And do you know that it could be so different and it may yet become different?
00:03:26.000 But the ideas won't be drawn, I don't imagine, from the political arena, but from the spiritual realm.
00:03:34.000 We'll be talking about that, of course, in a moment.
00:03:36.000 First though, here's Melania talking about the educational capacity of that jittery Parkinson's robot.
00:03:44.000 Imagine a humanoid educator named Plato.
00:03:48.000 Access to the classical studies is now instantaneous.
00:03:55.000 Literature, science, art, philosophy, mathematics, and history.
00:04:01.000 Humanity's entire corpus of information is available in the comfort of your home.
00:04:09.000 Plato will provoke.
00:04:11.000 And once these oil and energy shock lockdowns begin, the comfort of your own home is all you're ever going to be allowed to know again.
00:04:20.000 Do you feel like you're being groomed for an eternity in comfortable incarceration?
00:04:26.000 That we might lurch from pandemic to war to climate crisis.
00:04:32.000 And your only real option will be to vote for a president that has a particular set of biases that means that the reason that you'll be tyrannized will change slightly.
00:04:41.000 We're tyrannizing you slightly for LGBTQ plus type reasons.
00:04:46.000 We're tyrannizing you for Christian type reasons.
00:04:48.000 Well, all good.
00:04:50.000 Oh, well, thank you.
00:04:52.000 Meanwhile, in the escalating potential apocalyptic conflict in the Middle East, Pete Hegzeth has done a prayer.
00:05:01.000 And I've always kind of liked Pete Hegzeth, so I feel like he looks kind of cool and he's, I don't know, my enemy's enemy is my friend.
00:05:08.000 He dealt with a lot of stuff, didn't he?
00:05:10.000 And managed to rise to prominence and high office regardless.
00:05:14.000 Here, though, in this prayer, I think we have to start considering what it might be to follow Christ.
00:05:24.000 Put yourself in the place of one of those couple hundred Americans about to undertake this audacious raid on the Iwo Jima, looking at a lot of uncertainty in front of you.
00:05:34.000 And this was the passage, and this was the pre-mission reading and the prayer that was read with them.
00:05:39.000 First, a reading from the book of Psalms, chapter 18, verses 37 to 42.
00:05:44.000 King David writes, I pursued my enemies and overtook them, and did not turn back till they were consumed.
00:05:51.000 I thrust them through so that they were not able to rise.
00:05:54.000 They fell under my feet.
00:05:55.000 For you equipped me with strength for the battle.
00:05:58.000 You made those who rise against me sink under me.
00:06:01.000 You made my enemies turn their backs to me, and those who hated me I destroyed.
00:06:05.000 They cried for help, but there was none to save.
00:06:08.000 They cried to the Lord, but he did not answer them.
00:06:10.000 I beat them fine as dust before the wind.
00:06:12.000 I cast them out like the mire of the streets.
00:06:16.000 And then he prayed this prayer, the chaplain.
00:06:20.000 And we pray it with him this morning.
00:06:22.000 Almighty God, who trains our hands for war and our fingers for battle, you who stirred the nations from the north against Babylon of old, making her land a desolation where none dwell.
00:06:32.000 Behold now the wicked who rise against your justice and the peace of the righteous.
00:06:36.000 Snap the rod of the oppressor, frustrate the wicked plans, and break the teeth of the ungodly.
00:06:41.000 By the blast of your anger, let the evil perish.
00:06:43.000 Let their bulls go down to slaughter, for their day has come, the time of their punishment.
00:06:48.000 Pour out your wrath upon those who plot vain things and blow them away like chaff before the wind.
00:06:53.000 Grant this task force clear and righteous targets for violence.
00:06:57.000 Surround them as a shield.
00:06:58.000 Protect the innocent and blameless in their midst.
00:07:01.000 Make their arrows like those of a skilled warrior who returned not empty-handed.
00:07:05.000 Let every round find its mark against the enemies of righteousness and our great nation.
00:07:10.000 Give them wisdom in every decision, endurance for the trial ahead, unbreakable unity, and overwhelming violence of action against those who deserve no mercy.
00:07:19.000 Preserve their lives, sharpen their resolve, and let justice be executed swiftly and without remorse, that evil may be driven back and wicked souls delivered to the eternal damnation prepared for them.
00:07:30.000 For the wicked flee when no one pursues, but the righteous are as bold as a lion.
00:07:35.000 We ask these things with bold confidence in the mighty and powerful name of Jesus Christ, King over all kings.
00:07:42.000 And amen.
00:07:43.000 Amen.
00:07:44.000 And may the righteous be as bold as a lion.
00:07:47.000 May we pray such prayer for our men and women in harm's way right now to think that such Americans exist on our behalf on behalf of the American people and that is certainly our prayer for them today.
00:08:01.000 Well, who but a maniac wouldn't echo Hegzef's prayer for combatants and troops, that they be protected and that they be guided?
00:08:11.000 But when I pursue my own relationship with Christ and my own humble broken, hobbling attempt to follow him, I feel that the destination might be to, like Christ, get our identity from the Father and be continually in the presence of the Father, and to live Paul's edict that our bodies ought be temples and dwelling places for him.
00:08:41.000 And I suppose this war, of all wars in the last 10 years, makes me feel the following one, this war would be happening if Kamala Harris was president.
00:08:53.000 It'll be happening in more or less the same way.
00:08:55.000 That makes me feel that all of the particularities and all of the unique qualities of Donald Trump his bombast, his belligerence, his strength of character, his uniqueness, his peculiarity, his indefatigability, his willingness to stand up to institutional corruption, his actual fortitude are all irrelevant when it comes to a real global agenda.
00:09:21.000 And this is, I suppose, where it's not fun to be Christian, but highly relevant to be Christian, because whether you're an individual and of course you are or you're an individual acting on behalf of an entire nation or a nation or department of war we, as followers of Christ are like him, trying to overcome the world.
00:09:40.000 Here he says in John 16, the end of John 16, just before he prays, just before he accepts his personal fate, his personal self-sacrifice, like that, Christ comes to serve and Christ comes to die, and Christ comes to redeem, Christ comes to reconcile.
00:09:57.000 And when Christ says I come to fight, that fight is against the world as a whole.
00:10:05.000 And while we might make arguments for chosen people, certainly that's an argument that Israel are making for themselves, and Christians and anyone who has a particular religious belief is, I suppose, by definition, saying.
00:10:17.000 This is what I regard as true.
00:10:20.000 Christ in particular firstly says, anyone can come.
00:10:24.000 All you have to do is repent, turn away from your old life and follow me.
00:10:30.000 And here he says, I've told you these things so that in me you may have peace in this world.
00:10:38.000 You will have trouble, but take heart, I've overcome the world.
00:10:42.000 And overcoming the world is not, I don't suppose, a militaristic endeavor, and actually it's the combatants and troops that you know like.
00:10:53.000 When I was had a different kind of political perspective I was like a lefty liberal type person I knew then that I revered and respected the bravery of people that were willing to lay down their lives for what they believe in, even if they were wrong.
00:11:05.000 The virtue of bravery is a pretty hard one to criticize and undermine.
00:11:09.000 But now that I know a lot of military people and veterans, they're more informed and have a better understanding of the corruption and the deception that's usually behind war.
00:11:24.000 And this war with Iran, I suppose, like the war with Iraq that's only really 20 years ago, you know, generation or so ago looks like it's undergirded somewhat duplicitously, i.e.
00:11:37.000 We went to war with Iraq because we were told untruthfully, deceptively, that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.
00:11:44.000 Ostensibly, we, or the United States, I should say, I'm not an American, America are at war with Iran because Iran might develop nuclear weapons.
00:11:54.000 And this is something that's been going on and being discussed for a long, long time, war with Iran.
00:11:58.000 It's been part of an American agenda for quite a long while.
00:12:01.000 It precedes Barack Obama, precedes George Bush, stepped up some in 9-11 under George W. Bush's presidency.
00:12:10.000 And now, with all these vicissitudes and all these changes and all these cultural war battles fought on streets and Minneapolis and placards, where did that go, by the way?
00:12:21.000 Minneapolis, when ICE was a thing, when people cared about that.
00:12:25.000 Look how fast it's all moving.
00:12:27.000 Wouldn't you like to step outside of time and into eternity and recognize that actually, while we're around here listening to all this white noise racket, there's an agenda being pursued that's far beyond individual personalities and amounts to what, in a sense, Trump was elected to absolve.
00:12:48.000 There is a global imperialist order that appears to control national politics.
00:12:55.000 You can see it real plain in a country like mine, the UK, which is sort of falling apart, sort of a deliberate, sado-masochistic self-destruction being undertaken.
00:13:06.000 But in your country too, that's the truly surprising thing.
00:13:09.000 It's truly surprising that do you ask yourself this question and answer this question, this rhetorical question, do you imagine things would have been any different under Kamala Harris when it comes to this important issue?
00:13:23.000 Is this the most important issue since Trump has come to office?
00:13:25.000 Yes, it is, isn't it?
00:13:26.000 It's like a war that could lead to Armageddon.
00:13:28.000 Would it have been different under Kamala Harris?
00:13:31.000 I don't suppose it would have been.
00:13:33.000 I'm not suggesting she would have handled it as well.
00:13:35.000 What I'm saying is, is real power moves beyond the names and faces upon which we fixate, for good and for real, actually, because real power is ultimately spiritual, ethical and moral power.
00:13:47.000 Now, just after saying that, Christ makes the prayer that many people feel ought be as significant as the Lord's prayer, that I in you, you in them, they in us prayer, where a kind of unity is alluded to that makes a mockery of all bellicose talk, all praying for war, whatever theology it falls within.
00:14:12.000 My true religion is comedy.
00:14:15.000 Here's John Cleese, one of the great prophets of British comedy, talking about that very story.
00:14:21.000 Hegzef is a perfect example of the sort of Christian who loves the Old Testament more than the new because Christ isn't in it.
00:14:26.000 It's an interesting statement from John Cleese.
00:14:30.000 And if there is going to be the, as they say, boots on the ground war, which if Israel are correct and it's a year-long conflict with Iran, Iran ain't going to fold up anytime soon is the sort of common understanding.
00:14:43.000 And Israel are in it for the long haul because it looks like they have some geographical and territorial expansionist aims that America currently at this time at least are supporting, then boots on the ground war is likely.
00:14:55.000 And it seems like not many Americans, only 23% of Americans in the sort of prime fighting age, are eligible to serve in the US military, mainly due to poor academic performance and obesity and criminal records.
00:15:10.000 As people have been saying for a while, this isn't a nation that's really ready for war.
00:15:15.000 Oh man, what a complicated time.
00:15:18.000 But hey, what I'm saying is what concerns me most about this conflict is that it would be happening no matter who is in charge.
00:15:26.000 Remember the things people were saying about Putin?
00:15:28.000 Like, if we let Putin invade Ukraine, why?
00:15:32.000 That guy's going to maraud around Europe acquiring territory.
00:15:36.000 Well it seems that Israel and Netanyahu are making claims for territory in Lebanon, that there is a territorial expansionist project afoot under Netanyahu's Israel regime and equating Netanyahu and Israel and Judaism seems like a sort of a real interesting bunch of compounding going on right there.
00:15:57.000 And like a lot of people, I'm beginning to think that Zionism has very particular aims and the charge of anti-Semitism has a very particular goal to shut down conversation, conversations that are pretty unavoidable now because of where we are and Israel is centrifugal to events that are determining the trajectory of all world power, particularly the power of the United States of America.
00:16:19.000 And if you're a Christian, you believe that the only answer for the Jewish people is to accept Jesus Christ as their savior.
00:16:27.000 And as we said before, that would mean following him.
00:16:32.000 And he is not, and certainly in his first incarnation was not, a warrior king.
00:16:38.000 And his fight was undertaken with the sword of the tongue.
00:16:42.000 Language, the word, the frequency, the vibration, attaining new states in preparation for the merging of the kingdoms of heaven and earth.
00:16:52.000 And then when it comes to politics, I don't want my ideology coming out of those places.
00:16:56.000 I don't want my ideology from a nation.
00:16:58.000 I want nations to focus on protection, defense, the roads, hospitals, schools at the most local level possible.
00:17:07.000 If there's going to be a principle for politics, it should be localism, individual freedom, community sovereignty delivered through digital direct democracy.
00:17:17.000 There's a principle we can believe in, but we understand what the world trajectory currently is.
00:17:21.000 It's global imperialism, vacillation for a minute between left and right and seeming extremes before delivering you centralized government.
00:17:29.000 Only you and I could oppose that by continuing to awaken.
00:17:33.000 And we can only do that if we're connected to something a little more powerful than this world that would blow you about on its endless breeze if you don't have the weight of Christ within you and behind you.
00:17:45.000 But that's just what I think.
00:17:46.000 Let me know what you think in the comments and the chat.
00:17:50.000 I'm going to be back in a minute with Dr. Tina Piers, who the reason I want to talk to her is because she's getting on and healing people that have been injured by the vaccine, injured by long COVID.
00:18:01.000 She doesn't seem to be particularly focused on the ideology around COVID.
00:18:05.000 And what I mean by that is that COVID can be understood as a way of recognizing how various institutions lied to us and deceived us, potentially to legitimize centralized global authority and to legitimize social engineering that would never have been undertaken without it.
00:18:23.000 No, she's just getting on with making people feel better.
00:18:26.000 I'll be talking to her in a minute, but here first is a message from one of our partners.
00:18:30.000 We'll be back in a second.
00:18:31.000 Censorship is back and it's happening everywhere.
00:18:33.000 The platforms are controlling the narratives and pushing the stuff they want us to see.
00:18:36.000 We've got to fight back.
00:18:37.000 Rumble is the only company that stood the test of time and they deserve our support.
00:18:41.000 On one side, Rumble is challenging big tech censorship.
00:18:44.000 And now on the other side, they've introduced something that will give us protection from big banks shutting us off.
00:18:50.000 Banks can cancel our accounts, freeze our cards.
00:18:52.000 So that's why we've launched Rumble Wallet.
00:18:56.000 A wallet no one can cancel and a wallet that supporters can use to instantly tip creators like old Russ without any middlemen taking cuts.
00:19:03.000 I don't want no middleman taking a cut of my Rumble wallet.
00:19:07.000 Give us some money.
00:19:07.000 Give us it.
00:19:08.000 Give us it now.
00:19:09.000 You can buy and save digital assets like Bitcoin and Tether Gold in one place.
00:19:13.000 Tether Gold is real gold on the blockchain with ownership of physical gold bars.
00:19:18.000 I like the sign of that.
00:19:19.000 It's a digital currency and it's gold.
00:19:21.000 That's Joe all over.
00:19:22.000 It's not only a wallet to buy and save, it also allows you to support your favorite creators by easily tipping them with the click of a button.
00:19:26.000 There'll be no fees when you tip my channel or others and we actually receive the tip instantly, unlike other platforms where we have to wait for payouts.
00:19:33.000 Support my show and other creators by clicking the tip button on my Rumble channel.
00:19:36.000 It's wallet.rumble.com.
00:19:38.000 Tip us on there.
00:19:39.000 Even don't tip me.
00:19:40.000 I'm all right, man.
00:19:41.000 But, you know, use it.
00:19:43.000 It's good.
00:19:43.000 Download Rumble Wallet today.
00:19:44.000 Open an account.
00:19:45.000 Step away from the big banks for good.
00:19:47.000 Wallet.rumble.com.
00:19:48.000 Wallet.rumble.com.
00:19:51.000 Get out of the system.
00:19:52.000 Get into Rumble Wallet.
00:19:56.000 Hey, welcome back.
00:19:57.000 If you don't have Rumble Premium yet, get Rumble Premium right now.
00:20:00.000 You get access to more content from Crowder and Tim Paul.
00:20:03.000 And as well as more content from us.
00:20:04.000 Remember, we do why a whole host of things.
00:20:07.000 There's Crack On, where we talk about addiction.
00:20:10.000 We conduct interviews like the one I'm about to undertake.
00:20:12.000 And we, of course, talk about the news.
00:20:14.000 So get Rumble Premium, get yourself a Rumble Wallet for all of your cryptocurrencies and support Rumble in any way you can while you still can before Rumble is, I don't know, maybe Rumble will one day be sort of bombed into oblivion by centralists.
00:20:29.000 Who knows?
00:20:29.000 Who knows what will happen?
00:20:31.000 But do make an investment in those things.
00:20:33.000 If you're watching this on YouTube, click the link in the description.
00:20:36.000 Get on over here because this is one of those interviews where we're talking about COVID and healing people from vaccine injury.
00:20:42.000 And as you know, those kind of things are difficult to talk about on Google Alphabet Commodities.
00:20:46.000 So click the link in the description.
00:20:48.000 Get on over here.
00:20:53.000 Our next guest is Dr. Tina Pierce, who qualified in medicine from Guy's Hospital Medical School in 1983.
00:21:00.000 She's a general practitioner.
00:21:01.000 That means like a family doctor in British.
00:21:04.000 And the reason that I want to talk to her is because she's been finding ways to treat people who have long COVID and vaccine injury potentially from spike protein.
00:21:12.000 She's contributed to a number of proteins that invest, excuse me, scientific papers that investigate the potential damage of spike protein and vaccine injury.
00:21:21.000 And while many of us are caught up in deception, madness, and what are still regarded to some degree as conspiracies around COVID, Dr. Tina's getting on with helping people who are suffering as a result of this extraordinary era.
00:21:34.000 Dr. Tina, thanks for joining us.
00:21:36.000 So Russell, I'm not a GP anymore, darling.
00:21:39.000 Former.
00:21:40.000 Yes.
00:21:40.000 Former GP.
00:21:41.000 You can say that, my fallibility is included in the content.
00:21:48.000 So why are you no longer a GP, Doc?
00:21:53.000 So I was a GP for seven years only.
00:21:56.000 I trained as a GP, which was nine years.
00:21:59.000 And then I did general practice for seven years part-time while I had my three kids.
00:22:03.000 And then I decided as a GP, I couldn't really help people properly because 10-minute, five-minute, seven-minute appointments were crazy.
00:22:11.000 And I didn't like prescribing drugs.
00:22:14.000 So I was always looking for a holistic kind of lifestyle change to try and get my patients to do.
00:22:20.000 And then I became a women's health specialist.
00:22:23.000 I became a consultant in women's health.
00:22:26.000 And I spent 24 years building up services for Surrey for contraception.
00:22:32.000 And then I became a menopause specialist, which was also part of it all.
00:22:37.000 And then I just became very interested in mascell activation in 2016 because of my daughter.
00:22:43.000 And started seeing, and I had a private practice.
00:22:46.000 People would just come and see me for that all the time as word got round, you know.
00:22:51.000 So, and then I opened the Long Covid Clinic in 2020.
00:22:54.000 I'm sorry, it's not a quick answer, is it?
00:22:57.000 That's a perfect answer.
00:23:00.000 How were you treating people and on what basis were you treating people during COVID then?
00:23:05.000 In what capacity, if not as a family doctor.
00:23:09.000 Okay, so I was treating them because I had a huge private practice by then.
00:23:15.000 And so my patients were contacting me who were my private patients and asking me for help.
00:23:22.000 And that's why I started treating acute COVID.
00:23:27.000 And then I realized that nobody was helping them with long COVID.
00:23:33.000 I realised how to treat acute COVID and therefore how to treat long COVID.
00:23:38.000 And so I opened a long COVID clinic, first one in the country, I think, 1st of November 2020 and started treating patients with long COVID because they basically had mast cell activation syndrome, which I had developed this interest in since 2016.
00:23:54.000 Because of your daughter's condition.
00:23:56.000 Because of my daughter, exactly.
00:23:58.000 With lesser heart, yes, because of her.
00:24:00.000 Now, I know that in the most general sense, you believe that there should be a sort of a participatory dimension when it comes to medical care between doctors and patients.
00:24:11.000 And that, I suppose, is, gosh, I'd forgotten that that was even a possibility because medicine has become so sort of didactic and sanitized and the sort of kind of aristocratic nature of medical treatment in countries like the UK and the United States has sort of contributed to a feeling of remoteness.
00:24:33.000 But I feel like that remoteness became real pronounced during the pandemic period.
00:24:38.000 What was it that you discovered that made you skeptical about the way that COVID was being handled and treated generally?
00:24:47.000 What was the first moment where you became concerned about the way that it was being handled?
00:24:52.000 I think it was when they said they were going to close the GP surgeries because that seemed completely illogical.
00:24:59.000 I had been saying to my family, don't worry, they'll open the surgeries for longer because they'll have all the normal patients they have to see, plus they're going to have the COVID patients to see.
00:25:08.000 And then they said we're closing the surgeries.
00:25:10.000 And then they said there's no treatment for COVID, which I thought was crazy because there's always treatment for illnesses and infections.
00:25:17.000 We can always find a way of helping.
00:25:19.000 And then so that there were other flags.
00:25:23.000 And then when they were talking about lockdowns, which is a prison term, not a medical term, you know, and in medicine, you quarantine sick people, not well people.
00:25:34.000 And then there we were locking down well people and stopping children in their education.
00:25:40.000 You know, and one of the things you have to do in any infectious kind of disease or any disease is you look and see which age group are the vulnerable ones.
00:25:48.000 You know, who is it?
00:25:49.000 What is the sort of profile of the patient who's going to do badly with this?
00:25:54.000 And then you protect them and you work out how to do that.
00:25:58.000 And it was the elderly who had comorbidities.
00:26:01.000 It wasn't even the elderly who were fit and well, you know.
00:26:04.000 And that was so the whole thing, the science that they were claiming they were following just didn't make sense, you know.
00:26:10.000 So there were a whole load of red flags.
00:26:13.000 Dishonesty, primarily among them.
00:26:16.000 Now, I suppose in general, it's not good to ascribe to malfeasance that which could be ineptitude.
00:26:24.000 But in this instance, it was precisely undergirded by the idea of expertise, trust the science.
00:26:31.000 These were the kind of doctrinal maxims that were flung at a population.
00:26:37.000 The first thing I noticed, and of course I'm not a medical professional, was that like the high, the sort of urgency.
00:26:44.000 I looked at it through a media lens, I suppose.
00:26:46.000 The ticker tapes at the bottom of the screen, the tendency to amplify fear rather than minimize fear.
00:26:53.000 It would only have been in retrospect and via excellent educators, scientists and medical professionals that I began to understand, for example, that the vaccine wasn't worthy of the name vaccine in a traditional sense.
00:27:07.000 Then I started to understand the corporate impact.
00:27:09.000 Then I started to look at the regulatory bodies that were being trusted and the I became pretty cynical about those regulatory bodies, whether that's the FDA in this country or the equivalent in the UK.
00:27:26.000 So, were you treating patients quite early on in ways that were outside of the conventional purview, doctor?
00:27:34.000 Absolutely.
00:27:35.000 So, in the spring of 2020, I was reading, I mean, 2020 came and we were all devouring all the information we could find, all the studies and publications that were out there to try and learn as much as possible about this COVID thing.
00:27:51.000 And in the spring of 2020, I saw a post-mortem report from Italy.
00:28:00.000 And they said that in the lungs, they were very confused by their findings.
00:28:06.000 They said these people who had died had hyperinflammation, they had coagulation of the blood, so clots, they had hemorrhaging and a lot of bleeding, and they also had breakdown of their membranes.
00:28:24.000 And when I read that, I thought, well, gosh, these people haven't died from the infection.
00:28:27.000 They've died from their body's reaction to the infection because I was very interested and had been treating mast cell activation syndrome for about five years by then.
00:28:39.000 And all of those things that were described in the lungs are as a result of the cytokine storm, which comes from the mast cells.
00:28:48.000 So, people who have this propensity to have overreactive mast cells will produce all these cytokines, which can get so bad that actually it can cause inflammation and ultimately death.
00:29:00.000 So, my feeling was: right, so if this is the mast cell activation, and it's 20% of the population have got mast cell activation, and it was about 20% of the population who struggled with COVID, the others just sort of got over it quite quickly.
00:29:16.000 And so, I thought, well, let's treat them for the mast cell activation.
00:29:20.000 So, when patients came to me and said, What can I do?
00:29:23.000 I've got COVID and my family have all got better, and I'm just getting worse and worse and worse.
00:29:27.000 I said, Right, okay, we're going to give you the things I would give for MCAS, which is antihistamines that you can buy over the counter four times a day, not once a day, like it says on the box, but four times a day, and magnesium and zinc, and selenium, and vitamin D and vitamin C, and quercetin, which is a mast cell stabilizer.
00:29:47.000 And do you know, Russell, they stopped coughing within as fast as four hours in some cases.
00:29:56.000 Four to six, eight hours, they'd stop coughing because the inflammation in their lungs would go down.
00:30:01.000 And I treated about 100 patients like that.
00:30:05.000 And then, a colleague, a dear friend, he's become a dear friend now.
00:30:08.000 I didn't know him then in South Africa, he came to the same conclusion I did.
00:30:17.000 He was a GP, so he was seeing many more cases.
00:30:21.000 And he has treated 14,000 patients in the same way.
00:30:25.000 And none of his patients needed oxygen or went to hospital or died.
00:30:30.000 So, we were on the right track.
00:30:32.000 Did you try to communicate any of these early successes?
00:30:37.000 I certainly did.
00:30:38.000 I got very excited.
00:30:40.000 And this was when I was really very naive and blissfully unaware of what was going on in the world.
00:30:47.000 And I emailed Matt Hancock.
00:30:50.000 I emailed Chris Whitty.
00:30:53.000 I sent a message to number 10 Downing Street.
00:30:56.000 I also contacted the chairman of the Royal College of GPs.
00:31:04.000 And I really thought, I honestly thought that my phone would be red hot.
00:31:10.000 And I didn't get a single call.
00:31:13.000 So, Matt Hancock was the head of British Health, the British Governmental Department of Health at that time.
00:31:18.000 Chris Whitty is the British equivalent of Anthony Fauci.
00:31:23.000 And so far from welcoming your, you know, not anecdotal, because you've got, I guess, a set of 100 people and the corroborative support of your colleague over there in South Africa, although I'm not sure if you had that at that time.
00:31:36.000 Nevertheless, it's certainly an interesting area of inquiry.
00:31:40.000 But your findings and your experience as a physician were ignored.
00:31:46.000 So when, like, it's interesting to hear names like Matt Hancock and Chris Witty, and particularly as I sort of primarily operate out of the United States of America, but these now are sort of ghoulish phantoms out of the pandemic era who occupy the same sort of psychological territory as a character like Anthony Fauci, who marched into the pandemic era with a great deal of authority, with the sort of bombastic statement, I am science being perhaps the epicenter of that entire performance and phenomena.
00:32:16.000 And now is regarded by a lot of people as, if not a charlatan, a kind of paid for, almost pharmacological assassin whose support of DARPA and pre-knowledge of the Wuhan experiments with mRNA technology,
00:32:32.000 his relationship to HIV meds in the 80s, as well as a whole raft of royalty scandals while at the CDC and NIH make him a kind of in many circles, he's regarded, at least in many circles, as a villainous figure.
00:32:49.000 Now, Hancock is kind of a goon, and Chris Witty, I mean, everything in British is in Britain, our country, kind of, especially when we spend a lot of time in America, seems a bit carry-on and slightly ridiculous.
00:33:01.000 But the corruption is the same.
00:33:04.000 The deception is the same.
00:33:07.000 When did your bafflement at your inquiry being ignored, and I'm assuming that it did, blossom into skepticism, cynicism, and doubt?
00:33:23.000 And where are in 2026?
00:33:25.000 Let's face it, which is where we are now.
00:33:28.000 What do you feel was going on?
00:33:30.000 What are we talking about?
00:33:31.000 Ineptitude or something worse?
00:33:34.000 Before we move on to some of the solutions that you propose and practiced.
00:33:40.000 Much worse.
00:33:41.000 Much worse than ineptitude and incompetence.
00:33:45.000 Planned, organized.
00:33:49.000 They had a sort of pandemic rehearsal in September 2019.
00:33:57.000 And there is evidence that the so-called vaccines, which were actually gene therapy and were pretty nasty injections, had been sort of pre-ordered and organized way in advance.
00:34:12.000 So I think the whole thing was planned and orchestrated.
00:34:15.000 And there are various text messages that have come to light from Matt Hancock with various other people saying we've got to scare the pants off them more because not enough people are having the vaccines.
00:34:26.000 And so let's up the ante please, you know, in the evening standard, make it more scary.
00:34:32.000 And of course, if you create a fear, big fear in people in a population, then you can brainwash people very easily and cause confusion.
00:34:43.000 And if people are confused, even the most discerning of minds can make the wrong decision or use the wrong judgment, really.
00:34:54.000 And, you know, so, yeah, the GMC that I started then speaking out when I realized the malfeasance of what was going on, only because what I was seeing in my clinics was so terrible.
00:35:06.000 You know, I was starting to see the evidence of the toxicity of the spike protein, which is what the injections make the body make.
00:35:15.000 I was starting to see the fallout from that, you know, that people were having heart attacks and strokes and myocarditis.
00:35:21.000 They were having blood clots, pulmonary emboli.
00:35:24.000 There were turbo cancers coming along.
00:35:26.000 And everyone, every patient, Russell, was telling me about their family and friends and loved ones who suddenly died or neighbors.
00:35:34.000 One lady, she came home from work to find her builder, her 28-year-old builder, dead on the driveway.
00:35:42.000 It just, you know, this sort of thing was happening all the time.
00:35:44.000 It was horrendous.
00:35:46.000 And I was doing a deep dive into all the sort of medical reports and became very aware of what was going on.
00:35:55.000 So I started to speak out.
00:35:56.000 And I actually spoke out on GB News, as well as treating my patients and getting experience and successes with them.
00:36:04.000 I spoke out on GB News in January 2023 and in February 2023.
00:36:11.000 And a few days later, I get a letter from the GMC and they attacked me.
00:36:17.000 And yet everything I had said was absolutely true on the television.
00:36:22.000 I talked about the MHRA public assessment report, which everyone can see it's in the public domain.
00:36:29.000 And on pages 16 to 21, they did not do any safety data at all.
00:36:35.000 And it just gave them a sort of exemption from safety data.
00:36:40.000 So it said fertility studies, non-done, carcinogenicity studies, not done, toxicity studies not done, biodistribution studies to see where it went in the body, not done.
00:36:53.000 Pharmacokinetics to see if your body can clear it.
00:36:56.000 Now, that's an important one, very important point, which we'll come to in a minute, not done.
00:37:01.000 And then, you know, I pointed this out on television.
00:37:05.000 And then lo and behold, a few days later, I get an email from the GMC attacking me.
00:37:10.000 And, you know, and they attacked me for speaking out and for treating my patients.
00:37:17.000 And it was a completely vexatious complaint, not from a patient, but from a colleague.
00:37:24.000 And, you know, it caused, it was, I felt absolutely morally obliged to speak out and to try and warn people not to have any more of these injections.
00:37:39.000 Because I thought, no matter how much they attack me, if it saves one pregnant woman from going and having it, or one young person thinking, oh, I want to go on holiday, I'll go and have it.
00:37:51.000 And it stops them, then maybe I would have saved a few lives and it was worth it.
00:37:57.000 But anyway, it was, you know, they eventually dropped the case, but 18 months later.
00:38:02.000 So it was pretty hellish.
00:38:04.000 So the General Medical Council had a case against you for what, malpractice?
00:38:09.000 Or what was the case against the potentially for malpractice?
00:38:18.000 They said that I had not followed the NHS or NICE guidelines for treating the vaccine injured.
00:38:28.000 But the interesting thing is there are no guidelines for treating the vaccine injured, but they accused me of not following them.
00:38:34.000 They said that I was working outside of my area of expertise because I was a menopause specialist and I shouldn't be seeing people with long COVID or vaccine injury.
00:38:44.000 They said that I was using ivermectin out of license and that that was the wrong thing to do, even though there was no right thing to do as far as they were concerned.
00:38:55.000 What else did they say?
00:38:57.000 They said that a charge that was dropped was that I was bringing the vaccines into disrepute and spreading misinformation.
00:39:07.000 But they dropped that one.
00:39:10.000 How did you feel being falsely accused of those things?
00:39:15.000 I have no experience of being falsely accused of anything myself to draw upon.
00:39:20.000 So what's that like to be falsely accused of things because you've spoken out against powerful interests?
00:39:27.000 Firstly, what was it like for you personally?
00:39:30.000 And yeah, start there, please.
00:39:34.000 Okay, yeah.
00:39:35.000 So it was shocking, actually.
00:39:38.000 It was really disappointing.
00:39:39.000 I wasn't surprised because by then I had seen their form.
00:39:44.000 I knew that they were going after colleagues.
00:39:46.000 Anyone who spoke out was being attacked, basically.
00:39:50.000 And so I wasn't surprised.
00:39:53.000 I thought it probably was a matter of time before they did it.
00:39:56.000 But I felt it was a great injustice because I'd been qualified since 83.
00:40:02.000 So by then I had been qualified like 41 years.
00:40:05.000 I'd never had a complaint against me.
00:40:08.000 And I'd worked so hard, always doing my best for my patients.
00:40:12.000 I was also one of the only people, one of the few people, not only people, few people who was actually really helping this group of people, patients, listening to them, taking them seriously, helping them with long COVID, helping the vaccine injured, doing some really good work, and then to be attacked for doing the very thing that they tell you to do, which is to be honest.
00:40:36.000 And it's your duty as a doctor to speak out if you see something dangerous or that the harm is being done to patients.
00:40:43.000 It's your duty to speak out.
00:40:44.000 And then when I did that, I was attacked because, of course, they don't like whistleblowers, you know, so they pay it all lip service and then they want you just to be quiet and shut up.
00:40:56.000 So they are as corrupt as the rest of them.
00:40:59.000 In my experience, this is generally practiced across bureaucracies and the bureaucracy itself essentially is a dehumanized rationalism, systems of logic, logic decoupled from spirit, I suppose, is how I might regard a bureaucracy.
00:41:20.000 Bureaucracy is a wonderful tool for asserting control, impeding progress, justifying dark power and making dark power seem somehow sanitary, clinical and anodyne.
00:41:33.000 Bureaucracy is a very, very important evil.
00:41:36.000 In the sort of like long forgotten days of the 80s, the condemnation and critique leveled at Eastern bloc nations and the great entity behind the Iron Curtain was that it was a bureaucracy, that it was dehumanizing, that it was state power.
00:41:51.000 But it's very interesting to see how these bureaucracies operate expertly.
00:41:55.000 And I suppose the pandemic gave us an opportunity to see just how similar a sort of state communist country like China is in practice to Italy, the UK, the United States, when it comes to the serious business of being able to assert control, manage information, shut down dissent and dissidents, destroy enemies.
00:42:16.000 When it comes to the truly important stuff, it's pretty plain that bureaucracy is the interstitial piece of material that means that capitalism, communism, all just window dressing, because what you have are a set of interests that are very difficult to reach, influence and impact.
00:42:34.000 And indeed, I believe the one thing that was kind of heartening and at least peculiar about the pandemic was that there was pushback because it seemed that whether it was medical professionals like you or people operating within media, people, perhaps because of their own pathology or their own spirit, depends on what diagnostic tool you want to apply, were inclined to oppose it.
00:43:00.000 Like you initially, like optimistically, like those people that invent, like I heard that, like, when was it James Edison?
00:43:09.000 Like, when like they were, when it was it James Edison, Thomas Edison, when he first invented a light bulb, it's like, oh, this thing, like, we can make it last six months.
00:43:17.000 Well, that's just fantastic.
00:43:19.000 Why don't you come in here for a moment?
00:43:22.000 Oh, like, we've got an engine that works on water.
00:43:24.000 You know, when people earnestly and sincerely discover a solution, it's these kind of apparently well-intentioned regulatory bodies and bureaucracies that enclose parasitically on any solution.
00:43:41.000 And I only am laboring this point because I believe that the solution lies in the ending of these representative bodies, that the localization and directness of democracy is everything.
00:43:57.000 If you don't have a democracy that you can participate in in a way that you appreciate and understand and that is almost immediately impactful, then you don't have a democracy.
00:44:07.000 You're participating in a kind of theater.
00:44:10.000 It's another one of the things that the pandemic showed us.
00:44:13.000 And by the way, I'm assuming that none of your family, and in particular your youngest daughter there with that mast cell activation syndrome, didn't take any vaccines.
00:44:20.000 Would people with mast cell be at a particular risk?
00:44:24.000 And what is it about mast cell activation that and your knowledge of that that lent itself to insight when it comes to both COVID and you know and presumably treating people with spike protein problems?
00:44:39.000 So my daughters did not take the vaccine.
00:44:44.000 My son did because he wanted to travel and I was very upset by that.
00:44:50.000 I myself felt obliged to have two because I was told I couldn't see my patients if I didn't at the private hospitals that I was working at.
00:44:59.000 And because of my love for my patients and I felt an obligation to keep working, I also felt that there weren't very many of us helping long COVID patients, etc.
00:45:11.000 So I needed to do it.
00:45:14.000 And it caused me ill health and damaged my health, which was terrible.
00:45:20.000 But yeah, so we did.
00:45:24.000 But luckily, I suppose there's always a silver lining, isn't there?
00:45:28.000 And experiencing an adverse reaction myself and having clinics full of people with them made me very, very determined to find a solution and a way of clearing the spike protein from the body.
00:45:42.000 And in 2023, I discovered an incredible research project by an Italian team run by a civic society, a not-for-profit organization called the Zero Spike Project.
00:45:56.000 And they have been amazing and they've come up with the answer for everybody.
00:46:00.000 So it really is definitely a message of hope.
00:46:03.000 You know, they'd have been studying the COVID issue since 2020 and have written thousands of pages, documented thousands of pages of the toxicity of the spike protein and what it does in the body and how to help it recover.
00:46:23.000 And they have a remedy, which is amazing.
00:46:29.000 And I've seen it working in myself, first of all, and then in all my patients.
00:46:35.000 And it actually detoxifies and gets rid of this spike protein, which is really very, very toxic and is causing turbo cancers, myocarditis, et cetera.
00:46:47.000 Terrible.
00:46:47.000 Infertility.
00:46:49.000 Yes, because I've been thinking about that a lot.
00:46:53.000 That, of course, we're not going to get in the same way that we were lied to throughout the pandemic period, We continue to be lied to about the impact of both COVID, but also the vaccine.
00:47:06.000 And yeah, I sort of anecdotally at least understand that turbo cancers or it didn't even exist as a term, really, did it, before.
00:47:15.000 But now there is a thing called turbo cancers as well as mycotitis and pericarditis and those kind of things that seem to be concessions, but the infertility issue and the sudden death syndrome and those weird, awful white tubular blood clots and all of that stuff.
00:47:34.000 You're saying that, oh, yeah, that's my question.
00:47:37.000 Does augmented NAC, which is part of this solution that has emerged from the XeroSpike with whom you collaborate, I understand, is it effective both for people that have taken the vaccines or and additionally people that have still some impact from COVID?
00:47:57.000 Are those two separate strains?
00:48:00.000 I mean, is there a crossover?
00:48:01.000 Yeah, so they're all the spike protein.
00:48:04.000 You're absolutely right.
00:48:05.000 So if somebody has acute COVID, then they will have spike protein in them, including in their gut.
00:48:12.000 So they will have spike protein.
00:48:14.000 But the injections made our bodies make a stronger kind of spike protein.
00:48:21.000 So it's got, they added a new, they added an extra an extra section into it, which made it more, even more difficult for the body to clear it.
00:48:32.000 So because it's not a human protein, the body hasn't developed, evolved over thousands of years, a way of clearing it out.
00:48:39.000 So once it's made, it's in the body and that's it, which is why we're still seeing people so sick now who haven't had any injections since 2021.
00:48:51.000 But, you know, they're still getting the myocarditis now or the heart disease or the, you know, having a heart attack and keeling over or sudden death, etc.
00:49:00.000 Because this awful poison is still there.
00:49:04.000 And the but the XeroSpike project have come up with augmented NAC, which is the only thing in my experience that actually detoxifies the body from this from the protein and helps the body clear it out.
00:49:19.000 Because there was one of the things you noticed at the beginning, there was no pharmacokinetic, I've just learned that word off you, pharmacokinetic, there was no pharmacokinetic testing.
00:49:28.000 That means the consequences of the vaccine are ongoing and people are experiencing turbo cancers and myocarditis and infertility.
00:49:38.000 And are you saying that augmented NAC addresses any and all of those because they are all caused by the excessive manufacture of alien spike protein?
00:49:52.000 Exactly.
00:49:53.000 Exactly.
00:49:53.000 So the way that the injections worked was that they had a code basically.
00:50:00.000 The messenger RNA was a piece of ribbon which was coded for the production of this foreign, non-human, toxic, poisonous protein.
00:50:11.000 And it didn't stay in the arm.
00:50:14.000 They said it stayed in the arm and it would be gone after a couple of days.
00:50:17.000 It actually went all over the body, including through the blood-brain barrier, so into people's brains.
00:50:23.000 And it crossed the placenta, went into fetuses, etc.
00:50:29.000 And it went into previously healthy cells.
00:50:34.000 It took over the ribosomes, which is the protein making mechanism of the cells, and it commandeered it to make this horrible, poisonous spike protein.
00:50:46.000 So first of all, that ribosome is not now making the proteins that you need to keep your cell nice and healthy and everything in balance, right?
00:50:55.000 And instead, it's making this horrible toxic stuff, which it's just churning out.
00:51:00.000 Now, in, for example, a one dose of Pfizer, there were 13 billion pieces of this messenger RNA, which would make trillions of spike protein in the body through the ribosomes.
00:51:13.000 Trillions.
00:51:14.000 We also don't know how it switched off.
00:51:16.000 There's no switch-off mechanism.
00:51:19.000 So they didn't, because they didn't do any studies to look at the pharmacokinetics, et cetera, they didn't, there's no way of turning this off.
00:51:26.000 Now, in some people, it might just peter out.
00:51:28.000 Maybe the body gets rid of those cells that have got it in there.
00:51:31.000 We don't know.
00:51:32.000 We don't know.
00:51:33.000 So people are full of spike protein.
00:51:35.000 And the pathologists were told not to stain any pathology samples they took with the one dye that would actually show them spike protein.
00:51:48.000 So, of course, there are always some really good people who will do what they know is right.
00:51:53.000 And they will stain it with this stain.
00:51:55.000 And they found that the tissues were full of spike protein.
00:51:59.000 In fact, there was one German pathologist who examined a, I think he was a 28-year-old man who had died 40 days after having Pfizer.
00:52:14.000 And he looked at the testicles and instead of finding sperm in the testicles, it was just all spike protein.
00:52:20.000 Oh my God, that's a really disgusting, barbaric, monstrous idea.
00:52:26.000 The only way I'm getting listening to you is that nothing like the kind of reckoning that's required has been undertaken.
00:52:33.000 Nothing like it, nothing like it.
00:52:35.000 And the world moves so quickly and information moves so quickly and people are so either reluctant or unable to take on the magnitude.
00:52:43.000 It's almost like Goebbels is, or at least the mad maxim attributed to Goebbels, the bigger the lie, the more people will believe it.
00:52:50.000 It's just so sort of inconceivably dark and disgusting that you're almost like, oh, I can't bother to sleep with that.
00:52:57.000 It's too much.
00:52:58.000 I'm just going to look out the window or watch football.
00:53:02.000 It's too kind of demanding in its evil, but it is a demand and it's one that we must reconcile ourselves with.
00:53:10.000 When you're describing how hideous and sort of kooky, peculiar, mendacious and perverse those injections sound, I can't even conceive, doctor, of what the science was.
00:53:25.000 What was the counter argument?
00:53:26.000 What was it?
00:53:27.000 This is great because what will happen is the spike protein goes into your body and then you'll be generating these spiked proteins and I'll tell you what they'll do is they will, what was their argument for what it was doing?
00:53:39.000 They were saying that by producing the spike protein, you're going to stimulate your antibodies so that next time you come across the spike protein from an infection, your body's going to go, oh, I recognize this.
00:53:52.000 And your antibody response will be rapid and effective.
00:53:56.000 But it doesn't make sense, does it?
00:53:58.000 I mean, it really doesn't make sense.
00:53:59.000 If the worst part of the infection was the spike protein, why the hell would you make people's bodies make the spike protein?
00:54:06.000 It's not rocket science to see that it's going to be, you know, causing all the pathology that the infection caused, but much worse because you've got much more of it.
00:54:16.000 You know, instead of 10,000 bits of spike protein from the infection, you've got trillions, literally trillions being made in your brain, in your heart, in your lungs, everywhere.
00:54:27.000 And it's no great surprise that there's been so many ill people.
00:54:30.000 And my clinic is full of people who are really suffering.
00:54:36.000 It's absolutely heartbreaking.
00:54:39.000 Yes, because I suppose the nature of gene therapy is that it is has a kind of anatomical ubiquity and multivalent application.
00:54:52.000 You can go in there and do whatever it wants.
00:54:55.000 This is kind of terrifying.
00:54:57.000 All right.
00:54:58.000 So tell me then more, please, about the solution.
00:55:01.000 Are you saying that the research of ZeroSpike, that Italian non-profit organization, has generated what a kind of a supplement?
00:55:13.000 What is augmented NAC?
00:55:15.000 How do people take it?
00:55:17.000 Where do they get it?
00:55:18.000 What does it look like?
00:55:19.000 How is it packaged?
00:55:20.000 Is it expensive?
00:55:21.000 Are you prescribing it to your patients?
00:55:24.000 What kind of results are there?
00:55:26.000 Are there papers now on its efficacy?
00:55:29.000 Yeah, so many questions.
00:55:31.000 So you can probably diagnose me while we're having this conversation.
00:55:39.000 I'm going to drink a whole jar of the stuff.
00:55:43.000 Okay, so the spike protein is the toxic enemy, and the body cannot clear it as it is.
00:55:53.000 It's very, very powerful.
00:55:56.000 It's a very complex protein.
00:55:59.000 And they realized that they needed to find something that would interact with it and break it up.
00:56:05.000 And they really wanted to find a supplement because they didn't want people to have to get a prescription from a doctor.
00:56:11.000 Also, getting prescribed drugs into different countries, you know, licensed drugs, getting the license, et cetera, et cetera, would take years.
00:56:19.000 And we haven't got years.
00:56:21.000 We've got to act swiftly now because people are under attack internally, you know, so we've got to try and help them.
00:56:29.000 And so they took actually over 200 supplements and they mixed them with the spike protein, which you can buy on the internet for research purposes.
00:56:38.000 And they looked under their electron microscope at the spike protein and how it behaved with these various different supplements.
00:56:46.000 And they found that the NAC, which is a fantastic supplement to take, was the only one that weakened the supplement, the spike protein a little bit.
00:56:56.000 But it was just weakening a few of the bonds within the protein, maybe breaking up 2% of the structure, or even maybe maximum 12% of the structure.
00:57:07.000 But then the structure would reform.
00:57:09.000 They were luckily working with a quantum physicist.
00:57:13.000 And I don't know if you know very much about quantum physics, but I think it's the future.
00:57:17.000 I've completely understood it.
00:57:19.000 I understand all of it.
00:57:20.000 I've got some advanced ideas.
00:57:22.000 Now, the only thing I know about quantum physics is if you think you've understood it, then you really haven't understood it.
00:57:27.000 I've looked into double slit theory and quantum entanglement, and I never understand how these ideas are applicable.
00:57:35.000 And I thought it was rather charming that you said luckily they had a quantum physicist, like one was just wandering around like a troubadour, and they snatched him by his bodkin and dragged him in.
00:57:48.000 What is the contribution of quantum physicists, Doc?
00:57:51.000 Well, okay, so if you imagine that you can give something coherence, there's a principle in quantum physics of coherence.
00:58:01.000 And things gain coherence.
00:58:05.000 So, for example, if you took a whole load of pendulum clocks, identical pendulum clocks, and you put them on a wall and you set them off at different rates so that their swing was in a different position for each one, eventually they would all swing together in the same time.
00:58:22.000 Okay, so they're affecting each other, even though they're just independent on the wall.
00:58:27.000 And this is coherence.
00:58:28.000 Okay.
00:58:29.000 So there's another example of coherence, which is really interesting.
00:58:33.000 If you took a hundred, if you took a monkey and it learnt how to use a tool, a new tool to open a nut or something, okay, on one island, and it would teach the other monkeys how to do it.
00:58:46.000 Once 100 monkeys know how to do it, all the monkeys in the world would know how to do it.
00:58:52.000 Yes, there's some kind of coherence that suggests a kind of mycelium network of consciousness, a sort of monkey-mycelium network of monkey consciousness, which in a sense, I suppose, perhaps one of the fundamental ideas of quantum physics is that our conception and perception of individual material-based reality cannot accommodate, i.e., quantum entanglement and the reversal of polarity in electrons.
00:59:18.000 But even in that sort of the rather more delightful parable that you've just told us, it affects there's a point where consciousness is transmitting in ways that are non-linear and sensorially difficult to corroborate and appreciate.
00:59:37.000 Yeah, it's on a grid.
00:59:38.000 We're all on a grid.
00:59:39.000 So, so though, if you have, if you take the molecules in the NAC and you make them all absolutely have coherence and line up exactly the same way, then you give them more power.
00:59:53.000 So, it's a little bit like the difference between a torch and a laser beam.
00:59:58.000 So, the torch has got photons of light coming out, a little bit disheveled, a little bit sort of random, and you can see it shines light into the room or whatever, it's great.
01:00:08.000 But if you make those photons of light waves absolutely in synchronicity, okay, you give them synchronicity, then it becomes a laser beam and it's much more powerful and it goes much further and so on.
01:00:22.000 And it can do other things.
01:00:23.000 You can do all sorts of things with a laser beam, which you can't do with photons of light, but essentially it's still light.
01:00:29.000 So, the molecules in the NAC were put into a machine to make them all line up to give them coherence and synchronicity.
01:00:38.000 And then, when they put that molecule with the spike protein, they were so excited because they could see it enter the molecule and then split it up apart like an explosion into multiple little pieces that the liver can then clear out.
01:00:55.000 So, then you can clear it out of the body.
01:00:58.000 And it is amazing.
01:01:00.000 It's amazing.
01:01:02.000 I wonder why that co-opted a urine.
01:01:05.000 Sorry.
01:01:06.000 Well, thank you for explaining this in such a simple way for me.
01:01:09.000 And I hope that you haven't had to mentally drop down several gears into a kind of remedial level that you reserve for idiots.
01:01:17.000 And like sometimes in your practice, you're like, oh gosh, this patient doesn't understand.
01:01:21.000 I'm going to have to do something with finger puppets.
01:01:23.000 I hope we're not at that level.
01:01:25.000 But I was just reflecting on and contemplating why that level of cohesion would make it effective.
01:01:33.000 I'm trying to envisage a molecular reality.
01:01:37.000 And I wonder why that level of cohesion makes it effective against the spike protein.
01:01:43.000 And I also wonder what that machine's actually doing that's aligning those particles.
01:01:49.000 It's what I imagine, and this is just my interpretation, okay?
01:01:54.000 Is that if some of the molecules could weaken five or six particular bonds within the spike protein, but they could do it sort of weakly, if you had all of the molecules in that NAC attacking those five parts of the spike protein, that's much more powerful.
01:02:16.000 The weapon has become much more powerful.
01:02:18.000 And so it works.
01:02:19.000 It's stronger.
01:02:20.000 It's just basically stronger.
01:02:22.000 And we are all vibrational, and all the molecules for everything is vibration.
01:02:29.000 And somehow they've got them to vibrate all in the same way so that it becomes powerful.
01:02:33.000 It's a little bit like if you have some soldiers going across a bridge, you don't want them to walk in a march because they could collapse the bridge.
01:02:46.000 But if they walked just, you know, willy-nilly across, ambling across, they'd be all right.
01:02:51.000 But if they march across, that could set up a problem for the bridge and make it collapse.
01:02:59.000 I'm not very good at explaining that maybe.
01:03:02.000 You've done some wonderful analogies there.
01:03:04.000 And I'm like mentally circulating or circuiting ideas in scripture, i.e. that vibration precedes light in Genesis.
01:03:19.000 And I'm trying to work out the relationship between vibration and light.
01:03:23.000 And there's literally no reason why I will be able to do that.
01:03:27.000 And it's on no scientific basis at all, this inquiry.
01:03:31.000 I'm just inside my mind thinking about things like when thine eye is true, then the whole body is full of light.
01:03:37.000 I'm thinking of that.
01:03:38.000 And I'm thinking, I know that all of this leads to Christ.
01:03:43.000 I know that this leads to when you are able to abnegate self, when you're able to make yourself a conductor, a kind of coherence is achieved because you become part of the absolute.
01:03:54.000 I enjoy your image of a grid, because I reckon it helps me to understand that there is an interwoven quality.
01:04:03.000 But the etymology of the commonly used word weird is, perhaps you know, Celtic and was initially originally spelt with a Y.
01:04:13.000 And it was understood by the Celtic mind, at least this is what I am told, to be an invisible interconnecting network via which all things are connected.
01:04:25.000 And I suppose really, the idea of God the Father is absolute authority outside of time.
01:04:34.000 And when I consider time to be entropy, really, that molecules have a tendency to move apart over time.
01:04:45.000 Really, it's not a measurable commodity.
01:04:49.000 When time is scrutinized, unusual things seem to happen.
01:04:55.000 And I reckon that the reason that I've paused to think about all of this is because, well, you know, when we're looking at the pandemic period and the level of deception practiced across the world's population, it is truly unprecedented.
01:05:15.000 And as I mentioned earlier, at least a kind of informal global resistance emerged.
01:05:22.000 It's protein yet.
01:05:25.000 And within it, there are sort of countless units and causes.
01:05:31.000 But what I'm particularly evangelical about is ensuring that people don't allow the kind of mist to sort of dissipate and part and forget that something extraordinarily dark was practiced against us.
01:05:50.000 And whether it's a sort of Pulchianella character, like a comedia dell'Arte villain like Fauci, who I see as a sort of really sort of gnomish, chuckling, malign guy, or the kind of goonish stick figures that inhabit British politics, Chris Witty, that sort of lollipop of a man looming about, or Matt Hancock, that bag of adultery.
01:06:15.000 You know, like when I sort of see these ninnies, these figures that occupy the world stage, I pray that they are swept aside by a sort of a new flood, a new deluge.
01:06:26.000 And I reckon it's just because you were telling the truth a lot, and then you mentioned quantum physics and a lot of things that sounded like a particle accelerator.
01:06:34.000 And my mind whizzed off in all sorts of directions.
01:06:36.000 But what I'd like to return our shared attention to now, Doctor, is the possibility perhaps of making available these things.
01:06:45.000 So what is your what's your deal?
01:06:48.000 Like, don't you, you or they and you make this and can we, should we, ought we, dare we distribute it?
01:06:57.000 So they, they make it, they make it.
01:06:59.000 Um, and um, and it's very, very effective.
01:07:03.000 Um, the recommendation is that you take one three times a day for three months and then take one a day forever.
01:07:11.000 Okay, so the one a day, one three times, yes, forever.
01:07:16.000 Forever, because some people will continue to make the spike protein forever because the messenger RNA will have also gone into their changed their DNA basically so that they will be programmed to make this spike protein.
01:07:31.000 So, therefore, it's very important to stay on top of it.
01:07:34.000 Also, there's something called shedding.
01:07:35.000 I don't know if you've come across that, Russell.
01:07:37.000 Shedding, the prospect of shedding?
01:07:39.000 No.
01:07:40.000 So, it's been shown that people who go and have boosters, when they are for at least 18 weeks and probably longer after they've had the booster, the spike protein is spread to other people through their spit, their breath, their saliva.
01:08:01.000 Yes.
01:08:03.000 Breath and spit and semen, all full of spike protein.
01:08:07.000 I'm not going to live in that world, doctor.
01:08:09.000 So, honestly, me, I've had no injections, but I could get it out of other people's spit and breath and semen.
01:08:16.000 Wow.
01:08:20.000 So, therefore, the recommendation is one forever.
01:08:23.000 And if I go on an airplane, for example, I will take one three times a day again because you just bet your bottom dollar that there'll be people on that plane who've just had a booster recently and the air is circulating around.
01:08:34.000 Or if I go to a conference or the tube or the train or something, I always up my doses, you know.
01:08:42.000 But it's amazing.
01:08:43.000 And I have seen some absolutely miraculous improvements.
01:08:48.000 And it's really worth people looking at zerospike.org at the testimonials where you will see many patients describing how ill they were and then how quickly the spike protein detox worked for them with the augmented NAC.
01:09:02.000 And these will be people, just keep in mind that these will be people who will have tried so many other detoxification, you know, methods and will have got nowhere with them.
01:09:12.000 And then they take the augmented NAC and they are, you know, detoxified brilliantly.
01:09:18.000 So it's really worth having a look at those.
01:09:20.000 The only place you can get it is from the augmented NAC.com.
01:09:26.000 Hey, do you estimate that a lot of people are suffering from like is it even possible to speculate how many people might be suffering any one of these problems as a result?
01:09:38.000 I mean, it could be everybody is, couldn't it, if it if it's flying around an airborne?
01:09:44.000 Yeah, we think that ultimately everyone will succumb.
01:09:49.000 That was probably the intention.
01:09:51.000 If you speak to, yes, I suspect it was.
01:09:55.000 Well, for sure it was, yeah.
01:09:57.000 Population control, what's the point?
01:09:59.000 I mean, like, how I've started to think, I've been in this game a little while now, weary old, bedraggled thing I've become.
01:10:05.000 What I tend to look at is the result and then I go, well, that was probably the intention then.
01:10:11.000 So if the intention is, if it's created excess deaths, which it's widely believed to have done, then perhaps population control, an experiment for how quickly the authoritarian measures can be practiced.
01:10:26.000 Is that what you think?
01:10:28.000 I think that they've weakened everybody.
01:10:32.000 Everyone, there's so many sick people, people who were really fit and healthy have either completely fallen off their perch and died, or so many of them are ill, you know, and they were previously thriving and now they can't work or they can't concentrate, they can't hold down a job and so on.
01:10:51.000 So, sick people, have you got somebody there?
01:10:53.000 Well, yeah, I'm looking at Jake, my producer.
01:10:56.000 He's very fragile.
01:10:58.000 His whole exercise regimen is really for people that are paralyzed.
01:11:03.000 It's like sort of like Joseph Pilates developing something in a bed.
01:11:08.000 So, I was thinking, like, when we get this, can we do some sort of special thing?
01:11:11.000 We're going to put the let's strap them on the screen now with augmented NAC.
01:11:16.000 There's a link to it there.
01:11:17.000 We should set up something.
01:11:18.000 Don't you think we should set something up so when people buy it for using our code?
01:11:22.000 Yeah, yeah, we could definitely, definitely do that.
01:11:25.000 I'm sure they would.
01:11:27.000 We should start an armed militia across the UK that starts to fight back against this endless corruption and stupidity.
01:11:35.000 Every penny will be used to create an armed militia across the UK.
01:11:39.000 People are not going to pay their taxes anymore.
01:11:42.000 People are not going to pay their mortgages anymore.
01:11:44.000 We're going to bring about radical change.
01:11:46.000 We're going to fight them where it hurts.
01:11:48.000 Money and what appeared to be weird, bizarre, occultist ceremonies.
01:11:51.000 Now, we'll put let's put a link on the screen now and let's put a have a special code for it, which definitely sounds like it's necessary.
01:11:58.000 And certainly for Jake, my producer and partner over there, he needs it real bad.
01:12:02.000 Well, I've never seen anyone need anything.
01:12:05.000 And I'd like to take some as well.
01:12:07.000 Doc, how do you know?
01:12:08.000 How do you know Jerome?
01:12:10.000 Jerome Paul Bell, my friend who introduced us.
01:12:14.000 So, well, he, a mutual friend, Dr. Asim Molhotra, who is a cardiologist who's been speaking out as well, he knows both of us.
01:12:24.000 And he, Asim texted me and said, Jerome Propeller would like to meet you and chat with you because he's very interested in your work.
01:12:32.000 So I said, Yeah, he said, Can I give him your number?
01:12:35.000 I said, Yes, of course.
01:12:36.000 So then after Christmas, Jerome and I met up and we were very interested in what each other were doing because he's an extraordinary guy, isn't he?
01:12:44.000 He's great.
01:12:45.000 Did he treat you?
01:12:46.000 He's a very strange genius.
01:12:47.000 I love Jerome a great deal, actually.
01:12:49.000 I know Asim.
01:12:50.000 Asim's a wonderful man.
01:12:51.000 I love him.
01:12:52.000 Jerome is a close friend of mine and has been for a while.
01:12:55.000 Did you get treated by him, Doctor?
01:12:57.000 Yes, I did.
01:12:58.000 I did.
01:12:59.000 It was great.
01:13:00.000 I did.
01:13:01.000 And he told me that he was friends with you, best friends with you, he said.
01:13:06.000 And he was very waxing lyrical about you and everything.
01:13:10.000 And the next thing I know, he said, oh, I talked to Russell about you and perhaps you could have a chat.
01:13:17.000 He was extraordinarily passionate about these NAC, the augmented NAC, and he believes it's very, very important and significant, and people need it.
01:13:26.000 Of course, Dr. Jerome is treating people all the time, he says, with various forms of vaccine injury.
01:13:32.000 And he was one of the first people that told me that it was migrating and airborne or shedding.
01:13:38.000 I don't like that phrase.
01:13:39.000 I don't like the phrase shedding.
01:13:40.000 I don't like the idea of it sloughing off in great wobbly globules and getting down on people's trachea.
01:13:49.000 It's awful.
01:13:50.000 Yeah, so Jerome told me that we should communicate.
01:13:52.000 You know, he's unusual.
01:13:54.000 He's a very, very brilliant person.
01:13:56.000 He's not normal, is he?
01:13:58.000 He's a genius, I would say.
01:14:00.000 But he's, it's a not-for-profit organization who have developed this.
01:14:09.000 And it's from a civic society.
01:14:12.000 So they are.
01:14:14.000 So it's.
01:14:16.000 I mean, I know what not-for-profit means, but civic society.
01:14:20.000 So it was formed in 2020 to protect Italians who are being attacked by the state for various reasons.
01:14:29.000 So, for example, they were helping defend Italians in court who had lost their job because they refused the jabs and et cetera.
01:14:40.000 So, they were really sort of standing up for the man in the street.
01:14:44.000 And it was formed by some entrepreneurs who didn't want to make money out of all of this, but wanted to, for the better good, really wanted to do it to help people.
01:14:54.000 And I think they did a fantastic job.
01:14:59.000 They were treating people with acute COVID.
01:15:01.000 They had clinics for that.
01:15:05.000 And as I say, they were spending a lot of money developing the augmented NAC, looking, trying to find a solution, a remedy.
01:15:13.000 And they have, which is the great news.
01:15:15.000 But it's so important.
01:15:17.000 And thank you so much for having me on because it's so important that we get this message out to as many people as possible.
01:15:26.000 Because if you speak to somebody like Professor Anger Stahl Gleash, who is an oncologist from St. George's Hospital in London, he's been very vocal speaking out about saying all the cancer cases they're seeing.
01:15:40.000 There's an absolute, he calls it a tsunami of cancer from the spike protein.
01:15:45.000 And he says he thinks this is just the beginning.
01:15:50.000 So, you know, I feel that we're all on a crusade to detoxify as many people as we possibly can as quickly as we possibly can.
01:16:01.000 We are, aren't we?
01:16:02.000 That is what we're supposed to do.
01:16:04.000 All right.
01:16:05.000 Okay.
01:16:05.000 Well, I'll make sure that we promote this widely.
01:16:08.000 If you've been affected, let us know in the comments and chat if you think that you're suffering from some ongoing vaccine injury.
01:16:13.000 Here's a link in the description so you can acquire this augmented NAC.
01:16:16.000 Isn't it encouraging to learn that it's not-for-profit, however much I may try to turn it into some sort of crazy, balmy enterprise?
01:16:24.000 It's not happening.
01:16:25.000 It's a not-for-profit civic Italian society are our Italian cousins.
01:16:29.000 What an extraordinary bunch they are.
01:16:31.000 But if you're suffering from, well, certainly any of the issues we've discussed, it sounds like one of the solutions to ridding yourself of this vile and intrepid condition is augmented NAC.
01:16:46.000 Doctor, thanks for your excellent work.
01:16:49.000 Thank you for being a science and medical educator.
01:16:53.000 Thanks for your dedication in enduring those attacks.
01:16:56.000 And thanks in particular for your patience with me and my long-winded, clumsy questions.
01:17:02.000 I really appreciate your time and dedication.
01:17:06.000 Oh, it's a great pleasure, Russell.
01:17:08.000 And I would be delighted to give people information about marcel activation syndrome as well.
01:17:14.000 So if they look at my website, which is drtinapeers.com or menopauseconsultancy.co.uk, there's a lot of information on there for people with marcel activation, long COVID, and that applies to vaccine injury too, because we didn't have time to go into that, but it's all very much linked.
01:17:35.000 Doctor, right now the screen is smothered with details of how to contact Dr. Tina Piers.
01:17:42.000 And did you say about PiersInstitute.org?
01:17:47.000 Have a look at that.
01:17:49.000 You're doing some extraordinary things, aren't you?
01:17:51.000 Do you know who I should introduce you to?
01:17:53.000 It's Tony Lyons, who runs the Maha movement that through activism and communication support the ongoing work of Secretary Kennedy and Dr. Oz and a variety of other political leaders, I suppose is what you'd have to describe them as.
01:18:15.000 But it seems like a bunch of people that you should meet, Doctor.
01:18:19.000 Oh, maybe.
01:18:20.000 We'll see.
01:18:22.000 Yes.
01:18:23.000 Okay.
01:18:24.000 Hey, thank you very much.
01:18:26.000 And please don't hesitate to take advantage of Dr. Piers' excellent work.
01:18:31.000 And if you are being troubled by any of the conditions that we've just described, it sounds like thankfully there is a solution.
01:18:37.000 How often do we end podcasts with something as positive as that?
01:18:41.000 Thank you, Dr. Tina Piers, for joining us today.
01:18:44.000 And thank you for joining us wherever you are.
01:18:47.000 God bless you.
01:18:49.000 Take care.
01:18:49.000 You too.
01:18:50.000 Bye.
01:18:51.000 Okay, to acquire your augmented NSE, click the link in the description and support Dr. Tina's work in these various ways.
01:18:59.000 Thanks very much for joining us.
01:19:00.000 We'll be back, of course, on Wednesday.
01:19:04.000 Not for more of the same, but for more of the different.
01:19:06.000 Until then, if you can, stay Free