Best of the Program | Guests: Dr. Zev Zelenko & Justin Haskins | 1⧸10⧸22
Episode Stats
Words per Minute
172.00037
Summary
Glenn Beck's new book, "The Great Reset" is out tomorrow, and it goes into a lot of the details on the new things going on at the CDC. Today, we talk to Dr. Zev Zelenko, who has a 99% survival rate for all of the people he has worked on over the last couple of years. And we have Jason Buttrell on as well, talking about all the crazy stuff going on in Kazakhstan.
Transcript
00:00:00.000
Today in the program, we talk about some of the new things going on at the CDC.
00:00:19.340
It's called The Great Reset, Joe Biden and the Rise of 21st Century Fascism.
00:00:28.780
If you don't know anything about it, you can go on the internet and find all sorts of stuff that's not true.
00:00:33.720
Or you can go to this book and find the stuff that's documented.
00:00:37.000
It's called Glenn Beck's The Great Reset, available at glennsnewbook.com.
00:00:40.820
We have Jason Buttrell on as well, talking about all the crazy stuff going on in Kazakhstan.
00:00:47.720
If you have any Stan-based country, I'm always there for it.
00:00:51.600
Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, all of them I'm there for.
00:00:57.280
You can subscribe and rate and review this podcast.
00:01:03.040
Also, Stu Does America, available by podcast as well.
00:01:06.300
We're going to be talking about some of the crazy things going on with the CDC
00:01:11.140
and how Joe Biden has completely let us down despite giving him trillions and trillions of dollars to solve this.
00:01:18.920
You can subscribe to that podcast as well right here on this podcast platform.
00:01:24.280
You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:01:45.280
99% survival rate for all of the people that he has worked on over the last couple of years.
00:02:02.020
And he uses all open sources so you can see exactly what his thinking is and how it's backed up.
00:02:15.860
Thank you for taking my call on Friday and making me feel, I would say, 90% better by today.
00:02:24.780
Um, and, uh, I think it is, it was so frustrating last week, Zev, that, that, uh, uh, my doctor couldn't really prescribe the things that he wanted to prescribe.
00:02:39.880
Um, you can't really get any of the information and everybody is, and nobody knows what they're really talking about anymore.
00:02:52.860
Well, let me tell you how I got involved with this.
00:02:56.980
I found myself in the epicenter in March of 2020 in the largest, uh, outbreak of COVID in a small community in upstate New York with 35,000 patients living in a square mile.
00:03:10.780
And thousands of people got sick and there was no treatment.
00:03:14.340
Um, and these are people that I've taken care of for two decades and they were all looking to me for help and they were going to the hospital and dying and I had nothing to offer them.
00:03:24.420
And I honestly, I was praying to God, uh, it was the first week of March and at like two o'clock in the morning, I couldn't sleep.
00:03:32.380
And next thing I know, I see in my, um, on my, in my email, a, a video sent to me.
00:03:38.900
Uh, it was med cram episode 34 on YouTube and Dr.
00:03:43.980
Schultz, the, uh, intensivist intensive care, uh, uh, doctor, um, explained, reminded me of a mechanism of action for, uh, uh, suppressing viral, uh, replication.
00:03:58.200
It was based on zinc and, and something called a zinc ionophore, so I'll explain.
00:04:03.560
And so I said to myself, wow, that really makes sense to me.
00:04:07.740
All the government was saying was give people Tylenol, go home.
00:04:13.640
And in New York at that time, maybe 5% of the people were, uh, dying in a respirator.
00:04:19.120
And so I, I came up with a treatment approach, uh, based on work done in South Korea and in France.
00:04:26.600
And I started using it in my high risk patients, um, early in the disease process.
00:04:34.220
I would do the testing, but it took a week to get the results.
00:04:37.880
If I thought they had COVID, I would just treat them.
00:04:40.180
And after the first 10 patients, I just saw the same thing.
00:04:44.840
After six to 12 hours, they, their breathing started to improve.
00:04:52.700
And after around 50 patients, I said to myself, this is not a fluke.
00:04:59.480
I made a YouTube video with the help of my son, because I'd never made a YouTube video,
00:05:03.880
uh, addressed to the president of the United States.
00:05:08.700
I get a phone call from Mark Meadows, his chief of staff.
00:05:11.920
Um, Dr. Zolanko, you want to speak to the president?
00:05:19.120
And I gave them updates every, uh, few days with my progress.
00:05:23.980
Again, this was only the beginning, but it kept on seeing the same, same thing.
00:05:28.500
The patient's just getting better and not going to the hospital.
00:05:31.340
And then a week later, Rudy Giuliani called me and I did a podcast with him.
00:05:43.780
So I just, it was, God created, uh, you know, they say, uh, necessity, the mother of all innovation.
00:05:53.920
But I find it interesting that this journey really began with you with a doctor on, uh, YouTube for a, you know, a med cram, uh, video.
00:06:06.620
And we have the social media platforms doing everything.
00:06:12.060
I don't know if that med cram could have been, uh, posted today with everything that's going on.
00:06:25.500
Um, I was using hydroxychloroquine, um, zinc and azithromycin.
00:06:31.100
And just to quickly explain, it's not magic, this strong biology behind it.
00:06:35.020
Zinc, uh, prevents the virus from making copies of itself by inhibiting an enzyme.
00:06:40.340
The name of the enzyme is RNA dependent RNA femurase.
00:06:44.420
Um, the problem is zinc doesn't get into the cell where the virus is because, um, it's surrounded by water.
00:06:54.400
And so, so think of zinc as a bullet, but it needs a delivery system.
00:07:08.720
It's called a zinc ionophore and allows the zinc to go inside the cell.
00:07:12.240
If there's enough zinc inside the cell and inhibits this enzyme, the virus can't make copies of itself.
00:07:21.440
And I was, I was, it was actually quite elegant.
00:07:31.080
Governor Cuomo, ex-governor Cuomo issued an executive order, um, blocking pharmacies from dispensing hydroxychloroquine.
00:07:39.480
Um, and that was a direct attack on my practice and my patients.
00:07:42.960
Cause I was the only one in the state, probably in the country doing it.
00:07:45.500
Um, and so I, I couldn't understand why that would happen.
00:07:49.480
And I, I sent them a, uh, a very cordial letter and asking him to reconsider.
00:07:59.940
And then, you know, on, uh, the NIH server of all places, I found a substitute gun, a substitute zinc delivery system.
00:08:09.480
There were peer reviewed papers about something, a substance called quercetin.
00:08:13.760
Now I, to be honest, I'd never heard of quercetin.
00:08:16.340
So I Google it and I see it's over the counter.
00:08:22.720
So I said to myself, oh my God, I just found the cure to tyranny.
00:08:27.480
Um, because there's really only two reasons why people die from COVID is the moronic, by the way, uh, Omicron is the same letters as moronic.
00:08:35.940
It's the moronic doctor that, uh, people choose that delays treatment and the tyrannical government that blocks access to life-saving medication.
00:08:49.520
There's the first week, which is the viral phase.
00:08:53.540
But then there is an immune reaction, a pathogenic, uh, dangerous immune reaction that leads to, uh, catastrophic lung damage and blood clots.
00:09:08.500
So the key is to get rid of the virus, put out the fire while it's contained and not let it spread.
00:09:14.320
The cancer, you know, it's best to treat the cancer when it's localized in one place, not to wait until it's metastatic and spread everywhere and then treat it.
00:09:23.920
The same thing with, with COVID, the sooner you treat it, the sooner it goes away.
00:09:29.300
You don't get the, uh, pathogenic, uh, immune reaction that leads to lung damage.
00:09:34.460
And so, um, I started advocating for quercetin use because I had, I had nothing else to offer and that started to work and that they couldn't block because it was over the counter.
00:09:46.340
So that started, that, that was my red pill, you know, I, I, I was just like everyone else, just a simple biomedical doctor who was following the rules.
00:09:56.640
But when I saw governor of New York, literally I lost patients because of him, because, uh, patients couldn't get the medication in the right timeframe, ended up in the hospital and died.
00:10:08.880
So anyway, so that's when I began to keep my eyes open and trying to understand, you know, really what is going on here?
00:10:19.100
Why, um, is common sense and access to medication, uh, that's been around for 65 years.
00:10:25.840
No, hydroxychloroquine, FDA approved for rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, malaria, and malaria prophylaxis.
00:10:39.200
Some people live on it at 400 milligrams a day.
00:10:41.960
And now it's being blocked in the case of, um, COVID, but not anything else.
00:10:51.760
Can you, can you, uh, attribute any goodwill to that?
00:10:57.300
Is there anything that shows that that could be a danger, um, to a COVID patient or is there, well, let me just ask you that first.
00:11:11.180
Um, any obstruction of hydroxychloroquine, in my opinion, is a crime against humanity, mass murder, and genocide.
00:11:21.760
Oh, I, I think you answered it much more clearly than I would have, would have expected.
00:11:28.560
Um, and is there, uh, have you seen any medical, anything, you may disagree with it, but any medical explanation on why it should be, uh, a band?
00:11:41.140
Well, yes, uh, there was a Lancet study that came out, uh, meta-analysis of 96,000 patients that hydroxychloroquine kills people.
00:11:49.900
So that was pretty concerning, except there was only one problem with that, that that paper was, was fraud.
00:11:57.840
Uh, and in the biggest scandal in the history of, of medicine and in the peer-reviewed process, Lancet and the New England Journal of Medicine had to retract this paper for absolute fraud.
00:12:11.440
Number two, it was the recovery, recovery trial.
00:12:15.760
And it found that hydroxychloroquine kills people.
00:12:21.360
The only problem with that study, they were using 2,400 milligrams a day.
00:12:30.840
All that study proved was that if you give homicidal lethal dosing, uh, poison people, they'll die.
00:12:39.500
And then there was another study from Virginia, from the VA, where hydroxychloroquine not only didn't it work, but it seemed that everyone who took it died.
00:12:49.280
The only problem with that study was the patients that it was given to were on a respirator on average for 17 days.
00:12:56.960
And so they, they concluded that its use is, is, it doesn't work.
00:13:00.940
I was never advocating for its use in the late stages.
00:13:04.340
I was advocating for its use in the first few days to prevent the virus from spreading.
00:13:11.140
So hang on just a second, because I want to take you down one more, uh, hole here that, um, I think is important to explain.
00:13:18.500
I don't think most people even understand that there's a protective coating, uh, around, uh, uh, around the, the cells of COVID that that's why, uh, um, you know, you, you, you, you use zinc, but it doesn't do anything without something like hydroxychloroquine.
00:13:38.060
I don't think I've never heard that explanation.
00:13:40.480
We'll get to a little bit more of this here in just a second.
00:13:43.320
You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck program.
00:13:55.320
Well, it looks like California is getting ready to double their income tax, double the income tax.
00:14:03.300
It, uh, it, uh, it will increase the average taxpayers, uh, tax burden in California by over $12,000 every year.
00:14:20.500
Now let's take an additional 12,000 people from the average person.
00:14:30.000
Plus California is now looking at making it mandatory that even if you have COVID, you'll have to go to work in the hospital, which I think Stu is taking the best of New York's policy and merging it with the absolute best of California.
00:14:49.260
Uh, by the way, a lot of these things are all happening because of the great reset.
00:14:54.500
France is now, uh, bracing themselves for 35 to 40% guaranteed increase in electric bills this winter, 35 to 40% increase in the electrical bills.
00:15:11.680
Because they are planning power outages of the nuclear power plants, which France gets most of its power from nuclear.
00:15:19.860
And they're going to, uh, put those on power outages, uh, you know, just to get ready for the great reset.
00:15:26.040
We've got to get these, these evil nuke plants out of there and get people to pay higher prices for their electricity.
00:15:33.020
40% there will be riots in the streets of France.
00:15:37.540
This is the kind of stuff that is coming our way and you won't have anything to do with it.
00:15:43.580
And they'll explain it away a mirror, a million different ways.
00:15:47.340
But the problem is being caused by the left and those who believe in build back better.
00:15:59.900
Tomorrow, my new book comes out on the great reset.
00:16:02.560
This is a must read for anybody that cares about freedom anywhere in the world.
00:16:11.600
Uh, it is written for America, but this involves the entire free world.
00:16:17.340
It's Justin Haskins, um, co-authoring it with me called the great reset.
00:16:28.740
Um, I just saw this new heartland poll from Rasmussen that is coming out next week.
00:16:35.620
Uh, and I find some really disturbing things in there specifically on the great reset.
00:16:42.040
44% of Americans don't have any idea what it is.
00:16:48.080
And then it is almost a tie, if I'm not mistaken, on those for and against these policies.
00:16:57.200
Uh, so the vast majority of people, that's true, did not know what it was.
00:17:01.640
As of the people who did know what it was, um, it was pretty close to a tie.
00:17:07.400
If you're looking at strongly favor versus somewhat favor and somewhat opposed and strongly
00:17:13.620
It was pretty close to a tie, but somewhat opposed was over 50%.
00:17:17.780
So most voters did say if they knew what it was, that they did not support it.
00:17:22.820
And strongly opposed was by far the plurality choice at 43%.
00:17:28.240
So there were a lot of people who know what it is and hate it, but there's still a lot
00:17:35.140
of people who have no clue what it is and their world is changing around them and they
00:17:40.400
And I would contend that, uh, some of those people that said, yeah, they know about it
00:17:45.660
Some are socialists, some have to be fascistic, but I'll bet you most people don't really
00:17:50.780
even know, you know, they've bought the, the hype that this is just a jobs program.
00:17:55.760
This is, you know, just, uh, for global warming.
00:18:04.580
And actually there was one question in the poll that we asked that I think brought that
00:18:08.580
We asked people what they thought the highest priority should be for businesses.
00:18:14.240
So if they had to choose one highest priority for businesses, what should it be?
00:18:19.140
And of the questions we asked, most of them were things that you would normally, if you
00:18:23.760
were a conservative, especially associate with things businesses should be doing, like
00:18:26.860
earning a profit, uh, to benefit shareholders or owners, providing individual consumers with
00:18:31.500
high quality products and services at the lowest prices.
00:18:35.900
But then we threw in trying to stop climate change as one option and then using business
00:18:41.260
resources to pursue social justice causes as another option.
00:18:44.840
Now, those two are pretty much the stated purpose of ESG scores, which is a huge part of the
00:18:51.640
And only 9% said trying to stop climate change.
00:18:55.760
And 1% said using business resources to pursue social justice causes.
00:19:03.200
The vast majority of even Democrats did not make those selections.
00:19:07.440
So when you ask people whether they support the Great Reset and they say yes, there were
00:19:11.220
a bunch of people who said yes, but also said that they don't think that stopping climate
00:19:15.920
change or, or having businesses fight for social justice causes was their highest priority.
00:19:21.060
And that's really one of the main, uh, tenets of the Great Reset.
00:19:24.960
So I don't think that people who support it even really fully understand what it is in the
00:19:31.000
Especially since it looks like 54% of the American people still believe in capitalism, uh, 45%.
00:19:39.720
This is in order 45% providing individual customers with high quality products and services at the
00:19:46.760
Then the next is providing goods benefits and pay to employees.
00:19:56.600
Um, 14 earning a profit to benefit shareholders or owners.
00:20:04.660
And those are the real goals, uh, of, um, of the Great Reset.
00:20:11.920
I contend that earning a profit to benefit shareholders or owners, uh, that's also part of the Great
00:20:24.860
I think the Great Reset is the biggest Ponzi scheme that's ever been hatched in the history
00:20:29.660
I think that there's trillions and trillions and trillions of dollars flowing into people
00:20:34.300
at wall street, uh, investors and big banks and corporations and all these people.
00:20:39.580
Uh, so I think there are a lot of people getting rich off of it.
00:20:42.480
But I think when we ask voters this question, I don't think that they understand that.
00:20:47.200
I think the vast majority of them are thinking, no, that's just part of capitalism.
00:20:52.240
And there's certain people who would answer the question that way for that reason.
00:20:55.820
But yes, is the Great Reset primarily about, uh, benefiting shareholders and owners of companies?
00:21:01.820
In a way, you could absolutely make that argument.
00:21:07.340
I'd say owners more than shareholders, stakeholders, as they call them.
00:21:12.320
Um, so let's, let's go through some of this stuff.
00:21:15.720
This, this, these poll numbers come out later this week and early next week.
00:21:26.940
Uh, let's start with, let's start with COVID, um, and the trust level on COVID and, and vaccinations.
00:21:39.260
So what we wanted to do is ask questions that would get at the heart of how authoritarian are
00:21:45.600
people really when it comes to the unvaccinated.
00:21:48.100
And so we asked the people, we asked voters, these are all likely voters.
00:21:51.740
We asked them a series of questions, um, about, uh, policy proposals.
00:21:57.080
Some of them we just made up in that get increasingly more authoritarian to see how authoritarian people
00:22:03.780
And then we looked at party affiliation and things to see if there was a connection between
00:22:09.960
And what we found was that, um, about half of Democrats depends on the question.
00:22:16.080
Sometimes it's a little less, but about half of Democrats support some incredibly authoritarian
00:22:23.280
For example, we asked people if, uh, they would support a policy that would require that, uh,
00:22:30.680
unvaccinated people live in designated areas or facilities, essentially camps.
00:22:35.740
And about half of Democrats said, yes, we asked if people should be required to wear trackable
00:22:41.860
If they refuse to get vaccinated, about half of Democrats said yes to that as well.
00:22:46.880
We asked if people should be fined or in prison for questioning the efficacy of the existing
00:22:54.880
And about half of Democrats said that they should be fined or in prison for that.
00:22:59.640
The only thing, the only authoritarian question we asked that did not have, uh, about half
00:23:04.920
of Democrats support it, uh, or more than half was a question we asked, um, if you refuse
00:23:11.620
to get vaccinated, should you lose custody of your children?
00:23:22.820
And when we, we looked at the results, we compare those results to say Republicans are
00:23:27.840
Independents are a little bit more likely to go along with it as you would probably expect.
00:23:37.720
The independents overwhelmingly rejected these policies, uh, just as, just as much, almost
00:23:43.260
just as much as Republicans, depending on the question.
00:23:45.740
So this is really only Democrats that support this.
00:23:48.620
And then when you look at all the other crosstabs, uh, from the polling data, from all the other
00:23:53.280
questions, the number one thing, one of the top two or three things, uh, but the biggest
00:23:59.880
thing that you could look at to say, what is the best predictor for determining how people
00:24:04.260
are going to answer these authoritarian questions was their support level for Joe Biden.
00:24:09.100
If their support level for Joe Biden was very high, the highest level, then they were most
00:24:16.320
If their support level was extremely low for Joe Biden, the biggest disapproval, then they
00:24:23.360
And so you can see this divide that exists in America is pretty overwhelming and support for
00:24:33.240
So that actually kind of plays into all of this as well.
00:24:38.080
And where does Joe Biden stand with Donald Trump?
00:24:41.100
I just saw a poll that shows Joe Biden is underwater in all, but I think three states, uh, in the
00:24:53.080
We, we, we, we asked questions about, uh, we asked the question specifically about a head
00:24:57.120
to head matchup between Joe Biden and Donald Trump in the next presidential election.
00:25:01.600
And 46% of likely voters chose Donald Trump compared to 40% for, for Joe Biden.
00:25:08.360
And when you look at the breakdown by party affiliation, what you see is that support, the real reason
00:25:16.100
for the difference is that support for Joe Biden amongst independents was only 29% compared to
00:25:24.540
So if you're, if you're Donald Trump, that's an incredibly, incredibly strong result to get
00:25:39.060
Women were tied between Donald Trump and Joe Biden, which when you look at exit polling from
00:25:43.980
the last election, women pretty much very strongly rejected Donald Trump, according to the exit
00:25:51.380
So that shows that there are a lot of independents.
00:25:55.680
If I had to guess, I would say there are a lot of people in suburbs, uh, who are with changing
00:26:01.360
their minds now that they've seen a year of Joe Biden, the absolute catastrophe that it's
00:26:07.580
This is what we saw with the election results that happened earlier in, uh, in Virginia.
00:26:15.020
Virginia is, has been a blue state now for over a decade.
00:26:17.660
And yet they overwhelmingly rejected an establishment Democrat, went with a Republican.
00:26:24.280
And I think that that shows when the election is about the issues, when, when people see the
00:26:29.640
failure of the Biden administration, they're going to reject it.
00:26:32.260
And they're going to go in a, in, in the direction of Donald Trump.
00:26:35.860
One last, one last thing on Virginia and Yunkin.
00:26:39.420
He just, um, put in as his, uh, secretary of education, somebody who is deep into common
00:26:45.460
core CRT, the connections and the money is, is gigantic.
00:26:50.000
I hope he doesn't turn out to be, uh, you know, uh, uh, hidden, uh, hidden leftist or
00:26:58.460
a hidden, uh, uh, liar, uh, when it comes to that, that was the most important thing.
00:27:04.380
The, the, uh, schools with children and, um, he's just put in charge of all of the reforms.
00:27:10.220
Somebody who's believed in this stuff from the get go.
00:27:13.320
I, I hope the voice of Virginia and Virginians, uh, are heard by the, uh, the governor.
00:27:27.480
He is the coauthor of the book, the great reset, which comes out tomorrow.
00:27:36.340
There are, for the first time we are having problems keeping people selling fake copies of
00:27:43.980
So we want to make sure that we are always on the links to make sure that you get the
00:28:06.340
So Stu, um, you know, I know you made fun of me on sports, uh, last week, but
00:28:12.040
I believe I, I talked about the Detroit lions and, uh, you made fun of me, but, uh, Pat didn't
00:28:23.940
Well, you're talking about their win over the green Bay Packers.
00:28:28.280
Um, of course Detroit lion, even I know that's not supposed to happen.
00:28:35.960
However, the game completely meaningless for the green Bay Packers, uh, considering they
00:28:41.440
had the number one seat locked up and a buy home field advantage throughout the playoffs.
00:28:51.480
I did know that, but, uh, do you just throw the game away?
00:28:56.100
Well, they benched a lot of their players, including their MVP, uh, level quarterback in
00:29:01.100
Uh, I will say if I'm a Detroit lions fan, I'm a little upset that they did win because
00:29:05.600
if they would have lost, they would have had the number one pick, uh, in next year's draft
00:29:10.640
given Jacksonville one, but they decided to win that game for some reason.
00:29:16.480
See, that is the type of deep analysis that I lead everybody on this program right into
00:29:25.040
So what you were doing, you were leading me into analysis.
00:29:29.160
So I actually watched the 49ers, uh, with my son, I watched the, the Buccaneers and the
00:29:38.260
Um, but, uh, uh, that San Francisco save at the end in overtime when the 49ers, it was
00:29:51.360
I still don't know how overtime works, but, uh,
00:29:55.080
Did you see the, did you happen to see the game last night, Glenn?
00:29:57.480
I'm sure you did Raiders and chargers big game.
00:30:00.200
Um, the end of the game was fascinating because if the two teams tied, they both would go to
00:30:07.200
However, if one of them won, the other team would not go to the playoffs.
00:30:10.520
So they went to overtime and the Pittsburgh Steelers and the fans and the audience that
00:30:17.340
But, uh, if they tied the Steelers would have been out of the playoffs and then the
00:30:21.540
Raiders had a decision to make whether to just take a knee, take the tie and go to the
00:30:25.960
playoffs with the chargers or try to kick a field goal to win the game and knock the
00:30:30.300
chargers out and let the Steelers in a riveting completely.
00:30:34.620
Like it was a game that was completely riveting and also just based on obscure tiebreakers.
00:30:43.020
I've noticed that when you get to this point in the season, usually everybody is so matched
00:30:51.400
This is why the Superbowl is boring because there's never a blowout.
00:30:55.400
Like, like the Ravens game yesterday was boring, boring, boring last fourth quarter.
00:31:04.660
It was actually exciting, but the first three quarters were a snooze fest.
00:31:09.380
It's really fascinating to talk to you about this stuff because I feel like I've been talking
00:31:18.260
No, I mean, the Superbowl was famous for being nothing but blowouts for like 20 years.
00:31:24.020
And then honestly, over the past 15 or so, it's been, you're right, a lot of really good
00:31:29.060
games and, and, uh, competitive games, but that used to be the thing all the time that
00:31:32.920
by the second half, it was, it was already over because it was such a blowout, but you're,
00:31:55.380
I'm more, much more of an expert on, uh, and that is, uh, great television.
00:32:06.700
Oh, I'm feeling very, I'm, I, I would be at work today.
00:32:12.440
I just don't want to get everybody sick and please pray for our staff.
00:32:25.960
And to say Jeffy's not at the peak of health is, is an understatement.
00:32:33.240
And quite honestly, none of us are stronger to, strong enough to carry that casket.
00:32:45.700
I'll tell you, not by much, but just a little too soon.
00:32:48.500
I'm worried about our backs, you know, it's bad, but, uh, please pray for Jeffy.
00:32:56.220
Cause he has, he's had a rough go of it in the last couple of years.
00:32:59.980
Uh, and we're all very, very concerned about him and love him dearly.
00:33:07.340
And we've got, we've got a ton of people that you don't know their names that are also at
00:33:15.000
But if we, if we're still on the air on a Friday, it'll be, it'll be interesting.
00:33:19.700
We're hiring nurses now to do, to do camera jobs, but, and no vaccine required.
00:33:27.140
I may be the only person on every blaze TV show this week.
00:33:34.260
And I think this is, you know, I've been talking to people and friends around the country and,
00:33:38.140
and, and it's this way seemingly everywhere right now.
00:33:50.620
Um, but the good news is it is much less severe, much less severe.
00:33:56.140
There is, there is, there's no way I would have been broadcasting last week with the original
00:34:03.720
I'm not sure, but I had it right before the vaccines were out.
00:34:09.260
Um, yeah, but it was, I know my family had alpha.
00:34:11.880
I didn't get alpha and then right as Delta was kind of really snowballing.
00:34:18.400
Um, and now we believe I have Omicron, which even if, if I have Delta, it's not the same.
00:34:26.120
Either my immune system really kicked in or it's just a much weaker Omicron variant, which
00:34:34.200
The scientists are somewhat split on whether it's actually a lot less severe or we just
00:34:39.800
have a lot of immunity built up between not only the vaccine, but obviously also people
00:34:43.740
just getting it over the years that a lot of people who are now getting it the second
00:34:47.280
time, it seems to break through both vaccine and natural immunity.
00:34:50.700
And people who are getting it the second time are having a much better go of it.
00:34:54.780
Uh, it look, I mean, this is, this is, this is what happened in 1918.
00:35:11.000
Maybe just started to burn through and just become the common flu, the Spanish flu.
00:35:17.500
That's why we have flu shots every year because of that.
00:35:20.480
This may be replacing, hopefully the common cold.
00:35:25.920
If that happened, we don't want to double the flu numbers.
00:35:29.580
Uh, and you know, nobody wants to have everybody have a cold, but if this can just become the
00:35:39.760
It's not a, it's not a society shutting down type of thing.
00:35:43.620
You know, I think we're going to, we're going to have a rough couple of weeks just because
00:35:47.780
not because we are, yeah, look, you have more, you have more, uh, immunity.
00:35:50.780
You have a lighter variant, but also you just have numbers.
00:35:59.920
Just, you can't take this many people out of society and expect everything to be running
00:36:04.660
It just, it, it can't happen, but that doesn't mean the hospitals are overwhelmed or
00:36:10.440
You know, they're not giving you the numbers of the hospital.
00:36:12.900
The people that are in for COVID is minuscule next to the number of people who are in the
00:36:24.060
When it gets something, that's a complete difference.
00:36:25.880
When something gets spread around this wild, wildly, a lot of people have it, don't even
00:36:29.840
realize it, go in for a broken leg or whatever and have it.
00:36:32.520
And like, you know, it, it presents issues for hospitals, right?
00:36:36.560
It's totally different though, than what we were seeing, you know, in Northern Italy or
00:36:42.620
There you've got, they're putting refrigerated trucks with bodies outside of the hospitals.
00:36:47.580
Now you're talking about, okay, like let's say someone comes in with a broken leg.
00:36:50.920
They would normally go to that area of the hospital.
00:36:53.480
Well, now if they have COVID, they can't put them next to a person who has a broken
00:37:04.520
Add onto that, that doctors and nurses and other healthcare workers are getting COVID at
00:37:11.060
It does stress hospitals, but it's a totally different thing than what they were warning about
00:37:18.900
And you would not be able to tell that from the coverage in the media.
00:37:22.300
They're making it sound as if it's as bad or worse than the worst moments of this thing.
00:37:34.940
And by the way, if you miss the protocol today and you want to be able to fight this in advance,
00:37:40.180
the secret is getting it before it hits you and having your immune system bolstered.
00:37:50.180
There's when you are infected and can infect others.
00:37:55.360
And then the stage two is when it goes down into the lungs and it gets really nasty.
00:38:00.460
And that's where you get blood clots and everything else.
00:38:04.780
And it's really pissing me off that doctors are saying, just go home, take some aspirin,
00:38:11.480
No, that is the time to make sure that you kill that from replicating in the first week.
00:38:21.000
You know, something else that really bothers me.
00:38:22.960
I know you watched the case study, Stu, from Pfizer.
00:38:26.560
Did you look at the London and European part of that study?
00:38:35.160
So the Europeans, they didn't, you know, England was really good at getting everybody their vaccine.
00:38:45.600
And so what happened is they had this huge spike.
00:38:49.300
When they get all the vaccines, they have this huge spike of COVID patients.
00:38:53.860
And then it takes a huge dive down and it's very flat after a while where Europe didn't have that.
00:39:03.160
And they just keep kind of going up and, you know, going for a long time.
00:39:07.100
That huge spike, according to Pfizer's own data in their trials or clinical trials,
00:39:15.160
shows that that spike is from a 14-day period after you get the vaccine or a booster
00:39:22.700
that makes your body more vulnerable to getting COVID.
00:39:29.300
It will be less severe, but in that first 14 days, you're more vulnerable to get it.
00:39:36.960
So the time to say get the vaccine, get the booster, is not when everybody is having it.
00:39:42.740
Like right now, getting the booster could possibly make it much more likely that you get COVID in the next four days
00:39:50.620
because your body is already struggling with it.
00:39:54.240
And if you're exposed, Pfizer's own research shows this.
00:40:05.320
You've got to go get your booster or your shot right now.
00:40:09.120
You say those things when we have relative periods of rest, not at the height of it.
00:40:16.360
I mean, look, there's a lot of theories and a lot of disagreement on this stuff.
00:40:19.160
But I mean, I think at this point, you should be able to just go out.
00:40:21.500
You're going to have to analyze this and make your own decisions.
00:40:24.760
Anthony Fauci and Rochelle Walensky or Glenn Beck or Stuberger, none of us are your doctor or your dad.
00:40:29.760
So just go figure out your own, make your own mind up.
00:40:34.360
And at this point, the information's out there.
00:40:36.980
You just got to live with your own decisions, right?